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                  <text>Thu
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Weather

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Today: Rain
High: 50; Low:40
Tomorrow! Cloudy'
High: 50; Low:30

Sports

April I , 19N

It's a boy, Page 9
Padres defeat Reds 6-3~ Page 4
~s - hand Indians first loss, Page 4

Diamond
teams post
wins
Page 5

Douglas quits governor's. race
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COLUMBUS (AP) - Toledo Luca.~ County Democratic Party. said
millionaire Bruce Douglas, who ha.~ Douglas told her Wednesday lhat he
funded his own campaign for the . had spent roughly $1 million without
Democratic nomination for governor, much result.
Dougla.~ did not return messages
is dropping out oflhe race, according
to newspaper and broadcast reports left at his Office Wednesday and
loday.
.
today.
.
But his wife, Dee, told The Blade
Douglas' campaign on Wednesday
said he would make a major that "the whole state is missing out
announcemem at a news conference on the chance to have a really good
. ., . .
today, but would provide no details. governor.··
The. repons said he had deterDouglas, 65, also reportedly will
.mined he could ·not defeat former endors~ Fisher in a general election
Attorney deneml Lee Fisher in the race against Republican Secretary of
Stale Bob Taft. ·
Democratic primary May 5.
Douglas' running mate, Mark
. A recent Republican poll showed
that Douglas. who has never run for Hatch. would not confirm that Douoffice. ll'ailed Fisher 50 percent to 9 glas A{anned.to leave the mce bullold
The Columbus Dispatch and The
percenl.
" He had decided after looking at (Cleveland) Plain Dealer thai there
lhe poll number!! that it was not in the had been much discussion wilhin the
cards." Richard Ruppert, a longli me campaign in the past day.
,frien~ and supporter. told The (ToleThe Fisher campaign said II had
do) Blade. ·
not been lold of Douglas··plans and .·
Paula Ross, chairwoman qf the declined to commen1 on the reports.

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Bul based on the reports, Taft sent
a letter to Fisher today congratulating
him on becoming the Democr~tic
nominee for.governor. ·
" I look forward to un honest and
spirited campaign - a campaign that
focuses on the issues lhat matter lo
Ohio families, and one lhat slrengthens public confidence in govern·
ment." the letter said.
Douglas has made the proposed 1cent sales lax increase that would
roise money for schools a central
issue of his campaign.
l;le ha.~ said the proposal is inadequate. His plan would rai~~e the sales
lax by 1.5 cents and the cigarette tax
by 25 cents a pack. providing $1 .5
bi Ilion more each year for schools
and aboul $500 million for property
t,ax relief.
"It just puts more money into the
syslem," Douglas said. "It does not
distribule it equitably. It wi II not solve
the problem."

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BRUCE DOUGLAS

Spring storms kil/20 'in -southern states
"(he Qally 8tnUMI- Wldnaclay, April I, 1. .
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Beating the·Off-ROod· --~------------------:------:-~---------------,
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IN
ON
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Black and Blues
·EXHAUST SYS
SPECIALS
AT
TRI·COUNTY .FORD, INC.

The anow hu moiled and It'•
lime to lhink abou1 niUmlnJ lhose
outdoor adventure~ includin1
cunpina. fiahinJ, boaliDJ llld offraid explorina. Por neuly two
million 'of ua, the way we Jet to
those out-of-the-way pl~eea Ia In
' a aport utility vehicle (SUV). Not
only are tile number• bf SUVa e&amp;plodlnJ, bat 10 are the acceuoriea
runnlnall! tbern. Take for eumple
the electrical wincbea, apotllpta,
faa liJbta,a~ereo ayaleinl and TVa
, that accompany tbe auburban
c. CM~per ud taliJICer.
Wllh•all the additional electrical demanda and the out-of-theway plaeea we take lbele vehicles,
suva require heavy duly balteriel with extra punch and reserve
capacity. When it'tlime to repl~ee
the ori1inal !*tery, the expertaat
ONB Tec:lntoloJiea, manufacturer
of the Champion• Trailblazer.,..
battery, recommend conaumen
look for balteriea lhat are apec:ilically manufactured 10 he vlbrllllon
reaillant IJIId powerful - J b to
aupporl the ulra demaada of
today' a weekead eaplonn.
If you ceuld take a loOt lulde a
battery, you •d see a Mriea of lead
platca or ,..W. covencl willa a·lead
pute. Wltedler. you're ngedly
off-madi. . Dlvlplin• the city
bumpa lad pot bolep, )'0111' J.aery
II beiltJ jolted lad jolded. Jf il
"' Clll'tllke the vibrllion, the pute
011 diose lead ,..W. lltedl IIIII fall•
to the boaom of the bllllery wllere
II caa eleCuicallllorla. ·Tbat

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meani a prematunend to both lhe I
battery and lhe adventure.
It al10 mean1 you ahould know "
a liUie about tile black box underyour SUV'a hood. Vibration Ia
more dama1in1 to i battery lhan
either heat or cold, 10 to take lhe
beat out of lhe vibration, the Jrida
ia vlbl'llion-naiatalll baUeriea are
placed i111ide envelopes tbll separate llleln from CICb other aad hold
the pUle aJUDII the lead platea.
I
Those pi• lad eavdope separa·
I
ton are ucl!oml to ihe bottom of
I
lhe battery
by a polypropyI
leae bondinJ material that helps
I
rcaiat the rockin1 and rollins
I
caused by rocky trails and llllmpy

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case

llreell.

The product label can 1110 plde
battery selection. Look for a "vlbratiO!I reaiataal~ llllemenl oa lhe
label. Baueriea with AG9, an al·
loy of the aame ailver •• you1
1randmother'a coffee pol, also
have proven to '-'e reaillanl
to plate abrer.di111 and pro~ide
·iuperior performance and IOII,Cr
life in hi1h heat and extreme cold
weather. Piully, look for a bat,
tery wilb a cUe and cover of durable, polyp!opylede plulic which
further reduces ¥ibntiotl damap.
So, even If you'nlillinJ Ia traf·
lie and nol blaziDJ aew traill,
today'a ·aometime bumpy road
coaditioaa requ~ a battery 111at
DOl only IIUII tha vehicle but
witbataadtallllae extru we put in
fRIIIl of aad under it.

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MUFFLER ~ TAIL PIPE INSTALLED
ONLY

$

*

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With Thla Coupqn

ALL DOMESTIC
CARS
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CALL
US FOR PRICING FOR
.
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I FULL EXHAUST SYSTEMS
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!I ·Fr~nt End Alignments 11
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Cars $27.20
2 WD Plck~Ups $28.95 U
·4 WD Trucks Starting at $28.95 · . . .

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(Additional CharQ!I with Change of camber ele... on .. WD Yehfclee)

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rr-~------------------~-------------------,1
III' . LUIE,CHilli
O~L &amp; FILTER
$
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DOMESTIC CARS ·

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Wllh

F~r Appointment

. By JIM FFIEEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
Syracuse received a new Post·
mn.~ ter Wednesday afternoon with 1he
swearing in of Bonnie Brown as viilage Pos tma.~ter. '
Sieve Eldridge. manager of poslal
. operolions. Columbus, perfonned theswearing·in ceremony. Also auending
were several other poslmaslers from
tliroughoulthe area.
Brown used lhe occa.~ion 10 highlighllhe Celebrate the CeniUry stamp
series, focusing on 1he Fronk Lloyd
Wrighl ( 1867-1959) slamp featuring
the Robie Hou~~e , buill in 1909 in
Chicago.
Mike Slruble of Syracuse spoke
. brieOy on Wrighl, who is considered
one of lhe greatesl figures jn 201h-

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Today's

Sentirtel

1 SIICiiona • 16 Pages
Vol. 48, No. 150 .
Cah;ndar
ClepiDcds

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IS
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3

Comics
EditorialI

Loc•'

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Lotte nes

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OHIO

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Pkk 3: 707 l'ldl 4: 0192
Super Lotto: S - 10-17- 24-2~·47
Kldler: 430477
W,VA.
Dally 3: 004; Dally., 1891
0 1998 Ol1lo Valley l'llblllhina Co.
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out~ide

Birmingham. At least 20
people were ,ki lied. ·
The same s1orm sys1em was also
blamed for one death in Mississippi
and one' in Georgia. At least 17
National Guardsmen were injured al
Georgia's Fort Stewan.
Hardest hit was Alabama's Jefferson Counly, west of Binningham• .
wilh 18 dead and devastation in several tiny · cimlmunities. Two others
died in St. Cla.ir County east of Sinningham.
Leon Hyche lost his niece Deb
Helms. and her ·iwosons. ·colby;
and CIU'liOn, 4, in Wednesday nig~t's
storm. They were killed as they hid
in lheir ba.sement just down the street
from him in Rock Creek. ,
"it's. supposed to be the safest
place," he said. "The whole wall col·
lapsed on lhem. "
Hyche said his niece's husband,
Dave Helms, was not home al lhe
lime.
"He's crushed. " Hyche said.
"He'.s losl everything.''
More lhan 160 people were taken
10 Binningham hospitals. where offi-

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ALABAMA

Bank will be exchang~d for a number of OVB common shares with a
total market value equal to $163.09.
For the fifth straight year, OVB
declared a slock splil and a cash·dividend increase. The board of directors
declared a stock splil of SO percent
Sharcholden; on lhe record date of
April 20 will receiv.e .one ne:w share
for eacn two shares of common
stock owned. The cash dividend.
adjusltd for the stock split. was
increased from $.13 to $.14 per
share; raising the quanerly cash dividend of·5.66 percent
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. is a one
bank holding company operating
Ohio Valley Bank wilh offices in Gailia, Jackson, Pike and Frdnklin coun·lies in Ohio and Point Plcasanl.
W.Va. The Bane Corp. also has consumer finance company oflices in
Gallipolis, Jackson and South Point
operaling under the name of Loan
Central. Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
common slock is 1raded on NAS·
DAQ under th'e symbol OVBC.

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cials said many required surgery. At · it struck.
leastlwo people were panially pam- ·
" I was sitting in the recliner and
lyzed and still others. at least six, my daughter called my wif~ and said
were in critical condilion.
a tornado had touched down at 0ak
In lhe glare .of spotlights, bodies Grove," he said. ' "My wife mn into
lying along.the road could be seen in the bathroom. I started. bulthe roof
lhe early-morning dark in Rock caved in."
Mayor Wallace Thompson of
Creek. Chain saws buzzed as
nearby
Sylvan Springs said th~ storm
searchers desperately tried to get to
homes cut off by felled trees, over- , dealt a dev-dstating blow to a smull
turned car.; and the bricks and limber town lhal had grown and prospered. · ·.
ofruined homes.
"You work like lhe devil. and you
lose
it in three s~:onds, " said Thomp. The Rock Creek Church of GO!!
was 1umed inlo a 1rauina center.
.son. who ..'!"a,~ 1r.1pped in his )!o!"!: _
The 'poweiiUI storm , system
Kendro Vmes wa.• with foor' relasparked warnings an hour before sun· tives in her home in Sylvan Springs
set and then began a twisted. random when slrong winds struck the .house .
trail' of destruction across Alabama as they hid in 11 ba.•emeni comer.
two houn; later. at 8 p.m.
"That wa.• the only corner lefl
· Homes of wood and brick in standing, thank the Lord," she lold
Rock Creek were reduced 10 lheir WBMA-TV.
foundalions. with household appli·
Some of the injured were in
ances scauered across yards. limbs church meetings lhat ) urned into
and power lines across streets. Ambu· prayer vigils as violenl wiru.Js packlances had difficully. r~aching the ing ba..eball,sia:d hail roared out• ide.
At lhe Open Door Church in
dead.
· The tornado destroyed the home . ·Birmingpon. west of Birmingham,
of Leon Harmon and left a boal atop more than a dozen people wer~
his garage. He recalled how quickly injured.

Ohio Valley Bank plans
Pomeroy branch office

Ohio Valley Bank ha.~ announced
J!Iuns for opening ils lhird SuperBank
office to be located in lhe Big Bend
Foodland ston: on West Main Slreet
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (APl surfaceandslillcontaminates ground in Pomeroy.
Mason County's sc;hool board presi- water, environmental officials say.
The office, e~pecled lo open in lhe
lk;nl believes lhe dlstrK.1 is. trying 10 . The school would be built near lhe third quaner of this year, will offer
rush into building a proposed con- to~ic site but not directly on it
full service ~king seven days a
solidaled high IIChool.
An architecl says soille~;ls on lhe week.
The board volcd 3·2 Monday to proPQSCd site do not indicate lhe land
James L. Dailey. chairman and
close lhtee schools and lransfer stu- is contaminated.
chief executive officer of Ohio Valdents inlo a new building planned for
Bill Morgllfl doesn't want to take ley Bank, announced plans.for lhe •
a sile 1ha1 some, parents fear is laden any chances.
,
Pomeroy f;u:ilily at lhe annual sharewith loxic chemicals.
'Tm confident wilh stalemeniS holders meeling held Wednesday al
, Board Presiden\ David Morgan such as, 'We lhink il's clear,"' !~!for· lhe Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis.
and board member Darrell Hagley gan said. ''That's probably whalthey
In addition Dailey reponed on on
~o1ed again-st the cllle'lings.
said 30 years IIJ!il when they burica plans for acquiring The Jackson SavThe site of the new school norlh God knows whallhere.
ings Bank located in Jackson. The
"We -can 'I bury our p!:oblems. OVB board of dircclon approved lhe
oF Point Plea.~ant wa.~ used in the
1940s and 19SOs for an txplosives They will evenlually come back to. execulion of a deflnilive purcha.•e
plam and agricuhurollests.
· haunt us.'1
llBI'l!C·ment for OVB to acquire The
Later designaled a Superfund sile,
The county received Sl4.4 million Jackson Savings Bank...
il contains loxic waste beneath lhe lhree yeal'll ago from the slal,e School
T!le purchn.•e is subject 10 cenain .
·Buildins Authority for construction conditions, including lhe approval of
of a new facilily. Progress has been )ackson Savings Ban_k, shareholden;
however. a.~ parems have . and regul1110ry authonlles. Under lhe
Good Afternoon slowed.
sued to stop consolida1ion.
terms of lhe agreement, each of the
19,400 shares of Jackson Savings

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century architecture.
The Robie House was built for
bicycle manufacturer Frederick
Robie using lhe prairie design -focusing on long horizontal lines,
After 1wo attempts to demolish lhe
house, the Univer!lil}l of Chicago pur· ·
Chi!Sed llle struclure which I~ now
used as a univer!lity alu{llnj cenler,
Struble e~plained.
Brown began her poslal career in
1985 n.~ ,a casual worker in the
Athens Posl Office. She began work
at ihe Pomeroy Post Office the fol·
lowing year 'and has served as tem·
porary officer in charge of both .
Racine and Syrocu,sC pbsl offices.
She resides in Minersville wilh her
husband, Danny. and lwo children,
Teddy. 8. and Alison. 4. ·

:·New Mason County school .
:site tested
for contamination
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new· p~sttrtas·ter

Soorta
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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) . Rescue crews frantically searched
through the rubble of homes for survi von today after a tornado ripped
· lhrough one town afleJ another just

Syracuse gets

.Call
. Mike B'ing Se:"ice Mgr.
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NEW POSTMASTER • Bonnie Brown wai awom In Wedndly lflemOQnll !WW poatmealer for the vllllgtt of SyfiCu... She
Ia iii!CJwri hen with her hulblnd, Denny, while Steve Eldridge,
· manager of poltll operetlona; lldmlnlatara the oath of office. · ·

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IMMUNIZATIONS GIVEN • The mobile health unit of Ohio Unl·
verelty College of Osteopathic Medicine vlallld ReediYIIIe and
PomerOy on Thufldly to provide childhood lmmunlzatlona to ·
qualifying children. Here, Tiffany Reltrnlre, 6, and Ivy Cc!ndl, 5,
prep11re for lhllr lmmunlutlon• during the unll'a atop at McDonlld'a. Alao piCtured lfl Jennifer Conde 1ncl Reg~n Shuler, and
John Coen of the OU/COM Community Health program, left.

Middleport Community Association endorses renewal levy
lance provided 10 froil older adults.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
She ~~aid that an emphasis of lhe
Sentlnei Nlwl Steff
program
is 10 keep older Meigs
The Middleport Cornmunily AssoCountians
in their homes by provid·
ciation endol'liCd renewal of a I mill.
ing
a.•sistance
wilh health anll home
five-year levy for Ihe Meigs Coun1y
Council ,on Aging at ils Tuesday chore programs. One in five seniors
meeting in Peoples Ban,k conference residing in Meigs County live in
poveny and 1wo oul or three who
mom. ·
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need
long-lerm care live in lhe com·
SuSIIII Oliver, director, spoke 10
the group on the scr¥ic:es to senior cit- munil}l and depend on help from
izens. provided with the levy funds family, friends, or neiahbors becauac ·
combined with other local contribu· of lhe limiled liCnior reiOUrces. it Will
lioDI and state and fcderol monies. . .noted.
Oliver aaid that for four cents a
She noted that in 19971evy funds
provided 20 percent of lhe monies day bwd on a home valued at
needed for lhe Council on Asing's $40,000, the Council can.conlinue 10
operation which Included lhe Senior provide euenlial services for seniors.
Center, providina one or more ser· Thai revenue, acconling to Oliver,
vices 10 2.280 older lllul1!, , 47.~ · provides lhe local mat~h required for
meals 10 homebound older adulls. attraclinJ and inaintalnins fedcml
aad 36.584 hjlll(l of in-~ome wis- and~~ fundii which totaled 68 per-:

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cent of Ihe 1997 re~cnue .
village lasl week and will be in place
· Al~o speaking atlhe meeting was until t-1iddleport alumni lime when
Tom Reed of lhe Gallia-Meigs Com- the orange and black flags will be
muni1y Action._He talked on lheoper- Oown. Red, while and blue flags will
ation and funclions of thai agency -be used duri ng the summer, it .was
and discussed possible projects in lhe reponed.
village with which il might assist.
The 6-Mile Yellow Flag Yard Sale
· Myron Duffield, president, repon- . to be held May I and 2 wa.~ disc11~scd
ed on mcmbenhip noting thatlhere again and soR)e clarification made as
are now 51 members, e~ceeding. the ; 10 panicipnnts.
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goal of SO.SCI by the group.
t
"The sale is a unifted yard llale
The "slreet repon" noted opening held jointly with lhe Pomeroy Merof 1he' Middleport Branch of Rio chants As!IOCiation," said Duffield,
Grande University on March ,27 and "and Includes bolh communilies."
thL srand openins of lhe Riverbend
He e~plained lhal it is open to all
Crafl and Antique Mall on April 4. cilizcns, mcrchanls and organiu·
The Association presented Mr. llld 'lions in both Middlepcnt ·, and
Mrs. Mike Gerlach. ownen, wilh an Po~y. that the small en1ry fee of
honorary membership in the organi· $4 coven the cost of advertising. a
ution.
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yellow flag on a pole, and a tip sheet
New sprins flags wen1 up in 1he explaining how 10 conlluct a yard sale
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for best resulls. lie also said that the
promotion leading up 10 lhe !lllle will
include a map 1o a.-.ist people in
locating sale locations.
To panicipate residenls may sign
up al the Middlepon Depanment
· store or the Ohio River Bear Cornpony in Middleport, or Chapman
Shoes or the Bulk Store in Pomeroy•
· For lhose h do 1
' bothered · ' t~ ho . 00 wa~ t? ~
ilem . c WI
~vmg a ya . sa e,
• an be "?nated to. t~ Midd!eport Co~m~mty Ass~tat1?n wh1ch
Will be stagmg a sale 10 ~lies Park.
Proceeds r~m ~hal ,sale Will go IOIQ
the As.~oclallon s treasury.
· Nex1 mectlng was set for May 5-at
R :~ a.m. at Peoples Bank.

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·commentary
-The ·Daily Sentinel

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pubill her

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G111tr1! M1n1ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

What ·they are say.ing
elsewhere around Ohio
By The Aaaoclated Pre"
Recent Ohio edhonals of s1a1ewodc and nalionai on1ercs1:
The D1ytoo DaUy News, April 6
President Clonton's criticism of lhc Wcsl's response 10 lhe horrendous
genocide in Rwanda on 1994 os more mcanongful and more useful than mosl
such acknowlodgments of error. He was. after all, in power at the lime.
It's a strange thing aboul genocide, !hough. h keeps happening. It keeps
goong uncheckod And we keep flagellating ourselves about it afterward, at
least lhe besl people do.
The Westos not commouong t~cse cnmcs agaonst humanuy and shouldn't
be judged too harshly But how to JUdge people os not the omportant issue . The
omportanlissue IS how to make "Never Agaon··- the post-World War II rai!ytng cry agaonst genocide - as close to reahty as possobie.
Mr. Clinton -because he os not sompiy siuing on JUdgment of others may be in the best position to lead the cause. He can foster the creation of an
international agency that os specofoca!iy dedocalcd to perccovong genocide on
its early stages. At least that way, nobody can say they didn't know.

.Tile ChUikothe Gazette, April 3
Some changes on Ohoo's court organoza\oon system mighl be on order, but
should be made carefully.
·
The goal must be to make the courts as acceSSible to the users as possible.
The Ohio Supreme Court has appoonted a task force to look at how the
court system is struciurcd and suggest changes.
·
One idea has already been shot down - merging area courts into district
courts. Such an odea m1ght be great in Cleveland, but on rural areas ol could
. put an unrcahstic burden on JUrors, witnesses, attorneys and others It could
also drive up costs for counucs that would have to transport people held in
jails to where the courts were.
' However, some other ideas being disllUssed do make sense. One would do
away with ma)'vrs' courts and create county courts to handle mosdemeanors.
1bal rnake5, good serse. Mayors are not lawyers and have plenty of other
• duties wothout havong to handle traffic t1ckets and such.
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; The Lima New1, Apr115
: After heanng the news that a little Rock judge dosmossed the Paula Jones
: ~~~:xual harassment case against him, President Clinton popped a cigar in his
moulh.and beat an African drum on a carefully staged Kodak moment.
A judge ruled that even of thcn-Gov. Chnton dropped hos drawers and
asked a lowly stale employee to "kiss it," ot doesn't meet the stnct Arkansas
standards for sexual harassment. _ .
Amencans should step back and examone what's really at stak~ here. The
' the pres1dent arc not that he has' an overly achvc
most serious charges against
libido,-the cute way 'the 'prcsodent's apologosls put ot. 'They arc lhat he uses
the machinery of government to gel h1s way with women. And then hos taxpayer-funded fixers and plumbers shut them up and make the cvodence dos·
aprcar.

Berry's Wor d

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'Pork' takes
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prec~dence

oevtRieS.

The plll, an-

live years for lnlospa~ StRly il Clll cll:led Mllth !7·
fil¥1 $30 billion to double !he budget fer 30 b)' llxcel
mcdicalo
c!Lit ough: tn, lu righl oow OmniOOs,ptllis
savin8lives doesn'l have the s5ne pl&lt;lity oquestioo to 902
as building roo:ls and dishing perle.
adults 'nauoowidc:
Whereas !he HOUSe vtXed 33710 IKlro ·"COOp.; is a.-JmS the highway biU befae .rponing for "''llly coosidering a
spring vacauon, breaking supposedly settleme.ot with
sa:ml bOOget caps in the poccss, reatdl ICbaa:o COIT1pll1ies
resead1 is caighl up in c:omp; ...,lld:lac- wild! could result on Kondracke .·•
co. budget and political maneuvas.
a paymcntof$65 bil- _ .
The Senarc btdget resoll.liOO ~ lion lO the f&lt;.deml gowmnen. If this
taq week provides fa an IIJlleSSOve II
money btwm:s available, wlich twO of
p:1re0t increase for the NWonallnstituleS Ill! following areas do you believe should
of Health next )Ita'- still !1m of !he IS receive dis additiooalliaxlin ?"
The plll showed th:t ~3 perolllt of
percent needed fcr=overfive )'13'5
-- but~ sa
woold have 10 respoodenls fava"OO eW:alion; 43.6 persavage ahl'r reaith
10 meet thai &lt;:ent, medocal research;· 36.5 pen:cnt,
goal.
Mec:tic;e; 32.6 pen:ern. child Cli'C; and
Money to find disease CIJ'CS lllso could 21.1 pen:enl. federal tax cuts.
come from new tobacco revenues. but SenMedical research was fava"OO OVtr all
ale Republican iealets want' to reserve
the an..- clri&lt;e; by males, by )iersoo; ages
lOOn for Ill! Moo1C31J' trus1 fimd, and 45-64, and tlo;c With incancs in Ill!
Hou.o;e GOP leaders want 10 usc lOOn b $15,000 to $25,&lt;XX&gt; and $40,&lt;XX&gt; to
laX Cuts.
$50,0C0 rnnges. It was the c!a;e Sll001'd
A new poll commissooned by a pm- choire of vi11llal!y every an..- popuialion
doubhng g,oup I'm mvoivcd woth -- group
NIHx2 -- shows that, next 10 cdocation,
EdUCilllon was Ill! top priority ror
medocal rescan.il is Ill! progmm the public women and most other demographic
most prefer.; to benefit from tobacco laX' groups cxcep1 thai mold care W8S Jlll'fcmxl

andConnicMack.R-Ra.,-arestnq!I'O'
pcnerts rl broad-gqe liscatle I
dL
'*-'-·-·~· .....
....,!'if ........
.,....,
"""'6''
.... ~, his been
~multiple limes b)' CIIIDCI', is a ctwn.
pion rl cbilling h whole NIH budget.
The~ twO Senatm leS)QISiblc b

~ filldinB ~ - MIVaitY

l..eaderTh:ntU..R-Miss.,andWhipDoll
N'oddes. R.OJda. - pesunably will be
ma;t ullel :sted in blocking funds f~ l'll:si·
din Ointm's ta-o tax fXiOOtics, wlich
'ill:ludc.clildc~uldcdl.....ms well as
rcsc:acll.
Despile the Commen:c Commi~~~:e
"*- ot's not at till cte. thai Congn:ss will
produa: a tolw:o liB this ye., given cootroWISies stmmding !dUty fllt*X.'Iion
for IObaa:o coqoanies and the 00111pQnies'
~lion 10 tax hikes.
The ~ fXIICIIliili liming SIUCC for
elqll'ding medical rcsean:h is lhe disl:rc·
lionay budget, IU it is ~ by a prcvi·
oos &amp;g~cemeiuo thalollCitiiSCS in one pmgnm have to be offset by cus in O!h:ni.
Senate Budget Chairman Pete
Dcrnenoci, R-NM, lllirollellalig II periungandcarmo~ci~luthencanceled ' cent increase for NIH fer foscal 1999, but
the acoon b)' assigning Scowe lealcss the Sens. Arlen Specter. R·Pa., IIIII Tom
jobofdcu:nniningwherencwlolm:orcv· Harkin, !).Iowa. chainnan and ranking
cnl,ICSwouldgo.
memberot'lhe~Ullu-liHS
Al~twOoflhefOII'ScnalasresponSjllx:ommiliOC. rcsp,x:tivciy, and also NIH
siblc lir waking on thc project - McCain champions, clwm they can spend the
.----~jjji;;;;;;----------,-------:---------~ money .only bY ~!Jialing &lt;~ luilth

I

r~~-•. 4

PI,U(!IIIIIS

l.asl Thur.day. Specter' o!Tcrcd 011
l111lC00mcnt to cut Ill! fcdcml J)Ugr.mos,
includong de(cn&lt;c and highways, t,y 0.4
percent to pl'Ovidc a $2 hill ion i1x:n:m;c -I'll'
15 percent - for NIH. k iililcd, 57 10 41.
ondicaing thai fur a oloajaity ol !Olalm,
some OOICI' prilority &lt;.uncs .n:ad of &lt;.'111ng

dtrnscs.

I conies-;, iWlusc my Wile sulfcrs fmm
Pwkinson'sdiscasc, I have ll&gt;highcrpnority than findmg :reliC f&lt;'ll'thald~. What
memlx:r.; oug!110 realm: os thai !hero 111:
lCns of mil~ons of pooplc too.:hod bY \m·
ousdiscascs 'Nflo' ddWik lOOn il'thcy ®
bled lhe onvcstmcnt on &lt;.'UICS - al lc.ast :&gt;&lt;
111111y vacrs as.Wii! ama;Ot; a new high-

way.
•

(Mllrtm Kondnoodte .Is eMalllve
editor rl Rol Cal, the llt\OSfJI4ki rl

CIIPio'Ha)

Blondes· still prefer gentle.men
By Ben Wattenberg .
·
Have we issued President Clinton a
moral pass?
In Clinton's gravity-defying job-approval ratings and public fa1iguc
wnh the Starr investigation, pessomists
(mostly conservatives) see a symbol
of a broader pubhc lapse onto moral
expediency. The public, they btood, is
excusing private voce in the name of
cothcr lechnocai competence or ideological vortuc. Whether from cconomoc seif·ontcrcsl or partosan loyalty, they
arc sticking with their man .. and
winkong at the rest as mere hedroom
farce .
But from the muluplcx comes a
diflerent message. In the surprosc
smash. "The Weddong Singer, .. Adam
Sandier !cam• that blondes sui! ptcler
gentlemen And l,hc hox ollicc collapse of "Primary Colors" suggests
that even in the age of Chnton, moral
cxpedocncy goes slraoght to video
An . irrcsostob!y wann-h•.artcd
romantic comedy (laced wuh sly
social satorc). "The We-dding Songer,"
starnng fanner Saturday Night Love
comoc Sandler and Drew Barrymore,
has come out or nowhere to gross
close to $75 moihon (ot cost just $23
mo!lion) E•cepting some Oscar-win·
ning late 1997 releases 1hat enjoyed an
early 1998 box-office victory lap, it is
thc boggest hot of the year so far and
one of New Line Cinema's topeamco;s
ever. It ha.~ boosted Sandla''s stock on
Ho!iywood and turned hos usual audo·
encc demographic onsidc-out: 25-and·

under women
are dragging
their boyfrie!lrls
to se&lt;; this one.
In this
romanttc tnangle, Robbie Hart
(Sandler) vocs
with
Glenn
Gulia (Mauhew
Glave) for the
Wattanberg ha~d or the
incandeScent
Julia (Barrymore). An ;orena rocker
manque who has scttlcll for life a.• a
suburban wedding songer, Robboc
lives on his married sostcr's basement.
Kond to children and old iadocs,
respectful of women, and iookong lor
lashng love, Ruhhie Is, all, the sam&lt;:, a
lechnica! and professional incompe·
tent. a loser. His self-sacrilicing
benevolence and vicarious joy on the
rumantoc ru!fii!ment of 01hcrs become
sclf-puy, resentment and rage when he
os left at the altar by his high·sch&lt;xol
sweetheart. "I JUSt can't sec niyseif
mamcd to a wcddong singer." hos
bnde·to-havc·hccn cxpiaons.
Julia is a banquet waitress engaged
tn Glenn, a smug JUnk-hand (''high·
risk , htgh-yocld," he corrects) trader
who dresses like Don Johnson and
dnvcs a scossor-doorcd ' road rocket.
He's a compelcnt, '80s-style Ma.&lt;ter of
the Universe. But he cheats on Julia
and appi-aoses women as hvestock.
. "That'stop Grade A chooce meat." he
says of on&lt;i.

We 1'001 for Robbie and Julia to end
up together. And not just because we
don't Wlllll the heroine to go through
life signing her checks. "Julia Gulia."
We root for them bceiii!C in our hcwt.~
we know that worldly success ,does
not trump personal decency Yes,
Julia's choice (love or money) IS an
age-old convention of the romantic
comedy genre. But the convcntoon'
endures, because the popular moral
sense n prc,suppusc~ endures. II Sl!r·
vivcd the Decade of Greed (il is no
accident that "The Wedding Singer"
IS set in the ' 80s) and, or the hrcakoul
success of Jhos moral talc is any indo· ·
cation. it sumvcs in the Big He's '90s.
At the same time, "Primary Col·
ors" is a commercial !lust. Despite an
avalanche nf free modia reaped frnno
the too-g&lt;lod-to-be·lrUC timmg nf its
rc!ea...:, i_l dropped ' 42 pen:ent at the
box office in its second w•ock.
Adapted from Joe Kleon 's roman a
clef ahotlllhe 1992 Clinton campaign
fnr tlic Democratic nnminati&lt;m. the
Mokc Nichols film ha.• becn pm1sed
for oL• finely shaded "moral reahsm."
Actually, it is ll!&lt;lmily cva.•ivc. hs
Clinton surrogate, Jack Stlllllon (John
Travolta), is an FOB's Clinton. His
vemal sins arc VICtint1css· He sleeps
with women, bin he docs not exploit
hos power and prestige to extract afli.
davits from them denying all. His pub-lie ideals arc implicitly ~nassailablc:
He wa.\ 11 McGovern delegate; he
can't he all had As a result, otos too
easy to forgive the sins in tcnns or the

ideals, and the "sophisticated" moral
connie! al the movie's core is more
feogncd than real. The moral stake&gt; are
small. But the public isn't buying
moral eKpcdicncy .. even in this safe,
low-ompact form .
And incodenl~!iy, is the public cutting Clinton some moral sla&lt;:k in
exchange for deft c.:onomic helms·
manshop'/ Yes, hos upprnva! numbers
arc up .. but "''arc lhosc or Newt Gin·
grich and the Republican Con~ress.
And so arc the numbers oflhosc saying the country is "on 1hc right trock."
Contcnlment is gcm:ml. and "''me of
thut contentment sticks to qinton.
Moreover. a.• Robert Samuelson ha.•
pointed out, barely a lifthofthe pubhc
govcs, Clinton )ll'omary credit for the
econnmoc hoom. They cannot be rutin·
na!i1.ing his private vice on terms of a
tc.:hnicai competence that they don't
concede on the lirst plw;c. More likely,
the puhiic mind is elsewhere •• on its
own alluirs. 111~ Clinllm's. With the
econumy gmd, people arc happily
cocooJIC(l on their nwn onocrncosm1111.
A liufe distracted maybe. but hardly
decadent.
We're ali right, Jack. Goa.•kAdam.
8m Wallenbel'l!ls a senlor ·ret.
low at the Amerkaa Enterprise
Institute and is the moderator rl
PBS's "lldnk Tank." Duld Wat1tn1oera, who wrote thll Week's tol·
umn, writes reaullll'ly ror The
Weeldy Slalldard and 11 a con·

triiJutlna edltorrorc-v.

Despite California, its premature
to ·measure coffin for affirmative action
.
.
qr·

;s,,.. a
··-NU.""-

/"How about continuing on to India, .
Cllina Australia etc. etc. etc. ?I"

h
•
t
•
0 day In . Is Ory
·By TIN! Aaaoclated Prell

Today is Thu~ay. April9, the 99th day of 1998. There arc 266 days left
in the year.
Today's Highlight in History.
On Apri19. 1865, Confederale Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered his army
to Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at Appomanox Court House 1,0 V~rgonoa .
On this date:
In 1682. the French explorer Robert La Salle reached the Missis,;ippo
River.
In 1HH. the first tax-supported public !ihrary was founded, in Pcterhorough. N.H.
•
In 1939. songer Marian Anderson performed a concert a1 the ·Loncoin
Memorial in Washonglon. D.C .. after she was denied use of Constitution Hail
by the Daul!lhlcrs of the American Rcvoluuon.
·
In 1940, Germany invaded Denr'!ark and Norway.
In 1942, American and Philippine defenders on Bataan capitulated to
: Japanc111: forces; the surrender was followed by lhe notorious Bataan Death
. Man:h that claimed rie~rly 10,000 lives.
. In 1947, a series of tornadoes 10 Texas. Oklahoma and Kansas claimed
• I~ lives.
.
! In 1959, NASA announced the selection of America's first seven aslro: II&amp;UIJ: Scott Calpenler. Gordon Cooper. John Glenn, Gus Grissom, Wally
I khirra. Alan Shepard'and Donald Slayton.
.
•
; In 1963, BritiJ}I statesman W1nston Churchill was made an honorary U.S.
r.itizen.

•

.

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
in
I 997 to
Gannett News Service
. : ,00 1.
WASHINGTON - The story that . Californoa's
found ots way onto scores of ncw~pa- retreat
from
pers last week was not good news for affironative
supporters of affirmatovc action. · action was a
·Freshmen enrollment of black and n~ajor victory
Hospanoc students at the University fo,
those
of California's premier campusc,;- oJlllOsed
to
UCLA and Berkeley - will drop usong
such
prccopotously this fall, school offi· efrorts
to
coals reported .
•
achieve diversity
The reaKon: California's ban on in public ·higher education,' employ- affirmative action. . - ·
ment and contrioctong. As woth many
. The proh1hi1oon against usc of things that begin on €alifornia, the
affonnalivc acuon progrqms to bring assl\ull on affirmative action was
ra.:ia! diversity to the state's under· seen by some a,, the heginning of a
graduate higher education onslitu- national trend.
tions takes effect with thos year's
But the news that dido'{ get much
freshman class
media attention ia.•t week suggests
or the 8,000 students who have otherwi!C.
been offered a place in Berkeley 's
According to a report issued hy
oncoming cta5 s, only 255 arc black lhc Southern Regional Council, an
and 852 Hospanoc That's a sharp Atlanta·ba.o;cd civil right~ think tank,
decline from last fall when S98 support seems to be' waning ~~eross
blacks and 1,411 -Hispanics were the nation for anti-affirmative action
offered slots in that school's fresh· , initiatives. Woth the economy hoom·
man class.
ing and unemployment low, affonna·
The ligures for UCLA are almost tive action opponents are having a
as bad.
tough time generating widespread
Two hundred and eiahty black suppon for their campaigoj to end the
students have been offered admis· use of such prosmms. I
sion lo this year's freshman class, a
While what happened in Califor·
43 percent drop from I!197. orrers to nia has fec:eived mosl the national
!-fispanics fell 33 percent, from I,497 media's attention, problems encoun-

or

•

lllrcd .by affirmative action foes in
other states largely have go111: unrc·
portcd.. ll is .this failure, says Amy
Wood, the report's author, that has
fueled. "the false impression" that
many states arc on lhe verge of eliminating their affirmative action prl}-grams.
Bills to do so have been intraduced in only 13 legislatures in the
past two yclll'li, Wood says- and not
one ha.• become law.
A resolution that .would have
advanced a ~onslilutional amend·
mcnt banning affirmative action
failed in Arizona late last month
whCn one-third of the state Senate's
IKRepublicans joined its 12 Dcmoc·
rats in voting against it.
Three weeks earlier, a bill that
would have outlawed affirmative
action went down in defeat. in the
Georgia Legislature. .
This iM quite a revers~! of fortunes
since Caliliornians voted in Novem·
ber 1996 lO adopt PrapoKition 209,
the ballot initiative that ended the
state's usc of affirmative action prl}--1
grams.
Coincidentally, the Southern
Regional Council's report 'was
released on the eve of the 30th
anniversary of the asunination of
Martin Lutber King, Jr. The civil
rigHts leljder's often-slated hope lhal

America might one day hC a color·
blind six:jety ha.\ become a raiiY)ng
cry for many affirmative action
opponents, • who wrongly conclude
King wu.~ opposed to such race·
based programs.
'
The opP&lt;111itc ia true.
;
The United ~Me.• "l"~Sl not oldy
r.di0111ly ncildjuNt its attitude tuwllrd
the Negro in the compelling present,
hut must incorrorate on oL• planning
som~ compensatory consodcratlon
lor the handicaps he .has inherited
from the past," King wrote in hos
1965 hook, "Why We Can't Wait:"'
Just 11,' a(finnativc action opi)CI·
nents have tried to twist Kin¥'s
words tn their advantage, die¥ have
sought to moslcad the puh!ic ah6ut
the ompact of affirmative action.
While their campaign of lies and dos·
lortion.• workod in Cahfomoa, il 6os
faltered In other slates.
~
Even so, Wood says there arc
some difficult day• ahead f(.- artirmativc action su(lportcr.. '[otl:l's ;in
, Wu.•hingtnn state .~ill decide lllfcr thiK year whether to abolish affirma·
. tivc action, and a federal hill to ban it
thiu wa.• Jll!f on hold late la.•t year' is
,far from dead.
Qut despite looming challenges.
tbe news frotn the ·amnnativc actilon
haulcfickl is a lot beucr than tf1c
media lip led us !0 believe. , '1 I

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Death Notice·

.'

Friday, AprlllO ·
·Accu Weather• forecul for

over disease

b)' adults wiflless hll SIS,(XX) income
IIIII finished scanl behind cdoiQ!Iion
IIIIOng bllc:b. ahead cit m d1 Mcdiale
finished 1ft mty anD1J dihs OYCr 65.
Thx cuts lillishcd a distn lalt arrong all
........
... ~ 10 tirdess IDgaining by Sen.
.1oM M1.&lt;'.U1, R-Ariz., the Sena1c Canmcroc, Scieooe IIIII 1111¥tatior Canmiw:e la!t wdek ~ cu a tOOoo.oo liD
lhal c:omains SlS billion aye. fer medical
......,.,d~•-•ioa ' rll8pc:ata11 fa fit. ,
cal 1999 -lout &lt;*lly on narrowly tobaccoielalcd projctls.
The Canmen:e biU 'aao1es a special
IOOea:o-SIIdcs II@CI1CY a1 NIH and directs
fuming pirnarily 10 "the epidemiology of
"*-:co l1'ill," ''risk factas for ta-o use
b)' d!ikftn, rand similar P'lJilCIS - specif·
icaDy ruling cu ~ cellulll' a moleculll'
oesea1d1 andnNobiological rescath.ca-e
ND-IllW.
The oomminee ~ 1111 arneoldrnenl spaosm:d b)' Sen. Byron Dagan,!).
N.D.. 10 lioodeulhe lllCIISIIC 10 biCicase
OVCIIIIl NIH funding aN! J*1icu111ty ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~- ~==========-::===========~;C:;;Iin::t::o:n7.in:-;;K:en:;t:uc::ik;.:y;-;t~o~ba:;c~c;;;o__;.._
OHIO Weatller
•

HOJowess aro vee $271 billion over

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 1192·2157

.

.,...., . . .; 1111

~ Mottau Kallhcllt

'I.JtiiDfuflttf in 1948

.

thurlclay, prll9, 1998

•

conditions and

IToledo I 52" I

Clarence Ash Jr.. 70, Dayton, died Tuesday, April 7, 1998, atlhe Dayton
Hospice Center.
Born Feb. 2, 1928, in Scipio Township, son of the late ~!are nee "Friday"
Sr. and Delea Ash. he was retired from the Dayton School System.
He is survived by his wife, Kathryn Wyatl Ash; two sisters, Kathleen and
Wanda; two brolhers, Desmont and R~y: and a mother-in-law, Beryl Carsey

PA .
lo

Today's
ll"vestock report
II

Wy~~veside services will be held Froday, 1.:30 p.m. at Well's Cemetery:

INO

•
•lco:umbusls2•

P.dgeville, with lhe Rev, Joe Sayre oftieiating. Tabias Funeral Home of Beaver
Creek is in cha~ge of arrangements.

r

'For Candidate Holliste;

I

...' .
W.VA

ow--~-~:::l;,~pt~·~=t;_;~::!l:,

·

CARROLLTON, Ky. (AP) - .President Clinton, Save our tobacco"
With fre~h lipes drawn in tbe bailie -lined the road to the Kentuckoana
toregulatctobacco,Pre~identCiinton Tobacco Warehouse and Carroll
was confron(ing tod~ the very peo· County Hogh School where Clinton
pie who rely on cogarelle makers for was making the pitch for tough antitheir livelihood. "Save our toliacco," smoking. legislation.
wa.\ their greeting.
Tobacco growers, public health
Handfuls of protesters with pro· e~perts and communoly leaders gath·
fe,sionally printed signs - ''Don't ered in the squat, gray warehouse lD
tax us out of our Jobs" and " Welcome meet with Clinton

.Clarence Ash Jr.

MtCH:

•

country to sen regulatory plan

.;;

lio,day's weather forecast

;
.
' 'The Asaoelated Preas
; :Southeastern Ohio
.: Tonight...Occasionai light rain or
drizzle. Lows in the lower 40s. West
, .. wind 10 to IS mph . Chance of precopitation 90 percent.
..
Friday .. .Mosliy cloudy. A chance
, of light rain or drozzie through early
1
, at'lemoon. ·Cooler with highs in the
lower 50s. Chance of precipitation 50
percent.
.. Extended rorecast ·
Fnday night ... Partiai clearing.
·

Lows in the lower and mid 30s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Highs 55
to 60.
.
. Sunday... Moslly sunny on .the
morning ...Then partly ~ioudy with a
chance of showers dunng the noght.
Momi~g !o~s in the lower and mid
30s. H1ghs on the upper 60s. .
Monday ... Most!y 'Cloudy wolh a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Morning lows 45 to 50.
Highs from the upper 60s to the lower 70s.

GaiUa's Bob ·evans
not the_Bob Evans • •
J"tosting ·fund-·ra~ser
What's in a name '! Apparently
quite a bit, when 111&lt;: name is Bob
Evans; and, the issu~ in questoon is
the hotly contested race for the
Republican nomination for the U.S.
Congress in Ohio's Sixth District.
A "Bob Evans" is co-hosting a
fund-raiser for Lt. Gov. Nancy Hoi·
lister in Athens on April IS. Tlrat Bob
Evans, however. is not the Bob
Evans of Bob !;vans Farms fame.
The ossue arose wnh the issulmce
of formal invitations 10 the $7S per
person fund-raiser by Gov. George
Voonovich and a number or co-hosts,
including "Bob Evans." •
On Wednesday. candidate Frank
Cremeans of GaliiJ!Oiis issued a pres~
re!ea.~e expressong his "surpnse" to
see the name tied to a luncheon oo

·

. Skies to start cleari.ng Friday be~~f::.hitsh~p~~~~:~.c~-Hollister

By 'rhe Associated .Preaa
Some waterlogged ~reas of Ohio
, are likely to get more min tonight, the
. National Weather Service said.
That follows heavy thunderstorms
, Wednesday night and early today that
· dumped as much as I.S inches of rain
,on some pans of the slate. Minor
tlooding wa.• reported in some low·
Iying areas of western Ohio.
An approaching high pressure
·system should bring drier air into the
stale on Friday, f!&gt;recaslers saod.
Afternoon highs of 45·55 are
expected under partly sunny skies.
The record-high tempernture for
this date at lhe Columbus weather
. station was 82 degrees in 1945 while
1 , the record low w~ 18 in 1972. Sun·
, . .set l?nigh~ wi_ll be at 8:03 p.m. and
, sunnse Fnday at 7:02a.m.
Across the nation
. Thunderstorms rumbled over the
, .. storm-ravaged Southea~l early today
, and pushed toward tbe mid·Atiantic
,coast. Rain and some mounlaon llur·
I ries were hanging over the West.
f
The Southea.•t storms w~re trJck·
, . ing eastward after a night or deadly
twisters thai ripped through town
. after small town in central Alabama,
.. killing at iea.'l I8 people. most of
. , them in Jel'ferson County. west of
, Birmingham. Scores of people were
I

'
'"J~~.,;nants
· ·

d

administration is advertising this
of ihe storms could · fund-raiser by utilizing the well·
hang over eastern portions of the known name of 'Bob Evans'," Cre·
Southeast. but the most severe storms means said. "I feel that Sixth Dostrict
h d voters should be aware that the Bob
were expected to move overt e mo - Evans most of ihem know is not the
Atlantic.
•
Drier air was forecast to push into person in question." ·
the Tennessee Valley.' bul raon and
Marieua banker Robert Evans os
isolated thunderstorms were possible one of.the seven indtviduals co-host·
across Pennsylvania, the Ohio Valley ing the Athens ~vent.
and the lower Great Lakes. A chilly
"Thos" a dotlerent person than the
rain was.forecast over southern New Bob Evans known throughou! south·
England.
. em Ohio as the rounder ~r Bob Ev1111s
Fair,.dr,y 'and unseasonably warm Farms and Restaurant. Cremeans
conditionJ should prevail across the added.
.
"That Bob Evans. IS a .stro~g sup. moSIIy s~nny Plains and into the low·
er Mi~sissippi Va!ley.
porter ~f my ca~pao~n. and a longPatchy rqin and scauered moun· ume fn~nd or mme.
.
tain snow showers were forecast
Holhster responded wuh her own
across much of the West. ahead of statement. sayong she shared "Frank's
another , storm system t)lat ~ould frustration .WI~ keeping ail the ~ob
spread raon across Oregon. southern Evans s1ra1~ht 10 southern Ohoo. .
WashingtonandnorthemCahfomia.
Wednesday's tornadoes reduced
.bou&lt;es to rubble. In Jefferson County: wesn:ofBirmingham.Aia .. dozens
of homes were destroyed Of heavily
damaged .. . The same system was
blamed for a tornado that left a teen·
ager dead in northern Mississoppi.
The system roare~ into Georgia early today. damaging buildings antl cars
in suburban Atlanta, where a truck
was overturned

...

..Mei.gs announcement$ ·
' ':Euler egg hunt set
An Ea.•ter egg hunt will be held
•.
· , SalurdAy at I p.m. on the grounds of
' tile Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
. Sunrise services will be held Sunday
.. at 6:30 a.m. at the church.
'

.. Sunrlse service set
The Zion Church of Christ locat,
.: · ed on·Route 143 will hold sunri&lt;e &lt;er., 'voces at7 a.m. They will be followed
.; .by a breakfa.,t, Sunday s~hool at9:3Cl
, a.m. and worship serv1ce at 10:30

.

'
" :·p.nl.

.

' ...Good Friday ~~ervke plannell
.Acommunity Good'Fnday &lt;ervoce
Y(ill be held at the Middleport Unot·
• , ed Methodost Church al 7 p.m. The

Rev. David •OeWou of the uiurel Cliff
Free Methpdost Churcb woll be the
speaker. There will be special music
by a combined choir.
Special meeting set
A specia) board meeting of the
Eastern Loco! School Distrocl will be
held Monday,at Ea.•tem High School
Library for the purpose of awarding
bids on the School Net worong •
kindergarten ~!)rough 12.
Board to m~1
.
The Racone Board of Pubhc
Affairs will m~pt Tu~sday, 7 p.m. at
the municipal building .

~

"There cert'nonly are a lot of them,"
Hoiiisler saod.
"I am so glad for the support I,
have from the prominent Bob Evans
of Marietta, who is a friend and fone
Repubhcan," Hollister' said, in her
tongUe·in·cheek response
She added that h_er campaign also
round ol difficult to keep straight all
of the dolferenl "Bob Joneses, Bill
Smiths and Tom Wolhamses" supporting her.
"Although I don 'I enjoy the sup·
port of the namesake of that fine
chain of family restaurants, he can
rest assured that I sun eat there," she
said.
"In fact •. my hardworking cam·
paogn staff especoa!ly enjoys dinong
there because the .restauraAls are
open late and several healthy light
menu selections are available," Hoi·
lister added. "The service is always
excellent."
For his part. Bob Evans (of the
farm and restaurants) issued a slatenienl affirming his support for Cre·
means.
"I realize thai I'm a well-known
ma'n in southern Oh 10 because or my
Bob Evan• Restaurants and Bob
· Evans Farms, so I wam 10 set the
record straoght," he saod.
"Whether the use of the name
'B~;&gt;b Evans' on an advertisement for .
Hollister's fundraiser was delibemte
or coincidental. I want 10 make il
clear that I am nol that person."
"I have been a friend of Fronk
Cremeans for many. many years," he
added. "I strongly supported hiS lirst
campaogns for Congo:ess, and am supporting him now"

(USPS liJ-HIIl

..
..,.

Pul'lli~hel.l ever~ aflcrnoo11. M\IRdliY tlm1111h
Friday, Ill C~1urt St, Ponwmy, Oh1fl, b) the

Ohin Vallty PublilhlnJ C\tmpAny/(ianncu C't1
Pmn~roy,

Oh", 4!i7f,Q, Ph 992-l:Ub Sccon1l

cl:111111 prlltaM,e paMJal Pmnttf))l. Ohio
M~btn The AMOC"talcd Prell. and ahc Ohw

, •

N~:wtpapcr AIIOC ialton

' ' POSTMASTER: Send 1u.klren c:onectlt1flllo
Ttle Dally Scnuntl, Ill ('(lurt St . p,,mcmv.
0hiU4~7h9

SUISCRimON R4TES
87 Ca1rllr or MONt R•te
OMWI!~t .................. " S21XI
Ont Month • . .... , ..... , . . ~ SK 711
Ont Year, ... ......., ...... .. ......... SI041MI

. SINGU: CO~V PRICE
Oillly . ..

"

~!i Ctn"

' . . .... .......... ... .

s 11bKnhcr. nne Onlrln~J to pAy the camer may
remit Ill Jdvanct direct 10 11M: o~nly Senlincl

(In a three, six or ll month buls Crtdh will be
f;ivc::n earner c..-h week

No subscription by maH•permUted ie trus
where t1omt c1rrter terv~ 61 ayailllbk.
PIJI)Iider r(8__f!tl the riJhlto ldjutl rMft M·

lea 1M suhlc:nptlon perkld 5ut»c:riplf011 rate
diiiiJCI ,.,, be lmptementtd tty dtanJI"' tf\c
chlratlaa of I he liUblttipdOIII.
MAII.IUISCIUmONS
1-MtlpC-1
IJ Wrofks ... .... .... ... ............ .... .. ..$21 lll
2h W.e•• .... .......... .... .... .. ..........$3l.K2

!2 _ .. ................................... ......1111!.!0
--MtlpCoool1

. . 2ft1:1....._.,
............. . ................... ··:· .S~-:
w..u ...................................... ,.. s~ .

ll ....................... ,................... 11119.72

Units or the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reGarded eoght
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding inciud~d:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:34 ·a.m.• Hili Street. Pomeroy.
H~rold Wii!; Holzer Medical Center;
I2:23 p.m .. Qverbrook Nursong
Center. Mjddleporl. Ma~one Phiisod.
Veterans Memorial Hpspital. Mid·
dleport squad assi~ted;
5:33 p.ni., Laurel Street, Pomeroy,
Stephen Davcr. VMH:
· ·
!!:36 p.m.. Meigs County Sheriffs
Office. Wolliam Casto, VMH ,
Pomeroy squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORT
1:4.5 p.m., volunteer lire department and'squad to General Hartinger
Parkway. Matt Smith. VMH. and Ray
· Smith, HMC. Central Dispatch squ~
assisted.
' POMEROY
2:15p.m.. Holzer Meigs Clinic,
William Musser, VMH:
6: 13 p.m., Pomeroy Pike. Robert
S. Harris. VMH, C~!Jtral Dispatch
squad assisted.
·
SYRACUSE
o
· · . S:38 p.m., VFD to College Road,
garage fire al Chad Smerick resi·
dence.
•

children in the traoier. where the yard
PRIN(_:f;ljON, W.Va. (AP)
Residents of the quiet neighborhood was linered woth old furniture. rusty
where a 6-week-old boy was gnaw,ed brpken·down veh1cles, old toys and
on by a rat say they ~ope some good trash.
Pohce have said the inside of the
can come out of 1he gruesome inci·
irailer
was filthy. Rats had eaten
dent.
through
a kitchen wail and nibbled
"It's a shame il lakes a louie baby
10 shake up the whole neighborhood. . the tops off baby boule nipples.
Daycare owner Kathy Peak said
I' hope this will get people to clean
she
also hopes the incident will
up." sm~ neighbor John Smuh.
cause
authorities to force a clean up
The baby's father, Frank Taylor
ran to S)llith's home on Saturday to and take care of the rat problem.
Peak keeps a close eye on the tod·
cui! 911 when he found the baby
dlers
. who play on her front yard
bleeding in his crib.
· Police say the rats are.drawn to the because she's fearful the rats will
otherwise pleasant n.:oghborhood by attack the children who play 100
•
a few filthy homes and animals in the yards from the Taylors· trailer.
"This os why I'm moving. I don't
area.
Smith said he and others have want thai to happen to them," Peak
been tryong to gel messy neighbol'!i to said Tuesday, holding an infapt on her
clean up for years and it appears the arms as goggling choldren rode on
rat auack has caused some people 10 plastic cars and played lag in her yard
.graced wtth blooming tulips and
act.
Reiatoves spent Wednesday clean- budding bushes.
Resodents say rats frequently
ing up around the whote doubi~-wfde
trailer where Timothy Alien Taylor crawl ·through yards. eal through
wa.' attacked last weekend .., he slept. walls. chew through metal and wood
Taylor and wofe Liz Taylor, were doors and wobble across the gravel
charged .woth felony child neglect and road. coming dangerously close to the
dozen or so cho!dren who live nearfreed on $3.000 bond apiece.
The Taylors ii•ed with two other by.
Neighbors say Timothy Allen Tay·
lor's parents should not be blamed for
the anack. even though the famoly
lived in a run-down tmiier with no
Am Ele Power ....................... 49~
wdter, electricity or telephone.
Akzo ....................................100'/o
AmrTecb ............................... 46't.
Ashland Oil .......................,.52~•
1

AT&amp;T ....................................65 Y•
Bank0ne ..............................61\
BOb EYinl u••••••••••• oooooooooooooo~21 Y4

Borg-Warner .......................64"1.
Broughton .............................16't•
Champion ............................. 13\
Charm Shpa .............. :.:: .......4"r..
City Holdlng ..........................44:;
Federal Mogul.......................55\

Gannett ...............,.................73'4
Qoodyelr ...................;..........70~
Km,r1 ................................;.• 17..,.

Krogi.r ..................................47'!.

Linda End .............................3n.

Limited ..........................~.......28'.4

Oak Hill Flnl ............................ 28
ova .-;. .......................................41
OM Valley ...........................37'Peopl" ...............................:... 48

Prem Flhl ............................... 20~
Rockwell ..............................55"!.

RDIShiii ...............................58"Setrt ...........................:......... 15'.1

Hospital news

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
· . Wedne!Hiay, April 8
·Clara Call, Myrtle Jordan, Thoma.~
Blanton, Iva Jones, Cambel Dongess,
Juanita Gilmore, EameS! Ward. Evelyn Young. Carol Manley. Paul Lau·
dermi it, Karen R:~gland George
Woomer. Geana Moore, Clyde Ham·
mons, Sandra Milch and Francis
Johnson.
' Births April 8
Mr. and Mrs. Jerrniab· Johnson.
son, Gallipolis; Mr. arid Mrs. Michael
King. daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles LiiChlield. son, Hen·
derson, W. Va., and Mr. and 'Mrs.
James O'Neill, daughter, Wellston,

.

Shoney's .................................5'-

Stlr Bank ................................&amp;2

Wendy!a ................................22'Wosrthlngton ........................18~

..

to host variety show

The Rutland Civic Center will be
the site of a vanety show "Everybody
Sing" on April25, beginnong at 7:30
p.m.
•
The show, emceed by Tom Doo·
ley. will feature singing and dance
acts.
Among those performing arc: Jim
Soulsby,• "Unforgenable"; David
Stiftler and Rachel Pndemore,
"Beauty and the Beast"; Juhe Rime.
"When You Wish Upon a Star": B.J.
Smith. "SoPiewhere Oul There",
Rachel Pridemore, "I Will Always
Love You"; Melanie Dudding, "How

Do I Live"; Jennifer Auh. "My Heafl
Will GoOn".
Choral· and solo religoous selec'lions woli onciude· "When We Ali Get
Together With the Lord", "Just Tell
Them I'm On My Way". "I Saw the
Light", "The Old Rugged Cross
Made the Difference", "Ten Thousand Angels Croed", and "His Truth
. is Marching On."
··
Other acts woli onclude the Bog
Bend Cioggers, Swongong Senoors
and Midnight Cloggers.
Advance tickets cost SS for adults
and $2 for c'ho !dren.
Tickels arc available at Farmers
Bank, Peoples Bank in Rutland, Joe's
Country Markel, Fruths and the Middleport ·Department Store. Tockets
will be avaolable at !he door for $6 for
adulls and $3, children.

•••••••••••••••
BIG

[8 MovieS
•

r

pi

forM von T

"''~~

1-740-753-3400
'VI:Pt

"''"~ c.nnDM•

Sjiting Clearance
IN ORDER TO BRING CUSTOMERS THE
QUALITY THEY DESERVE
WE WILL BE CARRYING A NEW LINE OF 10
AND 14 KARAT GOLD CHAINS WITH A

LIFETIME GUARANTEE
10 MAKE ROOM FOR THIS NEW LINE
WE ARE OFFERING 50% OFF

•

OUR CURRENT STOCK OF
KARAT GOLD CHAINS

SAVE SO% ON OTHER SELEaED MERCH~DJSE

Quality Since.J959

&amp;ot'

·~ewelers

212 E. Main • Pomeroy,
Ohio

(740) 992·3785

-·-·-

.Stoek reporta are the 10:30

Also, Register For Our Easter Basket
~~...... Giv. .way- No Purchase Ntceseary ..,.-.'!fl

a.m. quot• provided by Advell
of GIIHpolla.
.
I

'

Rutl~nd

Ne"•g
· hbors fear g"•ant rats·,.
•
infant in SeriOUS COnditiOn

Meigs· EMS
'rThe
----------:..,
Daily Sentinel
Iog s 8.caII s ·l'i'""""""""=s""""to""""";ck=""""s~

I

Summary ot Wednesday's auc·
lions al Gallipolis and MI. Vernon:
Hogs:
t
Market hog.~ ; ~3.00-39.00; light
sows 22.00-26.60; heavy sows 27.0029.85.
Feeder pogs; 25 .00;45.00 cwt.
Ail boars 23.00 and down .
Cattle
S!aug~ter steers; choice 61 ()().
65.00; selecl 52.00-61.00.
Slaughter heifers; chpice 60.00.
62.50; select 53.00-60.00.
I.
Feeder calli~ ·
Yearlings steers 5S.00-85.00;
heifers 52.00· 77.00'.
Calves steers 70.00- I 03.00.
heifers 60.00-89.00
Cows:
;
Commercial and utolity 38.0048.00; canter and culler 33.00 and
down.
Ali bulls: 38.00-46.25.
Sheep &amp; iambs: choice wools
83 .00-8!!.50; choice clops 75.0081 .SO; feeper iambs 86 00 and down ;
aged sheep 45.00 and down

COLUMBUS {AP) - lndoana·
Ohio dorecl hog proces at selected
buying points Thursday as provided
by the U.S. Department of Agricui·
lure Markel News:
Barrows and golts: moillly 50 cents
higher; demand and tnovemenl mod·
erate.
U.S I -2, 230-260 lbs country
points 33.50.34.50, few 35.00·~5.50,
plants 34.50-36.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 28.50·
33.00; 210-230 ibs. 25.50-28 SO
Sows: near steady, over 500 lbs.
steady to 1.00 lower.
U.S. 1-3 300-400 · 1bs. 21.0024 00; 400-500 lbs. 24 00-2!\.00;
500·600 lbs. 26.00-28.00, few over
600 lbs. 29.00-30.00.
Boars: over 300 lbs. 15.00-17.00.
under 300 !bs. 18.00·21.00.
Estimated receipts: 34.000.
Prices from Produl:ers Livestock
Association
.
Thursday's trends :
Hogs 1.00 higher; sows steady;
cattle steady to SO cents higher.

�·spOrts

The Daily Sentinel
·

, ·Padres notch 6-3
.
victory·over Reds

·

Page4
Thursday, Aprll9, 1998

Cleveland wins suspended ga~e

SAN DIEGO (AP) - .Andy Ash·
by downplayed the significance of
his first . car:eer victory against the
Cincinnati Reds.
"It's nice to finally win against
them, but it wasn 'I something that I
was thinking about out there," the
San Diego right-hander said after the
Padres' 6-3 victory over the Reds on
Wednesday night.
"I just want to help the team have
a chance to v;in."
Ashby (1-1 ), who won for the first

Athletics defeat
Indians 3-1 to.give
Tribe .first 1998 loss.

Joyner added a solo homer. his sec·
ond of the year. to make it 4·0 in the
fourth.
"I have to keep swinging and
good things wi.ll happen," Vaughn
said. "I haven 't really done anything
except getting some at-bats after '·
missing some in spring training. I just
have to keep going. This is a··
marathon. not a sprint."
Comirig into the game. Vaughn
was 2-for-16 on the season. He also
missed starts Saturday and Sunday
rime in nine career decisions against because of a rib cage injury before
Cincinnati, didn't allow' a hit until a getting a game-winning sacrifice fly
leadoff single by Bret Boone in the · in Tuesday's 3-2 )Yin over the Reds
sixth inning. The right-hander in 10 innings.
allowed five hits and three runs in 6
"I try not to get to get too high
2/3 innings, striking out seven and when things are going good or too
walking two.
low when they're not." Vaughn said.
"I didn't really think about the no· "The baseball gods have a way of
hitter:· Ashby said. "I was just try· bringing you down to earth."
ing to keep my same focus that I had
White (0· 1) drew the star!" for the
for live innings. But then I started Reds as a late replacel)lenl for left·
getting behind a little bit and I got hander Steve Cooke. who was
some pitches up."
scratched because of a sore elbow. In
The victory put the Pad~J (6·2) his last start. Cooke limited the
within one victory of ma'tcht~ their Padres to one run over six innings in
1·2 record to open the 19% season. · a 5-1 victory Apri I 2.
when they won the NL West. Their
White allowed four runs and nine
best start wa' 10·2 in 1984 when they hits in five innings. Usu;11ly a reliev·
reached the World Series.
er. White had worked qn ly I 2/J
Greg Vaughn. who had three hits, innings in his two previpus outings
staked the P..ldres to a 3·0 lead in the this senson.
.
first inning. when he connected for
"I was as surprised anyone."
OOPS I- The Cincinnati Reda' Reggie Sanders muffs a fly ball hit
his first homer of the season, a two· White said. "You just ~ave to do
by
San Diego's Andy Ashby ln1he foutih Inning ol Wednesday night's
run shot off Gabe W~ite. Wally
(See REDS on Page 5)
National League game In San Diego, where the Padres won 5-3. (AP)

By ROB GLOSTER
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Phys·
ically, it felt ·like un avernge day of
work at the ballpark for Oakland Ath·
letics catcher A.J. Hinch. Mentally. it
felt like he had just worked a double
shift. ·
Kenny Rogers pilched ·sev.en
strong innings and Hinch singled
home the go-ahead run in the seventh
as the A's defeated Cleveland J.J on
Wednesday. sending the Indians to
their first 'loss this season.
The Oakland victory came barely
three hours after the Indians com·
pleted a 6-5 win in a suspended game
that was delayed hours by rain on
Monday night and then halted
because o( the AL curfew.
.
It took the Indians and A's a tolal
of just 2 hours, 52 minutes to. finish
off the two games. less time than it
takes most teams to play one game.
The ninth inning of the suspend-·
ed game took 20 minutes to com·
plete. After a 29-minute brenk. the
teams took 2 hours, 3~ minutes lo
play the scheduled ganie.
"It was kind of strange. I wish we
could have finished it the other
night." H.inch said. "I felt like !
cau~ht a doubleheader today. even
though it was just one inning."
Indians· manager Mike Hargrove
wits happy to win the suspended
game and end I he first road trip of the
season with a 6·1 record. but was
run si ngie. Sayre hit un . RBI single three singles, Slacy Lyons two sin· upset at the rules tliat forced the first
a~d after a. Regona Manuel sacnl}ce. gles. Kim Sayre. Ashli Davis. lhle, game to be suspended until Wednesday.
K1m !hie song led home the last of six Holman and Warnc:r all singles.
"I thought.that was a Iittle ridicuruns for a 8·3 SHS lead.
Alisha ~ortin suffered the Joss in
lous
to plby eight innings. after sitting
. Southern:plated a single run in the giving up nine runs on nine hits, •
around
all night. and nollet us go out
top of the seventh.
walking seven and fanning nine.
and
play
the las! one,,'" he said.
. A Haugh stngle led Wellston to
Southern is to play :rrimble
Rogers 0·0), obtained in a trade
two runs in I he sixlh, bul Wellston did · ,tonight weather permitting.
from
the Jllew York Yankees last
not striously lhreaten in the seventh . Inninall!llb
November.
got his first win for Oak·
Kim Sayre picked up the win to Southern
200·600·1 =9·9·3 land by allowing one run and four
push her personal record to I).. I, while Wellston
003-002·0=5·5 ·3
hits - only one after the third
walking o~e •. (anning nine, hitting
Batteries
inning. The left-bander struck out
one and gmng up live hits. The
Southern: Sayre '(WP) and Davis
five
and walked four.
Soulhern defense made three errors~
Wellston: Man in (LP) and Mahaf.
Mike Mohler pitched a perfecl
Southern.hitters were senior Cyn· fey
eighth
for Oakland and Bill Taylor
thia Caldwell with a 3·5 night on
pilfhed the ninth for his firS! save.

Southern softballers defeat Wellston ·9-5 ·
W~LFE

By SCOTt
Sentinel Corres~ndsht
A s1x-run fourth mnmg lifted lhe
Southern Tornado spftball~rs to a 95 Tn-Valley Conference wm over the
~ellston Golden Rockets Wednesday
at Wellston . ·
.
South~rn. (8·1) scored tw~ runs m
the first onnmg when Cynthm .Cald·
well singled and stole second then
Stacy Lyons dehvered an RBI smgle.
Lyons then adv.anced on a passed ball
and two wtld ptlches to score the next
run. Two walks followed, but a 6·3
ground out ende~ th~ .inning.
The next two mmngs were rather
thin for Southern as only one batter

reached in seven anempt&gt;. that being
when Tnsh Warner reuthed on an
error to lead ofT the second. As the
Sout~ern bats cooled. the Wellston
bats 1gnued. .
.
. · H1ggm led off the third for Well·
ston ( 1·3) w1th a tnple. then scored
":hen HulTman reached on an error.
Fmk reached on an error and Haugh
hit a two-run single fof' a 3·2 Well·
s1on lead.
Southern came back i~ a fury in
tbe fourth. Ashh DavJS. K1m lhle and
Warner all walked then Trish Holman
hit a two-run single to regain the lead
for Southern 4·3. Caldwell hu a two·

Scoreboard
,

acl 1.01. 2:20p.m.
CINCINNATI (Tom~o 1:01 :11 Sarl Di.;go
.:. ll..tms_stun 1..01. ~ : 0.~ p.m.
1-lorld:.. (Mcatlow ~ U· ll ul Phil:w.lclplw1 (Grc~ n
0.0). 7 :~· Jl . lll.
.
Momrcal (V:a.qucz 0-1) :u ~ilwauktl! (Mert.:tllcs 0-0). 7:0.'i p.m. ·
·
Sl. Louis (M.:rdi~r 1·0) at Colm:.Ju r nklll'f'ISO II
Gil
1-0). K :O~ p.m.
Arizona (Suppnn 0-1 I a1 l.ns Angd.:.s (V:lllk:l ()..
l
II. 10: 0~ p.m.
Houilon C B~rgft\llll 0-1l al ~n Fr!JrH:J\1.:0 (Gard·
.l' : -.., 1·0), IO:l'-'i p.m.

Baseball

AL standings
E1Rrrn Dh·Wun
}1: L
.......... " ........ 6
I

ldm
O.!llirnora: .......

fa.

. K~J

T:1rnru IJa~ . . . ... .. .. .... -t
N.:w Ynrk ....................... .1

.l
4

Turomo .............. ...................\

4

.571
4241
Al11

~

J7~

I

. K~1

.. ............ :\

4

42Y

. . .............\

4

2

~

..f 21J
2Mb

, Rmtnn .......

. ..... .1

Crntr•l
Kuns:~~

. ...... ...

0cUIIIt .•, ..... :.......... .......

Wn11m Dl"l"len

Anal~&lt;:lm . ...

........... ~
T~1iiL• .................... ------- -~- -'
Sc:11flc .................................. .\
Oukl;~nU ..... .' ................... ,.. 2

l'··

,1 .l&lt;IO

.. ...........\

Cily ...

Minnl!'"ula ..

.. 6

'
.\

4

. 62~

.1

500

I

~

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Middle ort

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.E.VERY·DAY!
Any

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Exp.
From tritinel t10 or 115 C-41 prooeu rolls.
See One Of Our Clerks For.Detells Of The Fuji
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Try. Us Out: For All
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Ntw Ynt'k lB. M1ami II)
Utuh VB, San A!Monio 88

LA. Uken IIJ. VDrK:ouvct 102

Cubs (Tmcft. ,.

TODIPt'spmes
· lndianaar Atlanln, 7:.l0 p,m.
Chit:aJO ar CLEVELAND. 7:}() p.m
~:wrji :.r D:tlllll. IUD p.m

. Friday's gamos

''
•

Valerie Karr ·wa.~ back in the lineup
after she injured her back this past
weekend.
Eastern will play Waterford loday.
Meigs 111ill travel to NelsonvilleYork.
lgpig 1Jdab

Eastern ·
006-900..(}: I 5-8-2
Meigs
030.()1().(}.:4·5·4
Eastern: Evans (WP) and Bailey
Meigs: Hysell (LP). Tangy Laudermilt (3) and Laudermilt, Amber
Vi~ing

(3)

DELIVERS TO PLATE -East·
arn pitcher Stephanie Evens
delivers a pitch to the plate dur·
lng Weclnaaday'a TVC game at
Malga High School against the
host Marauders, who loll 15-4.
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

DON'A'E
POMEROY, OHIO

1998 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Low miles, loaded!

Loaded- VB!

23'

8

21,180

8

1997 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO
. V6, auto., air loaded!

··I

.

1996 CHEVY CORSICA
1996 OLDS
Auto.,a air, cass
CUTWS SUPREME
V6, auto., air, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, cass. ·

11,990'• .

8

'7,110

$16 9 per mo. No Money Down

:: Wellston 'takes eight
j innings to notch 9-8
~ · victory over Southern

Reds lose•.•

: ·Indians•••

-

Ddroil at WathiOAIOO, 7 p.m.

Orlando 3f Boston, 7 p.m.

By DAVE· HARRIS
When play resumed. J.T.
Humphreys singled and Ryan Rams·
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs took advantage of a six-run · hurg reached on an Eastern error.
third inning to defeat Eastern 10·3 in Brad Davenjlort followed 'with a sin·
Tri· Valley Conference baseball gle. Nathan Hallbill walk~ and Pat
action Wednesday at Meigs High Martin reaced on a fielders choice to
School.
plate the linal runs of the· inning und
Meigs spotted the visiting Eagles give Meigs a 7-2 lead.
The Marauders plated three more
a 2·1 lead after the first inning. Josh
Will singled with one out and stole runs in the fourth inning on singles by
second and third. Steve Durst Stew:Jrt. ,Ramsburg and Davenport
walked, both runners moved up on sandwiched around two walks to give
stolen bases.Will scored on a ground Meigs a I0· 2 advantage:
ou1 and Dursl on a passed ball .
Eastern closed out .the scoring in
The Marauders cut the lead in half the fifth inning on singles by Erron
·•'! in the bottom of the inning on an Aldridoe
and Josh Harris. Aldridge'
e
Eastern error. u stolen base and a dou- then came into score on a fielders
ble ofT the bat of Rusty Stewart. ·
choice to make it 10·3 final score. ·
Eastern loaded the bases in the
Brad Davenport pick~d up the win,
third. on . three straight walks. in relief of.Waylon McKinney. The
Maruuder coach Scot Gheen brought two combined to give up three hits.
• in Brad Davenport with the bases · walk si~ and strike out six. Stewart
loaded and nob~y out. Davenport hit a double and singles, Ramsburg
retired the first out by striking out I he and Davenport added a pair of singles
number four batter. Brad then got the each. Roush added his home run.
next 'batter to grouod to third nod Bentley. Dugan an!l Humphreys
Roush wen! to the plate for the force . added singles.
out. The next batter grounded out to
Eric Smilh was the slarter and los· ·
· end the threat.
er for Eastern: The sophomore gave
Bentley and Tony Dugan both got up 10 hits. walked four and struck out
the big third inning Slarte!l for Meigs three. Will !lad a pair of singles for
with singles. Collin Roush then hit ·. Easlern and Aldridge added a single.
one down tHe right field line. Eastern
!:;astern (0·5) will play at Water·
rightlielder Robert Harris slipped Qh ford today. ~eigs (4·2 over.tll and 3·
the wet grass while going for the ball 2 in the TVC) will tmvel to Nel· ·
The Eastern Eagles held on to
and·fell down as 1he ball rolled past son ville· York.
claim a 13· 10 inter division Tri· Val·
Harris. Harris injured his leg ond was .Inning ll!l.ib
· ley Conference softball win over the
unable to give chase to the ball and ....
1
200-0
10-0=3·3·4
Vinton County Vikings completing
""' ern .
Roush circled the bases for a three Meigs
I ()6. JOIJ.i&lt;= I 0· j 0·0 the suspepded game postponed ear·
run. inside the park home run. ·
Batteries
·
lier because of darkness.
' The game was held up for sever·
Eastern: Eric Smith and Josh
Stephanie Evans picked up the
al minutes as coaches from both Broderick
win in relief of Valerie Karr. Karr
schools and Meigs athletic trainer
Meigs: Waylon McKinney. Brad gave up five runs on one hit; six
Jason Hickey attended to Harris. He Davenport (3) and Tony Dugan. walks, and had two strikeouts in two
was transported to the hospital by David Shuler (5) .
innings of work. Evan~ went five to
Pomeroy EMS, where it was report·
WP-Davenport
allow just three hils, walk six. and
ed that he suffered il possible frac·
LP·Smith
strike out six.
tured le~:.
Ce~il and Seitz combined in the
loss.
E;aslern hitttrs were led by Kim
Mayle. who wenl3·4with three sin·
gles. three run~ scored. and an RBI..
Juli Hayman was 2·4 with two singles and 3 RBis, while Stephanie
Evans went 2-5 with two runs scored
and one RBI. and Val Kurr had two
RBis on :I sacrifice fly and another
•
sacrilice.
Angi Wolfe had u double.
went
3·4
rin
the
night
·with
his
second
• By SCOTT WOLFE
double. a one-oul shot. then You~g and thusatie Hollon a double and
: Sentinel Correspondent
Wellston had its biggest chal· reached on u fielder's choice. allow· · two RBis.
Mayle and Hayman each had four
lenge of the year; going into extra ing Southern to tie the game at 7·7 .
stolen
bases.
Wellston threatened in the seventh
.innings before putting a,way the feisty
The big inn'ing for Eastern was a
, Southern baseball team 9·8 Wednes· but did not score after leuving the
six-run
third when Angi Wolfe led ofT
bases
loaded.
•· day nigh! at Wellston.
with
a
double.
Kelli Bailey walked.
Southern
wen!
up
R
·
7
in
the
eighth
: '
Morgan Stevens walked to ·lead
Evans
singled.
and Suzy Milhoan
; otl'the eighth for Wellston (8·0). as Stevens came on in relief of
• Chad Kuhn reached on u fielder's Ewing. Davis reached on :m error, walked. Hollon had a two-RBI dou·
• choice, Chad Bowman walked and advanced on a ground out. advanced ble. Mayle reached on an error. and
Miltt Phillips singled to give the on a lly ball. then came home on a Hayman had a two-run single. At that
time Eastern took a 9, I lend.
wild pitch to give SHS the lead.
Rockets the win .
VC came back with four in · the
Mof!!an Stevens walked to lead
Somhern (4·5) took a 2·0 lead in
third.
when Evans came in to relieve
off
the
eighth
for
Wellston.
Kuhn
the second orr an Adam Cumings sin· ·
Knrr.
The
score stood 9-5.
reached
on
a
fielder's
choice.
Chad
gle. a fielder's choice on Billy Young
At
the
time the game was sus·
0: and singles· to Josh Davis ·and Benji Bowman wulked and Matt Phillips
singled to give the Rockets the win. pended. Easte(ll was leading 12·5,
Manuel.
Young had three Southern RBis then came 10 complete the gume and .
Wellston came back with lhree ·on
the win.
three errors 'and a Mutt Phillips sin· on the night.
Pork Dill suffered the untimely Inning l!!llll:i
gle to make the score 3·2.
216·130·0= 13·9·6
SHS came back with two more in loss in 113 inning of work in relief of Eastern
'·
Vinton
County
014-010·4=10-4-13
a
beautiful
Corey
Williams
effort.
•· the third to go ahead 4·3 when Matt
. Batteries
Dill singled. Cumings doubled him Williams scattered six hits, funned
Eastern:
Karr. Evans (WP) and
home and Cumings came home on u li\'e and walked nine.
·
Stevens got the win in relief'of Bailey. .
ground out.
, '·
Vinton
County:
Cecil; 'Seitz, and
'•
Ewing.
wlio
g~ve
up
eight
hits,
Southeril went up 6· 3 on a tW()o
Orlowski
funned
seven
and
walked
two.
run fifth led by Michael Ash and Bil·
•
Southern hosts Trimble tonight.
ly Young singles.
.
An eiTOr to lead the sixth sei 11 bad lnnin1101ab .
022.()20· 11 =8·8·5
(Coniinued from .Page 4)
tone for Southern as two walks. u hit Southern
030·004·02=9·8·3
batter. and singles by Nathan' Fer· Wellston
what ~ou can ·do and give your club
Batteries
wick. Cliud Kuhn and Brent Ewing
as many innings as you can.:·
Souther~: Williams (LP), Dill and
brought in four runs that gave Well·
Trevor HotTman, who escaped a
Cumings
·
ston a 7-6 leu d.
bases-loaded jam in the eighth, got
Wellston : Ewing, Stevens (WP)' the final four outs for his second save. •
Southern threatened in the seventh
by pulling two on. Adam Cuming~ and Bowman
Jon Nunnally followed Boone's
'
single in the·sixlh with an RBI dou·
(Continued from Pa11e 41 ·~
ble. In the seventh. the Reds closed
within
4-3 when Willie Greene deliv· to ily to center with two on a~d two · 1972.
: out. The game resumed at the start of
The game resumed under a partly ered a run-scoring double and caine
, the ninth inning.
,cloudy sky, a stark contrast to the home on a single by Eddie
The ·suspended game ended at miserable weather that tormented Taubensee.
. 12:35 p.m. PDT Wednesday•.exactly the teams oo Monday and forc~d ruin:
Sterling Hitchcpck came in to
'41 112 hoursafter its 5eheduled start· delays of 3 112 hours before n was strike out pinc.h hitter Dmitri ·Young
, ing time.of7:0S p.m. MDnd~y. Jt WI\S suspended afler eight innings.
to end the RedA' rally.
the first game in Oakland suspended
·
• because of curfew since Aug. 10•

•

OPEN EASTER 10 A.M. ·1 P.M.

Milwaukee 107. Tmm1o 100
Phi~*lphia 109. Ctwrtone 101

Meigs diamond·men·
pouncj Eastern 10-3

Softball·
Eagles get
13-10 win·
over VC

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo· Center

Nutlon.l Hut'kt)' l.njlur
NHL: N:mk.\1 Fnmlri llruwtl 011.'~ wesiJct1t ul
ltk.'Lim rl!liillllllli.
UUI·l=Aill SI\UKI:."i: 1-"il'l'J l_.1rry (Juum, 1ca111
j!rc~ulc:tll :uMI~;hicl' L:AC~'ul iv~· ullkcr. N:uncd 'J'imulll y RiJ!lls l.' hi,•r ~acrouli\le ort'lroer o111 d H. 11 11 .
lkrtuvich inlcritn ~cncml n~.:utllJ!.t'f nl ;lllmi nl!'lr;tliura
·
('HI('I\GO IU.ACKHAWKS : K t!·:.~ s iJ! Itcll I&gt; .
M~mi ltuy.:r :mJ (.' Tmld Whill: tu llt liumr j)u li ~ HI
the IHI.
.
. MONTMEI\1. ('ANADIENS : S~u1 ( ' Erlt'
Hutnlc ~~~ ).'rctk,,-i~ tun of lilt' AHI_.

YOU'RE OUTI :_ Eaatern pitcher Eric Smith (20) laye 't he leather
. on the Meigs Marauders' J.T. Humphreya (far right) at the plate as the
: umpire preparet to make the call during Weclneac:lay'a TVC cont11t
at Meigs High School, where the Marauders won 1G-3. Humphreys
tried to score on a wild pitch. (Sentlnel .photo by Dava Harris)

a

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l.u~ A u~:d,·s
San J u~c
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................ ,.... , .4~ 2111 Ill I

Frldoy '• K•me
:11

Our Line Up:

S,.cramenlo llf Otnv~r. 9 p.m
Ponlfnd a1l.A. CliJIJIC"I, IO:.lO 11m,
Housron a1 GuiUen State. 10:)() p m.

1\tloola (Millwood 0.01 al Pill ........ (l.ldi&lt;r ().

0).

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ll

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• ·UI;Ih ,... , .................... ~H If!
y-S;m Allltllll\1 ...... , ......... .'il 2~
y-Minncsulu..................
...40 .lf,

NL standings

Milwoiu~ ........................... ;..6

-~ IM
~2 C!

. JO 47

I'"'U01 himnre (l)rahck

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Mmncfte.C:I fMurJ!:m C)-.0) al K:mJ:L'I City (MiliiCY
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Wmhingtun .............. ~(J
N,V. lflanlk:rs ................... 2tl

.\· llciWII . .

1\lhmlic lli•isHII'I
,- .MIIIInl
N~·w Yurk .
N1.1w 1ehe)'
Orhmllu

l!: L I eLL Gf liA

l- N~w J~r scy ...

DAYTON. Ohio (APl- Dayton
· Chaminade-Julienne's · Tamika
Williams has picked up another play·
er of the year award.
Williams. a (}.foot· I senior who ·
averaged 18.8 points. 11.6 rebounds
d live assists a game. was named
e Gatorade Circle of Champions
ational High School Player of the
ear on Wednesday.
.

Transactions

Divi~ion

l:tnlraiiJiwi~lon

Iwll

!10~

Friday's

Aduntl'

Iwll

w .............. ~ .................. ~. TPt"'

F:ASTERN CONFERENCF.

ISt:lc I-OJ :n \ hiCug11 Whill! Si'A (llalll-

Muntn:al

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:.. - lhlla~

.

K:~lduMJI'C (K~y 0-(J) :II Kalt..~OI S

)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NBA standings

Today'• R•m•s

.

NHL standings

(Moore

0-1). 7:0. p.m.
Alluntu (M:1l1Ju,. 0· 1I :11 Phil;uJCi rhin !Sd1illin!l
'1·0). 7_:0~ 1'-111
Flnri~ll IHI!rn:andt:l J-1) at Piu~burgh !SilvJt 0·
1I. 7:05 Jl.lll .
N.Y. M e l ~ (Mikkl U·U) :11 Milwookec (Jur.kn I·
0), 7 :0~ p.m.
( ' INCINN/\'n {W~·a dM!rll l -UI :u Ctrhlr&gt;lllo !Kil~
1 - I J.IJ :O~p . m.
,
Hnu~lun ll~cynold1 1·0 ) ill LJI S Angclc5 (R

Tonight's games

Hockey

..

Gatorade
honors Dayton
C-J's Williams

N.Y. Islanders iU Bo~lon. 7:.\0 p.m.
•Tnmnto al Carolina. 7:ID p.m.
PiHiburah Ul OtiLIWlt, 7:JO r:m.
Philallelphia :11 Floritl:1, 7:.\0 Jtnl.
Phflcnil alllclrml. 7:_10 p.n1
Ou~u~u :It S1 . Lmi.-o. 7:.\0p.m.
\l;uM;m.lv..:r :tl Cul~:1ry , IJ p.m.
Alt:ltk!im Ill Sa11 Jmil.', 10:.\0 p.m.
blnumtun '" Lns AnJ!.l'll'., , IO:.lll 1'-lll

l .A. Clif'PO'! nl Utah, 9 p.m.
Phoenik -.1 L.A. Laktrs. IO:JO p.m.
Houslnn ill Sacramen1n. IO:JO p.m.

Friday '• pmes

Di vl~lon

CI.EVEI.ANIL.... ..
01ic:.~u

·''

Atlnnln :n Chnrlonc. H p.m.
Miami :11 Torunln. ~ f1 m.
Philatlclphia al M1nnesllla, Hp.m
Sl!illllt tU San Antonio, 8:JO p.m.

"When you hold a lineup like that
toone run. that's all you can ask for,"
Rogers said. ''You can't overpower
them. you have to move the ball
· around and change speed~."
Hargrove said Rogers, who
entered the game with just ,a 4·7
record and a 6.40 career ERA agpinst
Cleveland while pitching for Texas
and the Yankees. seemed like a dif.
fere'nt pitcher.
"I don't know if I've ever seen
him pitch like that before. the way he
pitched !oday,'' Hargrove said. " He
never gave in to any of our hitters."
Cleveland st:trter Dave Burba (I ·
I). who was obtained m a trade from
Cincinnati last week, gave up two
runs and liv.e hits in seven innings.
"If I can go out and give up two
runs a start, I'm going to win a lot of
games with this club," he said. "I
wenl out there and pitched and kept
our team in the game. I think that's
whal they 're asking of me. They're
not uskin ~ me to pitch nine scoreless
.-.
1nntngs.
In the completion o~ the ·suspend·
. ed game. Mike Jackson wrapped up
the viclory by getting Scott Spiezio
(See INDIANS on Page 5) .

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Easte~ took advantage of two big
innings to defeat Meigs IS-4 in TVC
soflball action Wednesday evening at
Meigs High School.
Meigs jumped out to a 3·0 lead in
the second inning. Stephanie Wigal·
singled. Abby Harris walked. and two
straight Eastern errors scored the
Meigs runs.
Meigs got the first IYf!l outs in the
lop of the third inning, before
Chasatie Hollon walked. At this point
the rains came and afler a delay of
several minutes play resumed. Meigs
pitcher Amy Hysell had problems
getting loose after the ·delay an&lt;l
wnlked the next three bailers. Kelly
Bailey then singled and and a Meigs
error and another vtJik gave Eastern
a 6·3 lead.
· The Eagles pi~ed up where they
left off in the fourth inning plating
nine runs to put the game away. Kim.
Mayle and Hollon both had two sin·
gles in the inning, a double by
Stephanie Evans, a single by Kelly
Bailey. three Meigs errors and four
walks gave Eastern·a 15·3 advantage.
Meigs closed out the scoring in
the fifth inning on a walk to Amber
Vining. a fielder's·choice and a dou ble by Tangy Lau~ermill 10 make it
a 154 contest and close out the scor·
ing.
Stephanie Evans picked up the
win. striking out five, walking two
and giving up. live hits .. Mayle,·Hol·
ion and Bailey had a pair of singles
each to lead Eustern, Juli Hayman
and Evans added doubles for the
Eastern hits.
Amy Hysell took the loss for
Meigs. Tangy Laudermilt came on in
the third inning and finished up. The
two combined to strike out eight,
walk 12 and sC'aller eight hits. Wigal
had a pair of singles to lead Meigs.
Kelly Gilkey. Vining and Laudermilt
added doubles.
Meigs played without the services
of two starters in ,Brooke Williams
and Casey Sanford . Williams injured
her back and Sanford was out of town
due to a funeral. Eastern standout

•

94 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V6 1auto., air, PW, PL, tilt, cruise ... ,................... 18,300 ·
95 CHEVY CAPRICE VB, auto., air, tilt: cruise, PW, PL ....................................... 113,500
96 ·CHm CAVALIER Z·24 Auto., air, cass., tilt, cruise .....................·............. 110,650
96 cam LUMINA Z·34 Auto., Bir, stereo, till, cruise ............................... ,....... 19,800
96 DODGE D·150.PICKUP V8, auto., 'air, cass., tilt, cruise ...........................~ 117,500
97 CHEVY S·IO PICKUP Ext Cab, V6, 5spe~d, air, 17,000 miies .................. 113,995
96·CHEVY.BLAZER V6, 4x4, air, auto., tilt, cruise ............................................... 118,750
96 CHEVY C1500 PICKUP Ext. cab, auto., air, PW, tilt, cruise ...................... 118,500
95 CHEVY S·l 0PICKUP vs. air, $tereo, tilt, cruise, 4x4 ...,....:........................:110;900
95 CHEVY K2500 PICKUP 3/4ton, va,·auto., air, liH, cruise:........................ 117,500
95 CHEVY Kl500 PICKUP 4x4, PS, PB, air, 35,000 miles ............................115,600
95 CHE'- K1500 PICKUP VB, auto., air, stereo, tilt, crui~e ....:..................... :22,500
98 CHEVY 5·10 PICKUP V6, Ext. cab, auto, CD player, tilt, cru1se ................. 17,900
97 FORD EXPLORER 4x4, vs, auto, air, tilt, cruise....................................:....... 1

�•
•

P., 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_Thursday, April 9, 1998

Thuraclay, Aprll9, 1998

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~ .

HEY .BOYS AND GIRLS, ENTER THE
.1998
EASTER COLORING CONTEST AND
.
HAVE A LOTS FUN AND EXCITEMENT.
YOU MAY WIN UP TO $15- AND
IT'S SO EASY TO ENTER.
.
.

HOLIDAY COWRING . ONfEST

.

..

CONTEST.RULES

.
LOTS ·
OF·

•

FIRST PRIZE •••••••• s15.00
SECOND PRIZE ••••• s1 0.00
THIRD PRIZE •••••••·• ss-~00 .

.

FUNI

1. Just color one or more of the drawings on these pages, fill in the blimks and t*e
·your entry to the sponsoring store before·5 p:m., April lOth.
2. Entries will bejudged in two different categories: ages 4-8 and 9-17.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

WIN
CASH

PRIDSI

EASY
TO

ENTEII

Ir~----------------~-~------~~
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BROGAN WARNEfiiNSURANCE
POMEROY. OHIO

--

-~--r

-~--··-

•

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�•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
992-2196

N011UNC.l RUNS •
UKEAIEERE"

MUFFLER SHOP

608Pinecrest0rive

c

.

Mujjler &amp; Tail P.ipe

Gallipolis

AcroSs from Gillie Auto Sales on old Ale. 35 West

4515

""'oo lEPOR1'

Starting at $79.95

New SummerHoursMon.-Fri. a..s; Sat. s-3

0UniTHIRo

•

Wife ·who is only·happy having affairs needs to seek pleasure else. where

PHONEH2·m•

t

106North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

n

L-(6-1-4)_«_&amp;--24_1_2_or~l-oi-IF-roo__1_~_oo_·_59-4--1-11-J~~~~~G~u=a=ffi~n-te:oo:-~::N:ic:.e::::::::::::ij:~:::~:i:9A:::'::::::::~:::::::::gg2•2B2S

Ann
Landers

CIC

1W1 , L.11 AIIICI¢l TII!ICS
•Syndinle 1M Cre1lun
S)'"dinlc.

· THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT
BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
COMING UP: THE BUSCH GRAND
NATIONAL DIVISION
GALAXY FOODS 300
WHERE: Hickory
(N.C.) Motor
Speedway
WHEN : Saturday,

All--

• -

~prr l

8 p.m. • Frkily • TNN

Dick Trickle

I - O N , Clelar FOOdo 300 •
2 p.m. • Slturday • CBS

IAUM LUMBER

• 'lbWalo ~"""of

.... -

Shepherd

1 p.m. • &amp;l1dly • TNN

mph,

St. Rt. 248 Cheater
985 3301

Tho

lUSCH

mUCK

1. D. Eatn!wdt Jr.. 1.0011.
2. ElllcCISMS!w, N1.
3. MiU MclAugtilin, 83.
" · MMt Kanltth, w
5. R.-.cly LaJoie, 902.
• . ~ JOntt, 1838.
7' -*" Otwrl, 820.

t. Jatlo. Spr~. 3-40.
2. Ron HotrGy, 32{:
3. Gnlg Blfhl. 31~.
&lt;4 . Jl~ Saul•. 311 .
5. Bob KneloWikl. 288.

WINSTON CUP
1 . Rulty~ 1,0311.
2. -'-my Mllytllld, 1,012.
3. T$'1')' Llbon11, 1,001

4. M.t Mlftln.ll711.

www.IOI'O.com
OJ 1187
Toro

t993.

OTHER FORMER WINNERS: No

POINTS STAHDIIGS

,.,... YGI.llllll H.........

· Chevrdtet, 90 .990

Nov. 6,

RACE RECORD: Johnny Rumley,
Oldsmobile, 66.156 mph, Nov. 7, 1993.

i

TOHO

EVENT QUALIFY·
INQ RECORD :
Bobby Labonte,

5. Jtl1 Goldc:tl. ll38.
e.'Bil Ellloft, ezr.
7. """' JFwlt, t20.
I . JMI a.wton, l75.
II. Dlle flfntwdl. 810.
10. Jol'lr'rTt Binion. 843.

• . Hwold

s..r. 800.

active driver has won here more than
once. Among those with Hickory vlcto·

rles are Johnny Benson, Ricky Craven,
Steve Grl11om, Date Jarrett, Bobby
Labonte. Dennio Setzer. Mo111on Shop·
herd, Jimmy Spe;ncer and David Green.
NOTABLE: Pontlacs have won 1e

· 6. Rick Clldl. 27\J.
1. Ron BwftKI, 2 ~7 .
8. Rick Crlwford. 2!18 .

lnslJI,lll'C

c..JEFF
WARNER

a4(1

'!I

--....
==
...........
,_7_....
.._..

-1111-1471

-

fiR •• 1 •

..,,

WINeTON CUP SERIES .
Mark Ma'tln tied Jetl Gordon
with his second Winston Cup
v6clory of the season. outlasting
teammate Chad Uttle to take
tho TelCas 500 in front of nearty
200,000 fano.
A winner of a Busch Grand'
National event at the Fort Worth
track In t997, Martin took the
lead after hia final pit !lop on
the 303&lt;d of 334 laps.
Clo&lt;don ond Eamhllldt were

among 10 drivers inVOlved in
eu&amp;CH GRAND

Coca·Cota 300 at TelCas Motor

NA~

teams in dnia raciflll, road ~~einc,
Buach Grand National, Winston
Cup ond Craftsman Truck Series. ·
The l'aiOfll for Roush\ racing
1 ate JICk and his team's
P"
taJenu. their del;re 10 win and lwd

CRAFTSMAN mUCK SERIES
Rick Crawford led the linal
31 laps and held on series

and dedication. The same
raeons hold true for any of the
other multiple tam """""· These .
some ottri1Nia-'"' tho pmequisilcs
for IUCCesS in any worthwhile

-Muhiplicity

b "' ..,...... of
It does bump tho level of
""'"''I'ition up. couple of no&lt;i:hes.
The same Nla lhat alktw muhilllml . . the same rules dill pre""'" the little lillY~ pia&lt;:e ......
the foondations ofNASCAR. Any·
body wiKi con quolify o lepl cor

Complex .

Youth was again served as
Dale Earnhardt Jt. passed Joe
Nemecllek with sii!1Jtly morv
than a lap to go to grab the

~U«CU.

Sprague managed to take
the po~nt lead b)' 14 over Ron
Homaday.

...
..

6. Jeff Burton C8l

1. lbrk Mortin (&amp;j
Hard to outsmart
2.Jei!Qordon (11
Moving Into place
3. Ruaty Wobce (21
StMI oheed in points
4. Dole ...rrott (31

Summerfield s
Restaurant

'•

Could use some luck
7. Jeremy Moyfield (7)
Any week now
8. Johnny Bonlon (8)
Five straight top 1OS
9. Dale &amp;mhardl (8)
Fading again
10. Bobby Labonle (10).

Should lla\ljJ won

II. Terry l:oiJora 141
Waiting for-a win

Backing up a b~

Chester
985-3857

•
•
~

&lt;

..
••

011 THE SCHEDUlE
t11111 Winner Potl
J. Ooldon
K. ~
Mlrtln
J, Gordon
J. Gordon
J. Gonton
Rlldcl
R. WIIII8C1

Ul•l :'\ IC U 1:
U\\

lrllan

J. Gcwdon

12:30-6:30

.

.,. ......
.

..

111 Court St.
Pomeroy
992-2155

..

·

.

-Elmlwdl-"""
Cop-·"*"·

Dolo
of llilri)'
-~COII1itt1011yllglil0t
ltlo CCII ldlllot• el Motor
Spoochoy.
oo rnucli
llllh m11io nc1t l'aroolly In
bld .,_,. Mid Olllarlu.
'Diilo(Eouledl)t..-

on--.

- . g - - .. tliil-

J,.....n

HMniton
MMtin

An&lt;htll
J . &amp;rton

Skll'll'llf
Sctwldlr

Jarr.n

~

lt¥1'1

c:on,

----out tiMn II day. You
\ol1dlr ..... co.dtlui .."

NAICNI 1'1111 - - .

Tho-

hloloiry ol No\ICAR

Thanks to lhe 'explol1s of
drivers like Ned Jarrett, ·
Junior Johnson and Bobby
Isaac, Hickory Motor

•

Speedway Is among the
most historic ot all
NAS9AA venues. The tiny
· trac:k hosted Winston Cup
(then Grand Nationaij races
for meny years and Is host-

SIIH£ .
www.lab.luta.ano

See us for Your Stihl"
· Power Tools &amp;

~· that need to be COl'·
roctod. but
of ltlo -

on.

tiMnwaooomucli - tl1at tllioro _. 10 llilri)' tlpod" " - · h ~'1.
running around ft 01 ttvvqoe1M lf)led. lllot'l not

e--.1Ut.-.-lle
to got.

n! .. tlleOihnliad
race mil1l' points 11 they could. But ·
.one •• 101 ....... goi1g to

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

.•

EliOtt
J . Gordoo
B. UCont•
T. Llt:o'll•

FEUD Of THE Will
·Rlchlrd Chlldrea n. Texas Motor Speldway
Tho cor....,.,of -.tina IIIII ,.._ "llll, tiMn..,

The Daily
Sentinel.

..

Andftnl
Ntrroechtfl.

Mll1i'1

Rudel .

.

.

' ... -

besl.
Teom- ontho-~
the ITI&lt;k hu

WMkly ranki'IO$.~ NASCAA This week writer Mom• Dunon. Last
week's ranking is In J)¥80theses.

•

ing it1 41st Bu~&lt;:h G1and
National race this Saturday.
,Tommy Houston and Jack
lng'am each have won
eight times on the .363of-a-mlle track. ·

Accessories

ByMontallu1ton
NASCAR Tlis Week
Richard Petty is the g"'at·
est figure in tho his1ory of

stock car racing.
Winner of 200 Winston
, Cup races, the most of any
driver by a margin of 95,
Petty was the first drivll'1o
.give NASCAA nalionwide

exposure.
Toqay Petty is a suecess-

stat1s, 200 wins, 127 poles,
507 top-five finisheS, carMr

eaminga of $7,755,409.

HOW DID THE Pi II YS

STARr RACING? •n...,.
fike we alwayo had a faat car
around. Back when I was a
boy, 10 or 11 yea,. old, rigllt
after World 'War II, Daddy

decided to try H. Him ond
' Julie buiH 1h,.. en. I
""*"ber two of the en
tlte't hod - . modified

(L.eellnd his brothlr Julie .
hlld a car theY raced on 1he
highways. I'm not trying to
rationalize lhat waa right, but

Dodge ond • Plymouth .
ooupo with a ~-eight
engine. The first IICIIthllr
cars ran 1-2-hnd they

lost money.'

HOW DO YOU THIIK
YOUR PRERNT RACE
TEAM 18 DOINO?•"Fine.
There's a kind of camalldorte there that :;cu don'
always fiftd. Jolin ~Q
and Robbie (l..aomlo) have 1ft

ful car owner, managing a
Pontiac'still emblazoned w~h tlterl waan ~ IJitYWitera """'
the famous No. 43. Bobby
aa much traHic lhtn as now,
Hamilton won races in each
especially on ruraiiOIIds.
of the past two sea5ons.
The racing waa Clone in the · unusually alrong ability to
John Andnrttl is Petty's
· dead of nlgl)t when hardly'
communicate.•
present driver.
anyone _was out ond about,
WHY DID YOU NOT HIRE
AGE: 60
so the only people they
JOHN AHDAETTI AFTER
WIFE: lynda
1
CHILDREN: Kyle, Sharon

HE IIAOVE FDA YOU IN

endangering WOI"8
themselves.'
'

Petty Farlow, Lisa Petty
HOW ABOUT RACING
Luck. Rebeoca Petty Moffitt. AROUND ATRACK? "In
, CAR: Owner of No. 43
1948, racing ori oval tracks
STP Pontiac Grand Pri&gt;.
began gaining popularity In
CAfiEER RECORD: 1,t77 the Carolinas, and Daddy

Wbo'suot

WH0'8H011
Cliod Ultie, commg
off the best flnith
(.....,.,..r) of his 129·
'"""Winltor) Cup . . . ...

e-.

WHO'S NOn 0a1e
who il riding a downward
finish op;ral of t2. 22, 35 ...

1""? "Wilen we -

tagellter blclc then, 1he tim-

ing

waon' right. Bu11hlngs

n a lot dlflelnt oow. We
khow that Jolin r~ .·

•

t. Who wooltlo voungoot
,.,. • Doytono?

--to lilt--..

w1n o t - quo111y1ng

••

•
.
.
" .

lho eoc.coto

555 Park St.
Middleport

na •••

IDOINilllllll, Wille: NAIC*A

Tho--·-e.
N.C.-

1'1111- Yaw lin, c/o
FJ'IIIkln ~ Q 111 a tla,

I
I

'i

992-6611

.,.~ .

Engno crow ol
ownor ODug-

Pic ;.I• a Aabert
Pt IIIII) 1D the belt
-

ollllo Wlnoton

c...-··~~*~~
........ Motor

.,.,_,.,,

It)

cD

- ~·

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,

Winston Cup teams n~t happy wltb Texas Motor Speedway
By Monte a:unon

NASCAA This~

.

FORT WORTH, Tc:us - The
~tate ofTcu.~ may not chanse
1~s

battle cry, but Texas Motor
S~cdway IS offering an

al~crnat1vc:
.
'Forget the ~l01mo. Remember
the: Texas 500!
,heryone loves to visit Tell as.
The problem, at le11tto the
Winston Cup teams 3nd dr1..-cn,
is that the~ ha..-e to race here.
Ai prnenl, the only thin&amp;
wronG w11h Texas Motor Speedway is the motor spced~iY- The
- optnirt&amp; roond Of qualifymg and

fm11l practice session were
"iecpcd out."
The weather all week w;as

beauliful, but each aR_tmOOn
when lhe sun fell bchtnd the

mMlmoth gralldstands, wa~
started keping onto the trick.
· " If I owned thislrack.J'd really
be uprtet."IIA.[)arrcll Waltrip,
..Everywhit ~ in TcnJ

whCR yauU a hqle 1n tJtc
ground. )'QU Itt oil. Hm you
gel water, 10 thai would really
bother me."
.

TIME TO REFLECT:
Uncompeti!ive and sponsorteu.
Diamond Rid&amp;e MolorlporiS
withdreW froftHhe Tau !00.
..We.have not demontilrJICd
llr0n8 performance lhil year,"
t~id owntr Gary Bethtcl. "We
~ lo find and rt10IVc the .

problems tkalarc affmiat~r
on-trick ptrfo~ We
dei:idcd 10 ltlf home for 1 while
man effort to ~and
impnwc upon
klli. ~- ·
We did not ~'lila decision
based orr ow ~ip
.
liruaion."'

additional outlet charges. ·

WHAT IS PIC-SURE??
A service maintenance plan that
eovers coslll that may occur.with
a customer's imide cable wiring.

&lt;

•

·.

•

•

•

. ..

.

THE GOSSAGE DEFENSE:
Oenenl.....,..,
Eddie Oot.saae
. . aaimplc •rcnse ofTa.

Motor Speedway.
..We-'ve 101 a facilil)' with

1~.()61 ~ lftd &amp;bey'n- all told
out," hr llid. ..,.._ fw are vot-

ina with their ticklt ~
,
Some of lhe driwn
we
need to R'tO"t1rlhe wallil. tum 11

hlwlfll'id

four. They've been ll)'inl Mfoi
z

e

·

..

..8 yars 11 DarliqiOn. Darlilll·
1on should not ITIO'IC' its Will. ft'l
quain1 okl Derlift&amp;IOft, and 1hll\ ,
what INika ilareat.•

.;

DtHARr .lOINS McCLURE:
l.arr)' ~hare. owner of the

W:U&amp;&amp;ItnJ No. 4 ~let of_
~ Bobby lt.rrukon, hal hu·ed
mmn em. dlicr Gary OeHan
to Krw as I c:oMUitlnt.
De Han headed Terry Labonte's
1996 Winston Cup championlhip
1e1m forTCIIIII Hendrick, but Seft
thai ten lfter bcinJ involved in
I pte·I'IU ahm:ation lut fall at
Mlrrinn'ille. DeHin ltten briefly
'Ml4ed for the BuKh Orand
Nllionll ani oC~fdriver
lyndell Amick. · ·
1

IIDDt.....,... •

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CABLEVISION
CO"HUNICATIONI

675-3398 or 1-800·766-0553

Call or visit our Qfflce at
1401 Jefferson Blvd. r

in Pt. Pleasant

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Dear

1he slrenglh to rai se them. Her fami ly was 3.000 miles away and could
nol help. However, the neighbors in
our small town rallied around, much
like the people of Carlisle, Iowa, 'IJ'e
doing for the McCaughey sepluplels.
My parents now have 35 grandchildren to love and enjoy. -- Tile
Oldest Daughter in lsaquah, Wash.
Dear Daughter: The thought of
it bcggles my mind . If all 35 arc
heahhy and well-behaved, your parents are incredibly fortunate .
Send queslions lo Ann Landers, Crc'
atcrs Syndicate, 5777 W Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

·~.

A'ITENTIONADVERTISERS!!
.

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Advertise on this pag~

Call,992·21'55
Dave Harris Ext. 104
·For More Information

Pleasant. ·
Local student achieves top status
Kent offers these safety tips 10
Arnie Ellioll of Rutland has
keep
in mind when working near
achieved STARS status at Hocking
College. .
STARS · is an overhead power lines:
• Always allow an open space, in
acronym for student team involveall
directions of one and a half times
ment and acadcl!lic recognition system. It is ·a program _of recognition
for students who achieve academically. in extra-curricular activities or
leadership.
Elliol_l is. recognized for the high·
est grade poinl average in lhe pracli·
cal nursing program. As STARS.
these sludcnts will also receive a
certificate and a medal and they will
be invited to take the lead position in
their respective program in the graduation procession during commcnccmcnl on June 7.
A STARS reception will be held
on Wednesday. April 29.

. _,

.

script, resume of activities and

career objcclives, a current photo.
and plans for. continuing education.
Lel\crs of application arc 1o · he
relurncd to Meigs Hi gh School.
Deadline to apply is May l .
McComas-Mooro Scholarship
- Applicanls arc restricted to those
whose parcnl or grandpqrents graduated from Middlepon High School ,
be planning a major in education,
have a 3. or higher CPA and_be in
need of financial assis1nncc. May I
is lhc deadline for 'applying.
MHS Faculty Scholarship Applicalion deadline is May I and
forms 10 apply arc availahlc al lhc
schooL
Michael Bartrum Scholarship
-Athletes wilh a 3. or higher GPA
who have earned 1wo varsity leiters
in a single spon -qualify to apply.-A
formal wriucn request must be sent
along with ,the application stating
why they should receive the scholarship. Deadline is May I and applications arc available allhc school.
M.L.T.A,Scholarship- Dead·
!inc lo apply is May I wilh applica-

lions tn he returned In the high
schooL
Parker Long Scholarship Deadline, May I . applica1inns available a1 the school.
:Rudand Alumni Scholarship ..:...
Available to a child or grandchild of
a Rulland High School gradi,UltC
Send grade transc'ript,' resume o{
ac1ivitics and career objectives, currcnl photo, name and gradual(on
year .,r alumni parcnl or gran~par ­
cms, a~d name of inlcndcd higher
cducalion . inslilulion 10 Rulland
High School Alumni Assodation
Scholafship Commi\tce, Box 125,
Rutland, Ohio 45775, by May I .
Senior Class and Student
Council Scholarships - Deadline
10 apply is May I and applicalions
arc available 31 the schooL
'
Susan G. Park Scholarship Applicalion deadline .· April 30 ..
Applicants .musl he a direct descendent
of a gradu~te of Middleport·
High School. They arc lo have al
least a 3.5 GPA induding the fin;\.
semester of the senior year using a
non-weighted curriculum .

the length of the . item hclng
installed. If you're uncomfonable
with lhc lask. hire a professional' lo
complete it for you.
*Usc wood or fiberglass ladders
inslcad of metal· ladders; they arc

less likely to conducl elcctric!ty.
*Check wealher condilions
before beginning an outdoor project:
Save the pr&lt;)ject for another day .
even if there is aremote JlOS!iihilily
ol'rain.

- - -- -

Cheshiro youth joins te.:h crew
Joshua Moles of Cheshire is a
mcmhcr of the_technical production
crew at Ashland Univcrsily.
· Moles. a 1994 graduate of River
Valley High School and son of Terry
and Sharon Moles, 2624 Lillie
Kyger Road, is a senior majoring in
to~icology.

The purj&gt;osc of tbe tec!Jnical pr~
duction crew is to provide lights,
sound and other technical ass.islance
to student organizations and depanmcnls who arc involved in activities
arid events for the campus community .
Ashland University is a privale,
liberal ans instilulion localcd in
nonh ecnlral Ohio between qcvcland and. Columbus . On-campus
enrollment is 1,900 while total
enrollment. including ofT,campus
program_centers, is 5. 700.

Antenna Installation Safety News
With spring cleanmg and outdoor
projects on the minds of many,
American Electric Power warns cuslomcrs to ·show caution when
installing antennas and other large
outdoor equipment
-To-uching an ovcrhc:kt}mwcr line
with anything can ·cause injury or
death. WhCn metal s1ep ·ladders,
extension ladders and an1cnnas are'
Elatem High School lltllor Kltlll Bailey, ~ with Secretary in the picture, lhe risk multiplies
of Stele Bob Taft, recently participated In • live atelewlde broedcut because tbose items arc good clccabout voting and cltiZIIIIshlp hosted by Secrelliry Taft.
.
Ohio Fin1t Vote Live '98, which lirld on Apr. 2, originated from • tricily conduclon&lt;.
"We wlnt to remind our cusWOBU atudlo and wae broedc:ast atetewlde via public tlllvlelon.
tomers
of the risks associated with
Belley wn.part of • stUdio clan felturlng14 high school ~~t~lors
touching
a power line. All iltakc~ is
from schools located throughout the stele.
one
small
error and the conse. Taft led the etudlo clan through 1 dlac:unlon about the history ·
llldlmportenc:e of voting and then opened the phone llnee to cella quences can be falal." said Mary
frllll,l high schools throughout the elite that were watching the live Kcnt.-districl manager for AEP in Pt.

proggm.
.
. .
Ohio Flnt Vote Ia an 'Innovative program IPOft-.cl by Tift's
office b l alma to , . . _ the downward trend In voting 1111101'11
ycKing paopll. Students ICIUiilly register to vote In their high ~hoot
Flret ·Voce cia•-· The p!'ogrenl lias regla..-.cl 112,1100 Mrllors
~ 111112.
'
. Ohio F1nt Vote Live 'H wlllaleo be l'lbrOIIdcllat Thul'ldly. Adclltlonally, ttduCIIIOI'S miY obtlln I t.pe "of the program by Clllll!'ll
IMtruc:tlonal Tachnok!iJ¥
Services at Central Ohio ll (1114) S2Ns60. ·.
.

must include a high school Iran-

.,.-----,..----Society Scrapbook·-·--------

9.0
DAYS

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•

•• ••

'

&lt;·.·

Only $1.00 a month and no more

Service Needs ·

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AIOUIID THI GMAGI
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Ripley, WV 26271

•

Dole Iii. Smidi Jr.

Oinbt,Mia

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CALL TODAY FOR DETIIUI

. Come See U1 For All Your
Parte and.

.,

... By the WI)', the '"Tijuana Tpi"
four-door, IOo.

'·&lt;.i
··;; .

GarnU tae.

At. 21 .. the Rlplly-FIIrpllln Exit 1132

Valley
Lumber&amp;·
Supply Co.

.

Will

.,~._

life-insurance pol_icy I i'nsisted he
Dear First: Twenty-five years?
gel so the kids and I would be OK if Did you have a lawyer? Was he ·
he died young.
, sober? Was he conscious' Assuming
" Ken" and ~is present wife make your husband didn'l catch you in
over $125,000 a year, while my bed with someone. you got a very
inco me is about $20.000. Our raw deal.
divorce agreement did nol include
Ann Landen: I had to
any mainlcnancc.
write in response to "Charlone in
There is no child suppon hcc:wsc · Georgia" who had three children
the kids arc over 18. There wusn't and then gave birth to tripleiS.
any retircmcnl benclil hecausc we
In 1953 , my molhcr gave binh to
were going to save fur I hat together a set of lriplcls. At the lime, she also
wh~n t_
he kids were grown.
had ftve other c ~ildrcn , ages 6, 5, 4,
Some firsl wives squeeze 1hcir · 2 and 15 tnonths . S)1e had eight chit former husbands for alllhcy can get, drcn in six years . Not only that, but
hul the divorced women I knnw arc she had five more children afler the
single and struggling lo raise lheir triplets. for a lotal of 13 kids.
children ·while their former hu s-I'm sure she would agree wilh
bands now have two good incomes. "Charlouc" that since God- gave her
-- Firsl Wife in'Wisconsin
· all those children, he would give her

Numerous scholllrships arc avail- mion, Charles Gibbs Scholarship. P.
ahlc to 1998 Meigs High School 0 . Box 202. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Crawford-Grey-Lewis Scholar)lrlldUa\eS and lhC information aboui
them is availahlc al the school's ship - Application deadline April
30. .
guidance office. ·
Applicant m!Jsl be a resident of MidThey include:
,
dlcpon
and applications arc to be
Bedford Township Scholarship
- Applicanls must live in Badford returned lo Meigs high School.
Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis Schol·
'Township and application~ arc to l;lc
arship
- The scholarship is given
returned to Meigs High . The deadin
memory
of Dr. Raymond Boice.
line to apply is May I.
Auorney Fred W. Crow, and Coa~ h
B~ta Sigma Phi Scholarship This .scholarship is designated for a An "Pappy" Lewis . Deadline for
studcnl who. plans to ·auend a two' applying is May I . Applications arc
year technical school . An essay mus1 .available at the high schools. Information to be included arc ACT. SAT,
be returned with the application.
Bob ,Roberts/Pomeroy alumni olher entrance examination scores,
Scholarship _; The deadline for · grade point average. p~rery1 or
applying is May 15. The scholarship guardian occupation. list of activiwill be awarded to a child or grand- ties. wilh a summary on · fulurc
child of a Pomeroy High School plans.
Jack Slavin Memorial Scholar·
graduate. Applications are to be
.accompanied by a grade transcript, a ship - The scholarship is for sturesume of activities and career' dents who will be majoring ih an or
objectives, a current photo, and the an education. Applications arc to be
name and graduation year of the picked up and returned to the high
alumni parent or grandparents, along school before May I.
Linnie Taylor Scholarship with lhe name of the school they
This
scholarship is for residents of
plan to auend. Applications are to be_
sent to the Pomeroy Alumni Associ- Rutland Village and applications

eoo ot ~?

GET PIC-SURE

1-800-964-FORD

CaooyA- ...

doesn 't solve it.
You need to stop fooling around
and do something that generat~ s
self-esleem . .
Investigate some wonhy cause&amp;.
and &lt;become inVolved. You need to
do somcihing that will make you
feel gnod about yourself --and scr. vice to olhcrs is the first slcp. Gel
moving, and good.luck .
Dear Ann Landers: I di sagree
wilh the woman in Charlouc, N.C.,_
who said ~n&lt;l wives gel all o( the
hcnelils after a divorce.
My hushand and I divorced after
2~ ycurs of marriage. He has since
remarried. His second wi fc will reap
ohe benefits of the .:olle)le cducalion
I helped him )lCI. the husincss I
helped him slarl and 1hc $250.000

2. What two CUNni- cllinodlholr

Coll•rfeh11M The Onion (N,C,JGNetlt • DIIIIR lllellt¥ UIWIWIII ....... .,,

Bus.Phone(304)372~73

oiwa)'l .,_...... ond the only
lhina the •in8Je 1e1ms ran do t. 10
be more Cl.tlnina. darinJ. IUft!loO., polien\ lucky, whote&gt;er. The
multi--·'"" be """"""- All&lt;

What with Easter coming up, . nences over the pas1 couple of
I'll bet you're prcny busy. eli years huvc been heanhrcaking .
Bunky''
.
Several of you have asked for the
Of course. the season hrings Manns' address and I' ve been
extra commilmcnts to church scr- unable to supply tlial on the spot.
vices and then !here's gelling l'vc 'ncver learned it since I don't
ready for the Easier Bunnydo wriucn communicalions. I
h9wcvcr he lils into·the piciUrc .
telephone . So I looked up · ihc
· These days you can buy has- address and ii's 3877 Oakmont
'kcts already prcpar~d and ready to Lane. Lancasler. Ohio 43130. ·
present . However, that's npl ncar- · Jayne aAd Tobin arc just
ly as fun or lime consuming as delighted with their new arrival'sclccling each jelly bean, choco- as arc wc~and I know they will
laic egg and rabbit to prepare bas- he just as pleased to hcut from
kcls for your special ones is it7
you. · Jayne. and Tobin have
And, then !here's the dyeing of appeared Qnlocal stages a number
· the eggs and· aren't there some of rimes over the years in the
. great producls on the' market for · musicals ofthc Big Bond Minstrel
takin·g care of that chore 1hcsc Association.
days? You can create all kinds of . ·
fantasy "stufr'. ·
Speaking. of music, the 'First
By the way, the Women's Aux- · Southern ~aptist • Church on
iliary, at Velerans Memorial Hos- Pomeroy Pike is planning to lravpilal at last count had sold 94 rab- cl to The Bill Gaither Homecom~,its which were placed on three ing Concen in Charlesto•:, W. Va.,
white "honey of a bunny" trees on June 6 .
about the hospital. II was a sueThe church people have charccssful fund raising projecl for the tercd -two buses and have purorganizali~n. Members . Bcny chased enough tickets to fill bfll'l
Sayre and Sarah Neiglcr, chaired vehicles. There are still 25 tickets
the activity. Thank you for such remaining on sale. The cost is
wonderful supporl so well , $30 which lncluiles no1 only a
deserved by the Auxiliary. And ticket to the concen but the bus
on Friday, the Auxiliary will he . transponaliQn to Charlcslon as
holding ils annual Good Friday _well .
..
bake sale in the hospital lobby. · ' Thc-remain\ng tickets are on a
Their goodies sell oul fast so you firs\ come, firs\ served, basis and
might want to do an early stop t~ you ean pick them up from Bill
pick up something .
Quickel at The Insnrance Plus
Charlene and I received the Agency on Coun and Second
mosl special "~slcr present" of SircciS in Pomeroy. I understand
pur lives hist Friday. April 3. lhe conccn will be similar to whal
when our daugh1er and Sll(l· in- you sec on the Gaither homccomlaw. Jayne and Tollin Mann pre- ing videos . Marty 0' Bryant.
scntcd U&gt; with a line grandson. music director at 1he church, is
Quinlan . Quinlan was hom al chairing 1he trip.
University Hospitals in Columhus
I hope you have the mosl
and iwlh onothcr and hahy arc
doin)l well. We're very grateful inspiring and heautiful Easter
,fo.- thm hecausc some prior cxpe- ever. And do keep smiling.

got hurt •

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

...w_.

wi1

TRIVIA

RidenourSupply

..••

•

""'-·i..

TOP lEN

..-

By: ~ob Hoeflich

competitive andlor mulliple-car

old, th.lrct-generation driver ga"e .
him the BGN point lead.
Nemechek fell to third when
Elliott Sadler, the Bristol winn8f',
sMpped past him on the final
lap.

champton Jack Sprague In ~e
FloriOa Dodge Dealers 4001&lt; at
Homestead (Fla .) Motorsports

a crash on the second lap.

Beatv of the Bend ...

0.. NASCAR This Week,
Multiple teams will proY&lt; tO be
the best thin&amp; t11at ...,. hoppcned to
NASCAR riCing.
I have been 1 racina fan sinoe the
eorly '60s. I hiM: bem o Jack
Roush fan oi""' IN: early '70s.
when tho 0app &amp; Rouslt "Tuuana
TIXi" -inaled Pro Siock drag
racina. Roush Racint has fielded

Speedway.
·
The victory tOf the 23-year-

years, I've had sev~ral affairs. My
husband found out about a couple of
lhem and forgave n)e. I should tell
you lhal when I'm not having an
affair, I have serious bouts of
depression.
I am now involved with a great
guy, and I think I'm in love with
him. I want to leave- my husband but
am afraid to risk being on my own.
I've been in counseling but can' t
seem to change: •'
My therapist says I'm emotionally immaiUre. II se~ms I am happy
only when I'm involved in a
. romance. What's wrong with me'! -' Three's Company
,
. · Dear Company: I agree wilh
your thera'pist 's assessment However, bein_g aware of your problem

.Scholarships available for.Meigs High School graduates

Sam Aid and Tommy Houston each
won f_
l v..... Randy LaJoie hat won
mort than $2 million In the Busch
Series, most of any driver.

FROM LAST WEEK

Fnr HomC'0\'111C' I S

For More
Information

HICkory racet, four more than Chtv·
rolet. A Ford hll never won here . ...
Tommy Elll1 won aeven poltt, while

I . Mike Bliu. 253.
10. Ri¢11 Sicltll. 2.wl.

"· Jeff Bi.noo, 7117.
10. flton s.wy.,, 771.

,

Dave Harris
Ext.104

etands, """' such ~ 1t11&gt;1o0 •
hot bologna ond ilvor muol1 11r1 on aolo. Not to wcny ~
such rustle ctMlno does not tompt
tho palate. The hot dogt ""' luot
fine, thlnke.

DEFENDING
CHAMPION :

c:..p. ...... 8110 {1liPOdl

Call 992-2156

For 1 unique_,_.. of locll
Cotawbl Vlllly . . -; .... neocl
1oo1&lt; no fattiW 1111n tho Hickory
Motor Speedway~

1 1.

Dear Ann Landers: I am, not
writing 10. be reprimanded for my
behavior. I am in my early 30s and
have been married lo a wonderful
man for 10 years,. but I've never
· been in love with him . I've slayed
because I' ve fell it was 1he righl
thing to do.
. My husband is almost twice my
age, overweigh! and not much fun .
I'm good-looking and have no troubl~· atlracting men. In 1he lasl _
five

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Thursday, Aprll'9, 1998

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. Big band sound to swing.the Ariel with Chris Vadala concert

The Daily Sentinel@
Southern High School
.

"

. Thu,..y
Aprll9, 1998·
Page 1.0

.

l!flhen .the greatest g;tt is given
Fiction
By ERICA ARNOTT
Tara was so excited that Easter
was finally here, and at age 7, she had
a lotto look forward to. An egg hunt
that her brother and sister · had
planned, Easter ba.•kets. from two
grannies, and a special surpr.se·her
mommy was making just for her.
were just a few things to look forward
10.

While their mother was preparing
dinner, Tara hunted the Easter eggs
that her older siblings had hidden.
She picked out her favorite basket
and ran to the obvious eggs first.
After finding only three prominent
eggs she began to whine. "You guys
are too hard. Please play llot and
cold."
After about an hour of whining
around. she found ~ost of the eggs.
She would have gollen them all had
her brother and sister not hid them so
well they couldn't remember where
·they were.
.
Then, after a few games ofhide 'n'
STUDENT CHRISTIAN - Senior Crystal Colem8n, who experienced a convenlon to Christianity at • youth rally In Kentucky
._ year, sheree the scripture with fellow etudenta by placing
poeWn1 throughout Southam High School, Including thl1 poster
the llrat floor water fountain.

For some, embracing
Christianity is 'cool'
. Although a few · student~ have
W.W.J.D. read lhe white leuer on questioned Coleman about her
lhe black wristbands that are now posters, she hasn't received any negbeing worn by several studenls l\t aiive comments about what she is
Southern High School. .
doing for the Lord.
The leller stand for the phrase
She said one fellow classmate,
"What Would Jesus Do?"
Raneua Wheeler, has really supponWhen asked what the wristbands ed her in what she is doing. Coleman
are there to acc.omplish, seniqr Crys- . said Wheeler's strength is an inspiratal Coleman said, "It is a w:ty to help lion to her and everyone that truly
Chri~ians make the right decisions in
knows her.
everyday life. Whenever I encounter
When Coleman gets discouraged,
a difficult situation, thinking 'What she said Wheeler always manages to
would Jesus do?' helps. me to make get her ·to see the positive side of
the right choiCes."
things.
,
The wristbands aren't the only
A new addition to the student
sigris of Christian students "spreading activities at Southern is the Christian
the · word". There are also sever:lt · Student Group. The group is advised
•igns hung in various places at the by Southern Local teacher Mr. Bill
hiBh scltool.
Beegle.
·
The hot pink poster that hangs
Aftet several students had ~sked
above the chalkboard in the room of him about staning :1 Christian group,
Mrs'. Carla Shuler, .mathematics he sugge5ted gelling ortic~ approval
teacher at Southern. reads: "Cast all before stlllting the group.
·
of your anxiety on Him because He
The Christian Student Group
c&amp;re~~ for you" (I Peter 5:7). Other meets every Tuesday arid·Thursday
saying.~ on the signs that line sc'hool
morning in Mr. Beegh:'s room, room
walls and hang over water fountains 104, and students who have attended
include: "W~ver . loves his brother the Christian meetings include Amber
lives in the light and there is nothing Bird, Angel Bird, Ranetta Wheeler,
10 "'i'ke him stumble" {I Jo~n 2: 10); Jennifer Yeauger. Cynthia Caldwell,
"GreaJ is the Lord and most wonhy Chris Pmfliu. Jody Hupp. Autumn
· of praise" {1'5al ms 48: I ).
HilL Autumn Thoma\, Erin Bolin and
The signs were placed there by ho;on Lamhen. Sometimes the meetColeman who has done a lot of coura· ing includes Scripture readings or a
aeous things in the high school to discussion, but most of the time it
!iptead the_word G~. and to try to L'Onsists of just a short prayer. .
reach those who don I know about
When Coleman wa• asked if there
Hipl.
were any imponwuthinss she would
When Coleman wa&lt; asked ~hy like to say about being a Christian.
she Willi puttmg fonh such an eftort she said. "One of the biggest misto spread the word, ·she said. "I real- conceptions about Christianity is thai
ized how much my life ha• improved Christians are boring and can't have
and wanted to share the Word wllh any fun. In reality, nothing could be
111her pi!Ople." She referred to Psalms funher from the truth. This fallai:y
119: I05, "Your word is a lamp to my prohably arose because often people
feet and a lisht for my path."
think of sin and 'having a gOod time'
Coleman. who' has only been a as being synonymous."
Christian for about a year. wa&lt; saved
"Personally, one pan of my life
a1 a youth rally in Kentucky. She said that I thought I couldn't live witllout
that lhe lessons taught_at the rally was the lype.of music 1 listened to.
answered a lot of questions that she · For every secular music style there is
had about Christ. and made h&lt;:r real· an equal Christian style. Alier listen·
ize that she needed Jesus in her life ing to Christian groupuuch as Audio
to make it complete. Now that she is Adrenbline, D.C. Talk, Newsboys,
a Christian. she says that her life ha.' and Third Day, I do not even miss
·chanaed in ll)any ways.
ACIDC"
She said she has found that a per·
She then referred to the scripture
1101111 relllli0115hip with Jesu• Christ in.2 Corinthians .5:17: "Therefore, .i f
has given her great love. peace. and anyone i~ in Christ, he is a new cre1\appiness because she .knows that ation; the old is gone, the new has
JCKu.• is in control of her life.
come."

By SUZANNE .EVANS

or

School lunches, cooks.
popular ,.with stude~ts ·
.

ly IILLE JO SELLERS

•
•
School lunches IICCm to be really jlopular this year. More peosile are eatinalunch here at ~j:hool, this year !han in the y~ pa&lt;t.
., •
.
Is it because the students ate really hungry. or JUSt because II s good food?
Accordinato the·students-here at ~them High School. it is because of
lhe food.
.
'
Anaie Alley, a senior, said she elluchoollunches because the school has
1 aqot~·cook; a Rntimenl ~ by other st,udent~ . .
Suzanne Evanuumme6it up when she said, ~The cooks are always polite
IIIII try to make the best of the food they have 10 work with."
· But while the Oldcnll may like the food, they don't always agree on what
11 !lnl. Alnlolt all of them agreec! thai the best lunch that a student can eat
• die bip school is the chicken fingers, ma•hed polaloes, green beans Mil

. tull.
:
The odlen who didn't like the chicken lingers said the best lunches are
· · ...., MIWd l'orThutkaaiving and Olristmas because of the IUrkey and stuff.'

The

seek and an extra egg hunL it was
time to 'dive into the Easter baskets.
Tara sat down right between both
baskets, each stuffed full of candy
and toys, things that loving grandmothers spoil their granddaughters
with.
The first basket, from Granny Bet·
ty, contained jelly beans .. Peeps,
chocolate eggs, a huge solid chocolate bunny with "real'' eyes, and a
Grand Champion Horse that makes
real horse sounds, just the toy she
wanted.
The next wa.• from Granny Margaret It contained twice as much. candy and a large, white stuffed Bunny
which Tara mimed Abigail. .
Tara picked up Abigail and her
new horse and ran into the kitchen to
show her mother. "Mom, Mom, look
what my grannies gave me. They're
jus! what I wanted! When do I gel my
surprise from you?" Tara a• ked.
"Right after dinner," her mother
replied.

Eas~er

Tara played outside with her·new bod and·begged her mother to let her
animals until, finally, dinner was hold it while the Grannies took a pij:·
ready. The table looked like a restau- lure. Her mother was very unsure of
rant's buffet table that had not yet this but Tara looked as though s~e
been touched. Tara wa• so hungry but wa.• going to cry. So mother gave in
she couldn't eat hardly anything and handed over her masterpiece.
because all she could think about was This was not a very good time ·for
her surprise.
·
Tara to have a clumsy attack but 'it
She waited patiently until every- bappened; She slipped on the ·r11g
one had finished eating ·and she which lay on the hardwood flooring
couldn't stand it any longer, "Mom- in the }c.it~hen.
my, can I have my surprise now?" she
Before she even hit the ground she
asked hurriedly. She dismissed her- was crying, knowing that her mothself to get _the surprise while Tara's er, along with everyone else, would
sister blindfolded her.
be angry with her. All she could do
EveryOIIC gasped when her moth· wa\ just sit there with the broken
er re-entered the room. Tara could pieces of cake. crying 'her eyes out,
hardly stand ii anymore and tore the when her mother came over to
blindfold off. Tara's jaw dropped embrace her. Her loving face slight·
when she saw it Before her was lhe ly discolored. she said, "It's okay premost beautiful cake she had eVer cious."
seen! It was a bunny-shaped i:ake
Tara knew (rom that moment on
with white frosting, pink ears and that. her mother ·would love her no
nose, and jelly beans of every color . matter what kind of messes she could
going down its brea.•t.
make and that was the greatest gift
Tam wanted to hold the cake very she received that day!

An editorial: ·

Story The facts support
passage.of levy

By.SHAUNA MANUEL
the Hebrew festival called Passover.
There are many things a.•sociated
Easter wa' celebrated 111 different
with Easter. like Easter rabbits, used times of the year until 325 A.D. when
to show fenility, and brightly colored ·the Council of Nicaea fixed Easter as
Ea.,ter eggs, used to symbolize the the fi~t Sunday following the first
brig~tness of the sun in the spring · full moon after the spring equinox.
tim&lt;;. The most imponantthing about This panicular full moon usually
Easter, and the only real reason we occurs between March 22 and April
celebrate it is because Christ wa.• cru- 25. Some think that the council set
cified. and three days after this bru- ·. this date for the celebration of Easttal crucithion He rose from His er near the lime of the full moon so·
tomb. Easter is also a symbol of the pilgrims traveling to worship
God's love and His promise that a could use the 111oon as a flashlight.
man's soul is immonal.
Many modem Easter celebrations
In various languages, the name for may have "began in the phgan cele- .
Ea.•ter comes from the Hebrew word brat ion of the rebinh of the earth in
"pesah" which means Passover. It is the season of spring. A very poplllar
also thought that the nall)e Easter new Easter custom is the gift of new
may have come from the Anglo-Sax- clothes. such as Easter dresses. The
on name Eastre. Eastre was lhe name reason .for this Easter custom is
of a Teutonic goddess. This plllticu- because the season of winter has endlar goddess was the goddess of ed and the earth seems to come back
spring. Atlirst Easter wa.' linked with to life.

r.o--Writer's block.·When I Think of You
By BILLIE JO SELLERS
· When I think of you I think of forever
Then I wonder will itlastthatlong
It never has before,
Then I realize that this ain't like
All those other times this time
the person I love. loves me back
It~ ink

of everything that's ever went
Wrong with any of my rel~tionships
Then hope that it never happens with
Me and )OU
But I know that if it wa.•n't ror
Those unfonunate happcni'ngs I
Wouldn't have·you. And I'm thankful
everyday that I have you and hope
to never lose you

""·But .no matter what I will love

You forever. and hope you will do
the same for me.

By JOSIE JARRELL
and JENNIFER YEAUGER
Once again the big topic around the Southern Local School District i~
the upcoming levy. Most pi!Ople make the comnients, "farmers will be
~&gt;Verly burdened with _
inore taXI:ll,lhe levy is hard on the elderly with fixed
mcomes, we don't need more space for classrooms and, we don't need a,
ne\\1 school." However these comments are dispelled by information gathered by So~them Local Building Committee Chairman Rev. Brian Hark·
ness.
·
Farmers should not ·worry about being over-taxed becnu.se the facts are
a• follows: Fanners who own 10 acres or more and devote lilat to agri;
cultural use can file at the besinning of the year for $25 for the Current
Agricultural Use Valuation Program which reduces taxes on agricultural
land. &lt;;urrently the program cuts taxes in half for land that qualifies.
Fuithermore, the elderly peed not worty that the levy will be hlll'!l on
them because of their fixed incomes. The is thai anyone 65 years or older can qualify for the Homestead Act tax reduciion. depending on their
total inc?me, which is once again something that reduces taxes.
The biggest misconception about the levy is that we don't need more
space or a new school. Here are the facts each and every.voter of the South. em Local School. District need 10 pay close 1111ention 10: first of all there
are roughly 79 children in the kindergarten building )Vhich is divided into
three clas~. Of that, 62 of the children make up two kindergarten cla•s·
es. The ra_noof ~tudents !O teachers in lhe state of Ohio js 2510 I percla~•.
The k1pderganen chtldren have to walk from their small building 1
through even the worse weather, to :ire junior high school to eat lunch.
Classrooms have been made on the stage at the junior high and Syracuse
Elementary, on the floor of the Portland Elementary gyrnnasium and irr ·
the basement at Letart Falls Elementary due to inadequate space.
.
People still say after all of this lhat the children don't need and that it's.
not necessary, but how do you feel about you children, grandchildren. and
other loved ones going to school in a building that is so old that the win.
dows leak wind and rain. the roofs are constantly leaking, the chalkboards•
:UC rotted from age and can't be used, electric wiring in the buildinus is,
. Inadequate, and the rainwater runs in the door like it does at the kindergarten?
·
.
Is it not bad when the children have to wear their couts inside during.
class on cold days, or wiH:n the healing systems have no lllters and your'
children are exposed to dust and germs?
You be the judge.
,
. Also.take into consideration that there au: no libraries. no cafeteria•.
and that handicapped children 'are not able 10 get around at school due to
narrow doorways.
,
.
These are the facu ~n not only' by Rev. Harkness, but also every child•.
teacher, parent and •taff memher involved in the Southern Local School
District.
·
·
Please vote Yes on the Southern Local Bond Issue. Thill' is "our" chance,
'

Advertise your

COOLS POT

business here.
. Call

CONYENIENCESTORE

992·215;
Ask for:Dave

Fyti:OiliGI!rltt Dell
Flmlrv Rntp•mbt
9oolville Exit oil Rt. 7
667·81 00 Store
667·8101 Restaurant

Owner: Bryan White
WheelHorse
TRACTORS
and RIDING
MOWERS.

333 Page StrMt

...,...., Olio
. . 45760
(614·992·6472

BAUMLUMBER
State Route 248
Chester

985-3301

YoarProm

Heldq11111m

FABRIC

SHOP · .
'110 W. Mala st.·
l'olllaoy

992·2284

I I

w!:~ &amp;·•Cooling,
---·Inc.

H

11 ..D0-7'17-41m

Hill Rd.
01141720
WV21110

W¥211271

Feed Supply
Mstutr• ror .ras ·• Farm
An!mele Stable

Joe!~

Owner

lli241M
.

.

Advertise.your
business here. ·
'
Call

992·2155
Ask for Dave

The K~ Buy"Cuy•&amp; Gall

&amp;upiaartlng Ill the
. . ICitciole I youth

992-2196

The annual Holy Week services patient roo:ntJ; on Chapel Channel
held in the Chapel at the Holzer 16.
•
·
Medical Center have been scheduled · The guest spea~er for the Good
' for Good friday and Easter Sunday, Friday ser-11ice will be Reverend
' accerding to \he Reverend Arthur C. Damon R~es, a member of the
Lund, . Director of Chaplaincy Ser- Hospital's Volunteer Chaplains'
vices at the _
Hospital.
Associatiot1 ·Reverend Rhodes is the
On Good Frid~y afternoon, April pastor at:'l the Mason United
10, a .service for the Hospital staff Methodist 'Church in Mason, W.Va.
members and visitors has been sei
. The organist for the service will
from 12:30- I p.m.
be Cindy Born, Executive Assistant
.
. This service offers Hospital per- at the Hospital.
sonnel a special time to worship
Her husband, John, of the Church
together and is televised to all of Christ in Christian Union, Gal-

•

lipolis, will be the soloist.
On Easter Sunday morning, April
12 a service will be held for all
patients, their families and yisitors
and the Hospital staff. The service
will begin at I 0:45a.m. The organist
on Easter Sunday will be Corrine
Lund from New Life Lutheran
Church, Gallipoli s.
All Holy Week Services will be
held in the Hospital Chapel on the
first floor of Holzer Medical Center.
Those patients who 'are unable to
come to the Chapel for the services

will be able to watch the 12:30 p.m.
Good Friday Service and the 10:45
a.m . . Easter Sunday service on
Chapel Channel16 on the color televis ion sets in their H&lt;tspital rooms.
.The patient's rami members and
visitors are alway welcome at the
Chapel services.
Funhcr info
these Holy .Wee~ e ices can be
obtained by calling the lzer Medical Center Chaplain's Office at 614 '
•
. 446 -~ 053 ·

·'
SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS · - "The
POMEROY- Youth of Mt. HerGreatest 'llf Servants" to bj! present- mon United . Brethren in Christ
cd at 'the Tuppers Plains' St. Paul Church to present Easte.sunrise ser·
United M~thodist Church, Thursday. vice. 6:30a.m. Sunday. Breakfast to
7:.30 p.m.'
follow, in fellowship . hall . Sunday
"
s.chool, 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
FRIDAY ' ·
.
10:30 a.m.
- i'OMEIWY - Good Friday service, "The Stations of the Cross''
SYRACUSE- Sunrise services .
sponsored by the Meigs Ministerial a1 Ashury United Methodist Church ,
Associatiori. noon Friday, ~acrcd 6 a.m . with hrcakfasttGfollow.
Heart CathOlic Church.
'I
RACINE - Carmei-Suuon Un it·
CHESTER - "Have You 'Seen cd . Methodist Church sunrise se r·
. SYRACUSE - Communion and
, fool-washing service Thursday, 6:30 ri1y Son'!'l;lGood Friday drama at vices 7 a.m. at Carmc'l Church with
. hrcakfast to follow at 8 a.m.
: · p.in. at the Syracuse First Church of Cliester UMC. 7:30' p.m. .
'
.
God.
·
.
MIDDLEPORT - .Hope Baptist
S4TURDAY'
POMERI!lY - Return Jonathan Church. Middleport . sunrise service
STIVERSVILLE '- Stivcrsville
Community Church. 7 p.m. Satur-' Meigs Chapter, Dimghters of lhe ill 6:30a.m. All weh:ome .,
American Revolution, Saturday, I 0
day, puppel show; public invited. ·
· MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise sera.m. at the Po}neroy Lihrary.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Mi~hael Struble to talk on architec-· vice. Ash Street Free Will Bap'tist
Plains Veterans . of- Foreign Wars lure ·of the • lock houses in Meigs Church . Middleport . 6 a.m. Sunday:
orhcr regular service. 10 a.m. and 7
Post 9053 meeting Thursday. 7:30 County.
••
p.m:
p.m. for nomination of officers.
Refreshments served at 6:30 p.m.
SYRACUSE- Easter egg hunt.
Saturday. I p.m. on the grounds of MONDAY
'.
POMEROY - Ri ght to Life
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta the Syracu:sc ·Church of the
Beta sorority meeting Thursday, 6 Nazarene. Sunrise services, 6:30 meeting . Monday. 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
p.m: at ·the Episcopal Parish House a.m. Sunday.' ·
"
.
I
in Pomeroy.

; _Kind~rgarten registration slated for Meigs Local Schools

---6)---~

.

Marcum and Sandra Soto were married
$aturday' in the Franklin County Jail.
-:. The,couple had planned-to marry at
in outdoor wedding in July. but as
Soto said, "things happen."
i· Marcum, 19. am:sted for being a
felon in·possession of a firearm. faces a
~-month prison tenn when he is senkneed TUesday. So the wedding date
l"'as moved. up because, Soto
rxpljlincd, "we tmlly love each other."
j The·bride kept her wedding outfit
llmple since Marcum )VOUid he in a
~jail jumpsuit. She scnled on a
ilaisy-print mess and black suede boots.
: The newlyweds weren't pcrmilled

742-2211

I

p

.

..

TWO LOCATIONS
151 2nd Ave., Gelllpolll
91 Mill St.,' Middleport ·

I

.

'1:00 pill

It

\-' ,I

Iii

FrM Parking

, 01 ::n~~.":;:."/~~~tna
• Selko watch••

~Member JsweIers Board of1ira....

~
• Croll Pena • Rille Cotna

Peopl_
N ictnal
To O·o !
NORRIS·NOATHUP ·DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis

------------------------------------------SATURDAY,·APRIL 11
8:00 am

to 12 noon

• Saturday Only • Special Low-Rate
Bank Financing' On New And Used Vehicles
With On ,.._. Spot. Approval!
• Register To Win A FREE _Tank Of Gas
·A Week For An Entire Year*l

• Balloonal • Refa•shmental · • Prlzesl
• Plua A LIVe Broadcast .,, Magic 1011

.

£lbr(IYIJ Kids youth ·
. wllls~nsor an Easter Egg
~ Hwtf, at Racine Dbra"'! .
on -A.prl1'11, at

,.

' j'

..

EasJer Egg Hunt I

I

II

Soto sniffed into her bouquet
on the way out. "I can't bCiicvc it." she
said. "I am a wire. I'm a wife."

....

~

1

·,

.!itcquisitions :Fine Jewefrg ~

The Community Calendar is published as a. free service to non-profit
groups ·wishing to announce meeting.
and special events. The .calendar is
not designed · to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items arc
: printed as space permits and cannot
. ' be guaranteed to run a s~cific num- ·
ber of day s.
'I THURSDAY
'
POMEROY -· ANAl-Anon reg : ular meeting Thursday, 7 p.m . at the
1 Pomeroy Municipal Building.

:. Willi a kiss through a pllltition that
!Ccparates inmates from ~jsilors. Jared

lltopln lnd uy •HI"
to One or Herb.

Mother's Rings Starting ot s99

1~--------------~----------~

-Com.munity ·C alendar--

ill MI'VOd with muhec! polatocs, rolls and vegetables.

•

Chris Vadala

· Holy.week-serv,i.cesi schedu_
l_
ed in HMC chapel

lcadicr.

Rutland .

BoHle Gas

t\Je

·. KENNEWICK. Wa.&lt;h. {AP) - The to hold hands or touch at all. No rings
Wedding bouquet was made ,)f tissue - and Marcum' co4!dn 'I ~al any of the
papcf roses and dyed with hlack cherry wedding cake. ·Kooi-Aid. The preacher - a mntnrcyclc evangelist called Spider - wore

Ask for Dave

Ford

.
PRESENTS GRANT· Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, left, presented
· • $6,000 grant to the Pomeroy Merchants Association on last weeky.
The grant, from the Ohio Department of Development, will be used
to purchase period costumes and pay wages to tour guides to accomodate guests of the
Cumberland 011een, an exc11rslon boat that will make dally stops in
Pomeroy this BUf!lmer. Accepting the check is .Annie Chapman,
president of the association. Also pictured are John Musser of
Pomeroy VIllage Council and Mayor Frank Vaughan •

.....__ _ They aren't your typicalbri~e and groom---

•

Tri-County

Gallipolis--A big band sound of University where he also serves as
brass, drums and piano will be rea- director of the perQiission and jazz
Jured when the Ohio Valley Sym- percussion ensembles. He has per- ·
; phony presents "Twentieth Century formed with such well known enter·
: Fusions" on Saturday, April 18 a! 8 tainers as Pearl · Bailey, Dave
· p.m. in the Ariel Theatre.
Samuels, Diane Schuur and Bob
· Chris Vadala, saxophonist for 14 Thompson. His ciedits als.o include
years with the Chuck Mangione performances will\ the Rochester
Quanet, will headline the spring Philharmonic . and 'Montreal Symsymphony performance with a spe- phony as well as an appearance on
cial presentation 11f "Takin the 'A' National Public Radio (American
• :rrain" and the Concertina da Cam- Jazz Radio Festivlll).
era. One of the counlry 's foremost
Pianist Richard Lopez is active in
woodwind ariists, Vadala is in great central .Ohio performing in Rigby's
demand as a jazz and classical per- · Restaurant, the Fl~ron and the New
fonner and an educator.
AlbanyCountry'·q ub. His .first CD,
He has appeared in more than 80 ·"The Richard Lopez Trio, ·Live.", ·
• rc~ordings to date as well as IJlany was released recently. The Columji~gle sessions, film and TV scores. bus Jazz Orche~tra has invited
I
'
.
; He is currently director of jazz stud- Lopez to perform
next February tn
: ies and .saxaphone instructor at the five performances of Gershwin's
.t:Jniversity of Maryland . ·
Rhapsody in Blu~ .
' · One of tile most requested musi- .
Bassist Roge't Hines is also an
cians, Vadala travels worldwide, active musician . in the ,Columbus
, jlerfonning with and conductin@ stu-· area. When nclt on tour with jazz
dent and professional jazz enscm- vocalist Diane Schuur, he has per·
. bles; symphonic bands ·and arches- formed with
Columbus Sym. iras. Within the past few years alone, phony, th~ Columbus Jazz Orchestra
he has appeared in 200 high schools and the Co.lumbus Anists-inand colleges across the nation.
· Schools progiilm .
His credits include four years of
. A native of Poughkeepsie, N~w
'York, Vadala graduated from the performance with · singer Ray
· Eastman School of Music, earning a. Charles and tquring. with such well ·
. performer's cenificate in saxaphone il:nown bands as the Count Basic
; as well as a ·bachelor of music in Orchestra and the Duke Elling1on
tnusic education and .a master's in Orchestra.
clarinet from Connecticut College.
The April symphony is sponsored
As if Vadala weren't enough, the in pan by the law firm Baker &amp;
percussion trio of Guy A. Remonko Ho&lt;tetler. For more information on
· on drums, pianist , Richard Lope z, 'ti~kets for this concert or subscrip' and Roger Hines on bass will tions Cor the 1998-99 symphony sea. accompany ovs under the direction son, call 74o-446-ARTS or contact
:'of conductor Ray Fowler. Remonko Sheila Oehler,.740-446-2582 after 4
is a professor of percussion at Ohio p.m.

.. R~gil;tratioil for new kindergarten · 742·2666; Salem Center Elcmcn- polio,-onc MMR and one TB skin
students in the Meigs Local School tary, April 2tr,: 1-3:30 p.m., 742- · test before entering schoo! : A school
District will be held April 27-30. · 3113; Sali~bii{Y, Elementary, April nurse will be present at registration ·
Children who will be five years old· 29, 8.30-II.J(fa.m., 992-3404 , Har- to answer any of your questions conan or before Sept. 30, 1998 arc eligi- risonville Ele~~t~~ntary, April 29, 1- cerning ·your child's immunization
blc to atttnd kinderganen during the 3:30 p.IJl., 742J3000; Pomeroy Ele- requirements.
1998-99 S(lhool year.
mentary, April \&lt;!0, 9-11 a.m. and
Information obtained d~ring the
, 11ic registration sc~edule is as 12:30-3 p.m., 992-27!0.
registration process allows school
follows: Middleport Elemehtary, • Parents should bring their child's staff members io plan activities to
April 27, 8:30-10:30 a.m. and noon · bi.nh cenificate, ocial Security card make a child's fir$t year of school
to 2 p.m., 99~- 3387 ; Rutland Ele- and immunization reoord to registra- sue~cssful and enjoyable.
- mentary, .April.-lR. -8:30-11:30 a.m., lion.' Children netld four OPT, three

Ohio River ·Advertise.youf
business here.·
Bear.
Call
Company
992·2155
992-4055

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

._ .........

A llMelon 01 City Nllionll 8ri • Member FOIC

...,.._.,I DillE •·

P'olnl Plllllnl
874-1000

New.""'"'
882·2135

uuon
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..'
••
(

••

..

�•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Tflursday, .April 9, 1998

Thursday, April9, 1998

1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Oog owners frothing over . Kennel Club's. slight to popular breeds
By RICHARD PYLE
Assoc:iate6&lt;Pnss Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - For almost
70 years, the American Kennel
Club's "The Complete Dog Book"
has been considered the bible for
dog lovers.
But the venerable Kennel Club is
recalling the book's latest edition
amid howls fro'll pet owners who
objected to its descriptions of some
of the nation's most popular dogs including Scollies, Dalmations,
dachshunds and 37 other breeds as unsuitable for children.
Some breeds with more danger·
ous reputatioQs, like the American
pit bull and the Doberman pinscher,
were listed as good with children.
And in some places, the book's "not
good for children" lists don 't jibe
with remarks about which breeds

make good family pets.
Within days of the new edition's
release, breeders and owners com·
plained that the new classifications
were unfair and uninformed.
The Kennel Club reacted as if it
had been caught sleeping on the fur·
niture, apologizing for the unintentional errors in the $33 book and
announci ng a recall of the entire
30,000 first printing of the book that
has so ld 2 million copies since 1929.
"The AKC sincerely regrets the
distress caused io dog owners and
breeders by the errors," the club said
in l\ statement Wednesday. "AKC
neither agrees with nor endorses the
material."
The Kennel Club blamed the mis· .
take bn a .change in format "without
proper v,etting."
The publisher was asked in Janu·

ary to suspend sales and recall the
books, which will be replaced for
free with a revised edition io Jyne,
the AKC said.
"Nobody quite knows who put
that information in, and a number of
the breed ciYbs around the country
are not pleased with it," said Patty
Brooks of Strafford, Mo., whose
husband, Fred, is a breeder and president of the Scottish Terriers Club of
America. "The information certainly was not supplied by anyone who
evidently knew what they were talking abouL"
The .recently released 19th editio n of the AKC book carried new
information boxes for each breed
with data such· as size, trainabiliiy
and ratings as to suitabi lily with
children.
.
Dogs that made the not-goo~- ·

Break through in breast cancer announced

Fanciful poses part of yoga's charm for kids
By TANYA KERSTIENS
The Bellingham Herald

nap her knees like a buuerny·s
wing's.
"I like yoga. My mom docs yoga.
too," she says. "It stretches nut my
body."
Louise's mother. Emily Highleyman , like so many other parents who
enroll their children in yoga,
helieves it offers a way to maintain
good health throughout li fc .
") would like her to gain an
awareness of her bi•dy and an ability
to teach her body 10 rcla• ... say s
Highlcyman. 34.
Yoga can build self-con Iiden'" in
children and teen-agers. who arc
often insec ure about their hndies.
Kerwin say ~ .
It 's hccausc of thi s that Ji II Clark.
43 . enrolled her '1-ycar-nld d:iugtuer. ·
Caitlyn Manin. in yoga rather than
dance .
''I'm kind of opposed to the '
whole ballet cu lture where the
emphasis is on thinnes~ and there's
prcssur'o- to maintain a t.:t:rtain

10

_

Children's yoga incorporates
adventure .
In their hare feet. l~ey bend like .
bridges. roar like lions and stand fike
graceful namingos.
Louise Highlcyman of Belling·
toam , Wash. imitates a tree by balancing one fool nn her opposilc

thigh and holding her pressed palms.
ahove her head.
The 6-year-old ·giggles during the
first few minutes of her yoga class.
which hcgini. with a fnim of the
game. "Mother may l...''" lnstead of
requesting. h&lt;~hy .ur giant steps. the
children ask for permission to per·
form yoga poses.
It 's not exactly wha1 India's lirst
Yogi s had in mind 5.(JOO .ycars a~;,,
but yoga has si nce evo lved into a fun
and crcalivc c xcrdsc for 1hc cnlirc
familv.
The disc ipline of yoga provides a
lifetime of guidance and can be
modified to suit all stages of life.
including childhood, says Elizabeth
· Kerwin . who teaches the kids' yoga
class at Yoga Northwest in Belling·
. ham.
Children gain some of the same
bencl'its from yoga that adults do:
Flexibility. balance, strength and
concentration. the 39-year-old
instructor says.
With their natural flexibility and
sense of balance, children make
rapid progress in yoga because they
usually find it much easier to adopt
poses. Kerwin says.
Poses or postures are held quietly
and l'irmly: Yoga involves moving
. rhythmically in and out of these
posit inns.
Kid 's yoga is diffcreht from adult
yoga. however. Kerwin says.
Children have shonCf attention
&lt;pan' than adult s and· need more
help concentrating and holding
poses safely and correctly. she
explains. The solution: To stimulate
their in terc.st by making yoga fun .
Kerwi n makes usc of the fact that
many yoga poses arc named after
animab: as yoga is closely tied to
nature - thus. imagination is
encouraged.
" My favorite is the butterfly
pose. " says Louise, a kindergartner
at Samish School in Be[ingham,
Wash.
· During the butterfly pose. children sit on their mats with the bottoms of t~elr feet together. They
bring their feet toward lheir bodie.S
while sentiy dropping their knees 10
the floor. Highleyman says she likes

TRIVIA

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Dealer For:
•
•Brlgga &amp; Strtnon •MTD •Murrty •McCollough ·
•Echo •Ryobi •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
1riggs &amp; Stratton: Mast• Strvlct Ttdt!tkiatt

O.ldoor Power lqtliplllll Assodatitlt: c.rtlfletl 2'Crde
(614) 949-2804

linda's
Custolft Cakes
AU: OCCASIONS
Birthdays, Holidays,
Weddings, Showers,
AnnlversariH,
Graduations, Etc.
Homo S.kery Llcenoed
and lnepectld

PIH and Cookies
(140) 843-5544
Portlond, Ohio

3112/111 mo. pd.

P/B Contradors In(,
•Bobcat Service
·Concrete .
··Masonry
•G.eneral

The first ruMe-edaed sweet pu,
&lt;aiJccl Spor•m, IJ'CW at Altborp Pllk
in England, where Dlua, Prl,....
ol Wllel, wu railed llld laid 1D raL

Commercial and .
Reoldentlal
24 Hr. Bobcal Servlee
Available .

Happy Ad

FrH Elttmarea
No JoiJ Too Small

LINDA'S

15th

OPENING APRIL 1

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do it for you.
Interior
Before II p.m.
leave measage.
Alter II p.m.
FrH Eatlmatea
41!11!11 1 mo. pd.

_,

{

LIMESTONE

LARRY'S LAWN
CARE

Special Thru
· Msrch
8 ton Delivered

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
Commercial! ·

$120
Mileage Umlt
· Call Randy

• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery MainterioiKll

992-5050

...

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

.

•New Homes

i

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

Plan ahead. Call
Ieday for lree estimate
742·2103 ., 446·1622

E~TIMATEES

985-4473

:JI3(WB 1 1'1'10 pd

'

-

'
'

I

'
''
I

'

7/22/tfn

.

S racuae

McHI ROOPIIIG &amp;
PAIIITIIIG
Speclellzlng In:
New Rools, Root Rtpt~tre,
· Gull.,., Interior &amp;
ext-. Painting,
Drywall Repair.
lowftt ....a during the
winter rno~ ot
Jon:-Feb.-Mar.

Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hoi&amp;Cold
Lunch SandWich
Including Plzia
12" $7.49 DoiYXI

Quality Wotr GuanniHd

FrH Eel.• Fully !neurad
1-614-1192-1057

992-5776

Mklll

Oh.

...

'

'

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
·11/':-.
~·· Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding l'.!':
~
Commercial I Residential
~,
· '.!. 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
-':

~

Phone 740·992-3987
Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

•Commercial ·

•Residential
Owner, Mlckla Hollon
Chester, Ohio

740-985-4422

LANDS(;APE
BAWD AND
BURLAPPED TREES

Norway Sprueo,
Whi.. Pineond
Canadien
Hemtoek
Delivery Available
Hemlock Grove R011d
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 740-11112·7285
After 4 P.M. .

Umaatone Hauling

Gelllpolls, Ohio 45831

HOUM &amp; Tr&amp;illl' JlitH
Lan(l CiNrlng I
Grading
· Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimatea

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

~
lit.' !.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pomlac, 1900 Eaat.,n lwenue, Gallipolis.

Parra Manager Needed, Experf:
enced · Nece"uaty, No ·phone , .
Calls, River Front Honda, Gaftipo-

I

lfi1&lt;111

MEET
NEW PEOPLE
THE FUN WAY
TODAY
1&gt;1100·370.33015
Ell. 1571
$2.99 f'ef ,Min.
Seni·U 619-645-IW34

"8" MILE

·HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Se~nd,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
END TO END
MAY 1 &amp; '!~ ALL DAY

Save Up To
75%0H

CLILIID'S OUTDOOI
. MlllftiUCE .

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET

·UMESTONE DELIVERED

40

Giveaway

. 7 Mi•ed pupa, pan Rottweil•r.

pall coon. 304-675-~950.

7 Puppies, Ready In 2 Weeks,

Someone to till garden on O.wl
Hollow in Tuppers Plains, 7C.D·

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

3S2·B283.

WANTED: Par1·1ime babysitter In
New Haven, Mason area . For
apecial needs child, prefer Chf~s­
tian home. 304-882-3339.

Help Wanted

110

WILDliFE JOBS TO 121.60 /HR.
Inc. Benefits. Game Warden&amp;,
security, Malntenace, Park "Rai)Q·
era. No Exp, Nee4ed. For ApP.
And Exam Info Call t·BOO·Bf3·
3S8S. Ext &amp;175. &amp; A.M. · 9 P.M., 7
Days Ids, Inc
'

US DANCERS WANTED $1$
Excellent opporrunity lor rhe right
girl. 1500( •)per eaming po·
tenrial. No ••P necesaar~. must

180 W&amp;l'!ted To Do

small gardens, painr. put up hay.
etc. Free Eltimates. 30 .. .-675-

3628.
Ouitbus1e11 Proleaslonal Cleaning, Commerdal And Resldenllal

Applil;:ations For Pool Manager
And life Guard Positions At lon-

Call Aller 5:00 P.M . 740·388-9422

don I'Uol For The 1998 Swimming

FrM EstimaleL

Seaton Are Being Accepted Until
May 7. Submh In Writing, With

Furniture repair, refinish and "res·
IOration, alia cua~em orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop. Larry

Training And Experience, To Ja.
nice Zwilling, Clefk -Treasurer, At
The Syracuse Municipal Building

l'llillpo, 740-992-6578.

Or Mail To P.O. Box 268. Syra·

Gardens plowed near Roosevelt
GraGe School area . 304 -67S·

cuse. OH 45779.

mil, shots and wormed, 740-992· 25271 .
6&amp;JS (SjiiiQJIO).

Puppies Pari Boston Te.-rier, 740-

2S11·6251 Evoningo.

•

..

1
=299_
·--=-~~-~--

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your log!&amp; 10 the miU just call

:l04·675-1V57.
Jones LaWn &amp; Care Service, Free
Estimates, 7..0-2•5-0589.
lawn Setvice, 740...w6·3103.

-nil.

304·675-1193.

R. L. HOLLON
SAYRE
TRUCKING ?TRUCKING

'

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
AgrlcuHural L!me,

' . · Pleasant valley Hospital
· , · Medical Explorers' Meeting
' ;.1 Thursday, Arpil9, 1998, 7 p.m.
Cafeteria
Speaker: arandy Barkey
Miss Point Pleasant

-

'

.915-4422 ..

i

·-

Chester, Ohio

..

SeptiC sy...ma · ·
Tnilltr &amp; Houae IIIII
!

Ru..,. Rllfft
Joe N. Sayre

614-742-2138

-WINDOWS

_..,,...runcMIW

Experience preferred.
No phone calls .

Call992-2155
For More Information
D~ve Harris· Ext.104

&amp; Trenching
umnt- a Gr~VII

Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Now Taking Applicatons for
Assistant Managers at
DOmino's Pizza
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis Locations

.'

· Hauling, Excavlltlng

MIRROR'

JUST IN TYME .

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY

Found: small dog, Meigs Counry
fairgrounds, female , houaettalned,

740·11115-3439.
Lost 7 112 Month Old Mate Chocolalt lab, In Rodney Area, An·
awer1 To Name: Oscar, It Found

Pleaoe Con1act. 740·4•6·1500,
· -dOI$100.

lb ..... ...................- ..'8.00
SM. Oibn --·-·---......IJ.30
....... in"' SQjlilag

415198 Reward Ollerod. Pleaoo
Call 7•0·378·2145 Or 740·256·
1014 L.,.o ~.f....., Pel.

BAUM LUMBER
NOW IN STOCI A
NEW ECONOMICAl

llaml6pm
Hlllslde Baptist ~urch Choir will present a

loat Black And Gray Sib4rian
Hutky Puppy. Answers To"lc:e"
Lui Soon On Hamillon Road On

. 70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

ALL Vanl ..._ Mwt
Bt Peld ., AdvMct.
QEt'! •~ 2:00p.m.
111o dey lloloN 111o 111 .
le to run • ..,IIIJ

-

, •...

Ap&lt;N 101h ·11111, i-8, 117 WOOd·

1'Dfo Whlll IIOIW1tlctofl

Hot .........

.

Open: 7:-..:oo WI Pdl')e
7:311-4:80~

. . . IR241•

land Drive, Gallipolis, Clothing:
CNidrona, -Its, TOll, Comput·
.,,

Big Goroge Sole Rain Or Shine,
122 Jorid10 Road, Chtat&gt;iro, April
11111.10111, 11111.

Garage Sate : Friday, 181 Mill
·Croak Road; Rain Or Shine, I·

,

300.

I:

.
h

,I

9&amp;48, 61.-387-7010.
Shafefs lawncare Serwice, free
Estimates, CaR 7.0·441-031~.
Want 10 mow iran In lower Mid·
dl~port area. Call 7.CO·Q92-2910,

all&lt; 1:1r Clwio.

Cai!I00-437·87114.

DciUCI' lntr•du41111 Til• Sfl
WHk to..o. Touck Toch, Tho
Leader In Owntt JOperamr Tachnology 11 Initiating hi Ntw leal·
ing Pro(llom. W• Still Ollar: Fl·narclnQ. NO Money Down, Crtdil
Rebuilding Evon With Bed Crldll
Or Bonkrupleiol And .lob flloee.
.,.nt. Clan "II", 1 Yr. OTR •
HazMa1 Roquirod. CALL Truck
Teoh 1100-377-3101 To Ouaify.
Earn 11,000 W..Oij. SlUffing

en·

17•·301 Eut Slh Ave. Suite 112

.,rid.,......,"""""
IOWI

-

Co&lt;si&lt;or,.., T-1 75110.

. ld•lon·• :tOO p.m.

"BADHABir
· Saturday Night Only

Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal. Free Estimates! In·
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 61._388·

Drivers Needed For 300 To 800 Vard Work, Mowing, Trimming,
Mile Radius Must Have Clast 8 lighl Tree Trimrhing , Clean Or
llcenM And Good UVR. EJpfri· Repa1r Flower ·Beds 25 Years Ex·
one• Also R.qulred. WHidy Pay parience, $30"Min. Free Est 7.0 .
&amp; Heallh Ins. Avltilllble, For More ...0·7139.

181 Green Terrace Top 01 Hill

1'11·11'-(12.50

PolllnPt I Ill

I=----=-'-----

740·~ 1.

I· IIIJ0.«l0.8.00.

Apfil101h, 11111, 8-4, Boby llems,
ChaJIQing Table, Bor't ~

Metal 9" OC Rib/White

Off

M1·

net!lville. Call Jim or Pa.ula, 740·

Will Care For Elderly Or Handi·

EARN EXTRA Ia

&amp; VICinity
voto.-s; no prior OXflO'ion&lt;o, lr•
--:---:---.,,;...== . dereils, nnd SASE 1o: N.B. DIPI

OR SIDING

Middleport. Presents ·

ba·

capped f'efson In M1 Home, Rol·
lndep4lndenl ConlrV.c:to" NMdecl erences. 740•441 - 1536· .
I300REWARD
For return or black/brown German For Delivery Of Chlmplon Oirec· Will haul junk or !rash away. $3S'
Shephard laken from Edilh Rog - torift Telephone Book For Ohio pidwp load. :104-675-5035.
ers farm on Redmud Ridge. An· Valley Area. Must Be Atleaat 18
swera lo name ·chance.· No Yeart Of Age &amp; Hllve UH Of An Will Mow a Trim Your Lawn Ex·
questions ask. Call John Rogers lnaured Vehicle Immediate perien·ced Reuonable Rates ,
1-800-287-()576. •
Openings A'lailable Call YDS AI Referencei, For Free E:~tinlates ,

33100 Pint Grove Rei,
Racine, Ohio 45n1
740-148-2461
"' Gr- ............~ ............16.25
1~ eo.,illt illne,_,,_,15.60

29 GAUGE ROOfiNG

Appearing Friday 8:00-1 ~-ft~• "
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

· D£UVER'I DRIVER

60 Lost and Found

lrimm~ or odd jobs,
~h . localed in

bysitling, any

992-4286.

Consrruclion Office Cltf'il Wind·
ows 95, Excel Spreadsheet Experience Prefet"red. Good Organi·

zational Skills Fax Reaume To:
Registered While Garman 3311-4711-8856. .
Shepherd, To Good Home, 740Counter Person Needed Must Be
441f-36!i4.
Dependable, Part-Time Evening
Yorker Benji dog male, neutered Hours, Apply From 8-10 A.M. 41
wtaU shota. Female cat -Tiger, 14108 At Cardinal Drycleaners,
bolh need loving good home. 19 Ohio ~Plaza, GallipoliL

. .

•

Dependable man will mow, till

30 Inventory Positions To Wa'rk
•111 -18 In Gallipolis, A1S5.50
Per Hour, Call 304·485-5200, For
Details.
·

Awon · $8 -$20 /Hr. No Door To
0oor. Easy Casl:tl 1·800-298Free Puj)piei·Biack lab &amp; Husky 0139 indlslslrep.
mixed, 4wkJ old, wormed, mother
COMIHOSOON
great dog, loves kid&amp;. 304-882New Sporrs Resraurant
3292.
Needing general manager, kitchFree To Good Home: 1 Year Old en management, kitchen· help,
Oti11an1 Spaniel PuPPI, Call After kilchen prep, banenders, hos1+
•:JJ ~M. 7•0.416·2660.
'
ess , serwers. Pt&amp;ase send rt·
Fuzzy, black eight week old sutne to : Twislers Sporrs. Grill
107 Academy Drive Ripley, WV

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

740-992-Q79

•

Wanred To Buv : Junk Auto's .Any
Condilion, 740-4•&amp;-9853.

740-24&amp;-9025.

STARTING AT $65 A LOAD
CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

WAYNE'S PLACE

.,

Wanted To Buy : Good Used Hot

Is Waiting! Call 1-900·407· 7182
E11. 79S7, $2.99 !Min. 111+ Sefv-U AVON I Alt Areas '! Shirley
Spears, 304-675-1429.
619·645-8434.

448-4759

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

security Guards- must be l.txe 10
work any llih Including moor woe- ·
kends. Must have clean police
record, good work hiluory, reliable
transportation, valid drjver'a Jlcense, home phone and muat
have black steel toe safet~
shoes. ·Pay start at $5.50 par·
hour. 32·40 hours per Wftek. Call
740·668· 2874 Mondaj· Frida,,
8:QOam.4:00pm. tor appointment

Tub For Sic;k, 740-446-2S 15.

Personals

• 10:00&amp;JII. ........ .

speda1 music~ at ftle Sunday Smic
Dr. James Acree invites the publl~ to aueod.

POSTAl JOBS TO lt8.35/HR.
Inc. Benefils. No Expofktnce. FOr
App. And Exam lnlo., Call 1·600·
813·3565, Ex1 6474, 8 A. II . ·9
P.M., 7 Oaya tds,inc.

be a1 18801 18. Call 814·11112·63111
(an11ime) or 30•·B7S·5VS5 alter
ENTICING! EXCITING! Your Dare 8pm, Wed lhru Sat

Free E•tinude•

Just off Bradbury Rd.
(Look for signs)
Middleport, Oh

•

Good Friday Scrrice April tO -1 pm
Easter Sunday Smices Aprill2 •

11' Ohio.

Vacanl land (At A Raasona~e
Price) On land Contract, Part
Pasture And Part Woods, 740·
367-7891.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Touch-Ton&amp; P.lone Raquwed
Procall Co. (602)954-7420

20 Yrs. Exp.
· Ins. Owner: Rick Johneon

WICKS .

•

ADVERTISING DEADLINE:

Announces Its Easter Services

Now takinp applications for drivers at Dorruno's Piua in Pomeroy.

2526.

Euter puppies, Shepnerdtlab

t.

.

Antiques, top prices paid, River·
ine Antiques, . Pomeroy, Ohio,
Run Moore ownlf, 740-992-

992-6576.

1·900-945-8456 x-3252
h11pi/Www.lhehotpagoo.
corwcut 131 791 1cu.hrn
$2.99/Min. Must Be 18 Yrs.

. i

.REACH.OV~R 18,000 H9MES,
IN T.HE tRI·COUNtv AREAl

Pomeroy

Required . Fax Resume To Grail
At FlrstPfus Direct, CA 1·800+
400-4690.

Wanred To Buy: Used Mobile
Hamea, 740-446-0175, 304-675·
. 5965.

005

Needed : Mortgage

Ben'"' fo!eecla Signers For Morl·
gage Documents. local Travel

~:

"Collectlblea, Anllques,
Mlacellaneouo,
Houaeholdl, elc."
· Jean While
740-24$-9448

NURSERY

Hours

'.

Notaries

Now TaOing Appll&lt;ttiont For Ex·
perienced Carpenters &amp; Roolltfs,
~ust Have Hand Tools, Mutt Be
Experleneed, 7&gt;10-24S.O&gt;I37.

BE A8ETTER
PARENT

(UmeStoneLow Rates)

.

THURSDAY, APRI-L 20, 1998- 12 NOON
INSERTION DATE:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1998

Need A Baby~nar In M1 Home, 2
Children Good Pay, l ite tiou&amp;e·
work Included, 740·379·2734.

304-773-5033.

(614) 992-3838

In The
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
• GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
.
.
• POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL

740-992-6667

49HS85.

Wanted to Buy

Antique• &amp; clean used lurniture,
will buY. one plect or complete
household, Oab~ Martin, 740·

II Call Me II
*I Buy Accumulations•

HOWARD ,
EXCAVATING CO. :

614-992-3470

.

Medical Tran'acripllon Services
wanled for loca l ollice. 1·888·

Abooluto Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Prooftets,
Diamonds, Anlique Jewolrj, Gold

~

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Man
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
• Easter BaSkets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assone&lt;l Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends .
and we will fill them.
Rt. 124 Minersville, OH
740-991-4559

• Fascio • Saamleu'
Gutter • Roofinil
• Replaeemenl Window.
. • Slalionary Docb
• Blown Insulation
• Garages • O.Cb
24,X 24 Pole Building
itarting ot $5995
740-992-2772

Call614·843·5426

children . yoga also can enhance concentration. Parents of childrcn ·with
special nrcds report yoga. reduces
their children's hyperactivity and
improves cognitive and motor skills.

S163.

773-578S Or 304·773-5447.

90

'

LOcal trudt driver, Clus A COL
'equired , log haul1ng, 74 0 · Q ~2 ·

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service. -Licensed
166,0hio &amp; Weal Virg inil, 304-

11/':-.

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

JlcL.SIDING &amp;
INSULAnON
• Vinyl Siding • Soffit

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

A SPECIAL SECTION

EOE.

J &amp; D Auto Parts. Buying
wreclled or IIBivagad vehicles .

• Vinyl Siding •·Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

it1 cs and Down syndrome . For th~sc

Auction
and Flea Market

80

Slerllng, Ele. Acqulsidons Jowelr)o
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galll&gt;olia. 7&gt;10·4&gt;18-2842.

992·5583

COnSTRUCTIOn

Yoga therapist Sonia Sumar ol'
Buckin~ham. Va., is known nationwide l'or her work with children who
have ccrchrul palsy. learning disahil·

Hillside Baptist
Church

hll&lt;:h • """''1"'re.

Uult'Be 1BYra.

p( lSCS .

Immediate OPJn ings for housekeepingflaund;y aide. Parl ·tlme,
rotating shifts. Point Pleuant
Nursing &amp; Rehabilita.tion Cen-ter,.
State Rou te 82. Rau te 1. Box
326, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 .
(A Glenmark·Genesis Aflillate) .

Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currency,

Ke rwin , who also works as a

counselor in the Maple Falls (Wash. I
School Di strict. says these ar~ all
good reasons for children to practice
yoga.
. "Working in sc hools. I sec how
scatterbrained kids can he." Kerwin
says. " This 'really docs help to
impro ve their conccntrnlion:·
.
Yoga requires chtldrcn to listen to
direction s "nd focus on holding

949·2682.

sene heater, encyclopedia, trailer

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

1998 Martin Streat
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

12/11/1111

COMMUNITY WIDE
CANDLELIGHT COMMUNION
Good Friday· April lOth
fro-:n 6:00 to.8:00 pm
at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Stop by and take the Lonl's Supper.
.·nave a prayer and be on your way.
All Faiths Welcome
Rev. Charles R. Swigget Pastor

.39760 St. Rt. 143

·---·

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

All Topplngo
Collin Ordora Aeeeptod
7
·7838

Computer Grephica
Designs
Ail Landscaping I
Lawn Services

81

wrmo .•..

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick •·Tlg • Aluminum Welding

7DoyoAWHk

LUDIClPE
DDIBII

Remodeling

"Build Your Dream"

'

'

'

...

House cleaner, · every Friday,
Racine area, six hours work, 7-'0-

Gara-ge Sale·3 Mllet out Jericho
. Ad. Fri • Sal V·? Dehumldlller,
VHS movlos, Chrlarmas ~ ... roll·
a-away. bed; portable TV, ktro ·

'

RADIIftiR REPAIR

FOOD
Mfllt'f
Open 24 Hra. A Dly

"2-6215

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

:

-·.. -

CttESttiRE

Pomeroy, Ohio

Easter Flowers,
Pansies, Cabbage,
roccoil, Cauliflower,
Hanging Baskets,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Shrubs, Spruce
Trees
Open Daily 9-5 .
Sunday 12-6

. ..

•

I

And WindcMI, 81.-AU·2669.

&amp; VIcinity

Custom Homes

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Home Remodeling Rio Granda.
Need Estimates On Sid1ng -toncrele Work Windows -Painting

Pl. Pleasant

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

.

113 W. 2ND ST.

•oo Ru·

!land Slrell, Mitldleport. Men,
'WOmen &amp; children's c:tothn, toy1,
houlllhold, ,klll of rriac.

"
JEff. WARNER INSUUNCE

CARPENTER SriiCE

•

Throe lamil1. 13th· 14111,

360° Communications

992·0077

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

Foctory Choke Only

1:00pm Frldey.

CELLULAR PHONES

Carpet 1c Upholstery
Cleaning
258 Pearl St.
Middleport, OH

sales ••per ..nce and be able to
worM with public, knowledge of
floor c;:overing &amp; decorating a
plus, long time commitment nee·
tlllfy, lind resume ro : Daily
Slntinel, P.O. Box 72i·60, Pomer·
oy, Oh. •5769.

Iunday &amp; Monday tdlllon ..

-

CHEVALIER'S
.CARPET CLEANING
SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAl .
50% OFF Ill

VItld to 1ucceed, mutt have

All Yard Sal• lluat • Paid In
AdvMU. Dtldlln•: 1:00pmrha
day before lhe ad 11 to run,

tf

YOUNG'S ·

GUN SHOOT
SUN., I:00 PM

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

• Weedeating

image," the Bellingham mom says.
"This· is a nice ·alternative hecause
yoga foc uses on the mind as mu~h ._,
the hody ...

AMERI(,AN LEGION.

BEECH GROVE ROAD

New &amp; used IIams. We
Buy - Sell . Trada: Toolo,
fishing equip., TV's,
C8'o, alerooo - little bH
of everything. Localed ·
on Ohio River Camp·
grounds, St. Rt. 124,
Recine, Ohio.
7411-949-1012

(740) 11115-4180.

""'-

RUTLAND, OH.

Ohio River
Campgrounds and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.

Plllftll

Weddiug .·
An'n iversary
Mike and
Barb
Triplett

Brion Morrtaon
(740) 985-3948

Fleg rard aala,
Pomeroy/ Ulddlaport May 1·2.
Aogltllr, pic:l&lt; up lllgo , _

614-992-7643 .

State Route 338 • At VIne •'Racine, Ohio

Ful or port limo, 1011 otariOf, moli-

·e· IIIIo Yellow

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

•Mower~

·

Happy

BISSELL BUILDERS, I~C.

Parts and Servlce/1

,.

Company Car, Re&amp;uiM To: P.O.
11o.1 33, Gallpou, OH 45631 , 740...a-0353.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity .

lllclll Mowa CLIIII;

Help Wenled

Ex~erf4tnced Prote111onal Ph .. •
botomlat W+F, Eatfy Morning•.

Pomeroy,

•"

with-children list include Chihuahuas, toy poodles and whippets
and Scottish terriers. But the list
sometimes contradicls the book's
· more detailed remarks about temperament Scotties, for example, are
said to be "l()lling and gentle with
people."
Paddie Swift,' a mother of .two
walking her Dalmalian , Griffen, in' ·
New . York's Central · Park on
Wednesday, joked, " Disney might
have to change the name of the
movie to ' 101 Dalmatians Ready to
Eat Your Kids.'" '
And Alexandra Day, author of the
popular "Good Dog,' Carl" children's books about a baby-sitting
Rottweiler, said there was no basis
for 'that breed - the nation's third
most popular - to be criticized,
either.
"They are 'family 'dogs, but they
protect their own," Day said.
· Her Rottweiler, Zabala, regularly
works with therapists and kids at
hospitals.
"He loves to play," she said.
"He 's been around . literally hun dreds of children. 'I

prompted her to take pan in one of 16,000 women were recruited,
the lar~es t cancer prevention trials tamoxifen would be expected to,preever.
vent 120 to 125 breast cllncer cases,
" I' m just thrilled. Wow! " Lorah while producing 58 to 80 new cases
said. "Thi s is almost overwhelm· of uterine cancer- which is far casmg .
icr to detect early and cure than
Tamoxifen. made by Wilmington. breast cancer.
Del. -based' Zeneca 'Pharmaceuticals,
In 1994, the study was suspended
is widely used to prevent the spread during congressional hearings into
four uterine cancer deaths in another
nation·s cancer· programs, said its or return of breast cancer.
Women at risk of getting the di s· study ~f breast c,aocer treatment
Six-year study showed that taki'ng
the drug tamoxifen cut cancer rates case because of family history, pre· using tamoxifc'n. And University of
by nearly half am~ng women who ca ncerous breast lesions or age were Pittsburgh surgeon Bernard Fisher,
were considered at risk of getting randomly assigned to five years on cumdinator of the study. was inves·
either u placebo pill or tamuxifen .
tigatcd lor report s that he wa~ slow
the disease.
According to .the institute. the to address research problems.
Critics raised concerns about the
That did not prevent women from
drufs links tQ cancer in the uterine drug reduced the rate of expected
breast cancers from one in 130 s.tayin~ in the study.
limng and to blood clots.
" I never considered dropping
The institute has mailed · letters · women to one in 236 during the
studya
decline
of
about
45
per·
out.
My thoughts were more like,
announcing the breakthrough to the
13.000 women in the United States cent. Tamoxifcn slips into estrogen 'Maybe I'll save my child's life and
and Canada who participaied in the receptors of breast cancer cells and my own and other people's,'" said
s!udy, which was first reported Sun- locks up the cells. preventing them Fern Maklin, 49, of Newtown, Pa. .
from growing and dividing.
Study participants will be tracked
day by The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Tamoxifen has been associated for at least two more years.
"This is now the first study in the
Researchers still are analyzing
world to show that a drug can reduce with increased ri sks for cancer in the
and
with
blooq
clots
in
the
data. Medical recommendations
uterine
lining
the incidence of breast cancer," the
the lungs. Those risks prompted The for using tarnoxifen to prevent canletter stated.
Details of the study were· to be National Women's Health Network cer are still being developed, accord·
in Washington to criticize the study. ing to the letter.
made public today.
1
"If this turns out to be a good
The ·women now can go to the
Sona Thak)c:ar, a spokeswoman .
for the National Cancer Institute, risk-benefit ratio for some women , 270 medical centers participating in
said researchers were not discussing that will be goOd ne)"S, " said Cindy the s-tudy to find out whether they
the repprt until it was formally Pearson, the group's executive were taking tomoxifen or the place- ·
· bo.
released this afternoon. The report is director.
" I'm hoping I was on tamoxifen,
Researchers rr.u st tell what the y
expected to address the concerns
about uterine cancer and the forma- know about "the ·nst of this bene,- but if I was in the placebo ann, I am
fit ," she said. "Did an) women die · going to ask my physician to put me
tion of blood clots.
of
anything caused by tamoxifen? "
on · tamox ifen because I really
One of the study's participants.
Leslie Ford. the National Cancer believe in it." said Helen Wilson, 48,
45-year-old Patricia Lorah of Read·
ing. Pa., lost her mother and grand· Institute offi cial overseeing the trial.. of Nonh Wales, Pa.
mother to breast cancer. The deaths predicted four years ago that if
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
federa l government has notified
thousands of women of a break·
through in the fight against cancer,
say ing a study for the first time
show s that a drug may prevent
breast cancer.
·
The National Cancer Institute ,
the age ncy that coordinates the

110

70

Floor M1fntenance Pelltlon~st

have e•perlence In

strip~

ping, -ing. bulling, ear.-1 ..,.
and other dulles ill llllgntd.
Pick up appllcodon 11 Rocksp•lngs Rehab Coi&gt;t•r. Rock·
springs Rd .. Pom•roy, OH. No

FINANCIAL
-----------

210

Business
Opponunity

'"Bu1ine11· For Sale'" Small Rea.
taurant /Grocery On Appro• . 3
Ac:re1 Wilh River View, Seriou1
Inquiries Only Plic:ed To 54111 Call

740-256-61()11 Alii For Owner.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you cto bull·,.
nell with people y6u Mow, and
NOT 10 aond mono1 lllrough "''
mail until you hl.va inYIIIigattd ·
holllring.
If you have an esrabtished bualnest lncl unu~ed parking apace, '
you may quahl)o to bt 1 U·Haul

Dte!Or. lll"*llltd &lt;all 1100-282·

8575.

:::.",.;,""...:•...:c:a,_,•.:.~=-----Tired 01 Being Broke! Earn
I'IIUITIIATED? NO RIAL AI).
VA*'WNTPO'IENltAL?
CIUIICILNI'
HJIIU .,. omployM and llol rou
•• In a no (lllln IIIUalion, 101J ·i1 10 1Qvraoll 10 consider joining
1M L-n Group. This Ia o· high
Income prvloulon, rapid ad·
voncomont .-tontlal, alld toll·
saoalac1lon holpl.._ ltmilles. For
'1"'1' 11111101&gt; lnttnriow, c:al S!M
Snllth otl14-llll2·7440.

$3,000.00 • W"klj. Training
Prv•ldod. S.ious 1114(11iri.. on,.
1-«JJI.IIIIS-Dlle Ell 05113

230

Proleaatonal
Services

llvlnglton•a basement wattrproating, all biHmanl repaltt
done. lroe astlm1te1. llfotlmo
guar,nloe. 10111 on job OKporl·

-

304-87s.2145.

�•
Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

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•

AUEYOOP

'BIUDOE
I

•

fHJU,JP
ALDER

~5678.

•

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Nl real estate advertising In
this newspaper IS SU!JteCIIO
the Federal Fair HouslngAcl
of 1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitation or diSCrimination
based on race~ COlOr, religion ,
SBII famHtal starus or national

origin, or any lntemlon to
make any such preference,
lknl1atlon or dlscrimlnation.M

This newspaper wm not
knowongly accept
advertisements for real estate
wnlch Is In violation of !he
law Our readers are hereby
1nformed that all dWellings
aavenised In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedroom 1 112 bath, 314 basement, new roof, Siding &amp; windows
on 2.4 acres in Hartford. $27,500.
:JCM.II82-3858.
3 Bedroom Home Complele~ Ae·
•. mDdeled 2 Car Garage With SecOnd Floor Approx. 2 Ac;res, Yard,
Pllnd. Beautllul Lendscaplng 1 11
4 Milel Down 218, 740-..e-9633.
' 3 Bedrooms, 1 112 Beths, Ja~
Dmlo. 7&lt;40·406-8251 After 5 P.ll ·
3 or 4 Bedroom, two bath. ranc:h
st~le manufactured type home
1,800sq. fl. Situated on one acre
of ground, Rayburn Rd. 114 M1te
off SandhilL Addltlonal acreage
aYailable . Peaceful, puvate,
coun1rw setting . $62,500 304875-1296 Arl)'-.
4 Bedropm house on Rt. 62 on 2
acres of ground. 5 Miles North of
Pt Pleaunt on Po11et Creek Rd.
30'· 713-5787
BUY HOMES FROM $4,1100 1 ·5
Bdrm., Loc:al Gov"l &amp; Bonk Repo's
Cel 1-800·522·27.10, X 17118.
For Sale By Owner: Nlcelr Dacoraled, WeH Mainrained 2 Bedroom
Home located In Chelhlre, Asaumable Loan, 740.387·7117 AI.., 5P.II.
In New Haven-Coukl be a alarler
home or rental property, been
renlino $300/mo. ready now. due
to lllnen., needs to tell $25,000
fwm. For more info call 304-77357&lt;48.
•
Pomeroy, 3 bedroom home, newer
., . rool, newer furnace &amp; hot water
tank , ~handy man special" .
$10.000, 814-237.0125
Localed In Uason, WV .g
Roomo. 2 Bothl. Bo..,...,~ 2 Cat
Carport On 1 Acre Of Land, 2
Porches, 30&lt;-713-58 15.
'
Middleport, beautiful twa stor~ . 3
br, 2 bath, large tr. &amp; lr.• oak
dOOf'l I trim, Sm1th'1 C111tom oak
·cabinets, Jenn-a1r range, dishwasher, detachell garage, by ip·
pooromant. 740-992·52&lt;3.
MODULAR HOOSE AUCTION
,. 28'158' Ranch St~le Modular
Houae W11l Be Auctioned To The
Highell Bidder On llay 9, 1998
.t.i 12:00 Noon AI The Buckeye
Hllra Career Center located At
Rio Grande, Ohio Pub4ic VI8W11'1Q
Monday Through Frida~ From
· -1~ . 00 A.M To 3:00P.M. Please
Call 7•0· 2•5· 533• For An Ap·
poinrment. Formal Viewing 01 The
Houae Is Dur1ng The Buckeye
H1lla /Ohio Valle~ EXPO On Salurda~. Apnl 1a. And Sunday, A.prtl
19, 1998; 12:00 Noon -500 PM

Each Day.

River View 3 Bedrooms. 2 Barns,
fn.Gn)uncl Pool, 740-256·9393.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12:ceo Recently remodeled, must

see apprec18ta 304-ezs...et•o.

12J85 Trailer 3bt, 1 beth 15.500.
Col 30'-ll75-..78.
1&lt; 110 3BR. 1999 Down &amp; ONLY
$111 per mo. FIN ar &amp; tree Skirt·

1·8811-9211-3426.
14:.70 Ymdale Mobile Home 2
bedroomJt bath with 7114 pull
Owt living room I 21'10 pull oul
Miller bedroom, new perch, for
more inlo ••II 304·773·5683
IIIMt mtlllge wifl retum caM.
1870 12Je0 3br, 1 bolh,
lol304-lll2·3891.

on,.,,...

1973 12~65 ca-on traior 2br
w/1 room add-on . $4,500. 304·
882-31112.
11171 t4x70 Mobile Home Minor
Repair 18 .000 Includes AC &amp;
Awninga, 7•0·•41·6830 After e
P.ll.
1g81 Oakwood •••B5. $12.500,
e1c. cond. till Clay10n 14170
w/hoat pump. $t3,g00. Will dO·
liver local Calf K &amp; K Mobile
Homes 304·875-3000 between
llltl&gt;5pm.

t8e4 18x80 lndlea, Euelltnr
Cordtion 31• Aeto Land, Located
on Hiilto9 Drive on Noiflhbo•hoocl
....000 (740)..1-CIMt
1ges Clayton llobllo Home 2
Btdroomt, 2 Barha, Gas Fire·
plo£o. GatGen Tub On Rarual Lo~
Finon&lt;:ing Ava1loblo. 7•0·245·

i7311.-...._.
ABANDON HOllE lloh 2 pay·
111ume loan, owner II ·
71i1.

Clayton Mobile Home Few
Uontf'll Old, llka New On larot~
Ront.a Lo~ 5&lt;111 Cheap! 740-"119•28.

Dlsc:ount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accessoriea Water Heaters, Vi·

nr l Skirting Kits $299 .95. An·
chars, Wood &amp; Flbefgla'll Stepa,
Roof Coatmgs, Doors, Windows,
Plumbing &amp; Electrh;:al Suppllet.
Block•ng Wood &amp; Wedge st And

Morel Call Belinen's UobUa
Home 5uwir AI1· 7.CO-«I!-9416.

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 monrhs FREE lor rent
Includes sk1rtmg, delul!le steps
and setup On I~ $187 08 per
month With $1075 down. Call 1·
000-1!37·32311.

Cell Fiwco Lilo

uooe•• 5111

-

Sol&lt;lp' Dellvtry

•

For LHae Mobile Home : Site' On
White Road With Electric C•tw llaytag Washer &amp; ·Drrar worki
Wattr, Stptic Tank, Near Holler
2 Apartment• In Rio Grandt Hospital $125 Per Monlh, 7•0· Good, $150, 740-44a-g&lt;487,
Area: Acroaa From College, 1
Now That Spring 11 Hero 11 II
&lt;411-438t.
Room, 1 Bath. Udlitles lnc:ludocl,
Time To Stock-Up On Your Avon
$200/Mo Depoolt Required : 1
Skin· So-Soft t.totlture Suncare
Bedroom Apanment, t2t01Uo.,
ptul. To Order Call Pam Ar 7-40Utihues Included , 1·888·840·
245-~43
MERCHANDISE
0521
Oal&lt; single caplian·o bed·2 drawSingle House 2 Bodrooms, Qulo~
art &amp; stotage underneath, book
Historic, Re aldentlal Area, De- 510
Household
cart headboard ._ maltreas.
pooH Required . 740· "8·2287,
Goods
$300. GE Otyet 1 112yr. old, oJc.
740·&lt;411-4474.
cond. $150. Car rima oH ol1987
Recond itioned Ce""ro. 30+675-7429 oker 3pm, .
Two bedfoom houae, clean, re- Appliances:
lrloeralor, no ttove, no lnaldt Waahera, Dryers, Ranges. Refri·
pets, depoait raquirtd, 7-40-e02- gralora, 90 Day Guarantee ! Patio Table, Four Chalro With
French C i t~ Ma~ tag , 7-40-UI· Cushions &amp; Umbrolla $100 7•0·
3090.
"8 ,06&lt;
7795.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Small rwo bedroom mobile home
lor rent in Racine, 740 ·992-5039.

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fvr·
nlshed and unfurnished, sacurlay
deposit required, no pelt, 7-40992-2218

New Ooublewlde 3BR, 2 bath
$1.325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1·
868·926·3426

1 Bedroom Apartment Neweat
and Cleaneat In the area, near
Holzer $279 Ptus Ulllllies, Depotlt
and Lease Required (7-40,-4•821157

Ba
Oou·
blewide Displa~ Ever
Factor, Outlot Pr~lng 304-738·3409.

t Bedroom" Aparunent, Stove, RelrlgeratQr Included, No Pets, 7404-411-2583.

Older 12J50 mobile home willl two
big lots, and all udllty hookups In
Rutland, out or high water, aa Is
call740-742·21l70.

tbr apartment, private, quleL Deposit. Relerenc:es. $250/mo. 30•·
875-1550.

saooo.

Or Rent· 2 Bedrooms, May Sell
On land Conrrac1, Can Be left
On Lo~ 7&lt;40-,&lt;e-1810.
Slnglo Parlftt Program. Spac1ai
financ1ng on 2, 3 I -4 bedroom
homea. Payment&amp; aa low 11
1110. Cal oow304--755-5885.
Special Hlill80 3BR. 2 balh.
$1,325 Down, 1205 Mo. Free air
&amp; ~eallklmng . 1·800-89t-87n.
SPRING SPECIALS
Mlllown
UFI1edRatea
!118/llo. Poymont1
li?,ll5on•A.
~- Dlllvory &amp; Sot-up
Only AI Olk-d Homoo
NRro, WV. 304-755-58i&amp;
TAX SPECIAL. ·
New 3br $999/down $188/mo.
Free Set-up &amp; Delivery. Onl~ 3
Lotti Onlr at Dakwood Homeo N&gt;
'"' W1l 304·755- 5885.
Late Model Repo Set Up On lol
1 ·800·~2.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
120 It long. ao lt. long by 75 It
wide, levellol in Middleport, re·
duced from 123,000 TO 111,000
oeo. 740-992·22110.
30 Acrea Wi!h"T'Imber Close To
Gallipolis With Good Home Silt,
$25,000 740-2511.JI574.
4.95 Acres Ridgewood Estate&amp;·
Sandhill RDad. Water, electric &amp;
coblo. $18,000.304-875-5828.
7 Shaded navigable creek side
112 acre camp sitet; county wa·
ter, electnc. $1 ,500·S2,500ea. &amp;
locked gate. 7 High sites tor permanent cablns, · 112 acrea, some
locked, soma not, aama utilities.
Write or Vllil Roy &amp; Nancy See
Pleasant Ridge Ad . 10 M11ea
Plea~ant oil WV Rt.
'Nil.
BRUNER LAND
7411-441-14112
011111 Co.: Gall1po11s, Neighbo-rhood- Rd., 10 Acre BuHding Slte,
Loll Of LMI S1g,ooo, Of 22 Aa·
oo With Pond NOW $24. 000.
Friendly R1dge last 2! 8.5 Acres
$1,500 Or 6 5 Acres $8,000 Both
.$15,QQO. County Water.
Utlgl Ca. : Oanv111e, N1ce 11
AtJBI $18,000 ·12.000 Down+
S212JMo . Or 9 Acres $16,000,
water. Oyesville, Nice 11+ Acres
$10,500 Very PrMite.
Call For Free Maps + Owner Fi·
nancn''U lnb. Taka 10% 011 Us ted
Prlceo On Calh Purchesesl

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Cash Pa1d Fo'r Lend In GaiOa
Countr, BlacKburn Realty, 7-40446 0008.

RE NTA LS

, atove relrig"'"" 81 129 Gaorge St. NIW Ha·
.,.n, Wv. $2115/mo. 304-713.g171
L-llossege.
3 Bedrooms, Rent + Utill!itl •
Dopoolt, 740-797-4345

SBit.

No,..,....
Until»&gt; 1111111
E·Z FinllnCinQ

Nice clean, 2bf, references &amp; d•
nope11 304-875-5162.

2br, 1 bath. ·mob1ie home. Go ill·
polls Ferty. $250/mo. rent. 1100
deposiL304-675-7761 .

Llko Now Duple~. Largo Living
Room; Fullr Equipped Kitchen,
Dining - . 2 at• oom~ IBolh. W/0 Hook-Up. Alloohtd
Fully C-'"'1. 2 112
On 581, 740·4118-

21102.

12x20 carpor ,, can be seen at
809 Pearl St., M1ddlepott, 7•0·
992-~. .

3437.
2bdrm. aptl., total e l ectr~c, appliances furnished, laundry room
lacllitle&amp;, CIOM IO IChOOI in town,
Appllcatlana available at: Village
Green Apts. •49 or call 7,.0.e92·
3711 . EOH.
3 Rooms &amp; Bath U p~~:/,\;; ~N~~o
Pets, Water Paid In c
740-3118·11.00.

0

I

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive
~om $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; mOv1es. E:all 7o40·448·2588.
Equal Hauling OppOramlty.
Furnished Efficiency Apartment,
Central Heat &amp; Ait Conditioning,
Carpet Throughout, Private ParkIng, All Ublities Furn•shed Excepr
Electric, Private &amp; Quiet, 740'&lt;18-2802.
Gracious 11ving 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village M'anor and
R•verslde Apartments '" Middle·
port From 1249·$373. Call HO·
992·5084 Equal Hout.ng Oppor·
rurnes
New ~tngle effiCiency apartment in
Mldctleport, utllilies paid, S375
pluo depooit. 7&lt;40-992-5304.
Nlce clean elllency apilflment,
references &amp; deposit, no pttl.
30o4·675-5182.
Two bedroom apartment 1n Pomercy, utilities paid, no pets, 74Q·
992·5658

TP"'ree bedtoom apartment, t300
plus depoail and ulililles, Third
Street, Racine, Oh10, 7•0-2474292.
Upsta•rs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur nished. Clean. No Pata, -•nee
&amp; Oepollt Requ~red, 7-40·•46·
t51~
-

450

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Mottl loweat Ratti In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO
Cinema•. Showtlml &amp; OlantJ:
Weellly Rates, Or llof11111y Ratti,
Construction Workers Wtlc:ame
740- .. 1·58118, 740-141·5187.
Sleepmg rooms with cooking
Alto tfliler apace on river. All
hook-ups. Ctll alter 2'00 p m.,
30'·773-5851 , MIIIDnW'l

WJLL!AM- MOrEL
i l l SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS
ti'ECIALLOW
WEEKLYAATES
IIHGLIS I1ID.OOWUKLY

480 Space for Rent
Lorge mobile homo lor lot rent on
- -.304-e75-7971 .
llobilo homo alto ovallobll bel·
wHn Athtna Jlnd Pameto~ call
7&lt;40-38~7 .
'

r-

R'SFumRufl
Mil
WY
0 "•
~X~ 1 ,

-Sell'li~",

Uaed &amp; Anbquas
Furniture.
304-773-5341 .

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upnghl. Ron Evans Enterpnaes,
Jackson, Ohio. 1·1100·537·9528.
Used Carpets For Two Rooms,
14Q...46-2386.

• Supplies

~es(7,0)&lt;4H982

Anuque Pocket Watches, Windup Wrlll Watch.es, Old Colna.
Gold And Sliver, Good Uted
Cameras, Pto{ec10r Lampl, Photo
Albums, Old Clocka, Typewrite.'&amp;,
Photo Frames, Camera Casea,
Figurlnt Statues 422 Second
Ave, Gallipolis, Oh1o (740)4461615
•
Are Yout Looking For Avon Pro·
duel&amp; But Don't Know Where To
Find Them? Alto, If You Would
Like To Sell Awon, Call Pam AI
740·2•5-5&lt;43.
SCREEN TV FOR SALE:
Responsible l?anr To Take On
Small Monthlr Pa~menta. Good
Credil A Mull. Call 1-800-7181857.

Ono bedroom apartment in llld· BIG SCREEN lV FOFI SALE: Re:dlopo::---:-'~_77&lt;0_-99_2_·_21_7_6._ _ _ _ 1 sponslble portr to take on small
One bedr.oom apartment in e.tid- monlhly payments. Good credit a
dlepor~ an u•lltioo paid, , 210 Pit Jl'USLCoi 1·800-718-1657.
month, $100 depoall, call 7•0· Brand Newl Greal Glhl COividBO
992-7806.
·
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Point Pleasant WV Nlca s Room Navar CUI of boll $125. Holds up
U11furnished Aparlment, 304 -a 7s- to 9•0 discs. also holds tapes.
1115. 1Jter 6 PM.
Call 740·992·6836 alter e pm .
co. &amp; 1apes nor lf1Ciuded.
At:: ~"!'n~E
1 Bedroom apll. ror elderly or
disabled . HUD aaslstad. EOH
~882-3 1 2 1 .
Small Apartment Upsralrs Close
To Galhpolis &amp; Grocery, N'o Pets,
Relerences. 740.406·1158

Prlm ..t•r· $9Q ln11allation with
$50 rebert F1rat month free with
free movie channala, StarOne
apecial, $41 lnatallatlon, 800283o-2e40.
Ou
.
aen llle waterbtd, $150; boy't
Levi't, almoar new, husk~ 11z81
32ll28; 7&lt;40·992-6566.

18fr. Above ground pool with as· Washer &amp; Dryer $150, H0·448·
seasoriealaprox . 30x40 privac;y 2003.
fence/In e•cellent condition 304773·5693.
Waterline Special : 314 200 PSI
121 .95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI
22 112 M3S Inch Dog Caga $45; $37 00 Par 100: All Brass Com·
Brand New Heavy Swag Lamp, pression Fillings In Stock '
Glass Wllh Teardrop Bulbi, 180; RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
740·4&lt;1-8885. Alter 5 P.ll. Or Jackson. Ohio, 1·880-537·9528
AnydiN Weekends
Wedding Gown-Beautllul 1vor~
48J72 &lt;lak Dining 'Table. Willi 4 sequined, re·embroidered lace,
E•(tra Leaves &amp; 8 Marc,lng ~ze 10 with ¥811. Only $225. 304·
Chaira, Excellent Condilionl Paid 675-80&lt;10
$1,200 Will Sell For $800. 740·
388-ll824.
Wheel ·horse 8hp. riding irlower,
nice. $800 080. John Deere 210
8)(8 Heavy dut~ utilily trailer. nder 10hp. Koiher engine, nice.
road ready wl1aad1ng tampa 304- 1,400 000. II T.D. Bhp. rider r8tr
675·8348.
engine, runt &amp; mows good. $300
Amazing Metabolism Break 080. 304-875-3824.
Through. Looe J 0 "' 200 lb•. Call
Building
For free consultation and Free 550

---------1 BIG
Now Tak1ng Applicat1ona- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townl"'ouae
Apanments $295/Mo., 740-4400006.

Palatoble 8FT Slato Top Oru~a·
wick Complete With Sllcka, Balls,
Rack1, cover, New Felt, and
LIQhll . Excellent Condition.
(740)-17E...,;,gs

Rainbow vacUum cleanet, Acer
computor. 31151 aluminum ahut·
tors 30,·882·3121 8am· 12pm.
___,,....,,-,....:..:..:..:..:~=-:-:-I 304-882·3274 alter 12pm.
~N ew
• Rem 1naton 1' oo LT 20 Royal Oak camping memberahlp
gauge, SSOO. 740-992·6154 after lor sale. reaaonable priced. ••II
5pm
..:...~·7.::::---:-:---::~-:--,.-l &lt;~9·886·4905 alter 6pm or call &amp;
Wileon'e A""W' Surplue
leave message &amp; I will return
Best pricea an~where- full l1ne of 'J')ur can
Advantage Camo in time for Sears Llfestyler 2808 Treadmill
turkey season. Great aelectlon of Pa1d $800 Less Than 2 Hours
new and used boots; lots of new Use Do To illness, 1350, 740and used camo. alzes 2 monthi 388-9080.
td 4X: backpacking and camping
items; kld'1 clothe•: U.S. made Smnh Corona Word flroceuor
Sm1th I Wesson knives and fota W1th Screen, Hal lotus 3,
more. Come and check us out. Sp&lt;eadsheets, Hard Drive And A
We aro open s ·~Oom-8.00pm Disc Drive, 'More Features, Cafl
everydey. Call us 81 740·992- Pam AI 740.245-9835.
7093 or 1·800-3&lt;111-8176.
WARM UP: High Effk:11ncy Natu·
ral And LP Gas Furnacea. L1le·
530
Antiques
time Warranty On Heat ExchangBuy or aell Riverine Antiques, er. ·u You Don't can Us We Both
1124 E. Main Streel. on Rt. 12-4, loset• Free Estimateal Add·On
Pomeroy. Hours · M.T.W, 10:00 Heat Pumps Onlr Sllghty Higher.
a.m. to e:oo p.m.• Sunday 1:00 tD Call Ul Today. 1998 Ia Our 28th
8:00 p.m 740·992·2528, Ruu Year In The Healing &amp; Cooling
Bus1nesa1 740-446-6306, 1-800·
Moore ownet.
291-0098 .

540 Miscellaneous
Marchand 1se

2 Bedroom Apartment, Uti1U1e1
Paid, $425/Mo.; $100 Depo~t. No
Pets. 740·44~· 1637, 740·448·

Cement Morter MIMef 8 HP Honda Motor Asking $1,200 Hardly
BeenUoed, 7&lt;40·245-9033.
Concrete &amp; 'Plastic SePuc Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gahona Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1·800·537·9528.
Couch matching love seat &amp; oaK
coffee table. $150. 304-e7S.6963
orleavenssage
England /Coraa1r Couch I Chair,
Goad Cond1t1on . Aakmg $350,
740·•-373
For late- large blrn lull ol dlll'let
bottles, book's:-Taking beat oller:
Open until 15th On SR 338 goong
toward Ravenswood brldg•. 1•0·
84~5327.
.
Go kart

~nd Bllrll, tsoo,

~49 ·2381111ot

31Cou •lw

: :=."t!:t.7''

Anlwll • PNt1a • Pua:at.

...• ......nile

· 45~Gtlag r

.~

Rc c•uaun
Alien IIIOIIUy

Rl~
Conecttr,

Dan

Mtlllllet-m

11

olcHtt'le
17 Builder's .._

Cer181n '

eleclronlllbe

14 lleop .....

11 - out(~l 551-.1~

po~~

NEW BANK REPO"S Onlr 3 leltl
Still under warranty, owner li·
nancing available. 304-755·
7191 .

3br House 1n New Haven, WV
I335Jmo. • d1pos11. 304· 773-

IllY Ill MARCH

For Lease

OOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahtn, dryers, rafrlgaratora,
Divorce Forces Salea-Taka over
ranges Sltaggs Appliance•. 76
paymanta, 2br, 2 ba!h, llnanc:mg
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobllt homes Vine Street, Call 740--446· 7.398 ,
IIVIlilablo. 30•·755-5566
$260·$300, sewer. wa11r and HI00-&lt;99·3499
For sale- 1970, 12x50 mobile trash Included, 7&lt;40-992·2187.
Refrigerator $75; Dryer $95; Elec:·
home, new furnace &amp; water heat·
er, lff8.Shef &amp; dryer and air concll· 2 Bedroom Beau11ful River VIew tnc Range $85, Nice Wuher
!loner, $3,000 or make an otter, Relerenc;.., Depoalt, NO PET!II $150; N1ce Side By Side Relng·
Foster's UobUe Home Park, 740- eratar Water &amp; lc' In Doar, $350
740-992·56Q&amp;.
441 -0181 .
1 Year Warr ant~ ; G.E. Washer
Huge 28J80 3BR, 1 112 bath . 2 Bedroom UobUe Home. Refer· 1205 l1ke New 1 Vear Warranty,
Skagga Appliances 76 VIne
Starting at ONLY $39,999. Many
oplions a~tallable 1-888-928- encea Required, No Peta, Rent Street Gdpolla. l40-o448r7398.
Plus Depo•t. 74Q·797·4345, 7403426.
_4'6_·08~79~·-------·l Super· Capaally Whirlpool Wash·
er&amp;"""'r$100, 7&lt;40·256-1170.
large selecbon of used homes. 2 "
Two 2 Bedroom t.toblle Home,
...... ,..
or 3 bedrooms. Star1ing at $2995.
""' Fu rn1 to re Sto re
Ou1ck delivarv.. Call 740-385- You Pay Ulllllieo, &amp; Depo1lt, &amp; We Movedl u·-"
Refetences Required, In Porter Below The Holiday Inn In Kanau 9621 .
Area814-388-9162.
9a , OhiO. Beds, Orestera, Couch·
LIIIITED OfFER
2 Bedroom Trailer (?•O) 448 _ B.!l , Manresses, Ect. Hra M-T·W.
10.4, (740)446-4182
1998 Ooublewide 3br, ·2 baths. 4
110
=::::.!:.::~:.::.::-:-.---·1
tt,699fdown $259/mo. On!~ at
Sporting
Oakwood Homes Nitro, WV 304· 24 Foot Pontoon Boat For Sola; 2 520
Bedtoom Trail~&lt; 7&lt;40-« 1•1536,
Goods
755-5885
Make 2 Payment• Uove In tfo
Payments Aher 4 Years, 304-138·
7295.

ACROSS
1 11tllcel
10
12
1•
15

'•
•

tat Tme Buyers, E·Z Financing
2 or 3 lle&lt;lroom. Around $200 per
month. Call &lt;;redit line 1-800·

•'

NIA Cro11word Puzzle

.•'
490

The Dally Sentinel o Page 15

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Thuntday,April9,1998

!Jluraday, Aprll9, 1~

'·

1

740·

Spm,

Golds G)&lt;m $12S, like New, 740.
24W405.
Grubb't Plano- tuning &amp; repain.
Problems? Need Tun.a? Call the
piano Or. 740·44e·452S
Hand Made Blanket Oak I M••
Choat. 740 · 370~2720 Allor t

P.M.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Alc&gt;oirld, How I -.1111n SroCk
Cei Ron Evons, 1-IOCJ.537·1528. ·

Block, brick, oewer pipes, wind·
ows, linlel1, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande. OH Call .740·245·
6t21

1210 David Brown uactor, 85 hp.
diesel, Irani end loader bucket,
nw.nureiDtk, be.&amp;e apear and bac~
bale loader, good condition,
ssooo: 154 Jonn Deere manurt
st&gt;&lt;eader. high flotation tires. 220
bulhei, new chain. $500: golf can.
S1000; 7-40-742·3084 or 740·742·
3089.
1971 Cab .Over International
Trans Star Tractor 350 Cum·
mlngs Engine. Good Tlreo. Good
Shape, $4.300 7&lt;40-«11-2415.
3 PI ~tch Dialc, 3 Pt Saader /fer.
tHzer Spreader 2 Horaedrawn
Turning Plows, llulch Hay. 740·
448-434-4.

580 Club Cadet 16 HP With u•
Deck &amp; Front Blade, 740· 448·
24&lt;5.
7' Sickle bar mower. scraper
blade · &amp; yard rake $400. 304675-2917.

Ac

2 raw no 1111 corn planter.
John Deere 7ft. hay bine. Ford
10ft. transpou 411k, all in good
condlion. 30+273-4215.
Beat The Spring Ruah, getJour
mowers &amp; tfimmtrl luna up
now. Sider'• Equipment Henderson, WV. 304-875-742t.
John Deere 2010 diesel tractor,
42hp. , wide front, good rubber,
$4100: 20 hp. Noma lawn tractor.
two years old, .e• cu~ 1900. ·740742·2387.
Massie Ferguaon 1010 4 WD
Whh Belir llower. 15.989 740·
256·1539, 740-256·1371.
Shtnnlu Tractor 25 HP 4x4 like
New, 7•0.-2..5.
Your Area John Deere oealer
For Residential A.nd Commercial
lawn Equipment Compact Utility
Trac1ora From 20 To 3D HP. All
Slzea Of 4 WD And 2 WO Farm
Trac1ors, Hay Equ1pment, John
Deore Skid St- Loaders. Check
With Ut About Fmanclng As Lew
As 2.9'% On lawn T11ctors And
Low Rate .Flnenclng On New And
U11d Equipment Carmlchael'a
Fatm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 7&lt;40·
406·2412 HI00-594-1111 .

630

Livestock

2 regiatered yearling short·
horned bulls. 740-8,9-11053.
30 Anguo And Chi·Angus Bulls
For Sale, Reasonably Priced, Ex·
cellent Breeding, Slate Run
Farms• ..,ckson 740-286·53115.
51 Fair Pigs 4Q-801bs S556a Call
30'·576·2579 lillie Rtl""'.
8001 Holste.ntHereford steen,
serious callers only, call 740·98544&lt;7 bolore 8om or alter 8pm
Angus bull, 14 monlht otd, ep:·
pro•. 750 lbs•• seoo OBO. 740 742·2133.

Ll•--

SPECIAL SPRING
FEEDER CALF SALE

Athono
Saaorday,
Apri 1111 1 P.ll. All
Consigmema Welcome. Hauling
Available. ~nle Accapted Alter
4 P.!t. Friday 740·582·2322 Or
7&lt;10-698-3531
CHAIIPION DRIVE
CLUB f1tQ SALE
Fridar. April 10, 1gve 1 P.ll.
Fa~ene
Co.
Fairgrounds,
Waohlolgton. C. H. Oh10, Selling
200 Head Free Bu~ing s,rvlce
Sale Dar Phone: 814·336·g120:
Ganer Genetics, 814-871 -7697,
614-875·8892: Jedr Swine Farm
81&lt;·86,·4847, Rick Starr 814·
998·5347. 61&lt;·998-2515. Nor•:
G•lll• Co. Champion Was Purchulld From This Sal.. 4 Ye,,
OOJI Of 8, Como Tako A Look/

1871 Chevy Caprlct .COO engine,
good COndibOfl30~75-57...

. ""

1gas Chevy Van cftan , good
tires, ac, goOd cond, t2,000 firm.
304-713-8111 .
19813 Chtv~ Aslro cargq van ,
good c:ondoon. $2,150. 74Q·992·
8154alter 5pm.

West
• 54

1D75 Lincoln Mark IV Good 400
Engine And Auto Trans. teOO
1&lt;0 ...&lt;6-m4.
1910 Pontiac Lemano, V·8 au·
lomatic, good running, no rust,
7.CO·II2-1302IIYOflingl.

1990 F-250 4 WD, 5 SpeoG, Diesel. $7.800. 740-446-9317 ..

South

1061 Chrraler LoBoron ~1.000
mile&amp;, slanl 111, aulomatlc, pow., ltatrlng, power brakel, excel·
lent ,WDrk car, mechanlca\1~
sound. 11.000. 304-175-3824.

1g93 Ford A11oa1ar v,n, blue
with blut Interior. 70,000 miles,
XLT Limited, Special Eddon. now
dres, very clean! $8550. 740·9492311 dars or 740·949·2844
evenings.

•KJI0865
• AK4 2
• 2

1962 Cudass Suprema, 2 D, 260
VB. Good Condition. $1,900 Or
Bell Offor. 7&lt;0-992-4566

'995 GMC Truck 112 Ton 4114,
Loaded, Like New 19.000 IA1Ies
$18,500(740)379-2427

South

West

1986 Ford Tempo, auto, air, good
c:ondllion, low miles, runs &amp; looki
good. $950, 740·992·6824.

1996 Chtivr 4wd. 350, Sop&lt;, ail.
cru111, tilt, am-lm ca&amp;letle.
115,500 304-675-5332.
•

s•

21

Pass
"Pass
Pass

• 4
• 10 9 8 6 5
eKQJ54

1989 Cavalier 2.0 " Cylinder
Auto. Air. High Mileo. $t,500,
304-675-1310.
1988 Corsica high milet, new
urea &amp; parts $1,150 304 ·675·
5253. Reyburn Road.
1989 Dodge onon1 5 Speed,
Cru1se, $1,400 Negoriable, Day·
740·448·0855, Evenlngo: 740·
2•~52

1991 Ch81trolel Caprice Station
Wago'n, Eicellenl Condltlon,
65,11511iloo. 7&lt;40-4&lt;5-0924.
1991 CheVy Lumina cor, 3.1 Euro
model, V·8. 11 .000 miles, blue
wllh blue Interior, two door, all options, $•500 OBI!l, 7&lt;0·9&lt;9-2311
day&amp; Of 740.949-2644 ewningL
1992 Bu~e~ USable SE, White, •
Door Sedan. Excellenl Condition,
1 Local Owner, Plea1e Call Aher
6 P.ll. ?itO-..a-15&lt;3.
1993 DO&lt;Ige Shadow ES, V·6. 5
Speed, Loaded, $2. 100 OBO:
1990 Dodge Spirit ES, V·6, Auto.
Loaded, $1,200 OBO, 740·258-

. THE BORN LOSER

Kawasaki STS Jill llkl, still under
warranty, three seater, 83 hortt·
power, bought new Julr bl •g7,
three matehing Kawaaahl akl
vesta and ltaller all go with it,
$5000. 7&lt;40·9&lt;9·2203 or 740-9&lt;9·
~5. will consider. trade for a
good pontDon boal

~. W~'f OOti'T'fOOlkE.
~101. LEJ&gt;.)I(.

s...- n.soo.

·,..~'·~'(~
~ , 0'.1£F, 6UT

fort Ill£

I I'"E£1.. f'INC:.

1

' 'BIG NATE

HE

OFF fi.IE

111M A LESSON .• HIT HIM!

Must Sel Due To II&lt;WOI
1r Starcraft Tri·Hull 140hp. In·
our. trailer, all equipt, A-1 cancl.
S3.goo llrm. Call 304·875 - ~15
alter 5pm.

760

2

27 Slnfllngaound

'5 BUing""
Ru..,.n.,..ce

30 Ha8d gerbond
32 Engre,..,

station .
Hearing organ
7 FlcltOn giiiN

M Anlmel'a CMI

.......,

380.-luel

6

37 Dancer Miller

8 Allan ~lm
I RlaWo'bthall

,...,......,.,..

11 Slippery II.- 13 B•ltblll

.-

12AIIIrnoon

&amp;•

Pass

modem
21

010 lfOU
REALL'r' POSH
HE(( OFF Tt.IE
· SWIN6?

IT WAS A ·MISTAKE .. I

THOU6f.lf s.lf WAS M!f SiSfER ..

There's no

·w~y··arounJ it,
Classified Ads

art-

Fermenlld

liquid

·:

22 Stowr slahl;
23 lllck ol!hi,.

neek
,.
2• Dllla.d ,.
25 Stary
, ..

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder
Blackwood is great (or uncovering
aces. But wHal do you do about lhe
other lt')lmp honors? ll's no good
being in six if your trump suit is Ax-x-x opposite X·X·X·X. Enler Roman
Key Card Blackwood. You count lhe
NEA Inc
trump king as a fifth ··ace," and can
show lhe lrump queen too. lfs more
complicated than simple Blackwood.
but most toumamenl players think the
extm accuracy is worth lhe brain
.'
strain.
In this deal; after receiving heart
,
preference, South used RKCB .
North's reply showed two of the five
.10ICES OF Ttlt
key cards bul dented .lhe trump
· queen.
IVSINES' S' (.OMMUNITY
AI first glance, South's bidding
looks aggressive with only 15. high·
card points. Yet what a 15 poinls! He
I'"
""'
!Ul\fo..~, e.L!T '(0011£ WoiNt-11~
has so few losers thai he is easily
TQ~Io'£1(.1..1
worth RKCB and six hearts.
West led the club king. Feeling
happy. declarer won wilh dummy's
ace, cashed th~ spade ace-king and
diamond ace-king, then ruffed a dia·
mond with d~mmy's heart nint!. Dis·
a~ter! East overruffed with lhe queen
and reiUmed a trump. leaving declar·
er saddled with a diamond loser.
SOuth should have ruffed the dia·
mond two with the heart aee. not the
nine (""Don't send a boy ... "). Declar·.
er returns to hand with a club ruff and
trumps his last diamond with the
heart nine. NowJI doesn't matterthat
East overruffs. as declarer ha~ no
losers left.
For fuller details of RKCB. send
a stamped. self-addressed envelope to
nie at Newspaper Enlerprise Associ·
alion, 200 Madison Avenue. New
York, NY 10016, or read pages 14
und 15 of my book "Gel Smarter al
Bridge.'"

.

18 Cry of
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aurpriae .·
20 Scbool ol •

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When you see Branda tn the famous cab scene 'i(i
On the warerfronl, H"s still breathtaking • - Anthony Hopkins
. ..

'.

YIIAf DAILY
PIZZIII

Set:\\~~-4£~s·

- - - - - - I...., loy CLAY I. I'OUAN

....

WOII

,
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to '""" lour 11mpMr words

~

-r-S...;U;.,.M;.;..;.:.H...;Ur-il ..;..', .

..__,l_l~_..l_l_..
Sympathy is what you gtve
_ • • . .
someone when you don't want
. - - - - - - - - - - , to lend them·-···.

I

ONVEKI

•
•

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-1

1---,IF.-5.:;l...:.....r-1;_;;-I.,_,
•
•
•

,..

' &gt;

range lottofl of rl&gt;o
0 Roar
ID&lt;Ir . ocromblod words bo·

lo:w

.' ""

•

'.
.'
}

Complele 1he chuckle quoted
by t.lling in the miu1ng words
you develop from atep No 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
· THESE SQUARES
UNSCR,WSLE ABOVE lETTERS
10 GEl ANSWER

•'

1

'

I I
•

•

.SCL\Mti.ETS ANSWERS ·

'•'

Uproar . Leaky· Swirl· Bygone • KEEP YOURS
Have you noticed that some people lose their tern·
pers.Just from seeing you-KEEP YOURS?

"·

New gaa tanKa, 1 · ton truck
wheels &amp; radiaiOfl. D I A Auto,
Ripley, Wi/. 304-37a·3933 or 1·
100·213-931!8.

APRIL 91

ITHURSDAY ·.

WANTED TO IUY: 1811
Through 1g72 Chevollo Or Eico·
mino Consalt, Can Alto 81 A
1910 Through 197211onlit Carlo
Console. "MUIIT BE HOIIIHUII
SHIFTER TYPE" Phona: · 740·
..1·1053.

790

camper•

&amp;
MotorHomu

1884 Yellows- ,Comper, 35", 2
expanao'a, full alze bedraom
(queen size bed). lui IIIli living •
kitchen. ,_ lull olzo s - &amp; rol.,
new carpet. vinyl, all window•
have custom klrsh bllndlllam:
bergar. muar ·~ to epprKlita,
aerlous calli only. $8500. 740·
992·8113, 740-992·2015.
.

810

Home .

_ _;_lm:.;::prcivementl
Unconditional llloUme gueranM.
local reference• furnia..d. E•llblllhed 1875. Coli (740J.!!'"
0870 0r 1·600·267·05711.
II
Waterproofing.
Appli1nc1 Plrll And Sorvlco; All
Name Branda 0v8f' 25 Y1e11 Ex·,
perience All Work ,Q uarentHd
French Cit; Moytog. 7•0·448:
7715.
• C&amp;C Gtnerel Home Main·
· tenenct· Painting, vin'l a1ding 1
carpentry, daors, windOWs, bllh1,
mobile home rwpalr end ..,• . For
lroo ooUmatt coil Chet. 740.0g2.

11323.

•

840 E•lcaland
Refrigeration
Anidonliol or commofCial wiring,
N(Yioo or rapttlra. llo11• U:
conoad oloclrlolan. Rl~onour
Elootrlcol, WV0003De, 304· 875- .
17116.
•
l

a
more auention.
diiclose your intentions pre·
Friday. Aprili.O. 1998
CANCER {Jpne 21-July 22) ma1urely to one who isn"t involved.
Several advantageous relation· Evccyone slrould be .• heard today
SAGITTARIUS ·rNov. 23-Dec .
ships mighl be established
regarding a mauer that coocems lhe 21 I Conditions look.. favoruble today
ARIES (March21·April 19) Gen· enlire family. A proolem migh1 resull for any important affairs you per·
erally spealdng. yourone·t~ rela· i~ a member of r~e clan doesn 't get , sort11)ly · manage. Howe~~er, do~·,
lion11hips should be rewardtng for you hrslher two cents .'"·
. · gamble on developments that shtn .
today. with a few exceptions.. You
~~0 (Ju!y 2,3•Aug. 22) If your control of maucrs ID ~eone else.
might have 1o conlend wuh two rmh· posurons or idcau~ npposed,by oth·.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
viduals who are wave makers. Get a ~rs today. don't re~t in a ?ngry fash· Be ~ex~~le and prepared to aller Y?ur
jump on life by understanding ·the ron. Use your ":des. w~l and t~t lactrc~ rn a career matter today 11 an
influences that" II govern you ·in the rather than an rneffectrve hosule :associate tnes I~ put roadbloc~s on
year ahead. Send for your Astro- response
yo~r.palh. If you re not locked tnto a
VIRGO {Aug. ~3-Sept. 22) In spccrftc procedure. you should do
Graph predictions ~y mailing 5~ to
Asuo-Graph. c/o this newspaper. your important business dealings well.
.
P.O. Box 1758. Murray Hill Station. today, don't leave anything up to
~QUA~Il!S _&lt;Jan. 20-Feb. . 19)
New Yort. NY 10156.. Be sure to chance. lnslead; insi~t upon .a com· ~n t put hmnauons on your.thm~·
state your zodiac sign. ·
P,lete !lisclosure of all relevant facts. rng today, or llllempl_ to do lhtngs t~
TAURUS (April 20..May 201 Your and figures.
ways thai YC!~Jr ex~n~nces tells yo_u
worldoid might be a !rifle heavier
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Persons :are· not _featble. II s trme 10 expen·
today than usual. Fortunlllely. it can with wbom you"ll have sensitive mcnt wuh new mc~hods.
be lightened substantiiilly if you usc dealings today will be mon: eager to
PI~CES !f.tb. 20-March 20) Your
our brllin in lieu of yollr brawn.
coopers~ with you if you take time .rnan_ctal pos1~10n can be strengthened / ,
Y GEMINI (May 21-June. 20) It to point aut how thinp will benefil m thrs cycle 1f yo11 focus on way&amp; to
tiif1~M;fcCi.:..-could be wise to .tike 1 'b\lck seat t~~em. Don't aMUme they undcntand. · oyercome sm~~ un~~e~:essary expen·
aocially today If you're In the comSCORPIO(Oct. 24-Nov, 22)Yoilr dt.lures. Tnv1al_ rmprovements
pany o1 a forcefUl illdividual who probabilities for su«esa will be sub· bec6me tmpress1ve when comwanll to lib ccnier,s~a~C· lnciden-': ~lllltially enha~~ t~y . if your . pounded.
,~

AllftO·ORAPB

SERVICES

I'

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•

..,

44 Wild ox .. I
.a Bure1a •
'7 Slrogar Ad!lina·

Acces10r1es

ss.soo.

vana&amp;

~

1969 Seatmp 11 11211. deep·V.
beige wlaand interior, llcyl,
190hp. loltrcrulser lnboa.rd mol&gt;r.
with trailer, lila preservtra &amp;
buf1"1)0f1. $2,750. 814-«11-3814.

1996 Z-'24 Cavaher, AU Power,
Sunrool. 5 Spe.a, Kerless Enrr.
CD Plajer, New Tire&amp;, $13,000,
000, 740-441.0235.
'

Crocllt Piobloma? W. Can Htip. 1~=~~:-:-,-=--­
Eur Bonk F1noncing For Usod 1079
414 .COO auto, , _
Vthlcles. No Turn Downa. Call· 331tUO INL
304-475V~klo, 740·4&lt;18-2897.
7310.

.

~

16 FL Tri-Haul Boat &amp; Trailtr Now
Uotar, 740-388--0124.

199&lt; Boyl!ner 18.5 F~ 4.3 V-8 Er&gt;
gina And Cullom Troller With
Brakes Low Houra, $8,500. 74Q·
258-1130.

1 Dlekor.IIM
Blbllell tribe
3 Tabled'-

birth
2e Dollar bill

36 Perlalan

".

18 Ft. Flborglall BOat Johnson
85 IAoiOI', New Soots. How Carpet.
Good Trailer, It ,500, ·740·3189354

1998 Monle Carlo, Automatic, E•·
cellent Condition, 22,000 Miltl,
Loaded, $15,300, F~rm, 740-318aoilo Weelldars Bebre 11 A.M.

mi-.

&amp; EARNEST

'84 110 Baumalter ball boat,
135 hp. Evlrwude. ,_ OUC trollIng ............ live wells. ""' f'ocl. .
eatal nat, lots of storage. rides
O~d IUnl (lfOO~ 83500. 740.1853813.

2~1 .

1996 Dodge Stratus 31 ,000
Mites, Take Ovet Payments, 740·

F~NK

~Cf\1'£~'( ?

, 9D1 Yamaha 8.1 Convened Ta
15 HP Outboard Engine Sklrod
tnaldl Ercettent Condition Runt
Groat! $1.000 OBO 740·448·
7108.

1233 '

'

686GL-~~oa~aoa:

750 Boats &amp; MotOI'I
for Sale

DOWN

raba

23PerUinlngto

The modern
ace-asking bid

1996 Kawaskl Bayou 4 Wheeler
E•collent Condition• .2 Year Fat·
rory Warronrr $2.5110, 740·258·

1990 Cadllloc SMillie ~igh milo·
age, like new. $4,300. 304·875·
1651 or3D4-875-6197.

• 10 9 7

57 Ancient chartol

Opening lead: • K

1996 Honda Shadow Amerloon
Clasoic Edition t100Cc EliCOIIant
Condition. Lots 01 EJtra'sl 17,000
Firm, 7&lt;40·446.0963 Dar• Allor 5
P.M. I Weeiulndl 740·4'6·1371.

19g7 XL883 Sportoter. Black
With 1200 Kit, Too llany E•lrao
To Llsll Forward Controls 11,500,.
740-37N105 EVOf)inga.

4NT

MOVE II

LUNCHTIME'S OVER !!
BACK TO WORK !I

199• vimaha YZ125 E•cellent
Shape,t Runs Good, Asking
$1,800, 740-4&lt;1·11190.

1990 Beretta 2.2 Four Cylinder
Aula With Air, t3,500, 740·319 ·
9105 Eveninga

•

Q 7 3 2
Q3

56 Florida county

111 Pert of a yard
20 Afrlcatn-.tyll

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

1996 Ford F· 150, 4''· XLT, with
loti of e•tras, only 4500 mlles,
$20 ,000 , may consider other
1987 COrvette corwlrtible, white.· truck an partial trade, 740-Q9230•-B15-58&lt;3.
.
.
6154.
1967 Pontiac Fiero SE 4 Speed,
740 Motorcycles
v.e E19no, 740.4 ..·2445. •
1888 Calico t2 Ft. Stock Trailer 1ge2 Honda Motorcycle 850
Nighthawk $900 Or Trade For A
$1 ,350, 7&lt;40·2•5-5087.
Riding llowar 01 Equal Value.
1988 Chevy Cavalier. Tinted 740... 48;,426
Wlndowl, Sttreo Srstem New En·
gmo Runs Good $2500 0 .8.0. 1_. Honda V65 Sabre, UOOcc,
Water Cooled, Shaft Driv~. like
(7&lt;40)~561
.
- · 740 ...41.0403.
1188 Ford E-~ GT
1988 Kowuokl EX500, 11.000
Red In Color. Tlroa New. Loaded.
mills, eliCOIIent condition, $1500.
Power Sun Rool 84,000 llllos
740-742-3101evenlngs.
$1,000
(3CMI4Y-1699
1989 Buick laSabre, loaded, loiS
of new paris, good condition,
$1900, call 740-G4D-2203 or 740·
Q&lt;g.2Q&lt;5.

•

1 A 3

1887 Chevrolel Z-2-4 740-Ufl·
2•45.

ooo.

x

04-o&amp;·lll

eKJ986
• A9
• J 7
1 A86 3
East
I Q 10 T 2

1989 Bronco II XLT, V·8 au·
tomauc, air, loaded, 175,000
mlle&amp;, looks and runs good.
12800. 740·247-&lt;292.

------I

4&lt;18-~0.

'

I7::7,7:-;.W.SS:.:;;~2·.;.130:::.2ovenlng;:;.:;:;:·~~

1i70 Chovollollll lbu .365. llu·
nclo 4 Speed, Oodr Good, Runo
Good. 15•8 Ralllea Lotllor~ Ao·
cessorlei To Go With It 18,000
7&lt;40..._3.

Club Piga Excellent Bloodline,
560" Pets for Sale
t
Born January 24th To February
26th. Call 74Q-245-5872, Or 740· Ohio Valley Bonk Will Ollor For
2 AKC Rea Botton Terriers 1·
-0583.:.::::.·-:-:-:--:----·I Sole A 1819 Ford Eacort Pony
male 1-female ov~r 1yr old.' ::38_7_
A 1H7 Yamaha
house broken, buy one gel one Easter rabbits, 4-H rabbit6 &amp; *280517,
YFZ350JB ATV 11189211, A 1gae
lraa. 304-875-2215.
chickens. Pine Grove Farm Oldo Dalla 88 1830895, A t88 1
'Racine, Roger DiiiDn, 740-949: Oldt Cutlaos 10,"160. 'nd •
•
,..
,.
A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming. 2986
Featuring Hydro Both., Don :;:-.-::---::---:----:11096 G"" Tracl!or 194820,. PubShHll. !73 Georges Creek Rd. Palommo Quarter Horse. good lie Auclion Will Be Held At The
740-406-0231 .
trail hotse. 30'.JI75-5040.
OVB Ann11. 143 Third Avo.. Got·
__
;...:.:::...,.______ 1 ::=:.:.:::::,::::..::.::-=::;:..---I"Pollo.
DH On 4125188 At 10:00
AKC Collie pups. sable &amp; white. Riding Horuo For Solo (HO) A.ll. The Above Will Be Sold To
$250 each : 'AKC Sholllo pups. :'::'"~":.:1.::.0·--------l Hlghesr Bidder "AI 11 - Whtre
llblo &amp; white. bi·black, 111. $250I•" Without Est&gt;&lt;lllled Or lmplild
Hay &amp; Grain
Worranty And May Be Seen ~~y·
$350: AKC Pomeranian pups, 640
males, beautiful colora, $350 :::::=~~~-:::-:::---:--:-·1 Calling Kellh Johnson At 740·
each; 111 vtt checked and ahota. Straw lor sale, $2 00 per bale, 4"1·1031. OYB Reserve• The
cloWI Nf110VId. call 7&lt;40-8911- :7_40_·99~2·_38.:.53~
.
Right To Accept Or Roioct Any
1085
And All Bldo. And Withdraw
Tobacco Plants For Sole, Re· f'ropertr F""" Solo Prior To Solo.•
AKC lllnlature Schn~uzer pup- serve For Mar Plannng. Danny Tar . . 01 Sale: CASH OR CER·
plea, 12wkl old, sholl 1 Dtwhurll 30•·885·8733 Leave nFIED c:ttECK.
010rmed. 1200eo. 304-895-31151 .
:ll:es:•=as~•::_-:-:-::--:-:---1
:50
Upton Uled Caro AI. 62·3 lllloa
AKC ·Siberian Husky Pups 8 6
Seed &amp; Fertilizer . South ol Loon. WV. Financing
Weeks, 111 Sholl, WO&lt;med. 740.
Aotaia- 304-4••1-"
379-2383CotlJ.
Dok*lb Sood Corn. Kay Farms.
- ·
- - ·
Call 30'' 875·1506 11 No Answer 720 1tucks for Sale
Now Open sunctar1 1·4. Mon-Sei LeaYOIIessage.
11·8. Floh Tank&lt; I Pot Shop. :;::.::.:=SPU:.::::;RL::,:O_C_K_L_IIIE
_ _ _ I "91 Ford F 150 E•landed Cob
2• 13 .Jackson Avo. Point Pleas·
ahort bed XLT 351 a 1
1·
l FERnUZER
•
•
u omot &lt;
am. 304-875-20113.
bedllner, vliOf. 108.000 mllea tMi
Complott Biendlng &amp; Spreading. ""'" blown, $4200
7..,:948Located· Near Gallla County Line 21l4•or 7&lt;40·940-287• . •
French Lop Bunnlea, 4 WteKa 1 112 II ill So~th 01 State Rouui
278, On Ju1101 Emory Road oak 1i72 Chevy GOOd CondollOn Willi
Okl ss.oo i7«1) ••e uao
Hin, 7&lt;10-682-90~0.
•
Now Tireo, EJhaull. Alot 01 El·
Full Blocxlod Collie Pufi!&gt;IOI, f75;
traOI740-256-&amp;574.
No Papers &amp; 1150, Wilh Popors.
TRAN
S
PORTATION
7&lt;10·.. 1·1083.
tg84 GIIC ti2 81t. bed. otrolght
=:-::-....:.----~:----·1
acyl,
auto, 78,000 oroginal !1111eL
NOTICE
710 AutOS fOr Sale
11,500. 740·g92·2478 Dars or
Fflncll Cltr Pl1 Oroornlng
:;;;:T;7::=~~~==--=~ 740·992·4111 EYif'ings.
-Oplftl
1111C~Truck
Profeuional Grooming by Ap- '69 Triumph TR6 Roadster, good
Custom 30, Black 1n Color,loldpointmtnta. 650 Second Ave. lop, lires, interior, Calllornla car,
no rull ever. $5750. 740· 288·
ed,llodylnRMIGood~
GaNipoli~ OH. 304-875-4858.
5+44.
Facl&gt;ry Big Block..s.:
Purebrad Slb1rian Hulk~ pup90,000 lllioo ·
.Pits, 5 matea, 3 fematea, blue '83 Pllnliac Grant! Pro• SE. white ,
eyea, meska, vary cult, people wllh gror lnlorlor, llag wheolo. -:-::-::-Ph:-"'-,._..:,(:104~14_S._1_8_H_ _
or1ented, ready now, 1130, c111 automalc, 3.1, opollor. very nice 1988 Chevy S.10 • cyl 5 ap
car, 111750, 7.t0-9•Q·23t1 dars 01 ladder rack &amp; 1a01 ba1 ''runs i:
7&lt;40·992·5144. •
7.C0-9&lt;Q.211.. 11V1111ngs.
loou good, $2.200 olio. 304· .
Ronwtller ptJppiel, 5 male, 3 le·
11&amp;2·31121 .
male, 1150 eech, 1II lhOtl, 19•8 Chevrolal 112 ton !luck. rNI
wormed &amp; wt cheeked, rMdy 10 good body. $2.400. 30•·875· 1gg1 S·10 TruCk u,ooo 111101, 5
go, 30+1182-3021 .
.;.49::7.;;.5·- : - - - : - - ; _ - - 1 Speed, 740--7318:
1951 Pllntiac Chieftain Sedan In 1g113 Jeep Wronglor Wlherd top.
570
MUIICII
Good Condldon, $2,500 740·•48- low
304-875-34711.
lnlti'UIIIIntl
11113!J.Afler 8 P.ll.
'
:--:-.;...;.=;,....----1 199&lt; Ford F·350 Craw Cob Dual·
Tok*mlno Guitar Spaical Edtlon. Bed Crodll, No Credll, Bankrupt· ly P.U. 7.3 Turbo Dloaal, Auto
&amp; Hard Shell CaN, For More In·
cy? Wo Can Hllpl Bonk Flnaflc· Trone. 3 Dillerontjiltchoo. 12,000
loriNiion Col 740-4...011311,
lng On Used Vohl&lt;leo, 740.441- Milas, S25.000 7-239&lt;.
0807
•
'
1g05 Chovr 1 ton, auto, ajr, ps
FAfH.l S lJf' P l IE S
1080 ·1990 Cera For ftOOIII
..,.fm, 12ft. lilt btohlllilaollklo
Sailed And Sold
&amp; LIVE STOCK
ro&lt;ks. 1 owner, 54.000 original
Loc:allylhlo Month.
miloa. 111.100. 740·1g2· 2471
Trudia, 414~. Et&lt;:.
Olys 7--4111 E11et11np.
1-eoo.52:!·Z130. 300t :
730 ·
4-WDs

Johneon'a Ueed Furnlrure ·
Wllhet, Drrera, HYIChtl, Oi:
_ , 1Wrigora1&gt;ro.
Tal· 810 Fll'lll Equipment
..lslona, LIYinoroom illedroom
Sul!ft, 740·44e·40311,. 740.441· New HOlland el HaJ Bolar, I 3
Point Hitch Roko, ti.SOO, 740'
1004.
•
.

s-a,

12" Transport diiC, ln1erna11onal,
~ blades, ll1ld, roadr. $850

'

I

�P-ae18 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday

Thursday, Aprll9, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Ann landers column, Page 6
Christians observe Good Friday, Page 6
Cavs snap Bulls win streak, Page 5

Today: Cloudy
High: 50; Low:40
Tomorrow: Clear
High: 60; Low:30

4 WHEEL DRIVE

A/C, AMJFM

can,

topper, locll tnlde.

V8, A/C, power tqUtlp-JI!Jfl

ment, tilt, crulae.

Few voters request absentee ballots
for
primary
.

LOCAL TRADE

1996 MERCURY
VILLAGER

NAUTICA,
a~o. ve, leather, power
equipment, crutae, tilt.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
, If ~eigs Counly's absen1ee ballot
requests· are any indiclllion, lumout
for the May 5 primary election will
be very low.
Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections. said
ThurSday that while the office usually sends out over 100 absentee ballots on the first day of itie mailing

Elections at 992-2697. Voters may
also vote in person at \fle board office
on Mulberry Avenue lhrough May 4,
during regular.business hours: 8:30 to ·
4:30; Monday through Friday.
Absentee ballot requests must be
made in time to allow the board 16
mai) the ballols no later than May 2:
and
those ballots must be received
Day.
.
'
Appliclllions for atisenlee ballols back prior to Election Day.
Voters who are registered to vole
are available by calling the Board of

process, the board has only sent out
65 ballols 10 date: with the election
less than a month away.
Absentee voting·is made·available·
to senior citizens, diose who work oul
of town on Election Day, college students and others who are un~ble lo
visit lheir polling places on Election

anywhere within the stale may ca.~t a
ballot at their cum:nt polling place on
Election Day. If a voter moves from
one precinct to another within the
county, th"e voter should repon lo his
or her NEW polling place on Election
Day, where they will be permitted to
vote. Voters should ·never return to
their former polling place once they
have moved.
The deadline for new voler regis-

1996 FORD
F150
SUPERW

XLT, auto, A!C,
crulae, tllt, power wlrld·l
OWI·Iocki

.

l:nterfaith families face spirited weekend
By-CATHY GROSS~N
Robenses arc very clear on two roof."
USA TODAY
points: They have no conversion
She b~ gan the newsleller because
From seder to sunrise scr.vices, agenda. And they believe it's better .. I' VC seen toO many situations
Passover prayers to Easter hymns. for families to know and respect two wher,• people felt forced by instituthis will be a spirited weekend for faiths than tn have a passel of holi- tions, families or partners to make
tho\e among the nearly I million day panies signifying nothing, says choices they didn't want to make
Jewish/Christian U.S . families who Joan Hawxhurst.
and wound up feeling resentful: Peocelebrate both traditions.
Hawxhurst . a Methodist· and ple have questions and they need
"We'll have the first seder on granddaughter of Bapti st missionar- open-minded,
nonjudgmcntal
Good Friday. hunt for Eas.tcr eggs ies. · married a Jew. She is the resources'to.hclp them."
'
before the second seder on Saturday, founder of DI.-IFR and publi sher of
She sees many couples who proand Sunday morning everyone will Dovetail newslcucr. whi ch she ere- fess to he happy secularists -until
go to Mass with me," says Mary ated in 1992.
their children arrive. Suddcnfy they
Helene Rosenbaum, whose priest _ "There arc people. maybe even arc confronlcd with memories and
skips the sprinkle of holy water niost people. who pick and choose choi ces charged with deep meaning.
when he reaches her pew.
the easy. pretty pieces and put them
"The separate traditions arc valuShe is a Roman Catholic who together into something nice and able in and of themselves. When we
married a professor of Jewish stud- trivial. Theology gets pushed under try 10 mush them together. the hcauics .at Dickinson College. Carlisle, the rug." Hawxhurst says.
.
ty will 'he lost. We will end up with
"But more people arc trying to ·simply secular feel -good stuff. and
· Pa. They' ll spend this weekend in
the dramatic retelling of the great.come up with a way of Jiving with it's not enough .. It won 't compel
and very different - central stories integrity and respect that renccts people 's allegiance .'' says Mary
of their two tcligions.
their reality - two faiths under nne Roscnhaum, executive director of
Good Friday, when Christians
·

01-IFR and author with h.,. husband
of a book called "Celebrating Our
Differences" (White Mane. $19.95).
·:1 can believe in Jesu·. as the
risen Lord , -and my husband
absolutely docs not, and it's all
right."
--· Well. maybe not all right with ·
everyone. Jewish institutional leaders sec a train wreck. Jewish/Christian marriages may be just I percent
or the nation ·s households. But the
intermarriage . numbers loom large
for America's tiny Jewish popula·
lion.
·
Of those I million intermarried
couples. only 28 'percent arc rearing
their children in the Jewish religion,
and just 45 percent want their chiiJrcn to know tlicir Jewish cul]ural
heritage. according to studies by the
Jewish Outreach Institute.

.,

hclicvc Jesus was crucified. coin*

•

A/C, auto, power equipment, tilt, crulae, AM/FM
CD

EASTER HOUDAY • Children acroH Melga County are enJOy·
lng a brief Euter break today with all county echoola c:lottd ror
GOod Friday. Schoolaln the~ and~ loall echool cbtrlctl reopan Monday with c:hlldren going back to IChool Tuee-

.4 cyl, auto, power wltnd·t
owa-locka, cruise, tilt.

EXTRA CLEAN

Douglas

NICE

1997 FORD F150 SUPEiCAB LARI4T
..

412,

. '

AUTO, VI, POWER EQUIPMENT, LEATHER

AM

COLUMBUS (AP)- Some educaiion and labor groups. dissatisfied
with the state's plan for d~aling with
a coun order lo fix Ohio's ~chool­
funding system. have united to campaign against a proposed •penny
increa..: in th~ sales Ia~. .
"Tije people wantlhe Legisl111ure.
to do the job. and to do it right." Sen·
ate Minority Leader Ben Espy. D' Columbus. said at news conference'
J'horsday.
'fh9ugh , the proposed sales-tax
increase - from S percent to 6 per·

1994
NEW YORKER

ve,

AJC, auto,

equipment, leather,

trade

a

ONE OWNER

'

Good A tternoon

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND AM

AiC, auto, power WI~IG·I
o~a-locka, tilt, crulae,
51,000 mlln. · ' '

1987DODGE
Today's Sentinel

RAM SO

2 Sections • 12 Pages
Vol. 48, No. ~SJ

Auto, 4 Cyl, AM/FMiradio

~akmlar
~lmll:!eds

.

!d!mics

• I

Editorials

u
1!·9·1!!

u

1

.

(Mal

·3

51111:1!

H

~YIIif[

.1

Lotteries
OHIO·
,,
Pldt 3: 654; Plcll4: SSS I
Burbye,$: Q-13-18-20-32
W.VA.
.
.
o.Jiy 3: 090; D.ily 4: 2036
0 19'!!1 ohio Valft.YPutoltohtOJ Co.

IFR).
Dovetail and couples like the

•

David beland..said the annooncement
· ·• t
·
Fisher issued a statement praising
Douglali a.&lt; "a 'man of both courage
and principle."
While Do11gla.• was. announcing
his· withdrawal, Taft's campaign
released a letter to Fisher a~king him
to immedialely return all campaign
contribulions received above what
ordinarily would he allowed under
campaign finance law.
. 'Fisher wa~ allowed to accep1 con·
tributions above $2.500 per individ·
ual becau,;e DoUglas bankrolled his
,own campaign. At. the end of the primary Fisher would have been
required to give up any leftover
money that was more than the S2.500
limit. ·
"He doesn't need the money now,
so he should ~:ive it all back." said
Brett Buerck. Taft's campaign ·
spokesman.
Jon Allison. a spokesman for
Taft's otlice, said Fisher has until
April 23. the pre-primary reponing
deadline. re~oorn the e~lt"d money or
give it to charity or to lhe Ohio Elec-

' w~ ...a."cla!'s ilct~..

tions-Commission. ~.:.. :-. -'~ · :......oe~
Fisher's i:ampaijin will ~tum ali
the money it is required to return. ·
campaign spokeswoman Judy Boubao
said. But since that provision of campaign finance law had never been
used befbn!. Fisher's staff n~s time
to study it. she said.
She said Taft was punly lo t;lame
for any confusion. ·
"It is a la.w that Bob Taft sup- ·
paned and helped to write. I find it
ironic." Barbao said.
Voters in downtown Columbus
hUrl mixed reactions to Douglas'
withdrawal.

Henry Berryman of Columbus
said he doesn't pay allention to politics until a few days before an election. He said he wa.s familiar with
Fisher's record but had never heard
of Dougla•.
.
Melea Wachtman. also of Columbus. said she tell deprived of an
opponunity to exercise her right lo
vOle.
" I think voters should always
have a choice," she said.

Unions, education groups organize against ~ales tax increase

.RIGHT WHITE
1994 PONTIAC

~ay In Eastern Local. C.hlldren w8re buly Thuraclay afternoon ·
With Ealtlr ectlvltlta, IIICI these lclndlrgilrtn.-. at Southern Local
In R8!)1ne who are lhoWn hunting Eaater egp.

he's putting party first

COLUMBUS.' lAP) - Bruc.e · how fal' DoUglas was behind in the
said the· numbers were ·nat poll.
·
•
thefC and he would nol hun · the
Douglas spent close lo $1 million
Democrats' chllnces in November by on television ads and a brochure
staying in lhe race f01' governor.
mailed to thousands of Democratic
Douglas ended his self-financed ::: households. spokesman Dale Butland
campaign on Thursday, nine weeks Said. : ,
Douglas. 65. had mad~ education
afler he began it. He said his pqlling
showed lhat he wa~ too far behind lhecilreofhiscampaign. But he said
. Fisher with less than a month to make his polling found that v01ers favored
up the differen•-e.
,
more money for schools but not the
So De.mocrat Lee Fishe.:. a fonner reforms he advocated, such a~ smallauorney general. won' t have a pri- er cla.s size and ail-day · kindermary on May 5 imd will face Repttb· ganen. ,
. lican Secretary-of State Bob Taft on
He believed lhatthe proposed 1Nov. 3. Douglas pledged his suppon cent sides ta~ increaSe on lhe May 5
for ~isher and the rest of the Demo- ballot to help finance education and
..
.
Jlive property ta~payers a break is
cratic tic~et.
. ''I've devoted a great deal oftime ina~uate . .
and Jreasure to helping Democrats
His plan would have raised the
over the years.and I'm not prepared sales tall, by 1.5 cenl&lt; and the cigato "!!lfishly -sacrifice my pany for per- reue ta~ by 25 cents a pack. providsonal gain," Dougla.• said at a news ing $1.5 billion more each year for
conference. surrounded by his fami- schools and about $500 million for
ly and staff.
pmpeny lax relief.
Toward tit~ end of his speech, his
. "In 1998. Ohio's wOrking families
need a Democratic gGvemor."
voice faltered as he thahked his wife.
James Ruvolo. a Douglus consul- Dec, for her suppon.
tanl. would not comment when asked
Ohio Democratic Pany Chairman

19,5 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE

1.~% APR .financing
on
. 1998·Pontiac Sunfire·
for 36.Months

$~.YS

Ddil~las

)

cides this year with the first night of
Passover.-whcn Jews tell the story of
freedom from bondage in Egypt.
The stories may be ancient, but
the ways that modern American
families celebrate have undergone a
revolution now that 52 percent of
Jews who marry choose non-Jewish
panners.
Couples who might once have
withered under the pressure of
grandparents or the strictures of
clergy to choose one exclusive reli- ,
gion wijl proudly cclcbratc·hoth.
"There arc many who say, 'You
can 'I .do thi~.' To these people we
say. ·Deal with the real world,"'.says
professor and columnist Steve
Roberts . the Jewish husband of
broadcast journalist Cokie Robcns,
a Roman Catholic.
Friday night the Robenscs will
celebratt their 30th seder when 36
people gather at their Bethesda. Md ..
home to share in the Passover meal,
taste ;ymbolic' foods and ~ad from
the Haggadah's sage stories. prayers
an1f snngs.
~:•ster Sunday he' II he beside her
in l'hureh.
.
"It was never an option for me
not to be Catholic.'' says Cokie
Robcns. whose mother. former congresswoman Lindy Boggs. is the
U.S. ambassador to the Vatican. ''I
don't know how. I've rievcr liccn
anything else ...
Yet ··she's the best Jew in my
family. We never had a seder growing up:· says Steve Robens. whose
grandparents were ardent Zionists
und socialists if not religious Jews.
Their serious intellectual grounding in ethics and social service gave
them common values if not a common history.
The Robenscs arc very public
advocates of including bolh faiths in
family life. sharing open leucrs 10
lhcir son and daughter in books and
magazines. They were 1hc keynote
speakers at last weekend's first
1111ional conferen~e on inclusiveness
sponsprcd by the Dovetail Institute
for Interfaith Family Resources (01-

1995
OLDSMOBILE
ACHE IVA

1996 MERCURY
COUGAR

trations was Monday.
.
. Volers will nominllle their panics'
candidales for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General,
Auditor of Slllte, Secretary of State.
Treasurer of State, U.S. Senator.
Congressional representative, State
Senator, State Representative, County Commissioner. County Auditor
and judicial candidates.
Two state is.~ues relating 10 school

funding, two county-wide· levy proposah. a schooi ~nd..jssue in Southem Local School District and several village and township levies will
also be determined on Election Day.
In addition to the Republican and
DemOcratic primaries. a Reform Party ballot will be available statewide
in the primary, with the 'Pany's candidates for Governor and Ueutenant
Governor. John R. Mitchel and
Lawrence Anderson, respectively.

Barge aground,·
oil spill cleanup
is underway

HOLY WEEK PROCESSION • Penitents carry figures of Christ ancl Virgin Mary thr9Ugh the crowds during a traditional Holy Week proceeelon In Seville, southern Spain Wednesday.
·
. .
·
.
'

Padres
humble
Reds 6-?
Page4

.
1997 FORD
F·150 XLT

·1997 fORD
RANGEl XLT
ve,

Sports

April tO, 1998

'·

. ..

.,

cent~ is touted by suppmers as key
to meeti~g the Ohio Supreme Coun·~
order to come up· with a beuer way
to pay for public educulion. opponents say it does not do enough.
Espy, one of the co-chairman of
lhc Vote No on Issue 2 Coalition, sai4
lawmakers wolilll be forced to start
over if vole.rs reject the sale ta~
increa.'ie.

Clinton

1~.

Backers of the ballot issue predict '
legislators 'willtake away-a different .
message.
"The signal to the Legislature is •
that people don'.t want to invest .
more in education," said Cliff
Treyens, spokesman ,for the Every
Child Counts campaign.
Supponers of the Ia~ increase.
which would generate about $ L 1 bil-

lion annually. are raising millions for
a television ad campaign that began
airing Tuesday.
·
Ron Marec. pres.ident of the Ohio
Federation of Teachers and the other
coalition co-chairman, said his group
also plans 10 run ads.
·
So far. lhe United .Auto Workers
have pledged financial suppon for the
group. Marec said.

heart of toba~co country ~o sell regulatory plan

CARROLLTON. Ky. (AP&gt; visil wa.s aimed at increa,in~ piessure · Tohacco fanners and others lis·
Workers at Southern Stales farm on the industry not to light Congress teQed intently to ,.,hat he had to say
cmwded into an otfK.-e and lislent:d il' as it works to curb teen smoking and . about the crop thai . is economic
President Clinton pled'ged to "do compensal~ states for smoking-relat- lif~blood of this Ohio River community apd 01hers like it
. right by famHies that grow tobacco" ed health care costs.
· even as he pres~d · his message
"Tobacco farmers have not done
The workers ne~t door at Southagainsl teen-age smoking in.the hcian . !'IY!hing wrong. You_' ~ growing a em States farm .couldn't get in to see
of tobacco country.
legal crop. you're nOill!iing the mar- the president's address, so they
Coming a day after major cill""'lle keling of lhe' tobacco to children," packed·Manager Daryl Satechewell's
makers sounded a death knell for a · Clinton said Thursday at Kentuckiana office to listen. "He's beli~vuble,"
niuinnal tobac~-o ,;etllement. Clinton's Tobacco Warehou.re. ·
Satechewell said.

The diesel fuel remaining in the
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)·ruptured
tank wa~ transfem:d to othA Pennsylvania-ba•ed tow with 17
er
tank.~
to
minimiie the possibility of
empty coal barg~s ran aground on the
additional
spillage, Westerberg said.
Ohio River, puncturing its fuel 'tank
. No municipal water intakes were
and spilling an estimated 1.000 gallons of diesel fuel into the river.
· threatened by . the spill, the officer
The Campbell Transponation Co. said. The vessel remuins aground and
of Charleroi. Pa .. owner of lhe MN salvage is expected IP tak~ several
Elizabeth M. dispatched crews 10 . days.
The OhiQ River remains open.
clean up the spill Thursday, said Lt.
Westerb&lt;;rg
said.
Eric G. Westerberg, public affairs
The
cause
of the accident is under
officer for the U.S. Coa.st Guurd
Marine Safety Office in Huntington. investigation. However. Westerberg
The Elizabeth M ran aground . said there is no evidence the incident
about five miles ~pslream of was related to a walkout by riverboat
Pomeroy, Ohio. The Coa't Guard was . pilols in New Orleans. The operating ·
noiifted of the ac~;ident aboul 12:20 company has been·unaffected by the
labor dispule. 1he lieutenant said.
a.m. Thursday. Westerberg said.

Hqu$8 Republicans
consider hearing
testimony from Starr
WASHINGTON (AP)- Anticipating a formal repon from Kenneth
Starr. House Republicans are con_sidering a plan to have the indepen·dent counsel testify before Congress
about any evidence or impeachable
offenses that he turns up against President Clinton.
.
GOPollicials, speaking on condition of anonymity. said Thursday thai
under this proposal. Starr would be
. called to explain his findings before
a panel of lawmakers. These officials
cautioned that no decisions have
been made. and even if they decide
to go ahead. numerous details remain
to be worked out.
These include whether such a
session would be open to the pubIic.
and what kind of questioning Starr
himself would be subject to by the
lawmakers. Nor is it clear .what oth·
cr witnesses. if any. might he called.
Asked about the proposal. one
Judiciary Committee official '\Uid it
wu.s "pure speculation based on the
assumption thar there .would be·a
referrdl to Congres:s. Any dec1ston
. about pr01.-edure wtll nol be .made
until and unless the mdepe~de~t
C&lt;~un:sel m.akes such a referrdl, th1s
olfictal sa.od. .
. ,
Starr ts mvesttgaung w~ether
Clinton had a sexual relationship with
former White House intern Monica
Lewinsky and encouraged her to lie
·about it in the · Paulo Jo11es sexual
hara..smentlawsuit.
A White House st~ward. Glen ·
Maes, ap~ared Thursday beli1re the
federdl gmnd jury investigaling the
Lewinsky matter. Another steward.
Bayani N~lvis. previously testifieiJ. ,
Stewards often work near ' the
president. and prosecutors apparent·
.ly ate interested in what they muy

have seen.
Starr also is investigating possible
.obstruction of justice of lhe 4-yearold Whitewater investigation in
Arkansas. and he is delving into t~e
Clintons' relationship with their former business panner. the late Jim
McDougal. As a lawyer in Lillie
Rock, Ark .. Hillary Rodham Clinton
did work · for McDougal's failing
savinl)S and loan.
Starr's offi•-e and House officials
have bolh said in recent days they had ·
not been in contact with one another
abqut the independent counsel's

w0rk4

'

. Even so. speculation has he~n
intenljC in Congress that Starr wou Jd
issue a formal repon to lawmakers by
the end of May.
DiS~=u.ssion of a possible hearing
featuring Starr comes at a time when
House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
Rep. Henry Hyde. R-111 .. chainnan of
the Judiciary Committee, are planning for an event 'that would he
unpn:cedented: the submi.&lt;sion of a
·formal repon by an independent
counsel

oullining

impeachable oflenses.

cvidt:ncc

of

·

Starr was appointed under legislation that was enacted :~fter Richanl
Nixon ·resigned from office mther
than face ,impeachment proceedi[.gs
in the full House. The law requires
any independent counsel to notify the
House "of any substanti:ol and credible infonnation ... that may constilute grounds for impeachment.''
Republicans were careful to
~·•1ibe a~y hearings that might foilow submission of S!arr's repon as a
review oF his work. not as pan.of any
fonnaHmpcuchment inquiry.

Ohio, Wildlife Council
OKs
fall hunting, trapping season dates
.
.
.

By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbui .Bureau
COLUMBUS The stale
Wildlife Council approved !IeaSOn
dates and other rules and ~gulations
for Ohio's fall hunling and trapping
seasons, Wednesday evening in
Columbui.
Hunleri can take one deer in 111051 ·
.of the state, bul In a 14-county
~gionoflioathwtOhio-knownas

Zone C - lhal includes Galli&amp;,
Meigs, Ross, Pike, Noble•. Moraan.
Monroe and Washington Coulilies, an
additional ~r may he harvested.

Ohio's statewide deer gun ,;eilson
will span sill ~ys, November 30
throilgh December S. II Includes a
Sunday (November 30) for lhe lint
time as a result of legislation signed
into law by State.lawmaken earlier
this year.
·
"This represenls a ·lona·awaited
pi to give Ohio hunters more hunt·
ina op)!Onunilies," said Michael
Budzig. ,chief of, lhe Division of
.Wildlife. "In p~evicius surveys, we
have learned 1ha11he lack of time is
whal p~vents many people from
hunting more ofte1t, due lqely· 10

work and family commitmenls."
ln ' lhe 14-coqnty southeastern
Ohio region where two deer call be
1a1ten. the deer gun season runs one
day longer inclUding December 6.
In Zone A, a S 1-counly spanning
acros.• much of the nonhern part of
lhe state including Sandusky and
Ottawa Counties, hunlen may lake a
deer of either lex on the lim two days
of lhe deer gun season or • buck only
in lhe, .em~ining four days.
In·other pans of the stale, hunlen
may take a deer of eilher sex during
11'1e deer gun ,;e~n.
·

The stlllewide primitive deer season spans five days .from December
26 lo December 30; including Sunday
• December.27: Statewide archery.season runs from October 3 through Januwy 31, 1999.
Pall turkey seawn will be from
October 19-25 in 2l soulhem Ohio
counties including Meigs, Pike, Ros.'l,
MOI]IIUI. Monroe, Noble, and Wa.'lbinglon Counlies. A limit of one wild
turkey of.eilher sex may he harvesl·
ed.
•
·Spring wild hlrkey ftunling season
will he ftom April 26 dtrough May 16

•

in 57 counties ineludingthe southern •
region which was gmnted a spring
turkey season. Sandusky and Ouawa
Counties are n01 included in lhe 57county region.
Addilionally. nuisance animal
!rappers are now allowed to usc
body-gripping snare traps mea.,uring
. seven in~hes by !ICven inches inside
a building for lhe porpo,;e of removing nuiliance wild animals, such a•
raccoons and skunks. The snare !raps
have been ~riticized by some animal
rights groups as cruel and inhumane.

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