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Reducing produce contamination·

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Champion Hill, Bidwell, consigned the Fibril·
ery 1997 lOR Of · Leachman 5augahatchee
3000C. Randy Denlela, .Colbert, Ga., judged the
contest entrlea.

····t:x:KJ

CATTLEMEN 'S ASSOCIATION

~.

CURT ANDERSON
AP F111111 Writer
WASHINGTON - The Food
and Drug Administration is issuing
farm and processing guidelines to
reduce bacteria in fruit and vegetables
by improving practices ranging from
. hand-washing to disposal of manure.
The voluntary guidelines de~l a
series of practices in fields and in lhe
. food industly intended to curb growing incidences of illness from such
microbes as E. coli and salmonella on
lettuce, tomatoes and other produce.
"No farmer or business person
wants an outbreak from their product," Joe levitt, director of FDA's
food safety programs, said Friday.
"These arc important prevention
techniques lhat.will really help."
. The rise in illness from produce
has several causes: Heallh-conscious
Americans arc. eating more fruit and
vegetables, but modem processing
and shipping mean they frequently
change hands and come from all over
the world. Sanitation practices arcn 't
consistent.
·
In addition, mpre virulent strains
of bacteria continue to appear, challenging weaker immune systems of
lhe elderly, the young and people
with such diseases as AIDS.
·:Most of the calories in a healthy

diet shoUld come from fi'Uils, veg· · er hand-washing training and even
etables IIIII grain products," said where to locate toilets iri lhe fields.
Donna Shalala, the secrctal)' of heallh . "This will help reduce the inciand h11111811 services. "That recom· dence of worl&lt;ers in the field or out·
mendation makes it even more criti· side packing arcu relieving themcal for government and industrY to selve~ elsewhere (as in the fields),"
worl&lt; togelher to ensure that fresh the FDA document says .
produce is wholesome and safe."
Levitt said the standards were
The guidelints run many pages, developed after hearings lhat includranging from how to ensure lhe ed farm and processing interests and
cleanliness of water used to wash should not be impossible to imple.
JIIO&lt;Iuce and for packing ice to work· ment.

Reds clobber Rockies, Page
Boon to .history buffs, Page 10
Social Security and pensio~s, Page 10

Tomorrow: Rain
ttlgh: 70 ; Low:SOa

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

:Five years after ··~OCF stando·ff,
·problems persist despite change

•Reliable service
•Dedicated·customer support
And Now •56K Internet Access

By JOHN McCARTHY
. Auocllted Prell Writer

CObUMBUS- Five years later,
Reginald Wilkinson remembers his
reaction to the tie)!IS: A group of
inmates had taken over a wing of lhe
maximum-security Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility in Lucasville.
· "II. was shock and disbelief,"
Wilkinson, director of die Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction, said last week.
·
"l probably thought it was something that I'd only read about going
on in another counlry or another state.
As it 'began to materialize, lhe sbock
and disbelief turned into 'How arc we
going to set Ibis thing over wilh1' "
One suard and nine inmates died
during tbe s,ieae that began April II,
1993- Easter Sunday.
Families of guards and inmates
kept vigil outside lhe prison. On the
Other side of tile rator-wirc perimeter, a Heet of satellite trucks and vans
kept humming as reporten and photographen kept the natiOJ! informed.
Negotia~ions kept breaking down

1998

.

.

-and restarting....:. until April 21. a superrnax facility in Ohio," Wilkinwhen lhe 300-plus' inmates surren- son said.
The riot also .led to "single·
dered and letlhe
remaining
hostages
.
'
.
ceiling"
at Lucasville. One of lhe
go.
The riot wa.\ costly as well as causes of lhe rio~ investigators found.
deadly. The state Spent about $78 mil- was having two inmates per cell.
"I think lhe major positive change
lion on trials, prison rcpain, overtime
was
single-ceiling 'at Lucasville,"
and investigations. Forty-seven
inmates were convicted of crimes said Niki Schwartz, a Cleveland
committed during the siege. Five lawyer and inmate-rights activist
were sentenced to death for the mur- who helped negotiate the end of the
•
der of guard Robert Vallandingham siege.
"That
reduced
llie
population
and the nine inmates.
there and reduces the tensions of
Th~ rioc also changed the way
o~ercrowdcdness..
There had been
Ohio runs its prison system.
1
The most visible changes are disputes over interracial ceiling."
However, Schwartz said managephysical. Seven new prisons have
opened since the riot, bringing the ment promises on other issues have
total in Ohio to 30. Last week, not been kept. s~h
,retaliation
Wilkinson opened Ohio's first against those who took part in the
''supermax" prison in Youngstown. riot, a charge Wilkinson denied.
"I helieve lhe. department has
The $6S million prison is designed to
hold 500 of the.'state's most danger- violated lhat promise by depriving
lhe Lucasville death-row inmates the
ous inmates.
"We had some discussions about privileges the other death-row
having a more secure facility prior to inmates have," Schwirtz said.
Death row prisoners were moved
the riot. But when the riot happened,
from
Lucasville to the Mansfield
we expedited the mission of having

as

..

'

CAPTURES FEMALE HONORS - Champion
Hill Barbara 751 walked away with gn1nd
champion lemal8 honors al the. 1998 Ohio
Angus Alaoclatlon Super Star Show end sate

.

a

March 1997 daughter or Bon VIew BllllllCI834.

By IIICHEUE BOORSTEIN

Farmers
plan for
spring
.p lanting
TOLEDO (AP)- Seed~ aren't in
·the ground· yet. but agricultural
experts ar'e already making predictions on this year's crops.
•
The Ohio Depanment of Agriculture predicts farmers will plant. 4.6
million acres of' soybeans, up from
4.5 million acres the last two years.
An estimated 3.4 million acres of
com will be planted, down from 3.6
million la.~t year but up from 2.9 million two years ago.
This year farmers will be trying to
. dodge the effects of El Nino. The
weather phenomenon ha.' made headlines and kept forecasters busy this
year - and agricultural experts are
. k~ping an eye on the weather phe· .
nome non.
El Nino. an abnormal churning
and warming of water in the Pacific
Ocean. is known to disrupt global
rainfall and wind patterns. Some
predi~ted that it would result in mild
winter weather in the Midwest.
Kevin Marcus. manager of agri·
culture wealher marketing at Eanh
Satellite Corp. in Rockville, Md., told
The Blade in a story Sunday farmers
should pick the most drought-resis·
.tant seeds and buy more crop insurance than usual this year because of
El Nino.
.. Marcus e~pects crop yields to be
s" percent to I0 percent lower than .
usual. H~ advises farmers to plant as
eorly a.~ possible to protect th~ir
crops. since a hot and dry late July
.aDII early August could ruin corn

..• . C:aop5.

: . • · For soybeans. the predictions arc
• .: loOking • lilt~ better.
·: ·Although · Ohio farmenr are
'expected to plant more soybeans thi.~
it is uncenain if that !,s because
~ · •/JfTut of drought.
• ; •Sieve Bruce. a broker who trades .
the floor of the ChicaJo Board of
, 'n-It. calls soybeans "the cockroach
of the plant world" because of their

.

AIIICIIIiti:I"Pthi·Wt·

1.9% APR Financing
1998 Pontiac
Sunfire
. .
· for 36 Months

Jt~ne.

Fort Wonh's blunt approach is
undmltandable -lhe district expects
td lose more lhan 10 pei'cent of its
leachen Ibis spring, mostly to retire·
men!.
And it 1s not alone. Across lhe
country, districts arc bracing for a
serious ~hortage of teachers in the
next decade as a genellllion of educators retire!! and student populations
swell.
An~ious school officials are
boosting salaries, putting m:ruiten
on,line and on the road, and offering
to pay applicants' relocation costs,
. find them apart~ts and ev~n throw
them welcome-to-town parties. .
"They have glossy brochures and
fancy displays, meeters and
g~ers," !IBid Cindy Clegg, pel'liOII·
nel director for the Te~a's Assoeiation
of School BOards. ''They're touting
1heir worl&lt;ing conditions, promoting
wbat a great place they' .arc to live.
hQw wonderful their .campus looks.
You've got to have an edge."
.. Demographics arc lhe primary
fOrce behind lhe looming teacher
crunch.
·

Ill model Shlnnlu In Gallla County, a lhree-cyllnder dlul, fourwheel drlvt1 35 HPR; Tom Grube (on tractor) Ia the new owner.
Standing behind Grube Ia Jim Fraley, ·owner of Jim's Farm

Equipment, Upper River Rd., Gallipolis.

.

•

•
COME IN "TOQAY
AND GET A STARTUP PACKAGE FOR
JUST $19.95 tHAT
INCLUDES:

• A selett
luwd·lreld pltollt
• Leatlrer

carryi11g case

..

UNitED STATE$

CELLUlAR.

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Wl!la.ESS COMMUMCA TIONS

Good Afternoon

~

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• Cigarttte liglrttr .
adapter .
• 30 local mi11utts .

; hardiness. ·
· . ~M081 people planl those thinss
beQuse they can't die." he said.

· 'CHESHIRE • . Jeffrey A. Hill,
l,onJ Boaom. an employee of the
Gavin Plant .in Cheshire, m:eivcd a
promocion recently fflllll equipment
opel'IIOI' to coal IIndler.
II

· Roughly 44'perceot of likely voters questioned for •he latest Ohio Poll ·
said lhey would support Issue 2. which would raise the ,sales tax by I cent.
Roughly 45 percent opposed the issue and II percent were undecided,
The poll, released Sunday, mirrored internal surveys done by is.\ue sup~ers, sai~ Cun Steiner, a leader of the Every Child Counts ca"!paign. He
satd lhe statJSilcal deadlock wa• an acceptable starting place for the campaign,
which began airing statewide ads laSt week. Opponents e~pect to stan radio
and television ads within a week.
"It's good to
we're wilhin striking distance even before we start getting our message olll," Steiner said. "We're confident we can persuade people that voting for this issue will help finance Some signifitant improvements
in education.':
.
.
. Opponents said lhe proposal does not do enough and will be a tough sell
w11h voters.
.
·
"Your message is only as good a.• your product. and they ~an 't sell a bad
product," said Brian Rochenberg. spokesman for the Vote No on ls.•ue 2 Coolition. "There arc no guarantees in this other than the fact that people will continue to face local tax levies to pay for all the unfunded mandates they've
given schools."
.
The issue would raise lhe state's sales tax from 5 cents to 6 cents on the
B~tTuNG SHORTAOri _;, DaSoto lndapendlnt School Dllblct
~ollar, ge'."'rating roughly $1.1 billion. Property taxes woulil ·be cut if the
Alhlll!c Director FNCI Haclgacokl, lront right, sat belldl t.Jiow
1ssue pas...es.
INchlr Glgl Crowdlr, front left, u hlllloltuld hla lrualrltlon at
The increase is part of the Legislature 's P,lan to meet .an Ohio Supreme
• ~..lllitdld tMCtllr Cll'llt' day 811111 Unlverllly of Tex...
Court's order to devise a more equitable way to fund publiC education.
Dlnlon 1181 -11. Wlttlaludlfit populetlonl 1-lllng and I QIR·
The poll found strong suppon for I!ISue I, w.hich would allow the Legis·
ll'll1lon or INchlra marching toward Ntlrwnant;' achool dlstrtcta
laturc to borrow money for school projects using bonds backed by the state.
acrou tile country are bracing for a lalchlr lhorlaga .ovar the
For)y-nine percenl supported the proposal, 24 percent opposed it and the rest
nellt dlcltde. (AP)
were undeeided .
. . Most demographic groups were split on Issue 2. Opposition wa.' strongest
St,ates arc also creating "altema- already find.~ shonages in half of all in the Cincinnati area, where 52 percent were opposed. Support wa.~ stronge~t
tive certificates" to lure skilled. mid- · · teaching fields, including bilingual in the Columbus area. where ~4 percent suppoi'led it.
career professionals into classrooms. education, speech pathology, special
The Institute for Policy Research at lhe University of Cincinnati randomly
hoping their worl&lt; experience will · edueation and science. The "long· questioned 614 Ohioans who'identified themselves as likely voters. The tele·
give their lesson plans add¢ impaCt. (lrcdicted need for new teacher:s, "lhe phone poll was conducted between April 1-M. The margin for error was 4
While alternative teacher candidates study said, "is'starting to becOme evi- ;x:rcentage points. .
generally get more preparation than dent."
An Ohio Poll conducted in late January and eorly February found'that 62
emersency teacher.;. includi.ng·trainll's becoming evident in Boston. · Jercent supported the tax increase. There were two major differences in how
ing tailored to lheirexperience, there where Jialf the city's 4,600 public the polls were conducted: Only lhose who identified llfemselves as likely votis still misgiving about their increa'led school teacher.; will reach retirement ers were questioned in the latest one, and the earlier poit asked about a tax
use. Critics say people with less train- age in· the next decade. In Georgia. incrca'!C only in generaltenns .
ing can't help but be; lesser teachers. where school ·district\ art offering
The poll was sponsored by The Cincinnati Enquirer and the University
A. new rcpon by the as&gt;IOciation sign-up incentives as high as.$4.000. of Cincinnati.
·
·
·

see

·Deputies track daytime burglaries

· By JIM FREEMAN
checks and waiting periods for hand·
Sentinel News Staff
gun purchases, sellers at flea markets
yoday's Senti~el
Deputies of lhe Mei11s County arc'iiot'liound by these Jawr, mattins
·
1 SKtlon • 10
Sheriffs ,Department have been them popular places to dispose of
VOl. 48, No. 151
investipting a rash of burglaries over stolen guns.
lhe la.u few weeks, mostly in the
Soulsby said lhe sherift's depart·
10
Ce!atd•r
western end of lhe coun!Y.
ment c:an easily de~ine if a firearm
.
Most of lhe thefts have occurred is stolen by checking ill senal num6=8
• ;n the LanJSville. Dexter and Salem her against a nationwide list of
·9
..• Comki
Center. area.~. according to sheriffs· fircarma that have been rep,&gt;rted as
l
F.dltnrlph
department reports, but I(IIIM! have stolen. The problem is thit many
3
I
L9gl
been rqlOI1Cd ip t!1e outskirts qf Mid- stolen f~ arc not on file because
.. Sportt I
4&amp;5
dlePQrt and Pomeroy. ·
ownen do not always ·record their
Thieves have stolen a wide vari· serial numbers, he said.
ety of items, but seem to have specif·
Soulsby eneouraaed county .rcsi·.
Lotteries
deilu to record and save serial num- ·
ica11f!=used on firearma.
s ·11 lames M. Soulllby -.ld ben off of ftream11 and other items
QHIO .
.
fil'lllllls ue often stolen by lhieves includin11 elocttonic goods, ' power
Super Lotto: 5·1l·l!l·16-41...7 ·
bec1111e they arc vaiWible and eaay 10 -tools 'aild lawn equipment · ·• '
itlck 3: 6-3-7; l'ldl4: 2·7-6-8
ditpose of,at rqional flea nwteta ~· .
"Irs importanl to note
fl
Kicker: 7..()..6-2-0-2
similar salea.
•
&amp; Ea. have been happenma at day~
w.yA.
AIJhouah licensed firearm dealen time, • he said.
Dilly 3: ()..4-4; Dally 4: 4-1-7-3
arc required til keep uack of their
Alllhe thieves have to do is knock
•
sales, and comply with blckJI'OIInd on the door presumably to ask dircc·, "' t9!111 Ohio Volle)' Publlll!i"' Co.

a,emm

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No,. lcntan, Jlci:IOII, w..tY·

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"

LUCASVILLE (AP) - It i~ unlikely that SatUI'd;ly's stabbing of an
inmate at th~ Soulhern Ohio Correctional Facility by another inmate had
anything to do wilh the five-year anniversary of the. deadly siege at the
prison, a priijpn spokesman said Saturday.
The timing of Saturday's stabbing was a coincidence, said Joe Andrews,
spokesman for t)te OhiQ Department of Rehabilitation and Correition.
"I don'tlhink it ~as related to that (lhe 1993 siege)," Andrews said.
On April II, 1993. a sroup of inmates took over a wing of the maxi·
mum-sec;urity prison, starting an II -day siege. One guard and nine inmates
were killed.
Saturday's stabbing took place around 6 p.m. and did not appear to be
life threatening, Andrews said.
·
.
Warden Stephen Huffman told WCMH-TV in Columbus lhe inmate
was on his way back from the showen when he was stabbed several times
wilh a homemade knife in the back.
The inmates' names were not released.
Huffman said the inmate was taken to The Ohio State Univmity Med.ical Center in C~lumbus. Hospital officials said they arc not allowed to
release any infoimati011 regarding prisoners.
.""
The State Highway Patrol was investigating the stabbing.
A message seeking additional comment was left for·Andrews Sunday.
No one at the P.rison would comment on lhe investigation Sunday.

~INCINf'!~T~ (AP)- Wilh thP,=e~eeks l~fl before lhe May~ prii!W),
Oli1ot11i~ q~tlohed riir a poll were evenly split on a ji/npd.alto lncrcase the
state's ~les tax to help schools.
·

p.,._ .

,a.-.

Promoted

.

On one poster, a tree sprouts dolJar bills. On a second, a fist holds 11
bUlging bag of coin.~. At first glance,
the; advertisements look better aimed
at gamblers than teachers.
·
The posters boldly list bonuses for
· teachen who sign up with the Fort
Wonh Independent School District:
~ for those who earned high
grades in college, $1 ,000 for those
who speaks two languages, $2,()()()
fiir those who sign contracts before

'

WiU! ,lllte-nwrying bally__boo,.men
.r"1 sen3ing a steady stream;OI' i:hil- ·
drcn to sc'tiOOI, elementary and secondary eru:~~llments arc expected to
set new~ every year undl UYJ'/,
aec:erding to the U.S. Department of
Education. And wilh almost a lhird of
the country's teachers having taught
for ~ thiln 20 years, lhe govern·
ment predicts the nation will need at
least 2 million new teachers' in lhe
next dec:ade
· But ocher',factors arc also squeez·
ing the teachCr supply: ·
·
•'TWen'ty stales have-eilher passed
or arc proposina class-size limits; and
Presi'dent Clinton has proposed
spendina $7.3 billion to reduce average class size in fini. second and
lhinl grades from 22 students to 18 by
Hiring IOO,OOO•new teachers.
• Teaching standards arc getting
tougher. which could weed out under·
· performers.
.
• More new teachers arc quilling,
particularly in urban areas, a., social
and pliysical conditions worsen.
Wilh the need for teachen growing, desperate districts arc granting
more emergency licenses and "alternative" teaching certificates. Both
raise concerns that teaching standards
could sink.
Emergency licenses permit people
with no teucher training intq· ch1s.•·
· · rooins if they agree to complete ·
trainins and become licensed as soon
as possible. But overcrowded districts
commonly a.~k states for permission
to extend the .tenns of unlicensed
emergency teachefs. Eleven percent
of teachers in New Yorl&lt; City and 7
'percent in Arizona have emergency
licen!ICs.
·
··

Lucasville stabbing may not
be related to riot anniversary

Ohioans evenly
·split over need
for State lssue ·2

·of educators send·
schools scurryi.ng

held llarch 20 In Columbus. The entry, which
Wll exhlbhed by Champion Hill, Bidwell, 11

S1ngle Copy. 35 Cents

Correctional Institution, where a dis·
turb;lnce in September was quelled in
one day.
Wilkinson credits changes in
guam training wilh lhe successful end
to lhe Mansfield disturbance. Guards
now arc taught surveillance and riot· ·
·control techniques by lhe FBI and lhe
military. he said.
"The primary thing is to have
good intelligence about what's going
on. It took us a while at Lucasville to
know exactly who the players were,"
· 1Jt! said. "Responding quickly obvi·
Ol!sly helped."
·
COnditions have improved from
the standpoint of the guards as well,
said Mike Turner, a guard at
Lucasville since 1977. The}leginning
was Wilkinson's transfer of Art Tate,
the warden at the time of the riot. who say~ 'It's my way or no way.'," opened to the outside. Except when
Wilkinson said guards treat under esc&lt;l!'l by guards,. the inmates
Turner said. Current Warden Stephen
Huffman is a better listener, he said. inmates with "dignity," but they still will spend all their time alone.
If supenna• prisons in other states
"Problems begin when manage- arc just that: inmates.
In lhe Youngstown prison. inmates arc an e~ample, lheir lives will be dis·
ment tries to run things like King
Arthur's court," Turner said. 'He lis· · will be locked up one to a cell for 23 mal, Schwartz said. He said the lone·
tens to his staff- all staff including hours a day, with one hour e~ercise ··liness eats away at prisoners' emocorrections officers. ·He's not a guy . breaks in a room wit~ tiny windows tio~al and mental stability.

~ational · shortage
'.

O'Meara nets
green jacket
at Masters
Page 4:

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

A Gannett Co . Newspaper

56K INTERNET ACCESS

Sports

April13, 1

Weather
Today: Cloudy
High: 70.; Low: 40a

FDA guidelines aimed at

OHIO CATTLEMEN'S

GRAND CHAMPION BULL • Champion Hill
Apollo 13 was crowned gl'lnd champion bull ~t ·
the 1998 Ohio Angua Assoclallon Super Star
Show and Sale held March 20 In Columbus.

Sunday,lpr1112, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pteaunt, WV

__ ...,
,-.XJP'(

Mo

Analysis .conclut:!es Ohio
won't net all highway funds

lions. he said.' "If no one is home,
CbLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio won 'I get all of lhe money promised in
they go right in."
Soulsby encourqes residents to
the trdnsponation bill pas.'led la.'l month by the U.S. House, an analysis
call the sheriffs department if someby a highway advocate a..sociation says.
one st~ at their home to ask them
Ohio will noc get S303 million o.f the $1 .04 billion set a•ide in the highquestions. They should attempt to
way bill for 1998-2003. said David Finley, director of the Ohio ConI~ribe the subjects and !heir vehi· struction Information As.-iation."llte bill is now in a House-Senate conference committee.
cle if possible, he said.
· . Most recently, lhe TNT Pitstop on
The group ba.'led it•· analysis on a simil~ 1991 transportatio~ act.
State Route 7, Middleport, was broIt said Congresstt;llditionally ~·not live up to piomises to fund highken into either IIIC Jbunday or ear- · way projects. In 1991 ,'Ohio was shortchanged 1773 million over the six·
ly Friday. Early Friday, lhe front dOor
year life of the acl. Finley sai~.
·
·
Much
of
the
problem
is
"demonstration
projects,"
lhe label given to
was found standina'JJ~Cn a cipreues,
beer and a change box stolen. ·
pori&lt; pR)jects that arc promised for particular legislaton' districts. Finley
said many of those projects do 1101 happen because lhey II'!! .only intendIn additi011, Bill Lambert repol1ed
ed to pave the way for lawmakers' re-election. •
:
his son's home on Star Hall Road was
'Demonstration'
is
a
!01&amp;1
misnomer,"
he
said.
"None
of
lhese
pro"
broken iniO sometime before Sunday.
ject~ demonstrate anylhina.''
.
• ·
Stolen were a television/VCR, VCR,
$We ofl"u:ials hav~ taken no position' on the bill other d!ln to lobby
a carpet shampooer and sevcnl powfor IIICft highway funds, but Ohio 'I'Nnsportlllion Director Jeny Wray
er tools. ~CtD~ding to the sheriffs
depanmettt report.
.
.
wrote to each memher of lhe state's delegation last month, opposinl
demonstration projects.
.
·
The home -IIIIOCWpied due to
remodeling, ~ngto the repon. . . "The Ohio dele&amp;ation should demand I fair di511ibution of all hiJh·
way funding under lhe reauthorizatiori federal highway program." he said.

�qommentary
'£sta/J£islid in 1948

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

---- -

GOP vs. Clinton
still -n ot risk-free
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON - What Newt Gmgnch says ts that hts House Republicans face zero risk in dealing wnh the case against President Clinton But
what he's doing doesn't fit that clatm to be worry-free
Nobody is Immune from the poliucal pen Is that would be sltrred should
special prosecutor Kenneth Starr send the House what he constdcrs to be
"substantial and credtblc mfom1all0n'' that mtghl conslltutc grounds for
tmpeachmcnl procecdmgs.
ObviOusly nol Chnlon But ccnamly not the Republicans, either._ ·
So Gmgnch is having prior GOP mvcsugattons of alleged admmtstrat10n
wrongdomg revtewed to avoid repcaung mtssteps that hampered them ·m
case of hearings on impeachment He 's ~ad the budget of the House Judtciary Commmce hoosted by $1 3 mtllion. where they 've pula vele(an prosecutor in a semor staff posl. The money and the man both could ligure tn
Clinton proceedmgs, tf they come.
Gmgnch hasn ' t said whcthe'r he will part with precedent and have a spec tal commtltee set up should it .come to that, tnstcad of leavmg the tasks
mvolvcd in an tmpcachment invesugation to the Judtctary Commtttcc tlself.
Top members of that panel would dommale a separate one, but there also
wouiJ be room for conservative' Republicans who ate not among the 3S
members of the standmg commiuee.
Gingrich says he ts spending only mmules of hts work week, perhaps an
hour on "all that sluff."
"All we have to do is be calm, and wail for Judge Starr," the speaker satd
m a recent interview. "We have zero nsk."
,
But he also said itts only prudent and responsible to make ,~ure the House
ts prepared, in case.
· ,
All of thts presumes that Starr wtll be scndmg the House a rcpon on Chn~
ton in,• olvmg tmpcachablc offenses. a step the mdependcnt rounsel law
requtres m the event he finds credible evidence to warrant it
That has nol happened before. Starr satd Wednesday that no decision has
been made on the issuance, timing or contents of such a submtsston.
Gtngrtch had said he was not assuming or prejudging. Clinton's defenders say .he ts. and that tl ts premature to be talking abOut such proceedings
and seltmg up the machinery for them
.
Gmgrich dismtsscs that. "All I'm saymg 1o people ts take adccp breath
... step back. don't comment, and watt." he satd tn a lclcvtston tnlcrvtcw.
Perhaps. hut people aren 't neces5llr~y hstentng.
. .
On Monday. Rep Dtck Armey, the majarny leader. wasn t hstcnmg. He
was 10 Tuas, at Coppell Htgh School, saymg that tf he faced lhe sttuatton
confronung Clinton over sexual mtsconducl allcgauons, he 'd restgn
"H 1t were me thai had documented personal conduct along the ltnes of
the president's. I would be so !tiled wtlh shame that! would resign," he said.
·'This prest!lenl won't do that '
·
Ncxl day Armcy said that he was lalktng_about the tmr.ortance of personal rcsponsthtlity. "(could not let these chtldrcn thmk lhts prcstdcnt ts a
gMd role model. .. he sat d.
. •
Gingrich satd he did not agree wtlh Armey on rcstgnalton, hut added that
the No 2 House GOP leader "reprcscnls a lot of people who feel very
deeply,"
•
.
.
.
. .
Thai pmnls to nne of the poliucal nsks mvolvcd: ActiviSt cunscrvattvc
Rcpuhltcans arc vtlal to Gmgrteh and hts 11 -scat GOP maJonly. mtsmg the
.

But to take the offcnstve dcftcs the counsel of the polls, whtch show Chnton ·, JOh approvtll ralmgs unshaken. a~d d_raws While House countcrauacks
repealing the argument that the nghl wtng IS &lt;Jut to get the prestdeQt. and that
the Rcpuhhcans arc playmg lhts for pantsan advan1age.
They .ue. and will Democrats arc shaptng thctr defense strategy for lhc
same rca&gt;&lt;m. The voters wtll elect a new Congress on Nov. 3.
The next move IS Starr's. :· tfhe sends ur a very powerful case. the House
wtll have a cnnstttulinnal ohhgat10n to do somethmg." Gingrich satd. " If he
sends up no case or a very weak case. the House will have an obligation to
' do nothing "
The nsk. cnher way. " unavoidable.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice pmicknt and columnist
ror The Associated Press, has reported on Washingto~ and national pol·
ltks ror more than 30 years.
.

ITO GET OFF YOUR FANNY
Atl~' EX~RC~- • ..
~NEA,Inc

•

Pqmeroy • Middleport, Ohio

millions of dollars worth of free propaganda (Democrats receive) from
the 118lionalliberal news media ... or
course, that's the· same news media
that ·Gingrich is currently using 10
get loads~of
free publicity for hts
'lteW book
Perllapl 'nking that only Republican conlri
would ·be reading
lhe NRCC lener, Gingrich makes several statements lhat. WPIIId probably
come as surprise to most AmeriCans.
When Republicans took over Congress in 1994, there was much talk
from GOP leaders about closing down
various cabtnet depanments. Such
rhetonc turned off much of the public,
and Republicans turned thetr anention
10 other issues .. or so we thought.
Gingrich writes. that "many
(underlined for emphasts) Republicans in Congress want to ehminate
the Federal Depanments of Commerce. Housing and Urb,an Development, and Energy " He asks readers
if Republicans should "charge forward wtlh plans lo abolish these
agencies."
II came a.&lt; riews to us that congressional Republicans arc still
devising plans to shut down cabtnet

ing. Gingrich's
approval rat·
ings • ·have
climbed to 36.
percent. That
may not sound
hke anylhmg
to get excited
about, but for
Gingrich
who's survived
Moiler &amp;
two government
Anderaon
shutdowns, an
embarrassmg
ethics probe, a mismanaged coup
attempt and approval ratings that
hovered at around 20' percent ,. it
passes for exceedmgly good news.
So good that Gingrich is now open·
ly talking about runnmg for president
in 2000 But don 'l be fooled by the
speaker's public demeanor. In a recent
fund-ratstng letter penned by Gtngrich
for the Nattonal Republican Congressional Commmec, the self· ·proclatmed "revolutionary" was m vintage pantsan allack-dog form .
In the lcuer. revtcwed by our
associate Aaron Karp, Gmgnch asks
Republican don~rs for large contri· hutions so the GOP can counter "the

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on.

One man against the lords of the
By Nat Hentoff ·
In 1989, the Globe. a supermarkel tablotd. published astory based
on a book, "The Senator Must Die,"
by Roben Morrow, a form~r oontrucl CIA agent ll clatmcd that the
true assa.\Sm of Roben Kennedy was
Khalid Khawar. Born tn ln!(ia,
Khawar had been working, the magazme 's rcpon continued, lor the
!raman secret pollee m combiqauon
wilh the Malia.
Khawar was indeed present tn the
Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles
when Kennelly was ktllcd, hut he
was only taking photographs for a
.Pakislant news magalinc.
On lcammg that he had been
accused of this horrifying crt me,
Khawar sued the Globe for It bel.
Because oC...Ihc arltclc, he had
received death threats I rom all over
the world. he says, and his three sons
had also been thrcatenc~ with death.
Dunng 1hc law suu, it became
clear .that none of the people at the
Globe mvolvcd wnh the story had
lne!lto check tls accurocy. As Mtkc
Wallace added tn his account of the
libel suit on CBS's "60 Mmulcs,"
"The Globe had not even tncd to
contact Khawar."
Thcjuryawarded Khawar$1.17S
mtlhon because, tl said. the magaztnc had engaged m reckless dtsregar!l of whether or not the story was
true. The Globe appealed and the

Californta
Coun • of
Appeals
affirmed
the verdict
m favor. of
Khawar. As
one of the
appellate
JUdges said
to
the
lawyer
from
the
Glohe dur· Hentoff
ing orul argumcnls.
"What you'_rc say mg. ·counsel. is
that the newspaper has no business
to take a look at what is printed in
this outlandish hook and detcnmnc
whether there ts a scm till a of truth in
tl.' '
The Globe has appealed to the
Supreme Coun of California and has
been joined by an array of the
nallon's leading newspapers and
broadcast organi1.a11ons ... among
them. the Los Angeles Times. the
New York Ttmcs. the Hearst ~orporalton, the Assoctaled Press. CBS.
NBC. ABC. l~c Society of Profcssional Journalists, and the RCJ'IlMers
CommtUcc for the Frcedom ·or the
Press (of' which I am a dtsstdcnl
member m thts eil,c).
Why arc all these formt!lable
press mslitutions going agamst

Khahd Khawar, who has surely been
treated unfairly by one member of
the prcliS? .
The rca.-ion is called "neutral
reponing," a qualified pre'"' pnvtlege
available in a mmorily of StalL'S. h is
de lined by Kclli Sager, a Los Angelcl;
auorncy who spcciali1.cs tn media
ca.o;cs, and is involve'(( in this one:
"his the tdea thai a news &lt;•gani7Alton can neutrally and accumtcly
repon on a muller of public conlmVL'f·
sy without taking stdcs, without
knowing or makmg a judgment on
who's tclhng the truth. hccause il is
unpnnanllitr the puhlic to know what
charges arc hctng made.''
· Th .. ,te~ur~lely report" in this context means that if you make no mis·
takes in rcp&lt;1ning what someone else
""-' sat!l in a muller of puhhc L'tntmvcrsy: you ure under no ohlig•Mion to
check faL1s .. no matter. how damuginB or bizarre the charge ts.
In its account of the Khawar ca....:.
CBS's "60 MmutcS'' revealed the
dan)!ersol'unfcucrc!lrteutral rcp&lt;lrlin!!
.. even though CBS tlsclf ha.' signed
on tn suppon of the Glohe. On the air.
Mike Wallace sa1d:
• "ThiH'a.&lt;C ts ahoul a homaQ.being
and his fwnily. I know damn well I
would never in a million years have
hccn pcnnined'lo pul on '60 Minutes'
what the Glnhe put tn their ma!!aline."
·
The prestdents nf CBS, NBC and

, If there 's a bubble in this bull
market, it hasn't popped yet. When i't
wtllts anybody's guess. Why tl will
is sliU a mystery. So )Vlth one quarter dow.n in 1998, most cqutly funds
have wowed the.world by providing
double-digit returns "' thetr shareholders.
Look at tbe lirst-quaner returns
on stock funds .. and if you're not
already invested in funds, you're
probably wishmg you were. Accord-ing to Lipper Analytic~! Services, all
equity
investment
objectives
showed gains this quancr. That's the
lirsl lime this has happened m mnc
years -- since the first quarter of
1989.
Look closer and the performance .
numbers get even more irnpl}:SSive.
F91' example, the average general
equity fund was up II .91 percent for
the quarter, and up 41.98 percent
over the latest 12-month period. F91'
the past 10 years, the artnu~lized
growth rate of general equity funds
has been 16.53 percent.
"These high returns have not
been seen since the; 1980s, when the
I0-year period ended Sept. 30, 1987,
produGed an 18.74 percent compound growth ra~,'' wntes Meliss~
Daly in Lipper Analytical Services'
first-quaner report.

. ...·-------·
·------

-~ ·

Michael P.·.Mahan
•Wa ANoc;loted Pt... GtiDhlctN•I

Rain likely throughout
region tonight, Tuesday
·
Showers and thunderstorms will spread across Ohio tonight and conlinu~ thro1,1gh Tuesday morning, for~casters said.
.
Skies will clear slowly in the afternoon as temperatures mch mto the 60s,
the National Weather Service said.
, Lows tonight will be 50-55.
. .
.Fair skies will return to OhiO on Wednesday w1th htghs around 70.
'The recqrd-high tempemture for this date at the Colum~us weather stalt~n was 86 degrees in 1941 while the r:cord low was 21 tn 1920. Sunset
tdmghl will be at 8:07p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at6·55 a.m.
··
•
Weather rorecast:
Toniglll...Occasional showers. Lows in the lower 51!". South wind IO_to
15 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
_
Tuesday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs 65 to 70. Chance of
ra1n 60 percent.
.· ·
.
.
• Tuesday night ... A chance of showers and thunderstorms early~ otherwtse
pi!J1Iy cloudy. Lows around 50.
Extended rorecast:
.. Wednesday... Panly cloudy. Highs around 711.
'·
' Thursday... Moslly cloudy with a chance of sho\\lers and thunderstorms.
Lows io the lower 50s'and htghs in the mid 70s. '·
• Friday... Moslly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
in the mid 50s and higlls in the lower 70s,

pr~s$;

Bloodmobile slate, _
s top .
in
.Pomeroy Wedntsday
.,

ABC News refused to appear on thai
segment of "60 Minutes." hut
Howard Kunz .. press critic of the
Wa~hington Post - wa.• characteristi· '
cally forthright:
"To hurl a charge nf murder and'
nor call the accused .. 'Can we gel 1•
your side of the story'/' That seems
to me to he just the epitome nl' joul'- '
1
nal .. ttc mulpmclicc.
':The nation's lnp news nrgant~.auons have a knee-jerk tendency tn ·
rush to the defense nf any journalist in '·
tmuhle. Tilcy're afraid (tbe i:usc}
would sci some kind nf legal prcce- •
dent I don't think we should apoln·
gm: lilf the wnrstexcCS-o;csol &lt;HJrhusi-"

The American Red Cross has.
is~ued an emergency appeal for
donors with type 0 negat&lt;ve blood.
Officials at the Tri-State Region
BJI/flll,S~Q'~ces said.usage of this, type
d~~ins the past three weeks ha\ been
exceptionally high. Current invento·
nes have less than a one day supply,
out of a needed three day lev~l
"Area hospttuls are having a large
number, of patients with the 0 negatixe type using blood." said Denzil
Sp1ith, chief operatmg offic~r. "This
hal; depleted inventories so much we
are issuins an emergency appeal. We
a~ desperately needing people who
have typ,e 0 negative blood to
donate."
. Smith Said the Tri-State Region is
tcyins to impon 0 negative blood
from other ~d Cross regions, but
this is a type that experienL't!S high

ncs.,,"
· A lricnd of mine is the auorney lnr ·
a news urgani1.a1ion thai is supponing
the Globe. "If Khalid Khawar wins in ·'
the California Supreme Cnun." I
asked him, "wtll y&lt;iu suppnn the'
Globe in the Surn:mc Cnun of the
Uriitcd Stales'!"
,
·•
"Oh. no." the illlnrncy said. "I
wouldn't take a cha111:c ol losing up
. there. Ncutml reporttng could then he
a lost cau.&lt;e lhn&gt;Ughoul the country. I
wanllo keep the case m Cahfnmia." .
The decision by lhe Surremc C&lt;&gt;Un
of California is due sorn&lt;: time thi,;spring.Thelordsoftherres.,arcJustifiably apprehensive.
Nat Henloll' is s writer lor
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
'·· ·
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the Ft~elity Blue. Chip Growth :
Fund, ahead 13.99 percent.
•
But before you get causht up in :
all the investment hype that's sure :
to follow thts first quaner's pcrfo~- 1
mance figures, don't forget that :
not all stock funds are winning :
investments. Of the live "•~rst-per- :
forming .funds during the quaner, !
Potomac's OTC/Short Fund was I
1 off the must -- down 23.90pcrcent; l
and the American Heritage Furid !
tclecom.munications. Otl· average, followed, olf 19.39 percent. Then !
the Profunds' Ultrabear !
they returned slightly over 23 per- came
Fund ..ilown 19.02 percent, and tlic i
cent to their shareholders, and 61
Prudent Beur Fund, down 17.39 t
percent for the past 12 month.~.
pcrccnl
t
Look at world equity funds, and
So
even
though
the
financial
eli-.
:
the place l() be invested over the
mate
looks
msy.
don't
be
blinded.
In
:
last year was 1n European region
funds. During the first quarter of the marketplace. there arc always wi~: ~
ners and loser.&lt;. There arc also olways •
this year, they have moved ahead
market lops and market 'bottoms. And' :
over 20 percent; m llle latest 12there arc times when stocks outpcrJ :
monih penod, over 3~ percent.
Investigate the performance ot form bonds, and Urnes when bonds :
outperform stocks.
the 2S largest funds (those with the
~' ~
most assets) and you'll find that
Dian VuJorich II lite •lhar (II '
five beat the performance or the
"Stn!pt
. Talk AbO.t Mululll •
S&amp;P SOO Daily Rcinvestmeny
Funda"
and
"Stnnpt 1ill About
Index of 13.95 percenl. Th011e
ln\'tltlq ror Your •
funds were American Century's
TC Ultra..,JJp IS. 93 percent for the bolh ot whkll an! pallll lw r.y. :
quarter. New Perspective Fund, McG111w Ha Setld q111'1 nllo hir' •
ahead -IS .SO percent; the Janus Ia an llfthll neMplper, or 'ria to :
llllllatMIIMulull8ol.cotn.
' '
Fund, up 14.50 ~rcent; Fidelity
l•,
..
Magellan, up 14.21. percent; and

"These high returns have not been seen
since the.1980s, when the iO-year period
ended Sept. 30, 1987, produced an 18.74
percent compound growth rate," writes
Melissa .Daly in Lipper Analy#cal Services'
first-quarter
report.
'
.

- ...

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f ,,

'

___________ ___ __- -------- --------"

_;.:_

demand ttyuughout the country.
"Because 0 negative can be used
by all blood types and is oft~n used
in emergency situations, 0 negative
us~ge e~~J;~cls the percentage of 0
negative people in the population," he
conlmued. Type 0 negative blood is
also used tn transfusions to babies
.since type ~pecific transfusions can
be difficult. It is also the only blood
type 0 negative patients can receive.
To help il1'rea'IC the supply of 0
negati~e bloqd, a bloodmobile ha~
been schedu~ at the .Meigs Senior
Center. Mul~ Heights, Pomeroy.
on Wednesday from 1-6 p.m.
To donace blood. individuals must
be at lea~• 17 years old•. weigh 110
·pounds or more, and be in good
health. Donors ,may call 1-800-GIVE
LIFE for an answet lu donation
questions.

.

Actions to end marriag.es filed
• The following aclillns to end marrivge were liled recently in the office
of Meig.~ County Clerk of Court~ Larry Spencer.
, Dtssolulton asked - Tony A.
K~yset. Vinton. and Lisa A. Keyser,
Vinton, April 3.
· Di vol'l:es asked ..:.. Judith L. Stewa(\, Pomeroy, from Thoma.• L. Stew·
• un. New Marshliel!l, Apnlll: Ronald
Joseph Romine, Langsville. from
KaJhleen Romine, Albany. April 3:
J'!!"es ~etlh Hanmg. Albany. from
Mi!ry Su~atl Haning. Albany, April I.
Divorces gmnted - Charles A.

·The Daily Sentinel
!USPS lU·HOl
..
flllth ~fwd .:v.:1y afh:moon, Mt1nd.1y

d•n1u1h
Ff"h'IV. Ill Court St . Pnwruy, Ollill, b)' lf'll:
Ohio V:.lley Pvllhshtn&amp; (\lmpany1Ganlk.11 C'o .
Pn.l.crny. Ollia 4~7fl9. Ph. 992-21 ~6. Sceond
"~f!'l' Plfo'iiKC ~·d "'Pomeroy, Ohtu

Mr~Rber! Th~ A1toc1.-ted
~"!spotpe:r

l'n!11.

antltl)c i&gt;h111

AuOtl1dt('ln

PbSTMASTER: Send :uklrcu corralltutl It•
'lit Daily Scnllnd. Ill ('ourl ~1 .. Pomrmy,

,

.. m&lt;&gt;!&gt;.

Ohjo

Ritchie Jr. 'from Kristy L. Ritchie;
April 2: ·Kathy S. VanCooney and
Larry L. VanCooney, April'2: Christina K. Freeman and Johnny W. Freeman. April 2: Connie Dodson and
David G. Dodson. April 7.

Mamage ,·,censes
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recenrly in
the Metgs County Probate Coun of
Judge Roben Buck :
Jesse Lee Molden, 18, and Amanda Faye Huegld 18, both of
Pomero.y; Joseph Tlleron Suiger Jr.•
40. Proctorville. and Jennifer Rae
Proffilt. 22. Long Bouom.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...........: .............49
Akzo .................................... 100~

AmrTech ..................1............ 46').
A1hland 011 .............. • .. ......53~.
AT&amp;T .......................:.............65~
Bank .One.............................83'"1•
Bob Evans ..................: .........21\
Borg-Warner .................: .......86).
Brougltton ............................. 18}.
Chllmplon .............................13\

I'
,.

Charm Shpl .................,........411).
CIIY Hollllng ..........................44').

\Jik Y~•r .

GanltMI .................................74~.
Gooclyear ..........
70,.

SUBSCRimON RATES
BJ Clrrin" or MDiur R011lt
W.,-.d;
• • .•.. .. . Sl UH
OheM .. Ih " " • '' '" "' """'"' " ' $.&lt;711

6,_,

. . ... . .

..... .•.• , SU.,. 0()

Federal Mogul ...................,.55.,..
0 . . . . ................

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dlfil' ,,, .. ,. .
. .. .. 3~ Cen11

..

'

S~nocrs lkJt deSifUII! Co pay the cmle• may

remlc in

advan~c

direc::llo The Dally Sentinel
QP&lt;a dHet,
12 mo111h buts. Crtdll ¥&gt;111 bl!
~wn carr\tr c~h week.

''"or

"

NU~ su tl~enptio n

by m~il r,rm•ttcd in aruM
"'!.ere horn&amp;: cnrrier aerv•« s IVIilltble.
•
Pubhr.;htr rtscrvts •he nJhtto adjust fll1n dur·

JX'nod Sub~triplion rat~
C~"Jtl may be imp&amp;emenlfd by c••nJin&amp;lht
tng the

sub~enphon

dltration of lk tubla'ipiK'Ifl

I•

MAlLSUIISCRlmONS

c-,

·

"
1.... Mtltll
1l' \Yc..:l,...................... ........... ......... S27 lf)
26.W..U , ....... ..............,............ ISJ.Kl
· ~{WHu ....................................... sur.&lt;.Y•
'• - 0 . 1.... MtlpC-1

tHII,.u ................................... ll9l.~

:U. WHh .......... ... . •.......................1511.61&lt;
ll WHO ........................... :.......... 11119.72

Kmart .............................. J......17\

Kroger ....................................1115\

Linda End .............................37'\

Limited .............................1.... 30~

Oak Hill Flnl ...............~ ............28

ova ....................................~t··-44

One Valley ...........................37"1.
Pto~ ...............~................... ~

Prem Flnl ........ ~ ........................21

Rockwel~ ................................11\
RDIIIt.ll ................................51~
...,.............. ~ ...................... 511~.

Shoney'1 .......... :....................:.•5'1.

I

Star Bank .......
14
Wtftdv'l ................................22\
&amp;0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

w~~

..........................1n

-·-·-

l

Stook reports are the 10:30
quoin p!0\1dlcl by Adwat

•.m.

of Oalllpolll.

"

Jerry Large, Elmwood Temce Apartments, Racine, "'ported Sarunday
evening to the Meigs County Sheriffs Depanmentlhat the wires were cut
on his riding mower, tires tlaltened on a bicycle, and tools stolen.

•

••

•
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I

No injuries reported In accident
No injunes were reported 'following a two-vehtcle accident on West
Main Street in Pon1eroy Saturday at II :39 a.m.
Brian Colwell, Vinton, was westbound on Wesl Main and stopped for
a car that was turning when his 1994 Ford Ranger was struck from behind
by a 1992 Buick driven by Sharon K. Riffle, Racine, according to a
Pomeroy Police Depanmenl repon.
A repon of a two-vehicle accident that occurred on Coun Street Friday afternoon was not complete as of presstime Monday morning, according to a police depanment dtspatcher.

•

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I

Teen ticketed after pickup hits church
A Middleport area teenager was injured following a one-vehicle accident Friday on County Road IS (Hysell Run) near Rutland, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State H1ghway Patro' reponed.
Timothy J. King. 16. 39054 Bradbury Road, was transP?"ed to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs EMS following the 2:25p.m. ci"J.~h.
troopers said.
According to the repon, King wa.• nonhbound, 1.3 miles nonh of State
Route 124. when he lost control of the pickup truck he drove and went
qff the right side of the road.
The pickup then struck a utility guidewire and a .telephone box. continbed on and struck a church, troopers said.
The pickup was severely damaged, and King wa• cited for failure 10

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Michael P. Mahan, 16, Athens,.died Fnday, April .10. 1998 at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Born June 9, 1981 in Athens. he was the son of Virginia White Mahan of
Athens. and Webster Mahan of Marieua: He was a sophomore at Athens High ~c:on;tro~I.----------------------------------.J I
School.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by maternal grandparents Paul
and Patsy White of Shade; his maternal'great-grandmother, Elizabeth Cuckler· and an aunt, four uncles and nine cousins.
The following land transfers were Eads to Kent Eric and Kimberly
'He was preceded in death b¥ his ~alcmal grandfather•. ~ack R. White.
recorded recently tn the oftice of Kathleen Eads. Columbta:
Services will be I p.m. Tlles;lay tn the Hughes-Moqutn Funeral Home, Metgs County Recorder Emmogene
Deed. Chalmer B. and Mary DaiAthens. Burial will follow in the Alexander Cemetery. Friends may call at ·Hainillon;
ley to Bryan R. and Mehssa D. Dai- I
the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
Deed, John T. and Marilyn J. ley, Lebanon. 1.9 acres:
Deed, Chalmer '!nd Mary Lynn
Wolfe to Glen E. and Patricia McCulDailey
lo BenJamm R. Dailey, ,
lough Enslen, Racine;
Deed, Wayne and Clara Jarvis to Lebanon:
George W. Parsons, 5(;, 1203 Winthrop Lane, Ashland, Ohio, died Sat- Wilham E. and Nola A.- Swisher.
Deed, Roben L. and Dianna
urday, April II, 1998 in the Good Shepherd Nursing Home, Ashland. fol· Middlepon parcel.
Imboden to Roben L. and Dianna
lowing a brief illness.
Deed. Farmers Bank and Savings Imboden, Rutland:
Born March 18. 1942 in New Brighton, Pa.. son of Dorsa and Jessie Rowe Company to Edward T. and Patricia
Deed. Oral W. and Com A. Raines
Parsons, he had been a janitor at Hyco Manufacturing Co., Ashland, prior D Baer. Pomeroy:
to Roger L. Lovsey, Olive:
to retirement He had been an Ashland resident for the past 30 years.
Deed. Florence M. Rtchards to
Easement. Terrance Allen and
Survtvtng are a brother, Roger A. Parsons of Ashland; and three sisters, Steve and Belinda Lane. Middlepon: Debbie Smtih to slate of Ohto,
Ruby Hupp of Rae me, Joyce Whtte of Letan Falls, and Jean Wells of GalEa.o;emenl. Barbara L. Ours Hess Chesler:
lipolis.
.
· to Columbus Southern Power,
Deed, Phyllis Glasgo to James T.
Services will be I:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Oenbow-Primm-Kemery Lebanon;
Ward and Cleo M. Smith. Or~nge
Funeral Home. 313 Center St.. Ashland, with the Rev. John T. McCoun offi·
Ea.'!Crnent, Jeffrey C. and Deborah parcel ;
elating. Burial wtll be ipthe Ashland Cemetery. Friends may call at the funer- M. Harris to CSP. Lebanon:
Deed. Home National Bank to
al home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.fl\. Tuesday.
Easement, James E. and Linda Dallas, Donna and D. Anhur Htll ,
Memorials may be made to the Ashland County Cancer Association, P.O. Diddle lo CSP, Lebanon:
Letan;
Box 85, Ashland, Ohio 44805.
Easement. R.H. and J.E. Matz. · · Deed. David M and Darlene
H.S. and P.R. Ebersbach to CSP, Shirk to Vtcky Graham. Salem:
.
Lebanon:
Rtght of way. Joyce A. and Larry
Easement, Harry E. and L. Taylor to OPC. Rutland:
Genevieve Richard lo CSP. Lebanon:
.Right of way. Harold Rose to Ohio
Ben Earl Petrel. 51. Elm Street, Racine, died Sunda . April 13. 1998 at
Deed. Carolyn Salser to Ltnda C. Power Company. Suuon: .
Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
and Gary . D. Evans, Suuon. 1.4~
Deed. William A. and Hazel I.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Fu ml Home, Racine
ac,res.
McKelvey lo Bruce Edward McK·
Deed, Paul J. and Mildred M. elvey. Lebanon parcels:
Pauley to David L. and Shtrley J.
Deed. Doneue R. and Kevin L.
Bumgardner, Pomeroy:
. Dugan .to Doneue R. and Kevin L.
Margaret A. Pickens, 97, Mason, W.Va., died Saturday, April II, 1998 · Deed, Paul J. and Mildred M. Dugan, Orange:
in the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
Pauley to Davtd L. and Shtrley J.
Deed. SeL'Ilko S. Calfee 10 Ronald
Born March 23, 190 I in Mason, daughter of the late David and Margaret Bumgardner. Pomeroy:
and Nancy Talley, Sutton.· 2.S 16
Harper Elias, she was a niemlier'of the Mason United Melhodtsl Church.
Deed, Wanda• Louise and Jerry acres.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Ralph A. Pickens, in I%S;
and by five brothers and four sisters.
Surviving a daughter and son-in-law, Belly P. and Billy L. Thomas of
Mason; and several nieces and nephews.
Units of the Metgs County Emer- Petrel. VMH. Central Dispatch
Services were held at II a.m. today, Monday, Apnl 13. f998 ·~ the
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, with R.C. Browning officialmg. Qurial wa~ gency Medical Servtce recorded 16 squad:
8:09 a.m. Sunday, SR 338, Tim
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation was held in the funeral home calls for assistance Saturday and
.Sunday.
Units
responding
tncluded:
CornpliOn, Jackson Generdl Hospital.
on Sunday.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RUTLAND
6:55 a.m. Saturday, Eastman
12:19 p.m. Saturday. Rutland.
Rtdge Road. Pomeroy, Joyce Sauters, Stacey Williamson. Plea.•ant Valley
Veterans Memonal Hospital ,
.
Hospital:
Carolyn Elizabeth Powell, 47, Radcliff, died Saturday, April II , 1998 at
I11:22 a.m. Saturday, South Founh
2:23p.m. Saturday, SR 143, Magher residence.
,
Avenue, Middlepon, Florence Potl&lt;, 'gie Siek, PVH :
Born May 26, 1950 in McArthur. daughter of the late Marion Westley and VMH:
,
5:38a.m. Sunday, Star Hall Road,
• Margaret Prall Perry, she formerly worked for l:ake Hope Stale Park. Austin
2· 18 p.m. Saturday, State Route Salem Center, Pliyllis M. Crosley.
Powder Co. and McAnhur P.ark Apanmenls.
248. motor vehicle al.'cidenl, Betsy O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, CenShe allended Black Oak Freewill Baptist Church.
Ntcodemus. Mallory Nocodemus and
She is survived by her husband, Kenny Powell : four daughters, Cheryl Mitchell Barringer. refused treat· tral Dispatch squad assisted.
Lynn &lt;!omer of Pomeroy, and her husband, Ivan. of Pomeroy, Donna Jean menl, Chester Volunteer Ftre De'punNelliOn and liance Shawn Hull of Hamden, Karen Kay Kight and fiance _David ment and Tuppers Plains squad a&lt;sist·
Voelker of Star, and Melissa Dawn Herrold and husband, David. of McAnhur, ed:
' ·
·
a son. Kenneth Wayne Powell Jr. of Coalton: 12 grandchildren: and four sis6:35 p.m. Saturday, Wolfe Pen
ters and brothers-in-law. Sandra and Ronald Mason of Hilliard. Juamta and, Road. Pomeroy. Tim Warner, treated
John Ward of McAnhur. F.dith and Richard Henderson of Radcliff, and Edna allhe.scene:
Floyd of McAnhur.
7.07 J).m. Saturday. Riverside
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Garrell Funeml Home, Apanments. Middlepon. Charles
McAnhur, with the Rev. Marvin Markin officiating. Burial will be in the Bean Eaktns, VMH:
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-9.p.m Tuesday.
12:57 a.m. Sunday, Wayne's Place,
Mtd!lleporl, Edith Roush, VMH,
Mtddlepon squad assisted,
2:08 p.m. Sunday. Batley Run
Road,
Middleport. Jason Roush,
CLEVELAND (AP)- The jack· $6.528.412 and players shared
Holzer
Medical Center, Middlepon
pot l(&gt;r Wednesday's Super Louo $739.983 Sales m the Ktcker lola led
drawing will offer $30 million, the $91 8,K81 and players shared squad assisted;
3:25 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
$419;8:\()
•
.
Ohio Lonery said.
Nursing
Center. Mt!ldlepon. Mtl·
There were 113 Super Louo uck There were no Super Louo game
dred
Clark.
VMH. Middlepon squad
tickets with the correct st&gt;-number ets with five of the numbers, and each
a.'5isted;
combination from Saturday's draw- is wonh $1,589 The 7,094 Super
7:54 p II). Sunday, OBNC. Dore&lt;
Lono tickets with four of the numbe"'
ing with $24 mtllion at slake.
Arnold.
HMC. Mi!ldlepon squad
Sales in Supcf Louo totaled are each worth $79.
assisted
.
There was one Kicker game tickPOMEROY
et with all the numbers and it's wonh
Hospi~al
10:39
a.m.
Saturday. Laurel Street.
$100,000. The winning ticket was
Veterans Memorial
Della
Rosenberry,
VMH ;
sold at The Comer Srore in Ma"ilSaturday udmtssions - norie.
11:24
p.m.
Sunday,
Eagle Ridge
lon.
Saturday discharges - none.
Road,
Bonnie
Walker,
VMH
The 1-3 Kicker tickets showing the
Sunday admissions - Mildred lirsl five digtls are each wonh $5.1100.
RACINE
Clarke, Middlepon: Linda Grimm,
3:08a.m. Sunday, Elm Street, Ben
R..Cme.
Sunday dtscharges - Roben
Mahr.
Holzer Medkal Center
Discharges April tO - Mtldred
McDaniel, Claude Winters. Mrs.
James 0' Neill and daughter. Mrs.
Charles Lilchlield and son, Doshie
Sydenslricker. Richard Mabe, Polly
Trainer. Robert Gooch, Thomas
Allen, Charles Skaggs, Stc:lla Rawlins.
. Disellarges April 11 - Vivian
Weaver, Ronald Perrie, Smory
Arbaqglt, Edith Holbrook, Joan Johnson, Halley Martin, Anita Chipman.
Dilcharps April 12 - Misty
Hutchinson. Donna Smith.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Keith
992-6674
'OPEN MON.•FRI. M; SAT. 9-5
Grice, son, Well11on; 'Mr. and Mrs.
Royce Bissell,·daughter, Middleport.
MaaterCardNIII/Discover
(Published wllh (lennissloll)

Land transfers recorded

By The Associated Press

I

Staying in that htgh-return mind
mode, the top-performing general
equity fund type this quarter was·
th'c S&amp;P 500 Index ohjecltvc
funds. There arc now ·89 of those
funds, with an average return of
13.77 percent. Growth funds
moved ahead on average 12.89
percent; micro-cap funds, ahead
12.3t percent; and captlal appreciation funds, up 12.10 percent .
(Lipper's general equity fund category is made up of eight fund types
.. capttal apprcctation fun~s ;
growth funds; mtd·c~p funds;
smal1-c~p funds ; mi~ro-cap funds;
growth and mcome funds;. S&amp;P
500 Index funds; aod equity
income fund&gt; . All togethtr, there
are 3,226 funds that fall t~nder the
Jenera! equity headina.)
Of Lipper's sector equity funds,
the biuest gains wc~e seen ·in

The Rev. Wilbuf H. Leifheit. 68, Racine, died Friday, April IO: 1998 at
the Cleveland Clinic, following a lengthy illness.
He was born May 3, 1929 in Pomeroy, and was a lifelong resident of the
Racme!Pomeroy area.
He was an ordained minister for 2S years and retired as pastor of the First
Church of God in Anderson, Ind. He served as interim pa.\lor of the First
Church of God in Elyria in 1984-85, and was a laborer at Kaiser Aluminum
in Raven~wood, W.Va., for 30 years before reriring in 1991. He was a peacelime U.S. Navy veteran.
,
. SurvivoiS include his wife of 49 years, Julia BishOp Leifheit; a daughter,
Pauy Ann !lush of Sulliv~n, a son, Wilbur H. Leifheit Jr. of Port Saini Lucie,
Fla.; four granddaughters and one great-grand\on; and two brothers, Frank
Leifheit of Mira Lorna, Calif.. and Russell Leifheit of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Victor and Lillian Leifheit; a
sister, Beatrice Leifheit: apd a brother, Edwin Leifheit.
.
Friends may call Tuesday from 7-9 p.m. at the Bauer-Laubenthai-WainWright Funeral Home in Elyria. Sen ices will be held Wednesday al 10 a.m.
at the funeral home, with the Rev. Joe Griffith officialmg. Burial will be in
the Brookside Cemetery, Elyria.

Clncinnatl 68'

,,

Thi.s bull mar.ket's a winner

Rev. Wilbur H. Leifheit

IND.

Jack Ande~n and Jan Moller
are wrilers lor United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

\

Damage, theft reported to dep.utles

MICH.

depmtmcniS. Of course, Gingrich
couktsimply be play in~ to a part1~
crowd in an effort to 1111se campatgn
cash. In a nmi-presidenlial year;
Republicans are expectins ~ low
electoral turnout and are counung on
their activist base to help them retain
their slim House majority.
FOOD FOR 1HE DEAD -- 'fhl:
government . that's supposed to
"work beller and cost less," to bor·
row a phrase from AI Gore, is still
handing out food stamps to dead
people.
A' recent comprehensive study by
the General Accounting Office of
the food stamps program in fou~
stales .. California. Aorida. New
York and Texas .. found that "near.ly 26,000 deceased individuals iri
the four states
wert included in
households rccetvtng food stamj&gt;s"
during the years 1995 and 1996.
In one of the more a&lt;tounding
examples of government waste
we ' vc come across in a long ltme.
taxpayers spent $M.5 milhon to feed :
the dead.
The GAO hlamcs the fact that .
stales arc not required lo check the .
validity of the Social 'Sccuhly num· bers pmvided by applicants. If lhcy
dtd, they 'd learn that many of the
numbers being used ~ shall we s:ly.
expired.
.
.
"The tncluston or decca.OO -indi:
viduals in food stamp households goes
undeJccted." writes the qAO.
"because agencies rely primarily on
unverified infmmation on household
membership provided by food stamps '
applicants and panicipanl&lt;...
The GAO recommends thai
states match Soctal Security num· '
hers of tndtviduals in I'&lt;KKI stamp
households wtl~ dat~ in the SSA's
"Death Ma.&lt;ter File." The GAO also
sugj1csls that it wouldn't he a bad
idea for the' SSA to notify states
when a food-stamps recipient passes

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Local News in Brief:

'l'uesdly, April14
.AccuWeather0 forecast tor

By Dian Vujovich

•

,

OHIO Weather

I

comeback?
If a ~ta:nl fund-raising lener -- in
which the House speaker calls for,
among .other things, lhe abolishment
of several cabinet depanments .. is
any indtcation, the answer is a
resoundtng yes.
You'd be hanl pressed to find any
evidence of the old, liecy Newt during
recent public appearances in whtch
he's tned his damdesl to cultivate a
new, mce-guy image.
The kinder, gentler and leaner Gingnch is touring lhe country promoting
his new book, "Lessons Learned lhe
Hard Way." So far. he's steered clear
of the incendiary rhetoric lhat marked
his early days as speaker, and turned
off so much of the pubhc.
The carefully crafted book tour
mcluded a folksy interview wtth Katie
Counc on NBC's "Today'' show. Gingrtch told Couric that he's "leammg to
keep (my) mouth~ul " rather than
make the kmd of f hsh. off-the-cuff
comments that bel d smk hts poll ralmgs.
The strategy seems to be work-

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

Berry's
World

Page2.
'

By Jack Anderaon
Molter
Is the old Newt Gingrich making a

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

prcssUIC lor an aggressive stance agamst Chnton.

·.

Mondly, Apll13, 1 •:

end Jen

111 Court StrHI, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2158 • Fax 992·2157

General Manager

..

•

Monday, Aprl113, 1998

A comeback·for NeWt Gingrich?

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

. ••,

George·W.

Pars~ns

Ben. Ea-rl Petrel

Margaret A. Pickens -·

EMS units record 16 c.a lls

Carolyn E. Powell

Jackpot goes to $30

m~llion

news

Do you have an IRA?

a Keogh? or a SE.P?

·618 EAST MAIN ST., POMEROY

�Sports

The Daily .S entinel·

•

Marlins lose 11th straight

Page4

.

Monday, Apr1113, 1998

captures Masters crown
'

. MASTERS CHAMPION • Last year's Master's champion Tiger
,, Woods helps 1998 champion Mark O'Meara put on his green
,Jackal after winning the four'Clay tournament In Augusta, Ga.,
.·Sunday with a 279 effort. (AP)

..

. Sco.reboard·
Naliunal League
East Dh·isicnl
\V
7

New York
I

'·

Philadelphia
Adam a
Montreal

6
6

Flo~da

Pd .
.IJJ6
6!Xl

4

1/2

..1

273

I
4

I

II

OX3

6 1!2

w

Cenlral Division
L
Pet .

8

Milw:~uk ec

7

St Louis
Pinshurgh

7
7
7
6

4
4
4
5
6
6

667
.636
.636
5K3
5JX ·
.5lXI
Wl&gt;sl. Division ·
L
Pet.
2
833

1..

Cincinn:ui •

' I

San Diego
San Francisco

10
7

Los Angdc:.

5

Colorado
Arizona

4

9

'

10

w
•I

~45

5
X

Ch1cago

HoustOn

L
~

5
6

583

~55

GB

112

112
I

. By DOUG FERGUSON
ing him a 5-under-par 67 for 279 and
AP Sports Writer
a one-stroke victory.
AUGUSTA, Ga.
Mark
"We had a great round. but we got
o· Meara had hit the putt during a beat by somebody who played a great
practice round, knowing the hole ·round the last round of the Masters,"
would be there on the 18th green .in said Couples.
·
the final round of the Masters, but not
A great round was lurking. With
": realizing he would be there with so &lt;1nly a soft breeze, the table was set
• much at stake.
for the kind of back-nine chill'ge that
1
Neither did anyone else.'
makes the Masters special, and there
i Th,e cheers on Supday were for were plenty of players on the leader! Jack Nicklaus, teasing a breathless
board who were caP\Ible.
gallery with one more run at another
Tiger Woods was not one of them.
green jacket. And for Fred Couples, One yeill' after his record 18-under
who took himself out of contention as 270 gave him a 12-stroke victory and
quickly as he got back in it with raised concerns that. Augusta was
unforgettable shots on the par-5s.
obsolete. Woods never managed to
· When O'Meara lined up his 20. break 70 and finished six strokes
1 foot birdie putt on \he 72nd hole,
back at 285.
thousands of fans had already lined
"People just don ' t know how
the lOth fairway in anticipation of a hard this golf course is," Woods .said
playoff between him, Couples and after a round of 70 that included his
David D.uval.
third three-pun of the week.
"Am 1nervous a little bit? Yeah,"
. For a while, a 58-yeM-old man
O'Meara said. · "But there was no . with six green jackets made it look
need to set the playoff. 'I can put this e~sy again. Nicklaus birdied four of
in my hands and finish it off.' "
the first seven holes, rocking AugusThat's what he did. raising both ta with-roars that only he can generarms defiantly after the putt fell. giv- ate.
r""":~::-:=-::-:----:---.:B:u:;.t.:ao;ft;;,er~o::;:::ll.,:,:to;.;:,5.,::u:nd::;e;.:,r.;w:;i:;:th~

'98
I• .
· Mas,ers.
scores

. AUGUSTA, Ga. (Alh- Final scores OF TOP 10 and money
winnings Sunday of the $3.2 million Masters, played on the 6,925yard, par· 72 Augusta National Golf Club course:
·
Mark O'Meara, $576,000
74-70-68-67
279
Fred Couples; $291,600'
69-70-71-70
280
David Duval, $291,600
71-68-74-67
280
Jim Furyk,
$153,600
76-70-67-68
- ·
281
Paul Azinger, $128,000
71-72-69-70
282
Jack Nicklaus, $111,200
73-72-70·68
283
David Toms,
$111,200
, 75-72-72·64
283
Darren Clarke, $89,600 ' ·
76-73-67-69
28S
Tiger Woods, $89,600 ·
71·12-72-70
28S
Justin Leonard, $811,600
74-73-69-69
285

I 1/:!

GO
1
4 1/}
6 1/2
K

I'

of the lead with Couples and Duval.
Couples never 1051 his composure.
l&gt;ut it's a wonder he ever caught.up
to his tee shot on No. 13. Leadmg
Duval by one, he hooked it so far left
that it ripped through the pines and
over Rae's Creek before coming to
rest on a dirt path. He hit a wedge
over the trees to the fairway. then put
a 6-iron into the creek on his way to
a double.bogey.
"I just had a big blunder on 13,"
Couples said. "That was the decidihg
blow."
He got it back with a 6-iron to 2
feet for eagle on Nq. 15, but gave
himself only ·one ,other chance for
birdie- a IO.footer at No. 17. He
missed it.
Up ahead, Duval was at 9 under
on 'the 16th tee, having made birdie
on five of the previous seven holes
and looking like .another 20-something player who wa• going to claim
a major.
But he three-putted the 161h. and
his birdie attempt on No. 18- about
the same pun O'Meill'a had - slid 1
beneath the hole.
O'Meill'a chugged along. with a '
two-putt birdie nn No. 15. a two-pun
P'dl' on the 16th, before closing with',
two birdie putts:
"I was extremely relaxed over
them," O'Meara said. •·1 kept my
composure, and you hav~ to do
that."
He also took time to soak in the
moment long before he seized it. He
gazed at the beauty of Augusta's azaleas, watched the sun setting a~ he
walked up the 17th fairway.
As for those fans w~o hea~d to
lOth fairway for the playoff that never hnppened?
"I did not notice that," O'Meara ·
said.

MHS errors costly,
Athens wins··s-4 tilt

·Knicks· to file protest over contro-versial loss

Mariners' pen blows another one·

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
'•
Salurday'5 Gam('S
Lou Piniella didn 't want to name
p;u sburgh 7. Floridali, 10 inning -.
names. So here they are: Paul SpolN.Y. Mct s'2. Milwauk&amp;:~: I
Montreal ~.Chicago Cubs 4. I(} innm1s
jaric, Bobby Ayala, Mike Timlin,
Cincinnati 12. Colur:-~do ~
Tony.Fossa.• and Heathcliff Slocumb.
St. Loui~ 7. San Ffancis~:o 2
Seattle's bullpen blew another
Philadelphia fl. Atlanta 5 ,
. game in Boston on Sunday as Jim
Houston 6. Los Angdcs 2
San Diego I . Ari.,.ono 0
Leyritz hit a game-lying homer and
Sunday"s (;ames
.
Reggie
Jefferson singled in the winMontreal 4, Chicago Cuhs I
ning
run
in the ninth inning. giving
Atl::~nta J. Phdaddphi a ~
the Red Sox an 8'7 win over the
Piusburgh 7. Fl{)nd::~ J
N.Y. Me1 s 6. Milwau~cc -"
Mariners.
Cindnn:lli Ill. Colorado -1
"I'm not going to knock any:
San Olcl,!O 4.' Antuna !
body
... Piniella said. "These guys are
San Francisco 2. S1. Luui s I
giving the effort. and it will get betLos Angdc~ , 7. Houston 6. 10 11111ing:..·
Mundav'.'l (;am~
ler.''
St. l.ouj$i 4Ayhar 1-11at So11 Franm~:n 1R~l'tl'r 1-1L -l ;lJ~ p.m
It can't get much worse. Then
Atbnta tNCaglc 1· 1) at Phii:Jdclphia ( fkc~.:h 0- ~I J. 7· 0~ p m
again.
Seattle's relievers have this
Flt&gt;nda I Ludwk~ 0- ~i a1 Pithhurgh I Loa11:a l -UI. 7 .U"i p.m,
blown save business down to a sciN .Y, ML' I I; ~lt'lh:r 1- lt :lt Mtlwau~t:l' tK;.rl 1-0). 7 : ()~ rIll
Arizona.! Andcr,.;on 1- 1J at Sun Di..:!!O (A,.hhy 1· 11. 7 . 1~ p m.
ence. They blew 27 last year and gave
Cindnnati (Whi te 0- 11111 ColonldO!Wnght U- ~ I. K I)~ r Ill
away Friday's game despite leading
Houston I L11na 2-01 at l_?'i Angell!' I NtliiiO 1}- l t. ~ . n~ r 111
7-2
in the ninth.
Tut."Sday·s Games
·
.
Seattle starter Jeff Fassero pitched
Milwaukee (Mcrn;dc..C).O) al Mnntn:~l ~Vatqu~/ 0 -l ). 7:()S IJ.IIl
Chk3go Cub:. lGtm:t.akt 0- 1l al N.Y. Mel' (~ct:d 0- 11. 7-..H) p m.
well in his 1998 debut, but gave up
Pitt~hurgh (Lid·N:r 0-1) ;11 At la ru o. 1M1ll wootl l·n). 7 .m run
Leyritz's two-run homer to tie it 3-3
Ariznna!Surp:m 0-2) 011 St . l•1ui ' (Merdcr l ~H) , fi ; II I Jl .IH.
in
the sixth, forcing Piniella to make
Los Aut,'cles (V:~Ide:-. I · I J :11 Colomdtl ( Th4liiiJ'I~on 1·0). ):05 p rn
that
dreaded call to his bullpen.
San D11.'gn 1Lanrston l-UI nl San Frnnc1M:o IG;mhwr 1· 1). 111:11:\ p.m.
Spoljuric came on, and the next
batter. Troy O'Leary, homered. SpolAmerkllln J..ugur
t:a.'il Division
jaric also gave up Mo Vaughn's
w
Pel.
GB
I.
ninth-inning grand slam to blow Fri.Kl X
Baltimore
9
2
day 's series opener.
2 112
New York
6
4
.600
Ayala blew a 5-4 lead in the sev2 112
4
·.600
T::~mp:1 Bay
6
)
54~
6
Bostoo
5
enih. and Fossa.~ allowed a double 10
5
~
7
.3M
Toronto
the only hntter he faced. In all. SeatCcntul Div~it•n
tle wa.&lt;ted lead• of 1-0. 3- 1. 5-4 and ·
(;8
Pet.
w
L
7-6. wasting two homers by Alex
KOO
Cleveland
K
2
"i45
:! lf~
Mmncsota
6
5
Rodriguez and one by Ken Griffey Jr.
~
~!Kl
Chicago
4
to extend their losing streak to five
~
10-1
Kan~3 '&lt; City
7
" 112
games.
;
~ IKl
7
IA!trOII
3
Elsewhere ·in th~ AL. it was: New
Wrs1 Di,·t~ion
Pet.
GR
w
L
York 7, Oakland 5: Baltimore 6.
(it)()
6
~
TCX3!1
· Detroit 3: Anaheim 12, Cleveland 1:
t.
112
Anaheim
'~'
Tampa Bay 4, Chicago I; Texas 3.
~7 1
3 II:!
H
Scanlc
J
,,
Toronto I; and Minnesota 7, Kansas
1 II :!
7
Oakland
~
Saturday•s (;amt'S
City 2.
8os1on .S. Scanlc 0
Protecting a 7-6 lead in the ninth.
Bahnnnl\! :! . lktroit 0
Slocumb (0-1) struck out Vaughn. but
(lc\'dand M. Anoh..•1m 5
.Leyri,tz hit a 3-2 pitch into the screen
N.)". Y~kcl!s J. O~t~land I
Minni.'&lt;&gt;O!a K. K•m"a~ City J
above the Green Monster. O'Leary
Tampa R:ay 5. Chi~:a~u Whrle ~ oA I
walked, took second on a wild pitch
Toronto~ . Tcxa..~ ll
and
scored when Jefferson. hitting for
s..-ay'sGam~
Mark Lemke, si.ngled to center.
·
Rt~ltunorc-f1. l~:tru11 .l
Anatk·im 1 ~ . Cl!!wlaod f
"When we struck out Vaughn to
Rn:.ton H. St::artk 1
start the ninth. I thought we were in
N.Y. Yank..·'"-,; 7. Oakland:'
pretiy good shape,.. Piniella said . .
Tcx.a:-. :t. Tumnw I
Minnc~u1;1 7. KaliS;~~ Cilv ~
"But. much to my chagrin, I was
TamJm ihy -'· Clnca~n W1111e s," I
wrong."
Mondav•s (;ames
O'Leary was 3-for,4 and Leyritz
Oakhnd { Rng...r~ 1-0l at 8 (hlnn IS:thcr·hagL•n I ·IH. h tl~ p nr
went 3-for-5 wilh three RBis. John
Seattle ~Cinu.k 1-0) :11 Clc\•dand (8urha 1· 11. 7 0~ p 111
Minnt.~tlt:ltHa\\ kins 0-11 :11 Tamra Hay 1Armtn J . l). 7 O" p 111.
\_Va..tin (2-0) pitched I 2-3 scoreless
Anuht!am (}hll2-m 111 N.Y. Yanke~.: -. 1Wdl:. 1· 11. 7. .1~ p m.
innings.
Toronlo tH-:mgcn l ·tll at -Kansa; C11 ~· (ltu ....'h 11-::! ). K ll."i p rn
"II was like a shoot-'em-out,
1X1rmt1Muchlcr t)..l):lt Texas (Will (). (1), tU~ p.m
bang-·em-out Western," Wasdin said.
1\.rcsdav•!'i (fo~nte!'i
.
oakbnd (Ha)',Ol"... 1-mat Bo:oolon (Ht:nry 0·01. fdl5 p IU,
..The la.•t man standing wins."
Sc;~nk (Swift 1·0) a1 Ckwland ( Krh·da J .O). 7:05- p. tn .
Unless, of course. he walked out
MinncsQt:t t RadLc 1- 1) at Tampa Ray ,·springer 1-0). 7.(15 p,m.
of the Seattle bullpen.
Chi~·agll White Sox (Eyre 0 · 11 at 8ahimorc tKcy J ..O). 7:05p.m.
Yan~ 7, Athletics S
Anaheim (Mdlowt:!ll 1-.ll al N.Y.. V:.mLcc!i tlrahu 0·0). 7 ,:\~ p.m.
Tnronltl tGuzm:an {)..2) :11 Kansas City IR3pp 0-0). M:O) p.m.
AI New York, the Yankees com- ·
Deuoi1 tSapdl.'rs 0- 1) al Tc:&lt;ns (5\-lc 2-0), M;:\5 p.m.
pleted a three-game sweep and won
their fifth straight as Bernie Williams
singled home the go-ahead run in the
sbth and Darryl Strawbe.,y hit his
third homer.
Hickory
Motor
Speed0.363-mile
New York is 6-·1 since starting tbe
AUTO RACING
•?&lt; •
HICKORY• . N.C. (AP) - Ed way.
. year 0-3.
The Ford driver finished about 12
Rookie Mike Buddie (2-0) got the
Berrier won for the first time in 208
car-lengths
ahead
of
Hermie
Sadler's
win despite gelling just one out, and
NASCAR Busch Grand National
starts, leading the 'final 1061aps oft~ Chevrolet. Tim Fedewa was third, Mike Stanton got three outs for his
and series leader Dale Earnhardt Jr. · third save.
Galaxy Foods ~ on Satutday 41t
finished eil(hth.
Orioles 6, Tigers 3
JOX
.167

'

a birdie on the 15th, his next three
putts for birdie all missed by no more
than an inch.
"To have all the pedple outthere,
knowing that might he the last time
you walk in front of them with the
chance to do something good was a
pretty nice feeling," Nicklaus said
after closing with a 68 and a 283.
0 ' Mem was a forgotten man,
fifth in career earnings with 14 PGA
Tour victories, but none of them a
major championship. 'The 41-year-old
would have thought no less of himself had he not ·had a major to his
credit at the end of his career, but he
never quit · trying in 56 previou~
auempts.
"I know that this game ha• always
· been based around performance of
major championships," 0' Meara
said. "I know that there's been comments about why I haven't won a
major. I think timing and a little luck
- that's what wins major cham pionships."
·
.
A hot putter never hurts, especially at Augusta.
The previous four Masters champions had but one three-putt between
them - Nick Faldo in 1986.
O' Meam had a three-putt paron the
second hole of the second round, and
no more the rest of the week.
"I've played enough with Mark.
That's just how he puns;" said Duval.
who teamed with 0' Meara in the
President's Cup. "He's one of the
best putters out here. and he makes an
awful lot of them." ·
0' Meara got a lift when he
dropped a pair of bombs on the third
and fourth holes for birdie, but he
saved the best for tbe end.
His birdie putt from 7 feet on the
17th finally made people take notice.
if only because it put him in a shill'e

.

By The AeiOCiated PntH
beat Chicago 4-1 and San Francisco Bret Boone hit his first career grand ninth before getting his third save.
Aorida said repeating as World beat St. Louis 2-1.
•
slam. Pete Harnisch (1-0) blanked
Garren Stephenson (0.1) allowed
Series champion would be an impos·
At
Piusburgh,
Jer!llaine. Colorado through five innings, drop- two runs and sjx hilS in six inninp.
sible task. These days, a single vic- Allensworth singled in three of Pius- ping lhe Rockies to ().6 at Coors Mets 6, Bnwen 4
tory seems inconceivable, too.
burgh's first four run~ ·and Jason Field.
John Olel'\ld hit a rwo-run hornet
The depleted Marlins lost their Schmidt (2-1) allowed three runs and
Chris Stynes reached five times in the seventh at County Stadium and :
II th consecutive game in April, this five hits in seven innings.
and scored a career-high four runs, reliever · Turk Wendell (3-0) w011
time 7-3 at the Pittsburgh rirates on
Jason Kendall singled twice to set homering to lead off the game.
again despite giving up a three-ruli ·
Harnisch ( 1-0) allowing two runs homer to Jose Valentin that made il ·
Sunday. Since winning March 31 on liP Allensworth run-'Scoring singles,
opening day, Fldrida has set a team then hit a two-run homer in the sixth and eight hits in seven innings. Pedro 4-4 in the sixth.
'
record for consecutive losses. skid- to chase Rafael Medina (0-1).
Aslaeio (1-2) as tagged for 10 runs Butch Huskey also homered for
ding to the worst start ever by a Dodgers 7, Astros 6. 10 innings
nine earned- and nine hits in five- New York and Mel Rojas pitched rwo
defending champion.
Raul Mondesi hit a two-run homer · plus innings.
innings fo~ his first save. Paul Wag. "It's a .new season with a lot of with two outs in ·the bottom of the Padres 4, Diamondbacks 2
ner (0.1) wanhe loser.
new players, .. catcher ChiU'les John- I Oth to give Los Angeles a victory
Ken Caminiti homered in his Expos 4, Cubs 1
son said. "If we keep looking back, over Houston.
fourth straight game as San Diego
Rookie Brad Fullmer went4-forwe're bound to keep stumbling." .
Billy Wagner (0-2). who surren- won its seventh straight- it• longest 4 and drove in four runs at Olympic
Florida got rid of 12 players from der~d a game-tying RBI si ngle to winnin~t streak since 1991. At 10.2. Stadium as Montreal won for just the
its World Series roster, slashing the pinch-hiner Mike Devere·aux with the Padres matched the best start in third time in II games, sending Kerpayroll from $53 million to $33 mil· two outs in the. ninth, was given a San Diego history, accontplished by ry Wood to the loss in his majorlion. Outgoing owne~ H. Wayne chance to win after Moises Alou led the pennant-winning team of 1984. league debut.
Huizenga. who is trying to sell the off the top of the lOth with a homer
Andy Sheets hir a two-run homer ·
Dustin Hennanson ( 1.-1) struck
Marlins to team president Don Smi- off Antonio Osuna ( 1-0).
for his first Padres · hit, and Joey · out eight and allowed five hits in 6.1ley, is getting what he paid for.
But Wagner walked Mike Piazza Hamilton (2-0) survived solo shots by 3 innings, yielding
Henry
BOONE HOMERS. • Clnclnnlltl'l Brei Boone, right, Is con·
"Our guys m trying. We're just with one out and Mondesi drove a 2- Travis Lee aqd Yamil Benitez.
Rodriguez 's fifth homer. Uguetll
gratulated by third base coach Harry Dunlap, left, after his grand
not playing very good," manager Jim 2 pitch deep to left-center for hi$ secWillie Blair (0-3i gave ,up four Urbina got three outs fo~ his seconil
118m ho~ run In the third Inning against Coloredu In Denver
Leyland said. "We're not hitting ond homer of the .season. Mondesi runs and five hits in seven innings for save.
Sunday. The Reds won their third straight, 10-4. (AP)
very good. And I'm not managing entered the game hitless in his previ- visiting Arizona, which dropped to 2- ·Giants 2, Cardinals I
.•
very good. Ob~iously, when you're · ous eight l!t-bats with runners in scor- 10.
·
John Frascator~ (0-2) walked Bill
1-11 and you've lost II in a row. it's · ing position, but singled in a run in Braves 3, Phillles l
.\
Mueller with the b3ses loaded and
not very good."
the sixth inning that nmowed HousTom Glavine (2-0) allowed one two outs in the ninth, forcing in the
In other games, the Los Angeles ton 's lead to 6-4.
unearned run and six hits in eight go-ahead run at San Francisco. Fr.t.&lt;~Dodgers defeated Houston 7-6 in I0
Carl Everett matched a career- innings at Veterans Stadium and catore walked Charlie Hayes and
innings. Cincinnati beat Colorado 10- high with four hils, and also had two Ryan Klesko homered, stopping Darryl Hamilton, then threw four
pair of walks, a single by Crem~ans. 4. San Diego beat Arizona 4-2, RBis for the Astros.
Phil~delphia's five-game winning
straight balls to Mueller.
By DAVE HARRIS,
a
fielders
choice
and
another
smgle
Atlanta
beat
Philadelphia
.
3-2.
New
Reds
10,
R01:kies
4
streak.
Mark
Wohlers
gave
up
an
RBI
Robb Nen (2-0) pitched a perfect
Sentinel Correspondent
York
beat
Milwaukee
6-4,
Montreal
Colorado
lost
it&amp;
eighth
straight
as
single
to
Mike
Lieberthal
in
the
ninth
for the win.
by
Smith
to
make
it
a
7-4
ga~.
.
.Six· Meigs errors paved the way
Athens
closed
out
the
sconng
10
for five unearned runs as Athens
defeated Meigs 8-4 in non conference the seventh inning on a single by
softball action Saturday afternoon at Praze. a stolen base, passed ball and
she scored on a iliegal pitch. .
Childs of the Knicks said ... You all
the be~h during a skirmish.
official protest today.
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Meigs High School.
.
·
Cremeans
had
two
doubles
and
a
In this case, the rulebook unam- know it: the Heat knew it, the refer"David will take all the evidence
The Lady Bulldogs took a 3-0 lead
AP Basketball Writer
single
to
lead
the
winners,
Smith
biguously
states that the atlicials' ees knew it, NBC knows it and the
and
make
a
ruling,"
league
Commissioner
David
Stern
has
a
in the top of the first inning on a pair
added
a
pair
of
singles.
Casto
and
decision
is
final.
But the replay clear- world knows it. The shot wa.~ good.
big decision to make today. Does he spokesman Brian Mcintyre' said.
of Meigs errors and a single off the
Myers
added.
double~
..
Fry
was
the
ly
shows
that
the
basket should have But nobody had the courage to say it
1ft other games, New Jersey
follow the letter of the law or the spirbat of Fry and doubles by Kostival
winning
pitcher
stnkmg
out
SIX,
defeated Toronto 116-109, Phoenix counted, which could give Stern was good."
it of right and wrong?
and Cremeans.
walking
two
while
scattering
eight
The loss dropped New York into
crushed Vancouver 129-106,1ndiana some leeway to differentiate between
Sounds
familiar,
doesn't
it?
But the Mill'auders came back in
hits.
eighth
place in the Eas~tm Conferthe
letter
and
spirit
of
the
rule.
The New York Knicks will ask topped Boston 93-87, Seattle beat
the bottom of the inning and scored
Laudermili
and
Vining
led
Meigs
.
ence,
a
half-game behind the New
The frantic finish began as New
him to overturn their loss to Miami, Houston 103-95, Atlanta downed
four runs to take the lead. Kelly
with
a
single
and
a
double
each,
arguing that the officials blew the call Washington 91-8 I and Charlotte York in bounded at midcourt with 4.4 Jersey Net~. •
Gilkey led of the inning with a walk,
Gilkey
~dded
a
triple,
Wigal
two
sinseconds left. Chris Mills took the pass · Nels ll6, Rapton 109
when they disallowed AIIan Hous- edged Detroit 88-86.
Amber Vining doubled, Stephanie
gles.
and
Sanford
a
single.
LauderAt Toronto, Keith Van Hom
If the Knicks-Heat outcome and drove past Alonzo Mourning, but
ton's buzzer-beating basket Sunday
Wigal singled and Tangy Laudennilt
mih
was
the
losing
pitcher,
Amy
scored
a season-high 33 points, Kermissed
a
short
runner.
Charles
Oak·
·
· stands, it will mark the second time
in th~ Heat's 82-81 victory.
followed with a double. ·
Hysell
pitched
the
final
inning.
The
Athens took the lead in the top of
The evidence will support the the Knicks have come out on the los- ley missed a tip. and Dan Majerle · ry Kitties added 31, Sam Ca,sell had
pair
.
combined
to
strike
out
three,
Knicks.
The rule book will support . ing end of, a controversial finisll to then slapped the ball in the direction 25 and New Jersey played a perfect
the third inning on a single by Wheat..
five
and
give
up
10
hits.
walk
the Heat.
·
one of their games at Miami. In last of Houston, who hastily threw up'one final three minutes. ·
ley. double by Cremeans, a fielders
.
,
The
Marauders
once
again
played
The NeL~ won their fifth straight to
Televised replays clearly showed year's playoffs, Stem suspended·five last attempt at the buzzer.
choice and a another Meigs error. .
the
game
without
.one
of
their
leadmove
ahead of the Knicks and into
Referee Bob Delaney immediateMeigs threatened in the bottom of
Houston's shot leaving his hand members of the Knicks for one game
each after they left 'the bench during ly signaled the shot didn't count. seventh place. Now it's up to New.
the third.inning by loading the bases ing hitters in Brooke W1lhams. before the clock expired.
Brooke
has
a
bad
back
and
is
queson an Athens error. and a pair of sinThe official rules state: " itegill'd- a brawl in Game 5 of the Eastern After conferring brieOy with the two Jer:;ey 10 stay there ~nd avoid a fir.~l­
tionable
for
lhe
Marauders
game
at
other officials. the ruling stood.
· rou~playoff matchup against the
less of when the hom or red light Conference semifinals.
gles off t~ bats of Laudermilt and
Southern
on
Monday.
In
that
case,
Stem
followed
the
let"Any time there is a controversial defending champion Chicago Bulls.
Casey Sanford. But Fry struck out the
·operates to signify the end of period,
next rwo bailers and·retired the side Athens 302 002 1-8 10 3
the· officials ' ultimately make the ter of the law.- even though Patrick play, we always huddle and decide."
Meigs
.
400
000
0-4
8
6
"Seventh place is not secure. and
final decision whether to allow or dis- Ewing merely strayed to halfcourt head 'official Hugh Evans said.
on a come backer to the mound to
Fry
(WP)
and
Wheatley
and
didn'tjoin.the
fracaswhen
he
"There
was
not
a
difference
of
opinwe have to try and win the rest of our
allow a successful field goal."
end the threat.
.
n
'
Laudermilt (LP), Hysell (7) af\d
games... Van Hom said.
Athi:ns added two more runs ·in
Knicl&lt;s general manager Ernie cited a league,rule that mandates one- IOn .
"The shot was good." Chris
Grunfeld said the team will file an . game suspensions for players leaving
the sixth inni~- on a Meigs error, a Sanford

Nicklaus finishes 6th with 283

O'M~ara

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Aprll13, 1.998

..

ss than five minutes and you'll
be hooked on the 400 Series!

,~Si?tJ(
i

1

,,

'

-Sports. b·riefs~-.. .

,~

SALMON HOMERS· Anaheim's Tim Salmon
(15) Is congratulated by teammate- · Damon
Mas"ore (22) after hitting a solo h~ run In

At Detroit. Scou Erickson (3-0)
stayed unbeaten. With ~nother win
over Detroit.
Erickson. 14-3 in 21 starts-against
the Tigers, gave up II hits- including Dam ion Ea.• ley's third homerin 7 1-3 innings.
Rafael Palmeiro hit his first
homer. and Armando Benitel got his
fourth save for the Orioles, whose 93 start ~atches the Jhird-be~t in club
history.
Angels 12, l1dians I
At Jacobs' Field, Chuck Finley
pitched 7 1-3 shutout innings. and
Tim Salmon hit two homers and
scored five runs a; Anaheim won for
the first time in six tries against
Cleveland.
Jim Edmonds hit a three-run
hOmer off Jill'et Wright ( 1-1 ). who
allowed a career-worst seven runs.
Finley (2-0) allowed·seven hits in
7 1-3 shutout innings. He allowed
only th~e runners beyond first ba.'IC,
and lowered his ERA to 0.77.
Devil Rays 4, White Sox I
At Chicago. Wilson Alvarez
pitched eighi strong innings. Dave
Martinez homered and Robeno Hernandez got a save a; I~ three former
White SoK led T~mpa Bay.
The wili improved 1~ Devil Rays
to 6-4, the best record for a first-year
expansion' team in 10 games. No
expansion team had ever been over
.500 after 10 games. Alvarez (2· 1)
took a shutout into the eighth and
beat Chicago for the second time in
a week.
Jaime Navarro (1-1) took tbe los.'
for the White Sox.

the uven Inning Sunday et JIICObs Field In
Cleveland. The Angels but Cleveland, 12·1.
(API

•

MC519 Material Collection System
..

Attention
Tuppers Plains R•sidents!
The Meigs County Commissioners are
proposing to secure grant funds~asslst In
the cost of connecting to the Tuppers Plains
Regional "Sewer District for the low income
and elderly residents of the area who qualify
for the program.

CAR

•

668 PINECREST DRIVE

April 1;Jth, April 15th, April 17th

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

,1 ,

'

\

47 -ln . Snow Blower

54-tn. Front Blade

It's easy to get attached to a 400 Series Lawn and Garden Tractor With over 25 different implemMts to choose from. the 400 is designed to work on mqre than just 1your Lawn or garden.
With the Ouik·latch implement mounting system that (ets you get hook.ed-up 1n mmutes. you can change attachments as fast as you change your m1nd. No tools needed. Wh1ch means the only
you'll have with a 400 Series Lawn anti Garden Tractor &gt;S decidmg what to get attached to ne~t. Get hooked-up w1th the best lawn equ1pment. See your John Deere dealer today.

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

.

450Tiller

51 -in . Broom

40 Lo11d er

·I:'
I

•

The versatile 400 Series features liquid-cooled, 20- to 22-hp
engine and 54- or 60-inch mowir1g deck,

Includes Riders, LX lal'fn
Tractors, GT, 300, &amp; 400 Series
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Front Mowers, and all
attachments.

,,

'·S
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(740) 446~2412

1,1 "''''II' I'"'"

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE
\

r

�'

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Mrs. Pollifax had n01 aged, Gilman
had covered most of the important
political ':"o~ements of the world
from the stxlles to the nmelles m her
plots and loc~les.
.
In thts senes, Parsons expllllned,
Mrs. Polltfax acts as a part-time
couner for the CIA.
She told of how this unlikely
career started and outlined a few of
the places and situations in which
Mrs. Pollifax had fou n4-herself.
Parsons then quoteJl from some
of the books to illustrate how much
the author was interested m these
exollc locales and how much she
respected the cultures and the people
of other countries .
'
Gilman also endows her character
with a healthy anitude ·toward life
and great common sense. The

CORRECTED NOTICE OF .and daacrlbed aa loltowo,
SALE
lo·wlt: Baing In !)action
By virtue ol an Ordor ol Number Twenty-ltv' (25),
Sale laauod out ol the Town Number Thru .(3) ond
Common Pla11 Court ol Range Number. Eloven (11)
llolga County, Ohio, In the ol the Ohio Company'•
:111 ol Chaoter Proffitt, at PurchoH, and baing the
11., Plolntlllo, va. Paort North ona-mtlt (1/2) ol the
ProHitt, et at., Dal1011don18, South weal quarter ol
upon a Judgmont therein Section Number twenty-live
rendered, baing c 111 No. (25) containing Eighty (80)
94-CV-223 In eald Court, 1
more or 1111, ond the
wilt oHer lor nle at the lront
Ull eo much ol the
door ol tha COurthoull In .1: !~~~'::~:•• Ia ntellaory lor
Pomeroy, Melga County, I
ond removing the
Ohio, on the 17th day ol oaRmel.
D d
I eronca It 1 : Vol.
Apr II , , -a
"" , 1 I 10: 00 a.m.,
the following Ianda and 314, P· 441, -Vol. 314, p. 433,
tentmtnta. A complete Vol. 303, P· 799, Vol. 303, p.
legal deacrlptlon ol the rut 798, Vol. 298, p. 475, Vol.
elllte Ia IIIOIIOWO:
280, P· 217, Vol. 288, p. 803,
PARCEL NO. 1: The Melgo County Dead
following premlall altuate Recorda.
Value:
In the Townohlp ol Llbanon,
A P P r aloe d
County ol Melgo and Stete $2,800.00
of Ohio, and In tho Ohio
Parcel No. 4: Tho
Company'• Purchaoe and following r11l eatato
bounded and d11crlbed 11 altuatad In tho County ol
follows: Being 1 part ol 100 Melga, In the Sl8to ol Ohio
acre or 5th Olvlalon Lot No. and In the Townahlp ol
198 and S.ctlono t4 and 15, Lebanon boundad and
Township 2 and Range 11 d11crlbed ae lollowa: All
parttculorly bounded as that portion oil tho
lollowa: Baglnnlng at the following d11crlbad land
Southtall cornor o1 Lot. No. lying Northweet aide ol
188; thence Nortll,ola atone Slate Route• 124 and 338
at the Northweat corner; which are the umo. Known
thence Well 27 poteo and 8 and dealgnated 11 Filth
llnka to a pool; thence Olvlllon or 100 acre Lot No.
South to e stake on the 194 In Stctlona No. 20, 21
bonk ol tho Ohio; thence and 22 In Town 2, Range 11
with the meander• and up of the Ohio Company'a
the ume South-eaatwardly Purchoae which waa
to the pi- ol beginning, originally drown In the
making ot right angle the dlvlalon olland ol the Ohio
111111 width 1011d front at·tha COmpany'a Purchlll to one
. eouth end •• at the North ol tho aharea In tho neme ol
and which to 27 poleo 11 Alexander Homllton, ond lor
llnka, containing 78 and further deacrlptlon aa ·
148/180tha ol an aero, mora lollowa: Beginning at a
or tell. And being tha 1111111 118ke or poat In the Eoet
property conveyed by tnac lint oH nld 100 Acre Lot 80
Parr and Ruth Parr, hla wHe, 1111 South of the
to Robert F. Johnaon by lnterlletlon ol State Rout~l
deed dated April 20, 1853, 124 and 338 and running
and racordod In Book 11 at with aald Eliot Una In the
Page 324 ol the Deed Northerly direction to the
Recorda of Melgt County, Northt!ll 'c orner ol aald
Ohio.
Lot: thence ln. a Weaterty
Except 1 rtvor benk WhiCh dlrtcilon acroaa aeld 100
waa 110ld to Plait and Smith Acre Lot No. 194 to lhe
Bulldera Supply Co'mpeny, Northweat corner of told
See Daad Record Vol. 181, lot: thence In a aoutherly
Page12.
direction with the Well Una
, R1
D11d " 0 1 4 ol told 100 Aero Lot no.
e erence
" 314,
' ' p.' 194, which It lhe tine
Page
133 (0.R.), Vol.
433, Vol. 281, p. 475, Vol. batw11n eald lot and land
290, p. 217, Vol. 288, p. 803, now owntd by Lloyd Harrta
Melga County Deed to a poatln nld nne 20 roela
Recorda.
South ol S!Aite Route 124;
Being a port ol Audltor'o thence acrott tald L,ot to
Parcel No. 07-0D678.
the place ol beginning,
A p p r alae d
v alua: contelnlng 65 acrea, mora
$61,500.00
or le11.
Parcol No . 2:
It
Ia agreed and
Hundred Acrea olllnd tying underatood by former
In the Townahlp o1 Labenon, Grontoro ond Grant111 thot
County ol Melge and Stall the 'Grant- ahall have all
ol Ohio oltuated In mlnarolt and tho righta to
Tcwnohlp Two and Range operata
the
aame
11 ol the Ohio COmpony'a underlying 15 ocret, moro
Purcha11, which tntludta or tau, aeroea the South
the entire 70 Acre Lot No. end ol the above datcrlbod
189 and thirty acr11 oH
premlaes. It Ia further
Woat and ro- aide ol
underotooel by and be-n
acre Lot No. 118 platted
both partlea to thla Deed
bounded ao
thot 1 former Grantor haa
Beginning at e otone
rourvod unto hlmaell, hit
alike on the bonk ol the helro and aoalgna all the
River at Georgo Cummlnga mlnerale underlying the
upper corner, thence North balance ol tho above
with tald Cummlnga line to deocrlbad land with the
a tlake at tho Northwall right to toll and operala the
corner ol aald 70 acre lot; nme.
Jhence Eaot ol the
It Ia further agroo and
Northout corner ol the 70 underatood by the Grontora
aero tot; thence Eall on the and Gront111 thot a former
North una ol 100 Acre Lot Grantor, hlo halra and
No. 188 to taaae Parr'a uolgna, ehall mtve o rlghtNorthweot cornor; thence ol-way 121111 wldolrom the
South with Parr'a llna to"tha Stato Road 338 North along
River; thence down the the Eoot llno to the touth
River to the pta co ol end o1 thle property.
beginning, contolnlng 100
Excepting thorelrom 45

acrea, more or '"'' within acre•

:

~="'•=

=
•

reviewer read"excerpls to '~ow these
qualities of Emily Pollifax.
. Parsons concluded by agreeing
wtth newspaper reviews . which
compared Mrs. Pollifax with Agatha
Christie's Miss Marple and declared
"that intrepid charmer and part-tirrie
CIA agent Emily Pollifax is a joy
wuh a warnr heart , nerves of steel:
and manners as i impeccable as her
karate. "
'
·
President
Martha
Hoover
remmded members that the next
meeting would be held in the Middleport Library.
Hostess .l eanne Bowen served
candy to members after they
responded to roll call by comment·
mg on t~ e review or mentioning
another series having a fe male
sleuth
·

more

or

leaa

convoyed to Lloyd Horrte
and Sualo Harrlt by Arthur
Rouoh ond Sodlt Rouoh by
dated Soptambor 2,
recorded In Dood
110, Poga 488 ol
111 C9.unty D11d
Recorde. tf lo lntonded,
howovlr, to Include ond
convey heroln the Ira uoo
ol the oprlng that wao
rooarvad In tho deod to
Lloyd and Sualo Harrla
aloreaatd.
Baing tho port of the
"""' raol alflto convoyed
to Sodlt II. Rouab and
Arthur E. Rouoh by dlld
recordld In Dlld Book 180,
P1111 84 of the Molge county
Dlld Recorda.
Tile lut pravloua
conveyance ol the property
Ia recordad In Dlod Book
175, Page .483, Dead
Recorda ol Metga County,
OhiO.
.
Thla dlld Ia Intended to
convey 17 acree, mort or
1111, or all on the Northwell
aldt of Stall Routll 124
and 331 now or formerly
ownad fly the tlld Harry

~apt

Robert and EtiZIIieth Faye
Prollltt aa ~lbed In Vol.
17a, Page 449, Dead
Recorda, Melga County,
Ohio.
RIIIIIIICI Dalda: Vol 4, p.
133 (O.R.), Vol. 314, p. 441,
Vol. 314, p. 433, Vol. 298, p.
475, Vol. 2110, p. 217, Vol.
218, p.803.
Baing Auditor'• Parco!
No.07.-acl.
Appralaed Value: $11,300.00
Parcel No. SA: The
following real " ' ' ' '
tltuatad In the County ol
Metga, Slota ol Ditto arid In
Lebanon
Townahlp,
bounded and daacrlbed at
lollowt, to-wit : One
Hundrlld Acre Lot No. Ono
Hundrod and Elghty·throe
(183), Soctlona Noa. 13, 14,
and 15, In Town No. 1Wo (2),
In Range No. 11 Ohio
Company•• Purchatel,
except thrH-Iourtllt ol an
acre (3/4thl) on tha Eatt
aldo ol uld lot deeded to
the M. E. Church. Also,
except the Pioneer
Graveyard In the South Eaat
comer ol aold lot dllded to
tho Truttaaa ol Lebanon
Townthlp In Malga County,
Ohio, and further except
1Wo rodt ol land uud at a
prlvota burying ground
altuatod on tho Eaot aide ol
aald Lot and directly In front
ol the M.E. Church above
relerredto.
Ellcoptlng 1/4 aero more
fully datcrlbed In Volume
168, Page 282, Melga
County Dlld Rocordo.
Alao, the coal undortylng
the above deacrlbod
promltea 11 horoby
re1ervad and excepted; alao
tho excluolvo right In
perpetuity Ia r11orved and
excepted to Ull so much ol
the
•url•c•
above
dllcrlbtd ao may bo
nac11ury to open and
operate and equip a mining
property with bulldlngo, ·
,.llroad twltchtl necetury
to mining property with
buHdlnga, railroad awltchn
nac~11ary to carry away
oald coal from tald
proml111; alao lor dralnoge
and depoelt of rolu11 and
the ~right , to haul through
and over aald promlaoa coal
and from
adjacent
properUaa and tha grantora
to be rollevad from any
turloce domogt by reaaon
ol mining lor coal under
uld promla,..
Any aurtaca land required
lor uaa at above by aald
grantor• or any peraon or
peraona now or In the
futuro owning nld C081 ond
other right excepted and
reaerved or either or both
•• alated aloreoald to be
paid lor at the rete ol
1300.00 per acre.
Reference Dttda: Vol.
314, p. 441, Vol. 314, p. 433,
Vol. 383, p. 799, Vol. 303, p.
7a9, Vol. 288, p. 475, :Vol.
280 p. 217, Vol. 218, p. 803,
Vol. 149, p. 584, Malge
County Dlld Recorda.
. Being Audltor'a Parcel
No. 07-ootl77.
Apprtlltd Vtlue: $74,000.00
Parcel No. 5B: Alt10, the
following premlno altuated
In the county ol Malga and
Stato ol. Ohio, and In the
townehlp ol Lobenon and'
boundld and deacrlbed aa
lollowa: A trlangulor pleca
ol land lncludod In the
dooryard ol the dwelling ·
houae ol Emellno L.
Blcknel. Beginning on the
Eaal Una ol Lot No. 184
where the fence ol Itt. Iron!
ylrd cr01111 lhl lint and
running parallel lo lhl
public road lltlhly·two 1111;
thtnCI at rtghl angln with
aold line running Eall ol N.
Seventy-eight lift jtlong the
aide ol the dooryard lance
and tide ol ·woah houu to
the lntereectiOn ol the Eaat
line Dl Lot No. 184
lforeaold; thence Iouth on
ntd hllllnt Jo the pi- o1
blglnntng and wllh all olthe
appurtenancu, lencu,
g - , will, aummar h - .
ahrubbery, lrutt
'tfllh
hOUH, ale. In and on uld
101 ot lind .. llortllld, llkl
~. 114, being- •• Lot
114, In Town z, Range 11,
OhiO Company'a Purchln Metga County, Ohio.
Aloo, the coal underlying
the above · deacrl bed
pramlt.. It hereby
teiii'Vtld 1nd uCilpted; 1110
the IXCIUIIVI right In
perpetuity Ia reaorvod ond

•

Investment and Tax Consultant

lr-.

Dealer For:
·
•Briggs &amp; Strllton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI
lrltgs &amp; Stratton: ·Master Sarvkt Tt~lmldclt
Otttdoor Power E; l;:•tnl AsiGdatlon: Carflflttl2 Cycle
State Route 338 ·At VIne • Racine, Ohio

Garages • Replacement Windows

S.CUritles otrered through H.D. V.SI
Investment Securities Inc. Advisory
Services otrered throogh H.D. Vest
Advisory Setvices,lnc. 6333 North State
Highway 161, Foonh Floor, Irving TX
75038-(972) 870-6000

linda's
Custom Cakes
ALL OCCASIONS
Birthdays, Holidays,
Weddings , Showers,
Annlversarltl,
Graduations, Etc.
Harne Bakery Llcenaed
· and lnapected
Pies and Cookies
(740) 843-5544
Portland, Ohio

Notice ol Election on Tox

Public Notice
PlolntiH and tha Defendant;
Fourth, the the Defendant
pay the PtalntiH'e attornay
1111 and court cotte, and;
Seventh, lor auch other
retial 11 thla Court may
dHm juat and equitable.
You ore required to
anawer the Complaint
within twanty-elght (28)
daya alter the teat
publication ol thla Notice,
which will be publlahed
once each week lor alx (6)
IUCCIIIIVI Wllkl. Tha lall
publication will be made on
the 11th day ol May, 199a,
and the twenty-eight (281
doya lor anowar will

Public Notice
Notice ol Elactlon on Ttx
Levy In Exc- ol the Tan
Mill Limitation
Revlltd COde, Sactlont
3501.11(g), 5705.18,
5705.25
NOTICE t• heraby given
that In purauonct ol a
·Resolution ol tho Board ol
County Comm1111onere ol
the COunty ol Matge, Dhlo, .
Palled on the 20th day or
January, 1998 there will be
aubmltted to a vote ol the
people ol nld aubdlvlalon
at 1 Primary Elactlon to be
held In the COunty ol Mtlga,
Ohio, II the regulor place•
ol voting theraln, on the 5th
day ol May, 1998, the queatlon ol levying a lox, In
excoat of the tori milt limitation, lor tha bonlllt ol Mtlge
County, lor the purpou ol
malnt1nance, caplt1l conotructlon, and operation ol
Carleton School and Molga
lnduatrlaa workehop lor
person• with mental rotar·
dlltlon and devtlopmonl81
dllabllltln.
Said IIX being: an oddl·
tlonol tax ol 1.8 milt at a rata
net exclldlng 1.a mlllo lot
each one dollor· of valuotlon, which omounte to
alghtaan eente ($0.111) lor
eech ona hundred dollaro ol
voluotlon lor a continuing
periOd ol time.
The Polio lor nld Elactlon
will open 11 11:30 o'clock
o.m. and remeln open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. ol nld
day.
By C!'dtr ol the Board
ol Eltcllone,
ol Mtllll County, Ohio
ftenry L Hunter,
Chairman
Alta D. Smith,
Otractor
Dated·March 10, 11198
(4) 8, 1 3, 20, 27 4TC

Public Notice
day ol May, 111118, tha qua•
lion ol levying a tax, In
excab of the tan mlllllmllltlon; lor the benlflt ol Molge
County lor the purpotl ol
lire protactton.
Slid IIX being: a renewal
oil IIX o11 .0 mill 111 rota
not axctldlng 1.o milia lOr
IICh one dollor ol VIIUI•
lion, which amounteto tan
centa ($0.10) lor each one
hundred dollare ol valua·
lion for live (5) y11ra.
The Polla for aid Election
will open et 8:30 o'clock
a.m. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock p.m. of nld
day.
By order ol tho Board
ol Eltcllona,
ol Molgt COunty, OhiO
Henry L. Hunter,
Chairman
Alta D. Smith,
Director
Dated March 10, 1998
(4) 8, 13, 20, XT 4TC

MHI Umltatlon
Ravllld Code, Sactlona .
3801.11(g), 5705.19,
5705.25
NOllCl It htrlby given
that In purauence ol 1
Ratolutlon or thl Board o1
County Cornmllalonera o1
the COunty of Matgo, Ohio,
paaltd on the 20th day or.
January, 1998 thero will be
· aubmltted to a volt ol thl
paopla o1 utd aubdlvlelon
II a Primary Ellctlon to be
held In the County ol Melga,
Ohio, 11 the regular ptacea
ol voting thlreln, on the 5th
day ol Moy, 1998, the que• commence on that date. In
lion· ol levying a ·tax, In tho caoe ol your failure to
excan or the tan mlllttmlll· anawer or otherwlaa
lion, lor the banlflt ol Melga raapond aa requested by
County lor the purpou ol the Ohio Rulaa ol Civil
providing ond malntelnlng Procedure, Judgment by
unlor cltlztne •rvleat or default will be rendered
agalnot you lor tho relief
lacltltla.
Sold tU being: a ronawal demandeilln tho Complaint.
Dated thlo 2nd day ol
IIX ol 1.0 mill II a rata not
axclldlng 1.0 mlltalor each April, 1998. ·
Public Notice
Larry Spencer,
one dollor ol valuotlon,
Clotk
ol
Courts
which amountt to ttn canll
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Submlttad:
($0. 10) lor each one hunSTATE OF OHIO
Chrtotopher E. Tenoglla
drod dolllra ol valuation lor
DEPARTMENT
OF
(0055280)
.'
five (5) ynra.
TRANSPORTATION
. Attorney for the PlalntiH
The Polla lor nld Elactton
Cotumbuo, Ohio
will open at 11:30 o'clock (4) 6, 13, 20, 27, (5) 4, 11 8 tc
Offlca
ol Contractt
a.m. and remain open until
Legal
7:30 o'clock p.m. o1 aald
Public Notice
Copy Number 11!1-218
day.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
By order 01 the Board
Notice ol Election on Tax ·
Moiling Date 4/3/98
·
ol Electlone,
Seoled
propoaala will ba
ol Melga County, Ohio Llvy In Ellcoaa ol the Ten
Mill Limitation
occoptad from oil' pre
Henry L. Hunter,
Rovlltd COde, Socllona
quolllled blddara at the :
Cholrman
Olflet ol Controcte ol tha ·
3~1 .11(g), 5705.19,
Rill o. Smith,
Ohio Deportment ol TraneDirector
5705.25
co'nlalnlng 100 acres, more
portatlon, Columbue, Ohio
Dated
March
,
Ia
hare
by
given
NOnCE
10 1998
or loll, excoptlng about (4) 6, 13, 20., 27 Tc
until 10:00 o.m. Wtdnaadly
In
purauonce
ol
a
thot
4
8.211 acre• on the North eldl
RltiCIIuUon ol tho Board ol
April 28, 1111 lor lm·
tharaol, which wu
Townahlp TruiiHI ol the
(IIOVIIMnte:.
convoyod by C.M. Brown
PubliC Notice
Townahlp of Choater, Ohio,
Melga Cotlnly, Ohio far
and Luclnde Brown, hlo
pelllld on the lOth day ol
Improving aactlon MEG-7
wile, to Jam11 H. Hughll, In The Mllga County Court February, 1998 there will be
11.384; MEG-7·12.247, Stolt
by - d recorded In Voluma
eubinltted to 1 vote ol the
ol Common Pleaa
Route
Sallabury
IV, Pago 77, Mtlga County Jamat Keith Haning,
peoplt o1 nld aubdlvlllon
...:___....., Townthlp,7' byIn.repairing
two
Dlld Recorda.
PlalntiH,
.
,
at 1 Primary Election to be
Public
Notice
.
•
tructuroa
with
mlcro-alllca
Furthermore exQaptlng ';:
1 ovartay and joint repair.
held In the Townahl!l ol
unto Clair C. BoliO, hit hel,.
Haning,
Cheater, Ohio, at the regular
Notice ol Election on Tu
"Tho dote aet lor
and anlgna forever, all that Con No. te-DR-()3
placet ol voting therein, on
Lavy In Ellc- olthe nn
complotlon ol thle work
7
part ol aald 100 acre lot
by Publlclllon
!hi 5th day of May, 1898,
Mitt Limitation
oholl be •• ••• forth In tha
which 1111 South ol the To: Notice
Mory
Sua
Honing,
the
queatlon
ol
levying
•
Ravlltd
Coda,
Sactlont
bidding propooal." Plono
Stall Route No. 331, and
ond Spoclflcotlont ore on
whOoo teet known 'oddrall~~~::'n~e~x1;"~"~':',n~o~lt~; h~a len mill .
3501.11(g), 5705.18, .
dncrlbed 11,lollowa:
' lor the benefit ol
5705.25 .
file In tho Department ol
The following real 111111 lo 33385 Haning Road,
Tranaportatlon.
Albany,
Ohio
45701,
preunt
purpoae
olllra
prot!2fton'h.
e
NOTICE
Ia
h•reby
glvan
baing In 100 ocra Lot No.
unknown.
~·
that In purauanca ol a
JERRYWRAY
182, Lebanon Townahlp, addroeo
.
You
are
hereby
notllled
Said
IIX baing: a replace· Reaolutlon ol the Vllloge
DIRECTOR
OF
Malga County, Ohio, that you have been named ment ola IIX of 1.0 milia at .Council ol tho Vllloga ol
TRANSPORTAnON
dllcrlbed 11 lollowa:
(4) 13, 20 21c
Beginning In tho center ol Defendant In tho action ~~~:~~orneoatchexocneeeddlonlglar1o.OI MlddleRort, Ohio, pautd
entitled
Jam
I I Kalth
on
tho
181~ day ol February,
Stile Route No. 338, on the Haning, Plalntlll, va. Mary valuallon, which amounta 1998 there will be aubmhted
Eaat line ol 100 Acre Lot
Honing, Delandant. to ten centa ($0.10) lor each to a vote ol the people of
'.~~~,· a..i.t~;.1·.'NI
i.·''•
No. 182; thence South 995 Sua
Thlt
action
haa
bttn
one
hundred
dollars
orval·
oald
aubdlvlalon
at
a
~.11 '""· ,..;naw
loot · to the Ohio River; llllgnad c
No. 88·DR· uatlon lor live (5) yeara.
Primary Election to be held
~ , -.
thence Southllat along tha 037, and Ia 111
pending In the The Palla lor nld Election In the County ol Malge,
'
utW -''
·
Ohio River to tha Eoat llna
CLASSI~ED•
01 Common Pille 01 will open at 8:30 o'clock Ohio, at the regular placet
ol 11ld .1oo Acre Lot No. Court
Malgt County, Dhlo. The a.m. end remain open until ol voting lharoln, on tho 5th
182, thence North 1057.8 object
olthe
1110 7:30 o'clock p.m. ol uld
_ _.:..._:_::.._!,!::~~~~:=.=::::,:::;:...!1
1111 to the canter ol State
da~
·
110 Help Wanted
Route No. 338; thonce 60 ••k 1111 follow ng relief
1 r....:-~-....:=========-----.
dlllrtll North 20' Will from you:
By
order
ol
tho
Board
Firat, the granting of a
ol Electlona, 1
847.22 '"' along tha canter dtvorcelrom tha Dlfendant:
ol Melga County, Ohio
ol ..lei State Route ~. 338
Second, Plalntlfl to be
Henry L. Hunter,
to the ~~- ol blglnnlng, granted both temporary ond
Chairman
containing 13.2 ICIIIo moro permanent
apoueal
Rita
o . Smith,
Immediate Opening for Experienced Flat Rate
or 1111, aubject to oll legal 111pport;
Director
hlghwaye, ond 1110
Body Shop Technician/Painters
Deled March 10, 1998
Third, that an equitable
excepting all the lond lOuth
27 4TC
Apply in person · No phone callsolthe obove daacrtbld 13.2 dlvlalon olall marttal 11nta
be
made,
Including
that
the
acr••• which may be
See Body Shop Mgr-Jeff Basham
Included In 100 Ac11 Lot No. PlalntiH bo granted, In fee
· M-F 8 am - 5 pm
almplo, oil ol tho right and
182.
· Equal Opportunity Employer
The foregoing being pert title In real eototo currontly
or the real 111111 which w11 held In both tho nome ol the
conveyed to Clelr C. Boao
by dlld recorded In Dlld
E. Main St.
Pome~oy, Ohio 45769
Book 187, Page 1198 altha
Metga County Deed
Recorda.
Reference Daedt: Vol.
314, p. 441. Vol. 314, p. 433,
Vol. 280, p. 211, Vol. 218, p.
801, Vol. 222, p. 5V Matga
Earn Up to $32,000
County Dlld Recorda.
Based on YOUR performance
Subject to Flowage
Eaaamanta to tha United
. Plus Vacation &amp; Insurance
Statea or AmeriCa recorded
In Vol. 225, paga n1 and
Vol. 225, page 713, Malga
We are looking for results oriented
County Dald Racorde and
to all other Juaea,
Managers with the followig qualifications:
eoaamanll and rlghta ol
• Minimum 2 years general managers
Wll'/ ol record.
·
Now
Taking
Applicatons
for
Being Audltor'a Parcel
experience
No. 07-oots78.
Assislant Managers
• Outgqing &amp;·energetic personality
Appralaad
Value:
Domino's Pizza
tll3,000.00
• High standards conceming cleanliness,
Pomeroy &amp; ·Gallipolis locations
Real Eatlle Appratltd 11:
quality &amp; ·service
Poreel No. 1 ·ttiUOO.OO:
Experience preferred.
Porctl No. 2 ·SVI,OOO.OO;
• Possible relocation
Parcel No. 3- $2,1100.00;
Paroel No. 4· 111,300.00;
·
PJL Enterprises, Inc.
Parcel No. 5A· 174,000.00:
ia a multi-unit Multi-concept
Parcel No. 5B· •so.oo:
Parcel No. .. ttl3,ooo.oo.
Ladles, mark your calendars;
operator of Golden Corral and Sonic
1ha r111 111111 cannot be
dn' Tuesday, April 14th,
Restaurants
IOid for Ienihan two-thlrda
starting al 8:00 pm, a private
the IPPrtiHd VI(UI,
Send or Fax your resume to:
Terma ol Salt: Caah on
party al the Southfork Inn,
dlllvtry Ol diad.
featuring Chippendale style
· Jamu M. Soulllby
Sherlll ol Molga County,
Male Review!
Ohio
Door prizes, OJ and
(3) V, 18, 23, 30, (4) II, 13, II
tc
ladies only.
Adn"isSIIO~ iS $12.00.

3/1.vtl1 mo. pd.

P/B Contractors Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Reoldentlal
24 Hr. Bobcat Servtc•
Available
F"'e Eallm•rea
No Job Too Sm•ll
Brian Morrlt10n
(740) 9854948

'""YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVIa
•Room Additions
•New Garages
•E!ectrlcal Be Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
_
Painting
Al.so Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
'

.ROBERt BISSELL '
CONSTRUCTION
1.

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

985-4473
7/22/lln

o!C

..ORTABLE WELDING
992·5513

f/""'N

New Hours:
Tues-Frl10·6 Sat. 10-4 '
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Esse~tial Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assoned Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fill them.
Rt. 124 Minersville, OH
740-991-4559

•Goragas•Decks
24 x '24 Pole Building .
starting ot $5995
74G-992·2n2

BALLED AND
BURLAPPED TREES
Norwoy Spruce,
White Pine ond
Canadian
. Hemlock
Delivery Avllllable
Hemlock Grove Road
Pomeroy, Ohlq 457811
Ph. 740.992·7285
Afler4 P.M.

Umettone Hauling
HOUH &amp; Trailer Jlltaa
Land Cleating Be
Grading ·
Septic Syltam Be
Ulllltlea

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump, Grinding
Insurances
20 Yrs . Exp.
• Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

EaUmataa

., •.,..,. E&amp;timale•

·Gravel, Sand,

614-992·3470

i

CLE'·IID'S OUTDOOR
IIAIIftiAICE

TIM'S CUSTOM

LIMESTONE DELIVERED
STARTING AT $65 A LOAD

CARPET
Just off Bradbury Rd.
(Look for signs)
Middleport, Oh
740.992·5379
Da &amp; Evenin Hours

CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

74NBI 4174

. INTERNET SIGN·UP POINT.
POMEROY, OH ·
740-992·1135
41131111 mo.

SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

/ 985-4422
Chester, Ohio
1~5111/tfn

&amp; Trenching·
Umeitona
'
. &amp; Gravel
Septic Sytttema
Trtller &amp; HouH Slt11
RUIOnllbte RaiH
.Joe N. Sayre

614-742~2138

'
'

SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grove Rd,
Racine, Ohl!)45771
740-1149-2481

Pig GrMr .........................'6.25
I:a Caattth Httrw ........... 15.60
'' 1111 laW!it ........................ '8.00

. ..

Show&lt;hldclltl ....................17.30
11w ....... far SOJ ...

NOW IN STOCJ( A
NEW ECONOMICAl
29 GAUGE ROOFING

$120

OR SIDING

Mlle111ge Limit

IMetal 9" OC RibM'hite

Call Randy

J'XI0'·$12.50
J'X 12'·$15.00

992-5050

,.

FARM FEED&amp;

BAUM LUMBER

Specie/ Thru
March
· 8 ton Delivered

Gue11 Who!!

Pleasant Valley Hospital is look·
ing tor a part-lime Pharmac;ia t.
Mu st be licensed or eligible lo r
licensure In WV. Hospital t)lperi ence a plus. computer skills a

~ouo~·c::~~~~c"~tlo&amp;nh~~~~ S:::r~

eaoye AVG INCQIE
$510 Min Per Wk Guaranteed

visory skills. Send resume to Bill
Barker, Assis tant Executive Dl ·
rector, Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Dr., Pt Pleaaa nt,
WV 25550. AAIEOE

Wo rk In Retai l Store (No Multi

True?

F11~

POSTAL JOBS TO $18.311 fltR.
Inc. Benefits. No ExpBI'Ienc:e. For
App. And E"am Info., Call 1 ~800·
813 -3585 , Ext ~474 , 8 A. M..g
P.M., 7 Days fds,inc.

Outllntervtew At:

AMERICAN SHOWCASE

Hou•eholda, etc:."

Holiday lnl'l, Gal!ipoh
577 Stale Rt. 7 N
Wed Apnl15@ I 30 ~U.

Jean White
740-245-9448

Real Ettate Sales Person Want·
ed, Galtia County Area, Full Or
Part· Time Send Resumes To
~0 ~x 230; Jad&lt;son. OH •5840

Aj&gt;pllca uc.ns For Pool Manager
And life Guard Positions At London Pool For The 1998 Swimmt~
Season Are Batng Accepted UntJI
May 7 Submit In Writma. With
Tratmng And E)lperience. To Janice Zwilling, C18r'k ·Treasurer, At
The Syracuse Municipal Building
Or Mail To P.O. Box 286, Syre·
cuse, OH 457N.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Personals·

All Rer&gt;tes ~ Confidenlial

Serv1ce Ma nager For Small
Equtpment Repair. Preler EJiperi·
enced Wlth Parts Catalogues
And Counter Sales Start Part
T1me. More Hours Alter Tcalntng.
C~ 74&lt;1-446-7441 EOE .
Someone to 1111 Qarden an Owl
Hollow in Tuppers Plains. 7•0 352-8283.

Casttng - Movte Extras Production Tratnees Major Film Studio
814·523-9500.

ccnvcu/131 7911Cu.hun
$2.99/Min. Must Be 18 Yrs.
Toucf\. Tone Phone Required
PrO&lt;&amp; II Co (602} 954-74 20.

TELEIIARKETEII
Seeking Exporlonc&lt;Ja Ph&lt;ine f'er .
son. Ex·Boilerroom Manager Preferred. Base • Bonus Pay. Ertel·
l&amp;nl Earning Allential. Call 740·

Convemence store cashier, send
resume c/ o The Oal(y Sontmel,
P 0. Box 729·6 t. A&gt;""roy, Ohio
45799.

Dally Chec;ks l Processmg Mall
from Home Free Details Write

To Dally Checks. 2714 Niagara
Otive At , le)!:lngton, Ky .OS17

4.46·4553 Far Interview.

Cool Spot , Coolville , Ohio, now
hmng for pastttons of cook,s, waitresses , dishwashers and cashIers. Ptck up apphcatton• at The

ENTICINOI EXCITING! Youo Date

WANTED· Part·tlme ba~1itter In
New Haven, M111on area. Far
spectal needs chtld, prefer ChriJ·
ban home. 304-882·3339.
·

Is WattinQI Call f-900-407·7782
Ext 7957. $2.99 IM1n. 111+ Serv·U
Cool Spot
1519-645-8434

Counter Person Needed Must Be
Dependable, Pan -Tml8 Evenino
Hours, Appl~ From 8·10 A.M.
14/98 At Cardmal Dryc:leaners,
19 Ohio R1wr Plaza, Giltpo~a.

3585. Ext 11475. 8 A.M.. 9 P.M., '

_DELIVERY DRIVER

Days fda,

EARN EKTRAIS$

6212

· Giveaway

ANYODOJ08S

~ hruba &amp; weeds tr.mmed, mulch·

l'!g· flower beds, land scapt"f,
s•dewalks, edg1ng, mowing,
etc ... . Free Est1mares Call Bin
304·675·71 12

t -800·800-6400

•

3 Couchea &amp; 1 love seat,

DIABETIC PATIENTS : You May
descent condttton , free for hsul- Be Enttlled To Receive Your Dta·
•ng. 304-882-3323
• bette Supp11es At No Cost To
You For More Information 1·8U·
Germa n Shepherd Aus tral ian 677-6561

OFF
NOWt

Magazines, VtctCma , Souther n
tiVIng &amp; Country llvtng, , rc 304·

895-3703.
Small female house dog. Papdlon. 304-8DS.3D72.

304-67S-71 12

S:JOOREWARD

Found: Small Black and Brown
Female Puppy Wirh Whire Spot

Found~8198

Lost 7 112 Month Old Male Cho--

colate Lab, In Rodney Area , An·
swers To Name: Oscar, 11 Found
Please Contacl. 740-446- 1500,

-dOf$100.
lost B la~;;k And Gray .Siberian
Husky Puppy. Answen fo•tce·

Last Seen On Hamilton Road On
415/98 Reward Offered, Pleue
Call 740-379·2145 Or 74Q· 256·
t014Leave Message, Fam t l~ Pet

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp; VICinity
AU. Yonl Sot.. II,.!
Be Pliklln AdVIftCI

DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

,,. doy ....... ,,...,

ftl to run . Sunday
ldMIOft • 2:00p.m.
Flldt¥. lloncloy ldhlon
• 10:00 ..... Solunloy.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
"6" Mile Yellow FJag ~ard aale,
Pomerow1 Middlepor t May t ·2
flotille&lt;, pick up IIJtla,_. '

Toro Whlltltorll
HctlptrtgiSpaa
Open: 7:»&amp;:00 -doyt
7:....:110

4«1141R 241•

All Yonl 81111 lluot 81 Plid In
Advance. O...rflno: 1:OOpm tho
dar bator• the ad le to run,

Fum11ur• repair,. ref1n1sh and res·
toratian, also custom orders. Ohio
Valley· Reftnts hmg Shop, Larr~
Phi~ps . 740·992-6576.
Georoes Porlable Sawm1ll, don'l
haul your logs to the miH JUS t call
304-675-1957

At/Wiable. 401K Relremtnl
Plane, F1r11.1n Fnt Out

Jones Lawn &amp; Care SerVIce, Free
Estimates. 740-245-0589.

Dilf&gt;ltlCII.lale Model Conv.

Mowing and 'tard Work, Free Es·
DmaiOS (740) ... 1~720

Trac*»rs W!Flatbed Ttakn.
Compoulive Ploy
-lOge Of Gto11

1·8Q0.287-QS76 1

Vcinity ol Norrhup

Dependable man w1ll mow, 1111
small gardens•. pialnt, pu1 up hay,
etc. Free Esttmates. 30• · 67~ 3628.

DIIWERS
W.IINTEDt
500 Mile Rad1u1.
HolTe Every Weel!end, .
Hellllh lnlurance Provided
Wilh Fetn~ CoWiliO

For return or blaCk/brown German
Shephard taken lrom Edith Rogers larm on Redmud Rtdge. Answers 10 name '"Chance • No
quearions a1k. Call John Rogers

ANY ODD JOBS

Shrubs &amp; weeds tnmmed, mulch·
mg. flower beds. ,landscapino.
s•dewalk
edging,
mawin9.,
etc ... Free E1timates. Call 8111

Drivers Needed Far 300 To 800
Mile Radtua 'Muat Have ClUJ B
L1cqnse And Goad MVR. Expertonce Also Reqwod. Weekly Pay
&amp; Health Ins. Available, For .:lore
lnbrm8ti01'1 can 800-437·8~ .

60 Lost and Found'"

tnt:

1so ·Wanted To Do

Independent Contractal1 Needed
For Oeh\lery 01 Champion Diractones Telephone Book For Ohio
Valle~ Area Uual Be Atleasl 18
Years 01 Age &amp; Have Use 01 An
Insured Verucle lmmedtate
Openings Ava ilable Call MDS At

You Can Ftnd Your Spectal
Someone Nowi !IP 1-900 -370 3305 E XI. 96S5, $2 99 Per MIM
Must Be 18 Yrs Serv-U 619-332·

40

WILDLIFE JOBS TO 121.10 MR.
Inc. Baneltts. Game Wardens,
Security, u .alnrenace, Park Ring·
era. No E)lp. Needed . For App.
And Exam Info Call 1·800· 813·

•1

1-1100-370.3305
Exl. 6576
$2.99 Per Min.
Must Be t 8Yrs.
Seov-U 61ll-645·8434

PINE GROVE

Hauling, ExciY8Ung

LIMESTONE

Happy 21st
Birthday
Schnuck/

Calls. Rivet Front Honda, GalllpoHil Ohio.

AVON I All Areas I Shtrlei

"Collectlllln, AnUquea,
Mlacellaneoue,

On &amp;east M1Jed lluoed
COil (740)4-1151

'

Give us a call for t~ystem repairs,
sali~B, upgmtles or consulting.

Pa rts Manag_er Needed, ·Expen ·
enced .Nec8na ry, No Phone

SPQars, 304-675-1429

level Or lnveott To Good To Be

leave message

.

l:omputer Shop"

Expenenced, 740·2•5·0437.

I$$ CANCERS WANTED $$$
E11ceUenc opportu"nity for the right
g1rl. $500(• )per weM. earning poltnlial. No e11p necessary, mu1t
be at least 18 Call 614·992·6387
(anytime) or 304·675-5955 al!er
8pm w~ thru Sat

Shepherd rrMll pups 5 males 2 fe·
males (740)441·0616, no answer

Save Up To
75% Off

DUMP TRUCK

Help Wanted

•1 Buy Accumulations•

•

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

Now Taking Applications for Expenenced CarpenteiS I Roofers,
Must Have Ha nd Too ls. Must Be

Ann.? l ike J_.ry? No Exp. Nee

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

HAUUNG

400·4690.

II Call Me II

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

Remodeling

Joe'WIIaon
(614) 992·42n

110

MEET
NEW PEOPLE
THEFUNWAY
TOOAY

YELLOW. FLAG
YARD SALE

Notariu Needed Morl gege
Banker Needs Stgnars For t.torrgage Documen\1. Local Travel
Requtred. Fax Resume To Gratl
AI FirstPius Direct, CA 1·800·

EMPLOYMENT
S ERVICE S

Plus Comm. &amp; Bonus like FI&amp;XI ·
Ole Hours ? Ltlte Advancement
Opportuntty? like Working With
People? like Bemg Cehter 01

12/11/11n

WICKS

Naed A Bab\'~ Het In My Home, 2
Children Good Pay, llle Housewort&lt; Included, 740·379·2734

Wa nted To Buy. Uaed Uobtle

S racuae 992-sn&amp;

005

5163.

Homes. 740·446·01 75, 304-1175·
51185.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE

Galllpolla, Ohio 45631

COMPiri'ER
PERFORMANCE R•.L. HOLLON
SAYRE
.TRUCKING :,TRUCKING
~ UPGRADES
''Your One Stop

LADIES NIGHT

Easter Flowera,
Panalea, Cabbage,
Broccoli, Cauliflower,
Hanging Baskets,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Shrubs, Spruce
Traea
Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 12·5

local truck driver, Class A COL
requ ired, log hauling , 7~ 0 -902 ·

Wanled To Buv · Junk Auto 's Any
Condilion, 740·446-11853.

· PARENT
1·900-945-8456 x-3252
h11p1.......,.1hehotpeges.

Limestone,

Local automotl~e parts store now ,
hiring for the following posltionl.
Full time Store Manager and
Counterperaon aM a part rime
Counterperaon Send resume to
MAW, P.O Box S6B, Marierta , OH
45750. Attn. PAP Dept or pfck up
application at P'omero~ Auto
Pans, 118 Weal Second Street,
A&gt;"""C'''.' OH.

304-773·5033.

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

(614) 992-3838
:

EOE

wrec:kad or salvaged veh icles.

HUBBIRDS
GREENHOUSE

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO. :

.

State Rou te 62, Rou te 1, 801
326, Point Ptea1an1, WV 25550.
(A Glenmark-Genesia AfhHale).

J &amp; D Auto Paris. Buying

BE ABETTER

Computer Graphics
Deslgna
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chesler, Ohio
740.985-4422

keep t nglla undr~

Clean Lale Model Cars Or
Trucka, 1990 Models Or Newer
Smith Bu tck Pontiac, 1000 East:
&amp;rn At.rerue, GaUipoh.

F1ctory Choke Only

COUNTRY CltiDLE
SHOP

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • Soffit
• Foscio • Seamless
Guller • RoOfing
• Replocemenl Windpws
• Stalionory l&gt;oc:ks
• Blown lnsulotion

LANDSCIPB
DESIGNS

~1mopd

Ohio River
Campgrounda and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandlae.
New &amp; Ulld Hemt. We
Buy • Sell • Treda: Tool•
llehlng equip., · lV'o:
CB'a, ateraot - little bit
of everything. Located
on Dhlo River Compgrounda, Sl. At. 124,
Recine, Ohio.
740-949-1012

Stick • Tlg • Alulfllnum Welding

TONY~$

742·2103 or 446·3622

OPEIIIIIO APRIL I

Welding Supplies • Steel Sales

419/Ntmo. pd.

al

'.

-.

Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair

Take the pain out of
painting, end let me
do It for you.
Interior
Before 8 p.m.
leave rrieea,ge.
Altar&amp; p.m.
(140) 985&gt;-4180.
·Free Eetlmatn

"Builll Your Dream"

+++

'

.

_,.... !

•Re-cores • New Radiators

M&amp;J

RESTAURANT MANAGERS

•

Plan ahead . Call
today for free estimate ·

POMEROY, OH.

Agricultural • Industrial ~ Automotive

LINDA'S
PAII,.ING

Custom Homes

308

Attention: S.L. White
Fax 740-776-2296

113 W. 2ND ST.

RADIAtOR REPAIR

Open 24 Hro. A Doy
7 DayoAWoak
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sindwlch,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunc;h Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Topplnga
Catlin Ordera Accepted
740-367·7838

Don 'IBte Motors Ine.

PJL Enterprises, Inc.
3.15 Harding Ave.
Sciotoville, OH 45662

" WARNER INS.UUNCE
JEFF.·

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

1998 Martin Straat
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Commercial) .

• Weedtating
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance

6·14-992·5479

Call 614·843·5426

HELP WANTED

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN LEGION
lEECH GROVE ROAD
GUN SHOOT·
SUN., 1:00 PM

CARE

360° Communications

FOOD MART

lmmethate opemngs to, haute· '
aide. Parr-rtme. ·
rotating shifts. Po1nt Pleuanl
Nuratng &amp; Rel'labtlttat ton Center,

Gotd

992-6578.

LARRY'S LAWN

• Mowing (Residential &amp;

CHES"I~E

Rmga, Pre-1 030 US. Currenc~.
Sterlino, Etc:. Ac::quilli~ona JNI'Iry
· M.T.S. Cotn Shop, 15t Second
Avenuo. Gallipooa. 740·446-2842.

Anttquas &amp; clean used lurniture
will buy one piece or comple18
household, Osb~ Marlin , 7'0·

CELLULAR PHONES

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

,

r1 SJ'

eo:r,tatnt

...

·-·-------

Absolute Top Doll11: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofset1

Antiques, top pricet paid, R t ver~
•ne ""lrquea, Pomeroy, Ol'lia,
Ruaa Moore owner, 740· 8022528.

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins . Own11r: Ronnie Jones

· (No Sunday Calls)

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

ln ...,._ , '

1 1cre aold to

614-992-7643

-

Home Remodellno Rto Grande,
Need Estimates On S•ding -Concreta Work Windows -Painting
And Windows, 614·414-' · 2669

Diamonds. Antique J-lry,

FREE ESTIMATES

LOnG'S
CO"STRUCTIOH

1

"
' " ' - l i· ·l
. •"

.

Sentinel. P.O. Box ~. -

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Carpet &amp; Upholatery
Cleaning
258 Pearl St.
Middleport, OH
992-oon

IIIII lime. oolf ...,ltf, moti-

CJI', Olt 457N.

Room Additions • Roofing

CHEVALIER'S
CIRPR CLEANING
SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAL
50% OFF ILL

II'

7

vated to succeed, mt.tat have
Ales experience and be 1ble lo
work with public, kf'lOWiedge ot 1
floor cover ing &amp; ,duorating a :
ptua. long time commitment nte·
tll&amp;ry, aend rAILUTia to : Daily

90 · Wanted to Buy

. N.ew Homes • Vinyl Siding New

(614) 949-2804 .

Ful

Page

Help Wanted

110

Rick P.araon Al.iclion Company,
full ti"V auctioneer, complete
auction
service. licensed
H&amp; ,Ohio l Wtat VlrDinia, 304·
773-5785 Or 300-773-S.U7.
•

IUILDERS, INC.

oMowara oC"-In Saws •Weedeattrl •Authorized

740-992-7270

Llvy In Exclll ol the Ten

~ISSELL

PertB end seritice/1

Karl Kehler III, CPA

excepted to un so muell ol
the
eurloce above
doacrlbed •• moy be
niCIIIIry to Open ond
opereto ond equip a mining'
property with bulldlnga,
..nroad iwttchee neca-ry
to cerry oway nld C08IIrom
oald pramlooo; oloo for
drainage and dapoalt ol
roluu and the right to haul
through and over aald
premlaaa coal and from
edjacant propertlll ond the
grontora.to be' relieved from
any eurface domega by
reoaon ol mining lor coat
unt:14r nld preml-.
Any aurlei:e land requlrad
lor uaa u above by aatd
arantora or any pareon or
paraone ·now or In the
future owning uld coal and
other right oxcepted ond
rotervad or olthor or both
ao elated alorotald to be
pold lor at the rate ol
$300.00 per ocre.
Reference Deodo: Vol.
314, p. 441, Vol. 314, p. 433,
Vol. 393, p. 799, Vol. 303, p.
789, Vol. 298, p. 475, Vol.
280, p. 217, Vol. 288, p. 803
Vol. 149, p. 584, Molga
County DHCI Recorda.
Being Auditor'• Parcel
No. 07-00881 .
Appralatd Value: sso:oo
Parcel No. 8: · the
following
ducrlbed
premlaeo eltuated In the
Townohlp ol Lobanon,
County ol Melgo and State
ol Ohio;
Being 100 Aero Lot No.
182 In Townohlp No. 2,
Range No. 11 ol the Ohio
Company's
P u r c h eo e,

Auction
and Flea Market

80

Call Me For Details!

Public Notice

The Dally Sentinel •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

Public Notice

the Ohio company'l
Purchltt, ond lor 1
particular dtacrlptlon oflht
premllll, reference 11 had
to the Ohio booka. And
being the aama property
conveyed by Edward Rouah
and Julia A. Routh, hla
wile, to Robert P. Johnaon
by dotd doted February
24th, 1883, and recordld In
Book 24 at Paga BOO olthl
dttd Recorde ol Melga
County, Ohio.
Reference Detda: Vol. 4,
p. 1G3 (O.R), Vol. 314, p. 441,
Vol. 314, p. 433, Vol. 298, p.
475, Vol. 280, p. 217, Vol.
218, p. 803, Metga County
Dlld Recorda.
Baing a part ol Auditor'•
Parcel No. 07-ootl78 ond all
o1 Parcel No. 07-ootl7t.
value:
A p p ra 111 d
$85,000.00
Porcat No. 3: 011 and gee
rtghll conveyed by Meyma
ond Llroy Homea to John
Proffitt. Reference Dead;
Vol . 141, Page 477 Deed
Racorde, llelga County,
Oltlo, a foltow.: llllultall 1ft
the County ol Mllga, Stall

1998

·You Don't N(!tld To
Be Rich To Start
Investing, But Yoq
Need To Start.
Investing For A
Chance To Be Rich.

Literary Club reviews work of mystery writers
Works of. two mystery writers,
Dorothy Gtlman and Cluirlotte
Macleod, were discussed at a .recent
meeung of the Mtddleport Literary
Club held at the Racme Ltbrary.
Betsy Parsons, who ~VJewed the
two aut~ors, spoke bllllfly about
Macleod s work.
Of spec ial mterest was the Sarah
Kelhng senes of mystenes that often
feature Sarah's Aunt Emma Kelling.
Emma has a lot in common with
Mrs . Emily Pollifax who is the main
character of a series by Dorothy
Gilman, sa1d Parsons.
She reviewed the Mrs. Pollifax
series rather than a single title. Par· sons .comme~ted that Mrs. Poll ifax
was m her s 1~11es ~hen the senes
started over thirty years ago.
She pointed o ut thai even though

Monday, Aprll13,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Shafers lawncare Servtee: -Free
Esbmales, Caii740·44Hl318.

ContaCt
1-8(10.854·4157.
Earn 11 .000 Weekly Stufltng En·
velopea At Home. Start Now. No
Ex~rlence. Free Supplies, Into.
No Oblioation. Send LSASE To:
Ace, Dept: 1351, ~x 5137, Diamond Bar, CA et76S.
Earn S1.000 Weellly. 'SlUffing envelopes, no pnor expenenct. tree

deleila, aond SASE lo. H.B. Dept

11•-::JOt Eaat SUI Ave. Suut 112
Cor11cara, Tems 75110.
E rperienced Proftsaton•l PhlebotomiS t U· F. Early Morntnga,
Campen~ Car, Resume To:. PO
Boo 33. Gotlipoll~ OH 45831. 740...-0353.

FRUSTIIATED? NO REAL ADVANCEMENT POTEN1JAL?
GlASS CELINO?
II you are emplOyed and fHI you
are in 1 no gam situation, )IOU owe
to yaurseU to considet joining
the LoMen Group. This is 1 high
tncome profeasion, rap1d ad ·
v•ncement potenual, and self utiafaction helping famtlll l For
your lilt job lntervfew, e~~ll St8ft
Sfttth atfJ14-IJI2-7UO.
tt

OPENINO SOON
Help nud&amp;d·EJIPif'ltnced c:ooka,
kitchen help, water,. I Wlillell••· ho&amp;I8118&amp;, . 1Ntr-llndlt'ti , •••

c.lltnt pay, ttexible houts. Send
rHUrrw ta: Twl...,. lpona Grill
t07 Academr Orivt AiP'ey, WV
25271 .

Will Care For Elderly Or Hindi·

caPoed Peraon In My Home. Ref·

erencas. 7.-o·.U1-1536.

Will haul junk or trash away. S351
poc:kup lOad. 304-675-5035.

W1ll MoW &amp; Tr1m Your lawn E• ·
per1enced Reasonable Ra trs,
Referenc es, For Free Est1ma1es.
14W·388-3M I.
'

210

FINANCIAL

Business

Opportunity
!Nai'ICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

recommends that ~au do butt · ·
nell wllh people ~ou know, and '
NOT to und mane~ through lht
mall until you have investigated
lhe ofloring.

HOT NEW OIET EARN THOU·
SANDS Whfl t Los~ng Wt1gh1
N• M.l.ll . Oppor~unlly Call I·
818-1157-991511.
•
II you have an tslabtithed busl- .,
Mil and unuHd parking space ...

you may qutfir.- to be a U-Haui
Ollltr. " - - call 1100-282- •
1575.

230 • ProftHionel

Sunday I . ~d~y edition·

· Strvlcn

April 13· 1•. Roger Roush ,..idenct, Rac •n e, SR 12.4 past
Southern High SChool at Rac tne

LiwintaiOn·a basement wattr· · •
. proofing, all HHmtnt reptl irt
dorit, frH t1tlma1ea, hftlime
guarant. .. 10yrs on job tJipeti·

1:00pm Flldt¥.

lodge. Welch b ~~gns. Sam·? •.,.

....,.. ~75-2145.

.

�Monday, April 1'3, 1t98r

. ~omeroy • ~J~dle~rt, Ohio

PHU.I,IP

ACROSS
1 Cw: ;1111

42 Colorful nah
45-CivUWar

• 011 grp."

41
48Stock

...._

ALDER

10 liMed

12~man

r.:::''

.

14 Bird llome

All real estate advertising in
thts newspaper is subjec1 to
the Federal Fair Hou!nng Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise "any preference.
l1mitat10n or discrimination
based on race. color. rellgOO,
se11 tamll1a1 status or national
orig1n, or any IntentiOn to
make any such preference,
limitation or d iscrim i nation.~
This newspaper will not
lcnow!ngly accept
aaven1sements for real estate
which IS In violat!on of the
law. Our reader5 are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised 1n lh1s newspaper
are available on an equal
opponuntty basis.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale

540 MlsceUaneous
Merchandise
Cath Paid For land In Gallla

Steeping rooma wilh cooking.
County, Slaokburn RtaiiV, 740- Allo trailer tpace on river. AU
448 0008.
hool&lt;·upo. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,

1i03 th80 Sunshine Supreme
Mobile Home Bought new in late
1994, 3 bedrooms 16x13, 13xt3,
10121 . 2 full baths, living room
16•21 dlntng area, kltchen, utility
roOm, newer quality carpet. cov ered front porch Deck in beck all
electnc, heat pump, CIA. , range,
'refrigerator, drapes, stay must
see 1\at many eitra's excellent
condition, loc;ated en rented iol
10 miles from Gallipolis $23,000

304-773-6851, l!aaon WV

RENTA LS

41 o Houses tor Rent

199&lt;4 181180 lnd1es, Excelle nt
Condition 31-4 Acre Land, Located
on Hilltop Or1'ole off NeighbOrhood
Road $39,000 (740)44Hl681

Nice clean, 2br, reftt"encea &amp; de·

1995 Clayton Mobile Home 2
Bedrooms, 2 Bat hs, Gas Flre-

no pets. 30«75-5182.

2 Aparunenr&amp; In Rio Grande
Area : A.crosa

Room,

plac;e, Garden Tub On Rental Lot,
F1nanc1ng Ava1lable, 740· 24S-

1

I

Bal:h,

$200/Uo. Deposit
Bedroom Apartment,
Utilities Included, 1

9738luvo Measago.

0521 .

1997 Clayton t.tob1le Home on
rented Lot In Park Lane $22,500
Call(304) 736-3116

Sil'lgle House 2 Bedrooms, Oulet
H111oric;, Re11dent1al Area, Deposit Required, 740 ~ U8 ~ 2287 ,

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay- 7.0-446-4474.
ments, asaume loan, owner fl.
Two bedroom house, clean, re·
nancing available. 304-755-7191 .
frigerator, no stove, no inside
pets, deposit required ," 740 - D92 ~
Attention Uoblle Home Owrers·
Areas largest lnventorv 01 Inter· 3090.
therm 5 Coleman Heat Pumps,

over~~~fu~~~·=&amp;~D;o:po;ll:l,:&amp;

.

For Sale By OWner: Ntcety Decorated, Well Ma1nta1~d 2 Bedroom
Home located In Cheshtre, As·
sumable loan, 740·387· 7117 AI·

,., 5 ~~~
located In Mason , WV. 9
Rooms. 2 Baths, Basement, 2 Car
Carport On 1 Acre Of Land , 2
~r~s , :.14-773-5615
Middleport, beautiful IWO SIOry, 3
br. 2 bath, larQtt l.r. &amp; h ., oak
doors &amp; tnm, Smith's custom oak
c;abinels, Jenn -air range , dish·
~~~r. ~etached garage. by ap

poontmonl, 7.0-992-5243.
IIOOULAR HOUSE AUCTION
A 2fi'x5B' Ranch Style Modular
House W1ll Be Aucuoned To The
Highest 81dder On May 9.' 1998
At , 2:00 Noon At The Buckeye
Hills Career Center located At
R10 Grande, Ohio. PubliC \/ie,wtflQ
Monday Through Friday From
9:00 A.M. To 3:00 P.M. Pleate

Call 740-245-5334 For An Appointment Formal Viewing Of The
House Is Ounng The Bucke~e
Hills /Ohio Valley EXPO On Saturday, April 18, And Sunday, Aprtl

!9. 1998; 12:00 Noon -5.00 P.l!.

Uatce 2 Payments Move In No 1 ard 2)bedroom apartmonl' lurPayments After 4 Year., 304-738· mshed and unfurnished, HCuritr
7295.
deposit requ1red, nd pe1:1, 740·

992-2218

New 1998 14x70 lhree bedtoom,
indudea 6 months FREE lot rent 1 BedfOom Apartment Newest
Include• skirting, delux:e atepa and Cleanest in ,the area, near
and 1e1up. Only I 18 7.08 per Holzer $279 Plus Uttltbes, Deposit
month 1111~$1075 down. C.iii1 - and Lease Requ1red (740)4482957
•
I00-837-3238.
-

NEW BANK REPO'I Only 3 lohl 1 l!e&lt;lri&gt;om ApartmonL SID\Io, Re-

Siifl Ul?der
warrarrw. 30
owner
fi-~~~~:ln:c:l:u~~d~.N~a~f'~l":•i~7~4~0nancing
available.
.. -755·

7HI'1

1br apartment, privata; quiet De·
New. Qou~lew1de 3BR. 2 bath. posU. References. S2501mo. 304-

$1 ,325 Down &amp; $205 per mo. 1- 675-1550.
888-928-3428
•
-HomtForSale

Paid, $4251l.to., 1100 Dopolil. No
lot size 112 ac;res "Cape Cod" Pet1, 740-446-1837, 740-446·

st~le. h1gh 70' s ' 2 BedrOom, 2 3437.
Bath, County Water, Easy Ac:·
cessl 7 Uites From Jackson, 13 2bdrm. apts., total elec..rric, ap.
Miles From Rio Grande Call pllances lurn~ahed, lauildry room
(740)288--7200
fac1lities. dose to school In town.
~P~&gt;II&lt;:.&gt;Ii'pna available at Village
Q&amp;KWOQQ HOME1
Apts. 149 or call 740.992Barboursville WV. largell Oou·
1. EOH.
blewlde Oitpfay Ever Oirec;t Fac·
10ry Dunor Priang :114-736-3409.

Oldet

t2~~:50

mobile home With MID

Mull See A-Frame, 3 Bedrooms,

$8000, ..u74D-742-2070.

~-~~lJ~~ifzt~~~

2 Baths, $48,000. Pat Mayes AealtOf, Ullom Really 1Bener Homn
&amp; Garden&amp;. 304-733-7140

Now ~800 Sq. FL Bfld! Rancn, 3
Bedrooms, 3 Baths, Front Porch.
,. Deck and Basemenl!140)441 -

t345
Hew hstllllg· three bedroom home,
l•ge garage. 1 112 ages, next lo
Salisbury elementary senool, calf

Jim Carleton, 740-992-6375 lor
more ;dDrmabOil

Pamlh Ave Pl. Pleasanl. 4 Bedroom, 2 bath, greal condit1on.
CIIII:J04.&lt;175-7 129 bofofo llpm_
RiWf VieW 3 Bedfcioms. 2 Balhs.

Jn.Grourd 1'001, 740-256-9393.

Two lara• bedrooms, corner

lol,
newer 'arage. sidmg. wmdows,
nice neighborllOOd, reduced, 740·

11112.fl737.

320 Mobile ~omes
tor Sale

GOOD

beige and

GOOd, $150,740.448-9487.
Now That Spr~ng II Here It Is
Ttme To Stock-Up On Your Avon
Sk!n-So-Sott Mollture \Suncare

Plus, To Order Call Pam AI 740245-5443.

Pomeroy Thrift Shop now

USED

APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.

992-3725.
Prlmeatar- $99 in11aUation with
$50 rebate. Flr&amp;l month free wilh
free mov1e channels, StarOne

spooial, 149 lno1olloflon , 800283-2640.
R&amp; SFumllu.re

Mlson,WV

I-80D-499-3499.

Buy, Sell, Trade
U&amp;ed &amp; AntiquO&amp;

Pollv'• Ntw &amp; Uaed Furnllura
We now have Army Surptus!ll

FurnHure.

2101 Jelferson Ave.

AefnQerator S7S, Ory81' $95; Etec;.
uic Range S95; Nice Washer

$150; Nlco Sodo By Sldo Refrigerator Water &amp; fee In Door, $350
1 Year Warranty; G .E . Washer
$205 like New 1 Year Warranty,
Skaggs Appllancoo 76 VIne
Slroof. Galipol~. 740-446-73!18.

bu~lng

large outeide toys and baby
iteml, walketa, toddler nata, etc .
Tuesday thro~gh Friday, 740 ~

ranges Skaggs ApPliances, 16
Vme Sueet. Can 740·446 -7398,

Open 9;30 - 5.00 Men,Sat
. 304-675-SOFA (7632)

:114-773-5341.
Royal Oak c;ampmg membership
for sale, rea!lonable puced, call
419-886-4905 after epm or call &amp;
leave message &amp; I will return
~ur call

gauge, SSOO. 740-992-81 54 alter
5pm

good blades, fie ld, roodr, $850
OBO. 740-992-7302evonlng.
440 John Doore log Skldder, E•oollonl Condiloon $10,000 (7401
379-2427
Beil The Spring Rush, get your
mowera &amp; trlmmtrs tuned up
now. Sider'a Eqltlpmenl Hender-

F 725 John Deere mower, 2 years

old , 100 hours an It, 5-4~ cut, 20
horsepower engine, wilh ao~ lsnow
blower, $7,300 , 1P67 Dodge 300,
1 tan, S1. tOO; 740·992-3564.
For Saie or Trade lor Catlle
14x60 Mobile Home, Needs Re·

collonL 16095. 740-9112-QO!IS.

Year In The Heating &amp; Cooling
BusmNsl 740-448·6308, 1·800·

291-oo98.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upr1ghl, Ron Evans Enterprises.
Jaokson. Ohio. 1-al0-537-9528.

Bu~HoSaoro

1992

SE, Whlto, 4

Ooor Sedan, Exc:ellenl C..onqition,
1 Local Owner. Please Call After

6 PM. 74D-448-1543.

1993 Dodge Shadow ES. V-8. 5
Speed. loaded , 12.100 OBO;

t99o Dodge Sp~rir ES, V·8, Aulo,
Lqadad, St ,200 OBO. 740·256-

t233.

•

1994 Chevy Camaro, 3.4, V·6 5
speed, PW, POl, arntfm ca1set18,
alarm ay1tem with remol8 keyleal
entry, headlight and taillight
blackout cover~, new lirea, humer
green, 83,000 miles. 1mmacu1a1e
condition, asking $8800, can 7-40·

John Deer 3 bottom plows, Ferguson 3' pt httch, hay rack&amp;. 740·
256· 1098
John Deere 2010 d1esel rractor,

Loaded, 31,000 Mtles. $8.800
Neg. 740.379-9384.
1995 Plymouth Neon c Doors,
Green Wllh Spoiler Automatic;,

42hp , wide front, good rubber,
14100; 2a hp. Noma lawn vactar,
two years old, 46" cut, $900, 740·
742·2367.

Au. 55,600 Milos, $5,900 OBO,
740 - 256 ~ 34 0. 7.0·258-6467.
t996 Dodge Stratus 31,000

.,..-l

:B;;;
Ia;;;d•:·;;;".;;·;SOO;::.,7:.&lt;10:.:-2:56:.-.;;'';.58~.

~

t.tauey Ferguson 1020 01eset
4..:4 368 Hra. Uke New, 317 John

Miles, Take Over Paymenla, 740·

t980 · 1990 Cars Fot $10011!

SeiZed Ard Sold
Locally This Month.
Trucks, &lt;llx4'a, Etc.
I-800-52U730, X 3901
Come ••• thelownt prlc11 b•

.

609 Pearl St., Middleport, 740-

992-2358.
1988 Cub Cadet , 18 hp. super
ltaciOr, 60'" mower deck,

WP !Dryer $60 Gib110n Dry&amp;f $50
HP()ryer$50(740)446-9066

550

e~c;ettent

Building
Supplies

low Rate Financing On New And

Ear &lt;e&gt;rn, S2.so per bus~el, 740-

·'~4-9--236
-:-9-·--'-----­

Suaw lor sale, S2 oo per bal e.

740-992-3653. .

~415

'

oonduron . $3800, 740-992-2219
CNenngs.

740·992-4111 Evenings_

1996 Clltvy Trude
Cutlam 30. lllaok in Colat, Load- ed, llo"'' In Real Good ~.
$5,500, Fac:IOry Big Block 454,

740-441-9865, Allor 5 P.M. Or
Anvl,.. W"""-"ds.

IIO,IIOOUiles

Spec1al 18x80 3BR, 2 balh.

•n g - $275, 740-379-2360.

port From $24e-$373. Call 7401192-5064. Equal Houoing Oppor-

8X8 Heavy duly utilily trailer,
road ready wltoading ramps. 304-

1UI'Ilel.

•A.

675-6348.

New single eHJCMtncy apartment '"

Mtddleporl. uliluies paid, $375

2•5304 ·
plus dopo,., 7t.ltc;e clean e-lhency aparlment.
r•ferences &amp; deposit. no pets.

Ontr AI O.kwood HomM
· Ntfto.WY.304-711-5111

' 304-a7!'&gt;-5182 ·
New 3br $999/down $189/mo_ Two bedroom apartment in Po Free Set-up ., Delive,y. Only 3 meroy, uh~ln paid, no pet1, 740Lehl ~ II Oakwood Homes Ht- 092-5158.

TAl SPECIAL

Ira

wv.304-755-5885.

Now Taking Applications- ,3 5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
~··.:800=..-383=:.:•;;;;;2.:;__ _.__ _ Apartments 12951Mo.• 740 -448 ·
0006.

late Model Repo Set Up On lot

1

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

120 h. long, 80 11. lane by 75 h.
wide',

lever lol in Uiddleporl, re-

One bedroom apar1men1 in M1d~

dlejlorL 7~992-21711.

du&lt;:od from 123,000 TO $17,000 One bedroom aparlment •n U1d·

__:__-=-To

dlepOrl. all utilities paid, $270 per
monlh. 1100 diPOSIT, call 140·
1192-71106.

17811 SoriOvolnqulriol on~
I ~~c;_;_
_ ___;___

30 Acres Wilh Ti mber Cloae

Gallipelio Will&gt; Good Home Silo,
14 170 311R, Down &amp; ONLY 125.000 7~258-657'1.
1171 por '"" "'• oir &amp; lroo . . . l;:;:::;_:__;_:__ __;c__ __
6ng. 1.-.821-3421.
,
4.05 ~Cfll Ridgewood Estatet·
Sandhill Road. Water, aiO&lt;:Iti&lt; &amp;
1170 12110 3br, 1 belli, on ronled cablo.St8.000-:114-117S.5828
lal.304-1182-3691.
I==:...:::.:.__;___;__;:.:.__
7 Shaded nav1gable creek 'side
112 aQe camp t ittl, coun1r wa•2 · •-·
I
ler, e-rne. $1 , 500 ~,.
~• · ,.
lodlod gate. 7 High lilao lor pormanent cablna, 112 aetes, tome
locked, some not. same ulilitles.
Write or visit Ror &amp; Narw:r See
taa

AIVER' BEIIl PLACE

- ....... wv

1 Bedroom lpts. tor elderly or

disabled, HUO Ollillecl. EOH.
304-882-3121.
TlwH bedroom tporlm&lt;Htl,

•:110

ZGalipalio Ferry, wv.·

Break

For free consultation

t~nd

Free

~ .. (740)441-1982

Art Your Looking For Avon Products But Don't Know Where To
Find Them? Also. If You Would
ltll.e To Sell Avon, Call Pam At

7.0-245-5443.
BIG SCREEN TV FOR SALE :
Re spons tble Parr y To Take On
Small Monthly Payments. Good
Credtt A Must Call 1-800-718-

1&amp;57.
Brand Newl Grea1 Gifll COiv1deo
storage unu. Black and cherry.
Newer out oi box, $125 Holds up
to 940 d1act ,~ a1so holds 1ape1.

Call 740-992-6636 altar 6 pm.
COs &amp; rapes.., indudod.
Concrete &amp; PlaatiC Seplk: Tanks,
300 Thru 2,'00'0 Gallons Ron
Evans Entarptises. Jackso n, OH

1995 Chev'f I IOn, auto, air, ps

am-1m, 12IL llal bed WISieOUido
racks, 1 owner, 54,000 orig1nat
miJes $15,5"00. 7&lt;40 -992· 2478
Days 7-40.992--4111 Evenings.

1995 Ford Ranger XlT 4oyl.

1522

~~----------------For oalo- 1996 Honda TRX 300 ,:
750 Boats &amp; Motors
r Sale
,.__..,..,...,....;.._..,......;_

and runo
3613.

Furnished
Rooms

- JET
AERATION I!OTORS
Ropaited,, Now &amp; Rollulb In SIDCit
CaJRon1;_1_53r-8528.

groo~

OAWPOUs
SP£ctAL LOW
WEEKLY IIAl£8
SINGLES .180.00 WEEKLY

Ulld Furnllurt:
W11h•t, Drllfl, Hutchto, 01fii/Wt. RelrigotaiDf!O,
Til·
OW&gt;IIont, Llvlnoroam llleclroom
Silllto, 740-448-4039, 740.4481004.

•

IF t 1:\N)CN.."(~
10~~~~.1

'oO.iDVE

1989 Soa Imp 111 112h. deep- '1.

iflf.#JEO

beige w/sand ihterlor, •~rt,
1g(Jhp. Mercruiaer inboard mciiJ'r,
wllh tr1iler, life preservers I

iUU.T
~!

bumporo. 12,750. 614-446-3814.
19e1 Yamaho 9.9 Convtrled To.
15 HP Outboard Engine Stared '
Inside Excellent Condition Runs,

Groall $1 ,000 080 740·4487106.
•
I
11194

Bayr;ner 18.5 FL u v-e er;.l

gine And Cullom Trailer With
Brakts Low HoutS, ta.soa, 740J

258,1130

1998 19 fl. Marada Wl1h 4 13 ;

Merc:ruiser And Trailer, Uke New;,
1990 15 Ft. Aluminum sea
Uyn/pn Suo Saall Wuh 30 HP I
Evenrude

I

1
Ttaifer 1L01dtf. 1

Ready To Fioh: 1995 20 FL

Bay-:•

line, CUddr- With 4.3 Metc:rulser, '

&amp; Tra~er l-aw Hour&amp;; 1,9110 18 Fl •
Plarrrmo Ski Boot With 88 HP1 : 1

Erenruda &amp; Trailer: tND .18 F~ ,;

Vioing Doell Boat Complolely f!e:.'
conditioned ln1er10r With 170 ..p . ·
Merorulsor &amp;Traitor, 1 Ulod 5 11 1
2 liP Johnoan 1 Uood 40 HP-"

13 Nellhar'a
partner

21 '"
good "''*' r.
working
22 Actreaa

Slgnoret

P~s

3•

Pasa

••

Pass 59
Pasa _ Pasa

KawaNki STS Jet lki,

deanrt

24 Be fond at
25 Stap- - 1
(move)
27

Pass
Pass

Ken-

28 Sherry, e.g.

29 Defeat
31 SmaU plant

Dbl.
Pass

~ptlan

three matching Kawuaki ski
vests and trailer all go with 11. ~

15000, 740-949-2203 or 74D-114t- ,
20-'5, will consider t•ade for 1
(1000 pontoon boat

40

Classified Ads

Fr119ment
Nonnan-

42'· 0rlenlll 111h

43 Singer LHy ..:.. •·
44

46

Car

.

sz c-". p~v.

•

53 Actrell
Merkel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

Ctflbnty

c.,.,_,
ctyp~agramt ate cre~lkl from quote.liont by famoua l*l)le, ~~ and prllltnl
Elct'l rttltr·in ltw q,Mr stands for ar'IOlhtf'. Todty'• clu. X equals P
A'H.D E

'AKYIAT

PZZWI,

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D·Z A

G

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SRAYOGAZ

·z oN

VYIIR

XBZEYNZOA

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NHUDE

ISLLHRI

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KHBEZBGWYDC .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "Thete is only one rehg1on. though there
hundred versions alit • - George Bernard Shaw
·
.
~MT

DAILY
PUIZLII

are 'a ' ;

lAME
- ' - - - - - - - Edited ~y ClAY I. ,OILAN _;;.__..;__ _
Reortango '"""" of tho0 lout
ocro111bled wordo be-

low to form four simple word1.

·AS PLOT

I' I I I

I
I' I I I~

'.

NUCTU

L YK0 E

I I I 1·

~~
.~

,,
'~

..

A fool a'nd his money are
soon pl;lrted, but the rest of us
wait until we. go • • the - - - ·,

I l--,l'"'-'ilr.5:'--tli-'-.;.l;-6i-rl...-.., Q
"

Complete "lho chuckle quo1ed
by ttlling in the miumg words
L-.J.--L.-.L--.J.--L.--'·
Y.DU develll)p from srep No . 3 below.

new carpet, ~vinyl, all windows • '
have custom Kinh blinda.'Lam-· ;
bergay. mus1 see 10 appteciate.l-•
serious calls only, 16500, 740· .

0112-41173, 740-992-201 s.

SE RVICES
'•

Improvements

.
Killer - Drown · Legal- Jumper· POKER
. After a night with his pals my husband sighed, "I'll
never be short of friends because I'm a constant loser
at POK!;R"

=,··li

•

21-June 20)Today 1 SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov. 22) Pay
~=~=::!!!!!!!!!!!~!!====-·!:~~~~ be mo~
a match for the- close attention &lt;o your personid
•
assigniiii!IIIS or tasb from .wltich you _ appearance tOjfuy. You will defini&lt;e·
ASTRO·OilAPII
cuiltomarily back away. Get an early ly be· noticed wherever you go. and
Tuesday, April 14. 1998
stan.·bec:ause y&lt;iur self:csteem, will the impression-- good or bad·· will
In ~ year ahea4 you should be be enhanced by your accomplish- be a lao;ting one.
able to benefit fiUIII changes that gen- menL~'
' SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
· CANCER (June.2t-July 22) Y.OUr 21))VItaJ YO\I hope to achieve today
enue peatcr material securi&lt;y. Circumstances beyond your con1rol bcstasselloday is Y!lUr ability to
can be more ea~ily accoirlpli5hed if
might oa:asionillly complicate devel- ganize situations jumbled by OlhCfS. you let others dlink ideas you con·
opments, yet you'll be able to suide
WhaJ looks ftke a tingled web to - ce~ve are theirs. End results are~
them to fruition.
them will bc.to you as simple as important than creative crmits.
ARIES (Mmh 21·April 19) You brushing your hair:
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
to~~ld be extremely adroit in your
LEO(July23-Aug. 22l.Thisisone .Friendsmightleanonyouabit~
commen:ial affairs today. This is a of those days when you·~ likely to "tban usual today. Be p~pm:d to
biJ advantage. bec:ause profit is pos- be more effective handling dlings for IISSU!JIC a portion of. ·their bwdens.
sible if you utilize your ill5ighls li1KI 01~ than sortinc out your own· "Whallhey,givc you to do will be eas·
resoun:es intelligently. Trying to affa1n. Operate whete you .are need· ily manqcable.
pateh up a broken romance? The ed the most
AQUARIUS-(Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Astrd-Grlph MIIIChmaker can help
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your
Do not be unduly COflCCilled today
you undpJtand what to do to .make • . powers of concentration could: be if you find yourself caught up in ·a
the mlalionship wort. Mllil $2. 7S 1o • tather awesome today. Mental asstgn- competitive Involvement. Your lnlek
Maldlmalcer, c/o dlis lll!wsp~pe~, · menu requirins 10181 allention should time is lilcely to be swiftcf than your
P.O. Box 17S8, MUITiy Hill Slation, .• be i 1111p fOP you.
IJPIUieiiU.
New York, NY 10156.
LIBRA· (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mitfch 20) This
TAURUS (April 20-Msy 20) A Probabilities for adding somelhing of can be avery productive day ·fill" you
dqwt ••hie ll)d .forcelill friend of '1'41ue to .your present anay of col· if you profit from· your pall experiYDUP will have 10111e good things to
lectibles look good today. Don't give ·ences. Don't I~ back into old
IIY 011 your behalf to Olhen today.
up seardtina tot tlliilp you really faultY habiu thai proved.to be obstaHill/her " , iiCIIII will be sincere and
wam.
cles.

•

rear-

DOFIIG

11870 Ot 1-800-287·057e. Flogtfo
--ling.

"

Fr•nch City l!oyrag, 740-446: •
1185.
~.·:

- - - - --

C&amp;C General Home Main· ...
tenence- Painling, vin~l 11drng, •,, •

c:arpenvy, doorl. windc:Jws, baths, · ~ ' l
mcable hcMne repatr and more. For , •
free estimate call Chet, 740·992· ,, "
6323,
...~

•'!

'Rifrlgeratlon

I 'I

u: · '\:

censed elecrriclan. Ri~enour ·• "".,

Electrl&lt;ol, WV000308, 30~'-G75- 'l

1788.

.

' '

..

..

,,,
'.
.''
' •.
,q

..

•

j

.

,, .
,.t·

APRIL 131

'

Reiidenuat or eammercial wiring
new "'vice or repairs. Maattlf

. :. .

SCC\\cl\lv\- ~ t.tfs· won

I

840 Electrical and

-.·
-'••

.

Home

.'
.'.•'

HL

AKZ

XBHNSWA

...

.

..'

-·-

'.•

tlll4 Slltno ea'"'*, as·. 2 •
eapando'a, full size bedroom·
(queen lilo bed), lui li7:olftring &amp;kilchen, new lull tile atove &amp; ref.,1, j

810

•·

Engln..ound ·.

WANTED TO BUY: tee&amp;' ;
Throueh 1972 Chovelle Pr Ekl·· l
mino Contole, Can Also Be A •
1970 Thtough 1872 !!onto Corio' ;
Consolo. "IIIJIIT BE HORSHIIE' •
SHIFTER TYPE" Phone: 740•ll'

Campers &amp;
Motor ttomea

·

47 Something
:
unique
,.
48 Skin opening •
50 Nahoor ahaep .

o

790

·~

•••

41 Prorlucer

New gas tank 1. t 1on rrucll ·
wheala &amp; tadialotS. 1 R Auro,~ ·

4.. 1· 1053. .

,.
z•

gorldtll
38 Fr. holy

One plays, the
·
.other writes
-

There's no
way around it~

still

Ripley, WV. 30&lt;1-372-3933 or 1 ~
800-273-11329.
.•

tv actor ,

ARTAMU

under
warranry, three •eater, 83 horN·'
power, bought MW July of '87,'

760

~~

23 Cuatardy

1

Jahntan'•

&amp;-.,

..

THE BORN LOSE:;::R:...____,
...
.

Local ref.,encta furniahed. El· " •
tabllohed 1875; Call (740) 448-

50, 740-9112-

EJ

$3500, 740-985•

WATEIIP~

cargo van,

I&gt;ENTIST~Y

now OI!C trol- ,

Name Brands OVer 25 Years E•·•·
perlence All WO,tl Guaranteed c.

450

OBSnT~IGS

.

Unconditional lifedme guarantH.• ·

Hand ~~&lt;ide Slanloet Oak &amp; l!aplo
Chool, 740-37e- 2720 Aller e
P.lll.

l&gt;fl. tMilV~Y

PV~tl

16 Fl. Flberglaao Boar Johnood 85 l!otor, New Soobl, New Cafi'OI,
Good Troller, S1,500, 740-3889354.

1-1100-537-0528.

ries, S7S. 740-9112-5000.

l&gt;ll•. t400PEil

lour' wn:~r, like new: t340D, •
_7.c.40;_-98:;;:;:5-_;;:;.::;.·- - - - - - :

Hand hefd eel phana &amp; ICCIUO·

1518.

&amp; EARNEST

·.

•

nilhod.
Cloon.
No "'"'·
&amp;
Depoait
Required.

7-40· 448·

F~NK

1995 Harley Dj!Yioon FLHT, ElK- ':
Ira Glldo Classic, low l!lleo,
loaded, like N~w (740) 448- I

SASE lENT

"P•"•·

39 BaubeU IHma 8 Hatrow'a rival
40 Colonl9 Actor aamea-

By Phillip Alder
England:s top player, Tony For·
rester, and om: of lhe country's best
writers, David Bird, have collaborat·
ed on a book, "Sec~ts of Expert
Card ~l:iy" (Batsford). As many of
the featurert deals were player;! by
Forrester, my guess is that he supplied the bulk of the material and
Bird did all the writing.,Whatever the
division of labor, &lt;he end product
gives cine a good idea of how an
expert thinks at the table. tlow, if
only you could pu&lt; tFie advice. into
praetice, you too could be an international champion!
. .
This deal, from th~ Gaining Entry
.chapter, was played in New Orleans
during the 1995 Spring Nationals.
How should declarer proceed in six
clubs after winning trick one widl his
heart ace?
Appa~ntly. several declarers
cashed tile' club ·king at trick two.
after which they couldn't recover.
If clubs we 2-2 or 3"1, die contract
is laydown. Two of dummy's spades
can be discarded on declan:r's dia·
mond.•. Then the spade five cait be
ruffed in the dummy. So, you must
consider a 4-0 trump split. The right
play is to lead a low club from hand,
finessing dummy's 10 if Wesr pl_ays
low. Whether the finesse wins or loses, die contract is safe. And ,he~.
when West 'discards, you rise widl -.
dummy's ace, finesse the club jack·
through East, and draw a third round
of &lt;rumps. Ne~t, you play on dia·.
monds, throwing two of dummy's
spades. Finally. you take the' spa~
ruff. East geL• only his &lt;rump wiililer.
The'book is $22.95 postpaid from
Baron Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 274·2221 to order.

1

j

Sspd, loaded, 18:000 m11ea.

England ICcnait COuch I Cha1r,
Good Conchtion. AIMing: $350,

. "&lt;}-~~

1991 Honda 250x .. Wheeler LOII'If
OfExtra'sl740·441 ·1419.
....

$7,725. Call allor 4pm_ 304-6754849.
F.. lary S-10 Whftlo (740) 441,.1g
-

18 Commont,..

20 Judge

· 12 Oven Pllrl

woman

I

Applian&lt;e Porto Ard Sorvi&lt;rt; All 1

WILLIAM UOI'EL
111 SECOND AVENUE

,

1z.ooo

l!iles. $25,000 7~446-23114.

11 Foret unit

7 Loop on lace

:

1988 Kawasaki EXSOO, 11 ,000 '
miles, el'cellent.conditlon, $1500,
740·742·3104 even~ngs .

Upllaira 2 Rooms &amp; Bach Fur-

lion Wilh 35x50 Ft Metal Garage

ttl4 Sk~Une 14.170 gable roor,
751100ft Ia~ .... ~. Building Insulated, Also Tra1ler
ne• catpet, central hell &amp; air, Pad Sei·Up, 2 + Acree, Rural
appliance• including washer &amp; Wautt, Approx . 7 Miles From
drytr, poren &amp; out IIUildlng. Gallipoio. 740-2!8-1335.
128.000 ~- 304-112-3323.

11194 Ford F-350 Crow Cllb llvally P U. 7.3 Turbo Dlooel Auto
Ttan•. 3 Oif18fent Hnches,

740-441-56911, 7~ .. 1-5167_

WRiters Home Neat Compte.

1992 Ford F-150 V-6, 5apd
42,000 miles, po, pb, 'lie, blado:
.... - -$1.200.:114-4175-2181.

38 Court divider
37 - Angelrla

5 Sun.•paech
6 SPIInlah gold

33

I

305 Engine $300 AI Ia. 304-4175- .
11164.

1991 S-10 Air 89,000 l!lleo,

grp.

naada

Opening lead: • 2

1984 Honda V65 SabJe, 1100cc,~,
Water Coated, Shah Drive, like 1
New, 740-4-'1·0443
; }

original miles, no ~Ol required,
12ft. flatbed wJt•~es. t7,400.

Cloon. 7~446-13111.

4NT
8•

....

tG82 Honda Motorcycle 850 ,
Nighthawk $900 Or Trade For A' 1
Ridmg Mower 01 Equal Value. 1
740·4413·4426.
:

1e87 GI!C C-50 4&amp;pd 350, pi,

1989 s , 1o V-8, Auto. t3,295,
1986 auc S15 V-6, Auto, AC.
S2.•95; 19112 E x - Cob S-10,
13.695 : Cook Uotaro, 740-4480103.

3•

,\(~~.
..... . ..

HAUNTED II

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

740 ·892-2478 Doyo 740-9924111 Evenings_

Pets for 5ale

Many EJ.

traal$200, 740-256-1631 .

Problema? Need Tunocl? Call lito
piono llf. 7-4525

CJJc:le Motel LDW811 Rates In
Town. N.ewly Remodeled. HBO.
Cinema•. Showtime &amp; 0 1sney.
W-ly Raleo, 0&lt; Uqnlhly Rat85,
Conalluction Wortltrl Welcome

wlheat pump. ••3,800. Wlh do- Empl)' lot on Spring Avenue, Poliwer local. Coli K a K Mobile mttoy, 13200, 740-843-5283,
HOIIIII 304 -875-3000 btl... en - - -·

Metabolism

ptua ~posit and utifiti•t, Thtrd ' 740-- 1 3.
Strell. Racine. Ohio, 740·2474292.
.
Grubb's Piano· lunWig I

•

NC 28.000 BTU Wei Goo Hoot« Pleaoant Ridge Rd. 10 Mlleo
14.:3_ _.,-- 1Soul~ ol Pt Ploaunl all WV Rt
.:15=100=(:;_7_;:40)3811-9:::::..:.:.

Amazing

Through. lose 10 ID 200 lbo., Can

TRANSPORTATION

560

D~rtb1lce

KITCHEN IS

258-8180.

Gmciou' living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village t.tanor and
Rivett ide Apanments tn Middle·

S1,325 Down, S205 Uo. Free air
I ~ee oiUrtlng. 1-800.fl91-87n.
SPAtNG SPECIALS
MH Down
UFl1ociAaiH
$ttHio. Payment•
St?.HSon
Froo llolhr..y • Sai11P

1980 125 CR

2t

PAW ll MY

Motorcycles

740

1984 GI!C 112 811. bed, Slfalghl

$1,5QO. 740-992-2478 Day&amp; or

22 112 x36 Inch Dog Cage $45.
Brand New Heavy Swag Lamp,
Glasa With Teardrop Bulbs, $60;

5 Horse lJI1e, E;~~cellent Cooctiboo,
S125: 1991 Murray 12 Hofstt Rid-

·•

1g77 ,Chevy Pir;kup 350 Automat·
k: 112 Ton Goad Cardino~ $1500
(740) 258-1098
sty I, auto~ 78,000 original miles.

BAitNEY

0

Metwry: 1 Uud 50 HP Mercurr '
1 U1td 00 HP Mercu1y: New ;
Marada Boats New Odyssey
Pontoon Boall, J. S. Marl~ 7.0..:

new paim. Navy Surplus, 21,500

1180. Call,_ 304-.755-5885.

88 Bronco II 4X4, excellenr condi·

I 986 Chevy Nova, 5 speed, $500

1

12•20 c:arport , can be seen at

•

Your Area Jonn Deere Deater

fer

·

6154 .

446-2540

Aa 2.9% On lawn Tractors And

4 Harper VaUey

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South West North Ealt
Pass
1•
Pass I t

$20,900, may conatder other .
truc;k on partial Uade, 740·912•' .

135 hp. Evonrude,

va,.,

740-4AH119. '

1998 Ford F-150, 414, XLT, wltli' ·
lots of extras. only 4500 miles .- ~

ing motor, two llvo wolll, Pta Pod- •
estal seat, 1011 of ltQrage, rlda!

Sizea 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors, Hay Equ1pment, John
Deere Skid 51- loarlero. Ched!
Wllh Us About FlnanC111Q AI low

hlpa

35 Vlollnlata'

•K7832

t986 N11san Stanza, auto. 2 shd·
mg doors for easy access. good
condiuon, S1295
1987 Chr~sler New Yofker, aulo,
a1c , heater, plush leal&amp;, digiUII
dash, 1uns excetlen~ S895
88 Buick Skylark, auto, excellent
gas mileage, n1ce dependable car
around, $750
1989 H~undai, 5 speed, runt
eood, I&gt;D&lt;Iy·s goOd, $945
91 Geo Storm, perfect 'ondi!lon,
runs excellent. au~. $,595

Sottlh

DOWN

28 Roman 1,051
27 Nocturne! bird I Envelope part
30 Straight
2 llealdt
32 Actor Eaievez
3 Think nofhlng
34 Willi handa on •

•

'84 170 Baumaatar bau boat, :

For Res1dent1al And Commerc 1a1
Lawn Equipment. Compact Uhhty
Tractors From 20 To 38; HP. All

• 10 8 •
• Q 98 5

• 7

• K Q J 10 5

• A K5
• A·
t KQ J 7

lotttnelr gono.

New Helland 88 Ha~ Baler, &amp; 3
Point Hltc;h Rake. S1 .500, 740-

• 8 53 2

1996 Chevr 4wd, 350, 5apd, air, ·
cruise, tilt, am·fm cassene. ·
$15,500. 304-675-5332.
.

t. o

Used Equ1pment. Carmichael"&amp;
Wllaon'l Arm,' Surplus
Farm &amp; lawn Clallipolio, OH 740Best pric:et anywhere- full hne of
M&amp;J Aura. 15153 SA 160
Advantage Camo in time for Washer &amp; Dryer $150, 740· 448· 446-2412 1-800-594-1111 .
Houra 12·8, days
turkey season. Great select!on ol 2003.
Call for mare tnlonnation
630
Livestock
•
new and uaed bo0t1: loll of new
74D-388-9693
and u1ed camo, sizes 2 monlha Waterline Special. 3/4 200' PSI
2
raoisu~rad
yearling
short
-'
to 4)(; backpacking and c:amping $21.95 Por 100: 1" 200 PSI
Credn Problema? We Can Help,
"!"nod bull, 7.00-949-2053.
uems; kid' s clothes; u S . made $37.00 Per 100; All 8ra11 ComEasy Bank Fmancmo For Used
preaalon
Flltlnga
In
SKN:k
Sml!h &amp; W1110n knives trnd lots
8001 Holstein/Hereford ateers . Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call
.
RON
EVlNS
ENTERPRISES
more. Come and check ua out.
serious callers only, c:att 740-985· Vickie, 740·446-28D7,
We are open 8:30am·8:00pm Jaokaon, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528
4447 b&amp;lo1'8 Bam or,aft8f 8pm
Upron Uaed Cars Rt. 62-3 Mites
everyday. Call us al 740-992 · Wedding drell, low prom dress7093 or 1 ~ 800-346·81 76.
ChicKens lor sale- brown S 1.00, South of leon, WV. Fi nanc ing
es, wtde auortmeot of other
Ava•lablo. 304-458-1069. ·
530
Antiques . '
droasos &amp; mare. Sao at Flea ""'" 7~. 7-J0-96!'&gt;-3968.
Markel in Horde&lt;san.
Club Pigs Excellent B1aodilne. 720 Trucks,
Sale
Buy or ..tl. Riverine Antiques,
·
Bor'l January 24th To February
1124 E. Main Streel, on RL 124, Wedd1np Gown·Beautilul ivory 281h, Call 740-24!'&gt;-5672. 0&lt; 740- . 1972 Chevy Gbod Condillon With
p
H
M T w o 00 sequinecl, re-embro,dered lace, 367-Q583. f 1
New Tires, EII'laust, Alot 0, Ex- 1
1
s.ze 10 with welt. Only $225. 304·
omeroy. ours . · · · ' 1 :
a.m. 10 e:oo p.m.. Sundar 1:00 to
51raSI 740;258-8574.
.
.I
8040
Ouatter Horl&amp;. good
6:00p. m. 740-992-2526, Ruul c
&amp;7 _-,-·------:--,..,- Palomino
\rail lootso. 304.fl75-5040.
I
'976 Cab Over lnterna't,orlal
Ueo,e ownet'.
Whirlpool Washer, '&amp; DrYer G. ~ .
Tra(ls S1,ar Tractor 3SO Cum540 MiscellaneOus
Eteo••• Range. ' 0 E washet., • 640
Hay &amp; Grain
m•'lgs Eng1ne, Good Tires. Good
Gas OJW'er All •llems $75 Eac;h, k----::::-':.,--:-r-:--:::-~ Shap'll 14. 300 ,OBO· 74o:448-

Merchandise

Loaded, like New 19,000 Mites

256-6381 .
Baa Credit, No Credi1, Bankrupt·
cy? We Can Help I Bank Finane·
1ng On Used Vehicles, 740-4410607.

Eut

---

P8rtlclpant

23 Chunu at.lce

Weat
•QJ982
• 17 3 2

.

0777

55 U.rathon
55 Carbonated
be-age
57 Tidal wave

11 ~-about
20 Fencer,

6 A J 10 ' 4

U82 GO Tracket Converti ble, ;
PS, AC, 414, 58,000 Mile&amp;, CD ,
Playtr, 18000 0 .8.0 (740) 441 ~

lion, $4,900, 74D-992-7038.

palr$1500 (140) 44B-105.2

Mower, Plow, Disc. ·And Grader

1e80 F· 2s0 4 WD, 5 Spoed, Dlo-.
.... $7,800. 740-44H317..
•

$18,500 (740) 379-2427

04-13-91

• ee4
• Aa

EEK&amp;MEEK

1990 Eagle Talon, rod, 5 opeod,
05,000 miles, looks and run• e~~:·

992·7551 , ask for David.
1995 Dodge Avenger Black

Kubota 6100 4w4 3 Cylinder, Diesel, 3 Pt. Hitch With ota• Finishing

mil es, looks and ru ns goad ,·

~~~~·~7~~~-7-~~~·----~~

---------'
1995 ClMC Tru co 112 Tan 4•4, '

son, WV. 30~-675-7421 .

Need 1omeone to work on larm,
Sohd Oak 10 Gun, Gun Cabin&amp;!. salary, rent, utilities and extras
Solid W1th Assortment Of 4 Guns, , pl'one (7.0) 441H05.2

Call Us Today. 10118 Ia Our 281h

New Remington , tOO LT 20

12' Transport disc, lnternalional,

N
• 10 8 4 3

1gag Bronco II XU, v-e au-

tomatlo, olr, looded, 1 75,000••

11J89 Cavalier 2.0 .t Cylinder
Auto, Air, High M\111, $1,600,
304.fl75-1310.

Pam AI 74D-245-9635.

Heal Pumps Only Shghly Higher.

Sporting
Goods

610 farm Equipment

Smtth Corona Word Proceuar
WIIH Screen, Has Latus 3.. Dooro 17 HP Hydro 47" Deep,
Spreadsheets, Hard Or~ve And A Troy -Built Tiller 8 HP Electrtc
Disc Drive, More Features , Catt 51811, NICe, 740·4"~·9227.

Super Capasl!y Whirlpool Wash·.
er &amp;O&lt;verS100, 7.0-256-1170.
$1,200 (740)258'-1098
We Moved! Used Furniture Store WARM UP: High E11i&lt;:«ncy NatuBelow The Holiday Inn fn Kanau· ral And LP Gas Furnaces, L1fe·
ga. Ohio. Bed1. Dressers. Couch· time Warranty On Heat Exchangea, Maltresaes, Ect Hrs M· T-W er · 11 You Don't Call Us We Both
10-4, .(740)446-4782
•
lo1el'" Free Eatimatesl Add -On

520

FAR M SUPPLIES
&amp; LI VESTOCK

"0" G1bton electric range, good
condilion. lour years old. S375.
740-992-2548.

With Wall!l' Tap 18.000, 740-256-

1111 Oit-d ...n 112;soo.

new,

Maytag Wash8r &amp; Dryer Works

7795,

(740)28&amp;--7i!IIO 12pm8pm

Single Parent Progr~m. Spec:lal
f1nantint on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes.' Payments •• low ••

Cond1ian $3,000 (7«1) 2511-1098

exc. cond. tt88 Cla~ton 1-4170

Vacuum1, l ike New GS &amp;
G4s. Call 740·448-4553 Far DaIBils.

gray, caii74D-985-3e88.

Appliancet:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Relri·
grators, 90 Day Guara ntee!
French Cuy Mayrag , 740 ·446·

•989 BulcM LoSabrt, lolldod, Iota
of new parll, good condition,
$1900, ooll 740-949-2203 •• 740949-2005.

BUDGET PRICES

3 Acres Recently Landscaped

1 Billh, Elecrik: Furnace Window

Klr~

Wh ite Road W1 th Etectnc City
Wa ter, Septic Tank, Near Holzer
Hospita l $125 Per Month, 740·

Household
Goods

of Jac" 1 on. Call for detaUa

30~3323.

For Lease Mobile Home· Site On

51 o

- (304)458-11111

Kenmore stac;k laundry centtr
washer &amp; dryer, axe. cond . SSSO
0~0. Apartmen t slu Cro1ley
freezer $100. Quasar mlc:;r~WIYI
W/1utn table, aame 1.1 new $75 .

Large couch, like

MERCHANDISE

buoy hlgnwoy (U.S. 35) ooulhoool

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Onve
tram $279 to $358. Walk to shop
&amp; mov1e1. Call 740·440 ·2568.
Equal Houq OpportJnity.

12xl5 2 Bedrll)om Tratler,' Fair

tt73 12;~~15 Cameron trefler 2tH
W/1 roOm aGd-on. $4.500 . 304·
812-3812.
•·70 3 a.1e15 Schulll 1• -room,

For Lease

490

Space availabte at lntlraection ot

Pflone (304)451-IHI

ceo. 7~9112-2290.

C81301-875-4e11.

H o - Product? craft&amp;?

IHI FOld E-ll QT
Rod In Color, TlrH Now, ~.
· -SunRooi64,000I!IIH
$1.000

388 IBM Computet With Wir.d·
ows3.1 $300, 7~256-1558.

12lt0 Rocendy remodeled, mull
_ _..ra304&lt;175-e149.

· - Troiltt :ll&gt;r, I bell'- S5,500.

387-7278

2 Bedroom Apartmelu. Ut1lilie1

biQ lotS. and
uulitvwater,
hookups
Ruttand,
out ap
of htQh
as in
Is

Each Day.

noma lot lor rent on
. 304-67~ - 7971 .

446-4389.

•

949-2368 all"' 5pm

Noodo Repoir, Sf 50 OBO For
Bolh 7~441 -0135.

460 Space lor Rent

Available. 740· 441·0459 or 7-40 ·

pool~

Need ·A Place To Sell Your

Kenmore Heavy Dull 70 Washer

'"""' at 129 GODrvt SL New Haven, Wv. $265/mo. 304-773-9171
Mobile home altt available bet·
LooveMeuago.
·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call
3br Hou 11 in New Haven, WV. 740-385-4367
$335/mo. + dopool t 304-773 Tra1t'er Lot lor Rentt All Hook·upa
5881 .

off Route 160 N. (7.0) 446~283

Go leaf! and extras, 1500, 740·

And Dryer, A lmond, Wa1her

Small 2br houae, ttove &amp; retfig·

'TWo houses for rent In Pomeroy,
3 Bedroom 1 112 bath, 31:4 base- Alf Cond1t1oners. J=ur naces &amp;
menl, new root, sldirtQ &amp; wtndows Parts, Huge Buymg Power Means confB!ct Wes at 740·982·5500.
on 2.4 acres in Hartkwd. l27,500. The lowest Installed Pr1ce, Easy 420 Mobile Homes
30&lt;0-882-3858 . .
Over The Phone Bank Financmg.
Call Bllnnotl's Mobile Home HTG
tor Rent
3 Bedroom Home Completely Re- &amp; ClCll 800-872-5967.
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homea
modeled 2 Car Garage With Second Floor Appro•. 2 Acres. Yard, Clayton Mobile Home Few $260-$300, sewer, water and
Pond, Beautilul landscaptng 1 11 Months Old, Like New On Large traah lr&lt;luded, 740-992-2187.
Rented Lot, Sell Cheap! 740·44641!oloo Down 218, 74D-446-9633.
2 Bedroom Beautiful River View
9428
Relerences, Deposit, NO pEist
3 Bedrooms , 1 112 Baths, Jay
.01scounr Mob1le Home Parts 5 Foster's Mobile Home Park, 740·
Drive, 7..t0·446-8251 Alter 5 PM
Accessones Water Heaters, \/ i· 441 ·0181.
3 Bedrooms. 1 8arh, Full Base- nyl Sklrtmg Kits S299.95, An ment Allached Garage, large chors, Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps, 2 Bedroom t.toblle Home. ReferBaCk Yard, New Central Heat/Air Aoot Coatmgs, Doors, W1ndows. ences Required, No Pets, Rent
Plus Deposit, 3 Bedrooms, Rent +
322g Stale Route t41, $139,500 Plumbmg &amp; Etectnca t
I
Ut1l1t1es + Deposit, 740-797·4345,
!Cenlenary) Call Ironton 740-532· . Blocking Wood &amp;
740-448-o879.
5147, Ot 740-S32·8J08
More l Call
~obile Home.
3 or 4 Bedroom, two balh, ranch Hom&amp; Suf&gt;pl~
Jlyle manufac;tured type home.
Forces
1.600sq. ft. Situated on one acre Divorce
J)aymenrS,
2,br. 2Sales-Take
bal!'l, financing
. In Porter
or ground, Rayburn Rd. 1/4 M1te ayadable. 3l4· 755-5566.
off Sandhill. Additional acreage
Fo1 sale· Park model trailer to ·l1ve 24 Foot Ponroon Boat For Sale; 2
available. Peaceful, pnvate.
'ountr:Y sewng $82, 500. 304 · 1n, extra mce. JUS! move tn , the l!odroom Trailer 740~41-1536.
675-1296 Afl)'Umo.
lurn1ture goes with it, call 304· 3 bedroom HUO ac;c:epted, de·
273-3XIt 1f you woold tike 10 see.
posit required, $295/mo. 304-6757783.
.. Bedroom Home On 2 Ciry Lots.
2 Blocks From New Wai-Uart. Hue• 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath .
Starling a1 ONlY S39,099. Ma.ny SmaH 1 Bedroom Mobile Home In
$48,000 Phone (740)416-1914
Kanauga Utilities Furnished
options ·available. 1 -888-928$180/Mo . Plus Oepo111, ?40·448·
4 Bedroom I'IOuse on Rt. 62 on 2 3428.
7406.
acre• ol ground. S Miles North of
Pt Plaaunt on Pouer Creek Rd. large aelec:lton of uHd hameL 2 Small two bedroom mobile home
or 3 bedrOOms. Starting at tMS.
304-773-5787._
Ouic:k delivery. Call 740-385· lor rent 1n RaCine, 740·992·5039.
BUY HOliES FRO!! 14,000 I -5 9621
Two bedroom ~railer m~ country,
8drm., Local Gcw't &amp; Bank Repo's
Rae~ne- Portland atea, call 740LIMITED OFFER
Ca~ 1-800-522-2730, X 1709.
992·
7824 alter 5:00pm.
1998 Ooublewide 3Dr. 2 batha.
Charmmg counrry home in West $, ,sog/down $25gtmo Only at
Apartments
Columbia. minute! lrom town, 9 Oakwood Home• Nitro, WV 304·
rooms, concrete driveway, 755-!i8a5. .
lor Rent

$75,899. 304-n3-5379

....11 ca,...
17 New (pm.)

15 E1ceulvety

Mobile Homes .
tor Sale

..c......

sc
eor- 54 PUrpoM

•

,,

_ ____ _ ...

I

I

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'
·- -- -- -··---...:t--

r- • - - - - -

- - - - - - - - ·-

.

�ByTh~Bend

The Daily
.

.

Sentfu~l

Ann
Landers
IW7, l..ol

Aafdel n.e,

S,.ftdt.:IU: aad ClulM

S)Wiica

Dear Ann L~~nden: ·This is in
response to "I Showed Him in
Maryland." who wrote that "staying
at borne is OK if you want your
brain to go dead."
Life is full of choices, and that
woman made it appear as if she didn't have a choice. The truth is, she
chose to marry a man who was domineering and controlling. She chose
to keep her head in the sand and
remai n ignorant about financial matters. She also chose to believe that

in Temecula, Calif.
Dear Brain: Don'tlook for outsiders to give you credit for slaying
home with your child. They won't.
nie credit will be the satisfaction
you will get out of it. And that
should be enough.
Dear Ann: I was offended by the
letter sisned "I Showed Him in
Maryland." which said stay-at-home
moms were brain dead.
Many college graduates have ·
chosen to be stay-at-home moms.
We volunteer at schools, tutor, ll•Y
the bills, balance the- checklx'oks.
are the purchasing asents for most
items bought for our families, and
run businesses out of our homes.
Many ·of us have appreciative and
adoring husbands who help us with

the kids and the housework.
jud1e us stay-at-home moms who
1Wsin1 kids and keeping a home are proud ~ happy to be there.
may noc be the most stamorous job
Before I hid my son, I worked as
in the world, but the rewards ·are . a mechanical engineer in a ~sign
worth it. It is like a ganden. It takes firm. Did it"iake brains? You bet.
tinie for the seed yoo planted to Did I like it? No, I did not. I have
reach its pinnacle of glory. If you do worked harder and improved myself
a good job raising your children, the a lot since staying home. We sacri- .
rewards will be endless. -- Volcano ficed a bigger house and flashier
Brain in Carlsbad. Calif.
cars, but the qjiality of our lives far
Dtar Ann Lucien: Your exceeds what ~ was when we both
response to "I Showed Him" was wbrked. -- Somewhere in Missouri
too generous. NQ one is to blame for
Dear Ann: I suggest we start
her· lousy experience except her -- • 'Calling it "s~at-honic. couples"
not her husband, not working because havin.,_.~ne parent stay at
women and certainly not those of us home requires ·:SOTH parents to
who choose to stay hoiJie and ·are make it a successful experience. It
quite "brain alive."
·
iequires a breadwinner who shares ·
More power to her fpr what she the income and the responsibility
has accomplished. but she shouldn't that comes. with it and who commu-

Tomorrow: Sunny

pr~ise

High: 708; Low: 50s

nicates apprectalton for the' work
and dedication of the one slaying
horne.
It also requires an at-home parent
who recognizes the value of being
there for the children and guiding
them to responsible adulthood. I am
a smart, fulfilled, stay-at-home parent who considers it a blessing to
participate in this pannership. -Grapevine, Texas
Dear TextiS: Bravo on behalf of
all the parimts you spoke for today.
Well done.

Beat of the Bend ...
By Bob Hoeflich .
•
You history buffs will certain·
ly appreciate the spring edition of
the Blue and Gray Magazine.
The edition which is to be displayed at magazine ~les counters until May 27 is full of information and photos all about. the
Battle of Buffington Island. The
color photos of Meigs County
spots featured in the magazine
· are great and you're sur.c to enjoy 1
the informative articles about the
local area and the famous battle.
Now about the magaziJ!e. It is
diSiributed world-wide through
subscriptions and book stores.
Copies also. can be obtained
direct from the magazine's office
the address of which is 522 Norton Road, Columbus. Ohio
43228. The magazine is in its
I5th year ~f publication, founded
in 1983 by David E. Roth and his
wife, Robin, and was a hobby
which has now turned into a living. The quality is excellent. By
the way the cost of the May edi. tion is $3.95 .
Harry Lee Bailey is presenlt,
confined to his home at 1126 E.
Main St. in Pomeroy recuperaring. from foot surgery performed
at O'Bicness Hospital in Athens.
Hurry is on the move a lo~ sq the
farced confinement probably
isn' t being tdo well received.
Howcvcr.this. too. will pass.
Harry. Speedy recovery.

soon as they received word of
Mrs. Bealmear's problem. Mrs.
l&lt;rider and Mrs. Frazier returned
home late last week with the Tippie family staying longer in Baltimore.
Mrs. Bealmear is a patient at
the John Hopkins Bayview ll(tedical Center, 4940 Eastern Ave.,
Baltimore, Md., 21224. The
room number for you card
senders is 659-B.
The new community choral
group is being launched this
week under ihe sponsorship of
the Riverbend Arts Council.
After a few week~ of. "talking
it over and up", singers will meet
for an organizational session at
7:30 p.m., this Thursday at the
headquarters of the Ri verbend
Aits COuncil, Nonh Second Ave.,
Middlepon. There are already
some 27 residents of Meigs and
Mason Counties who· have
expressed interest in singing with .
the' new choral group .
Residents of both Meigs and
- Ma,on Counties are being cordially invited to attend Thursday
night's initial session. Myron
Duffield who has been active
with planning for the formation
of the vocal group stresses that il
is d~signed to be a fun organiza·lion. You don't have to have a
·fabulous · voice-just enjoy
si~ging.

Maxine Bcalmcar resided in
Baltimore, Md .. for a number of
years hut a couple of year.; ago
• returned to Mcig~ County and
ha• hccn living iA Syracu!lt.
A week ago Saturday, Maxine
traveled to Baltimore for a visit
and on Monday suffered a severe
stroke. Her sisters. Mrs. Clara
Krider of Syracuse, and Mr~ .
Betty Frazier of Middlepon. and ·
Mr. and Mrs. ·Bill Tippie and children. Kimberly and Michael,
Syracuse, went ta Baltimore as

If you can't make a rehearsal,
no hig deal. Choral arrangements have been secured and a
piano will be moved into the arts
council quaners ig · preparation
for Thursday night's opening session. By the way, in addition to
getting organized those attending
will be also doing a bit of singing
during the evening. getting their
feet wet. so to speak.
I hope your "Ea.•tcr• Basket"
was overnowing with many
blessings. Do keep smiling.

Poet's Corner
I ·Muat Walk Again The Wooded

Sometimes I sing alone
No special melody.
Sometimes I sing olone
Without any harAtony.

receiving payments. If your mother's. future husblli\d is receiv_ing
Soc1al Sccunty benefits. tt 's posstble
she could. receive a larger benefit
amount a.~ his spouse. Call Social
, Security for additional information.

.

.

Meigs County's

BY BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
Bid~ f!lr the installation of inside
compu1er wiring, and a change order
ta,provide new heating ~d air con·
ditioning systems in Eastern High
School were appl"!'ved during a special meeting of the Ea!item Local
School District Board of Education
on Monday evening.
Three firms were awarded portions of the work required to install
wiring and infrnstntcture hardware at
EHS and the 11CW Eastem Elementary

90045

Social Security benefit is $800 per,
month. Sine!) he 'll stall receiving
bcnelits at age 62, his benefHs will
be reduced by 20 percent tn $640.
Either way. your potential monthly
hcnclit on his record is $400(50 percent of $800) if you wait until age 65 ·
to draw. If you start your benefits
before 65, your benefits will be
reduced.

fund an1mal cruelty·
i·n vestigator's post

By BRIAN J. REE.D
In other btlsiness. the commis·S.ntlnel Newl Stiff
sioners approved the purchase of a
· The. Meigs County C'Ommission- new asphalt roller from McClean Co.
ers approved the contribution of of Columbus, ala cost of $51,975.
$5.000 toward the salary of an animal McClean submilted the only bid for
cruelty investigator when they met in the equipment, which was approved
rej!ular session on Monday.
by County Engineer Roben Ea.10n.
• The commissioners had pledged
Eason and David Spencer of the
the funding toward the position Hev- highway depat1ment voiced their
eral months ago when approached by concern about discussion of opening
the Meigs County Humane Society. the county's grovel pit to the public.
which has sought funding for the
Last week. Thornton said he suppqsition from other l!ourees as well. ported opening the pit 10 the public.
T~e pa,rt-time position will p~y
"It belongs tp the county and the
~pproximately $12,000 and benefit•, taxpayers, and they should have
In addition to the commissioners' access to it," Thornton said.
shar~ of the cost, funds for the posiSpencer. however, said h~ had
lion will come from the United F~nd been in c:ontacl with Buckeye Adminfor Meiss County. the Humane Soci- istratlirs, which carries the county's
ety and villages within the county. . liability insurance, and that the firm
Commissioner JetircJ£-Thornton had recommen~sLas.ain&amp;t .. public
roi!dl~objeclion to the l"unding by the access because of the liability issue:
commiilsioners, saying thllt the board
.Spencer also noted that the state ·
needs to be "accountable to the tax- auditor's office had recommended
payers, • bul ultimately voted in favor against public a~cess several years
of the funding because it ~ill come ago •. wheo the pt! was open to the
from a special oo:ount.
- pubhc. _
''I'm not against the Humane ~i- . Among t~e abuses_ of the pa~t polely. but there are ocher things that tcy of opentng the ptt. accoldrng to.
need our attention." Thornton said.
Eu.o;oll and Spel'lcer, were ca.'ICs of
Commissipner Fred Hoffman said out-of-county residents loading gravthatthe commissioners' share of the el from the pit and reselling it.
funding will be provided through the
"We could noc and should not
cou~ty's doa and kennel fund, a spe- compete_ with private business.·
cjal revenue account made up from Eason satd.
(jog and kennel license fees. I:Jse of
~~ncer a~d ,Eason noted thai
thO.. funds is limited to projects pohttcal subdiVIstons. mcludmg VIIrelating to animal control, Hoffman l~ges and townships, do have access
said.
to the pit, which prov,ides a large part
Thornton noted that. two years . of the aggregate used by the county
ago, the commissioners had used · highway department for road maingeneml fund m.oney to make tenance.
.
improv~ments to the county dog
Spencer sat~ t~nt the county saves
pound. located adjacent to the Ro.;k up to a h~lf-mtlhon dollars per ~ear
Springs Fairgrounds. and indicated by operatrng us own aggregate mane.
that he felt use of general fund monThe c~mtss10ners also:
ey for such a project wa.• inappropri• ~uthonzed. a suJI!llemenlal transate given the county's financial diffi- fer ot FEMA funds tnto the county
culties.
(Continued on Page 3)

-.

can be easily joined together to create blankets,· rxmchos. or vests, it
was' reported.
Cost for participants is $80 which
includes loom rental; ·$1 0 nl' the fqe
may he applied tnWIIrd the purchase
of a lonm. High quality. naturally
dyed y'am may he purchased fnnn
the instructor UtAI cnst nf appruximately $25-$60. Panicipnnts may
provide their own yarn a.• well.
Enn~lmcnt is" limited. sn applications will he processed on a Jirstcomc, first-serve basis.
·
A non-rcfundahlc dcrosit of $40
must he made hy June Itt&gt; receive a
map and instructions.·Lunch will he
brown-hag or 'at a Inca) restaurant.
To register, residents may call Judy
Heinrich at 740-373- ~302 nr Nancy
Schul at 740-667-3336.

Community
Calendar
MONDI\Y
POMEROY - Right to Life
meeting, Monday; 7:30 p.m. at the
. Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Big Berid Flinn
Antique Club, 7 p.m. Monday at the
Grange annex building at Meigs
fairgrounds.

Path
1 mus! walk again the wooded path
As I did in mJ childhood ·days .
SALEM CENTER - Free skin
I must wa,lk again the wooded path
Which ends on one bright day.
testinl! clinic by Connie Karschnik,
AlthOUih for now, I sing alone
It Jed to Christ on Calvary .
Bdt this won't always lie.
R. N., Meigs County Tuberculosis
The two thieves nailed there too.
Por others too will sing a song
Nurse at the Salem Grongc Hall,
One of them cried out to him
· lnspirinJ 10 the ear.
Monday, 4:30 to 6:30p.m.
' He gave him life anew.
We •inl a song to Christ the Lord
Our praises he wi II hear.
•
TUESDAY
1 must walk aaain tlie wooded path
POMEROY . - Mr :gs County
For memories linger there.
•
Trulh In D.,knua
Conservation
Coalitit'·" meetins
L must walk arain the wooded path. Have faith in darkness
Tuesday. 6:30 p.m. at the Shade
'fhe path of love and care.
A• welt as the liJht.
God up. in heaven has
.
River Coonhuntcrs Building on the
I" must walk aaain the wooded path All the power and the might .'
Rock Spri11gs Fairgrounds to discuss
whh thoushts of yesteryear.
fund raising projects to defeat proOf special things that happened
Have faith In darkness
- posed anti-hunting ballot issue. All
· T.llose moments were so very dear. He will •ce· you through .
club representatives, hunters,.
1: must walk aaain the wooded Keep faith in Jesut
anglers,
trappers and others wetpathway
He lives life anew.
come.
tome and time aaain.
•
My heart asain remembers the Have faith in darkness
POMEROY - Meigs County
.
joyful days of past.
Don't be afraid.
These are the things I remember.
Jesus sirs on the throne of risht- lt~alth Department free immunizaMy soul is joyful still .
· •eousness
tion clinic, Thesday, 9 to II a.m. and
I, walk asain the wooded path
Hi~ death out on Calvary
I to 3 p.m at the Meigs MultipurIt is my Father's will.
Was the precious. price he p.aid.
pose Center, Pomeroy. Each child to
be IICl:ompllnied by a parent or lepl
Sometlmh I Han To Slat Aloat Have faitH In darkness
auardian. Immunization record to be
Sometimes I have to sinJ alone
We must. stand our sround.
brought. For more information call
To God who's up above.
Rememberlna Jesus always
We were losr · but now we 're the Health Depanment 740-992Sometimes I sin1 alone
6626.
found.
'
For Precious Is His Love.
Sometimes I sinJ alone
Without a soul in siahr.
Sometimes I sinJ alone
Because Jesus h The LiJhl.
· Sometimes I sina alot~e
My heart is filled with Jlee.
SOmetimes I sina alou ·
In Jesus Christ, I'm Free.

- ,-

.
----- -·-•------

Have faith in darkness
As, small as a mustard seed.
We are all God's children
~nd all his sheep he'll feed.
Poams By Barbara James
. Pomeroy

- ... -.- ---

MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
Middlepon Holiness Chun:h, 7S
Pearl Street, Monday throuah Sunday. ·Evangelist, Rev. Amlis Tillis.
Special sinains. John Neville, pastor, invites public.

Federal Communications Commis- the district.
sion's "E-ratc," which provides dis·
All companies that submitted bids
counts to qualifying districts in order received a portion of the work, with
to connect to the internet and online the exception of Alltell of Hudson,
services.
whose bids for a new digital teleThe board divided the bids into phone system and for .Schoolnet.
vllrious components in order to keep wiring exceeded cost expectatioos.
costs a.~ low as possible, according to
Ritchie said that the bid from All·
Lisa Ritchie, the district's clerk/trea- tell was not submitted in compliance
with the board's requirements.
surer.
The boand also approved a change
Schoolnet will provide an amount
less than $[0,000 towand the infro- order with General Temperature Constructure required, and wiII also pro- \fOI,the district's heating, ventilation
vide computer _hardwiiR! at no cost to and air conditioning contractor. to

portion
of street
gets O-K

A f'8clne rqn wealnlul'ld lfllr IIIII C8l' he drove lltruck 1 ~~~~ pole on Stltl Route, 24 near

8MIM~.thea.tleMIIgeP8etofthe· ltle!tttt~gt~wt~_ P- .. ~ TI'OIIpllf8uld.elaM
F. lfl!llii"CIIt, 73, Main Street, w•·trwtld It !hit IQtrte by the Melga MS following lha 1:30 p.m.

IICCident. According to the petrol, Spencer wa eaatbound when tha car want olf the taft aide
of the rolcllt1d ltf!lck the pole. The car w11 aeverely damaglcl, and Spencer w11 cltlli tor drl·
vlng under the lnftuenoe and failure to control.

Personnel matters receive·nod .
·from educational service center
Personnel matten dominated la•t pathologist; Karen Smith, parent
In other business, the board
week's meeting of the Meigs County mentor.
approved panicipation in the
.
Educiuional Service Center, formerThe board did riot renew the c~n­ SEOVEC ~twork plan and approved
ly lhe Meigs County Boand of Edu- tracl of preschool handicapped funding contracts with local school
cation.
·
districts for the 1999 fiscpl year.
teacher Sara Frances Campbell.
The boand reemployed the fol·
Bus driver certificates were
Superintendent John D. Riebel Sr.
lowing: three years - Perianne approved for Jack Lyons and linda said Michael C. Leilheit wa.~ the winner of the Franklin 8. Walter Award.
Bates. SBH tender: Patricia Cook. Harrison, Southern Local.
The
board
also
empJoyed
Heather
·
He is the son .of Roger and Lenora
MH teacher: Carolyn Sue Heines,
speech pathologist; Joseph Mayhew, Wakefield a.• a substitute teacher on Leilbeit.
school psychologist; and lena an as-needed basis. and accepted the
The academic excellence banquet
Tenaglia, spetch pathologist; two resignation of Kitty .Hazier a,; !al- will be held Tuesday. May 5 at7 p.m.
years - Yvonne Scally, school ps~­ ented and Gifted Program coon!ma- at Meigs High School.
chologist: one year - Lynn Delle- tor, effective July 31 .
Present were Riebel. Treasurer
The board approved Dr.;. Hunter, Carole Gilkey, Board President Jeff
field, MH teacher: Donna·Grueser,
preschool/office .assistant: Cecilia . Spencer. Mansfic:ld and Witherell to Harris. Vice President Robert Barton,
Harris. TAG tc10eher: lpter Manuel, give school bus driver examinations Howard Caldwell and 1.0. M•-coy.
SBH teacher: Donna"Myers. speech for the 1998-99 school year.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Inflation · ran at a barely detectable 0.2 peree~t .fell 3.5 percent and are down 3.5 pe~diKappeared from the U.S. econumy annual r.tte for the first quarter of cent from a year earlier. Natural gas
for the secand ri·me in three months 1998.
'
costs increa.o;ed but fuel oil was
in"March. with a continued steep ilrop
Retail sales unexpectedly dec.lined . unchanged and electricity declined.
in energy costs offseuing scattered 0.1 pen:ent in March, pulled down by
FQOd prices were unchanged in
pri~e increa.o;es in other IIR!a•.
slumping auto sales, the Commerce , March for the second consecutive
: The Consumer Price Index wa.• Department said in a cl~ly-watChed month. Pork prices fell 1.2 percent,
unchanged last mooth, after inching report. since it represents roughly a the most in more than three years.
just 0.1 percent higber iii February third of the economy's outjiut. .
Fresh fruit fell a seao;onally adjusted
aiid holding steady in January, the
Energy prices served a.• the chief 2.6 pen:ent and fresh vegetables. 0.3
Labor Department said today.
bulwark againsl'inllation in Mon:h. j,ercent: recovering from earlier pric;e
Thus inllation, which !lllllk to an falling 1.2 pen:ent.the founh df!IJI'in increases when El Nino's rains drown
1t-year low of 1.7 pen:ent iri 1997; a row. Gasoline prices at the pump winter vegetable crops in California.

1998"

Good Afternoon

Today's Sentinel
I Seclion • 10 Pa1n
Vol. 48, No. 253

•

Cllladl[
• Slaalfledl

§:II

• Comlg

!

l!l
~ •

f:tlil!ldlll
: Loral

I

~

~ Sports

445

Lotteries
OHIO

Pkk3: 8-2· 1: Pkk4: 9·0-4-7
(

lludteye 5: 12-1$-22-25·27

ftWA.

.

o.lly 3: ~-5 : Dlllly 4: 2-9-1-6
o 199l.Ohlo Yaltty MNohios Co.

Outside of the volatile food and
energy sectors. prices inched just 0.1
percent higher. They've advanced at'
a 2.4 percent annual rate so far this
year. That's about the same as the socalled "core" intlalion mte of2.2 percent for all ol' 1997. the lowest since
1965.
·
Tobacco price,; fell 2.6 perc~nt
after a slightly bigger drop the month
before. Because of earlier increa.o;es.
they·still were 6.7 percen; higherthan
a year ago.

·Future ·impact of latest.wave of bank
mergers worry consumer advocates .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Could and other businesses into riskier v~· monopoly muscle to chllll!e their customers higher fees than small banks
the wave of huge bank mergers result tUI'C!I.
The
bank
merger
w•ve
could
in dangerously big institutions that
and credit unions do."
could fail and be bailed out at tax- bring U.S. wpayers ."severe finan These concerns gnawed at Wa.•h. cial exp0511re," Frunk· Torres: leg~ ington policy makers well before
payenl' bpense'l
The ltUest outbreak of financial islatin counsel for Consumers Monday's twin shockers: Nationsmerger mania ha.• 110me lawmakers ·Union, warned Monday. "If the busi- Bank Corp. and BankAmerica Corp.
and consumer activi!llll wondering ness goes under. will a taxpayer-' announcing a $62.5 billion '!larriage
whether' 11M: bankins industry may he financed bailout follow?"
to create a coast-lo-coa.'&lt;l banking
Torres ai!IO warned that these giant, and Bane One Corp. and Finl
making itself more wulnerable by
thinning-iu ranks and pulling a heav· large con!IOiidations could mean Chicago NBD Corp. . saying they
ier burden on each bank's resotii'CCI. higher banking fees becauliC of less will unite in a $28.9' billion deal to
Claser to horm, critics hive compeliticin, fewer choiceS for con· form the dominant bank in the Mid·
evoked lhe specter of ·~ multibil- sumen .and even a lolls of privacy a.~ west.
lion-dollar 1axp11yer bailotit of this !luge ot)e-5top financial . companies
But the latest news shlllpCned the
promote ocher financial services 1o
counlry's savings and loan indtMtry in
anxiety,
comina on the heels of last
the late 1980&amp;. Just aa bants have e~isting customen.
week's
announcement
of bankin&amp;.
"Bigger banks IIICIII bigger fees,"
been reaching into new areu such u
securities, insurance and real eilate, said Edmund Mierz)llinski, consumer giant Citicorp's planned megameiJ·
the s.tL debacle wu at leall ('lilly program director for the U.S. Public er with brokerase-insurer Travelers
blamed on the thrifts expanding Interest Research Group. "Studies 'Group.
Also, the Justice Department's
beyond lheir IOiditional IIIOI!Jaae have confinmed that bigg~ banks use

"

upgrade and replace components of
the HVAC system in Eastern High
School.
· The district plans to ~place individual electric heating units in the old
junior high wing of the building.
~hich. beginning next year. will be.
used to house high school classrooms.
The,;e units will be ~placed by
individual gas units which will also ·
provide air conditioning to the da.~s­
rooms. The new units will be indi(Contlnuad on Page 3)

injures driver-..... Vacating

What inflation? Consumer Price Index.stays unchanged

.

'

School, to be ~ to connect class- 'PfOvide two servers at $12,900, and
roqms with Schoolnet and Schoolnet to install the servers at a cost of
Plus. educational computer systems _ $1,600.
.
that provide internet access and othThe total of the three contracts is
er educational services:
$88,748.60, approximately $10,000
TCBC of Mllriella was awarded a less dtan the board expected the pro$38,843.60 contract to provide and jectto ~ost.
install cable. Tri-State COil)puter · The project is not included ·in the
Exchange Inc. was awarded the.clec· school's·building project bond issue,
troni~s portion of the project, which meaning that the district will be
will include the installation of hubs required to pay for the 'contnicts
and other equiP,ment for classrooms, thrQugh its general fund.
.
totaling $35,405, and XL Connect of
However, the district has qualified
Cincinnati was awarded the bid to for a 70 percent discotint through the

~ounty Y~~ll partly . ....--.~rash

---------'oo.:Society Scrapbook-----Historical SOfietles to come to . bicentennial and local historical nationally rc,ognized weaver. will
Pomero,.
organizations. Linda· Showalter and present a· 2-1/2 day workshop on the
Andy Verhoff, Ohio Historical Soci- use of the tr!angular loom, June 20POMEROY __:, The Meigs Coun- ety, will talk on "Developing Rela- . 22. Sponsored by the Pioneer Fiber. ty Historical Society will host the tionships with Schools·~. and Neil crofters Guild, the workshop will he
Ohio Association of Historical Soci- Allen, Washington County Histori- held at the·home of Nancy ,Schul in
eties and Museum Region 8 annual cal Society, will discuss "Rccruitins · Guysville.
meeting at the Meigs County Muse- Volunteers."
. Leigh, who offers mot",~: than 16
um on Saturday.
Registration per person is $14 for workshop topics throughout the year
Registration will begin at 9:30 members and $17 non-members. from her Hillcreek Filx'r Siudio ncar
a.m ..
Checks should be made payable to Columbia. Mn., will cover the basics .
Franco Ruffini. assistant director, the Meigs County Historical Soci- ol· this unique and simple form nf
Qhio Historic Preservation Office. cty, P.O. Box 145, Pomeroy, OH · weaving. No c~pericncc is needed
and David Gloeckner, Meigs County 45769 . .Registration deadline is for participants to cre,llle a shawl
Historical Society and Civil War Wednesday. For funhcr information from a variety of yams and fibers.
rcc'nactor, will talk on "Preservation residents may phone 992-3810.
The triangular frame loom allows
Battles: Fighting to Save Historical
'
weavers to weave loops and spread
Sites.''
-~---------them apart across the joom.' seeing
Participating in advisory table
:the entire weaving as it develops.
format, Nicola Moretti. Southeast
Flbercnften GuUd often lriaa·
An entire shawl can be ·woven
coordinator of the Ohio Bicentenni- &amp;Je weavlns worlcshop
from one continuous ball of yam,
al' Commission, will discuss Ohio's
GUYSVILLE - Carol Leigh, and two or more t~angular pieces

Hometown Newspaper

Eastern Board approves computer wiring bids

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

Q. Does Mcdi~are cover hospice
care·?
. A. Yes. Medicare hospital insurancc can help pay for hospice care
· for terminally-ill beneficiari.es if the
Q. My husband wa~ married for
care is provided by a Medicare-cer- · over 30 years prior to his divorce.
tificd hospice and if certain other His ex-wife has really never worked
conditions arc met. Special "benefit outside· the home. T.hcy arc both '5K
periods" apply to hospice care. Has- years old. What percentage of his
pita! insurance can pay for hospice Social Security benefits will she be
care for a maximum of two 90-day allowed to receive?
_. periods and one 30-d~~ period and
A. Your husband 's ex-wife would
one extension period of indefinite he. entitled to the same benefits as
duration when the patient is .terini- you would be entiUed to on his
nally ill.
recond. At age 65, she would be entitled to one-half ot your husband's
.
Q. My husband will begin draw- full benefit amount.
ing Social Security at age 62 so he
If she collects benefits· before
will only get 80 percent of his full age 6S, ti!Q amount of her benefit
amount. Will this reduce the Social · would be permanently reduced by ii
Security amount I will receive as his percentage based on the number of
wife?
months before she or he r~aches age
· A: A wife's benefit is based on ·6~ . Please ' be assured that th~
one-half of her husband's unreduced amount of benefits your husband's
benefit whether" or not he took ex-wife receives will have no effect
reduced benefits before age 65. Let's on the amount of your benefits.
say your husb~nd's unreduced

Indians . edge
Mariners J)y a
single run
Page4

•

Questions answered on Social Security
.
. and·pensions

live comfortably.
BY ED PETERSON
Field Office Manager, Athena
A lot of people expect a full com- Social Security questions and
pany pension plus Social Security answers
Q. My elderly father must enter a
benefits when they retire. But
according to Jhe Bureau of ·Lahor nursing home soon, and we . arc
Statistics, 63 percent of retirees from preparing to sell his house. car and
large and medium sized companies other belongings. Will the sale of
receive integrated pensions when these possessions affect his SSI benthey retire. That means your Social efits?
.
•·
Security is taken into account when
A. The sale of his excludable
calculating your pension. Now is resources (his house, car and $2,000
more important than ·ever to start of his resources) would not be conplanning your future .
sidcrcd income for Supplemental
Security
Income (SSI) purposes. but
Remembec that Social Security
was not never intended to be the the money would be considered a
only source of income in retirement. resource if retained on the first day
Since its inception Social Security of the following month.
has always been referred to as one
pan of a "three legged financial
Q. My 68-yeiu-.-old mother who
stool". One leg is Social Security, gets SSJ is planning to remarry in a
another is pension income and the few weeks. Her husband-to-be is not
third is personal savings and inves: · getting SSJ. Will she automatically
ments.
lose the SSI payments she has been
. Individuals most bear in mind .receiving?
that for those retiring at the "normal
A. When your mother marries',
retiring age" Social . Security · her eligibility will . depend upon
replaces about 60 percent of the pre- whether her income and resources
retirement income for low income combined with those of her husworkers, 42 percent for average band's are within the SSIIimits. She
income workers and 26 percent for should contact Social Security and
high income workers. Most financial tell them of her coming marriage.
analysts say that about 70 percent of The people there will determine
pre-retirement income is needed to whether she will be able to continue

Sports

Aprl114, 1998

Understanding harassment law, Page 2
. Safety in the kitchen, Page .6
Area Pinewood Derby results, Page 10

Todtty: Cloudy
High: TOe; Low: 50a

.
Page10
Monday, Aprll13, 1998

Stay at home moms make choices ·- but don't ·e~pect a lot of
staying home to raise children
.makes • woman brain dead.
I· made the choice to quit a
rewarding and high-salaried job to
stay home and raise my daughter.
I've never regretted it. Three years
later, not ·only am I not brain dead,
but I'm having more fun and reaping
more rewards than any paycheck
could offer.
Is it scary living on one paycheck? You bet. But it's Scarier leaving your child with someone else to
raise -- at least it was for me.
People say good teachers should
be paid as much as doctors and
lawyers. What about the noble profession of stay-at-home mom? 1
don't need a paycheck. but a little
credit would be nice. -- Live Brain

.

J

C'ompuler prices fell 2.8 pe":ent
Thetr cost. along wuh the cost ·ot
many other manutactured goods,
have been drifting down. helped by
a reducuon m the c?sl of Imported
pans caused by Asaa s sharp currency d.evaluations. .
.
.
lnllat10~ rema1.ns strong m certam
servtces. Atrltne Jares rose 2 percent
in March and were ~ . 5 percent above
a year ago. Educauon costs JUmped
0.6 percent and were up 5.1 percent
from a year ago.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NIWI SUIH •
Vacating a ponion of Broadway
Street; potholes and rental property
permits dominated ,an otherwise
uneventful meeting of Middleport
Village Council Monday night:
Council met with attorney Chris
Tenaglia abl!ut vacating a small portion of Broadway that is occupied by
a 40-year-old garage. Council
approved vacating the ponion of
right-of-way. with Councilman St~ve
Hiluchins voting against the mca.~ure .
Tenaglia said it wa• necessary to
vacate the section of right-of-way so
the owners could sell a fwme local. ed on the p~. OWIIm discOvered the right-of-way during a recent
site survey.
Mayor Dewey "Mack" Horton
indicated village worker would begin
Wednesday on patching potholes .
He said nearby asphalt plants are
expected to begin production on
Wednesday. allowing repair work to
begin - weather permitting.
Councilman Roger Manley asked
questions about the rental proJierty
permits mandated earlier by council.
Manley, who owns rental property in the village. said it was his understanding that the.permit !f10ney was
supposed 'to go into a buildiog fund
that would be used by the village for
demolishing and cleaning up con• ·
· demned and ·bUrned buildings, not
into the general fund.
In addition. he noted that some
renter.; are not paying the 'annual permit fee.
Council President Beth Stivers
presented the March fire report submitted by Fire Chief David Hoffman.
The report showed three fire and res-.
cue calls and 38 emergency medical
S4;rvice calls for a total of 712.8 miles
driven. In addition, 52 man-hours
were spent in training and 30 manhours on equipment maintenance.
She also thanked the fire department for sponsoring the annual Easter egg hunt Sunday at General
Hartinger Park.
It wa.~ noted that ponable toilets
would be installed in village parks
and that the e~isting restltlllm in General Hartinger Park would be turned
into a stor~ge building.
Police Chief Bruce Swift said he
visited the new regional jail at Nelsonville, '!~~ding thai he plans to tmns"
(Contlilu.d on Page 3)

~--------------------~
Midwest bank nterger
Bane Qne Corp. and First Chicago NBO Corp. announced Monday they
will merge in a $29.8 billiOn deal that will create the dominant bank In the
Midwest. A.took at the two companies:

--

. BA.NC:

FIRST CHICAGO NBD

11117 rwenue: $t3.22 billion

tlll7 , _,$tO.1 billion

111117 umlnga: $1.3t biNkin

tllll7 •nii18J•: $1 .53 billion

·Qul8. of Dec. 31:1115.8 billion

Alula .. of Dec. 31: $1t4.1 billion

llrrdquarWN: Columbul, Ohio

~:

Esnpllwsn· 5t,tOO
'
OIIICH: 1,500 In t3 mldwuteril and

Emptaw ur: 33,414
••Mihal: 850 In lilinQII, Mlchiglln,

IOUihwellem ttatH

and Indiana

IIIOaniiCIIIIIItlol18: creclil card
...... Flrll USA, P.remltr '*-P
and Ffflt Commelce of L06d:f·..

..._. r 1 dsltlane: IDnMd bV the
1fiii5IIJIIVI.r ol Fir1l Clllcago Corp•
and,Detrnil'a NBO

Columbut. Ohio

antitrust division on Friday approved · sell off ·32 CoreSiate.• branches in
the $16.6 billion merger of First Pennsylv1111ia. The Federal Relltrve
Union Corp. wilh CoreStates Finan- conditionally approved the deal Moncial Corp. after the banks agreed to day.
•1

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