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                  <text>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

�..

•

.,

Tu..day,April14,1998

I

•

.Com'!lentary·

•
.

The Daily Sentinel
'Utufulid 111 1948
111 Court Strut, Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992•2156 • FIX 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publlahtr
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

DIANE HILL

General M1n1ger

Controller

Tllo Soallntl wolcomo lolfotl lo lht odllor , _ - M • brolld- ol loplt:e.
• S/toll- (3011- "'lfou)llrlfo lht
ol IMIIIf , _ , , . ,, Ty,..,t I«·
IWto- pnlwrH Md IN moy 1M tdllld. EICh lllo&lt;lld lnoludl I 1/flnlhn, lddrtll,

all.,.,..

IIIli dl)lllmo,.,..... llllmlw. s,_lly I doll II lltoN!I I - ID I,..,... lfllole
CN' lfott.r. IIIU to; l•"- 1o lhe Edllot; Tllo s.nunel, Ill Court Ill., Po/!lff'Oy, 0/llo
U711: Dr, FAX to d1f...:l-2151.

U.S. would not be
trampling law by
.grabbing
Pol Pot
.
.

Death 'Notices

Wednesday, April IS
AccuWeathc... forccut for

(

•I

OHIO Weather

Page2
1\leld8y, Aprll14, 1tll

Spring com~s, writer escapes desk work .
By TONY SNOW
dency to daok:e
Q ttcrs Syncinll
and daydream
WASHJNGI'ON - I skipped out of when she's playwork early the other day. I wanted to see ing goolie -but
my daughter at her lirstsoc=pmctice of who can blame
the season.
her? While my
You live for moments like this: bright wife and I are
sun, kids frolicking.
. impressed by her
OJroldest is only five, and the game's competitive evonuances escape her. But she, like the other ·lution, the ·coach
youngsters, likes to run and she seems to is not amused.
be getting the knack of kicking the ball.
He barks out
. Snow
At one point. she sprints the length of something about
ti)Pticldand,stumbling,firesashotjustto missing the goal. 01.1' daughter smiles
die right of the pylons the coach has laid and shrugs.
on ~ imaginary goal txJSIS.
As the pmcticc breaks up, I head off
She pump&gt; her fists in triumph and for a run - make that a plod.
looks our way. I clap and 'cheer, a~ my
I chuff along a trail that runs through
wife chases . down our two younger Washington and its environs.The place is
babies, each toddling along separate
packed with runners and bicyclists. all out
tor&gt; 10 heaven knows where.
for fitness and the view. The l'cAomac surLast fall, our daughter coilldn't even face, reflecting the sky, looks glassy blue.
hit the 0011 and didn't care. During one. Blossoms of staggering intensity butst
game, she stopped at midfield to ask a girl from the trees along the trail. The sun is
(rom the opposing team whether she making its way toward the horizon. ·
wanted to come over and play. While the
As I approach a hilly rubor, a man
two chlcked their calendars. the OIJPO' emcrges fiom the shadows. He 'stand~
nents scored.
atop the cres1 of a hill, legs locked in a stiff
Now, our baby acwally careS about inverted "V." He's wearing Rollerblades.
the game, son of. Sure, she still has a tenOne SCC$ poor suckers like this all the

=·

mmility. I gee out. The businels rAP.·
nalism in m:entyeas has bcwneamft
of voyus - men and YIIXIICR who ply
their tnrde 1101 on streets. ~ over pin~!
lines. and who get tlasooops by fax and ·
e-mail, ruther than in ful1i&gt;'e hand-oil$ in
dimly lit alleys. So spring comes and I
escape the desk.
•
Rlr all the COI'(el11 1m in Washing· ton about the president's libido, 1111111 peapte worry about m&lt;1C pasinJ dings.
Here are twO guys walkin,g. talking in .
hushed aniuon about someding or
other.Theylooklikefatherandson.They
fall silent ~ they hear me thudding close.
They wait until I wheeze safely plllll until
they resume their chatter.
·
Funher along. a woman walks alone,
arms flailing faward. She's in full~
ness regalia including leather flat.s. She
looks toWard the horizon, gaze futed.
Twenty minuteS later, we cross palhs
asain. (I'm thudding in a circle, looking
like a Oydesdalc in at-shirt) She remains
engrossed in something unseen and far·
away. But this time !ihe acknowledges.
Her lips llancn out for an instant - more
matchod pair!
benign grimace than a smile. I smile back,
Oh well. We all have ollr ways of but she has already cast ,her eyes again
greeting spring. Some people test their toward the darkening edge of !he night.

time. They find themselves in 1he middle
of nowhere on little rubber wheels. They
feel like the 1ln Woodsman on ice.
Naenheless, !hac's sanething odd
OOool this fellow's beaing. He is lisling
dramatically to port, ~ if drunken or
maimed or both.
As he edges into the light. I see why.
He has a CIIIICh under his left arm. He's
uying to regulate his speed by jabbing 81
the ea:th as he hurtles down the hill.·
Each time he jabs, his torso flies left.
Each twist sends him toward 1101 &lt;lnly the
grassontheside,buttheriverbeyond.
Ard yet he contiolues, exuding fear.
As he picks up poa:, he pokes and twists.
pokes and twists. I wait for the CIIIICh to
dig into the·min-softened turf and vault
him into oblivion. I give him the son of
wide berth one usuall~ reserVes passing
horses or unleashed Doberrnans.
.
But somehow he survives. As we
move nearer each other. I notice an odder
sight still: I see in silhoucnc beneath his
jeans acytindrical cas1 running from knee
to shoe tops.The guy is rollerblading with
a broken leg -- and bidding fair to get a

r:::===~----------=:;;;;;;:==:=;;;;;;;;:::--:--:--~

1A

.

~y

..

'

Jerry W. Moore. 56, Barboursville, W.Va., died Sunday. March 15,•1998
in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
His funeral set"'ice wu.~ held at the Wallace Funeral Home in Barboursville
on Friday, March 20, 1998, ana burial was in the Springhill Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, the former Karen Hoffner of Pomeroy; three
sons and a daughter-in-law. Jerry W. Moore Jr. of Hunlington,Jeffrey L. Moore
of Barboursville, and John D. ~nd Melanie A. Moore of Hong Kong: two
sisters, Joanne Pullin of St. Albans, W.Va., and Janet Lewis of Cleves; a grand·
son, and two nieces and three nephew5.
·
Bom,July 15, 1941 in Cairo, W.Va., he was the son of the late Jessie
Woodrow and Beulah Blanche Goodwin Moore. He was a district manager
at Tasco Insulations Inc., and was a member of the Huntington Rifle and Pis- ·
tol Club, the Ashland Gun Club and the Winfield Gun Club.

•

:Warm front promises
·.·rain, highs in the 70s
: By The Alsoclllld Pre11 · . · · · . ·
.
.
Clear skies tonight will quickly gtve way to tncreased cloudmess and more
rain on Wedne!lday. .
.
.
,· But a warm front bringing the clouds and moisture will raise tempera·
.lures into the mid·70s on Wedne!lday.
., Some thunder.~torm activity is likely in the afternoon. especi~lly in the
, far west, 'forecasters said.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta. · titm was 84 degrees in 1941 while the record low was 20 in 1950. Sunset
/ tonight will be at S:OR p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:54 a.m.
Wealher forecast:
•'
Tonight... Panly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s. Wes~ wind 10 to IS mph,
• shiftins to the 50uth. ·
·· · ·
Wednesday ... Panly sunny. A chance of showers and thundentorrns in the
~ afternoon. High$ in the lower and mid 70s. Chance. of ram 40 ~rcent.
Wednesday night ...Shower.&lt; and thunderstorms hkely. Lows mthe lower
• 50s.
• E11tended forecast:
Thursday...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs in the mid and upper
60s .
• Friday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showel'll. Lows from the upper
40s to the lower 5011, and highs in the lower 60~. .
·
.
Saturday... Moslly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s and highs in the lower 60s.

La.nd tr-ansfe·rs recorded

Baring·the .truth ·a bout naked ·celebs

Deed, Beuy 1. Moore to Gerald A.
• reconled 1-ecently 'in the office of Moore, Salisbury;
Deed, Terry · L. Laudermilt to
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Tanuny
Ball and Troy McDaniel, SalHamilton: ·
Deed, B.F. and Iva P. Uplon to isbury;
Deed. Faith Fellowship Crusade to
' Ronald F. and Kelly L. Robinson.
Dorothy
Morris, Letart;
· Orange:
·
Deed,
DaVid D. lind Carolyn A.
' · Deed, Joseph Jeffrey and Beth
Jeffers
10
Charles
P. and Carol P. All·
., Brown to· James R. lind Rebecca J.
hou~~e. Pomeroy 101;
" Andenion. Sutton parcel;
Deed. Phillip R. and Ann M. _ .Peed. Nola Jane Young 10 Mikel
· Lacomb to Leonard Randall and K. and 'Christine B. Young. Olive,
Ca.;c:y Randall Karn. Olive, .39 acre: 10:246 acres:
Deed, Nola Jane Young to David
Deed, Michael Roben and
' Thomas Edward Vorpe to Ann Vorpe E. and Daphne G. Young, Olive.
10.137 acres:
Keller, Lebanon parcels;
Deed. James R. and ~sty E. Dai· Deed. United Methodist Chun:h to
Timqthy D. and Keoda A. LaWrence, ley to Elaine Par.too. Riiil'and.
· Pomeroy;
'file following land transfen were

•

·Vacating portion of street
57.016.82; rsre IIIICk. $2.306.37: COJI5
:port female pri110net11 and othen to fa.•t grant, $364.92: economic devel7
opment, $7,823. 72; public tranK'the new facility.
He said the new facility charges ponation. '$20.270.76; law block
a day 1o keep piisone"' compared grant. $3,723.10: refuse. 553.282.06:
··to $60 a day for Chillicothe. and is disaster relief groutt. $187; water
debt service, S I00.05 1.17; ~~ewer
much closer to Middleport.
Clerk/Treasurer Bryan Swann debt ~~ervice. $7S,s44.93: water tank.
indicated a study ~hoyld be done to $9.000; water syAtem. S81,090.01;
determine what it eMil for village IICWer sy5tem, $~6. 703 .4K; recre' work:en to perform routine ~ices. ation. $1.609.72; cemetery. $704.14:
• 511Ch as mowing. to- if il would be meter depo!iilll, $36.179.23; cemetery
• more feasible to contracl out the ~~er- endowment, S91.032.n.
vices -therehy neducingthe village
·In other bu5iON;IIII• council accept'" payrolt
.
ed the mayOI's repon llhowing 54.344
• Swann presented the fioanc.ial · in lines. including $3.~30 in old fine5.
report for March Mhowing the rol· . itnd met in executive oe~~ion to di,._
lowing balao'ces: general fund. cu,. peno&lt;Jnel mattel'!l.
$21.339.42: ~tout. S35.29ll.30: mini
AI!IO prellent were council memgolf~. $1 ,139.61 ; law enforce·
bers Rae Gwiazdow5ky. Sandi
ment. $235.30; fire equipment • lannaRIIi and Bob Pooler.

•.

...

(ContlnUid from Page 1)

·s.ss

':·:Today in history

Understanding sexual harassment laws

- The Daily Sentin-:1
Stocks

1~11'1111,_,

P..Mkllr.d PUY 1rtft~tM&lt;t, MaHtday UtrOM,P
Foidi). Ill ("""" St. ,._..,, Oloio, by olw
QtaW Y.aUty P~~ Cll"'ttlf'MJfJIIIII C..•.
,.,_.,, Oloio
902-.151&gt;. d ... """"" ....... ,........,, Otoio.

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Tllk' Dail1 St11Jntl. U I ('""'' Sf .•

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rfftlil il _."'" dir«1 .., nw lltil,. 11•1•1
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No ~ipdH b)' mall pC'rmil.,d ht . ,..
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ClllmpiOII-..........:.................13\

Ben &amp;rt Petrel, 51: Elm Street, Racine, died Sunday. April 12, IIJ'.I8 in
the emergency room of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
Born July 12. 1946 in Racine, son of Add1e El~cta Cross Petrel.of Ractne.
and the late Benjamin Earl Petrel. he was a cash1er at Home National Bank
in Racine. where he. had been employed for nearly 29 years.
.
.
He wa~ a graduate of Southern High School and attended OhiO Umversity. He wa~ a former Racine Village councilman and Cub Scout ~aster. He
was on the board of Greenwood Cemetery and a member of the Racone En:ter·
gency Squad. He attended the C~rmel -~ utton U~ited Methodist Chu~ch .
In addition to his mother, he 1s surv1ve~ by h1s son and daughter-tn·l~~·
Trevor .and Michelle Petrel of Columbus: and by a sister, Ruth Ann Mllll·
ades of Morristown: Tenn.
•
.
.
He is also survived by his liancee, Ma•ine Rose of Ractne, and by hts
former wife; Jannine Petrel of Racine.
·
Services will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Fune"!l Home.
Racine, with the Revs. Dwayne G. Stutler a~d Ke~ny Baker offic1atong. Bur·
ial will be in the Greenwood Cemetery, Ractne. Fnends may call at the funer·
al home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.

Commission ~ays ads
·don't violate state law

Meigs announcements .
Boswcirth Counc1146
Boswonh Council 46 will hold a
special meeting Friday, 7:30 p.m. al
the Middlepon Masonic Lodge with
work in the Super Excellent Master
Degree.
Camr Day
Eighth grdders in Meigs County
will attend career day activities at
Meigs Middleport School on
Wednesday. Approximately 30 career
representatives including those in
ans and communication, business,
industrial and engineerilg work,
environmental ilnd iifricu tural sys· terns, health services and · human
n=sources will attend, with a focus on
gender equity opportunities, in the
work place. The program will begin
at 9 a.m.
Services set
Danville Church or Christ will
have services. will be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. ~ .
· on Sunday. Denver Hill of Foster
W.Va., will be the speaker.
. Water lurnoiT
Syracuse water will be turned off
from 9· a.m . to 3 p.m. on Second
Street and Water for the purpose of
replacing values.
AA/AI-Anon to meet
The AA and At-Anon will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. al the Sacred
Heart Church on Mulberry Avenue.
Pomeroy. '· .

Hospital news

Eastern Board approves

County will partly

f-n '-'

Bur OCCASIONA.LLY'
WE Do ON PRICE.
SPRING SALE

. NOW IN PROGREss

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81ocll ra,,,. are the 10:31!
:ro:=~by Advnt

•

can

EMS units r:ecord eight .calls

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_.__._

banquet to be held on April24 at '1: I~
p.m. at the Meigs County Senior Cll·.
izens Center. Tickets are $8 .~0 for
adults and $7.50 for children and
be purcha"'d from the Meigs Coun~
ty Pomona Grange Master Ziba Mid~.
kiff or from Subordinate Masters
Norman Will. Rosalie Story, Charles
Yost or Patty Oyer.
'
•
God's NET
. ••
God's NET will be starting thd
"Friday's Fun, Food, and Fellow~hiA
Project" pmgrams Friday at 6 p.ml
·for the leenagcrs..Nutrilional food~
will be served. The birthday party fo(
the month of April will be held Fril
day during the introduction of the fel;
lowship project.
'·
Workshop oiTered
:
A workshop on constructing peri·
od costuming will be held at the!
Meigs Museum. Butternut Avenue;
Pomeroy, Thur!lday night at 7 p.m. •
The workshop is being sponsored
by the Meigs County/Ohio Biccn ~
tennial Committee and Becky Baer1
Meigs County E•tension agent and a
member of the committee, will bel
conducting the activity. Thc!re is rio
charge and anyone interested is inviJed to attend.
:
Emphasis will be .on costumes
from the 1870s through the earLy
1880s. Palterns and samples willlfc
available.
. "
Baer said that the workshop is
geared toward costuming for greelets
.of passengers on the Cumberllll)d
Princess, Sternwheel Festival queen
contestants, and 4-H club meinbeh
who are taking a costume project. '

League to meet
The Middleport Child Conservation League will meet at 7 p.m.
lo rioeet
Thursday al the Rock Springs Club
The Rock Springs Better Health
Church. Norma Torres will be the Club will meet at I p.m. Thursday at
COLUMBUS (AP)- T.here is no eviUence that television ads promot·, speaker on Aids and·children.
the home of Pltyllis Skinner.
ing the school funding issue on the May 5 ballot violate state law, accord- Trustees set session
ing to a commiuee of the Ohio El~-ctions Commission.
•
Chester Town•hip truste~s will
•
The panel voted 2-1 on Monday against holding a full hear!~g on.a co~: meet in regular session. 7 p.m. Tues- Support II'OUp
The
Gallipolis
Area
Parkinson's
plaint that the Issue 2 ads falsely promised that tax cuts are guaranteed
day at the town hall.
Support Group will meet Friday at 2
for every homeowner. ·
.
..
..
p.m. at Grace United Methodist
The complaint was filed by a nonhwest Oh1o coaltuon called Cmzens for Slgmip deadline
Church,
600 Second Ave .• Gallipollll.
Ohio School Reform. .
•
Thur!lday is the final day to sign . Traci Sisson, speech therapist from
lld Howard of the Toleclo suburb 01 Sylvania, speaking for the ·tssue 2 up for the muliinora rose cost-share
opponents, said the law that voters are being a.~ked to approve could be adjust- program through the Meigs Soil and Holzer Clinic. will discuss 5peellh
and swallowing problems of people
ed·by legislators later.
.
.
·
Water Conservation District. Maxi- with Parkinson's Disealle. Meetings
But David Young, a lawyer representing.Every Child Counts, a group that mum cost-share is SUXI per acre and
supports Issue 2, said thai claim could be made about any law that 1s not a treatment must be completed by July are open tu everyone. l:larland Wood
at 446-0SOR, or Paul Clay al 446constitutional amendment.
.
.
IS . Residents may stop by the Meig~ ffiJ72 may be contacted for rurther
"There"s no reasonable justification for continuing negauve campalgn- Soil and Water ConJ~ervation District
information. ·
i~g." Ybung said.
.
.·
. ·
Office, 33 10 I Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
Issue 2 would increase the sales Ill~ by a penny per dollar•. woth the S1.1 Ohio 45769. No phone applications
Revlvtllltrvlces set
billion it would raise each year splil evenly between school•mprovements will be taken.
·•
Revival services at the Reedsville
and propeny ta• relief.
·
·
.
United Methodist Church will be held
. The Legislature put Issue 2 on the ballot a• a resp&lt;.mse to the Ohto Supr~me­ Grange meelln115 set
Friday.
Saturday and Sunday al 7
Court"s ruling la.~t year that the state"s school fundmg plan wa.~ un~.onstnu ­
St,ar Grange 778 and Star Junior p.m. There will be special sin11in~
tional.111i: court said it did not provide a "thorough and efficient educa- Grand 878 will hold a fun night and
tion for each child lind relied too h,eavily on property taxes to pay for schools. potluck supper on Saturday with the every evening. The third Sunday
hymn sing will also be held Sunday.
'
pOtluck supper to begin at6:30 p.m.
followed by making final plans for Coin Club
'
the consignment sale to be held at the
Regular meeting of the OhKan
Unit~ of the Meigs County Emer· McGraw. Holz'er Medicai Center. grange hall on May 2. There will al110
Coin Cub will be held April27, 7:30
gency Medical Service recorded eight S~racuse squad u.1sisted:
'
be a work session on Saturday begin·
12:25 p.m .• Holzer Meigs &lt;;linic. ning at 2 p.m. at the Grange hall. All p.m. at the Riverbend Art.• Council in
. calls for assistance Monday. Unil•
Middleport. An auction wi II be held
Po~roy, Peggy Proffitt. HMC:
responding included:
member.&lt; are urged to au~nd. ·
and door prizes awarded. There will
5:31 p,m., Riverside Apartments,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
be refreshment~. and visitol'll and
8: 12 a.m .• State Route 124, Dale Middlepon. Charles Eakins, Veterans Banquet planned
guests
are welcome.
Memorial ·H()spitat Middlepi&gt;rt
Friday is the linal day to purchase
squad a~sisted:
tickets for the Meigs County Grange
10:39 p.m., Kingsbury Road.
Veten1111 Memorial
• Monday admi ..•ions - Mary L:w- Pomeroy. Nev While, HMC.
Pomeroy squad a.~si51ed.
dcrrnilt, Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - none.
.
MIDDLEPORT
(Contl,nued from Page11
cool the junior high section of the
8:46a.m.• General Haninger Park- vidually controlled by therrno5tat.
Holzer Medical Center
buildi"ng with the same system as jn
Dltcha!JftApriii3-Aili'anna way. Kelly Davis. treated at the
According to Superintendent the high school. beca~&lt;e the ceil inS•
Large, Violet Wells, Ml'll. Keith Grice !ltene.
Deryl Well, 1111: units. which are in the newer wing arc 100 low to
and son, Mn. R~ce Bi•sell and
appnidmately. 25 years old, cannot accomodale ductwurk.
.
daughter,oGrace Glenn. t\odrey DavPOMEROY
't'he
gymn1111i11m
will
receive
,
a
be controlled, and run all the time.
enport. Thelma Starr. Raymond
I:12 p.m., South Fburth Avenue.
Also included in the $38 1.265 new ventilation system. which will
Trout. Billi&amp; Woltz.
Middleport. Rhonda Stover. VMH. project will be a new HVAC sy51em make that area more comfortable for
(Publlllbed with pernlls.•lon)
Middlepon squaa a.-.i•ted .
for the high school wing. which will · event~ such u.~ graduation.
RACINE
The !IChool's old boiler will be
·provide
air conditioning and heating
Meigs court news
I:3.7 p:m.• vo,unteer fire depanmaintained to heat common areas in
·
ment and squad to SR 124, motor in the cla•srooms and offices.
Sult filed •
Well said that the ori~inal b~ild· the building. such a~ COITidors and the
(Edllor"l nole: A r-&amp;111 oua1.- vehicle acciden1. EIAOn Spencer.
ing plans had oncluded atr conchtlon- lobby. Ritchie said.
the grlllvancet o f - p111y ~g~lnlt treated at the licene.
ing for cenain rooms in the newlyWell said that he anticipated conIIIIOiher. It doft not ntabtllh guilt
. RUTLAND . .
renovated high school. but now. the siderable return on the district'~
or In-ICe.)
,
.
· 6:01 p.m.• Meigs Mine 31. Salem entire building w.ill be air cOndi- investment in reduced fuel bills once
Home National Bank of Racine Ponal. Durward Hayu. HMC;
tioned.
·
the new systems are in place.
seeks S16,297.58, $686.86 and
The di51rict is unable
$497.49 from Aooy Patterson, Syracuse, administrator Qf the estate of
(ContlnUid from Page 1)
Harold Palterson. in a suit liled In the
Meigs County Court of Common highway depanment builget';
• Approved a transfer of $86,027
Jl~s
. The bank alliO ...:eks a foreclosur der.
.
within the budget of the Meig.~ Coun. Judgment entry
ty Department of Human Service~;
Far rs Bank &amp; Saving~ Co .•
• Approved payment of bills in the
~y. ww; awarded a judgment of amount of $146,224.76, with 224
$21.341.75 plu~ interelll in uuit filed entriu.
earlier in the Meigs County Court of
Al50 preoenl were County ComCommon Plea.' again51 Jame5 w.CJe.. missioner Janet Howard. PrOlleCuling
Attorney John Lenle5, and Clerk
land.
lo bep
Gloria Kloes.
bnily
~nanciolly secure loday
Jury trlllllldtled
WE NEVER
A civil trialliCheduled for ThuBin the yean 1o come willt a r...
day 'in the. Meip County CourJ of
CoMP~MISE ON
Nafianwide" Ne.lt Anoly$il
Common Pleas ha~ been settled.
review. Callloday.
QUALITY
Jurors DMI .not repon.

C:J..~-· ................-.......A5\
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Mogut.u.-........_.........55'1.
Qern.et ,_ ...............,...............73\
GoodY., .....................- .......8\

1

[·

.

Ben Earl Petrel .

home,each
the other
kids play.
Thehouse.
dogs
barkBa..'k
and chase
i.-a the
Supper's on the !'lblc· The oven has
warmed the room. Our two oldest race
through a prayer and tear into chicken
nuggcL~..We cat. We lalk. 'Ml plan the
ncxl day's play. And just to he CC(Uiin the
children don't hear thinp they shoulm't ·
hear. my wife and I keep the news oiT.
The most important business in my
life takes ploce riglt here as the kid.~
repon on theit activitic.~. Five yews ago,
we had none of this. Now, to 011' astonishment and delight. the children bl061101t1
even more brilliantly than the springtime .
bud~. My wife and I squeeze handS and
watch. The president's wonies call wait
Right npw, my 2-year-old boy has a song
he just lcamcd, and we all want to ilea'.

RICHAR
ASIOCII
re11 Writer
.
~~FfiNG
N- President Clinton's apparent desire to have the Unit·
ed States play a lead role in bringing about the arrest and trial of former
, !(hmer Rouge leader Pol Pot for ihe murders of as many as 2 million Cam,bodians can be fulfilled without. offending international law, some experts
say.
The president reportedly has ordered. th~ departments of Defense, State
and Justice tl) prepare strategies to arrest Pol Pot, who from 1975 to 19791ed
. ille Khmer Rouge regime until it was toppled by Vietnam.
If the American government is bold e.nough to take him into custody,
.i.oternationalla\11 is malleable enough to find a country to serve as host for
trial.
.
• 1 "Arrest and trial is readily achievable as a matter of law," says Diane
·Orentlicher, an American University law professor. "The real question is
·Whether there's the political will. The law is not a problem."
. · Adds David Bederrnan, an Emory University law professor: "Given the
~.;,agnitude of the crimes at issue, finding a country or a tribunal willing to
assert jurisdiction should not be difficult.··
··, The· trial probably could not be held in the United States:
· The statute that comes closest to authorizing such a prosecution is the
Genocide Convention Act. But it requires either that the alleged offender be
an American or that some crime occurred in this country.
·! "Our country's laws have not provided the universal jurisdiction enjoyed
:.,Y some other nations," Bederrnan says. "There also could be a constitu·
~tional. due-process problem that docs not arise in other countries."
· , But U.S. agents do have the authority to arrest Pol Pot in Cambodia or By lan Shoale1
I' II bet .gen. •
zine (which contributed to the past
·Thailand.
This month's Playboy featured
Paula Jones
Historically · (again, relatively), fame of Bun Reynolds). I'm envi. "International law would permit U.S. forces to carry out an arrest with Ginger Spice of the.. Spice Girls.
got . squat. appearing naked for the media ou•. Why, when I was hi~ age; I was
ihe consent of the host country," Orentlicher says. "The Cambodian and The cover insisted that should the
I'll bet her seems to have helped .Marilyn Mon- twjce as pale and ~erawny. Of
Thai governments apparently have given such Cllnsent already."
reader purchase the issue, he will
treacherous
roe, Burt Reynolds and Jayne coul'liC, l .wiJI ju~t a college kid. I
• Once he was ih custody, a trial site would .have to he found.
1
indeed find her "starkers ' inside. I
boyfriend
Man~field
professionally, Bo didn't have "Titanic" u_ndcr my
, ; 1)1e U.N. Security Council could set up an international 'tribunal similar took the cover al its word, but did ·
was the only Derek'! Who knows'! She made a hell, if you know what I mean, and
11,0 those prl)secuting war crimes committed in Rwanda and the former
not buy. I only read Playboy for the
one
who few bucks frorn it, but she isn'l ' I think you do.
t Yugoslavia. A potential stumbling block is. the need for council unanimity,
anicles anyway. If it had been Posh,
walked
playing Lady MacBeth bcfause of
To conclude then, bare-naked
1Qccause China is a longtime Khmer Rouge ally.
well. that's another sto..Y (or aniclc,
away with a it. Ditto LaToya. Ursula Andres~. pictures help some. and hinder oth·
, , But no Security Council action would ~ needed to· create a tribunal act- as the case may be).
full wallet Rosanna Arquette and Mimi ers. It's a crap shoot. ncar as I can
ing on behalf of the United Nations if it lacked the "coercive'authority" of
Last month 's Penthouse featunid
from
that Rogers.
lelr. We arc fickle in our voyeurism
the two war crime tribunals at work in the Netherlands.
·
a series of snapshots of Paula
deal: (And
So what"s the point? Who dp we and its consequences. Some get
"Such authority is needed only when there is a country trying to shield Jones, taken by some treacherous
why, I won- wani to sec naked, and who do we whai they richly deserve, a.nd some
the culprit. Here. the consent of the Cambodian government would make use boyfriend who apparently sold
Shoalet
der, hasn't not? Janet Reno? In Japan. maybe. get nothing.
of a less-authorized tribunal possible," Orentlicher says.
them to that most sophisticated of
she sued that · Hillary Clinton? Hubba, you know..
1"11 tcJI you though, if someone
Perhaps the most plausible option is to find a nalion with lhe necessary the girlie magazines. I did buy that sorry excuse of a former lover'!)
hubba. (Like 1hat will ever hap- offered me a gajillion dollars to
' l~ws tn try "crimes against humanily" no matter Who the perpetrator and
issue, hoping thai it might also feaRumor has jtthat Penthouse' has pen!) Unia Thurman'! (Been there.) expose my Oahby writer's hody 'for
·victims arc. Canada and several European nations have laws that would lure Susan Carpenter-McMillan or already offered Monica Lewinsky a Neve Campbell? (Done lhal.) How the vicarious pleasure of others, I
· :lllow them to prosecute Pol Pot in their own judicial systems.
Linda Tripp looking pouty in merry gajillion dollars to starker it up for arc these women rewarded?
wouldn't think twice about II. Hey,
"· Germany. .Belgium ~nd · Switzerland arc among the countries that in widows. Boy, was I disappointed. its politically savvy readership. As
What is it about popular culture I did .some nude modeling in colrecent years have i~vokcd their own laws to prosecute war crimes commit· And the articles? Forget about it.
far as l'know, she has resisted this that creates this sub-culture of lege. Yes! An student$ I&lt;Klk bla~k
" ted in Rwanda and Bosnia. Spain ha.&lt; invoked itS own laws to prosecute
Speaking of sophistication, mo't gencrou~ offer.
naked celebrilies? (There's even, or and white photograph.~ of me as 1
" ~rimes committed in Argentina and Chile.
·
imagine my surprise when I opened
Age seems to matter. Playboy wru1, a soft core monthly called ·writhed around naked in fishnet. If
up last week's New Yorker to find has featured Joey Heathen on, Celebrity Nudes, which consisted any of those ph&lt;ilos should ever
an eight page advenisement, fcalur- Nancy Sinatra 'and Farrah starkcrs. of stills oC movie stars copped from surface. I' m 8iving the world nolicc
ing Courtney Love more in than out The point, if there was one. seemed nude scenes in R-rated motion pic- right now, I want a piece of the
of the lalcst Versace line of cloth· w be that though these women arc turc's, interspcrsoo with layouts of. pmfi".
ing. Hubba hubba..
really old (relatively speaking), starlet hopefuls baring them!ICivcs
(Ian Shoalcs· new book, "Nol
Now
I
like
looking
at
pictures
of
·
they
still
have
fabulous
bodies.
hopefully.)
Wei
Yet," is available from 2.13.61
By The Alsocilted Pre11
bare-naked
women
as
much
as
the
Penthouse
is
a
little
more
rcalis·
And
though
public
nakedness
is
Publicalions,
PO Box 1910, Los
. , . Today is Tuesday. April 14. the 104th day of 1998. There arc 261 days
next guy. But what arc the criteria? tic, if that's the word . They've fea- mainly a female phenomenon, there .Angeles, CA 9007K. The toll-free
,left in the y~ar.
Who gets paid to get naked. and lured old nude black and whites of have hecn naked men as well. numher is l-1100-IJ'.I2-1361.)
Today's Highlight in History:
·
Madonna. Vanessa Williams (caus- ~onardo DiCaprio, for instance, is
lan Shoale1 Is a •,-mlkated
On April 14th, 1865. President Lincoln wa.~ shot:and mortally wounded who doesn 't?
I'll
bet
Love
aQd
Ginger
both
got
ing
her
to
.
tosc
her
Miu
America
trying
to.
sl\)p
pu~lic.ation
of
some
writer
for Newspapir EnterpriH
. by John Wilkes Booth while attending the comedy "Our American Cou~in ''
a nnte pin money for posing stark· title), and the hooker who brougbl in~dvenenl nude shots of his Anodatlon.
, at Ford·s Theater in Washington. 'fLincoln died the following morning.)
ers. or semi-starker's.
down the Reverend Jimmy Swag- !!Crawny figure in Playgirl maga·
On this date:
· .In 1759, composer George Frideric Handel died in Lonilon.
· In 1775. the first American soi:iety for the abolition of slavery was orga. nized by Benjamin Franklin and Benjamin Rush.
.
I' ~. In 1828, the first edition of Noah Webster's "American Dictionary of the
harassment is."
~ ·$nglish Language" was published.
By 8111'1 Eckel
the
media heads
1; • In 1902, J.C. Penney opened his first store, in Kemmerer. Wyo. ·
The only thing stunning about the
So here are the dry, tedious faeu. As Judge
would
say dark·
; ! In 1912, the !lritish liner Titanic. collided with an iceberg in the Nolth demise of the Paula Jones case is
Wright hqs thmonstraud, in orthr for a plaintiff to
ly. Apparently,
; r ).tlantic and begin sinking.
.
thai everyone was so stunned by it.
· •. In 1931 , King Alfonso XIII of Spain went into exile. and the Spanish
But stunned was definitely the it made more
pro11e she has been sexually #umu1ed, she must
eKciting
copy
:Republic was proclaimed.
operative emotion. When Judge
ihow either that sexual.ja11on were reque~ted t11 tJ
· In 1939, the John Steinbeck novel :'The Grapes pf Wralh'"'Was first pub- Susan Webber Wright dismissed to present 5ei'U·
speci.fk condition of empl(Jyment or that ·cerlaln
•lished.
·
·
'JIJnes' sexual harassment lawsuit al harassment
· . In 1968, the Matt Crowley play "The Boys in the Band" opened in New against President Clinton, il was as a Pandora's
011ertures crefJied worldnJ conditions tlud severel1
'York.
called a "stunning" decision by Box -· in which
hilidered an e,rployee's tlbility to do her jtib. To
In 1981, the lirstlest night of America's first operational space shuttle. Time magazille, USA Today, ·the any kind of sex·
Eclwl
ual
expression
in
the Columbia. ended s~ccssfully with a landing at Edwards Air force Base Washington Post, the Chi~ago Trimeet the ltJtter half of that definition - cillled
in California.
home and the New York Dally News. the workplace !•
11
hostile environment'' hartusment •• thi pllllntlff
grounds
for
a
suit
-rather·than
to
. In 1986, Americans g01lint word of a U.S. air rai~ on Libya (because or ABC News~ ~~.New York Times
must show that the luua11ing beha11ior w111 snere,
the time difference it was the early morning of Apnl IS where the attack - both declared 11 a .s.!!lnmng v1ctory simply Slate the dry, tedious facl5 .
So
hete
are
the
dry,
tedious
facts.
occurred.)
'
for the (:!resident." And a CNN
unwelcome t~n4 repeated.
Ten years ago: ·Af~anistan; Pakistan, the United States and the Soviet anchor sa1d "Jud.ge Susan Webber As Judge Wright has demonstrated,
.
Union signed agreements providing for the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Wn~ht . stunned JUSt about every- in order for a plaintiff to prove she
haS
been
sexually
harillised,
she
mUSI
call
-·
an01her
judge_
might
have
serves aoofy JU)'$. It is al10 ultoAfgha!'istan and creation of a nonaligned Afg.han •tate. .
..
one · woth her ruhng.
.
Five years ago: M&lt;lhons of black workers tn South Afnca went on stnke
Meanwhile, Jones and her .legal show either that sexual favors were made the argument that, if tnic, such matcly 1ood for women with ICriOUll'
10 protest the slaying of activist Chris Hani. A U.S. aovemmenl·funded •~am were ·:shocked.." And Chnton rcquc51ed as a specifiC condilion of an eKtremc act a.• eKposing oneself grievances -- · ip which they were
study said that or 3,321 men 5urvcyed, :only. 1.1 percent identi~ed them- ~acks P~~1sed Wnght for her ejllployment or !hal certain overtures ' by someone as high-ranking iu; a subject 1o repeated intimidation and
created working conditions that governor should be ronsidered ICliU· holltilily at work. BccauJIC 'that's
)'elves a&lt; exclu~ively homoae~ual. a lind1ng dtsputed by py acUVISis.
·
courage:
.
,.
• One year ago: Attorney General Janet Reno rejel!ted Republican calls to
Bu~ there was nothmg 51unnmg. · Kverely hindered an employee's al harassment. But in dccidina thai it really what ~exual haraumenl is. It's
:.CCk an independent counsel to investigate campaign fundraisina. James s~kong or c~rageous about Jud.ge ability to doh« job. To meet the lllt- wasn't, Judge Wright was Jiving a n0110111e schmlic:k" trying lo pll Y9U
)\fcDousal, who'd agrmlto cooperate with Whitewater prosecutors investi- Wnght's dec_iswn. And a~yone w11h ter half of thai definition .. called very conservative reading of the law int11 bed.lt"s hislieingnasty and vinsating President and Mn. Clinton. drew a three-year prison sentenc~ for 18 ' the most basiC underSiandmg of leX- ·"hostile environmtnt" harassment • •• n~J$ a radical one.
dictivc and bad1erina -· in otlicr
And an appiOjKiate one. Think words, lwusin1 :· when you 11y
felony fraud and conspiracy counts.
·
ual harassment law knows that..
. - the plaintiff must show that the
•
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Sir John Oielgud i~ 94. Actor Rod Steiger is73.
Unfortunately•. 111051 Ame~cans harassing behavior was severe, abOut il •• u obnoxious u the presi- no.
dent'J alle4ed behavior may bavc
)l.ctor Bradford Dillman is 68. Actor Jay Robinson ("The Robe") i• 68. do nol have a baste understanding of unwelcome and repeated. ,. .
Sen Eckel Is a IJMiated
This is no1 new infonnation ~ an . been. do we really want.a studard writer fGI' NewJpilper Ell&amp;esfilw
Sinpr-songwriter Buddy Knox is 6S. Counlry singer Loretta Lynn is 63. sexual ha~assment ~aw. Th~t's
Equal
Employment Opponunity thatsays·one strike and you're out? A.cltldOL
Actress Julie Chriitie is 38. Baseball's all-time hit leader, Pete Rose. is 57. because until Judge Wnght's rubng,
Send commeniS 10 the author in
Actor John Sitea is 49. Actor Anthony Michael Hall is 30. Rapper DaBrat is !he medi.a rarely offered the kind ~f Commission pamphlet could tell you Shouldn'teven the creepiest auys be
24 Ac1reJ$ Sarah Michelle Oellar' ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer-") is 2 I.
mforrnauon !hat would help Amen- the same thins. And all Judge Wriahl given a chance to be iold "Hey •• e~n: of this' newspaper or ll!nd here' ·ThouJhl for .Today: "As I would nol be a slave, so I would.not be a mas- ·cans navigate !he barrage of charges did was say thai Jones failed to meel I'm nO!,into it" before aeuinJ hauled mail at waeumaol.com.
••
let. This ellpt'esses my idea of democracy.:· - Abraham Uncohl ( 1809· ~ow hems .hurled back ~ forth. any of these standards. Thai's not 10 into court?
186~).
·
1
No on~ really knows w~l sexual . say that the Jones calC was an easy
This slllndard is not Jull one !hal

Jerry W. Moore

MICH.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

' ' ••' ' • •*' •••• •

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel;

Ohio
Valley College beats
Redmen 17-13
.
.

·
Page4
Tuesday, Aprll14, ·1998

Football wasn't the game, but the
University or Rio Grande could hnYC
used a good placekicker as it lost to
Ohio Valley College 17-13 in a nonleague baseball contest at Stanley L.
Evans Field Monday.
Rio Grande (14- 12-1, MOC 7- 1)
rallied from a 10-6 deficit after four
innings of play ·to take a 13- 11 lead
heading to the top of the seventh.
Ohio Valley proceeded to load the
bases with no outs after two walks
and an error on . a routine infield
grounder. Jimmy West si ngled for an

Rockies record 8-4 victory over Rads
moved to second when Belinda threw
more runs in the eighth.
the
bull into the stands for hi• first
Dante Bichette and Greg Col·
career
error.
brunn each went 3-for-4 for the
"I lost my footing on my nele;a.~~e, "
Rockies.
"This (streak) had to end eventu- . said Belinda, whose error was the
ally," Colorado right .fielder Larry first of his career nfter 465 uppeur·
Walker said. "You wail for things to ance!i without one. "Everything
snowballed from there."
dick and maybe tonight is it. "
After Castilla wa&lt; walked inten·
With the Rockies trailing 4- 1 in
the seventh. Bichette and Colbrunn tionally. Kirt Manwaring singled
singled off Cincinnati stnner Gnbe home pinch-runner Cunis 'Good in.
White, who was tiltced to leave with Neifi Perez followed with u two- n
triple to make it 8-4.
a. blister on his indeK li nger.
Walker doubled tu ope . Cul"We didn ' t lose the game,"
orudo's
thind and soored on Bi
's
Cincinnati manager Jack McKeon
single.
said. ·:We threw it away."
"The way we have been getting
Stan Belinda (0- 1) came on and
Castilla homered off the lett-field beat has been embarrassing, "
Bichette said. " We put some hits
foul pole to tie it 4-4.
together
and got some hits from the
"As soon as I hit it.l knew it was
gone." Castilla said. "I saw it was · lower purt of the lineup."
·Notes: Cincinnati phicell pitcher
hooking foul . I told it to stay fair and
Steve Cooke on the IS-day disabled
it hit the pole."
In the eighth. Bichette doubled list, retmtlctive to April 3, with tenand Colbrunn ·singled off Belinda's dinitis in his left elbow. ... The stan
glove. Bichette scored and Colbrunn of the game was delayed 40 minutes
by ruin.

" I gave this team was it needed,"
&lt;aid Wright, who fanned two and
allowed four runs. " Now it ·s time for
us to go after people."
Wright, who struggled with control in his curlier outings. went back
to basics.
" I went back to what got me here
nnd decided to go right after hillers,"
Wright said. " I didn 't throw the
curve •.but kept using my hard slider
a ~d tried to throw as many mikes ns
I could."
The onl y time' he struggled was
when the Reds scored four runs in the
founh. Cincinnati scored on Dmitri
Young's RBI double. Willie Greene's
two-run tripl ~ and Joe Nunnall y's
sacrifice fly..
"Jurney threw an outstanding ballgame and kept us in the game." Bay ·
lor said. "And the hitters finally came
alive. "
·
Vinny Castilla provided t~e big
blow, a three-run homer in Lhe .&lt;eventh. and the Rodies rallied for four

DENVER !API - Some of the
Co l or~do Rockies were ~ redil ing the
end of their eight-game losing streak
to the arrival of a ;lreaker.
A man whose name was not in itially relea&lt;Cd was tackled afterjum~ ­
ing onto the field in near-freeli ng
weather. pulling ofT hi s clothes and
racing across the turf in the the third
inning Monday night.
The Rocki es. somber after being
crushed in recent games. bu rst into
laughter in their dugout, no one
smil ing more than manager Don
Baylor.
.
The incident seemed to boost
starter Jamcy Wri ght. who allowed
13 runs in 7 213 innings in stuns
against Houston and St. Louis. He
delivered seven strong innings.
Curtis Leskanic (1-0) and Jerry
Dipoto had a scoreless inning apie~e
out of the bullpen as the Rockies rut lied for an 8-4 win over the Cincinnati Reds. their first victory in seven
~ames this year at Coors Field.

Tribe outlasts ·Griffey, top Mariners 6-5
Grifli:y'.&lt;third homer in two days anil
By KEN BI!AGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - When sixth of the year.
" I just don ' tlike losing." Griffey
Ken Grifli:y Jr.'s 300th home run ball
ltllldell in the right tield seats, that said after the Mariners dropped to 3·
9 ror the S&lt;~ond- worst stan in fmn was th~ last he saw of it.
Why go to th~ trouble of retriev- chi •.e history. "No maller what haping the ball ? Chances are. more his- . pened. a lo" is a loss.''
• Griffey. who had his 31st career
tori~ milestones are still to come.
multihomer
game. hit two-run shots
Maybe he ' ll keep the SOOth.
in the first against Dave Burba (2- 1)
Or the 6tl01h.
"Growing up wat~hin g my dad. and the seventh against Mesa. His
he never wa' a power hitter." said first homer and a solo shot in the sixth
Griffey. who homered twice Monday by Davill Segui gave the Mariners a
night in ~alll~ 's 6-5 loss to Cleve- 3-0 lead.
" I challenged him. I got beat,"
l:jnd and bec~me the second youngest
player with 300 homers. " He was a said Burba. facing Griffey for the tirst
chntact, line drive, getting guys over time . "I learned something. You
kind ·of hiller. That's the ballplayer can't challenge him.''
The Indians scored six in the sixth.
t~at I wanted to be. I wanted to be just
taking a 6-3 lead on Brian Giles'
like my dad.
: "I've got a four·year·old son who three-run ~omer ot'f Bobby Ayala.
"That's one of the reasons we
. wants to be just like me. I never
rnnde a pitching coach change,"
tbought I'd reach this.··
Griffey's mother and younger Mariners manager Lou Piniellu said.
brother were on hand to .ee his hi s- "That's what we're going to work on.
toric homer. estimated at 391 feet off · We're going to work hard at it.''
Seattle's bullpen blew two saves
lpse Mesa.
.
They also had to watch Seattle's against Boston last weekend and the
bullpen blow another lead and waste Mariners fired pitching coach Nardi

.

•

TAKES CUT - Southern'• Josh Davia taka• a cut at a pitch dur·
lng Monday's TVC blnball game a~lnat the visiting Melgl Mantllcllfl, who loat11·1. {Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

So.uthern gets 11.~1
victory over Meigs

•

•

HE'S OUT- ClnclnnatiMCond baRman Brei Boone {left) lays IM
leather on the Colorado Rockies' Greg Cofbrunn lor the out on Cot:
brunn'• 11111 1tt1mpt olucond ba.. In the eecond Inning of Mon·
day nlght'e National League conlftt In Denver, whare·lhe Aocklea won.

.

.

~- ~~

Marauder right fielder misplayed a
By DAVE HARRIS
ny ball off the bat of Josh pavis.
Sentinel Correspondent
Southern scored in every inning . Meigs threatened in the top ofthe
en route to a Il - l win over Meigs in fifth inning loading the bases on two.
Tri-Valley baseball action Monday walks and a Southern error, but
evening at Southern High School.· . Stewan popped out to s.hort stop to
The game was called in the fifth end the threat.
The Tornadoes scored three in the
inning due to the 10-run mercy rule.
fifth
to end the scoring and the
With the win Southern is now 5·
game.
Aaron Williams reached on a
5 heading into Wednesday's game
with Eastern, Meigs drops to 4-3 in Meigs error, and one out latrr Corey
overall and 3-3 in the TVC heading Will iarns went deep over the left field
into action at Nelsonville-York, in a fence for a two run home run and a
10-1 Southern lead. Matt Dill. the
make-up game on Tuesday.
The Tornadoes jumped on top in next batter for Southern hit one in just
the boUom of the first inning. about the same place ror back-toMichael Ash walked and Corey back home runs and end the game.
Dill went the distance to pick up
Williams followed with a single. One
out later. Adam Cumings singled into the win. He struck out five, walked
left field .to give Southern a 1-0 two and scattered four hits. Will jams
had h,is home run and a single to lead
·advantage.
•
In the second, Southern took Southern. Cumings added two sin·
advantage or wildness from Meigs gles, !)ill added his round tripper, and
starter Jeremy Bentley to put five Billy Young chipped in with a single.
Bentley was the starter and loser
runs on the board. Bentley walked the
for
Meigs with help from Brad Davfirst five batters in the inning, a field ers choice, a hit batter and a walk enport. The two combined to strike
plated the runs and·gave Southern a out four. walk eight ~nd give up six
hits. Manin. Tony Dugan,Stewart and
6-0 lead.
·
Put Martin singled to lead off the· J .T. Humphreys had singles for
·
third inning for Meigs. he advanced Meigs.
to second on a ground out and scored Iontnalllllll
001 -00=1-4·3
on a base hit off tbe bat of Rusty Meigs
151·13=11-6-2
Southern
· Stewart.
Balleries
Coach Mick Winebrenner's crew
Meigs:
Jeremiah
Bentley (LP),
added another run in the fourth
·
Brad
Davenport
(3)
and
Ton~ Dugan
· inning. Cumings and Billy Young
Southern:
Matt
Dill
(WP.) and
bot~ singled with one out. Cumings
then came into score when the Adam &lt;1u111ings

Wellston·tallies 10-0
-triumph over Eastern .

nine walk&gt;. while giving up seven
Eastern hils.
Eastern rallied fur live runs in the
bottom of the first inning when Kim
. Ma~le led off the game with a triple,
Juli Hay1nun reached on an error
allowing Mayle to scort. then after
two nut Valerie Karr walked. Kelli
Bailey walked to Joad the buses and
Kristen Chevalier slammed a two run
Mingle. Suzy Milboan then followed
up with another two run single and
Eastern led 5-0.
·
Evans held Wellston scoreless .in

at bat.
Dan Davis was the big slugger for
Ohio Valley going 3-for-3 with a
. three run homer. Charles Somers
went3-for-5 and had one home run.
He also pitched.five innin gs, but did·
n't figure in the decision. Anthony
Boughner (1 -2) got his fi rst win of
the season and gave up one hit and
one run in one inning pitched.
Kevin Green went 2-for-3 and
scored three runs for Rio Grande.
Steve Hitchcock hit two over 1he
fence and had a double to go 3-for-5
and had six RBI on the day. Shawn

Sommer homered and si ngled and
had two RBI.
Red men starter Scou George gave
up eight runs on six hits in four and
two-thinds innings ·of work. George
did strike out five batters.
Jamie Lambert (0- 1) worked one
and one -third in nings. Aave six runs
on four hits and took the loss.
Rio Gf'~nde play; at· home Tuesday against Mt. Vernon Nazarene at
I p.m. The Redmen then go on the
road and don 't return until Tuesday,
Apri l 21 Ill play Tiffi n at I p.m. at
Stanley L. Evans Field. ·

Rio baseball
team· sweeps .Malone in twin bill
.

Softball Eagles get past Wellston 12-3
Taking ~dvuntage of eight runs in
the first three innings. the Eastern
Eagles rolled to a 12-3 inter-division
Tri-Valley C~nlerence "ictory over
tile Well,ton Golden Rodets Monday mght dunng h1gh &lt;chool softball
action al Tuppers Plain~.
· Ea~tern is now 5-3 overall.
Junior hurler Stephanie Evans
Hurled yet another v1ctory. est~tbllsh ing herself as the Eastern ;~ce with
four ' trikeouts und two walks. while
scattering just four hits. Martin suffered the loss with four strikeouts and

RBI .;;d next came Charles Somers
to drive in two more runs off or
another single.
Still with no ciuts and one runner
on, Jesse Seaton took his tum to get
n single. The runners advanced to
second and third on a wild pile~ .
Alexey Glukhiy drew a walk to
reload the bases and allow Allen Bee
to single for a two run single to give
Ohio V~lley a four-hit, six-run inning.
The Fighting Scots (4-11) took the.
four run lead and the victory after the
Redmen failed to score in their final

.

Contreras on Monday, replacing him straight hits to start the sixth, und
with Stan Williams.
Ayala failed to hold a 3-2 leud.
Gri n·ey. who has hit at least 40
Shawon Dunston ·led off the sixth
with
a single and scored on David
homers four times. is 2K years. 143
days old ..Jimmie Foxx was 27 years. Justice"s double over Grilli:y's heud
32K days when he hit his 300th. Foxx in center. Manny Ramirez hit an RBI.
hit S34 homers during his Hall of doubl~. and Jim Thome singled
sharply.
The Wellstun Golden Rockets Will, another s()phom!;lre. to linl~h
Fame career.
,
Piniellu brought in Ayala to face again proved why their baseball pro- the game.
"He's had a heck of a career to
WHS added two in the the third. ·
date," Piniella said. "He's on his way Travis Fryman. who gut his first hit gram is u good one as they managed
to doing ;i lot of great things in base- in IS ~areer at-bats agai~st the reliev- to do the little things right in defeat- one in the founh and two more in the ·
cr. an RBI single that tied the score. ing the Eastern Eugl~s 11 -0 Monday fifth. Only four Wellston runs were ·
ball. He'sjust got to.stay healthy."
Noles: Cleveland was the only night in inter-division Tri -Valley earned.
Griffey didn't s~t the ball out of
Ens tern hitters were Broderick ·
the stands, seemingly uninterested in team Grilli:y did not homer twi~e Conference action at Wellston.
The game was a designated home with two singles and a 2-2 night.;
memorabilia- just like his dad. • against last season. ... The Mariners'
"He never really collected any - bullpen is· 0-2 with no saves and u game for the homeless Eagles.
Durst a single and Wes Crow u sinthing," Grifti:y said. "One( in a whil: 7.44 ERA (32 2-3 innings. 27 earned , Eastern i~ now 0-7. Wellston is 9- gle. ,
·
'
he ·d take a jersey home. Our house runs) . ... Seattle staned 2-9 in 197R. 0.
Wellston was led by Nathan Fen- ·
wa~n ' t decorated with memorabilia."
... The Indians agreed to Double·A
Wellston went to · work early, . wick with a single. Ewing 11 double ·
GritTey and his father have 452 contracts with left-handcr Huck Flen- drawing three walks in the lirst and two triples, Matt Phillips u sincareer homers together: Junior dou- er and· right-hander Jim Brower. around a Brent Ewing triple and an gle. Chad Khuri a double and triple. ·
bled up his old man with the 300th. Flener. with Toronto from 1993-97, Andy Mercer two-r4!n single as the Anlly Mercer three singles and Chad·
They are second to Bobby and Bar· · got his first major leagu~ win . at · Rockets blasted to a 3·0 lead.
Bowman a triple.
·
ry Bond~. who have 709.
Cleveland on July 30. 1996.... lndi·
Eastern threat~ned in the second
Eastern is at River Valley tonight.'
Burba allowed three runs nnd five ans right-hander Dwight Gooden. on by gelling ·the first two runners on: Inning llllall •
hits in six innings. striking out seven . the DL with bkeps tendinitis. pitched Josh Broderick getting a single and Well~ton
332-12=11-11-0·
and walking three. Mike Jackson a simulated game Monday.... Cloude Steve Durst a single: however, a pop· Eastern
000-00=0-4-5
pit~hed the ninth for his sixth save.
gave up four runs and six hits in five- up. strike out and ground out end(d
Batteries
Ken Cloude (1 -1) allowed four plus inning•.
the innint~ .
Smit~ 1LP). Will 3rd nnd Broder-·
Wellston hit for three rriore in the ick · ·
'
second to go up 6-0. eventually ,
knocking starter Eric Smith out of the Ewing (WP) and Bowman.
box and making way fo~ reliever lush
Eastern
the oecond and third. then Enstem Milhoan singles and Karr a double
livened up lhf offense with three (1-2).
Mason Bowling Lanes results ·
third inning runs. Kelli Bailey
Wellston hitters were HiggenGolf G'o~rse (698 l
walked, Kristen Chevalier walked. botham. Martin, Robinette and ." Early W~dne!lday Mlud .
Bowling
Le&amp;liU~
(a~
C)l
April
!)
Men
then after an out White and Mayle MahaiTey nil with singles.
'
Record
Hlllh serleM: Bub Stivers (497),
walked to force home a run. Chasutie
Eustem gllo!s to River Valley today Tum
Me1gs
County
Golf
c;ourse
68-44
Steve
Burton (478)
Hollon then ripped a two run single for 11 non-teague contest.
·
S&amp;S
Sports
Curds
.
68-44
Hillh
pme: Stivers (187): Roger
for an B-0 Eastern lead.
!pplng ll!.llht
Thundq
Alley
tunes
57-S5
Carpenter
(175)
Eastern added single runs in the Wellston
000-102-0=3-4-10
Lifo
On
Murs
50-62
Women
founh and fifth and two in the siKth Eastern
SOJ-112-~= 1-2-7-4
49-63
High series: Helen Phelps (520):
Tony's C;~rryoul
for the 12-3 finale.
BallerleM
F.O.E.
2171
44-68
Debbie
Satre &amp; Murgnret Eynon
Eastern 'hitters were -Kim Mayle .
Eastern: Evans (WP) and Bailey
Team
hlah
~~erles:
Meig~
Counly
(tied
nt
479)
with a triple and two walk.&lt;, Hayman
Wellston: Mullin (LP) and Mahaf·
Golf Course (1930)
.
High pme: Phelps ( 198): Mosstwo singles, Hollon. Chevnlier and fey
Team hlah 11m!!: Meigs County man ( 189!

.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Pom~roy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,Apnl14,1998

The University of Rio Grande
baseball Redme~ ran their winning
streak in Mid-Ohio Conference play
to six consecutive games after sweeping Malone College Saturday.
Rio Grande (14-11 -1, MOC 7-1)
overcame a 4-0 ,deficit in the si'xth
inning to win game one 5-4. The
Redmen scored a lone run in the bottom of the sixth and manufactured
four more runs in the seventh to earn
the win.
Kevin Green· led the Redmen
attack, going i -for-4 with an RBI.
. Steve Hitchcock went 1-for-4 and
drove in a pair of runs. Shawn Sommer was l-f6r-3 with nn RBI and
pinch hitter Brian Hawkins also had
an RBI.
Ryan Bishop went 2-for-3 to lead
the Pioneers' offense. Jim Williamson
and Paul Josett each had a hit and an
RBI.
Rio Grande's Jeremy King (2-1)
came on in relief to net the win. He
pitched two innings and struck out

one batter.
Redmen starter Blu Johnson
pitched five innings, giving up three
runs on six hits. Johnson struck out
one bauer and walked two.
.
Malone reliever Zach Gall gave
up two runs on three hils after entering the. game in seventh and was
charged with the loss. Staner Rob
Hill held the Redmen at bay for five
innings before surrendering three
runs. He recor&lt;jed fiv~ strikeouts and
allowed'just four hits. , ·
In game two, Rio Grande survived
a ·six run .barrage over two· innings
and came .rrom behind 'again to defeat
the Pioneers I0-6. Af.ter jumping out
to a 3-0 lead at the end of three
innings. the Redmen were victimized
by a two-run fqunh, followed by a
four-run fifth and tratled 6-3 going to
the bottom of the fifth.
· The Red men had some offense of
their own in reserve in the bottom of
the fifth, scoring six runs to take a 9. ~ advantage. Rio Gmnde added an .

insurance run in the six th.
Green went )-for-4 and scored
three runs for the Redmen. Hitch~oc k
was 2-for-3 with two RBI and scored
a run. Sommer went 2-for-3 wi th
three RBI and scored a run. Adam
Welsh was 1-for-4, scored a run and
drove in two· runs.
Williamson went 2-for-4 and
drove in two runs for Malone. Rob
Robinson was 2-for-3 and also had ·

tWO RB I.
Tom McGra1 h 13·3) pitched live
innings and

~ truck

o ut four baiters to

notth the wi n. McGrath registered no
walks. Jamie Lambert came on in the
sixth and held Malone.to just one hit
on the way tp his lifth save of the seaso n.

The Redmen beat up Malone
starter Mike Vo lz (3-2) who was
tagged for eight ru ns on seven hit ~.

RE·ELECT

FRED HOFFMAN
Your
·M•igs County Commissioner
FULFILLED FIRST TERM PROMISE Of
NO NEW LOCAL TAXES
.. ._llliiiiiiiiiilliliilliiiil"iiidldiiiaiiileiil.Fli'odiiiiiHiloffiiimiiiaiiln,li2iii56iiSiioiil.FlioiilurtilhliiAiii'""oiiMiiildditiiiiepoiiiiirt
iii
'liiOiiihii'oli45iii71i60iil

--

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ARRIVES AT SECOND- The Mllga Mar1uderl' C1.-y Sanford (10)
llldn lnto·ncond bin ahaad of the tag by Southern•• Kim lhle dur·
lng Monday's TVC eoftball game In Racine, where the Torn11C1011 W9fl
12•:l, (Sentlnel photo by DIVI Harrl1)
.

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Southern softballers.
roll past ·Meigs 12·3

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LOOKING FOR A JOB

Ill p.m.

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the winning pitcher while Jenny · a •plil with Malone ( 11 -12. MOC ~- · !ICa'!OII. The Redwomen pound~d out
Murphy M
Uffered the lou ror the Red- S). Murphy (3-3) was ·the l~ing · 10 hits to snap a five game IO!!in&amp;
pitcher a~ the Redwomen fell 3-2 in ;, ~treak . Pelei'!IOn (8-5) w:a.• the losing
women.
the lillll pme With the Pionecn. Mal- pitcher. .
In game tWO, WaiM
h"J · Amy one gOithe game-winning run in the
The Redwomen . travel to
Lehmer tossed a complete game l:w of seventh. Kim Peterson (8-4) Portsmouth today to face defending
thnee-hitter and shut out Rio Grande . wu the winning pitcher.
MOC champion Shawnee State.
Rio
Grande
pined
tome
meuure
Oame
liiiN! i5 5:30 p.m. ·
~- Rebecca Evans took the lou for
Rio Grande. The Redwomen com- or redemplion in tht 11il end of the
Rio Grande returns home Thuntmitted four errorMin the KCond twinbill, defea1ing Malone S-1. Evans day to face Cedarville in an MOC
game.
•
(9-2) Kattered four flits on the way twinbi)l al 3 p.m.
Saturday saw the Redwomen earn to her ninth C!JIIIP!ele pme .of tbe

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Softball Redwomen lose thre·e out of four
·The Univeuity of ~io Grando;
liOfrbafl kam dropped to .SO'&gt; in MidOhio Conferenu play after sttug·
gling through a rough Ea~er W(tk·
end in Clll)IOII.
Rio Grandt ( 12-6, MOC 5-5)
dnlpped- a doubleheader to Wal§h
(22·7, MOC 10-4) to open the weekend la•t Friday. The Lady Cavo
Koi-ed rwo runs in each or the fourth
and fiflh innlnguo grab a 4- 1 win in
game one. Kim Heimptner 111-6)

F.ASTF.RN CONFERF.NCF.
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•

Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency may be able to assist
you in the following ways:
·Employment: We're looking for drivers to perform delivery
dll)ies In Gallia County. Daytime work on a regular schedule,
Monday through Friday, $5.15 per hour, up to 20· hours per
week. We also have non-driving jobs available.
Training: Short or long term training In fields such as
.
compulerl!, nursing asat~. COL, and others at area tchools. •
Do Both: Work part-time, anend claas part-time. ·
Sound Interesting: Call 367-?342, 446·101B, oF 992·6629 to
request a JTPA Preapplicatlon.
.
\

'

Gallla-Melge Community Action Agency
P.O. Box272
·eo1 o North State Route 7
Chllhlrt, Ohio 45820-0271
Equll Opportunity Employer
'

(100WAO)

'

I

and didn~ walk a batter. Caldwell and
By DAVE 11ARRIS
Southern scored II runs .in the lhle led the hit parade for Southern
with two singles each. Sayre, McK·,
third inning and went on to defeat
inney. Lyons and Jody Hupp each
Meigs I 7.-3 in Tri- Valley Conference
added singles.
·
1101\ball action Monday e&gt;"cning at
Amy Hysell was the staner and
Racine.
The Tornadoes scored first in the loser for Meigs. Laudennilt went the
second inning. Ashley McKinney final 2 213 innings. 'The two comsingled to lead oft' the inning, •he lat- bined to strike out three, walk 13 and
scalier eight hits. Laudennilt had a
er came in to. score on a ground out.
.
pair
of singles to lead Meigs. Kelly
Then came the big thind inning for
Gilkey added a triple, Casey Sanford
Southern. The Tornadoes look advantqe or six walks, four Meigs errors a double and singles by Wigal, Vin- .
1(111 singles oft' the bats of Cynthia ing and Miller.
Meigs will trav~l to Nelsonville-·
Caldwell, Kim lhle, Stacy Lyons and
York for a make-up game today,
Kim Sayre.
while Southern plays . Eastern on.
Meigs added three runs. in !he
WednesdaY:
si~th inning to close out the sconng
in the sixth ihning. Tonyi Miller and ln•lnllP'III
Meigs
000-003-0=3-7-tj
Siephanie Wigal had singles and
Southern
l(li)O-OOO-x=l2-8-2
Miller came into score on a basehit
Amy Hysell (LP), Tangy Lauderoft' the bal of lin&amp;Y Laudennill. :
milt
(5) and Tangy l,.ltudennilt and
Wigaf and Laudennilt both came into :
Casey
Sanford (5)
·
~eore on back-to-baclc Southern i
Kim Sayre (WP) and Ashley
enon.
,
Davis
I
Sayre wu lhe inning pitcher, Kim .
srrucik out seven, p .ve up seven hits

"Encourage your child to read a newspaper every day, and
one day that child will grow up to be king o~ the hill."
I

When 1 was growing up my dad taught nie thatto make it in spor ts you have to use your head as well as you~ body. He was
· a great athlete and a great reader. He and my mom helped me train my m1nd by read 1ng to me a~d teachm g me to 1·ead .
Start reading to your kids today. They're nev~r· t oo young. And . encourage them to rea d a newspaper every -~ay. Newspape.~s
educate and inform hke nothing else. Who. kAows. the head start you give cou ld one day help make your chd.d k1ng of t he htll .

The Daily _S entinel

Grant Hitl. bosketball player

It all starts with newspapers.
l H 15 M [ 5 S 1\ C I

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Page 6

• The Dally Sentinel

Time out f.or·tips

·I

l

BY BECKY BAER
when slirring foods that arc cooking. antibacterial soap and warm water
Meigs County
Metal
ones
for at least 20 seconds. Hands
Extension Agent
may become
should be washed before and after
Family and Consumer Sci· too hotlo hanhandling food , going to the bath·
cnces/Community Development
die. Likewise.
room. blowing your nose or coughSafety in the kitchen is very make sure that
ing, changing a diape~ or touching
your pel. ·
important. II has been said that more the 1id handles
accidents occur in 1he kitchen and for the pans do
When shopping for food, pick lip
bathroom than any ot her place. 001 conduct
refrigerated and frozen foods just
Some simple rules IQ prevent heat.
before checking out. Make sure that
mishaps and illness are given below.
Knives
meat juices don't drip onto the proDo not usc a chair to reach high should
be
duce in your grocery can or refrigershelves. A foot stool or a ladder is washed sepa·
Saar
· ator. because they could contami·
much safer. To further-prevent ~falls, - rarely. Do nol puttnem intolne dtsh-: nate-them:-As-soon·IIS')'ou·get home
use nonsktd rugs. espectally . on walcr while doing the reSI of the put the food away properly.
·
waxed floors . Always have cabmet dishes. Since the suds hides them.
Check freshness dates and don'l
doors and drawers closed, so heads someone cou ld accidentally pick buy containers that have broken
won't accidentally get bumped.
them up by the blade, causing a cut. seals, arc leaking, or are dented.
Do not have aerosol cans near ihe
Usc plastic culling boards • They provide an open door for
· stove or an open name. They can · wooden. ones allow microorganisms genns.
explode at htgh lemperatures. Lt~e- to hide where they can .contaminate
Never use eggs thai have crac ked
wtse. do not have cords runnmg the food . After culling up uncooked shells. Genns that cayse Salmonella,
across the stove or the sink. The foods. wash knives. ·ulensils. and the a foodbome illness. can enter the
waler and the electricity could cause culling board thoroughly. Do nol eggs .. For that same reason, don't
an elcctrocutton .
reuse them on cooked foods unless taste raw eggs or doughs that have
Avoid a~ electrical octopus. Too they have been washed. This will not been cooked. Thaw meats and
many apphances plugged tntn an help prcvcnl recontamination.
poultry slowly in the refrigerator. or
outlet can cause an overload and
Be careful of where you slore you cou ld lhaw ihem in the
short them nut. Do not allow cords "food and cleaning supplies. Do not microwave if you cook them imme·
to drape down over lhc counter keep deaning products and poiso· diatcly following the thawing cycle.
where lhc apphancc can easily be nous material s under lhe sink where
Because of the possibility of food
pulled over.
.
linlc children ,can get into them . poison in g, remember the simple sloFiammable matcrtuls such as Never put poisonous substances m gan "Keep hot _food s hot; cold foods
paper lowcls and napkms should be food conlainen; that could be miS- cold." Foods that should be enher
kepi away from the mngc. sinc•e they taken for ed ible items, such as motor hot or cold should nol be left oul at
can. quickly ca1ch fire . s~.~causc an uil in a pop huulc, and never :-.tore room temperat ure for more than two
accidental bump could cause the pan food and dcaning supplies side-by- hours. On very warm ,C\ilys. one hour
lo .spill. · keep pan h~ndles turned side . bch of the se (houghlless acts is the limil. Baclcria. m~ltiplies very
rnward .
t:uuld cause a dcUdly situat ion.
rapidly betWeen the temperatures of
Always usc hot pa~s or pot hold·
Do not mix deaning products and 45 degrees and 140 degrees Fahrenerli when rcmo~mg dtshes from the . ble:tch when sanitizing surfaces. he it . This tem perature range is .
oven . Dn nut usc n towel. because 11 Toxic fumes m:iy ·be given nff thai known as "The Danger Zone." To
is not thick enough to prevent l cnn cause se vere illness ;.md possi bly furth er prCvcnt 'food poisoning.
burn. In addilinn. il may be damp. even death. Read tbe label on the rcfriucratc any lcfuwcrs in shallow
which could result in a steam burn. cleaning producl and specifi.:ally &lt;:&lt;mt;inors as soon as the meal is finWooden spoons should he used follow itS dircctinns.
ishcd.
To help prevent the spread of
ecrms. wash hands thoroughly wilh
Uiurcri Elizabeth Roush, daughter of Jamie and Becky Roush of
Mason, celebrated her lhird birthday
March 22. She was honored with a
pany at the home of her Brandpar~nts, Gary and Donna Northup of
Clifton.
Those anending, in addition to her
parents and grandparents, were
brother Michael Todd Roush; grandOur statlsllcs show that mature
parents, Larry and Sonya Roush;
drivers and home •owners have
great-grandmother · Doris ·Yonker;
fewer and less costly losses·
Jordan Roush, Jodie Roush, Andrea
than other age groups. So it's
·Lanier, Rachel Beasley. Ben Lowonly
lair to charge you less lor
man, Nicholas Nonhup, ·Michael
your
Insurance. Insure your
Northup, Sherri Hendrix, Zach, Tyler
·
home
and car with us and save
and Alexandra Hendrix, and Jessica
even
more with our special
and cassidy Cleland.
1
discounts. :
Lauren is also the great-granddaughte of Mary and Harold Cook,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Buck Yonker ot
Letart, and Debbie Northup of
LAUREN ROUSH
Clifton.

Turns three

.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
lavings. .

'

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
If you are Interested In obtaining a .c ommercial [j)rivers Ucense
as a truck driver and if you are a disl~ted worker.
Galli.a-Meigs Community Action 'Agency may be able to assist
you with training, testing, and related costs.
(A dislocated worker is generally a person who has worked at
least 12 months at ona occupation, is Aow unemployed or
under employed due to a business closing or cutback, a~d is
'unlikely to return to their previous occupation. There are
additional qualifications, howaver income Is not a factor)
To find out if you qualify please call ~67-7342, 446-1018, or
992-6629 and request a JTPA Preapplication.
Training period is app(oximately four weeks, training will be
conducted in Marietta, Ohio or Ashland, Kentucky.
•
Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency
P.O. Box 272
801 0 North State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 4562G-0271
Equal Opportunily Employer

.

(100WAD)

Public Notice

Public Notice

Mtlgs County floodplain
varlenca boerd will moat
Aprll17, At 2:00p.m. In lilt
Mtlgo County Com·
mil...,.,. Offtct.
Edwlrd Werry
1'1-pltln Menagtr
(4) 14, 152 tc

thonco Wut 1850 !tat to 1
pool in tht Northwttt cornor
ol70 lcre Lot 1121; thonce
Southl25 foot to tht ltnd ol
Myrtle Root; thonco Ettt
IB55 ltll to the W11tlino of
100 ocre Loi 1138, t~tnco
North 125 loot to the piece
of beginning, containing
35.01 acroo, more or•lett.
AltO, a pert of 100 tcrolot
1131, Towne 3 and 4, Aonoo
. 11, beginning at 1 otone
cornor In the North lint ol
100 ecro lot 1131; thonco
Wool 504 loot to tho
Northwoat cornor of 100
tore lot .,38; which point It
ItO loot Norlh. of the
Northllll cornor ol 70 ocra
lot 1121; tho nco oouth 2Ct
fill; thence aouth 28
diQrlll Eaot 30 foot;·thlnca
eouth 45 degrooe Eoot 137
foal; lhtnco South 18
dogro.. Eoot 137 Itt!;
thence South 88 dtgreoa
WHI 112 1111; thonco Woot
20 !tot; thtnco South 3415
loot to tho corn" of tho
·Iormor Boulo Lorklnt
IInde; thonc., Eatt 372 feot
to tht Iormor Mro. A. M.
Connolly'• lond; thence
North 11t · loot to tho
Northloot corner·of tho oold
lormtr Mra. A. M. Connolly'a
land; tho nco Eaot 132 IHI;
thonco North 34111 lett to
the place of beginning,
containing 41 acrta, more or

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue ql 111 Ordor of
Bela 1.. uod out of tho
Common Pleat Court of
M1 I111 Cou ty Ohl 0 1 th 1
n Ltrry
'
' n
coot o1 the
Michael
Bloooll, II ol., PltlntiHo, vo.
Jenlt K. Grotnovold,
Dtlondont, upon 1 Judgmont thoroln rtndorod,
btlng C111 No. 117-CV-123 In
otld Court, 1 will ollor lor
tala ot tho front door oflhl
Courthouse · In Pomoroy,
Molgo Cot~ntv, Ohio, on tho
15th doy of May, 1tltl, at
10:00 o.m., tht following
Iondo and tonamontt,
ioeottd 1112300 81111 Routt
241, Long Bottom, OH
4f743. A complllt lege I
doocrlpllon of tho reeiHIIII
1o 11 1o-:
•Roaloaltto oitultedln tht
Townel)lp of Olivo, .County
of Melgo ond·S - ot Ohio,
dotcrlbtd 11followa:
A pert of TO acr11 Lot 1121,
Towne, 3 ond 4, Ringe 11,
bflllnnlnll 504 leeC 110 feet South from a 11comer In thl North line ot·
100 ICII lot 113t, ·which
p0 int Ia the Northlltt
.,_of TO ..,. Lot 1121;

fH1.

Aloo, • port of the middle
Plrl Ol 100 ICII ·Iof 1131,
Towno 3 and 4, !Iongo 11,
bflllnnlng &amp;ollth 1~ loot

Sou1htttt- o f - Lol
Public Notte.
Numbt&lt; (7'7), tht ltnd htNin
dttcrlbtd
conttlnt 67311 ooo
IN THE COIIMON Pl£AS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY, ol en tcre.
THIRD TRAClT: AltO, tht
OHIO
.
CASE NO. 17 CV OT7 Iollowlng dttcrlbtd 'roal
111111 oltulltd In tht vltl"fft,
THE I'ARMEIIS lANK l
County, tnd Slttl tlortNkl
SAVINGS COMPANY,
end
bounded end diiOribtd
Plllntln,
I I lollowo, io-wlt: Lot
~GIE FETTY,
Numbor Fifty (50) In lht
C~MISSIONER OF THE
Vllltgo ol Pomoroy, Ohio,
ESTATE OF HAROLD W.
fronting on Ploattnt llldgt
FETTY, DECEASED, ET AL, Avtnut ttvonty·l.lvo (75)
Dlflndtntl
IHt end running bo'Ok et
LEGAL NOTICE
that width TWo Hundrod
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
(ZOO) lett to 1 lot Numbor
REAL ESTATE .
Savonty·olvtn (7'7), EXCEI&gt;T
Ao Shorlll of Mala• therefrom 1 otrlp Forty ,(40)
Countv,' Ohio, 1 hereby oller IHI wldo by Ono Hundrod
lontltot 10:30o.m. on Mty and Fifty (·150) feat of the
15, 1. . , A.D., on tho front North Wool corner of. .. ld
otapo oHht MtiQt eounty· -Lot
.
Cour.thou"; Pomt·roy,
PARCEL TWO : Tht
Ohio, tht following following roalaototo oltuoto
ducrlbtd reel oottto:
In tho County ol Mtlga,
PARCEL ONE: Tho Stolt of Ohio, ond In tfto
following doKrlbod promlt· Vlllogo ol Pomoroy, · In
11 oltulttd In tho VIII ago of Fraction No. I o, Sactlon No.
Pomoroy, County of Molgo 14, Town 1 end Rang• 13
ond Sltto ol Ohio:
, lind doocrlbod eo lollowo:
FIASTTRACT:Aparctlol Beginning
ot
tho
lond Forty (40) !tot wldt on Southototorty comor of 1 lot
Ploeaont Rldgo Avonua In conveyed to Herman Warrv
Lot No. Fifty (50) In tho by deed ol oven dttt
VIllage of Pomeroy, Mtlgo htrtwlth; thonct oouth 43'/•
Countv, Ohio, ond running deg. Eta! Forty-three (43)
btck 11 that width One Hun- loot thonco oouth 48'/• dog.
drod tnd Fifty (150) 1111, Woot Forty (40) felt; thtnct
baing tho oemo piece North 43'/, dog. Wool forty·
oxceptod ond re11rvod by, thrH (43) loot; thonco North
Thomoo Bockloy end wtlo In 48'/• dog. Eut Forty (40) Ito!
o conveyance of port of uld to tho pltce·ol beginning.
lot to Wondtl J01chlm ond
Aoloronce Deed: Volume
conveyed by Theodoro 323, Page 441, Molgo
Beckley to Gottlieb County Dud Recorda.
Wildermuth by daod datod
Tho above doocrtbtd rul
Novembor 17th, 1173, ootllt hal boon eulgnod
recorded In Vol. 41, Page the following Auditor '•
503, Mtloo County Atcordo. Porcol Numboro: 18·01885,
SECOND TRACT: Sltuotod 115·01888 and 16-01887.
In tht VIllage, County and
Sold rtiol ootalt wao
Stolo aloreotld, ond bound- oppralttd 11$12,000.00.
od ond doocrlbod 11
Stle of told reel ootlite to
lollowa: to-wit: Being • port be lor not lou thon two·
ol Lot No. Sovonty·tevtn thlrdo (2/3) tho olor~oold
(77) In tho VIllage ol oppralotd ·voluo. Caoh In
Pomeroy, Molgo County, hond on dele ofoala.
Ohio, and dotcrlbed •• lol·
Sold 1111 l'o tub)oct to
Iowa: Beginning ot tho North opprovol by tho Common
corner of tht Brtw1ro Ctllor Plooo court, Mtlgo County,
lond oold Ia Kothorlnt Ohio.
Shollor, thence South 49
Jamto M. Souloby
dtg. Eatt Ono Hundrtcl and Shariff, Melo• County, Ohio
forty-two (142) loot to Wylllo (4) 14. 21, 28 3tc
Hill Avenue; thtnct E111
with ttld Avonuo to ttoko;
• ·Public Notice
thence North 42 dog. Wtot _ __;..::;:.;;.::..:.:.:.::=-Thrtt Hundrod and eighty· Notice ol Election on Tax
oovon Ill to Loonord Ltvy in EXCIII of the Ttn
Wtrry'o corner; thtncl
Mill Umltatlon
lOUth 48 dtQ. Wttt forty
lltvloecl Codo, Socllont
(40) leot to Worry'o corner;
3501.11(g), 5705.19,
thence North 42 dotl. W11t
5705.25
43 ltot; thence South 48 NOTICE It hlreby .given
· dtg. Wool lilly ltot to tho thlt In purouonce of •
lint of tho Brtwer Collor'o Roeollitlon of tht loud of
lond; tlrtnct 42 dog. E11t 50 Townthlp Trullot!o ol tho
loti; thence South 48 dag. Townthlp
of
Scipio,
Wtat 75 ltet to the pltc~ of Pomoroy, Ohio, p1111d on
beginning, contolnlng Ont tho 17th day of February,
end 33/1000 01 on ocro, t . . thora will be oubmlttod
EXCEPTING tho mlntrilt to I VOII of tht people of
thtrtln ond oLibloct to tho oold tubdlvlalon 11 I
right of woy In ond through Prtmorv Election to bo held
thl land below tht turltco In tht County of Molgt,
rooorvod by Somuel Wyllyo Ohio, II lht reguler placet
Pomeroy In t~o dud to of vollng thoroln, on tho 5th
·Gottlieb Wildermuth dotod day of May, , . ., tho quoeAuguet a, 1171, ond lion of levying 1 lex, In
recorded In Vol. 38, P•o• ...... of thlten mlllllml18·
313, Molgt County Rocordo, tlon, lor tho banollt ol
EXCEPTING oloo 31/100 .of Scipio Townahlp lor lht
en ICrt aold to Cherltt A. purpoot of lire protection.
Wllllomoon out of tho Seld tax being: a replace-

•

Tuesday,Aprll14,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Tuesday, Aprll14, 1998

Public Notice
1111111 ttx o1 a.o m11111 • ,...

exottdlnl 2.0 mila lor
one clolllr of IIIU-

not

lion, which amountl to
twenty Otntl (f0.20) lor
-one hunclrtd dolltrt of

"!__ljtllan lor nve Ill ~­
Tlie Poll lor ttld l!l.ctlon
wtll open It 1:30 o'clock
1.111. tncl Nmlln, optn Until
7:30 o'clock p.m. of llkl

day.

By_, ollht lolrd
of Elections,

ol Mllgt Countv, Ohio ·
Htnrv L Huntor,
Cht.lrrntn
Alii D..Smlth,
Dlroctor
D~td-Mt~~bo, 1. .
-_(4) 7, 14, 21, 28 4
Public Notice

Business Services

of vcMtllfl lhtrllit, on ihe Slh
day of lily, 11111, 1111 qual-

lion ol l.ovytng 1 1111. In
u - of tht ton mill limitation, lor tht blntfll ol
P - oy VIII• tor tho purpoae of ... prottctlon.

llCOHdlng 1.0 mlllolor lOCh
one doller · ol veluellon,
which omountt to IWiniY
(SO. tO) lor oac11 one
hunclrtd doillrl of VliUa•
tlon lor llvo(S) ytll't.
Th4 Polio lor ttld Election
will open 11 &amp;:30 o'clock
a.m. and Nmoln opon unlll
7:30 o'clock p.m. ol llld
dey.
By order olthl Boord
of Eltcllono,
ol Mota• County, Ohio
Htnrv L Hunter,
Chelrmon
A118 D. Smith,
. Director
Dltld Mtrch 10, 18118
(4) 7, 14, 21,28 . +TC

Joe N. Sayre

..

992-6687 .'

LADIES
NIGHT
.
I

Ufe Home Car Business

n. iv.

Public Notice

PnJt..'

Ladies, mark yo4r calendars;
On Tuesday, April 14th,
starting at 8:00pm, a private
party at the Southfork Inn,
fealuring Chippendale style
· Male Review!
Door prizes, OJ and - ·
ladies.only.
· Admission is $12:00.
. Must be 21 or over.

· Public Notice

from a etont corner tn the recorded In Valume 216,

North line of 100 aero lot
113t; thtnco North 26
dogrooe Eoot 130 foot;
thence North 35 dogrttl
and 30 mlnut11 Elot 110
lilt; lhtnco North I degrtto
ond 30 mlnutoo Eut 130
loot; lhtnco North 11
dogro11 W11t 114 1111;
thonct north 50 dogrett
W11t 150 1111; thtnco touth
610 lttt to tho place ol
boglnnlng, .contolnlng I .24

acres, more or leaa.

Contolnlng In all 17.32
acrea, more or leaa, aubjtel

to aliltgol hlghwayo.
EXCEPTING real ltllto
con.v tytd by Jotiph 1nd
Ada Bluoll to Chootor ond
Dorolhy Wtllo by doed
dated Oclobor 23, 11158, ond

Page 817, M•lo• County
Dtld Rtcordt.
·
DEED REFERENCE: Book
4~. P•o• 115, Molgo County
Olllclal Aocordt.
•
AUDITOR'S PARCEL NO:
011-00139.000, ot-00140.000,
ot-011141.000.
'
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
52300 81811 Routt 241, Long
Bottom, OH 45743.
REAL ESTATE APPRAIS.
ED AT: 142,500.00. Tht rool
oototo connot bt oold lor
ltto than two•thlrdo tht
opprolood value.
·
TEAMS OF SALE: Cath
on delivery ol dtod. Sold
oubjoct !1)"-eccrued roll

NOTICE

Used Washer &amp;
Dryers, Refrigerators,
Rang·es,
(90 aay warranty.)

French ·city
Maytag

111111 tiXH.

(4)

Jomtt M. Souloby, Shorlfl
14, 21, 28 3tc

Business Services

.Pomeroy VFD
Chicken ·&amp; Rib
BBQ
Sun.. April 19th
Serving starts
11:00 am-

·SUE'S GREENHOUSE
Verlety, G••llty ••~ Ltw Prl••
"We don't want lo make rno11e1, H?e jual
walll lo •*:U flower•. '

a. Veget.ble Fl.ta
Hanging Baskets $6.13

Bedding

Atbloornfng Ullll, HOIII, Ptonllo, Blltdlng Hllrll, lie.
Variety of Perennlale 94fl
Fruit &amp; Flowtrlng T11tt, Shrulll, Plnn &amp; Ar11111 ·
Momlng 8tltr CR 30
.
RIICI1111, Ohio
141-2115

a

'G ravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill. Dirt

614~992-3470

'

Uutl Hav• Hand Toolt,

Ellf*loncecl. 740-245-0437.
OWNER OP£RATORI

•

FLEET OWNERS
WlNTEDI

Flolbedo Only
Compelillve Poy.
Haohh lnL Avoiable

8111-84~ .

ConliCI

Par11 Manager Needed, Exped·
entad Neceuary, No Phon•
Calls, River Front Honda, Gallpo-

w, Ohio.

CARE

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

Plan ahead. Call
today for free estimate
742·2103 or 446•3622

740-992·5379
Day &amp; EveliirlQ_ Hours

3130198 1 mo pd

-

'

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

'

DUMP TRUCK
'

SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
I'
Dirt• Sand

.. 985-4422

i

.

949·2168
J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULAnoN
• Ymyl Sieling • Soffit
· • faKia • Saamltu

• lllown lniUialion
• Garogos • O.Cks .
24 X 24 Pole Building
alarling ot $5995

or·

740-992·2n2

614-691-7231

LIIDI'I
Plltmlll

CHESHIRE
· Open 24 Hr11. A Doy
7D.oyoAWtok
Hot Breakfast
Slacult Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Cold
• Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Doluxo
All Topplngo
Cell In Drdor11 A'ccapted
740-387·7138

Based on YOU~ pe~ormance •
Plus Vacation &amp; Insurance
'

~

$120
Mileage Limit
Call Randy .

' 992·5050
I
I

I

RUTWII, OIL
AMERICAN UGION
IIECH GROVE ROAD
. GUNSHOOT

SUN., 1:00 PM
Foctorv Choke Only

I

-

Carpet &amp; Uphol.tery
Cleaning
258 Peilrl St.
Middleport, OH

tt2.QCI77

TV'a,

.

Real

Pan-Time. Sand Rasum•• To

RADIA,.OR REPAIR

Service Manager For Small
Equipmtnl Repair. Prefe:r Experienced With Pans Catalogues
And Counter Sales . Start "Pan

P.O. Box 230. Jackoon, OH 45840
All Replies SJOOix Confidonlial. .

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

tONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

,,..,.,..

992·5583 .

•Garagai
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

.

Car To Giveaway, Chr1aler

74~388 ii:JB~.

'

\

I

I
!

FrH E•IIIN,.•

No Job Too Smtrr
Brtan Morrtaon
(740)985-31148

I
I

: 7/22/lfn.

41111 ,.._

.

BAUM LUMBER

9' OC Rib/White

20 Yrs. E~p . • lns ..Qwner: Ronnie Jones

CELLULAR.PHONES
360° Communications

"
JEFF. WARNER INSUUNCE
.

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Fr.. To GOOd Home: 5 Kittens, 1
lAIIIe, 4 Femot01, Ready To Go 41

c-llulll

Trees
Open·Daliy 9-5
Sunday 12·5

........ , ... 1111
·Toro Wllttl HorN Trtctonl
Hot Sprtngt .....
Opon: 7:-..:00 - y t

· HUBBARDS
GREEIHOUSE

7 :30-4:00

41314SA

S recuse 982-6778

352-8283. .

TELEMAIIItETEA
Seeking E•perienc:;ed Phone Per·

son. Ex·Boilerroom Manager Pre·

AppUcationa For Pool Manapr

fefred. Base .. Bonu1 Pay. Excel-

2..,108, Come Ptck Out Your Fl110ilte Now I 740·441-t 288.

don

And Lilt Guard PoliUon&amp; AI LonPool For Tho 11198 SWinmng
Sea..., Are Being Accepted Until

lent Earning Potential. Call 740·
446-4553 For Interview.

Girman Shephefd Australian
Shepherd ml11 pups S mal.. 2 le·

May· 7. Submit In Writing, With
Training And Experience, To Ja-

'TRUCk ORNER TRAINING

riic:e Zwilling, Clerk -Trtt&amp;urtr, AI

ans~r

11 You Are Interested In Obtaining A Commercial Drivers li·
cense As A Truck Driver il.nd U
You Are A Dislocal8d Work«.

&amp;

Country Li'l ing, etc. ~· ~8_4--523-i-:-_soo_.---:-----:

895-3703.
Small female housi doQ, Papil-

Convenience store cashier, Mnd
resume c/o The Oaity Sentinel,

60 Lost and Found

Cool Spot, Coolville. Ohio. now

14108 AI Cardinal Orycleaners,

Found: SIT8I Black and Biown

-d0fl100.
LOST: Black I while Bo&amp;.,n Tor·

"Your One Stop
~omputer Shop"'
INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT .

7"t,~;1!,~

POMEROY, OH

Custom Homes

DriYefl

on

Remodeling

M&amp;J

Yard Sale

(tO TDAO)

All Co""ontional Floet

, I

' COL·A &amp; 1Yr. OTA Req.
cau t&lt;on 1100·3115-10.5

a.

DRIYEI!S
WANTEOI
500 Miit -~ I
Ho!n&amp;E""'Y-_

I

Hoo111 ......,..,. Provided
With F.,;ly eo-go
..... table. 4011( Roi-l

Plane, ~italln Flr11 Oiu ..
Oiapllleh. Ltte MOdel Conv. '
rrac~&gt;r• w IFialbed Troilt&lt;L
CompolitiVO "-Y

velopea AI Home. Starf"Now. Ho
·••fore tho ad 11 te tun, Experience. Fr~e Supplies, lnlo.

a

I OWl

details, sand SASE ro: N.B. 0.,1
174·301 E111 5rh Ave. Suil8 112
Corsicarw., Te.as 75110.

er. some 10011. 111riouolling&amp;.

80

Prote11iona1 Phle-

Auction
. and Flea Market

Early Morning&amp;.
Aosume To: P.O.
OH 45631, 740-

Pearson Auction Company,
full rime auc1ioneer, complere
auction
tarvice. lic:ented
IOO,Ohio 1 Well Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Ot ~-773-5447.

FRUSTRATED? NO REAL ADYAHCEMENT POTENTIAL?
GlASS CELINO?
If you are emplOyed and tMI JO~o~

90

Wanted to Buy
Aboolute Top Dollat: All U.S. Sil·

are n a no gain lituaOOn, you OWII
it to yourself to considef' joining
the Lo,..n Graup. This is a high

income profeuion, rapid advancemenr polenrial. .and aelf·
tamiliea. For
satisfaction

,.,pino

etc .. .Free Etlimares. Call Bill
Oepencfable man

,,

Will

mow, till

small gardena.,. painl, pul up haJ.
etc . Free Es11ma1es. 304·6 75-

3628.
fumilure repair, refinish and res ·
ICH'AkM\. also CUllOm Orders. Otuo
Va111y Refinishing Shop. L!JHY

Phllipo. 74CJ.9112-115lll.

Georges Porrabl8 sawmill, don't
hllul ,our logs 10 lhe mil juar call

304-1175-1957.
Jones lawn I tare SerYIC8. Frae

Ellim&amp;111, 740-24&gt;&lt;15811.
Mowing and Yard Work, Free Es-

limalt11740) 441 ..()720

your loll job lnt~. call SIM Shafotfs Lawncare Serv~e. Free
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec:ond Srnth II 1514-992..7"0.
E1imatol, Cal 740-441.()318.
-Gaftipolil. 740-448-2842.
Full or pon limo. otlf - . ntllli- Will Care For Elderly Or Hand1·
Antique•: top priceS paid, Rivef- waled to auccMd, muat have capped f'llrson In Uy Home. Rei·
lne Anliques, Pomeroy, Ohio, aalea experience and be atH
· 740·441·1536.
Russ ·uoore owner, 740·8812· work with public, lcf'towtedgt"
~.

noor covering &amp; dacotatlrtg
plua. l q time comnitment nectllary, aend rttume to: Dally
Sont.NI, P.O. Box 72NO. - -

J &amp; 0 Auro Par11. Buying
wrecked or ulveged vehicles.

Will haul Nnk or !rash away. S351
pickup loed. ~-675-5035.

Will Mow I Trim \'our lawn E •·

perienc:eCI Reuonable Rates,
oy, 011. 45780.
R•1er•r.::et, For Free Eabmatea,
Homo Remodeling Rio Grondt, 74CJ.381-«U1.
Noed Ellimallo On Siding -Conc:rtlt Work Windows - Painllng
FINANCIAL

MdWi.Sas,l1......_2111.

lmmeqtate openings tor hOus•
11Hplnglloundrr otcre. Ptrt·diM, 210
ror•tine ahlft•. Paint PINunr

Business
Opportunity ·

304-773-5033.
Nurolna &amp; RthobiUIIIian Cantor,
INOTICEI
1
Sllll Rout• 12, Rou .. 1. lax
Wanted To Buy: Jun11 AuiO'I A"' 328, Point Pltooonl WV 25510. OHIO VALlEY•PlJBI.tSHING
C9,
~.7-11153.
~lonmork-Gtntll.• Allillolt). recomm•nds that vou do buiJ·
ne1;1 with people you know. and
Wontool To Buy: Uud t.loliilt
NOT 10 lind money lhrouph thli
Homn. 740·4..·0175, 31M-t71- Local true~ "''-· C;o~u A CDI. meil
undl you ha~• inve&amp;llgaUtd
5115.
rii!Uilod, log htuling. 740-fl2· .. oftorino.
.
5183.
HOT NEW DIET EARN THOU·
Er.1PLOYr,1ENT
Noed A 3 IJII,., In My .-_, 2 lANDI While Lo&amp;lng Wtighl
SERVICES
Chlldrtn GOod Pty, Ll1o Houll- Ntw II.L.II. Opportunll)', Call 1.
-'&lt;illlll*d, 740-3111-2734..

-.e57.....

'

Nottrltl Nlldtci: Mar,.... It you hiM an 111ablished busi·
ntU lnd Ulltlled parking llfiiiCr.
~~-......
ForTro
lloi1....
Documonto.
local
..t rou mer quolifl to bo a U·Hav~
Roquirocl. FIX Ao""mt TD 0..11 littler. II lnttrtllod coli 1100·2ei·
At FlrttPiuo Dlr"l CA 1·100· 8575.
•
400 1•0.

Now

poy,

hiring 1111 *l•tte, good
lltJiblt hour&amp;. Alllllr ~ ,....

toniiDDininD'IInf'l. ..... 11.

•

I

•

304·&amp;75-7112.

. , A\IMJO, Gallipolil.

OFF

ANTODD,JOBS

Shrubs &amp; weed&amp; 111mmed, mulching, flower beds, land seeping.
sidewalk&amp;, edging, mowint.
tiC .... Fraa Ellimtues . Call Bfll
304·875-7112.

vetope' no prior ftperience. ''"

Clean Late Model Can Or
Truck1. 1110 Mod_.l Or Newer,
Sm•th Bu•ck Pontiac, tiOO East·

.40%

~80 . WantedTO 'Do

SyraCuse, 8:30-? Freezer, furni ·
ture, pteuure canner, jar&amp;, llec:·
tric [)'pw'riter, bar siDOis, dilhla,
linena. Wagner raUitf' and- spray-

1192·6578.

nnrra&amp;Y

And E•am Info Call 1-800-813-

3585, Ert. 8475. 8 A,M. · 9 P.M .. 7
lloyolds, inc

ANTDooJOBS
Shtubl . &amp; WHdl !rimmed, mufc:t1·
ing, flower bedt, landscaping.
mowing,
aidewatk
adging ,

Anrfques &amp; clean used lurnilure,
will buy one piece or complere
household. 01by Martin. 740·

':HEAT .
MIRROR'

Slcuril)', Mainlvnac:e, Park Rang era. No Exp. Needed . For App.

No Obtigation. Sand LSASE To :

Rings, Prt-1930 U.S. Currency,
Stetling. EIC. Acquililion&amp; _,_lry

Pomeroy, O ..lo 45769

WILDLIFE .ro8STO,I21.60 ,fill .
Inc:
. Benerils. Game Waroerls, :

Monday edition-

1:00pft1Fridoy.
Act, Dept: 1351, Bo• 5137, Diot.loving yard 111&lt;1· Fridoy &amp; Sal· 1~"""-"'-Bil~._CA_V1.c78_5.--:--­
urday, 17·18, 12211 Colego Sllttl Earn Si.ooo Wtoldy. Stulllng en-

Diamond&amp;, ilnliquo J-lry, ·Gold

1ll!ia Martin Street

lion homo. 304-882-33:MI .

NeW Hav1n, Mason area. For
special needt child,· prefer Chrtsllon l)ome, 304-882-33311.

Advano.. ONdiiN: 1:00pm th1

Sunday

WANTED: Parr-time babysiner ~ n
New Hav1n, Mason area. For
IPICill nNdt child. pre!et ChriS-

WANTED: PaiHime babystuer In

Evoringo (7:30 ·10:30) a
WookondaBOO-!Q3.&amp;7112

Gallipolis
VIcinity
•" V.niStiNIIutt
"""
'
Bt Ptkf "'Ad-cti
DEAQLU!E:2:00p.m.
1111 cloy llolo,.tho Ill
lo torruft.SUndoy
odhlon • :1:00' p.m.
Fridoy. Monctoy ldHion
-10:00 o.m..SotUidoy.

ver And Gofd Coinl, ProofltiS.

"Builll Your Dre•m"

.

GREAT Pr\Yt
GREAT FAEIGHTI
GREAT IEHEFmll

Home MaatWaahendlt
Good t.liloo I Good "-Y

'

day

•Gallla -IlliG• Coonn•mlty
ActlonAgP.O.Bo• 272
8010 Norl1 S•to Roule 7
Cho&amp;hro, Ol1o 45,821H!272
Equal Opportun&lt;ty Employer

1-800-8ilo-e4oo.

Pleaae ·cont&amp;ct, 740 ·448· 1500,

: Middleport
flltcen. . . OfGtou
Conlllet
&amp; VICinity
HIOO·B5H157.
All Y&amp;nl Salot Muot Bt Paid In Earn 11,000 W-11 Stuffing En·

Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrsdes or consulting.
.

Training Period 11 Approximately

Four W1ek1, Ttalning Will De
Conduc:led In Marietta, Ohio Or
Alhland, l&lt;enllu:t.y.

Independent Contractoro N For Delivery or Champion OirecVIcinity ol Northup
toritt Telephone Baok For Ohio
Found41&amp;118
Yalloy Arot. t.lul1 Be Alloa11 t 8
Lost 7 112 t.lonth Old Mala Cho- Year&amp; 01 Age 1 Ha\lt Ooo 01 An
colate Lab, In Rodney Area, An- Insured Vehicle Immediate
lwera To Name: Oscar, II Found Oponlnao Avallolllt Call lAOS At

Pomeroy,

.UPGRADES.

·

quest A JTPA Preappli«:atiDn.

Coli (740)441-11159

FREE~ ESTII!IATES

~

To Find Out If You Quality Please

Coli 740·387-7342, 740·446·
1016, Or 740·V92-862V And Re-

EARN EXTRA AI

Fenate PIIPIII' With Whit&amp; Spot
On llroall Milllld II&lt;&lt;lOCI.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

CIIIPUIIR
PIRFIRIIUCI

Income Is NolA Factor.!

18 Ohio Rlvor Plaza. GallipoiL
DELIVERY DRIVER .

1192-7597.

•

Calls)

Unlikalr To Return To Their Pr&amp;v·
ioua Occupation. There Are Ad·
dltional Qualifications, However

Perton Needed t.tuat Be
Dependable, Part-Tinie Evening

Hourt, Apply From 8·1 o A.t.l. 41

Room Additions • Roofing

Sund~y

nell Closing Or Culback·, Ana Is .

Coun1er

Found : camera, call to 10, 740·

Garages • Replacement Windows

.614-992-7643

At Lent 12 t.lonlho AI One Oc·
cupadon, Is Now Unemployea Or
Under Employorl Oua To A Buai· ·

hiring 1&gt;1 po&amp;IUon&amp; of cockl, wai~

, -800-287.()576.

·

(A Dislocated Worker Is GeNr.
ally A Per10n Who Has Work&amp;d

1resaea. dlahwuhert and cash·
iet!l. Pick up applications a1 The
Cool Spot .

~~, .five Mile Rd. 304 -675;

I

Related Cos11.

P.O. Bor 728·81,·Pomerll)', Ohio
45708.

For retur" ot black/brown German
Shephard taken tr.om Edilh Rogers larm on Redmud Ridge. An twen to name ·chance.· No
questions ask. Cau John Rogefl

rier wfcoUar in Gallipolis Ferry

•

Gallla -Meigs Community Action
Agency May Be Able To Assist
You Wllh Training, Testing, And

1

70

Easter Flo-ra, ·
Penalet, Cabbage,
Broccoli, CauliflOwer,
Hinging SetkWI,
Phlox, Azlltea,

Sprue•

Someone to till garden on Owl
Hollow in Tuppers Plaint, 7•0·

(10 OWAD)

S:JOOAEWARO

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

~hruba,

P.O. Bo• 272
BOlO North S•te Aetna 7
Chotllwo. 011o 45821H1272

ml•

lon. ~.jjgS-3972.

HUIIAIDS
GREENHOUSE

HOW IN STO&lt;K A
NEW ECONOMICAL
29 GAUGE ROOFING

can 740-44&amp;-7441

Equal QptlO'tunlty Emploior

FOUf

Lliling

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

•Maaonry ·
•General
Commercial and
Reoldentlal
24 Hr. Bobcat SOrvlce
Avalloble

Time. More Hours After Training.
EOE.

Aclloa Agonqo

·

The Syracuae Municipal Building
Or Mall To P.O. Bo• 2e8, SyroLong Haired l&lt;lnena, Gray &amp; cuse, OH 45779.
Blacll, 740-448·3584.
Casllno - Movie Extrat Produc-Magazinls. -Victoria, Southern tion Trainlfl. Major Film Studio

I

'

Ollk-M1Ig1Communlly

A Llldo Or Uoed For Par 11.

leave message

•Room Addlllont
•New Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing .
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1182-6215 .
Pomerov, Ohio

740-985-4422

Estate Sales Parton Want·

ed,.Gallia Count~ Area, full Or

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Computer Graphl.c a
Delllgns
All Landacaplng &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
·Realdentlal
Owner, .Mickle Hollon
Che1ter, Ohio

• '

POSTAl JOBS TO S1B.35 .ttR.
Inc . B&amp;nellts. No Experience. For
App. And E•am lnlo., Call t ·800·
813·3585, EXI 8474 , B A.t.l .. g
P.M .. 7 Days ld,lnc.

LOAD '

YOUNG'$
CARPENTER SEVICE

•

i ·New Homes

OR SUIING

CHIYAUII'S
CIIPET CLEIIIII
SPRIIICLEII
SPECIAL
50" OFF ILL

equip,,

P/8 Coatradors Inc.
.
•Bobcat Service
CONSTRUCTION
•Concrete

' S,.ciifl Thru
I
i
Msrch
~ B ton Delivered

Up to $32,000.+++

-ROBERT BISSELL
.

LIMESTONE

WV 25550. AAIEOE.

74N8~174

LUDSUPI
DUIGIS

FOOD MfiRT

'·

RESTAURANT MANAGERS

llahlng

CB't, llereot - lltfle bH
of evofV!hlng. Locoted
on Ohio River Comporoundt, st. At. 124,
Racine, Ohio.
740-11411-1012

614-691·5716

.

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

Ohio River
Campgrounds end
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
New &amp; uoed ltemo. Wo
Buy • Sail ; Tr11de; Toolt,

·FREE ESTIMATES

•

$65 A

2520 Valley Or., Pt . Pleuant,

CA.L L NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.
SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

Shaw Chlden ..................... 7.30
1hese prices art for SO# boa

Professional Floor
Coverilig

• Slcrlionary Docb

..

STARTING AT

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SI)PPLY
Umntone Hauling
33100 Pine Grove Rd,
House a. Trailer Sites I
Racine, Ohio 45nt .
Land Clearing &amp;
7il0-949-2461
Grading
I
Pig Grower .........................16.25
Septic System &amp;
12% Compltlt H0111 ........... 15.60
Utilities
II% RafJOM ....................,...'8.00
Estimate•
1

CARPET
PLUS

Gulfer .• Rooling
• ...,..,,.,,, Windows

Pomeroy, Ohio 457811

LIMESTONE DELIVERED

HOWARD '
EXCAVATING CO. ;

IUALAPPED TREES
Norwoy Spruce,
White Pint ond
Canedlan
Hom lock
Deflvary Available
.Hemlock Grove Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45719
Ph. 740-982-7285
Altat 4_P.M.

Guttara
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting" · ·
FREE ESTIMATED

Barker, Aaaittant Executlve 0 1·
rec:lor, Pleasant Valley Hoapltal,

males (7A0)441·0616, no

BALLED AND

Don Tate Motors lac. ·

MAINTENANCE

-

OPENING APRIL 1

'

Attention: S.L White
Fax 740-178-2298

'

12/1

11112510..,,,

pelntlng, and let me
do It for you.
Interior
'
8 p.m.
Befort
I'
leave me~~~ge.
J
Alter 8 p.m.
.
(740) 98s-:4180.
Free Eltlmatn
4/11111 mo. pd.

PJL Enterprises, Inc.
· 315 Harding Ave. ·
Sciotoville, OH 45662

.

. (614) 992·38~

Chester, Ohio

• Take the peln out of
'

'I

• Weedealing
• Tree Trimming
e Shrubbery Maintenance

.

.CARPET

.

New 'Hours:
Tues-Frl.10·6 Sat. 10·4
. Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essenlial Oils
· • Easter Baskels
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fill them. ·
Rl. 124 Minersvill~, OH
748-992-4559

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
Commercial)

lng tor a pari-lime Pharmaclat.
Mutt be llcenaed or •liglble for
licenaure In WV. Hospital e~eperl ·
enu a plus. compultr skills 1
mu11. Applicant should have
good communication and super·
visory skills. Send resume to 'Bill

CLELIID'S OUtDOOR

COUNTRY CINDLI
SHOP

LARRY'S LAWN

TIM'S CUSTOM

•

MOWER CLINIC

(614) 949·2804

Save Up To
75% Off

'

FOr

' 1-~4157

· •Mowera •Chain Saws •Weedeatera •Authorized
-~
Dealer For:
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD ·M~rray •McCollough
·Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI
lrlggs &amp; StraHOft! Mosler S.rtrkt Technician
Outdoor Power Equlptnentlssodatlon: Cer!Hitd 2 &lt;yde
State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

Limestone,

HelpWanfed

We are looking for results oriented •
Managers with the followig qualifications:
• Minimum 2 years general managers
experien~e
•
• Outgoing &amp;.energetic personality
• High standards·concerning cleanliness,
quality. &amp; service
• Possible relocation
PJL Enterprises·, Inc.
ia a multi-unit Multi-concept
· operator of Golden Corral and Sonic
~estaurants
Send or Fax your resume to:

Now T&amp;klno Appllcodono
perleneed Catpent••

S!&gt;ewl. 304-117&amp;-14211.

To: Dally Chtckl, 2714 Nlogaro
OrM f.1,lolinglon. Ky 40517
ENTICINOIIXCITINOI Your Dota
II Wolling l CoR 1·000·407-7782
Ext. 7857. 12.118/loln. IS. Serv·U

Qalllpolll, OhiO 45131

Parts and Service/1

HAULING

Immediate Opening for Experienced Flat·Rate
Body Shop Techniclan(Painters
Apply In person - No phone calls·
See Body Shop Mgr-Jeff Basham
M-F 8 am- 5 pm
Equal Opportunity Employer

Earn

IICINI

WI.CKS

HELP WANTED

308 E. Main St.

PersonalS

HelpWanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is look·

(lime StoneLow Rates)

•

;t,,,. o,,.,.erll lmmrnru·,.

005

110

614-742-2138

r.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

a~ ad Call 992·2156

110 Help Wanted
AVON I All Artll I Shirloy

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

RIIIIOAiblt Rllll

PUBUC NOTICE
Nollct 11 hereby glvtn
lhet tht onnual mHIIng of
tho ohoroholdaro of '
Farmoro Bonctheroo, Inc.
will be hold at the Pomeroy
Ubr11ry, 21&amp; Wttl Moln
Stroot, Pomeroy, Qhlo,
Public Notice
tccordlng to Itt byltwt, on
the third Wtdnlldoy of Notice of Election on Till
April, 11118, at4:00 p.m. lor
Exctll of tht Ten
tho purpooo of electing · Lovy.ln
Mill
UmltiUon
dlroctoro
ond
tho
Atvloecl
Codo,
Soctlono
treneectlon of tuch other
35C11-1)(g),
5705.1g,
butlnott •• may properly
. 5105.25
come belore otld mtotlng.
NOTICE
II htr~Y glvon
Paul M. Aoecl, Socnotorv that In purtuenca
of · 1
(3) 22; (4) 3, 10, 14; 4TC
AaeoJullon ol tho Vlll1g1
Council of tht Vllloo• of
Public Notice
Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Ohio,
polltd on the 181h dey of
Notice.ol Elocllon on Tax
FtbftllfV, 1. . 1hore will be
Lovy In Excooo of tho .Ten aubmttled to a voto. of tho ·
Mill Umltttlon
peopll ol 11ld oubdlvlolon
Aovloecl Code, Sectlono
at a Primary Election to be
3501.11(g), 5708.19,
hlld In the County of Melge,
5705.25
Dhlo, ·11 tho riQUIIr piiCII
NOTICE le htroby glvon of voting !heroin, on lht 5th
that In purouance ol a day of May, , . ., lht que~
RIIOiutlon Ol lht IOird of · tlon ol levying a tax, In
Townthlp TruiiHt ol tht ...... of tho ton mill limiteTownthlp ol Autlend, lion, lor lht btnolll ol
Rutland, Ohio, patttd ·~ Pomeroy VIIIIQI lor thl purtht 30th dey of Jenuery, poll ol current oxponott.
, . . thoro will be oubmlttod
Said tax being: • , . _ ,
to 1 voto ol the people of • of 1 tax of u mlllt at 1 me
ttld . tubdlvlelon at 1 not excaecllng 1.1 mille IOJ
Prlmorv Eltcllon ta be held IICh oril dolllr of vol...
In tho County ol Molgo, tlon, which emounl8 tci
Ohio, 11 tho reguler p l - nlnotHn conl8 (10.11) lor
ot voting thorotn, on tho 5lh ItCh- hundrtd dolloro of
day of May, 18118, the quae- valulllon lor llvt (5) yuro.
lion of levying t tlx, In
Tho Pollt lor llld Eltctlon
exctta olthoten mill Hmll8· Will open at 8:30 o'clock
lion, lor tho benefit of •·11'· end rtmalri open unlll
RUtland Townthlp lor tho 7130 o'clock p.m. of llld
purpo11 ol llro prottctlon.
day.
Sold 18x being: on addiBy ardor of tho Boor~
tional tax of1 .0 mill 11 a rltt
of Eltcllont,
not oxcaeclllig 1.0 mille lor
of Molg1 County, Ohio
Nch one dollar ol valu•
Henry L Hunter',
liOn, whiCh emounto to ten
Chelrman
cantt (to.10) lor ItCh ont
Alii D. Smith1
hundrtd dolloro ol valuaDlroctot
tion for llvo (5) yeert.
Doted March I II, 1GGI
· The Polio fer llld Ellctlon (4) 7, 14, 21, 28 . 4TC
'
will open ot 8:30 o'clock
e.m. end remeln open until
Public Notice
7:30 o'clock p.m. ol uld
day.
PUBU&lt;; NOTICE
•
By order ollht Botrel
will
be
Soolod
bldo
of Eltctlona.
of Mtlgt County, Ohio rocolvoid by tho Vlllog~ ~
Syracutt until I 2 noon on
Htnrv L Hunter, Thurodoy,
7, 1111,
Chtlrrnen whon theyMoy
will
be
opanoli
Ant D. Smith,
end
rood
oloud,
lor
lhit
Director
l
Dtltd Mtrch 10, 1818 loNowlng:
1$83 pentltd van, 16 ft.~
(4) 7, 14, 21, 21 ·4TC
.111 aluminum ·body. 1'/. toll
chooolo. Minimum bid
Public Notice
$1,500.
15 H. Aluminum boot, I
Notice o1 Eltctlon on Till
HP
Evlnrudo motor.
Ltvy In Exl:tll 01 tho Ten
Minimum
bid $400.
Mill Umltlllon
To
vlow,
call 112,7181 or
Rtvlttd Codl, Stctlont
8112-5561.
3501.11(8), 57115.111,
Tht VIIIIQll lltlrvto tho
57111.21
rtght
to rojact eny ond all
NOTICE II hortby glvtn
that In puro1111101 of 1 bldo. F,rlhor, tht obovo will
Aoaolutlon of tho Vlllago be told In lht condHlon It It
Council of tht VIllage ol In, with n·o e1preea or
Pomoroy, Ponwoy, ·Ohio, Implied werrtnty glvon.
'WIIt!M ttllod bldo ore to
•ttd on tht 11th day o1
bftltJV, llllllhoN wiN bt be oubmiHed to 'Janice
tubmlltad to 1 vote o1 the Zwilling, clerk-treaourol,
peoplo 01 llicl oubdlvltlon VIllage ol Syrocu11, P.O.
II a Prtmory Election to bl lox 288, SyriCUit, 0.$
hold In tht County of Mtlgt, 45771.
Ohio, 11 thi rogulor plocoo (4) 7, 14, 21 3tc

110

place

YELLQWFLAG
.YARD SALE

H1ullng, Exclvltlng
&amp; Trenching
umeatone &amp; Grtval
SeptiC Syatema
Trtlltr &amp; Houae Sltea

.

Now taking Applicatons for
Assistant Managers at
Domino's Pizza
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis Locations
Experience preferred.

To

ANNOUNCEr,1ENTS

OaiiY, Chtclul Prouning Wall
From Home. Fr11 Dtllill Write

. SAYRE
:tTRUCKING

laid ttx btlng: I ""'""'
of 1 tax of I mtllllo Nit not

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

.

�•

\

Page 8 • The.Oally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally ~ntlnel • Page 9 :

&lt;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

rueaday,~l14,1998

•

••

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

350 Lots &amp;
~lwlngaton' • bllerflent

water·

land Rlr Soil, 1411-446·2885.

1881 Oak!'Ood 14xe5. $12.500.

proofing, all bailment repairs
dont, tr11 11timatea, U11Jl.mt

exc. cond. tUB Cla~ton 14x70

pY1f011loo. 1Oyr• on job "pori·
....... so.tl75-2145.

liYtr locaL Call K &amp; K Mobile

wlhoal pump. $13,900. Will deHomos 304·675·3000 between
8arn-5pm
1984 Skyline Ux70 gable root,

75x 10011. lol, nice neighborhood,
new carpet, central heat &amp; air,
appllanc.. ln,ludlng washer &amp;

dryer, porch a out building,

$28.000 080. 304-812·3323.
All real estate advertising in
thi1 newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 which mak&amp;s it illeQal

1993 HS.BO Sunshine Supreme
Mobile ~ome Bought new In late
1994, 3 bedroom• tOxt:S. t31l13 ,
10121 , 2 full batha, liVing room
16ll.21 dining area, kitchen, ·utilil)'
room, newer quality carpel, COY·
eted front porch. Dedt in back au
electric, heat pump, CIA, range,
refrigerator, drapes, atay must
see hat many e•tra's excellent
condl!ion , lacaled on ren1ed Ia!
10 mil at lrom Gallipolis $23,000

to advertise ·~ preference,
limitation or discrimination
baSecl on race. color. retigion,

tamHiat status or national
origin. or any intention to
make any such pretilrence,
limitation Of discrimination."

se~e

off Routo 160 N. (740) 44H283

This newspaper will not

knowingly accept

1994 1tht80 lndlea, Excellent
Condition 314 Aere land, located
on Hilltop Drive aft Neighborhood

advenlsements for real estate
which is in violation ot the
taw. Our readers are hereby

Road 139,000 (740)441~1

Informed thai all dwel~ngs

1995 Claylon Mobile Home 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, .Gaa Fire ·
place, Garden Tub On Rental lot,
Financing Available, 7-40 ·245·

advertised In this newspaper

are avaitabfe on an equal
opportunity basis.

9738lo...,.Mossage.

Electric, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
Oak Cabinets, . With 2 112 Ton

Heat 1\J/1'4), 7411-24!HI834.

310 Homes for Sale
3 Beclro~m 1 112 bath, 314 base-

men~ new roof, siding &amp; windoWs
on 2.4 ICfH in Hantord. 127.500.

-·3858. .

3 Bedroom Homo Completely Re·
mod&amp;lld 2 Car jlarago With Soc·
ond Floor Appro• . 2 Acres, Yard,
Pond, Beautiful landacaptng I 11
• Milolllown 218, 740-&lt;146·9633.
3 Bodrooma, 1 112 Batha, Jay
Drive, 740-446-8251 Aller 5 ~M .
3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Full Baaa-

mtnl Anached Garage, Larue
Back "-rd. NeW Cennl Haa1 /Air
3228 .Stato Routo 141,$69,500
(Cen~~Nry) Call 1ron01n 7411-5325147, Or 7411-532-83011.
3 or 4 Bedroom, rwo bath, ranch
· sryla manufactured type home.
· 1,OOOtq. It Situated on one acre

of ground, Ra~burn · Rd. ·114 Uile
off Sandhill . Additional acreage
available. Peaceful.

'

199e 14ll72 Mobile Home, Total

HEAL ESTATE

privare.

coun1ry se11ing. $62,500. 304875-12911 Anylimo.
4 BodrDDm Home On 2 City Lot~

2 Blocka From Now Wai-Mort.
$48,000- (740)4411-1914
• Bedroom houN on RL 12 on 2
ocret ol grvYnd. 5 Milol North ot
Pt. Pl•unt on PDner Creek Rd.
304-773-5787.

1997 Cla~ton Mobile Home on
rented lot in Park Lane $22,500

Call (304) 73&amp;-3116
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay·
ments, assume loan, owner financing awilabte. 304·755-7191 .
Attonllon Mobile Homo Own&lt;i&lt;s:
Areas Largest Inventory Of lntertherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps,
Air Condilioners, Furnaces &amp;
Parla, Huge Buying Power Means
The lowell lnsiBIIed Price. Easy

Over Tha Phone Bank Flnan&lt;ing.
Call Hennon's Mobile Homo HTG
&amp; CLG 1·600-372·5967
Clayton Mobile Home Few
Uonthl Old, Like New On Large

Rented LO\ Sell Cllaapl 740-4460428.
Dl,count Mobile Home Palla &amp;

A~ceuorlts Water .Heaters, VI-

nyl Skirting Kill $299.95, An·
chort. Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps,
Root Coatings, Doors, Windows,
Plumbing I Electrical Supplies,
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And

Uorel Call Bennell's Mobile
Homo Supply All-740·446·9418. ·

Divorce Forces Sales· Take O'iler
payments. 2br, 2 bath, financing
avalablo. 304-755-55116.

H•o• 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath.
BUY HOliES FIIOII S4,00D 1 ·5 Starting 01 ONLY $3D,D9D. Many
Bdtm .. ' - - G4W't I Baroll fl!IPO'I op11ona available. 1-818-12834211.
Cal t-100'522-2730, X 170D.
Charming country home in West
ColuQ1bla, minutea from town, 9
room1, concre1e driveway,
S75,M, 304-773-53111.

Largo aolocdon ol used 2
or 3 bodooomL Startina at $211115.
Qyick dolivorr. Coil 740-3859621 .

Log home, 2 bedrooms. 2 baths,
-u.TEQ.OFFER '
hall basement, basic app~ancn. 1001 Ooublowido 3br, 2 bolllo.
lull porch on Iron~ deck, aetting $1,889/down $2511/mo: Only at
on 5 acres, w/3 car garage, Oakwood Ho"'" Nitro, WV 304S 120,000, 140-992· 1188 ot11r a 75&amp;-5885.

~pm:::---------·IMako

2 Paymanta .Mow In No
Middleport, I&gt;OaYdluiiWD llory,
Paymon11 Allor 4 Ylorl, 304-7311br, 2 bath, large l.r. I fr., oak 7295.

doors &amp; ltim, Smith's cullom oak

rangt, dith· New 19911 • .1170 lhrM bedroom.
wosilar, &lt;letachld garage, by liP' incllldn I moniN FREE lot rom.
poinunenr, 740-992·5243.
lnctudll tklrling, delux:• ttepe
and IOIYp. Only $187.08 por
, MODULAR HOUSE AUCTION
monlll willl $1075 down. Caii1A 26.•58' Rancn Style Modular 100-837-3231.
'
Hou&amp;e Will Be
·
To The
Higl&gt;ast Bidder
1998 NEW lANK REPO'S Only 3 lehl
Noon
Still u'noei" warrant1, owner fi ·
cabinets, Jenn-ai'

nanc:ing available.

304·755·

7191.
Uonday

g:OO A.M.
Coli 14CI·2•15·!53314
polfltment. Formal
Houst Is Ourmg
Hills /Ohio Valley EXPO On

101

--ForS.
size 112 acres ·cape Cod..

uR!ey, Apr~ 18, And Sundey, April style, high 70's 2 Bedroom, 2
tt, 1991; 12:00 Noon -5 :00 P.U. Bath, Counay Warer. liasy Ac Eoch Day.
cent 7 Milel From Jackson, 13
Miles · From Rio Grande Call
Must See A·f,ame, 3 Bedtooma. (740)21111-7200
2 Baths. $48,000 Pat Mayes Ro. attor, Ullom Reatay ISener Homes
04K"''QQ WM'
&amp; Ga•dons. 304-133-7 140.
Barbo&amp;,~rsville WV. Large11 Doubtowide D11pi1y In 28 '"" QD8
.Now 2800 Sq. Fl. Bndl Ranch, 3 Down,
304-736·3409.
Bed,ooms. 3 Baths. Front Porch,

Oeck and·Baaemeni
1345 .

(740)~41-

Slngte Paronl Ptogr-. Splc:ial
financmg on 2. 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
names. Paymenra •• low ••
New liatinO· tiYee bedroom home. 1110. Cal now 304·755-5885.
latfe garage, 1 112 aaelthelllt 10
'

Salisbury etementaty school, can Special 16•80 3BR, 2 bath .
. Jim Cafleton, 740·892·6375 lor SI ,:125 Down, 1205 Mo. F'" oir
men inb"malion.
&amp; tree
· 1·8fi0.6DHI777.

Parrish Avt Pt. PleaUnt 4 Bed·
room. 2 barh. grear condition.
c ... »H75-7128 belofeDpm
River ViaW 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths.
In-Ground R&gt;ol, 74D-256-D3D3.
flodnoy

Vi'-11, 4 Bodroomo.

t

SPAINO SPECW..S

"'"f_.,......, ..

l.lfllod-

•111111o. Pwr11wwta

S17,H5 on 38R.

s...p

Oolo._. - ·

0n1r
AI :JC14.75fi.W6
-.wv.

... Ronch Wilt 24a2,&lt; Dolocl1od 1-:---':-c-:c=---lniOIIalld Hilled Gllrago, FanilRoom Wilh Firtpiau lnsar~ Ell·
tn Kitchen Wilh O•k Cabinera,
Ftncld In Bock Yard Roady To
- l n i .,OOO. 741).245-Stl46.

TAX SPECIAL
.
Now 3br S8geido•n $188/mo.
Free Set-up &amp; OeliMrF. Only 3
l ,alll Only at P o - IIi·
OV WV. 304-15&amp;-5185.

Two llrgo bodrooma, comer lol, La1tll0dol Ropo Stt Up On Lot
newer gorage, aiding, winctowa. 1 ,1;..8fl0.;;;;;.;3ti:HIII;;;.;;;;;;;2.~....;.---­
n;c. ~.-_ . . - , 7411- 350 Lots &amp;
. . .737.
~-....

A-e

320 Mobile Homes
lorSIIIe

Acreage

360

Real Estate
Wanted

460

Space for Rent

large mobile homo lot lor rent on
SlncNI Rood. 304oll7fi.7D71.
Mobile home

site available bel·

540 Miscellaneous

580

Merchandise
Kirby Vacuums, Like New G5

G~s.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Need A Place To Sell Your

&amp;

no

Autos for

Sale

'88 Grand Am, loodod, 111

mo01~.

12000, 740-002-6215.

HolM-Grown Produce? Craft•?
Space available atln..ntc:tion of

Call 740-4,.&amp; -4553 For De·

188g Bronco II XLT, V-1 ••tomatlc, air, loaded. 175.000
miles. looka and runt ooad,
12800, 7411-241-42112.

1984 Chevy Impala 2 Door Hard
ween Alhens and POmeroy, call tails.
321 ·300 HP 60,300 Original
buay hlghwey (U.S. 35) southeast Top
740-385-43117
.
Miles, 740·448·8806. 740-446· 19~2 Chevy Conversion Van
Cash Paid For land In Gallll
Large couch, like ~. beige and of JacKson. Call for de tails
loaded With Rear Air 740·258County, Blackburn Realty, 740· Trailiw Lot lor Renll All Hook-ups
7787.
(740)211&amp;-7200 12pm 6pm
gnoy, col 740·985-0068.
1380.
•46-rol8.
Available. 740 ·441·045~ ar 740 1970 Chevelle Mailbu 355, Mu·
367-7278
. May lag Washer &amp; Dryer Works
ncie 4 Speed, Body Good. Runs 1992 GO Trac;;kur Convertible,
Good,l150, 740-4411·9487.
FARM SUPPLIES
RENTALS
Good, 15x8 Rallies Lot Mort. Ac· PS, AC, •x4, 56,000 Mllol, CD
&amp; LIVESTOCK
cessories To Go With h $6,000 Player, $6000 O.B.O. (740) 441~
Now
That Spring Is Here II Ia
490
For Lease
0777 •
I
740-446·8893.
Time To Stock-Up On Your Avon
410 Houses for Rent
For lease Mobile Home: SHe On Skin-So-Solr Uolsture Suncare
1971 Cnevy Caprice 400 engine, 1985 GMC Truck 112 Ton ....
Plua. To Order Call Pam AI 740· 610 Farm Equipment
2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis, White Road Wilh Electric City
good condilion. 304-&lt;175-5744.
Loaded, Uko Ntw 1e.ooo Miloo
2•5-'5443.
WID Hook·Ur.· CIA, No Smokers Water, Septic: Tank, Near Holzer
$18,500 (740)370-2427
•
•
12'
Transport
disc,
International,
Or Pets. Re erence&amp; &amp;. Deposit; Hospital $125 Per Month, 740·
tol..)
Olds
Dalla
88
~uto,
like
good blades, field, ready, seso
4.6-4369.
19911 Chevy 4wd, 350, S,pd, ali,
740·258-9190 Be-., 8-9 P.M.
Pomeroy Thrlh Shop now tMiylng
now. :JO.U15-2358.
·
cruise, tilt, am-tm canena.
large outtide toys and baby IJBO. 74D-DD2·7302oY.ning.
3br Haute in
items. walkn, toddltr uaiS, etc. 440 John DMro ~og St&lt;lddor, Ex- 1888 Chrysler LeBar_pn, 2 Door, $15,500. 304-675-5332.
MERCHANDISE
$335/mo. +
Tuetday throygh Friday, 740- cellent Condlllon $10,000 (140) Whits, AIC, Gassenet'Crulu, Tilt, 1996 F·15C 4&gt;4 XLT Packog•.
5881 .
992-3'/25..
Excellent Condition t1400 (740) Short Bed, loaded, Low Mllr(s
370-2427
379-:!E-45
With Extrul $17,500, 740· 24$·
51
Household
PriMeltlr· $SUI installation with Beat T~e Spring Rush, getJour
9544,
ISO rebate. fi11t month free with mowers I trimmtra tune up
1188 Fold E..... GT
Goods
lree movie c~annels, StarOne now. Sider's Equipment Hender·
Rod In Coior,llres Now,loodod,
88 Bronco II 4x:•. &amp;XCflenr candi·
apeclol, f41 lnalollollon, 1100- son, WV. 304-675-7421.
"""""' Sun Roofl4,000 Mllol
lion, $4,900. 740·992·1036.
283-2640.
$1,000 .
F 725 John Deere mower, 2 years
(3CM)4U.18D8
R&amp;SF-HUN
aiel, 100 hourt on it. 54· cut. 20
Motorcycles
Muon.wv
horsepower engine, Wiith ao· snow 1989 Cavalier 2.0 4 Cylinder 740
Buy, Sol, Trade
blower, $7,300 : 1967 Dodge 300. Auto, Air, High Miles, $1,500, 1980 125 CR Dlrtblkt Many E¥·
Used 4 An1iquel
304-375-1310.
1 ton. $1,100: 740·~92·3564.
liaoll200. 740-256·1831 .
Fllmilllre.
304- 113-5.'141 .
Far mall .Cub !factor wlplows &amp; 1990 Eagla Tolon, rod, 5 speed,
1982 Honda Motorc~cla 690
disks •. good garden tractor. looks and runs excellent, $6095,
Nighthawk
$900 Or Tlodo For 'f.
Riding Lawn Mower, Driven By $1 ,500. 304-&lt;115-!¥124.
140·002-0053.
Riding Mower Ot Equal Valu,,
250 Yamaha Uoror &amp;· ·Transmls ~
skJn Tri·Axle Rear End, 740·2.. 5· For Sale or Trade lor Oattle 1992 Bulclc LoSibro SE, WNte, 4 740·446-«28.
59114. .
14".:60 Mobile Home, Needs Re- Door Sedan, Ex:ceUenr Condllion,
1 Local Owner, Plea.H ·CaH Ahar 19114 Hondo V65 Sabre, 1100cl.
~r$1500(7.0)448-1052
Water Cool&amp;d, Shaft Drive, Ulfl
Royal Oak camping momborahlp
6 P.M. 740·448-1543.
Nwt 7411-441-G443.
'
lor ule, reasonable priced, call Gehl 05 grinder/mixer, hammer&amp;
• 1g.e88-4905 alter 6pm or caM &amp; never turned, ercellent condition. 1002 Plymoulh lazer Auto, AC, 1991 Honda 250x: 4 Whaeter loll
Crull&amp;, Tinted Window,, New
leave measage &amp; I will return 304-273-4215.
~
Tlret, Grea1 Goa Mlloagel 304· Of Elllt8'al7.a·4•1·1'19.
your caH.
•
John Deer 3 botlom pfows, Fer· .58-1821, 7411·3118-8897.
1995 Harley Davi.. n FLHT, Eie1Smith Corona ~ord ProCtiiOt guson 3 pt. hitch, hay racke. 740·
1993 Dodga Shadow ES, V-8, 5 ' uo. Glide Clauic, Low Milts,
With Screen, Hat Lotus 3, 258-1~
Speed, loaded, $2,100 080; coadod, like New (740) 44~Spreadsheets, Hard Ortve And A
,John
Deere
2010
diesel
tractor,
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
1990 Dodge Spirit ES, V-3, AulD, 1522
Disc Drive, More Featurta, Call
42hp., wide lront ~ good rubber, loaded, $"1,200 QBO, 740·256$260·$300, sewer. water and
Pam AI 740-245-0835.
for sale· t9Q6 Honda TRX 300
$4100; 20 hp. Noma lawn tractor, 1233.
, tralhincluded. 740-992-2167 .
four wheeler. like new. $3400,
Solid Oak 10 Gun, G'yn Cablnat rwo yean old, 48" cut, $900, 740·
2 Bedroom Beautiful River VIew
1995 Dodge Avenger Black 740·985-4395.
Solid With Aloor1monl 01 4 Guns, 142·2367.
References, Deposit, NO PETSI
loaded, 31,000 Mlloa, $8.600
11,200 (740)258--1098
. 750 Boats &amp; Motors
Foster's Mobile Home Park, 740·
Kubota 6100 4•4 3 Cylinder, Die· Neg. 7411-319-93&amp;1.
520
·
Sponlng
WARM UP: High Efficionc:y Naw- sel, 3 PL Hitch With 48. Finishing
"1-0181.
for Sale
rat ·And lP Gas Furnacet, Life- Uow•r. Plow, Disc, And Grader 1995 Plymouth Neon ' Doors,
Goods
Green
With
Spoiler
Automatic:.
time Warram~ · On Hear Exchang- Blade, $4,500, 740·256·1156.
18 Ft. Fibe,olau Boat Johnton
Remington 870 Wing Mas1et e• ·u \bu Oon'l Call Ua Wa Both
Air, 55,600 Milos, $5,900 080, 85 Mo.,., Now Stoll, - Carpel.
12ga. full choke. t2SO. 304·175· losel* Free Eslimareal 4dd-On 'Maney Ferguson 1020 Diesel 740-2!WHI340. 740·2511-11487.
Good Trailer, $1,500,' 740-3813824.
Hoot Pumps Only Sllghty Higher. 4X4 366 Hrt. like New, 317 John
9354.
Call Us Today. 1998 Is OUr 28th Deere 17 HP Hydro 47" Deep, 1998 Dodge Strain 31.000
Year In The Heating &amp; Cooling Tro~-Buil1 Tiller 6 HP Electric Miles, Take Over P&amp;ymenll, 740. 19&amp;g Saa Imp 1~ 11211. doap-V,
~1 . ·
'
btige Wiland interior, 6Cyl,
BYslnahl 740·448-8308, 1·800· Slart Nice, 740-446-9221.
190hp. Mercruiser Inboard motor,
2D1-00D6.
Need someone to work on larm. Bad Credit, No Crldl~ Bankrupl- with trailer, lila pr11trv-ra &amp;
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 G11ion salary, rent, utilities and extras cy? We Can Help! Bank Finane· bumpers. $2,750. 614--148-3814.
ing On Used Vehicle&amp;, 740-441Upright, Ron EY~na EntMprlsoa, phono(740)448-1052
0607.
1985 24 Fl. Ponhion Boat, With
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528.
NeW Holland 68 Hay Balet, &amp;· 3
40
HP ~o1or &amp; Trailer. $4,250;
f980 -1990Trucks For $100111
Sun ,Wave Spa • .Person, Brown . Poinl Hileh Rake, $1,500, 740·
740·24!HI258.
St~ed
And
Sold
.
Tonea With Redwood .Exterior 448-2540,
Locolly Thil Month.
$1,300 740·448-2829 Leave
TNCk&amp;, 4X4'a, Etc.
1991 Yamaha g .Q Converted To
TWo M~tuey Furgeson tractors,
Moesage. .
1-IJ00.522-2730, X 3901.
15 HP Outboard Engine Stored
(1) T.0.35 ·goa, (2) 50MF diesel:
Inside EJ:ceJien1 Condition Runs
Sunquest Well tannlna bod, good good tires on both: 740·742·
corno-lhe-prlcos~
condilon, $1100,7411-742-1348.
Greall $1,000 080 740·•46·
2875.
530
Arillques
loriJIIIIIr gone.
7106.
Two bedroom trailer in counuy,
Waohor &amp; Dryer 1150, 7&lt;10·441Your Area John Deere Dealer 1D88 Nilllft Stanza, BUll), 2 slid- 1994 Baylinor 18.5 Ft. 4.3 V.6 En~~~:::and area, call 740 · Buw or 1111. Riverine Antiques, 2003.
For Rtlidential And Commercial ing doors for eas~ access, good gine And Cuatom Trailer With
;;;;;;....;~;;;.;;;;...:;:.;::;;.:...____ 11124 E. Main Street, on Rt 124,
Brakes Low Hours. $8, 500, 1•0.
440 · Apanments
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI lawn Equipment Compac1 Ulilily condition, $1295. .
258-1130.
a.m. 10 8:00 p.m .. SUnday 1:00 10 $21.g5 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI Tractor~ From 20 To -39 HP. AU 1988 Chevy No¥0. 5 apood, $500
for Rent
8:00 p.m. 740-992·2521, RYII ~37.00 Par 100; All Brooo Com- Slzea Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm 1987 Chrylltr New Yorklr, IUIO,
prllliDfl Fl1dngo In S1Dclt
Tractors, Ha.y Equipmint. John ale, heater, plush seat1, digital 1HI 18 Ft. Mar1d1 With 4.3
Moorw awnar.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur·
RON EVANS EIITERPRI. .8 Deere Skid SIOir L - •· Chock dRit. runo oxcolllnt S6U5
- - Anct ,Trallor Llo Now;
mshed and unfurnithed, security 540 Miscellaneous
-.Ohio, 1-800-537-95:!8
With Ua AboYt Flnanclna As Low 88 Buick Skylark, auto, ex:cellent 1gfl6 15 ft. AIYmlnum Soa
deposit required, no pets, 740·
As 2.1'Wt'On Lawn Tractors And
mil-. nice dopondoblo car Mymph Bau Boat&amp; With 30 HP
Merchandise
Wedding Gown-Beautiful Ivory low Raw Financing On Evenrudt , &amp; Tralfe' loaded
992·2218.
And around, $750
tequlne&lt;l, re~embroldered lace. Uted Equipment. Carmichael"• 1989 Hyundai, 5 speed, runs Reedy To Flah; 1195 20 Ft. Boy·
•Aliena•
riding
lawn
moWer
w/
size 10 with veil. Only $225. 304· Farm &amp; lawn Gallipoh, OH 740· gcod. body's eood. S1145
t Bedroom Apartment Newttt
liner Cuddy With 4.3 MerduiHr,
and ·Ciean"t in the area, near electric atarlor. '500. 304·675· 875-8040.
&amp; Trailer low Houra: "1HO 16Ft.
-«6-2412
1·800-584·1111
.
11
Geo
Storm,
perfec:t
condition.
Holzer S27D P'&lt;fa Ut~llos. Deposit 4871 .
Playlyma Ski Boat W!lh If HP
NnS&amp;lCeellQn~ 8UIO, $1585
Whirlpool Waaher, ' Dryer G.E.
and lta11 Required (740)448EvinrYdt &amp; Trailer: 1080 19Ft.
Livestock
1ge5 Ho~da 200 All To~raln 3 Electric Range, &amp; G.E. Wuher, &amp; 630
2057Vikina llack Boat Completely RaM&amp;J AulD, 15153 Sfl460
WhHitf, Automatic, New Tires,
Gas Dryer All ftems 175 Each, 2 regilttred yearling thorl·
conclidonod Interior With 170 HP .
Hours
12·8.
dliya
vary
Runo
ex-.
7411-245-sek
740~118
.
1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove, Re11Drnotl buUa, 7411-949-2053.·
Uercruiaer I Trailer; 1 \JIId 5 11
Call for more infonnation
frigerator Included, No Pets, 7-40· 1988 Cub Cadtt, 18 hp. super
2 HP Johnson 1 U11d 40 HP
7411-388-9693
448-2583.
Mercury; 1 Used ~ HP Mercury •
trociOr, 60" mDMr dock. excoilont HW~P~~~~~~~!!..-$_50_ 2.040 Pound" Tobacco Allotment
':
For Lease, .25e A Pound 304· Credit Problems? We Can Help.
I Uaod 90 HP Mercury : Now
2 Bedroom Apartment On F~tst condition, $3800, 740·9g2·22UI
550
Building
815-5131 .
Eas~ Bank Financ:tnQ Fo' Used Marada Boats New Odyuey
A....,e, Gallipolio, 740-446-822.'avorings.
SuppJJes
28th AMJII Bentley Pig Sale: Fri· Vehicles, No Turn Downs, Call l'llniDDn Boa11, J. S. Manno 740·
2 Bedroom Apanmant. Utillues 1897 Honda 400 ATV 740·245258·81110.
day April 24th, 7:30 P.M. Fayene V'H:kie, 740-448-2807.
Poid, S425/UO:, $100 Deposit, No 111134.
.
8•10· Wood Storage Building County Fairgrounds, Washington Upton Used Cart Rt. 82·3 Mlln ~owasakl STS Jet ski, still Ynder
Pets, 740·4.48·1837. 740·4483431
22 112 x36 Inch Dog Cage h5: T130 Siding Barn Oaoro s700 Courthouse, Stllin{j 200 Head, 01 SoYih ot Leon, WV. Finonclng warranl)', three seater, 83 hof4e·
Hamjll · Durocs, Cro11brld Bo•· Mliablo. 304-4!58-106D.
·
Brand New Heavy Swag lamp, Phone (740)44&amp;-11283
.
power, bOY8hl now Joly ol '97,
rowa I Gills, Conaignerl Ro9~r
2bdrm. apta., total ti\llctric, ap· Glaas Wilh Teardrop Bulbt, S&amp;O:
three matching Kawasaki tkl
BlOck, btick, tawar pipas, wind - Bentley, 937-.584-2398: Leroy 720 ltucks for Sale
'pfianceslurnished, laundry room 740-441-9865, Aher 5 P.M . Or
vestl and tri.iter all go with it,
owa, lintels, ale. Claude Wintera, Larrick 137·780-480'2.
$5000, 7411-04g-2203 or 74D-849·
laciNtioo, cloae to school in '""" Any1imo Wookeridl.
Rio Granda, OH Cell 740-245197e Cab Over International
Applications available at: Village 14-:0::.-:G:-:i:-bs_o_n_e:-le-c-lr:-ic_ra_n_g_o••_go_o_d 5121 ,
4 HOraes ' 2 VearUng stud"a, 2 Trans Star Tractor 350 Cumc 2045. will consider trade lor a
.Yearling fillies. l350ea. 740-448- minaa En~no. Good Tiroo. G- good ponlllfln boiL
Green Apts. 149 or call 740·992· condition. four yeats old, $375,
Steel Buildings New, Uust Sell 1179.
3711 . EOH.
7411-002-2548.
Shapel t•,300 080 740-448· 760 Auto Pans &amp;
o40•&amp;0•14 Waa 116,200 Sell
3 Rooms &amp; Bath ·Upalairt, No 8X8 Heavy· duty utiliry trailer,
sg,g9o; 5Cx100x18 Was $28,550 8001 HolateiniHorelord 11eor1. 2415.
Accessories
Pet1, Water Paid In Gallipolis, road ready wlloadlna '"11'9L 304·
Salt 118,990. aousox:16 Wa1 Mrtous callers only, call 7o&amp;0-985- 1977 Chevy PlckYp 35() AuiDmal·
7411-388-11 00.
$48,990
Sell
S29.9g0; 4447bolore8amoroltorlpm.
875-3348.
ic 112 Ton Good Condi1k&gt;n $1500 24' car ttailer with toolbox and
ra/1'4)1, 7411-742-2815. •
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Amazing IAelaboliam Break
Angullherelord cron. 18 months (740)258-1098
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Through. lose 10 01 200 lbs.. Cali
old, nlr:o young buK,' $700, 740· 19114 GMC 112 811. bod, llraighl New ga&amp; tanks , 1 ton IIUCit
ESTATES, 52 Wtatwood 0J~Ye For free conauluuion and Free
002·74511.
6cyl, aulo, 78,000 original miles. wheels &amp; radiarors. 0 4 R "'uto,
hom S279 to $358. Walk ro Shop Strnp1es (740)441-1982
Ripley, WV. 30•·372·3033 or 1·
1&lt;10-992·2478 Days or 8fl0.27:w.1211.
$1,500.
&amp; mow•••· Call 740· 448 · 2568.
74D-DD2·4111
Evorinlis.
E!!UBI HouSUlD Oppora.nity.
Are Your looking For Avon Pro·
WANTED JO BUY; 1t88
duels But Don't Know Where To
11116 Clllvy Truck
Gradout living. 1 and 2 bedroom Find Them? Also, If You Would
Thro•gh 1972 Ch...,lle Or Elr:oCuSIOm
30,
Blad!
In
Color,laodo
apartmentl at V.illage Manor and like To Sell Avon, Call Pilm At
mlno -Consote, Can Also Be A
od, Body ~ Real Good Shape.
Riverside Aparlments tn Middle· 740-245-5443.
1910 TlwoYgh 1972 Monll Corio
$5,500, Focmry Big Block 454,
port From 1241-$373. Call 740·
Conaolo. "IIU&amp;T IE HORBHUE
90,000
Miles
992·5064. Equal Housing pppor· BIG SCREEN TV FOR S'ALE:
:f,~~lfal! ~YPE" Phone: 740·
Ph- (304)45fi.1118
lunilies.
Responsible Pan~ To Take On
Small Monthly Pay.,.nll. Good
19S7 GMO C·50 4sp~ 350, pa,
New singte efficNtncy apanmen1 i'l Credit A MulL Clll1·800· 718·
campers &amp;
new painr, Nawy Surplus, 21,500 790
Middleport, ulil1t•es paid,
1857.
original
milea,
·no
COL
required,
MOiorttomes
plus di!,;o~1. 740·992·5304.
12ft. flatbed wlsides. $7.•00.
:--'---------·1 Brond Nowl Groat Gill! Cllil!idoo
Nice clean elheney a,.anment, storage unit. BliCk and chMrr. AKC Miniature Pine: her 1•maa. Ear aarn, t2.SO per bushel, 740· 740·992·2478 Day• 740-992· 18114-- Camp11; 35', 2
expando's, full size bedroom
., , Evw&gt;ingl.
8411-2311t.
references &amp; depoltt, no pets. Never out of box:, $125. Holds up
old, tamale, ,... 10 aell du to
( - llll bod), llrl tilt IIYin{j I
.,.304--6"-7_5-_51_62.:;._ __._____ ro 840 discs, also hbJds tapes. sidlnou. $25o. 304-5711-2&lt;144.
Tobacco Plants For Sale. Re 1
kitchen, - luhiZt · - &amp; .....
Two bedroom~rtmenl In Po· Call 7•0·102·8836 attar 1 pm.
serve For Ma~ Planling. Danny 188g S· 10 V-8, AYIO, 13,205: neW carpel, vinyl. all windows
COs &amp; tapeS no1 il'llluded. · _
1988
GMC
S1
5
V-6,
AYIO,
AG,
AKC. PembroU Wetth Corgi Dewhunt. 304·185· 8733 leave
have cuttom Kirsh bllncflllammeror. utitilies
, no pets, 740·
12,485; 1982 El- Cob l-10. bergay, mu11 IH to lppteciate,
P•ppioa Born 211/VI, 1 Tri-Color Mossogo.
Ca~inol $200 080 740· Fomoll, 740-245-921111.
$3,685: Cook Motofl, 740·"•- se,iout calla only, $8500, 7-40-992-·56_56-:-..- - - - - - - · l China
378-2381.
0103.
992-41173,7411-11112-2015. .
650
_
Seed
&amp;
Fertilizer
Now Taking Appl•caliont- 35
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhoult Concre1e &amp; Plastic Seplic Tanks, AKC Reg . Mini Oachahunds 4
1991
S-10
Air
8t,OOO
Mlloo,
27 FL Stll C«alriod ....... Apartmanll S2DS/Mo., 740-448· 300 Thru 2,000 Gallona Ron Malol, 740-25e-&amp;044 $250 Eoch. Dokolb Sooa Corn. Kay Farma. Clioln. 740......7318.
Clll304·81!;-15()6 II No Anawor
20,000 Miloo. .380 Oojlge Engine,
oooe.
Evans Enterpriaea. Jadlson, OH e-.Oid.
1992 Ford F-150 V-1, 5apcl, Au10 Ttant., loti at Edl'all Roed
HI00·'53H528.
AKC Slberl•n Husky Pup1 e
One bedroom apartmenl in Mid·
•2,000
mlloa, pa, pb, 1c, blaclt, Roady Priced To StNI 740·387·
-ko, 111 Sheta, Wormed, 740.
SPURLOCII LIME
dloport 74D-DD2-2178
0447.
Grub~• PianO- tuRing &amp; repair•.
exc.
cond.
$8,200. 304-175-2161.
3111-2383 Caf1r. · •
&amp; FEIITIUZER
Problema? Heed Tuned? CoN 1he ,
.
;
_
1
Complete
Blending
&amp;
Sp•eading,
One bedroom a~tment in Wid· piano er: 7411-..._.525
1995 Chevr 1 ion, 1u10, air, Pt.
SlRV IC!:S
Open SUndoya ,_._ Moo-Sat Located: Nor Gallia County Line,
dloport all utiiOH pold, $210 por
am-tm.
12IL lot b o d - lido
monm, 1100 deposh, call 740· Hond held coli phone 'a .......,. 11 -e. Fioh Tank I Ptt Shop, 1 112 Milo South Ot State Route raclla, 1 Nner. 54,000 original
2•13 Jackton An. Point PIHI· 279, On Jimes Emory Road, Oak milu. SI5,5CO. 740-812·2471
DD2-7108.
riot, 115, 7411-1192-5006.
810
Home
... 304-175-2083.
H• • 74CHI82-9040.
Days 740-D82·4111 E""'*"'"'
IIIlER BEND P1oAC5 .
Hond Made - O a k &amp; Mapil
lmpi'ovements
Chtat, 7•0·37D-2720 After I •filii Colio ........... $15:
TRANSPORTATION
U85 Fo1d Ringer XLT 4&lt;)1,
.
t Bedroom aptt. for .tdertr or P.M.
IIAIIEIEHl
No Paporo &amp; $150, With Pof&gt;lrs,
5apcl, loaded, 18,000 mllet.
dioablld. HUD 111i11od. EOH.
WATERI ROOI'IIIO
740-441013.
1
$
7
,
7
2
$.
CoU
altor
4pm.
:JOo.l751
JET
--3121.
Unccoucll-llifelimo gYOr011110.
710 Autos tor Sale
4149.
AfRATIDHMOTORS
.
Local
rtr.rtnetl· furniltted. El·
Three bodroom aprtrlmon~ · S300
IObllllttd 1175. Clll (740) 448· .
Ropairld,
.....
&amp;
In
·
plut cMpo1i1 and udlitles. Third cal
lam
iDOIUng
lor""'
lorre10
il
lVII
FaciOry
s-10
·
(7""'
441ore
Ita
·
bought
thlm.
'18
-•
Ron E..,.. 1-8fi0.537·1152A
1418
0170 Or 1-800-217-0571. Rogero
from •d'll Atk about one'"' ago top. lirel, interior,
·
Slrlfl. Racine, Ohio, 740-241·
~'&amp;:poolug.
piHH caN ... n Ftrrota narnaa .no ru11 ovor, $5750,
730 VIlli &amp; 4-WDS
•2112.
.
Jot~nson's
Used Furniture: Brlncly and Tllkle Pllono (740) 5444.
450
Fumlshed
Waahor, Dryoro, HuiChto, 01·
~~r,~~~:i~~=~l9731lodge
Rid
ll 1 Bl 014x•
8 Truck Stl _ , Appllonco Paris And Strvlce: All
Rooma
...,..., Ra4rlgeri1Dro, - . Tol- -44_1_-1_4_18_.""':=-,----·l · 1g70lJI2
Branda o... 2S '""
NIITICI
Oriairoil Min Eacallent
s 1~~0:.0 740-=-l~ Pal~t lllltne
=:-::-:=:-:::-:-~~~~:-:-·levi•iona. Livingroom llhdroom
perienct All Work Gua1antttd,
F.-CIIylloiOrao""na
(7ot0)311H008
Circle Motel Lo•oll Ralta 1n SU11to, 740-448·4030, 740-«1·
o,ortt
1812 Cu11om1zed Dodgt Van. Fref!Ch City llillll&amp;, 740·441·
Town. -~ Roniodelod, H80, 1004.
Protoatlonll Grooming by AP· 1880 Pon1iac Leman a. V-8 aY- Ont OWnarl EXcollont C-Ion. 7105.
Cln•m••. howrimt &amp; Oitney. Junlt, approx. two tons or l·unk
painrmtnts. ISO Second Ave. tomatlc, good running, no rust, Mu11 SH 10 Appreciate! Call;
C&amp;C Go-al Homo M1in·
w.tdr Rolli. Or llanltlr Ro...
Hugh Gr1ham 11 740' 441·1304 tenenct· Plinlipg, vinyt siding,
ConatrlfCdon Workora Welcome cheap; alao bob; goot; 740·849· ~G~I~~~~·~'~OH.~~so.G~!7~5-~4~1111~8~•.,...-1740-D82·7302-Mogo.
3012·
carponlry, _ . , w;-. bolho.
7-1-lleH. 740-441-5117.
PYrebred Siberian Hu1ky 'P•P· 1982 CYUou Suprorna, ·2 D. 260 oltr 7:oop.m·
plea, 5 molu, 3 lemaloo, biYe V8. Good Condition, $1,900 Or 19114 Chevy 1-10 Bluer+- mobile iwlmo - " ' and mora. For
~th
k'
~more
HooYy
DYII
10
Wleher
Sl ••, Ino toom• ... CGO u'lg. And O~or, Almond, Wathtr
tllimoiO call Chot 740·DD2·
OJtl, m11k1, " ' ' CYte; paople Boot Ollor, 7411-91l2-f5118.
drive, """ artglno &amp; 1ranoml1· 1Alto traller apa~ on rfvtr. All
_~
ready now, t130, call
·on · nde
1 $3 ooo 11323.
11
hook·Ypl. Clllaltor 2:00p.m.. No... a op1ir, S15C OBO For orielnld,
740-182-51.t4.
1984 C?lds Cullan Supreme
r warran J.
•
• u
-1411-441.0135.
31)4.,- ·~5851, ,._, wv.
~-::-"""""'::--:--:----·1 Brougham pw, tinted Windows OB0. 304.a82-3&amp;50. ·
840 Ellctrlcelllld
580
Fruna
&amp;
Alpine
11ereo
S1
,5oo.
30•·815:
191111
GMC
4a4
305
""""
""·
1111.
WIUIAII ANN IIO'IIL
Konmore ata,&lt;k loyndry conlor
Refrlgntlon
Vegltab!ls
5019 altar 5pm or leive moo- crlfiN, AIC, CD playo&lt;, bod-·
111 I(COHI) AVEMIE
wooher I dry•. exc. conct. $55()
OALLIPOUII .
080. Apar1mon1 olzo Croal.,. ,__.,...._,:;...,..,~-.,...,.....,-1
At1Ung..,,500.304-812-3141.
Rooljtlllal or
wiring.
,_ ..W. or ropttiro. llaMr LlSPECIAL LOW
freezer fiOO. OuPir mic- Goorgll rod, "hilt and bYah :-:.:7:-C::----=:----cenlod lltclrlclan. Rldenoyr
WEEKLY RATES
"ltyrn Iaiiie, Htne n now 175. _ , potaiD ,...,, co11 7.0.'" 2_ 1•81 h•vy , Chavouo 95,000 1181 Oodgo Dakola
mlleo. axe. cand, QOW tl•et $700. ~/lJt~·!S4.~1~5C!!:·!;,74D-~t~11!;!1~151ot.~-~·l Elec111c11, WV00030t!, 304_171_
2773 .. 740_742•2220.
SIHOL£S S1to.GOWEEKLY
30U112-3323.
1781.
.
.304-1175-8728. &lt;

N

• J 7 4
• "6 2
t

•J

•AKQ32
• K 54·
• Q7 2

i

•

South

t•
31

HOW COME

pllriMr

t - Runyon

31 Poetic time
32 .wedding-page
word

4 Aomanthree
5 Chtlnlcat
ati111x
6 Gymnootlcleet

2 Comp-

agreement
3 Ohio clly

33 Rlced

Pass

NOnb
2t
4•

J

· Three choices,
two winners

??

. .n

Weot
Pass

Opening lead: •

SPICIAL
DILIVIRY

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.

.

.

C ltQI ThaVHIOoll. br NU. Inc

.,.THE .BORN LOSER

23=~·

Vulnerable: EAst-West
Dealer: South

I

SP&amp;CIAL
O&amp;LIV&amp;RY

•

34
37
40
41

•ti

i.r

I JEST MAILED OUR
DOCTOR BILL, PAW··

•

llllaloMe
Italian currency
1 Obllaatlono
Encircle
7 Wlafllngton,
Superlative
DC, tlfPolt
eridlng
13 Put oil on
43 Hltlunch
14 MelD die
45 Boxer
15 Medium
Muhammlld18 Conceive
41 One day"-IT Gmrel ridge
time
18 A llobbley
47 New (pre!.)
twin
48 Slngt&lt;
Johnny20 Mot!!'• .........
21 Head
51 Mathematician
.
BltiH· movementt
54 Refrigerant
_ 55 Eotabllth by._
24 CIIICIIH
authority
25 '!Welve houra 56 Oozed
· alter mklnlthl 57' Brad ·
21 Do tome math
·.29 NeiiMf'l
DOWN

South

..,

....
,
.....
\t-1-..veS"

r

·. ~t:t-.'(1:&gt;\l'OHllONLE~~!
NOTK£.1101-1 ~~r..?

~

11'1 "[l'f. ~ Dee fiE ~E.
TOe£ XJ fW'\&gt;'t' r-.ealT_;-~c_J
~~

'
"

" BIG NATE

1

By Phillip Alder
Abba Eban, the former foreign
minister of Israel; claimed, "History
teache~ us lhat men and nalions
behave wisely once they have
· eithtWsted all the other alternatives."
In bridge. though, you normally face
' few alternatives, 5;0 try to consider
lhem all.
In today's deal, you reach four
spades after East has . overcalled in
clubs. East takes the first two tricks
with t6p clubs, West di!ICarding a low
heart. Now comes a third club hem·
or. What should you do?
To jump-raise spades immediately promises four or more trumps. So.
Nonh must go through a two-step
routine with only three trumps.
South, with better than a minimum
opening, should rebid three diamonds. Don 'I rebid in your first suit
without siK unless you have nothing
else to do.
·
You seem to have only three
losers: one heart and two clubs. Yet
there is a danger of a trump loser as
well.
You have three choices at Irick
three: ruff high, ruff low or discard.
The best play is the last Throw a low
hean (or diamond). If East persists
wilh a founh club, discard again, let·
ling dummy ruff (or overruft' West).
j\Jtematively, it East switches, win
and draw trumps. To keep your
trump holding in~att, you have traded your- hean loser for another club
loser.
.
With this layout, if you ruff low at
irick three, you go down. West overruffs, and you must Jose a later heart
Irick. But you can succeed by ruffing
. high. Your 10 tricks will be four lop .
spades, two hearts, three diamonds,
and a diamond ruff in hand.
Historv teaches us lhat the loser·
on-loser play is overlooKed by almost
everyone.

PEANUTS
ALL Rl6J.IT, TIIERE'5 ONE
COOKIE LEFT .. WE'LL VOTE
TO DECIDE Wll0 .6ET5 IT...

There's no
way around it,
Classified Ads

I VOTE FOR ME
SO I 6ET IT!

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher~ art clftl_. lrom quol..ions by famous people, past ancl prntnl
Eldliet*in the cipher illlndllor 1nothfr. TOday"s cJue· R eq~lfJ

BPY

•G P

BYMESMCS

YGP

wxc

PHAPFFPEAP
iiXKCEMFOI'I'QA
•
B'I'MESB
YGMY
YPFPUOBO ,XE

WCPS

CMYGP&lt;:

SME

YXSML.'

X E

WCOPESFL .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thirty Ions a day." - Bill Veecl&lt;. onellme president;
of Sullolk Downs, on lhe ul1imate end product ol. horseractng. .
.
o

o

yo

.,....':'_.~_:_t:....~'_S.;,_@..;;:!~c~~~J~S·

WOlD
lAIII

0 four

laHars of tht
ocromblod words bo• - 10 lorro four ~mplo worda:
Rearrange

.

SUREIC

I I I I~

I

RA F I R

I~

L U CG H

I

_ I I 15 16 ~

·, .

..

~-I"'H7...,AI

"Along with age." the wise
• elder told her grandson , "regrets are a ~atural property of

~-~0~:,:.:·

..P':...,.:I:"'8...:YI,....::::B.,I--11
•h• ehuckl• quo••d
_.J.I-...1..
-J.
.
...:.J.I-...1.
.
....I.
by
tilling
in
lho missing words
L
you develop from step No. 3 below.

A
V

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCJlAM.I.ETS ANSWER$
Postal- Uncut- Yokel • Trauma - TO the MALL

Y~~~d~~~~~~~~your
ASftO-ORAJtB

most
returns
your -'-'
· •orldly
likely to come from a pannership · interests are conceroed. Chance could
,.
arrangement. It binds you with an
play · a significant role in tilting
·"' . w £ y . April IS. 1998
. individual who was lucky for you
advantageous bends in your favor.
In the year ahead there is a possi- previously.
·
··
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
bility 110111ething profitable might
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Sell
21) l..et the pronouncements of
re:wlt from an endeavor that slilrted imaginatively today if there is somegloomy. companions fall .oJ! deaf ears
a
hollby
or
sideline.
What
you
thing
you're
trying
to
promote
for
a
.
today. Tune them out nnd tune in
011111
. :·hAve 10 Offer will atti'IICI pqnners.
personal profit. However, don"t · lhose whose pitch is in hannony with
deptlltfromthef:ielstolllllkclhesale.
yours.
ARJES(M ·-'-21 A '119)Y.
.,.,, - pn
our
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) When it
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
' Ingenuity 11 ..,. 10 bF q shade more ,
luminoua today · than tf!at of your · comes to working outu asreement
Ydu should do well today in your
Ilk1 1 ( be
today you should be able to strike an ,..comme'ri:ial affairs if you conduct
• .pcren: Everyo"' Ia
t:;o
t• advantalleous bargain. However,
them alona· traditional lines. Use
. ter if dtoy ~ )'IIIII' · Jhl ideas
don't get careless and overlook the
methods you know from experience
"ipsteadofdtol,._ Arlt~, "'at yourself
•10 bi........., Jill Send ~or your obvious.
wofk effectively.
... _ ,
•
"
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SCpt. 22) Strive
' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A
•
A~ pmllctlotls for lhe year 10 be aw!lfC of matcri~stlc matters disgtUntled associate might allempt
:,~had by mllliiiJ and SAS£ 10 today without being selfiSh or greedy. to throw a monliey wrench into your
·Allro-Oraph. c/o IIIII nows~J~per.
•.._ ·
._.. _ Don' 1 lh'
Boll l751, Murray tlill Station, If YOI! Jet :ovents run u,.;lr
machinery wuay.
t et IS upset
rewards fi'OIIIIWD 1rUf are polllble.
you, becau~~e you won't hAve trouble
York. NY 10156. Be sure to
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Today
findin&amp; an equally effective altemA-

i~ ·.

--.wv

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

II":

e•.

r

n

·r·.au•us
('"" •:r.-1 ' ""
May
" "
•v-

-.... YIIW llldllll
'

·

COI!ne·

20)

.Strlw 10 ""' your focus, 011 JOlla

1111111. pcomt~e today.
L.ay Ludt II IIIII.I till fan of yuan
')lid 1M iJ JPIIIII1 on yow turf.

· 'U. Ill'- lilt

. , ~1N1 (MaJ 1-J~ 20) Todly

·

-

)'llll'll be riaht 011 WJel rn manag~ng·
mat1en that require good social jqmenL However, this envilble tAlent
rrusnt not extend to your commen:ial .
. alfain.
·
$CORPIO.(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You _,
could he hoc~ier than lllllal . today

live.

·

.

PISCES (Feb. 20-~h 20) This
could be a dAy when lhe emplwi&amp;
will be placed on unexpected deveiopments. Be ready to move IWiftly if
Lldy Luck opens up a window of
opponunity.

:

•

••

.·

XE

A fool and his money are soon parted;but the rest of
us wail until we go TO thl! MALL.

l---·

•••·AuiO,

. • g 3 .
• AKQ.8783

• J 10 8 •

I

-·citll

A K 8 5

- - -·• 1054
East
Welt
• 8
• 10 9 B 5
• Q 10 7
•J98 '3

o

- ·

04-IHII

ACROSS

I

I

i

�•

•

·By The Bend

Wednesday

.The Daily Sentinel

Weather

Family Medicine, Page 6
Ann Landers column, Page 6
Dining guide, Insert

Today: Cloudy

Pa~10

High: 70; Low:50

Tuesday, Aprll14, 1998

Tomorrow: Showers
High: 70; Low:50

MGM_Pinewood Derby contest h~ld at Southvv~estern S~hool

Sports

Aprll15, 1998

Meigs County'~!

Indians
defeat
Mariners

Page4

Hometown Newspap.er

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single copy. 35 cents

Chamber endorses Carleton Sc.hool, seniors levies
nGER CUBS- Kenny Longwell, Dylln ·R-. David Rookaberry,
Nich Alexander, Jeffrey Bryant, BJ Stanley.
.

WOLF • Sam Gaul, Brandon Moore, Chrla McCoy, Zlch Hammond, Shlwn Rhoclet.
·
·
'

MGM Pine Wood
Derby winner list

· WEBELOS - Josh Skidmore, Brodie Gill, JW Sh"ta, Dustin
Cochran, Jeremy Smith, Aaron Angles.

Garden ·club meets
Plans for a litter pickup on April ings," "Springtime," and "Take
20 at 4 p.m. were made when the Time," concluding with the club
Riverview Garden Club lnet at· the singing "How Great Thou An."
Reedsville Church of Christ for its
Wendi Hannum and Margaret
March meeting.
Cauthorn were welcomed as new
Nola Young. Nancy Wachter and members.
Wendi Hannum were hostesses for
·Buffet-style refreshments were.
the meeting with members respond· served by the hostesses to those
-ing to roll call by giving a symbol of named and Mary Alice ·Bise. Betty
St. Patrick's Day.
Boggs, Margaret Grossnickle, Ella
The business meeting was con· Osborne, Frances Reed; Gladys
dueled by Wachter. Cards · were Thomas, Maxine Whitehead and a
received from several recipients of · guest, Counney Long.
fruit trays. which were delivered In •
Marilyn Hannum received the
February.
door prize. a springtime flower
Crystal-clear Easter eggs were arrangement Everyone received a
tilled with candy for patients at the magnet of a bear with a shamrock
Arcadia Nursing Home. and deliv· made by Nola Young.
ered by Marlene Putman. Janice
The April meeting will be held at
Young and Janet Connolly directed the home of Delores Frank. A tour of
the project
Karen's Greenhouse will begin at
Dev01ions were given by Ruth 6:30p.m., prior to the meeting.
Ann Balderson titled "Easter Bless..

Eastern honor rolls announced

·'

..

Elementary school students 'have
been recognized in the Ea~tem Local
School District for outsutnding academic achievement for the third nine
weeks grading period.
RIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY
Grade Six: All A's. none. AcaC!emic Achievement: Emily Brock.
Sandy Powell. Hollie Rose. Tyler
Thompson.
Grade Five: All A's: Jaime Reel,
Mo'l!an Weber. Krista White: Academic Achievement: Charis Collins,
Casey Smith.
Grade Four: All A's, Shawn Reed:
Academic Achievement, David Max- .
son,. Ashley McCaman, Charies Wil·
son.
. &lt;;HESTER ELEMENTARY
Grade Six: All A's: Alyssa Holter.
Stacy Smith. Jonathan Owen. Brit·
tany Hauber; Academic Achievement: Kass Lodwick. Paul Stuckey.
Becky Taylor. Andrea Warner,
William Wood~.
· Grade Five: All A's: Derek Baum.
Cody Dill. Sara Pore: Academic

TIGER CUBS • BJ Stanley. first
place, Pack 205; Jeff Bryant, second
place, 205; Kenny Longwell, third
place, 258; David Rooksbcrry, best
design. 205: Dylan Rees, best paint,
205; Nick Alexander, most unique,
214.
•
WOLVES - Sam Gual. first
place, 262: Brandon Moore, second
place, 204: Chris McCoy, third
place. 204: Shawn Rhodes, nest
·paint, 258: Brandon Moore, best
design. 204; Zachary Hammond.
most unique, 204.
·
BEARS · Crais James, first
pla•-e, 205; Whesley Bryant. second
place, 205; Chris Canaday, third
place, 204; JT Crcameans, best
design, 204; Adam Blake, best paint,
204; Mark Miller. most unique, 205.
WEEBELOS · J.W. Sheets, first
place, 205; Brodie Gill, se,ond
place 205; Josh Skidmore, third
place, · 205; Jeremy Smith, best
design, 214; Dustin Cochrcn, best
MGM Pinewood Derby over - paint, 262; Aaron Angles, most
all grand champion
J. W. unique. 214.
·
·
St.ets, Pack 205.
Over· all grand champion - J. W.
Sheets, Pack 205. ·

BEARS- Mark Miller, J.T. Creme1ns, Adam Blake, Chris Canaday
Whllley Bryant, Craig James...
'

Spring is puppy season ·
I By Sandy Stealey ·
~ Melgt County

TUESDAY
POMEROY .. Meigs County
Conservation Coalition meeting
Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at the Shade Riv·
er Coonhunters Building on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds to discuss fund
raising projects to defeat proposed
anti-hunting-haUot issue. All club repre:~entatives, hunters, anglers, trappers and others welcome.

Achievement: Kenneth Amsbary,
Abbie Chevalier. Carrie · Elberfeld,
Ross Holter, Debra Siek.
Grade Four: All A's, Andrea Mcln·
tyre: Academic Achievement:
CHESTER ·- Chester Township
Autumn Hauber. Bnttni Hensley. trustees. 7 p.m. Tuesday at the town
Amanda Windon. James Will. and hall.
Jeremy Basham.
TUPPERS -PLAINS ELEMEN·
POMEROY •.- Meigs County
TARY
'Health Department free immunizaGrade Six: All A's. None. Acade- tion clinic. Tuesday, 9 to II a.m. and
mic Achievement: Jessica Boyles, I to 3 p.m at the Meigs Multipurpose
Chrissie Gregory. Nathan Grubb. Center, Pomeroy. Each child to be
Kevin Man:inko, and Katie Roben· accompanied by a parent or legul
son.
-guardian. Immunization record to be
Grade Five: All A's, Katie Hoxsie. brought. For more information call
Academic Achievement: Br!ttany the Health Depanment 740-992·
Barnett, Christopher Carroll, Adam 6626.
Dillard. Andy Francis. Jennifer Hayman, Joshua Hayman. J~ssica Kehl.
MIDDLEPORT-- Revival at MiqBryan Minear, Darren Scarbrough, dleport Holiness Church, 75 Pearl
Slll'llhYost.
Street. Monday through Sunday.
Grade Four: All A's, Brian Ca.,tor; Evangelist, Rev, Amos Tillis, Special
Nicholas Kuhn, Sara Wiggins. Aca- singing. John Neville, pastor, invites
demic Achievement: Christopher public.
·
Davis and Joshua Marcinko.
·
DARWIN .. Bedford Township
~--------------------~~ Tru.~tees. Tuesday. 7 p.m. Darwin
town hall.

er coat and white on chest. Really '
loves attention. Very calm and loving
and should be. a good dog to train.
PEN FIVE .. Pups
.
Heinz variety. some have rust/tan
points like Rottweilers. but have
faces that look more like shepherd
pups. Some probably have Labrador
retriever in them', too. They are at ide:
al adoption age."
Boxer mix pup, very young. very
outgoing. flashy fawn with white
chest and toes.
PEN SIX
Very large black Labrador retriever mix . Friendly and calm. Seems to
like people. ·
OTHER PENS
All·blaek husky/Akita. Medium to
large size for an Akita. Ears stand up,
tail curls ·over back. Maybe a great.
watch ~og. since it is very alert and
does bark some.
Large black and tan Rottweiler ·
mix.
The shelter is located adjacent to .
the Rock Springs Fai'l!rounds on
Rocksprings Road. The phone nymber is 992-3779. Hours for adoption
are 9to 10 a:m. and 4to 5 p.m.. Mon·
day through Friday, and II a.m. to 2
p.m. on Saturday.
The adoption fee of $10 includes
license and registration fee. New
dogs arrive regularly, and we encour··
uge you to visit anytime.

Humane Society
Thank you, readers. for your interest in dogs available for adoption.
This latest list of dogs wa.&lt; current
on April 3. Availability cannot be
guaranteed. since dogs are adopted
and some must be euthanized to
make room for others.
First, in a foster home right now.
is a dog found wandering on Vance
Road near Snowville the week of
April I. He is a young male, approximately two yean; old, a Beagle-Ba.,.
sell mix, very friendly. He ha~ no col·
lar but has been neutered. He does •
well in the house with other dogs I!Jld
cats. If you think he is yours.· please
call 593-4687 during the day. and be
prepared to provide proof of ownership.
·
·
PEN ONE. .. puppies and small
dogs
A very cute, small. young tri-colored Beagle. happy and curious.
Long-h11ired, medium-sized pup,
almost grown. All soft. fuzzy black.
except for wliite on his. chest. Likes
attention. Ears flop over like a collje.
but not like a hound. Looks like pan
chow and border collie. May make a
good obedience dog wjth training.
· PEN DYO .. large Clogs
Rev. Joseph R. Jo'!)an, evangelist and
Very .
large,
German
son evangelist of Pataskala to be
shepherd/Alaskan
,
Malamute
-mix.
there. Services nightly at 7 p.m.; Sun~ilver
in
color.
Barks
at
strangers:
day, I 0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
HuskyfRottweiler .(?) with nice.
You Don't Need' To
dense
coat, lik.e long velvet. Black
THURSDAY
POMEROY .. AA and AI-Anon, with mottled brown markings and
Be
To Start
7 p.m. Thursday at the Sacred Heart rust points. Amber eyes like a wolf or
eagle. Ha.• a nice demeanor: laid back
Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
Investing, But You
and intelligent
POMEROY ... Middlepon Child
PENTHRE.E
..
Need TQ Start .
Conservation League, 7 p.m. ThursBlack
and
tan
dog,
medium
io
day at the Rock Springs Church. Nor·
in size. Looks like. a DoberInvesting For A
rna Torres. R.N. to speak on Aids and small
man/Jack
Ru~sell terrier mix. Short
children.
Chance To Be Rich.
hair. very lithe and lean.
FRIDAY
Old English Sheepdog/curly d:rri·
MIDDLEPORT
Bosworth
er
mix. Whelit colored. about · 40
Council46, special meeting, Friday,
Call Me For Details!
pounds.
Likes attention and ha~ long
7:30 p.m. at the Middlepon Mawncurls.
so
probably
would
need
more
ic Lodge. Work in the supereKcellent
grooming, but a 11ice-looking dog.
master degree.
Karl Kehler III, CPA
PEN FOUR
.
POMEROY .. God's NET to
Investment and Tax Consultant
Really "sweet female black
begin Friday programs. 6 p.m. for Labtador rotriever mix, maybe with
740-992-7270
teenagers. Refreshments. Those hav- border coli ie or Austt'lllian Shepherd.
ing April birthdays to be honored.
Like a Lab, but with a little bit fluffiSecurities offered through H.D. Vest

Community calendar
The Comm.unlty Calendar is
published as a free servire to non·
profllgroups wishing to announre .
meelln11 and special events. The
cBJendar Is not designed lo promote
sales or fund raisers or 1111y type.
Items are printed u space permits
1111d Cllnnet be guaranteed 1o run a
specific number or days.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Chamber of
, Commerce endorsed two county·
wide levy issues during its regular
monthly luncheon Tuesday at Car·
leton School in Syr.~cuse .
The group endorsed a one-mill
renewal levy for the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center following a
presentation by Susan Oliver. direc·
tor of the Meigs County Council on
Aging.
Oliver spoke briefly on the histOry of the senior citizens center which
recentl_y observed its_25th anniversary.

In 1997, the Meigs Mu hipurpose

Rich

.•
'

,

.
I

'

Daily Sentinel

lnveslmcnl Seanilics Inc. Ad\lisory •
Services offered throush H.D. ~''
Advisory Service., Inc. 6333 Nonh Stare
Highway 161, Foun·h Floor,lnoing TX
7~038-(972) 870.60011

QUALITY LAWN FURNITURE ·AND GAZEBOS
PL~RS•S~GS•BENCHES•GAZEBOS

•
•

POMEROY -· Revival services,
Wednesday through Sunday, at the
Pomeroy Church . of the Nazarene.

Named to dean's list
Jacob Morrow of Syracuse has
r,mara Zuapen and Jane Oraf18m, co c....,_raona tor
WallcAmerlca tot the March of Dlmle - holding 1 ~lea TShlrt that pertlclpantl may win It they have over 115 In contrlbu-.
tiona tor W.lkAI'IIIrica. Thole having contributions of $180 can w1n
1 cap atid • T-llllrt, S:JOO.I IWIIIIhlrt and 1 T·lfllrt, S500 1 wlnd~ker 111d 1 T-thlrt, $1,000 plua, chokia of lllacttd met ctlllldiM ·
lnd 1 T·ahlrt.
I

beeit named to the dUn's high hon·
onlist 111 Marietta College for the
1997 fall,aemestcr. He is a student in
the colleae:s spoils medicine pro-

gram.

· To be elilible for the Dean's High
Honor List, a student must earn a
GPA of 3.5 or pter:

meeting of the state Transportation
Review Advisory Council (TRAC) in
Athens.
Next, the University of Rio
Grande Meigs Center director Gina
Pines was introduced.
She said 74 students are currently enrolled at the center which is
offering courses in the Microcomputer Applications in Bus.iness
degree. She said other courses and
programs may be offered in the
future including three progmms in the
oflice- technology field-- depending
on community need.
"We want the center to be more
than just a place to hold classes," she

said.
Economic Development director
Ron McDade said his office is working with the state in an effort to construct a ~ launching ramp in or
near Racine.
In the tourism report, it was not·
ed that the calendar of events is completed and available at the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
office.
·
In addition, the chamber is making plans to participate in the upcoming 6-mile Yardsale sponsored by the
Middlepon Community Association
and the Pomeroy Merchants Associ·
ation.

·

The Meigs Local Board of Education renewed contracts during its
regular meeting Tuesday evening at
Street paving and ,repairs to the interest.
the . district's central office in
Rutland Civic Center were discussed
Pomerol'4l!Qmey Charles Knight Pomeroy.
when Rutland Village Council met in was hired to seiVras legal counsel for.
The board hired the following
regular session on Monday. !
· the village.
teachers on one-year contracts for the
Work on replacing the civic cenThe .Treasurer's Report was 1998-99 school year: David Barr.
ter roof is eKpected to begin this approved: total funds. $118,233.62; Julie Defelice, Pam Durst, Sharon
week, as is paving of Bry~u . Elson general fund, 15.80 1.67; police fund, · Edmond~. Michelle Frazier, Janet
and Elm Streets. The paving work I,489.93; law enforcement, 487.33; Hollingswonh, B~verly Jones, Beth
will be perfomied by Myers Paving , street fut\d, 10,492.43; highway, Lawson. Darin Logan. David
at a cost of·SIQ.,152. It is ~xpected to 6,029.62;
~ater
department, Longsworth, Melanie Quillen, John
be completed later this week.
6,757 .66;
sewer department, Sharp, carin Taylor and Donna Wol(.
Council agreed to send a letter of 3,662.91, sewer debt, 15,049.05; utilTeachers hired on one-year conthanks to the Meigs County Emer· ity deposit 13,187.95; FEMA fund. tracts pending the completion of cergency Services office for replacing 45,275.07; replacement, 20,391.49.
tification· requirements were: Scott
the overhead door in the civic center.
Council approved payment of Brinker, Larry Haley, Scott Christ$ 120 for mayor's training, as well as · man and Sandra Holcomb.
It was agreed that Councilman payment of mileage and expenses. ·~ Teachers hi~d on three-year conMartin Andrew would serve with
It was noted that it is against vii- tracts were: Krista Johnson. Teawana
members of the hazard mitigation lage regulations to blow mown grass McCaulla, Lisa Miller and Chris
grant committee. Disa,~ter surv~y in the streets. Re.~idents are expected · Stout. . _ . '.
reports and prope11y appniibls are to sweep any 'grass from the street ' Teachers hired oii five:yeaJ!ton·
no* being completed for that project, after lawns are mowed. Grass which tracts were: Mary Brauer, Gregg
ari\1 environmental studies are expect- is left in the sireets goes into the · Dee!. Penny Dewhurst. Sherry ,
ed to be completed this week.
storm drain, which were recently Hensler, Mike Kennedy, Carol Mahr.
Boyd Ruth, the project supervisor, cleaned. ,
Paula Roush, Rita Simmons and
can be reached at 742-0704.
- ' Present were council members Carolyn Smith.
Council agreed to make an $8.000 Vema Martin, Martin Andrew, TamTeachers hired on continuing con·
principal payment on a loan for the my Searles, Jay Dewhurst: Dick Fet· tracts were: Christine Blaettilar, Kar.village backhoe. The original loan ty and Judy Denny, Mayor Joann Ia Brown, Cheryl , Halley. Judy
wa.• for $17,000, and Clerk Rose- Eads Clerk Eskew, Ruth and David McCarthy, Sue McGu1re, Pete Woods
mary Eskew said that this payment Dav.i~. maintenance supervisor.
and Tara Woods. ·
would leave a balance of$2,000 plus
The following were hired on supplemental contracts for one year for
the 1998-99 school year with contracts to e&lt;pire at the end of the 1998Racine Village Council endorsed man of Buckeye Hills/Hocking Val- 99 school year: Mike Chancey, head
the Meig~· County Council on Aging's ley Regional Development District. football coach: Rick Blaettnar, Gregg
one-mill levy when they .niet in reg- who had notified her that the agency Deel, Sclll· Gheen and Pete Woods,
will refund $4,300 to the Ohio assistant varsity football; Don Dixon,
ular session on Monday.
Susan Oliver, eKecutive director of Department of Development so that Jesse Vail and Bryan Zirkle, 7th and
tlie agency. met with council to dis· the water meter project can be certi· 8th grade football; Chris Stout. boys'
varsity basketball; Rusty Bookman.
cuss the services provided through fied as complete.
Glenn
Rizer.
street
coin
missioner.
·
b
oys' 7th grade basketball; Mike
levy funds at the senior center.
Council approved the eKpenditure reponed that his crews had complet- . Kennedy. cross country; Jim Sheets.
of $120 for -labor to complete the ·ed mowing the Greenwood Ceme- head wrestling; Johri Krawsczyn.
shelter house at Star Mill Park. It wa.' tery. He requested permission to pur- golf; Rick Ash, girls' volleyball ; Ron
noted that materials are already on chase a lawn mower, weed killer, tr~f· Logan. girls' varsity basketball: l&gt;'o~rin
hand and had been donated to the vii· fie paint and replacement decals for l:.ogan. girls' reserve basketball: John
lage by an anonymous donor.
stop signs. He also reponed that a Sharp. girls' 8th grade basketball;
The approval followed a request 1988 Chevrolet pickup truck had Mike Chancey, athleticfacilities care;
by Dale Hart. who also requested per· been purchased through the Ohio Eleanor McKelvey, yearbook; Becky
mission to cut down ·two trees at the Department of Transportation in , Cotterill, high school newspaper;
Marietta.
Celia McCoy, drama and senior class
entrance to the.park.
Council authorized use of a town- advisor: Pete Woods. boys' co-ath·
That request was tabled until the
park board · submiL~ a request to ship grader to perform ditching work. letic director: Ron Logan. girls' coCouncil discussed complaints of athletic director; Dennis Eichinger,
council.
Lee Layne of the Board of Public dogs running loose in the village. athletic treasurer: Toney Dingess.
Affairs reponed that the water tank especially at night. and re~inded band director: David Deem. pan-time
had been cleaned and re-coated on political candidates that a $25 fee IS a.•sistant band director. Cliff Kennedy
the inside. Leary Construction Co. required to place campaign signs in ·unci Mike Wilfong, guidance counwill painl the eKterior of the tank lat· the village.
. selor (II month); Eleanor Blaettnar.
er this· spring. Layne said that the
The meeting was recessed until librarian: John Krawsczyn. a.~sistant
exterior paint had blistered.
Monday at 7 p.m.
.high schonl.principal (pan timel:.Scot
Clerk Karen Lyons said that she
Present were Council members Gheen, head teacher at Bradbury Ele·
had been in contact with Rick Hind- ·
Continued on paRe 3
mentary: Vicki Haley, head teacher at

Racine council endorse~ levy

Harrisonville Elementary; Marsha
Radabaugh, head teacher at Middle'
port Elementary; Cindy Johnson.
head teacher at Pomeroy Elementary;
Marjorie Fetty, head teacher at Rut·
land Elementary; Rita Simmons.
head teacher ·at Salem Center:
Eleanor Blaettnar,library supervisor.
The following teachers were hired
on extended service contracts for the
1998-99 school year: Kevin Shep·
pard, vocational agriculture; 'Micl(
Childs, OWA; David Kucsma, mar•
keting; Ron .Logan, OWE; Marjorie
Blake, nurse assistant; Sara Harris,
life skills; Janet Hollingsworth,
Kathy Reed and Gloria VanReeth,
home economics.
The bOard also hired Gary Walk·
er as network and computer technician on a one-year contract effective
for the 1998-99 school year at a
salary of S12,00(1.
1'l1c- boardlnon·renew~· the .fol·
lowing supplemental contract~ due to
the ,fact that these people are not
under contract as full-time teachers:
Carson Crow, 7th and 8th grade football; Pat O'Brien. boys' reserve bas·
ketball coach; Jared Stewan, boys'
9th grade ba.~ketball coach and girls'
softball coach; Scott Williams, boys'
8th grade basketball coach; Crockett
Roush, 'assistant high school track
caach; Bob Williamson. middle
school track coach; Heather Hawley•
a.~sistant middle school track coach;
Chad Burton. reserve baseball-coach;
Dale Harrison, girls' assistant vol. leyball coach; Jim mer Soulsby, girls'
7th grade ba.•ketball coach: Cindy
Fields. high school cheerleader ad vi'
sor; Stephanie Price. middle school
cheerleader advisor; Bob·Buck. quiz
team advisor.
The following contr;u:ts were not
renewed because the positions are no
longer needed: Christi Lisle and Kelly Satterfield. long-term substitute
teacher; Ronald Wilson. long-term
substitute bus driver; Jeanie With·
erell, aide.
The following contracts were not
renewed beCause the spons are in session and evaluations are not complete: Mike Kennedy, head track
coach: Scot Gheen, head baseball
coach: Mary Grim. girls' reserve
softball coach. In addition, the following contracts were not renewed
until it can be determined if they are
needed ·due to participation: Scot
Gheen and Pete Woods. reserve foot·
ball coaches. and Rick Blaettnar.
freshman football coach.
The board accepted the resigna·
tion.•. for retirement purposes, of John
Amott. John Bentley, Joy Bentley

and David Chadwell. effective-May
31, 1998, and accepted the resignations of the following teachers from
their supplemental contracts effective
the end of the school year: Carol
Crow and Jennie Dorsey. co-junior
class advisor, and Beth Lawson, middle school newspaper advisor.
The board hired David Ramey a.&lt;i
a tutor for a health handicapped student at a rate of $11.72 per hour not
to exceed five hours per week
retroactive to Jan. 20, 1998.
In other personnel matters. the
board hired Roger Cotterill a• a bus
driver and Carolyn Chapman as a
three-hour cook on two-year contracts effective the end of the 1998·
99 school year.
Hired on continuing contracts a.~
non-cenified employees effective the
1998-99 school year were: Donna
liliiCY· bus driver; Brenda Erwin and
Mabel Rilmsburg, cooks: Ed Ram5·
burg 'and Bennie Wright, mainte·
nance; Greg Browning. custodian;
Mary Boorum. assistant to the trea~
surer: Jo Gilmore, aide.
The board also hired Susie Abbott
on a continuing contract as a secre-

tary and hired Heather J. Wakefield
as a substitute teacher to be used on
as-needed basis for the remainder of
the school year retroactive to April6.
The board granted o medical leave
of absence to Rosalee Snowden until
June I.
In other action. the board:
• Adopted a resolution of commendation for the Farmers Bank &amp;

Savings Company in appreciation for
the recent donation of weight lifting
and conditioning equipment to the
Meigs High School Athletic Depart·
ment
- Adopted a resolulion opposing
State Issue 2 as not adequately .
addressing the school funding situa·
lion in Ohio.
• Adopted the school calendar lor
the 1998-99 school year as presented by the superintendent. pending the
receipt of a memorandum of understanding from the MLTA and
OAPSE.
• Approved a contract with Ohio
University to provi'lle athletic trainer
services to Meigs High School for the
1998-99 school year at a cost of
$8,056.
- Renewed an agreement with
Woodland Centers, Inc. to provide
mental health services.to the district
begi~ning the 199~~ school yea~.
· • Approved a contract with the
University of Rio Grande to provide
reimbursement to the Meigs Local
School District for the use of the
comptiter lab facilities at Meigs High
School retroactive to March 26 with
the revenue going to an uccount to
replenish computer lab .supplies.
Following an executive session.
.the board gave. a one-year contract to
Donna Vance as cook.
The next meeting will be held
April 28 at7 p.m. at the central office
l&lt;lcated on the second floor of the
Pomeroy Municipal Building.
'

·A fast-food first?

McDonald's workers strike
MACEDONIA (AP) - Did on strike. " Now I figure that with all
somebody say strike?
the publicity we're getting and with
In what may be the first walkout the corpomtion becoming involved
at a McDonald 's restaumnt in the they will work something out woth
United States, six young employees us ...
unhappy with work conditions have
The walkout may be a first for
walked a picket Iine ICJr three con- McDonald's workers in the United
secutive days.
States. a labor expen said Tuesday.
The rain-drenched workers. ages
There have been unsuccessful
15 to 20. held cardboard signs that attempts to organize McDonald's
said "Strike" and "Honk Your Hom" workers in Canada but little interest
outside tlie restaurant in a shopping in the United Stat~s. either among
center about 20 miles southeast of unions or workers, said Greg TarpinCleveland.
ian. director of the Washington-ba.o;ed
Workers walked out briefly April Labor Research Association and edi8. saying, a supervisor yelled at an tor of the Trade Union Advisor
elderly crew ·member and made her newsletter.
cry. They began the strike S~nday, in
"McDonald's is kind.of really the
part because they' said the company symbol of service-sector growth in
ignored the request' of SOme·lO be otT · the over;~ll economy. ·• he said.
on Easter.
The restaumnt ha.• remained OJJ$:n
"I was afr-~id for my job at first." and business did not seem down.
said Jamal Nickens. 20. one of those

Good Afternoon

POMEROY .. Catholic Women's
Club. Tuesday, following mas.~ at 7
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
. MIDDLEFORT -· Middlepon Lit·
et;ary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Middleport Public Library, Wednes·
day. Gay Perrin to review "Anasta·
sro~'s Album."

struction program. is not under devel opment, ~rid is at lea.~t 10 or more
years away from construction. Story
said. On the other hand. ODOT has
five other southern Ohio highway
projects which could go to construction, yet are unfunded.
Once these projects .arc completed, the region can focus its attention
squarely on the Ponsmouth Bypass...
Regional leaders can intensify their
focus on getting funds to move the
project out of Tier Ill status, he
explained.
Story said U.S. Route 33 proponents stressed the need for improvements to the highway during a recent

Rutland Civic Center . IMeigs board renews contracts for 199B-99I
repairs discussed

.

Get the latest in sports news from the

Steve Story presided at the meet·
Senior Center provided one or more
services to 2,280 older adults. A total ing in the absence of chamber Presiof 47,865 meals were delivered to dent Sue Maison.
In his transportation report, Story
home-bound older adults and 62,044
outlined
a proposal by Ohio Lt. Govmeals served.
Senior Center vehicles drove ernor and Congressional candidate
143,424 miles and 36.584 hours of Nancy Hollister.
Hollister
proposed
using
in-home assistance was provided to
Appalachian
Regional
Commission
frail older adults.
· The program "allows older adults funds earmarked for a planned
to age in-place, saving the taxpayers' Portsmouth Bypass to levera~e fund·
ing for other projects including
money," Oliver said.
·
In the future, Oliver said weekend replacement of U.S. 33 from Athens
services will be offered by 1999.
to Darwin and the Ravenswood ConIn addition, the chamber endorsed nector in Meigs County.
The Portsmouth Bypass does not
a permanent 1.8 mill levy for Carleton School following a presentation score well in the Ohio Department of
Transportation's major/new con·
by Kay Davis. ·

..

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Steff
Video taping of veteran's relating
their war experiences. a feature of the
Meigs County/Ohio Bicentennial
Committee program, will begin this
week . .
Several committee members
including Joe Young who represents
Meigs Counly's American Legion
Posts. will visit Gamer · Orirfin at
Arcadia Nursing Home this afternoon.
Griffin, Meigs County's Ia.~ World
War I veteran, will be 102 on April
2S. Untillasl year when he moved to
Artadia after a fall, Griffin resided
alone at his Alfred home.
Veterans of all
will be includccl'in the video la!!ings planned as a
part of preserving ~Otlt Century mil·
itary history for future gene111tions.
Wllile some individualtapings are
planned, the committee expects to ·

wars

I80J .200J .
emphasize groupin,gs of vetemns in
conversation about their experiences
durina the war years. Veterans interested in beins a part of the historical
video are asked to contact Young or
call the Museum.
At Monday night's meeting of the
committee, Becky Baer, Meigs County Extension asent, announced plans
for a period costume design work·
shop to be held Thursday night at 7
p.m. at the museum.

The workshop. co-sponsored by depict• the Meigs County courthouse
-the Bicentennial Colfllllittee and the and early industries.
Extensi!)n Service, is open at no c!)st
A report wa.~ given by Charlene
to anyone interested. Patterns and
HoeHich on steps being taken to
costumes will be shown as a part of detennine the fea.~ibility of estab·
· the activity.
lishing a bike path from upper
Boer said that the workshop Pomeroy to lower Middleport. Meet·
should be of particular interest to lngs have been held with village offi·
those serving as greeters for Cum- cials and representatives of the mer·
berland Princess passengers visiting chants' associations and some po;Pomeroy. those participating as liminary work is underway toward
Stemwheel Festival queen candi· .. detennining ownership and avail·
·dates, and 4-H club members taking ability of land along the river, as well
projects in costume desi8ning, as well as funding for preliminary studies.
a.~ anyone planning to take part' in
Wilma Parker reponed that NicoOhio bicentennial parades and Ia Moretti, Southeast coordinator for
pageantry.
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission,
Other observ~ projects noted advised· her that funding for conduring the meeting included a report struction may be available lhroush
from the Rev. William Middleswarth the ()hio Department of Transponaon adoption of a design for the coun· tion.
·
ty !las. Middleswarth said that the
Spring plantins programs to be
design created by Bob Byer for U!le canied ·out by youlh groups were
by the Emergency Medical' Ser\lice again discussed along with other

beautification projects. including a
Today's
general cleanup of trash along the
Long range plans of the commit·
3 SMtions • 20 Pqes
tee include updating of church,
Vol. 48, No. 254
school. business and community hisCalendar
6
tories.- a study of early settlers and ·
their lifestyles, marking of historical
places. and performances depicting
Comics
evenls of earlier 1imes.
E&lt;litorja!s
Margaret Purker, committee chair-.
Local
man, announced a meeting of Region
8 of the Ohio Association of Historical Societies to be held Saturday at
W ather
the Meigs Museum. Among the
speakers will be Moretti of the Ohio
Lotteries
Bicentennial Commission, and Fr~n·
co Ruffini, assistant director of the
OHIO
Ohio Historic Preservation Office.
Picli 3: 272; Pick 4: 7681
She also announced that on April
·
B~Kkeye
5: 2-24-27-29-JS
27 the first two markers of the MorW,VA,
gan's Raid Route will be dedicated.
The firsl will take place at II a.m. on
Daily 3: 30 I ; Dilly 4: 9349
o 1998 Ohio Valley Publi1hina Co. .
Continued· ~II" l

Sentinel

on

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