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                  <text>Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

II

:·credibiil.ty co unts. And if you
have any questi on abou t that, look at
the·U.N. weapons inspec1ions mess in

border stations for prisoners from

private ci tilen -

ror

th~

Kosovar

refugee camps in Macedoni a and
Albania to "let the refugees know
that we care antl hear their plea."
The not:quite candidate for the
Republican presidential nomination
is methodically answering q iticism
-that she 's taken no hard stands on
issues. In a speech in Cali forn ia, for
instance. sfie said she opposed abor·
tion, but that a constituti onal ban was
unreali stic.

.Wednesday night. in an address
tit fe d " Hawkish World View." Mrs.
D~le adopted a hard line - t~ some
4,000 midshipmen in · their summer

wh.ites -on why she should succeed
Clinton as their commander in chief.

Iraq, or today 's tragedy in Kosovo, " Serbian detention cam ps.
she sa id.
Mrs. Dole veered from her tex t to
. Mrs. Dole. whose. husband ..Bob, tell of visiting a Red Cross camp in
has 'served as Clinton's envoy .tothc Congo where· Rwandan orphans were
Balkans, .ae&lt; used Clinton ' of oeing too ill to be ~ l othed . " We had to just
wishy-washy in his ultimatums to keep washing them dow n, these poor
Mil osevic.
little children."
She tac kled head-on the politicalShe did not say what America
ly volatile question of sending U.S .
have done to 'prevent the
should
ground troops into Kosovo.
Rwandan
genocide.. .
.
" If the NATO commanders and
sa
id
Carl
·
Zeppegno
of
the
Still,
the Joint Chiefs rif Staff say that
ground troops are required to accom- academy 's Class of 2000. Mrs. Dole
pli sh our goalS, then my answer is knows from her Red Cross work and from her marriage to a severely
' yes, '" s he sa1'd..
The fir st midshipmen called upon· inj'ured World War II veteran - the
. by a moderator during the question- risks of military action.
"She 's seen firsthand what we' re
and-answer period asked:
"Are you willing to se nd your up against and she understands that
· own sons and daughters to bleed in we have a limited capabthly when
we're sent out with our hands tied ·
Kosovo, ma'am? "
While hi s classmates "ooooh'ed" behind our backs," said Zeppegno.
Min Chung, Class of '99, said he
· at his audacity, Mrs. Dole said yes with&lt;;&gt;ut menti oning that she has no liked what he heard from Mrs . Dole
children - then fumbled in repeat·. but was holding out for a candidate .
ing her line about approving troops if with "prior military service."
·
recommended by military brass.
Mrs. Dole 's speech came in
Mrs . .Dole's unnamed target, her · advance of a planned Washington
aides said , was Texas Gov. George W. fund-raiser later this month, the first
Bush, con~idered her strongest com· in a series. She has banked a disappetition for the 2000 GOP nom ina· pointing fraction of the $6 mtllion
tion.
that Bush raked in during the first
Bush has been criticized for what . three months 'of 1999.
'

Mayoral candidates focus
on keeping employment up
COLUMBUS (AP). - The area ·ty commissioner. said enhanced pub·
around · Columbus has one of the li e transportati on was a priority.
She said that although the county's
state 's lowes! unemployment rates ,
and the city 's. three mayoral candi- un employment rate is below 3 per·
dates say they have plans to keep cent, it exceeds 20 percent in some
areas of the city. She said many of the
things that way. .
Democrats Michael Coleman and new jobs in· the county are ne ar the
Ben Es py and Republican Dorothy Interstate 270 outerbelt, which is sevTeater took part in a public forum at eral miles from the central city.
"We have to get folks to those
wbich jobs were a major topic.
so they can work the different
jobs
Coleman was asked at Wednes·
and gel home for emergen·
shifts
day 's forum about a plan to decen·
lralize state offices by moving large cics," Teater said.
· Espy. minority leader of the Ohio
numbers of state jobs from Columbus
Senate, said that as mayor, he would
to smaller cities such as Toledo.
Coleman, who used , to . live in · make sure Columbus .got its · "fair
Toledo, ind ic ated a willingness to share" of state development dollars.
.He said he was tired of Columbus
support the plan last fall , when he
was the Democratic candidate for taking what he said was a back seat
to Cleveland and Cincinnati in state
lieutenant governor.
But he seemed to change his tune government aid.
Wedn e~day.
·
I
"Thbsc jobs will be right here,"
Espy also said city tax money .
saJd C 0 1ema~ , who is president of should be refunded to residents when '
City Counci l.
tax receipts are hi~her than anticiTeater, currentl y a Franklin Coun· pated llix recei'pts.
.

GM, Ford note increase ·
in first quarter earnings
DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Corp.'s earnings climbed 31 percent
in ·the first quarter, exceeding Wall Street expectations, on continued strong
profits in North America. Ford Motor Co. profit~ also were up.
.
GM reported today it earned a record $2.1 btlhon, or $3.04 a share, m the
first three months of the year co mpar~d with $1 .6 billipn, pr $2.27 a share,
during the year~ago period. ·
· . ·
. .·
'
A survey or analysts by First Call Corp. e.stimated GM ·would earn $.2.88
a share.
Sales at the world's largest automaker totaled $42.4 billion, up 6 percent
from $40 billion a year ago. Revenue figures exclude the sale of Delphi Automotive Systems, the big pails unit that GM is spinning off.
·Ford, the world's No. 2 autoiTi aker, said today it had a 20 percent increase
in operating earnings during the first quarter, earning $1.81 billion,or $1 .46
a share, compared with $1.51 billion, or $1.22 a share.,for the ftrstthree
months of 1998.
Sales totaled $38 billion at Ford, compared with $36.6 billion a year ago.
As with GM, Ford's earnings were higher than' Wall Street analysts' expec·
tations. The average estil)1ate of analysts surveyed by First Call was S l.J9
a share.
GM 's earnings including Delphi set a company record for any quarter, narrowly surpassing the $2.09 bil.lion it earned in the second quarter of 1997.
GM's North American operations earned .$).4 billion. up 67 ~ercent from
the $841 million it ea,rned in the first three months of 1998. Proftts also were
up in European operations.

1

t

.1 ,' J

.:

&lt;

1

il I! J~! :,

Still raising the money, Page 2
Meigs beats Vinton County, Page 5
Teenagers ~ren't all bad, Page 6

)

.Tomorrow: Cloudy
H!gh: 50s; Low:. 30s

NOW IS TH:E TIME!!

Discrepancy.leads

1999 CHM S·10 P/U

Sy JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A discrepancy between two motor vehicle acci dent reports resulted in a
. mistrial du ring an aggravated vehicular assault case ·in the Meigs' County
· CQ.urt of Common Pleas Thursday mornin g.
.
Herbert L. Grate II, 32, Reedsville, was charged with aggravated vehic·
· ular assault of Kenneth R. Rig gs, 32, Long Bottom, on April I, 1998. In that
incident, Grate and Rigg s had raced up and down State Route 7 near Tup·
. pers Plains; Grate driving an automobile and Riggs a motorcycle. Grate was
accused of striking Riggs' motorcycle, causing it to srash.
.
..

a•u·' "' VB, auto, locking Diff,
Indigo blue: cass, _chrome
chrome bumper, MSRP $111,730

5 18,549
Now
_,;;;.....;;;;.J"_.-,..........-t

Regional Briefs:

·1999 CHM SILVERADO
EXT CAB 4X4

1999 GMC YUKON

Taft requests more aid
·for victims of tornado

4x4, 4 Dr, VB, auto , air; leather,
tiH, cruise; alum wheels, CD
Cass, Black MSRP $38,720

32,964

.. MONTGOMERY (AP) -· · Gov. Bob Taft has asked for more federal
assistance for victims of the tornado that swept through several Cine in· .
n~ti suburbs last week, killing four people and causing more than $27 milli on in damage.
.
The Small Business Mministration announced Thursday it will make
low-interest loans available to help homeowners and businesses rebuild
and recover from 4ninsured losses caused by_the tornado. .
But Taft asked President Clinton on Tbursday to approve additional
assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for fami ·
lies, businesses and local governments 'in the iorn ado-damaged areas.
'"The situation is of,such severity that effective recovery is beyo nd vol· ·
untary agency, local and state capabilities," Taft wrote in hi s letter to the
president.
If Clinton approves the federal disaster declaration, the FEMA money could come in the form of loans and grants to help owners of damaged homes and businesses. and the communiti es which sustained public infnistrucnire damage. Communities co uld receive FEMA grants for
unin sured costs of temporary housi ng or for home repairs.
The hardest hii areas were Montgomery and Blue Ash. and wrec king
.crews have begun demolishin g some tornado-damaged businesses there.
The razing of some of the ruined homes was to begin today.
·Many families ha ve found rental apartments and signed &lt;;ontracts for
demolition and rebuilding of their houses. Businesses that were wiped out
h~ve rebpened to fill minor orders and t.ake phone calls.
.Scott Casuto, who·lost. only the roof and windows from his house, hopes
to bring his family home after repairs are finished in abo ut two to five
months. They have rented an apartment temporarily.
• " We were the lucky ories," Casuio said . "Every single home here .will
be bulldozed - everybody except me and the one next door.'.'
In nearby Loveland, peopl e were already rebuildin'g businesses. 01' 29·
companies in the L\)veland Commerce Par~ . 25 had storm damage and
fi ve were destroyed, 'putting nearly 80Q jobs in jeo'pardy.
By Wednesday aftemoon;about95 percent of the companies were at
least partially bac k in business. The ones hun worst moved their office
operations into temporary qu ~ ners within the industrial park campus.
"W,e are open for b~ s iness- we ' re just aski ng for patience arid understandin g," said Steve Brown, president 'of Self Adhesive Products Inc.,
one of five companies that lost their buildings. "We' ve had a series of
small victories and we're taking it one day m a time."

::; 5

1999 CHEVY TRACKER

1999 OLDS BRAVADA
tilt, cruise, towing pkg, gold
pkg, pewter MSRP $32,900

::; 5

1999 OLDS SILHOUETTE

Dr, Conv, 4 x4, auto, al·r, CD, · GLS, auto, air, Pleather,
...... loaded:
Blac:kls;iJver MSRP $18,155
V6, Sand MSR _.,,470

All wheel drive, V6, auto, air,

28,968
"'?'·

_,_._,

:&lt;~-

'TillUS:•
.. ' "· ': "- l:;;~,,. . .

. .

1998 GMC SIERRA SLE
EXT CAB

.

'

2 Dr, 4 WD, Ve, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM, WAS $19,800

-.

1998 FORD RANGER XLT
Ext cab, 4 Dr, VB, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, 4 WD, only 9,000 miles,
WAS$19,900

1997 NISSAN 4 WD P/U
4 cyl, 5 spd, AM/FM
WAS$13,999 .

Now 517 950

Marshall aims for $125M fund-raiser

S·10 P/U
V6, 5 spd, LS pkg,
27,000 miles, Black,
$10,900

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP{- Marshall University President J. Wade
Gilley has announced an amliitious fund-raising drive and a plan to
· increase faculty salaries.
In his spring report to faculty Thursday, Gilley outlined plans to launch
a campaign to raise $125 million in the next two years .
·
"The Huntington-Charleston metropolitan area can only go forward
with a: first-rate comprehensive university," Gilley said. "Marshall needs
to continue to move forward, not for the univers ity community, but for
West Virginaa."
·
·
The previous largest fund-raising campa1gn for the 16,000-student uni·
~ersity was $10 million by then-President Dale Nitzschke in 1990.
.
Gilley also said faculty salaries must be raised to I0 I percent of pay
by peer universities. And he called for establishing_a $2-million-a-year
Funds for Excellence Program to underwrite salary mcreases and course
and faculty development.

WAIBI VB, . auto, air, AM/FM, tiH,
cruise, WAS $1&amp;,991

Now$9960
Oni3J
,
.

·: ; 5

16,800

2 Dr, 4 WD, V6, auto, air, tilt,
cruise, White WAS $13,995

V6, auto, air, AM/FM, CD, tilt,
cruise, SAS $7950

Teen accused of biting friend's ear

0 Now51

::; 1 ,450

CHILLICOTHE (AP) - An 18-year-old has been charged with felonious assault for biting the ear of a friend during a fight over auto parts .
Dustin Rhoads of Chillicothe pleaded innocent Thursday in Ross County Common Pleas Court. A Ross County grand jury ihdicted him April 9.
James Tackett, 18, lost a chunk of his ear nearly 3 inches long and more
than I inch wide during the fight March 22.
.. ·
· .
Sheriff's deputies have said the students argued at Pickaway Ross JQtnl
Vocational School about swapping vehicle parts. They decided to meet
on nearby &lt;ountry road near this city about 50 miles south of Columbus to setile their dispute.
.
.
·
Rhoads is accused of reaching· through the driver's side window of
Tackett's car and hilling Tackeu in the face .

5

98 CHM SILVERADO LWI, 2 WD, V6, a~to, *• AM/FM cou, tit, cn11w, . . ..,,lilly 9500 ..... WAS $19;900'----- 17,850
97 FORD RANGERXLT, 414, V6, ssp, air, AM/FM, tit, cnllt, .WAS $15,900 .
~,·
SJ3,200
5

96 CHM 5-10 BlAZER, V6, AUTO,AIR,1'n.T, CRIISf, AM/FMWS, WAS $19,900
1~..:~~
91 CHEVY 1/2 TON LWI V6, nto, *• AM/FM WAS $5499'---------....------~
90 CHM ASTRO CONY VAN V6, auto, air, tit, miH, AM/FM WAS $5900
:::~~ ,
88 CHM 1/2 TON LWB VI, auto, air, AM/FM co11 WAS $6900 ~
- -.. '""""'"""--·---r--~-:':'
98 GMC SONOMA Ext Cab, 4 WD, V6, a~te, air, AM/FM, tilt, Gills•, WAS $19,900 .
_.J17,450
98 GMC SONOMA Ext Call2 WD, 3rd Door, 4 'YI, Ssp, tllr, AM/FM, tit, lnlht, WAS $13,995
'
&gt;12,600
98 GMC JIMMY 4 Dr, 4 WD, .V6, allo, air, 181, GIIIH, AM/FM, WAS $23,900
·s21 ,850 •
97 cHM.TAHOE 4Dr, 4 WD1 LT pkg, VI, nto,., AM/FM, CD, ltatMr ""'tit, cniH, WAS $29,900
- '27,800
522 500
.
'
'
98 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 4 Dr, AWD, V6, tl!llo, llr, tit, GIIIH, AM/FM 1111S. WAS $24,900
-·-·-~"·---- s96S0

a

Good Afternoon

Sentinel
l Sections • ll Pages
.

Today's
C.Jndar
Oeetifteds

9t CHM 1/2 TON LWB VI, nto, tlr, tit, cnlit, AM/FM, WAS $11,995
'"·-·
s9200
94 CHEVY 1/2LWI4x4, V6, .,o, *·WAS $10,9001_._..._,_~------~-----r.-:
5
93 CHEVY 1/2 TON Ell Calt, VI, auto, air, tit, GIIIH, AM/FM COli WAS $11,995·------""--·--·-- 10,600

POMEROY, OHIO

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Mon.·Frl. 9 am·8 pm; Sat. 9 am·4 pm; Sun. l pm•S pm
~
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~

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L.A. Lakers
fire Rodman
Page4

•

~'"' - CONVtNmNT FINANCI.NG

air, cass, bench seat,
JM!;RP $14,155
lwhi9SIS.

Sports

Aprll16, 1999

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 50s; Low: 30s

I .

The Wall Street Journal's editorial
page called a " vague and tepid ...
almost Clintonian" statemen t on
Kosovo.
One senior Dole adviser said she
wanted to con trast hersJ:If with Bush
by emphasizing her advantage in for·
eign policy experience.
'
When one questioner pressed Mrs.
Dole to elaborate on her call for the
defense of Taiwan against China. she .
appeared flustered. . .
"I've been out of the Red Cross
now for three months and there's
·some issues where I want to take a
very careful and thoughtful approach
before going forward with the poSI·
lions." she said. " I am not yet an
announced candidate , much less the
elected nominee ofthe party." ·
Sounding like the Coid War-era
Ronald Reagan whose name she
invoked, Mrs. Dole spoke expansive ly about the immediate need for
a missile-defense sys tem.
But at the possible expense of edu·
cation funding?
"If indeed our country is vulner·
abje to ·rogue nations developing
nuclear weapons that can strike the
United States, then there's not going
to be much opportunity for education.
We have to protect ourse lves- that 's
first ," she said. .
She licked off her travels as Cabinet secretary and with the Red
Cross: to aviation talk s in Beijing :
labor talks with Poland 's Solidarity
union; and to the Croatian· Bosnian

Friday

Weather

Mrs. Dole talks
tough
during
chat
·
•
at Naval Academy
By SANDRA SOBIERAJ
Associated Press Writer
ANNAPOLIS, Md . - Elizabeth
Dole talked tough: Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic "ought to
be labeled a war criminal" and President cii nton tnust "use all the pow.er necesSa~Y ·• to win in Kosovo.
When a mi,dshipman•stood to ask
whether she would risk her own family's blood in that faraway region, she
stammered a yes.
Mrs. Dole went to the U.S. Naval
Academy on Wednesday. night to
· prove her mettle on foreign policy
and earn a more se rious look from
campaign donors.
Later' today. the fdrmer American
.Red Cross president departs -as a

Thursday, Aprll15 , 1999

Po!'l'eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Comics
Editorials

'

8·10
11
2
3

Soorta

4&amp;!

Weather

3

f

Lotteries
OHIO
Plck3: 3-2-4; Plck4: 7-6-4-7

Buckeye 5: 9·16-23-33-37
W,YA
Dally J: 4-1-2; Dally 4: 8·2-0-0
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publiahina Co.

During testimony by State Highway Patrol Sgt. Paul Pride , it was noted al discrepancy and di ~mi ssed the case . As ahernati vcs. he cuuld have al so
the report Pride was using differed from the one presented by the prosecu· gra nted a con tinuan ce or provided the other report w· Grate 's auumey.
.
· The question remains: Why were there two different wreck report&gt; ' Tc•
tion to the defense during the discovery process.
. The patrol report indi cated both men were cited on charges of reckless. answer that question, DeLay has sc heduled a !T'ecting with pro&gt;ecutor&gt; .
The case was origi nall y handl ed by the Me1gs County Prosecutor' s Office
operation and that Riggs was cited for ni:J motorcycle endorsement, whi le
Grate was cited for expired registration..
but was referred to special rroseetnor Ke vin Rings. a former Washmgton
The report possessed by Grate's auorney had a question mark written in · County proseeutor, after Assi stant Me~gs Coun ty Prosecuiing Attorney Chuck
the spaces reserved for citations, but was othe\'wise identical to the patrol Kni gh t, who presented the case 10 a grand jur)'. "' ked to be excused be ~au;c.
wreck report.

·

Visiting Judge Thomas DeLay of Jackson County noted·il was a materi•

he had rcprescnlcd Riggs in an unrelat ed L' l \ il matter.

Shell opts
to act on
retention
proposal

The sixth annual Racine Area
Community Organization's Flower
Festival will be Saturday,April24, 10
a. m. to 6 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
Racine.
··
The day will start with a parade at
10 a.m. and anyone •wanting .information about the parade can call Marilyn Powell at 949-2676. Entrants
should be at the old fire department
annex at9: 15 a. m. and line up willbe
at 9:30a. m.
·
The crowning of the festival queen
will be .at noon on the stage at the
park. A queen will be chosen from the
senior class at Southern High School.
Stage entertainment will he the
Midnight Cloggers at II a.m., Steve
and Beverly Pottmeyer at. I2:30p.m.,
the Backporch Swing Band at 2
p .m.. Mike Hemmelgarn at 3:30 ·
p.m .. followed by True Country at
4:30 p,m. Hemmelgarn will also do·
a balloon show for children after his
stage performance.
Flowers can be purchased from
area flower growers by the flat , pot
or ·basket. For booth information,
contact Lillian Weese at949-2401 or
Kri sta Smith at Home Nati onal Bank
at 949-2210.
··
There will be craft, games and

By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. Shell Chemical's Pom1 Pleasant Poly·
ester Plant will proceed with a $60
million reten tion project, after mem·
ber&gt; of the Mason County Commission signed an indllcernent resoluti on

. Thu rsday for the issuance of revenue
bonds .
The project will mclude updating
equipmen t that wi II all ow the plant to
compete globa ll y. Bob Bowen. Shell
plant manager. said thi s update is
"absolutely criuca l. "
Of Shell 's four worldwide plan Is
produc~g PET . the local plant has
the oldest equi pment and and &lt;is the
most ineffecti ve. Technology used at
the Poin t Pleasant plant was iOJiiated
and owned hy Goodyear whe10 Shell
took over at the plant.
P.E.T. is a grow ing business.
BowCn ~aid . hut more companieS
going into thC husiness a'c driving

the pmfit dow ~ . In 1995. P.E.T was
selli ng for 85 ce nts per poundc but
now sells for 38 ce nts. Wi th ·older ·
technology. Shell is paying 4 cents
per pound in add1lional

Mike Hemmelgarn
food boo th s starting at 10 a.m., and
during the day, the Carmel United
Methodist Church youth group will
have children's games. A kiddie trac-

&lt;:O ~ t s

that

would he eli minaicd with ·an equip·
' ment update.
·

Bowen said at the prcs~nt ·lime.
ior pull will be held on the basketball
the lo&lt;al Shell plant ca nn ot survive
court at 2:30 p.m.
In the event of rain. the festival against ils compet itors. The upgrade
will be held at Southern High Schoof. · would make it the strongest of Shell 's
four worldwide plants and secure its ·
ex istence in Mason County. Shell
now employ s 376 locally.

Voinovich pressing government to
make decision on road funding
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Clinton administration offered 'no
hints about its intentions as a deadline loomed for deciding whether 10
appeal a court ruling that threate~ed
to disrupt planned .road construction
in several states.
The head of the Federal Highway
Administration told inquiring senators Thursday that debate between
several agencies was still going on as
officials tried to determine whether
fighting (he ruling or allowing it to
stand was the beuer course of action.
"We're trying to sort through all
that," Administrator Kenneth Wykle
· told a Senate subcommittee led by
Sen. George Voinovich, H. -Ohio.
The case, filed by t~. Environmental Defense Fund , struck d6wn a
rule allowing road projects to retain
federal funding even when .commu nities fall out 'o f com pliance with air
pollution standards before construction begins.

.

Th e case was dismis sed shortly after lunch foll owing a meeung betwee n
the judge and attorneys in chambers .

Racine's
Flower ·
Festival
set for
April24

Pentagon . t~
By ROBERT BURNS
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon
is preparing to ask President Clinton
for authority to activate as many .as
33,000 reserve forces in support of
the Kosovo conflict, and the president
is likely to approve the request, government officials said today.
"The request has not come to him
(Clintmi), but the Pentagon is making
plans for it," one offici.al said.
Defense Secretary WiUiam Cohen
is'likely to present the request to Clinton elll1y-next week , the officials said,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
It will include up to 25,000 Air
Nati onal Guard members in units that
fly aerial refueling missions both.
from the United States and from
Europe:
Some civil -affairs specialists from
the Army Reserve are likely to be

to·mistrial in assault case

Bowen added most of the engi·
neering work has been done, and' the
project will proceed within the next

,
.
· Members of the Senate's sub- Apri'l6 identified the 10 communit ies
two month s.
committee on tran spurt ation and on the initial-impact li st as Atlanta:
John Stump, anomeywith Steptoe
infrastructure pressed for an appeal. Monterey and Santa Barbara. Calif.;
and
·Johnso n of Charle~t(ln , said the
" If thi s cou rt decision stands, high- Ashland and Paducah, Ky.; Raleigh
. way projects will come to a stand· and Winston-Salem, N .C.: Kn oxvi ll e count y commi ss ion will serve as the
still." Voinovic h said. "Th~re are a and Memphi s, Tenn.; and Billings, "conduit' '· tu issue the tax-exempt.
lot of people in the country that are Mont., but the highway administra- private activity bonds for a portion of
preuy worried about it. "
ti on could not fully verify that on the $60 million. He :idded there will
Sen . James lnhote, R-Okla, said it Thursday. A spokeswoman said offi- be no obliga11on. cost or liabili ty to
is imperative that the Clinton ad min - cials famili ar with the issue thought the cou nty.
" It 's n w5n-win situatiOn for everyistration appeal the decision.
all but Billings may belong on the
one."
Stump sa id .
The Environmental Prote ct ion list.
Abo
anending with Bowen and
Agen cy said th ere would be an
·'Stum
p
were
Tom Way. Mason Counannouncement today. the deadlin e for
The Ohio Department of Transty EconomiC Development Authorideciding whether 10 appeal.
portatiOn sa id the state was . not in
The full impact of last month 's jeopardy of los ing any money ty cxccuti'T director. and Bob Crooks
ruling was not immediately clear. because its projects complied with of Shell.
Wykle said $100 million worth of the Clean Air Act without re lying on
Comm issio ner Phyllis Arthur
fundin g for I0 cities would be atrisk , the "grandfathering" provision struck
made
the motion to s1g n the induce with the possibility of endangering at down by the court .
ment reso!Uiion. with rhc vote· being
least $500 million more for 84 proun animo us.
jects.
A graup r.cpr.csenting ro.ad huildcrs ·
"We rcallv need Shell Chemicl l,"
However, hi s age ncy could not predic ted the decision could lead to said Cmnmiss10i1er Ri ck Handley.
immediately provide a list of those 84 160,000 lost jobs if it's allowed to "It 's one of the.biggest employer&gt; in
projects. An internal memo dated stap.d.
th e county."

ask for call-up of over ~0,000 reserve forces

included in the call: up, the official s
said.
The need for reserve forces is
linked to NATO 's decision to expand
the air war by addin g 300 or more
U.S. aircraft and two battalions of
Anny Apache heli copters .
Officials said the Pentagon also is
preparing to issue a "stop loss" order
that would prevent active,duty troops
from leavi ng th.e military during the
Kosovo crisis. This is meant to limit
the need for additional reservi sts.
A Defense Department official
said that while authority to call up as
many as 33,000 would be ·so ught , a
smaller number may actually be
ordered to active duty. He said Cohen
had not yet settled on a specific number.
If approved by Clinton as expected, the call -up would be the biggest
since more than 200,000 reservists

were activated during the Persian
· Gulf War.
•
The U.S. military relies heavily on
reservi sts, the citizen soldiers, . for
almost any large operation. Many of
the Air Foree refueling aircraft in the
Balk ans already are operated by
members of the Air National Guard
who volunteered for duty. Nine Air
Guard refueling wings from nine
states already are participating in the
NATO missions, as are K(,:- 135 refucling units from fiv e A.ir Force
Reserve wings in five states .
The call -up of additional forces
would follow a major buildup of t,J.S.
and other NATO aircraft in the elTon
to halt Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic's campaign against ethnic
Albani ans in Kosovo province.
At NATO headqu arters ioday,
offi cials were pressed for additional
informati on on a confusing series of

in cidents Wednesday in which four
In re•)mk. Thursday. Clinton said
Kosovo refugee convoys reportedl y NATO had no alternative hutto precame under attack: NATO ack nowl- vail in thi&lt; war. Ceding Kosovo to
edged that it was responsible for one M1loscvic. the president said. would
attack nort h of the tow n of Djakovi- mean "turning Kosovo into a li fe less
ca. and it apologized for the mi'stak e. wasteland" and would mark a historic
NATO spokesman Jatm e Shea . setback for democracy in Europe.
under questioning by repo rters. sa1d
Clinton also said the mistaken
he could add no new •nformat ion.
NATO attack Wednesday on a
Shea also said that NATO's homb- refugee convoy in Kosovo that killed
ing l11ursday night was one Df the . dozens of civilians was a .regrettable
most succ.ess ful of the campa1g n, 'error that shows thafmodcrn warfare
whkh began March 24. He said a :'is not a business of perfection."
wide array of military targets were
" It is also inevitable in a confl iet
struck throughout Yugoslavia. 1ndud- of thi; kind. with planes travchng in
.ing surface-to-air missile si tes, radars. high speeds . doing the best to fulfi ll
an ammuniti on bunker and air fields . · their mi ssion, .. Clinton said. "And if
The spokesman also reponed thai the requirement is that, nothing like
Yugoslav naval vessels in port in this can ever happen, then we're say- .
Mont"negro have been firing artillery ing it 's OJ&lt;. wllh us if Mr. Milosev ic
at NATO aircraft. But he sa id NAlD · displaces over a million Kosovars.
so far has not attacked any &lt;)f' the kills and rapes thousands upon thouships.
"'nd' of thc·m ...

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Friday, Aprll16, 1999

Commentary

P~~ge

'F.stab[IS/Ucl in 1948

-2

Frlday,~l18,1808

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.11112·2158 • Fax: IHI2·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

DIANE HILL

Controller

n. Sentinel w.r~c.,.. ,.ttet.lo the edH« trom ,...,.. on • bNMd~• oflopU Shott ,.,.,.. (30/J won:t. 01 M..) haw ft. bMt ella,_ ot I»Jtfll pubi/Mt«&lt;
ryp.d
pNr.rr.d .nd aU may tNi ~lt«J. E.ch ahould lncluda • •lgn•turt,
Mld,.... 1md dayfkn• phon• numb.K. Spflclfy • dat• H th.r.'a •
to • p,..
vfou. arllct• or lfllt• ""'' to ,_.,.,. to th• «lllor, TM Sentinel, fff Court Sl,
Pom.roy, Ohio U1a, M, FAX to 7«J.992·2157.

lett.,..,..

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Guest column

Toward a society for all ages
By REP. JOHN CAREY
As we enter the 21 century, the Umted States does so wtth nearly 4 mtl·
lion indtvtduals age 65 and older This generauon is the last generation to
fight tn a World War, a generatton wtth the only rematntng living memories
of the Gre•t Depression and a generatton the lived wtthout, among other
things for the most part, computers U S Americans 65 and older have first
person knowledge of Htroshtma. life wtth and wtthout the threat of a Cold
War and the invention of the televisiOn
It ts after all, the generation of persons 65 and older that' have lived
through a maJority of those historical evenis that shape the Umted States and
the world today
Our older generation has seen advance• in every aspect of life and has
adapted to these changes time and time again As we reflect on the last cen·
tury, tits imperaltve that we remember the tmpact that these tndtvtduals have
had and continue to have on our ltves. Indeed, what would 1962 or 1998 be
like without John Glenn's trips to
space? Whtle Glenn has had a
very high-profile impact on the
United States m the past and the
P,.esent, there are millions more
hke htm across the country in
every stale and city of the U S.
that continue to shape America.
Since 1963, every May has
been a ttme to celebrate and honor
those 65 and older during Older
Americans Month
This year, through the Oh10
Department of Aging Ohio has a
host of events to honor our elders.
For example, May 18 has been
designated Senior Citizen Day in
Ohto. Around the state, celebrations will be held at community.
centers and senior centers.
On May II, the 31st Annual
Ohio Governor's Conference on
,Agtn wtll be held at the Aladdin Shnners' Complex in Columbus. This
y!Sr'
keynote speaker ts 60 Mmutes commentator and author Andy Rooney.
Als , he conference wtll mclude informatton on Medtcare, intergeneration~l v lunteer opportuntttes, and support for care givers
\,be Senior Citizen Hall of Fame induction ts May 26. For the last 22
years, Ohio has honored those oh)er Ohtoans who have worke~ hard to co~­
tinue to shape the world around them. The award places spectfic emphasts
on accomplishment in the later years of h fe. This year's group represents
·achievements m public servtce, health services, volunteerism, literature and

Ohio ranks 17th
among states in the
65-plus population.
Nearly 13.4 percent
of our population is
attributable to those
over65. Ofthose
individuals, approximately 176,000 older
Ohioans are ac!ive in
the WOrkforce.

1

mUSIC.

•

Ohio ranks 17th among states in the 65-plus population. Nearly 13 4 percent of our population is attnbutable to those over 65. Of those indtvtduals,
approxtmately 176.000 older Ohtoans are acttve tn the work force. Furthermore, many older Ohioans acttvely volunteer in vanous walks of life. The
statew1de program STARS, Seniors Teachmg and Reachtng Students, whtch
focuses on tovolvtog sentor ctltzens as tutors and mentors to elementary
schools boa.~ts more than 400 volunteers in 34 schools throughout the state
On a national level, 45% of 65· 74 year olds and 34% of those 75 and older
volunteer more than four hours a week
Of much concern to the 39 mtllion Americans that are covered by Medicaid, there is now a way to help keep track of medical records/btlls. As part
of the state's Fraud Reduction Network, the Ohio Department of Aging is
distnbuting free forms and/or envelopes' that feature printed information,
ledgers for hstmg dates, servtces recetved, deducttbles and amounts paid and
various important phone numbers. Contact the ODA's Elder Rights Hotline
for further information, 1·800-447·8477
The federal Medtcare program has begun dtsclosmg informatton on
Medicare HMO's and the quality of care and services provided. These consumer-satisfaction audits can help rate the &lt;wality of an HMO for new users.
The mformalton can be found at www medtcare.gov Wtthm the next few
months, Medtcare wtll open a toll -free number.
The tmpact of older Ohioans ts felt at home, in the work force, in schools
and tn vanous aspects of public servtce. As May approaches take the It me to
think of how you can thank and celebrate the contributions of those 65 and
older during Older Americans Month
John Carey represents the114th District In the Ohio Houa•ol Repre·

aantstlvea.

Letter to the editor
More to yard sale than a yellow flag
This wnttng is rcgardtng the Annual 6 Mtle Yellow Flag Yard Sale being
heli throughout Pomeroy and Mtddleport on Fnday and Saturday, Apnl 30
and May I. As many of you already know this is the second yearfor this particular sale. We had a total of 75 sale locatiOns conducted last year. It was
considered to be a great success as tl drew many people from several communtltes.
The purpose of this sale is to support and promote a yard sale event exclusively for the restdeots, bust nesses, and ctltzens of the communities. The
most important element of thts Sale is the ADVERTISING which alerts your
buyers from several counties that there is a community·wide yard sale taking place as well as the Jocatton of YOUR sale.
We have had several telephone calls regarding the reuse of the flags
which were purchased for last year's sale "We already have a flag, why buy
another one?" We feel tt ts very important to clanfy this potnt for the benefit of those participating in the sale.
Your $5 registration fee pays for a yellow flag, a tip sheet, a hsting on a
locator map (whtch ts dtstnbuted prior to the sale), and a listing on a large
locator map in the newspaper reaching several thousand buyers. In addition
there is advertising on the radio. TV, and out-of·town newspaper bulletin
boards.
So the answer to your question is YES you may use your old flag from
last year. We would appreciate it if you would, as it will help keep the cost
of this non-profit event to a mtnimum, but. .. you sit II must register and contribute your $5 to be included in the advertising and be shown on the loca·
tor map. Remembering that it is your regtstration that pays for the advertis·
ing and makes it possible for everyone to have a successful sale. If everyone
used their old flag and did not register, we could not cover the cost of the
advertising. Therefore, future sales would not be possible.
Thank you for joining in and supporttng your community-wide yard sale.
Wishing everyone a great sale.
Myron Dufflale!, praaldent
Middleport Community AaaoelatiO!'

The war that's not really awar
frustration and despair. We have fast food franBy lan Shoalea
chises watting to be airlifted into Kosovo Once
What have we learned from
the Kosovars taste a char·broiled cheeseburger,
the war so far? Well, first of au;
they ' II drop their ancient hatreds ltke a bad habit.
tt's not really a war. It's more
We can't lose.
like a really loud civics lesson.
This is no different than the Monica or 0 J
From the enemy's point of view,
, things. The body count may be a little btl higher,
of course, it's a war, but then
and Mtlosevic is more infamous than famous, but
again the Serbs aren't really our
other
than that, the same pundits are being trotted
enemy. They're more like an
out on the same chat shows with the same line of
unruly child, .who must,be taught
patter. It's reassuring. The drone is restful. We
a really loud civics lesson.
Will we use ground forces? Probably, but don't need to pay •altentiun, just follow drowsily
they're tn no danger, absolutely no
danger. Certainly, three of them have
already beet\ captured (even though
they weren't technically in a combat
situation), but we consider them to be
more like chtldren who strayed too far
from the ptcnic. Real soldiers are
never captured. injured or killed .
That's old·fashioned We do things
differently now. Today's soldiers are
more h ke tour guides.
.
Besides, we have tools They can
be programmed to tell the difference
between a Serb and an Albaman, at
five thousand yards, in the teeth of a
hurncane, or the'dead of night. We
have lttlle tiny hehcopters that can
drop a bomb on a Serb shoe, if we
want that. We have tanks as big as
Rhode Island, and they're invisible.
You don't even know they're there
until they stan to move, at which time
prerecorded announcements (featur·
ing the voices of Susan Sarandon,
William Shatner and H~ Sltearer)
polttely warn bystanders o gel out of LoQ-~
the way, before they are rushed pain·
lessly under the rugged ABS plastic
treads. We have airplanes that never
need to land, with bombs that never
fail. We can shoot out the eye of a die- .._ _ _.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
tator on a postage stamp from a
'
bunker in New Jersey if we have to.
in President Feelgood's empty footsteps,
We have also drafted very polite letters to be
Why didn't we go in before? Well, ethnic
tssued to every refugee, which recommend van- cleansing is just a matter of opinion. Our optnton
ous approaches to oral hygtene, impart some is -- it's bad. It's a recently arrived-at opimon,
handy English phrases, and provide handy however. We had to wait for the studies to come
Instructions on how to starve with dignity For the in to see whether what is occurring ts actually
Serbs, we have drafted polite letters of misinfor· genocide, or JUSt plain old senseless slaughter,,
mation, whtch will confuse them utterly, and When is sex sex? When is murder murder? That's
make them throw down their useless weapons tn for the commtsstons to figure out.

Nation's industrial output increases modestly

Ohio weather

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economic• Writer

for

WASHINGTON - Output at the
natton 's factones, mtoes and uttltttes
posted a shght overall increase m
M¥ch as production at auto plants
fell Construcuon of new homes and
apartments Wll$ down as well. falhng
for the second straight month.
The Federal Reserve reported
today that tndustnal output was up
0 I percent tn March wtth the
strength commg from a btg JUmp tn
energ~ucuon at utthty plants
The attvance was far below a 0.3 per·
cent advance tn February and reflected dechnes mproducuon of autos and
apphances
Manufactunng output was
unchanged from the February level
while production in the mtntng sec·
tor, whtch tocludes ml productton,
was down 0 7 percent
The Commerce Department satd
housmg constructiOn fell I 3 percent
tn March. dtpptog to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of I 77 mtllu)n
umts Housmg stans had fallen I ~
percent m February after a 12-year
high of' I 82 mtllton units tn January
Taken 1ogcthcr, the report s on
tndustrtal actiVIty and hou stog
reflected an economy sttll operatmg
tn surpnStngly robust fashton, gtven
that the current cxpanston ts the
longest tn peacettme ht story
Analysts are lookmg for growth to
slow as the year progresses If eco·

•

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Cloudy

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Roil

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Snow

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Wet, windy conditions
forecast into weekend
i
ay The Aasoclated
Preas

today.
You might be thinking, "This is all too rich for
my blood " But then again, what is rich? What is
blood? Leave those questions to the lawyers. In
the meantime, it's time to shed some bucks and
watch the blood (not ours) flow
Why? It's the right thtng to do,
Copyrlght1tH NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

sus on whether or how to do it. GOP
By IRS estimate, It
leaders had said they'd settle on a
plan tn 1998 and act on it this year, takes 11 hours and 34
minutes for the aver·
but they didn't and they won't.
The tax code is built into the age taxpayer to preAmerican economic system, and it
would take ttme to butld it out, pare the basic Form
assummg the political agreement 1040 for Income taxes.
and will to do it
Itemize deductions and
Steve Forbes, the Repubhcan It's another 4 hours, 28
presidential candidate who made the ,
flat tax his issue and pushed it, minutes. With capital :
briefly, to the top of the campaign gains, add 8 hours sad
agenda in 1996, ts running for the 41 minutes. Figuring ·
2000 nomination, still advocating a
simple, 17 percent tax. This time, his taxes on Interest and
agenda ts broaaer, an!l while he says dividends takes an
there is broadenmg support 'for tax additional hour and 12
simplification, he acknowledges it is
minutes.
not an easy issue to sell because people mistrust what pohticians tell tions
An earher Fox News poll reflectthem about taxes. "It gets to the
ed
,the doubts about targeted tax
feeling that it's hke the weather,"
Forbes said. "That no matter what breaks. In that survey, 62 percent
you say, not much is going to be said that when Clinton talks about
targeted tax cuts, they think it means
done about it."
a
cut for someone else, not for them.
He said it wt!l be a presidential
An
NBC News-Wall Street Journal
campaign issue, and there will be
poll
showed 53 percent gf Ameri·
action to stmplify the system wtthin
cans think they are paying more than
four or five years.
A poll conducted for The Associ- their fair share in taxes. Forty-five ,
ated Press showed 66 percent of percent said their tax share is about
Americans think the system is too right.
complicated, compared with less
EDITOR'S NOTE - Waltsr R.
than half in a survey three years ago.
Meara,
vice praalclant and 8J*)Ial
More than half in the poll late last
correapondant lor The ~IIOclated
month hked the idea of a flat tax Preae, haa reported on Waehlngbut only a thtrd said they'd be will- ton and natiOnal politic• lor mora '
ing to give up their current deduc- than 30yeara.

'

DCC raises money in impeachment's wake ·.
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The impeachment of President Ointon may
turn out to be a boon for the Democrats -· at least
' tn the House. First·quarter fund-raising results are
tn for the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee, and they've just set a new record for
similar ttme-penods by raistng more than $6 milbon. This tS especially significant because it
comes in a non-election year, when·donations are
normally harder to come by.
Democrats would love to attribute the uptick to
voter support for their proposals on Social Securi·
ty and health·care reform. More likely, the gains
resulted from disgust over the GOP's handling of
impeachment. Sources say the biggest gains came
from direct-mail solicitations and a dramatic
mcrease in small donations -- the kind politicians
love, because it suggests that their core voters are
motivated.
' Already the money is being used to lure attractive candidates into the ring with promises that
they 'II have backing from Washi.ngton should they
run into financial trouble. House Democrats have
fixed their sights on at least a dozen vulnerable
Republicans, chief among them impeachment
manager Rep. James Rogan, R-Cahf.
The riioney windfall might also have something
to do with the new chairman. Rep. Patrick
Kennedy, D·R.I., is the new head of the DCCC,
and he's shown no reluctance w use the family
name in pursuit of big bucks. For example, donors
who pledge $100,000 or more to the organization
are promtsed, among other things, a weekend at
the famous Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port,
Mass.

AccuWeather"

That's why we fund studies.
The stacks of reports, by the way, are exactly
equal to the weight of the bodies buried in mass
graves. This is the result of a bipartisan effort. Not
only that, many natiOns worked tog.ether with
NATO to allow the beasts responstble to roam
freely We encouraged them to wear really mce
suits. But now it's ttme to kill them. Or bring
them back to the table. It's all the same to us.
Some say if we go in, we'll be there for 20, 30,
40 years. Then again, hasn't NATO already been
there for 40 years? That's why we're all ':' safe

Congress complains but doesn't act to fi~ complex tax cod'
An AP Newe Analyllle
middle-tncome Americans who
By WALTER R. MEARS
invest in proposed new personal
AP Special Correapondenl
retirement accounts.
WASHINGTON (AP) - This
All those changes for specific
being income tax day, Congress is purposes and groups would add to
once again chorusing complaints the more than 2.8 million words in
about the burdens, complexities and, the tax code, tnple the Bible, the
by Republican accounting, e&lt;ceS· complexity critics note.
sive rates of the system it created
In the past two years, Congress
As usual, the talk will yield to voted 1,260 changes in the system.
inaction on sweeping reform- and reflected in 11 new forms and 177
another round of targeted tax breaks revised ones issued by the IRS for '
will make tl more complicated next 1998 income taxes.
time.
By IRS esttmate, it takes II hours
President Clinton wants an array and 34 minutes for the average taxof them, Republicans want fewer ' payer to prepare the basic Form
breaks and across-the-board rate 1040 for income taxes, Itemize
cuts, too. The GOP budget seeks deductions and it's another 4 hours,
about $800 billion in tax reductions 28 minutes. With capital gains, add
over t he next decade, up to $15 btl· 6 hours and 41 minutes. Figunng
lion of them next year. Details are to taxes on interest and dividends takes
come.
an additional hour and 12 minutes.
So the 1999 debate will be about
That's why more than half the
how much to cut, and for whom, taxpayers filing an estimated 126.1
without the push for a simplifying million returns this year paid to get
overhaul the Republicans had said them prepared by tax professionals.
was coming.
And it is why the complexity
At the top of the GOP list now is complaints are a fixture. There is a
an end to the marnage tax penalty, Republican effort in Congress to fix
which causes about 21 million cou- it by decree - scrap the current
pies to pay more on their joint income tax code at the end of 2003,
income than they would if they were to be replaced by a simpler system, a
stngle. Proposals to do that are flat tax or consumption tax.
geared to income, meantng new
That deadline is a fallback; the
instructions and tax forms.
earlier one was the end of 2001.
Chnton wants targeted tax breaks
The ·later one won't succeed,
for child care, senior care, education either. Democrats oppose the idea of
and more. The administration has ending the graduated income tax,
just proposed $300 tax credits for and there is no Republican consen-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

saturday, Apr. 17

The Daily Sentinel

•

It's not quite the Lingot the favor.
"It shook me that (Janklow) would do that,"
coln Bedroom, but so far it
seems to be working.
Daschle told a local gathenng recently. "Linda
Republicans needn 'I
and I treasure it as if it was yesterday. It's someworry about the lure of
thing l will never forget and can never really
Hyannis Port. They've got
repay."
But repay tt he dtd\ Last fall, Qaschle managed
their owilplate of perks for
six-figure donors and still
to slip in a land-transfer provision to the giant
hold
a commanding
omnibus spending bill that kept the government
money lead over the
running. Without publtc hearing, Daschle wrote
Democrats. In the last election cycle, congression- language that turned over 200,000 acres of riveral Republicans raised $97 million, more than dou- front property to the state of South Dakota. Tllis
ble the record $41 million brought in by the ange~ several local American Indian tribes, who
say the land historically belongs to them.
DCCC.
QUOTE TO NOTE -• •Rep. Bill Archer, R·
ODD COUPLE -- Washington is full of odd
couples, folks whose different political outlooks Texas, is a Washington veteran and one of the city's
would seem to preclude a strong friendship. For premier evangelistS when it comes to tax cuts. But
example, there's the unlikely alliance between he might want to brush Qp OJI some basic math. •
hard-partying Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., and the
It came as no ~ufl!dse when he launched a wei!·
devoutly religious Sen. Orrin Hatch, R·Utah,
timed crusade this week to give our men and
You can add another couple to this list: A con· women in Kosovo some relief from the April IS
servative Republican governor, and a liberal 5en· tax deadline. A hurry-up measure introduced Mon·
ate Democrat "Wild Bill" Janklow of South day would waive all income taxes on "hazard
Dakota, and Senate Minority Leader Tom pay" given to soldiers in Yugoslavia Overseas
Daschle, D-S.D., have known each other since troops would also receive an automatic extension
they both came into polittcs the same year, 1978. on their filing deadline, and an exemption from
Daschle revealed recently that their frien!;lship paying excise taxes on long-distance phone calls. .
was cemented in an unlikely way: by scandal. A
Archer was typically patriotic when announc·
few years ago, Daschle and his wife, Linda, were ing the bilL "Our men and women serving
accused of misusing their influence in a crash Kosovo area 'should be focused on one thing
investigation involving a charter airline run by a one thing ohly ·- keepmg themselves safe from
top contributor.
.
harm and achieving our mission."
Urn, isn't that two things? Perhaps Archer
Janklow wrote a letter to the New York Times
would
be wise to consult an accountant when il
on Daschle's behalf, supporttng the senator even
though the scandal might have helped put the seat comes to his own tax~.
into Republican hands. Daschle said h~ never for- COpyright , _ , UnHed F~aturt 8Y!1d1CIItt, Inc.

nom1c activity does not slow on tts

ed at 80 I percent of capaetty tn confidence and the lowest unem·
March, the lowest operaung rate tn ployment rates m nearly three
decades
,
nearly seven years
The production of consumer
On the houstng fron t, analysts
goods was flat m March as a rebound bchcve those factors wil l mean onl y
tn energy productton by uuliues was
a sldwdown Irom the Stalmg' pace of
offset·by dcclmes mother areas Pro· last year
dudton of autos and appltances fell
Davtd Orr. chtef cconom1st for
from elevated levels reached to Feb- Ftrst UniOn tn Charlotte, N C , satd
ruary. Output of consumer chcmtcals ·• the dropoff m housmg demand would
was up for the second stratght month, reflect not only the fact that mortgage
followmg a long penod of dechne rate s have stopped fallmg sharply but
smce last sprmg
also the tncreases tn gasoline pnces
Economtsts beheve that overall Falling mortgage rates and gaso ltne
pnces were credued last year for
1ndu stnal product 10 n wtll conttoue to
be under pressure thts year as Amer- he lptn g boost consumer conlidence
tcan manufacturers struggle to recov- to record htghs
Orr satd butldtn g "acuvtty has
er from a global economtc cnsts that
has cut sharply mto expo"'
been so frenetic that most tn the
Weakness overseas has been off- tndustry wtll welcome some modcr·
set, however, by strong domest 1c all on •Both labor and matenal s have
demand as consumers spend wtth gotten to cnlttall y shan suppl y sttu·
abandon. reflecllng htgh consumer at tons "
Fmanc tal markets saw nothtng to

Lottery. resu Its

wasc~~evt~~~~.d(~:~'"-;aJh;:~

numbers drawn m Thursday ntght 's
Buckeye 5 drawmg and tt's worth
$100.000, the Ohto Lottery satd
Tlie wmnmg ucket was purchasctl
at Famtly Pantry m Toledo.
Sales m Buckeye 5 totaled ,
$346,595 Players wtll share
$202,596
There were 129 Buckeye 5 tickets
wtth four of the numbers. and each ts
worth $250 The 3,445 ttckets showtog three of the numbers are each
worth $10, and the 35 ,896 ttcket s
show mg two of the numbers are each
worth $1
The Ohio Lottery wtll ' pay out
$992,698 to Ptck 3 wtoners Sales
totaled $1,319,824 50.
. In Ptck 4, players wagered
$407.561 50 and wtll share. $181 ,100
The J8Ckpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto drawmg ts $8 mtllton

·

worry about m today 's reports The
Dow Jones mdustnal average, wht ch
has set records tn the past four trad·
mg sesstons. was up about 15 potnts
at the start of tradmg today
BUtldtn g permits dropped a 5tz·
able 6 percent m March, the btggcst
declt ne m four years. smce an 8 2 per
cent fall tn January 1995 Permtt
apphcatwns had been down 2 I per·
cent 10 February
The drop 10 construcllon starts
reflected a small 0 I perce nt dtp •n
st ngl e-famtly homes. whtch fell to an
annual rate of I 4 mtllt on umts
Apartment construction was down
5 9 percent to an annual rate of

365,000 umt s
Mortgage rate s had htt a I 0month htgh of 7 II percent m mtd·
March But smce lime they have
retreated a btt.

Meigs announcements
Yard sale planned
The Rutland Ladtes Auxthary ts
sponsonng a yard sale mstde the Rutland Volunteer Ftre Department
bUtldtng on Apnl 24 begmmng at 8
am Those wtth Items to donate are
asked to contact etther Leta Fetty,
742-4 102, or Stacy McKntght. 742·
83 11 All contnbutions wtll be apprect ated. Refreshments wtll be sold on
the sale date

22nd Street Church of God of
Prophecy, Pomt Pleasant W Va
There wtll be 12 stogmg groups rhe
love offenng wtll benefit upcommg
Bend Area Gos pel jubtlee
Songfest planned
A songfest will be held at the old
Dexter Church. May 15. 7 p m
Smgers are mv1 led to attend and par·
t1c1patc m the ser v1ce

: Wet and chtlly condtttons wtth gusty wtods are predicted for the week- own, the Federal Reserve ts expectImmunization clinic set
Recipes needed
end m Ohio.
ed to help the process along by ratsRectpes
are
needed
by
the
Mtd·
The Metgs County Health Depart: Clouds wtll blanket the state tomght and scattered showers are hkely for • ing mterest rates at the first hmt that
dleport
Ftrst
Department's
Ladtes
ment wtll hold an tmmumzatwn cltn·
the enttre state, the Nat10nal Weather Servtce satd
ttghtlabor markets and nstog demand
Auxthary
for
a
cookbook
they
are
tc Tuesday, I to 7 p m at tts office
• A cold front wtll bnng even cooler temperatures to Ohto on Saturday and are tnggenng mnationary pressures
pubhshmg
Those
to
rectpes
to
sub·
on
Memonal Dnve Children must be
Sunday Htghs won't be any warmer than 45 degrees and lows will regtster
So far on that score, heavy spend·
mtt
may
contact
Angte
Swtft
at
992accompanted
by a parent or lega l
~~ the 30s
tog by manufacturers on new plants
07112
or
they
may
be
matled
to
280
gu.
a
rdtan
Shot
records are to be tak
Some wet snow or flurries can be expected m nonhero Ohio
and equtpment has kept producuon
Broadway
St
,
Mtddlepon.
en
The record·htgh temperature for thts date at the Columbus weather sta· bottlenecks from occurring The Fed
!ton was 86 degrees to 189~ whtle the record low was 22 tn 1962 Sunset reported today that factones operat·
Office to be closed
Trustees to meet
tOnJght wtl1 be at 8 10 p m. and sunnse Saturday at 6:51 a.m
The
Planned
Parenthood
of
SouthThe Letart Townshtp Trustees wt!l
Weather forecast:
east
Ohw
offtces
wJII
be
closed
meet
Monday, 6 p m at the office
Tomght Mos tly cloudy wtth a chance of ram showers Lows near 40. West
Tuesday,
for
staff
trammg
Offices
butldmg
wmd 15 to 25 mph Chance of ram 40 percent
Sandy lannarelh, actmg mayor of Pomeroy, $100, dtsorderly by totoxSaturday Mostly cloudy wtth a chance of showers Htghs in the lower Mtddleport, processed 14 cases thts tcatton, $200, reststtng arrest. Tamrl\y wtll reopen on Wednesday at the reg·
ular scheduled Urnes
and mtd 50s Chance of ram 50 percent
week in Mtddleport Mayor's Court Scarfs, Mtddlepon, $25 and costs,
Saturday mght.. Cloudy with a chance of ram showers Lows 35 to 40
Ftoed were Thomas 0 . McKay allowtng dog to run loose, Max Gospel concerts set
Extended forecast:
Jr.• Mtddlepon. $100 and costs, cnm- Gary, Mtddlepon, $25 and costs,
The Joe Lester Famtly Butlders
Sunday Panly cloudy wtth a chance of showers Htghs tn the mtd 50s.
mal trespassmg, $200, assault , Ttm· open burmng; and Josh L Potts, ,,.Quartet and Glory land Behevers wtll
Monday Panly cloudy wtth a chance of showers Lows tn the lower 30s othy R. Cramer, Barberton, $465 and Pomeroy. $465 and costs, three days
appear m a gospel concert Apn I 24,
and htghs m the mtd 50s
costs and three days in jatl, DUI, $25, tn jatl. DUI, $25, no tat! ltghts
7
p m at Father's House Church,
Tuesday Partly cloudy wtth a chance of showers. Lows m the mtd 30s no se-~t belt, $200, posesston of drug
Forfemng bonds were Amy A Hanford , WVa A mtnt-jubliee wtll
and htghs m the upper 50s
parapRernalia; Betty J. Stanley, Mtd- Atkms, Ractne, $49. speed, $150
take place at 6 p m on 'May I at the
dlepon. $465 and costs, three day s- m fatlure to appear. Steven J Batey.
Jatl, DUJ, $200, reckless operation, Mtddleport, $60, failure to yteld,
$25 , no seat belt; Joy Cundtff, Mtd- Sherry L Walters, Franklin lnd ,
dlepon, $25 and costs, exptred tags, $51. speed, Sarah J. Cratg, Pomeroy,
Samuel C Wtlhams. Syracuse, $25 $60, tmproper backtog, and Debbte
and costs. defective exhaust, $25. fic- Cremeans, Mtddlcpon , $130, mentitious tags; Duane E Qualls ac mg threats
Cora Gnndley, Grove Ctty, dted Fnday. ;\pnl 16, 1999 m Veterans Memorial Exten'ded Care in Pomeroy
· ·Arrangements will be announced by the Ewtng Funeral Home, Pomeroy
The Alan Stone Construction Co , ChesterhtiL ts the contractor on a
I'G)
$437.000 shp repair project on State Route 124 near the junction wnh
Jlltl GJI!ritul, a.. eoq., J.an Dim.
Lebanon Townshtp Road 144 (Oewttt's Run). The project requtres closmg
SR 124 on Monday, contmumg for approxtmately 45 days Dunng the clo·
.,.... -- ji&gt;M! 74. - ·
sure. the offtcial detour wtll be state routes 7 and 248
DOUG'S FIRST MOVIE (0)
Ken Buckley, Ohto Department of TransportatiOn project supervtsor. says
SAT/SUN 1·20 &amp; 3·00
construction plans actually call for a 60-day closure, but the contractor has
UFE (R)
A btll sponsored by State Rep tea] SCenes and interfenng With the agreed to accelerate the project in order to reope~ the road sooner The com·
7:20 &amp; 8:30 DAILY
John Carey, R-Wellston, Introduced work of EMS personnel
pletron date on' the proJect ts June 4
to· help protect emergency medical
personnel, passed the Oh10 House of
"There have been specttic mct·
dents tn my district whtch have
Representattves on Wednesday
H.B, 137 would toclude EMS per· brought thts problem forward," Carey
A rwo-vehtcle accident on Coun· was ctted for fat lure to yteld half of
soonel tn the offense of dtsrupttog satd, "Some dtsruptmg metdents ty Road 18 (Kmgsbury) near the the roadway
public services and misconduct at an include standmg tn front of an EMS mtersectlon Wtth Bedford Townshtp
ANALVZE THIS (R)
vehtcle prevenung tl from leavmg the Road 150 (Murray) on Thursday
emergency
7:10. 8:10 DAI~Y
' Current Jaw provtdes protection to scene of an emergency, phystcally was mvesttgated by the Galha-Metgs
FRIDAY THRUTHiiiiiiii)AY
1:101
public safety agencies, such as police restraming an EMT or paramedtc as Post of the State Htghway Patrol.
MELOtBSON
NEVER BEEN
PAYBACK"
officers and firefighters. The legtsla- he or she attempts to admtmster EMS
7:00 &amp; 8:20 DAILY
WED. BARGAIN NIGHT
tion would also offer stiffer penalties treatment, making false reports of til·
MATINEES
SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:20
The 5 p m acctdent mvolved a
ALL SEATS
-.otl23
to those dtsruptlng emergency med- ness or injury tn order to lure EMS mtntvan driven byLester M Lewts,
~----~----------~~ personnel away from thetr statton, 52, 39473 Whtte Oak Road.
and cuttmg of telephone lines at an Pomeroy, and a pickup truck operatEMS statton.
ed liy Mtchael D Pratt. 39, 38561
(USPS li3·Ht)
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy, accordmg
Commun.IIJ Ntw1p1per Holcllnp. Jne.
·We need to address thts mcreas· to the report Both vehicles were
mg occurrence of people tnterfermg moderately damaged m the crash
1\ibhdled every dlcmoon, Monday th~
· fridly, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh10, by the
EMS personnel and thetr
with
The Meigs County Commissioners are preparing an application for
Ohio Ylllcy Pubhshins Company. Second cJau
Detatls on the acctdent were not
response to emergencies," Carey said
po.tap pend al Pomeroy, Oh1o.
funding in the amount of $260;000 to be submitted through the Ohio
Mtmbn: The lutoc1ated "Prtss and the Oh1o
"The vulnerabtltty of EMS personnel avatlable from the patrol today.
~Newsp~per Aaociahon
as well as thetr pattents has become although thF report noted that Prall
Rural HardshipGrant program funded through the Ohio Water Pollution
Poltlllllkr. Send 1ddress C:OiTOCtiOftS to The
Dtnly Sentmel, 111 Coon St., Pomeroy, Ohio
very clear Interference wtth these
Control Loan Fund (WPCLF), which is Ohio's Clean Water Act SRF
4.1769
acttvtttes sho11ld not be tolerated.
SUIJSCRIPTION RATES
,
Offenng protection is the least we can
ByC•.....,.ocM_R.,.te
program.
1
One Week ................................Sl-00
do"
Untts qf tbe Metgs County Emer·
One Mornh ................................ $8,70
gency Medtcal Servtce rec9rded SIX
One Ytar................................... $104.00
The planJied program will provide a combination of a grant/loan ,
SINGLE COPY PRICE
calls for asststance Thursday Unus
Dady. ....................................... 3S Cerlta
respondmg included.
' Subscribers not Cfesinna to pay the carrier may
depen.ding on household income, to those very low/low income
remit In advlllcc direct to Tbo Dilly Sentinel .on
CENTRAL DISPATCH
a tbne, lilt or 12 monlh bu11. Credit Will bo
households in Meigs County for the purpose of upgrading current septic
12 07 a m , East Second Street.
ainn camer each week. ,
Am Ele Power .......................39'b
Pomeroy, Todd Ackerson, t~eated at
No aubknption by mtll penn11tcd-m ueu
systems or installation of approved new systems in order to prevent ,
Akzo ······~·····•••••••••••••••• ...•••••••u•46
where home camer 11rv1ce 11 avadable.
the scene,
AmrTech
...............................
82'.1
Publ1sher re~ttrv~ the ••&amp;hi to AdJUst rJies dur~
ground water and/or soil co ntamination in unsewered areas of Meigs
12.15 p m., John Street, Syracuse.
Aeh 011 ..................................42'1.
Ina the IUbsctlpllon pendd. Sublalption rate
cbao~ may be implemented by chans!na the
AT6T ..............,......................56~
Adam Crouse, Veterans Memonal
County.
·
dunt10n of the aubacnplion
Bank One •.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••511~.
Hosp1tal;
7
Bob Even• ............................19 1.
MAIL SUIJSCRIPTION
10 45 p m.• Eagle Rtdge Road,
Borg-Warner ....................... 52"1.
lnalde Melp CouniJ
The Meigs C~unty Commissioners will hold a public informat.i onal
Racme,
motor vehtcle acetdent. JefBroughton ..............................9~.
13 \\\oeb.,..... ............... ..}27 30
fery
Roberts,
treated
auhe
scene.
Champion .................................&amp;
26 Weeks ...... , .................. ,$53.82
meeting on April 19, 1999 at 1:00 P.M. at the regular meeting of the
POMEROY
l2 Weeb ...........................St~.$6
Charm Shpe ...........................4'•
Ro,.. OWido Molp Countr
CIIY Holding ......................... ~.29
6.05 p.m., East Matn Street, BranMeigs ,&lt;;ounty Commissioners, Courthopse, Second Street, Pomeroy,
t3 Weeb .... ,...,.................. .$29.25
Feilaral Mogul ....................... 48~
don Grover, VMH, Central Dispatch
26 w..u............................ S$6.68
Ohio. Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April.l9, 1999
Olnnett...••••..........................70'· squad assiSted
l2 Wee(ls ......................... $109.72
Kmlrt ....................................1&amp;~.
RUTLAND
to provi~e public input on the activity being planned in this program. If
Kroger ,..................................57\
Reader Services
I
:
17
p.m
, volunteer ftre depanLande End ...........................37a,.
a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled, or taped
ment to Hysell Run Road, utthty pole
Ltd ..........................................41~
'
· Correction Polley
Oak Hill Flnl ............................18 ftre.
material,
assistive listening device, other due to a disability), please
Our ••In coooem In all llorleo 1110 be
ova .........................................42
SYRACUSE
accoraiO. lr yeu know or an error Jo a
One Valley ............................. ~.38
contact Gloria Kloes, Clerk, prior to April19, 1999 at 740-992-2895 '
11 ·08 p m , Minersville Htll , Zach
oiOry, &lt;all the neworoom at (740) "l·
PeopiN ................................ 24'1.
1
Young, Holzer Medtcal Center. Cen215!. We will &lt;heck
tnromatloo
in order U&gt; ensure that your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs
Prem Flnl .............................13 ' •
aod ltaba..,mctlooolfwamoted.
Roekweii ..............................47"- tral Dtspatch squad asststed
County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
RD/Shall ...............................55'•
•
N-s Department•
Seer• ......................;..............42'1.
: •: . Tilt m•l• number II "l-1155. Depart·
&amp;honey'I
2t.t
.... • mrnl exte•slon• are:
Veterans Memorllll
Written comments may be mailed prior to April 19, 1999 to the Meigs
FlratStar ................................ 33~
·: Geoerol Maaaa......................... .ExL 1101
Thursday admisstons - none
Wenctv'• ...............................
:· New• ................................ExL 1101
County Commissioners, Meigs Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
WorttOngton .........................13'1.
Thursday dtscharges - Phylhs
or ExL li&lt;Mi
••· •
Glasgo.
Stock raporta are today' I
Holzer Mecliclll Center
Janet Howard, President
Other Servlcea
10:30 a.m. quote• provided by
Discha11es
April
15
Yplanda
Advertlslnll- ... ... ,........ . .. .ExL 1104
Advaat ol Galllpolla.
,•
Meigs C9unty Commissioners
Masters, Stacie Smith
Clrculot .................... , ... .......ExL 1103
'
Ctaullled Adl..................... ........Ext, 1100
(Publillhed with penniaslon)

Middleport mayor's court

Cora Grin

Slip repair project starts Monday

~MS

protection bill wins
approval from the House

Two-vehicle crash investjgate'd

J'he Daily Sentinel

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

Meigs EMS runs

Stocks

.

1•••

··········u············......,..
2n.

-·-·-

•

•

Hospital news

�•'

t

•

The Daily Sen~~~~

Sports

Friday, Aprll16, 1999

Friday, Aprll16, 1999

.'

.

···Browns trim No. 1 draft pick field to Couch, Smith, Williams
By JOM WITHERS

St. Louis

·Lakers
.release
·Rodman

Eastern's Karr to join.·
area cagers in girls' ·.:
all•star game Sunday

Rams
get Faulk

'. By JOHN NADEL

By A.B. FALLSTROM

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Denni s·
Rodman's seven-week career With
the Los Angeles Lakers has come to
.an abrupt end- no big ·surpri sc considenng his recent behavior.
Rodman reacted to being released
Thursday ni ght by ca lling himsclf'a
scapegoat fo r the team's ptoblems,
and said the Lakers were "cowards
not to talce the fall for some pf the
thmgs that have happened thi s year."
The Lakers issued a statement
sayi ng they were . fini shed with
Rodman in the wake of another in a
long Jist of mciden ts involv1ng the
eccentnc forward earlier in the day.
Desperate to w1n thm first NBA
title smce I988. the Lakers figured
Rodman. a member of five championshi p teams,inc luding the last three
with the Ch1cag0' Bu1J s, was just
what 1hcy needed to put them over
the top.
In hiS final game, they bottomed
out , Jos mg I 13-86 at Port land on
· fuc sday 111ght .
But that wasn 't the last straw.
That appare ntly occ u1 req when
Rodman. according w coal:h Kurt
llamlll s, showed up late f&lt;&gt;r the
team's pract ice at. Lo s Angeles
So uthwe st Co ll ege on Thursday
morning , and was slow getti ng ready
hccausc he couldn 't lind his socks

DENNIS RODMAN
and shoes ..•
Rambis later told reporters he told
Rodman to go home , and said the
team w.as through with HS special
1reatment of the NBA's leading
rebounder in each of the last seve n
seasons.
" At thiS time we feel it 's 1n the
best interests of the Lakers to end the
·relationship," Lakcrs vice president
Jerry West said in !he statement
1ssued Thursday mght. "Thi s obviously d1dn 't work. out hke we had
hoped, but we would like to thank
Denms for the contributions he did
make to the team and wish hun the
best of luck in the future ."
Rodman , who turn s 38. ne"
month , signed with the Lakcrs on
Feb. 23 and played hi s first game
three day s later. He averaged 2. 1
points, 11.2 rebounds and 28.6 minutes .
The Lakers won then lirst II
games w1ih Rodman m umform , but

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis
Rams acquired three-time Pro Bowl
. running back Marshall Faulk from
the ' Indianapolis Colts today in
exchange for two draft picks, a second- and lifth-round choice.
Coach Dick Venneil would not
confinn the price the Rams paid
aside from saying the p1cks did n\)l
include the Rams' first-round selection Saturday, wh1ch ~ill be the sixth
overall in the draft. St. LoUJs·had two
second-round p1cks, mcluding one
acquired from ·New Orleans in an
offseason deal for wide rece1ver
Eddie Kenn1son , tn use as bait.
"We're very excited about it,"
Venneil said. " I think it's an outstanding move for our organization.
Our' first-round p1 ck is intact."
It was not 1mmed1ately clear if the
deal means the Colts wi ll choose
Hei sman Trophy winner R1cky
Williams with their No. 4 pick m the
draft.
.
Colts owner Jim lrsay issued a
statement that read , in part,
"Marshall was a . very productive
player for the Colts as evidenced by
hi s three Pro Bowl nommations.
"At this point, the Colts have
decided to take a different direction
as preparations continue for the 1999
season. We wish Marshall continued

MARSHALL FAULK
. success in his career."
The deal fills the Rams' biggest
pre-draft need. Their top rusher last
year, June Henley, had 313 yards.
Greg Hill had a.few big games early
in the season, but missed most of the
season with a knee injury and the
Rams are worried about his durability. '
The Rams had been considering
taking Miami running back Edgerrin
James with the six th pick. Now they
m1ght set thelf sights on North
Carolina State wide receiver Torry
Holt or Arizona cornerback Chns
Alhster, and they might be Jeanmg to
defense.
Charley Anney, .the team 's director of player personnel, noted that the
Rams have· made a number of offensive upgrades, uicluding quarterback
Trent Green ancj guard Adam
T1mmerman. ·
" We've addressed a lot of our
offenSive questions through free
(See FAULK on Page 5)

(See RODMAN on Page 5)

By The Associated Preas
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Here
are the roster; for the Nortli-South
girls all-star games to be played
Sunday at noon and ' 2 p.m. at
Otterbein College:
Divisions 1&amp;11
Soulb: Erika Christianson, Fairborn;
Tiffany
McCoy,
Col. Miffiin; Amber
Ellison, Byesville
Meitdowbr.ook ;

Bobbi Jo Ohmer,
Vincent Warren;
Jilt
Wiltkugle,

Waverly;

Dallas

Williams. Mason;

Blair, Panna Hts. Holy Name.
Divisions III-IV
Soutb:
Leah Donaldson, S.
Charleston SouJheMtem; Angie Bums,
Canal Winchester; Megan Jerome,
Marion Pleasant; Erin Maso)l, Belmont
Union Local; VALERIE KARR,
REEDSVILLE
EASTERN;
'Amber
!so n,
Peebles ;
Dawn
Barker, , Camden
Preble 'Shawnee;
Brook Fulton, Qn.
Wyoming ;
, Michelle Estell,

Newark ; LaToya
Turner ,

Pick e ringlon

(tnJured). Coaches:
Jerry Stem, Cin
Pnnceton :

Frank

Goldsberry, Dayton
C h ami .nade Jullenne

now likely to be selected by either for No. I.
Philadelphia with the No. 2 pick or
"We are actually in conti nuing
Cincin.nati at No. 3 if the Eagles go negotiations with age.nts for all three
for another quarterback , Donovan of the picks under consideration,"
McN~bb .
Browns team spokesman Alex
While appearing on "The Late Martins said Thursday. "The organiShow with David Letterman'' on 1.atwn has not made a fi nal detenniThursday night, Couch said he didn 't nauon as of th1 s point as to which
know where he might wind up.
" I &lt;jon 't know. I wish) knew," he
said.
Couch isn't alone . It seems everyone thinks they know who the By DAVE HARRIS
The Me1gs so ftball team won two
Browns are going ,to take.
more
Tn-Valley Conference games
Reports have them taking Couch
Wednesday
and Thursday. The
with the first selection as long as a Marauders with
the two wins run
contract can be worked out with
their
record
to
·
!
21 overall and.8- 1 in
Coiuion of Cleveland-based IMG
tbe
Ohio
Division.
before Satu rday. But the Browns
On Wednesday, the M ar~uders
maintain they haven't anointed the
defeated
NelsonVIlle -York 15-0 at
Kentucky quarterback the chosen one
Me1gs
H1gh
School. On Thursday
yet, and that it 's st1 ll a three-man race
evenmg.thc Lady Marauders traveled
to McArthur and defeated Vinton
County 4-1.
Against Nelsonville-York , Meigs
· jumped out to a 4-0 lead at the end of
the 'fir st jnning. Amber Vining sin gled to lead off the bottom of the
llrst. Stephame Wigal foll owed wllh
a tn ple and Tangy Lauderm•lt a dou -.
Bentley, who picked 11p the ww · ble. One out later Brooke Williams
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
lor Meigs, struck out nine , walked ripped a triple. She later sco red on a
Meigs scored in each of the first five and sc aitered six hits.
four innings and went on to ·defeat
Ward had a pair of doubles to lead
the Vikings I0-6 10 Tn -Valley the Vikings. Kirby and Luciak added
&lt;:;onference Oh1o Division baseball two singles apiece. Ward · wa' Lhe
,act1 o n tn a · rain soaked con test starter and loser, with help from
Thursday .evening at McArthur.
McFerren. The two combined to give By ANDREW CARTER
Me1gs scored .two runs in the top up four hits, walk one and stnke out OVP Staff Writer
A 12-game losing skid was fi nally
.of the first inning. Jeremiah Bentley four.
reached on a Vinton error, and stole
On · Wednesday at Me1gs H1 gh halted Wednesday .as -the Uni versity
second. Hot hitting -Jeff Brow n fol - School, Nelsonville-York (5-·1 over- 'Of Rio Grande baseball team came up
lowed · with a double to score · all &amp; in the OD). took a 6-1 'lead 1nto with a 15-6 win over Geneva Co ll ege
Bentley, Brown moved to third. on a the seventh and held off a Meigs in the second half of a co nference
passed ball and scored when J.T. Marauder comeback ~uempt in win- twinbill at Beave r Falls, Pa. The
Redmen dropped the front half of the
Humphreys reached on an error.
ning 6-1.
·doubleheader
9- 1.
The Marauders increased lhe lead
Travts Smathers piclied up the
Game one saw Ri o Grande take a
to 4-0 in the second mnmg. Tommy win. Shawn Schui!Z picked up the
;,Roush singled, and Kyle Smiddie save. Humphreys was charged with 1-0 in the first inning before Geneva
::reached when he beat out a bunt·sin- the ,loss pitching t~e first 4 I f3 (22;9, AMC.5-5) rebounded to score
:;gle. Pat Martin hit into a fielders innings, Bentley pitched the final nine times in the first three frames.
Mike Garvin and Ted Mclaughlin
ohoice and Bentley scored both run- two.
each
h'omered for the Golden
ners with a 'single.
Meigs scored three runs m the
Tornadoes.
Garvin linished 1-for-3
The Vikings came back in the bot- bottom of the seventh and had a 'pair
with
two
.
RBI
and scored · twice.
. tom of the inmng ·and plated four· of runners on with two outs . But the
McLaughlin
went
1-for-4, drove m
runs with two outs to tie the contest game ended when Schultz retired
two
runs
an~
stored
one run .
at 4-all. But Meigs scored three runs Bentley on a hard smash to deep cenGary
.Grater
pitched
a complete
in the top of the third mning to take ter field for the game's final out.
g~me
to
earn
the.
win
.
He
scattered
the lead for good. After Humphreys
Jeff Brown led Meigs at the plate
e1ght
Redmen
hns
and
struck
out
.r~ached on ali error, Nick Dettwiller with three single1- Flynt Smathers
.and Roush singled to make it a 6-4 had two doubles for the Bockeyes.
game. After Smiddie then walked, a Russell Fox added a so lo home run
fielder 's choice scored Roush wilh. in the SIXth.
' the Marauders' seventh run .
The Marauders (7-5 &amp; 6-2) are .
Vinton scored two runs in the bot- scheduled to play at Miller today,
tom of the third inning, but Meigs Inning mlal§
came right back with three in the top Meigs ................. ... .. 22'3-30= 10-9-3
·of 'the fourth and end the scoring. Vinton County .. .... ,..... 042-00=6-6-6
Meigs took advantage of a .pair of
Bentley (WP) and Humphreys
Vinton errors, a passed ball and a
Ward (LP), McFerren (5) and
Roush double . Roush sustained an Lash
.ankle injury going into second on the . Inning Wall
play and had to leave the game.
Nelsonville-York .. 010-21 1-0=6-7-2
Roush Jed the Marauders at · the Meigs .... .. ..............000-100-3=4-4-0
plate· going three for three with a paiT
T. Smathers (WP), Schultz (S) ..
, of singles and a double, Bentley and Lindsey
added two singles, Brown a double,
Humphreys (L P), Bentley (5·) and
Adam Bullington . Nick Dettwiller Dettwiller, Humphreys (?,)
and Kyle Smiddic each had singles.

AP Sport1 Writer
As the Browns make their final
(&gt;reparations for the NFL draft. the
... two mo~t important players for the
team to evaluate might be Tom
Condon and Leigh Steinberg. ·
Condon, who represents ·Tim
Couch, and Steinberg, Akili Smith's
agent, were both contacted this week
by the Browns. Who have made it
known their two clients are among
three players - along with Ricky
Wilhams -:- Cleveland is considering
takmg With the No. I pick . 'in
Saturday's draft.
Arid as months of spec ulation ,
rumors and analysis are reduced to
hours, the Browns conunue to insist
they haven't decided what tbey'll do.
Couch is apparently the frontrunner to go to Cleveland, with Smith

VALERIE KARR·Eastern H.S.

(\ ·

North R'.ltelyn Vujas, Wadswonh ,
Sandy Marlin, Struthers: Kaayla Chones,
Eastlake North ; Sarah Gordon; Wooster;
Jesse Reese. Dover; Angie Sherk,
Shelby; Tonia Watkins, . Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne; Amanda LewiS, Lima
Shawnee; Teresa Kahle, Lima Bath; Allie
Graf, Poland Seminary. Coaches: Darcy
Hufl'man, Massillon Washmgton; J.udy

Clearcreek ; Jessica
Stanley, •Lancaste!
Fairfield Union.
Coaches:
Todd
Nauman ,
· Centerburg, Deb
Gentile,
Cin.
Wyoming
North :
Krystal Henson,
Orwell
Grand
Valley;
Katie
Kruse,
Chag nn .
Falls; Layta W11tis,
Lorain Clearview;

Danielle

Meyer,

Caslalia

Margaretta; Sarah Zdesar, Cleve. VASJ.
Coaches: Dennis Lee. Bluffton; Barry
Clute, McDonald.

Scoreboard
k.-Toronto.
0), 1.i5pm
. A529 7 97 266
Montreal (Pavano 0-2 ) at New York tJones 2·01. k.-Bonon ..... . ...... J 829t3 H9 211
1·40pm
.......... 362717 89 203
X· Buffalo
Chtcago { rra~chel 0~ 2 1 111 Milwaukee (Roque 0· ' Montreal '..
.. ~ I 39 II 73 181
1). 2:05p.m
Soulhtast Division
Atlnnta (MaddU:t 1-0) al Colorado fKi le 0- l ).
.. . .. . ,34 3016 84 201
y-Carolina .
3'05 p rrt
..... 29 34 I 8 76 204
San Franmco fR uecer 0-0J al Anzona (Benes l- Honda
1), 405pm
Wuhmgt on ..
..... 1 144 6 68 200
....... 19 5) 8 4(j t7l
R ori d3 (L Hernandez 0-2 ) at PhtladelpbJa !Ogea TamP.a Bay ..
l-.1 ),7 0.Spm
.,
S1 Lou1s Oimenez 0-Q) at Hous10n ,(Huh 0-l ),
WESTERN CONFERENCE
-14' 805 pm
Central Diwlsion
I.J:J s Angt'!cs (Park 0-1) at San D1ego (Hitchcock
Iwn
l!! L I flo. lit:
1·0) 10 05 fllll
.. ·-43 ] ] 7 93 243
y-Oc1r01t ..
.. 363213 85 234
~t·St Lou1 s
Sunday's games
31
.: ... 284 112 68199
Chtcngo •
l'msburgh ut CIN CINNAII. I 15 p m
4 '·
Nashvi lle .
........ 28 46 7 63 189
4
F\unda &gt;~I l'hihldclplna. I 3~ p m.
s ·~
Momrenl at New York. l 40 p m.
NorthWtSI DMsion
Chtcago at Milwaukee , 2.05 p m.
y-Colorado.. . .. .. .. 43 2710 96 2~
St Louts at Hous1on, 2.35 p.m,
~t - Edmonto n ...... , .... ~ I 3712 74 222
Atlanta at Co lorado, J:OS p.m
Calgary . .. , ... .. ...... ]0 39 12 72 209
I
S!lrt Francuco at Arizona; 4:05 p.m
Vancouver .. ,..
.......23 47 12 S8 192
2
Los.A. ngeles at San Diego, 4.05 p.m
2
Pullk Diwision
1.- Dnll a~ .
51 17 12 114 235
x-Phocntx
.
JB J 1 12 88 203
x·Anahet m.. .. .. .
. 35 34 12 82 212
X·Snn Jose .
~ I 32 IJ 79 193
LosAngeles . . . . . . . . .\144 5 67111~
NBA
.li -chnchrd playoff berth
y-clinched di"iston IIt le
EASTERN CONFERENCE
z chnched co nference rille
Atlantic Division

Baseball
AL standings
Eamm DlvjJkm

rwo

· New York ,.. ..

n

L

.... 6
6
4

2
4
6
6

.. .. , ... ., .. 7

Bos1on . . '
Toronto .
Tampa Bay

'

.. .

J

8altim01 ~

•.

''•

fn.

2

118

400
3.\3

Central Division

7
.4

CLEVELAND
Mmnc$01.~

.

..... ,

............ J

Chicago
Kansas Cuy

..... ~
' .. 2

Detrott ...

I .H75
5 .444
5 37l
5 37l
7 222

wutfm-oi"l~lon

•

'•

Anaheim

....6
S

4
.S

600 '
500

"' Oak land ·
:: Seaule

. 4
4

6
6.

400
400

•• Texas · ..... ,. . .. .

~.

.

Thursday~s

Basketball

scores

Anaheim 12. Oakland l
Kansas Cuy ;It CL,.EVELI\ND. ppd .. ram
Chi cago 4, Bos10n 0
Te~t as 4 Seattle J {10)
Minnesota 8. Deuo11 6
Toromo II , !farnpa Day l
hul!irnon= 'J, New York 7

..
~

standings·

Tonight's games

·~

Tampa Ba ~ (Rekar O. OJ at 9o510n (Wakefield l
0). 6:05 p m.
.•
,
Dalll tn(lte (Poruon 0- l J al Toro nto ( Henlgen 0-l)
7 05 p m
Mmnesota (Radke l· l J at CLEVI:,LAND (Nagy
1 - 0) .' 7 · 0~ p rn
,
·
New Yo1k (Hern;mde;.o 2-0) a1 De trmtiThomp ~ on
0-2).705pm
L'h1cal!o (S trotka 0- I J &lt;11 K an ~iU C1ty CAppier I·
l ) 8·05 pm
..
Seattle (M oyer 1-1! at Anulletm lDclcher 0- 1!
10.05 p.m
Texas (Se le 2·0) at O::tkland fCandu)IU 0-2).
10 \5 p m

,..
••

"
.,.
"

:~

.•
2
l

,_.

UI. I ·U5 pm

,.
,.

Mmnc ~o l a (MJIIn n 0-0) nt CLEV ELAND (Wn ghl
1·01 I O.Spm

.,.
~·

1:05pm

New York

( Pctullc 0-01 :n Dctmll (Hl:ur 0 I)
al

K a nM~

City (Ro1ado 0-

lhlurnore fl.•n too 0-0) at Toronlo (Wdl§ 2·0).
4 0 ';pm

fe\as IClark O· l tat Oakhmd fHnynes 0..2). 4 · 0~
p.m
IO.~;:~~~~~ {F Garcw 2-0) at Anahetm IH!II 0 - 1),

~

::

..
0

.,

Ulvi86on

"'
•': Iwo
Nt!w York

n

7
.6

·~ Atla nta
.
' 1 Phtladelph la
i Montre al .
., Flnrtda ..

.4

.,
~

••

L

3

700
.667
5 444
6

400

6

JJJ

'

'

..•.

...... 7
. ....... 6
.. , .4
.. .... .A
J

l
4
4

625
556
500
~
444
5 .375
5 .375
3
4

.,'
.'

.'
"

' '

~ ·

1

,.,
''
I

'""
'i

""'
'II!

~:
.,
... ._
''I

'•
'I

"
"
:

•

.,

'••

'·

.22
23
22

20

CL(VEI.ANO

Toront o.
Chn rlo11e

. 18
.... 17
. "" 10

-·-

~
.444
6 .400
S .l7l

16
17
17
18
19

579
57~

l~·

526
486

20 " .459
19 .256

,.,
,.•

·' ':

7

'

16

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iwo

x-Utnlt
San ri muut o
Housto n
Mtnne~ol:l
Dnlla ~ ... ..

llei'J V!!f

l!! L

1'.&lt;1.

JO

789
61'! 4

4

.667
19 525
25 ~2

4':
10
17

.. 26
26
21
. . IJ
-

o

,

u"

·8
IZ
I~

.12 28

V;mco uvcr .... ,. . , ...... ,, .. 7 .\2

m.
179

{ill

19

H ':

P•f'iRc llh·lsion
29 9
2S 15

x·l'ortlanc.l
LA Lakcrs

.. I'J

l~

76l
625
'500

20 .4M7
21 447
22 .436
3:! .158

S
10
10' ~

12

1-0), 2.0l p.m.
f1l01lda (Springer O· l ) a1 Philadelphia (Schilling
2·0). 7~0s p.m.
Pilt~ !M.lrgh ( S~:hm1d1 2- 0) at CINCINNATI,
(Tomko 0-0), 7:05 p m.
• Mollllcal(Hermanson I·O) atNewYurk(l..eiterO1) . 7 : 10pJ~1
St. L01m (Oliver 0-1) tll Houawn !Reynold• 2-0l.
1'1 .03 p.m,
Atlantil ( G l&lt;~Vl i~0- 2 1 or ColoradO (l1lOmWrl 0- l 1.
80Sp.m.
.
San Fra n~1~CO !Gardner 0· 1I ar Anzona
(Siolllemyrc () 01, 10:0!\ p m.
l.A»Ana:ele • (Brown I-OJ At Stl nDieJO C A sh~y J.
II. 10 :0~ p,n1
t

•

Piusburah (Pt.if't1 Q-O).at &lt;:INCINNATIII:h:rco I·

Hockey
NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AU•nlk Dl.,.islun

y-New Jersc~ .. .
,..J'htladcJphHt

l!! L I l'fJ. lit: !iA

. 4S 2-1 II 101 24') 193
.\6 25 19 91 226 192
.11 - Pi tt~urg h
\7 2f) 1-l ~M 1J8 217
NY. Ran jers . . ..
.\J l7 II 77 116 22~
N Y. lslonUers ............ B 4 ~ I0 .56 l 87 242

Northfl'" Dh IJion
y-OI:rnw:~ ............ · ... , .. -'41 ' 14 101 2:\8 17R

'

,.

'

CINCINNATI BENGALS· Rt' llgned OL Rod

Amtrican Hockey Lt-cut
, BEAST OF !"EW ljAVENo S1aned G

Jone t and WR S1epfre1 Willianu. Waived G Cory

~ue

Wilhrow.

·
B~eot

.
E1s1 Coast Hockey Ltacue
JOHNSTOWN CHIEFS Re-signed F CJtl

Bel«~ '

A~ny. ~ ·

Coll~ge . ·
,
NCAA ; Placed' St Joseph'i, lnd , on two }flr5
probation lll!d took 11way five men ·, bask.etball schol·
arships for !he 1999·2000 season for v•olall n8
NCAA ru~ s .

EASTERN CpL!-EGE ATHLETIC CONFF.tl·
ENCE Added Li.sell Colle&amp;t:. Ne'wbury CollegC,
Simnons CoUeg~:::, Thiei College mnd WashlnJion
College for the 1999·2000 tleadtnuc year
BUTLER: Named Wendy Gallin women'• bat-

Claybrook~ and TE M~us Bryson have been dfl.
mined from the fo01ballaeam for unspecified \'i&lt;lla·

rion1 of team rule1.
' ·
MICHIGAN STATE 'AnnOtJnced the resignariQfl
of Merrill Norwll Jr.. athle1ic dire:ct01.
NEW MEXICO STATE' Announced the n=ll•g·
nation of Jim Paul, athlettc director.
PENNSYLVANIA: Named James Urban dtrtc·
tor of football adiTllnistrauon
POINT LOMA NAZARENE: Named Bill
Wesjph1l women's baskelball coocn.
,
~HODE: ISLAND: Promoted Jerry Dt:&lt;iregorio
from men ·s assistant baske1ball coach to head coach
SAN DIEGO: Named Greg .Quick .offen$i•e
coordinator.
·
SAN DIEGO STATE:. Named Brian Dutcher
ITII!'n 's auiuam baskt:1ball coach
1•
SOUTHERN MI~SJSSIPPJ. Named Ri ck
Ree"r' womrn'1 bMketb;lll coach

Buffalo at Boston , I ]Q p m
NY bhmden 111 Pimburgh. l : ~ p m.
Dallas at Phoem,;, 4 p m
Toromo at Momrenl , 7 p.m
Ottnwa at Carohna 7 p m
Tampu Ha ~ 1111-lorida. 7 JO p.m
IXtroll ll\ Ch•cngo. 7::\0 p m.
New Jersey ut NB5hVIlk, 8 p.m.
Calgary al Edmonton . 10 p m
Anahttm at San Jose. lO:JO p m

·Rodman ...

(elnelrnber your spouse, child~
grandparent, friend, ,coup,les,etc,.

at Buffalo. 3 p m

N.Y Ran gers ,

~

pm

Boston ill Philadelphia. J p.m
Dallas at Cblorado, J p.m.
St Loull at Los Anzdes, J p.m.

Transactions
Amtrlun

~..t:•sue

BOSTON RED SOX Placed c;: Scou Hauebtrg
oo lh('' l ~ · da~ d1 s.able:d h ~t
TAMPA 8 :-\Y DEVIL RAYS · Place:d LHP
W1l son Ah·arcz on the l ~ - day duabled lt st
Purc hasca lhc con1rac1 of RHP Bryun Rckar rrom
Durham of the lnternal lona ll.c~ uc
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Stgned 28 Pat Kelly.
Placed JNF Cra1g Grebeck on the 1 .5 -da~ dtsablcd

Lawa &amp;
lardaa
Taals,
Trimmers
IMawars
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,

:'· W.VA.
773·5583

To be
published
Friday,
May 21, 1999
In
The Dally·
Sentinel

.

•

Stacey Michelle Price ·
r,tiJga H!1111 S,C!'I~f

Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
',· ' • ' ,f.&lt;, •
'
'{_.,,,,,
.:
:
-,.
.
•:
,. " '
Jj 7:'
•
..
.

Name .
School
Year
Nickname

·Faulk.,.

$aid. "So we can't overlook the type
pf player that 's sitting there at that
pick on defense.'' ·
i Faulk, 26, has two years to go on
1he original seven-year contract· he
~ igned wiih the Colts ·at the second
9verall pick of the 1994 draft. He is
~ make $2.22 million thts year and
wams to renegotiate his deal,
; · Venneil said the Rams. wouldn 't
be opposed to that .
: , Faulk is coming off his best year.
!i_e rushed for 1,319 yards, cau~ht 86

'

.

-

.
Deadline Fri. May 14· 4 pm
'

'

'

,,

.

•

'.

"

(Continued from Page 4)

~gency and now this trade, " Armey

0.';

.

In the sixth inning the Marauders
ended the contest by platmg si x runs.
W11liams and Boy les had tnples.
W1gal had .a double and Harri s and'
Pri ce singles.
'
Laudennih was the innin g pit cher
as she fired a two hitter. In striking
out se ven and walked one, she had a
no hitter goi ng until Cagg broke it up
with a sin gle w1th one out m the top
of the fi lth inn mg.
Mc1gs pounded out 18 hils Jed by
Williams with a pair of triples and a
single. Laudermilt added a double

Amy Hy sell picked up the win
'Pitching a three hitter. The junior
struck out f1ve and didn't walk a batter.
Cecil. the starter and loser for the
Vikings, struc~ out four. gave up five
hils and walked two. Fee had a pair
of singles for the V1kings.
'
Me1gs will tra vel to M1ller today.
lnnin£ ll1.lilb
Nelsonville-Yor)&lt; .... JJ00-000=0-2-4
Mci'gs . . ... ... ... .400-416= 15- 1R-1
Lauderrntlt (WPJ and Harris
· Taylor flP) and Dupler
Inning~

Meigs ...................... 101 -110=4-5-0
Vinton County ..........000- 100= I,5, 2
Hyse ii. (WP) and Harris
Ceci l (LP ) and Orlovski

four batters. Grater issued two walks. for Rio Grande He struck out two
Brandon Hutchin son drove in the batters and gave up five runs on I0
Rcdmen's only run , whi ch . was hits.
scored by Brian Knab. Knab also had
Dave Bretch went 2-for-3. with a
a stolen base.
home run and had three RBI to lead ..
Jeskec Zantene took' the loss: giv - Geneva. McLaughlin. one of the
ing up all nine run s in three innings heroes of the first game, was 2-for-4
of work. Geneva touched Zantene for · with an RBI· and scored one run .
II hits. He recorded two strikeouts. Bryan Stephany wen t 2-for-3 an d
The Redmen's bats wanned up in drove m two runs.
the second game as Joe· Thomas, O Ron Jamck• was saddled w1th the
Andy )'erry and Brian Karlet each Jo ss. He pitched three mning~. giVIng
homered to lift Rio Grande to the 15- up four runs on "' hits.
6 victory. Perry drove in four runs
Rio Grande (6-24, AMC .J. J0)
and went 2-for-4. He also scored los t I 0-6 to Saint' Vincent on
twice. Thomas went 2-for-5, scored Thursday in Latrobe, Pa.
three run s and had one RBI. Karle!
The Redm&lt;&gt;11 w11l host Malone on
was I' for-4 with three RBI. Cory Saturday at Stanle y L. Evans Field.
Maynard went 3-for-3 and had two ·Game time is I p.m. R10 Grande then
· RBI.
hosts Ohio Wesleyan on Sunday at
. Former Point Pleasant High I :30 p.m.
s·c hool, ace Jimmy Hall went six· and GJnnt 1 0 Innin&amp; tl!1illl
one-third innmgs to.pick up the win Rio Grande ........... 100-000-0=1 -8-6

Geneva ........... 117-000-x=9-12-0
WP Grater (7 JP, 8 H. I R, I ER.4
K, 2 BB) and 0 ' Angelo .
. LP:· Zantene ( 3 IP, 9 'R; 8 ER, II
H. I K. 0 BB), Shepherd (4th), lrvmg
(7th) and Randy Jones
HR: Garvm (()EN), McLaughlin
(GEN )
SB · Kn ab (RIO), Klindworth
(GEN), Edmunds (GEN)
~ 1. o lnnin&amp; ~
R1 o Grande ....... 2 I I · 132-4f. 15-14-2
Geneva ................ OJ0-001 -4=6-12-4
WP: Hall (6 I IP, 5 R, 4 ER, 10 H,
2 K, 4 BB ), Hitchcock (7th) and
Randy Jone s
, ·
. LP: !ameki (3 IP, 4 R. 2 ER, 6 H.
·o K, 0 BB ), Van Dyke (4th) and .
D' Angelo
· HR · Thomas (RIO), Perry (RIO) ,
Karlet (R IO ), Bretch (GEN) .
SB : Thomas (RI0)-4, Gardner
(GENI

JERRY BIBBEE

fr~m Page 4)

a

Claaor
1997,
,
.r

't

Special recognition for 50th, ~5th &amp; lOth year.
(194919741989)
$6.00 per photo or $10/couple.

'

Pr~ ce.

and two smgles and Vining three singles. W1gal added a double and a
triple, Boy les a triple and a single,
Price and Harris .a pair of si ngles
each, and Brandy Tobin a si ngle.
Taylor: the starter and loser pitcher for Nelsonville -York , gave up 18
hiJs , struck out four and didn't walk a
batter. Cagg · and Kos ko had the
Nel sonvi lle· York hits. both singles.
Aga1n st Vinton County, the
Maraud ers posted a 4- 1 wm. The
game was called after six innings due
to ram The wet · weather see m to
effec.t the Vikings as all four of the
Marauder runs came on passed ball s
or w1ld pllc hes.
Wigal had pa1r of smgles and
scored two runs for M~ 1 g; . Tawny
Jones, Y1 ning and Ham s each added
singles.

1999 F350 CREW CAB
7.3l, Auto, Air Cond., AMJFM Cass., Tilt, Cruise, All Power,
Fully Loaded Conversion

3.4L, V-8, Auto. Air, ABS, Mach Audio with Cass .. Moonroof,
Leatl:ler, Loaded!

1998 FORD WINDSTAR
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819,141

of

'1

Stephania Lynn Price
Malgtl High School
Claaaof 1993 ,

&lt;Continued

,we re 6-6 since that time with him returning eight days later for a
playing. They are 8-9 withoul him _ nationally . televised game in
Rodman told Fox Sports News Orlando. While he was gone, he was
'late Thursday night that the Lakers spotted gambling in Las Vegas.
Rodman 's pa•d leave of absence
,"have to have a fall guy, and I'm
perhaps stemmed from problems
.basically the tall guy."
"A lot of people will criticile my With hi s wife, actress .Carmen ·•
attit4de and my dedication to the Electra, although he denied that upon
g~me of basketball , but, you know, it his return .
,Poesn't surprise me," he said. '' I didHowever, Rodman and Elcc1ra
,n't 'really miss practices. Today, I . announced jointly April 6 they had
didn 't miss practice. TodaJ, he filed for d1vorce.
'
(Rambis) asked me, 'Do you need
According to Rambis, Rodman
.tr,e atment'' I was there I0 minutes also refused to return lo games in the
.early before practice', arid he told me fourth quarter on Mllrllh 26 and IMt
to take the.day pff ~nc!. all of a sudden Friday, saying his muscles had tightTm like, 11reat, you•Jcnow?
, ened up. He was late for practice the
" ... I wanted to come here an,d ' following day both time,s .
. win an~ play here. It didn't tum out .
Rodman didn't play in the second
that way. I don't know what I'm half in Poqland on Tuesday night,
"lloing to do right know. It's one of. claiming he had an injured elbow. He ·
"'tliose deals. 'If they warttto .make' me had four rebounds in ..l3 minutes
·,lhe fall guy, I will ,be the fall ·guy. I before being taken out With 2:3lleft
.,1fon't expect anything else."
before halftime.
· , Rodman ·did say he .wanted to
The . Lakers didn) practice
a12ologize to fans in· Los Angeles, Wednesday, setting the stage for
'~dding, "·! hope that they don.' t look Thursday;s incident 4.•
.
,at me as a bad individual.[ hope I'm
"You want to know t~e truth? I
still loved by [ieople here in the stale. was shocked when they put him on •
California.''
thm teat!\," Utah coach Jerry Sloan
· · Rodman also said he would con- said after his team . beat~ the Los .,
's ider playing for another team this · Angeles Clippers I 03-89,'1Thursday
~ason.
.
, .. , . ·
night for its ninth straight vjctory.
, "It depends on if so~rebody, wants . The Jazz, who beat the lak~ in
to take a chance on having a guy like the Western Conference fi nals last
me on a.team lliat can win champi- spring, will attempt to extend the
.pnship, l will go and play with win,ning s1reak against the Lakers on
Jhem," he said.
Saturday night in a nationally teleAfter reportedly refusing to return vised game at the Delta Center.
to a game 1n . th~ fourth quarter. on
'From what I. heard, Jerry West
March 12 because his right elbow didn't have much to do with it
~as sore, Rodman was late to prac- (bringing Rodman in)," Sloan said .
, tij;e the following day, and when he "·! ·understand someone else wanted
1lid show up, he said he needed lime him, so they got him."
~ff to deal with personal problems.
Sloan was referring to 1 J..akers
, : He missed four games before owner Jerry Buss.
·

A special section devoted to
your favorite "_a lumnus" :

Sunday's regular·season finales
Wa~hmgl o n

ground out.
_
Me1~s added four more runs m the
fourth mnm,g . Me1gs had SIX h1ts m
the inning all singles by Bethany
Boyles ,
Vining,
Laudermilt,
Williams, Abby Hams and Shannon

:It's the Dealer Be.lilnd The De14l ·
·That .Malres The BEAJJ Dift"erenee/

Remember When?

Saiurday's games

have become a two- man duel
between Couch and·Smi th. Williams
has apparently dropped from consideration •nd w1ll probably be taken by
Indianapolis with the No. 4 pick after
the Colts traded running back
Marshall Faulk to St. Louis on
Thursday

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

kelbatlcoach.
· CONNECTICUT COLLEG Eo Named Lyno
Ramage men's balkel:ball coach.
EAST ·CAROLINA: Announced DE Fre&amp;lie

Tonight's gamts

P.m.

•

Sopel, C Jo5h Holden and •LW Robb Gordon to
Syracu~e of rhe AHL

FLORIDA MARLINS: Received cuh conuderDALLA$ COWBOYS Dec1iBed 10 match the
au on (rom 1he Texas Rangers u compe,asauon for , Carolina Panthers· offer shee1 1o WR Patrick Jeffen .
Gregg Zaun.
·
KANSAS CllY CHIEFS: Stgned PK Sean
r.iONTREAL EXPOS: Recalled RHP Shaynt f1errung to a three-year co ntract
Bennen from 011awa of the lmemational League
MIAMI DOLPHINS : Waived 'WR Denh
PllTSBUROH PIRATES' , Placed RHP Montana
ST .LOUIS RAMS Ac.qutr('d RB Mar-,hall
FranciKo Cordova on the IS-day dt~al:!led ltst
Faulk from the lndianapoh s Colt s for undi.clos('d
Atllnti(' Lcapr
draft piclu
!iA
SOMERSET PATRIOTS: Si1ned RHP Wayne
199
Hoy, LHP John 0\.lffy and INF Joey Cruz
Canadian Footb•lll..ucu«
207 .
HAMILIDN TIGER-CATS: Staned WR Ronald
246
Mid wnt Le.,ut
Bonner .00 WR Core•1 M-Coy
257
ROCKFORD REDS: PI~ C Ryan Zebt:r on .
"
'
the .disab~d ltst. retroacii\IC to April ll Signed C
Aftna footban.Lrl,uc
·
Ch?s Snusz.
NASHVILLE KATS: Signed OL-DL W11liam
199
'Gaines. FB~-LB Rupert GrDJM and WR-DB Curbs
22J
Not1hem Ltaaue ·
Jones Activated WR-DB Cyrill Weew form !he
23 1
DULUTH-SUPERIOR DUKES: Signed INF nempt lisl. Wai\'ed OS !Jamie Coleman Suspended
2SB
Shane Cronin. •
WR-08 Buller O.wensllDd FB-LB Ja5on Branon for
personal re:asotH .
Nonh\Voods Lnaue
•
164
ROCHESTER )'IONKERSo Signed RHP Chri1
Hockey
197
Gray
203
Natkmal Hockey Ltatue
DALLAS STARS· Recalled G Manny
186
Ttx .... Loulllana Ltaluf
219
RtO GRAI"OE, VALLEY WHITEWINGS Fr::rnande:r. (rom Houston or tM IHL and D Pc:lr
S1gned INF Juan Melia and RHP Kevin Robe:ll Re:- Buzek from Mictucan ef the Ji.il. Au ar:ned G Many
Turco to MichiJWI
sis ne:d I B·C R J H.r~ndncb
FLORIDA PANTHERS. Au1goed F Matcus
N1lson, F Perer Wonell and D Jotin Jakopin It~ New
Wntem Ltague
Haven of1he 1\HL
TR I-CITY POSSE. Sacned OF Ke11h Goodwin
LOS ANGELES KINGS. Recalled 0 R~an Bach
rrom Lona Beach of 1~ IHL. Asstgned G Mann~
!JaskttbaU
Lcgace to Lons Brach.
N11tlonal Basketball AIIOdatton
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING: Announc('d !he
LOS ANGELES LAKERS. Waived F Denms , relir('ntent of 0 K]C!:II Samut:luon at Ill(' ettd of lhl::
Rodman
u:ason
VANCOUVER CAN UCKS Assigno'd

Baseball

games

FootbaU
Nldo•ai ,Footblll Lt•IUt

199·
226
Zl5
284

· 23

Botton at Washln&amp;ton, 12-:W p.m.
·
Pbiladelph1a at New Jerse~. 12JO p.m.
De1rol1 a1 Orlando, 3 p m.
Indiana at Miam1 , 3 p.m.
Golden Sene at Vancou"er. J p m.
Seaule at Phtlenill, 3 p.m
Houlton at San Antonto , :; JO p m
Milwa~~~ 'at ~icag&lt;l, 8 p.m
Utah at Mmncsota, 8 p.m.
lkover It L.A. Ciippeu. 9 p.m.

.

N11kmal

12'~

Orlwldo a! Atlaflla, 7:30p m
lntliana at Ptnladelphia, S p.m
Nt!w Yurk at Detroit, 8 p m,
Miami 111 80ifun , 8 p m
VancoiJ\'er ~ Mlnne101a , 8 p m
Charlo11e a1 Milw!'lukee.,8 lOp m
PM land at San ABionio, 8 30 p,m
Dallas at PhotDIX 10 r m .
L A. Clippers at.,Golde1t St.a~. Hl ~0 p m
New Jcru:y at Scallle l 0 30 p m

Iam

Z07

ltst Announud RHP Eric Ludwick hu cltartd
'watvers and will be offered bact to the Aonda
Marlins

Cmoli na at Tampa Bay. 7 05 p m
Philadelphia Ill New J('r5t'y, 7 JO p m
Colorado at F..dmomon. 9 p m
l.m Angelc: l&gt; at Son Jnst 10,}0 p m

Piu ~ burgh nt

Sunday'~

Today's pmes

games ·

.
~

Charlotte a1 CLEVELAND, 6 p.m.
Toronto at New York, 6 p m
Ponland a1 Dallas, 8 p m
LA Laken at Utah. 8 ~0 p m
De•wer 11.1Sacramenw. 10 p m

Mtlwaukee: 9. Montrc:ul 4
St LouiS al P111 &amp;bur¥h. ppd .. rain
CINCINNATI at Cht~g o , ppd., nnn
San f-ra ncisco S. Hous10n 2
Colorado 6, Sliln Diego 4
Atlanta a1 Philadelphia, ppd., rain
Florida II, New York 4
Lo1 Angeles 8, Arizona I

Saturda~'s

667

n'

Saturday's games

.700

.600

~ " Chicaao &lt;Sanden 0-1tIll Milw31Jkee tPul1jphcr
1:

Ctnlrl!li Di"'lsion
.L. 26 n

l)ctrou

Thursdtty 's scores

:i.l

17'-

Thursday's scores
Boswn 4 Pinsburgh 2
NY Rangers 2. Ouawa 2-ti('
Onugo 4 Nashvtll(' 2
Calgary S. Co lorado'!
St Louts 6. Phoe ni~t 4
Los Angeles 4, Anahe 1m~-OT

CLEVELAND at Toronto. 1 p,m.

West~r.n Division

"C Sa tl franmco ..
~ Lus Angelt' l .
•• San Dieso
•· Artwna .
!ott CoiCiradO

'fl8
21l.l

Chlc~go at Wuhmgton. 1

Cenlral Dlvl5ion

!:

.. 14 24
/0 28

7'..

Tonight's games

J

I

S1 Louts .
.. 5
Houston . . ..
.. ....... s
~. P i n •b ur~ ......... , .
. 4
•: . Mtlwau e . ...
... . .. . 4
•i '.Cht cato .. ...... . .........l
·, CIN C NNATI ................ J

12-' ·

·

fn.

.4

•~

~9S

2
7

HOta lon 86, Ponl and 76
Dallas 101. Mtnnesota 95
ScatUc 99. Sacrmn.::mo qg.or
Golden 51ale t!5. lknvcr 79
Utah 101, LA Chppers IS\1

~

Ea~t r rn

2~

11

Thursday's scores

.:•. NL standings

..'·

I~

Phormx
.
.. ..J9
Golden S1:i1e ...... , .
11
Sacramento .
. .17
L.A. Chppers ........... 6
x-clinched&lt;f'layoff berth

Tampu !lay m Hoswn l,OS p m
lhlttmort: at Totonlo , 1' 05 p m ,
Minnesota al CLEVELAND. 1·05 p m
New York at Oct roll. J·O) p.m
Chtcag_o at Kunsa~ City, 2:05pm .
Tua! m Oakland, 4 05 p.m.
Se&gt;~Uic at Anahetm, 8OS p m

J

'1

Adaula

{ill

12
18
18

Seaule

Sunday's games

..
•.'
.

~

Mtlwllukel'

f&lt;l.

718
.676
5l8
526

Boston
New Jersey
lnd1ana

L

28
2.5
21
20

Phil~del ph w
wa ~ h lng to n

l'&lt;lmpu !Jay (Sandm 1· 1) nt lloston (Ponugill l· '

C hi ~ago INavunc• (), ))
1 ) 1 05 pIll

•

Orlando
,Miami
New Yor~

Chi ~o·ugo

Saturday's games

:~

n

Iwo

~.

,!

-·-

,.,•,

750
600

228
177
173

edly seeking a seve n· year, $44 milli on deal , plus a $12 million ;1gning
bonus. Last year, the lnd•anapohs
Colts gave the top pick, quarterback
Peyt on Manning. a SIX-year. $48 milli on package ..
As the Browns' No. I derby
comes dow n to the wire, it appears to

Baseball Redmen split DH with Geneva

Sara · Pellt, Doylestown Chippewa:
Lindsay Mast, W. Lafayette Ridgewood;
Dll)i · Reynold~. Bascom Hopewe ll·
L,oudon; Bev Fa~ning, . Lakeside
Danbury; lana Butler, Findlay LibetiyBenlon ;

player we will se lect on Saturday.
" The negotiating process will
continue over the course of the next
few days. and we don 't anhcipatc
malting a deci sion on the pick unttl
Saturday mornmg"
Whomever the Browns take first
will be a rich man. Condon IS repon-

Meigs softballers beat N-Y, Vinton County

Baseball Marauders
beat VC, fall to N-Y

Amanda~

Erika
Schmidt,
Harrison: Sarah
Allen, Cin. Mt.
Notre Dame; K.B.
Sharp,
Bexley;
D'wan Shackleford,

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

-

MERCURY MOUNJAINEER.
V-8, All Wheel Drive, ,Auto, air Cond., AMJFM Cass., TiH, Cruise,
AU Power, Two In Stock,.

1997 FORD EXPEDITION.
5.4L, V-8, Aulo , A/C, Tilt, Cruise, All Power, 3rd Seat, low Miles,
Extra Clean

~

passes. for 908 yards and scored 10
touchdowns. }fis 2,221 total yards
from scrimmage was the sixth-highest total in NFL history. He was second to Thrrell Davis in rushing yards.
He was third in the NFL in receptions. He led. all NFL running backs
in both receptions and reception
yards.
·
.· Other teams - Baltimore; the
New York Giants and Oakland ~
·were reportedly interested in acquiring PauJk.

Phone
740-992 -2 196
.,

461 S . Third
Ave.

Middleport

'

..

'

�'
•

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April16, 1999

Page6

Friday, April 16, 1999

Teen reader says youth of today aren't all bad -so stop the bad p.ress
not like her JOb as a receptionosl lo,r

-Ann Landers

a large business across lown, so he

hored her at an entocong salary and
made her office manager, '
1have been employed here for I 0
year&gt; and always fell! could tell my
boss anything in confidence_
Last week, Sue conducted a staff
meeting, and the boss was not prese nt The next day, he asked me how
the meelong went and asked for
detail s 1 had a few complaints abouo
Sue, whoch I JOlted down and gave to
him , I marked the note "confidenti al " Later that day, he men o oon~d
that my pomts were vahd and that he
wou ld address them ,
Ann , 1 mea nt that note for his

1997, los Angeln Tins SyndJcotfi ond
(re&lt;!'tors Synatcate.
, ,
Our Ann Landers: 1 am writing
to protest the way teenagers are put
down , Everywhere you look, they
arc portrayed as disobedicnL
untru stworthy, violent and hateful
No generatiOn of teenagers has ever
, been I 00 percent honesL pure and

, good Whtle there arc ronen apples
in every barreL the maJonty of
, today's teenager&gt; are decent people
We are the hahy Slllcrs who diligently watch your chi ldren, We are
the store clerks whll help you when
you need assJstancc We raJsc money
fo r chan ties and do vo lunteer work

We arc tutors and caretakers. We arc
the future
If peop le would take the time to
ge t to know us, they mogh! lind we
remond them a lot of themselves
when they were our age _-- R_E IN
OAK PARK, CAUF
DEAR R.E.: I agree wholeheartedly and could not have said ·11 bcttC.r: You spoke for a great many
young people today, and !thank you, l' )'CS onl y To my astom shmcnt , he
Dear Ann Landers: My hoss - ;howcd the note to Sue and asked
recently hncd a woman for the pos J- her what she thoug ht
uon of office man ager, "Sue" was a
Now, Suo no longer ac kno wlsoc1al acquaintance of ht s who d1d edges 1hy presenCe. I am a trattor m

her eyes, My trust on my boss has
been completely shallered 1 feel
betrayed, All my co-workers kndw
about thos, and I' m afraid they woll
ne ve r trust me agam. .
Should I turn a blind eye and a
deaf car to everything that has happened and stay here? Or should 1
throw in the towel and seek employment elsewhere? --NO NAME, NO
CITY
DEAR N.N,N,C: Your boss'
behavoor was reprel1ensible, He had
no business showing your note to
Sue, This was it blatant voolatoon of
trust The waters have now been
muddoed , my dear, and I don ' t see
any way to cleanse them .
My advice os to look for another
JOh ommedoaoely and take the best
offer,
Dear Ann Landers: After read-'
tn g the column about "Content in

rrr

Karate -evangelist to appear at
First Baptist Church of Racine

ApostoliC

the peace of mond it has created for
both of us_-, ALSO CONTENT IN
FRESNO. CALlE
DEAR CONTENT IN FRES·
NO: What a splendid odea t I heani ly recommend it for others on sinular
sotuations, You sound hke a couple
of classy brothers
Is that Ann Landers column you
clopped years ago yellow with age'
For a copy of her most frequently
requested poems and essays, send a
self-addressed , long, busoness-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $5 ,25 (this includes
postage and hamllong) to, Gems, c/o
Ann Landers, PO BoK 11562,
Chicago, IlL 60611-0562, (In Canada, send $6,25,)
To lind out more about Ann Landers and read her past columns, vosol
,the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.crcators com

Calif," who didn't care that her
mother cut her out of the will, I
decoded to share my story,
My mother is very wealthy, but
she is also control long and mampulative, My brother and I suspect she is
a closet alcoholic, We are both over
40, are married to lovely women and
have several children. We both have
succeeded in our professional
careers and , wlfh the help of counseling, have achieved a great deal in·
spite of our onsane childhood ,
My brother and 1 drew up and
sogned a legal contract agrecong to
split 50-50 whatever inhentance
Jllight come our way,
,
Thos agreement has relieved us of
worrying about the nightmare that
may have resulted if one of us had
been left out of our mother's wo!L
Although we joke ahout geuing 50
percent of nothong, I cannot tell you
•

.Worship - I()a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne-sday Services - 7 p.m .

Cllurdo or Jesut C~rill Apotlolk
VIUlZandt and Ward Rd.
Pu10r: James Miller

Assembly of God
Ub&lt;rtJ AllembiJ or God
P 0 . Bo~ 467, Ouddina Une
Mason, W.Va
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Servicu- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Krno Church ofChrtst
Worshtp ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10 30 a.m.
Pastor-h:ffrey Wallace
lsi and 3rd Sunday

Baptist

Bearwollo.. Rid&amp;• Chun:h ol Chrlll

Zloo Chon:h ol Christ
Pomeroy, Harri!iOaville Rd. (Rt.143)
P.ascor: Roger Watson
, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Sl:lrv•ccs - 7 p m

F..., wm BopiiJI Chun:h
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Le5 Hayman
Sunday Service-7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wedne5day SeNicc-7·00 p.m.

Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worsh1p • 10:30 a.m.

41872 Pomeroy Pi_
ke
Pastor: E. lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30 1.m.
Worship ·.10·4S am., 7:00p.m
Wednesday Services-7:00pm

Bradford Church or Chrill
Corner of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Dean Blakeney, a preacher of the gospel as we ll as a black bell on Kung
Fu style karate , woll be at the Forst Bapll sl Church of Racine for Sunday services, L0:30 am_ and 7 p m, Monday and Tuesday, 7 p,m,
, Blakeney 's monostry has been dt&lt;Scnbcd as one of "tWO SWOrds" as he
uses a Samarao sword and th e sword of the Word of God on hos presentations,
H1 s travel ing mmistry m llmerant rev1val work was launched when a
local new spaper ran a story dcscnbong a karate demonstration performed for
elementary children The Assoc o;Jicd Press pocked up the story and pnnled 11
in ncwspJ.pcrs tll.:ross the co unu y Umtcd Pres~ International ran the story in
newspapers on Europe ,
,
As a rcsu ll of that artoclc , Dean was contacted and appeared on the televosoon po og oaons What \ My Lone' and the ABC Evcn ong News , He was also
featured on th e Lowe ll Thomas rad io broadcast and many other local rad oo
program ...

Pastors ,rnd chuoches began' on vllong hom to speak He and ho s' famil y traveled in th os ktnd of mini stry for 19 years , As hi s choldren reached ho gli schoo l
age , he accepted a positoon as assostanl pastor at First Baptist Church of
Tmy, Mo ch In addition to ho s responsobtlities there , he os a popular speaker
• for retreats, youth rallies, and church revovals ,
,
Blakeney mcorporatcs a karate demonstrati On into h1s serv1ccs ' He
breaks concrete 'or hoards w11h hos hand , slices fruit woth a Samurao swood,
or aims Chonesc stars and darts at balloon targets, Mongled on are Bible
apphcatoons and a dorect presentation of salvation ,
He says that he -uses hi s natural sense of humor to reach people for the
Lord,

Sorority chapter plans founder's day banquet
Founder 's Day banquet plans
were dosc-ussed when Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Pho Sorori ty mel recently at the
St Paul Lutheran Church ""
The go rl of the year clcc ll on
was held woth the wuiner to be
announced at the Founder's Day

Powell , and Mar-

Hemlock Grove Ct,un:h
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

•'

Bethlehem Boptlol Ch•rch ,
Oreal Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Gene Morri\
Sunday School- 9:30 a.rtJ.
Sunday WorshiP. - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Sludy - 6:00pm.

We loue because God first 10\led us
Good News Bible 1 john 4:9

~· ~--' .A

Old Bethel Frtt' Will BlptiJt Churdl
2860t St Ro 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday Services· 7:30

HllddellopiiJt Church

St Rt 143 just off Rt 7 ,
Plator: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.

Sentinel
1

Vortec V-8 Power
Color TV &amp; VCP

I

Rnr Air I Hell

1

MARTIAL ARTIST AND EVANGELIST

821,9

• Rear Sofa Bed

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• Nicely Equipped!

• AMIFM Caaaettl

HocklnaPOn'Church
Grand Streel
Sunday School • I 0 a m
Worship - ll a.m
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Torch Cburcb
Co, Rd, 63
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Nazarene

Chesler

Episcop al

Evtnin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sendcea • 7p,m,

Gnce Episcopal Cbun:b

Church of Chri st
l'llmeroJ Cbun:h oiCIIrisl
, 212 W. Main St.
Minisler Danny Biu
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worshlp-10:30 o,m,, 7 p.m,

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

........,, Welllkl&lt; Churc- of Christ
33226 Childoen'• H0010 Rd,

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bemackt, Rev. Katharm Fosler
Rev. Deborah Rankin, Cler&amp;Y
Holy Eucharist and
' Sunday Schoo\11:00 a.m.
www.frognet ncV'-deanery

Holiness
Community Cllurdl
Pastor: Re11. A.mos Tillis
Main Strec:l, Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
Sunday Worshlp-10:30 a.m.
Sunday &amp; Wednesday .Service--? p.m.
Duvllle Hollaeu Cllurdl
31057 Slate Roule 32S, Langsvlle
Pastor: Or J.D. Young
Sunday $cltool • 9:30a.m.
Sunday worslllp- 10:30 a.m, &amp; 7 p,m,
Wednesday prayer service ; 7 p.m.

Middleport Chun:h orlhe Nuorene

Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Gregory A . Cundiff
Sunday Scfiool- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30pm.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Joppa

Pastor Bob Randolph
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a,m,

Reednllle Ft:llowlblp
Church or the Nalal'tDt
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worshtp - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ServJocS -1 p.m.

ton1Bo11om
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

, ReednUie

Tuppen Plalas St. Poul

Syracuse Church or the Nazarene ·
Pastor, Robert J Coen
WBGS Radio- I0:30a.m. da1ly 9 a.m. Sunday
WJOS-TV 27-3:30 p,m, Sunday

4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 1Q 30 a.m, 6 p m
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

PaSlor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m .
Tuesday Servicu • 7 30 p m.

Pomeroy Clturcb of the Nazarene
Putor: 'Rev. Uoyd D. Gnmm,Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsh•p - 10 30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7 p.m.

CenlniCI-.
Asbury (Syro&lt;UJe)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Servicea ·7:30p.m.

Chesler Cborth ollht Nuomoe
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 11 a." , 6 p m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.'

Eole'1'rloe

Paslor: Keuh Rader
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
_ Worship • 9 a.m.

or

Rulla.nd Church tbe Naureat
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Basye

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p - 11 a.m.
Forat Rua
Pastor: Olad Enmck
Sund1y School • 10 a m.
Worship - 9 a,m,
Thu"'l,ay SeJYk:es - 6:30 p,m,

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship-t0·30am , 630pm.
WedneSday Services· 7 p.m.

l'orllond flnt Cburdl oflloe Nuarene
Pastor: Mark Matson
Sunday School -10:30 1.m.
Morning Worship· 11:15 a.m.
Sundpy Service · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p m.

-. ·--

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local
churches
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Rrjoicing. Ufe C hun:~
500 N 2nd Ave., Middlepon
P ast~r: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School 9:30a.m .
Worsh1p· 10 30 am
Wednesday Semces - 7 p m.
Chufch of Jnus Christ,
.•
Aposlolk t'alth
114 m1le past Fort Me1gs on New L1ma Rd
Pastor· W1! liam Van Mc:tef
Sunday-7:()0 p.m.
Wednesda y-7.00 p.m.
Friday-7:00p .m.
Clifton Tabera1dr Church

Clifton, W Va
Sunday Schoo! ·10 a.m.
Worship · 1 p.m.
· Wednesday Serv.cc 7 p.m.
New Ufe Vu:tol")' Ctnltr
3773 Georges Creek. Road, GallipoliS, OH
Pastor Bill Staten
Sund&lt;~y Services -·10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m , &amp; Youth 7 p m.
Full Gosptl Church oftht U"ln1 Savior
Rt.338, Ant1qu•ty
Pastor· Jes.'ie Morns
Ass! Pastors Jim Monis
Services· Saturd&lt;:~y 7.30 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St Rt 124, Racine
Pastor Wilham Hoback
Sunday School - 10 'll. m
Evc:mng · 7 p m.
Wednesday Servtces- 7 p.m

Middlepor1 Penlrcos111
Thud Ave
Pastor: Rev Clark Baker
Sunday School· 10 a. m
Evening- 6 p m.
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syncust First United Presbyterian
Pastor Rev. Krisana Robmson
Sunday School· !0 a.m.
Worship- II a.m
Harrisonville Pm:byterlu Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9·45 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday Schoo! • 9 a m.

Monr,Chapel Church
Sunday school • 10 a m
Worship- 11 a m
Wednesday Sen.•tce · 7 p m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Faith Gosp£1 Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9 30 11m
Won;hip- 10 45 a m , 7 30 p
Wednesday 7.30 p.m.

01

ML Olin Community Church
Pistor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p m
Wedneday Service - 7 p m

Unlled Follh Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor· Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30am.
Worship- 10.30 a m , 7 p m
Wedne.sday SelVice · 7 p m

Full Gospel Llplhouse
33045 HJ\and Road, Pomeroy
Pastor· Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 am a
.
Evening 7.30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursda y· 7:.30 p.m

Worship · 10 a.m.

Seventh· Day Adventist
Rd , Pomero~
Pa~tor · Roy Lawmsky
Sa!Ufday Services .
Sabbath School • 2 p m
WOrship - 3 p.m.

~ulbcrry Hl&lt;i.

United Brethren
Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Christ Churcb
Texas Communuy off CR 82
Pastor Robcln Sanders
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10·30 a.m , 7 : 30pm .
Wednesday Sc:rv1cc:.s - 7:JO p.m

~.

Eden UJtited Brethren In Christ
2 112 miles north of Reedsv ille
. on State Houle 124
Pastor &lt;Re\ Robert Markley
, Sundav School- 11 a m
Sunday Worshfp- 10.00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Semccs- 7;30 p.m .
Wednesday Youth ServKC -7:30p.m.

South Btthel New TrslamenC
S1lvcr Ridge
Pastor· Robert Sarlxr
Sunday School · 9 am
Sun. Worship - 10.10 am , 6 p m
Wednesday Service - 1 p m
C1ritton Joterdenomlnatlonal Churda
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Oyde Henderson
Sunday School - IJ·30 am.
Worshap Service 10 30 am
No Sunday or Wcdnesda) Night Sc!V•ces
Fr«dom Gospel Miulon
Bald Knob . on Co. Rd 31
Pastor Rev R,ogc:r W11lford
Sunday Schoo l · 9 30 a.m.
Worship· 1 p m
While's Cllapel Wnl~yan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip RidenQur
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 am.
Wednesday SeN ice · 7 p.m

and support local

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~i&amp;~e~

Jl[ urural :J'lome ,Jint.l

264 South Second Ave •Middleport, OH 457tSOI

740-992-5141
8nce R. F1sher • D1redor
590 East Maon Street • P01110foy, OH 45769
740-992-5«4

j'rancis FLORIST
, Mf!ia&amp; County's Oldest FlorUr

&amp;fatiiiiiiP
cr;
740-992-2644740-992-6298
I Jf!l V• SPnd )'o ur Tlto"#flth Wi1lt

8111 Quickel 992-6877

., - - '--I
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Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co Rd
Pa.."tor Rev. Blackwpod
Sunday School - 9:30am,.
Worshtp 10.30 a. m , 7:30p.m.
WedneWay SeN ace · 7 30 p m.

DytsTillt Community Chun:h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
, Worshtp- 10 30 a.m. 7 p.m

Advertise your
business each week
In this' space

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••0-M·-' - ----

Churcb
Off Rl, 124
Pastor· Edsel Han
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worshtp- 10.30 am , 7:30pm

992·5432 .
INSURAN.
CE .

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Service : Fridlly, 7 p.m

Com~nunlty

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

-(740) 949-3131
..,..;'--

SyracuH Mlsliion
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pas10r
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
E~mng • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\Oice • 7 p.m.

"Featuring Ktmtucky Fried Chicken"

'

APRIL 18:..20
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF RACINE
0

FaUll Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor Re'f'. t'mmett Rawson
Sunday Evc: nmg 7 p.m.
:r"ursday Service· 7 p.m.

Crow's Fami!Y Restaurant

BLACK BELT IN
FU!!!
WORLD RECORD HOLDER!!!

,.
\

Pas1or Rev . f1ankJm Didttns

ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE

Full ilne or

SUNDAY MORNING 10:30

Hlr'rlsonvllle Community Church
Pastor· Thc; ron Du rham
Sunday· 9 30 a.m and 7 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m

Haul

Faith fiL'IIowship Cruudt for Christ

Sunday Scflool • 11 a.m.

BrandNew1999Chevy ·
S.S.ries LS Ext. Cab Pickup

• Air CondHionlng

Townsh1p Rd., 468C
Sunday School· 9 am.
Worship • 10 a m
Wednesday ServiceS · 10 a.m

Sunday Sdtool - 9:30 a,m,

Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday sc:bool and worship 10:25

Pas10r: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sat Con . .f:45·5:1.5p.m.; Masa- 5;3p p.m
Sun. Con. •8:45·9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass. 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass· 8:30a.m.

• Well Equlppecll

!kihei Cbun:h ,

1\lfrod

Rudood Fret Wlllllopllsl

c161 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy, 992-5898

• Air CondHionlng
• AM1FM Stereo
• 4 Wheal Dlac llrlkel w/ABS

Mam &amp; Fifti:I.._St.
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a m
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

' Mei&amp;a Coopentlve Parlsb
North~ut Cl•ler

Trlnlly Churdl
Seoond &amp; lynn, Pomeroy

Socnd 11or1 Catbolk

• Rw Step Bumper
• Styled Wheell

Coolville Church

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
. Paston Rev. Ralph Spires ,
Sunday School- 9:30 o.m,
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

The Believers' Fellowship Ministry
New Ume Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Re .... Margaret J. Robi nson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Mlddlepon Communlly Church
575 Pearl Sl., M1ddlepon
Pastor· Sam Anderson
Sunday SchooiiO am
E'f'ening- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m .

Pas1or: Helen Kline

f ML Ollve Ualled MethodiJI

·

Faith Ch•~l
923 S. Th1rd St., Middleport
Pastor Erme Wengerd
Sunday serv1cc, 10 a m
Wednesda y scrvict, 7 p m

Endllmr House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route: 33)
~
Pastor Robert Vance
Sunday worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday servia: • 6.30 p m

Coolville United Melhodlll Parish

Groham Ualled Methodisl

Congregational

Cathol1c

All New 1999 Chevy
Sllv~do 4x4 Pickup

Raclae
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sund111y School · 10 a.~ .
Worship • 11 a.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10 ·4~ a.m.
Sunday Evening-6:00p.m.

, Anltqully Bapllll

,,

Our Saviour Lutheran Cllurtb
Walnut and Henry Sts, Ravenswood, W.Va
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worihip- 11 a.m.

Worship- l:od p.m.
Wednuday B1ble Shady · 7·00 p.m.

Stlvtrs\'llle Word of Faith
Pastor: Dav!d Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
E... emng - 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Paswr· Steve Reed
Sunday School- 9 30 a.m
Worsh1p ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m
Friday - fcllow!.hlp service 7 p m

-

Worship · 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30 p,m, (3«1 4 41h Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Azapt Ufr Crntrr
eFuli-Gospcl Church"
Pasrors John &amp; Pan y Wade
603 Second Ave. Maso n
773-5017
'Servtce t•me : Sunday 10 3D a m
Wednesday 7 pm

Snowllille
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wo.rshlp- 9 a.m.

E ott!Aiarl
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· JO a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

SL Paul Lulhtr.. Church

lflnnt Outruch Minlstrin
47439 Rc:1bcl Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev Maty and Harold Cook
Suftday 5&lt;-Mcei: 10 am &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servtces - 7 p.m

Hob10n Chrl!itlan Fdlowship Cllurch
Sunday servatt, 10:00 a.m , 7:00pm.
Youth Fellowstup Sunday, 7 00 p m
Wednesday service, 700 p m

SL Jolln Lalltenn Charth
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00 a m
Sunday School • 10;()() a.m.

FairvWw Biblt Church
Letan, W Va Rt. l
Pa5tor: John Hart
Sunday School -9:30a.m .

Salem Center
Pastor· Ron Pierce
Sunday School- 9·JS a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m.

MomlnaStar
Pastor. Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- 11 'a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Lutheran

Worshtp - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UM'VF Sunday 6.30 p.m
Fil'it Sunday of Month · '1 :30 p.m. service

Sunday SChool· 10 a,m, ,

• Crul• Control
• Styled Wheela
• Nicely Equlppedl

~8,850*

Churdl of God ol Proplorcy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: PJ. Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m. ~
Wednesday Service!- 7 p.m.

Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Extended Cab 4x4 Plckl!p

Chrtstl1n Union
Hanford, W.Va.
• 1 ':..Pastor:J1m Hughes
_Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship- 9 30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wediiesday Services ·1:30 p.m.

Syracuar Fll'll CbW'Cb of God
Apple and Second Sts.
P'astor Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- lO a.m.
E\lenina Sef\Oices~ 6:30p.m.
Wednesday ~ryices ... 6:30p.m.

ML Moriah Bapllll

* All New 1999 Chevy Silverado

Hartlonl Churdo ol Chrlllla

Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Fourth &amp;: Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev Gilbert Cratg, Jr
Sunday School • 9 30 a m
Worship- 10:45 a.m.

• Fiberglass Running Bela.
• Totally Loldedl

Sunday School I 0:20·11 a.m.
Relief SocietyJPrieslhood ~ 1·0.5·12.00 noon
Sacrament Serv1ce 9-10:1S a.m.
Homemaking meeting, be Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Un1ted Methodist

Rutload Churdl ol God

Paslor : Artus Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 am

'

The Church of Jesus

Chrlll ol Loller-DaJ Salnll
St Rt 160, 446-624 7 or 446-7486

Other Churches

Christlln Fellowship CeAtrr
Salem St , Rutland
Pastor. Robert E. Musser
Sunday School JO a.m.
' Worshlp - 111Sam,7pm. '
Wednesday Scrvtce - 7 p.m.

Carmei-Sullo~
Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds.
Ractne, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Sluder
Sunday SchOol-9:30a.m
Worship - 10:45 am.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Worship - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Forul Ruo llopllsl

Brand New 1999 Chevy Full
Size Raised Roof Conv. Van

Portland-Racme Rd.
Pastor Jerry Sanger
Sunday School· 9:30am.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7.30 p m.

'

Rutland
Sunday School-9:30a .m.
Worship · 10;30 a.m.
Thursday Serv1ces - 7 p.m

Bethany
Pastor Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

or Litter Day Salall

Christian Union

Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Bnce Uu
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Ev'enin&amp;- 6 p.m.
Wednesd~y Services- 7 p.m.

Failh Baptist Churth
Railroad S1., Mason
Sundar School· 10 a.m.
Worship· J1 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

To get a_current weather
report, check the

Latter-Day Saints
lleorpolzed Cbun:h or Jesus Cltrlsl

Corner Sycamore &amp;t Second St , Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
· Worsh•p • II a.m.

ML Morloh Church ol God

VIctory Bapt11t lndtprndant
525 N, 2nd St Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- lOa.m., 7 p.m,
Wednesday Scrvicts · 7 p.m.

,,

Pi1Stor. David DeWin
Sunday 3chool- 9:30a.m.
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Rtfdsvlllr Chuf('h or Christ
Putor: Philip St11rm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m. ·

Chur ch of God

Sunday School- tO a,m,

Worship · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servtces -7 p m,

Ca rol Adams, Ruth Rofne and
Dorothy Sayre served pizza to
those allendi ng , Jane Walt on,
Joan Corder, Velma Rue . Shirley
Beegle, Jane Brown , Donna Byer,
Norma Custer, Char lotte Elbcrlcld, Carol McCullough , Mart ha

lAurel Clllr F,.. Melhodlol Churdl

Laapvllle Cbrllll1a Cbun:b

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • I0.30 a m., 7 30, p m
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Rock Sprlnp

Hytell Rua Hollnns Church
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7·30 p m

Evangelist M1ke.Moore
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 6',30 p m.
Wednnday Service!i • 7 p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor ; Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9 : 4~ a.m.
Evenina • ~:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

observance.

EY

Hlckary Hills Church ol Cbrisl

Sliver Run Bapllsl
Pastol': Bill Little
Sunday Schoo1-10a.m.
Worship- lla.m., 6:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

we fa)! short of His glory,

Pastor: Ke1th Radet
Sunday School· 9~1 5 a.m
Worship · 10 am.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p m

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m;, 7 p.m.

RIK'iae First Bapllsl
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Won.h1p- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 00 p m

know everything: you know that I love you!"
(John 21:15-17}. This scripture is sometimes
explained by tying it into the scripture in Luke, where Peter denies jesus
three times. Even though he denied Htm, I am sure that Peter's love for
jesus was strengthened after proclaimmg that he loved Him three times.
Perhaps when we are praying, we should reinforce in our hearts how
much we love Jesus by telling Him several times that we love Him,
because we probably have also denied Him in one way or another.
The Lord knows everything, and He knows who loves Him el(en when
we fail Him. However, when you profess your love to God, you are
strengthening your faith and trust in Him. God retur~ our love on a
continuing basis and His love for us is everlasting. A simple triad prayer
of, •1 love you, Jesus, i love you, j esus, I love you, jesus, • strengthens our
love and devotion for our Savior and m&amp;y be just what we need whenever

WesleyiD Bible Holiness Cburth
1S Pearl St., Mtddleporl
Pastor· Rev Doug Cox
Sunday Worship. 9 30 p m., 7l0 p m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Rullond Churdlol Christ

Pastor: M11rk Morrow ·
6th and Palmer Sl. 1 Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wor!hip ·10:15 am, 7.00 p m
Wednesday Service-7:00 p.rn.

mentioned the third time, •tord, you

Pomeroy
Pastor: Co nmc: Fiarc:s
Sunday School - 9 1.5 a m
Wonhip- 10·30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday- 10 a.m.

Bndbury Chun:h or Chrlsl ,

Flm Soulheru -B•v.•tso

Pearl Ch"J&lt;I

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a m.

Pine Grove Bible Hollness Church
I/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor· Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30am.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeT\I'ice- 7:30p.m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewan
Worship Scrvtce - 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10.15 a.m.
Youth· 5·30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Mlntra\'lllt
Pastor Chad Emrick
Sunday School. 9 a.m..
Worship - 10 a.m.

Rose of Sharon Holiness Cburdl
Leading Cree k Rd , Rutland
Pastor: Re'f' , Dewey King
Sunday school- 9·)0 a m
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer me-cling· 7 p.m.

o

Pomeroy Flnl Blptl!ll
East Main St.
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

the Bible, Jesus asked Peter three

Worship - 11 a.m., 7·30 p.m
Wednesday SeN1ce- 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plalo Church or ChrisI

Rutl•nd Flnl Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

to Jesu s all three times that he did, and

Dean Blakeney

a:.m.

astor: Jim Ditty
S10 Gram St., M1ddlepon
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

times if he loved Him. Peter proclaimed

FUN FAIR - Sandy lannarelli, acting Mayor of Middleport, Is pic·
tured with Sandy, Brandon a1,1d Megan Hood, Tannar Spencer, Whit·
ney Fields, and Samantha and Christopher Fo_
lmer at a proclama·
lion signing in advance of the "Week of the Young Child" Fun Fair.
The fair will be held at Dave Diles Park; on Monday from noon until
4 p.m. Entertainment and refreshments for children are planned for
the event, organized by Early Intervention, Early Start, Head Start
and other local agencies.

Pasror:Terry Stewart
Sunday Sclloo\-9:30
Won~hip- 10'30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Jfopo llor.lsl Ch•n:b (Soulheno)

Flntllopdll Chun:b

In

Stl1 and Main
Youth Minister ~ Bill frazier
Sul)day School· 9·30 am
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m
Wednesday Stl"!ices • 7 p.m.

Three Times
May Be Better
Than Once

Sunday School9:30 a,m,

Pastor: AI Hanson

Evening - 7:.30 p.m.

Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday ~hool - 9:30 1.m.
Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m.

Harrisonville Road
Putor: Rev. ViCior Roush

Middleport Cburdlol Cbrisl

Sun&lt;by School - 10:30 a,m

Hulh (Middleport)

Calvory Pll&amp;rlm Chopol

your
business each wee k
hi
In t 8 space

NEW HAVEN

EWING FUNERAL HOME

"'--" A'"'
Dignitysnd...,•v•ce
•.rays

ruNERALHoME

Established 1913

"Wdcc•pt p,..need

992.2121 .

1m..._,.,...

112-1200

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075

Searching for a
.
loc'al church?
Check the Sentinel

andsupportl~oca
...I ..~1 ~00~~:2~:_..~P~om:
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Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

..... ..

..

't

'

Friday, April1 6, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

F~lday , April1 6, 1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page g.

Pom eroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fl rt

Community Calendar:.__-The Community Calendar rs
pubhshed a&gt; a free serv1cc lo non - SATURDAY
profi t groups w1shmg to announce
POMEROY - Meigs Co unt y
meet1ngs and spec ral events . The Ret rred Teachers Assoc 1atron ,
calendar rs not designed to pro- Saturd ay. noo n, Trinity · Church
mote sale s or fund ra1 scrs of any John Lentes. pro sec ultng attorney.
type "Items ar · pn nted as space _,pcakcr
permits and can not be guaranteed
STIVERSV ILLE
Hymn
to run a spcci f1 c num ber of days .
srng .
7 10
p.m
Saturday,
Strvcr,v rll c Co mmunrt y Church.
FRIDAY
Must c hy Deltvered and Joe
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ North McC loud
Bethel Church , revival, 7 p m
Frrday throug h Sunday Da ve Dat · SUNDAY
Sprritual
EAST MEIGS ley to be spea ker
renew al. Sund ay through April
POM EROY - Women\ AA , 7 24. 7 p m each evemng at the
p rn . Fnda y, 1607 Nyc Ave , · So uth Bethe l New ·Te stam ent
C hurch located on Silver Rrdge ·
Pomeroy
Ro.td Qucntrn Srn rth , spea ker:
.
POM EROY - Mcrg s Cou nty ~ rcual mus 1L: by Procla11n , Dcli v• Arthrrt iS Support Gro up . f: rrda y crcJ . S rn g111 g Gospelarrs. Kru I 0 tu 11· 30 ,, m Se nr ur Crtrtcn' sadct s. Jodr c Rtfc. Jenmfer Hick s.
Ce nt er Bonni e McFa rl and , R N . ·Oil s and Ivy Cockran Nursery
and Matt Ha-seman. LPT. to talk 1)1 o vt d..:d
on w c lln cs~ prqg ram a nd It s ~cr ­
TUPPERS PLA INS - Tuppers,
V JCe s
Pla tn s VfW l'us t 9053. celebraLONG BOTTOM - Fatth Full ti on o f Loya lt y Day. I p m Su nGospe l Ch ur ch 7 p 111 fr rday. d.t y D1 Rnct lor members. auxll can tata wuh the Unlly S1ngc r' li.ll)' m cmhcr~ a nd spou~c~
unde1 th e duc l: li On of Sue M ~i! ht.&gt;
POMEROY - Gabrtcl Quartet
ny Socta l hour wrl l fo ll ow
tn s tng at Pom ~roy Ch urch of the

Nazarene Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and
10 30 a.m. Publrc rnvited
ALFRED - Hymn sing for
Northeasi Cl uster, Sunday, 7 p.m
al the Alfred Unried Meth odi st
Church . S R 681 . Publi c wel co me
MONDAY
RA C IN E - Rac me Vrl lagc
Counc rl. 7 p.m. Mond ay at the
rnunt ct pal hurldtn g
SYRACUSE - Fre e skrn ICSI ·
mg chnrc. Syracuse Frre Slatt on,
4 ·30 to 6·30 p rn by Mer gs Co un ·
ty Tuberculos rs Office , Con nre
Karschntk . R N
POME ROY - Mergs County
Assoc tatr on of Garden Clubs. 7
p.rn Monday at Pomeroy Ltbrary.
Pla ns for Mc tgs Co unty Fatr
tl owc1 s how, new county co ntact
chatrman 10 he elected
TUES DAY
POMEROY 7'- Me tgs Cou nty
ladiC s Go lf A s~oc JaLJ on , mec ltng.
Tues da y 9·30 at go lf course
MASON - Stewart Johnso n
VFW Pos t 9926, Ladi es Aux rlrar y,
elcc t)on ol ul lrccrs.

OSU announces winter quarter graduates, honor roll
T he Oh ro State Un1versr 1y has
Iss ued the lr st of sen tors and grad u::H c
stud e nt s who ror.:c Jvc d
deg rees at th e wrnter" q uarter com mencement cercmon 1cs held last

Rae Wasse l, Long Bott om and
T heda
C harlene
Darl ey,
Reedsvt llc, we re among the student s on the OSU hono r ro ll fo r
w 1nter quarter

month

G raduates included El11ahe th
Re nee IJow nr e and Wrllr am
Charles To un das. hoth of Pome roy
In .ldd ll! On. -To und as , Amanda

820 450
'

* Pontiac
Brand New 1999
Grand Prix GT

• 3800 V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• AMIFM Casielte

~7,950*

• Losdedl

,......

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Brand New 1999
Pontiac Firebird

• 3800 V-6 Power

• Crulse/TIH

• Air Condhlonlng
• AM/FM CD System

• Aluminum Wheels

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $2 ,900.00
Door Prize $700.00
145 people or
more will play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
regular

• Loaded!

'

Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp;Sound

• Air Condlllonlng
• AM/FM CD System With EQ
• Power Glass Sunroof

AMENDMENT TO
ORDINANCE 652 FIRE
DEPARTMENT
To provide lira protection
lor tho Vllllrga of Pomeroy, 1
volunteer tire dapertmont
ahlll be melntolntd end be
known ee tha Pomeroy
Volunt"r Fire Doplrtmtnt
end shell be organized and
oporattd under Iowa of the
State of Ohio end the
Pomeroy Vlll1go Council.
Therefore
Section
Ill
Offlcore, ohall be amondtd
•• follows. The department
shall heve lha following
officers Chief, 1at end 2nd
Anlatance Chlaf, tat and
2nd Captain, tat end 2nd
Lieutenant.
Roaldoncy
roatrlctlona have been
removed to hold any of
tho" offlcea. To be eligible
to hold en office, • tlrallghl·
er muat have bHn 1 mem·

MON. i WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$500.00
$50.00 01 MOll

• TIH Steering
• Air Condhlonlng
• Remote Keyess Entry
• Power Windows
• Power Door Locks &amp; Mirrors • Nicely Equipped I

~2,950*

Public Notice

BINGO

• Traction Control
• Aluminum Wheela

• Tilt Steering
• Rear Window Defroster
• Loadedt

Public Notice
Public Notice
point of IHrgtnnlng 1110 appoint e Olrtctor of
belrog II tho North-1 cor- Emergency Monagomont
nor of e 50 foot wlda Rlght- who aholl dovolop 1n - oi·W•y rotalntd by the gency oporttlona plan end
GrtntON, ..ld Rlg hl-e-Way pur1111 a proftlllonll
to extend from tho center- dovelopmant training prolint of u ld County Road 20, grim, aa t lltbllahtd by tho
1nd
Stille
olong tiho North aldo olthe Fadoral
1.965 1cra parcol horaln Government end;
WHEREAS: Tho Malgl
doacrlbtd, to tht Weal and
County Comm1111onara by
ol t1ld parcel;
:rhlnca South 39 dog . 33' vlr1ue of a ReSolution In
50" Wall 109.850 IHt elong 1990/19111 did tlltblll h •n
aald Emergency · Management
the contor of
Klnglbury Creek and along Agency known 11 tho Molgl
Emergency
tho North lint oltha aald 50 County
foot wide Rlght·a-Way to e Manegemont/Emargoncy
point;
Sorvtcea Agoncy, and ;
Thence South 58 dog. 35'
WHEREAS: Tht Mtlgt
Emergency
24"' Woet n .197 '"' 1tong County
lht cantor of aold Klngbury Manegomont/Emerganc y
Creek end along tho North Strvlcea haa end will conline of tht H id 50 fOot wide tinue to fulflll the raqul,. ·
Right-a-Way to a point; . manta of Stolt and Federal
Thence South 76 dog . 58' llrwa end regulation• and
54" Waat 141 .462 IHI along any auch rulaa and rogulathe center ol
aeld llone pertaining thereto
Klngabury Creek along the rogardlng management.
North line of the eald 50 NOW BE IT RESOLV£0
foot wide Rlg ~ t-a·Wiy to a THAT:
point; ·
Tho Village of Pomeroy
Thence South 0 dog. 07' dooa horoby dnlro to con15"' Eaat 202.7911 loti to an tract with the Molga County
Iron pin tit, palling an Iron Comml11lonera, by vlrtuo
pin HI 1188.2 IHtfor rater- of Section 307.15 RC, to
obtain and racolva the atr•
ence;
Thence South 62 deg. 50' vlcta ot tho Metga County
26" Eaet 157.705 IHIIO an E m e r g e n c y
Manegemoni/Emorgoncy
Iron pin 111;
Thence North 31 dog. 27 ' Sorvtcaa Agency will dovtl·
59" Eeat 141.698 IHt to an op en emergency operaIron pin atl;
Ilona plan which will
Thence Nor1h 42 dog. 57' encompan Ill poiHicel aub19" Eoat 288.179 teet to ·a , dlvlalona of Malga County;
point In tho centerline of ahall purauo e prolaaalonal
aald County Road 20, pu• dtvalopmont trllnlng prolng an Iron pin aatlll 209.40 gram; and cOQrdlnllt tho
feet for referencei
emergency management
Thence North 47 dog 17' ICtivltloa of all tho political
50" Wast 168.598 feet along aubdlvlalona thet executa
Section 7, Town 3 North, the . conterllna of aald
tlrla controct. Ilia tho doalra
Range 13 Watt of tho Ohio County Road 20, to a point of tho Board of County
Company•a Purchase and of beginning containing Commlttlontra of Melga
being dttcribed at lollowa: 1.965 aorea, more or leaa, County to lurnlah the oloraBeginning at a point In the excepting all togal ••••· monllontd tervtcea to. tht '
Vlllogo of Pomeroy for an
center of a bridge on monte and right-a-way.
Reference Dood:Voluma ennuel leo par year dua and
County
Rood
20,
(Rockaprlnga Road), over 31, Pega 579, Official paylblt no later thon tht .
Firat (tat) day of March of
Klngbury Creek, t1ld point Rtcorda ot Molga County;
Baarlnga a,. anumod and each year, and do hereunto
ol beginning b·&gt;lng South
39 dog. 20' 40" Eaat 378.00 .,. lor englt mtaaurement affix our llgnetum.
CURRENT FEE FOR 191191S
IHI from contorllno lntor- only.
The above dllcrlptlon $300.00 PER POLITICAL
aectlon of County Road 18,
(Kingabury Road), and wea baltd on en actual eur- SUBDIVISION
County
Road
20 vey on January 5, 19118, by " Ia tho desire of tho Vlllega
(Rockoprlngo Road), aald Robert R. Eaaon, Ohio P.S. of Pomeroy to antar Into
thla contract and do ao by
point of beginning being No. 7033.
South 58 dog. 59' 40" Eoat Auditor 's Parcel 101· 1.99 thla 1at day ol
Flbruery 19119.
518.735 IHI !rom .the Inter· 00348.001
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
Frank
A. Voughon
section ol aald County
Road 18 and the West line 37675 Rockaprlnga Road, John Munar
2/8199 Date
of Section 7, aatd lnterooc- Pomeroy, OH 45769
llon of aecllon line and TERMS OF SALE: The real Janet Howard, Praaldent
County Road 18 alao baing oatata cannot be eold lor County Commlaalonora
at tho Northwtot corner of le11 than $85,809.24; 10% Mlck Davenport, County
tho Grantor• Parcel aa down day of aale, payable Commlallonor
d11crlbed In lha Melga In ceah or certified chock, JoH Thorton, County
County Dood Recorda• balance on dollvtry of dtld. Commtaaloner
(4) 9, 16 2TC
Volume 289, Page 975, 11ld (4) 9 , 16, 23 3 TC
Public Notice
Public Notice
In Memory
CONTRACT TO FURNISH
RESOWTION 2.911
EMERGENCY
BE fT RESOLVED by tht
MANAGEMENT
In Memory Of
(Sactlona 6502.26 8502.27 Council of the Vlll1ge ol
Pomeroy, All mtmbtrt
Charles "Hank" 5502.27.1 • 5502.271 RC a1 thortto
concurring:
Reviled &amp; 307.15)
,THAT. The Cltrk/Troaauror
WHEREAS:
Sactlone
Amott
5502.27.1 &amp; 5502.271 RC of the Vlllaga of Pomeroy,
who passed away
formerly 5915.071 of the tranalar tho aum of
Ohio
Rovlaed
Code $150,000.00 (Filly thouHnd
Apiil16, 1996
raqulraa thot any political dolllra) form tho Ganar11
eubdlvlalon thet Ia not a Fund to tho Strttl Fund tor
Sadly Miued By:
part of 1 county wide egr- the operation ol current
Milford, Romaine
mant aatabllahtd under exponan.
Thta roaolutlon Ia deem en
6502.26 or 6502.27
&amp; Sherri Frederick Stctlona
RC, then, each pollttcataub- amerganoy due to lack of
dlvlalon ahell have an fund• tor currant axpona•.
&amp; Liuie
Emergency M1n1gemant PASSED: Ftb. 15,1999
Hyaall,
Agency, which atctlon atao Kathy
Chief Cltrk/Troaaurar •
roqutraa
tho
Extcutlve Officer of each Frank A. Vaughan, Mayor
political oubdlvtalon to (4) t, 16 2TC
Dtpertment lor two y ..,. to

Business Services

be a Ueutonant four ye~ra
IN THE C()MIION PLEAS
to be I c.p111n, and tlx
COURT, PROBATE
yH,. to be an Antatanc:o
DMSION MEIGS COUNTY, Chief. Thlo amendment
OHIO
upon approvol by tho
IN THE MATTER OF
Pomeroy VIII• Council
SETTLEMENT OF ·
will become effectlvo •• of
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
thla 15 day of March 1999.
COURT MEIGS COUNTY,
Alltll: March 15, 1999
OHIO
Kothy
Hyaoll,
Accounta and voucht,. of Cltrk/Tranurtr
tho following nemtd fidu- John Mutatr, President ol
ciary hat - n Iliad In tht Council
Probate Court, Molga David Ballard
Coun~. Ohio, for opproval
Scott Dillon
and aenlemant:
Gorl Walton
ESTATt; N0.-29777-Firat Larry Wthrung
Account
or
Honey Gaorga Wright
Broderick, TI'\Jatoo of tho (4) 9, 16 2TC
Non·Tntamantary Truot of
George David Buskirk,
O.Ctlltd. .
ESTATE N0.-291156-Firat
NOTICE OF SALE
Account
of
Noncy
By vl rt~ of an Order of
Bordorlck, TruatH of Truat Sale laautd out of tha
Creoltd by Hem II of the Common Ploaa Court of
Laat Will and Ttatamont of Gallla County, Ohio, In the
Goorgt Dovld Buaklrk, caat of the- Carmen Jean
Dtcteltd.
· Hayoa nka Carmen Jean
Union excaptlona ere Allan, Plolntlfl, va. Darren
flied thorato, Hid account Eugeno . Hayoo, Defendant,
will be for hearing beforo va . Pooploa Banking &amp;
t11d Court on the 17th day Truat
Compony.
of May, 19111, at which time Dtlondanlt, begin Cttt No.
Hid account will be conoid· 97-DR-41 In Aid Court, I
trtd and conllnuad from will offer for tale at tho front
day to day until finally dl• door ol the Courthoutt In
poatd or.
Pomeroy, Malga County,
Any poraon lntoreatad Ohio, '"' tho 30th dey ol
moy flit written oxcoptlon April, 19111, ot 10:00 o.m. the
to tlld account or to met• following lando and tent·
!tr• partalnlngto tho oxocu- menlo, locoted at 37591
Road,
tlon of liM truot, not ltH Rockaprlnga
than five dayo prior to tho Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. A
data HI for ht~rlng.
complete logal d•crtptlon
Robert Bucli, Judge
of tho reel ootate It ea lol·
Common Pltea Court,- lowe:
EXHIBIT "A"
Probeto Dlv. Metgo County,
SIIUIItd
Btdlor d
OH
(4) 161TC
Townohtp, Molga County,
State ol Ohio and being In

30 Announcements

Brand New 1999
Buick Century

~8,950*

Public Notice

HOWARD
EXCAYAIIIIG CO.
''ZM'arsa•
"
HepJI . . .
Ser11icet
Houoe &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Gra ding
Septic Syste"" &amp;
UtUilie1

. 1740) t92-3131

BlSSELl BUILDERS,
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
.
• Roofln g

'Sadly mi..ed by
Children, Great·
Grandchildren, GreatGreat Grandchildren,
Brother~ , Siltert, lnIAu" &amp; Friend•

I

•

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Porto
Factory Aut horized
Case-IH. Ports

...

Dea le r s.

, ,.....

1000 Sl. Rt 7 South

Dave~s

Jack's Roofing
&amp; ConJtructlon
Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing
Free Estimates

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
THIS PROJECT IS OPEN
TO ALL BIDDERS. BIDS
WILL BE OPENED IN GAL·
UPOUS, OHIO.
Billa will be rocalveil by.
ACCESS Hold Stort llllhtlr
offloae, 417 2nd Avenue,
P.O. Box 316, Galllpolll,
Ohio 45831, to tho Illanti on
of Chrla Ervin, lor the following pro)act:
•
INTERIOR BUILDING
ALTERATIONS
ACCESS I!EAD START
CENTER

Drawlnga
and
Spoclftcatlona prepared by:
Panlch, Noel, Oawaon &amp;
Aaaoclataa
Archlttcta and Englneera
-507 Richland Avenue,
Suitt 301
Athena, Ohio 45101
Ttlophono: 740-592·2420
Tolalax: 740-592·3824
lntarntt: PNDArch@com·
puoorva.com
Any propoltd Equal lor e
Standard ahall be aubmlt·
ttd to the Archlltct no later
thon ton (10) day• prior to
tha bid opening. If ' no
Addtndl II laoutd In aliaclitiOn with tho lllddar'a
raquei t, the propoaad
equal aholl be conaldlrld

Slltl Routt 881

The Old TUppora Pilrlna
Etemtntory School
lllpptrl P11lna, Ohio
In accordonct with the

r

Public Notice

$40.00 par Ml poyablo to
ra)tcttd.
Sooted blda will be Ponlch, Noel, D1weon •
rocalvtd lor the work of tho Ataoclalta. No mort thin
pro)tct under one Ganoral thrH (3) - will be providControct, which Ia to ed on a relundlbla baela to
Include all rtllllld plumb- a Blddtr.
Tho bidding documenta
Ing, HVAC 1nd tleqtrtcal
mey bt ravlawad during
work:
Contract: General Contract bualnna houra at tho !of·
lowlnglocttiona:
Eattmato: $94,880.00
until April 28, 19911, 11 2:30 Tho ofllooa of Panlch, Noel,
p.m. local time, when they Oawoon • Atloclatlon, 11
1ddraao llattd obove.
will be opantd and rood.
The
ofllca1 ol the Ownar,
A Pr•Bid MHtlng will bt
held on Thurllday, April 22, ACCESS, at tht onlco
19119, at 10:00 a.m. at the oddttta llattd above.
project alto In Tupptra F.W. Dodge
175 Dublin Road
Pl1lnl, Ohto:
Bidding document• may Columbua; Ohio 43215
be oblllntd by pt1clng • (4) 18, 23 2TC
depoalt In the •mount ol

I

'

Endings:
Golden Retriever Rescue
To be a foster home
To adopt a Golden
To Surrender a Golden

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Cheater, Ohio

l..arry'• Lawn
Care
Free Eelimale•
'Profeoslonal Rculine Lawn
Maintenance and Menk:urlng
' Reeidenliel &amp;Commercial
' Serving.Ma!gs and Galla Counles

In Ohk&gt; and M""""·Corrnty In WV

•.., ...., ..... ,...&amp;.Mti .....
1·740-742-2803 or
1-740-446-3822

GNCSPRING
CLEANING SALE
Over 300 items
50% to 75% ·off
13 Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, Ohio
740-441 -9849

H9RSES

s.u, Train or BOCird

Buy,

. Alto Riding Ltttont

Hoof HolloW
Fuma
7~290

-

6462.

Portable
TV.
(il041675-:m7.

........

Does

play

Sean Kenmore Washing Machine &amp; Older Refrigerator , Both

YELLOW fl.fiQ
YARD SALE
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

..................clc
Pallo Cor.ibucllaa

leremy .L. Roush
948-1701
YOUNG'S
CARPINTEI SERVICE

Work. 74D-446-~,

60

Loal and Found

Found- Yetrow Lab on Carmel Rd .•
9419-9027.

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

•Ntw Gar~gtl
•Eiactrlcll&amp; Plumbing
•Rcottng &amp; Outttra
•VInyl Skiing l Ptlnllng

•Pttio I Porch Docila
Froo e.fftlllffl
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-8215
Pomeroy, Dlrlo
22 y ... Loco/

985-4473·
7

Lost Four Month Old Brittany
Spaniel Brown Leather Collar. AnJ
swef'l To Lacey, Cheshire Area
Near 554, 7•0·367·1067 After

,;;r..,
~

C

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

,;;r..,
~

Garages, Pole Buildings , floofing , S iding
"Spe(:ializing In Log Home•"
Commercial &amp; Re•idential
28 yra. exp.
Uce nsed &amp; Insured

C
C

Phone 740·992·3987

;..,

3 30.

70

Yard Sale

==========

~

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
· Al.l. van~sa~o~ uu1t
Be Pold tn Arlvonco .

c~~~~~~ ~~11M ~1rer

~-'!:~~~,:,ed
tdhlon · 2:00p.m.

Ct
,;r..
11.'.'1

·

John Dean· Owner

1~ ~

'

DliAQLINE: 2:00p.m.

SHAD RIVER AG
SERVICE

· CANDLE· MAKERS

(Umt Stone-

We now have 30 NEW
Candle f11aking
fragrances !II
•Birdhouses • Bear
• Wreaths • Refills

Low Ratti)

WICKS
HAULING .

CANDLE SHOP"

Tuet· Friday 1o-e
Set 10-4

Rt. 124 Minersville, Oh
992-4559

Pomeroy Eagles ,.,
Club Bingo On ·
Thurad•yB
AT8:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall

$500.00 Stlrburat

•

Don~

Need A Big One

CaU A Liule One

DRIVEWAY SIOIIE
Landscape Material
&amp; Thpsoll

Ligh\ H~uling up to
.

.

992·5455

CONCRETE
CONIIICfiON

TRI•RAR MOilLE

(!uality Driveways,

Trllltra-l1clratt-mollllt

POWER WASH
Trucki--

Sidewalks, Patio•

Horntt-dtckt-drlvwlyl
Equlpmllll ~I Dogroaaod

Parking Lots

JEFF STETHEM
PHONE: (740) 1185-4218

Free EsHmotes
74Q-742·8608

EMAIL:
STETHEM®EUREKAHET.COM

FREE ESTIMATES
31782 Sumner Road,
•Olio 454185

Big Garage Sale 3 ,Family' 60 Hilda Drive, Saturday &amp; Sunday, g.7
DB Garage Sale Apr11 1 !5th . 16th.

17th, Rio Grande. North 325, To
1035 Eagl e Road Glanware,
Bo oks, Clothes, Furntture, What·
. nots, Morel 8·5, Ra in Or Shine!

carpenters Bulldrng America

Haning's Home
Improvements
Wood-Vinyl- Metal
Siding, Soffit , Paint,

B. Haning
(740t 691·1713

SMITH'S.
·CONSTRUCTION

A&amp; DAuto Upholstery • ~s, Inc

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Rutland, Ohio

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
tru~k tarps,,c&lt;?~vertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle &amp;eats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.

"6"' Mile Yell ow Flag Yard Sale .
Pomer()y-Middle port , Ap rl t 30 ,
May 1 Re gister now $5 00 Pick
up fl ag For more Informati on call
7~ ()-992-4 197.

All Yard Stlea Muet Be P1ld In
Adv•nce. De1dllne : 1:00pm the
day btfore the ad 11 to ruri ,
Sunday &amp; Mond•y edition·

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

Ulllpm

80

740 742·8888

Call ~ at (7 40) 7 42-2842

Auction
and Flea Market

na-5785 Or 304· na-5447

~emember

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Sat urday Night 7 P.M ,

"Done right the first t~"
"Price~ right aU the time "

Crown Ctty. 7~2-969
We demeye r's Auction Se rvlc,,

Golllpohs. Ohio

90

7~3711-~720.

Wanted to Buy

Absol ute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gol d Coin s. Proo fseta .
Diamonds, Ant1que Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 US Currency,
Sterling, Etc Acqulsllkms Je welry
- M T S Coin Shop, 1&amp; 1 Second

CRIDI7 PROBLEMS
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
.Repo • Divorced
·

~ve nue.

WORRYIIG!!!

Ga!lpoto. 7il0~·21142.

Antiques, top prices pa1 d, RiverIne An llq ue a. Pomeroy. Ohio ,
Ru ss Moo re owner 740 ·992 -

No Embarrfasment ..•
You' re Treated with Retpectl
for~!!~_! ~pprCIVBIII ..

"Call Today"
FREE Estimates

'

Rick Pearso n Aucti on Compa ny,
lull 11me au ctioneer, complete
auct ion
sarvice
Lic ense d
166. 0h io &amp; We st VIrginia, 304·

.Need a friend In the budneu

• ::NoJob 'lOo 'llrg or
'lOo Small

F~dey.

Bill Mood lspaugh Aucti oneering .
Complete Auctionee ring Services Co nsignment au ~tl on · Mil l
Stree t, Mid dlep or t, T hur t days
Oht o L1Ce j'1 S8 17693 . 740·989·
21123

Don·s
Htatlng &amp; Cooling

• N.... Con•tnlctiort
• Remodelins
• SiJing

2526
Clean Late Mod el Ca r s Or
Trucks, 1990 Model t Or Newer,
Smllh Bui ck Pontiac, 1900 E;asl·
em Avenue, GallipoliS.

17401 992·5535 or
992·2753

Want To Sell Your Sluff? Call RN·
ers1de Auction And Let Us Sell 11

For You. 7~2-989

SELF STORAGE
29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

74Q-949·2217
Stua 5' x 10'

to 10' x 30'
Houra

_. ....

7:00AM·8 PM

Sprlnl/l Seo.~on
Corrtplete Una Of
: Vegetable &amp; Bedding·Planltl

All
EuiMd• •

~lata

$11.50

8~

c.,.,.,..,....

• Hanging Baskets
: Sloomlng &amp; Foliage
$5.75&amp; Up

; -Geraniums, Azaleas .
: •lhrubs &amp; Trees
• We Honor Golden
' , Buckeye Card
Open
Weekday Sunday

IUIIARD'S
IRIINIOUSE
SYRACUSE

•••n•

(7 4.0) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio
·~

(

Paddl"l.

7~~45-5887 .

Wanted To Buy. Wooden Rock·

lltkc"the pain out of

11111 Chair. Phone 1304)!175-4318

PaJnting, and let me

dlliDn.

do it for you
INTERIOR
Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

Wan ted Ca rl, Trucks An y .Con·
740"·388-806~. 7&lt;0 · 448·

PART.

740..985·4180
Free Estimates

Gutters

'

AGA GAS, INC. IS OFFERING A IIIICIAl ON OUR
CYLINDER PACKAGES
IF YOU LEASE OR PURCHASE OUTRIGHT A
CYLINDER, AGA WILL GIVE YOU THE FIRST
FILL OF GAS 'Iff lUll AN AGA IDENTIFI ED
CAP,.,, THE CHANCE TO REGISTER FOR A
CU'ITING OUTFIT TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT THE
END OF THE PROMOTION . THIS IS A MW,G
01 UP J0 $100.00 DEPENDING ON THE SIZE
CYLINDERS YOU SELECT. PLEASE CONTAC
YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED ACA DEALER FO
DETAILS. ALL SIZES ARE NOT AVAII,AIII.E FOR
OUTRIGHT SALE. THIS SPRING SPECIAL W

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Howard L. Wrltesal

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

.run IN TINE POR'IPRDfG REPAIU

END JUNE 21Nil~~~!~

I

Litda's Painting

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

ANN OUNCE MENT S

005

Personals

Gentleman Seeking Comp anion·
ship From Na Female For Talks.
Walk s &amp; Friend shi p Send Replies To 553 Second -'venue,
Apartment 1403, Gallipolis, OH
~ 5113 1

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
4/2TFN

Looking For NIce W/F Wllh A
Positive Attllude, Age 21 ·35,
With A Polltlve Relationship.
7.W·3~8 .

30 Announcements

SAYRE
TRUCKING

DIABETIC PATIENTS : You May

Hauling
Limestone &amp; Gravel
R11ton1blt RittS
Joe N. Sayre

9 Wt11 Stimaen. Amana
700.592· 1802

'

740-742·2131
'

3/11"' TFN

25&amp;50.
Agr lcutl ure

Diesel

Mechanic

wartrod. 7~286-11522
Are Yo u Entrgetic, Motivated,
And Caring? Sctnlc H1lls Nurs1ng
Center Is Looking For lndtvlduals
Who Art Currenlly State Tested
Nurtmg A11 lttanta To Work In
Our Comprehensfvto Care Facility
Please Apply In Person To 311
Buckrldge Road , Btdwell, OH
45614

Be Entitled To Receive Your Dla·
betic Supplies At No Cos t To
You. t=or More lnformaUofl. 1-888877-656 1

Now 10 You Thrift Shoppo
Qu ality clothi ng a nd houlthold
Items. $1 00 bag 1111 t very

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:1J0-5•30.

No Trtopanlng On John E.
LOVO dly, tncllvid Uitl Will Bl
ProMCUted,
John E. LMday

110

Help Wanted

Otlollal Send S.A.S.E. To: Nal"l
Homeowrk er's Auoclatlon . P.O.
Bo~ 675. Ripley. WV 25271

Hel p Wanted

CN.t. a lPN'I , Needed Top Pay.
Capll ol Nutalng Agancy, 1· 800~7fl.83olll

Computer Users Needed Work • ·,
Own Hri. 125K ·$80K /Yr t -S00~7H653

x m7. ,_ rcwp com

..

Genera l Ollice /Sales Experl &lt;
tnctd Preferred Full· Time. lm· . •
medlaW Operung. Apply Ufestyle • •
Furniture. 856 Third Avenue Galllpotis, 10-2, No PhOne Cllls
Heallh

Managem•nt

Nursmg

ServiCeS II Hiring A Full· Time Of·
t1ce Assistant In Our Gall ipolis:
Offa Great Hol.ll's.. Benefits &amp; I~
turance , 740·4ll5·3808 Or VIsit • ,
The Office At 752 Second Ave ·
nue. In Gallipolis, E.O.E

HELP WANTED

Bates Broa Amusement Co Free
to traval Must ba 18y rs. or okter.
Call 7~0 - ~66·~9~0 M·F. 8 :00 ·

GMCAA 11 Cunently Accepting,
"Appllcallons For The Follow1ng
Temporary Stan Posttlons TMse
~ ,. 30
Potltlons Req uire Re imburse d
Travel In The Gallla -Me igs Area
Bookkeeper/Receptionist , uperl~ And May Be Based At Cheshtre ,
enc:td . full time. dulles Include. Gallipolis Or Pomeroy Positions
payroll, quarterly, computer skill. Are Expected To Ha ve var ious
Me lga County area 740-992 - -Start Dates From Lata -Apr il To
3954
Mid ·June And ContJnue Tl'lrougli
Care· Taker Needed for Elderly
Lady Room/Board , &amp; Wages •
References Needed . Mall To
P.O. Box 8, Gallipolis, Oh 10,

AOMINI8TRATOR
Centvrlon Management Group, A
Prog renlve Long Term Care
Company Is Currently Taking Ap·
p11cationa For An Administrator In
The Southern Aeg1on Of Ohio .
We Are Seeking A. Challenge
Driven lndl'llldual With The Ab!Uty
To Lead By Example And Ensure
Thf Highest Stand ard 01 Resl·
dent Care The Ap pli cant Must
Have Experlence In Lo ng Term
Care, And Be A Ucented Nurs·
ln g Home Adm inistrator 1{1 The
State 01 OhiO Ca nd ldatn For
ThiS Position Must Posseu The
Ability To lead With A Focus On
Marketing, Fina ncial Manage·
ment. And Employee' Raiatlons
Centurion Ma'nagement Offers An
Exceptiona l Compensation Package II lnte reated In A ChallengIng Po sition Sen d Your F\esume
And Salary R!!tqulrementa To Teresa Davis, MH A, LNH A. BSN,
RN C, Vice Preslel ant Of Operations At Centurion Manage ment
Group, 3490 Far H1 ll1 Ave nue .

Kotrerlng. Ohio ~54 29 EOE

Drivers wanted, requiits COL and
medical card , 24' strai ght truck ,
dally trips dell\lerlng flowers, 740·
247-2664

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE:
C~ss AOTR

res.

Both PositiOns·
Alleasl 25 Year&gt; Old
,6,tJeast 2 Veers

E~rlfnce

GocdMVR '
W"""iYPB'I
Health Insurance A118tlable
Wo111; Well With The Publte

For Mo re Information Call 800·
437-S764. Hrs. 8 :lO A.M. ·5 P.M

FREE TRUCK
DRIVER TRAINING

II You Qu ali fy Gi 11111 ·Mtlgs Com·
munlty Act ion Agen cy Ca 11 Pay
Your Tuitio n And Rela ted Fee s
To Attend A 5 -Wee k 1200 Hour
Tru ck Driver •Tralnln'g Will Obtain
Their Claaa A COL And Have An
E ~~:cellent Opportunity To Obtain
Employme nt In The Trucking In·
dustry.
GMCAA Currently Has Available
Training And Re tra inin g Fund s
For u ne mployed Ana Underem·
pk&gt;yad Ellglb'- Residents Of Gal·
lla An d Meig s Counties Fun ds
Are Llmtled So If You Are interest
You Should App~ Now To Qualify
You Must Be A Gallla County Or
Meigs Co un ty Resi de nt , Be 20
Years Old Or Older, And Meet
JTPA Title II Or Titl e Ill Guidelines. JTPA Title Il l Serve s Laid
Ott Worke rs. INCOME IS NOT

AN ELIOIBILITY FACTOR.
'II :iou H ave Specific Qu estions
About The Trai ning Or Empl oymen t Opport unities Cll!ll Ed
Adamt At Washin gton County
Career Cemer In Marlena , 1-800·
646·369~ .

Moll Of The Sommer
JTP.t. framer II -Program Specialist· Position Rasponslc le For
Providing FuUd Supervision A.nd
DirectiOn To Participants And /Or
Workslte Supervis or s. Duties'
May Include Enrolling ParOCIP·
an ts. Preparing Work sites. Aeviewmg Compliance And Safety,
Dlracllng Work , il.uls tlng Wit h .
Payrol l Pro cuses, Ar ranging ·
Other Activities, And PerlormlngOther Requ ired Duties POst H1gh •
School Traln1ng And fOr Relevant
Exper;Mnce Prelerred
JTPA Trainer II -Education Spe cialist POSition Will Perform Ou·
Ilea 0 1 Program Special ist Ane-·
Also Be Responalble For Prov1d·
lng Educational Services To Par.llclpants In Classroom, Worksita ,
And Other Program Locat ions
Educat iona l Activ ities To VouU'I ·
Age 14 ·21 Poslllon Requires A
Four Year College Oaor•e And
Valid Ohio Teachi ng Certlrlcate
Or LICense.

A:

Appllcallons Must Be Rece ived
By 4 P.M , Wednesday, Ap nl 28",1999 May Be Obta ined AI The
Follow1ng Loca tions. Educalloni-•
ActNities Will Primarily Focus Otr~
Provldmg Basic Skills Jnstructlori;
And En r1 chment Act ivit ies TO:..
Youth Age 14 ·21 . Poslllon Re.,:..~
quires A Four Year College 0~
gree And A Valid Oh 10 Teach l n~
Certificate Or Lanse.
~

.
~

App lications Must Be Receive$
By 4 PM . Wednesday Apn! 2&amp;.,"
1999 Ma~ Be Ob tained At Th~
Folklwing Locations
:,

.

.,'·

GMCAA Gatlla One Stop
859 Third A...enua

..
••..:•
'•

33105 H1lard Road

:::
,.,.
,4

Po.....-oy

.4

Gallipolis

GMCM Meigs One Slop

,4

OBES
445 Buckeye HillS Aoad
RIO Grande

'

To Obtain A JTPA PreappUcaUon
Or For Ell gibhlly Questions Ca ll
740·" 46-1 01 8 E11t.
Or 740·

ee

Ext 88 Or MThe Fol·
' k&gt;,.;ng GMCM FiiCitilies.
Gollla · Meigs Communlly
Action Agency
Central Office
8010 North State Route 7
Cll8shwo. Ohio 45620-02n

740·3fl7-7342 7oC0-992-6629

Fax: 7-10-367-7510
'

GMC AA Glllla Ono SlOp
859 Third ~-uo

GMCM Meigs Ono SlOp
33105 H;lancl Rood

'•

·-

!~

Gailia -Meigs Cornmul'"llty
Action Agency
8010 North State Route 7
Cheshire OhiO 45620-fl629

••
~"'

=~

.•
~·

Equal Opportuntty Emplofef

--~--H~E~
LP-W
~A~N~T-E0~--~:

•••

GMC AA Is Currently Acceptmg.
Ap pllcatt ons For The Followtnlf
Tempora ry Positions Pos itiOn&amp;:
Are Expected To Have Vanous..
Star t Oates Fro rn Mid · April fb..
June And Cont inue Throu~
Most Of Th e Summer. lnteriste(
lndi'o'lduals ShOu ld Apply lmm~
diately To Be Considered For A"
Potential Opemnga.
""'

...

40'"'

Flood Cl eanll p Laborers ·
Hours Par Weak (Subject To:
Weather ConditiOns). S8 Per Hou~
Work Will Be In Me igs Coun t.,.
Re moving Flood Debns Fro!Jl!
Stre ams And AdJacent Areas"
Persons Hired Will Be Requ1redf,
To Attend Chain Saw Anel Sate~
Trai ning Req ui r ements , Me 1 g~
County Re sident Age 18 Or Old--\
er, La1d Off Or long Term Unel'n'"'.
played Meeting JTPA Title Ill Elr·•
Q1billty Guidelines (I ncome Not /vo
Factor)
~

'
Laborers !OIIIee Workers /Partir.
Maintenance Wo r~ ers 40 Houri'
Per Week , S5 15 Per Hour•• Wor~
Will Be Performed At Var 1o u~
Govarnmanl Agencies And Non4ili:
profit Organizations In Tht Area ~
Requirements , Ga llla Or Me l g~
County Resident, Age 14 -2 t , Uno
emP.Ioyed /UnderemploYed Meet;:;
ing JTPA Tille II Eltglbllily Guide-.
lines
"-

..

.

Laborers /OII!ce Workers 2~
Hours Par Week, $5.15 Pfir Hour ~
Work Will Be Performed At VariJI..
ous Government A.gencles A nct·
Nonprofit Organizations In T he-,.1
Area . Req~lrements : Gall ta Or~
Meigs Coun ty Res idents Age 5~.
Or Over Unemployed /Underem·""'
p layed Meeting JTPA T11le II EH-::
g1bllity Guideline&amp;
..t

•i

To Reques t A Preapphcellon Be'\•
Mailed To You Call 740·"46· 101(1
EX1 99 Or 740·992·2222 Ext 99 .-

Ga~polls

7~6 - !018

•

'•

•

flreap plicatlons May Be Pl ckea-.,
Up AI The Following ECucat!onar.
Facihti4JS
"•

-.

7~

Entern High School, Gallia Aca-::
demy High School, Meigs H 1 gh ·~

Funding Pro vkted By The United
Slates Departme nt Of Labo r And
Th e Ohio Bureau Of Employment

Southern High School, South Gal·:.,
lla High Sdhoot , University Of Rio•'"
Grande, Crossroads Ofllce And·:
Financial A. 1d Olllce Buckeye·.,
H11ls Career Center: Adult Educa· :,.
tlon Office And Student Serv6c.~

Sei'IICIS - - ---

Equat Opportunity Empto.,oer
Car .., Opportunillll Rapidly
Growing Home App liance &amp; Fur- · Full· Time Finance Assistant II J
ntture Rental Company. Has Im- MI S - A Commun ity Mental
mediate Full· Time Poaltlon, A'o'&amp;ll· Health Agency Serving A Three
able For Highly Motivated Carter·
Co untv A rea It Seeking Can dl·
Minded Ind ividual l n,.Accountt
dates For T he, Po sit ion Of
Management. We Will Train To A
Finance Assistant II /MIS Ouall·
Person With Good Communica- f led Applicants Must H ave A
tk&gt;n Skltla &amp; Good Driving Record
Bachelor's Degree In .'!ccounUng
We Offer An E~tcelient Campen· Or Related Field: A Minimum 01
satlon &amp; Benefit Package, Appll ·
Two Yeart Experience With Com·
cations Accepted In Person Only
puterlzed Accounts Payable And
No Ph one Calls Ple,ase, AENT- Cuh Disbursements Procenlng,
WA.Y, 5 Ohio Rlvtr Plaza , Galli· And M eet Apency's Fleet In ·
polt~
surance Ca{rler Driving, Require·
menta Skills And Ab ilities That
Couple Of tingle person to move ~rs Preferred. Knowledge Of HUO
In and cart lor elderly pllrson in And HAP Regulations Preferred~
Melga County All living e• pe ns· Governmental Accounting , Espe.
es, plus talary List work history clally Mental Health Agenclll
and 2 references Send name, Wllh CMHC Software, Mtdlcold
addreaa and phone number be· And Ot her Third Pafty Payett
tore May 1, 1999 to: Marg aret, And Prtor Exptrie.nct Will'\ LOIUI
General Deliver~. Pomeroy Poat 1, 2, 3 w orkPtrtect 5 1, e.o Anct
Oflloo, Pome&lt;oy. OH 4571111.
Experi ence With Grant Funding
$SSMakt ' Money i$$ S Work At
H ome ~ Auemble Products
EasW' Wor k, Exc:ellent P&amp;'f'. free

110

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Sell.
Sl\lrley Spears. 30«71&gt;1429.

9 9~-~~~~

Wanted To Buy. Trampoline Tarp

· HILL'S

Advtrtls lng Position AVIllablt
WJndowl tXI)Ifitnce a M'usl.
Oe•ktop publlstMng tltlplul S•nd
resumt to C W 25 , e/o Po int
PltaWt Rtolattr, 200 Ma in
Strt!W Point Pleasant, WV

Mo'llin g Sate 428 Hedg wo od
Single Driver, Late Mod el KenDrive, G allipoli s, Saturday 4/1 71 , worths With Reefers. We st Coa st
99 , 8 · 5 , Many Items Incl udin g Carrier
Furniture, ce ramiC f loor Tile, Kirby Vacuum Cleaner
C~ss BOTR
Team Straight Truck. Late Model
Freightllnera With Sleepers Muat
Have Ai r Bra ke En dorsemen ts,
Pomeroy,
800 Mile Radius. Home Deliver-

3/15 1 mo.

.

10:00 a.m. S.turdly.

llelow Cllppo• Mill

Call 98S·38JI

AG sl!ltvla•

8 ton

Progreealvetop line.
Uc. II 00-50 11~-

25yrs experience

SHADE RIVER

M - tdlllon

April 16th, 17th, 10 To s. s Miles
South 01 Gallipolis On Ro ute 7,

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

"THE COUNTRY

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

w

Help Wanted

~5631 .

Lost Dog: Whlte{Tan Shltzu , Fe·
male. 91bs. In 1he Camp Conley
Area, {304)675--1~9

101111' IISSllL
COIISIRUCIION

· •Room addlllona &amp;Remodeling

tlj

Garage

WiDiarn. Safranek, Anorney At Law

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

(740 992-4277

·LewaC....·Iulp
...................11

Buildtnga, Decks, Etc . .
Free E11imate•
~ Carpenter

740·992·2068

For Information Regarding Bankr uptcy contact:

Female Cocker Spaniel, 5 Years
Old . To Go od Home, 740·256·
Free 2 Cats, 1 Kitten, Part Hima-

Metal, Lamination, P ole

Joseph Jacks

can relieve a
debtor of finan cial obligations and arrange a fair
di• tribution of assets. Debtor• in bank r uptcy may
keep "exem pt~ propert y for his or her peroonal
Ul!le. T his ma y include a car , a houae, clothes, and
•houeehold good•.

Joe Wilson

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768

.

•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
• Drywall &amp;
• Plumbing

-Complete Auto Service-

7 Puppln, 6 weeks old,
' j304)895-JOil7. (304)675-7809.

"Build Your Dr•am"

740·992·3470

R~flng • Repairs

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

Bull. t304)n3-5357

740·992·2068

Pho n,e : 740-843-5572 '
Public Notice

2 Ooberman Pups , Alto . 1 1/2
Lau le Collie, 112 Borde r Collit,
To Country .Homn Only ! 740·
256-9123.
.

e wk.s old Part Collie , Pari PI!·

Top SOli, Fill Dirt

Racine, Ohio
Public Notice

II

Joseph Jacks

Former-"Velver
HamlfU!r"
•
52954 State Rt. 124

Public Notice

150 mo1ot crou lrophlu &amp;
ploquoo, 7~992-3537

F~dey.

Free Estimates
Longbottom, Ohio •
(740) 985-3677

Remodeling

Custom Home•

Found. All Black Fu"y Small Dog,
VIcinity: Nazarene Church. 740·
441· 11 49 E~~enlngs Attar 6 P.M.

Coolvfl'l! OH 4&amp;723

n.,

~

I Mole Smal Dog. 740---314.

Register Now $5.00-Pick up Flag

. PARft

Thesday • No Tap
Wednesday • Mea's League
Thlll"lday • Mixed League
Stortfo1
7:JO P. II,

INSURED OWNER

OantiGMmln ~ Milrod.

FREE ESTIMATES

Beglne 1et Week
In ...,

KEITH MYERS

Grey Puppy. ~ 112mo • Grear

April 30th- May lst

DIPOYSAG

Summer League

TREE AND STUMP
REMOVAL

tnd

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
No Sunde Calls)

77HJOO

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

1 Ftmalt Grtat OarHt, Fewrl Cob

place on ud Call992·2156

hi! by car, Heated by vet 740-

614-992·7643

Lanet

MYERS TREE
·. SERVICE

1

Giveaway

layan , 7~.

Mason BowBna

In Loving Memory
of Ethel Hysell
Out beloved mother
As one of the great
grandsons said
'' you must have bee n
a prett y good morn"
&amp; s o you were a
wonderful mom ..

To

B11lldoar &amp; Backhoe

'Shru~ ~tenencrr

Business
Services

40

Sourc&lt;Jo lo ~110

Protorrsd. Stnd·

Rttumu To . Sherry Gordon ,
Mangaer Of Human Resources,
Wood land Centtrl, 3081 State
ROUIO ISO. Ganioplla. Ohio 4S63t

EOEIM

e'""'-·

School. River Valley High Scncol."•

Offioo.

Hod&lt;lng

&lt;:(_.-

Coli~ ' JTPA

rice, Tri-County JVS Adult Ed~:
catiOn Center
~:.
Preappllcattons Ca n. Also Be
talned At

Ob ~

• -

GMCM Galt~ One Srop
859 Thro A,.,....
GaHipollo

74D-c.6· 1018

GMCM Moigl One SlOp
33105 Hiland Road

••

Pomoroy
74()-99~·=

OBES "
"5 Bool&lt;oyo Hilla Rood
Rio Gronde
7~246-8509

Gallo ·Meigs Commurlty
Action Agency
eo ro North srote Rouro 1

P.O. eo. 272

Cheshire. Ohio ~5620-0272
7~3flH342 700.992~

Fax

7~3fl7·7~10

Equal O!&gt;JtonunHv E'"""""r

~

•,

�•

:Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aprll16, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
BRIDGE

•'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'

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ACROSS
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PHILLIP
ALDER

310 Homes for Sale
Day

pos~IOn.

9am 7pm. Night po-

slt•on 7pm-9am Outlu Include
care

or the

elderly, cooking and

cleamng, 740·992·5023 for Inter·

Housecleaning Dependable, Honest, Good References, Vears Of
bparience,
740-·U8-7525 ,
Lowe A Mesaege

V18W

Lawn Mowing Service. Small

Drivers needed tor 24' straight
truck no COL required, dally trips
deiiVtflng flowers 740-247·2664.

Garden n111ng, Clean Out Garage

Home Improvement c:ompany (35

years In buainess) needs em·
ployeas e;~~pe rl enced In wmdow
and siding Installation, some
knowledge ol mom additions.
Good psy and hours , 740·992·

6815

and Other Odd Jobs (304)675·
3828
Painting, All Around Handy Man!
Call Bob, 740-6611-1 803
S&amp;S lawn Care, Commercial &amp;
Residential, Free E111matest 740·

441-o3t8
Will Do lawn ServiCfl In Gallla

Immediate Openings Seeking
Full· T1me Person For Bookkeep·
ing, Send Resume To CLA 470,

c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
, Third Avenue . Ga llipolis OH
45631

Job opening reliable person.
hours 1a to 5 five days a week

Sand resume to P 0 Box 124,

Rutland, orr 45n5

County, 7'1&lt;H46-2761
Will do small cleaning/painting
jobs &amp; small lawo mowing and
haul trash or junk away $215 a

load (304)675-4538
Yard Work : mowing , "'Imming,
raking Pt Pleasant Area .
(304)675-6512 u no answer,
leave message, will return caH
~

Job open ing· yard laborer and
experie nced COL driver needed,
Chester, Oh , apply at Baum Lum·
ber or call 740-985-3301

Licensed Managed Cosmetolo·
g1st At The Ha1r Hut, Rio Grande,
OhiO. 740-245-9494

local Tr uc~ lng Company Seeking
Qualified Tru ck Drivers Good
Pay And Benel .ts Send Resume
To PO Box 109 Jackson, Ohio
45640 Or Call 1-740·286· 1463
To Schedule An Interview

MAINTENANCE

HEAVY

EQUIPMENT· Sands Hill Coal
Company Is Seeking EKJ)erienced
Heavy Equipment Maintenance
Worker Needs To Have Service
Truc k And Tool s Experience In
Welding Electrical Troubleshoot·
lng And Air Condll loner Service
Make Appl ications At 38701 S R
160 Hamden. Ohio Monday Thru
Friday, 8 A M To 4 30 PM ; Or
Call 740· 384·4211 To Have Ap·

plication Mailed To You EEOC
ErT'I&gt;Ioyer
Need 7 ladies To Sell Avon, 740·
446-3358

FINANCIAL

Busln888

210

Opportunity
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bustness with people you know and
NOT to send mona~ through the
mall unlil you have Investigated

the ollerlng
For sale- 25 year clothing and
sfloe b\Jsine&amp;:&amp; Owner retiring
Inquire within· Dan's, 290 North
Second Avenue, Mlddleporl,
OhMl

Profesalonal
Services

230

Signs Large Portable Change·

able Loner Sign S279·S369 Free
Delivery/letters Plastic Letters
$55 Second Box Free AAA

Signs t-8()().533-3453 anytime.

TURNED DOWN ON
• SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

1·888-582·3345

Now accepting appl1cat1ons for
night shift, El Dorado Adu lt Home
Basic: first aid &amp; BCII required

with Fireplaces . 3BR. 1 1/2
Baths, Kitchen with Appt1ances.
Utility Rm , Enclosed Front
Porch, Alum Sid., Gas Furnace
w/C A , Carport Auach. to house;
1·C Detached Garage; Sm Stor.
Bldg w1th E* Call onty from I

Prime building situ outside ol
Mason City limits $15,000 per

acre (304)682·3m.

to ttPU. (304)675·4808 or
(304)675·3991.

cated 5 Miles From T~ City. Out

luxurious Country Bride Set In 13
Acres L1ke New, In Ground Pool,
Shop &amp; Lots Of Storage, You
Must Drive Sy &amp; Take A Look
Sea AI ' Big Foot Park' Rt 1
South , 6 Miles Below Gallipolis .
To Bear Run Road &amp; Follow

Signs, S175K
Thr$8 bedroom hOme with lots of
closet apace, close to school, on
corner lot, storage building, one
bed•oom rental home Included ,

740-992-6164

Now Hiring Motorcycle Mechanic
40 ·48 Hrs Wk Inquire AI River
FronLHonda, Gallipolis, 740·446·

2240
Part time walt stan needed lor Vne
dln.ng establishment Call 740·
698·2450 lor interview
Poste l Job! to $18 35fHR Inc
benefi ts, No Experience. For
App and Exam Info, Call 1-800·

813·3585, EMI 81126, 8AM·9PM, 1
Days lds,lnc
RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get Vou Prepared , 740-3883800
Sears Sliver Bridge Plaza, Galllpohs Accepting Resumes For
Delivery Helper &amp; Assembly Per·
son Apply In Person, No Phone
Cella Please!

STATE TESTED NURSING
ASSISTANT POSITIONS
Holzer Senior Care Center Is
Currently Taking Applications For
State Tested Nursing Aaslstants
Excellent Working Environment
And Benefits No Phone Calls
Please Apply In Person At 330
Colonial Drive , Bidwell, Ohio

45614

All real estate attvenlslng In
this newspaper Is sublect to
the Federal Fa1r Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advenlse ·any preference,
limitation or diSCrimination
based on race, color, religion,
se11. 1am1llalstatus or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination •
Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch is 1n vfalation of the
law. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings

advMised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportun~ basiS

10x50 Trailer And 12x50 Trailer,
W1ll Sell Both For $1 ~ 500, 740·

379 2835
12 Ft x65 Ft 1974 Spring Manor.
2 Bedrooms, Total Electric, Good
Cond~n.

310 Homaa for Sale
2103 Mount Vernon Avenue. 3BA
1 1/28A., Family Room, Garage,

Central A~. Patio, Porch, S77 ,000.
(304)675-2533
3 Bedroom Home 1 Acre Lot, Rio

Grande Area, $33,000, 74().2459667

•

$3.500. 740·367-oe32.

The Harald Dispatch Has Two
Motor Delivery Routes Avallabfe,
In The Gallipolis Area.Galllpolls
To Pomeroy, New Haven, Mason,
Daily Delivery Time , 3 Hours
Sunday 4 Hours Approx imate
Monthly Profit $948 00 Trans·
poratatlon Required Gallipolis To

Crown City, Dally Delivery Tlme 2
Hours. Sunday 3 Hours. Appro•·
lmate Monthly Profit $700. 00
Transportation Required II Inter·
ested Please Call Gary Moritz At

304·528·2832 Or 1·800·955·
6110 Ext 832
Benefits Game Wardens, Secur·
lty Maintenance, Park Rangers
No E~:p Needed For App and
Exam Info Call 1-800 813·3585,
Ext 8827, 8AM· 9PM, 7 Days
fds,lnc
•

Buslnese
Training

Golllpolo CIMr COllege
(Careers Closo To Home) C8Jt
TOday! 74~367, 1-800214-ll452, Reg 1190-05-1274B

180 Wanted To Do

12x65 Master Craft, two bedroom,
one bath, gu heat, $4500 negot~
able, 740-992-1042.
14X70 2BR, Clayton Mobile
Home on At 87 Price Reduced.
Large lront porch, free lot rent

(304 )675-~ 1231( 304)695-3167
1973 Hlllcrett two bedroom mobile home, 740-992·5039

1960 Kingsley 14 Ft x70 Ft. With
314 Acre Lot Located 2 Miles On

State Route 218, In City School
District, Day11ma 740-448·3278,
E""nlngs . 740-446·3099.

S~yllno.

2BA.

Vinyl Siding, Shingle Root, Steel
Doora. 2•6 Walls, Thermopayne
Windows, Deck, $19,800, 740·
256-6980
Low Interest Rates For 1at Time
'suyera, Limited Time Ayailabla,
B00-383--8862
Ban~

Repo Mobile Homes. Slngte

Wide I Sactlonala Financing, Lit·
lie As $500 Down, 740-742-o5'10
with

selection of used hom11
or 3 bedrooms Starling at

$3995. Oulc~ ~ellvery Call740·
385·9621
Klrl&lt;wood Mobile Home 14 F1 i70
Ft 3 Be&lt;lrooms, 1 Bath, Excellent

COndition! Must Be Moved lmi'(IAw

dlatolyl 740-446-9616

LA, DR, Kitchen, U1UIIy Room, C/A,
Heat Pump, Fanced Yard. 2/3
Acre, 15 Minutes From Gallipolis,
4 Br, 2 BA, lR , DA, Kt, and
breakfaat room Basement new
carpet and linoleum, gas heat, AJ

C. Garage
$75,000

(304)875·8759.

Beautiful Stone House Eat-In
Kitchen, Island Range, Trash
Compactor, 2 In Wall Ovans ,
Spice Cabinet, All Appliances
Stay, 3 Or 4 Sedr&lt;lQmo, D,A , L.A
Fireplace, 2 '1\lpea 01 Haat, Lots
Of Closets, 2 112 Baths, Hot Wa·
ter &amp; Heat Pump, 1 112 Acres M/
L, AIC, Shown By Appointment,

740-446-4W.

2704, 740-992·5698

Make 2 Payments No Payment
Alrar 4 'mars, 304-736·7295

Musl Sell 1995 14 Ft M72 Fl '
FIHtwood, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
A Private Rented Lot Will Take
Payoll, 740-256·9362

Nice Home Set Up On Lot Malee
2 Payments, Move ln. • Veara

2608 Leave Men11ge on Ma-

Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elderly Or Handl·

capped, 740-441-1536.

Interior &amp; EMtarlor Palnllng, Ex·
perlsnced, References, Reasonable Rat11 For Free Estimate,

Ranch Style Houae on 75 Acres,

3BA, 2BA, garage, hay field, big
barn (304)895-3130

For A Double Wide And Garage,
Starcher Road. Call Chris Al740245-5074, Anytime.
2 Lois. Camper And Building. AI
Big Foot Parll,'$7,500, 740·3880121
2 38 Acree, All Road Frontage,
Asking $20,000, Flat, Water On

Land, Bidwell -Rio Area, 740·245-

1, 1999, to July 1, 1999 Buy 3
GriYO Marl&lt;era (304)S78-2719.
BeautlrLII Home Sltet · 1Acre, 5
Acrea, and
Acres 10 miles
from Pt. Pl., Pubflc water. Pri-

e

vate, (304)876-59) 11456-1542
BEAIITifiiL

Your Home ts Just A Phone Call
"-'~·

304-7313-7295

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom moblle homes. air
conditioned, $260·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

BroadAun Road. Rent lor $250
mo + deposiVutllltles. (304)773·

J&amp;S Will 00 PIMIU&lt;I Waohing I

Kitchen Lg Family Room 740·
245-9337

LMng Room, Dining Aoom, ~·In

Gallipolis, To Bear Run Rd., And
Follow Sigr1l To Bigfoot Pari&lt;,

5 Ft. 3 Point Hitch International
PICk·Up DIIC like New $300-,:

Cali 740·388·9516, Or 740·388·
8071, C-30 wrecker $6,500
Ready To Run, t;iaa Generator
$500, Bear Engine Analyzer

$800, Hand Hold Computer 1100
RIAdl Codes; Front End Alignment Machine $300; 1991 Ford

Tauruo $1 ,500.

COQLQQWN
Central Air Conditioning Added
To Vour Furnace. 3 Ton Installed

11,500 , 2 112 Ton $1,350,2 Ton
S1,250: 1M Above Includes Normal lnatalla11on. If \'bu Don't CaN
us we Bolli Loser 740-448-e308,
Or 1o8Q0.29HI098
For Sale: 5 AQuarluma1 complete
and with tlah, sen c11eap New
Harley o Boots, size 98

(304)675-1584.

Highlander VCR Tapes, The Ser'loo Volume 4, $60 Firm, 741H4&amp;qulred, Call 304·675-1115 A"er 5 0218
P.M
ISM Computer System With
Tara Townhouse Apartmenta. Windows 3.1 Price Nogotlablo.
Floors, CA, 1 112 Beth, Fully COr·
poled, Pallo, ~ Pall. Le- Plua
Security Oepollt Required, 140446-3481. 740-441HD101

740-448·2902.

JET

AERATION MOTOAS
Repaired, New I Aebo.il In Stock
Call Ron Evona, 1·800-537-9526

application• lor 1BA. HUD oub·
Size Wat&amp;rbed Canopy
sldlzed apt. lor o~rly and hand· King
Wllh Mirrors $500, Coffee Table,
lclpptd EOH 304-675-6679
'$50; 740-311 0400
Two bedroom apartment In Po·

meroy, no polO, 740-9112-!1858.

lawn mowers, John Deere 212·

Two bedroom, one bath apart·
ment, one bedroom, one bath
apartment, both In Mktdteporl, Immediate occupancy, 740·992·

24• 11lf propelled. Factory built

Murray 16/42· TroyBIII high wlttel

Memorial Gardens· one crept

Upstairs ThrH Room Apartment

257~

At 651 Second Avenue, Galllpo·
lis, Naxt To Library, $350/Mo..

Nice New &amp; used Furniture And

'

We Are Professional Installation

Bath, In the Country 304·6753030

2 Acre Trailer Lot For Rent, 740·

Wholesale To The Public We

New Mobile Home Park at Galli·
polls Farry. Now accepting appli·
cation• for Iota on 11te (304)e75·

Mobile home site avallabl• bat·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

'

Nice 3 bedroom mob1le home, in

Middleport, Oh., no peta, 740-982·
5656

440

Apartment•
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unrurnlahed, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

982-2218
1 Bdrm , Extra Nice, Fl1'61 Moritt'l
Free With One Veer Lease

$279 00 Par Month, Plus UINIIIea
740-446-2957

740-365-4367.
Trailer Space For Rent, Georges

Crook Road, 740-446-1142.

Loo~lng

for 2 or 3 bedroom rental

In tne Roouvelt School District

MER CHANDISE

1 Bedroom Apt lor Rent, PI
Pleasant $300 month + Deposit

510

1 Bedroom N"ar Holzer's, Clean·
est In 1M Area, $279/Mo., Pluo
Utilities First Month Free With 1

'mar Lease, 740-448-2957

Appliances .
Reconditioned
Waahars. Dryers, Rangaa, Rafrl·
gratora, 80 Day Guarantee!

1st Clesa Convenient,' One Bidroom Apt Central Air &amp; Heat,
Wuher/Oryer, Dllhwaaher. Prl·

French City Mtytag, 740-448·
7795

vate entrance, S350 . (304)G75-

For Sale Rec~nditlo.ned wash·
era, dryers and refrigerators
Thompaona Appliance .• 3407
Jacl&lt;lon A111nue, (304)875-7388

2 bedroom apartment In Mlddtepon, we pay water, aewer &amp; trash,

a ei&amp;Cirlc, $200 par

month , $100 deposit, 740·992·
7808.

Applications available at: Village

Green Apts t49 or call 740-992-

3711 EOH
Accepting applications at
THE MAPLES,
100 Mtmortal Drive East
Pomeroy, 011.
Income limits have' changed 1
person· $15,100, 2 persont-

$17,300 And lllll limits hava
changed also If you are ~ years
old or handicapped. you may

qll0111)' lor The Maples. ()paning&amp;

are now available Renta are oom·
puled according to your Income.
Relrlgerator and stove provided
and all primary utll~lto paid. Muot
bt so years of age (effective
through February 29, 2000) or
handicapped Must meet HUD

202 Section 8 eligibility roqulro·
menta. For further detallt, call

(740)992-7022. Er!O
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood Drive
from $2711 lo $358 Wal~ to shop
&amp; movloo . Call 740·448·2566.
Equal Houllng O!&gt;portunlty

Beautiful Modern 1 Bedroom
Apartment Rent &amp; Utllltleo, lntarvtew, Rtflrancet., No Pets, lt118,

Dopoolt, Non smo•rs. AVailable,
41151991n c~. 7o40-44e-3864.

740·1192-4514, epartmonto avail·

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartrilent,
Across From Park, AC 1 No Pets ,
Ralerenc11, Depoatt $32ei/Mo ,

740·44e.t!235, 740-441HD577.
Furnlaht4 Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;

Bath, Clean, Aoloroncao, &amp; Do·
pos11 Roquhd, u - Paid, 740of48-15t9

lnolail For You. II You Don't Coli
Ua, We Both Losal 553 Jackson
Plko. 740·448·6308, 800·291·
Swimming Pool For Salt:

16x3~

OVal Wllh Solar Cover, Rig Cov"
er And Cover Reel. Dtck Com·

!iooo USEP APPLIANCES

Waahera, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appllanoea, 76

Waahor $95, Dryer $95: Eloclrlc
Range S95: Froot Fret Aelrlgora·
tor 1150, Chell &amp; Upright Freez-

er, Dryer $205, Waaher $205, 1
Veer Warranty, New Amana Air

Conditioner, 5,ogo BTU 5 Yaar
Warranty, We Service What Wo
Selll Skaggs AppUances, 78 Vine
s,..~

Galllpolla, 74()..148-.13111

-5311

550

Anllquea

POLE llllDINQS
tloroe Bams Garages, Any Style,
Any Size, Frea Esumetes, 740·

384-4567

560

540 Mllcelleneous
Me~ndlee
1 TWin Bid Willi Storogo D,._.

Underneath $40 OBO, 1 Antique
Flool' le"1&gt; $100, 740-3e7·1041

11' DlrtcTV llteliltl S,ototno·
169 oo comea with three month

lreo programming Umlttd lime olltr,coll1·800-nt-etll4.
·
19'

Televltlon

And

Stand ,

Draperies, Tabla lomp, Mtdlcino
Coblnol, E.corciM Bicycle, Hlah
Chair, &amp; Sohool Oeak, 740·4462732
4 Cemollry Lola In Ohio Valley
Memorial Gardono, 1100 Each,
740-448-9238
AKO Adorablt Chocolata Malo
Lab, 4 Montho; Hotpol~t. 20 Cu.
Fl Freezer, 740·448·2460 Allor
5
Aluminum Tool Box For Small

Trui:k MO. 7ll0-448-0440

AMAZINQ

METABOLISM
Broa~lhroughlll Loot 10·200
Pounds Easy, Oulc~ . Fut
Oramallc R11utta, 100% Natural,

Doclor Rtcolt-tdtd "'" 8ampitl Cel740-441-11112.

Soulh
I NT

1990 Nlaaan piCkup, runa &amp; looks

good, $11SOOB0,740-742-2574

11111 Ford Aongor 2WD, Bodlln·

Spd, 1~.500 mila•. $12 ,500 Call
Tracy, (304)882·3560 or I:Jq;4)812''
2051 .
t
'
1988 Blazer 4WD, 6 cylinder ou·
tomatlc, M;, PS, PB, groat •hiOe.l
$3700, 740-992-7478 or 740· 9-(~;
Ford Conversion VaT\!

302Ft, ralaed roof, TV, captain'•

HI-Top ExplOrer Convarsoln van.,
One Owner, 39,700 Miles White,,
Orttn Leather tli\tlrlor All Op·,
llont ~VIIIJblt, .j3,000 , 740•:
448-0076.

Ha~

(304)675·1407

At Delano Jackson

Farm, 740·44G-t104 Or 740.441 0450.

TRAN SPORTATI ON

Body In very good condition

2282.

87,000 Milo 2nd Owner, Exotl·

1110·1tiOCAA8 FfiPUAnd

Tax

Aopo's. For Llotlngo Call 1·800319-3323 Ext. 4420.

______

.

l'lf1!0nburV, wv 21!101 .

oacrlllce ' al $6,500
Call:
13041t71-7m.
1988 Monti Carlo SS, runs good,

looke goodr 30!5 high output !
S4000 QBO, 740-982·3367. .

[ .JU)\ LOIIE '(OVi:, BOO~(.'itO~ I

new, ridden very little, $AOOO, :

740-992·51!75

1998 Honda Foremen ES •so 4•4
Windshield Rear Rack Gear, ;
Storage, Like New, 400 Miles,.
$5,400 740-38e.e418.

"

·

wE'RE ....WII'UI.\

I"'!.I'T!
wn.e WIITCHID!

WE RE

for Sale

g2~:::J;i::::t;,

PUTRID!

1997 Kewuokl Jot Skit tOO cc 3'
Seater, Alum inum ·Trailer, life

Jac~ot. Excellent Shapol 15,500, ,
740-992-3537.

1981 LIO!'OIO Town Car, 156,000 1,.:.;;;;.::=-=.::.:...,-r------"-,
Mlleo. Runs Greatl740-44t-o335, 760 Auto
6
740-448-3232'
Accessories

..

needs windshield. $700. See at
104 8th St .. Pt. Pl .. (304)87573116.

Now gao Ianiei I body pariS o &amp;:
A Auto, Ripley, WV. (304l372••
3933 or 1·800-273-9329.

790

1991 Bonnevllls, excenant condi-

. Cam.,...S6
Motor Homes

WELl., ~OW DID

•

drink
49 Actrua-

-

Arlhur

50 German 101
52 Knock

53 Lllul: auf!.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Ctphe~ cryptograms ara cree!ed fi'OfTI quotat10f11 by flmout peopM pall and l)r'senl

Each letter 1n tht cjptler lla!\01 lor another Toc:My'•

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DCPXU

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION. ' NexiiQ bomg shol a1 and m1ssed, nolh 1ng
sat1Sfy1ng as an mcome tax refund • - F J Raymond

'::~:~~~, scall~lA-~t.~s·.

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One dummy to another,
' Some men thtrst after fame,
power, and money, but all men
thtrst after - • - • - • -.'

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Complete lht chuckle quotod
bv fdhng In the m1 ...ng WOtdl

-

SCRAM UTI ANSWIIS
Oxford- Femur - Tempo· Rancrd ·NEXT OO~R
A colleague kept yawning and stretchtng Smiltng he

Don't got stung by high pr1&lt;cs 1
Shop !he ciGssJ(Itd st&lt;fiOII

•• $6,995, 740..:

'

•

•

explatned ' Insomnia can be conveyed to man from
dogs- the dog NEXT DOOR '

I FRIDAY

•
••

APRIL 161

Cylinder, Auto, Front Wheal

Drive, 33,000 Mllel, AU/FM CaooeUo, Aa~lng $5,700, 740·441·
0118 Homo , Or 740·441-0950

Vary Good Condition! .5,500,
740-4'11-0337.
1998 Lincoln Mark VIII, Loaded,
Mooh Roof, CD, oct •36K mllos.

camper

shell ,

109K

•

SEHVICES

8,10

&gt;

•

~

Home ·
lmproverilentl

'
-.
.'.
~

•

PSEUENT
WATERPAOOI'IIICI
Uncondiilonal llltllme guoraniH.
LOcal references furnished.

1875 call 24 Hra. 1740)
446-01170, 1-800·267·0578. Aog·
.,..~.

miles,

Porto And Service: All
Nome Brando 0\llr 25 Vetra ![x-·

A~pllonct

Po~ or Gray Coci&lt;ltel~. 8 monlho
old with cage, $75, 7.4o-247-11601

1998 Pontiac Trans -Am, Navy
Blue Mtlallc, 5 1 Liter, LS 1 En-

cac

wrecked. bent frame, 97K miles.

gine, Leather Interior, 10 Spul&lt;or
Monsoon Stereo. 12 Disc CD

Changer, FUlly LOidedl Will TalcO

,..,. orr. 1~ ue

1548.

p

Chavy Moua 1\lbe Frama,, QrK
Car. 377, PG, 5.13 Dana, Bill 01
6.52 In 116th $8,500, Turn Key
oeo, Trade On EVO Harley, Call
Randy 740·448- 3005, Alter 8
~M

720 Truck• for Sill
1951 Chevy 112 Ton Pici&lt;·Up,
Can Rtttore Or Make A Street

Rod. 740-387·0138.

7~0-•46·

Fronoh City Maytsg,
7795

.

Glneril - HOme Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl aiding ,
carpentry, doora, windows, baths,
rnoblla 110mt repair and more. For

lrH estimate call
8323.

C~t.

740·1192-

LAREDO CONIT

COI[!)Ielt Home Remodeling, SidIng, Windows, Roofing, Room ~d­
dltlons, Fully Insured, Free Est

740-384-4587.

Llvlngaton'a Basement

PrOofing~
baaement' ::::~: ..
done,
freeall11t1matea,
quoraniH 12yra on )011

1

""* (~)1195-;1687, .

840 IIM:J:•t IIICI .·:

~~;.;;swirl~,
"'-~.
u-

-

....

U..lar

. ,..d tltclrlclon . Rl~onour
lltctrlcll, W¥000308, 304·17&amp;·

1711.

ASTRO-ORAPH

Ea· .

perlence "II Work Guaranteed.

ley Drive In Athens, Oh 45701,
Coil740-583-7871 .

44 Ho1 br8ncly

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

WE 60T ONE ..

Travel Trailer, New Fur-...'
Water Heater, Oak""

No Tille. Wholo car. no porta,
$1,200. (304)675·52•4 or s11 ol
2808 Jacl&lt;aon AVe • PI PI

Wantld to buy· electric stul guitar, Hawa"an Lap steel, consoles
11&lt; podol oteola, write 111· 17 Burk·

atlck or ..,..
31 Pl•ywrlghl
O'Neill
39Hummed
40 Thicket
42 Bunchn

•

Moving· 5 Boxers,, two aduU fe males. one adult male, two puppin, belt ollar, 740-992-1383

Lowrey 'Cotllllan• organ, $1200,
740-992·7200. \ i,

apot

36 Prellx 10&lt;

•

1250. 740-742-71 03

ln1tru~nt1

-·

35 Voca11on

L--1--'--"---''--_.,--' you dovelop from Slop No. 3 below.

TI-lE'( 60T FORT'( AND

YOUR GAME 60

$3 ,795 1988 MonloCorlo SS.

Musical

11ternetJw•

30 Grow In
length
34 George-

1991. Lincoln Continental, Too
Many Features To Llat, Nice Car

Factory warranty until 12122/99,

Jack Rus1111 terrier puppies,

manner

26 Soviet reiUIIf
28 Wlt8t'Color

~-.,~-..,,~..,ll'l'._lr:7:-TI-I

PEANUTS

..

tion, PB. AC. 3.8 anglno, $3,700,
740-1149-2045.

Dachohund Long Hotrod. 1 Year $23,000. 1991 Chav S·IO Tahoe
Old Malo. $100 To Good Homo 2WD. 4.3L. 5 apd. Tilt, Crulaa,
Onlyl740-441.0111. '
Ca.asene. NC, LOti ot new parts,

FARr,l ',lJPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

:"'!

1988 Honda 300EX 4 wheeler,•'

Iomatic, " Doora, 5o,ooo Milas,

-

Pupplal &amp; KltltiW
Fullnt or pett •a.wt•s

570

,..

ale Electra Glide, Loaded, Lou Of 1

Honda Helix Motor Scooler
250cc Staroo &amp; Trunk, All Origi1tll Jaguar X Jl. Excellant nal, Verv Few Made, Prefer tor
,Condition lntlde and Out. Runs , Trade For 4 Wheeler Of Equa ~
great, drlv11 great. Dark blue ex- Value, 740-2411-0485
terior, tan leather Interior/ power
sun roqf Pioneer 1tereo WIIJ 750 Boata I Moton

AKC Sberlan Husky Pupi, $150 • Work.
S200: A!llomotl\11 Paint S20 -S2&amp; 1981 Cavalier Automatic, ' AIC,
Gallon M•ny Colora, 740-~46· AMIFM TIPI 16,000 OBO,
11127.
1304)675-51'!2
•
B . V . - .......unt
-1988 Dodge Neon 4 Cyltrtller.'JOJ304-415-12t3

..,

Fl~(. . 1... (N'I'\X(.INO, 1... Qli::j&lt;:.l1:'(
t».t-1151\, 1... VlOW N'.l) 1... C.D Jl.ll.lt.L
&amp;.

11195 llartey DIIYkllon Ultra Ciao·•

like

East
All pass

However, some players -- even
experts -- try to be clever, and end up
losmg lrr cks they should have won.
That apphes to thts deal, but the
declarer sltll had to read the cards
well Slllmg West, what would you
lead agamst three no-trump''
llus layout arose dunng the match
between France and Sweden at the
1995 European Champtonsh1ps, held
1n V1lamo ura , Portugal.
The French North declared one
no- trump , wmmng exactl y seven
tncks.
At the other table, M ats Ntlsland
for Sweqen opened w1th one notrump, s howmg 14-16 pomts Hi s
partner, BJ o rn Fallemus, JUmped
strmghl to game Now the French
West got o verly •magmati ve. You or
I would have selected the d1amond
mnc, surely defeattng the contract
However, West wanled to lead a
maJor because North hadn ' I used
Stayman. So, he chose lhe blzarrelookmg hean s1x
• Declarer dtd we ll, callmg for
dummy's queen. East would have
done better to duck , rctammg commumcalto n wtlh h1 s partner, but he
covered wllh the kmg After winnmg
the lhtrd round of hearts m hand, Ntlsla~d s uccessfully fin essed the club
10 West won the next club lead wtth
hts ace and exiled with a c lub
1
As Wes t hadn ' t cashed the 13th
heart, tl was clear he had led I rom a
three-card suit So, he had surely
begun with 3-3-4-3 dtstnbutwn.
(With 4-3-3 -3, he would have led a
spade.) So, Ntlsland cotlltnued wtlh
Ihe ace, king and another spade Thts
estabhshed nine hard-earned tncks
from three spades, One heart, two diamonds and three clubs.
•

191M~Pontlac Sunbird LE 67,000
Mi. . $4,000, 740-441-QI:!:!

AKC Aeglotorod Yorl&lt;olllre Terrier
Puppln, Rtody 4115199 740-379-

200B- lfl!tl'llii

,...

Extras! $16,500, 740-367·n55

1989 Chevy Bat Air 2 Doora, 327,
2 Spaad. Powar Glide Trans,

Impound•,

THE BORN LOSER

1976 Hondamatic motorcycle, excellent condition, 2 owner. 8 track

radio, windshield, aaddle bogo, all
Included. must aao. $1200 OBO.
740-742-4510
,

1950 Plymouth. 4 door. 8 cyi .,

North

3 N'l'

12 "Ivanhoe ..

pen,_

By Phillip Alder
If you stick to textbook b1ds and
plays, I guessllmate you wtll get
some 80 percent of deals correct.

'" I

Flar Pigs For S418, 740·256-6102

Wesl
Pass

9 French
O&lt;dlnal
ending
10 Erode
11 Holm
19 G-k lalond
22 "Praying"
lnMCt
24 In 1 quiet

Stick to the book

730 Vans 6 4-WDI

For Sale 1893 Chevy Full Size,

1000 1111 or good milled hay lied
with plastic, $15 each, 740·898·
27.,,

5 Mop abbr.
6 Barbro
Strelaand
movie
7 Acme
8 M..tlevol_..

Opening lead:??

ar, Tonneau Cover, CD, Air,~ 5:

0583

Hay &amp; Grein

ono
37 Popular
Chrlalmoa gift
40 Hints
gem
41 "Roady
14 - p o f i or- .. .'
15 Very rocloua 43 Circular tent
18-.,
45 CIAr-undocorollon
48 Alrlcon
17 Uncloae, lo
ontetope
Byron '
47 Sllcky otull
18 , . . _
48 trrotlonal1ear
component
51 Comr20 Computer
54 Moot wllhtre&lt;l
"-f-d key 55 Took 1o the
21 Fire period of
beach, porhlpo
tlme
,
56 Houae and
23 Mouno groundo
24 "let It oland" 57 Aopld
25 Actreoo
Cannon
DOWN
27 01~~~ duck
1 Narrow-minded
29 Br
of
peraon
pheoaanta
2 Spun
31 52, Roman
3 Detoctlvt
32 -Aviv
Queen
33 Building
4 Aaolat
· lcldiUon

1 - -ey-.:1
7 IMM fokltl
13 Cryolltfllne

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer· South

$4,500.00 080 740-251!-1241

Pets for Sale

M,T.W. 10:00

a.m. to 8:00 p.m.. Sunday t·oo to
6 oo p m. 740·992·2526, Auao
Moore owner.

mant Trailer, Tri-Axte, new t1r11:
pentel hitch, $3 ,500 DO Firm
1985 Dodge pickup, runs good,

chairs and bench 111t $I BOB
OBO/trade. Call after 5PM;

Graaa

• 'A K 52
• J 10 4 '
+A3
• Q 10 9 6

$12,000.00 Firm Hooper Equip•

- -· 740-245-0485
Fair Plga lor Salol ExCIIont Blood
lineal For mora Information Call:
(740)·245·5672 or (740) 367·

640

Soulb

Oumptruck Engine-low mileag:~
new tlreer • new bedllnfr;

199t

.. 10 9 3
• K 9 8 7
• Q 10 5
.. 7 52

• A J 3

1980 GMC 8000 Series, 18Ft
FlatBed • $1100. (304)57B-30n · _
1986 lntornatlonol 466 Dllm

1

East

• 9 8 7 2

I ~:::.;:::;:.::,;;;..._____

8 AKC Aeglatored Lab Pupploo.
5 weoko old. Ready to go Friday.
S300 eajl'40)379-2835.
1995 1Bulck LaSabr., Custom"
D~olo ; Blue Loaded, 740:J82·
AKC Lab Pupploo For Sale, Vel· 7512.
low 1 Chocolall, 1300 7~0-379 ·
2835
1995 Ford Taurua GL Station·
wagon, 46,000 Mlln, Top Condl·
AKC Aeglatered Boxer Pup Malt. Uon, $11,500, 7o40-44e-7355.
4 Months Old $200, 304-875·
2134
1995 Noon Hlgltllne, • Doors, IOJ.
tomatlc, AIC, Tlk, Caf8otlt, Slue,
AKC Roglstarad Golden RetriiiYIIr Well Maintained. Great Gao Mile2 Years Old, For Stud Service, agel Only $6.900, OSO: 740-367Papers Available, Contact Ml~a 7461
Browor At 304-773·5011 Or
le11118Molugo.
1995 Toyo11 Sedan 2 Doors, 4

1124 E. Main SlrHt, on AI. 124,
Hour~:

NannY &amp; 2 Kids,

1989 For(l ,tntmpo, runs good,
looks goOd, II~ rust. new tires,

Rio Granda. OH Call 740·245·
5121.

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antlquea,
Pomeroy.

ShoriBod $1500 as II ltU•
OldoiGood Condition, $ t .ooo.
(304)682·2042.

04·15-19

K J 6 4
K 8 4

Weol
• Q 64
• A63

200 miles. AutomaUc 112 ton

--.,...-.:..,....,..,....,_--:-.!"

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

Hou1ehold
Goods

AJplne Goats 1

Pollct

Woltrllno Special 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Par too; All Brass Com·
proaalon Attings In SloCtc
RON EVANS ENTEAPAISU
Jacklon, Ohio, 1-800-537·9526

nice, $350 par month pluo dopoa·

Ford(wrecked/rlghl
302 Now Jalptl' MOCO&lt;t

2()45

Vou To Install Your Own Or Wa
Can FurniSh A List 01 Dealers To

490

11, 740-949·2093.

county Fairgrounds, Washington
C.H. Sailing 200 Head, 01 Barrewa, &amp; Gllta, Conolgnora Roger

Stock Janllrol Healing 4nd Cool·
lng Equlpmant, Duct Wor~. Roglotara, And Rotated Matarl~ll For

pltloly Around All To Ba Moved,
Price. $1,000, 740-258-1397.

Office building· Minersville, 600
square toot, air CQndiUoned, very

1171
~de)F150.

•

$900 (304)895-3659.

27th Annual itlnuey Pig Sale. Frl·
day April 23rd, 7:30 P.M Faye1111

lent Condlllon, $5,000 Firm, 740.
379-2688.

(304)895·3714

ForU.M

Livestock

$1200. (304)682·3613

And Service Supply. We Soil

0096

470 Wanted to Rent

2.

t

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

F- Olrtct Special

pao I a SUPPLY

69011

'

710 Autos for Sele

PAIIESTAA

441·1018.

~

241

446-1039 ArtyUmo

Mile From Gallipolis On S.R. 588,
$135"-10, Plus Utllllloo, 74o-4463411

Enclosed Porch, 3BR, 1 1/2

630

Appliances, 740·446·1004, 740·

programing, Cali 868-265-2123

2. (304)895-3538,Aiter 8PM

GallpoDa, Ohio

7

North
.. J 8 7
.. Q 52

or

lot, opening and ciOiing.lnctuded,
$2500 , (aavo S500l, 740·742·

Plus Oepoalt, No fe:ta, Call Dab-

san. CAR·
a LAWN

1989 Chevy Trucll. Great Shape ~
(3D4)l62·2721. 7·1PM , l..vo ·
m11sege (304)874·1445, 8·9PM
COl U... l'&lt;&gt;urS onty.

woodaptlltar. 7~2765 .

9133

ble Or Judy A1740-448-7323

100 Pieces To

IIICHAEL 'S FAAU

9033

Spacious 5 Room Unlurnlshed
Apartment In Point Pleasant
Area, Rele,.nca &amp; OepoaU Ae·

- vary Spacloue, 2 Bedrooms, 2

(304)61S-4507
711 N H Sliago Chopper With 2
Row Com Head, $1,800.00. AISQ.
N H. Silage Blowor, $1,000 00 .
740-&amp;13-2285
AUCTION: Solurday, April 24th,
10.00 A.M. Ovor 30 Uood Lawn
Tractors. Over 30 Ulod Tractors,
15 Used Round Balers, Uaed
Al'-8, No TIR Planters, Etc Over

Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; rop1Birll ..1 Bentley, 937 · 58~ - 2398, Leroy
Larrk:ll 937-7110-4802.
Problema? Need Tuned?
plarto Or. 740-4411-4525
3 Pure Bred Hamp1hlre Boars &amp;
Hewlln Packard Pavilion 82 ~9 a Hampshire Fair Pigs, 740·37?•
Gig Hard Drive, KeybOII'!I, Monlll- 2805
tor, Printer, Soma SOttwera. Need
+H a FFA Club Plgl, And Round
To Sail. $100 oo 740-258-1241.
Beleo 01 Hay For Sale, 740·388-

1/2 Acre Private Trallef Lot, 1

Water furnished $200Deposll
3Mi North ol Point Pleasant, At

able, lumllhedl unlumllhtd.

Mora Or Leai, Boating, Fishing,
Hunllng $500.00 Down, $144.00
Month. Aouta 1, e Milao Below

Blue Couch &amp; Loveaeat, $400,
CIIAfter HM 740-367-D680

Free installation, 3 months free

Lots For Bole 1/2 shaded camp-

Own Your Own Summer Place
With LOIS Ot Privacy 1 Acre

5443.

19t5 Torramlto Good Condition,
Call Huntington, 304-736-9131
Day; Or ~525-5359 Evonirtgs

480 Space for Rent

Christy'a Family Living, apart ·
menta, home &amp; lreltar rentals,

Alwtr, ol!l (304l57fl.2894.

Spring Valley, 2 story family

$385/Mo., DaposH I Good Refer·
enoes, 740-44&amp;-2801 .

Beanie - · For Salt, 740-245-

Twin Rivera Tower now accepting

Fleatrlcted Residential Lola Located A Comfortable Distance
From Oallipolla Double Wldtl
Are Permitted. •Leave All Your
Cares In Town, Buy Vouraalf A
Ploca 01 Ground' Lola Start AI
$8,750 5% Down land Contract
Now Available. Call For Free
Mapo. H!00·213-836S.

on 12 acres, Village Middleport,

home 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Baths,

IJ

$38,500

sites, water, road. boating 10 Ohio

740-31J8.11041

Etc CAl 740 448 •1.

Road
Frqnlage.,
(304)675-4879

Restored VIctorian home situated
seCluded and private, appoint·
menl, cail740·992~98

One Bedroom Apartment in Pt.
Pleasant. Furnished Very: Nice

'2bdrm apts , tota~ eleclrlc, appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to·.lschool in town,

$45,000, Cail740-992·7572.

Drlvo, PI Ploaaant, (304l675·

Traoh, $315/Mo., 7 40·

17 83 Acres For Sale Or Trade
For 4 To 6 Bedroom House on
One To Two Acres Been Oozed

Oakwood Homes Barboursville,
WV $499 Down Single Wide,
$999 Down Double Wide, 304·
736-3409

lois , get th6 4th tree Special
Sale Companion and Individual

For Sale By Owner 38A, 1 1/
2BA., large family room &amp; office,
upstairs totally remodeled, new
roof, guttering, water eoftntr &amp;
Iota or extras 2912 An11111on

Sewa~o.

448-0008.

350 Lota 6 Acraage

Left On Loan (304)722·7140

Ouibulldlngs One With Beaemont,

Fenced In Vard, Central ~lr,
Wal~lng Dlotance. 01 Wai-Marl,

Appllcauono- ..35

• Vine Street, Call740·448·7398,
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
1-888-818-0128.
To Unlvertlty Of Rio Grande
Campus, 740-245-'5656
Hotpoint Full Sizt Washer 4 yra
old, seo. Almond Color. Kenmore
2 Bedroom Aparlmlfft, Rio
Dryer, $60. (304)875-6883
Grande Area, Close To College,
$350/Mo.. lncludoa All Ullllllaa, New And U11d Furniture Store
Depollt Required, t-888-840- Below Holiday lm, Kanauga. Stop
0521
And See us. 740-448-4792

Apple Grove Memorial Garden 11
now oflerlng a limited time ape·
clal on Cemetery L011, from April

chine.

304-675-1957

5162

3 BR, 2BA, 2 Car Garage I Acre

menl, Electric Heai/C A $32,000
(304)6S2-3n2.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your toga to the mill just call

Clean, Efficient. 2BR . Referenc·
es, De9Qall, No Pets (304)175-

you pay gas

Electric Maintenance Service.

I

992·5502

$200 74 per month with $1150
down Cal H!00·83l-3238
·

4 Bedroom Ranch 1 112 Bath1,

L A Sm D A ,

122 1/2 VIne Street, Gallipolis,

0132.

Excellent stan-up home. Owner
pay cloatng coat 3BR w/Baaa·

WOfk8

K~hon,

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, 3 Car Garage On 2 5 Acres, 740·-'41·

Greg Milhoan 304/675-4628

992-11 oo, Appalachian Wood·

Bedroom

(304)875-3100.

By Owner· 33 Smithers Streel,
Gallipolis 3 Bedrooms, 2 Large

Furniture repair restoration &amp; re·
tinl,hlng, custom built reptoduc·
lions, klz: &amp; Bennett Roush, 740·

2

1992 t4x70 Redwood mobile
home,
excellent condition,

1995 Dutch Mobile Home, 1-'x70

Tl~lng

tached Garage, Rodney Area,

2BA MoblleHomo S250month

Cal After 4 ~M 740·245·1302.

Now

Wast 2 Bedroom Townl'louae
Apartment&amp;, Includes Water

Roomy 2 Btdrooma With At-

5681

1994 16x80 Sunshine Mobile

Reference Required. 740-4'41·
0008.

Neighborhood! Dapoall &amp; Raler·
once Aoqulredl $250 00 (304l87iH550

41 0 Houses for Rent

$12,000, 74().245-9120.

Home, Three Bedrooms, Two
Bathrooma, Walk·ln Closets, Utility Room, Electric Heat PultlP, A•
frlgerator And Stove lnciu;:led,

Prime Downtown Gallipolis Location No Polo. $300 . + Ulllitlu.

One Bedroom For Rent in Quiet

1991 14x70 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
New Gas Furnace /Heat Pump, 2
Porches , Many Extras! Aak1ng

trlcian , WV025956 , Free Esll·
mates tor Residential Services
(304)675-7927

modeling (740)441-1401 .

RENTALS

2 Bedroom Mobile Home out

$12,500, 740-742·2795

Nawty Remodeled 1 BR Apt.

and Clean . No Palo. Phone
(304)675-1386

992-2187.

Approved Master Licensed Elec·

Wlnng Breaker Boxes Light Fixture, Healing Systems, and Ra·

We Buy Land: 30 : 500 Acr11.
We Pay Cash 1-B00-213-8385,

(304)675-7045

3 Acres on sandhill· Road 42tfft

E &amp; S Lawn Service· Design, Implementation , and Service
Available for Spring Clean up,
fertilizing and planting Free estl·
mates Salislacuon guaranlled .

Homo
(304)882·2405
or
(304)882-2221, Homestead Bend,
Brokar

1982 Fleetwood 14Ft X 70Ft, 2 1 Bedroom Trailer Secluded Lot.
Bdrms, 2 Bath&amp;, CIA, All Eleo1 , 2 Sidwell /Porter Area, $375/Mo , All
Porches, Very Good Condition Utilities Included, 74Q.44t-o720.
740-448-6157 Afler4:00 Pm

Aoveroldo Apart,...ll In Middleport From $249·1373 Call 740992-5064 Equal Houolng Opporlun111ot

0165

20 Acres + needed In Mason or
Jackson Ct~ With or Withou t

Beautiful River VIew . Nice Two
Bedroom, 1 112 Bathroom Home
Or) 108 Terrace Street Stove &amp;
Refrigerator, Basement, One Car
Garage, Washer /Dryer Hook·Up,
Oepoalt &amp; References Required,
No Pets Rent Discount Call 740-

dleporl, house &amp; 3 k:lta, must see
to appreciate, will sell house without lots for $89 ,000 , 740·992·

ltustwonhy. (304)875-7299

Real Estate
Wanted

44t-o3t8.

2222

Ar~

360

Gradous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VMiage Manor and

North 3rd Ave , Middleport, 2
bedroom, unturnlahtd apan""nt.
deposit &amp; relerencee, 740· 992·

7.41).446.()670

By owner, 725 Page Streel, Mid·

2 People Will Co Housecleaning.

2510

5733

$56 500 740·379-2666

Wlldllle Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc

Of Flood Plain To Build That
Dream Home On, Call 740·-'46·

New 1999 14x70 three bed1oom,
Includes 6 months FREE 101 rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe atepa and ntup. Only

A Muat See. Letart (304)J623518.

To Find •

12x65 General 2 Bedroom Trailer,
Gas Heat, Asking $1,200, 740-

With Gaurded Tub. Must See On
3 Bedroom Home 2906 Meadow·
brook Drive Call (304)875·4360,
after4PM

impo~&amp; l blo

·Until Now, Approx 3 Acres Lo-

320 . Mobile Homaa
for Sale

J-•••••••••11 Good2
REAL ESTATE

RIVER LOT

Anthony Land Co

mobile Home Moving, Must Sell

Now Hiring Experienced Cashiers
&amp; Dell Workers At The Following
Little John's Locations Cente·
nary Th1rd &amp; •Vine Street, Ganlpolis, Vinton , Pomeroy, Apply In
Person At The Above LocatiOns,
Between 8 AM -4 P:M

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage I
Lake View, Gallll County,
$32 ,000 More Acreage Availabtl,

740-388-8678

1988 Pinecrest

74().992-5039

140

HOUSE FDA SALE BY OWNER:
Located Near Downtown on 8th
St. 2 Story With l .R , and O.R.

Ant-lo "'""foul Puzzle

.

Saturday, Aprill7, 1999
Give aA your unique or ong..al
ideas 1 chance to provethemselvci in
the year ahead before prematurely
• tossing In the towel. One oi"'more
'ould contain slow seedmg suceess·
es.
ARIES (March 21-Aprii 19)
• Althouah you normally have ex~l­
: lent taste, you could be more atlniOI·
1• ed IO OS!CnlltiOUS of JariSh types Of
' items today, so be coreful you don 'I
· impulsively boy a white elephant
while you shop. Trying to patch up a
· broken romance? The Astm-Graph
: Matchmabr can help yQU undentand
whit to
to-make the relotionshlp
work, Moil $2., toMau:hmabr,e/o
"lltla ncwapaper, P.O. Box 1758, MurHill lilllion, New York, NY

do

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)
Unlike your usual orpni...t self, yOU
mi1h1 forego a Jantq plan and 111emp1
to do lhlnas in fits and starts today,
leaving lots of unfintshecl fllojects in
your wake.
GEMINI (May 21·lune 20) ljlon 'I
look to othen lo do thinss lgrl you

that you should be dolns for yourself.
Chances ore they won ' t cooperate
and you could quickly find younelf
tn a bind
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Someone who promi~ to
some,thi~s you're depending on mtaht
renege on his or her plcdse today.
Unfortunately, the sob story your pal
~ptns won't solve athina . Oct anolh·
er helper.
1
-LEO (July 23-Aua . 221 Undependable allies have a tendei\C}' to
show the same colors over and over
•1ain, "' when it comes to partner·
ship ll'fanaements today, team, up
only with thOse you know are reli·

do

able.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Allen·

lion to details and patience may be
the order of the day for you 11 - "
tndoy. If you lock the tolerara ' fOr
n\ethodkolchorel, don't lllrtlheraln
tho fil'lll place.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23l There Is
a major difference between wishful
thinkinl and positive thinkinJ. Be
hopeful but realistic today, and
count on things u If they are a fan

do•:•

aceompli before they happen
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov 22)
Springing major ~hanges on tbe family today will go over like a lead bat- .
loon. Talk things out first railter than
risk disturb10g domestic tranqutlhty.
SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Rushtng around from place to
place is normal for you, Hut don 'I be
•n such a hurry tlial you gel careless
about important things today, such as
dming.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan 19)
Hide the checkbook today, so you ' re
not tempted to splurge on things you
truly don't need II mtghl please you
at lhe moment, but buyer's remorse

will set in later
AQUARIUS I}an 20-Feb 19) As
an Aquorlan, you have the abtltly to
vtsuallzc fulunsl happemngs , but
liking premature chances on what
· isA't yet lull-fledged could be an
exercise in futility
PIScES (feb. 20-Morch 20) Generally, your hunches arc right on the
mark, bul today they could be far
afield and aet you In hot water. llunk
thtngs throuah thorouahly before
acting tmpulsively

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�M·o tive eludes
police following
deadly rampage
By GREG BEACHAM
Associated P'r ess Writer
SALT LAKE CITY - Sergei
Babarin had run-ins with neighbors
and packed a pistol during a fight at
a department store four ·years ago.
Rut police don 't know why the 71 year-old Russian immigr~nt chose the
Mannon Falllily Hi ~ t ory Library for
a deadly rampage.
A Church security office r and a
library patron were killed before
Babarin was shot by pol ice Thursday,
dying later in an ambulance. Four
other pcop.\e were wo unded as
Babarin calmly and mcth(&gt;dically
roamed through_the buiiding. even
stopping once to reload.
. " He did n't say any thing. He JUS t
came in and Sl'lJted shooting people."
said Margaret Kane, who huddl ed
under a desk in the orst-Ouor rcscarch

Friday, Aprll16, 1999.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page12 • The Dally Sentinel

broughL
The Iibrary, the largest center for
genealogical research in the world, is
aero&gt;.~ the stree t from the Church of
Jesus Chri&gt;t of Latter-day Saints' Salt
Lake Temple and Tabernacle . It has
mnre than 2 mill ion rolls of mi cro-

.,.,.1
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LOW PRJCES - STRAIGH~ FORWARD D.EALING .. CONVENIENT FINANCING
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pageA2
•

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remembers o thers ye ll ing, " Get

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

down~

He's got a gurl!" as the mnn
in a long coat and baggy pants and a

cap pulled low over his eyes began
fir ing at anyone he saw with a hand-

would begi n a hunger strike immc-

force the issue of assisted suicide into

the limelight.
The tape and the CBS News

hii11 he was eali ng and W{JU)d continuc to do so.
" If he's going to starve, 1 don't

shoW's interview with . Kevorkian
were the prosecution 's main cvi -

""""' va,

""Jtu., air, cass, bench

auto, locking Diff,
Indigo blue, cass, chrome
chrome bumper, MSRP $19,730

IMSI~P $14,155

gun .
" He came in the lobby and shot a

dlate\ y upon entel'lng priso n. But
Morganroth said Kevorkian, 70, told

Now S
!""""!,-.,.;IIK.&amp;....._,:I....~

1999 GMC YUKON
4x4, 4 Dr, V8, auto, air, leather,
tiH, cruise, alum wheels, CD
Cass, Black MSRP $38,720 ·

Now

Onl»

Onl»

s3

28,968

1998 GMC.SIERRA
EXT CAB

1998 FORD RANGER XLT

EXT CAB 2
WD SLT LARAMIE PKG

1997 NISSAN 4 WD P/U

Ext cab, 4 Dr, V6, auto, air, lilt,
cruise, 4 WD, only 9,000 miles,
WAS$19,900

4 cyl, 5 spd, AM/FM ..
WAS $13,999
.

::;s17 950

Now

WAISI va, auto, air, AM/FM, tilt,
cruise, WAS $18,995

=~ 5 16 800

· hi s first on a m'urder charge. ·Previous

1996 CHEVY CHEYENNE

wo.

\;IUI'~.,,,4
Ext ·cab, V8, auto, air, 2 Dr, 4 WD, V6, auto, air, lih,
WAJSIIIII, cruise, AM/FM WAS pruise; Whne WAS $13,995
$21,1195
'

trial.

eve ry 242 days from a locat ion about
as far as Venus from the sun. The oute-r plane! has the mass of four Jupitcrs
and orbits its star every 3- 1/2 to 4
years. It is more than twi ce as far
from its star as Earth is from 'the sun:
Eanhlike planets are unlikely to be
four:-d in such systems, the sc icnlists
said, because the forces geQeraled by
huge Jupiterlike planets - moving in
elliptical rather than circular orbits-=would kick smaller planets oul inlo
ohlivion .

" Now we have il multiple system,
maybe a Rosetta stone to help us
understand a lot of these weird planets we ' re findin g, " said R. Paul Buller by telephone from the Anglo-Australian Observatory in Epping, Aus tralia.
·
The Rosetta stone is an ancient
inscription in three languages thai
allowed SCientists to decipher Egypt.
ian hieroglyphics.
.
Upsilon Andromedae is easily
visible with the naked eye, though it
is currently behind the sun and will
nol be seen until June.
The planets were di scove red using
a method th at measures th eir grnvitational pull on their star, not by
direct. obse rvafion. Planets' gravity
tugs on stars. causin g .them to wobble sli ght ly.

..

V6, auto, air, AM/FM, CD, tilt,
cruise, WAS $18,950

:;5

17,450

'

1994 GMC JIMMY

$19

600 Now $1

Now$

98 CHEVY SILVERADO LWB, 2 WD, V6, auto, air, AM/FM cass, ,.,, aulst, W~~~r, only 9500 lllllts, WAS $19,900 .........~-'1'-"-·-5 17,850 .
97 FORD RANGER XLT, 4x4, V6, 5 !P· air, AM/FM, tit, crvlst, WAS $15,900-:
·----·-·-...........;_ _..........513,200
96 CIIEVY S·10 BLAZER, V6, AUTO, AIR, TILT, atUISE, AM/FM CASS, WAS $19;900
. ...................--.-·..S17,850
91 CHEVY 1/2 TON LWB V6, auto, air, AM/FM WAS $5499-·-..- -...- .........;......~.......5420_
0
90 CHEVY ASTRO CONY VAN V6, auto, air, !llt, crulst, AM/FM WAS $5900 _ _ _ .....- - . -....- -................._ _ _ _54650
88 CHEVY 1/2 TON LW8 VI, auto, air, AM/FM cassWAS $6900 .......,.,..,_,.;.._ __;,,.;,.,_,,_ _,_,~
......:.__,_ 55250
517,450
98 GMCSONOMA Ext Cab, 4 WD, VIi, allo, air, AM/FM, iMt, crulst, WAS $19,900
....
.
.
5 .
98 GMC SONOMA Ext. Cab 2 WD, 3rd Door, 4 cyl, Ssp, air, AM/FM, tit, cnist, WAS $13,995-......- ......_ _ _,,,,,,,,, .. -·- 12,600
98 GMC JIMMY 4 Dr, 4 WD, V6, aula,' air, lit, cruln, AM/FM, WAS $23;900 ..........~............'......,_;,_.;,............._,,,,........._ _ s2il,850
97 CIIEVY TAHOE 4 0.:, 4 WD, LT pkg. VB, auto, alt. AM/FM, CD, ltatiMr hit, tit, cru1M. WAS 529,900.-~...................._, __,,_, 527,800
91 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 4 Dr, AWD, V6, auto, air, tit, cruise, AM/FM cass, WAS $24,900 ......- ..................................~.-...- .. 522,500
94 CHEVY 1/2 TON LW8 VB, auto, air, tilt, !fulse, AM/FM, WAS Sl 1,995...............:·-·-·..............,..
............................................59650
.
'
94 CHEVY 1/2 LWB 4x4, V6, auto, air, WAS_$10,900............................- -...........- ............- ......59200
93 CHEVY 1/2 TON Ext c•, VI, .aula, air, Hit, ervin, AM/FM Iiiii WAS $ 1 1 , 9 9 5 - - - - -..- ...~......_,_..
$10,60.0
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POMEROY, OHIO
308 EAST MAIN
(740) 992~6614 • (80~) 837·1094
Mon.·Fri. 9·am·8
Sat. 9 am•4 p"'; Sun. 1 pm·S pm
@ ~~~1 riiill
CHEVROLET.

BUICK·

(W)

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Vol. 34, No. 9
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: . COLUMBUS (AP) -. People
interested in Ohio's Civil War history hope it soon will be easier to travel a Confederate raider's ,path
throug~ lhe eastern part of \he state.
Gen. John Hunt Morgan led
2,400 Confederate soldiers who
pushed through Tennessee, Kentucky, lndiana.aoid Ohio in 1862 and
1863, stealing.Jivestock. silverware .
and other valuables. They were captured by Union. troops 111 Salineville
in Columbiana County in eastern
Ohio in July 1863.
His 26-day ride came to be
known as Morgan's Raid.
At sites· around Meigs County in
southeast Ohio, new bronze historic
markers show the path Morgan and
his troops took after they clashed
with Union troop8 at Buffington
Island in the Ohio River on July 19,
1863.
.
.
Civil War buffs and state officials
hope the rest of Morgan's palh ·
across Ohio, from the Indiana border
near Cincinnati and north 'toward
·Canton, will gain new markers and
visibility as part of a four-state John
Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail.
"ll's a wondert'\11 idea. ll'\1 definitely draw tourists in the state," said
Margaret Parker, president of the
Meigs County Historical Society.
Her grolJP raised $11,000 and
received a matching grant of
$10,000 from the Ohio Office of
Travel and Tourism. The money is
~elping with placement of new
markers and signs across lhe county.
- Parker said lhe society installed
two new markers in April, and five
more imi planned for lhis year.
Dr. G. Michael Pratt, director of .Heidelberg College's Center for Historic and Military Archeology in Tif·
fin, has received a $40,000 matching
grant frorn the Ametican Battlefield
, Protection Program to "try and tie
down where things happened."
"We're hoping to be able to give
an idea. of exactly what happened
where, instead of giving a 5· 9r 6scluare-mile area and saying there
waS a bailie here," Pratt said.

Good Morning

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~ ;lbwl
14 Sections • 124 Pagm · -

· Todly'set if
Calend•n

C4&amp;5

C1•p1Deds

Q3. 7

Comlq
Edltorhlls

JQKrt

AloDR the River

M

· Cl

Qbltu•des

A5

~ -

Bl~

0 t9990llio \\tky "'btilblq Co.
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gearing up
for Noah mania

"
By JIM FREEMAN
·
Tlmee-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Members o.f the Hillside Baptist Church are. gearing up for
Noah mania.
Last year, church members construct·
cd an approximate Ill 0-scalc model of
the ark .as recorded in the Biblical
account of Noah. The chur&lt;:h's Power in
the Blood Ministry will use the mock-up
to perform lhe story of Noah later this
year. In addition, Noah is the subject of
an upooming NBC movie.
In the story of Noah, wriuen by Mosc:s,
God told_Noah to b¥ild a large, llhip-like
ark. to protect ~ii1amily from a great flood.
He was, told to build the ark 300 cubits long.
50 cubits wide and 30 cubits high; large
enough lo · contain two of every animal
including seven of every clean animal.
God then shul Noah and his family
inlo· the ark, and caused it to rain for 40
days and nights, flOOding the world and
killing those outside.
_
The Rev. Dr: James Acree, pasto~ of
ihe church, said the ark held 45,000 animals and was 547 feel long, 91 feel wide
and 54 feel high.
Friday afternoon, 5ome of the congre"
galion were on hand portraying the
account of Noah in advance of the NBC
movie. Those present will be shown
locally on WSAZ Channel 3 which wu
on hand to film the portrayal.
In ·Friday's portrayal, Noah and his
wife, played by Bretl and Laura Russell of
Lelarl, W. Va, go into the ark just as God
closes the door, shutting out the sinners.
Too late, the sinners realize lheir error and
unsuCCessfully try to enler inlo the ark.
Acree said the lessons taught by Noah
•• one of the most popular stories in the
Old Teshjment book of Genesis -- remain
valuable today.
"Noah and his family did exactly what
God had _commanded of them," he said.
"They were obedient to the word of God
and being Jed by God built the ark in its
entirety and on the day of the calling
went in and the door was shut by God,"
"God delivered them from the flood

NOAH AND H18 WIFE, portrayed by ar.tl •ncl Lllu,. Ru-11 01 LA!IIrt, W.V..,
wD:h from Notth'• Ark 11 God ~food. the wolkl, •• doomtd llnnera try, too_1811,
to enter tile erk In thla depk:llon ol tha Old 1'Mtllmant -unt. Membere ol tha
Hill*~~ hpht Chureh,loca1td
Routa 143
Pon.oy, •-nttd the
BlblleeltltOry In ICMtnca_of •n upcoming.IIIBC movie llbout No•h.

on....._

O( the WOrld. God
kept his promise," he_said,

.and all the diHSiers

n..,

Acree said the model ark will also be
available for other church groups to use.

By KEVIN KELLY 1
11-SIIIllnel Stitoll ·
GALLII'()LJS -The ~ery of items taken from two
Gallia County residences may lead to lhe undoing of A lhcft
ring suspected in nearly 20 break-ins, sheriff's Olicf Deputy
'Dennis _Salisbury said,
For the past few
months, the . sheriff's
department has conducted an inveStigation into a
rash of thefts and burglaries in the southern
end of the county lltat
have oa:urred since last
summer. Salisbury said
investigators' pursuit of
the cases Je,d to the
recovery of •the stolen
·. items.
As a result, Salisbury
said lhe investigation
will probably lead to the
atrese of several adults
and a juvenile suspected
in the crimeS. As lite
probe continues, more
GALUA -COUNTY aiMrlfl'l
arrests may be made, he Chlel Deputy Dennla Sllllbury
added.
eumlllM 101111 or the llllddiM
"A thorough investi· end other bml ...ca...,... by
galion into the multiple deputlea lrom • pelr of 1'-.1
B &amp; Es enabled us, due bretlk-lnaln the -.only'a -.tho
to lite aggresSive fol- •m and.
Iowup, to obtain useful
·'
information lltat ted to lite recovery of the items from two dif.'
fen:nl B &amp; Es," Salisbury said,
.
"This theft ring is going to come to an abrupt end," he
added.
On Friday, Salisbury and Investigator Mike Smith present~
ed saddles valued at around $.13,000 and _othcr belongings~
the owner, Mark Sullivan, who reponed the theft on April 5. ·
Sulliv1111, 700 Horse Oeek Road, Crown Gty, w6s one of
lite two RSidents whose property was ~oed by deputies;
He reported at the time that an unidentified subjoct or sub~
drove up to his bam and remoVed the saddles.
•
The thefts have occurred In the Crown Qty and Mer~
-cerville areas, Salisbury said, adding that in all, from 15 to 2(J
break-ins are alleged to have been committed by the sll!pCCls.
Charges are pending~~&gt; lhc investigation continues. he said, :
"The investigation has arrived to lhe poinl where fou(
adults and one juvenile are involved at this time, and our
investigation could extend to funher arrests," Salisbury noted.
The Sheriff's department will' be contacting property owners about identifying and reclaiming their missina items. Salisbury urged residents to wail for a call from the in~gative
division before making their own contacts.

Ohio University creates Appalachian health research center
ATHENS -The first comprehensive look · southeastern Ohio residents, it won't be lite
at the health of southeastern Ohio residents last The university's board of trustees voted
didn't produci: promising tesults, some Ohio Friday I«! mate the Center for AppaliChian
University researchers fdund.
·
and Rural Healllt Research.
The $ludy from last summer found thai 20
The goal of the center, which will be run by
percent of these residents do not have a doctor. lite College of Osteopathic Medicine, will be
lt also uncovered a rate of diabeceslltree times ,to improve the health of area residents and io
higher than lhe national/ate and a percentage oversee health care studies.
of smokers 10 ·I'CrQCIIC higher thaoi the state
"Because of where we are, as a citizen of
rate.
the rejion, it's appropriate to examine lhc
Although it was the first time anyone had community in which we live," said Carol
taken a _comprehensive look at the bcalllt of Blum, vice president of research 11!-d graduate

studies.
·
Randy· Hunt, director of the Governor's
Office of Appal1Chia, welcomed lite ce11ter,
but noled that much already has been done to
improve health care in all of Appalachia.
· Since the 13-state Appalachian Regional
Commission was mated in 1965 the region's
infant mortality rate, which measures the num·
bcr of,deaths. between birth and the agt of I,
has fallen from an above average 28 deaths per
1,000 births to eight, a rate in line willt the
national average.
·

aradc levels to come up with activi·
ties that lltey could help wilh," she
explained.
- -The 710 votunlccrs involved
helped a reported 1,100 people·
thro~gh their.efforts. In conjunction
with World Food Day, students col·
Jected canned and non-perishable
.food items for area food banks for
those in n~d. They held a fall carnival in October, with the entrance fcc
being canned fooda.
Children in kindergarten, first,
fifth and sixth gradi,l collected per·
sonal care items to donate to local
homes for ltbused women and children. ltellll collected included aham·
poo, lotion, toothbruahea and school

Hunl ~aid the commissi9n hu invcstc&lt;! in
healllt clonocs and progran1s and has recruited
doctors. to the region. Th~ commission's
emphasts on road constructton, sewer and
wale~ systems, and C~CPnomic dcvclopme~t
progrlms has made he&amp;!lh care more accessoble for the regoon, he Slid. ·
"lt,'s not ~ if.we h~vc'n 't been working,on
these ·tssues, Hunt Aid.
The center's first project,. determining the
region's true rate of diabetes, 'h u gotten slarted.

Gallia seniors set to share $17.5M
for achievement on 12th grade tests

Washington Elementary volunteers
·receive national---recognition for efforts
·8V CHUCK BAKER
l'lmp-Sentlnel llllf
GALLIPOLIS Volunteers
from the Washington -'.Eicmentary
School have been chosen as local
.winnc'rs in ihe USA Weekend National Day of Doing Good Annual Challenge.
Washington's submission to the
, publication's challenge was made by
Phyllis Bral)dcberry, who teach~• at
the school. Brandeberry said she and
the school jfC tryina to show chil· c
· dren at a,n drly age lltat hclpina oth,
· era is an important part of a penon's
life."We pu' up 1 challcnac throughout the building to each one of the

a supervisor in lite DHS \\brkforce Development unit,
lhose agencies provided lhcir assistance independcnUy
prior 10 lite TANF reforms.
These faith-based organizations l!lso serve another purpose in lhe process of transitioning welfare clients into paying jobs: providing work experience ..
According to Chapman, the DHS hM contracted with
Rejoicing Ufc Christian School in Middleport to provide
work experience, as teacher's assistants, for some clients,
while olh_er clients are workins in food pantries and cloth·
ing banks in the county.
"These agencies have always been coopeoalive with us
in lltose instances when we've asked for MSistance, but
now, the wall has been removed, and lhlll's been cnoouraging." .Swisher said.
·
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Recovery of stolen
.items may crack theft
ring, chief deputy says

l:f~tftnt#!l · Pomeroy church

·All' wheel .drive. V6, auto, air,
tilt, cruise, -towing pkg, gold
pkg, pewter MSRP $32,900

" I told him. 'Jack, if you' re not trials on ass isted suicide charges
here, how can we pursue the very ended in three acquinals and a mi s-

We're not alone: scientists
discover new solar system

human services departments·in trying to help clients with welfare dependency to self-sufficiency.
immediate needs, but according to Mike Swisher, DillCIOr
These partnerships are encouraged in order to avoid lite
MIDDLEPORT- A new relationship is being forged of lite Meigs County DHS, those local welfare departments duplication of services.
between the_state welfare syslem, faillt and community- were limited in lltcir contacts with faillt-based charitica and
Public agencies, such as Gallia!Meigs Community
bascd'organozations, in lite cmgoing attempt to move we\- organizations.
.
.
Action Agency and lhc Meigs County Council on Aging
fare recipients to self-sufficiency.
.
Temporary Assislance f6r Needy Families, the federal will continue 10 provide services to some clients when warOhio .Works First, the new wcifllfC reform program, . legislation which 'governs welfare prograrllS at the slate ranted, bul will be joined in stronger foroe by agencies such
requires recipients of cash assistance lltrough lite state wei- level has tom down lhose restrictions, according to SwiSh- M the Meigs Ministerial Association, the United Methodist
fare system to_work or to seek job training.
er, and local departnients can now forge new partnerships Cooperative Parish and other faith-based Charilies.
- From an administrati~e standpoint, lhe program gives with charitable organizations,
Those charities will continue to provide assistance to
county QOfllmissioncrs more leeway in administering welUnder lite Charitable Cl1oice provisions of lite legisla- · DHS clients including food from food pantries, clollting
fare progrims. Prior to !he new reforms;mosl policies were tion, state, co~nty, and local governments arc provided an from lltrift shops and, in some cases, even cmcrgcncy cash .
made at the state level.
opportunity to engage the resourceS- of failh-based and assistance.
•
· · Working with charities and·organizations such as Com- community-based service providers lltrough contracts to
The difference, now, is lltat the clients can receive direct
munity Action Agencies has - long
been
a
practice
with
seive
families
and
individuals
making
lhe
transition
from
referrals
from lhe agency. According !0 Barbara Chapman,
.

nma..s.ntlnel SUtll

1999 GMC SUBURBAN

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DHS, faith-based organizations forge partnership

Civil War buffl mark
Confederate raider's path

-::: 5

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • April18, 1999

By BRIAN J. REED

.

dence. ·
have anyone for an appeal," MorKevorkian said Youk's death was
ganroth smd in touuy_' s Oakland Press his first euthanasia, and the trial was .

'

Details on

Cash

ll o{)r when she heard the shots. She

you_ It's al l meaningless without.
you.'"
· · .
The same day Kevorkian went lo
prison . slate prison officials said
they had reversed their policy · on
force-fee din g. Under the policy,
Kevorkian would have been allowed
to starve himself.
Kevorkian injected Thomas Youk,
52, with a lethal cocktail of chemicals
last -Sept 17 at Youk's request. The
man sufferin g from Lou Gehrig's disease was confined to a wheelchair,
·had a feeding tube installed in his
stomach and was afraid of choking to
death on· his own saliva.
Kevorkian, who says he has
helped 130 people kill themselves
since 1990, senl a videotape of the
death to .' 160 Minutes," hoping to

';

career
Johnny

at a. cmnp utcr tenmna! on the second

By JUSTIN HYDE
Associated Press Writer
DETROIT- JackKevorkian 10\d
his lawyer he has abandoned plans to
go on a hunger strike and is being
treated well at his new home - a
-stale prison.
"He's ·in good spirits," !awyer
Mayer Morganroth said Thursday.
two days after Kevorkian was se ntenced to 10 ·10 25 years behind bars
for second-degree murder in an injcclion death last fa ll .
" He said the medical facilities arc
excellent, th ey gave him a checkup
and he had a lilli e hi gh blood pressure, but that 's about it," Morgan roth
said .
Before he was se nt enced,
Kevorkian had told a newspaper he

By WILLIAM SCHJFFMANN
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO -~ In an
astronomical first, researchers· have
di scovered three large planets spinning around a star 44 light-years from
Earth - the first clear evidence thai
our solar system is not unique_
The discovery involving the star
Upsilon Andromedae indicates that
many or'the gala~y · • 200 bi llion stars
are:\ikely to have planets, researcher
Debra Fischer of San Franci sco State·
Un!versity said Thursday.
. " It implies that planets 'can fo rm
more easil y than we ever imagined,
'and that our Milky Way is teemi ng
with planetary system s. " Fischer
said·.
Researc hers· have already found
planets outside the Earih 's, solar system, bullhey were Single bodies sur- r.ounding a star. This is the firsllillle
mulliple planets around a star have
been found .
The innennost·of the _lhree planets,
spoJtcd in 1996, has at least 75 percent of the mass of Jupiter and is very
close to its sun, orbiting once every
4.6 days. Jupiter is the largest planet
in the solar system. 3 IHtimes the size
of Earth.
.
-The other two planets arc huge.
The middle planet is twice
Jupiter 's mass and orbit s the star

HI: 50s
Low: 308

•PageM

.. '

Beve rl y Rawley had just seu \ed in

Kevorkian-opts not
to do hunger strike

Cal}st~ we wa nted to pursue through
lhe Supreme Court'.' I have to have

Fn1Urtd on Page C1

GREAT SELECTION... WHY WAIT.. NOW IS.THE TIME!!
'

of refugees
on the
move In
Yugo•lavla

fi1m cupn.:s of CCT)S l.J S and other
. rceord s from ·niorc than 100 coun·
tries.

lady 1n the head and two or three other men," said Lyman P\.at! , a genealogist
area .
Shots were fired as much as 45
" He jus! looked intent on what !)c
was doin g. He caine to do what he minutes after offi cers arrived , at first ·
was doing.'' she said. " He didn ' t call. leadin g police to believe there might
ou t, no na.mcS or any thing. He just be a second gunman. The gunman
-kept his hand held mit pointing a! barricaded himself in an office at. one
rcnp \e_.,
point and exchan ged fire with police.
Mayor Deedce Corradini said latThe slai~ were identified as secuer that Babarin was sch izophrenic. ·
rity guard Donald Thomas. ' 62, ahd
Bubann 's ·wife told in vest igators Patricia Frengs, 55 , of Pleasant Hill,
he had not been taking his medication Calif. Of the wo unded, a 71 -year-old.
lor schizophrenia and each day would woman sbot in the face was in se riwalk a dozen or so hlocks from their ous condition
·
home to the State Capi tol and toTe mAn international genealogical conple Sq uare, police Chi ef Ruben Orte- vention had auractcd heavy traffic to
ga said.
·
the library. wh1 ch has two floors
Ortega sa1d Babarin was arrested below ground level and three above.
afte r a 1995 fi ght at a departm ent Some 250 people - p~trons and
store in downtown Salt Lake City. He employees - arc in the building on
had been carrying a .22-caliber semi- a typi cal day.
aut omatic pistol and was charged
The church has been in volve d in
with assaul t and carrying a conceal ed ge nealogy since its fo unding nearly
weapon.
Police Lt. Mark Zelig said Babarin 170 years ago. The church amasses .
had a reputation for harass ing people the reco rds for what it calls the bapin his apartment ~ild in g or who ti sm of the dead . Mormons believe
passed hiS wmdow. Last May; a that such baptisms givc 'the dead the
bicyclist told police that Babarin opportunity to join the Mormon
st uck an um brella in the bi cycle church in the afterlife.
The church said the library woutd
spokes as he rode' by and accused him
of being a spy. No charges were not reopen until Monday. .

of Pontiac.

j)fusic in
•
the schools

items.
Fifth graders also wenl on walking field trips lo help.ciCIII up liner
thmuahout Gallipolia on streets and
walkways.
Durlna the hurricane sc;ason last
fall, sl_xth grade students collected
school and personal care ilcms that
were placed in decorated
boxes, and )Verc sent · to stricken
school ayatems in the South.
Third graden made Halloween
.treats (or 200 'Meals-On-Whecla
and nu_rsina horne clients. Third · Set
UIA Will I IlL
graders made, additional containers
_for youths at the children's home, u Medical Center.
Another charity lite volunteers
well 11 collocti111 boo!oa ,for donation to the pediatrica floor at ·Holzer
COntinued on pagei&gt;J

Ill~=~==~::::;::.
ldiiiOn;.
~ , ,

I

GALLIPOLIS - Sixty·seven high school seniors in Galtia County
soared well enough on lhe 12th-grade proficiency tests to qualify for $500
college scholanhips, officials in the county local and Gallipolis City school
districts re[IQrt. _ '
Of the I~ seniors in the county district who took the most recent test in
February, 34 - of2 I percent - will receive SSOO scholarships from the Ohio Board of Regents because they passed aU five test areas in lite 12·gradc
•
exam.
Two students in the eounty school system achieved honors standards in
all five test areas.
·
In lite city district, 33- or 27 percent - of the 124 seniors who took the
12th-grade proficiency test will ~ve the Board of Regents' schoiarshipa.
Two seniors at Gallia Academy High School achieved honors standards
in all five teat areas.
.
Gov. Bob Tlft set aside $17.5 million. for the program in each year of the
two-year budget now being consideoed by lawmakers. That's enouah money
to cover 35,000 scholarships.
·
The scholarships are good at any two- or four-year college or university
Continued on IIIII' A3

·'

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