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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy ·• Middleport, Ohio

CCL hears about massage therapy

•

Wednesday, Aprll1, 1998

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

IN TH! COIIUOtli'LIAI
COURT. PI90IATI
DMilON MllCia COUNTY,
OHIO

m1s. 1w11 OIJtl' tor..,. et
... INI...,...,J
..... 14111, ,..,
Mwan
It .10:00 a.m., 11ft the llelp
County Courthau• ltepe,
Stltl of Ohio, t.

Public Notlc:.

Public
_....... c -

'

.........

_,...
·
BelntOty,
th• - .. m•

Ohio Lottery_

•

•

lnetrurnent.

reel
She said that the massage therapy
llld pr•ml ..a are
The South Central District Con. . _ -VM to Plulll• •PP,.IIId 11 ninety nl111
is good for relaxation, stress man- ference will be held at Rodney Unitlohulet •nCI ll1rg11 . J. thouund
dollera
agement, and edema reduction. A ed Methodist Church on April 17.
o.y Wade ...... - '
lohuler by Ceoll P. (. .,000.001 and mUll Ill •
question and answer period fol- llleme will be "Christmas in April" CJUitlllln or the 11t1te of
llrlclbutylllldwlfebyCIMCI lold lOr not leu thin nlnetv
-llargll J. Sctu•. en
lltullld In the TCIWIIIIIlp ~In Dllellloolt 188, nine theullnd Cloll1r1,
lowed h~r presentation and she·was and tjle ToddlerS to Tassels League
of Llllanon, County of p111 18 of the 111111 (188,000.00). Tttn percent
lr.comp-.d,.,.....
presented with a gift from the group. is hosting the event
llelgl lnd 81lllt of ONo,' t. c-y Deed Recorda. .
down when lhe biCI 11
Kathy Dyer opened the meeting
Seveml of the members are plan·
~:onlte
·
ICCipllellnd bllonca upon
wtt:,..;
following
dlecrllltcl
lublect
to
111
1
......
by leading the group in the pledge of ning [o attend. The league has a
Pu,...•nt to the onl• of rul eelltl tltulllel In the 11";:::,:.nCI · rlghte~f- dlllvery ol dHd.
allegiance and the Mothers' Prayer. money making project and a draw- the Probate Court"olllelge
The Hie Ia eubJICI to
Tawn•hlp ol Lebenan,
..... ~
1pproval
ol the llalga
for roll call members answered with ing for a Longaberger basket will be County, Ohio, In C~ll No. County
of Mtlgellicl Stitt 311 p
-588 : Volume County Probete
Court,
1
when they last flew a kite. ·
held on May 21. .
;;~~~~;~of
Ohio 1nc1 bounded nc1
•
lle
• Melgo llelgo County, Ohio. The
It was voted to . endorse the
de•crlbeCI •• follow: In C:O:~!!:c'P~::rc':~. 07• GUirdlln rellrvtl the right
Donna Pullins won the traveling
Town 2, Ring• . 11 1nd In 007S4 lncf.ONI0755 •
renewal levy for the Meigs County ·prize. Refreshments were served by
to rlj1C11ny lnd Ill bldL
1(10 ICre 1011 No. 181 lOCI
·Excepting from lhe lbove
Gary Rupe, Ouardlln of
Council on Aging.
Peggy Harris.
~ ~~~ In the Ohio d..orlbed premle.. the
Margie~ SChul«
'
peny 1 Purohaoe 1nCI follOWing:
.
~; (4) 1, I; 3TC
In Memory
mortpert~arly ct..erlblcl · Approximately 4.035
II tollowe.
being 2.087 ICrel In
louneled on the North by 100 1ere 'Lot No. 111 anCI
'
'
In Memory of
IInde formerly owned by 1.841 ecree In 1oo Acre Lot
Newton Kimper; on th• 112 11 11me 11e1 bltwHn
NEVA
M.
GRIMM
To offer sto~ suggestions, report lateElll bV tilt OhiO River; on SA 124 lnd the Ohio RIVer
On Her83rd
tilt South by ·IIndt or J,M.
IUrvty of Qeorgell
brealdng ~ and offer news tips
Cox; lnd 11ft tilt Will by the
Ohio Prol-lonlii
Birthday, Aprll1et
~:"~=~~~~ ~;·~;2 .:~~
No. 8044, Jl~•ry
Always 10 true,
more or leu..
'Slid EXCEPTION II more
uneelfllh end kind
Excaptlng - hell of 111 fully deecrlbed In Exhibit
Few In this world,
thl oll1nd 111 1nc1 a1 other "A" or an Entry llled M1roh
ml-alo In and underlying 3rd, 1111 In the Malge
are hard to find
the above ducrlbad County Prob1te Court In
A beautiful life that
prem~IL
. . No. m15 and 11mel1
Aleit IUblect to the right Incorporated herein by
eime to en and
or way gr1nted to c. H. ret-.
Wetzel to I. II. J-•· June . No opinion of title nor
She died, ·• • eha
211t, 1'118 lnd recordld In oortlfle~llon 11 to 1ccurecy
lived, our beloved
.Volume 1, Pl.. 271 of thto ol ...acrlptlon rendered by
Mother, and bas'
R-rell of Alghll of Wev the the prep1rer ot thll
friend.
We wJsh you 1
'
.
.
Happy
Birthday
New Six Week Session Beginning April 7.
upon thle l!u ·
.
Tuesdays &amp; Thursdays 7-8 pm ·
Though you are up
,._.....;;..,....,..,.TTumplke Ford,
needs • Business Manager tQ
Held at Royal Oak Resort
. In Heaven and fer
Mid Ohio
support o~r growth. Realistic first
away! "
For More Information Call Jeannie Owen,
Valley's
·
Love and mlaeld by
.;: year Income of $35,000 to $50,000 or
Fit
Aerobics at 992-6893
Leading
your loving family.
¥~ more. Industry leading benefits

CCL hears about massage therapy
• 'Janice Haynes, .licensed massage
'therapist, was guest speaker at a
recent meeting o.(. the. Middlepon
Child Conservation League held at
tl)e Rock Springs United Methodist
'Church.
.
· Haynes spoke of mMsage as
spanning a wide variety of therapeutic approache.s which works to
improve an •individual's 'health and
. well being through the hanas by
manipulation of muscles and other
'soft ti ssue of th~ body.

•

•

Padres hand
Reds secon~
loss in row
.

::'*OJ&gt;

Pick 3:
9-7-5
Pick 4:
4-3·1-4
SuperLoHo:
4-9-18-24-36-38
Kicker:
4-8-2·2-4-3

'

Sports on Page 4
&gt;

~

Happy
90th
Birthda
8r_artdrn
Pickens

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

"

•

SMAll
·WANT ADS

1M&lt;

7

~1.'48, NO. 245
~1 Ill, Ohio Yltley Publllhlng Cornp1ny .

ABil PIKHI

Automotive
Retailer, has
lmmedlite
openings In the
following area:

:~pplicatlons will be taken at the Tuppers Plains Fire Department
.from 1:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. on the following dates.
~

. April 6th, April 8th; April 1oth
. . April 13th, April 15th, April 17th

· A Gannan Co. Ne-papar .

:J ones lawsuit dismls,sed by judge

.

·Appeal '99 ·p~r·cent'

certain~-attorneys
.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) _. Freed
fro"! the prospect of an embarassing
trial for sexual harassment, Presi.dent
Clinton responded today- with an
understated, "Oj!viously, I'm
pleao;ed." One of Paula Jones' auorneys described her as "tearful" and
said her legal team would meet today
to plot a "99-percent" certain appeal.
Both sides acknowledged that the
case is not yet behind Clinton.
.While Clinton savored his court
victory with an unlit cigar, the pres·
ident still must confront a criminal
inves1igation by Whitewater counsel
Kenneth Starr ·tbat grew out of the
Jones' lawsuit.
.
Mrs. Iones was not commenting
but her la~yers and supponers were
making the rounds of morning TV.·

Including group health and 401K
retirement plans. We provide the
proddcts and a great work
environment. You provide your
desire and commitment.
· Contact Brad Sang In per'ion
----:between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday
lhr4)U(l(h Friday at Turnplka ·Ford.
· Turnpike ·Ford Is an equal
opportunity employer.

BUSINESS
MANAGER

· The Meigs County Commissioners are proposing to secure grant
funds to assist in the cost of connecting to the Tuppers PlainS'
Regional Sewer District for the low Income and elderly reslderits
of the area who. qualify for the program.
.

2 sec~tc&gt;ns, 12 Pages, 35 t!enis

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

..

.·TURNPIKE· FORD

AftENTION
ftPPERS PLAINS RESIDENTS!

Clear tonlg'h t , low In
lower 30s. Friday, pertly
rain in afternoon,

.

.
'
WI don·' ilhink"this is over until the ' the victory, telling reporters today:'
. 8th Circuit rules (on an appeal)," "Obviously I'm pleased with the
Susan Carpenter McMillan, spokes· decision. 111e judge's ruling speaks
woman for Mrs. Jones, said today,
for itself."
,
·
, Responding to U.S. District Judge
Mrs. Clinton was more effusive.
Susan Webber Wright's opinion that "Both Bill and I havelelt throughout
Clinton's alleged crude advances on this 'whole thing that it would tum out
Mrs. Jones did not ccinslitute h~s- fine ... based on the fact that there
men~ Carpenter McMillan added: 'If was no ~vidence to 'support these
thai ruling stands. then you just have groundless claims," she told Ameri·
an open season on women here in this · can Urban Radio Network·.
country for groping and grabbi ng." · Wright's stunning ruling in Little
"Mrs. Iones was tearful ... it's Rock, Ark., on Wednesday did not
been an ordeal for her," lohn White- . vindicate the"president.· Ratller, the
head, Mrs. Jones' altof!1ey, said on judge said.Mrs. Jones' allegations fell
ABC's "Good Morning America." "farshortofth~rigorousstandards"
He said there wis a "99 percent" for establishing her job discriminaprobability of an appeal.
tion claim under Arkansas law.
In Africa with his wife, Clinton
Senior White House adviser Rahm
tempered his first public remarks on · Emanuel said today that Wright's dis-

.

'

missal meant that Starr, whose grand
jury investigation is probing whether
Clinton ·committed perjury and
obstructed justice in the Jones case,
needed to "move and wrap this up
quickly."
"There is going to be some questions by the Americans people why
you would have an ongoing investi·
galion of a matter when the judge has
decided that this case ha~ been dismissed," Emanuel told NBC'~
"Today" show.
former Clinton adviser James
Carville,. appearing with Carpenter
McMillan on NBC, said he yet hoped
to see the Jones case 'spawn another
investigation.
'
"I think a lot or money was
changing hands for a lot of people to

, I

tell a.lot of lies," Carville said.' "'fe
need a thorough investigation i~to
payola."
Their burden woUld be hlgh for
reversing the judge who threw out the
Jones lawsuit and spared the president a sensational, probably monthslong trial. Clinton looked forward .
today to gelling back to business in·
Washington. "I'm .very much looking
forward to going home and continuing the very ambitious agenda we've
got there," he said.
·
Although Mrs. Jones contended
she was placed in a dead-end government job for refusing sex with
Clintonon May 8, 1991 , Wright said
the former Arkansas government
clerk, who filed·.her suit in 1994,
"failed to demonstrate that she has a
case worthy of submilling to a jury.."

What's next
Mrs. Jones
• Her lawyers have 30
days-to decide whether
or not to appeal
• The Rutherford

..

Institute, which is

financing her suit, say they will
~ppeal all1he way to lhe SupreJne
Court

·

, ·

President Clinton
• Significant victory for

the White House
• Still faces legal
!roubles and mounting
legal bills

Kenneth Starr
• Does not directly affect
his work; Starr will
press on with his
criminal investigation
. • But impeachment

rumblings could stop
AP

.......----Artist in residence-___, House·in · udes $5 m·i llion for
Ravenswo d Connector project

····-···-·········-·····-··-

The U.s .' House of Representa- passed earlier.
The funding for the Ravenswood
tives has included $5 .million for the
Ravenswood Connector in ils. House project. if approved in the final stage,
"Transportation Bill. The legislation, . will be used for continued design
approving a lotat ·of $218 billion in work and construction to -augment
highway spending, was approved $1 .3 million previously appropriated ·
by Congress for the project.
·
last' night by a vo~t of 337 to 80.
A,mong the other seven projects
According to U.S. Rcpre§Cnlative
. Ted Strickland, P-Lucasville, the approved in the bill are t6e improve' · fundint ·levels •mUll ~~; ·mluU oU~asteiTl Aven~- -- Slat!=
cited with the Senate-passed ve!Sion Route 7 -- in Gallipoli~;. to 'lid in die
of the transportation bill, which flow of traffic; replacement of a ·

-,
'I
•.

The Commissioners urge all affected residents to take advantage
.of this program. Please contact the Meigs County Grants Office
at 992-7908 for more Information.

bridge across the Muskingum River
in Marietta; funds for the Chesapeake
bypass project: and the upgrading of
U.S: 33 to a four-lane highway to
bypass Nelsonville.
'
The House and Senate will now
work together to "reconcile" the
funding of individual p~jects,
because the Senate does not earmark
funds f~¥ in ' ivi&lt;!lllll·projccts when it
approves its trlulsportation funding.
according to Strickland's office.

Handful of Ohioans attack spend.ing bill
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Aa1ocllted Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Ohio would
get a significant boost in road-build'ng money 'under legislation that
pasSed the House without atross·the·
IM?ard Ohio suppon.
The slate's overall share federal
gasoline , ta~ revenues would rise
·under the legislation from an average
of $6!16 ·million.a year to more than
$1 billion:
.
But that ?idn't please lawmakers
with an eye on the bottom line; Buckeye budget·hawks complained about
the bin allouing more money than the
balanced-budget agreeme'nt allowed.
and complained about more. than
1,600 line-items earmarlcing money
for special projects.
"The hlghway process still works

•

•
•

•

. George Bo'A'M of

ahown ..... with

FRIDAY, APRIL 3
HIO
Fools Rush In

1:11
1:11

11:11

HID3

lm:Jepcnoen ce Day

MAX

falherS· Day

HID!
HIDF
IIID

Hosllle Waters

MAX

H80 Or.~m,11 M0~1e
Stepnen K1110 s Th t1mer

Tne Juror

.

Vtce Vers;~

1:11pm

11:N
11:15
11:31

HID
Hl03

The Samt
Courage uuoer F1re

MAX

Tw1ster

HID! '
HIDf
MAl
HID
HID3
HIOF

A Tune To K•tl
A1rp1ane•

Turbulence
The Ot~~tl s (h:m
Tm Cup
A1rp1ane 11 The SeQuel

SUNDAY, APRIL 5
1:11 '"' IIID
HID3
9:N

MAX

From The Earth To The Moon
(h ltSoc:le! 1 dllcl 2t
MISSIWI tmposstble
The' £:able Guy

HIDZ

Suo.1f'lt me

HIOf

...

•

11:111

HID

10: 0~

HID3

Nutrition exoer
gives you the
and real answel
·and vitamins

,.
•
•

•

COlumnist· Lorrie .Lynch will
give .you the latest scoop on
_your f~vorite personalities in

The P&amp;ltagon Wa rs
1180 Orr(Jm.rf Mov•e

._,~,

.'

'

The Aeltc
Prunal Fear

HIO

'1. (

Eat Smart.

One Fme Day
· The L,u ry S.1ruters Sh0\'1

MAX
11:31

'••

Get

SATURDAY, APRIL 4

....

lluclenlw In the
lltllow, 1111 llt'Ved ..
Plalna Elementary .•• an
In realdlnce" alnc:. 1111 .Wiliiii''
llo-•. ·• gredu•te
· Cltllt•lend l,_.ltute of Art and
the Nova Scotllllnatltute of Art
In Hallflx, N.S., c.rutcla, 1111
worked with alllluclenta In the
· achool, from klndergartell
through allith .grecle, helping
1hem lelm the ptOCHI of
claveloplng ldeea In art, work·
.lngln groupe, and 131111 ntlng
a 'lnlahed prolect. Projacta
Involve three-dlmenalonel
- • ntflectlng the community - ttHa, a barn, and
wildlife, Included - •• well 11
underwater c:reaturea whlc:h
will hang from the celllnga ilnd .
a cave ac:ene. The flnllh~
- n wiH be feltured 11 ali art
exhibit 11 the ac:hool on Thu,.
dey evening, wfllc:h will 1110
Include 10111e opportunHIH for
handl-on artwork. The threedlmenlklnll lllima _ . .,....
pared for the new E11tem Ele.mentery School, which le
ac:hedulld to · open at the
beginning of the neitt ac:hool
~r. At right, lludente Amen-

WhosNews.

..

·

· ··

..••
•

.••

'

...~lfEIIAX I HBO ON CHANNEL 18
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.

•

.. '

'

ell Berringer, JMH Nutter and
Jennlfw Hayman work on 1 3D trw. The prog~am II mlde
polllbla by grant fundi
thrpugh the Ohio Arta COUncil,

the ~llchlin Arta lnHietlve
and
Rlvarbend Aria·Coun·
ell. The Tuppera Plllna Ell-

meo•tat t

~

ld.ln the progt:am.

alao '111111·
. .

•

House, Senate clear"
··ecks bef.o..re break
~

'

•

'
''

.How they voted

• I

. COLUMBUS (AP)- State lawThe Senate, meanwhile. cleared its
makers, doing· some last-minute backlog' 'of legislation with ncarhousekeeping before their annual unanimous· votes on several' liills.
spring rece!t&lt;, have approved legisla· Among theril, bills requiring public
lion requiring more background agencies lo mail public documents if
information for foster' parent&lt; and requesied and requiring state park '
· better water testing al state !teaches. officials to test swimming area.&lt; for
The House voted 91-0 Wedlf\lsday high levels of baclma and IJ&gt; post the
• to ~cept some 'minor changes made results.
'
in the Senate la.&lt;t week to a bill that
The bills now,go to the House for
would require foster parent&lt; to be consiileratlon.
notified if their foster ahild had been
All together, the House and Senconvicted of any ·serious crimes, ale cleared the decks of about twosuch as murder or 111pe. The bill orig- dozen, mOstly noncontrovendal, bills.
inally ~leared the Hous!:'in the fall.
Lawmakers phin to takel next wee~
· Among the changes made in the oiT, and the next voting sessions are
Senall!. was a requirement that foster • not ~cheduled ufllil mid-May.
parents receive detailed reports of
The foster child legislation, which
psychiatric' reports, said sponsor Rep. is now headed to Gov. George ·
J~k Ford, D·1Jieelo.
Voinovich, was written after a Tol\l·

.
·
do. woman
was killed by her IS-yearo(d foster son, Johnnie JoiJfaq. He
was convicted of beating Jeanette
Johnson, 62, with a hatchet, dousing

her with kerosene and setting her on
· J
1996
fitre ·m her k'tic hen In
anuary
·
·
'th M
Jordan had bee.n I'tvmg
w1
rs.
Johnson ·and her husband for two
months. His history of violence
forced officials to move him into and
out.!&gt;f 19homcsimd fosteroperatio~s.
·
·
be
H
smce ·age 8· e was about to
· th ts
' t'tme 'Io a group
moued
• ag am,
home for I
g sex al 0ft ders
een·a c u .
en
·
. Her ~u~ba~: Charles. Johnson:
SIUd soctal se~1ces offi~1als knew
J~rdan had a history of vtole~ce but
dtd n~t tell ~he couple about h•s J?liSI.
Offictals sa1d the couple were gtven
Continued 011 page 3

By The AIIOCiated Prell
HowOhio's U.S. Represenlatives
vol~d Wednesday as ui.t House
authorized $217 billion in fedeml
spending for highways and mass
transitoverthenexlsbyears.
A "yes" vote is a vote to pass the
bill, which was approved 337-80.
OHIO
Republic~ns Boehner, N;
Chabot, N; Gillmor, Y; Hobson, N;1
Kasich, N: LaTourette, Y; Ney, Y;
Oxley, Y; Portman, N; Pryce, Y; Regula, Y.
·
'
'
•
Democrats- Brown. N; Hall, Y;
Kaptur, Y; Kucinich, Y; Sawyer, Y;
Stokes, Y; Strickland, :V; Traficant, Y,

.A..

· ul.e"s•on
Cher·
t't'l II• 11
IVCI
Pleads Innocent
·

WELLSTON (AP) - ·A teacher
onstrilcewhoisaccusedofhiuinga
security guard with an umbrella has
pleaded innocent io an assaultch~UBC.
Mitchell Baker, S1, of Wellston,
ente.red the plea Tuesday in ihe Well·
b
h f J k
C
ston ranc 0 ac son ounty
Municipal Court.
He 1·8• accused of ht'lt·•'n• Joseph
·
&lt;&gt;
Camp i_n the
. school bus g·~gc on
-·
March 18, lhe day after ihe strike
began, police said.
Camp, 28•of Troy, Micll., wu nor
injured. He is employed by Huffmaster Inc., the comJliUiy hired to
· nmvide security during ·lhe stri~-.
r·-111e maximum ~ penalty ~or..,.the
misdemcaiiO( charge is six months.in '
jail andaSI.OOOfine.
·
· About 121&gt; teachers are on strike
over wages in the 1,6()().pupil district .
·about 60 miles soutiL of Columbus.
Negotiations are scheduled for
Thursday.
• ·

'i

•

•

"'

.'

.!

the way it alwan has: badly, " said
Repuilic Rep. John Boehner. "II
shoncha es Ohio and it shon-cir·
cuits
ocracy." .
"'dded Rep. DavJ,d Hobson. R- .
Ohio: ...'f!lis.isasadday for Congress
... a reversal to the old ways of doing
business."
Among Ohioans. Republican John
Kasich was most prominent in U,e
debate, commanding an outnumbered army of lawmakers in a losing
battle of principle against' the popular bill.
He unsuccessfully pushed · an
amendment that would have gradu-·
ally allowed' the states to keep more
highway tax revenues.
"This fils the idea that maybe
Washington doesn't know best,"
Kasich argue&lt;~ prior to his amendment's defeat on a 98-318 .vote. " We
would essentially. say to the states,
'You tax yourselves afthe pump, you
.

pave your own roads. you make your
own decisions."' ·
His proposal drew scoril from the •
top Democrat on the Transportation
Committee, Rep. James Oberstar,
who scoffed that if K..Sich had beim
around in the Eisenhower adminis. tration there never would have been
an interstate highway system. ·
And the chairman of the committee, Bud Shuster, R~Pa., countered
that with more. goods moving from
state to state than' ever before, "There
is a greater need for us to have a coordinated, tied-together transportation
system'than ever."
I
Kasich also was opposed by ·rei- I
'
low Ohio Republican .Steve
LaTourette, one of the Transponation
Commiuee members who gave the
highway bill unanimous awroval.
• LaTourette said Kasich's proposal "predicts that there is no politics
t.:ontinued 011 page 3 ·
/

Donof riO
• t0 add ress
Me1gs
· • Democra
· · tS
·

·

,
.
·
.
,
John Donofrio, Summit County Meigs County Commissioner.
Treasurer, will be the featured speak·
"I believe that the Democratic Par-·
er at the Meigs County Democmtic · ty has an unprecedented opportunity
Pany's JeffersoniJI!Ckson Dinner on for victory this year," Maison said.
Saturday.
"Our state-wide candidates· are outThe -dinner will be held at th4: standing, with impressive qualifica·
Meigs Senior Center.
tions and a real commitment to the
Donofrio is the Ohio Democratic people of Ohio."
Pany's endorsed candidate for th~
"I hope that everyone will ta'ke an
office. He has served a~ Summil opportunity to meet our candidates
County Treasurer for the past 20 Saturday, and see wh~y we're so
years, and has received recognition excited."
and numerous awards from state aod
Tickets for the dinner are 10 ~r
national organizations for his man- person, with children under 12 admitagemcnt skills. He was developed · ted free.
·
andestablishednumcroustaxcollec·
lion programs.
· He and 'his wiftl, Mariiean live in
'
Akron.
,
,
S
"I have enJoyed servmg as urnmit County T~asurer for the last 20
years," Donofrio said. "f know that
the office of State Treasurer is an
imponant office that should never be
used as a ,political stepping stone."
"If elected, I look forward to
serving as State Treasurer, not as a
caodidate for the 11n1 opportunity
that comes 'down the road, but as an
0"""""ni"'
to serve all the citizens of
,.,.....~ .,
the Slate," he said. ' .According to P•"" Chairman Sue.
...,
-Maj,an. Congressman Ted Strick·
'lana, D-Lucasville. State Senator
Micheel Shoemaket. D·Boumeville, ·
aod Bill Oiler, the Party's c·andidate
for Slate Rep(esenlative. will also be
present, as well' as candidates for

s

.

�•

\...,

•.

•

C?ommentary

Page2

H·ousing·ke·ep$ the-boom bo·oming

The Qaily Sentmel
Xsta6{is/id inl948

HOwner•
This is very good news, not only my. A more valuable housmg asset ~
By Ben Wllttii._Y
WEST FARMS, BRONX, N.Y. occupied housing economically, but sociologically. The vides conswners grealer conftdence to
111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
Ovef the weekend I spoke to people
is the best remedy grunddaddy number in the vast amy of spend ex1stmg funds, or to borrow
614'-1192-2158 ·Fax 992-2157
from
suburban
New
Jersey,
New
Yott
for
inner-city huusing statistics is lhat "owner-occu- against the new and higher value of
•
City,
Denver,'
Washington
D.C.
and
the
problems,"
says )lied" figure. After all, it's the root of the their propeny (with intertst costs tax•
.., ,...,. " ......
. once burnt-out South Bn•nx. The .story,
Ray · Emanuel, American Dream: ownins · your own deducuble ). Such monies an: typically
albeit at different financial' lCvels, is
director of the place. Horne ownership rates were m used for educauon, remodeling, now
muci)
thi:
same:
Folks
arQ
Ph1pps Houses the mid-40 peccents during the ftrst half car.;, or to provide down payments for a
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
homes hke never befoo:. It's a big part
·developments in of !h-.• •-enrury (a low of 44 percent in new generation of home owners. The
of tl]e btg boom.
the West Fanns 1940,. The post- World WarD suburban · ripple effect of more housing spreads
ROBERT L WINGETT
.ijere
in
the
West
Fanns
area.
the
area of the South boom bounced the rate up to 62 pm:ent into almost every comer of the econo' Publisher
sidewalks have been widened and portby 1960, and 64 percent m 1980. There -my.
·
Wattenberg Bronx. "The """r·ly cobblestoned; they are flanked with
If all this IS so good, what could
ple who own are it lay until it broke 65 percent m 1995
rows of new and blooming Bradford involved across the boanl in their CQJll· and 66 percent (rounded) in 1997.
make 11 heller' Questioh: Who doesn't
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
Pear
trees.
Private
homes
arc
nsing
munity, they show up at meetings, they
House prices went up by about 5 OWJ1 their own dwelling tn America?
General M1n1ger
Controller
aJong and near the "Zoo Way" corridor act against cnmc and drugs, they go to percent per year for 1996, 1997 and the Young adults; under age 35, dtSJli'OPOf:
from a subway stop to the world- wOik every day and serve as a model for esumate for 1998 That too is good tionately don't-- the rate was SO percent
othel's. We sull don't have enough of it news. For a gcnellllton, between the in 1980: it's 39 percent now. Poor penTIIo Stn11MI - - - . "'1M IHIIrcwtrom , _ , . " " • - - at 11&gt;p1ca.
' famous Bronx Zoo The houses stand,
ShoftltiWO
ar Ita} """ , . o.., • - all»&gt;llfl publl-. T'yp«&lt;lol·
wtth llowers m thetr window boxes, on here, but it's coming "
early 19S0s and the mid.l980s, rising pic don 't -- the figure ts 40 percent,
,.~-,,,..,1M .,.IH. E..:h lhaultflncl- • ,.,.,.,., - .
d ha had bee
bed
the
It's surely coming everywhere else. horne values ·made many millions of higher-than one might thmk, but still
lltld dllyllnW , _ , . , . , _ Sp..:lt'j 1 dllr., ,.,..,. ,..,...,,.. 10 , prolllouu.8fO'IR t t
n tore
m
ro: r.-. ro 1M Edlfw. TIM _ , 4 111 cautt sr., Pamo.oy, Ohla
1970s and 1980s by arsontsts, drug- The rate of horne owner.;hip is ~~ an all- mtddle-class Americans into upper- low.
What to do'? Afunhcr mcrca.o;c in~
1.....;«~~711~'!:'~"'=·~FAIC=:"':=:"~':..,::·!l::':s7:i:.===~~----:-~~~=-==! dealers. landlords and tenants. For time high. In FebrUary of 1998,_new mtddle-class Amcncans. Then, f~ a
SZOS.OOO, wtth 5 percent down plus home sales were at an annualtzcd rate of decai;lc_gr so. home Jlli~ moved only_ fcdcf11'tax c(cd_it for child~n gctSJ)lore
ci&lt;JSing cosc,, you can-ooy atmee:fam- 893,000, tliC higlieSt month ever and the sluggishly, and fell disastrously in many money for down payments into, the
i ly attao:hcd row house and get some · stxth straight mOnth wtth over 800,000 areas
hands of young families. Poor Ameliproperty tax relief thrown m for good annuahzcd new home sales, the longest
The curicnt y-cnd has dramaucally cans would he es)l&lt;-'Ctally helped by arc'
measure A studio apartment is on the such run ever. Extslmg-homc sales were increased the;_net worth of individllal mvtgomttori of the Reagan-Bush inittaground lloor. A two-bedroom unit is on 4Jmillion in 1997, alsaarecord. Home owners. And an mcrease m r:~mal net ttvcs to sell oil' to tennnt&lt; the extsting
the second lloor. The foiu--hed~m pnces are movin"g up smanly in what worth, even if only ·an unreali1.cd single-family stock in public housing
By JOHtJ McCARTHY
owner's apartment ts on the lOp floor.
may be more than just p spring mlly.
"paper" gain, tends to holster an ccono- project&lt; (fulluwing the successful
Associated Press Writer
·•
COL:UMBUS~ A resolution that would take the politics out of politics
---~=:~
British model put into law by Prime
r
IS hack And for the lith time. tt 's probably dead on arnval.
--- ---Mimstcr MW'J!arcl Thatcher). A lurthcr
Control of the state A'pponwnment Board -the group that draws the
ICC
dimmtshmcnt af rules. rcgulattons . .
lU\.
,codes and no-growth znning restrictions
houndanes fof lcgtslattve dtstncts after each census - 'is perhaps the
OON~ ~-5
helps keep all real cs~1tc prices lmm
htggest prize in Ohio politics.
•
skyrocketing; one estimate puts such
Democrats controlled the hoard , whtch includes the governor: state
audnor. secretary of state and a 'legtslator from each pany, for 20 years
cost• now at about a thtrd of a new
house price. New huddtng tcch01qucs
before Republicans sctzcd control m 1990 It follows that by 1994, the
GOP had taken over the House and Senate
help; the pnvate houses m West Fanns
The resolution sponsored by Rep. Joan Lawrence would take the pollgo up in I0 months nowadays. Lower
tics out of 11. Anyone would be able to subrmt a redistricting plan for legmollgagc 1111CS always help.
The full-steam-ahead 'housmg martslattve and congressional dtstncts, now drawn by the Legislature, to the
ket is a prime indicator that the rolling
secretary of state.
economic boom 1n America will contin- ·
The secretary of state then would pick the plan with the fewest muntcipal and county "fragments" and that plan would co.ntam the district lines
ue. If owncr-occuptcd housing keeps
going up in the South Bmnx. 11 may
for the next 10 years
continue for a long, long lime, in happiThose fragments arc a linchpm of the current redistncling process.
Leaders of the party m control fashton the ltnes through towns and neigher cin:umstances.
borhoods to thetr political advantage.
Bea Wittenberg, a senior reUow Ill
· Even Lawrence doesn't give the resolution a chance.
the American Etllei )II ise lnslitutr, ..
"We didn't have any power for 20 years. It's awfully hard to give it up
the author of "Values M.aer Molt"
once ypu get it," \he Galena Republican said last week. "If the Republi11111111 the holt cl the weeldy publlt:
cans were to lose and the Democrats won, the Democrats would suddenly
......,.. prognun "'lhll!ll 'll!nll.II
~'if: j-' ~' . ,. not be supponing it."
· ~~~,
The plan has heen introd)lced in the Le~islat~re 10 each of the last I0
two-year sesstons. Etght times 11 never got to a standing commiuee. The
- ~two times it dtd go to a committee, 11 didn't get out:
· This year, Lawrence was promised a hearing at some lime, but that's all.
Senate Presiden. Richard Fman said the current system "seems to
work.:''
.
By Morton Kondleclte
ow.n &lt;.1inton, but
In 1996, votcrshadanot-mudl-bct· history has to olfer•.the movie invites
"I think the General Assembly would want to think quite a while before
Conllltly to assertions that "Primawhat I saw was at tcr choice. Even though the economy somebody to remind voters that oRen ·.
changes are made," said Finan, R-Cineinnati. "I think it would be an ry Colors" is a valentine from Mtke
best a bursting was good, evidence Wl!S tnckling in - in fact, usually-- the nation bas been
interesting poli1ical fight, also."
Nichols and John Travolta to Bill Clin-bundle of emo- that made a moi:kery of Clinton's governed by leader.; wmhy of rcsjlcct
House Speaker Jo Ann Davtdson, R-Reynqldsburg, said Lawrence, a ton, I thmk it's a devastating portrayal
tion - luSI, ambi· assertion that his team would be "the The likes of Warren · Harding and
former president of the League of Women Voters, works hard persuad10g '!hat begs the question: Is this the best
tion, hunger and mO!it ethical administration itr Amcri· Richard Nixon arc the e.cepttnns, otM
lawmakers to support the plan. She, has 22 cosponsors of both pantes. But America can do?
empathy-- and at can history." So he got ju.-. a 49 per- the rule.
Davidson also is rcalisttc.
In the movie, Gov. Jack Stanton
worst a liar, phi- · cent plurality.
,
Even if the final verdict nn Clin·
"On the practical side, I'm not sure how it will all turn out," Davidson gets the Democratic preside'ntial nomilandcrer, glulton,
Now allcgarjons of sexual misbc- ton's administration doesn't dip into
satd.
nauon because one major candidate,
seducer
and' havtor arc tumbhng in, mvolving a Harding lerritory .,.. the jury .is ,;rill &lt;lUI
Lawrence seems re&gt;~gncd to another dealh for the btll 10 the House Gov Ozto, decides not to run Another
phony.
White House intern and a groping inct- -- a.• a character model tt's clear he's
1:ommittcc orr State Government. But she .tsn 't qutte ready to plan the contender bas a heart attack and StanKondrsclte
dent ncar the Oval 'OITtce. They arc fallen far sheet of Theodore Rcx~&gt;Cvclt.
'
funeral for House Joint Resolution 10.
·
ton dnvc. a thtrd candidate out of the
Chnton/Stanton is unproved. but ' it's preuy clear that Harry Truman, Dwight Etscnhowcr.
'Tm figuring that tn the political procesS: you never know what's going race wtth scandalous information.
ponrayCd as having a keen abthty to abundant quantities of presidential and and even Gerold Ford. Jimmy Caner
to change tomorrow." she said
·
That's not what actually happened feel others' pain, a drive to help them, White House staff time arc being con- and George Bu.•h. .
. :
m 1992. but it's p;uallcl. Btll Clinton and a politically moderate policy agcn- sumcd ·to handle the. damage. and .
"Primary Colors' wnn't have
wcm alter serious contenders like then· da-- in a closcd"!lown factory. he UI'J!cs executive privilege a.•scntnns arc fur- much effc.:t nn Clintnn's fnrtlllll-s. ll's
Sen. AI Gore (Tenn.), Rep. Otuk JOh tratning over protectiOnism -- hut ther hluning'lhe barrier between puhlic JUSt a movie, after all. and I'C'~I hfc is
Gcpbardt (Mo.), and 01.io-hkc then- · hts personal vices strongly outwetgh and private husinc.s.
more compelling. It could have a mud,
New York Gov. Mario Cuomcl dtdn 't hts pohncal VI(IIICJi.
•
Still. Clinton's Job-approval ratings est effect on the 20!Kl election. hnwcvrun. Clinton survived his scandals partHe lies about maucrs large and arc soaring-- partly became things an: cr. It coulil help raise "char:tctcr'' tn
ly h&lt;."Cause the party lacked any stron!! '"!all, cheats o" his wife compulsively. ·going so well in the country. portly the top level of JIIC.'idcnual qualilicaDear Edttor:
allcrnajtvc candidate
rmndcrs lo con~titucncy gi'Oilps, drive. bCcausc Clinton ba.• govelliC\I well, tinns in the 'mmds •lf vt~ers.
We should all of us m Meigs County he delighted that the Umvcrstty of
Sn. what ktnd of nommcc did thts tdeallstic followet" to acts of ruthlc,;s- portly bccau.'IC the evidenCe against
That could be g&lt;Kld or bad. Ji'
Rto Grande and Meigs County have succeeded in offering college courses
ncs.\
·and
tonuptioti.
and
helps
drive
him
·remains
unproved,
and
partly
bedrock
American values prevatt
produce'? In the movie, Stanthi'OIIgh the newly launched Rio Grande!Rto Gmndc Community College . ton/Ciint&lt;m
.:illllCs niT tn o;omc people - the unstable to suicide.
because the public is confu.o;cd ahoul voters will be kKtking fut integrity
Meigs County Center tn Middlcpon.
.
-Janet Ma.,lin of the New York limes.
The
movie
bas
\O
remind
votcill
wlt:d
standards nf conduct it can legiti· above all. If current Hollywtxtd and
As an admmtstrator at nearby Ohtn Umvcrstty, almost datly I am rcmmd- fitr nne-- a.~ "an insti111.1ive winner and
about
the
unappealing
bargains
they
matcly
apply 111 it' leader...
media .values dnnilnatc. the cum,
ed of the imponancc of htgher educatiOn m the lives of rural cllll.cils. It's grat- an enJoyably familtar IIUI&lt;.' of cnntr.tmade
in
1992
and
1996.
They
knew
in
On
one·
level.
"Primary
Colm"
paign wtll he mtred in a tahloid orgy
ifying to watch young mmds open to explore new idea,,, become mtellcctu- dtL1t&lt;ms. Mtxing rulhlcssncs.' wtth real
ally challenged. and &gt;1art to make plans to tmprovc their lives a~d othet;S. par- empathy and pohttcal pa..sinn, he " 1992,tbat Clmton was a rake with llcx- . ·adds to the L'OIIfusion by ponraymg of sexual expose. Lei's hope Amcnticularly' tf the young people come ffom the hills and villages of rural Ohio. exa.,peratln!J even to those dilscst tn ihle attao:hmcnt tn the truth. But they prcsidcntialJ!&lt;~itics M a corrupt com- ' ca can nsc above the wnrld of "PrtCertainly most people enter college these days in order to advance m the him. and yet his powers of seduction avcrted thetr eyes because tbcy bad an hin:ition ol' scandal-niongering and mary Coklrs."
incumbent prc51dcnt they wanted to mantpulatton wtth linle CllltlkX.1ion to
(Mo.-ton KOIIdraeke ill execuwork world. for .in our society stopping wuh a high school dtplnma is no always manage Jo prevail."
forc and a I&lt;IOI'Y autocrat a,, a third• the large is.o;ucs facing the clcc:toratc.
live editor of Roll Call, the newslonger enough. But best of all. these young people from rural backgtounds.
Ma)'bt;· the movie is a Rorschach party altcmattvc. So Clinton won, but
'Yet. hy rubbing the nation's nose ill paper e1 Capitol HULl
a.~ well as nontraditional students, arc nearly always surprised that college
IL"SI in wh~ch everyone sees his or her with just a 43 pen.'Cnl plurality.
the w"'!" climpaign ,tactics that recent
work is not beyond them and that they can compete, and more often than nnt.
SURPASS the more tradttlonal students -- those mtddlc class ktds stratght
from urhamzed ht~h schools.
.'
On the subject of nontraditional students, I was charmed by 1he article in
the Sunday, March 29, issue of The Sunday Tames-Sentinel, whtch profiled
trashed
Phyllis SchiQOy, prciidcnt of
The Washington Times, now :
Bob Gilmore, a Middleport rcstdent. The admirable Mr. Gilmore, a retired By Joseph Spear
the conservative Eagle Forum, "Like an adult very well might,
If the Lord loved hypocrites. Clarence
coal hauler and store manager, 1s one of 79 students enrolled in classes in
he'd
hug
the
denizens
of
WashThoma's
on
speaking
then: Anita Hill was (Kathleen Willey) decides it is
Middleport.
.ington,
D.C.,
1~
death
about
the
..
say-so.
of
"that
character
from Okla- ' in her i~re'st 10 pretend that
Although one would expect that Mr. Gilmore would enroll 10 a course o(
now.
The
tow~
ts
as
warm
~tth
Anna
•
Htll,
homa,"
and
"the
... evtdcncc nothing · ' r happened. And so
' study focused on busmess courses, he ~id he has chosen instead to study htscharlatans
-left
wtng,
nght
·
but
have
been
makes
it
look
like
she's
chasing she write. a string of notes and
101'} . Enghsh and other courses in the liberal arts. The beauty of a clear. wellhim."
letters to the president, alterturned sentence, the vagaries of history and other forms of pltllosophtcal wing, you want 'em, we got 'em. reluetar.t 1o
The
issue
that
has
them
all
in
accept
the
Phyllis
SchlaOy,
now:
"No
natcly asking for jobs and praisi~~uny beckon him, and I reJoice at his endorsement of a liberal arts eduoaan
uproar,
of
course,
is
Bill
word
o(
Clinone
in
the
media,
not
cvcll'«&lt;lis
ing
his execulion of his official
lt"O.
friends, hclicves Bill Cli:tton's duties . .. W,illcy was very sen,si-:
1hope others will join him. The Great Appalachian novel, contributions to &lt;:linton'~ st_oried love ~ife. The ton's
rtght
wmg
portrays
ht,m
as
a
accusers.
dcntals
that he had an tmpropcr hie indeed when she tried to sociological theory, _political leadership can -and should -- come from southpredator
of
pulchritudinous
Editonal
relationship
wilh Monica Lcwtn- ignore what had happened."
,
eastern Qhio.
•
the&gt;
more
pcrfcrvid
wri1ers,
SpMr
sky."
,
Charles
Krauthammer,
con·
·
-maidens,
and
-Alden Waitt
•
Linda Chavez, conservative s~rvative columnist, then : "It is :
· s-v111e critics believe he 'ought to be columnists and
impeached for hts wanton ways. polittcal foes arc having a fteld columntst , then: 'Judge Thomas one thing for someone who has:
-'l'hc left defends hiM as a dcvtl- day with the fcministsf:::
' a arcnt "is hcin!l' charged , tried a~d been sexually harassed not 1o'
ish b~t es~ntially harmless soul ·inconsistencies . Rc . Anne co~vi~tcd .. wjth&lt;JUI one iota nf resign her job . ... It is quite: .
who ts bj:s1eged by women who Northup, R-Ky., to cit but one. evtdcncc.
another ... to follow the .harasser•
find him irresistible .
has taken to the airwaves to
Undo Chavez, n!&gt;W : " I to his new jnh .... And what arc:
lrlhi:.. ID~IIIIf'~ .
. Seven years ago, of course, press the anack. "There is a lot believe (Paula Jones) is tcllinp we to make of the telephone Jogs:
Today is 'llmday, Aprif 2.-the 92nd day of 1998. Then: an: 27J days left in the JUSt the opposite was the case. of selective outrasc here," she the truth .... The acuons she of the calls (Anita Hill) ... con. ·
~Conservative Supreme Court saiil on Fox News ,Sun4ay. ''I'm dcscnbcs arc gross and dis}lust- unucd to make t&lt;J Thomas'!"
•
Today'• Highliglt tn HISIIJiy:
nominee Clarence Thom11s was worried ' that women's support ing and make Mr. Cltnton unltt
Charles KFauthammcr now · •
On Aprill 1917.. Pn:sident Wilson asked Congress to decbl: ""'apinst Oci'- the accused and Anita Hill was groups arc really Democratic to he ptcsidcnt." ·
"The (Kathleen Willey) arrai~:
mmy, sayiRs. '1be WOI1d IIIUSI.bc madr: safe fordcmocnlcy."
·
the accUSfr. The right thought support groups."
. The conscr~ati.vc W~shing1nn has palhns, .. : Willey stands oul:
OnthisdMe:
Thomas virtuous . whtle the lC,ft
The politically astute readers Ttmes , lhcn : Mtss Htll moved .hecausc she hrought three things,
In IS ll. Spanish cxpbcr Juan Ponce de l.ca! 1\}ndcd in Fbida.
. saw him as Beelzebub incarnate~ of Joe Spear ' s column, I am with Mr. Thomas from the to the tahlc -- coercion cla.s '
In Im, Conp5s JliNild thc &lt;;oinage Al:t. Which lUhorizld tidwl •islonetl cl the
'
· :
Put succinctly. consistcnGy is sure, will detect the scent of Department of Educa1~on to the and credibility." .
U.S. Mint
For the record, Joe Spear
not the lo_ng sutt.of the pohu~al - fettd ftsh here . When Thomas EEOC._. ,_. Mr. Thnmas sccrct~ry
In 188&gt;, thc fntllaliaft P:o1~ met at Twm.
ly obscsstve. Truth ts a part1san was on the hot scat, Republican ... tesufted tclltngly that Mtss fiercely- dcfendc&lt;( Judge Thomas
In 1865. Conftder.rle Ptaidcnl Davis ;nllllOIII ellis Cabinet fled ft ~ thing, and principles are the women either said nothins or Hill was eager and cnthusiaslic then , and he -thinks Bill Clinton
capitlll ciRUotald, Va. ·
·
rules the other fellow ough1 10 · assaulted his accusers: a.s did to follow Mr. Thomas' 'rising is gcttinJ! a raw deal now. ·
In 1932, avialoro.lesA LirdlaaJunl Dr. Jdtn F. Olndon lliiiCdover $50,(XX)
play by.
_
,
conse~·vativc columnists, · ~nd star' to the EEOC. This is not
Joe may he wrong, but he 's no
ill-~~~- unidenlified nlln in aNew YOlk City OCittelely in exdJitee forlind(\
• Under the most tntense anack commentators . Indeed, 11 mtght the sort of behaviOr that can he hypocrite.
baJh'sltidoiiifiPCd son. N« n:le d,lhe ittfant Will found dead the ,following nt!JIII!l. al the moment are liberal femi- be tnstructive to compare the reasonably attributed to a • Joseph Spear 11 1 syndicated
In 1942. 01em Miller litd lis adteiUa recoolld "Amrrican Patrol" at the RCA'- nists, who are being accused of attitudes of yesterday to the sen- woman who experienced ...' wrller ,for Newopaper Eater- :
V~tt«lllldic» in~having a double standard. They 11men!S of the present.
harassment."
prile A1110clatloa.
' · ·
'

..

~

11iw.,. 1--.

., -r. -

,

Resolution would remove .
politics from redis~ricting

------------------------------=- =- =---_·

---

'?·

Is this the best America can- 0 . .

Letters to the editor

Encourages URG studies

Jlf"''"'

Uproar

i~

Washington

just··~ part~san

thing

Today ·in history

•

I

••

•

&lt;•

Dorothy L. Bailey. 94, 38654 state Route 143,'Pomeroy, died Wednesday, April I, 1998, at Kimes Convalescent Home in Athens.
.
A homemaker, she was born Dec. 9, 1903, jn Shinglehouse, Pa., daughter of the late William and Jessie Archer Russell Buck. She was a member
of Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
'
Surviving are sons and daughters-in-law, Raben and Wiloven~ Bailey of
Pomeroy and William H. and Delores Bailey of Middleport; a daughter and
son-in-law, James and Darlene Emmttt of Columbus; six grandchildren; four
grandchtldren; a brother, Samuel Russell of Urbana and several nieces aM
nephews.
.
· She was precedeil m death by her husband of 69 years, Carl G. Batley;
a brother. Charles Buck, and a sister, Mildred Zack.
S~rvices will be held Friday, I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with Pastor David DeWitt officiating. Burial wtll follow in Meigs Memory
Gardens.
·
Friends may call Thursday, 7-9 y.fR,$.1 the funeral home.

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Memorial Hospital.
gency Medical Service recorded five POMEROY
1.58 a.m .. Cheslllul Street. Mid·
calls lor assistance Wednesday. Umts
dleport,
Jeanette Thomas, Pleasant
respondmg included:
Valley Hospital;
.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:05 a.m-.-. state Route 7, iuppers - - 3:56 p.m.. Rose Hill Road. Janellains, car/motorcycle accident, Ken- Simpson, VMH
ny Riggs, Camden-Clark Memorial RUTLAND'
7:20p.m.. VFD and squad to Hatl:lospital; Tuppers Plains Volunteer
Fire Department and squad asmted; field Road, controlled bum/brush
9:47 p m., Ltmherger Rtdge Road, fire, no injuries reported.
Coolvtlle, Edtlh O'Dell, 1/etemns

--Court news-Divon:es and dissolutions
The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer.
.
Dissolutions a.• ked -- Laura Marte
Holsinger, Reedy, W.Va .. and Jay
Allen Holsmger. Reedsville, March
31~ May Ann Mulford. Middleport,
and Fred Ev~rett Mulford, Middle-·
port. March 31.
Divorce granted ·- Charles R.
Lyons and Pafi\Cia S. Lyons, March
Jl.
Civil case filed
· Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines
tbe grievances of one party agamst
another..lt does not establish guilt or
innocence.
J D. Drilling Company, Racine, is
seeking S18,000 from "Wayne Russell, Racine. in a suit filed Monday in
the Meigs County Court of Common

.

Pleas.
The company alleges Russell has
taken natural gas from one of it~
ptpelines over the past six years. The
company also requests Russell disconnect' any connections to the natural gas line
Indictment dismtssed
A vandalism tndictment against a
Racme man was {iismissed Monday
in the Metgs County Court of Common Pleas after representatives of the
Meigs County Prosecutor's Office
failed to attend a final pre-tnal 'hearing, accordmg to a court d~ument.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill dtsmtssed
the mdictment against Brian Durham
at the request of attorney Pat Story as
a sanction against the prosecutor's
office for failure to provide dil"=overy.
provide a bill of pantculars and. for
failure to attend the pre-tnal heanng.

senaI•eI ·"· - - - -

House'

Conlinued from page I

some informalton orall)', but not in
writmg. The olftctuls later said they

were muJYng changes to improve
reporting"to parents.

Continued from page
HandII.#.u/1 o· f.•••--~-1

played at the local level m the state
of Ohio or any other state." and
offered to prove the potnt in Ka.&lt;ich 's
own back yard: "I can point the gen·
demen to a ha:lf- a billion dollars
worth of road&lt; within spitting distance of Columbus, Ohio "
Kasich also was at the forefront of

critics who argued fruitles.~ly that the
big-spending bill wa.~ a threat to the
hard-won balanced budget agreement, C'!lling it an abomination and
"a significant detour from where our
party ha.' gone in the past." ·

Gallipolis livestock auction results
I Feeder Cattle sale '' the second
· Produc~rs Livestock Market ·
report from Gallipolis for 'ales con- Wedne,day of each totmth)
- Steers.
ducted on Wednesday. Apr.il I :
Heifers.
Feeder Callie.
Cui) Cows
' 200-3001 St. $M2-$%. Hf. $74Well Muscled/Fleshed S35-S41
SIB. 300-400# St. SM4-$9J.'Hf. $7KMedium/Avemge
$32-$36.
SKO. 500-650# St. $75-SKn Hf. $63Thin1L1ght $21!-$33. Bulls S41$76; 650-gOOII St. $65-S7M: Hf $511-.
S48.
$72.
Back To The Famts:
Cow/Calf Patrs S3 10-625; Bred
Cows $250-~540; Baby Calves S 15lt~r Medical Centrr
HIO: Goats SIK-$63.
Discharges
Graded. feeder .:utle sale results:
Wednesday, April I
$76: hetfers. S70.
Steers.
Oteyenne Landis. Mr.;. Charles
Home
&amp; !fliCk sale Saturday. Apnl
_Angel and son;. Mn;. Chester Ross
and son; Toby Brown, Gloria Adams. 4. II a.m.·
. For free on-farm •isit,, please
Bobby McCoy. Betty Fisher. Savancall
614-446-%%.
nah Ste~nwn and Noah Friend.
Birth•
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Myers. son.
Middleport.
Am Ele Power ....................--.50~
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stevens,
Akzo ....................., ..............
daughter. Wellston.
AmrTech .................................48
AShland 011 ........................... 56:0

Kelli Bailey. 18, a senior at Eastern High School. panicipated in
a statewide video conference today discussi~g teen voting issues
"Ohio First Vote Live" was broadca.'t on Ohio's public televtsion
statipns from I to 2 p.m.
Bailey joined Secretary of State Bob Taft. and 12 other hig~ school
senioh from around the sUite in a program which focused on the importanCe of registering to vote and voting. Almos! 30() high schools across
Ohio participated in ihe Ohio First Vote program thts year. Students
viewing the live video conference were able to phone in their questions regarding voter regtstrotion and the electOral process.
Ohio First Vote aims to reverse the downward lltnd in voting among
young people ..Since 1992. the Secretary of State's Ohio First First Vote
program has registered over 192.000 high school seniors to vote.
Bailey's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Greg Batley of Chesler. accompanied her on th~ trip.

Absentee voting begins
Those who plan to vote by absentee ballot in the May 5 prit!lary
electiop may still request ballots and may now begin xoting, accord-·
ing to Board of Elections Director Rita Smith.
The last day that the board will mail ballots ts May 2 at noon,
dl)rhough voters may vote at the board of elections office through May
~

'

Absentee voting is available to those over 62, those who are qisabled, hospitalized or who will be out of town ori election day.

-Valuation announced
Metgs County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell announced the oil
and gas valuations for 1997.
The values for oil have decreased 7.82 percent, $1,790 per barrel
to $1 ,650, while gas valuation remained at $225 per thousand cubic
feet.
Cambpell said there are small values for wells that produce less
than one ~arrel of oil imd less than 8,000 feet of gas.
The tiling deadline for ml and gas prOducers was extended to May
22 by lhe ta~ commissioner.

HEAP extended
Applications for Ohio's Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP)
will be accepted through May I, uccordmg to the olftce ol Governor
George Voinovich.
Funded through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. HEAP helps low-income Ohioans with home heating costs by
paymg a ponion of wmter heating bills. Applicants must have household incomes at our below 150 percent of the federal guidehnes.
lnfbrmation about the program IS available through the Ohio
Department of Development's Communtty Development Divtsion, at
(800) 686-1557.

Wreck.inve$tigated
A 30-year-old Long Bonom man was trdnsported to an area hospital following a motorcycle/car wreck on state Route 7 south of Tuppers Plains early Wednesday morning. .
,
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol :
Kenny R. Riggs. dri•ing a 1994 Kawa.,aki motorcycle, was l'ollow·ing a 1997 BMW automobile d,rivcn by Herbert Grate II, 30,
Reedsville. and wa.~ unable to slow down or stop when Grate moved
to the left side of the road to make a tum into a private drive.
Riggs' motorcycle then struck right rear of the car and went off the
rjght side of the roadway. throwing Riggs from the motorcycle. the
patrol reponed.
Riggs wa.&lt; transported by the Mei~s County Emergency Medical
Servtce to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital for treatment of vtstble
mjuries. the patrol reponed.
No citations were issued.and the incident remains under investigation. the patrol reported.

'

Columbia Trustees
Board of Trustees ot Columbia
Township will meet. on Mon~y at
7:30p.m. at the fire statton.

A 20-year-old Little Hocking man pleaded guilty Wednesday to
three breaking aod entering charges and one burglary charge follow1ng a March S· 7 crime spree in northea.&lt;tem Meigs County. .
James Marshall Keffer ciRoute I, Box S2A4, Linle Hocking, pleaded guilty to 1he breaking aQd entering of property belonging to Robert
Fortney, Adam Callaway and Mony Saunders.
He also entered a plea of guilty in the bUrglary of the Neda Mitchell
residence.
He faces JIIOtal of six years in priwn on the charges. Sentencing
in the matter ha.' been continued to a later date.

.

Breaking a~ entering prob~d
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherilfs Department are investig:uing
the reported breal\ing and enlering.of the Charles Rathburn residence
on Stde Hill Road in Rutland Township Wednesday evening.
Reportt'd stolen were a ~le compact disc player. COntp;ICI discs.
ca.,sette tapes, and a weed trimmer. said Sheriff Jame,. M. Sflulsby.
Deputies laler stopped a suspicious car on Bailey Run Road. but
found no rea.wn 10 detain the driver, Soulsby said.
Thai area of the county ha.• been largeted by burglars several time
in recent weeks. according to sheriffs dcp;rrtrnent report.•. Residents
are encour~gcd to call the sheriffs department if lhey have any information concernmg the burglaries.

Racine water tank cleaned
'

Tfustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees
will meet in regular session on Tuesday at the Rutland Fire Station.
Gnmge meeting
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 8789 will meet in regular session on Saturday with a potluck supper at6:30 p.m.. followed by the regular meeting at 8 p.m. Plans for the
May 2 constgnmenl sale wtll he linalized All member.; are urged to attend.
Dinner, music planned
The Meigs County Senior Cenrer
will have an e'vening dmner on
Thursday. Serving will be from 4:45
to 5:30. Junior and Rita White wtll
play music following the dmner.
Worship. study set
The Pomeroy UOiled Melhndisl
Church will hav&lt;: a Lenten Btble
study a16:JO p.m. Sunday. with worship at 7:30p.m. There wdl he quartet singing and Rev. Bill O'Brien wtll
he the guest speaker. Pa.,tor Bob
Rolimson mviles lhc public .

The Daily

Sen~el

cvsrs liJ..M)
F~thli~lk.-d CW(JY .-fl( rMtln.

•

M.,rwby

•
lllfild'b

· ·rWa1. Ill C.tVn S1•• PtNPt'JI'Y, Oh"'· lty 11M:
l&gt;tlin V.llcy hblnh•nJ Cotnparsy,(;.lfln.:tl f'••·:
Oluo 4~7lJ9, Ph. 9'1:!-21~'- SnunJ
rl.bf pdlb,et paid ill P~tmrmy. Ofail1.

''"*""'•

••...., 11se A.iJ«UICd PftSJ, •fkl lht '"""

. . . .~, ~... 1M.

f0n'MA51"£8: Stftd addrrti awftttNMIS itt
11lc Daily Sc•uMI, Ill Cuuu St., PtNneu.,.
OflNt4S7HJ

SUISCRIPJlON IIATES
.,c.,.,.
.......... ......
.,,_ w..-n... ·- ·-· ·- _ ...--:....-...-....
~Mont .. _.... -

S! ,.,

........................11.111

0• Ynt ........... ,. .... _, _...... _ .._ .. ·- SHU ill

'

SINGLE COrv PRICE
.l&gt;atly ......... --··- .. - -..-·. _,_........ .lS C'tatt.
S.,..'l'ltwJ-fllltf-ctrsifll'l W pty tlw t!Mtin nPY
r~eut iti adltillfl«' dut'd Ill) TIN Oo~~ly Staautt&lt;l

••:. •llfrf. sbf'f' 12 monatt b.asa.

icWt• can.n ~adl W«._
•

C'Jtd•••••• br

•

fM ..,...,,.110a tty m.all pc:rnehtcd •• artn
•fl,rrr llawrw carritr ltfYia i!l av2ilablt.

Bank One.............--... --.........63'Bob Evan1............................21 'Borg-Warner .......................65'-

Broughlon ..........,.................. 16~
Champlon ............................. 14~
Charm Shps ..........................4'CIIy Holding ..........................4$}.
Federal Mogul .................... .53"t.
Ganrtett .................................72\
Gooclyear .............................74'1.
Kmart .................................... 18~
Kroger..................................46"t.
Llnds End.............................39''
Umited .................................... 29~

The following . couples wc:re
issued rnat;riage licen.''" recently in
lhe office of Meig.' County ~te
Court Judge Roben Buck;
Eric Wayne Sim. 26. and Courtney
Camille Midkiff. 23. both of
Pomeroy; Charles William Buckley.

28. and Kathy Renee Roush. 23. both

Pomeroy,
and

THURSDAYS ONlY, 9:00
e.m. 10 4:00 p.m. beginning
Tunday,Aprl17, 1998.
J-TruiHII
Ex~i&gt; DlriCior, MMHA
(3) 30; (4) 2, &amp;; 3TC

we·re on ~our si~e.

sure you get "" besr ...lue Jcr

your iniUI'ance dollars. ens- aU

-your ~iont and mble wre
your claims ore processed qvid.ly.

'

WE NEVER
CoMPROMISE ON .
1Y
Bur 0
IONALLY
WE 0 ON PRICE.

F"' "" semce you c~eser.e.
0 ,.._

gMo us 0 coli.

Q

Oak tlilt Flnl ............................28
OVB ...........................................41
Ona Val lay................, ..............38
P.e~ ......................,..........48~

lNG SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

Prem Fln1 ...............................21'h

Rockwe1L............................ 56'1.
RD/Shall ...............................58'1.
Sears ................................- .....58'1.
Shonay'• .................................5~
Star Bank .............................61'1.
Wendy'~ ............................... 22'7.

-·

_.._._

Wosr'ltllf1gl0n ......;- ..............19\

Stock raports are the 10:30

NAILIIJIIISCIIJmONS
l .... lllrfpCIl Wccb. . ,.. .._____ - ... --- - ...S21.lll

-------------·--------$$).&lt;1

520 W. MaiD St.- Pome101, 0

l'lloiR---

~! MdA ., __ -·-· -·-- ............ _ ...IW5..5f,

-OoliNr lllrfp ~

Vmtau•UPa3

---------- - ----··· ---·-----12'1.2.•
:!to--------·--.. . _,___,_, __. , l!ft./&gt;11
IJ -

n - .. ·--- .,..-- .

Av•nue,

TUESDAY S

or business insurance. We'l mol...

of Middleport: Dale Eugene Stewart.
21. and
Renee Sayre, 25. both

of Galllpolla.

----------

The Melge Metropolitan
Houolng Authority Is
announcing the welling llsl
for Section 8 Rental
Ae1l1tance will be opened
effective April 7 ,= 1998
through April 16, 1998.
Appllcallone will be given
1nd 1ppolntmento will be
midi for the application
review. All houoeholdo
lnttr..ttd In rtcalvlng
lteletanct may obtain an
1ppllc1tlon at our office
laelltd II 39350 Union

Agency, we're oo your side whether
;IOU ,_, lile, home. auto

a.m. quota provided by Adve1t

:!to -

PUBUC NOTICE
OPEN WAmNG UST

A. ~ local Notioowide·

1om. Couples issued marriage license

AT&amp;T ....... ,.............................66:0

'

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Resident• of the Racine area served by the Racine Water Depanment may notice elevlated chlorine levels m their water for the next
few days.
. Thts is due to the recent cleanin of the villa e water star. •c tlllk.

Stocks

Southern OAPSE 453 meeting
Southern Local OAPSE 453 will
meet Thursday. 5 p.m. at the high
schooL Election of officers will be
held.

Scipio Trustees
The Scipto Township Trustees Southern Building Committee
will meet on Tuesday at 6·30 p m. at ' The Southern Local Butldmg
Committee will meet Tuesday, 6
the Pageville Town Hall.
p m. at Syracuse Elemen1ary School.
All commumty re sidents are welAuxiliary meeting
The Ladtes Auxtllary of the VFW come to attend.
Post9053 in Tuppers Plain~ will meet
on Thursday at7 30 p.m.'Elect ton of Chester Ball Association
The Chester Baseball/Softball
officers will be held.
Assoctation will meet toni ght. 6 30
p.m. at the Chester Ftre Statton
Clinic planned
The Meigs County Health Depart· Coaches meeting to follow.
ment wtll offer a free immunization
clinic on April 7 from 5 to 7 p.m. at Clinic planned
The Meigs Couniy Health Departthe Meigs Multipurpose Center.
Every child parttctpating must he ment Will offer a rree lffiffiUnizaiiOO
accompanied by an adult. and t~e clln;c on April 7 from 5 to 7 p.m . at
child's tmmumzation record should the Meigs Multtpurpose Center.
be brought to the clinic.
Every chtld par~lctpating must be
accompanied by an adult. and the
child's tmmumzatton record should
Trustees meeting
The Salisbury Townshtp Trustees be brought to the chmc
will meet on Tuesday at6 p.m. at the
__towoshjp hail a!_.Bock SP.ongs.
Shade River Lodge
•
Shade Rtver Lodge- in Chester:
F&amp;AM wtllthree E A.'s on Saturday
Lenten services
The Meigs County Ministerial A breakfast will he held at 8 am .•
Association wtll continue Lenten with degree work to follow at 9 a.m :
Ecumenical Worship services at the
Naomi Bapttsl Church on U.S . Route Class carni•al
The Ea,,tern Htgh School JlllliDr
33 on Thursday at 7:30p.m. Rev. Bob
Robmson wtll he the guest speaker. tla..s will have a class carnival on
Saturday at4:30 p.m. A spagheni dinner will be served at4·30 p.m. with
Dance 10 be held
A round and square dance anCJiine games to follow from S to 8 P-11) An
dancing wtll be held at the Senior Cit- elementary school dance wtll be held
izens Csnter. Fnday, X to II p.m. from 5 lo 7 Jf.rn .. and a JUOtor htgh
MuSic ~ill be by "Out ol the Blue" dance from 7 to 9 p.m.
wtth Art Conant. caller. Public is
Middleport Community Associainvtted to attend.
tion
The Mtddlepon Commumty A"oDinner to be served
The Racine Amencan Legton Post ctatialt will meet Tuesday. K·JO a.m.
602. will have a steak dmner Sunday at Peoples Bank in Mtddlepon.
at the post with serving to start at II
Easter Cantata
a.m. Cost ts $5. Public mvited
The Middleport First Rap1is1
Church wtll hold tis annual Ea, tcr
Meeting set
•
-The Meigs Cot~nly Comnns&gt;lon- Cantata "From Glory to Glory" Suners Will meet , With area farmers On day. 8 p.m at 1he corn~r nf Stxlh
Avenue and Palmer Street The canThursd~y at the Racine Library.'
tata ponrays the hinh, death and resurrection of Christ Sharon Hawley ts
Friends or Library
Friends of the Meig&lt; County the dtrector. Chris Rouse " the
Ltbrary will meet on Monday at 7 ptamst and Mark Marn&gt;w. pastor. wtll
he the narratnr. Sulm~ts arc Wanda
p.m at the Mtddleport Library
Shank. Adam Shank. Rtchard Rcttmme. Curtis Ble.stng._ Sharon Haw€1eanup lo begin
.Jhe Rutland Townshtp Truste~s ley and Momca Zurcher. Choir memhave announced that cleanup of bers are Carolyn Davis. :MarJllne
Walburn. Pam Neece, Helen FL~ds .
~-emeteries m the township will begin
on April 15. Those wtshing lo save Vicki Morrow and TeJ{anna Wehfling
decorations from graves should have
Public Notice
them removed Jlrior to that date.

B&amp;E,' burglary pleas entered

Hospital news

, Gallipoli1- 441-GMI

------"""-11

.

•

Meigs announcements

Participates in program

Dorothy L. Bailey

'

'

.----Local briefs·- -

Death Notice

Thursday, Aprll2, .1998

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, April2, 199~

.
'

�•

-

Pa~ally

I

..
,Sentinel

AL standings
Di•ision

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..

Rio Grande 's baseball team
dropped its third straight game
~ednesday after losing a road dou- bleheader tO Ashland University.
The Redn\en (8-9-1 &amp; 1-1 in the
MOC), who lost 21-8 and 8-3,
jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first
game, but saw that evaporate as Ashland scored 13 unanswered run s.
Eric Stevenson led Redmen hillers
with a 3-for-4 effon. He scored twice
and knocked in a run. Teammate
Scou George (Meigs '97) also scored

~00

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ll o~ tnn 2. 0 :1ldanJ 0
CL EVELAND 9. Seanle 1
Anahefm4, N.Y. Y :~ n k!!I!S I

Today's games
Boston ( W ;~ kdit."l d 12 · 1~) rn 0 11klantl { R o ger~
6·7l . ., : l ~ p. m .
MlntiC"-lla ( Hnwkins &amp;.12 ) ;lt Toronto (Hc nt g~n
I ~ - I OJ. 7 : 0 ~ p.m.
Dcuou (Worrell 4· 8) m Tampn Bny &lt;S r~undc n

•

----.~,. ,,o~p. m.

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10). 7 : 0~ p.m.
ch;cu8o Whhc So• 1S;i01t a J.o,"' Tcm iSelc
3

~ ~~:~~:1~~:qWell&gt;i 6.'1 o) o!Aoohdm (Hm
Friday's games

•

'f~11a• (Hd linl! !'1-9) ut Toronto (Junn Gu:r:man ;t.

:~~[ff~~~~~5~~.~ ~8"' 4' 2 ' '..rompu Uoy
• Octroi! IS.uM:u 6-14) :tt

B :~ ltimor~

U&gt;m tl.:k 12·

I I), 7:05 p.m.

VAUGHN .SCORES- - - San-·Diego1a--GregVaughn (taft) kicks up some dual at tha plata
while scoring ln.front oi,Cinclnnatl catcher Eddie

-

Tauben- in the calxth lnnlng_otWedneaday
nlght'a National League game In Cincinnati,
where tha Padres won 1G-9. (AP)

M i nnt!st~ l &lt;~

I Radke

Football
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) Marcus Allen ,' who ha~ defied uge
and holds the NFL record with 11.1
rushing touchdowns, has told the
Kansas City· 'Chiefs that he will
return for the Jin;il year of hi s contract
The 38-year-old running buck tnld
coach Marty Scho\tenheimer during
a weekend golf outing in Las Vegas
that he would play out the nnal year
of his contract. club spokesman nub
Moore said.

.

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NBA standings
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WESTERN CONFERENCE

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NEW SELECTION'

1/ .

. Kim Sayre pitched another gre'at
game and Southern hitters managed
rouneen walb and live timely hits as
. • Southern pushed its season record to
2-0 both overall iuid in the Hocking
· Division oftbe Tri-Valley Conference
with a 13- I over Miller Wednesday
night. ·
.
Sayre went six innings to pick up
the win on eight strikeouts and no
walks. while allowing just one hit.
Trisha Warner came on to pitch the
final round with one strikeout one hit
and one run allowed. Southern mun a~ed three errors.
·

·t

'.
:
,
\

Federal Hocking cut shon 'a sev- Hocking batters after riding out a
enth inning Eastern rally en rout to three-run first inning and settling into ·
claiming a 7-4 Hocking Division a groove that .saw him mow down
baseball victory over the Eagles at seveo .bau~rs in the last four innings.
Fedeni'J Hocking Wednesday night. Durst scattered nine hits, walked just
Because of. field construction at East- two and hit two batters. while four
em. the game was designated a home • costly errors· plnyed a role in al! but
game forth~ Eacles. Eastern is 0-2. a couple Fedeml runs:
.
·
. Eastern e(lach Dan Thomas said, ·
To.mmy Curtis got the .win' for
"I was again very pleased with our Federal Hocking, while Jason Lawpitching. It's thr second s._ood elTon · son came on in relief the last three
we've had this season. Stevie (Durst) innings. They ~ave up seven hits two
started slo."i. but reully got in a ~alks. a.nd hit o~..._ltatter "'hile strikgroove. As a team we've been com- mg out JUst four.
petitive and again shown~ lot of pos·
• Thomas said. "At least tonight \ye
itives. Once we get the young play- hifthc ball and p11t it in pluy."
eruome experience. we should be in
An error and hit batsmen set up a
pretty good shape."'
..._.,
home run opportunity for Curtis who
Durst was Eastern's lone returning· gave· Federal 3-0 start in the first
senior. Durst fanned · 11 Federal

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singles lo McKinney and 0;1\'is.
D:ircy Cook and Kelley
Humphrey were the lone Miller hi Iters.
. .. .
Southern plays Vinton County
Friday.
•
Jnnlna m111a
Miller
()()().()()().J=l'2-3
Sonthern
033-'700-x=l3·6-3
Balleries
Southern: Sayre (WP). W:trner 7th
and Davis
Miller: Ferguson (LP). Compston
4th and Cook .

inning. A single by Josh Will, two
stolen ba.'iC'S, and a Dursf single cui
it to 3-1 in the boitom of the frame.
Two errors and singled by Joek!IOII
and Vogt knocked in two for Feder·
al in the second for a S·l score. then
tin inning later Diles and Man
Edwards singled for another Federal
tally to make; the score 6-1 ,
Eastern c:~me back to·6-2 in the
sixth"when Durst walked. stole second,then saw Jeremy Coleman walk.
and Eric Smith hit .an RBI single.
'Joey Dillon got hit to load the bases.
but a 4~3ground out left llfree""Eagles
stranded on base.
An errorled to another unearned
Federal run in the top ofthe seventh
to mpke the score 7-2.
·

In the Eastern half of the seventh
an hun Aldridge single was tol:
lowed by a Josh Will RBI_ double.
Steve Durst had an RBI single. then
stole second and third. but a ground
out ended the same.
Eastern hitters were Will and
Durst with tw.o hits apiece. and singles by Aldridge, Smith. and Brod·
erick.
· Edwards and Vogt hnd two hits
apiece for Federal.
. Ea.~tem goes to Belpre Friday
lnninalmall
·
Federal Hoc)dng 321..000-1 =7-9-4
Eastern .
JOO..OOJ -2=4-7-1
88ttrries
Eastem: Durst (J.P)and Broderick
Federal Hnckin~ : Curtis (WP).
Lawson 5th and Edwards

a

to Federal Hocking•

·"Jaretthrew the ball well enough
to win." Hargrove said. "We've seen
him throw the ball better this spring:
but if this is his best-elTon then we' re
gping Jo be in good shape.''
Ramirez. who hitsevenhomersin
23spring .traininggames.ledoffthe
second w11h a home run. He homered again after David Justice doubled
to start the fifth .
Ramirez is 4-for-8 with two home
runs and six RBis in two games.
Alomar. who set career highs
with a .324 batting average and 21
homers last season. had an RBI dnuble in the second. He added a two-run .
double in the founh .
.
Alcimar is 6-for-8 with a homer
and four RBis this season.
The Indians knocked out Moyer
(O-Il in the fifth . He surrendered seven nms on II hits. six for extra bases.
in 4 2/3 innings.
Notes: After two gamCJ;. Seattle's
starting pitching has an ERA of.8.71 .
... Duvis made. two etrors . The
Marinersc!&gt;mmittedfour.errorsin
never_s~idldiilil'thilveJII?Wer.''
theirlirsttwognmes. leading_l?three
Ramn'Cz and Alomnr each dr.ove _earned runs .... After Wnght h11 Joey
in three runs against last year's AL ·Com with a pitch in the right lrg to
West winners.
lead oiT the Seattle third. Moyer hit
The Mariners hud Iheir chances ~- Ramirez in the back with the first
one night arter their bullpen failed to pitch in the ,founh in the back. Plate
hold a lead for Johnson in a 10-91oss. umpire Roc~y Roe then warned both
Once ajlain. Seallle's bullpen strug- ben,hes . ... Ramirerhud U1e seventh
gled.
two-homer game of his career ·01nd
Facing Mariners closer Heath- first since June 27, 1996. He has 10
cliff Slocumb in the ninth. Briarr career homers agaiost the Mariners.
Giles had a two-run single with two . ... Mariners DH Edgar Maninez·was
outs to give Cleveland :t 9-6 lead.
not a\'ailuble to play. He scminc'll his
Down 7-5 Sl!"1lltle loaded lhe · left calf when he hit into a double
b;ses with o~c out in the eighth play in the thir~ inning~[ the openinning. But Paul Assenmncher retired er.
•
. Alex Rodriguez on an RBI grounder
S
and got Ken Grin\:y Jr. on a pnpup. - - pOrtS briefs-·tennis
HILTON HEAD ISLAND. S.C.
ners ·at second and third to end the (AP) - Spain's Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario became the latest big name to
sixth:
• Segui. who hit a thre~-run s~ut in pass up the Family Circle or full
the fifth •. began the mnt~ w11h a down in the draw. dropping a 6-7 (7 homer ~n Assenm~cher. M1ke Jack- 5). 1-S, 6-2 decision to Germany's
son _reheved and closed for h1s sec- Andrea Glass. ·
~.save. ·.
__
. •
In other second-round matches,
In spnng lrmnmg. w~ d•dn I second-seeded Junu Novotna beat
play th~t well.:" J:~k!;On said•. 17fer- Sandm Kleinova 6-4. 6-3. and third rmg to the lnd1ans 12, 17 c;xh1b1t1on seeded Monica Seles led Barham
record. "EverybOdy tlllked about our Paulus 6-2. 0-1 when the. Austri:m
pilc_hing and we know ) t's not goin8 retired because of an elbow injury.
to be an ea~y road. but we have :tn
Figure skating
AR-Stilr lineup."
.
MINNEAPOLIS CAP) - RusJ:uet Wright. 3..0 in the postseason sia's Yelena Berezhnayu and Anton
and the lndiuns stancr in Game 7'nf Sjkharulidze won the pairs title in the
the World Series. got the vicuvy.
· World Championships. edging the
The 22-ye:tr-nld Wright (1-1)). U.S. husband-wire le;tm of Todd
·beginning his first full year in the Sand and Jenni Meno. Russia's Alex·
major.l, allowed .four n1~s ~four hits ei Yagudln topped the men's compeand four walks m five mmngs.
tit ion after ttJ: short pro~rnm .

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·
Caldwell walked and Kim . Sayre
walked. Southern scored three runs
without the bene lit of a hit.
In the third, Southern plated three
m!&gt;reluns on four walks and sinjllcs
by Caldwell and Sayre to mtike the
score 6-0.
· ·
1be fourth inning took a similur
course as Southern phtted seven runs
on four walks. a Caldwell si~gle. a
Sayre double. Davis sinJlle and a
McKinney single. This rally pushed
the score to 13-0.
.
· Southern hitters were Caldwell
and Sayre with two hits apiece and .
·

lose~ 7-4

a

/2 PRICE

35~

Anderson's

Miller sent two pitchers to the
mound. stnner Brianne Ferguson
who went' three innings. walked f2,
hit three batters, struck out four and
gavr up all fjve.Southern hits and all
13 runs. Heather Compston ·cameo~
in relier with three innings of work.
walking two. strikinjl out one and
giving up no hits. Miller made three
errors:
•
After a sco·retess rirst inning.
Southern plated three·in the second
when Ashley McKinney walked.
Ashli Davis walked, Kim !hie
walked, Kara King walked. Cynthia
·
·

Baseball ·E"agles

~

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REG.49C

. . . No 01 "' ,.... Qllola
• "C' ' lloJII Guwtt:cd
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• fftC IWiill ol olcl aiJid

. dc)ubled twice. the Indians were .able
to win despite Issuing eight walks. '
A year ago, Cleveland was 2-4 in
· the' ~ingdome anil 3-~. against the
Marine~&amp;. .
• ·'
Said Alomar, who was 3-for-3
with thre_c RBI~ ~fore leaving lhe
game w1th a shghlly a~gravate&lt;l
Meigs with a double and a pair of sin- groin: "It's very difficult to come in
gles. Williams added three singles. here and win. It's a great accomLaudeimill had a double. Price, San- plishment for us,"
·
ford and Amber Vining eac" added a
"Any time ybu can win a game
single.
against Seattle is nice. but when you
Adams. the loser for Belpre.... win •. especially in Seattle. it's a
struck out-nine. walked eight and bonus." manager Mike Hargrove
gave up I0 hits. Mays had a pair or said. "'TheSe guys liave gril a .good
triples and a double to lead· the ballclub and I'm glad IVe don't hiil'e'
Eagles, Adams had a double and a to play thCni three here.''
single and Starr a pair of singles.
· In his second game for Sennle.
lgnlnclllbb
David Segu'i had u career night He
Meigs
003-00,1 -100-3=9-10-4 homered twice forthe first time in his
Belpre
120-003..QOO..I=7-9-I . major-league career - one from
·
BatteriH
each side of the plate- 'IJ)d drove in ·
Mei~s: l'dngy J..autlcrmilt (WP) live runs.
and Casey Sanford
"I've never been a power hitter.''
Belpre: Adams (LP) and Mollnhnn said Segui, who had fl9 one-homer
game:&lt;beforeTuesdaynight. "Butl

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· Piniella said after,watching the Jndi~ · beatthe Mariners 9-7 Wednesday
mght.
.
, In a game when Manny ~irez
h1t rwo home runund Sandy Alomar

I

RUSSELL STOYER

..... 8

bat of Casey Sanford. Kelly Gilkey with an RBI single to pull Meigs to
then singled to make it.a 3-2 contest within 6-5. The Marauders then Jied
Gilke_y laier scored to tie tbe game.nt the game. when Laudermill reached
three.
on a Be.lpre error scoring Gilkey.
. 1be Marauders took a 4-3 lead in
In the lOth. Mrigs loaded the
the sixth when l'nngy Laudermilt led bases with- a pair of walks. sandoff the inning .with a walk. Lauder- wiched around a Williams single with
milt came into score on a one out sin-· ,one out. Price then followed with her
glc off the bat n(Brooke Williams.
base hit to clear the bases and give
The lead was short lived howev- Meigs a 9-61ead.
cr. as Belpre scored thre~ runs in the
Belpre scored in the bottom .of the·
bottom of lhe inning to take a 6-4 "tenth. on a triple by Mays and a sinlead. Mays had a double . in the gle by Starr. but couldn't get any elMinning and Foraker added a triple to er.
. •
pace the Eagles irt the fmmc!.
Laudcrmilt picked up the- win
Meigs forced the ~arne into extra scattering nine hits. walking siK nnd
innings in the sevrnth with two runs. striking out four in running her
Sanford walked, Gilkey rollowed record to 2-0 for the yenr. Gilkey led

·

JOIN liS!
Store Hours: 10:00-6:00·Mon.-Sat.
1:00-5:00 Sun .

ing AL champions in the teams' season-opening, lwo-gamc series.
"We put 16 runs on the board inthe first two games of the season and
we're 0-2." Seattle manager Lou

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Come and Help Us Celeb~ate the
Opening of Meigs County's.First .
and Antique Mall ·
Craft
.
Saturday, April 4, 1998

Anderson's

F.A!&gt;'TERN CONFERENCE

:r-

•
By DAVE HARRIS ·
. Sentinel Correspondent
. Freshman Shannon Price drove in
!hree runs . m the_ top of the lOth
· .mnmg !ng1~e Me1gs a 9-7 win·over
Belpre m Tn-Valley Confrrence softball action Wedne•day evening at
Bclp~ . . _ .
• The wm g1ves coach J:~red Stew.. art~s Marauders a "2:0 n:cord in the
}'OUng seasoit ·headmg mto a non· conference game with River Valley at
home today.
Belpn:;jumped outto a 3-0 lead at
the. end of· the second inning. but
· Me1gs scored three runs in the third
. to tie _the game. Price )"alked and
came·mto score on n double off the

Allen will be paid a base s:1lary of
$900.000inthelinalyeurofhis con-·
tract . He rushed for 505 y'urds and '11
touchdowns !:1st season.
· Football
PITTSBURdH (AP) - The Pinsburgh Steelers signed Le••on Kirk land to a $15 million . fnur-year
extension - the biggest cnntmct e~er
for un NFL linellucJ;,r. Kirkland grts
a $5 million signing honus and itn
· average salary of $(&gt;.15 million
bt!ginning in JI)IJ'J. He will make $1.3
million in 199R.
·

~

The Dally Sentlne_l• Page 5

• • affair
•
Me .IQS .g•lrIs top BeIpre -g-7 ·•tn 1Q•Inning

.

Basketball

/

twice.
Matt Austin, who surrendered' I 2
runs - nine were unearned - in 2
1/3 innings. took the Joss.
In the second game, George (0-2),
who.gave up three runs, took tbe loss.
Teammates Joe 'fhoma.s (RBI
triple) and Shawn Sommer (double )
had Rio's only hits.
The Redmen will play at Marietta College today and go to Urbana
Saturday.

'

•

thriller.
the Seattle Mariners' Randy
J?flnson and Jamie Moyer. a com·
bu1ed 3.'-9 a year ago and 3-0 against
the lnd1ans, couldn't beatthe defend·

SEATTLE !AP) - Maybe the
Cleveland lnd•ans are even better
than they were la.st sea~n wben they
lost the World Senes m a Game 7

Padres shake five-run deficit,
h1
R
note ' 0-9 VICtory·ove·r eds GRAND OPENING
RIVERBEND CRAFT AND
ANTIQUE MALL ·

By JOE KAY
th~m . "
.
Boone doubleo wilh two "out for his
CINCINNATI (AP) - The best
Cincinnati went up 6-1 nfte~ the founh hit of the game. bringing up
ll nii lnn !Lowe 2- 61 at Scuule {C im.H.Ic 4 -21.
thing about the San Diego Padres' 2-. second mnmg as Joey l;lam11ton • Ca,ey. Hoffman got the count to 0-2
10:05 r m.
CLEVELAND IBurb tt 11 · 10) nt Annhdm (Me·
0 stan is that everyone can take cred- . struggled. He ligured ~ut his problem with a pair of insid~ J'aslhalls. chrew
Oowdl J. ) ) , 10:05 p.m. ~
-it for it
N . Y Y ank ees ( Me ndota K-b ) :.t O :~ kh1nd
- being tpo deliberate in his deliv- two more inside fastballs that Casey
( Huy ne.~ J.6 ), JO : J ~ p.m.
Their lineup came through from ery- and strmghtened out. £1\'mg ur. foul~d off, then showed the ,rookie his
top to bottom once again Wednesday. only one more_hit.
.
.
change-up.
NL standings
scoring I0 runs for c second straight
~am11ton got th~. wm by gomg 5
Casey had no ch:mce.
li:astun DiYI!Iion
!ill
game. Greg Myers' buses-loaded 1/3 mnmgs and gellmg a b1g hit from
"He was revved.and ready to go.
Iwu
n L l'l:L
double was the biggest hit as San the top-to-bottom offense.
A1lun1a .............. .. .................... 1 0 1.00
no doubt," Hoffman said.
New Yurt. .............................. 1 0 1.00
-;- Diego overcame a live-run deficit
"The offense deser~ed .the credit .
"They told me he had a great
f111riUa ... ....... . '............. I
I .:'100
1 and held on for a 10-9 victory ov.er bec~~JSe I .cenamly d1di1 I do my change-up and the next thing 1knew.
M u nr r~·:~ l ...........
.. ....... 0
I 000
Philaddphi:1.............. :.......... 0 I .000 • 1
tije Cincinnati Reds.
JOb, he smd. . .
,
I'm seeing four fastballs and I'm
San Diego won the opener 10-~ as
Cmlrallll v l.~kKI
Ken Camm111 and F1nley homered thinking, 'God. he's got a great fastPiru OOrtth ............................ J
0 I 00
eight players got .hits. The Padres and the Padre~ . to~k c~ntr~l with a ililll, too.' ". Casey said. "Then he
Sl. l.AmiL .............................. !
0 · 1.00
came from behind on Wednesday" as seven-?'n SIXth u~nmg h1ghl1~hted by dropped it off on me and I'm thinkCtut:11go . :......................... ,.. !
I
.m
'
Houllon .................................. 1 I .:"if)(}
'' eight players got hits once again.
Myers doujlle oil S&lt;;ott Sulhvnn &lt;0- ing, 'My God.' "
I"
Milw~tuk ~'t .............................0
I .000
In the two wins, San Oiego has I). Finley :s·two-run single complecI'
CINCINNATI ...................0 2 .0011
Notes:.Tony Gwynn had a pair of
piled up 20 runs on 20 hits and 10 ed the mnmg and made 11 10-6. •
singles
for . the SOOth multiple-hit
Wmt'rn Dl~t~iun
walks. The Padres have iotten
Colnmdu ............................ 2 0 100
Sean Casey. a mmor-league first game of his career.... Myers has
San Dio:gll ......
...2
0 1 on
homers from four different players. baseman obtamed frnmCieveland on played two games against Cincinnati
.500
I
San FrJnciM:o ......................... !
I
"You can't rely on one part of the eve of the opener m a trade for and come up big in both. With MinI ';
Los A11 ~~lcll .......................... 0
I · (}()()
1
Arizono1..
. .. .. 0 2 .ollO
your lineup." said Ste•·e Finley. who Dave llurba. got h1s first NL Jut and nesota last season. he went 3-for-4
homered and drove in four runs g~ve the Reds a chance. His two-run with a pouble and a solo homer last
Wednesday's scores
· Pilt.mursh 4. Mon1rcaiO
.
Wednesday. ''lt"s got lo come from s mgl~ off Brian Boehri~ger cut it to Aug. 30 in a 4-1 interleague win . ...
Chi~·.:~~u Cu'" 10. FlonJa )
everybody. When evcrybody"s g'el-~·
10-9m the seventh mnmg.
Boone's four hits matched his career
San Di ~go lO. CINCINNATI I)
H•1uston 7. s an Fr:u\l:i~c•• 6
., ling on base like they have the h1s1
The Reds had a chance in ·the high.
l'nlor;lllo fl. Au zma:t 0
COUple Of days. yOU're going IO SCOre ninth against Trevor J-loiTman. nrec
. Todayt's games
a lot of runs."
·
Cbkaf!.l' Cubt (Gonzalez ll ·IJ l ;a~ FJun iJ&lt;• IMet.i·
·•Thafs a great s ign." manager
in:•~,~~:b~;~h r.;hm,dr 10,,, ,11 Mnnrr\!lll &lt;Herman- Bruce Bochy said . ''lt"s nol one guy -----Sports briefs-----..., •-MJ. u~ p.m.
.
,
or two. Guys throughout the lineup
Basketball
was injured Tu.csday night in the
O). t~~ A~~~~le~ (Pnrk l4·Kl ;u St. Lour~ (PulinC()..
have gotten big hits. The bOttom of
COLLEGE STATION, Texas Heut"s victory over Boslon.
San ~.c, o ( Ash by '.1 - 11 ),.., C INCINNATI
the order is producing like the lop. (AP) ~Melvin Watk[lls. 42-20 with
Basrball
!CoulciJ- 1~). 7 . 0~ J• , rn.
That's important ··
·
consecutive trips to the NCAA tourPh1lotddph•:1!Purtu gal 0-2 1:11 N.Y. Met ~ !U11i!t •
.
•
CINCINNATI CAP) - Cincinn:ui
11-Yl. 7.40 1• m
The First lwo days of the Season nament at Nonh Carolina Charlotte
Reds owner Marge Schott underwent
J ). ~~::;-" ~~.: \Kall J().. l.l ) :&amp;tl\tLlnlot l~ l:.vi111: 14•
have been a ~i saster for •.he Reds. took over the Texas A&amp;M program: surgery for a broken hip. She was.
San f r..~•sc•l (Ku.:r...., l.l ·ft) ,., Hm•~••:n 1Hala- They took the1.r mosl lopsJd(d seaWatkins succeeils Tony Barone. who injured when she fell in her driveway.
"'"1
•0'· ' "~ r,m_
·.
son-o,.ning
rulur:~ , IA$'ftk:io 12-10, :II Arizomt (Andc rsun
b
- I ,.. . lo"
d
.. in f.36 years. • then was reassigned nfter seven seasons.
Sch\ltt. 69. was, resiing comfon1
4-2).tJfos r.ru.
ew a ·b1g lea to ;~II to 0- 2 ~ ln- inCluding a 7-20 mark last !.et1son.
atlly. accordinj1 m Dr. Michael
.
between. owner Marge Schott fell i11
Basketball Swank. who performed the halfFriday
''·II""'""
Mnnrre;il fV:•IJ.:5 +--'&gt;al Chtl.":l~~ Cuh~ ffr:~~.:h·
home and broke her hlp.
PROVIDENCE. R.I. CAP) -lim hour oper:uion at kwi•h Hospital
.,1.. 11&gt;. ' '"r-m
.
The pilching staff has been the Welsh. who coached lnna to a spot in Kenwood . .
p.1 1 1 w:~ukcc (MC"rn.U·, 7- 10 1 :11 Flmula II~•• ~
b"
bl
1h
I'· -•
'"" ' kl&gt;. 7 ol r m.
l_ggest pro em. I as wn •eu 10. hit the NCAA tournament will be hired
Baseball
l.n, An~des INunw '"'· 121 at CINCINN A'fl
one. thrc,Jwn two wild .Pilches and .as coach at Provillence College. The
TORONTO
tAP) - The Min(Wr:lf iM.'U 1-Jl. 7.05 r i11.
A
~ - ·d · h
f
· 1• 1 u~hut~h ''"'"
"u:•11·11 1,., N'. Y. Me1, cN. . t"d mr~ue
a 1of o1·ud
pile es t1 ter fallins Associated Press learned. He will nesot:J Twin' signeil reliever Hector
1:t-'n. 1 '"' r m
behind in the CltUnt.
Mnl."'dc~lllia IGr:~~.·.: J-Zl aiAII.ml a IN\!uj~:k: 2"· ·
··our slartin" pilchers nnd ·our replate Pe,te Gillen. who left to Carrasco tu a $685 .01Xl, nne-yeur
~ ). 1 .J O p . rn
e
CQach Vir~inia.
• . contmct. Cm;rasm pitched J'nr CincinCnlum.k' IMtrz bot( ) :u H•"mt lfl (l.•n"l 1-6 !. K05
retief' pilcher'\ have gnl 1n throw
Baskdball
•
nati and Kansas City last 'caspn, and
r.m
· ·
·
~trike~:: mani.lucr
Jack McKeon s.·:1i1l.S:m Otep" i L.rl ~stun 2-J J "' Sr Lutii.I (Ayh:v 2·
l:
MIAMI CAPJ- Miami Heat cen- was claimed lly Arizona in the cx"'p:m&lt;J. • '"P·"'
·
"lbey've got t&lt;1 get ahead and cut out' ter Alonzo Mourning was released sion draft. He was 3-0 with a 3.46
S:.n Fral'k'l~n (Cinnln...T 12-'JI "' Am:u~tu rSu plhe b;.ases on balls. When y(lU 'SCOre
pan 7·.1), IJ 0~ r m
from a hospital after surgery to rep;1ir ERA and one save fur the.Diamondfi ve runs like that. you' w ~ot l,o hold his' broken left cheekbone. Mourning liacks this spring.
Kun"ts Cit)' (HUlk)' I·2) at
20- IOJ. M:Ol"p.m.

By JIM COUR

------:Sports briefs------

Wednesday's scores
R H III mor~

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio

Indians beat _ Marin~r~ 9-7.to finish· sweep of :road ~eries

games to As~ land

Baseball
Ra~ tun

ThurSday, Aprll2, 1998

.Red men·drop tw9

Scoreboard
IwD

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Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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www.dllrt.com

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· Ta..lrliQill. IIIUf). end ClltMty llO! included.

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By The Bend
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rhe .Daily Sentinel

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~ational .Re.concUiation ·Day gives all a chance to reach out to someone
.

more precious
My parents suddenly seem old.
Ann
My aunts and uncles are sick. I
haven't seen some of my cousins for
Landers
1991, Lol AftJCitS Titnel
several years. I loye my family, Ann,
Synd1":ue and Crewl('ll
but we ' ve grown apan. Then, my
Sy ndica~ .
thOughts tum to the dark side. I
remember the feelings I've hurt, and
Dear
Since 1989, I I recall my own hurt feelings -- the
have suggested that April 2 be set ' misunderstandings and unmended
aside as Reconciliation .Day. It fences that separated us and set ~p
would be a day for people to reach barriers.
out \o those with whom they have
I have a clpse friend in New York
lost touch and' put an end to long-ago · I ha•en 't spoken to in three years.·
grievances. Here's tbe letter that Another 28-year-relationship in
stancd it all:
,
.
Seattle is on the rocks. We're .both
Dear Ann Lahders: I've sudden- 4 f now, and time is marching on.
ly beFome aware that the years are
I think of my mother and her sisnyi ng by. Time somehow seems

eat o

'

ter, who haven't spoken to each
other in five years. As a result of that
argument, my cousin and I haven ' t
spoken either. I don't know if she
has children ~ Neither of us has met
the other's husband. What a waste of·
precious time! I'm sure there· are
millions of people in your reading
• audience who could tell similar stories.
Wouldn't it lie terrific if a special
day could be set aside to reach out
and make amends? We could call it
" Reconciliation Day." Everyone
would vow to write a letter or make
a phone call and mend a strained or
broken relationship. It could also be.
the day on whtch .we would all agree

•

tn

returned recently from a trip with a
national fann organization to !irazil
and Argentina. '
In South Atiteri9a the, group visited a number of fann operations in
.the two countries. Dale ·comments
.that it appears South Americans are
about I 0 years behind United States
farmers in ·their procedures and
equipment.

•

And special than~ are being
.extend~d to Delmar Baum of
Chester who has been such a good
. Indjan in the projector restoring the
historical Chester Counhouse.
' Delmar not only has been a hard
'worker on the project but as gener•
ous contributor.as well. He has been
advi~ed by his phy~ician to slow
down his pace a bit and so will not
be as available as he has been in the
past.
Window replacements and floor. ing have been the most recent projects of the restoration committee ·
and eKcellent progress has been
made. Now all the committee has to
do is to continue raising funds with
which to pay off the bills.'
The latest project to help in that
direction is the selling of a cookbook in May. The committee has
spent the last few months compiling
the recipes to be featured in the
book.
Lorena Turley, daughter of keith
and Gloria Oiler of Meigs County,
wanes to commend the 911 staff at
Point Pleasant, W. 'va., where she
now resides.

Lorena' returned to her home near
·the Roosevelt School on night
recently to find a man .roaming
about the neighborhood . Lorena
said she was frightened as the man
appeared to be watching her and just
wandering around the neighborhood
He l\lso pounded on the door of a
neighbor.

.

ly no time, the staff IJ;Id representatives of the sheriff's office on the
scene. The investigation disclosed
that the man had earlier been in an
accident with his motor vehicle and
was apparently searching for it in
the area. He didn't find the vehicle ·
and authorities had no grounds for
any arrest. However, they did order
some testing to be done on him and
he was taken away thereby restoring
order to Lorena's neighborhood.
·

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs
County
Extension
Agent/
Family and Consumer Sciences/ Community Development
Dates on foods can be very confusing - "sell by," "use by," "expira-

tion date" • what do they mean? Are
they the same? 1\re. they different?
To make things even more complicated, there are yery few federal
guidelines that regulate these different dates.

Wisconsin is the first state in the
Union to wipe out welfare. The
state action reQuires residents to
work or no check. Seems like a
pretty stern step and. it will be interesting to see ho,w the plan works in
reality. While there are defects in the
system, obviously, is it really possi·
THURSDAY
ble to wipe out help for all people?
POMEROY- AA and AI-Anon
The Women's Auxiliary at Veter- Thursday, 7 p.m. at Sacred Hean
an' Memorial Hospital is hopeMII • §athohc Church.
.
that some of you will lend a helping
.
. . .
hand for its Easter fund raising proPOMER&lt;?Y- Me1gs Mmtstenal
Lenten Servtce, 7:30 p.m. at Naomt
ject.
So far, 81 colorful rabbit replicas Baptist Church. Re11. Raben Robtn·
have been sold and placed on white son preachtng.
trees in the hospital lobby, cafeteria
TUPPERS . PLAINS - Ladies
and extended care unit.
Auxiliary
of the VFW Post 9053
The. Auxiliary goal for the fund
meeting
Thursday,
7:30 p.m. Elecdrive is 1.20 rabbits and the drive
does go untWEaster which is April tion of officers.
12.. You take pan by sending the
RACII'liE- Meigs County ComAuxiliary $5, the name of someone
missioners
meeting Thurs!lay, 5 p.m.
you wish to honor and on which tree
with
area
farmers
at the Racine Pubto the organization at 115 E. MemoliC
Library.
rial Drive, Pomeroy. the Auxiliary
is such a good organization and does
RUTI.ANDdeserve you help.
A 23 year old woman is missing
iri Columbus. A neighbor heard loud
screams coming from her apanment
at 4 a.m. on a Sunday morning but
telephoned no one to investigate or
help. That's incredible. Now,
indeed, that is avoiding becoming
involved. Do keep smiling.
.

Washington State announQ.es honor list
:Washington State Community ,ident's list were Candy M. Irarnes
College in Marietta has released the and Jennifer L. Wigal, Coolville.
names of 89 students who hliVe been Included. on the dean's list were
included in the college's president's Thomas P. Gannaway II, Vinton;
list for the winter tenn, who main- Walter R. McPeek, Amesville;
tained a perfect4,0 grade point aver- Debra J, Teaford and Sheri L.
age.
Roush, both of Ponland; Carla D.
In addition, 171 students were Ruble, Racine; Sean A. Maxey, Tup·
named to the dean's list, caring pers Plains ; and Roxanna D. Rupe,
GPA's of·between 3.50 and 3.99.
Coolville.
. Local students. named to the pres-

•

by a fonner friend. Thjs day could
be the staning plal:e. We could go on
from here to heal the wounds in o'ur
heans and rejoice in a brand-new
beginning ... Van Nuys
Dear Van Nuys: What a good
idea to set aside a special day for.
reconciliation. Today is the day you
ought to pick up the phone or write a
letter that· will bring so much joy to
someone who might be in pain.
.
Life is too shan to hold grudges.
To ·be able to forgive can be enormously healing and life-enhancing.
It's the best example of casting your
bread upon the waters and getting
· back.caviar san\lwiches. Do it today.

. Dear Ann., Landers: Am I the
only person wlia:&gt;cringes every time
a siJtger mangfes our national
anthem at a sporting event or other
occasion on national television and
embellishes the music so it becomes
almost unrecognizable?'! sometimes
. wonder what visitors from other
countries t~ink of this. Do they
. allow their mitionai anthems to be .
messed up like we do?
I have no problem with singers
"doing their thing" with other
songs. It just doesn 't seem right with
the Star-Spangled Banner, which is
so important to our image. Am I just
old-fashioned? .. Sc!attle Reader
Dear Seatde Reader: Old-fash·

CLIFTON - Benefit hy.mn sing,
Saturday, 7 p.m. Clifton Tabernacle,
Clifton, W. Va. featuring the Gabriel
Quanet and Joe McCloud.
CHESHIRE - Disabled American Veteraps, State Route 7,
Cheshire.• Ninth District meeting,
Saturday. Dinner at noon; meeting at
I p.m... MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Cooperative Parish to present "Lord, Is It
J?" drama 8 p.m. at Mjddlepon

MONDAY
PORTLAND ·- Penland PTO,
Monday, 7 p.m. at Portland grade
school.
·

Speech/drama classes .~t!re~~~or;::::~~
. re.paring
. 'Horror Hi gftV·ket~~~~:~:~:~~tingare
P
c

FRIDAY. APRi l 3

POMEROY - Meigs County
Library Board meeting Friday at ·
noon a~ the Pomeroy Library.

1110'

Foo~ Rqoh In
Falhefs' Dli

1:11

H102
Hlof

The Juror

SATURDAY

11:11

HIO

CHESTER
Shade River
Lodge Chester, F&amp;AM, tliree E.A.'s
on Saturday. Breakfast will be held
at 8 a.m., with degree.work to follow
at 9 a.m.

11:41

1:11""

IW .

Vice Velll ·
Hostile waters
•HBO Original Movie
Stet:~hen King's Thimier •
The 8ad News Bears

MAX

HIOF

SATURDAY. APR IL 4

--

11:11 '
1.:11

MAX

HIO '

11-JI

11:41

-

The Saint'

'Easter
"Flowers

HIOZ

li:ll

1110 '
MAX

tt• . ' 1110

$7.98uch

A T1111eto Kill

Airpline! ·
• Turbulence
Tho O.Vil~ Own
Airplane II: Tho 5equel

-

11:11

-

12:11• MAX
tZ:41
HID

·-.

,,;;,., Tt..

EaJ1h To,Tho Moon

(E~)Sodes

I and 21

Cfor
'1'/ie One You Love
'

'

'

Flo._

·111i.callle Guy

·

S.ila~lme

One Fine bay
• T1\e Larry S.ndero Show'
·Tho Relic
Tho Pentagon Wors
HBO Origin.llllovif
W.utivo Decision

School surpasses"goal·
set for bloodmobile visit

SeirchirJQ for Bobby Fi..:her
Smilla's Sense Of Snow
Dennis Miller live

• Summer Flower Bulbs
• Beautiful BlCJOmiat PrimrOse
• Frost Proof Pansies

I

OH

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CIIC

Bridge; Maton,
Phone(304)773-5721

C 0 H H U N .l C A.T I 0 N S

TO ORDER CALL ·800~766·0553

1/4 Mile N01111
.

M lhni"8 8 • 8; Sun 10 • 7'.

'

...CINEMAX 6 HBO ON CHANNEL 18
... HB0 ·2 ON CHANNEL 22
•.. HBO F ON CHANNEL 24

CABLEVISION
.

Hoff' fh15 Pri\'IIW '~f1S G PG PG-13;.&lt;11111 R·rlled Proorammlng: To llbi IJferiew .PIOQfPI from your lxlml. QN yoor IOU! able Otlfla101 Previ!W JVJ!IIbie oolyto homes thal:fiM•blsk:
,
- • potl:ll)llrnt Or!K AI bmturo IHtfin. ClrtO&lt; localllsfllQs ·
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Otfl(e
o!TimtWir111r£n1t/IIIIIINI'It~ LP
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On Weclt~e:iday. March 25. the appoiatmen
.
1 time on Wednesday for
American Red Cross brouaht the .tbll student. ~
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bloodmobile to M'elp Hip School'· · The stlldellll were Rid at the door
for the . Student Council's Annual ''7 lbldent counc;il m.ttbel'l. &amp;cll
· Blood Drive.
.penon who wanted to pate blood
. This year's Joel wu to ha9e so ·had to be 17 or older. weigh lllOit
pilltl of blood donated. :rhe tcho!!l .than 110 pounds, and .~ in JOod
(lllfed the goal with 81 units of blood health.·
.
I
beiDJ given.
·
·
·
Each aiUdenl :::~ve blood i
On theMonday and l)laday ~swm!d a. que ·
·re ·a~l ··
• before die Bloodmobile ·StMent ·hi • .put health and~ his.
: council membou visitCd ~001111 .tory. The llUdent wa then given a
: andclulea 11kiJ11 •"'atato vo1an- ~of privacy in order to decide .
: . tccr 10 donale.blood.
.r
..re ro donate.
Wbar uucleal in* ; 1 ?hat they
After havina completed dlia
.: ·: would like 10 volanteer, die ljlldent . proc:eu. die i?lldent- rally to.pvc
~ ;eouncil members Would tet ap an . · blood: ·
.

&lt;

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333.,. Slnet

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45760

MOWERS

JIAUM WMBE~·

State Route248·
Ch11t.r

(614-992-6472.

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Advertise your
business·here ..
Call
992-2155
Ask for Dave
Rutland

Ford

Bottle Gas

The "Good Buy~

Guy•&amp; Gall

992-2196

''

Advertise your
· business here.
Call
992,2155
Ask for Dave

1\i-County

.

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Ohiq River
Bear··
Company
992-4055

885 3301

..._...blood-

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FMdSi!ppiJ

........

TheiSubstilute

(Job's .41so Has:

Phone (740) ,446-1711
Open: Mthru S 8 • 8 Sun 10 •

J n"o•ISen···or Prom May 2
u I

COOLSPOT

a

"Twister

MAX

1:11

AmaricaR

Down Periscope

7:11,.. · 1:11
1110
MAX
1:11
HI02

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L"Ott1ea

: : . = u : : ; c a Wtlgl•• Mel ·

and:

FRIDAY'
REEDSVILLE - Free spaghetti
supper, Reedsville United Methodist
Churclt. Music by the Vance family.
Public we(come.

Available Now
"' Colora ·ro Choose Froll"! .
• Red • WhHe • Pink • Lavender

.·: - Bulk Garden·Seed • FertJJiw
~. Ume • Frost Proof Vegetable Plants
• And More!

~:~n:.;;:;~~gs:":::~!o~:~~..wastodesigna tloorplatiofa

' ·skills developed in class in a mar- . bromeliade. one peppcrpiant. a .
coleus. and the beginnen bOok on
II·
.
..
,hydroponics. In the ~ class she By KRISTINA KENNEDY
.
B PAMELA NEECE
.
A s 'th,'Tt Cl
.also affiliated with DECA, the state won asecond place.
the Junior class is busy planning· and preparillJl for the al\nuai
Y
•
my .m1
tna; ay row, ':"Q~· sponSORd club for t~is group. Stu·
M0111:an Mathews, Kim Pe~vley, J · fSe · Pro
be held
M 2
and RACHEL ASHLEY
ster; .Beth Fildey, Mr. ~n; LIRZ!e dents complete at the District and Amanda Miller and Julie Spaun comunThtor ntor
m to
on ay .
. S
.
·
.
is year's proln theme will be "A Moon Itt troll," m the colors of silIn less than a month from now the Notttngham·, Ms. Snaps; Colltn
senior speech/drama elasses will be Roush; Marty; Scott Dodson, Mr. · State level.
peted in the busi~ c~:_th 8 wr. wine, and hunter green.
perfonning "Ho.:ror High, • their Bunsen, and Michelle Bissell,
The program is offered to.Easterit photography p(OJCCI. ··- ."-1-nts
Students and their dates will have the opportunity to have 'outdoor picannual plays.
Anaela.
Southern students !IS well as shphotowed thehir taiSendets in taking goodhed tures taken dl!ring prom. Scheduling for pictures will take place one week
For this year the two plays chosen
During the'JIIays the cast members Me1gs Students. •
•
ograp s. tu nts researc
prior to prom. ·
are "The DullsviUe Mystery~ and . have to put fonh all of theireffons to' .
After graduatmg fro~ th1s pro- photollfiPhy and found it is used in
After the prom junior class parent~ will again sponsor activities. Some- .
make the plays successful. There~ ~many students ~bnue ID wcx:tc many technical fields. The students thing new for this year will be a l!fC·prom drawing. Student~ who pre-n:g"Nightmare High School."
For The Dullsville Mystery the hours and houn of rehearsals prepar- 1n~1J managmen! poslltons, use ~tr al!IO le;uned how to correct some of ister prior to April 17 will be eligible for drawiJ1g for prizes that can be used
cast of second period is as followS! ing for the play. and when the stu- s~lls and expcnences to acqutre a their mistakes by getting · helpful towards prom.
Prizes include tuxedo rentals from Ha.~kins Tanner and the Fabric Shop,_
Danielle Gruescr. narrator; Jenny dents ate not practicitig with the class htgher level J~, or use the money infonnation from. guest speaker,
Hayman. Jane; sara Grucser. Fifi; they are preparing costumes and earned dun~g high,.school~ funher Rog~r Gilmore. Th~ students Innovations Photo package. Nails by P;un, and your choice of con:ages and
~ly Chistecn, Susan; Carrie Hwt· · learning their ~ue words and lines. It the1r educatton after graduat1on. .
rece1ved an e~cellent ~1ng and nm· ~tonnicres from Francis Aorist, Pomeroy Aower Shop, Middleport Rower
son, Fruncesca; Jessica Wheeler. Ter· . is 111Quired ~ the eta.~~ members
.•ner-up award tn the bustness catego- Shop and
Aoral.
.
ry; Rachel Ashley, principal; Pamela have · their lines · memorized three
Neece, counselor; Scott Sellers, Joon; weeks before the play so that they can
Jared Wamer, Owen; Nathan Halfhill, work on their dwacter. costumes• .
. •.Troy; Marl~a Staats. Miss Sportski; and ac~ing ability.
.
. · Counney Haley. Lunch Lady; )erica
The seniprs have to be very
•AJI
ladt S1W
. _Clark, .Jane's mom, and Myca · responsible andl willing to commit
- Haynes, Madame Stupendo.
thei)ISehes 10 the senior plays for at
Blac:b Sema Day
CONVENIEIKE STORE
:- ·Taking roles "in the Nighunare least a month and a half. This year's ·
}aaal
fuj Clrp - t 0.0
• Aigh School are David Andmon, plays·wm be perforJII!=d on April 24.
April3rd
· Mad Doa·Mulligan; Lauren Ander. On ihat momingthe playa will be
, fwnbB '•'d
llc:ket&amp; $8.00 each .
·• ~ Charlene; Danielle Pecldllln, presented for the junian ~ion
"Stuf• for PetS • Firm
Coolvlile Exit orr At 1
··"Shelley; Mike Leifheit,.Todd; Melia- {lnd in the afiatKJC!II they will per·
887-8100 .Store
'Anftnll• s..ble
• 11 RamlburJ. Kellie; Mid: Bill', formed for the fraltmen
soplloon sale at ..
887-8101 RllltaUrant
JoeEwna 112-2114
nlonster; TJ. Davis, COI)lle; Nllhan . mores. 'lbe.evening pillf0D111111CCS are
Francia
Owner:
8fyan
WIJIIe
Owner
. ; Halfl!ill, Llny; Sftam!on Jenkins. for the~ and·~ comt1111nity.
· fob. Shup;. AJ. Vaughan, Colin;
For those who ane into myslery,
Wheel
Sup ·O'Brien, zombie, Adam SUSIJCI*.' love.III011tlen, and fun. the
·Thomas-Bill, Casey Sanford-Ms. Oass or1998"s dnnw are jull riJhL
TRACTORS
end RIDING
Freitner, Matt Willi8111s-Zombie;

CHESTER - Cheste.r Baseball/Softball Association will meet
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Chester
Fire Station. Coaches meeting to follow.

Hardy 74.zaleas

1or 'Jour garden:

· · gr.
· o,up earns
· .ho, nors '
.ec h p rep
f or· ent rtes
• In
• WS CC. .S.h·o. wcase

at
Rutland
Rule changes will be reviewed.

'

Just

retuf'!led

Heath United MethOdist Church, . . dinner at noon, and a meeting at I
Public invited.
p.m. for members and guest~.

CHESHIRE - Disable&lt;! American Veterans · of State Route 7,
Cheshire,. will host the 9th District
meeting, Saturday. There will be

A capsule.look.at M.HS'
v~Cational opportunities ..

Computerized
periods of relared class and four peri· coloring, perm waving, nail and skin
accounting
ods of lab each' day.. Students may . care, professional ethics and man· .
By KRISTINA KENNEDY
alSIJ qualify for early placement dur· agement. .
This is a two-year vocational proComputerized
. accounting ing their senior year. If the students :
involves the learning of manual and qualify for early placement, they will gram vi11ere a student~ four cred·
.compu!erized ..accounting, businesS wmt half of the day and attend cii!SS .its per year and is involved for si~
math, business communications, half of. the day.
. periods a41!y. To enroll students must ·
working with office machines, and
After gradualion many of )lhe be entering their junior year or or be .
the proper office etiquette. · Stu· ~iors are planning education m a I6 and at student at Meig~. Eastern, .
dents with junior status or 16 years of business related occupation.
or SoutJ¥:rn.
age and keyboarding skills ane eligi·
·
Nunllng ANI81ant
Students enrolled in this program
1
ble to ~II in this program.
By LAURA PAYNE ·
,ate affiliated with Vocational Indus- ·Students devote si~ periods of~
.The Nursing Assistant Progiam at trial Clubs of America (VICA).
class time throughout ihe day to i Meigs High School is a one-year proMechaniCI
receivefourcreditsayear.Joboppor·! · gnim offered to students in their :By HOLLY MILHOAN
!Unities range from a receptilinis~ . senior year.
·and JESSICA WRIGHT
secretary, accounting clerk or word:
The program consists of two peri·
If you are 16 years IJid or a junior ·
. processor. By being enrolled in' thls i ods in the afternoon the students talc· and interested in.cars, auto mechan·
·program a senior student has the! ing pan in simul&amp;ted'laboratory ex(lC: ics is the place for you,.
choice to ~ involved in an early j · riences: ,
Auto ':"ecll,anic students learn •
placement program that offers job: , Dunng second semester, studen~ about' engtnes, brak~s, and standard
opponunities during the school year. . participate in on-the-job employ- transmissions. there is a big demand
· Students learn by participating in mimi at local health cane or hospital for ·skilled technicians after high
· independent lab situations, doing
facilities du'ripg · the afternoon or school. The auto mechanics course is
interesling things, and learning skiDs evening hoilrs for pay.
affiliated with VlCA (Vocational
COMPETE .IN SHOWCASE - .,._ tech
munlty College, They
with llx .-rdl
to earn mone:r.
Margie Blake, a cenitied regis- Industrial Clubs of America). .
prep ltUdentlllt Mllg1 Hlgtt 8c:hool competed
of
excellent
on
their
J11
ojeC!ll.
•
A few seniors, from the Comput· tered nurse. is the instructor for the
At1to mechanics is a tWo-year
ln. tile Showcae It Waehlnaton State Comerized Accounting program said they program. She inslru(:ts students in vocational program with the stuplan to usc these many sldl.l~ f9r learning CPR, rust aiil, and basic dents taking two peri~ of related T.
workingwhileattendingcollege,as leamingskills. Aftercompletingthe courscwottan.dfourperiodsoflab ·
a stepping stone upon entering the . ;program, s~nts qualify tu take a. insuuction each day to qualify for
military, and to type papers for stu- state test 'to become cenifted nursing four c~its a year.
dentswhileincollege.
'
assistant...cCNA}andcanwot'kinany
Thereilrenoprerequisitesforthe '
Computer/word
long·terrrrfacility.
•
program which is open to all Meigs,
·
.
•
.
·
· proceNing
A student receives four credits for Eastern and Southern students. ~vid
6n March 19, 1998, several Tech ry..
.
sectional home, by using a computer
By PAMI!!LA NEECE,
completing the program which con- Putnam,. .a student from Sou!hem, Prep students traveled to Washingtotf . More, of the students attending tbe and a plotter.
JESSICA WRIGHT
~ists of si~ periods a day. To enroll says he. hkes the program and· the . State Community College to panici- 'showcase were Ashley Rupe, Tiffany .
The home consisted of four bed·
and HOLLY MILHOAN
certain prerequisites must he met teacher, and is learning a lot while pate in the Tech Prep Showcase.
. Halfhill. Adrianne Tilley, and Tawny rooms. two baths, two living rooms,
The Computer/Word Processhig such as average grades and good having fun.
The students found this to be a Jones. The project they completed a dining room, and a kitchen, which
·Assistan't program is designed for stu- attendani:e. Extra math and science
Students enrolled in the program very wonhwhile · experience and . was called B.O.B., which stands for all--were dimensional. Using.another
dents interested in careen as com- classes ane also beneficial.
are· acquiring · skills which will be . learned from the creating and pre· Best Of the Best, and it competed in program, a day-by-day manual was
·puter/word processing ,usistants.
The nursing program at Meiss is helpful whatever they do after grad- scnting of the project. The following . the Business category.
"
used tq.plot out already loaded proThis program is also designed SIJ that open to any senior from Meigs, East- ua~1~n, whether. they go on for more students and a brief description of,
The class worked hard for two jects, such a.~ an airplane. The stu·
studen~ may rontinue their educ:'alion
em, or Southern High Schools, !ramtn~: take a J~ tn a garage, or go their projects lire' as follows:
months working on speeches and dents. lear::ledgreat deal and
after h1gh school.
Besides those from Meigs enrolled in mto mthtary serv1ce.
.
Beverly Burdette competed in the videos. The project received an e~cel- received an
ell t ratina on their
Students work with · computers, i the progmm l!fC three from Eastern ·
llarketlngiCiuc:atlcn
Showcase with a hydroponics pro- lent rating.
.
·
project.
.
·
electronic calculators, copiers, tran· 1 · High School.
By IAN STORY
.
j~t.
·
. Tangy Laudennilt and Jake Birch·
John Davids n and Adam
scribers, and other office equipment. ' · Colmltology .
If you are a people oriented per·
Hydroponics is the growing of field also panicipated in the Show- Williams, junior electronics students
Word processing, database, and By SARAH L:ARKINS.
. ~n who likes 'dealing with the pub- plants without soil There 'are three case. The project ente~ was called also competed in t!Jc Showcase with
spreadsheet projects are completed
The Cosmetology program is a he, marketing education may be the main cultures and many methods of Astound 2. 1. The project was a pre- a lazer modulation project and
on the computer. The computer SIJft· two-year course that teaches·studcnts place for ~ou. Marketing is a two- hydroponics. Water Cl,llture involves sentation explaining the Tech Prep received an excellenl rating.
ware . used in this program is the .skills needed to become a year vocattonal program where stu- only water.!IS a medium. Sand culture progfollll. Their project received and
Mistie Musser · a~d Amanda
Microsoft Office including Word, licensed.cosmetologist, salon man- dents develop skills in merchandis· uses sand as the medium. Aggregate e~cellent ralitig in the business cate· Miller competed with a project called
Access, E~cel, and Powerpoint.
ager. electrologist, technician spe- ing, distributing. purchasing, selling, culture can use shards of brick. grav- gory.
ROBO-ARM. ROBO-ARM compel·
,
The program is a· two-year pro- cialists; esthctician merchandising. · mana~iitg, inventory coS! and other el. or rockwool. Burdette's unit used
. Ashley Bunon and Brandy Tobin's ed in the engineering category where
· . gram with students receiving four During this program a student will relaleil markeling topics. · ·
· rodwool.
project was over two progmns using it received an excellent rating.
c~its ,per year. Stull£nts attend two
learn skills in hair cuning;-..styling, . . A ~nt !"BY enroll in Mkt.l ill
With the display she took the bot- the CAD (Computer Aided Drafting). (The~~- written
·
etther hts Junior"!' sentor year. Mkt. ties·of nuirient sol!dion. Each bottle syStem. The maio concept of the pro- I!Y Holly M"'-'t, llr'nl Wllllml,

90045

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Lenten Bible
study Sunday, 6:30 p.m. with .wor·
ship at 7:30 p.m. Quanet , singing.
Rev. Bill O'Brien will be guest
speaker.

--~~--~--~~~~============~

'

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778 and Star JuniQr Grange
8789' potluck supper Saturday, 6:~0
p.m., followed by the regular meet-·
ing at 8 p.m. Plans fot the May 2
consignment sale win be finalized .
All members are urged to attend.

Page7
;;;. Thursday
April2, .1998

••

Generally. though, if you see ing capability, or pectin may not stored in a cool, dry place. If they
"sell by" or "pull" dates on food, thicken jellies as well .
become dented or rusty, microorgan'
this is when the grocer should
But the expiration date may also isms have a greater chance of invadremove the product from the shelf. be on there to warn about poten tial ing the food and causing spoi!age.
Most perishable products will last food spoilage.
·
·
l,ow-acid can ned foods , such as
five to seven days after that date if
Dairy foods such ~s so!Jr cream, _meat, vegetables, .and slews, can be
they are refrigerated at 40 degrees yogun, or cream cheese might show stored up to five years.
Fahrenheit. They "will keep even signs of mold after that date. Since
I-ligh-ac id fooos like tomatolonger if the temperature is colder there are no governmental standards based products, juices , pickles, and
than that.
for these tenns, food safety special- sauerkraut, should be used within
So if your family drinks a gallon ists say, "Wh.en in doubt, throw it eighteen months.
of milk in less than a week, you out!': · ..... ,
Most canned goods have a code
don't really need to worry about the
Eggs may contain a "packing staiTiped on thein. This allows man"sell by" date . However, if the milk date" on .their, canons. They· should ufacturers to identify where the
is kept at temperatures above 40 be used by three to five weeks of prod.uct was processed. If you find a
degrees, its lifetime will be that date. Some canons will have can of pears that have been in the
decreased.
expiration dates, 'though, which are back of your pantry for an unknown
"Use by" and "expiration" dates within thiny days of the .packing ·length of time, contact the manufacare a different matter. Both mean date. In either case, eggs should be turer.
that the prO\fuct should be used by stored in their canons in the refrigerThe name and address of the
that tlme. But the question is, ator to help prevent food poisoning. company will be on the label. The
"Why?"' It may me~n that 'the qualiCanned goods rrll!y have a date processing date can be detennined
ty will not be as good as it would stamped on therit. Even though the from the stamped code. Titis number.
have been, if it had been used by
date may be a year or two away, the also is extremely helpful in the event
date. For instance, yeast and bakjng food will probably still be good after of a product recall,
powder may lose sol)le of
that date. ~ake sure the &amp;ans are

Come On Ove·r To Bob's. ...

.Sin pot

ioned? Not in the least. You ·have
written a letter that I have been wail·
ing to see for a very lohg time.
Thaltk you. I, too, have attended
sports events and listened to tonurcd
versions of our national anthem. It is
an embarrassme nt. It sounds as ..if
someone is auditioning for a record
contract. I am cenain many readers
wi ll be pleased.that you wrote to
express yourself. Put me at the top
of that list.

----'----Time Out For Tips~-~-

•••

By: Bob Hoeflich

'

.

io accept the olive branch .extended

-

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

The Daily' Sentinel.com

Page&amp;
Thursday, April2, 1998

v

--------.

•

Supporti.... 1111
ania actlooll&amp; youth
leap In 8IMI uy •HI•
tD Dlrw or tt.rb.

742·22j.1

�•

•

•
Page

8 • The _Dally Sentl!'lel

Pom~~oy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aprll2,

•

1998·

Business Services

M&amp;J

'

YE~LOW
. TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

s·
Baked Porket te ,
llasbed Potatoes
witb GraV, ·
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Prunes

1.

7
Hamburger
Broccoli-HDII
Broctoli Soup-Site
Orange Juice
Bre&amp;d Pudding

10
GOOD FRIDAY
CENTER CLOSED

15
Cbickea • Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots ·
lo Cauliflower
Braad
Apple Cberr:v Crisp

20

21

Salmon Patt:v
Lyonnaise Potatoes
But~ered Carrots
Bread
·T ropical _Fruit

Navy Beans lo Bam
Cole Slaw
Cora bread
Apple
~ck:v Road ~d4ing

Turl!e:v Weiner
llasbed Po~toes
Sauerkrau~

c

22
BBQ Chicken Fillet

23

Baked Stei.k
llasbed ~tatoes
witb Gravy
Buttered Peas
Bread .
Peacb Slices

1

S~alloped Potatoes

Broccoli
Bread
Piaeapple Chunks
29
Vegetable Beet Sou
Pimento Cbeeae
Sandw.icb
·
Peachy Creamy
Pudding
·
Cookie

. 28

·

1
Bread
Fruit cOcktail

1? '
llushroom Steak
llasbed Potatoes
witb Grav:v
Buttered Corn
Bread
Blusbiag Pears
24
lleat Balls in
Bro11D Grav:v
Noodles
Tossed Salad
Bread
llandarian

18
Bam Loaf
Sweet PotitoeiJ
Greea Beans
Brnd
Applesauce

' 30

Evelyn Clark, ceater, bas beeD a voluateer wltb RSVP ~~Dee 1995. ·
Sbe Is lllo'!l'll teadllq ltUdeats about caDdie maida,. Enlya allo
II a Senlon Ia Scbooll voluaterr at Salisbury Elemealary. Call tile
RSVP ollke at 992-:ZI6llf·you would like to lmow IIIOft about vol·
uaterrlng In the community.

Retired and Senior
_
Volunteer Program
· The

Retired and Senior
Senior volunteers baye been
~IUIIleer Program ':"ill celebrate active in the Meigs County school
tiS twc.nty:fifth yc~ ·~ 1~8. ·~ ·system throusllout the years. 'The
followmg tnformatton JS a little hJS- "Yesteryear" program sponsored in
tory about the program.
conjunction with the Meigs County .
The Meigs County Council on
Museum and Historical Society bas
Aging, Inc. m:tived a grant of been held in the spring since 1984.
S27,482 for operation of a Retired The "Yesteryear" program allows
and Senior Volunteer Program in
fifth grade students «tparticipatc in
February 1973. Persons over age learning ~fts ~uch aa quilting,
60 could volunteer their talent, candle making, lln puncb, rag basinterest and experience to commu- · ket making. embroidery, leather·
J\iry agencies and otpiizations.
craft, bread and ~c making. aa
There were SO senior volun- well as gencalog•cal research.
leers enrolled in RSVP by the end Over 3,000 students bave attended
of May 1973, serving at Veterans "Yesteryear" during the pasl fifteen
Memorial Hospital, the Meigs years.
County Home, the Bookmobile, the
"Ycsttrycar" bas been nation·
Meigs Community School, the _ ally recognized with · the
Red Cross, the Cancer Society, Governor's Call to Service Award
Meigs Special Education, two and has been featu!Cd in numerous
small nursing homes and the Senior magazine articles including th~
Citizens Center. By the end of the lntergeneratiOIUJI Program Idea
first year of RSVP, 131 senior ¥,q)- Book by AARP, .Over the Back
unteers had given 10,000 hou~f Fence and Ohio Herilage.
volWitec:r service.
·
RSVP bad 200 volunteers.who
A senior citizens chorus and a · contributed over 45,000 hours in
squ~re dance club .were organiz:ed
1997.
Retired and Senior
dunng the first year of RSYP wnh Volunteers. age SS and over, ani
members volunteenng the1r talent assisting at maay agencies and
at many ~munity events, schools organizations in 1998. The RSVP
an_d nursmg homes.. • The two can be relied on to find volunteers
~ps met on a weekly ~is at the
to assist with numerous usignSenJOr Cen_t~r for the•~ enJoy~nt ments on a regular ~ or for one
and entertamed IJIIDY umes dunng time events.
the past twenty·fJVe years.

J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULATION

• Vmy! Siclin9 • Soffit
• foscia • S.Omleu
. Gutter • Roofing
• bp~cxt~Mnt Windows
· a Stationary Docks
• Blown lniiUiation
• Galages • Dicks
2.4 X 2.4 Pole Building

I

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Qlrt • Sand

a.-:ernilll die iijiUMJin&amp; ·SCII~

Chester, Ohio
1~

(Ume StoneLow Rates)

SAYRE .

-

'

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

'•

.'

R111110n11bhl Rlltn

Joe N. Sayre

1480 Jacbol!)'i.ke
Gallipoli( OH

-'~111,

·• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding
ln's urances
20 V.rs. Elcp.
- Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson
··~d-

E1timate1
446-4759

15o/c off

TONY'S
PORTABLE WELDING
'
992·5513
'
'-

Used 30" to 20" Electoc
Ranges with 90 Day Warranty
FRENCH CITY MAYTAG
446-7795

SHAWNEE TRADING POST
Largest supplier ol Indian motff. If
lndiii)S make ij, we'Ve got ill
4~ mi. out oiPt. Pleasant on t. 62
$. OpeQ Daily' 10-5, Closed Mon.

----

SAr.ES •

ERYASET-UP
.
.

'

• HOSPn'.U.BE

• WHIWJ.CIIAUIS

MEDICAID
PRIVATEINSVRANCI!

urrciiAIRS
AIDS
NDm.I7.EIS

"We7reoeY~

\

• '1

"

I II I I I I: I I

.

I' I\ I • I

OXYGEN
~

I '

j

It'

l '''

•

I \ I I\ ... I
.-"1

-

I \

1; ' I

11\l\

Experienced Profenlonal Phlebotomist M-F, Earir Mornings,
Compan~ Car, Reaume To: P.O.
Bo•33. Ga~ipoio, OH 45831, 740-

..8-CXI53.

Ex~rienced

saletpetiO needed
ica11on
r mall

·

tele-

vision station. Must be willing 10

310 Homes for Sale
2 Houus On 2 11"' Acres Wllh
River. Fron1age Garlield Avenue ,
Gallipolis, Main House.2 -3 Bed-

rooms.

112 Batn Full Basement.

l

Second Hou se 2 Baths, Good

work on commllllon. Stnd re· Rental Income . $55,000 7110-446-

Home Glamour Partial, Earn $78
. · 1150 Per Oav. Limited Travel,

800·426-8383. .

-------1
Home FuJniahinga Sale Rep, Re·
qulrementa: Minlm.~m 3 teara R•
tall Experience Including Cuatom
WindOw Treatments, · Carpal
Salea Or Degree ln ·Interior
Design. Send Reaum11 "To Tope
Futnllure Gallerias, 151 Second
Avtf1le, GalUpolla, OH 45631.

0639.

3 bedroom-large living rOom &amp;
kitchen, 314 basement, approx 1
!ltre land, nicel v located 10
minutes from town . Call alter

5:30pm. 304-675-5375.

3 Or 4 Bedroom, Optional Fam1ly
Room, 2 Baths, ln-GrounQ Pool,
Central Air, $73 ,000 740· 446 ·
4173.

tient. Part·Time Day And Evening

3 or 4 Bedroom, two bath, ranc h
stvle manufactured ,ty pe home
1,600sq. It Situated on one acre
of ground, Rayburn Rd. 1/4 Mile
of SandhilL Addilio na l .acraage
available. Peaceful, privat3,
counttr utting. $62,500 . 304·

Need "re gi¥er tor la6j 6ot years,
free housing &amp; aalary, call 740·
&amp;eN,938 or 740-687·3587.

With Game· Room 16x32 In·
Ground Pool With 2 Oec~s Over·
looking River , By Appo1ntmeht ,

bpN NEEDED
For In Home Care Of Femal•

Pa·

Now accepting applications tor in

7..0-.. 1.0126,

home workera. Please apply at

Two c:arpor1 aalea· Saturday,

Seeking Regillered Long Term $10,000, ~14·237.012~

APril ~th . Lee &amp; Pickens real·
dencea, Trree Bl¥d . , Racine,

Puppieo port German Shephard &amp; Ohio.
"""""'ian
Elkhound m•ed. 5 11
2WI&lt;aold.304-1175-1003.
Pt. Pleasant
Seuerat TheaiOr Saall, 740·•41 ·
&amp; VIcinity
-"-:-70-:-·-------::--1 Friday .,3198 Gallipolis Forry,
· To' good home- two year old Roo- west Terry Sub. Household
Nleilar/Shepherd, male, good w1 Items·, Home Interior, Kids, La·
children, call 71l0-985-3407 aher dias, Mens Clolhel.

3:30.

Garage $11e-3 Miles out Jeril;ho
Rd. Fri. l Stl g.s sw-. IIOr·

60 Lost and Found

Found: Small Dog In Vicinity 01
Pearson AtJcUon Company,
Mill Croak Road &amp; Second Ave- Rick
nue, GallipoUI, Call To ldentily, full time auctioneiH, complete
auction
service . licensed
7~041-1855.
I&amp;I,Ohlo &amp; Wilt Virginia, 304·
lost· sink gttl'( male c:at with yel· 173-5785 Or 30-4-773-5447.
low collar, lower end at Middleport 90 Wanted to Buy

BUV HOMES FROM $4,000 1 -5

tank,

Care Nufllng Aati1tan11. Inter·
mediate care Facmrv. Rotating
shifts, part lima . West Virginia
certification required . Palnl
Pleuant Nursing &amp; RebJbilila·
lion Center, State Rou1e 62, Box

32e, POint Pleasant, WV 25550.
(A Glenmark-Geneaia .facility)

EDE.

WILDLIFE JOBS TC S21.80 MR.

Inc. Benefits. Game Wardens,
Sec;urity, Maintenace, Park Rang·
efl. No E.•P- Needed . For App..

•handy

Located

In

man special",

M,ason,

WV.

9

Rooms. 2 Baills, Basement, 2 Car

Carport On 1 Acre Of Land. 2
Porches, 304,-773-5615.

Middleport, beautiful two storv. 3
br, 2 bath , targe l.r. &amp; fr ., oak
doors &amp; trim, Smith's custom oaic.
cabinets, Jenn-alr rince. ·dish·
washer, detached garage, by ap -

7ol0-992-5243.
MODULAR HOUSE AUCTION

pointmen~

.....,..,,........,...=.,...,.,-.'"':-:=

Call 614~~843·5426

ing Salel Furniture, Tilllf, Ri ·ng ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Mower, Camper Top Kni¥e . Run Moore owner, 7o40·992·

'El(VIYihing'

211.

3 Family. Yard Sale: Saturday Q Ant
s &amp; clean used rurniture,
A.M . ·5 P:M. Lola Baby Clothes will bu
ne piece or complete
And hlml, Adull Clothe• Of A~l household, Osby Martin, 740 ·

Sizto And Stasono, And House- 992-85'/e.

trems. Rou1h lane,
Chelhi:;:::::::
're::..- - - - - - - I

·

hold

Buying Hardwood
&amp; Pine Timber
________
__
412nc1 -&lt;l/3rd, S:OQ-400, 333 Third
, Md I C
O

-hill. Toys, 0111or llomll

•

Fofolor.-_,HIIton
• 10:10

a.m...,....,.,.,

April 101, 2nct,

3nl, 4111, 8:30 A.M.

t7~DIM.Misc.hna.

:..:.~::0·..:2~.;;..;8:..:.17..:2-,
.

,;,;.._;_;_ _ _ _ __

SERVICES

11 o r.
ltelp wanted

April 1M To April otdl, 1;00 A.U.
-1:00 P.M. 1517 S1aco Routt 7 AVON' I All Areas I Shirley
llorilo, Hou- Goooda, ll(ollldl- Spears, 300-875-H21l.
tr, Lawn Mower, Yooccum CIHR·
Awn $1 -$20 tHr, No Ooor ·To· ·
ar, S..~.

Aprl 21id, :Jrll, ..... Thurs. Fri. Sal.
t :OO· ? 1t 10 Second Avenue,

Moving Stlo. Hawy Rooopp's. '

·PANCAKE 'BREADKFAST'
. Sausage &amp; Pancakes
Adults $3.00, Children $2.00
SAT., APRIL 4, 7-11 AM
American
Annex ·
299 Mill St.
Oh.

April 3rd· &amp; &lt;llh 11·5 P.M. 1021
SIOio RooiO 581, Misc .. Knlcknodlo. Cloching Rain Concat~

40%
•

OFF

-

Furniture repair, fefinllh ind res- .urday, April ,8, And Sunday, April
1998; 12:00"'Noon -S:OO P.M.
toration, also custom ordera. Ohio
Each [}ay.
Valle~ Refinishing Shop, larry

,g:

Phillips, 7ol0-992-857e.

G.ardena plowed near Roosevelt
Grade School area. 30-4·675·

21i91.
., river, 7ol0-992·13-4ol.
Loll : Lhasa Apto· Puppy Camp 1983 Through 1985 Honda CR60 Gaargea Pqnable Sawmill, ~n't
((onley Road, Black With While For Parll, 74Q-245-gsQ7.
haul rour toga to lhe miU just call
Markings,Rawirdl300-875-7223. Aboolute Tap Dollar: All U.S. Sil- 304-675-1957.
70
Yard sale
ver And·JlOid Coins, Proolsel&amp;, ORAMMY CARE: Qualloy Child
Oiamo~ntique Jewetry, Gold
Care, In My Home, Mondar Thr'u
Rings, Pre-1930 u .s ·. cu,ency, Frooy, 740-367--5022.
GallipoliS
SterHng, Etc. Acquisiliono Jewelry
- M.T.S.'Coin Sllop, 151 Second Jratall Windihields, MalOn &amp;
&amp; VIcinity
AvOf'&lt;le, Gallipois, 740-•46,21142. 1""'n• S100 l Up, Routt 17, B•
~~=-::~=~~~
111 ·5th, 325 Nor~ Vinton, Mew· Antiques. top pric11 paid, River- side A"·, Tali, 740-446·1 535.

I OWl

Door, Eaa~ Cath, Fun, 1·800·

738-011111 in&lt;lllllltOp.

ea.. -. AmuaomanrC&lt;&gt;

Mull be 1e yooora or older. Frea
10 ·Call 7o10-2116-21l50, M-F,

3212.
320 Mobile Homes ..
· for Sale

12x65 Tra1ler 3br. 1 balh $5.500.

CO.

recommenda that ~ou do busi·
nell with people you know, and
NOT to send fnOI'WtY through the
mail unlit JDU have in¥eatigated
iho oltori~ .

II you nave an ealabltaneo busi·
ness and unuaed parking apace,
you mar qu11ify to be 1 U-Haul
Deal.... If interested can 800:282·

8575.
230

Proltsitonat
Services

Construction Offiu Clerk Wind· · li¥ingtton'• b11ement water ·

_.Stle: Twin Baby Items owo 115, Excel Sprndsheel E•- proofing, all butmtnt repairs
&amp; Clothing (lnlanl ·l Upt'Kida .porioneo Pretorred. Good Orgenl· done, free eallmattl, lifetime
Clotl'lea To Sill 7, Shaes, Ma-• utional Skllla Fax Ruume To : . guarantH. 10yrs on job expert·.
on&lt;o. 300-1175-21 •s.
'
cornlty, Houothold llomo, Ap- 330-o78-M!ie.
plio- Toys, Evar,lhing Prlcad .:,Do:;,I_W._ry;..:. .,Par,;oo_n--~oho-u_ea_Hio_lp
Rf ~l ESTATE
To Stitt On Clavin Srtot. ~ Needed Full Tlma PooiUon. Must
VIJIIOe
"
~
l
Beliordaj, April Bo Abla To Drivt Soa~dard
3ch 1 411. 1 A. .. P.M.
Tranomlulon Trucl&amp;, Call For tn- 310 Homes lor Sate
Frl l Stt A,ru ilrd &amp; •rh, 220 oorview, 740-04&amp;-41011.
Dollb" Orl¥t, Lt. 2 Famlty Flrol !l'!l"'ndabto And Flo1ibl0 Corll- 3 Btdroomo. 1 112 Batha, 314
Time Stlo: 0-3T. Bor• o-zt
AU Belly t10m1, Car SHe, High 11_.. Nuroa Aid Naadeot For In . Blltmont, NIW Root, Siding,
On 2.• Acras In Hart·
Chair, Ere. Toolo. T.V.. kluch Homo c.re. ca1 Adrlanno 0r ,.,. Wlnclowo,
lord, wv.127,!00 300-1182-3158.

·aac~~

~I

gil 1-8CJ0.41 -8334.

I

New Home-Fullr electric air cond
wJgas hearing arsrem as back ·
up. Lafge lront. &amp; back pofCh WI
large' side deck, barn style Am ·
iah building 16.J:24, Iota of fru it
trees situated on 2.7 acres. 2 314
miles out Crabcreek Rd. M.ust
see to apper•cate. $65,000 . Oar
304·675· 7133 Even1ng 304 ·6756809 or 304-675-71:tl. •
'

N1ce Storr &amp; 112. 3br, 1 bath.
covered pat•o. puvacy fenced m
backyard w/24x411. above ground
poo l (optional) small detached
garage. 26th &amp; Garheld A11e. N'ext
to PVH, close to everythlf1g .
Mather of two wanling to do ba· ' $79,900. 304·675· 2924 or 304·
bysitting in my.home, kJcalvd on 675·3379 Leave Message .
G1e,r Rd . Have references. 304·
Ranch, 2 beQroom. l bath. lining
675-8046.
room. diningroom . k•tchen, 1 24
Pa1n11ng, Plumbing, Remodeling, acres with river frontage, enough
riyer frgptaqe 10 make summer
Anv And All Odd Jobol Free Es· camp
site, located on SR 124 .
limates, , 740-2-4~51 St .
Racine, 011, 740-!1411'2006..
Profettional Tree Servtce, SlUmp
Removal. Free Eallmatnl In· S.R. 684, Harnsonv1Ue, 3 bf. home,
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-388 - level tor. appro•. 2t3 acre. new
~oot, new v•nr t S~dmg &amp; 'dec k,
9648,614-367-7010,
owner wants 10 sell QUICkl y, call
Shaler's Lawnc:are ServCe, Free 740· 742·2846 evenmgs. ·
Earimates, Caa 74Q. .. t-D3.18.
Schull Modula r 1995 28x56 Top
We Orter BacKhOe 1 Dozer Work, 01 The line. Tarat Drywall 3 Bed~~~~~·· • &amp; Bonded , 7,40-388- rooma , 2 Baths , Fam 1l y Room ,
Mus1 Be Moved, Call French Cuy
Homes. 740-446'-9340
Wlll haul junk or trash away. $35.1
Syracuse· th•ee bedrooms, tw'b
plclwp lOad. 300-875-5035.
lull baths. hvo large garage$,
much more, musr see, 740 -9-49·
FINANCIAL

.00..:30.

I

•

EOE'.

Toyo, Bikeo, Household Goodo, _n_20_·-~--:-.,.,-.,.,-~­
_Rai_n_Or_Sii.,.,·~na,...l:-:;:-,.,-::--:--I wanted To Buy: Good Used Hoi
.IIJ. Yanl S.IH Mull
Tub For Si&lt;k. 740-4411-251~
. liPoid fn Advance.
wanted To Buy: Junk Auto'o Any 210 . Business 2
00
Opportunity
. Rf&amp;QUt:f: : p.m.
Cond"on. 740..to68·9853.
1110 dajl balore Clio ad
INOTtOEI
looo run. Sunday
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISHING
-'"~on • 2:00 p.m.
EMPLOYMENT

Over 20 years experience.
.•
.Free Est(mates

SIIYD

''I I

I,,. I I

I

I.I

.

anl, WV 25550. lA Glenmark-

Gensis faclli!y)

:..::.=...:..:=---'----

5 Family Garage Salo: 330 Third Old, oboolele or bro•en compu1"
A¥11"M1e, Satufdlly .U4th 1:00 A.M. rtequlpment, a~y make or model,
-3:00P.M. Infant ..-Aduh Clothing will remove lor free . 304· 875·

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Ho·mes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

IIIIKDia'

•

I I II 'II I I •

I I,

·HOME

Lilce Family,.

STAIIl GUDD ·

conSTRualon

FRI.; APRIL 2ND, 9·12

TALS • REPAIRS

Wtll VIrginia licente required.
Point 'Pieuant Nuralng ' Aahabilltdon Ctntlt', Star. Routt "82,
Routt t, Box 328, Point Pleaa-

Thts newspaper will not
knowingly- accept
advertisements for real estate
which •s in violatton or the
law. Our readers are hereby
informed that a11 dwellings
ad\lertised in th•s newspaper
are available on an equal
opponunity basis.

m11, curt and pra,rul, 7•0-D82maaon County Actton Group, Inc. Bdrm., Local Gov:t &amp; Bank Repo's
101 2nd St. Point Pleasant Cau_1 _,·~·522·2730, X 1709.
o-::--1::55.=-=,.,.---:-::--:::-:-:--l Ru11and
Church
ot
Godchurch
yard aale &amp; bake sale, Saturday, Please no later than 3pm, AprH
·
Froo Firewood You Haul Away, April 91h ao che church. 9:00-7 13lh. MCAG, INC.• i1 an EOE. Ml For Sale By Owner: Nicely Deca7~.oa6-2112•.
~- · red .... youlh
F, AJA. ·
rawd, Well Maintained 2 Bedroom
..,..,. 80 .,.
·
Home located In Cheshire, As·
Fiaa To Clood Country Home Three tamly banment sale- Fri- .:....----'---::--1
Now Taking Application• AI,Dom· oumable Loan, 740-361-7117 AlPro•ecllve Adult Dog N~u1ered day 1 Stlurday, SR 124, Syia- ino'a Pizza, GallipoliS. &amp; Pomeroy 18, 5 RM.
Perfect House Manner~, leave
Aa'"'~
u hid&lt;Airl
Phone , &amp; Mona...,.....lor. roo, c
•. Localiona.
- AI 740·4~8· .....
parakHII, pygmy goara, Jurnlnore. ;;,;;,;,;,.;...:,______-:-:-1 House and property, approx. o4a7143
PCSTALJOBSTC$18.351HR. eras. Ideal starter homo. Beech
:..:.
:..:.::.·...--------1 moe. Dollar bag.
Inc. Benefits. No Experience. For Sl , ~
~mefl&gt;y OH . ""'
- -882 •20n .
Malo Chocolate Lab 1 112yro old, ::Thr::ee:;.::ta::.m~IJ.:;,::i_;..,_,..ee_c-.tio_n_o7t-::Ea-g-:-\l&gt; App.
And E1am Info., C.all 1-800mala, neutered, hal no papers. Ridge' Pine Grove Rd . Friday,
813-3585, E&gt;l 6H•. 8 A.M. -9 Pl&gt;iT18fOI', 3 bedroom homo, . - ,
noo&lt;~oroomtorun. 3CM·173-5132.
Sttu&lt;day, Sundeyafleroooo. , . P.M .• 1 Oay1 fds,inc.
roof, newer furnace &amp; hot water

1~.

. Plays Yy.tr Favorite
ROCK-COONTRY &amp; DANCE
SONGS

.......

--'---'--:-----:---:-1 Raber! Barr•"'· Rr 124 Ruuand

Four puppies, IWO mates. 1WO le· Rd, Apr~ 1·3, table -&amp; c:hairs, beds
male1, German Shepherd' Lab &amp; much more.

=----:----::---1 J &amp; 0 Auto Parts. Bu~ing
48 Hubbard Avenue, Kanaug1, wrecked or salvaged vehicles.
·
Friday, Homo ln-r, Klett Cloth-. 304.773- 5033 .

101 OJ JERRY J

CQMnm HOllE ...,ICAI. EQUIPIIENI' &amp;\'SUPPLIES

? Some antiqUea, house hold
part l.etns,clothingandoldlools.

Avlnue, longberger Baaketl. Clean La,e
o e
ars
'
Trucka, 1090 Mod.els Or Newef,
Household, Furniture, Clothea, Smith Buick Pontiac, H~OO East·
Collectable Barbie, Oakley Sun·
g1aues.
ern ·Av&amp;n.~e ..Gallipolis.

LONG·s

••

thilta. Intermediate Care Facilhy.

ShillS Only One Weekend Per 675-1296 Anylima.
Month Sond Reoume To: CLA·
_40~=-::-:G-:-Iv~e-:-aw-:-:a-::y:-;;-:=:-:l Large inside sale· rain or shine. ll32,
cfoGalllpolla Oalll Tribune, Beautiful Riverfront Propetly Rl. 7
112 Gold Rotrleuer. 112.Gorman Gruoser·s residence on Long 825 Thlr(l Avenue. Gall polis, OH South, Galllpolia, NvBr 2,8, Brick
5t'lel:t*d pupa, e weeks old, 740· Street in Rutland, ·Ohio behind the ll5631.
Colonial 3 Lar~e Bedrooms. LR.
1185-11829.
grade school. ~ril 6 &amp; 7, 9:00 'to ,.,-.,.,--.,.,--:-.,.,-:-:-:-~1 OR,. FR. Full Finished. Basement

========::::::=I

Agricultural • Industrial. • ~utomotlve
•Re-cores • New Radiators
· ·• Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tig • Alumln&amp;,~m Welding

Evety Wednesdr:~y
. Storewide Savings.

I
'

.

oppouunity to join the

AN real estate advenlslng in
!his newspaper •s subject 10
tne Federal Fair Housmg Act
ol1968 which makes it 1llegaJ
to advertise •any preference,
limitation or d•scr•m•naiiOn
based on race. colOr, religiOn,
se• tamd1a1 status ornauonal
or~l n . or any tntenlion 10
make any such preference .
limitation or dhlcr•minat•on.·

A 26'x58' Ranch Style Uodular
eo. car sear, par cage, ochool And E1am Info Call 1-800•813· House Will ~ Auctioned To The
1300 REw•ao
3585, E•L 8175. 8}I.M.· 9 I'M., 7 Highest Bidder On May 9, 1998
""
deaka, weed eater, lawn mower,
Dlyslds, inc
~!!J~9!4!9!·~2~804!!2~--J!l~!.!!~ For renorn of blacklbr_, Garman porcll glldar &amp; much more.
AI 12:00 Noon At Th8 auckere
Shephard taken trom Edilh.Rog· ===~=":-""=-Hilla Career Cemer Loca11d At
"' tarm on Redmud Ridga. An- 80
Auction
Rio Grande, Ohio. PubliC VieWing
1wer1 to name ·chance." No
d Fl M k 1
180 wanted To Do
quolllons ask. Cob John Ragero
an. ea ar e
Monday Throu
ri9ar From
9:00 A.M. To 3:00
. Please.
,;_1-80G-.:.:.:. :211:;7,;-o.:;S78.;,;,.;. -_ _ _...,.._ 1Flea Markel Set-Up Space Avail· DuatbYaters Profeuional Clean- Call
740-245-5334
r
An Ap- _.
ing,
Commercial
And
Reaidunlial
Found: On Whitt Road, Medium able Starting in April. Rt 33 Eaat
poinrmenl. Formal View
01 The
.Size 8tac:k Long Haired pog, very Of Mason at J~hnson'a ProdU.ce. Call Aller 500 I'M, 7•D-388-9422 Houae 11 Ouri{lg The uc
e
F,..E11irrB181.
'
Friendly, 740--.em Anytime.
(Space Un&lt;ler Sheller). 7ol0-541 Hills fOhlo Valley EXPO
Sat·
Galllpolla, Ohio -45631
2963.

RIDII7DR

OR CITIZENS D

Mastectomy S'upplies

I " II I I '
I ::111111-,

'

.

or shine.

: ::fo"~~ Breed, 7 ~· 448 .

AND OTHERS!

614-742-2138

675-4688

DICAL :SHOPPE

MOWER CLIIIC

"

DICAL.EOUl

. Supplies ·
_Back Supports .
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Suppjie5
Support Hosiery
Fint Aid Supplies
Dressings

.

Hauling, Excavating
. &amp;Trenching
Umeltone &amp; Gravel
. Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; HOUH SH~

.n·,,,

State Rout~ 338 • At Vine • RICine, Ohio

TRUCKING

WICKS
. HAULING

,

I"""•
.... &amp; Stra1t011: Mllster Stnlo T~
_...,,, 2 ( ~Outdoor Power E•lp•••• Assodallotr. c...,...

--

E:~~ctlltnt

long term h&lt;talltl care field. StakIng porl·time LPN'S tor rolallng

local Christian and

Strv·U ~~pop and baked goods. Rain oi
Up -To -Dalo Sporll /Spreado &amp; shine.
Morel 1·900-ol07·n85, Ell 8892,
,
U.811 Per Min. Muol Bt 18 Yro. lnoide croll • gill sale, April 2nds..v.u
1111tl-&amp;tS.a.t3A.
-4th, 10· 5, Waldnig reaidence,
=..:.;;;::..;;,;;;.;.:;:;.;;..._ _ _ 1 45597 SR 124, Racine, 011.

·Mowert •Chain Saws •Weedeatera •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Ec:ho •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear

L__...____

Drivers Needad For 300 To 100
Llcenoe And Good MVR. E•perlenc:t Aloo Roqulrad, WHkly Pay
&amp; Heal01 lno. Available, For More
lnbmalion Call 800~7-87&amp;1.

Milt Radius Mutt Have Clatl' B

our ramilr yard sale: Apfil 1-3,
Bone Hollow Rd., Middleporl .

•sas

Parts and Servr·'c"'/1
.,

'

EYOO!ngl(7:30 ·10:301 &amp;
W-ol00-~7t2

with e•c:ellent comm
skil!l to selladver · in

CJ4S.B4:w.

-

I n
u I I
JD CONS-U,...OI

IAI:II£

CII1Kan1100-3115-1CMS

4, 9am-4pm.

OLDER OHIO LADIES . local Gigandc church yard sale· Satur·
.Namea + Numboil 1-900·285- oey. April 3· 9•m-7 Harvest 0UI·
skt77 -Ext.
$2.DD tl.tln 1a + reach Church at Cheiler (Riebel
•
Rd.), loti of mile. iterps. Hot dogs,
81 ......... a.o-'!l.o

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
~
ill'• Garages, Pole \-J
buildings, Roofing, Siding 1\!!:
Commercial &amp; Residential
!/Po
.
""""
· 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured ""- ~
1/A
. •i,Phone 740-992-3987
!II!!:
-.
n"'ree Estimates
..,..,
. ·Owner: John Dean
II-'!!
lln..lfn..,r;;:..,tip,i/ln.An..lllf:o.iln.An.An.M&gt;.-.
~!!l riiliJ ~~~ IIJi!~ ii.~ ~; ~!!! il!•J Jtt•!! ~IJ tli~!l tti~~! .

.

985-4422

GOLDEN 8UCKE'tE CMOS

, Cervical1'illows
Tractor Eqpipment
Tens Unit!i &amp;t

~:
~

Fl¥e family yard sale, Sam Pick·
ens, Tyree Blvd., Saturday, April

much mort.

Min." Must Be 18 Yfl. Serv·U 818-

(
211
L_____:;;;_;.,.;;,.;.....;,~~-..:.--...;,;;;;;;;;;;~
-• •
7
•

CHEVAliER'S
~IRPET CLEANING
. SPRING CLEAN.
SPECIAL
50" Off Ill
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning
258 Pearl St. ·
Middleport, OH
-992..oon

:

No Sunday Calls)

.

S ~ Garage sale- 35100 FlaiWOOdolly
77DAllES
82 ll 3453· 2·- Five PoiniS, April2-4, 9:00-7 Rain

~~~
iJi11 ll.-1 ~iJ ~ Shlphjlrd.
ll Puppiu .111 male,
ill!!: tll!!J lil!~- ~~
!1!!!1 OI&gt;.O -· ~~~
ill!!'
304-875-5268.

3I3MJ8 1 mo pd

TIUCKING

· 7'
1·1100·ol0

~~~-

f

Everything
.. for the
Patient
at
Home

I
I
'

1:OOpm Frtclay.

eo player, dishes, Home Interiors,

. OATES
OUYS JQALB

_ _
614 992 7643

I

742-2U3 11r 446·3622

R. L. HOLLON

.Enjoy the ActivitieS
At Your Senior Center

I

COM MERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
A'I'ES
FREE EsnM"'1

. Plan ahead. Call
today for free estimate

992-5050

Ronnie Jones

'

\

Sunday &amp; Monday edition·

AIC..W.IIIt&gt;'llllflo«
Horne t.taat Wlalwndll
COL·A I 1 Yr. OTR Aoq.

Friday &amp; Saiurday, rain dale sume 10 TV27, 212 Rock Street,
Monday, 7 George Street, Mason,
WV. Stereo. boy'o 8-10, 0·12 ,.,PO-""'-~=:-',...011-loC"4C"5C"7118::-.--::~-I
_ _Proca
_ _n_eo~.'::(I!0=21::-S.._.;__~-I months, toys, stalionafy bike, vid- Hair &amp; Make-Up lleraon Fol- In·

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Ga rages • Replacement Windows
. R 00m Additi0 ns • Rooting '

• Waedeoting
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery MointinaiKe

Mileage Umlt .
Call Randy

.-

'
I

Commercial)

B ton Delivered
$120

•

'

f'..

hnp1-.tl0hoi!&gt;OUI1- c_
CGIWCU1131N1 1cu.hrn
S:Z.Qt/Min.Mulll!e 18Yrl
~
R
· ed
Touei&gt;TonenNne9 equ•
7 420

BISSEL·.LBUlL'DERS1 INC e

1.

_,

-992-3785

PARENT

-

ROBERT BISSELL
C:ONSTRUC'UON
•New Homes
•Garages·
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7/2!2/lfn
'

BE ABETTEA
1..QOO..Q.t5-a.t5ex·32S2

• MoWing IResidel!liol &amp;

March ·

Respite,

Adnneo. Daadilna: o:OOpm 1ho

Par Min, Must Be 18 Yra. Serv·U

•

Sales Must Be Pild In

day before· Jhl ad 11 •o run.

Ext I38SII, 12.99

1-IIOCHOJ.7781

LARRY'S LAWN
CARE

Special Thru

and- Home
Maintenan~. Th~ levy also 'supports · the Retired and Senior
· Volunteer Program, niJOII meals,
educational, ~ial and recreational
programs, the fitness room, the
Community Suppon Program and
Supponive Services (taxes, insur·
ance, living wills, etc.). ·
The senipr citizens one mill
renewal levy will continue to cast
the ave11ge homc:Owncr in. Meigs
County 4 cents a day based ori a
value of $40,000.00
Staff are available to speak
with your group or organizatiop.
about the tax levy renewal and
- Senior Services. If you wish lo
schedule a program, call Darla
· Hiwley at992·2161.

"serVing ~u~he .Ohio Cor over 20 yean"

-er

··-

LIMESTONE

·Senior Citize~s .renewal levy
to be ·decided on May ·5

Personals

Are You An E•citlng Romanrlc:?

.

'

Evening Dinners

An evening dinner .is served Citiicn 's Renewal Levy.
Tuesday and Thursday from 4:45
p.m. to S:30 p.m. The cost for the
meal is,$4.00 with the public invited lo attend. The menus for April
are: April 2 - Salisbury Steak;
April 7 • Spqhetti; April9 - Baked
Ham; April 14 • Chic:ken and
Noodles; April 16 - Mushroom
Lift Chairs
Steak; April 21' - BBQ Chickl!ll
1 Fillet; April ~. Meatballs in
Wheelchairs
Hospi~l Beds·
9nvY over. NoOdles; April 28",,
Rc.t Beef andApril30- Meatloaf.
Sh~wer Stools
Tltere will be entertainment at
Grab Bars
S:JO p.m. 011 Thursday, April2 with
Commode Chairs
Junior and Rita . White and
. .Walking Aids
'Jbulldsy, April30, with the''Senior
Diapers &amp;t Chux
Swillpl. · Center ltllff will be
Ostomy
Supplies ·
avlillble Apri19to demoDstnte the
Diabetic Supplies
Pi"*' Center equipment. . On
,....,, April 16, I blood praFeeding Pumps
- dillic: will be bcld. Allo avail· ·
ttllle will be blood apr and clJo.
I I oiiCICCIIia&amp; at I COlt ofSl.OO.
01 April 21, Supportive Setvices
ltlfJ wiD be IVIillble 10
11 'rt'ww coacerniq -Medicare,
wi111, .ec. OD Apri1.28IIICI April30 ·
ltatf will dltllllbote illlormatioll

'

starting at $5995
740-992-2n2

WE HONOR

•

005

20 Yrs. Ef&lt;p. • Ins. owner:

_, -

·e· Mila Yellow FlaQ rard sale,
Pomeroy/ Mi4dleporl. May 1· 2.
Regisler, pick up nags now. •

---~---:--....._· I All Yard

POMEROY, OH,
'

•

and

(814 992-4277
ANNOUNCEMENTS

614-992·5479

Center will be panicipating in the · Donations of items for the sale
community yard sale witll a rum,
woold be appreciated the liSt week
mage sale from 9:00 to 4:00.
or
April.
•

The Mcill' County Council on
Aging. Inc. is asking the.voters of
Meigs county 10 . suppon our one
mill renewal levy on MayS, 1998.
The levy is a renewal of the prexnt
funding. The one mill n:ncwall~y
will not increase the taxes now
being paid.
.
· The Meigs Senior Center staff
and m~mbers of the Levy
Committee arc scbcduling activities and events to inform all citi·
zens of Meigs County about services and programs provided
throush the Senior Center. Our
levy ·dollars arc ~ to suppon
'and/or fund these in-home programs: Home Delivered M~
Transportation and Medical Esccin,
. Chore, Homemaker, Personal Care

Joe Wilson

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy•.Qhlo 45769

81~5-&amp;131.

113 W. 2ND ST.

Meigs· Sen'ior Genter April Activities
The Meigs County Senior The testing is co-sponsored by
Citizens Center is open Monday Holzer Wcllness.
throush Friday 'from 8:00 to 4:30.
Thursday, April 16 - John
Regularly scheduled activities arc Lentes, Prosecuting Attorney, ~ill
quilting, sewing, cards, games, and be available from 9:30 • 12:00 10
pool.
assist seniors with legal issues,
Weekly activities arc Line ·make a will, and answer questions.
Dance Team practice, with Paulette Please call Darla Hawley, 992Hanison, instructor, on Mondays 2161, to set up an appointment
from 1:00 to 2:00, Knitting Circle time.
on Wednesdays from 10 to 12.
Friday, April17- the Arthritis
PACE (Persons with Arthritis Can Support Group will meet from
Exercise) exercise sessions will he 10:00 to 11:30.
Dr. Faro, .
held on Tuesdays from 10:30-11 :30 Podiatrist, will discuss how to treat
with Jeri Faulkner, leader.
foot problems in people with arthriA representative from tlie. tis.
Athens Social Security Office will
Tuesday, April 21 - Jennifer
he at the Center on Wednesday, Keller, Pharmacist, .will do a
April 8 and 22 from 10 10 11 a.m. 'Brown.bag Review to CQhsult with
Thursday, Ajml 2 · • ZSth persons individually about their
AnniveiSU)' Celebration begins at medications beginning at 10:00. ·
11:00, with din~r at 12:15, and
Tuesday, April 21 - Jennifer
entcrtainmentat 1:00.
Sheets, Allorney, will speak at
Friday, April 3 - Spring · 11:00 cooceming wills and probatWorkshop from 1:00:2:30 with · . ing estates.
'
·
Becky Baer, Meigs Extension
Wednesday, April 22 - a Quilt
Consumer Science Agent.
~how and Tea will be held at 1:00.
Thesday, April 7 - Pukersburg Several scnipr citizens will be disMall Trip by Center van, call 992- playipg quilts and telling about the
2161 for information.
quilt history. Anyone who would
Wednesday, April 8 · • the like to-display a quilt in the show
Stroke Survivors Support Group can contact Alice 'Wamsley, 992will meet at t:oo. with Ua Tipton, · 2161, for further information.
OT, Holzer Rehabilitation, coordiThursday, April 23 - a Care
nalor..
Giver Seminar, .5ponsorcd by the
Thursday, April 9 - the Bend MCCaA and Holzer Wcllness, will
Area Better' ,Breatliers Club will be held from 1:00 to 3:00.
meet from 10:30 lo 11:30, the pubThursday; Apri,l 30 - ·the
lie is invited.
·
mon!hly birthday party will.be hi:ld.
Thursday, April 9 , the annual with seniors celebrating birthdays
Easter dinner will be served at in April bono~. Junior and Rita
noon..
While will be cntertainilfg beginThursday, April 9 • Joanne ning at11:00.
Williams and Brend8-Roush will be
Friday, Aprll3 and 10 • ~ dance
at the Center at 11:00 to present will be held from 8 to 11 p.m. with
infonnation about1998trips sched· music by Out of the Blue. There
uled by the Farmers Bank &amp; .will be square, round and line daneSavings Co.
ing and cloging during the
Thursday, April 16 - the evening_. Art Conant will be caller.
. monthly Blood Pr_cssure Qinic will Admission $.5.00. for a couple and
be held from 9:30 to 11 :00. $3.00 single. The public is invited
Cho~rol and blood sugar tests
to attend.
.
will be available; also for S1.00.
· Saturday, May 2 • the ~nior

' Pomeroy, ·
Middleport .
&amp; VIcinity

JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE

llay 1
lleatloat
Parslied Boiled ,
Potatoes
Spinacb
Bread
Applesauce

Oven Baked Chicken
. llasbed Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
Bread
Banana

Thurs 4f2nd, &amp; Fr• 4f3rd. 1 Mile
W.01 Rodney Rain Cancels.

'-...

-

Cancelo.

"Buiid ·Y'our Dre11m" .

360° Communi·c ations
'

Moving Sale: Stlurday &amp; Sunday
"''"'· .-1s, 10·8 P.U . soma New
Clothes, Lots Of EYerything
Ch&lt;tap, 836 Skidmore Road, Rain

TIM'S CUSTOM

CELLULAR PHONES·

•

lo Pinea~p;l.e-Cooki.e

13
u
Oven Baked Cbicken Cbili Coa Carne
Co~e Slaw
Ausratin Potatoes
Crackers
Br11ssel Sprouts
F~it Cocktait
Bread
Peaches witb
~-~ Red Gelatin
Orange Sauce
~wale

27
llacaroai • C~eese
Creamed TOmatoes
Greea BeaDB
Bread
Pear Halves

Salisbury .S teak
Scalloped Potaton
Lima Beans
Bread ·
Pears in Lime
Gelatia

9
Baked Bam
Scalloped Potatoes
lliXed Ve~retab1es·
Roll - ~ Easter Egg
. Babanas, Oranges

B

Spagbetti with
lleat Sauce ·
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Grapes

•

Rood.

CARPET

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
END TO END
MAY 1 &amp; 2- ALL DAY

•

...... ., ..... "' 3

-2
Turkey Breast
Macaroni Salad
'Green Beans
lluftins • ·
Fresb Fruit Cup
Cake

MEIGS SENfOR CENTER
APRIL MENUS
_

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

.
\ I

·Lorettll Beegle aad Lulil Hampton are wrappiJia tbe lllverwan
for use In the Nutrition Program aoon meal. Bod! womea bave
been active In RSVP rot 25 yean volunteer!• tllelr dme aad tsleats
In many different volunteer aulpments.
· . ·
.

FLAG

Collectable Nlaa. Albeaa, Home
Interior, Avon , Clolhing, M.ltc .
llama, 1535 Graham School

75% Off

YARD SALE

MONDAY

•

•,

OAEAT MYI
OAIAT FIEICIHTI
OAEAT IIENEF1111t

Large Inside Salt: 8·8 April 3rd,

Save Up lo

Remodeling

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;Vlclnlt_y

•

Custom Hom~s

·"&amp;" MILE

70

Call9~2·2156

To pla&lt;e an ad

... ..... ,.--.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

Caii30&lt;1-6 75·•&amp;7S.
u 110 38R, S999 Down &amp; ONLY

$17.9 permo Free atr &amp;' tree sll'trt·
1~.

1-888-928·3426.

,.

1h70 Vindale MO.blle HOJTI&amp; 12
bedrooml t bath with 7~ ~ ~ull
out living room &amp; 2p0 pull qut
Master ~droom , new pou;h, rQr
more into ca ll 304-773· 5693
leave messagew•ll rtturn.caM.

1gea Fortat Park Ooublew1de: -3

Born,, LR, DR, Heal
Pump, Refrigerator fStove, VInyl
Skirting. MUlti be Movtl740·379·
Bedroorr&gt;~ 2

2962 Eueningo. . .
199il Sunohlne Mobile Homo

1hl0 Man~ Extras Can Be
·Moved Or left On Rented Lpt,

Alone: 740..46·11283.
' ·.•
1995 Redman 18180 Wiltl Cenin!

Air, Deck, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath,,
Garden Tub. Hug.e Khc:hen , •#ttl
Apptiancea I Man~ Exuul "J.·
ready Stt Up On Lou Toke Ov111

Paymtnll Ot f2ga Por Month,
7~.0S71 .
'
111118 .Schor II Sbodrooms, 2bllhs,
•ln,t tiding, ahlngled root, blrn
....... ~. prt.. 12750f 304-1175-4183. - :IO&lt;I-e75-

..

�•

•

•

Page 10eThe

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aprll2~ 1998

Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

NEA Crottword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER
320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

Mlacellaneoue

120 h. long, 80 h. long by 75 h.
111Tino a.yero, E·Z Fnar&lt;ing
wide, tovol lol In lllddlepor~ r•
2., 3 Bedroom, Ar&lt;&gt;und $200 I* ducod from $23,000 TO $17,000
month. Call credit line t -800· 000. 74Q.892-2290:
948·
5678.
Jim WIIIAiro Homo Noor Con!ple14x80 Glamour Balh, $1711/Uo., lion Wllh 35x50 Ft llell!l
304-736·7285.
Building~ fnoulated, Ailo
Pad SOPUp, 2 +Acres,
Water, Appro•. 7 Mlltl
. ,.ncing IMiilablt. 304-755-7181.
;:Ga::~:::po=I0.:.;7_:&lt;10-:,:256::..:·'.:;:33::5:_.

~~~:?~:.~~~~~~~~·w~:,St

----1

Minihin91ae
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENtS AT
OG
ES AT JACKSON
BIJ ET PRIC
•
ESTATES, 52 WOIIWOOd Drlvo
lrom
$278 toCall
$358. Wolk
lo ahop
&amp; movlto.
740 _448 •2581 .

\811. Abcwe ground pool with as·
I&amp;I IOrleo/Oprox. 30x40 privacy
lencelln excellent condlllon. 304-

~~~----'_.:.:._

540 Miscellaneous
-Mercha!JdiH
Powerbllt TPS, Golf Cluba, Sand
W•dge Thru 3 fro~ StHI Shaflo
New Grips $100 Firm , 740·446·
90

1-".:..;.·: :------ --

_ _,
,..
Equalu..~'-Oppor1unity.
or· SOli inotallatlon wilh
1014 Ford 4• 4 Pick-Up 12, 500 : 1Prl
·--..
Country Boy Dog Bo• With Comp $50 re
. 11 monlh kee Wl_th
Boec~ St.· Middleport, OH. 2br Small Or large Truck :S2oo: Wll- . lree mo
channelo, SllrOne
fu rnllhed apartment. utllltltt diJ fe Tracking Collar Channel special, 14
atallatlon, 800paid, dopooll &amp; ralerencu 304· $300: Eloc:~ic Dog Brooker Collar ;:263-:::..:211;:oJO.:::._
. _ __:::::..-=~
1182,2568.
1175: 5 Year Old Walker Coon
Size Wallrbed Complelo,
1~.__:· 1 auoen
-~==--------~-~~~~~~·~·258-8~~~
~
Ciean tbr apt In Hendtrton.
Works Good, 740-379-2720 AF·

1210 Dov~ Brown lraclor, 85 hp.'
dleo,l, front and loader bucktl,
mooorri'tork, b'le spear ond bacl&lt;
bale loader, gooU· condition,
$5000 : • 54 JoM ·Deere manure·
spread er, high nolatlon ",reo. 220
bus~l. new c:ttaln, SSoo: golf cart
$1000: 7ol0-742·3084 or 700.7:42·
:30::89
::·..:·. . . : . . - - - - - - C raw no till corn planter.
2
John Deere 711: hay blne. Ford
dl k 11 ·
d
tOll. 1ranopor1 '"15
1 • a 1n goo
cond"1ti0n. 30• · 2,.,~ ·

lol With S
. optic Tank &amp; Watv
Tap, Route 7, River Vla-....740_256_
·eo:.:....ca:..·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1175/mo. 304·875-1g721f no In- 11191 CompleiO Sot ot Encyclope-TE
· ::,R;.8:..P.:...II;:·:..__ _ _ _ __
1
1
-~
"'a D·lllnnlca
lnclu~
Nl 1 II (43112" 123')on - - ··-.""
Qf
_ . Reference
RaaFum"urw
"' ... ot
x
Books, Never Uoed, $300, 740~
"
Broadwau Slreal, lllddlapo_rl, Grac'""llivlng 1 and 2 ~room •••-71-.
Muon WY
'
"'"
$8000, 740-992-8988,
loo\Hf mat- aparlmtnlo
al ·VIllage Manor
and a.y, Sell,' Trade
' •·~
Rlvorolde Aparlmants In ~ddle- , l Houu 1rallar uleo w/llrao
UBOd &amp; Anllquas
Call Bannon's lloblla Home HTG ::.:::::-~~-:'~":'""~--1 port From S24g·S373. Call 7411· S90aa. e Houle lrallor llras on
Furnilure.
&amp;CLG 1.aJ0.872-!1187.
992-5084. Equal Housing Oppor. rims $35ea . Rod alumlnure cap
304· 773o53-41 .
lunilleL
· top lito full lizo truck. II sO. 304·
tN 'RC~
BUY ~~~
~..,..-::-,.,..,;..;.-:-.:.-.-o:--::-::::-1
675-&gt;4435,
Searl Riding Lawn M-r 11 HP
1
1
No Paymanll Until.fu 998
Modern 1br apt all utilltleo paid
Briggo &amp; Suanon Engine 42"' Cut
EI·IZA~~:!.
140· •xcept aleculc, 1250/mo. + de· 2Larclge bagl girls infant clothes Excallonl Condillon, 304·875·
a ···-·~posi~ 304·875-1371 or 304-875- up 10 8x, sell reasonable, very 2105.
'
HI00-948-5618
3230
good cond. RC4 Roper 35,0QO
Free Set-up I OefiY&amp;fy
::::::..
·
BTU air condltoner, used 2mos. Shop Smith Mark IV lots or Ac:·
New slf9e etfidency BpatlmE!f'K Jn 304 • 7• 1035.
,. Cello ire a Must Selll 740-446DiaCaunt Mobile Home Parta I
t.r 1
11 ·
id s
'V "
Be92
375
Accessories Water Heaters, Vi- -----~~~-~·1 •dd eport, 7ut• t11ts
pa
·
:_.::.::·-:---~-:-:::---1
3 legol Size Filing Cabinall, 4 ' Smith Corona Word Proce11or
nyl Skirllng Kits $299.95, An·
plusdOfiO!al~ oi0·9S 2·S304.
410
choro. Wood &amp; Flberglan=t••· .
HOI.ISII for Rent
Nice olein ottlency aparlmont, Qrawer With Locks, Like New, . With Screen, Has Lotus 3,
Roof Coatings, Doors. Wind s,
references &amp; deposit, no pets. · $2~ For All 740- 256"1216·
Spreadsheets, Hard Drive And A
ptumbing &amp; Electrical Su 1es,
304-675-5162.
42' Gibson Houseboat 'Muat Sell, · Disc Drive, More Featutes, Call
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
Owner llovlngl Nawll Decoralod . Pam A\740-245-9835.
Morel Call Bennett's Mobile
Twa b8droom apartment In Po- 1 1 &amp; E
· M
E
1
"lllle
paid
7••
nter or
any For
xtras
• no pam, Home SUpply AI HoJ0-448-9418.
2 Bedroom Houoo In
meroy, uu 8
Muol
See Toxlenor
Approclale
Ap- w•Ru
~ ~ UP·. High Efflc,··-y,Nalu·
-WID Hook-Up, C/4, No
1192-5858.
1 ""'"' 81 .._23 7 5655 '
ral And lP Gaa Furnaces, lifoDivorce Forces Sales-Take aver or Pets, References 1
::;:.::::;._ _ _ _.:.__ _ ~ po n
" ·
·
·
time Warrant)! On Heat Exc:hang· 3yr. old black gelded Tannessae
paymanls, 2br. 2 bath, financing 740·256·e 1 Batween
Nice One BR Unfurnished Apart· S'N2' Round Ash Pond, 24 Gold- , . or, 'II You Don't Call Uo We Bom Walker. Natural galled. $2,000 .
available. 304-755-55116.
mont Range &amp; Rafrig. Provided. tioh Pump Fiher And w11., Lll· lose I" Free Eotlmatool Add-On 304-562-5940.
2pr full basomonl, kltchan fur· .Water I j!larbaga Paid. Depoall . llesS 150;'AIIar 4P.M. 3o4-e75· . Heal Pumps Only Sflghty Hlghor.
3 Badr..,m , $995 Down, $199/ nllhad. $275/mo. • deposit 304· Required. 740-446·4345 After 8 3560
Call Uo. Today. 10118 11 Our 281h
llo., Only Oakwood Homes, ~r· 875-3230.
·
P.M. · •
.
·
· · . Year In Tho Healing 1 Cooling
bouraviila, WV. 304- 736·3409 ·
Chllllc:otho Road, Bedrooms, _N_o_w_li'"'a"'kt_n_g_A,_p_p_lic_a_ll-on-,- --,3-5 6X8 Heavy duty ulillty lraller., . Buslnoul 740·448-8306, 1·80Ct·
39
3
Glenwood, Palestine Rd. Mason Central Air, Heat, Garage, 740· West· 2 Bedroom Townhouse road ready wiiDading ramps. 304- ~211,..1_·009
::-8.;.·
&lt;·H Fair Pigo, 40 To 50 lbo. 740Co. 1989 3br moblto home &amp; 314 448-2583.
Apartman!l $2G5JMo., 740·4411· 875 ~STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon ~256::::,:-e:..'o::2.=:---,..--:-:::::-::-::l
acre land. central air &amp; heat, 17
0006.
Afghan $,.5; Indian : Bride a·' Uprlqht, Ron Evans Enterprlaes,
· 51 Fair Pigs 40-80 lbs , $55,
miles from Milton Exit. $29,500. 3'br House In NeW Haven, WV. :::::;,.------~- Groom ser ISO; Indian Pouery . . JackSon, Ohio, 1·800-537-9528.
Se..ious Inquires Only. No call• t335/mo. + depo1it. 304·773· One bedroom apartment in Mid· Baskets $22.50; Coffee Grinder
304·576·257g Mike Rainey, Jaraher 8:00pm. 304-562·5840.
·sse,_
dlepo(~ 740·992·2178.
112.50, 7oi0-24S.9842.
Two beaurlful larma.l dreuea, size . ry·a Run Roed•.Ap~ve WV.
7·8, each only worn once, call Syr old slandard brad gelding,
Huge 28•80 3~R. 1 112 balh. 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Nice Yard, One bedroom apartment in Mid· BIG .SCREEN TV FOR SALE: Ra- . 7oi0·98S.3501.
Slarting al ONLY $39,999. Many Non-Drinker, No lnolda Pots, Rio dlepor~ all utiHties pald, $270 per oponslblo party to take on amall
very nice dispoaition. 11,800.
optiona !lV&amp;IIable. 1-888·928· Grande-Area, 706.ae7.9833.
month, 1100 deposit, call 7•0·
monthly paymema. Goad credit a Used Werking Washer /Dryer, 304·562· 5840·
Longaberger Bukets (Unuaed) &amp;yr. old AQH4 maio INC. FUnd,
3426.
_119..;2---71108--_.,_..,..._,......,.,_;.- 111Uit Cai1-IJ00.718-1857.
Ciooe To City SChools
Large Purse, 97 Easter Basket 1 choslnul. 304·875-4490 If no anRani Wllh Optlo.n To ~
RIVER BEND PUCE ,
laFge selection ol uled homeL 2
Prom
dre11
size
M
worn
Point
.liner
Protector, 251h Anniversary
11
New HAven, WV
Tolll 1 Rooms,
message.
or 3 bedrooms. Slanlng al $20115.
1 Our Build· 1 Bedroom apt&amp;. ror elderly or in 97, blue 1equertce. suo. 304 • Baaket tUner Protector, Tandy •war
1,000 7&lt;10-446-8778.
RSX Computer PrO!ler,
Soft·
Quick delivary. Call 740-385·
Sto•• Fur· dlaablad, HUD assisted. EOH . 675-8418.
-,-..:_:.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ , ware,
.
AOHA mora, 10 '""· lrlil ridden
9821 .
&amp; Utili· 304-682-3121 ..
&amp;
paradeo.
oate, $3,000,
Brend Nowf ·Grilll Gild CDi'lldeo
brood
marevatt"
. proopect,
LIMITED OFFER
•
VACATION ·
UpstairS 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur· atorage unll. Black and cherry.
1998 Ooublewide 3br, 2 baths.
7oJ0.9112·2800.
, .
. ON US
nilhed, Clean, No Petl, Refetenca N - o~lof box. 1125. Hold1 up
$1,699/down "S259tmo. Only lit Nice clean, 2br, referencu &amp; de- &amp; Oeposil Required, 740·••o· to 1140 dloca, 1110 heidi llpoo.
•L
SPRING
.
Days~~
Nigh!L
SPECI
3
Oakwood Homes. Nitro, WV 304· pnl~ no pel&amp; 30U7S.S182.
FEEDER~CALF.SALE
1519.
Call 740-012·8838 aftor e pm.
Choosa One Ollliny Fun Filled
755-51185.
Alllano
u.-ock Soloo
One Bedroom Houoe Remodeled
COo a -not lncludod.
Locations like lllaml Beach ..
-·
450
Furnished
$200/llo.,
150
Dopoolt,
Call
Allilr
Sa
New .Ooublawlde Repo,· 4 BedIUnlay, Aprll1 11h 1 P.ll. "'
Browning Compound Bow, Hit
Daytona Beech... Allan~c CitY.. .
/"1 rooms,
5, 304-1175-21 17.
Rooms
2 Baths, Eas~ Terms, 1·
ConligmaniiW.Icoma.Haullng
.climbing tree arand, ,a• ~ruck
Oflanc:b... Las Vegaa. .. Branson,
4vlilabla. Callie AccepiOd Altar
1100·363-8882,
MO... Naii!YIIIa... Ac8p&lt;Jico,'
2 Apartment•
Rio Grandt Circle Motel Lowest Rates In speaker I, IITX ThundOf Pro 500
~P.M. •n(lay. 7oJ0-592-2322 Or
.watt. box lj&gt;aakero, Sant1urig ml·
Or Many Other Baaudlul Plac.,:
Area
:
Acrou
From
College,
1
New 1998 l41170 three bedroom,
Town, Newly 'Remodeled, HBO, crowew~, 2·1 to wlntlaw air condi740-898-3531 ,
Room, 1 Balh, Ulllitin Included.
Include• 8 month• FREE lot rent $200/Mo. Depaoli Required: _1 Cinemax, Showtime &amp; Oi1ney. Uonoro, GE 13" color TV, Saaro
Quantililio Limited.
N. rn goall. mUst bDtde feed.
Wee~y Rates, Or Monthly Roles,
lncludea aklrling, deluxe steps
Call Today For lnlo.
Bedroom Aportmont, $31 0/Mo., Construction' Workers Welcome 19" Color TV, FISher VCR. Brown· .
304-1175-19211.
and setup. Only $187.08
· 740-446-1396
lng VP 10 gauge ohol gun, RomUdltloo Included, 513-574-2539.
740-441-58911, 7&lt;10-441·5187.
month wilh $1075 down. Cal 1·
lngton lOO Senordo, 300
·
Club Pigs Excollonl Bloodline,
1100-837·3238.
Small 2 bedtoom house wllt1 small Sleeping room• with cooking. Wlnchootor
Mag. Rorlflotd Washer &amp; Dryers. $75 &amp; Up Sold Born Januarr 241h To February
yard near Tuppers Plaint, $250
3a12a58mm altlmata Alun;nator With Warranty Service AVailable, 28th, Cell 7ol0·245-5672, Or 740·
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 loHI per monlh pluo doposi~ 740·985- Also t~ailer 1pae"e on river. All
19 Ye.aars .E•porlence. 740-448· 387.0583.
hook-Upl. Call after 2:00 p.m., ~&lt;;ope. For foaoo 4,400lb. tobac· . 906
Still under warranty, owner fl. 3504.
co allolment304S75-718l.
304-773-5851, Mason WV.
· . nancing available. 3041-· 755·
Ham-hire FalrPig~ oJO -80 Pdi.,
••
1191.
Three bedroom home in p.lllddleBaby
Clolhu
To
3
Walerllna
Special
:
3/4
200
P~l
Car
Soal
WILLIAM ANN MOTEL
' 7A0-37&amp;.-2805. .
pon, $300 pe&lt; monlh plua u;lli!io,
Yoats,
llko
Now,
Baby
Sheoll
.l
$21.95
Per
100:
1"
200
PSI
818 SECOND AVENUE
New Ooubl~wide 38R, 2 bath. 7&lt;10-992-8542.
lloblla To 11"!"1\ 7&lt;10-256-11234.
$37.00 Pe&lt;"OO: All Brass Com· Roglo1orod Black Anguo Bull
OALLII'q.IS
$1,325 Dc{wn &amp; $205 par mo. I ·
pression Fillings In Slocl&lt;
.
Proven, Euy Calling Genlie,
SPECIAL
LOW
888-928-342e.
Two bedroom house, clean, re·
Concreto I Pintle Septic Tanko, RON ~ EVANS ENTERPRISES 1,400Pd&amp;$1,000740-258-8043.
WEEKLY
RATES,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ron Jackson; Olllo, 1, 800-537-9528
Older 1 21c50 mobil&amp; t.;Jme with IWO frigerator, no atove, no lnslde
SINGLES .180.00WEEKLY
poll, depooil required, 740 ·992·
Evan• Enterl)f'lsee. Jac:kaon, OH
,S• II'1ng o u1: 3 AQ HA s lalllono,
big loti, and all utilky hookups In 3090
1~!n7.Q528.
Wedding Gown-Beautiful ivcty Brood Uares Yearlings 2 Year
_Rutland, out of high water, as is
460 Space tor Rent .
ltquined, re-e.mbrold,red lace, Oldo, Treadmill Tack &amp; Farm,
. saooo..catl7~742-21l70.
420 ·Mobllf' Homes
ECONOMY
aize 1o with veil. Onl~ $225. 304· 740·286-6522.
'
Mobile ~ home slt.e available bet·
Healing And Cooling
. 875-8040..
REPO SPECIAL llosl Homes
for Rent ·
weerr Athena and Pomeroy, call
YoUng
Simmental
Bulls
BUtchlr
U~\bur
Never Lived ln. Theae Homes
74Q-385.4367.
·Preoerit
550
Building ··
Hogs,
4·H Club Plga, i740·258Are Draatlc,al.ly · Reduced Wilh 14X70 Mobile home 3br, 1 1/2
6510.
t-1100-849-2323
Special E·Z Financing, CAll balh In Camp Conley. 304-875- 470 Wanted to Rent
Supplies
740-:Ms.IGOII
~~-:...;..:......,....____,_11540
NOW FOR PRE-APPROVAL. 1- 8021 Calai111r 5:30pm.
Hay G,raln '
Witnted
To
Rent:
Trailer
lo1
In
Block, brick, oower pipes,· wind· ~~~-::-=:......:-:::":--:::::-::-­
. .738-ma.
Elvia
llama:
Records,
Bookl,
14x70 trailer, 1300 per month, no Gallipolis &amp; Vlcini'ly, 7,.0-448Platto, Doll, 'Aiao Country ows, lintels, etc. Claude Win1ers, Barn Kept Round Bales 800 lb1.
poiS, caN 7&lt;10-742.-2714.
3584
Rio Grande, Oil Call 740·245· $15.00 Each, Will load, 7~379Recordl, 741J-882.7~. Slngl• P1r1n1 Pro,gram. Special
5121.
2788.
financing on 2, 3 a • bedroom 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homea 490
F~ll Track llko New Gave $300 PUBLIC NOTICE : Two slool
homes. Payment• It low •• $260·$300, sewer, water and
Aoking S200 OliO 7411-256-14611 building• never put up. Will BARNED·Round ballo mixed
$180. CaN now 304·755-5885.
nih Included, 7oJ0.9112·2117.
For lea ... Jerlcho Rd. 3 bed· A~ a. Or~Mol••·
hay. , _ -304-882·2077.
make deallll Call Chuck 1-800·
2 balh, BIG lot $400/mo.
Special 16xBO 3BR, 2 bath. 2 Badroom Baautltul Rivar VIew room,
·
32D·Zi"O.
largo round baltia of hay. $8oa.
11,325 Oown 1 1205 Mo. Free air References, Depo1lt, NO pEISI 304-875-4187.
Wll toad. 304-1175-13115.
&amp; fr~ ailirling. 1·800-1191-11777.
fooler'l Mobile Homo Pork, 740·
,441-0181 .
Ml•ture of ~ltalla &amp; llmothy,
Sale
repalrl. 560 Pets
MERCHANDIS E
square biii&amp;J, round balll 12001,
Calllho
2 Female Aultralian Shephard 7oi0·98S.354&amp;.
Puppies, 8 Weol&lt;s Old Full Blood510
Household
Straw for aale, $2.00 per ~ale,
Hand lloda Bl.,ket Olk &amp; Maple ed, 74~258-8259.
7ol0·982·3653.'
Chaot, 740· 37&amp;-2720 After .I
Goods
8 Aullralian Sheherd Puppies,
P.ll.
.'
.650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
740·4464180.
Appllancn
Reconditioned
. JET
Wuhoro, Dryers, Rangn, RolrlAERATION MOTORS
A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming. Dakolb Soad Corn. Kay Farmo.
a;::~~~· go Day Guaranlool Rapoirod, Now &amp; Reboil In SIDCk. Featuring Hydro Path. Don Call 304-875-1508 It No Anawer
Shaato, 373 Georges Crook Rd. Loavell0110go.
•74-0.·4_4_8-j-· Cal Ron Evant, 1_1100-537•9528.
AuenrionMobllaHomeOwnors:
Ateaa largest Jnvenlory Of lnttt·
'lhorm l Colomon Heal Pump 1,
Air Condltlonan, Furnacea &amp;
~
H
B · ~ .. ..
...r11, uge uymg ~or M-1
The Lowell
lnotalled Prica, Eaay
Ovtr -..,. Phone Bank Financing.

~~~~:'i.t~~ouiii'iij,ij,(yG:allla

C

ug2 Cullan Suprema Sl, 2
Dooro, Rod,, Bucket Saotl, Foe·
tory Alloy Whtell, Cloon &amp;
Sharpl 15.0115, Cook llo10r1, 7&lt;10441H1103.
10112 Ford Tempo Loadad 73,000
IIMeo, 4 Doora, E•cellonl Condl·
tion 13,500; New Tlreo, Naw BatlOry. 740-256-8854.

--------1

oo

=-,.,-----1

•KQ ' 86 .43

•A-Q2

1985 Yamaha 700 VIrago Low .
Miles, E•cellent Condilion, ·
.$1,.00. 7&lt;10-3-.

• 5 '

• '7 6 ,4

30H7~723.
1ae Mus~ng Cobra laur Red.

Lealher Int., Mach 460 So.und
Sylttm Wllh CD Pliyor LOlli
Car 2 112 Yeora Ramalnlng $387/
.llo., 740·3&amp;·88011 Call Allor 4
P.M. ·

iiie~;;;fi;:ti~:R~21

tn

r•r

I:::::::::·- -----"--

s,._

a.

=-..;.,__ _.__

BARNEY
JU6HAIO WILL BE BACK IN SCHOOL
TOMORRY, MIZ. .PRUNELLY--

tor

~F.!!:~-C-il-y•M•a-y-la•g•,
G.E. 12.000 BTU elr
7

conclllonar.l-~o-h_n_oo_n_·,--u-..-d-,.-Fu"'r-ni-tu_r_o:

30H76-4811 ~4pm.
Washer, Dryoro, Hulcheo, .DI·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES llolle'o, Rafrlgeratoro, S-.. TeiWa'lhers, drren, refrigerator~, evislona, llvlngroom /Bedroom
ran9a1, Skaoo• Appllancao, 11 Sulloo, 740·448,4039, 740·448VIne ~~"~ Caff 740-448-7391, _1004_._ _ _ _......._...._~
1
I 800 411931011.
.
2 Bedroom trailer, reference• &amp;
dtpoolt. 304·875·1070 leave

••a
Business and

NEW ltAIIK FIEPO'S, DII.Y 3
LEFT, t..aoo.3a

340

B lldln

meuage.
Mason area 3 bedroom, deposit
required. S2e!!lmo. 304-e75-nB3.
Small IWO bedroom mobile homo

7&lt;10-~231.

IIPUIII.OCK Uftlt! •

a FERT1Lf2EA
AKC ' Female Shellia Sable &amp;
Complete Biondi"!! &amp; Spreading,
White, Very Friendly, Loves located:
N- GaU11 County line,
Children, SIOO, Coif 7&lt;10-446·7111 1 112 Mile Soulh 01 SIOIO Route
Or7-7375.
279. On Jimao Emory Road, Olk
'
Hill, 7ol0-811:!-8040.

1911Q :~ Dskoll V-8, 3.8 liltr,
'Aakinti 14.800, 7&lt;10-245-li595.

1gg1 Chavy S-10 4cyl, 5spd.
now llrOI, new angina. $1,850.
304-871-7388 oi 1-100·1195-7301
or 30U74-0007.
1&amp;g1 louzu Pick-Up, Corworlll!le,
351 Wlndoor, Automollc, 5 Slar
Whealo, Very Nice TrU&lt;k, Needs
Tranomiulon Rebuilt, Need To
Sell74flo256-1S.7.
.

'

DOWN

__

31'Libll't!f

33 lllallt &amp;lvlll
31 StniiiW.

7 Fllller

37~1w

,.....,

10 Soul (Fr.)

11 Aug. lim.
13 Certain

8 Rur

t

. COIIIpOIIncl

Dawn

IIW._
11 Grating

goc~c~en

(volca)

20 " .... llllng

22 Relaecl
2S Hymnal

· thanUglvlng
12 wda.) .

Eut
Pus

24 l&gt;octugueae

Pall

. city

25 Bacon, In

Opening lead: • K

DON'T RUSH. tT II

~shortage

·

·TO te trfT,~IHfl&gt;
6tv~,., Tlt&lt;AfS l&gt;~tri,.,l

1969 Sea Imp 19 1/21!. deap·V,
beige wtsand interior, 8cyl,
190hp. Mercruiser inbOard motor,
with trailer, lite prenrvers &amp;
bumpers. $2,750. 814-448-3814.

· Tttfllt &lt;:~ttfttr. · ·
6trtATf .l 601 ,
T~AT OUT OF Tttf
wAY MY Fl!tST
·l&gt;AY. '0,., MY
3011 '

1975 Glaolron Tri -Hull With Trail·
ar .85 HP Mercury Malar 11 ,800
304-1175-7521 . .
---'-----,--:-1076 Aslroglasi Fibarglau Bass

~-z.

';oo C.OOLD &amp;. ~ IZJGl\T ~ l ""~
""','~ l

(.()i)L.I? ~ P\) ~--~~
fo6YOJm.l

IJI'bln
'J:I JFK tight
32 Airline lnlo
- 340neneme

tp fit

lor ·-

-

By Phillip Alder
31Fraillr, for
A splinter bid is an unusual jump
.
- 43 Loud
that isn't needed in a natural sense.
45 1JIIII of steak
because nlower bid in the sainc s11it .
47 Opp. of enclo
would be natural and forcing. h
-48Acnu
LuPino
show~ slam interest in the agreed
41 Bulldlf'a
trump suit and.81 most one card in the
unn
suit just bid. First. partner judges the . .1.....-11-+--+.....:..r
br-+-+-+...,.-1-+-1
.
50
Scale
52 SWill- ··.
dcgree'of fit If lui has. say. K·Q-l·~
_.
mountain
in the splinter suit. there is duplica53 Agnuation. so a slam will probably not be
54111cft
makable. However, if partne~ ha• x~-~ or A·x-~. the fit is excellent:
CELE"RITY CIPI:IER
In this;,~ample deal, Nbl1h's four· ·
.
by Lula Campoa
~ o.,t.er ~ .,.. CfUIIed rrom QUOIIIionl bV f.mcu peoc~~e, put n ~
diamond response was a splinter bid.
Ead'l
lnthtciptlern.ndlloranothet. Todiiy'fdue: l'l'qUMAI
. •
(This is much more useful than tn:at·
ing the bid as pre-emptive, ~howmg
£ ' -K D
'F H D
F J
P G D,. N D z.W F H W
a weak hand with long diamonds.)
•
Z H"z U 8 W .E W
EW
HDKDN
EH
.Now knowing about the singleton (or
MD!JH
void) diamond. opposite. Soyth bid ·
ZJNZES ·
Fol
MDDH
E' K D
ZUVZBW
whill he expected to make. (Could
your partnership gel to seven·if North
F 0 P.'
YERGP · JEHS
VGZP · E
had the club king?)
Welil led the diamond king. (PerSZKES
MFV£0.
.
haps this wasn'tthe greatest choice,
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"Here
comes
4p&lt;ll
again,
and
as far
I can see the
as dummy was known to be short in
-'d hli 111!118 fools In itlhan ever.· - Charles Lamb. .
·
diamonds, but at leasa it was safe.) .
What now?
As ·declarer, you could take two
WOlD
club finesses. At least one will work
~ ' ~ lor ClAY
POllAN
some three~uaners of the time. Yet
it is silly to go down in ·a laydown.
Raorrange ton.rs al fila
· lour acrombled word• be- k...;;;-.n.
Win the opening lead. 'play a tru~p
low 10 form lou• ~rnple woids.
to dummy, cash the heart ace (dis•
carding the i:lub nine from hand). ruff
a heart. ruff a diamond. ruff a heart,
NYOVOC
and ruff a diamond. With the red suits
·eliminated·. play a club to your 10 (or
queen). I(West wins with thejack(or
M1 R E G
king), he is endplayed -- and you are
home. He must either lead back into
your remai'ning ~lub tenace or .con·
· ce~ a ruff-lpld-discanJ. ·
.

as

-=~=' s~~cil\'\-L££~s·

....

0

I
I I I f 1..1

.,
'&lt;

BUCK. DUKE., tlAWIC.,

II.OC:to:. LUto:E, JOC.l'o,
I'IA(K. SLICI'- ... ·
.
--,{"'7

Auto Parts &amp;

' j.

I

I

\

'.I

Accessories
11195 ford Ranger lruck· bed, long
bod, 1400 OBO, 740-949-2311
dltyl or 740-049-21144 evonlnga.

:~~~.-aiiiiCk

contlnenta
35 Pllfwed

0

1988 iouzu. lpace cab ounroof,
oliding window, bed llnor, aula,
air, am-tm ca~tana! $2,800. 304·
675-2849.

21 Counl cola iMI
21 Clllll llir 0111·

31 Soull'l•••ttm
lnCIIena
.

A 7 2

Nortll
Pus 4.
Pall .Pall

14 Ft. V-Bouom Aluminum Boat.
$500; New Galvanlttd Trailer
1800: 20 HP Marcurr Mo1or
seoo, 7&lt;10-24S.910Q.'· , -

760

'

West

Boa1 And Trailer No Motor, Only
Trolling
llolor,74().441·1415.
No Reaoonabla
Offer Refused,
1&amp;91 Yamahi &amp;.&amp; Convorlod To
15 HP Outboard Engine Stored
1998 Z-24 Cavalier, All .Power, lnllda Eocellent Condlllon Runo
Sunroof, 5 Speed, Kaylals Enlry, Great! S1 r000 QBO 740,446·
CD !'layer, Now Tlrao, S13,000, 71oe.
·
0110, 740-441-ll235.
---::-::---,.,.-~
1998 1'9 F't. Marada Wllh 4.3
10117 Chovy Cavalier Air, Cruise, . 11ercru110r And Trailer, like Now:
Till, AIIIFM Cauene, 24,000 · 1908 15 Fl. Aluminum Sea
Mllo1, 110,500 OBO 740'448· Mymph Boas Boalo Wllh 30 11P
756e. r
Evenrude' &amp; Trailer Loaded
•Roady To Fish: 111g5 20 Ft., Bay·
1!180 ·11190 Cars For S100111
liner Cuddy Wllh 4.3 ller&lt;ruioer,
5alzod And Sold
locallyTitlot.lonllt.
&amp; Trailer low Houro: 1990 18Ft.
]
E
Play1ymo Ski Boal With 08 HP
rucl&lt;a, ••4's, IC.
Evenrude &amp; Trailai: lOBO 10 Fl.
1·800-522-2730• X 390t.
Vll&lt;lng llec:k Boat CompiOIOI)' Ro- .
w0 c H
conditioned Interior With 170 HP
P
b
?
.Credit ro lams
an elp. lltrcrul10r l TraiiOf·, t Ullod 5 1/
Easy B•nJ&lt; Financ,1ng For Uood
Vohlcl~r. ·No Turn Downs, Call . 2 HP Johnoon 1 -Uoid ' 40 HP
Vici&lt;Ja, 7411--.,a~Sr.
~·~:~: g u·~ :'.r:Ur~~r~~~
Upton Uoed' cars Rl. 62·3 lllleo II aroda Boa11 Naw Odyauy
Soulh ot Loon. WV. Financing Po.-nBoals, 7oi0-25Ht80.
Avoua~e. 304-458-10119.
Ka-ki STS Jel ski, stiU under
warramy, lhrea seater, 83 horae·
~0 Trucks for Sale
power, boughl new July ot ,'g7,
three mltching Kl'f'lllki 1kl
, 1 • CMwylrucll
veat1 and trailer all go wllh it,
Cusltlin3CJ, Blad&lt;lncator,load·
$5000, 740-04g·22o3 or 740:949·
od,~lnRoiiGoodSho-.
20,45, will canslderlrade lor a
,...
$11,500,
Bla -454,
~ 11l!!l1001) boa~
.
' '
·
90,ooo ulloo '

""""" (304)4fii.1IH

21 City In
!II S~ble wort&lt;er
AllbeiM
57 BefuelciiH
2S -up (drellln
nn.y)
If
lve ·
21 1.0119 tiiMI
vtalon

Dealer: South

-1994 .Mercury Cougar XR7. 8
Cyl. , PS, PB, Powar WlndoWI.
lealher !Ciolh Interior, Air Bago, ·1998 Road Bon Go-Can 8hp.
E•cellenl Condlllon, Adult Drlvan Br~ggs I Stratton engine, electric
• Well Taken Care Of • 44,000 llarl, full roll Cage. hoadllghl &amp;
Mllao, $11,000 Firm. Sorlouoln- llil Ugh~ good cond. COl! $1,4119 '
qurloo Only. Call 740·4411·7527, ·new, asking $750, 304-458-1902.
Attar 5:00 P.ll.
'Kawasaki 550 LTD looks Good
SBSQ, 0110, 7oJ0.256-t1811. .
1~94 Plymouth Sundance Aulo,
Air. 4 Ooora, Exoellant Condition,
u,eoo. T&lt;I0-446·9~ · • ,

·1995 Plymoulh Neon 4 Doora,
Green With Spollet Aulomallc.
Air; 55,6oo Miles, S8,2bo OBC,
740-'258 8310, 7&lt;10-258-8.a7.
10115 Pondac Flreblrd, ~tops, tully
loadad, conlldar panlai trade.

. n~

41 ShOe pert
411111atNM
51 locual
55 Horae'• nama

Vulnerable: East-West

Cla~sic Edition 1100cc Excelltnt
Condidon. loll Of Ex•a'al $7,000
Firm, 7ol0· 448-0~83 Days Allar 5
P.ll. &amp; Woekondo7ol0·448-7371 .

for Sale

9KJt6 '4
+101643
• a3 2

Solidi
. • A J 10 t 7 2
t

acutptor

44 Dey o1 tile wk.
41 Cooll'llll'l

• " Q 10 9.

••collentl;!~~~~~~~r~

'

....

~·~

1995.Harli" Davidson Springer
Soflall-black, uc. coud . 8,400
miles. Asking $15,000. Call aflor
4pm, 304-882-3480.

750 Boats &amp; .Motors

.

---

1993 KX250 Pro~ction Suspension Boyesen . Rad Valve New ...
llalller Tlreo Excalont Condition,
s2.200. 304-8112·21 sa.

11 011- . .n

41 . _
....
a7~
LIM G The Thinker

tt-:·1

Eaat

1987 Yamaha 350 Wairior Good
Running Condllon. $900, :io4·
8112·2159. '

1afe Honda Shadow Amer~an ·

1995 Cutlou Supremo SL, V-II
Engine, Loaded, 112.0QO Front
WD, /Sunroof 3~-81!i-4888
Work: Home: 304-773-5249.

1 Coli.,.,.
1 In fnlnt
11 IICtdy
13 D11l1cta
14 Of m1dlcp
11· II iJeCIIdY
..-.lau'rverd
17 Alldenl

1995 Honda Shadow 1100 748
lllloo Sl)ow Room Condlllon,
.- .
.$8.500 740.245-5198. '

! '""'~·

·

11 - -

550 Nlgl11 HIMik Now
1&amp;8&amp; Cavalier 2.1 · 4 Cyllnd•r • 11183 Aulo, Air, High lllloo, $1 ,500, Tires, New Brakes . Low Miles,
look• Now7&lt;10-4.a:e892.
•
304-675-1310.
10111 ChfiVI' Luni,. Car, 3.1 E!lro
model, V-8, 8t,OOO mllas, blue
with ~.. 1--.r. two ~~oar, II optl,ono, •4750 080, 7&lt;10-g48-2311
clayo or 740-9411-21144 -ngo.

40~

I

;.:',
1CLATH
l~ I I , ..

r

-II 0~~~fere 1~

- .-T..:.:H..,_
r- 151: . .;: .,~. : Gy. :lR~,

I&lt; .

·

Oran11y always told
that
1
·
.
if I liked friendly anention and
,....;..------.., coo~ration I must be willing to
.&lt;hu&lt;kle quoted
by . filling in the misatnv WOt"ds
L...-1-.L.-1-..L......I'-.1 you develop fr0111 Jlep No. 3 below.

Engine. lranomlo-lon &amp; body
parts fOr 1990 Pontiac !)rand-Am,
for mar• lnbrmation call 30-4-875-

1

.

11987. •

~APRIL

New gaa links, 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R ~ulo,
Ripley, WV. 304-372·3033 or 1·
sllQ.273-932V.
.

790

FOOL!"
. '•

·campers &amp; .
Motorttomes

1874 Starcrah Pop·Up Camper
1902 S·10 Extended Cob, 1991 . S~eps 8, ~.~rnace, Relfigerator,
5,10, 19119 S' 1Q, V·8, Auto, 1988 Stove, Sink, Porta-Potty, Nicel
S·10 V-6 Aulo AIC, Cool&lt; MOtors, 74().046-118«.
.
'
740·448-4103.
.
.
1g75 ll'llard 27' Wilh Awning:
10114 Ford F-350 Craw Cab Dull-. 1980 FlooiWing 1r Wl111 Awning·
ly P.U. 7.3 Turbo Dietel, AUio ~090 Eddie 18' 1&amp;72 Prowler 20:
Tran~ 3 DIU.rent Hilehoo, 12,000 Wilh Awnin~. 1609 McCormick
lllleo, &amp;25,000 Coli 740-448· Rood, Gallipollo, 740-448-1511 .

.'

IT TOOK ME ALL N161-1T
TO THINK OF THAT ..

ere's. no
: way.arotintl it,

Cla5sified AdS

SCIAM LETS ANSWIIS
Sticky. Tempo· Breed· Pantry· MYSTERY ..
.
·1 don't tell my dales how old~ am: the middle aged
woman revealed, "I believe every life should have a touch
of MYSTERY."

APRIL21

TRAN SPORTATION

Pal!r'o- a Ulod Ftolllfiurw

Anrrt SUJpluolll
2101 Jolforaon-

We,_ -

~'.~,:~,.~Sot .

c;;;;;;;~B;;u~;;g~l;;s;~; Itor tent 1n :;:;:.~50311.
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom aDILRiilhr' fur.
ni1hed and unlurniinal, lic:urttr
deposir required, no peta,· '140·
1192·2218.

FAf1r.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; liVE STO CK

\

I

�'

•

•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

IUTWI»bL
AIIDICAJI

•

II Call Mel!
.. 8uy AccUIIIIII8tlons*
' "'CoiiK1!blll, AntlquH,
IIIICI ..MOIII,

1&amp;01 GI9Vt lOAD
.SHOOT.

HouMhlllft, lie.•
JMnWhlle '

•

Ll•ll•'•

Custo• Cakes
AI.L. ~CASIONS

,Birthdl!ya, Holldeyl,
Weddlnge, Showora,
Annlver~~rt"'

Grlduatlone, Eto.
~

Bekery UcenHCI

end lnapactld
Pl11 and COOkies
(740).1143-5544
Portllnd, Ohio
li1&amp;W1

SUfi.. 1:00PM

•

740-245 11441

CARPENTIR SEYKE
·FI- Addltlone

·N-GeregM
•Eiootrtcel A Plumbing
•Rooting
•lnt1rlor &amp; Exterior

8111811

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landsceplng I
Lawn Services
•Commercial .

29 GAUGE OOFIIG

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
Euter Flowera,

Metal 9" OC Rib/White

PIIIIIM, Clbblge,

3'110'·$12.51
3'112'·$1 S.DO
3'114'· 17.51

d1Jlli

Broccoli, Ceullflowet',
Hinging Bllklta,
Phlox; AziiUI,

Shrubs, Spruce
Traes

IUIIIIDS
GREENHOUSE

(FFIEE ESTIMATES)

V.C. YOUNG Ill ·
11112-8215 .
Pom11roy, Ohli!-o~

·

S ICUU

CHESHIRE

8peclallzlng In:
Haw Aoola, Root Reji.tre,
Gutlln, Interior •
·

. Elllrlor Pllntlng,

DryMII Repair.
......_. ..... during the
winter monthe

'

or

..................r.

0../lly WOrk 0UIIn1111Hd
Froe Ell;• Fully tnaulld

1-614-1112-IIDST

P/B

IlK.

•Bobcat Service

•Concrete
•MIIO!'I'Y
•General

FOOD MfiRI' .
7DiytAWHk

Lunch Sendwlch
Including Pizza

12" fi .49 Deluxe
. All Toppings
Cell In Ordert Aoooptld
7

·Bt\RB'S

Brien Morrteon
(740) 985-3948

,,

COUIITIY CUDU
SHOP'

Hellllock

Delivery Av•llllbl• · •

Hamlock Grove R011d
Pomeroy, Ohio 457•
Ph. 74o-lu·721111 .
After4P.M.

MIIMi. TIM Tllppera PlelChester Wetet Dl•trlct
raHIYII the right to ......
eny . tnformelltlll or
l....,llrltiH In the Blclcllng•
By order Of tllo 'llllllllra
Plelne·Chllter Wlltor

support our growth. Realistic first
year Income of $35,000 to $50,000 or
more. Industry leading benefits
Including grou~ health and 401 K
retirement plans. We provide the
produ~s and a great work
environment. You provide your
desire and commitment.
·•
Contact Brad Sang In·person
----~between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday
tnrouctn Friday at Turnpike Foret.
turnpikB Ford is an equal
opportunity employer.

.

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 1D-6 Sat. 1D-4

Norway Spruce,
·Wlllll PIM and
Canadttin

C.,nof 8trHt, Iuiie 5011,

C~Sun&amp;Mon

.

Ohio Lottery

.

·J,1arauders
:hand Aalders
~ 6·2 ·defeat .
· :Sports
.
.
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•

o"' Page 5

Buckeye-S:
11·13-20..23·33

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········--~--~······~--~---··

• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
·• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits ·
• Assoned Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fi~ them.
·
Rt. 124 Minenville, OH
, ...992-4559

-

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""'· 41. NO. 241

C1111, Ohio Valt.y Publllhlng Compi.ny

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'

Byl(ATHRYN'CROW
Sentinel Correspondent

'hired Triplett as.construction super· . said Mayor George Connolly. Those
who . do not c:Omply will have to
visor for $5,000.
Earlier,
Wingett
said
the
total
cost
answerto
chaQies in mayor's coun, it
,Syracuse Village Council will
.consider c.hailging the name of a vil- to the village will be around$ 11,500. was,noted .
Council also discussed the hours
lage street to Mistletoe Lane follow· . Also meeting with cou~cil were
~sidents
thai
will
be
affected
by·
the
spent
by the police officer in th.e viling Thursday night's regul• council .
cQRstruction
Mike
Struble,
Mike
lage.
•
..
meeting held at the Syracuse Mun_ic· ·
Swisher, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Friend
It was noted thai a pool manager
ipal Building.
and lifeguards are n~. Applica. · Council met with Mary Janice and Mrs. Carl Weaver.
Trfplett explained in detail the tions can be sent to Clerk/tn:asurer
Lavender, who said a botanist check·
work
that will be done, including Janice Zwilling.
ing mistletoe in peoples' trees
Connoll)' announ~ed that baseball
informed ,her that she has the number drainage, curbs and guardrail. He also
'one tree in the state as far as mistle· noted driveways will be repaired if. signup will'be Satunlay at the ball·
damaged and thai shrubs llfiCI other field from 10 a.m. to noon, aild all
toe prodLJction is concerned.
·
coaches are requested to attend.
Mistletoe is a protected plant that plants will be replaced.
Wingett said the project has been Parade day was set for May 9, with .
grows in .trees in .some portions of
Ohio. Lavender resides near the Ohio 1-1/2. years in the making and he · a rain day of May 16.
Councilman Larry Lavender purRiver at the end of Water and Walnut wanted 10 accommodate the residents
to accomplish the project.
chased fence to enclose die shelter
stn:ets .
"We want IQ work with every- houseinthepool·areaandtofencein
·: .Council said they woqld definite·
body," Wingett said.
· . Louks Field, the small little league
ly consider the request.
Atea
resident~
involved.
i
n
the
probaseball field. The fence will be
· Engineer Gene Tripleu and grants
administrator Roben L. Wingett dis· ject are to sign work sbeets, it was picked up tOday, it was noted.
.
Lavender noted all the electric
~ussed the Bridgeman Street slip . ,noted.
In addition, council discussed w.ork at the pilol, 10 include three
repair project with residents or the
complaints about residents allowing waterproof boxes, was from Andy's
Rustic Hill neighborhood.
&amp;1\d was approved for
Council signed .a contract with their dogs to run loose in the village. Lock·and
Residents an: to adhere to the ordi- ·$6,000, with $5,500 of that to paid
RollO's Excavating of Raci'ne for
. $1 00,03.5.72 to repair the slip, and 'itance requiring dogs to be restrained, t&amp;rough Ohio's Nature Works Pro-

gram grant.
•
Also. council occeptcd an estimate
for $500 from Eber Pickens Sr. to
install ·lifeguard c~airs at the pool..
The chairs. have alreljdy been purchased and merely need ins\JIIIed, it
was noted.
Council also agreed to readvenise
to sell and old fire truck, a boat and
motor. It was also noted that free fill
din would be secured to bUild up one
of lhe ball fields.
·
.
.
Zwilling issued tile following
financial report for March: general
fund. $32.425.71 ; street construction,
$15 ,34~.66; highway, $991.71 ; fire,
$4,049.74; water, $8,011 .27; pool,
$3, 377 .59;
guaranty
meter.
$3, 196.07; cemetery, $9S.65: total,
$67,497.50. .
•
.
The police report showed 14 cill·
tions issued and three warrants
served. The mayor's report showed
$1,129 in fines plid 10 lhc village•.
Also present were council mem·
bers Donna Peterson, Eber Pickens
Jr., Bill Roush and Kathryn ·crow.
Absent was Councilman Mony
Wood.

s~fety

·End
••
Auto, V6, A/C, power locks, cruise, tilt,

.SILVERADO
1997 FORD F-150 SUPER CAB

Auto, VI, lllthlr, A/C, 3rd o--,
. . _ wllldowl' ll.liclll, cruiM,
tilt

LARIAT
1996 FORD TAURUS XL
Auto, V6, A/C. pcMer equipment.
pcMer moon roof, CO changer

TURN IN

1998 FORD CONTOUR GL

Auto, A/C, 4 door, AM/FM cass,
PVtl, PL, crutee, 1111

1997 FORD £SCORT

1996 FORD RANGER

•

TWO TO CHOOSE FROM

1994 TOYOTA PICKUP
SUPERC~, 4x4, Big 4 cyl.
,AM/FM cass, liH kit.

AWMatereo

.ONLY 16 ooO MILE
doOr,

4 "'-' drive, 351 VB,

Door, AMJFM cass

'
.
.
4 TO 'cHOOSE FROM

Aulo, A/C. •AMJFM C8811, 4
maroon I white in color

'1995 FORD F-250 ,

XL PACKAGE, auto, V8, A/C, 3rd

LE~SE

IUPERCAII IIPLAIIH, 4 ·Wheel
drive, A/C, ,power wo1d0wa &amp;
Jocka, CIUIIe, till

· LEASE TURN IN

-·

A~JFM

Cl88

1997 FORD F-150 SUPERCAB

AJC,

SPORTY..
' 1996 FORD F-150

.1994 CHEVRO~ S-10

IUPEACAB, 4 wheal diM!, auto.
A/C, va, XLT pac:Mge, pcMer Wild. ows I locka,~. Ill.

BLAZERl.S.

. -

LOADE

1.995 FORD M.USTANGGT
AJC?. 5 apd, power W:.ldoMI

VB,

locU, till, NI/FM C8llll

•

1995 OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVA
Auto, AIC. AM/FM caa, cilllll,
lilt, pcMer W:.ldows·.l locb
•

BLACK

SHARP

1994 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

Auto, A/C. 118, 4 wllell drive, powwlndowiHDcks, crulee, till

Auto, A/C, V6, powor windows·

LOADED!

GREEN IN COLOR

1993 FORD TEMPO
4 Door, A/C, 56,000 mllll

locks, cruise, ti~

_1992 FORD F-250

lleleO,

4x4, A/C, .351 118, 5 .spd, AMJFM
stereo, 82,000 miles.s.

•sggs
'

GOOD LOOKING
TR C

· ltM/FM

.

;

Members of the. Mlcldleport Community Aseoclallon wwe buay

Tllul'lday momlng hanging ~I banners tllroughqut ~ village. Shown hero 1ro lbry WIM, ·Bill Swllhlr, Myron OUffteld and

test

Dick Owen. According .to Dufllekl, tht flip were msc1e by .~en­
nil Lillie of 11111-End Fabrics, wlllt hlrdw•re don~ by Klng'a
~. 1be colqrful -~banlllr8 will be n;pllced wllh

lfl'inohm.-&amp;liclfM~ IGII.SCM56flllis d&amp;irlnilllumnl
week which will be rapiiCed.ln tum by lrldltlonal.ltd, whb ll'td
biUifllgl.
.

Mason

1986 CHEVROLET 1500 4 WD

'bann~r' day-

rop .·m istletoe tree may prompt -A
street name· Qhange in Syracuse···

School site
,.---·Silver anniversary--- will
·require

Short wheel base, auto,V8, AJC, cruise, tilt.

2 61Cttona, 12 ..... 31cenll
A Glnnen Co. Haw 1peper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll3, 1998

'

Kar.

Final

.

.

. .

Occasional showers
tonight, lows In the 40e.
Saturday, cloudy,· then
partial elearlng. Highs In
the mid so..

•

a1

e

.

•

•

•

..
'
'

Pick 3:
-5-8-1
Pick 4:
2-4-1~

ne~ds a Buslnesi Manager to

BUSINESS
MANAGE·R

12111111n

IANDSC:APE
NUBSER'l'

PubliC Notice

TU.RNPIKE FORD

Mid Ohio
Valley's
Lasding
Automotive
Retailer, has
Jmmedlate ·
o~nlngs In the
following area:

. Estllllltel

(614) 992-3838

24 Hr. Bobclt 81rvt01

Owner, Mlekle Hollon
·Ch11t1r, Ohio
740-985-4422

publicly opentd IIIII rwcl

_ _,.;;..,.,-lTum.plke Ford,

Llncl Clurlng A
Grading
S.ptle Syltlm &amp;
Utllltlte

Hot&amp;Cold

lluRWPEO TIIEES

Avalltbll

l'bR

Public Notlca

llloull.
.CIIII1Htou, WY 15301
ltplrftiOIIIIId . . . for A IOPl' Of the
Till Tuppar1 Plelnl·
the pelntlng of our 10,000. •ceolftcetiOJII mer Ill Cheater Weter oietrtct
,.1111111 the rtght to rajeCt
......,..., .. dllc 111tlnll ad I wd lronl:
Oft IR 881 n. "Re1d1WIIt.
lUppera Pletn•Chlltlr • '"" end Ill lldl or to
will lie recelvocl lly the W..DIIIIrtcl,311111a.30 tncrelfe or docre111 or
1Upplir1 Pltlne·Chllllr .._., '111 d .... OH 46772, omit eny Item or Item• Dlltrlcl
end/or IWerd to 11M 1-.1
Thle 1eth dey Of llerch
Wiler Dlllrlct II tllo ofllol (740) 1111-3311
'
located II 31Ht lllr 30 , Dodge fteporte, 1 175· end Mill BIDDER. Each ·. 1.1N • '
Reed, Reedevllle, Olllo Dulllln Rolli, Columbue, Ott t"paul mull oontaln thll Herold Bllcklllon, Proeldlnt
II niBil Of w.ry pereon or
80ird of Dlractora
41712, until :z:oo o'oloc- 43211
ll·m· (!oat 111111), April 1, Dodge Reporte, ·401 company tnlertltld tn the (3) 24, (4) Z, l ; 3TC
1-. lnd then lt.llld olllcl

HOWARD
Umtttonl Hlullng
Hou• A Trailer .SIIH

Hot Broekfllet
Blec:ult Slndwlch,

IIAU!DAHD

F,.. E•tftrlllle•
No Job Too Small

ADVIATIUIIENT
IIIDt

992•5776

· EXCAVATING CO. :

Open 24 Hre. A Dey

Commerctel end
Aelkllntltl

•RIIklentlll

Public Notice

Open O.lly 11-5
Sundly 12-5

Alao Conerete Work

740-148-1012

LIIDSCIPI

NOW Ill STOCI A
IIEW ECOIIOIIICAI.

· Patntlng

OPEIIIIIIG APRil1

New 6 ualcl Heme. We
Buy • Sell • TriCk Toole,
tithing equtp~ 1Ve,
CB'e, tllraoa - little lilt
of · everytl\lng. Loctteil
on Ohio River Cempgrounde, Sl ·At: 124,
Recine, Ohio.

IUII!IAIDt
.IIIHUSI

. OISIIRIG

~peL

Ohio River
Campground• and
Bail a Tackle, a
Gen. Merchandise.

BAUM LUMBER

.Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- - ·---

1be llilp County Council on Alilnl celet.nad Its 25th annrvenary on Thursday with a·claYlong obnrv•ICI. 1be lltlgs llulllpurpou Sanlor Center WM fllllcl w1111 staff rnemblra and wtllwlahers, who ellloYsd I epeclllluMIIeDII, pn llllllltlonl and llilli!bilr'.-nt. Among tile VIPS
~ - , frciin left, U.S. Fltp. Del~. Ll Gov. NIIICY HolllsW, IICCoA Executive
. man, Dlroctor of U., Ohio Department of Aging, Dlroctor Susan Oliver and .Judith . ........
here ravlewlng I cllaplay of plloto. IIWil _.,...... clippings from the put 25 yell'S.
.

PoU
finds m
.
their own ·

leery ·o f investing

l ·Security taxes ·

schoOl site
il
w•K;o~ ,•uo federal government
is
mw1ufactu~ed World War II cxplo'sives and IC5tcd other toxic chemi-'
cals.
. "We 'II do the necessary studies,'"
said Larry Parsons, county schools
superintendent. "If it ends 4P thai it's
not safe, I'll be the first to say build
somewhere tlse."
The land. 700 acres just. north or
Point Pleasant. was used in the 194os ·
and 1950s for an explosives plut and
agricultural .tests.·
• Later designated a Superfund site,
buried toxic waste still contaminates
ground water, enviicinmenull officials
say. The school would be built near
the toxic site but not directly on it.
Pesticide residues such as DDT,
and illegally-dumped PCB transformers may also be contaminating
the ground. said. l!clc: Costello, site
project officerJor the stale Division
of Environmental Protection's Superfund section.
(Continued on Plge 3)

·Spring
forward
.

.

12 1

-s·upreme Court clears
path .fqr -~tate .Issue 2 .
By PAUL SOUHRADA .
Associated

'

Praa Writer

COLUMB':JS - The Ohio Supreme Coun 'todaycl~d the way for a
pla.nned vote May ~ to raise the state sales lax to increase state ~pending on
edUcation and to g1vc. homeowners a break on their property taxes.
·.
· The ;;even-~em~r coun. in a unanimous decisill!'• ruled that t!Je Legis·
• lature d1d not .mtsuSe a 147-yeur-old secuon of the Ohto Constitution to place
the sales taxtncrease on the ballot. ,
.
·
The coun, however, emphasized that it had not yet decided whether the
· state's new school-funding plan satisfied its order of March 24, 19971o come
up with.a better way 10 pay for public schools.
The Ohio Roundtabl.e ~u~ in an effort to keep the issue.from the ballot.
The ~lon-ba.'!Cd c~se~ative public. policy group that has campaigned
for such tssues ·as term hm•ts and campatgn finance reform argued thatlawlllllkm hac;\ created a new route to the ballot without any rules. Other mechaniiuns for placing is.•ues before voters have, for example, specific deadlines
and roles for ballot boards, the ~retaJ:y of state and C9UIIIY election boanJ.,
President David Zanotti did not return a phone call to his office IIIIa mom~

ing.

•

.

The court a~ with the Legislawre's contention that the Conltitution
allows lawmakers to delegate theinlilthority - i~ tliis case, to w people
BIIUrtiOeec
yow c:loolll
- in matters dealing with education. ·
·
'
end lRichll .
The coun. in an unsigned opinion, also noted thai all legislative ICtions
'-rdare presumed to be constitutional. and that couns should be reluctantto.inlerhour It 2 e.m.,
fere with elections.
.
. ·'
.
SUN!Iy,Api115•
\bte~ will now decide whether to i~£rea..e the sales tall from .5 percent •
to 6 percent to raise more than S1.1billion annually. Half of the money would
be u!Qito increa.o;e spending on public schools. The rest would be gi~en back
lo holbeowners in the f1&gt;rm of a 15 pen:enl reduction in their property tall
bill, up to $27.5.
.
.
Zanotti and other critics of the ballot issue have noted that lawmakers twice·
failed 10 get the tax incrca..e 10 the ballot in what they see a• tile proper way:
by asking voters to amend the constitution. It wa.• only after the lawmakers
were unable to get a three-fifths maJority in the House that they tu_rneilto
~the never-before-used constitutional pmvisioq.

JIY ALICE 'ANN LOVE
video editor.
raises now given yearly to retirees, .
Aaloc:Nited Pta II Writer
Still. moM Americans polled - 74 with 53 percent in favor and 44 perWASHINGTON - Three-quar- percent- say lhey would rather~ cent opposed. Those o~er age 55
.
ti~ of American.~ say they would a fundamental lcdesign of Social were actually the 11100 supportive
/
favor lening workcn shift some Security than tinkering. Just q per· . group, with about60 pen:enl willing
·'
•.
··Soclal Security wes ·into private · ce~t !lllid they would prefer adju~t· . to sacrifice benefit~ they gel now or.
accounts to invellt on their own. ments to [lll)'roll tues and pension will !lOOn. .
·
according to an As."IOCialed Pres.• poll. benefjt~ thai could maintain the curAlthough private accounts were
But asked if they'would want to rent retirement system.
the most appealing option in theory,
invest their own Social Security
.The telephone po'l or 1.013 adults · Americ!Uls are wary when a.•ked if L---,..--_.~t__J.J.-'LJ
~cy in. siOCks and mutual fundll. wa.~ taken for.APon Martl\27-31 by ·t~y would want til invest their own ~u·n
·
more than half of those surveyed '- . lOR or Med1a, Pa. The margin of Social Security taxes in stocks or I I 1 I
I'
.53percent-saidno.itwouldbetoo e~ · i• , plu• or 'minu• 3·percentage mutual fundS: .onlyabout46percent
risky.
potnL•.
.
said they would.
, In Kansas City, Mo., where PresWhen a.~ked about specifics••80
f'eojlle between the ages'Df 18 and
.idcnr Clinton on Tuesday will kick percent of those polled said they .34 were .most likely to support .the .
cifl' a series of town hall meetings to wo'uld favor letting workers shift 1dea or pnvlltC accounts, w1th nearly ·
··
.
·di""ss possible Soeial Security 50fiiC of their Social Security tax pay- 90 percent in that age group in favor. · WASHINGTON (AP) - Srartmg
~ges. peojlle interviewed sepa- ment• into privlltC accountJ. I
But far fewer of these young people Sunday, daylight will last an !lour
rllely f~ the poll had many ques·
· Less dramacic changes were 110t'b - on I~ .52 peli:ent _ 'said they'd ~ongcrin the evening for most Amer~ about how private · accounts popular.
.
•
want to risk invc.ttine for them- tcans. ·
.
would lll'ork and whether ir was wise
For elllllllplc. just. 22 jlercent or . selves.
·
Daylighl-savina lime returns at .2
19 qse them to replace Social Securi· Americans said they wouk! SllfiPOJ'I
a.m. for a stay of nearly seven
ty. •
raising payroll Wtc.t for all workers•. ,
months as clocks are turned forward
: nHow much privatization are we Nearly 76 pcn:ent i!pposed raising
Most likely !O be interested in llik- an hour. But most people will make
llilking about?" Rick Y1111ell, a 41 - taxes.
ing clwJe of their own retirement the cllange before retiling Saturday
)'tar old auditor, Wondered.
About the same number, 77 per- uvings were people younger than .54, night- eipecillly thole who WUJI to
: Some in Congn:sa bave p•'I"J''ed cent. oppose further iAc:reua in the those making over $.50,000 a year avoid beinalatc for cl,lurch and oth·
shifting to private aa:ounts 10 help retirement age, whiCh is llteldy and thole with 11 I~ some college er activities on Sunday.
keep Socilll Security financilllly scheduled to JOuP lflldulllly f101116S educetion.
. SWidard time will return Oct. ~vtJble u millions of blby .boo.ncrs to 67 for people born after 1.937.
Social Secl!rity is in diJI8er of
• ne law ·reu slltcl and U.S. terri•
retire. The Clinton adminilliition About 2.1 percent of thole surveyed beine overwhelmed by the impend· ~es ex~mpt ~mselves ~rom day·

2
r3.

4

c'ocks
.ahesdS one
hour unday .

.!I.:: .:~~e~~~::; ~t.:~s:;t~~:.:o.~~clia:

:i:::.~ebou·~h """" ::~~~of

"\Ve'n: blld dis•lm wjth priv• .portive.
lization in other 1re11," llid Kille
People w= more evenly divided
Neely·Phelln, "2. • Kln111 City about lll!lllina bid . cost-of-li~ing

:'

••

booltJtrs. Com:nt pnldictions are thai
the prop1111 will lun short on ceih by
2029 if nothing is dolle.

r

zona, Hawaii • .,.n of Indiana, Puei'·
to Rico, the VUJin lsllnds end AmericiJLS&amp;mOL

,.J

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·

.USA WEEKEND debuts April 5
In the ,Juu~au tt-...;Jadbul
.'Thi Jlunbag 'Giim,.·Jl•nlin•l begins bringing its readers a lively·.
addition to ~unday reading • USA WEEKEND, the nation's' best-read
Sunday supplement. beginning this
weekend.
"Page after page, USA WEEK'END is a unique Combination of
useful information and enjoyable
reading," said ROben L. Wingett,
.-.,....~ ~;-..jt•ntin•l publisher. .
Rapidly, ·USA WEEKEND has
become the preferred Sunday magazine, read ar more than 528 newspapers with a com~ined circulation of
more 1h1111l8 million. Those pepers,
end their 37.5 million teaders, mike
USAWEEKEND the strongest Sunday supplement in the country.
.
_
USA WEEKEND has ill frnger·
qn the pulle of the iltw en. JtiiCkles issuea1hat Concern us 11011t; crime,
helllhy liviftl, flmHy life, even the ntpid ~lllgcs in our moral badtboric.
It jillt !Wiy~ee~~~~· to be the Sunday magazine ~r tile '9011 and beyond.
•

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