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. Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprll22, 1998

Weather

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

"

' .

STORE HOURS .

Sports

·

Local· diamond re$ults,, Page 5
Beat of the Bend; Page 6
Ann Landers column, ·Page 6

High: 80; Low:40

.Tomorrow: Sunny

High: 70; Low:40

s· 99

8 AM·10 PM
298 SECOND ST.

.AprU 23, 19M

:Tod•y: Cloudy

2• 12 PI .tANS

Monday thru
Sunday

Thursday

Phi Illes
snap.losing
streak
Page4

•

•

•

Accepts Credit Cards

WE

'

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRIC.ES GOO.DTHRU APRIL 25, 1998

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

WE. ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

COCA C.OLA
PRODUCTS

·SEE

.

Battlefield petitions circulated

2 LITER

By JIM FAE.EMAN
In that banle, fought on July 19, · fleering facility along the Ohio Riv- els to show support for preserving lhe•
Sentinel Newl Staff
1863, about 2,500 Confederate cav• er and 11 pennit from the Ohio Divi- baulefield," said Margaret Parker,
Supporten of the Buffington alrymen under Gen. John Hunt Mor- sion of .Mines and Reclamation.
president of the Meigs County .HisIsland Battlefield in Portland will gan were defe~~&gt;ted by approximately
The Ohio Historic Preservation torical Society.
have a chimce to 'demonstrate their 8,000 Ul)ion soldiers fQIIowing a raid Office has recommended more study · "Local people have to show that
· backing on jletitions being circulatl!d through Kentucky,lndiilna and Ohio. be done on the baltlefieldobefore the support before the state will become ·
in an effort to save the Civil War bat- Morganhimselfwascaptured a week Division of Mines an&lt;! Reclamation Involved." she added.' .
1\efield.
. later in northeast Ohio.
issues a permit.
Dedication of the first two markThe petitions. which be circulated ·
In 1996, Richards and Sons Inc. of
The petition was drafted by ers on the route .of Morgan's Raid
starting today, will be distributed to Racine announced plans to min~ William Martin, a Jackson attorney through Meigs County will be held
local, slate and federal officeholders gravel from the property.it owns near representing the Buffington Island Monday at II a.m. in Chester at the
and encourages them to take all Portland. in an area associated wilh Battlefield Preservation Society, Commons area and at Rock.Springs
measures necessary to save the bat- the baulefield. The company is· cur- headed by David Gloeckner of Port- at II :45 a.m.. .at the fairgrounds
tlefield - ·the site of the only Civil rently awaiting a pennit from the land, a Civil War reenactor.
entrance on Rocksprings Road. A
· War banle fought in Ohio.
U.S. Anny Corps 'of Engineers for a
"We want voters to sign them to reception will ..follow at the Meigs
pennit to build a barge loading' and present 'to elected officials at all lev- County Museum in Pomeroy.

c

,
14
Chuck Roasts •••••• · ..
C
Bologna ••••••••-.~ ••• 9 9
$.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS:EEF

OSCAR MAYER .

·

SUPERIOR'S SLICED

.

SPLIT .(HICKEN . . . .. .

Breasts •••• e••••••••• ~~~.9

C

9
C
Th1ghs •••••••••••••-..69
$ ,,
Pork Lo1ns.......... . 1 .· .

12oz.

7·UP,
.PEPPER, .
ORANGE SLICE,
MUG ROOT BEER

·

Po

~· chop •••••••
Lit.

Cremeans c•lled 'right-winger' by paper

· Dayton Daily News.
endorses Hollister ·
DAYTON (AP) - The Dayton
· Cremeans, a fonner conpessman,
· Daily Newt. ha.~ endorsed Lt. Gov. was described by the newspaper as a .
Nancy Hollister in t~e Republican right-winger who has argued that gun
primacy for lhe 6th Congressional pxt~rol would undennine lhe nation ·s
Qistrict seat.
· defenses. ·
, The newspaper. which endorsed
Cremeans said Wednesday night
Ms. Hollister in·an editorial published that wHile he has never thought of
We&amp;esday, said her nomination as himself as a right-winger, he does
the GOP candidate . in lhe race would coa,r,ider himself a conservative who
make sense on every level.
wants lo ,make a diffeR!Iice.
·~' Newspaper endorsements are
"Adistric,t th~t is so evenly·divided between the two parties is ideally fine. but the endorsements that I am
represented by somebody near the concc)'lled Witll ~ lhe bnesfrom VOl·
.political'cenler," ~id lhe newspaper. , e!'S pn May S,'' he said. "I realize I
"A district that has some of the most am lhe underdog going up against the
persistent poverty in Ohio should nor · jiOwerbrokers in Columbus and
be represented by a staunch conser· Washington, but I am the on!Y expe.
varive who· is focused on such uni- rienccd legislator in the race and my
versa! hot-butlqn issues as abol:tion, voting record reflects the interests of
gpn coqtrol and lhe agenda of the the district."
Christian Coalilion."
Also on the· Republican primary
·: - The newspaper described Ms. ballot are candidates Mike Azin~cr.
·ltollisler as a Gov. 'George Grant Michael Browne and Tom
:!ioinovich:type moderate, unlike Shame'
1
·na...
fil1!' ·· 2The·
:6thD'
. l'u...de u:ounues
.
'
:f ran kcremeans, her h1&amp;--I·Pf\1
. &amp;stn..ct me
·conservative
opponent.
in southeast
and southcentraf Ohio.
...
I

2 CHEESE PIZZAS
32.5 oz.

s·

18.

BONELESS BUTTERFLY

.

CHEF
BOY·AR·DEE

CHI~KEN DRUMSTICKS OR

WHOLE BON~LESS .CENTER

BATTLEFIELD sUPPOHIERS Joyce ~vii of Pomeroy; left,
alld Plull Wood of C'-'- _,.the ftr11t twq aupporterl of ttll .
. Bufllngton lallnd Batt~ to algn a petition dnlgned to lhow
· :1oc111 aupport for' the Civil War blrtlllflei!:I In Portlllld. The petl.. :tiona will blr dlltrlbuted today..

c

Bacon •••••••••••••••
SUPERIOR'S . . . . .
.
·
.
D
·
·
.
·
12oz. 6·
9
C
H.ot ogs............. . ··

$

99

THANK. YOU
'

APPLE OR .CHERRY
PIE FILLING
21-0Z

":AEP asks candidates to not .
place posters upon poles

liDE LIQUID

$ 09
0
Potatoes ••••• ! ~~·~~.
UNITED VALL.Y .BELL • ·
$
189
Orange · Ju1ce.c:~.~ .
UNITE~· VALLEY BELL
. $
f
7
~E~ #I

. BAKING

•

•

.
2%. lk
1
$ ,,
.
h
.
9
9
C
Potato C •·ps .....~~·.
. Ice Cream ••••• ~:::~.. .1
/$
2
Corn Pops •••• ~~:... 4
. . .C •IC.ken ••••••MVITA. 2/$5
.. ·
i

0
••••••••• ~..
MODERN FO~DS PRE~UM

•

Asst. Var

·IELLO~G:s FRUIT LOOPS OR

..

.

TYSON. 'FROZEN

SANBORN
·COFFEE

~s

ADOPURCH

. STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

C.

99

CANE SUGAR ·

BLUE ·BONNET

· 34.50Z.

5L8S,

STICKS

1 LB.
UMIT3

3/$

PLEASE ADD
PURCH2,11

Meigs County ~eridors who sell
cigareues have been notiftcd that cisarette licenses are due to be renewed
for the 1998-99 year, according to
: Meigs County Auditor Nancy Part: cr Calllf!bell.
· · Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
·: SectiQII S743.1S, persons engaging in

·MARDI.GRAS
PAPER
TOWELS

.

Good Afternoon

SINGLE ROLi. .

2/$1
.. STOP IN AND
REGISTER TO WIN A
· '20" PANASONIC
·COLOR TVNCR
COMBO AND A FIESTA
OUTDOOR GAS BBQ
GRILL, AUNG WITH
OUR WEEKLY
BANKRC?LLJACKPOT.
THIS WEEK·

. MOO

•

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Cam- • cials said, remains constant: to avoid
paign finance legislation has fragile passage of legislation that would limnew life in the House, where sup- it the GOP's ability .to raise money
porters are scrambling to line up sup- . while doing nothing to restrict the
port for efforts to overhaul the current activity of unions. which spent mil·
·system after forcing the Republican lions in 1996 trying to elect DemQCIeadership to allow the issue to the rats.
·
floor.
. At least two proposals will vie for
"Make no mistake. This was a . support when the issue surfaces on
retreat not a conversion," said House the House floor next month, as well
Democratic leader Dick.Gephardt pf as numerous amendments. '·
Missou.ri. "The Republican leaderOne bill, backed by Rep. Chris
ship still oppoS~:s rc:fotm·that reduces . Shays, ~-Conn. , and .Rep. Martin
the role of money in polilics."
Meehan, 0-Mass., would bari soft
Some Democrats, 100. harbor money, the unregulated donations to
doubts about proposals to eliminate parties from · unions, corporations
unregulated "soft money,'' for exam-. and individuals. It also would impose
pie, believing their party needs it to . fresh limit~ on · attack ad~ that are
remain competitive with Republi- · aired a.~ "issue advertisements.'.'
cans.
.
President Clinton. in a statement
And Rep. Vic Fazio of California. .issued at the White House, embraced
the third·ranking Democrat in the tile mea.~ure, saying that all memtien
House, cautioned "I think h will be in the House have "a respOnsibility
close but. I don' t know. the-vOleS -...- to·v.ote for this measure to ban lurge
.then~" to approve a majcx: bilfartisan soft-money ccintributions, im~ve
measure. .
, .
disclosure and re·strict backdoor cam·
' The Republic~!! objective; offi- . paign S(lCnding."

bill revived

A second measure, supported by
numerous first-tenners from both
parties, would ban soft-money dona·
.tions to lhe national parties, but permit them for suite parties. II would
require disclosure by organizations
that run issue ads.
In addition. other measures art
likely to be.offered for a vote. Rep.
Rick White, R-Wa~h . , for example,
said in a statement he.will offer hi~
!lleasure to create an independent
commis.~ion '!R campaign finance
refonn.
And Republicans are likely to seek
a new vote on a mea.~ure that wa.~
defeated last month. It would give
union members the ·right to slop their
leadenhip from spending their dues
mon~y on campaign activity. This
proposal, which Republicans call
·;paycheck protection," !s opppsed
strongly by the AFL-CIO and cOngressional DemocratS', who fear it
would sharply restrict organized
labor's abilil)' to support candidates.

Gephardt and other Democrats
sought to tak.e credit for the change
of plans by Speaker Newt Gingrich
and the House Republican leadenhip,
whith had been auempring a.~ late as
la~t weekend 10 keep the issue off lhe
House tloor.
But Republicans uid it wa.~ GOP
defections that mattered.
. · Twelve GOP . lawmakers had·
.signed their names to a- petition'
designed to force lhe issut to lhe noor .
over the objections of the Republican ·
leadenhip. Others said !hey were pre-:
pared to do so; Officials said they
feared Democrats would gain control
of the floor and legislation could pa.~s
that was detrimental to Republican
political fortunes.
In exchange for Gingrich's agreement to bring the is- to the floor.
Shays and several other Republicans
scralched their name off the petition,
making it mathematically impossible
for Democ11115 alone to assure its sue• .
cess.

.

wer Festival candidates .-

PenaiW to
increase for
inducing panic
I

&lt;;:OLUMBUS (AP)- The penal·
ty soon will be tougher for someone
convicted of inducing panic at a
school.
· Gov. George V. Voinovich on
Wednesday 'sig11ed a bill making the
offense a felony. The measui'C sponsored .by Rep. William . Ogg. D·
Sciotoville, takes effect.July 22.
Ogg has said the bill was in
response to in(rea.~ing report.~ of
bomb scares at si:hools.

ascent poles," said Mary Kent. dis•
.' .
trict manager for AEP in Point PleasanL ·A climber has a sharp steel gaff.
The current penalty l'or the charge,
or poiril, about an inch and a half long a misdemeanor, is up to six months
at the bouom. With a climber in jail and a S1.000 fine. The maxistrapped to each leg, the line mechan- . mum punishment will become six to
ic actlljllly drives the gaff deep jnto 18 months in prison and a fine of up
. the wood with. each step he or she to $2,SOO.
takes 'f the pole.
· .
The penalties will increase .if
"To 111fely support a workers someone· is injured or a school is
damaged. A school that has to .be
.' ~onll•ued 011 page J
closed will be able to add a half hour
to each school day to make up the lost
time.
the wh~i~ble or retail business of . . Yoinovich also signed a bill allowcigarette,~'ales must have a license tQ i~g ~;umacists to mana~e an indi· do so. Licenses may be porch~ hy VIdual s ~g th.erap~. 1f wnue!'
mail with (he ·application which ha.• , apeement IS ~eiV~ from a phys1-.
been mai~ to current.veridon or al • c1an.. Phannac1sts .Will be a_bl~ 10
the' Meigs County Auditor's Office.
IJ10Rilor and . mod1fy preSC:npiiORS
• Ciganille'licenses for'lhe 1998·99 but not prescnbe drugs. .
year must be purchased before May ·
2S. Reven~s are distributed locally
The governor signed a bill allowto townshi • villages and the coon-. ing local governine111s to ·set ·oside
ty.
'
.
money for expenditures such as selfthe AUditor's office hours are insulliiiCC claims or capital proj«1s
Monday thro Friday from 8:30a.m. without !living up money from the
to4:30p.m. lfadditionalinforma~ion slate's Local Government Fund.
Both bills also go into_~(feet July
is nceded.IJic offace number is 99222 ~
:.
.

Time to renew licenses

.

•

$ 99

:$ 99

. .

9-10.Soz

·c

930Z.

•

gal

As elections apprl)ll:h, American
Electric Power remi~ residents lhat
'posters mounted on utility poles are
d~ngerpus for electric company
employees.
The nails, staples and tacks that'
are used to hold ·posters and signs to
utility poles can inlerfere with tho
work of a line mechanic.
.
"Our line 'mechanics often use :
boot auachmenL~ called climbers to

OR ULTU 2
LAUNDRY DETERGENT

1

~ampaign

GOP overruled,

2 LITERS

$129

.

Today's

.

\

Sentinel

l S«llou. 12 Pqes

•

man, Hillary Tlirley, Alicia Mulford, Jayme
UHler and Cynthia Caldwell. The five will parllclpale in tt11 FIOWir '-tlval pii'ICie at 10a.m:
In Racine and ttMi q - will blr crowned It
Saturday at S1lr Mill Parte.

noon

l- .!~dKI ;.!I!ILV:·_49,N-o.4- I . . !,_.Jtl_:. Coinmission would.offer Social Security
changes
.
,_JC~omin!IDIU....----"'.__ I.
11

/

Ed!tprjel•
Log!
Sporll
.

~

3

3
4:5

' 1 __ _

Lotteries
OHIO

..

Pick J: 297; ~ •= 7428
Super Lotio: 1 - 3· 15-18-~7
.KJcbr; 4800S6
W.VA.
Dilly 3: 422 Dlllly 4: 6783
0 19911 Ollio V.lloy N&gt;llthi., Co.

~

The follow'n'l!l Southern High School.tenloral
-named .. Clndld8tel for 1118 FloMr Festival Queen In conjunction with the Recine Area
Community Orpnlutlon'1 1111nual Fr- Fea- ·
. llval Saturday. Tllay . . . from lift: Trllh Hoi·

"

WAStnf.IQWN (AP) ~ The
.White House Obj«(\ and even some
·Senile , R~publicans are skeptical
about a H~ GOP plan to cm~te a
commission tQ considet the future of
Social S«urltr.
.
"The pnilidenl has launched 8 •
national dialoBue aboutlhe future of ·
·. Social Security and we believe thai
~ss is wortina," said Lindl Ricci, 'spokeswoman for the White
House Office of Management ·and
Budget.

.

.

'•

House Ways .00 Means C~miltee • 'ed to ron sh~rt of cash ~hen the · gress not to spend this year's expect·
approved commission legislation..
nation's largest generation ever ed federal budget surplus so that. if
"I'm increasingly concerned the retires:
neceuary. it can be used ·to guaranthaC the Clinton adminillrllion ·is
The chairman or the Senate tee Social S«urity l'or millions of
IIIOving in a partisan 'direction on .finance Committee, $en. WiUiam aging bllliy boomers.
Social S«uriry," said the panel's Roth, R-Del., was noncommllt!ll
However. Clinton ha~ said he will
chlinnan. Rep. Pill Archei', R-Tnas. · aboutlhe commission·idea. however. wait to say exactly how he thinki&gt;the
An:hei' said GOP leaden plan to And Sen. Phil Gramm. R-TeKa~ •. a money could help until'afuir a series
brins the c.ommission· bill to the · vocal member of~~ panel's Soc•al of town meetings oli Socipl S«urity
HOWle floor for a.vote next week.
S«urity subcommittee, came out that he opened in Kansas City, Mo.,
The ~.i,latiQII ~ld crelle ~ agailfst it.
, • . ·.
April7. .
. .
eiaht·member commiSSion on Soc1al
"Senator Gramm s v1cw IS 'that · . ~epubhcan law!"ae.rs part1c1pa1·
Security. simillr to one currendy con- : commi~ions we for people . who. ed m the .Kansas C11~ event. ~~ WI!"
OMBdirectorFrankliriRai~hM siderinll how Medicare, the aovem~ d~'t know what to do. We know . congressional elecuo~s loo~tnJm
tried to diSSIIIIIIe Republican leaders ment health insUI'IIIK:e program for whatlo do," said Gramm spokesman ~ovember, lhe GO~ IS loo~1n1 f&lt;H:
rron\ pushing a Social S«uril)' com- lhe elderly, can .:commodate ~Y Larry Neal.
h1g~ Jr?Und on Soc1al.
mission. Bul on Wednesday, the . boomers. 8oth programs are projeCtPresident Clinton.has asked c;:onTh•sls an electnc 1ssue, 11 1s

Se:curi'Y·. .

•

•

.

highly, charged and polili,al 'human ·
nature tieing what it is. there are ~
always those who would like to rake : ·
advantage of it' for political purpos- :
es," Archer said. "Py creating the ·
commission we will be pulling the :
politics out of it."
:
Under his bill. lhe president and · :
Democrats in &lt;;ongress would ·
appoint commission memben aloos :
· with rheGOPieqrship. Theycould :
include lawmakcn or outside CKpc111, •
but Americans of various 1JCS and :
both employers and worken would :
have to be represented.
' :
At least six commisSion members •
would need to agree
•
•

...o.

�The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

~ommentary ;

I

Local News in .Brief:

OHIO Weather

•

Friday, Aprll24
AccuWeather• forecast for

~sank Day' set for ·Wal/cAmerlca

conditions and

Barbara
Archer
•

MICH.

BarSara 'Bobbie" Archer, 43, Middleport, died Wednesday, April

22, 1998 at her home following an extended illness. ·
Born on April6, 1955 in Pomeroy, she was the daughttrofthe late Charles
L. and Betl)l Mic~Archer. She was a secretary for the Meigs Local School
District for over 2 ears.
She is survived b two brothers. Pat An:her of Middleport, and Michael
Archer of Union ·City, N. J., one nephew, and several specipl friends.
Funeral services will be conducted at the convenience of the family.
Memorial contnbutions may be made to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Mid-Ohio Chapter 1550, Old Henderson Road, Suite W 10 I, Columbus.
Ohio 43220 or the Meigs County Cancer Society. P. 0. Box 703. Pomeroy,
45769. Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport Chapel. is in charge of arrangements.

PA.

By a.n w..."'bbrg

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

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
LROBERT L WINGETT

P.ullllahtr
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

DIANE HILL

G-ral Menagv-

Controller
'

--of
'

b,....,,.,.

l'llo S.otiMI wolcomoi&lt;ftfro to tho from on 1
of tt!plco.
(3GO worr/1 or,,..) ,... tiN t»lt
t»mg pubtt-. ryp«J t.t·
t.tt 111 pnfomd """1111..., I» odlfwd. EliCh ~- ln&lt;:IW. 1 ~lllllunl, - · ··
IfNI tllytiml p/loM ,.,mw, llpft/fy I tlltllf-'1 I 11... 01 ... to I,.,. ...... lllfkt.
01' lotllt. llolt to: t..tt.ra to tho Edllor, l'llo - 1 . 111 Coutt St., Pomlroy, 011/o
.,7U; or. FAX to ftf-HZ-2167.
.

Shott,_,.

letters to the ·editor
'

;we the people of Tupper$ Plains
'

This is America, I thought.
This is for all the people, I thought.
This sewer system is owned by the people, I thought.
This price was going to be kept low, I thought.
We received a gr~n110 put this in, I thought.
People are honest, I thought.
, When inconsistencies began, people responsible should be ashamed, I
:thought.
·
; A United Front. by the people of Tuppers Plains, will win. I kna.w.
· This is going to require patience and prayers, I know.
: Don't be discouraged, together we will find a way. I know.
: People need to have a voice. This is the people's town. and no one should
· 'be afraid to voice their opinion.
We the people did not elect this board, and if the board is not workmg
:Cor our ,best interest, then we need to take control of this sewer problem,
,and make sound·decisions for all the people. · .
We need to join together as a town and work as a team c(fort for the bel·
~erment of OUR community.
'
.
.
; We cannot ignore this problem and expect it to go away. If we as a com;munity do not lake an active part in this situaliQn, we will be controlled,
not be in control. It will only continue to gel worse, and our cost per housebold will rise.
.
.
We the people all have the same prol)lem, so we either work together
:now,to.make it better or we all pay. There is no easy way out of this situ,.tion.
·
; We are not against a sewer system but we are against this outrageous cost.
: We are ap'palled, with how. the people of this 1own have been treated.
;We need to JlUI a rest to the hardship and stress that has been placed on the
people of Tuppers Plains for too long.
·
.
: I can't imagine anyone in this town being against what we stand for. It's
for the town and the people .of this town. Everyone will benefit, if funds arc
-allocated for this sewer system -even the people who have been involved
'in creating this hardship for The People of Tuppers Plains.
The People of Tuppers Plains
By Loretta Murphy and Rudy Kidder
Tuppen Plains

..

mature Han :. had an exlramarital people aic going to be concerned ••
fling. On a boat tall¢ the Monkey and they should be," specifies Rep.
Business. And challenged reporters to Barney Frank of venerably mature
"put a tail on him." Nothing -to hide. · Massachusens. "But the culture has
Nope. Gary Hanpence.'s 'life is an moved away from an acceptance of
rules that sex .is only legitimate when
open book.
•
Genuinely thoughtful and original. two people are married to each other."
A special new issue of "The Public
poli~y intellectual though Gary Han
Perspective,"
a review of public opinis, he would not be first on my list of ·
maturity experts. NATO expansion or ion published by the Roper Center,
weapons procurement reform? n,rt's contains several pages of. pie .charts,
the go-to guy. But not on the New tables and liar graphs illustrating
Maturity. Not if he added back the American public opinion on an anay
·of values questions, including mar;year 10 his age.
.
· Another sign of the New Age of ·riage, family structure, religion, childMaturity: "The. notion of an unmar- rearing and sex roles within the famiried president -- something 'that once ly. These' polls, conducted by Gal!up, ··
would have unnerved voters :· rarely Yankelovich, the National Opinion
comes up .in speculation about the . Research Center and others, don't
lend much weight tO claims of a broad
ambition~ " of single ~ns. Bob Kerrey
of Nebraska and Fred Thompson of new 'age of anything-goes culll!flll
Tennessee. Two questions: ~s being ·. maturity. Viewed through these fig.
single now qualify · as a "private ures, we look more like a post-Aqu!~f·
lapse"Hf so, isn't that pretty .:. judg- ian, retro-traditionalist culture.
In a 1994 poll, 84 percent agreed
mental?· Make that three questions:
Thomas Jefferson? '
that " I have old-fashioned values
And there is BarneY Frank who, about family and marriage.. (Princewrites Berke, "had no trouble winning . ton Survey Research Associates). In a
re-election since revealing (in 1989) 1990 poll. 92·pereent disagreed that
that he had hired a male prostitute."
"marriage is an. outdated institution"
(Gallup). In 1996', 71 percent agreed
TheNew
Ir.===~~==~~~~~~====~~~~~==~~~=::===~:===~==~ Maturity
may that "it's always best for children to be
even
lran- raised in a home where a married man
Sc;end inere ·ancj woman lire living together ns )
CI6ARETTES
voting pat· father and mother'.' (Los Angeles
AREN'T COOL.
terns. accord· limes). And whether, Michael Bowers
THEY OON'T liAVE
ing 10 Btrlce. wins his primary race or not, 80 .per·
THETRENO'f.
'\More than ·cent of Americans still condemn extraSIICCE~Ful
politics, the . marital ~x as "always wrong."
. IMAGE...
shift in aniMaybe a.Ncw Age of Maturity has
tudes may reached Barney Frank's BroOkline and
reflect
a New York Times readers (even if lhey
maturing cul- have grown a bit judgmental about
ture in which their squeegee guys), but in the rest of
Americans
America, the New Age can wait: We
are
more still have a lot of growing up.to.do:
aware of the
Ben Wattenberg is a senior fel·
realities of low at the Amtrictin Enterprise
private
Insdtute 11nd q the moderator Of
lives,"
he PBS's "Think Tank." Daniel Wat·
who wrote this week's col·
9"A~lER. expl?,~~s. . ' · lenberg,
umn, writes regularly for The .
I j,
On!iCIICfMWI.II!A:I!IJ you' r~
\1 Weekly Standard and is a con·
~2'--"~J~~------!:~~:.!._
_!P~m~!"~,~-~J spouse be~ter. lributina editor l'or Georle-

and Daniel Witlenberg
Last Sunday, The New York Ttmes
discove~ a new maruril)l in the
American electorale. .
Our New Malurity mamfesiS iiSelf, .
according· to the paper's Richard.
Berke. in "an environment in which
voters appear less judgmental and
more forgiving oflhe private lapses of
their public servaniS."
The evidence of our New Maturity?
Colorado Governor and Democratic National Committee Chainnan Roy
Romer retains a 68 percent approval
rating, despite admining publicly two.
months ago to a 16-year "very affect(onate relationship" with a longtime
aide. And Georgia Republican
Michael J. Bowers remains in the' race
for his pany's gubernatorial nomination, even after disclosures of his 15year affair with a foT1)1~r aide.
Fifteen, 16 years. These' might
seem like long spans of time to be
described as "lapses."lndeed, if these
affairs had been with caiS instead of
former aides, they would have been
etema).loves. But surel y pan of our

New Maturity is a ,----;.,.
sense that all is
relative, includillg
time, and ·-- how
time flies when
you're having fun!
Berke does cite
some additional
evidence
our
declining judgmentalism, but on Ben Watten·
the whole, the evidence for our New Maturity is somewhat slender. That is only to be
ex~ted . This maturil)' is, after' all.
still new.
One.additional piece of eviiter\ce is
that Gary Han says thar "voters have
been ·much more sophisticated in
judging characle'r and understanding
that character is demonstrated over a
lifetime in many, many ways."
Many, many ways. In his first race ·
for president in 1984, it was revealed
that as a younger man, Han had
changed his name. And changed his
signature. And shaved a year oft' his
age. And then in his next campaign in
1988, amid a swirl of rumors that he
was having extramarital flings, a more

____:__ _:__

Cong.res~ likely to play -it_safe on H·Mos
By Morton Kondracke
Thankfully, Congress is unlikely
to responq to public anger at HMOs
with heavily regulatory legislation
this year. Unfortunately, it's not likely to give patients more health-care
choices and information either.
If members come back to Washington this week having been born·
bilrded at home with managed-care
· horror stories, it's possible that
Republican leaders will decide to
pass modest legislation to prevent
Derrloerats from exploiting the
health-care issue in November.
·
Almost c~rtainly, though, nothing
like Rep. Charles Norwood's, R-Ga.,
Patient Access to Responsible Care
Act (PARCA)' or the Dcmocratoc
leadership's ·Patients' Bin of Rights
. Act is likely to pass.
PARCA is designed to put phy'sicians -- specialists, especially -- hack
in control of medicine, instead of
insurance companies, employers and
managed care plans, by ,. among
other things -- requiring HMOs to
pay the fees of any doctor a patient
chooses to see. ·
The Norwood bill has 229 House
co-sponsors, but it is anathema to
Republican leaders. who regard It as
certain to trigger higher health costs
and insurance rates and increase the
number .of persons without health
insurance. ·
.
It is also biuerly opposed by the
Hcalt~ Benefits Coalition, which
• includes the managed care-and in sur-

of Independent
Business
and
other employer
groups, all influential with the
GOP.
The same
groups -- and
GOP leaders -·oppose
the
Democratic bill,
Kondracke whoch is designed
to place consumcrs in charge-of medical care -but docs so largely through government regulation and recourse to lawsuits.
The bill would authorize three
federal agenc~es to issue regulations
on HMO conduct, require HMOs to
let patients sec specialists without
going through a primary care gatckeeper and -- like PARCA -- repeal
the federal Jaw that prevents suing
HMOs.
·
Fueled by news accounts CXJlOS·
ing deaths and lasting health damage
caused by HMOs' denying qcccss to
care, .even ipdustry lobbyists admit
that HMOs .arc barc,ly more popular
than tobacco companies.
In Janua!)', a poll conducted by the
Kaiser F~mily Foundation and Harvard University reported that48 percent of U.S. adults had personally
expc;ricnced a problem with an HMO
or knew someone who had -- ranging
from inability to get adequate informat ion about health plans to denial of

l'l od ay in history ~~"!::·;~ '~.:'!.~"":;;:: =~;;:;:'"'"
;

rn ' " " ' " " '

The poll showed overwhelming
support -- ranging.from 90 to 64 percent -- for enacting various elemeljll!
.of President Clinton's Patients' Bill
of Rights into . law, but support
dropped precipitously if the steps
involved higher insurance premiums,
government regulation or employees'
being dropped from insurance coverage. Significantly. support remained ·
highest for health plans' providing
more information about their coverage -- suggesting reforms that some
pioneering health-care thinkers say
Congress and the Clinton administralion ought to start planning.
Last year, David. Kendall and
Robert Levine . proposed in a paper
published by the Progressive Policy
Inslilulc that work star! on an Internet-style health iilformatiori ·network
that would include an individual's
coded health records, up-to-date data
on the best medical prac_lices for var-.
ious conditions and performance
records of doctors, hospitals and
HMOs.
Patients or someone they choose
could access the network and elccIronically match the patient's medical
problcm to the scientific and performancc data. PatieniS would deposit a
report on their treatment and iii .-·
results into the database -- without
identifying themselves and losing
privacy -- to add ·to the informaiion
available to others.
Kendall and Levine arc in the
proccs.• of expanding on the idea to
reform the entire u : ~. health delivery
system. They rcco!llmend that each

person hiiVe a Health ManagtmeQt
Account, paid into by employers
and/or lhe government, and have
maximum ·choice -- as federal
employees cuirently do -- to choose
the best health plan for their medical
needs and budget.
. Conceptually, the whole system, ·
operating. privately but with governincnl hacking. would resemble ·such
computeri1.ed new entities as the Visa
credit card consqrtium of banks,
credit repOrting systems,' ATM network.&lt;. the Internet and the universal
har code system.
The one hill this year that contains
a stan toward a perlormaf\Cc• arid
information-based HMO refnim is
the Health Care Quality, Education,
Security and Trust Act (QUEST)
sponsored by Scns. Joe. Lieberm~n •
D-Cnlln., and Jom Jeffords, R-Vt.
Unfortunately, it ha.• little backill@.
Republican leaders, of they arc
worried enough 'about anti-HMO
sentiment, arc prepared to pass token ·
legislation bar:ring health plans from
denying information to patients, protccting patient privacy and imJlQsing
minimum hospital stays after ma.•tectomies.
If they thought more .creatively,
though, they'd launch at least a study
of a na.tional health information network. It would be based'on the conccpls of personal choice and rc~-pon­
sibility -- just what Republicans say
they believe 1n.
(Morton Kondracke Is txte~~·
tive editor of Roll Call, the_,..
per of Capitol HW.)
·

. . Mulholland was on the .rig.ht track

.

tBY The Associated Pre"

·
.
Today is Thursday, April 23, the I 13th day of 1998. There arc 252 days
~eft in the year.
: April 23. I ~64. is the generally accepted birthdate of the English poet
~nd dramatist William Shakespeare · He ~ied on the sam~ date 52 years
~ater.
· '
• 1 On this date:
: In 1348, King Edward Ill of €ngland established the Order of the
:Oarter.
. ·
. ·.
. .
• In 1789, Prcsodent-elccl George Washonglon and hos wofe moved into
~he first executive mansi~n. the Franklin. House, in New York.
··
: ln _ l791.th~ 15th prestdent of the Unncd States, James Buchanan, was
~rn tn Frankhn C~unty, Pe.~n.
,
. .
·.
.
: In 1896, the " Vnascope sy_stem for proJccnng movoes .onto a screen
,was demonstrated on New York Coty.
.
. .
·
.
!. In 1940, about 200 people doed on a dance hall fore on Natchez, Moss.
! In 1954, Hank J\aron of the Milwaukee Ilr~ves hit the first ?f his record
'ISS maJor-league home. ru_ns, on a game agaonsl the St. Louts C~rdonals.
The Braves won. 7-to-S.
.
In 1968, the Methodi!l Ch~rch and th~ Evangelical United Brethren
Church ·merged to form the Uno ted Methodosl Church.
. .
. In 1969, Sorhan Sorhan wa. sentenced lo death for, assassonaung N~w
York Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. The sentence was later reduced to hfe
imprisonment.
·.
·
·
· ; In IIJ8S, the Coca-Cola Company an noun~ it-was changing the secret
~avor. formula for Coke Negative pubhc reactoon forced the company to
nesume selling the original version.
·
: Ten years ago: A federa! ban·on smokina during domestic ai,rline flights
elf. two houn or less went tnto effect.
.
~iv~.year~ a~o: President C.linton s~id he 'wa~ givins "se~i~s considerauon to 111111ted U.S. atr stnkes agatnst Bosn1an Serb posnoons. Labor
leader Cesar Chavez died in San Luis, Ariz., at age 66.
•
I

I

I

_,__

By Jo11ph Spll!l'
:Republicans lost their cool a few.
days ago when a prominent Democrat
threatened to drag some skeletons 'out
of GOP closciS if they begin to pursoe
Bill Clinton ' with too much fire and
gusto,
The panic began when Bob Mulholland, a Democratic National Com- millce 'member from ~lifornia told ·
the Washingi,On Times on April 10 that
he was gathering .information on
Republican le~rs and members of
the House Judiciary Commiuee, which ·
would hold impeachment hearings
should such proceedings be launched.
Several Republicans on the panel
are divorced and ~ords of their cases
"contain some very interesting information," Mulbolland said. He spccificall}' mentioned charges of ad~ltery. ·
The ink W3$'barely dry on the story
before Republicans started screaming
foul. Mulholland wa&lt; engaging in
"sniear" tactics and "gutter politiq,"
· they \l!hined. Party Chairman lim
Nicholson insisted ihat Democratic
otfocials demand Mulholland's resignation. The Democrats complied but
not.before Mulholland got off~ ·
. round, this time on national tttevlsion.
"When I see these Republicans go
II

•

.0

• •

(f,

(f

IND.

(f _•lcotumbusl·7o• I

of

·

L ____

IMansfield l1o•l•

on television
should ask SOII1C Democratic fatcaiS to
talking about
cough up some bucks to finance a priDcmocraL~ and
vale, nonprofit Mulholland CornmisPresident Clinsion. which would be dedicated to the
ton, abOut famouting of hypocrites, ·phonics and prcily problems,
. tenders. He could'then call on Clinfamily values, I
ton's bolicr-tha11-1hou critics and lhc
just gel a liule
supermoralistsoflhc Republican
outraged," he
to .come forwan:t, take an ~th. and
said on NBC's
answer some questions aboul their
"Today" show.
own private lives.
"I mean, after
spll.r
If lhey refuse to cooperate and
all, it's the
"come clean,". as they have 'iO loudly
Republicans, led by Newt Gingrich, demanded of Bill Clinton, well then. it
Bob Dole or California Governor Pete . · would be clear, wouldn't it, thai they
Wilson, who all dumped their fillll have something to hide'!
~ivcs for younger women ... And 1
Mind you, 1 per.;onally believe· all .
think that if (~orgia Congressman) this probing of private lives is a rcpu~­
Bob Irarr and some of these pther nant business. But if so~ people arc .
Republicans have had two, three or wont to walltlw in it, the le&lt;L&lt;I thai
four families, then let the American ou~l,t to be requi~ of accuser. an&lt;I
people know it. That's all public inquisitors is that tbcy hnw d~an
record."
·
hands themselves.
Having stirrCd up a fuss, MulholSo let's hear from House Majnnt\
land lhen backed off and declared that Leader Dlck Anney. who rccemly 1~-,;_
he had accomplished his goal ~f get· nounced Bill Clilllnn 11 "sha 111d,•ss
ting the media to focus on Republicans person" and dcclan:d th;tl I"· &gt;moht
and would now move on to other resign ifsi!llilarlyaccuse•t:lluw )''"'"'
thillgs.
ago, the Daii;L&lt; Of&gt;scrwr r··~~~,,·,fthat
That's too~- 1think'the man is on during the 1'17tls. s.·&gt;w;ll )'''""~
to something, and I think he ought to women al ·tl"·· llnin-r.it)' ,,f N1•o1h
continue the effort. Indeed, I think he Texas nhje•·le•l In l'mli·ssur lli,·l

party

J•

Armcy's flirtatious demeanor. One
took such offense at his "inapproPriate .
behavior with female studcnL•" tha~
she nctually left school for a while.
What say thee. professor'!
Let's hear froin Speaker Newt Gin·
grich, who declared the House ha.• an
"obligation" to probe Clinton's dalli~nccs . Several of Newt 's former
political aides arc on record ._, s:~ying
he cheated on his lirsl wife. A woman
nallHid Anne Manning told Vanity Fair
maga1.inc in 1995 that she had 11 sexual relationship with the m11rtkil Gin_grich and was wolling In talk h&gt;
:·~xpose his hyl"-.:risy and ahusc of
i"&gt;wcr." Wluu s;ty thee. Nc\\tic'.'
. Let's l~;or li·'"" Dan Quayle. wiK&gt;
""l"'•lle•lly jnk,·s that "tloc only porson
I
h'&lt;i:oy tl~ll·s willing ••• stan~ UJ1 h&gt; Bill
qinh•n Is f'mol:o Jt&gt;ol&lt;.'s ." f',;rh"f'S l&gt;.m
ll't&gt;UI,I lik~ " limm h• explain lhc
l·lc•n,l;o )!&lt;•If uuting l~t.• 11nJ twn ·t•ll~r
•ll-puhli~o.".lll ,·onpn.·ssm..·u tonk with ·
po&gt;t.•tnmuk l••hh~· isl ;uoJ lal~r Playhoy
1'"'"1' l':mla l~orkinsnn in I'IKO. l&gt;.m ,
sw,,..... lt..· .:n~a!!"'l in IW un1oward :
hdtn it&gt;r. hut it ' nl:l\' ···~ haw h..-.:n .'
fu,m lnl'ir-. l•ftrying. ·
. '
. .loNeph SJK'ar L• a iyndkat~
"ril••r ror Nr\\'NJIIIptr .Enterprise

I

Theodore H. Matthews
TheOdore H. "Ted; Manhews, 75, Birmingham, Ala, died Thursday, April
9, 1991!.
He was a member of the Shades Valley Presbyterian Church and a retired
employee of Vulcan Materials Co.
He is survived by his wife, Polly Karr Matthews of Birmingham, formerly
of Meigs County: a daughter. Nancy Matthews of San francisco, Calif.: a
son and daughter-in--law, Richard and Marilyn Matlhews of San Diego, Calif.:
a sister and brother-in-law, Martha and Carl Clark of Naples, Aa. ; three
grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
.
Local services will be announced later by the Pomeroy Chapel of Fosher Funeral Home. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made
to the Sanctuary Choir of Shades Valley Presbyterian Church, P.O. Box
530305, Birmingham AL 35253.

W. VA.

Vll Associated Press GraphlcSNBt

Today's weather forecast
By The Aesociatecl Prass
Southeasten Ohio
Today... Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Highs in the lower 60s: North wind increasing to 10
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonigh!... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 40s. North wind 10 mph
becoming light.
Friday... Mostly sunny and
YJ&amp;rmer. Highs in the lower 70s.

Extended rorecast
Friday night. ..Partly cloudy. Lows
in ihe 11pper 40s.
Saturday...Partly cloudy. Highs

near 70.

Sunday... Partl~ cl~udy. Lows in

ihe mid 40s and htghs tn the rrud 70s.
· Monday... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lpws in the lower 50s and
highs in the mid 70s. .

Weekend to. start
under dry skies
By The A"oclaled Preas

Units of.the Meigs County Emer'
gency .Medical Service recorded t1
calls for assistance Wednesday. UniiS
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
I:41 a.m., Leading Creek Road,
Rutland, Mildred Lambert, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Rutlancl squad
assisted;
3:54 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Freda Vanlnwagen, VMH, Pomeroy squad
assisted;
8:20 a.m., Eden Ridge Road,
Reedsville, Elza Bartimus, treated at
the SCel)e;
.
II :20 a.m., South Fourth Avenue,
Middleport. Barbara Archer, dead on

northeast was bringing showers
The last of the lingering showers across the mid-Atlantic region and
should move out of Ohio tonight.
the New England coast. .
Sunny to partly sunny skies with
Morning showers also were forehighs 70-75 are forecast for Friday. cnsl in the Tennessee Valley, while
Some widely scattered afternoon clearing skies were forecast in the
The following cases were conthunderstorms are possible in the Mississippi Valley as the system was cluded Tuesday night in the Middlenortheast.
: expected to move otT the coastline port Mayor's Court of Mayor Dewey
The dry conditions will continue lat.\ tonight.
. .
Horton.
.
on Saturday with temperatures again
The rain could cause high creeks
Forfeiting bonds were: Christoin the 70s, the National Weather Ser- and streams in western North Car- pher J. Roach, West Columbia.
vice ~W~id.
olifia and ·eastern Tennessee, aggra- W.'Va., $150, underage consumption:
The record-high temperature for vating any flooding ·in the area. And Lonnie Taylor, Middleport, $6(), failthis date at the Columbus weather a.f~rnoon · storms in the mid-Atlantic ure to yield; Seth Wehrung, Pomeroy,
station wa• 88 degrees in 1960 while states could bring hail an~ high $60, stop sign; Jacob W. Ventors,
the ~cord low was 23 in 1986. Sun- "!inds.
Bidwell, $.60. wrong way on one-way
set tonight will be at 8:17 p.m. and
Another low pressure trough was street: James V. Goody, Gallipolis,
sunrise Friday at 6:41 a.m.
bringing rain to most of the Pacific $60, assured clear distance; Nathaniel
Acrou the na~lon
'
coa•t: with showers from Washington L. Froufe, Dexter, $60, defective
Gloomy sktes loomed over both te c;entral California. Southern Cali- exhaust: Jaela Hall, Gallipolis, $150,
coastlines early today, with. the fomia arid the desert Southwest were underage consumption.
promise of afternoon storms in the looking al aclear dny.
Fined were: Brian J. Reed, Midmid-Atlantic, while high pressure
dleport, $25 costs. expired registrabrought dry, warm weather 10 the
tion: James F. Barnes, Gallipolis, $25
Plains and Rockies.
plus costs, allowing unlicensed perA low pressure system mo"ing
Veterans Memorial
.
Wednesday admissions .- Freda
Vanlnwagen. J1omeroy.
Dinner planned .
+
Wednesday discharges - none.
A turkey and ham dinner will be .
Editor's note: A lawsuit outlines.
Holzer Medical Center
served at the Southern High School
the grievances or one party aplnst
Dlscharxes April lZ - Sarah Sunday, May 3, II a.m. to 2 p.m.
another. It does not establish pill Ramey,. Jacobi Brandeberry. Fannie Cost is $4.75 for adults and $3.50 for
or innocence.
Taylor. Lionel· Boggs. Debra Sebert, students. Takeout food will be availThe following suits were filed Mauhew McCarthy, Goldie Haskins. able.
recently in the Meigs County Com- Estella Wiseman. Joyce Knous,
mon Plea.' Court of Judge Fred W. Mabel Rogers, Nickolaus Russell, Dilnce to be held
Crow Ill.
·
Brian Hayes, Samuel Will, Bobby
A round and square dance will be
First National Mortgage Corp.. Koonce, Lucinda Betts.
held Saturday night, g to II p.m. at
Frederick, Md., seeks $47,289.23
(Published with permission)
the Tup\lers Plains VfW. Guy Thoma
from Melissa J. Goble, Racine. or
will be on fiddle. with True Country
foreclosure . of property on Apple
Band, ; Ronnie Wood will be the
Grove-Dorcas Road.
The following actio.ns to end mar· caller.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Compa- riage were filed recently in the office ..
ny, Pomeroy. seeks $44,554.76 from of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar- Square dance announced
Ciody Pickens. Pomeroy. and Harry ·ry Spencer.
A round, square, line and clogging
Pickens Jr.• Racine, or foreclosure of
Divorce asked -- Tommy Boso, dance will be held from 8to II p.m.
property in Salisbury Township.
Portland, from Teresa Boso, Portland, at the Lqng Bollom Community
Ageis Auto Finance Inc., Newport April 16.
Building. Friday, Out of the Blue will
Beach, Calif.. seeks $12.918.38 from
Divorce granted -- William K. provide music.
Ricky W. Schaeft'er. Syracuse. on a Cogar from Mary E. Cogar. April20:
delinquent promissory note .
William K. t-1arshall and Trudy J. Garden Club to meet
The Winding Trail Garden ,Club
Marshall, April 21.
will
meet at 7 p.m Tuesday at the
The Daily Sentinel
home of Valerie Nollingham, Long
!USPS lll·Htl ,
Bottom. Members will make baskets
1
and are requested to take their own
Publislted ('\lery aflernoon, Monday UlfOUJb
Am Ele Power ......................4"'. friday, Ill Cou11 St., Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
supplies.
Ohio V.11cy Publiatung Company!Gannen Co .•
Akzo .................................... 102\

arrival, Middleport squad assisted;
3 p.m., Pearl Street, Middleport,
Latonia Thomas. VMH;
8:45 p.m., Laurel · Cliff Road,
Pomeroy, Mabel Tracey, Holzer Medical Center;
10:38 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, .
Maxine Dugan, HMC.
MIDDLEPORT
9:04 p.ll)., Pearl Street, Sarah Jef·
fers, HMC.
RACINE
II :07 a.m., state Route 338, Bobby Arthur, VMH;
7:23 p.m., Elm Street, Billy Hill, .
Holzer Medical Center;
10:39 p.m .. Elmwood Apartments,
Vicki Boso, VMH.

Middleport.Mayor's

Hospital news

C~urt

son to drive vehicle; Benjamin T.
Anderson, Hartford. W.Va.. $1 00
plus costs, open container: seat belt,
$15; Stephanie D. Anderson. New·
Haven, W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus
cosiS; Mary V.•Gam~s. Pomeroy. $25
plus costs, expored tags; Edie Roush,
Reedsville, $100 plus costs. disorderly by fighting; $100 plus costs,
disorderly after warning: Jamie Terzopplous, Racine, $25 plus costs,
expired tags: Tara M. Block, Middleport, $1 00 pi us costs, underage
consumption: $100 plus costs, disorderly after warning; Eric Qualls,
Middleport, $25 plus costs, no operator's· license: Kevin R. Roush.
Racine, $200 plus costs. driving
under financial responsibility action
suspension.

Meigs announcemenJs

Court ·news .

Tio end. marriageS

Cheshire. The Gospel Melody Boys
and Esta, Delivered, Witness II and
Joe McCloud will be featured. There
will be a love o.ft'ering laken to benefit the Bend Area Gospel Jubilee. .
Ganlen Club sets meeting
The Rutland Garden Club will
hold its regular meeting Monday at I
p.m: at · the home of Dorothy
Woodard in Langsvilll:.

.

Pomeroy accident reported

A P~meroy woman wa.• cited following a two-car collision ~I the,
junction of West Main Street and Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy
Wednesday around 8:07a.m..
.
Nonga Robert.~ . Pomeroy. pulled from Butternut Avenue into the
side of a southbound car driven by Alicia Council, Langsville, accord·
ing lo a Pomeroy Police Depanment report.
Council's 1991 Chevrolet Corsica sustained moderate damage to ;
the passenger side while Robert's 1984 Ford Escort received light dam- !.
age, the report stated. Roberts wa.~ tited for failure to yield.
.
·'•

Burglary thwarted
A Langsville man and his wife returning from Bible school appar·
enlly interrupted the burglary of his home Wednesday night. accord·
ing to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby were returning from Bible school when
they noticed lights were on in the kitchen of their home, said Sheriff
James M. Soulsby. They drove to neigh~ bouse for help and upon . •
return found their front door had been forced open.
. Nothing was reported missing, Soulsby~id.
Soulsby said a ra•h of burglaries is occurring in the county and alert·
ed residents to take precautions and be aware of suspicious vehicles
and people.
.
"Try to'obtain license plate numbers of any suspicious vehicles as •
well as make and color," he said.

a

vehlclelturkey collision repc,rted

I ,

One-car accident' investigated

"

David M. Felly, Pomeroy, was westbound on stale Route 124 in
Salem Township Wednesday around 7:30a.m. when he struck a turkey
flying ;u;ross the roadway, according 10 a Meigs County Sheriff's "
Department repori.l,.ight damage was reporteO to the right front fend·
er and windshield of Felly's 1989 CheVJ'Oiet pickup.

William J. Reitmire, Pomeroy, wa~ northbound on Old Route 7
north of Pomeroy Wednesday when his 1975 Ford Mustang began fish-tailing, according to a Meigs County Sheriff's Department report.
'·
The car struck a guardrail and came 10 rest on the guardr~il with
the rear end hanging over the rail, the report stated. He was cited to
Meigs County Court on a charge of fictitious tags.
· •.

Gobbler season begins Monday
Ohio's &gt;pring turkey season will begin Monday and coo_linues
through ~ay 16 with hunting hours 112 bour before sunrise to noon.
Sunday hunting is•nol permilted. ·
Check siMians are Eller's Citgo, Racine; Bourn's Lumber, Chester;
Hawk's 76. Tuppc;rs Plains; O'Dell's Lumber, Pomeroy; By the Way
Store. Langsville. Turkeys must be checked by 2 p.m. on the day ktlled.
Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood remin~ed hunters to be
cautious and clearly identify their targets before shooung. Only bearded turkeys may be harvested.

~p
Continued from paae I
A .:;;_
, . asks
.
·~---~::.:....;;_
entire weight, .the gall must bury
itself deeply into the pole. But when
it encounters a hard obstruction, such
ns a staple, nail or tack. even the most
skilled and experienced worker is in
danger of falling."
At night. it is especially difficult
for line mechanics to see obstructions
on the pole. Line mechanics sometimes need to climb poles in the dark
to restore power after an interruption
of service.

__

Also, the fa.,teners used for signs
and posters have sharp edges that can
tear holes in. the protective rubber
gloves and sleeve covers that line
workers often wear to protect themselves from electric shock hazards.
Even a tiny hole can expose an
employee to the hazard.
"We urge campaign workers and
garage sale advertisers not to post
signs on utility poles. Whatever the
message, it's not worth endangeri'ng
one of our employees," Kent said, ·
adding that it is illegal to post signs 1
or posters on highway rights-of-way, .
wbere many utility poles are located.

.$tocks

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Se:eond
class poslll!lC pftkl AI Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mtlllber: The Associated Prcn, and the Ohi"

Newspaper AssodatiM.
.POSI'MASTEil: Send addreu correcriont 10
The Daily ·Senlind, Ill Coun Sl., Pomeroy.
Ohio ..57r\9.

•

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Bob Even• ............................ 20'1.
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Br01.1Qhl0n............................. 18~
Champion ............................. 14~
Charm Shpa ..... :.....................4"1•
C!'J::Idlng ..........................45'!.
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I Mogul .........................51

GlnMtt.................................71 '·
Gooct,ur ..............................71~
KR11rt .....................................1n

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Strblcribcn not detirlnato P•Y dw carrier may
rtmll in advance dircd IO Tile Dally Sentinel
on 1 lhrct. six or 12 month b11l1. Crtdil 'Will be:
p~en carrier each week.

Llndl End .............................38\
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No subtC:ripllon by mall permlued In •relit
where. home camcr scrvil::e,il availal!'lc.

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P\lblither merves !he rlJhllo adjull rates.dur·

iAI lhe subtc:riplion period Subtcripllon rale
chan~• may' be imple.nenled b~ c:hanaina 1he
dural ton or lhe subscription.
MAiiLSUBSCRIP'IlONS

1-MtlpCoo..,

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26 W..ki....... ...... .................................... SSJ.K2
Sl W..tJ............. .................................. $111$-'6
Rolu0.-Mtlp~Ot7
·
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26 Wtdo ................................................. $16.614
52Wtdo ..... ........................................ $109.72

One Valley .............................40}.

People• ....................................,
Prem Flnl ...............................22\
RDIShell .............................158,.

s..ra ....................................eo~..

Sl10fiiY'I ....................... ., .......5~•
Slllr B•nk.............................82,.
Wencty'e ..................................23

.
.
--Stock report•

Worthlngton ............................ 18
'

lrt the 10:30

a.m. quotH provldad by Advailt
of GalllfiOIII.
.._

.

.

:\~"'&gt;.:iutlon.

•

'

Meigs EMS logs 11 ca.l ls

.

Friday has been designated "Bank Day" for the 1998 Tn-County
WalkAmerica for the March of Dimes.
'
Bank Day occurs when individuals aad teams should tum in the donations they have collected.
Donations should be brought to Peoples N~tional Bank, 2212 l~kson
Ave., Point Pleasant. W.Va .. from 9 a.m; untol S p.m. Volunteers wtll be
on hand to accept the donations. J'or the convenience of Bend Area .and
Meigs County residcniS, donations will alsq be accepted at Peoples Nauonal Bank offices in Mason and New Haven, W.Va.
Those unable to tum in donations on Friday ate a•ked'to bring them
to Peoples National Bank the following week, instead of bringing them
to the walk site.
.
Walkers raising $75 or more will also be able to pick up their prizes
at the bank on Friday. Prizes will be available at the Point Plensanl office
only.
Team captains are reminded to enter their team T-shirt in the T-shirt
contest. Bring a T-shirt on Friday to Peoples National Bank for judging.
The winner will be announced on Bank Day and will be presented an
award during the May II award ceremony.
For more information, contact Jane. Graham 11446-1479, Tamara Zus·
pan at304-773-S528 or-Lori Wilson at 1-800-313-2911.

Skin testing clinic set
A free skin testing clinic will be
conducted by Connie Karschnik, R.
N., Meigs County Tuberculosis nurse
at the Racine Fire Station Monday,
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Area residents are
encouraged to take advantage of the
evening clinics:
Gaspel si111 announced
The Bend Area Gospel Sing will
be Meld Saturday, 7 p.m. at the Old .
Kyger Freewill Baptist Church,

WE NEVER
CoMPROMISE ON
QUALITY

1'

8111' OCCAsiONALLY
WE Do ON PRICE.
ALL AQU, ALL 111111 $4.00

•••••••••••••••

rr-1BI~

I .:1,1· .• ,, ' Ill

~ ~IOI' tl' S .. .

SPRING SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS

..

RE·ELECT

FRED ROFFMAN
Your
Meigs Count, Coni..-lssloner
WILL CONTINUE TO KEEP INTEGRITY AtiiD
HONESTY IN THE COMMISSIONERS OFFICE

.uo w.Ph_
... St.
- l'vlllmi)O 0
..._
' VIDton•lllllll
Oalllpolla - ... 0111

'.

I '

�Sports

Se~tinel .

The Daily

Take your base - hey, only one,
please.
"If you put the ball in play and
hustle the whole time. that puts pressure on the defense," said Durham,
who tied a maJ'or league record by
reaching on an error three times. "It
causes mistakes."
The "Mistakes at the Jake"
included rollers and 'choppers
between
.
. first base and the pitcher's ·

mound and led to a bizarre nine-run
inning.
Frank Thomas hit his fpurth
homer ··n the first after Durham
reached on an error leadt'ng off the
game. Then ~ormer lndt'ans slugger
· Albert Belle contributed a two-run,
grounds-rule double in the fi"'•
1u 1during one of the damdcst rallt'es t'maginable.
_The damage rePQJt: . nine_ runs,

th.ee earned, two near collisions at
first base. Charles Nagy's pitching
line tells it all- 4 213 innings, nine
ht'IS, 12run•,
·~ "•our ··--'
""''""' a ru'ghtmare
strai'ghI out of the movte
· " MaJOr
·
League."
"It seemed like everything they hit
· to fall in or I was
was ett· her gomg
·
boo
· " Nagy said.
got_ng to . t tt,
The Indians made th~· errors in
the fitrst two mnmgs.
· ·
Cleve 1and man·

'By DAVE HARRIS
.
Slntlnel Correspondent . .
Tony Dugan sltpnmed a pair of
three run home runs, and Jeremiah
Be.ntley, Rusty Stewart, Ryan Ranisburg each chipped in with a long ball
of their own, as Meigs rolled to a 132 win over Waterford in Tri-Valley
-Conference baseball action Wednes·
day afternoon at Waterford.
The game was called after five
innings due to the mercy rule. ·
1bc Marauders jumped on the

•

sger Mike Hargrove w~ stomping
·
around on the dugout steps as if he dre~::,::~~·;he record of reaching ·
were the skipper of woeful lndiaris · on four errors in a game, Durham
teams of old.
tripled to center and scored wheq
·
• twice fail ed to p1c
· k up
" 1cou1d sit here all night
long and Kenny Lo1ton
talk.abou t what we did wrong,' • Har- the ball on the warning track in the
grove said. "The bottom line is we seventh. Tbat made it 14-4 but did·n't count for the recorct because
didn't play well."
After the game a s1'gn o'n the cl •
Durham didn't reach on the miscue.
'
uuhouse bulletin board read, "Thurs. "Right ou1 of the box, I thou
___ •h~
"'
day: Rescheduled fqndafenials,
(See INDI!NS on Page 5)

PH~LADEL~HIA (AP) - After

Phillies ~i~ht be headed to their sev- ~rallying to.beatthe. Reds 5"4oo DOug ·
enth strat~ht loss.
.
Glanville's fourth-inning ho~r:
the first tnntng, Phtladelphta managBut thmgs turned around qutckly
Tyler Green (2- I) survived a four.er .Te!!)' ~ona worrie~ that_!he _ Wednesc:llJ.y night, .!'~th the f'!t~lies run first and combined with Mark
Leiter and Ricky Bottalico to shut out
·
the Reds the rest ofthe way. ··
"I didn't think Tyler would be
i around after the first inning," Fran·
cona said, "But he settled down and
showed a lot That was a huge win for
.us. It's been awhile and we'll take
them anyway we can."
Despite ~iv!ng up five hits in his
shaky first mnmg, Green thought he

pitched well. He allowed only four
· hilS over the next six innings.
"They hit a couple of good pitches and not very hard," he said. "I felt
very good out there."
·
Green also helped himself with an
RBI double in the second. .
" I take pride in my hitting,
because it can help win games. In
fact, it helped tonight," said Green, 3for-6 this season with two RBis.
The Phillies scored tliree runs in
the sec~nd ~ tied it _in the t_hird
when Mtke Lteberthal led off Wtth a

triple and scored on Mark Lewis' sin·
1
g ePhiladelphia took the , lead in
fourth on Glanville's homer off Gabe
White (0-2). Glanville has lilt eight·
game'hilling streak after a s~w start.
"We battled back toni t, and
that's great for our confide' ,"said
Glanville, traded to Phillies 'by the
Chicago Cubs for Mickey Morandini over the winter. "I probably was
trying too hard early and was a little
jumpy at the plate. Now I'm· focusing on staying back and seeing the

f1orida ...................... :......_. .....6 14

~~

· Ctnfr•l DMsJon
Milwaukee ...........................! 3 6
St Louis ........ ....................... 13 7
Chicago .............................. :. 12 8
Hou11on .............................. II 10

standings
BasttrrCn
L £&lt;1.

~York ...........: ............. ... ~

!ill

l .706
B2t~on .................................. 14
6 .700
Btltjrnore ............................... l2 8 .600
Tampa BB)' ...... .................. .... 10 8 ..~56
TloVnto ...... -'· .................K 12 .400

2
)

6

'~ ~

C'l' nlral Dl•iston
CtEVELAND .............. ........ I2 ' 7 .6.12
Ki~os City ............................9 12 .429
4
MJ•ntsotn .......... ,........ 1......... II 12 .400
..'89 .
.222
7~

....·~ .

;:~~.:::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::-::.: l :~
•~

Wtltem DlviMn .
r.................. IJ
~ .722
Sf&gt;''~ . .
.. .. , ..... 10 II .476
Aihtm .................. ..............9 10 .474
Otl!and ....................... .......... 6 I~ .316

rfn.............. . .

·~7~
·~

1;

• _

" N.Y Ynnlctt.S 9, Toronto I
1te~~:ns 7, Tampa Bay 2
~!eallle I I, Kansas Chy 5

... 1Niheim 7. Baltimore 6

.,

'

Today's games·

: Tal1'f)a Buy (Joh11ron 0.0) at Tckas (Oliver 0-2),
.
t thiCDJO White Sox (Bere 0-3) at CLEVELAND
{W~ghr 1· 1). 7 : 0~ p.m.
•
2 : .:~p . m .

:•

1 BOSton

Friday's games .

(Wmkcliehl ().I) a1 CLEVELAND {Burba\2-2), 7:0S p.m.
.,n:lheim (Wi1151lfl 0-2) e~t Tampa Bay (Aivurez
.l-It 7 :0.~ p.m.
-~Oakland (Rogers 2- 1) m Baltimore tKamienieck•,.-o). 7:0l p.m.
\..6rfmit (Keagle 0-~) at N.:V. Yankii:Cll (Cone I·
, ,..,:~~p. m.

(Burkett I-ll ot Kansas Cily (Ruwh 1-3).
s:p'lexiUi
p.m.

.. r_ oranto {Hentgen 2-1) at Chicago While

So~~:

(J¥\'arro 1-2). R: O~ p.m.
Min~ &amp;otll (Tewksbury l-2) a1 Seanle (Cioude
2-j ~ IO.Ol p.m.
.

•

NL standings

=· .. .
I •

.Et.!llern Dl•ltlon

}f ~ ~

NewYork ............................. l2 7 .632
Pllii-Jelphio ....... .................8 10 .444
""',,.,1 ................................6 IJ .)16
' ~

.

.684
.650
.600
524

.450
.400

Wtstem Division
San Dieao ............................. J5 4 .789
San Fmnclaco ................ ....... 10 10 ·.-'00
Los Angelcs ............................9 10 .474
Colorado .................................? 14 .JJJ
Arizona ......... ,..................... ,.. 6 15 .286

•

7

"We had a lot of chances. espe·
, cially in the middle of the order, but
we just couldn't get it done," ·said
Reds manager Jack McKeon, whose
te~m is 0-S in one-run gaines. "I '
,thought Mark Hutton could go four
ior five, but he had trouble hitting the
·comers and they got to him."
.
Hutton was a replacement starter
· for David Weathers, who left the club ·
:to attend his father's funeral. It was ··
Hutton's first start of the sea.wn.

Waterford notches7:.2 ~in ~ver-_Meigs

4~
5~

Tonlaht's games

A1lama 111 C'hlltloue, 7 p.m. (TBS)
CLEVELAND ntlndinna, 8 p.m'. •{TNT)
Houlton at Utah,9:30 p.m. {TBS)
San Antonio at Phomix, 10:30 p.m. (TNT)

6
9

Wednesday's scores

Gil

';,
4

Friday's games
St. louia (Mercker 2-0) ::n Philadelphia {Gra.;e

1-2). 7:0l p.m.
Colorndo (Thompson 1-1• 111 Florida (Mead·
OWl 2·2), 7:fB p.m.
.
Houston (Reynokis 1.2) ut Mofllreal (Vakk:s 0..
2), 7:3l p.m.
CINCINNATI (Renilingcr 2-2) ut N.Y. Met1
(Ynshii 1·0). 7:40 Jl.m.
Arizona (Ander~W?n 1·2) at Athmtu (Neagk- 2·
I), 7:40p.m.
C~icago C~bs (~ood 1-1) at Lo 1 Angcle1
(Vnldcl 1 -~). 10.05 p.m.
.
.
Pituburgh (Schmidt 2- 1) at San Diego
(Langston 1.0), 10:05 p.m.'
Milwaukee (Wagner 1· 11 a1 San F1anciuo
(Hershi~er 0..1 ). 10_: 3.~ p.m.

.

VARIETY SHOW
RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER
SATURDAY, APRIL 25TH .
7:~0 _ P.M.

Saturday's games

at

Waahinaton J. Bo11on I; WashinstOn leads ae·
riea 1-0
- Detroit 6, Phoenb J; Detroit lends mies 1-0
Olla.wa 2, New Jemy I (OT); Onawa leads se·
ries 1.0
Buffalo 3. PhiliXIelphia 2; Buff11lo leads ~eries
1-0
DanU . ; San Jose I; Dallas leads series 1-0.
Edmonton J. Colorado 2; Edmonton lends sc:·
rics 1-0

To 'Be Published
Friday, May ~

.

1X3 Grulnt • •10.00

The .Daily S~ntinel

Tonlllht's pmes

Montttal at Pittsburah, 7 : ~ p.m.
Los Anpta at St! l....ouis. 7:.l 0p.m.

(;arpet

,,3.00

(PICTURE)

·. /

HAPPY \
MOTHER'S DAY

'

I

Frlday'spmes

Bosto• ar Wllhin&amp;lon, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at Drm-Oit, 7:)() p.m.
0aiiWAM New .Ieney. 7:~p. m.
Buffalo It Pttil~lphin. 7:30p.m.

Southem hitters were Michael
Ash who was 2--4 with two singles
and a walk. Pete Sisson 2-S with a
double. Adam Williams 2-3 wltb two
single5. Corey Williams a double and .
two walks and one hjt apiece by Josh 1
Davis, Billy Young, Danny Sayre and !
Jesse· Little ( 1-1).
,
. Chris D'Agustino was the winner
w.ith relief from Jor~an . They combined for nine runs. three strikeouts,
eight walks and gave up 12
againsi no eJlOrs:
•Williams and Ervin combined for
18 runs. 1I hit~. five strikeouts. eight
walks and four errors.
Southern will host Ravenswood
tonisht.
. .
lanlnllallll .
.
Alexander
101-913-3=18·11.0
Southem
I 10-322-0=9· I 2-4

HAPPY

MOTH~'&amp;

DAY

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND

LOVE,
JOHN,·JOE

AND
SUSAN

Deadline For This Special
lJother's Day Tribute Is .
Thesday, May 5, 12 Noon

Fill Out Th~ Form Below and Drop 9ff With Payment To.
·
The Daily Sentinel"Mother's'Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Batlerles ·

I

illH:tiH~
keds

~------------------------Ir.------------CIRCLE QNE
A. IXJ GREmNG-$11.00
I. I X's GREI'nNG WII'IC111U...$13M ,
.
I MOTIIIR'S NAME:

1

I
. I YOIJR NAM.I(S) .
II .

t

*849... "..

(PLFASE PRINT or"")

.

SHOE PLACE

:

.I

'ATE

D

•
'
I
,,141 992·6614. (1001 137·1094

POMEROY, OHIO

Mon.•Fri~

Sat. 9 a111~S

9 1111•8

. 1997 AND 1998
1998 CHEVY
GMC .AND ·C~EYY CHM S·10'S AND
BlAZERS OR
PICKUPS!
GMC SONOMASl GMC JIMMY'Sl
hr 4 Wheel Drivel
2 or 4 Wheel Drivel
1998 FUll SIZE

R.._ or

Ex..W Calli .

414

Reguiar or

2 ancl4 Doors

Extcada4 Calli

·VANS

Loaded, Silv•rado .OLDS SllHOUEm
5

. YOUR CHOICE

YOURCHOia

'YOUR CHOICE·

YOUR CHOICE

"

I
I
I

-:-:------.:......-1
I
I
I

--

I

L-----------------•---~---------~-~------~
. - -.:....-

J

.

•

..... ~..... for ··~·
.lllliPOII VILUtl
IICOIII JAI

.

.

DO'fi'T
FORIETI

...

'

APIIL·H, 1991
Lala

wlllllalhltgade •

-----·--

F.IEEJ
f. REEJ

ERE.EJ

5

13,995

ZERO DOWN

..e the HP-26 Helll

10 Yrs. Parts AND Labor
warranty!
4" Thick Super Filter .

YOUil CHOia

1997 CHEVY
MONTE ·CARLO

FREE FILTERS!!!

Come In and

YOUil CHOICE

10Over lnvoi,cel s10Over Invoke s10 Over lnvolice

•

501Ir oil lilt price.)

SUNFIRE

1998 BUICK
1988 OLDS
INTRIGUE OR
'LESABRE
PONnAC . ·
OR
OR
GRAND PRIX OR
BUICK CEltTURY . BUICK REGAL PARK AVENUE

*7990 Or $.l69 Per ..th.

(Frw filers llr!Md to I" .l laidlod ~'flllnl. All other filer&amp; provided ot a full

H..-vy Duty

1998 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO
CHEVY LUMINA

April 24,·25,".1998

For our Open ·H ouse- Friday and Saturday onlv. we will give
you !1:1! up to I filters for your furnace or blower/toil unit.
Breathe Hty •11 summer long as a glfi from your frienlls at
Dlv.id White hrvlceal
·

%Ton· 414

10·Over lnvoiceiS1 0Over Invoke 10 Over lnvaitre I 10 Over Invoice

.

.
Allergy Se•so~ Is here.•
You need· • new filter for your furn•cel

l998 CHEVY
K2SOO PICKUP

s1O.Over 1nvoi1tel s10Over Invoice! s10Over lnvoi1ce1 10 Over Invoice
, 1997 &amp; 1998 . . 1997 &amp;.1998 l ·QQR CHEVY
CHEVY
1998
.
CHEVY VENTURE CHEVY ASTRO
CAVAUER
1 TON
PO.NTIAC
OR
AHD
PONTIAC
GMCSAFARI
CREW CAB
TRANSPORT

•

Pump. Monthly expenses for cooling
up to §0% 1t11 I
Make an appointment for an in-home
e~rgy anylsls during qpen .house
and get:

I

~

MAD CHICK PA~.ULI'IO 1111 DAILY SIHI'DIIL

Southern: Williams (LP) , Ervin
and Cumings
·

1

.,

I .
I YOIJRADDUsst:__....___ _ _ _ _ _
I crrY, STA'I'II
'
I~
I

The

· OR TRUC.K IH STOCKII

I

(YOUA MOTHER'S
NAME)

Our Line Up:

OH EVERY HEW GM CAR

..--------------

111Greailnt

.... Plolu..

Cynthia Caldwell singled. Ktm Ihie •
walked and Kim Sa~re smgled for a
five run, two-out bhtz to make the , .
score 5- I Southern. . ·
.,. .
Caldwell had, two smgles, Sayre · . 1
was 2-3 with a double, Ashley McK- . ·
inney a single and smgle~ by Hupp :
and Holman.
lnpjng lldlll
AleJtander
000-lll0-0=1-3"2
Southern
OOO.IJOS-x=S-3-3 ~·
Batteries
.
!~
· Southern: Sayre (WP) and Davis '
Alexander: Secoy (LP) and Blair

OVER
DEAL!· I"VOICE

beat Southern 18-9

•

Wednesday's Kores

INGELS CARP£11'

(;utA toep

.

This Mother's Day, a·_ heartfelt "thank
could be
the.best gift you could ~ver give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

NHL first-round
playoff slate

,,~

(Continued from Page 4)
By DAVE HARRIS
.
Amy Hysell was the starter and
Waterford brpke open a close loser for M~igs with help from.Tangy . three," Durham said. ·
On this night, why not?
game .with four runs in the third lauderinilt. The two combi~ed to
"When I saw our third base coach
inning and posi a 7-2 wit\ over · strike out two, walk four. and scatter ·
wave
me around tHird, I tbougl\t,
Meigs in TVC softball action . nine hit~.laudermiltlcd Meigs with
WedneSday evening at Waterford.
a pair of singles, Stephanie Wigal, ' 'Wait a minute, how did that hapWith the win, Waterford is now Casey Sanford, and Shannon Price .pen?' " Durham said.
The other error involving Durham
14-2 overall and 9·1 in the TVC. each added singles.
carne
in the third when he stole secMeigs drops to S- 7 overall and 5-S in'
Tammy Huck .picked up the win,
the TVC.
· ·
striking ' out two, walking two and ond and went to third on Sandy AlaMeigs jumped on top in-the first giving up five hits. Lori Milner had mar's errant throw into 'center. He
reached on aa infield single in thC
inning, Kelly Gilkey reached on an three singles to lead the winners.
error and later carne around to score
Meigs will travel to River Valley ninth, making him 3-for-6 with four
runs.
on 'a base ·hit tiy Tangy Laudermilt. today and host Belp_re on Friday.
. Chjcago left-bander Mike Sirotka
Waterford came back in the bottom Inning llllala
of. the inning with three runs to take Meigs
100-010-0=2-5-3 (3·1) all9wed seven runs and nine
a 3-1 lead. ·
.
Waterford
304-000-x=7-9-4 hilS in 7 113 ·innings. Manny Ramirez
· hit a solo homer and Thome a twoThe Wildcats plated four big runs
)
· Batte~
in the third inning to take a 7-llead.
Meigs: Amy Hysell (LP), Tangy run shot in the eighth to cut what was
Meigs plate!! a run in the fifth inning lauderrnilt (4) and Tangy Lauder- once a 12-1 deftcit td 14-7.
In the first, Thome bobbled
- to puH to within 7-2, but could not get milt, Casey Sanford (4)
Durham;s
grounder to first several
any closer. Tonya Miller and Brooke
Waterford: Tammy Huck (WP)
times and it ricocheted to Nagy (2-1),
Williams reached on errors and came and Katrina Green
who couldn't throw him out .
. into score on a single by laudermilt.
"Ray just kept going;" Cllicago
manager Jerry Manuel said. "He ·
could have stopped· and eventually
they might have picked up the ball."
In a virtual ' replay in the third, .
Nagy took his eyes off 1bome's
throw for an . error on Durham's
Chasatie Hollon.
By SCOTT WOLFE
.
grounder. ·
McClelland, Shafer, Brown, JohnNelsonville-York plated six runs
With one out in the fifth, Durham
in the last inning to score a dramatic son and Pitt.s each had singles, while grounded to Thome's right am;l the
· 9-6 come-from-behind win over the Dupler-'and pupler.e~h had two hilS. tirsl baseman muffed it and had no
Evans suffered the loss with 10 play. later in the inning, Greg NorEastern lady Eagles Wednesday
night in varsity Tri-Valley Confer· hits. two walks and four' strikeouts. ton hit yet another grounder to .
eiiCe softball action in Tuppers McGee gave up four hits, fanned six Tbome. who threw to second to
and walked two.
force out Magglio Ordonez. But
Plains.
·1; Eastern made three cerrors in the
Nasy and Thome both ended up covtOI-100-6=9·10-1
inning to go along with four hits as
. ering first on shortsiop Omar
310.011·0= 1--4-11 Vizquel's throw. Nagy caught the
·~ dike burst to nood Eastern's vic- EaSiem ·
.
Batterle1 :
· ball, but Norton was already past the
tory parade.
N-Y:
McGee
(WP)
and
Dupler
bag.,
.
,
.
.
. Eastern hitters were Kim Mayle,
Eastern: Evans (LP) and Bailey
Valerie Karr. Kelli Bailey and
incredibly, the next batte_rground'
,
.
ed into no -man's land, too. Chad
Kreuter's roller was fielded by sec·
ond baseman Shawon Dunston for an ·
RBI infield single. .
Notes: The White Sox recalled
Wii Cordero from Double-A Birm- .
· Alexander: D'Augustino (WP), ingham after the ga{lle. The" outfieldBy SCOTT WOLFE
er-first lia..eman who admitted beatAlexander. now. 10-1, bfllkF open Jordan and Jewell
•
ing his wife batted .28.6
a 2·2 game in the . fourth. scQring
'
eight run~ en rout to an 18-9 win over P-111!"~-----the $outhem Tornadoes Wednesday ·
night in boys Tri· Valley Confetence
G•lll• Cou~ty•s L•rgest
baseball action in Racine.
tie•tfng &amp; Cooling De•ler
Alexander had four home runs
over the newly constructed fence at
~- · •• H•vlng •n ·
WilliamR Wickline Field in Racine.
Hitting home runs for Alexander
·were Lance Rolston. JeremiabJordan
and Daniel Jewell who hit two.
Dusty Bolin was 2--4, Jewell was 2'4 ·and Jason. Hawk Ylas 3-4 for the
Spartans.
,.,

. H~s help Atexand~r.

SUSAN

1JUu11111 Aa

•

·

Hoc key

~aabok

Indians ...

~e~!::~vr.

.

Maaalagton
. \1a,.l

•

~-.....-........--------~------· ·

6~

175 N.·2ND AVE.- MlbDL:EPORT, OH.
992·7028

,,

CLEVELAND 111 Indiana. I p.m. (NBC)
San Antonio al Phoenix, ) : ~p. m. CNBC)
Atlanca ar Chwloue, 8 p.m. fTNT)
Houston a1 Utllll. 10:30 p.m. (TI{l)

.

Brandy "Secoy suffered the loss, the tone for the game early when she
giving up five runs on eight hits, one struck out the side in the fi~t, then
strike out, four walks and two errors. hammered away at seven stnkeouts
She also hi,t one.
over the first three frames.
Things weren't quite a breeze for
In the fourth, however, her control
the Tornadoes as they trailed t-O over wavered as she walked the f1rst two
the last half of the game. Sayre and batters and King si ngled for the
Secoy traded off gOOd efforts on the game's only run.
mound and Secoy enjoyed the com.With their backs against the wall,
fort of the lead going into the final Southem·responded in the ne~t to the
Southern at-bat.
last round. The first tWo batters got
Southern had threatened through- ()Ut then Jodi Hupp got a pinch hit
out the game. but left runners strand- single, Trish Holman doubled home
. ed in sroring position. Sayre had set the tying run. Kara King walked.

N-Y rallies.to beat
softball Eagles 9-6

ADVANCE TICKETS
ADULT $5.~,; CHILDREN $2.00
ATTHI;DQOR
ADULT $6.00,• CHILDREN $3.00
Tickets Available Fruthe, Farhlfra Bank
and Peoples Bank · ·.
·

New York. Ill Minmi. 7 p.m. (I'BS)
New Jerte)' 111 Chic1go, 8 p.m. (TNT)
Minncao111 at Scan~. 9:~ p.m. CTBS)
P0t1land at LA. Laken, 10:30 p.m. (TN1)

San Diego 3, Chft'D'o CubS 2. 14 innings
Monlreal "3, St. L.ou11 2 ,
Phllodelobio ~.CINCINNATI A
Florida j, Colorado 2
Pinsbur&amp;h .S. Son Francisco 2
Los Angeles 9, Milwaukee 6
N.Y. Mels JO,Houston7
Atlamn .S, Ari:rona l

;:·da

i'.:

Frlday'•c••

10

San Francisco (Esles 0.3) Bl Pinsburgh (Coroo.'
va 2-1). 1 : 3~ r, -m.
Los Ailj,e es (Nomo 1·2) ot Milwaukee (Mcrcedesl-0). 2~ p.m.
Snn Di ego (Ashby 2·1) at Olicago Cubs (Clark
2-1). 2:20p.m.
St. Louis (Poline l-0) at Montreal (Hermanson
1-21. 7:0l p.m.
CINCINNATI (Hoirnisch 1-0) al Philadclpliin
{Siephen•on0-1). 7:05p.m.
·
Colorado (AII~;~ciu 1-3) a1
(larkin 1-0),
7 : 0~ p.m.
Houston (Limot 2-1) at N.Y. eri (Jones 0·2).
7:40p.m.
·
Arizona (Blair 0-~) at Atlanta (Ginvine 2-0),
7:40r.m.

thetr school's boosters. They cannot
make
h &lt;2()()()
.. ~ore t an .. • every year.
Thts really shows the opltmum
the NCAA can operate at if it chooses to," said Niland, a former runner
at the University of Buffalo. "It was
a piece of legislation that was really
thoug~t through. They really did
consider the welfare of the student'
athlete instead of just saying they
were."
OpponeniS of the rule, including
many coaches and athletic administrators, fear the potential of abuse in .
which some athletes will be given
money without working. Many are
also worried that high-profile recruits .

Monktnl al Pi11sbur,11h. 7:30p.m.
Los Anplcs a1 StLouis, 7:30p.m.

playoff slate

~·o'J

A ·. 'I . · lit-t
rk 1e
ado 1 ~m~ar ~ga on':'w~otcruof
"It's going to 'be a dis~•ter" · NCAPA' D~ .. ~ 1 yh 1 · J
·
..., , •
S IVISton SC OOSIR anuKansas State basketball coach Toin ary 1997 in the last days of the assoAsb
'd
·
· · •
·
ury sat ·
Ctatton s old governance structure.

Saturday's g11111es

1 ~ NBA rtrst-round
J

will now demand jobs with s~holar- : ·

San lose at DuJias, 8:30p.m
Edmon1on 111 Colorado.l0:30p.m.

Basketball

Today's games

4. Oakland 2
8, Detroit ~
' Chic::~go While Sox 1&lt;4. CLEVELAND 7

~ Boston

•.

II

Pi11sbur,11h ............................... &amp; 12

Wednesday's 51:ores

" Mlflnesot ~

••

CINCINNATI .............. .........'i

..\00

iiChools will be able to hold part-lime

•

Southern is now 14-2 overall (S 1Junior hurler Kim Sayre seem~ to game over the Alexaridet Spartans
be finding the form that earned her Wednesday ni'ght ill leading Southern · 10-over the last )hree seasons) as the
top honors in the area last year as · to a 5-I win over Alexander in tradition· continues. The TornadoesRacine.
. are 9-1 in the league. Alexander is
shed hurled a 13-strike out,
,
.three hit
1-13 overall. ·
·
Sayre went the distance, addir.g
two walks to her great effort and
allowing just one run.

ball."

JOb~. even if they are arranged by ships.

•

Sayre's pitching aids Sc&gt;uth:ern ·in 5-1 victo~y over Alexander _ ;.

. NCAA _says athletes may hold part-ti/rle jobs
By DOUG TUCKER
OV~~LAND PARK, Kan. (AP)
- Dtvtston I athletes may hold parttimejobs theNCAAboardofd'
tree'
.
tors ruled Wednesday.
. "It definitely passed," Bridgit
Ntland, head of the NCAA's student·athlete advisory committee, told The
Assoctated Press.
.
.
The board, which consists of college presidents and holds ultimate
power in the NCAA's new structure,
met in Indianapolis and adopted a
recommendation made last week by
EXCHANGE TIME comes for Malga relay runner Ullses BsrllZZII the NCAA management council., A
'O'!IIht) and Angelo Rodriguez during the boys' 4 x 400-meter relay race formal announcement was expected
week's Meigs Invitational at Meigs High School. The Maraud· later in the day.
. For the first time in dec~. athtook third in the race. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
_letes at the roughly 300 Division 1

•

•
closed out the scoring in the fifth run and two singles. Dugan added his Mike Suprano each singled for "
inning. Martin . walked and Bentley two home runs and six RBis. Bent- Waterford's hits.
..
followed with a single·. Dugan the hit ley and Stewart added a home run
Meigs (7-5 overall &amp; S·S in the
a three run home run for a 12-2 and a single each. Vanlnwagen added TVC) will go to River Valley today ,
advantage.
. ..
a pair of singles. Brad Davenport, and host Belpre on Friday.
Nathan Halfhill singled, stole sec- Rous~. Humphreys, Halfhill and lnninl ~
r
ond and wtnt to third on !Ill over- Martin each chipped in with a sin- Meigs
350-14=P·I6-2 ,,
throw. He then score'd on"a ground gles.
Waterford
200-00:2-4-1
out to give Meigs the win.
Luke lang was the losing pitcher
B11tteries
·,
Collin Roush picked up the win with help from Joe Huck and Matt
Meigs: Collin Roush CWPJ and . ·
scattering four hits, striking out six Huck. The trio combined to strike out J.T. Humphreys
.
and walking only one. Ramsburg "- three, give up I6 hits and walk five.
Waterford: Luke lang (LP). Joe ,
went three for three with his hoJ?e . Lang. Jared Crock, Dan Jones and Huck (2), Matt Huck (5) and Dan
Jones
.
.

Wildcats early pulling three runs on
Meigs put a big five runs on the
the board in the first inning. !&gt;at Mar- board in the second inning. Aaron
tin and Bentley walked to start the Vanlnwagen si!ll!led to lead off the
!inning, Dugan then went deep for the second and one out later Bentley .
first time giving the Marauders a 3· went deep for a 5·2 'Marauder lead.
0 lead.
·
'Dugan walked and Stewart hit ohc
TheWildcatsputapairofrunson over the left-&lt;:enter field fence for a
the board in the bottom of the inning. 7-2 lead. J.T. Humphreys, Ramsburg,
Matt Huck struck out, but reached on and Collin Roush followed with sin·
a passed balli Luke Lang then singled gles to give Meigs a 8-2 advantage.
pulling runners on. first and third. ·
Ramsburg , with one out in the
Lang stol~ second and both runners fourth inning hit his first home run
scored oo a Meigs error. • ·
and Meigs held a 9-2 lead. Meigs
1

'Glanville's homer pushes Phil lies to 5-4 victory ·o ver Reds
watchm~ t~e Ctnctnnatt Reds bat m

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. I

Meigs baseball team cruises to 13-2 victory over Waterford

Thursday, Aprll23, 1998 .

Five errors hurt Indians in 14-7 loss .to Chic_
ago White S_
ox
CLEVELAND (AP)- And the
~t f~ hitter in the Chicago
Whtte
hneup
......Sox
peed
I' 1is 1...adRayff Durham.
'""s
Y
Itt e e o batter hit
th ball ·
e 1 ndstx times, resulling
Cle
h in five
~e a
errors, as t e Chicago
Whtte
Sox beat
the Indians 14-7
Wed ·.~.
.
ne.-...y. ntght. ·
·
The Ind tans would have been bette ff ·
·
. r o tntenttonally walking Durham.

Thursday. Aprll23 1 1998

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By.The Bend

•

~u~y.Apnl23,1888

•

.
,•

Reader reminds Ann that cats can be dangerous .
Ann
Landers
1991, 1m Allrdn n-.
Sylw:liclde and Ctu~M
Sy11din~e

Dear · Ann Landers: I'm
responding to the letter about the
"cat from hell." The writer was concerned because her stepdaughter
. owned an eKuemely nasty cat.
What made the situation disturbing was that the stepdaughter had
just given birth to a baby boy and the
family was worried that the cat
would attack the child.
They were afraid to say anything,
however, bcicaus~ the stepdaughter
was very at1ached· to the anima].
Here's my story. I hope it will make
an impression on that new mother:
· When my son was 2, we visited
'some friends who had a Persian cat
.with a new litter of kittens.
The kittens were in the children's
room where my son and his friends
were playing.
When I went to get my son, this

cat started hissing until I backed out assuredly alen many readers to the
of the doorway.
possibility of a terrifying scenario.
Then, I sot a weird feeling when
Dear Ann Lllllden: Here's
I saw the way the cat was eyeing the another one for your "stupid crim·ikids. I told my son to come t9 me. nals" file. I roared when I read it,
He got up and tripped over the kit· and I hope you will, too. "- New
tens. He landed on his back, and the Yorker
·cat poun~ed on his face.
Dear New Yorker: I did. Here it
My friend had to kick the cat to is:
get it off my son. He hi!d a huge,bite
An intoxicated robber was caught
mark between his eyes, which when he grabbed a cash register· in
required 10 stitches, and claw an Anchorage, Alaska, adult bookwounds above and'below both eyes. store. Apparently, the cash register
I'm sure this cat was trying to take tape trailed behind him, which made
.the child's eyes out. He also had it very easy for the police to follow.
claw mar!&lt;s on ,his face requiring
When the man came into the
eight stitches.
··
store, he appeared to be drunk. He
This attack took less than 30 sec- was slurring his words and seemed
onds. ) was standing 2 feet away and incoherent.
felt pciwerless to prevent it. •
When the clerk refused to wait on
Please tell people that cat.s can be him, he jumped behind the counter
very vicious, especially if they are and started to swing.
.
protecting their young.
• The man then grabbed the regisOur son will always have scars, ter and ran with it. The police had no
but at least he still has his eyesight. trouble finding him. They just fol- Muncie, Ind. ·
lowed .the tape. .
·
Dear Munde: A 2-yeat-old must
After the ordeal, the store manag·
never be left alone with an animal, ·er said, "It would have been a lot
no mauer how "friendly." I am glad simpler if he had taken the $200 out
you wrote. Your letter will most of tlie register and not 6othered any-

body." The police agreed.
Dear ADD Landen: I am so sick
of the bathroom issue, I could
scream . •Why such a fuss over
whether the seat is up or down? '
My husband and I raised seven
kids, and the subject never came up.
If you needed the seat up, you put it
up. If you needed it down, you put it
down.
·
And we ~re grateful the paper
was there, regardless of whelher it
was hung so it went over the top or
dowp along the wail.
·
If this is all people have to worry
about, I have some advice for them:
Get a life. - Harriet in Hillsborough, Calif.
Dear Harriet: Bless you for your
common-sense approach to a "problem" that, for some mysterious reason. has captured the imagination of
thousands. Th~nks for writing.
Send questions lo ADD Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tuty Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

'

armlchael's Farm &amp; LawJl

Beverly Grate Adkins will get ground spoke to open the organiher feet wet Saturday night when 'zational session during which
a variety show, "Everybody time it was decided to meet every
Sing", is presented on the stage Thursday at 7 p.m., at the coonof the Rutland Civic Center to cil's quarters.
mark Bev's fii'St effort as a direcIt was the consensus that the
tor.
chorus is designed to be a "fun
The show has been in various · singing group" and the only .pubstages of planning and rehearsals lie appearance anticipated at this
over the past few weeks and the time is at the July 4!h celebration
opening curtain will be at 7:30 at the "Diles Park in.Middleport.
p.m.
It's designed to be a fun organiBev and a group of children zation.
' will do the show opener, "Sing"
Besides the organizational
and she will appear again as a meeting, those- attending sang a
performer later in the production few numbers and members of the
singing "I'm Sorry". Jennifer · arts council served refreshments.
Ault of Gallipolis will be doing ·a
During the initial session,
couple of solos. "Proud Mary" l'wila Childs served as director
and "My Hean Will Go On" and Lynn Kitchen was accompafrom \he popular movie, "Titan- nist on a keyboard provjded by
ic". Meigs Sheriff Jim Soulsby E* Chambers. ·
will be singing and several daneSo you'.re invited to take pan.
ing groups will be taking part All you have to do is show up on
including the Swingin' Seniors;- -a Th.ursday evening at 7. You'.ll
the Big Bend Cloggers and the be more than welcome to
Midnight Cloggers. There will become a participant. .. ·
he a segment of religious numbers included and Donna Grate
Words are inadequate to
and Sharon Wise will be featured express our appreciation for the
in a skit. A number of songs, warmth and kindness you
lhcmes from movies, will be pre- extended in the arrival of our
sented by various singers partici- grandson, Quinlan Mann. . His
pating in the show.
parents, Jayne and Tobin, and
Proceeds
from
the
production
Charlene
and I have been more ·
' ..
,, ' . will go to help maintain the civic than touched by your .good ·wish-.
center.
es.
You made what was already a
'
The Rivcrbend Community special event, a super special
Chorus was selected as the name event. All of your messages have
'·
for a new choral group which been placed in a memory box
was organized last Thursday which has been waiting for this
evening at the q·uarters of the occasion.
,
Riverbend Arts Council on North
. One day when he's a wee bit
Second Ave., in Middleport ..
older Quinlan no doubt will feel
Sixteen residents of Meigs great pride when he looks over
and M,ason Counties showed up the contents of the box and realfor the initial meeting and at least izes what a wonderful welcome
; · · ,10 others have indicated that to this world he was given by the
' they will be taking part in ' the people of Meigs County. )llank
chorus with participation open to you. You're great and you've
the public.
.
made it so easy for us to keep
Myron Duffield who has been smiling.
active in geuirig the group off the

IIUMLUMEI

Jll't FORD PROBE

1:11;\il

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Ullilf;aM &amp;aD, CGncord, N.C.
.....-. 400,

INH.Aibe 600•. , . . , Nil.
oftC-Qtlc:o 400, ~.N.C.

- 0 0 0 ,. - H.C.

.

J.~

.......

J. Cioodoo
J . ......

W11J1r Dtil nlu Dh olr. Ia dlllcntlnedllo . , Ylcloo1le 81 lilt WW"InW.....
Itant Cup - .

-.....
-.....
--·
,_
-..
--w.-

owned ~ellx Sabates.
CARE
RECORD: 141
ttarto, 0 wlnl, 0 poles, 5
" A road • - of, lnterna·
top-flvo flnlohea, 13 top
tlonal rtonown, Wally Dal·
lenbach \lr. ·la determined
lOa. c - earnings of
to match hlo'prevloua aui:- more than $2.5 million.
J.a.. - ceaa w~h vlctorlea at the
W~T WAS IT LIKE AS
T.Wlnaton Cup level.
A KID WATCHING YOUR
Once a baek·to-back
FATHER COMPETE IN
. champion of the Sports
THE INDIANAPOLISIOO?
Car Club of Arrienca'o
"I thought It woo pretty
Tr1n1Am
Sarles
and
a
win·
cool
watching my ded
....~
· nor ol the Rolex 24 at Day- drive 200 mllea an hour.
tona, Dallenbaeh ha been Dad won a few races In the
atock cars alnce
19701, but lor UO, II Wll
1&lt;- r~clng
1992.
.
like any ot~er kid
All il NASCAR driver, ·
vlng hla or her dad ao a
Oalllnbach Ia best known
carpenter or plumber. ou..
lor hla performances on
)uat happened to drive ,a

J.Cioodoo
J. Cioodoo

.......
J.-

,_.._

a.. -

.

The Daily
Sentinel

lrlloi*Dullon
NASCAA Thlo wtek ·

...........

""""'"'

--- J.-

a.IIOcthi

a.. -

0.-

capped tho Firat Union
• t..m frOm rtoachlng Ita tun
potential. Becauae wa
weren't In lh• thl6k olthe
points taco, we wert~
alwaya orio of tho last
teams through the ..
NASCAR technlcallnapeclion. /14 o rtoault, we were
'always one of the last cars
to get on tho track to
practice. And alnce we
were running a limited
schedule and not on the
track eve:r· week, we
needed al the practice
laps wa could get."
WHEN DID YOU AOTU·
ALLY Sl'AAT RUNNING
ALL OF THE RACES?
rae• 011r."
A YEAR AGO YOU RAN "Once we committed.to
A LIMrri!D SCHEDULE.
llnlohlng out "'oet of the
WHAT MADE YOU
remaining echedula, last
xesr, our on-track parlor·
DICIDI! TO CHANGE?
"Runnlog a llm~ed ached·
mance elevated the team ·
ule lut year really handl·
morale to a new level."

.Supply co.
'555 Park St.
Middleport

·992-6611

J::."

......._

roadcoursn.
AGE: 34

WIFI: Robin
CHILDREN: Jacob (8), .
Wyatt .(8), Kate~).
·
CAll: No. 46 lrat Union
· C~viblet
Monte Carlo,
.

...

WIIO'tttm

Jolmy-

-10--111

. .wtth""" ~
lop 5o.
..

-NO'I?--.

. -

TRIVIA

'

.

'

Willi- ""'1\11 blel- '*"'tlmovll- for"" tllmlng
"'"'oyy offhunclor"1
•
' • •
. .
'2. ---Cup-lOmonlod10111odJI91!8'ol '
1.

. ..-Donnie Allloon?

INrf

-

,_-an oltilrtt!

·-~

-on
---nol-lo
.........

thO_,-."""'

. . .--lot

bolnalnjlnd, hod

-28th 0&lt; - I n

992-2155

Valley .
Lumber&amp;

' Jahn~TNI~

Rolling-Ill

.
.....
...,3 -!00.-CIIIt.
...,,.

NASCN! - . , """'' .

. . hlighll. - I n """'

'

124.110,

FROM THE·,'ARCHIVES:

1188 BODIE IIIIIVII

•

·.

-Rtbluu.us

The 1lcih - , o1 NAICNI
In an llllller trivia queatloti,
wolnoOMCtly ldonH!Iad
Myrtle Beach Spoedwoy ao
the only alto ..,.,.. oil three
gonoratlonJ ot Winaton
Cup lllclng P~ - LH,
R!d-111111 Kyle - ·com·
poled In ,...._ Aa many

' - - t t y pointed
out, there wn a number
of l100ke wtwa oil three
Plltya

raced. Myrtli BOlch

--tlon· '"'*'

wu , ... only track whlll

Jlllhrle
without mtr w111fl(tig.

See for' Your StihlPower Tools &amp;
Accea,orles

Ridenour

ATtENTIONADVERTISERS!!

$upply .
. St. Rt. 248 .
Chester 1185-3308

·GET PI~·SURE

' ' .

,Advertise on this pag~.

•

Deo1118b Glll"l'eU IDe.

'

CALL ·TODAY FOR DETAIUI

'

R!pley,.WV 26271

Bus. Phone (304) 372·3673

Only $l.OP a month an~ no more
.additiOnal OUdet C~~S, . '. . l'
WHAT·IS PIC..SURE't. ·
L.

1·8Q0.964~FORD

:'1111

At. 2111t the Rlpliy-FIIrpllln Exit 1132·

. Par:ta and
Service Needs

.

•
I

CABLEVISION
co M'MUN,I .CATIONI

.

.

A service maintenance plan that ·· 675-3398 or 1-800•766-0553
'coven costs that may occur.with
Call or visit our office at
·
. ,s ID8
. ide cable wmng.
••
1401 Jefferson Blvd.
a cuatomer
· 1n ·Pt. PIeas(lnt

Come S~ Ua For All Your

No Alcollol Allowd
Sign Up SI1Mt lit Golf Coul'll
It yoll would llkl tO 11111k11 donltlon to the D.A.R.E.
progntm, piiiH contKt._., Soullby or~ WOOd It
the Mllgl County Sllerttf'l Dept, 11112-3371,
MondiY thN Frldlly J:Ga 1.m. tO 4:00 p.m.
ALL DONATIONS WILL BE UIEll FOR THE LOCAL SCHOOL
DlstAICTI OR FOR SUMMER ACTIVITIES.
ll

Pftlllllnant

A polr
Stacy
~ from \1rgl(lla end

Wlllk'a l'lnklng II In PII•IH 11

on Saturdey, Apnf25, 1998

I'

L;:--

TOP 1111

Location: MEIGS COUNTY GOLF COURSE ·

I

PIOIIU .

~.

·- - . y.

tw:eu . . .t

Shotgun Start at 9:00 a.m.

1

FqrMore
Information.

•

1\vo d1tvOii with

hllrt of hll1887 •·"" c• IUY,
JIOic ~- 1(1 the Chevy
Dotlera200ot~ 1--

WARNER
_,.,.....,
...
...................

1 - CBIVROLft ~BLUER Ll·

CROSSMEN TO PERFORM .- The llltloMIIy known qu.rlll,
"The Croumen" wlll be In concert SuncleY, 10:15 1.m. lit.the Firat

Golcf Carts, Prius It RefrHhmtnts

Ext.104

c;

11011 WT WBI

. Ron ilomldJtY, the .1996
nlllonJtl dlarnpJon, broke the

rl' LJrdl'i''f'

liT/HI:..

•

I . JIIDniCik,tt1 .
10. ..... or... 101.,

Pomeroy

S31.0011ch

Dave Harris

II. Bob~.-.

111 Couri St.

''
• · Meigs High School senior Danielle E. Grueser, daughter of Danny .,.d
Deborah Qrueser of Pomeroy, was .named the 1998 Girls Alternate in the '
~ual Buckeye Rural Electric Scholarship. As alternate, she received a
.S300 scholarship.
.
.
.
'.

t. twt~.-

10. Jotlnl\' BlniOI\ ..a.

. . . 'ft

""--~~~

Four Man Scramble wfth Blind Draw

Sotunlly, Apttl 25

• • Jot~ 287.
1. All* Clwbd,.. Ron e..t.lld. 252.
. . . ........ 14&amp;
10. AIOh ..... M •

7. IIUI:IIeftlt ..... I . .._Cion, IZI.

'

. : ..j

V6, A/C, power windows-locks, cruise, tilt,
IAMVFM cass, only 95,000 miles. PRICED TO SELL

Golf Tournment

~

• {) I H&lt;!lllf'O'.. 'l\'1 ',

~uto,

· ·sREC scholarship contest alternate announced
~

c. ..... 120.

t. Jf/6 Burton. 17&amp;. ...

2. FICin HorNdl'(, 322.
3. o..o-..315.
• . Jiy .....,S11 .

:1. ~ hdllw,t,ON.
4. w. Mc::lalgf*l. 1,053.
11. Alndy lAklle, 11111.
0. Hlfl'l'l6l a.... 170.

"lte7ThiTD!O

1814 POitiAC BOIImLL£.

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
'/.: ·. POMEROY- AA and Al-Anon, Repub)icati 'Commiuee, Thursday,
: T p.m. J'hursday, Sacred Heart '1:30 p.m. at Carleton Schooi, .Syra. • ' Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave., cuse.
I
· · · l&gt;omeroy.
·
POMEROY - "Caring for the
Caregiver'',
topic of program at
· , ':. ' niPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Post VFW 9053, meeting, Meigs MultipufllOse Senior' Center,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m., nomination Thursday, I to 3 p.m. Speakers~
Lenora Leifheit, R. N, Council on
and election of officers.

I

.. 1,131.
2. Milt I&lt;IMitl,1,101.

.. Ill Bloft.l27.

...... Y'U ....... rlgllt"'
. ,. -.tom.oom

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

IUICH

1 . D. ~Jt

•.

•. MltkMri\ .,,_ •
a..w Barl:b1. ~:~~ .

e: .

POJII1S STAIIDIIIIIS

WINftONCW
1. r:uty,.....I,C131.
2. Jtltmf~ 1,012.

•

.....

'

-

tHIS PAGE
Call 992-2156

COMING UP: T~Enolgy 300
WHERE: Tollodoga jAIL) SUporapooctway

•

•

Call992~2155·
·Dave Harris Ext 1.04
For More Information

. .

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•
~- '·tl

,,,

·,

,'

•

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•
•
••

992-2825

n

Auto, A/C, AM/FM cass, low mileage, low payment,
SPORTS CAR.

. C.onversion, auto, A/C, .V6.
CLEAN AS CAN BEl

..

'

106 Noith Sticond Ave. • Middleport, Ott

lll!fENIIINII ~: Matt&lt;Mirtln
EVENT QUALIFYING MCOIID: Joo
- · ~. 1113.517 mph.
April24, lt87.
RACE RECORD: Mark Merlin, Fom,
...... - · plato of tlbtl.
168.837 mph, April28, lte7.
01HEA FORT WR WINNERS: No one
itorAIILI: The IIP!ng """' at Tilllodegll has boln - to win thla 11ICO lwlco olnoe
hU tuld Ita ljJOnl()ioNp c:llangod. Since
' ltllnctlpllan In 1Dtl2. Ernie lrvon, Dole
the 1971 ' the Jllflng .... had known Eamhlrdl, Ken ~!&lt;h-. Chad Ullle llld
-. the Wlnoton 500, but ~OctOber race GNg Socka )oln Martin ~ the 1111 o1
will noW btl "'-n by that namooo that
wtnnet11 lot thl1l ,...., •
'*'..,... u the ooncluotorrot the
NqT,\IIU:'CheY101et holdo a &lt;1-2 edge
toboc&lt;:o company'I No Bull F... _ . . . OWt Fom In Tlilodego BGN ,.;no.... Jt"
The llloHa'd 500 will bo the nome o1 the
Purvis and have MOll won the
tpt1ng"""' lor the firot ijme thla yMr.
pole twlco.

St..RL248 Che~Wr
IIIII 3301

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

D~A:R.E.
.

,

!ill

..

Oo1.11

POMEROY - Retirement and
investment seminar for all active
teachers and administrators, Thursday, 6:30 p.tD. at the Meigs High
School cafeteria.

411DDtEPOR.T. o~

No one Jl&gt;ould peao up a tttp to
llrMmilnd Ribs • ..rthe C1t111&gt;U1
o1 the Unlvtrllty or -..a It
Blnnlng!Wn. The fin II otmplo:
pork r1bo, iOOf bnlad and potato
clllpo, ~ ygu'd like. But ygu'll,_-

9tp0.20

. MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF'S D.EPT.

PHONE912·2196

AlMOST 110111 COOliNG

11op1.21

J\ging; Dr. Richard Boone, Holzer
POMEROY - Meigs County
REEDSVILLE ·- . Riverview Clinic; and Tim Amidoin and
Saturday, noJOn,
Garden Club, Thursday, 6 p.m. meet Michael Jarzabek, Ohio University. Retired
at Whitehead home, go to Karen's
Greenhouse for tour, 6:30 p.m. ·
$poneorld byi
return to DeJores Frank's home•for
business meeting.

••tsouTttTtfiRo

lME IIU8CII-D NAT101W.

.

: · • • The Community Calendar is pub.. lished as a free service to non-profit
, · .:groups wishing to announce meeting
• · and special events. The calendar is
. not designed to promote sales or
• : fund raisers of any type. Items are
· &gt; ptinted as space permits and cannot
. : · lie guaranteed to run a specifi.c num,r. · ller of days.

. v.c#d

'

1
"~--~~
d --·~T~H~.E~·~W~I~.I~S~.~T~O~N~C~U~P~C~I~R~C~U~
··~T--~
. ~ --T7.~~~o~N~:

9tpO..
9tpO. 12

..

. ~-

_(jj,;'- ·

•

Guarai-rteed Service

......
......... ."'
.....
......
.... , -""'·-"'"'

Southttm 81ptl1t Church nHr .Pomeroy. The group 11 beNd II\ Morgantown, Ky. and h1a made 15. IIJPIIIflncee on · Gr~nd · OII Opry.
Tllelr new video "New Ground: Live In N11hvllle" 11 now being 1ITICI
on the .OdyaHY n.tworlt 1nd the Goepel Muelc Tlllvlelon Network.
~ group aleo 11111111 the 11117 National Qulrtlt Convention. PI•
tor Llftllr O'Bryan lnvltH the conmunlty.

. • ').' J.

Starting cit $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1·800-594-111

Aug, 11

..

See Mike Bing

.......,...

·Muffler &amp; Tail Pip.e.

Gallipolis

Across fnlm Gallla Auto Sa1ee on old Rte. 35 WIIIJ,
NeW Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8-3

1

The March of Dif!!es Trj-County Hogg &amp; Zuspan Materials Co.,
Walki\mcrica Team photos will be Lakin Hospital, I :30 p.m.; Vaughtaken prior to the walk by Randy an's Supermarket, WBYG Big
Houdashelt of the Image Gallery Country 99, Gallipolis ~velopmen­
beginning at noon.
. tal Center Employees, 1:40 p.m.;
Teams participating in the walk Ashton Elementary, Beale ·Elemenand their time for team photos 'are: tary, Nonh Point Elementary, HartMeigs County Board MRDD. Point ford-Mason Elementary , I :5~ p.m.;
Pleasant Housing Authority, Ohio Gallipolis Chapter of Harley Own·
River Rats, French City · Child ers, AEP Employees, Arbors of GalCare,12:20 p.m.; Kman of Gallipo- lipolis, 2 p.m.
lis, University of Rio Gtande, Social
Bank One, Fruth Pharmacy, Gal-.·
Security Office, ·Alpha Mu Beta, lia County Chamber of Commerce,
12:30 p.m.;Mason County Medical 2:10 p.m.; Burlile Oil Co./Litile
Alliance, MasOn County Health !ohn's
Fuel
Stops,
Borg
Department, MCB Small Animal Wamer,Farm~ Bank and Savings
Farm Studio, Rax Restaurant, TOPS Co., Gallia Co. Local School, 2:20
IIOH 1383, Cheshire, 12:40 p.m:; p.m.; Peoples National Bank, PamiRacine Youth Ringers, Veteran$ da, Ov~rbrook Center, Pomeroy Post
Memorial Hospital, Haer Bears 4-H · Office Employees, 2:30 p.m.; Shell
Club, GFWC Point Pleasant Junior Chemical Co., Super America,
Women's Club, 12:50 p.m.; Holzer Tudors, .Bossard Memorial-Library,
Clinic, Holzer Hospice, Holzet Gallipolis Dtiily Tribune, 2:40 p.mc;
Medical Center, 1 p.m.
WMGG Ma,11ic 101, Medi-Hom~
Thmpike of . Gallipolis,. South- Health Agency, Rockwell Automaem Ohio Sports Bike Association, tion, One . Valley Bank of point
Sonya's Kut n' Kurl, .Lucky Stars 4- Pleasant. 2:50p.m.
H Club, 1:10 p.m.; PleaSant Valley
Any team n~tlisted iS'to be there
Hospital, Advest. Inc., Gallia-)ack- . from 12 • 12:20 p.m. for team phoson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug tos. For more information call MarAddiction and Mental Health Ser· garet Yoder at (304) 675-5185 or
¥ices, Lowe Hotel, 1:20 p.m.; Jane Graham at (740) 446-1479.
Kroge~ of GalliJx&gt;lis an'd Pomeroy,

....

'.

668 Plnecraat Drive

March .of Dimes photograph
times announced for Sunday
By Bob Hoeflich

::::;::FLER sHo:,:-21~~~\-Co Ullt

Thuradly, Aprll23, 1998
· Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Senti~ Paot 7

Pomtroy • Middleport, Ohio

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohlo~===::!:==-r;;;=:;;~~The~;Da;ljly(S~ie;:n=tlne:;EI~·;;P~ag~ae:r9~

Thursday, Aprll23, 1998

.•

PNe 8 • The Dally Sentinel ·

Business Services

•

' .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Howard

• FEBTRIZEB
• GARDEN SEED
• MI.JI£H

CLILIID'I OUTDOOR
MllltEIIICI .

. CELLULAR PHONES
.

JEff( WARNER INSUUNCE
' 113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH. ,

.614-992·5479
- ~-

THE WATERING. HOLE
&amp; SOUTHERN EXPRESS
Invite You to Party with Us
on Friday, April 24,
9 p.m.-1 a.m.

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMONPLEASCOUAT,
PROBATE OMSION
' MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Account• and vouchera
ot: tho following ·named
fiduciary· hu flied ·In tho
Ptoblto Court, M1111
County, Ohio; for approv11
anlf ldloment.
ESTATE NO. 23711 - Tllo
Eljlllth Ac'l:ount of JOin
WIJifo, Trusta• ol thto TIU8t
c ..atsd by ltoril II of tho
Will of Elu · a. Klmoa,

OPENINI APRIL .t

Public Notice
lrom day to day until finally
dlapDIIdof.
Any para.on lntoreeted
may lila wrltton ..caption•
to oald account or to
mattora porlalnlng to tho
oxocutlon Df tho truat, not
leu than llvo dap prior to
the data HI lor-hhrlng.
Robert E. Buck
JUDGE
C:onimon Pt111 COUrt,
Prollllo Dlvlelon
Melia County, Ohio

PICKENS
HAULING
Gravel, Send,·
Ume1tone, Dirt, Top
Soli, Anything you
netdtohaul.
No Job

too '""'"·

Somt too ,,_

740-949 4802 .
74ct.949 4803

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

.

• Top • Trim • Removal
: • Stump .Grinding
Insurances
E•timate•
446-4759'

949-2804

. Sendnel

Open 24 H,._ A Day
7DiyiAWHk
Hot Br~~kfllt
a1.Cott s.ndwlch,
Hot&amp;Cold ·

i . SAYRE

JRUCIING
• Tranclllng·
Umeittp &amp; GI'IYII _

740-317-7838

.Hiullng, ExceYIItlng

Septlc'Syttema .
Trailer·&amp;HOUII 8ItH

,._,.,.,....
'

FIOWifl,

• R•pla-.ntWinclows

• Slatlanary Docks
• Blown l..ulaticin

Bru1h R•mCIV•I,
lnlllll r.~ew Bed•
FreeEati"Go Anyrmo,."
No Job too 1111111.
Mon.-sat.
(740)-..io4

ItA

~

r

~

.•

k:o.

l'i7l'l Pleasant Valley
~ .rII Hospital ·
·

CLASSIFIEDSI

.

•

•

'.

' NOTHING

.• Gas- and qiesel-powered 20and 22-hp engines
• Front, mid, and rear P.l'Os

•'

_,

.• . .

.

L I K E

'

I

'

258 Pwarl St
Middleport, OH

WI-

12" $7.49 Dotuxo
All Topplngl

~

. .
Ill!'

.

.
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..,

..,.,,
• j

..••

..
.,••
.,.,

IAWNUS,
OliO
. .

'l

..

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.

(No Sunday Calls)

-- .. .

.._.-,;7

BICIBDiuo
DOZER IIBVICI ·
•Septic Syste•s

••••••••••
•Excavating

.,

CALL·

•'

1·740·949•2015
...,_1

,.,
\

.

·7

Sentinel, P.O. Bo• 721HIO. f'omor·
oy, Oh. 4~769. -

J I 0 Auto Par ts. Buyi ng
wrecked or salvage d 11ehicles.

...:....-::HA:::I=RS::TY:::L::IS::T:::/8::Al.~ON:-:-304-7'13·5033.
MANAGER
Smart
Style
Will Soon Be Opening
Old wood en phone b9oth , old

441-0167.
Black male killen about Swks

Doberman/ German shepherd
mh1, good watchdog, will ·earn his

Ko-&lt;odgo Of CorMIInily Suppolt
System COmponents; Extensive

Knowledge And Bockground ln.
Menlll Health Princlpioo And C ~- .

til ln"rtrventlon . CompeUtl~
Salarr And EaceUent lenef~
Package. Full-Time IPosiUcm.
Available lmmedlattl~. Plea~

Applj To SMHC, Inc .. Ann.: P :
sonnet. Directo r, P.0 . Box 150 .;.
PQrllmoulh, OH 45882, Or FA o
740·353·8208. Appllclllons A ··
cepted Until Pot1tion 11 .FIIIe :

EEO .t.IFVH

SunPius Home Health Service .~

pups, one mole, I'M).Iomalrts, 740.
7-42-0202.

Do loth : Work Part· Time, At·
tend Clan Pa"·Timo.
"Sound Interesting: Call 740-387-

7342, 740·445·1018, Or 740-992·
Galla ·lloigo Community
ActlonAgoncy

P.o.eo.2n
0010 North Stata Routa7
Cheohlre. Otlo 4~2n
(10 OWAD)
APPALACHIAN COMMUNITY
VISITING NURSES AS SOCIA·
TION, HOSPICE AND ·HEALTH
SERVICES, INC. Now hiring

Avon.· $8 -$20 /Hr. No Door To

Door. Eaov Caahl

1·800 · ~98 ·

0139 indlllllrep.

.

q ...

SunPius A Rapidly Growing
veuiliad f 11e Health Agenoy..

Hao Sweral Oponingo For LPN I .

CPR I FIRST .AID COURSES

TIM'S CUSTOM.
CARPET ·

::;Ask::.,:lo::..:rM;::""':..t;,·--:-::---:--I Saturday, MaO. 1P98 Or Satur·
day. Mar 16, t998. Bolh Cta11eo
60 Lost and Found

Just off Bradbury Rd.
(Look for signs).
Middleport, 011

Long Bla&lt;i&lt; ~ Female, Fnencllv, ister. 740.245-5334 E•t 20g. Tui·
740-388-99511:
lion; $40.
Found: largo Brown Male Dog , QO.ITYOURSELI'·ERSI

Are From 9:00A.M. -5:00 P.M .
Contacl Buckeye Hill&amp; Career
Found On Bidwell, Ml Olive: Small Center, Adult Services To Reo -

V3nco Road. 740-446·3745.

Jusl In Time For Those Spring
LOST : t.tal8 Golden Relriever, Repairs ... Twelve Hours (Three
child's pet, answers 10 "'Tanner• Evenings) Of BASIC HOME R£..
PAIR ...Apoil 28, 29, &amp; 30 From
Thomas Ridge Rd: Area, RE • 6:00 P.M. · 10:00 P.M. Topics

I

CNA Certillcatos Art Roqu ir&gt;d!
Ann CfaVpool,

AN

Tlit lloigs Locol School Diotrlct

• Top Reral Corm1inion
With Prices
· • Heallh Insurance AYiilab'e

is currently seeking application~ ·
from certified applicants for A ... •
sistanr varsity Football Coach,

Paid Vacations
• Stock Purcra..cs Plan
• Manager II Eligible For
Monlhiy And Amuli Bonu181

tions), Frithn'lln Foo1baH Coa~
(2 positlont] , 71h &amp; llh Grad,e
f:ootball Coach , Bo~a· Aulstant

Reservo Foolboll Coach (2 pool·

Varoi1J Baokelball Coach, Bora· ;
Raserve Baoltelball Coach, Boyi' ·
8th Grado Boakotball Coach, •
Boys· 8th Grade BukttbaW
Coath. Head Track Coach, A•.~
sistmnt High School Track. Coao_P.
(2 positions). Middle "Sc:hoql .

~a~cT~:cckhC:!:~~~_:du~~~ ;.
ball Coach, Reaervt Bateb.-11 '
Coa~;h, G1rls' Asaittant VolleybaltCoach, Girls" Sot1ball Coach, '
G irls' Aeser11• Softball C01ch,

HVAC lnatallers Needed For Ea·
panding Company For lnstalla·
lions 01 Healit'IQ &amp; Cooling Equipment In Manufactured &amp; Aisi·
dential Hoosing
• 3Vrs. Experience Nteded

Girlo' Middle School Vollovball,

Coach, Girls' Alliltant Mldd~ •

Sehool Volleyball Coach, Girlt' ·'
71h G - Bosll-11 C01th, Mid&gt;

. • RSE SCertiiierl

die School Newspaper Advisor,' •
High School Cheerleader Advi ·, •
aor, Middle School Cheerleadtr· .
Advisor, Junior Clau Advisor,
and Quiz Team Advisor for the~
1998·99 school year. Appllcana.,
must hold a valid Ohlo ttathing•
certificate and for coacl'lln~ posi· ~
tiona must meet certilitai!On re-:
qu~reri'lenta ol Ohio tor sports1
medicine and CPR. Persons iolet"·!
eared should con"-ct 8111 Buckley,~
Superinrendent, Meigs local;
School Di11ne1 P.O. Bo• 2n, ~'~&gt;· r
meroy, OhKt.

• Paid Medical tnsuranoe

•PaidYacaiono

·• Paid Holidays
• bcellenl wageo

Part-time eaperienced caretaker
lor my elderly mother. Please

TRUCK DRIVER TRAIIINO

•

call 304-875·1272 lor more inlor·

II You Are lnterelted In Obtain- ~

mation.

i ng A Commercial Drivers li· ·
cenu At A Truck Driver A'nd If
'tlliiln ADislocarad Worker.
·

.

Pl~asanl V&amp;Uey Nursing &amp; Reha·
bilitation Center has openings for
certilied nursing ISSiltanta. Both
ful l·time &amp; parHitne positions.
Muat be able to work 12 hour

r

Gallia ·Meigs Community Action ..
Agency e.lay Be Able To Allill-You With Training , Telling, And
Related Colli.
' ...

..

shiiiB. holidavo &amp; · weakendo.

Musl be certified nursing auis·
tant. Conla't Angie Cleland,
Assl. Director of Nursing. 30 ..•

(A Dislocated Worker It Gener ~
all~ 1A Person Who Hu Worketl.
At Least 12 Months At One Oc:.l.
cupration, Is Now Unemployed Oii
Under Employed Due To A BusiJ'

875-523!1. MIEO£.

PDsllion AYallable F,r Sec:retary,
Receptionist. Dulles Include
Transcribing Oictarion From Die·
tap~one, Typ1ng, Filing, Answering Telephones. Schedulit11 Appointment&amp;, Maintaining Ofllce
Books. And Preparing MonlhiJ
Reports To Various Governmen·
1al Agencies. Mull Be Able To
Handle Office Withoul Super·

1~
Unlik~ To Return To Their Prev~

ness Cloolng Or Cutboek, And

ious Occupation. There Are Adt
dilional Qualifications, Howewel!'

._,.I•NatAFactor.) ·

t

'

To Find Out II You Qualify Pteasl
Call 740 -367 -7342, 7•0 ·446 .-

1018, Or 140·992·5629 And R..~

vioion And To Tjpe Neatly And

quest A JTPA PreappliC&amp;IIOfl~
Training florlod Is Approaimatel,
Four Weekt, Training Will 8•
Conducted In Mariana. Ohio 0 ~
Ashland, Kentucky.

Accurately. Send Resume W1th
Salary Requirements To Gallipolis
Dlily Tribune, CLA 433, CJO Galli·
polia Daily Tribune, 12S ·Third

AwlriJe, Gallpolio, OH 45831 ,
POSITION AVAILABLE· Send

1010 North Stale Route 7

J
l!

Equal Oppora.miry E~et

•: ·

a.. .....,. eo.....OIIy
AcslonAgency
~o. eo.2n

resume 10 Mel(la lndua1rie1. Inc:.,
P.O. Box 307, ~yracuse , OH

45779. MOWING CREW lEAD ·

To good home only, very playlul For Those Individuals" Worki ng
male cat, neutered, has had With The Public: And /Or Children.
shots, liner trained. 304-675-7625 Two Classes To Choose From I

740-992-5379
Da &amp; Evenin Hours

.-

Inc.

, Rooker, 1·888·888·7771 Elt.
1873;
'

Avon $8 ~$20 tHr, No Door -To ·
Six month old Husk~ · Shepherd Door, Easy C.aah, Fun, t-800·
mix , 10 good home, male, 740 - 361.0466 indlllllrep.
Thre&amp; German Shepherd mi •

:

VorseoComniosion~

• Supplies Fumilhad

458-2218.

Save.Up To
75% Off

•

.

Chotl&gt;re, Ohio 45620.0272

ER· supervise crew of 5·9 adults
wilh mental retardation and devet·
opmanlal disabilities in mowing
eo. acres Highwa, Reat areas.
General equipment maintenanc~
&amp; handlfng skills a plus_ e~~etlent
organization &amp; driving Mills need·
od. FT HOoonal wiOihor - k liP'
porturi_Iirts. MUll be wiling I able
to obtain OOt.tRDD cltftilication,

'I

cso TDAili

'

·!

Truck dr~vers needed 10 dehw~
fk)wlfs in 24' Ryder truck. COL &amp;\
medical card required , call 7co.1
247·2664
;
Wanted· pan ume bartender an~
k•ICI'Ien help for prrvale club, senp:

740·992-1 .
PO!'"lL .lOBS TO $11.35 .tlR.

resume Iii' Bo• 32 long St .. AU-•
45775.
.
.:

Inc . B
· ' · c:._,jegc:e, For
App. Ana uam InfO., t-;&amp;111 H:tuu·

!land, 011

813·3585, Elt 64'74. 8 A.M ·9 WiliiiFE JUS:: TO 112UO.tlR.':
P.M., 7Oavolds,inc.
Inc:. Benefils. Game Warden!(.,
Securirw. Mainte,.ce, Park Rang.'
Roglai_N.,_.
10:;::7:..
ers. No hp. Needed. For App. ~
.:;W:.:AR::O::..30::.;.
...::;89:.:5-:..:3;;;
· :-:----1 Covered Will Be; Repairing Lamp
IJcenHd Prar:tlcaiNu,..
And Exam lnlo Call 1· 800-813'-;
70
Yard Sale
Plugs, Switohes, &amp; Elecui&lt;al wag
Cor11ftod Hurling
3585. (Ill 8475. 8 oUI. · 9 P.M., t•
Handling Bas•c Plumbing Fresh Challenges leadi ng lo
_
··- Problems: And How To Do Vari- Prolellional Growth al Herilage Oavslcla. inc
4 1;
GalllpoiiS
ouo' Wall Repairs. CALL BUCK·. Manool Seeking RNs. LPNs and
,I
EYE HILLS CAREER CENTER, CNAt, full lnd pert-time, IDr vati· 170 Miscellaneous I I
&amp; VJclnltu
"1
ADULT SERVICES TODAY AND ous shifts. Responsibilities in- K•nt~sile waterbed Wlheadboar( t
--'-:ALL~YI=rd:-:S::-:::"II::u:-::..,:-- REGISTER. 740·245·5334 E•t. · clude direct are, administration Ktngs•z•
waterbed w1ou1 heact•

A-•

===========IOudets;

R•.L. HOLLON

''TRUCKING

Be Patd In Advanc:e:

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,

pEAQL!NE: 2:00 p.tn.
•

111o doy boloo,.tlwo od
Is to run . Sunday
Hltion · 2:00p.m.

Fridoy. llondoy ldillon
· 10:011 a.m. Sasunloy.

Um11tone • Gl'll'iel
Dirt• Sand

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

. I 98li 1422
• Cheater, Ohio

..

209 ··COst $45.00. Clan Will Be
Held On OUr R~ Grande Ca~s.

Earn S1,000~Stuffing En.·

velopes At Home
Experienee. Free

art Now. No
ppliea, Info.

No Obligation. Se LSASE To:
Ace, Oops: 1351, Bol 5137. Dla·
monel Bar, CA 9t 765.
Earn 11 ,000 Wtoklj. Sluffing· on·
t14·301 East 51h Awe. Suite 112
Coflicara. Teaas 75110.
Edur.lltor· Ful lime for multi-county
prlv111 non-protit based in
Athena. Oh io. B.S. ar M.S. in
'Communiry Heallh, emphast-_ on
hunn sexualily. Advocate b r r•
productitte he.llh issues . Condutt community educ•tion

Frldew- Roben Batrtn rewidenc:t workshops and dav.loping col·

'

on SA 124.
·
llbatllive -lllhn&gt;ugllout tight
tounlits. Travel rtquirtHI. Even-Goroge oalo· April 23· 2~. 258 ing ond w-nd houri required .
Satom Se001, Rullrtnd. Kld'a cloth- Send louor ill inttoeos. rtoumt

ing. lizt 10 ~ te, t1rge women·a, and nv.e tmpklyef relefencet by
ool/1op-. -loiJOfroitc. .
April 27, 11811o Planned Per·
1 J 0 hrlaon's 114 enthOOd of Sou&amp;heasr Ohio. 38&amp;
H
d
•
Richland Avenue, Athens. Ohio
uge fir u •·

-·•a-lor....,ondup-"'"

Rd.Loll
•• 143.
Alri _45_70_1.:..·E_oe.£
' 24·25, tom-5pm.
at Sorgo
__51'
_._ _ _ __
ElpononcecllegoJ secr..ary:

pt PltiSant
•

r•
quirt good tompule'r skills In-

eluding WP 5.0: knowl&lt;tdgo of
pltodingo and otlitr legal 4ocu·

I VICinity

,.....,...--=-:-~-:-:-:-:~1 menta; ptoper telephone tli·
Big Garage Sa~·RI. 2 Junction queue; 1nd general offite slrlills •

17,Mooon Co. Rd.,Aprll 23·241h. Send rtlumo 10: Bow CW·18 CIO

. Antiqun. dishH. old cloc:k, lur· Point Pltnant Regisltr 200
nitutt, rugt , bird caga, lamps. Main St. Pt. Pleasant. W'V
shutl. quilll. pots I pans, mi· 2S550.

cr-. old pic"rto.

board, maltress. healer, hner iJt~
eluded. 3)4-875-7154 after 4pm. 1:

burstmenl, health. dental, v•liOn.

180

hearing, life and 4D1(kJ with em·
pkJyer contribution offered. Glen·
mark·,Genesis means quall ty in

·

Wanted To Do
ANY ODD JOBS

'
-::
~;

~ubs &amp; weeds trimmed, muk:t. ~

all things. Callt3041 525-7822 or

mg, llower bed1, land scap inl ,
sidewalks. edging, mowin 1
etc .... Fr,e Eslimattl. Call 81 '
30-4-fSlS-7112. '
·~

(;Qf'ltact

vefopet, no pr1or erperienca, free

==;;;.::=;..._----·llhoough opooklng engagemonll,

1

and documenllltion, medications
and ttntmtnll. Must be licensed
and c:.rtified tn WV. Tuition reim-

detallo, oend SASE to: N.B. Dept

·a· Mile Yellow flag ~ard salt,
Pomeroy/ Middleport. May 1· 2.
!Atgilw. pick up .-.rflag today.
•All Yald ,.._ llual Be hid In
· AdwMn. OHdllne: 1:00pm till
day ••fora tho ad Ia to run .
Sunder 1 Monday adllloft·
1:00pm Frld.,.

,,, .,...

I OWl

Ohio LSW Or LPC, Mull Ho-i&gt; .

SunPius Homo Co,.
10249 Crillicoll1e Pika
Jacklon, Olila 45840

•

Home Care Aidet lor part· time
keep, 740·742·10110.
and full ime positions. Experienc;e
Free puppies, stwen weeks old, in home care preferred ._Mutt
mother Airedale, tlthet Dalmatian, have reliable transportation, Benefill available With opportunity lor
· great with kids, 304-853-8351.
advancement. For lnlormalion call
Mothef c:at &amp; 3-tswtl.. old kittens, 2 Barbara Allen, 740 -594-8226 .
· femate/1 male. liner !rained. 304 - EO£.
.

9&lt;19'2510.

~

Shall Supplv The Rut Benelito

As followed:
• Guaranteed HouA.. w.."' •""VW

Equal OpporljMlity Empl"'""

446-1959

WICKS
HAULING

.. OFF

ADULT CASE MANAOER -

r:·
V

qui rts A Bachelor Degree Anti.

Clientele Needed, Juat Have
Sheera &amp; licenae At Hand. 1 We

Wanted To Bu~ : Used Uobile

740-949-2,:!17- ~pn.·

Home! Will Be Small Dogs. 740·

'

•• .

Pleaae SUbmit Reaume Wirh :;ial-...
ery Hiaay To:

triever /Shepherd) Has •Bog en

AdorabJe Puppies, Frfle To Good

..

SHAWNEE !ENTAL
HEAI.nt CENTER, INC.
Scioto Counl)' Clinie

Several Hair Styllats, As Well As

Pups; 1 Female Husky; 1 l;emale 6629 To Request A JTPA Preap• Husk1 Chow 7.00.388-9839.
plication.

Low Rates)

40%

E•porlonct Coil 800--412·52311 or.
(740)!41 3351
t;.

A Wooklng Salon ManogiK, No

·

InterView Appointments Oolyl Catl
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling At

(Ume Ston•

'

and Hazmat Required, Flat a.:l

Conditkm, 740·446·9853.

Corporation) And Will II.• Hiring

You . For More Information 1-888- Monday Throuoh Friday, $5.15
077-ese1.
Pef Hour, Up To 20 Hours Per
=-:--=---:--~ 1 Week. We Also Have Non-Driv Red Crou lifeguard training tlqss ing Jobl Available.
now foiming . Beginning Sunday,

old. :.14-875-5505.

•ll

P'f':

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any

betic Supplies At No Cost To Work, On A Regular Schedule,

4 Kittens : 3 Husky Doberman

. 3/30/M1mopd

~'

Now' hiring •• ,. drlvoro, ..... .
- . lloxlblo houta. Apply 1!1
~· ~-~ in Pl. Ploooont r
oonatuoo•~•
"'
Oponlng For EMpatlencod MorirfTtchnicion, Apply AI Big Bay.1
Wotet Toyo, CheShire, Ohio. 740-.
3117- 71102.
r
OTR Truck Driver Notdad; CO~,

CNA's Current LPN license

Spews, 304·675·1 429
AGE ~5 OR OLDER

2Year0kllab, 740-3811-9797.

Plan ahead. Call
today for free estimate

,

110 · Help Wanttd

In The New Wai -Mart. Super
Center (And Is Owned By Regis

barber chair , pedal cars &amp; j uke
bot. 3p4-578·2106.

be,ellea!l 18. Call 614·992·5387

•--ed F..:-..~... 7-. ••• fi56,
...,..., ' •-N•J• -·~

• Weedeating
• Tree Trimming
• Shrubbe.ry MaintiiMIKI

I

r

740·448·9418 or 1·100·872·
5987:
Gollipo"•· OH 45831 ..
;::M;:'Ilf:.:3r::,:ci:.;C:;:al~l7!10:;.,:;·99:;:2;.:-e::.073;.:;,.
. --1 Training : Short Or Long Term
40
Gl eaway
Training In Fioldo Such AI Com- Part tlme .poshlori available. Mu!lt
.,..-::===v-:::=i-.=~1 puterl, Nursing Auissanl, COL be artistically inc:llntd, hands-on
1 Year Old Dog (Pari Golden Re· And Othoro As Area Schoolo.
work Involved. Hill's Denial l.lb,

. ij

'S

••
.,

D

c:all In Oldtrl Acceplld

t a.lel eXperience a11d be able to
wo rk with public, knowledge of
fl oor covering &amp; decorating a
plus,. long time c:ommitment necessary, send resume to: Dally

• AI:MlncedTralnlng
• OpporbJnl!y For AdYincement
For More Information Call 8111

h·

COMPANION I

Commerdoll .

61~992-3410

0,.., '24 Hra. A Day
7DapAWeelt
Hot Bl'lakfllt
Blac&lt;ult Sanclwlcll,
Hot a Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including PIZZI

Full Qf pori timo, 1011 • - · moll·
vated to succeed, mutt hav•

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, t990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1900 East·
ern Allen.le, GaUipolis.

an suppresses t e urge to eat. ~ahy li ma) or 304,615 -5955 after
F.or complete information, please 8p Wed 1h Sat ·
sand S1 .DO to Cookie Diet, 30915 -':::m::
. ':'""'
· ~··--·
NeeceRd.,Middlepor\OH 45760. AVON I All Areas ! Sh,ley

MEET YOUR

12/11/1111 '

740-985--4422

CHESHIRE
FOOD MflltT

BUILDERS, INC.

614-992·7643
.
.

••
••
.,

.

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
.TQP:Soll, Fill Dirt

IAUIDAIIII
IIUtti.APPED lREES
Norway Sprucol,
WhltoPIRICanedlen
Hemlocll ·
Detlv•!'Y A,.,..bl• .
Hemlock GrGVe AOid
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
Pit. 740 112·7285
Atter4 P.M.

Srnth 11814-992·7440.

.

--=.-

992-oon

'i58f!ORII'II

.

DEERE ®
·

A

..

~

Carpet I Upholatery
Cleaning '

..

,_

..

SPECIAL
50" OFF ILL

. New Homes • VInyl Sldlng New,

,

Mow inore for less.

\

..

SPill&amp; CUll

'

(740) 446·2412

•

CHEYAUD'S
CIIPO CLEIIIIG

With Tlrrloer. 74Q-e62-?318.

• Mlfchandlse DiiCOUnt

· d ·

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

~ISSELL

..

(614) 992-3831J

All Llndacaplng I
Llwn Servlcea
. •Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle HOllOn
Chtlter,OIIIo

------1.11111

!&amp;.-~-. -~~---~:.,:7~/22/lln=
' -.. ,.

992-5050

..

661 "IICIIR DIM

···•-\
.

II

Glngu
. Room
itlons • Roofing 1 ·
COMMER
and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

RUNS

IC

I

985-4473

Mileage Limit
Call Randy .

.

I

ESTIMATEES

$120

~

I

FREE

Special Thru
March
B ton Delivered

.

'

a.

LIMESTONE

•

.

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop Compare

..__ _ _.....:""':::.::-:.~·:.1

..

Computer Graphics
Dealgns

Buying Standing TirT):ber &amp; land

revs up the body' a metabolism tenti.al. No e•p necessar~. must

-· · -- ·- ··1·· ··
r-::-=:::=:==:::-., ......
- ·...-..-;,;.;::;;;...;.;;;..;.,;;,-....;

1·

·

Ummone Hauling
1·100-285-1287
EIT.811!14
LOOKING FOR AJOB
HOUH '&amp; Trailer JlltH ..
$2.99 Per Min.
Unci Clearing &amp;
Mull Be 18 Yr&amp;.
Galha -Me1Qs Commumty ACilon
=~s....:.·;...·U.:.::(6'-1D;;.l.;.64;.;;5..;.8...;434
_ _ Agencv Mav Be Able To AssiSI
Grading '
1
30 Announcements
You "'The Following ways;
Septic Syatem 1
Employment: We're looking For
UUJIUea
·DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May Ori11er1 To Perform Delivery Ou·
Eltlmltee
. Be Entirled To Receive Your Dla- ties In Galli a County. Oaylime

614-691•7231

i .,.. Homes

gga.5S76.

i ncome prole11lon, rapid ad ~
vancement potential, and ltlf·
, satisfaction helping lam!Uea. For
you.r last job lntarvitw, call SIIVt

Dally Tribune. 825 Third Avenue. 110 Help Wanted
Gallrpoll~ 0H 45631 .
$$$DANCERS WANTED$$$
_.;_W...;o_ig-ht_F_a"'lt-.-0-uo_ro_n_tH-dll E•cellent oppqrlllnitv for the ri!111
safe natural fat burning .cookie girl. S500(+)per weM. eaming PO·

CARE
• Mowing (Residential &amp;

!

Ant iques' &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one pi&amp;(:e or complete
ho usehold, Osby Martin, 740·

Gentleman Seeking Companlionship From Nice Female For Talka,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Re·
plies To: CL.A 309, C/o Gallipolis

742·2101 "446·1122

....IICIPI
IDIIII

Antiques, top prices paid, Riverine Ant iques, Pomeroy, Oh•o,
Russ Moore owner, 740-992-

40517

LARRY'S LAWN

...

FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AI).
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
GLASS CEIUNO? .
II you oro employed ond fool 1II'J
r~,ro In a "" gain li1uatian, )"'U 1110 voursoll10 conoldtr jOining
111t Loowon Group. Tin il a l'igh

From Hor,nelll Free Details: Write 5965.
To : Checks, 3825 Niagar,a On11e
(A 1 A, , le•ington , Kentuck~

,. ·r .

614-69..5716

P/8 Cttttrartors Inc. \ ROBERT BISSELl
•Bobcat Service
·: 'CONSTRUOION

(740) 1185-3&amp;48

; .

,FREE ESnMATES

~~~----~~ ~p---~~----~

':t-:::.s:::./1

i.

Professional Fl09r
Covering

141-2115

.

i

...

PLUS

F-E.,,..,..

Drive a deal.
.
•Overhead•valve, 15-hp engine
•Shift-on-the-go,.5-speed gear- ·
drive transmission
•Over 12 different implements ·
'available

Pom~::.~hlo
..............
......,;.......,_

Variety, Quality ad Lew Prlte

..

Spring into your John Deere dea.ler's store
and .save up to S400 on lawri equipment
·
through July6, 1998. ·
T~e advantage of special financing options, too.
With all of these savings, spring greening
.has never been easier.

•Electrical a. Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior a. Exterior
Painting
AliJo concrete work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

:

ver A[ld Gold Coins, Proolselt, To; Tope Furnlturo, 151 Second
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold . Avonlo, Ga~poH~ OH 45831.
Rings, Prt·1930 U.S. Currency,
S18fling, E~~; . -"quisinons Jewelry Experienced Timber Cutter fMed.
• t.t .T.S. Com Shop, 151 S.cond td. 741H182-731 8.
Avenue, Gallipolis. 740·446-2842.

Dally Checkal Procening Mail Homes. 740·446-0175, 304-675·

. YOUNG'S . I
HOWARD
.~!~!~o~r'ICE ! EX(AVATING CO•.

•New Garage•

Personals

=-::--::-:--:-:-::--.....,.....,:-:-::1

.i. .__. . . . . . . ,

~~~..,-

7"t;~;1l._35

•Concrete
•Masonry
. -General
Commercl•l and
RHidontlal
2• Hr. Bobcll Servlca
AVIIIablo

=005

Take the pain out of
painting, and let me
do It for you.
. Interior
Blfor1 8 p.m.
leave me1111ge.
After&amp; p.m • .
(740) 1185-4180. v
.Free E1t1mete1
-1ma.pd.

-==;--,,. . .

Hanging Baeket• $6.13 ·
RftiOOmlng Ullu, Hoete, Peonloa, alaotllr!l Halrta, lie.
,
Variety of Perennial• ~ .
.
....
Fruit l Fl-'rig T1111, Shrubs, Plntai!Az11111
Morning Ster CR 30
Rlclnio, Ohio

1•

"":':--:----:---I

Mlrm•a

Opon Tuol..f~. 1o.e
SaL 10&lt;4; CloMd Sun. &amp; lion.
' Rt 12'- IIMII)IIIIe, OH
740-tiZ-4551

CARPET

Walk off with a bargain~
.• Easy-starting 6-hP. engines
• Cast-aluminum or steel decks
•Self-propelled and push models

•

II.'!!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

·LI.DA'I

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

•

'

Owner: John Dean

"We don't want to make mon~y,;-we jwt_
want to seU jlOMJers."
Bedding 1 Vegltlble Flata

-

'

Big-tractor features
.
I
without the bjg price.
•13-, 15-, and 16-hp engines
•13-position sit-andadjust seat.
•Standard headlights

.·
1

~

POMEROY, OH

Mlf,oe

740·949·3006

Aeromlthlrspy,
,Wooden Angell,
Slufled R1bbltll Belrl

ft

"Your One S~p
C::omputer Shop~
·
,
Give us a call for system repa.rs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

.

.

·

Free Eatlmatll

'

.

·~',

Phone 740-992·3987

tJ

INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT · ' ·

D:EERE ·siASO ·- SAVINGS

.

Commercial &amp; Rllldentlal
7:1 yrs. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

COMPft~R

• . .... ...,

...

k:o.

r;~~---;;;,it.;"

of
.

992·5583
•

OllfiiiiG CAII!l£ MAKING SUPPLIES.
2 n•r Angel Birdbath
Founllllnt, lncluclel pump,
lor $121.00
CandiOI, Reft"''

~~~~~~~~~~~

. William A. Barker, Jr.,
Assistant Executive Director of Administrative Services
PleUint Valley Hospital
lSlO Valley Drive
Pobit Pleuant, wv Msso·

.

New Ht&gt;mes &amp; Remodeling

~

•

•Gar'IIIIO'•Dicks
2h u . ......ildini
· staoling at $5995
740 1192-2772

~

tlli•J Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ill!:

,.. Five yean minimum experience at a senior management level
Preferred:
·
·
,.. Masten degree In Nuning or related lleld
· Send resume and ul~ry requirem~nts to:

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

Joe N.Sayrw
814- 42-2138
I

· Pruning.
Cllln and lnltlll Guitar

• Y.'!nyi Siding • Saffit·
• Fasi:ia • SumiNJ
Gullilr · llooflng

Mowl~, M!IIChlng,

Lunch Sandwich
Including PIZZI
12" $7.41 DolAll Topplnga
Ctlllln Orden Accepted

-· •-• ~~

...............

FOOD MflltT

J&amp;L.SIDING I
INSULATION

mCOIITRUCTION

t;t

PERFORMANCE
~~~!::;~
UPGRADES

Required:
r Blcbelor of Science In·NunJna

OHIO RIVER SERVICE

COUNTRY
CANDU SHOP.

Elcperlenc:~ Slle1~ H91M
Furnishings, Carpet. Window
Treatments, Furniture, R11ume

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

Ford Tractor BOO Series No Dealers. 740· 446 _38 74 _

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

'

~c~~~~~~er~~~

.·Career Opportunities
Assistant Executive Director
Patient·Care Se"ices
•

Pick Up for
Re•ldentlal &amp;
Commercial
(No mall loft behind)
Coli

.,

~----~------------------~Competitive S.llry &amp; Bepeftb

'j.

1998 Martin Street · ·
Pomeroy, Ol'tlo 45769

s racuH 992-5776
'·· .- . . .

·

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

! '

90

2526 .

Quality Service .
For All Your ·
Garbage&amp;
Rubbish

RADIAtOR.REPAIR

Remode,llpg

"Build Your Dream"

IUIIARDS ·
GREENIOQSE

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

·~···

.!'\ .

· Eater 'F iowtra,
Pan1le1; Cabbage, . ;
Broccoli, Caullnower,
Hanging Bllketa,
Phlox, Aale11,·
Shrubl, Spruce
•
'
TrHI
OpenDIIIyN
. Sunday 12-5 .

:ao Yrs. Elcp.
• Ins. Ownlr: Rick Johneon

YELLOW
FLAG
..
YARD SALE

CHIESIIIRE

..

9:00.12:00 ~,.y

949·2168

4/11/1 mo.

Mil

..

•

.

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

·-.

Custom·Homes

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

"8" MILl

Show lltba .......- .....-..'7.30
1hesl jllbs .. for~ ...

.9 92-2156

ADVANCID CJftMIUGI .QTIMI, INC.

Sllte Route 338 • ~VIne • R•clne, Ohio

t• . . :. . . . . .".

-- · --·

9:00-4:30 Wllkd8yt

,

Qelllpol"' Olllo 4M31...

lrlggs &amp; Sirllton: Maittr StrYI&lt;e Ttdittldll
· o.tdoor Powtr E, ,111111 Assodatlltc Clrtlfllll2 Cycle

.

' 740..985·3831 .

WrlteHI

I

EXPERIENCED Rootero. Car·
Rick Pearson Auction Company, ponteto And Cat~ Holparo.
full "me auclionttr, complele Referoncoo. r ..noportallon, 1/alld
JtNice.
licensed Orlvoro Ueo•ao And Toola Ro·
auction
188,0hlo &amp; Well VIrginia, 304· quirtd . Chrio~on'o Conllrucdon,
773·5785 Ot 304·l'J'3.54'7.
lnt. 8 ·5 P.M. 740~514.

Guttara
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATED

Near Chester on St. Rt. 7

lUlUIDS
GIIEIIOISE

•Mowera •Chain SIWI •WHdeltel'l •Authorized
.. Deeter For:
·
•Brlgg• &amp; Stretton :MTD •Murrey •McCollougl'l
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rilly •Hydro G11r
'
AND OTHERS!

c..-

Claalifieda

:

74

_.

Open:

liW
Parts and Servlc'ell

33100 Pine Grove Rd,
RIICine, Ohio~~
740-94t-24111 '
!'II Grsw ....~...............:.16.25
I :!X
Hane_.......'5.60
IR
'8.00

(4) 23 ttc .

I.. ·! !tJS

IICIII MOWU

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY

0KIIIId.

Unlo11 excoptlona are
mid thoroto, uld account
will Ito for hearing botore
uld Court on the 22ncl ot.y
oi .Moy, 1-, ot which tlone.
ths account will bo
coilalderad and continued

.... ...

- -·-..

OhiO River
Campground• and
Bait I Tackll!, I
Gen. Merchendl...
Ntw &amp; Uled lttml. WI
Buy • Sill • Tredt&gt; TOOII,
ftlhlng lqlllp., TV'I,
CB'I, lltl'eOI - lmle bll
ol everylhlng. Loclled
on Ohio RIVIr Campgrounda, St. Rt. 124,
Raclnl, Ohio.
7..-1012

CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN'
' MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

'

SHADE RIVER.AG SERVICES

TUP!Mfa Pllllnl, 01110 411713

740/M5-3113
4" thru 48" plaatlc culvert In ltock
Full line of water atorage tan'!'·
SeptiC &amp; Clatern Tanka
·.
: Wltlr nne • 100' thru 1000' Rolli
"
Sewer Pipe. 3" thru 8"; 011 Pipe 1 Regulltort

.LIMESTONE DELIVERED
' STARTING AT $65 A LO~D .

360° Communications
"-. .

St. Rt. 7

L

Help Wanted

110

Auction
and Flea Market

ROOFING
IEW·REPAIR

•

• GRASS SEED

G&amp;W PWTICS AND SUPPLY

80

To place an ad Call992·2 156

•~

ANY ODD JOBS

I

Shrubl &amp; ...,. wimmt&lt;l, muleht '
flower beds, landscapino; ;
aid..-alk
edging.
mowing;.
etc ... FrH Esrimatll. Call 811 '

ino.
RETIUI. LENDINO OFFIC£R

"
A Southeasrern Ohio Bank Ia »&lt;•l'f&gt;7112. '
S•eking An . Experienced And BIB lawn Mowing I londacopo;
Oualilitd Individual For A Full· ing, E•porionc..r Profoul~~
Time Re&amp;IH Lending Position. To S.t1cn, ~Ouolily For Thla I'Diilion Tht Ap· EaSimotH, 740-3II·IIOCIO, 740 ·

Ra...

pli&lt;ontw•-ToHovo;
• .Self Mo!Miion

258-1211.

. O.penda.,.

ml.n

will maw, 111

arnot ~~-~ f1111n~ put up
·'
osc. Froo Eotimatn 304-8754-l
3821.
. J1

' e·Corm1unlc4oion SUo
'BarltlnglllldtgroundPntlrtorld
' 1 ·2'lloirol-.g E•porion&lt;o
Th•s Posinon Otters A Generous

·

1

Du1~11er1 Protaeslonel

CIHnJ ;

s-fita Pickage Including 401 K ing. Como;norclol And Rolidenlo\ '
Rolirtmen~ Opportunlly For Co· Col Altar 5:00 P.ll. 7.00.3M~

;~
_,..._.will
modollllf, dKko, yinyl olding r ·

reer Advancemem, And Meril fflll E.,...,
Bonus Opporlunities. .Salary E•pe;ietw4

Commlnsurlll Upon E--1.

dD ,.S1

E•perie(tetd And Qualified.,_,.

plu,_i:l. Frn e1tim1tt1. Ca~

45831 .

-FUJnillre rtpllir, refiftilft 1nd '".

aono Should Submit A Rooumo Jim Sllu · :104..75·l2n. Rtler-J .
To; P.O. liD&gt; 240, GallipoNo, Olio 1:;..;.;.;..;;;.::,;,;,;,:::;~~---t1
EOUAL OPPOIITUNtY
EMPLOYER ·

l:~

-lion. OliO CUllOm or1for~ Ofior
Volley Reliniahing Shop, larrr "',
Pl'ilipo. 7--ISJe.
~.

r,

:..•

••
.

.

.

'

•

'

'

'·

�P-a-10 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Thur.tday,April23,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

540
Babysitting Anyumo tn My Homo,

MUOSOCK RD.· All 8RICK
3 Year1 Experience, Knowledge RANCH on 17 • ocre~ lllU baH0! CPR 7~+4 t ·12•7.
ment, two c:ar garage, barn,
len&lt;ed pasture Pllone John, ERA
Georges Portable Sawmtll, don't
MARTIN &amp; ASSOCIATES, 8U·
haul your logs to !he mill JUII call 593-33330r 614-89&amp;-3711.
304-675- t 957
Inexpensive

made-to-order

greetmg cards, party rnvitanons,
bus lneu cards, resumes , etc •
call Oracle't Greeting•. 740-

bySIItlng, any sh•ll Call J 1m or
Paula m Mtnersvtlla. 740·992·

4286

Need your house cleaned? Com·
pe1en1, nonest, Chnsuan hOuse
c:: leanars \ non·smok tng, nondnnkmg Call 304 675-6099 or

W11h Water Tap $8,000, 740·25e·
t789 Serious Inquiries Only.

Modern 1 Bdrm, all utllltiel paicl
e~~:cept elec:tnc in Gallipolis f.,.
ry, WV $250/mo plua deposll

4 Butldlng S1tea·2 Acru each,
conventent yet private, e m1i11
!rom Point Plelunt 1 1/4 milo on
Batnol Rd. oil Sandhill, no lingle
Widel f .. ·18,000el. 304·875·
7!146 btbe 9pm.

304-075-1371 or 304-875-3230.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apaumant.

One plus acres, 4 bedroom
house, 3 year old aiding, lmme·
dlate possesston, $15,000 eaeh
or negollate land contract, 51 7
East ua 1n '" Rutland, 740-992· Centonary Road , t Acre Mil

"_7_42_·_100_7_ _ _ _ _ _ _...1 ~·.:.5'..'.:...----:-,---:
Lawn Mowing, No lawn
A0d
v111 age 11 ' 4 Bedroom•' 1
Sm.lll 740-379-2502, For
Bathney
Ranch With 24l24 Detached
mates.
Insulated Heated Qarage, Fam1ly
Uow1ng, mmmmg or odd Jobs, Da

3 Acres Recenlly landaeaped

Room With F~rep&amp;ace lnsort, ED.t·
In Kitchen Wilh Oak Cablnels,
Fenced In Back Yar411 Ready To

MaYO lnl $88,000, 741).24~58411 .

7.00~0390.

lind Contract Poo~blo 114,000 t
M1le From Proposed School, 7~0·
446·1736
J1m Wah4Hs Home Near Campi•
ttofl Wnh 35x50 Ft Meral Garage
Bu1ldmg Insulated , Also Tratler
Pad Set-Up, 2 + Acres, Rural
Water, Approx 7 U1les From

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

304-875-5257,

14 x70 38R, S91H1 Down &amp; ONLY
Ptofesa1onal Tree Servtte, Stump $179 per mo Free 11r &amp; free 1kirt·
Removal, Free E1t1mates ! ln- 1ng 1·888·928·3•28

New Lima Rd., 741).742·2803
1979 Schultz mobile nome
14x70 2br, good cond. 304·875· 360
Real Estate
Shaler's Lawncare Service, Free 625jl
Wanted
Eaumates. Cafl740·441 0318.
1981 Oakwood 14X65 $12,500
We Do
Stdlng, Replacement exc. cond . 1988 Clayton HJC70 Cash Patd For Land In Gall1a
W111dows, Roofs, Aoom Add1t10ns, w/heat pump $13,900 W•ll de- County, Blackburn Realty, 740·
Remodeling. Ceram1c Tile &amp; Hard- l!ver loca l Call t&lt; &amp; K Mob1lt 446-D008
wood Floof't, New ConStructtOn
Homes 304·675-3000 between
No Job Too 81g Or Too Smalll 6am-5pm •
suranc;:e, B•dwell, Ohio 614-38S..

740-388-8234

410 Houses for .Rent

W1ll Mow &amp; Tnm lawns, Reason
able Rates, Contact Joe Saun·

1991 Redman Breezewood 3
Bedrooms, 1 112 Baths, Hll:70

3 Bedroom House In Galhpol1s,
$325/Mo , Plus Deposit &amp; Refer ences., No Pets, 740·446-1734.

dora At 741).+46·2450.

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opponunlty

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

'

recommends that you do bUSIness wtth people you know, and
NOT to send money through the

ma11 unul you have mvest1gated
the olfe&lt;lng .
HOT NEW DIET EARN THOU·
SANDS Whtle LoSing Wetght
New t.t l M Opponun.ty, Calll-

888·857-9968.
230

St2,000 F11m, 7.00-007-7094.

1st T1me Buy era, E-Z Financtng

deposn, 740..992·3194

2 Bedrooms, Remodeled , 740·
448-2470

House •n Chester, many updates.
depoSit, leas.e, references are te·

Double Wide
2 Ba..._1
3 Bedrgo,ms,
"' s

1 1•885 00wn'$:189PorMonth
lncludea OeiiYOfy And Set Up

Jot'o TV·VCR Slrvlce
Free ES11mates
All Work Guaranteed
~-67S.tn4

L1vmgston's basement waterJ&gt;roormg, all basemenr repa irs

done , free est•mates, ltle ttme
guarantee 10yrs on tob expert
ence 3J4-675-2145
Need your house cleaned, yard,
garage, butldtng, etc? Call Vtcky,
740·643-5510

ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay

menta, a11ume Ioan, owner I•·

BUY IN APRil
E-Z Financing

Call F1nance Line
t-800-948-5678

--

-----~-­

.

'

FrveSel-up &amp;·Delrwrry

New Clayton Mobile Home Few
Monrhs Old ,Garden Tub, On
Large Rented lol. Sell rheapl
7.tO·ol461f"as

Y

DISCount MObile Home Parts &amp;
All real es.tate actverttsmg 1n
rrus newspaper ts subjee1 to
the Federal Fatr Houstng Act
of 1968 whtch makes 11 llktgal
to advertrse ~any ~reference ,
lt!llltatlon or dtSCrtfTnnattOn
based on race , cokff, rehgion,
sex familial status or nattonal
ongln, or any 1ntenh0n to
make any such prelerence,
llmllatiOn or dtscrlmtnatlOn -

Th1s newspaper w11t not

Accesso11as
Heaters, Vt nyl Sktrlmg Water
Kits t29Q 95, An·
chon, Woat:! &amp; Ftberglass Steps,
Root Coatings, Doors, W1ndows,
Plu mbing &amp; Etectncal Supplies
Blocking Wood I Wedges And
Morel Call Bennett's Mob1le
Home Supply At 1·7ol0·4 46·94 16
Otvorce Forces Sales-Take over
payments, 2br. 2 bath, ftnancu'lg

avallabhil 30"·755-5566
Huge 28x80 3BR, 1 112 bath
Star uno at ONLY $39.099 . Man~
opllons aval3 bli '-...1 ·888·928 ·

3426

know•ngly accept
adver11sements for real estate
which Is •n v10!at•on of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwe!l•nos
actvenlsed an th1s newspaper

large Nlec,1on of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Start1ng at $2095
Ou1ck dehvery Call 740-385·

are avatlable on an equal
opponunity bas1s

1998 OoubleWtde 3br, 2 ba!hs

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
1890 Moclular home an 2 t/2 acres of land.- rwo l:lllrhs, etght roan-.,

9621. .
LIMITED DFFER
1 t ,699/down $259/mo Only at
oakwood Homes N•tro, WV 304 755-5885
Make 2 Payments Uowe In No
Paymenls Aher -4 Years, 30" ·736-

7295

New 3 Bedroom Home
Only $169.00 P8f Month

1·800-251 5070
full basement, localed ott Flat- New 1998 14170 tl'llee bedroom,
woods Ad · S60.000 Ca~ 740-992· 1ncludes e monlhs FREE lol rent
.2..e&amp;after5pn'l.
tnc luelea slorhng, deluxe ateps
3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch, OptiOnal and setup Only $187 08 per
Famd~ Room, CA, 2 Baths, In· mon1h With $107S down Call 1
Ground Paal , Emu! $73,000 800· 637-3238
7oiQ.+46..j173
'---,-----::--:---·1 NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 teltl
4 BdrrTJ, 2 bath, Pt Pleaaant Still under warran!y, owner !1
home. HIOOsq fl E• cond 1 nancmg available 304 755
netg.barllood. 31).1-675-7129.
719\

4yrs old, • bedrooms, 2 112
baths, lam11y room, 1n Meadowbrook Priced tn · 130'a. 30"·675-

2 Apaflmenla In R10 Grande
' Area 'Across From College, t

Room, 1 Bath, Ut1ht1es Included,
$200/Ma Oaposu Required ; 1
Bedroom Apartment, $290/Mo.,
Utilities Included. 1·888-840·
052\

=~~'i:i.C:s

SINOLES$UIO.poWEEKLY

n&amp;nclng available 30•· 7ss- 719 '
420 Mobile Homes
Attenuo~ Mobile Homo OWners·
for Rent
Areas Largnt lrweruory Or Intertherm I Coleman Hea~ Pump•. 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile home~
A1r Conditioners, Furnaces &amp; $260·S300 sewer, water and
Parts, Huge Buy1ng Power Means trash 1ncluded, 740-992·2te7.
The Loweot Installed Price. Easy
o- Tho Phone Baril F1nanc~ng 2 Bedroom Beauulul R1ver V1ew
Call Bennetra Mobile Home HTG References, Oepo!ill, NO pETS!
&amp; CLG' 1·800-872·5967
Foster's Mobile Home Park, 740·
No Payments Until July 1998

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home sue aVailable ,bel·
ween Athena and Pometay, call
740·38S..387

470 Wanted to Rent
HELP WITH PROPERTY TAX•
E9?
11 You Have 200 Ot More Acres
In Gauta Or Me1g1 Co., I Would

Pomeroy, 740•842_
Bo lntoreoted In Le111ng The
52 8
Hunbng R1gh11 To Your Proporty.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Reier- I Am A Ruponlible Sporlaman,
ences Requ~red , No Pets, Rent And Can Pay $5.00 0.. More Per
Plus Oepostt, 740·446·4313, 740- Acre Per Vear If Interested,
Pte11e
Call Collect Bob Maya,
446.0879
304-582·2249.
~

10

log home. 2 l)edrooms. 2 baths,
f'talr basemtnt, bas1c appliances,
lull porch on rront, deck, seuing
on 5 acraa, w/3 car garage,
St20,000, 740·gl2·7788 altor 6
pm.

Middleport beautiful two s10ry, .3

br, 2 bath, large I r &amp; " ·· oak

dk&gt;oro I tnm, Smith's cuotam oak
ceblnett, Jenn-alr range. dish·
• • r . de•ched garage. by tp-. ·
74 2 52
SIG · ol3
pol'*"""',

IIOOULNIHDUSE AUCTION
A 211'•51' Ranch Style Modulor
Hou.. W11t Ba Auetloned To Tho
Hlgheot Bidder On Way 9, 11H18
At 12 oo Noon At The Buckeye
Hilla Career Center Located At
Rio Granda, Ohio PubliC V1ewtng
Maffdoy Through Friday From
9:00 A M To 3"00 PM Please
Call 740·245-5334 For An Ap·
poiitDIIOOit Formol V~ 0! Tho
Houoe It During Tho liluckroyo
Hillo !Ohio Volley EXPO On Sat, . . April it, And Sunday, 4prll
1g, lfltll: 12.00 Noon ·5:00 PM.
Eedl Dey.

AKC Pembroke Welsh Corgi
Pupptes Born 211'1'98. 1 Tfl Color

Fetmle. 740·245·9289

AKC Siberian Female g Weeks,
Ve t Checked. Shots &amp; Wormed,

1125, 740·379·2363 Kal1y.
Now Open Sundays 1-4 Man-Sat
11-6 Ftsh Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave. Pomt Pleas·
anr. 304-675."2063

------'-----·1

Antiques
1 Bedroom Apartment Newest 530
and Cleanest 1n the area, near Buy or aell R1venne Antiqu .. ,
Holzer S279 Pluo UDiton, Oepo~t 1124 E. Matn Street, on At 124,
and leaae Required (7"0,4,.6- Pomeroy Hours M T.W 10:00
2957
am. to 8 00 p.m.. Sunday 1:00 .,
6
00 p m 740 ·992·2526, RuiS
1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove, Re- Moore owner.
lngerator Included, No, Pets, 740·
446-258:l
540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

linanclng on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Payment• 11 low as

1180 Call now 304· 75!).,5885

Special t6x80 3BR. 2 bath
$1,325 Down, S205 Mo Free arr.

Purebred Siberian Huaky puppies, 3 malel, 3 females, blue
Rock-·· 1 Scutt Bag $5 gg, Uarble eyes. maaka, very cute. people
Chlp .. · 50LB Bag $3.69. Yellow anented, ready now, .$130, call
On•an Sets-· ·I 891b WMe O~ton 740·992-5144
Sel!l···$ 791b/ We Carry Bulk Wanted· male A1redale lor rea·
Vegetable Seeds &amp; Bedding sonable pnce or stud servtce,
Plan&lt;J"'304-6 7S.ol084

PomerOy Thrill Shop now buymg
la,ge outside to~s and baby
1tems, walkeri, toddler car seats
eiC Tuesday through Frtday, 740·

304-863-835 t.
570

Musical
Instruments

992·3725.

ludwig Drum Sot, Zlldjian Cym-

Portable 011hwasher SSO. Baby

P.M.

bals Cases, 740-446-74Qe After 4

.

Buggy $75; Baby Back Camer

$20, 740·38Uii38

Born Fltb&lt;uary 1998, Coli 740·
245-1872. Or 740-387-D583.

oc, Hamp and York, over 50 pigs
Ill cltoa11 from, oelact plgo Setur·

day, April 25111, Soon Upton. 741).
378-Btoa •

Good nal\l&lt;ed Charolalo hafll bul.
304-7~

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
t030 Casa $3,950:310 G Caae
Dozer $4,950; 8250 $2,450, 1385
OliVO&lt; suso.740·2118-8522
2 Farmall Cub Wit h CultiVators,
Ford 800 , Ford 641, Ford 861 ,

M.F 35 Q.,ael ·2· t35 M.F, 2000
Ford 01e1el P.S , -2- 3000 Fords,
3600 Ford 01esel P.S., Post Hole
D1ggera, Grader Blades , PlOws,
Dirt Scoops, Bush Hogs, Fimsh
Mowers, 3 Pl Rotollliers, Hay
Tedder~,

N.H. 56 Hay Rakea, N.H

Hay Bind, Bale Spears, Manure
Spreader, U F Disc, Boom Ptlles,
Side Dresser For Farmall Cub Or
140, Parts Far Ford &amp; M F K&amp;s·
sal's Tractor &amp; Equ1pmen1, 1 M1le
West, Holzer Hospital, Jackaon
P1ke, Gallipolis. OH, 740 ·446 ·

11906, 741).•46·7767
25 hp. 4•4 d11sel Shinlllu tractor
wnh end lOader, has ~ada, plow,
d1sc, cutuvator, post hole digger

end bruoh hog, $7000, 74D-965·
"222 dar• or 740·085·3412
evertng~

•

Farmall Super M Wide Front
Power SteC!!tng John Deere M

allot 7pm

st.

740·247·4292

5595

71

o

8pm.

Soulb

FORCE OF
HAilT I!

HE AIN'T '
BeEN HERE IN

WEIKS It

Sei:dld And Sold
L~ Thio Month.

Trudel\.,.,, Et&lt;.

1-800·522·2730, X3801
, 981 Buick ~eSabra limited m

1

'
:

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1969 See Imp 19 11211. dllep-V, ;
beige wJsand tnttrtOf, 8cyl, .
190hp. MercruiSDf tnboard mo1or, •

1982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 D, 280
V8, Good ConditiOn, St,DOO Or

•
1988 Kawasaki 650 Jet lkt , 2,
seater wuh tratler $800. or 090. •

bu~L$2, 750

814-&lt;146-3814

304·662·3566

1965 Okll Cutlall S.pr-. 305,

1992 Cobta Runabout 17 1/2 Fit
Wllh Trailer, lots 01 Elltraal Ukt

•

er. 80,000 Milcia, 740-+46-2532.

New, $8,000 740·446·4782, Golll· •
poliO, Ohkl

1985 Pont•ac Trana-Am Auto,
All, T· Tops, Black Sharp, $2,500
740·843-0832.

1995 PolariS Sl 750 water Creft
With Trarler, 740·448· 7496 Allor
4P~
•

1988 Plymo6th Sundance New
Brakes, New T1res, Good Car,

Kawasakt STS Jet ski, still under •
warranly, three seater, 13 horN· •
power, bought new July of '9 7, ;
three matching l&lt;awuak• skt •
vests and uatler all go wllh II, '

1989, Cavalier 2.0 4 Cylinder
Auto, A1r, H1gh Mll11, $1,500,
.
304-e7S.t3t0 --

good--

~~~N{i)

760

1

Auici ·P&amp;ns &amp;
Accessories

New OU ta,!)hl, t tqn truck

Ripley, WV 304·372·3933 or 1·,
800·273·9329.
WANTED TO BUY: 1980 ·
Through 1972 Ch8YeHe Or Elca·;
m1no Conaole, Can Also Be A,
1970 Through 1972 Monte Caflo ,
Conaole "MUSr IE HOIISHUE •

458-1821, 74().368-81H17

790

1993 Ford Tempo, 4 Oaoro, PS,

1995 Chrysler Concord 88,000
Miles, Loaded, $8,500 080, 740·

256-jj189

t 996 Chryofor Concord 2g,300
m•les. leather interior, loaded,

oil

81GNATE

wheels &amp; rad1atorl: D &amp; R ~Auto, :

SHIFTER T'IPE .. Phone 7"0• '
44 1·1053
•

$3,495, 740·24&amp;-54177.

""TtJt: 1'1~llr.'£!

.,

1992 PlymOUJh lazar Auto, AC,
Cru1se, Tmt•d Wmdowa, New
T~tes, Great Gas aAileagel 304-

PB, Air, Automatic, Trade Or

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Wosl

11
Pass

~ml~aa

1 RUIIIan ruler
2 She gato What
ahewanta
27 like an
operatl1111 room 3 Type of playing
marble
32 Mount (2 wda.J
33 Member of the 4 Tropical!,_

23

good··--

clergy
34 Hunter
r:onstall..lon

11 Rom., rOitd
t2Wu

7 New Volt .and
Chicago
8 MIUNt lnllrmiiiH .
tO Calro'a-

5 Author
Anala&amp; Type of bur

It Cleen-elr "'11·
21 L.endl'l aport
22 M.uftzzy

H

Pass
4•

1973 23ft Dodge Concord motar :
home, 4 0 Ona generetor, new ,
ttrea, gas &amp; elec1nc heat, ml 0 •
ctawave, double-door refrtgerator, •
sleeps 8. walled sweeper, tuna;

flOW 600D IT

IS

TO Be

_.,.....,_..,~~-

25 Hciw

.-1--

21 Wrtt.r

Anlll21 Book pert
2t Conatructlon

Easl
21
All pass

beltm
30 Sec:red bird

at Egypt

31 Motion
Dicture
37 Introduced

42 g:1ndtan
currency
43 Uppity 01111

_

'

•

44 llfeily01111

..

45 Layerot

47 Crude rubber
48 . . _ ,••t

41 irllh
50Mol...na
52 Badge
1111111ri11
54 Ape .

•

.,. _. .,..,..--"'--.. . . . . .,.
CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis Campos
~c. e.m !Itt•.'" 1t11 ~..,..tor .nDthw r_... au.

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loy
Reorrango lettero of the
0 lour
IC10trtbled -d• below ta form lour
. simple -d•
_ _ _ _.;..__

l~lootl

CU.Y I. POUAII

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1--+-w....;v,..=-L
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An . elderly colleague
once told me that the wmners do what the losers
don't -- --to- •

,.,-A--M_D__A_L__.;..Y_;;_..,,
'. 15. I_ I_ 16. I_ . e

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PURTSU
JZZXPfAII
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "Happy Is the man with 11 wile to tell h1m what to do
and a se&lt;:relary to do it' ~ Lord Mancroft

•

uNscRAMBlE tEnus
GET ANSWER

"l•'
J•

•'

II

ro 1 1 1 1
•

•

•

PRINr NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
•

•

•

. SCUM-lETS ANSWERS

1984 Coleman James ton pop-up, •
sleeps 4, extras. e•c c:ond :
$t,800 Call K&amp;K Mobile Homea ,

•

alowly
31 u.. lllriW
41 Mothtr-ol-

IN TilE PEACEFUL

A6MI..

&gt;

23 Exclled

Complete ;h. chuckle quoted
bv f•lltfiOi 1n the m•ss•no words
....._._ _,__,__._..._....... you develop 'Irom slop No. 3 below,

7047.

30H75·3000. flam.Spm.

North

..

. 24 Type "' ,....,

By Phillip Alder
We all 'know that, acco~ding to
William Shakespeare, King Richard
Ill. fighting' desperately on foot,
offered hisJdngdom for a horse. Well.
on the day that commemorates St
George, the patron saint of England,
this deal feat~res a defensive play
requinpg somewhatle~s than a h&lt;?r&gt;e
to defeat the contract. It was played
in a club game al Shakespeare's
hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon.
Defending against four hearts,
West cashed the spade ace. What
should he have done· at trick two?
With his long diamond suit, East
;was strong for the single raise to two
spades, but responding two diamonds
surely would have committed his side
10 bidding game. South would have
preferred a better suit for a three-lev.
el overcall, bu'! sometimes one must
do. what one must do. In competitive
auctions, more points are lost by
passmg than by bidding. North raised
on the "who knows?" basis.
If. West continues woodenly with
a second spade, declarer will ruff,
draw trumpS ending in the dummy,
and call for the diamoud eight. If Eqst
rises with the ace, declarer gets two
of dummy"s ~lubs away on the kingqueen Qf diamonds. However, if East
ducks, declarer benefits from the j.
3 club split. lo~ing only one spade
and two clubs.
So. West should switch to a club.
· but to which one7 If West selects the .
seven, declarer can play low from the
dummy, calling "on the power of his
nine. The winning -- and correct ••
play is the 10. y.'esl must hope pait·
ncr has the eighl (or nine).
Whether Sowh plays low or high
froin the dummy, t)le defenders will
score four tncks: one spade, one diamond and two clubs.
·

1970 W•nnebago Motor Home.
R~tnl Goad $2,500, 740·387 ...

aotung paj
p11ce D•1• 304·
e75-t932 or evening• 304·895- good $4,000 304-882·3237 Af· •
1er51&gt;m
3615
1996 Dodge Neon, 27,000 Mll,s,
2 Door Sport Coup, $7,099 080,
741).256-1539, 740.258·1371

.:IJ~I ~~

~Tl~[

pairs, $2,000, 740-GD2·5560
2•· car trailer with toofbo• and
'---~-,.-------1 ..
ra.:.mptt;:::•_;
'1'40.;;_·:..
7•::2..:·2e:::.:75:;__,__ _;;
1
t969 Olds ~ Doors. Red, V·6, -

1991 Sundance Conver1ible All
Opuons 89,000 Mileo $3,295,
1988 Chevy , Truck V8, Auto,
tw,OOO Mtlts $2,100 Cook Nok)ra
(740) 446-0,0S

,.IT':&gt;

$5000, 7.00·949-2203 Or 740-e41· I
2045, Will can11d1r trade tor a 1

t989 Dodge Daytona, 100.000
m~tes, runs good, needs minor re-

Auto, A11, Rod, International Ser·
ies, All Power Equipped! 7«1.,.41·
2532

••

:

Best Offer, 7411-11112·05e8

198Q Camara RS. must aell,
$2000, 7·0·742·2820.

.,.,ew,

• 750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

with Vttiler, ltfe preservers &amp; '

740·245-5897

· IT!$ PA'-T Of OUR
"FoLK5Y
IMA6f.

1991 Honda 250• 4 Wheeler lots :

or Extra'sl740-441-1419 . .

good cond. $2,000. 304·875·
1295
.

V· 8, Brougham Power Seale,
Power Root, T-Crutse, Air, 1 OWn·

DOWN

.My kingdom
for ·an eight

,

Allor 500 PM

1980 ·tiHIO,ruckl For ttOOIII

pert

Opening lead; a A

:

Goldwmg GL Motorcycle,
E•cellent Condition.

t976 Delta ta Otdamobilo, good
cond. 304-773-5482.

57 --flow
56 UHa I pencil

Dealer: West'

:

Aufps for Sale

laborer
56 Moat uruouaf

Vulnerable: Both

$18,995 1994 Ford F 150 xu:,
4x4, . loaded, 85,00 mt1es, ,
$14,995 Call 304-675-6261 afler -

•

55 Unakllled

• A 9 2

•l

1

•.

Cancel- Youth. Owner- Jockey· YOU are ALONE

I

e11c cond 30-4-273-42tS.

Veh1c:les ,..No Turn Ooams, Call

Vickl8, 740;;-t-4&amp;-2897.
Ohio Yaney Bank Wtll Olfer Fo1

Sale A 1988 Toyota Camrw

W4FIII UP: High mcltncy Natu·
ral And LP Gas Furnacea. lifetime W.rranty On Hett Ext:hang·
"' "II You Don't Call Uo Wa Both
Loaer 1Free Etumatetl Add·On
Heat Pumps Only Sllghty Higher
Call Us Today 1998 Is Our 26th
Year In The Heating &amp; Cooling
Buainenl 740-448-8308, 1-800-

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Residential And Commercial
Lawn Equ1pment Compact Utlhly
Tractors From 20 Ta 39 HP All
Sizes Of"Hay
WDEqutpment,
And 2 WO Farm
Ttactors,
John
Deere Skid Steer loaders. Check
With Us About Fmanctng As low
As 2 9% On lawn Tractors And
Low Aa1e Flnancmg On New And
U!It d Equ Ipment C'rm 1c hae I' 5
Farm &amp; Lawn Galnpoh&amp;. OH 740
+46·2412 t -80().594· t 111

Held At The OVB Anne•. U3
Third Ave , Gathpohs, OH On 5121
ga At 10.00 A M Tne AbOve W•ll
Be
H1ghast Biddel "Ao lo

roouW. Publtc

Livestock

1

AuCIIOn Will

Bt

I'Tick. 740·446·l511 , Galltpofls.

. "The best ttme to study humane nature,' the professor told hts class, "is when YOU are ALONE '

ROBOTMAN .

1993 Dutchman L1ke New, 30 F1 ·
Sletpa 8,' loaded' $10,000 740· '
245 58t8
Bella~re true~ camper, 8ft long, '
self-c:onlatned, goad cond ·
t1,800 Sleeper for p1ck -up,
seato t or 2 $450 304·882·3273

~~~!eg~~:~W~1~t~h~:o~urAnd
Expressed
Nay

ar

~·

__.....

SERVICES

•

Jonnson
Reserves

Right To Accept Or Raj eel
Any And All 81ds, And Withdraw

810

Upton Usod Caro Rt . 82·3 Miles

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcht•onal ltfet1m• ~ueranlet •
Local references lurmshed . E1 .
tabiiShod t975 Call (740) ••8 ·
0870 Or t-800·287·0576. Rogero ·

Property ,li!om Sate P11or To Sole
Terms Of Sale CASH OR CER·
TIFIEO CHECK.

3225, All« 5 RM.

630

STORAGE TANKS 3,000' Gallon

Red Reg•steted lmlOut•n Bull AYiiiablol30H51·t089
7•0-446-7380.
720 Ti'ucks for Sale

South 'or leon, WV F manclng

1

Home
Improvements

Waterproot•nu.

Appliance Parts And Service All
Nome Brands Over 25 Ynro Ex ..
perience All Work Guarentetd,
French City May1ag, 740·4,.8·"'
7795
~-::---,---.:··
C&amp;C General Home Main.' '
tenence- Pa.ntlng, vinyl stdlng,•
carpentry, doo11, windowa, batht,
mobile home r&amp;pa~r and more For'
ffee esttmate call Chet, 740·gg2··

Silverado 350 enlong bad, auto loaded
Caun11 Fairgrounds, Wa1htng10n 11•~500. 304·773-5139 or 304-773·
C.H., Ohk&gt;. Ovor 20 Cha....n I
Asnrvw frDm 1817 S.. Selling
GMC Extended Cab, DICit ·
75 Block Face Wether I Ewe
eondloan, 7.00·9411-3088.
lomllo. Dan &amp; Chrlo Scllllchttr
Famllltl Phono: 740·421·8725
IIHI3 Dadoe 0150 Club Cab, high
Or74o-428.fl833.
miteo. S87So. 740·1H12-8t54

8323

840

Electrical and
. Refrigeration

"" ' ,
'' •

ResldOIItial or CO~m*clel wiring, .,
HrYicl or repllra. IIIIIIOr IJ. ·
ctnt4td electrician, Ridenour ' •

Eloctrlcol, WV0003Qe. 304·875- ,
1788.

,.

•••
I

•Kt09832
t K Q9
'

740·247-4292

TRAN!:&gt;PORTATION

Two Maney Furgeson tractors.
(t) T035 gas, 121 SOMF d1e ..1.
good ltrea on bolh, 740· 742-

BEST LITTLE CLUB LaiiB
SALE, April 25, B P.M . Fajllll

Prom Drtll, S1ze 10, 740·2•5-

t989 Bronco tt, XLT, V-e. auto.
AIC, toadad, chrome wheels,
looks &amp; run re•l good, 12.800, .

'94 Yamaha 50 motorcycle, excel·
lent shape, rode one ltme, 1985~
'86 Suzuk• 50 tout wheeler, :'\IW
seal, good condttton. S995. 740·
142·3602

Troy bUt Model Horse l11ie New
S850; Noma R1dlng Mower, "
WhHI StHring, 18 HP. 48" Cut,
145 Houra, $800, 140·4A6-3413

•1 Baautllut Wldnlphl Bloo Sequen

Racine, Oh . S3oo
month plus depo11t &amp; uttltt1et,

lion, 740-4-48·8803

Actrno Bloom

53

player
17 Aclresa
Martha- .
18 Agnll820 Withered
' 21 AIIIIIIIIIVI
pei'IOflltilly
ca~ory

I·

t988 GMC S·t5 4&gt;4, New Eng1no
Now Patnl Job, E)(cellent Candl·

tQ95 Dodge 01e11t 4WO, loaded, •,
63,000 actual mtles, e•cellent l
Tobacco Plant• For Sale, Re· condulon. 122,000 ltrm, "II 7"0· serve For May Planuno. Oann~ 11112·8960
!
Dewhurst !l04·8g5·8733 L..vo
Massage.
--------~-------- ;
740.
Motorcydes
.
1
650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Mt111ge.

Large 3 bedroom IP.Irtment.,

LAV.HERS-,_._
.. _ . -

11an. Best Offer Accepted i40;

Hay &amp; Grain

640

St ,300 7•0·U8·2829 , Laavo

nurd

L~~l&lt;5.~.

379·2433

1995 Chevy Blazer LT •dr, ••• 1
leather, loaded, 45,000 m11ea.

Sun Wawe Spa " Perton, Brown
Tontt With Redwood Enertor

...,..

t978 Ford 4X4 V08. Shortbed,,
120,000 Milos, very Good Condl· ,

WANTE6. 1 Cow wlcall opprox.
3mos old, call Fr~day or Sarurdly
beloret0:30am 304-773-5725.

2675

Jodtlon, Ohio, HIOO.Sf17-9528

port From S2•9·$373 Call 740·,
992·5064 Equal Hou11ng Oppor-!

•AJ1 '6
• 8
• J 6 ~ 3·
Wosl
Easl
.• J 9 2
, IAKQ75
• 5
' . Q t
tAJ5432
10 N
• Q 8 4;
• K LO 7
Soulb
• 8

EEK&amp;MEEK

&amp; 4-WDs

1990 Ford f-150 V-8 Air, fm-cas·
sene, ••4 n,ew t~res, ,.. lift kit •
$9,500 Days 30•·&amp;75·1932 ~r ,
evening• 30H95-3tlt5.

Vorkshtre Ouroc Pigs, Born 2J2J
98 $50 Each; Yorkolllra Plgt Born
3it8J98140 Each, 740-381-7047.

04-23-98

• tO 6 4 3

Two Rfirotered block Angus
bulls t3.~5 montt11 olage. 31).1.
875-21)98.

875-2915

Upright, Ron hans Enterpnaes,

R•verstde Apartmenll In Mlcfdle-

Norih

Vans

51...,.

~~~

Factory 5· 10 Wheels (740) Ul1419

730

441 flmbei' trte

47 Sigh of dlaguot

&lt;

Slacked Speed Oueen Washer 1
Drylf 1450: Manuel Hosptta:l 8e&lt;l
t550, Good Cond•llon, 740-g92

Gractoua liVIng. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparrmenta at V111age Manor and

11187 · Ford Ranger )(LT 4cyl,
51Pd. 8,8001m1111, Tonnau cover, ac. pi, exc. cond. 30,. ~ 882 ·

Small Compact Camcorder Wtth $3,500 Each, 741).379·9381
1996 Monte Carlo LS Like Now, 19&amp;.4 Ye'llaw SlOne Camper. 35', 2 t'
All EAirao' Po1d St . tOO, W1tl Take
PW.
POL, '•CD Player, Tmted ellpando's, lull Sll' bedroom I
$550, M'an's Huffy B1ke R1dden Geht 95 grlnderJmtller, hammers
Windows, ,Cellular Phone Hook
[queen SiZe bed), full size livtng &amp; ~
T,.,.., S75. 740·446-7695
never turned, ell:cellent conchuon
Up, $12.5&lt;*'1.00- 256~347
kitchen, OM full SIZ8 !IOVt &amp; rei, j
304·273-421 5
Smith Corona Word Processor
new carpet, vinyl , all Windows ~
W11h S'reen, Haa lotus 3, John Deere 112 tracto'r W/48• 1996 Neon Green 4 Doors, Auto, have custom Kush blindlllam t
AC,
3t,ODO
M1les,
$7,200
OBO
Spreadsheets, Hard Drive· And A blade St.OOO OBO 304· 773
betgay, must aee Ia epprec:ialt, ..
740-258 8340, 7.00·256-8467
Disc Dnve, More Features, Call 5965
se11ous calls onl~. $8500 , 740·.·
Pam At 740 245-9635
Man•• Ferguson 1010 _. WO Bad Credit, No Credit, Bankrupt 992-8173, 740·992·2015.
We Can Help\ Bank FinancSola That Reclines On Each Side, Wilh Belly Mower, $5,9QQ 0 BO cy?
lng On Used Yehtclea, 740-441 - 1990 Eddte 15 1980 Flaett•nnl :
Matchtng Recline, Loveseat, Cot- 740·256·1539. 740·256-1371.
11' Awning, 1975 Mallartf 21f
lee Table &amp; End Table, King Size ~~~~~~- - ~~000~7·~~~-----­ Awnmg. 1972 Artstocrat 20' .:
Walerbeel Wtth 8 Drawers, New Holland 4 78
hay bine w/ Credtt Problema? We Can Help
1985 Chrysler New Yorker • Cy ,~
Matchmg Oreuer W1th Mttror. stub guards, cylinder &amp; manual, Easy Bank Fmancing For Used hnder, Turbo. 1699 Bob McCor::,.

291 ·0098.

SPRING SPECIALS
$411 Down
U Find Aatn
111~. Poymonto
ft7,19l1011 3BR
Fr81 Delivery_, S..·up
On~ AI oakwood Homee
Nitro, WV. 304o755-5885
TAX SPECI4L
New 3br S9991Ciown t 1891ma
free Set-up &amp; Deli very Only 3
LeHI Only at Oakwood Home• N1·
uo WV 30055-5885

Club P~gs Excellent Bloodline,

from the Ark about one year ago
please call me tI Feaets names

40L8 Bag 3 for $4 1111 Red Lava

Sohd maple dln•ng room table, 4
cha1ra, hutch, e•c cond 304 -

Single Parent Program Specutl

Ch•cktns-many dillerenl bt'Hda
304-87~ t Q2.

42 AttentlOngellingiCHind

15=ofnut
16 Mora like 1

21162 ovenlngl

Spru

I am lOOking lar two ferrets tf you
are 11'18 person who bought them

lor $5.89 Peat Humus--- 40LB
Bag 3 lor S4 .80 Cow Manure -·

7•0·379-2720, AFTER t P.ll.

888-928-3426

740·266·5395

8398

Cheat Of Drawers &amp; N.ght Stand,

New Ooublew•de 3BR, 2 bath

Farm~ ,~Jd&lt;~on

Border Col he Pupptes, Ftrst 'Shots
Maple Dining Room Table, 4 And Wormed, Males Only, $75
Chalro, &amp; Hulch, $300, 740·446- Each (740) 258~449

o

11 ,325 Down &amp; 1205 permo 1

Very Nlu , 1ex80 Redman 3 Bed
rooms, 2 Full Balhl, Garden Tub,
Kitchen Appli9nces, Central AM
Deck. Already SOl Up On lol,
Take Over Payments Of 1298 Par
Montn. 7~4411·0571 ,
Late Modal Repo Set Up On lol
2.
t-800-38U86
Rapoo
Double Wldlll And s;nglo Widol
Won1 Laltlongl
Call · 1·888-738·3332 .

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New I Rabu•lt In SIOdt
Gall Rem Evana, 1·800·537·9528

1

&amp; lreealurllng 1·800-69HS177, •

Muon, WYa: 2 Bedrooms, Central Heat, A1r, Anderaon Ttlt In
W.ndowa, Full BaNmtnl, front
'And Back Porches, 740 ·902·
31).11, 741).992·3567

740-446-0231

PrimtSIIr· $99 mstaUauon wnh
ISO rebate Ftrst month free With
free movie channels, StarCne
2 Bedroom, RIO Grande, Now Ta~· 490
'Fo L se
lp&amp;Cial , $41 lntllllltiOn, 800·
1ng Appl,catlons , Plus Oeposn. .,....-...,.....,-:-~r_e_a_~~~ 263-2840.
Rent, No Pets, Relerences Rela,ge stare lront spa'• lot lease
Smoking In Just Se·ten
qutred, 740·24s-92 12
1 buatne 11 tor lease !n Middle·
Guaranteed! Smoke·Away
port,
Oh.
contact owner Christtne
Commerc1al or re51deni!BI 467 1/
The natural way to quit smoking
2 S Rt. 7 N 740•446'·4263 alter 740-992...~14
eas1ly •nd for good I You have:
1pm
nothing ro lose but your smak•ng
MERCHAND ISE
habitl Order Now! Nationally sold
Small 2 Bedroom Mobile Home In
at St79.95, Smok•Away program
Parler, Close To Slores &amp; Holpj ·
IS now only I49.Q5. Money back
tal, Traah &amp; Water Pa.d, 12351
Household
guatanree Call {800)611·5930,
Mo , $235 Oepasll Available S/11 51
exl n59078 Vt181 Mastercard
GOOds
:9::8::."7740~~·36.:.6.:..:.9.:.32:.;5_ _ -:--:-'
77
Small two bedroom mobile home ~o· Glbton electtic range,
R 1-S Furniture
MaMn,WV
lor rent 1n Ractne, 740·992·5039
condition, lour yean old,
8uy, Sell, Trade
7.00.11112-2546
Two bedroom mobtle nome lor
Used &amp; Anuques
rent on New Ltma Rd, 740 -742- Appliances :
Reconditioned
FurOIIure.
2803
Washera, Oryere, Rangel, Relrt·
304· 773·534 t
grators, 80 Da,- Guara.neel
Two b8droom, 1 &amp; 112 half bath, French C1ty Maytag, 740·446 · Racmg Go Cart, 2 Motors, Extra
par !Iaiiy lurn~shed, lor sell orl rent, 7795
Pans. Ready To Race, 740-682. . .
6922, Evtl'llngs
IVRI~ble lSI of May, 740 ~ 9924003 or 740 992-8559
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washeis. dryetS, refrlgeratora, Skteper sofa wnh matching rocker
440
Apantnents
ranges. Skaggs Apphanc••. 76 recliner love seat, good cond!lton,
Vine
Strtot, Call 740·•46· 7398, S200 for both. Healtht~der ab
for Rent
chau , dlntng room litble With lour
1 81)0.499-3499.
c:havs. soltd walnut coffee Ta ble
1 and 2 bedr09fT1 apartments, lur- Rettrement Sale Room Size Car· w•th mstchtng end !abies .... all
mshed and unturntsned. -securny pet 112 PrK:e Kttchen Pnnt SS.OO 740 985 4301 betore noon
deposu requued, no pets, 740· Sq
Yd 740·448·7444, Mollohan
991·2216
carpet

5788
QAKWOQD HOMES
1 -5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM Barboursvtlle WV largest Qou
S4,000 loc:al Gov't. &amp; Bank blew•de Outplay In 26 Years 1999
Repo's Call t -800· 522-2730, X Down. 304·736·3409

1709

A Groom Shop -Pel Groommg .
Fearurlng Hydro Batn Don
stheets.. 373 Georget Creek Ad

Brandy and Teek10 Phona (740)
441 - 1419
Labs AKC Great Hunters, Great
Pets $225 Black, $325 Chocolate, 74Q-256·6 172
ConstruCtiOn Workers Welcome 446·8906, 740-446·7787
Male Ronwetler pup, 8 weeks old,
740·441·5698, 740·441-5167
h
t h k d $tOO 740
Now Tha t Spring I~ Here II Is s ots. ve c ec e •
•
•
Sleepmg rooms wtth cookmg. Ttme To Stock-Up On Your Avon 992 2665
Al so tra•ler space on nver All Skm·So·Sofl Uo111ure Suncare
~~~~C~a~ll
!a~h~er~2~0D:.:p~
.m:·~·~ 2"5-54-43
Plus, Ta Ordar Call Pam At 740·
NOTICE
.,::
Mason
WV.
Fronch Cky Pot Grooming
--Openl
PAINT PLUS H4AOWNIE
WIWAIIANNIIOTEL
Profen1onal
Groommg by Ap·
Cjpreoa
Mulch-·3cult
Bag
3
lor
811 SECOND AVENUE
potntments 850 Second Ave.
$8.89
Tap
Soii
..
·40LB
Bag
3
for
GALLIPOLIS
$4.89 POtting Soii .. ·•OLB Bag 3 Galhpoht. OH. 741).448-1528.

qulfed, 814·445-9921 idler6pm

441-0181
2 ....... room

Pets lor Sale

446-3438

qutred, 61•·446-3481, Evenmgs ·
740·446-0101.
MTO Shp rear tang IIIIer 12hp.
38" cut MTO lawn moWBf laddet
450
Furnished
rack tor full llZe PIC~ · up truck
304·895-3053.
Rooms
New release TV Beantes S9 SO, 2
C~rcle
Motel Lowest Rates In Peace, S35eact'l, 740-Q92-5232.
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
C!nemax, Showume &amp; Disney. New Trailers In Stock 5x8 Tilt Bed
Wee~ly Rates, Or Monthly Rates, 5•10 Tilt 76"1116, 76"M18 Ft 740-

4 bedroom home on Pearl St ,
Lttddlepon, $375 a fnanrh , •375

948-5e78

Call1 -800-251 ·5070

Professional
. Services

Tara Townhouse Apartm~s,
Very SpeciOUS, 2 B~droom 2
Floor1, CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully C •
pated, Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pat•o, Start 1350/Uo -No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit Re-

1995 Clayton Mobile Home 2' 3 bedroom hou1a 1n Pomero~.
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Gas Fire· 740·843-5218
place, Garden Tub On Rental lot,
F1nanclng Ava ilable, 740-245 3br House tn New Haven, WV
$335/mo + depOSit 30,.· 7739738l~ve Message
,5661
2 or 3 Bedroom, Around $200 per
month Call credit line 1-800·

3 Year Full-Blooded Botdef CoM11,
W11h Paper~;, Uale, I 150, 740·

seoo . .c

30 A""'' And Ch1 ·Angu1 8ullo

For s.,., Reasonably Pr1ced, E•cellent Breedtng, Slate Run

Sreel Butld•ng Oeatersh•ps In sa- 1 . :..:....:..::..::;_..:.._:_..:.._~lect open markets Huge prollt Fair plgs•,;tamp, Hamp and Our-

740-379-2765

Small Apartment Upstairs, Close
To Gallipolis &amp; Grocet'y, No Pets,

RENTALS

RIO Gr6nde, QH Call 740-245·
5121

560

Hobart convection oven,

Relerer&lt;es, 740-4&lt;16-1156

Block, bnck , 1ewer p•pes. w•nd·
owa, lintels, etc Claude Winters,

Oyna.mark R1dmg Mower, 11 HP
3e• Cui Good Condition, $300

RIVER BEND PLACE
round Ulbf•• &amp; chalra, 1125 each;
• NNHIY1t1,WV
air hockey table, $250, candy
1 Bedroom a pta for elderly or vending machine , $350: m1sc
dtsabled, HUD 811SIIted EOH . re11auran1 Items, 740·992·'5141
304·882·3121
ask for Chrltttna or leave mes·

7 Hoepitall
13 Rum drink
t 4 Cryatelllne

4-H P'Q&amp;, call 740·949·20 17 after

Building
Supplies

Duncan Phlfe table W/8 chaira &amp; potential. Call Ur Moonte 304·
matclung I&gt;JifoL 304-875-4500
756-4135

992·7806.

w,.,.,

W1ll haul junk or trash IJWBY $351

Crafrmatl 42' Mower 14HP Eng1na

$450(740)379-93&amp;&lt;

One bedroom apartment In Mtd·
dlepon, all udllues paid, $270 per
month, $100 depolll, call 7"0·

Sevetal two acre lots fot sale on

P&lt;ckup k&gt;ad 304-675-5035.

.:_:::_.;._=----"-''~
·

1.JI00.537·g528.

0006

441-o54t . Alter5PM.

1989 14X72, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, 3110 Acre lot, Heat Pump,
A1r. Carport, Back Porch, Porter

No Poll, Parking, 8 Montn L..••
1200 Deposit, $300/Mo, 740-446·
3667
N1ca Qne BR Unfurnilhed Apartment Range &amp; Relng Prov1ded

Now Taking AppliCation•- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Uo , 7.40-441·

Q6.48, 614--367-7010

Conlact Joe Saunders At 740~6-2450 References Avatlabte.

Concrete I Plastic Septic Tanka.
3dO Thru 2,000. Gallo"• Aon
Evans Enterprl111, Jackson, OH

P.M

Large WOoded Bu1ld1ng -lots With
Some Restncnons, Near S.R. 850,
Just Minutes From New Industrial
Park, Some Restucuons, 7"0·

Brand New! Grtat Gilt! CDIYHJeo
storage un tl Black and ch,rry
Ntver out ol box $125. Holda up 875-8040
to 9.o40 discs, also holds tapes
Call 740 -GQ2 -81!138 aHer IS pm 550
COo &amp; topH not Included.

31 Olatw. llw dirt
31 Succinct
40 Gloea

1 Cuatomer

540 Miscellaneous
•
Mercllandlse
Wedding Gown·Beautllul Ivory
11quined, re· embroidered lace,
••ze 10 wuh veil Only $225 30•·

Newly Remodeled 1 Bedroom ,
Furnished fUnturnished, Downlllllra, Uulftl" Paid, No Smoking,

Water &amp; Garbage Patd. Deposit
Requ ired 7•0·4•6-.o43•5 A'ttr 6

Galllpol' 741).258·1335.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

350nc.IIION

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER .

ASTRO·ORAPR
_

Friday. April 24, 1998 ,
• In · the year uheud impressive
strilb can be mode to fulfill two
secret hopes· and ambitions. Doors
that were previously shut will open to
you now.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
you ' re able to recognize opponuni·
1ties your associates overlooked, this
coold be a rewarding day for you.
Keep scanning the radar !iCrt:en for
positive blips. Get a jump on life
undeManding the inRuenca dul'll
govern you in the year ahead. Send
for your Astro-&lt;lraph predielion&amp; by
mailini S2 to Astro-Oraph.
IIIia
newspaper,' P.O. Box 1758. Muny
Hill SWioll, New York, NY 10136;
Be
10 1111e your r.od• 1i1n.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) Yoo'll
feel beaerand fare beaertoday if you
mainllin an ~Clive schedule. While
you're running around; take time 10
--$lap.and aay' llello 10 friends if you're
in~irarea.'
. C!.NCER--, (June 21 -July 22)

I!Y

C/0

sUre

"

Events should work out to your sat· 21) Your best a.'l.o;et today is your abil·
isfaction today. You have the ability ity to exec:iite your ideas and the idea.'
10 sifi throu&amp;h the ideas of others and of .others with equal ef!'~livenes.,,
redesign' the,in to suit your pu!J105eS. CtH:ontributors will appreciate the
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You miaht · respect you show for 11\Cir creations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ' 191
have an ~nity today 10 win a
Today,
trust your logical deductions
new ally by. franl\ly disc"ussing con·
cems that 'yotl' share. Be direct and a.' w~ll as your intuitive insights.
They will be useful to you socially
forgo embellishments. :
VIRGO (.',u!!. 23-Sepl. 22) Think and commercially.
AQUARIUS (Jill. 20..Feb. 19)
In tenns of !lie group today. not t~e
individual. You c111 find methods that Today, mike a ~nl of mingllna with
illllke everyone's)ob easier if new and people Jll!llejld of just hang· •
you work in telnjui!Ctioll with ~n. iO, out with old ~dbys. Fresh rela. LIBRA (Sept. 23-_()ct. 23) lionshipt~ 'will refurbi~h your life in
•
·
Unsuuctun:d aclivitict are aptiO be sellef\ll.
·PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) Your
die
you'll find die 111011 enjoyable today, l!O be flexibiC and respond best poblbilitict today for personal
pin are likely 10 come through new
10 the sugestioils. of odlers.
channels.
Look 11011nd a bit
SCORPIO (&lt;kt. 24-Nov. 22) A
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
constructive idea you ~t~today relatinli 10 domestic issues llhould be jiv· Bcginnina today overal' conahions
en 10p .,..;ority. Olher manen can be ·should be better for you than they
'
t""
I
•
were !*Jier in die week. Take PQSidealt with lltel'.
tive measures to fulfill your dreams.
SAGiTTARIUS
(Nov.
23·Dec
.
.
.

~~~~~ ·

will

ones

.

L

•

• I
0

'

~~~~~~~~~ "

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'·
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I &gt;

lwor
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. .
~.12. The

Dally Sentl~l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: Thursday, Apr1123,

1•

Friday
Weather

Honor roll anoounced for Meigs Local Schooi ·District
The names of .students making
the honor roll for ~ools in the
Meigs Local School District for the
third nine-week gradio1 period have
been announced.
Those students in their respective
schools making a grade of "B" or
abOve in"all their subjects are as follows :

Cody Davidson, Jennifer Kuhn, Joel
Lynch, Chalsie Manley, Katie Rodehaver, Jordann Thomas, Cassi
Whan, Clerissa Davis.
Special Clau: Brittany Annstrong, Patricia Johnson, · John
Lamb, Emily Ohlinger.

Sermonette, Page 10
Reds lose again, Page 6
Local' diamond results, Page 6.

Today: Sunny

ley, all A's; Ashley Baylor, Madison
King, Cassie Lee.
Grade S (Lisle): Adam Snowden, Sarah Wilkes, all A's; Justin
Coleman, Kimberly Taylor.
LDIDH (Primary): Michael
Hudson, Tiffany )14cDonald.
LDIDH (lntermdiate): . Troy
Barrett, Andrew McKnight.

Runyon, Ben See, Brandy Shea,
Josh Simpson, Allison Smith, James
Smith, Emily Story. ·stephanie
Story-Schwab, Jennifer W•lker,
Beth Wilfong, Jessica Wolfe, Hannah Woolard, Jennifer Zielinsky.
G.,.de 8: Andrew Baker, Jessica
C:undiff, Delana Eichinger, ~ber
POMEROY ELEMENTARY
Ellis, Josh Glaze, ZacJC Glaze,
Kindergarten: Chlsey · Arms,
Shawn Gwinn, Ben Haley, Amber
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY
Kristen Ballard, Shannon Barrett, SALEM CENTER ELEMEN· Haning, Erin Hartson Greg King,
Grade 4: Samantha Cole, Sarah Joyce Billings, Erin Dunn, Veronica TARY ·
'
Melissa Kirk, Darrick Knapp, John
Davis, Michael Durst, Anna Hanen· Grimm, Stephanie Hudson, Holly •
Grade 1:
Michael Bailey, Kraw\.czyn, John Lentes, Nick
bach, Briuney Jacks, · Meghan Jeffers, Ryan Jeffers, Autumn Rebecca Canterbury, Chelsea Car- McLaughlin, Jason Miller, Mbnica
Leslie. Kayla McCanhy, Autumn McDaniel, Ariel Nitz, Shlby penter, Jonathan Hal)dley, April Moon, Josh Napper, Chris Neece,
NcLaughlin and Melia Whan, all Ohlinger, Erin Pattel'$on, Richard Oiler, all A's; Matthew Dunkle, Mindy O'Dell, Krystal Pennington,
A's; Nathan Becker, Justin Bell, Reuter, Ryan VanMatre, Ivy Conde, Michelle Eggers, Brittany Kim~le, Beth Phillips, Kristy Puckett, Misty
Jamie Ellis, Ashley Engle, Aaron Ashley Laudennilt, Max Linle, Alyssa · Longstreth,
Stacy Puckett, Erin Ralston, Melissa Rich·
· Fife. Laura Hollen, Kylen King, Mara Perry, Bruce Youkers
Macomber, Samantha McDonald, mond, Joy Rose, ressica Ro.trsh,
Tara Lee, Jo Beth Rodehaver, and
Grade 1: Lacee Arms, Henry Skylar Rupe,-Robin Tay lor.
Leslie Runyon, Jessica Schuler,
Eric VanMeter.
Grade 2: Ryan Barrett, Joshua Mary SchuUz, Stacia SimS', Jacqb
Doerfer. Sarah Hubbard, Thomas
Grade 5: Melissa Boggess, Katie Klein, Josh1.1,a Morris, Aaron · Burnem, Corinna Cross, all A's; Smith, Rebecc.(l Smith, Amber
A workshop on period C:ostume design. with emphasis on the
Reed, · Brooke Venoy, Chet Wigal, Oliphant, Alexandria·Patterson. Erilf Dusty Adkins.
Snowden, Tember Wilson, Tara bustle yeara 187G-18110 was presented b~Becky Baer, Meigs Coun·
and Natasha Wise, all A's; Brian Perkins, Calee Reeves, Kel sey
Grade 3: James Wallace, all A's; Wyatt.
ty Extension agent, at the Meigs Museum last week.
Adkins. Emily Ashley, Brandon Sauters, Haley Sayre, Josi Van- Lauren Elliott
·
Attending tl:t• n11lon co-sponsored by the Meigs COunty/Ohio
Carpenter, Ryan Frazier, Lisa Meter, Deanna Cundil'f, Ryan CurGrade 4: Zachary Weber, all A's; MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
Bicentennial Committee and tlie Extension Service, were those
Gheen, Joe ilowat:d, Megan Maves, tis, Shane Day, Emily Fields, Kelly Napper.
Grade 9: Cara Ash, Shandi lntereatedln Mrvlng ea greeters tor Cumberland Princess pallenJordan Rawson, Anna Sayre, Megan Lucreshia Howard, Jessica Jewell, · · Grade 5: Randy Han, all A's; Bobb. Derrick Bolin, Alex Chaffee. gera vlaltlng Pomeroy, S!wheal Festival queen candidates, and
Tibbetls, Donnie Whan..
tume design projectl.
·
.
Ricliy Laudermih, Alisha 'Quillen, Jeffrey Baughman, Eric Burnem, Andrew Davis, ~hristopher Dodson, 4-H club memblre tlkllag
Michael
Hammon,
Aaron
Krautter,
Bear
used
poatera
end
anaparencles
to
show
how
to
told
miteBilly Ramsey, Randall Reeves, Zachary Bush, Aaron lhle, SamanAndrea Krawsczyn, Carrie Light- rial or use wlra meah trarnft to create bultle foundations. She Mid
HARRISONVILLE ELEMEN· Charles Runyon, Devan Sou)sb;Y,' tha Pierce, Curtis Varian.
foot, Samantha Marshall, Beatrice that allka, serge, poplin, taffeta, moire, velvm and woolana were
TARY
Nathan Timmons
.Mbrgan, Christopher Pickens, Shan- used by the women tor the dreaHI, 11111ny of which had hanging
Kindergarten: Dawn Bissell,
Grade 2:. Zachary Konkle, Lind- SALISBURY ELEMENTARY .
hlgl! fitted, boned collara, end jacket bodlcea.
ian Bullington, Alyss Green, Cody say McKinney, Gregory Musser,
Kindergarten: Jeremy Ash, Joey non Price, J.effrey· Sh an k• Joshua aleevea,
Stemwheal Featlval queen candldatea, Jamla Drake, ·left, and StiHill, Chrisie Lewis, all A's: Alysha Cas.sandra Patterson, Amorette Blackston, Collen Blankenship, Ste- Simpson, Timothy Snider, Stephanie flnl Bearha,look over-someoot thi poatertahowlng attire of thslate
Chapman, James Black, Justin Cot- Salser, ·Kaylyn · Spradling, Steven vie Bunce, Kelsey Burton, Justin Wigal, Connie Willet.
·
)
·
Grade , 10: Meghan Avis, Seth 1800's. (Photo by Charlene ,l;toefllch
terill , Rebecca Donohue, Cassie Stewart, 'Lisa Bla~enship, Travis. Ellis, Darby Gilmore, Scott
Morris. Zac Young.
Eblin, Chelse.a Hicks, t;lradley Kennedy, Bobby King, Samantha Baker, Keith Barrett, 'Steve ' Bella,
Grade 1: Elsa Gardner, Bethany · Jones, Jesse Mowery, Jill . Reeves, King, Stephanie Shamblin,• Gabriel Lisa Bias, Amber Blackston, •
J ·1
I a
Lee; Mason Metts, all A's; Ryan Felicia See, Molly Smith, Megan Williams, Caleb Davis, Kristen Bethany Boyles, Stacey Brewer, .
&amp;1ha Bing of Bailey Run &amp;.ad- held~ the Golden COOal in GaJiipolis on
Browning. Travis Hicks, Clinton Still, Caitlyn Thomas, Leah Whit- Eblin, Breana Hemsley, Adain Beverly Burdette, Robert Day, Pornciuy enfalained several gues111 ·on Good Friday.
·
Kennedy; · ·
.
Lavender, Tiffany Reitmire, Jacob Heather Ferrell , Marjorie Halar, lliller. '
tekind, Austin Willford.
'
Thepanyhashostedbyher~S.­
Grade Two: Talisha Beha, Doug
Grade 3: Dakota Arms, Zachary Riffle, Cassie Smith, Brett Curtis, · Melissa Han, Amber Huddleston,
Those JRSerlt were DiU Kay and Joe bara Delong of Canal WIIIChesT«. Ikr
Herdman, Chelsey Noel, Daniel Arms, Michael Blaettnar, Meghan Cody Will.
Eric McCartney, Amber Perkins, Md!lroy Pomeroy· Jeff McFlroy and grandson, Adam Bunten, presented a ·
Runyon, Kay lene Slater, Hannah Clelland, Evan Dunn; Courtne.y
Grade 1: Ruebel Davis, J.T. Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah Smith, Michelle•llrown. Waverly, WVa.; Jessica magic show.
Williams, all A's; Jonathan Black, Haggy, Mian Herman, Scotty Muss- Evans,.Amanda Gilkey, J.R. Greene, Shannon Smith, Joshua Sorden, McElroy, ·Nelsonville; Derrick HewiU.
Severnl Cllds and gills were received.
Cory Gates, Justin Gibbs, Nicole er, Stephn Will, Jerod Wyatt, Chris- Brandon · Hanning,
Morgan Julie Spaun; James Stanley, 'Yes ley Alhens; Vernon and [)arleen Bing,
AnmJirig Were Jim, Mindy andA&lt;ilm
Hill, Samantha Hivley, . Carrie teena Young, Randy Collins, Cecilia· Kemiedy, Ashley Mayes, Andrew Thoene, Amanda Upton, Mtchael Poinemy; \amn and Shelly Bing,~ Burden, Thornville; lbm, Susan, Alat,
Phelps, Brittany Picas!, Janella Core, Mark Cozan, Rene Edmonds, ,O' Bryant, Brittany Paxton, Deme- Willilon.
aml3en, all ofGaJiipolis· Tony Aqt;tn- · Andy and &amp;nina Delong, Strulsvil)e;
Stover, Ashley Wervey.
Heatller Elarn, Kayla Grover, Sarah tria Pearson, Antl1ony Shamblin,
Grade 11~ Jennifer Arthur, Lacy da and Hayley Bing, ~;
and 1lld I¥.ong, Canal Wmclteseer; Pam,
Grade Three: Sarah Lantz, all Jeffers, Daylon Jenkins, Trista Ran- Caitlin Swartz.
Banks, Candy Barnett, Kristen Melissa Leach, Ammla .00 NtelxJias, Don,ja;d)andShellyBarber,LaGraltge;
Grade 2: Amy Barr, 'Kyle Boggs, Brown, Melissa Darnell, John Colutitbus·"ImyandSharonSayrc, Travis • Kxen and Maxine Griffith, Pomeroy,
A's; Daniel Bookman, Cory Dill, dolph, Casey Richardson, Andrew
Celeste Taylor.·
Roush, Britnee Sauters, Tiffany .Ben Coppick, Decca Hans tine, Davidson, Tricia Davis, Stoney Day, and1ad,GaJiipiis; Misty Sayre, Canton; AllheaStrongofWUk=ille; Mr. and Mrs.
Kaylee Kennedy, ~rk Legar, Tren- Brandy Gangwer, Melissa Holman, Jlllice Bower, CirtlcviJie; a.iswp11er am Tun ShMo, GaJiipolis; Beay Reibel of
Fourth Grade: Miranda Beha,. Zornes.
Grade 4: Wes Ault, Bryce ton McClintock, Whitney White.
all A's; ~chael Gardner, Joshua
Justin Jeffers, Rebecca'Johnson,Jes· DiMd Hudson; CirtlcviJie· and 1bm and P'a!ieroy· am Fae Oaig. Por1aoy.
Grade 3: Shauna Clark, Andy sica Johnson, Kristina Kennedy, Wanda Hudson and B~ Otillioothc.
Davis, Amanda Jeffers, Nathan JefSpires, William Taylor.
~fitmEI)Iiawerep)j(pJones,
Grade Five: Peggy Duff,' Carl fers, Josh Kennedy, Chris Moss, Garnes, Brandon Pearson, Dru Sarah Larkins, Kelli Lighlfoot,
'
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jones, Jr. and family·
Noel.
'
Brandi Reeves, Whitne.v Thoene. Re&lt;;d. Jennifer Smith; grade four Dwayne Madison, Patrick Manin, {)atlnl*lbtltv
Mr. and Mrs.· Paul Jones,
am~
Jeremy Vincent, Daniel Young, Derek Brickles, Chris Fields, Cody P~nny ·Napper•. Tara Nonnan, Tamra
A binlxlay parly honoring Emma FredJones;RalphJooes.
MIDDLEPORT ELEMENTARY
Miranda Yourig, Chelsea Dent, Huddy, Matthew Meadows, Brooke 0 Dell, Jaymte Osborne, Alyson Reibel Ogdin on her 90th binlxlay8oise\\lllkinsofP011aoysenlagift.
Kindergarden: Kayla Grah811), Weston Fife, (;;ody flysell, Adam O'Bryant, Christopher VanReeth, Patterson, Macie Pierce, Ryan
·
·
Bubby Wills, Aaron Little,. Megan Pelligrino, Jordan Shank, Abby Lula Webb.
Ramsburg, Elicia Ritchhart, Kim·
Alley Tara Jewell, Maranda Rigg~. Stewan, Jake Venoy, Josh Venoy,
Grade S: Grant Arnold, April berly Ritterbeck, Nikki Robens,
Jacob Dunn, Olivia Carpenter, Alison WoOds.
Coppick; and Ross Well. ·
.Fram:o Romuno,. Tiffany Savage,
Andrew Blankenship, Kelsey WilGrade 5: Brittany Cremeans,.
Rebekah.Smith, Adam Sorrell Jereson, Tricia Smith, Kyle Rsselll)ller Jason DeMoss, Justin DeMoss, MEIGS MIDDLE SCHOOL
my Thomson, · Bridget Vaughan,
Andrews, Dustin Nasl1, Megan Dun- Rosanna Dillard, Justine Dowler,
Grade 6: 1Y Ault, Jodi Barrett, Christina Westfall, Sllfri Wright,
fee. Cody Smith, lake Lynch, Kris- Eddie Fife, Ben Hatfield, Clare Sis- David Boyd, Page Bradbury. Kara Jonathall Wyatt.
tine Davis, Trinity Kimes, Jennifer son, Jenny Bowles, Trevor Depoy, Buffington, Brandyn Bumgardner,
Grade 12: Vicki Adams, Rachel
Payne, CayLa Taylor, 'Zack -Whit- Keri "Evans, Brandon Grover, Matt Nik.i Butcher, Kenny Carsey, Katie Ashley, J)avid Banks, Stefani
Latch, Shanalle Smith.
.'
Krawsczyn, Maggie
Molden, Childs, Jaynee Dav,is, Maegan Dod- · Bearhs, Katherine Beaumire,
Grade 1: Hailey Ebersbach, · Michael Sayre, Annette. Sheets, Jilli son, Jennifer Dunn, Lesle Edwards, Michelle Bissell, Stephanie Burton,
Amber Hockman, Lian Hoffman, Young, Jenni Young.
Rosie Eggers, Andrea Fetty, Kelly Seth Carleton, Carly Cchasteen, JeriCara Lawless, Nicki Smith, Nicbol , Self-contained: Amber Evans, Freeman. Jesse Gates, Aubrie ca Clark, Floyd Cleland, Seva Cline,
Bailey, Amber Ebersbach, Nicole Erick Sydenstricker, Cody Vincent, · Kopec, Jonathan Larkins, Sara Lee, Eli Cline, Crystal Eblin, Brandie
Hailey, Nikki Lawson, Courtney Cassie Waison, Amanda Wittig.
Chrissy Miller, Ashley Payne, Erica Elliott, Elizabeth Farley, Jeffrey
Mayes, Willie Barcus, Caleb Bevan,
MH-MS: Gene Buckley, JoAua- Poole, Tia Pratt, Josh Ra~, Henry F()wler, Emily Fowler, Brianna
Chad Bonnett. Megan Bush, na Fetty, Katie Kibble, Angie Rider, Bradley Slaytop, Angela Gilmorp, Danielle Grueser, Cortney .
Chelsea Davis, Jennifer Fife, Laura Queen, Ruth Snyder.
·
Smith,.Jessica Smith, Xantha Smith, Haley, le11nie Haning, Carrie HarGheen, Hannah Hoffman, Chris
f
Ryan Stobart, Brandi Thomas, Holly mon, Jennifer Hayman, Dustin HerKimes, Jared McKinney, Renae RUTLAND E.LEMENTARY
Williams, Jorda~ Wil!iams, Angela shberger, Kristen .Hill, Jennifer
Richmond, Tess Thomas, Chassidy
Grade 1: Adrian Bolin, Clayton Wilson.
Husk, Hyung-D Kim, Sara .Lee,
Will.
Bolin, Justin George, Lilly Jacks,
Grade 1: Bridget Atkins, Brook Heidi Legar, Michael Leifheit, Jill
Grade 2: Austin Dunfee, Kay La Morgan Lntes, Maria Madows, Bolin, Lindsay Bolin, Ben Book- Lemley, Misty LyO!IS, Raben MalGheen, Natasha Knapp, Kaitlin Jason Morris, · Eugene Patterson, man, Dawna Brumfield, Ceigha hotra, Amanda Napper, Christina
Leslee, Breanna Mitchell, Trevor Briana Willis, all A's;,Corey Hutton, Bryant, Andrea Burdette, Wes Call, Neece, Patrick 0' Brien, Danielle
NichOls, Doug Noel, Casey Smith, Justin Little, Jessica Maines, Valisha· Jassiline Carter, Mindy Chancey, Peckham, 'Annette Pierce, Melissa
Lacey Stobarr, Alexa Veney, Robert Richmond, Joe Satterfield, Merissa Ashh:y Colwell, Carrie Darst, Loret- Ramsburg, Melissa Reeves, Andrea
Fore,man, Mason Conde, Joshua Snyder, Tyler Wamsley.
ta Darst, Kayte Davis, Maria Oren- Runyon, Caseyne 'Sanfurd, Charles
Eakins, Katie Evans, Holley Geary,
Grade 2: Jacob Barnes, Katie ner, Casey Dunfee, Josh Eagle, Ash- Searles, Amy See, Matthew Sellers,
&lt;;hris Goode, Sarah Hollen, Tyler Doczi, Keith Moore, Cassady Will- ley Eblin, Juley Eblin, Alllanda Wendy Shrimplin, Sabrina . Smith,
Littl~. Katie Patterson, Lesley
ford, all A's; Emily Davis, Bethany Fetty, Candace Fetty, Ashley Fields, Amanda. Smith, Amy Smjth, Mar·
Preece, Tiffany Simpson, Phillip Gibbs, Brittany Harrison, Seth John- Robyn Freetnan, Jon Halar, Chris lana Staats, Jonathan Stewart. Cry$·
Sisson, Patti Vining.
son, Kori Priddy, Aml;&gt;er St. Clair, Haning, Meghan Haynes, Courtney tal Taylor, Jeremy Thomas, Jennifer
Grade 3: Sarah Engle, Terry Josh Starchr.
Hicks, Lucy Howerton, ·Heather \lining, Nancy Whaley, Jessica
· Light, Amanda Schartiger, Alex Sis·
Grade 3: Bthany King, all A's; Hysell, J{elly Johnston, Kathy Whec;ler, Matthew Williams, Melisson, Valerie Carpenter, Laura Andrea Banru;m, Alisha Compson, Jones, Jessica Justice, Malory King, sa Williams, Jessica Wright, Sandra
. Eakins, Billy Fink, Brandan Fisher, Keilah Jacks, Adam Lambert, Amanda Langdon, Ryan Lemley, Young.
· Brittaney Haning, Joey Kim~s. Brit- Timmy Spires.
· Shawna Manley, Anthony Martinez,
tney King, Matt Landers, Steven
Grade 4: Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Valarie McClintic, Aaron McManis,
Hudson, Errinne Kennedy, Christy all A's; Josh Bolin, l)lson Gorge.. Jason Murdock, Sonya Powell, Jes- 1"!'11!1'-lll
Miller, Whitney Smith, Michelle Adam HUlltphreys.
sica Preast. Jenni Priddy, . Jason
''
Weaver, David Poole, Angela Casci,
Grade S (Jenkins): Renee Bai- Rosier, Jeremy Roush. Michelle

High: 70; Low:_40
Tomorrow:·Cloudy

High: 70;

Lo~:40

a1
Meigs ·County's

By BRIAN ,J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Hazard mitigation projects in Sal·
isbury Township ~~d Rutland Village
are among project ~ in 10 counties·
which have received addi!ional fund·
ing from the state.
The State Controlling Board .
approved a request earlier this weok
from the Ohio Emergency Management Agency to allocate $8,333.0:44.
representing an increase in projoct
funding from the state.
,
The projects funded are the result
of flooding in March, 1997, which
devastated communities in Southern
Ohio, according to Nancy Dragani of
the Ohio EMA. T~ funding will be
used to match federal dollars received
after President Clinton declared the
area a federal disaster site.

Covered wagons donated to fair board
Visitors to this year's Meigs County F.airwho have
trudged up the trail along ·the cliffs overlooking 'the
~ace track or Climbed the path behind the grandstand
to get frotn event to event on the Rock Springs Fair•
.grounds, will appreciate the gifts of Jeffrey and Deborah Harris.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harris have donated two wagons to the
Meigs County Fair Board. They come complete with
seatinJ, folding steps for ea.~y boarding, and yellow
and white canvas topping to shield riders from the hot
sun or a summer rain.
The wagons .were buill about IS years IIJO by Mrs.
Harris' father. Earl P. Cross. They were i!sed at the
H¥fis Farms to haul people back ~o ,!!!« ~~~ITY •
· •• andllllflben'Y patdtes until !!bout our years ago when
-thii-"JJid; your owq·~"tias discontinued.
Ko looser needing the wagons, Mr. and Mrs. Harris

TO REPLACE YOUR

Majority o~ _Ohioans against
·Pr.0 PO.s.ed .sales-tax 'increase.

s!!;:.:,

CINCINNATI (AP) _;__ A ·survey
The passage of Issue 2 would
of'likely voters in Ohio said ffiOlll inc~ tbe state sales ll\ll from S peropposed a plan to raise the~ 5111cs cent to 6 percent and'raise S 1.1 IIi I·
·
lion annually. Half of that money
. tax by ~penny
per doll ar to generate
•
hooJ
ordi
woold
go toward increa.•. ing · ""
mon: money ,or sc s. ace ng to
r~,,r·
the latest Ohio PoH.
pllpil state subsidies and repairing or
The Ohio Poll, sponsored by The replacing school buildings. The oth·
Cincinnati Enquirer and tbe Univer- erhalfwould offset a property·tax cut
sity of Cincinnati, 'found thll) SI per~ for ho~wners..
.
.
cent of those questioned said they
OhiO s . large~t c~rporauon~ .and·
opposed the tax increase, while 37 . 'largest teac~':' umon have gtv_en
$2.5 mtl.hon.to the Every Child
percent said they supported it. Twelve .nearly
C
fi
f h
percent said they were undecided.
. ounts campatg~ m avor o I e Ia~ .
The university's Institute for Pol- mcrease, ac_cordmg to_reports tiled
Th rsda
h Secre
fS
Bob
icy Research at the Univerility of
u · YWt!,
tary o tate
Cincinnati, which conducted !he poll Taft's office.
.
relea.oed today, randomly questioned
Oppon,ents have satd they do not
· atnng
· · te1evtsron
· · com633 Ohioans who identified them- .mtend to hegtn
· 1
·
he
d
selves as likely voters. The telephone mereta s agamsl I propose tax
poll was conducted from April 13· 21. inciease until this weekend.
The margin of enor was plus or
"We realize we have our work cut'
00 ~ for us;" Cun Steiner. who is manminu~ 3.9 percCIItage points.
Suppon for !he issue, which will agmg the pro-Issue 2 campatgn, told
· appear.on the May 5 ballot·as state, !he Enqutrer in .a story publi!ihed
Issue 2. dropped 7 percentage points today. "We still need to do a better
from a similar Ohio Poll relea.'led job explaining our position." .
·
April ·12. That poll foond Ohioans.
Alrrecl
director
p 1. R
h .of
· • 'J. ,Tuchfarber,
h
I
1
0
surveyed evenly divided 011 the issue.
e ~ttute ,or tc;y esearc • Cit·

~ . PRICE

. Plans for .the annual ·motherdaughter banquet to be held on May
8 at6:30 p.m. were completed when
the Bradford Church of Christ Lydia
· Council met recently at the home of
Sherry Shamblin.
.
Theme of the banquet will be
"Friendship Wanns the Hean" using
scrtplure from Proverbs 17-.
Paula Pickens, president, opened
the meeting with prayer requests and .
prayer, officers' reports .were given
and devotions presented from Matt.
i8, verse 8 by Nancy Morris and
Sherry Shamblin. Readings titled
. "De~otions from th~ Hean," "Fear ·
and ~oy," and "Easter" were present-

. Our Greenhouses'
·fire Bunting With Colorl -~~·
.

ALL YOUR
ANNUALS.

BOB'S .

"

CDoiens Of
Varlotloi)

Baskets

.

.

DWARF FRUIT TREES ..

Jult

·
••••••llnJII
·
IPPLI • PilCH • PEAR • CHERRY
'

on May I. Ohio University Public

Senate,OKs ec;Jucation
savings ~ccoun~s .56-43

.

Beautiful
.
Banging

·JAVOIIIE
SUMO

School Funding ·Issues to be highlighted on OU public television

$14'

1

ALSO. ·

FLOWERING IIEES INCLUDING:
Bradf•nl PHr eCrab Apple •W~•plng Cherry

Bureau, will focus on State Issue 2, a school funding formula, and JegislaTelevision will air two programs proposal to rai&amp;e. Ohio's sales tax . tors .decided to let voters have a say.
desi~ned to educate the public about
from five percent to six percent, and
The second program "Fi!rum:
·,&lt;;llucation funding in Ohio
to split the one billion dollars in year- School Funding,'' will delve into
"Your
. Schools,
Your ly revenues between schools and southeastern Ohio perspectives. J'wo
Mon~y... :Ohio Votes on School property tax relief for homeowners.
southeastern Ohio lawmakers, SenaFunding" will air at 9 p.m. "Forum:
The special will featufe arguments tor Mike Shoemaker, 17th district,
.School Funding," produced by Ohio from supporters and critics ·· wh~ are and Rep. John Carey, 94th district,
Cfni&gt;:ersity · Public Television, .will split into two camps •· of the mea- and Athens City Schools Superintenfollow at 9:30 p.lll.
.
sure.
dent Carl Manin, will discus~ the
, The first program, "Your Schools,
The docu!flentary-style program · funding issues. Shoemaker and MarYour: Money...Ohio 'Votes on School also will explain why the meaSure in tin are against the measure, while
Funding" p[reduced by the Ohio Pub- on the ballot •· the Ohio Supreme Carey is for it. A fourth panelist is yet
!ic Television . Statehouse News Court demanded a· re-write of the to be announced.

Tw'o Loc:atJ,~o_s_

tf.l ml.llt. 33

(114 mi.IIGIII 01 Ponier-/
....... tlrldgl) ........ WY
• ,

..

77H721

,
•
. \

COME ON
OVBRtO •

'

ed.
Mndeline Painter will handle
Thank-you notes were read from cbmmunion in April, and Shamblin
the Mildred Withee bmily and in May.
· "
Nancy Morris. It was noted that sunPlans are underway for Vacation
shine baskets went to Diane David· Bible Scbool, June 8-12.
,son · and Charadene ·Hanning in
New Lydia Council program
April.
houkleL• were prepare~ alfd distribI!ems to be brought for flte "pack uted by Pickens ~nd .Carolyn
the pantry" project for are baby sup- Nicholson.
plies, and for May, canned meats.
The May hostesses wiii be BienChurch supplies will be liquid soap 'da Bolin and Sherry Smith. ,
for April and toilet tissue for May.
Hostesses Sherry Shamblin and
Plastic silverware will be pur- NA!ICY Morris served refreshments
ch~ed for the church by the Council to Megan Dyer, Diane Bing, Paula
and Young Adult Class. Ladies' fel- Pickens, Carolyn Nicholson, Jackie
lowship will be held on May 28 with Reed, Suzie Will, Gerry Lightfoot
Bradford handling refreshments.
and Sherry Smith.

"

•

..

Z!OO Ellllm ,r.,..
(Aaoll flotn K-MIItl
Olf
C

' F

..

IC ,

448-1711

decided to donate them for use in transporting fairgoers 11round the hillside.
·
Dan Smith, president of the fair board, said that
the wagons will be put to good use, not only at the
fair, but other events that take plllee on the gfOUnds•
like the fall EXPO.
.•
Plans, according to Smith, call for- the Big Bend Fann
Nttiqlle Club to provide the tractors and drivers for
the wagons. Both the driver and a person who will
be seated at the rear of the wagon will have radios to
cootdintite starts and stops, theteby conaibuting t6 the
safety of passenge(S. There will. of cou~. be no
charge for riding ill the covered waaons..
.
Here Smitli shows Mr. and Mrs. Harris one of the
plaques which will be attaChed to the WIIOfiS.
·- ··- .. ,.,......,.,
- CI I T I' 1,Sf:
- · ' I I · t lliill)
·; \•100

Poll:· ·

Our
Conaplete

Council plans mother-daughter banquet

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Mitigatio·n project$ ·receive
boost with additional funds

Mr.

~ydia

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett co. Newspaper

·hm

..

Post-season
playoff•
start in NBA
Page7

•

Socl"etu.,',. sc·."1!:2pbook

~~

Sports

Aprll24, 1998

/

WASHINGTON CAP) - A bill have more of a role in the education
CJUiing tax-freuavings accounts for· of their children." said Sen. Judd
!IChool.expeiL'IC~ becume a !ihowca.'IC Gregg, R-N.H.
for sharp partisan divisions on its way
Supporters·had promoted the SIIY·
to narrow Senate passage. ·
ings bill as a modest way to help
· Just a handful of Dc:mocrats and working and poor families meet
Republicans broke ranks on the final . school e~penses and if necessary find
56-43 vote Thursday, and it came alternatives to dangerous or substaO·
only after days of wrangliqg during dard public'· schools. Opponents,
which both sides !IOIIJhl to stake out i.ncluding teachers' unions, described
· positions ·likely 10 play a role in the it as a vehicle for ll\ll ~aks to help .•
faK midterm c~ssional elections. affiuent parents send children to pri·
The Senate bill. which must be vate schools.
reconciled with a House-passed ver·
"Whql this means is the death of
siori, also evoked a W)lite House veto public edncl'i&lt;&gt;n," said ~mocratic
threaleven before Republicl!lll lidded leltder Tom.Daschle of South Dakoamenclments opposing new f~l ta.
.
.
math and Jadin&amp; rats for lllldents
Before' the vtlte; conservative
and ending the Education Depart· Republicans lidded ari amendment
ment"s conllol of some !dtoolspend- effectively bloc:king Clinton's proinj JII'OII'IIIIIS·
.
~ new federal tests. to ~re.
Repubucans uid they simply ·!ndivtdual madJ and readtna adu~ye,
wee mumilll • rauc11 power u pos- • ment. An am.mdment . converting
lible to IIIIa. !dtooJ boMdll and par- · some ·federal tchool pi'OI!'Illll . to
entsllld lhlkilll up a system :hat lets grants also wu ~·
.
stl!lleat IChievcmcat ·fall while
Some .of tbc bills would-be
cnrichina bureluaa!J,
, Dc:~tic suPf~D~:!en and some
"What we have here is a ~hoice Republ~ were drivCIIaway by ~
IJ;etween the lllatUI quo and people 111ti-tesung amendment and the shtft
who Willi 10 empower parents to of some power sway from tl)e Edu·
•
cation Department.
c

•

...

The $8.3 million wiU be trans- · Rutland project, which is now underferred from the $40 million appro- way, has been ~stimated at $829,000.
prjated by .the legislature to pay for · with federal and state soun;es confiQOd disaster-related expenses. trib4ting $600.000 of that cost. Boyd
including the required match, accotd- . Ruth has been named project director in Rutland and is now working
ing to Dragani.
The additional funds will bring !he with 37 property owners affected by
'
total share of state fundmg for milt· the flooding .
Work
on
the
Salisbury
Township
gatio~ projects to nearly $10 !"ill ion.
Local governments wtll provtde $6.5 project is slill in the early stages.
Homes in Laurel Cliff and Rock
million in matching funds.
The projects will allow tho.oe in . Springs are targeted in that project.
The projects are designed to break
flood-prone areas to either sell the
properties to the village or township a cycle of damage, repair and more
and relocate. move structures, or.to damage, accotding to the EMA. Such
modify their homes by raising them steps will reduce the cost of response
or retrofitting them against possible and recovery efforts ·· Ohio has been
the subject of eight Presidential disfuture flood damage.
Dragani said the actual cost of aster declamtions due .to flooding in
each project cannot be de1ermined the past IOyears, three of which were
until each is completed, although the within an 18 mo'nth period.

Corporations ·pour : m~IUons
of dollars into sa·les-tax effort
COLUMBUS (AP) -"" Ohio's
· largest corporations · and biggest :
teachelli' union gave nearly $2.5 mil·
lion to a campaign a.~king voters to
raise the state sales tax ~o the state·s
\SChools can get more money. ·
The amount raised for the E:v~ry
Child Counl~ campaign was much
greater tlian the lotal oollecied 5ylwo
groups oppQsed to the tax increase,
which will ap~ar as state Issue 2 on .
the May S ballot. The figures were
included in documents rded with Sec·
'fetary of StJlle Bob Taft"s office on
Thursday.
The tax increase is a response to

an Ohio Supreme Court ruling that
said the state's current way of paying
for public schools is unconstitution·
al. ·
.
Issue 2 would increase the state
sales tax from S percent to 6 percent.
Half of the $1.1 biHion raised annually by the ta~ ·boost would. go
toward increasing per-pupil state subsidies and repairing or replacing
school buildings. The other half
would'be to offset a property-tax cut
for homeownc{'i.
The Ohio Education Association
was the. top con!ributor to Every
Child
. Counts•. .donating $500,000.

The Procter &amp; Gamble.Co. kicked in
$250,000 and the Ohio As.o;ociation of
Realtors 'contributed $150,0110. Carl
Lindner of Cincinnati was the top
individual giver with a contribution
of 535,000. More than 30 of the
state's largest corporations and trade
a"ociations gave $25,000 to
$100,0110 each.
An anti·ta~ group, Ohioans
Against a 20 Percent Tax Increase.
raised S 19,200 in ca.'ih and in-kind
conailiutions such . as post~jle and
mailing costs, the repons showed.

~~~rica#~t~~~u~~~!~~~;~
~~~~.~i~:s.~~~::: ~~:;;:~ ~:~~= ~~e2~~k~onths.

~:~~e:lr~~~ ~~n~~~~u~o~":'.:swt~~t

are
busilions for the March of Dimes WalkA· nesses, school groups and others in are a.•ked to go to this location today
ed opposition from most of Ohio's merica Help Fund Breakthrough for these three countie~ have been hold- to tum in their funds . After this col·
education establishment as one factor Babies walk that will be held on Sun- ing, fund-raisers and have used other lection, a better idea of the amount of
in the latest poll results. •
,
day at 3 p.m. at Harmon Park in Point creative ways to raise money forthis fund• rose should be available by
••Getting
voters
to
approve
a
tax
PIeasan t• W"
'Sunday at the walk.
.
.
.. .., hf·-.....
. .a.
-.ause.
mcrease
ts
never
easy,
•UC ''""'r
The
.
1998
tn·~ounty
event's
c~
The
·
L- . d
The three-mile walk begins with
said .. "In this case, it's even more !lif~
~
top money ratsers, ......,e on
ticult because the natural allies of an chairs Jane Graham and Tamara Zus- a calculated process b~ the campaign registr3!ion of e~isting, and any othpan have been preparing for the pa.•t committee. will gain special recog- er new interested parties, st:irting at·
f:.~ation tax increase are opposed to several months for the walk and at nition. Others meeting certain crite- 2 p.m. at the park. The co-chairs are
The Ohio Educati.on Association, achieving a goal of raising $95,000 ria are eligible for awards, which will a.sking that al! donations be in by
the state's largest teachers' union, for this year's campllign.
; be presented in early May·once all the April 30.
contribu~ 5500,000 10 the pro'
This year's goal is up by $15,0110 final tabulations are made.
Different prizes will be distributed
due to an overwhelming increase in
Donations up to this point have for amounts collected. A donation Iff
Issue 2 campaign. But that money
$7•
was offset by opposition from pther donations last year. During last year's exceeded $10.275. This is a prelimi~ per person must be raised to
campaign. the · goal set by the ~o- nary figure based only on sent in . receive aT-shirt and other incentives
school groups such as the Ohio Fed·
be . db ..
eration of Teacher. and the Ohio chairs was $80.000. and $90,283 was donations.
can gasne y ratstng more funds.
collected by 66 teams.
Bank Day, where money is colFor more information about getSchool Boards. ·
The event is no~ in iL~ eighth year lee ted from . teams, is taking place ling involved in the walk, call Zuspan·
the plan lacksh suf- . to raise funds to help babies. The
ti .Opponents
.
,l!BYthe
at (304) 773-5528 . .
tctent money oor poorest sc oo1s
•
.
and would not do enough to address
lo~g-teim problem.,.
"The bottom line is Issue 2 is a ·
COLUMBUS (AP) The has ~leaded innOcent to a charge of Oddi. a.•king him to resign. Colley
bad plan because it doesn't fix the tax Franklin County clerk of courts, theft.
said Meeks confirmed the letter was
system or the education system," said charged withltaking $381 in traffic
Franklin Coonty Prosecutor Ron received "and indicated the resigna·
Brian Rothenbf;rg. a spokesman for tines;is expected I!J resign, the coun- O'Brien said investigators are look- tion woold be in on Friday."
Odd' ·
'bl
Oddi, who is free on bond, could ·
the Vote No on Issue 2 Coalition.
ty Republican leall,er said todaY,.
ing into whether
1 IS responst e
The Oht'o Poll also queslt'oned
Mt"chael Colley, GOP chat' rm
' an, •or nearly $10,000 still unaccounted not be reached today. Directory assis·
tance said the phone at his home in
voters about Issue I, · a proposal
to said Jes!ie Oddi's attorney notified ''for in the clerk's 'office this year.
authorize the state to issue bonds to him that his client expected to submit
Authorities believe Oddi. 49,took lhe suburb of Grandview Heights hild
finance school construciion lind. his resignation on Friday. No rea.~on money by voiding receipts, and the heen disconnected.
If Oddi resigns. the coonty comrepaint '
· was discu.~sed. Colley ~id :
. pattern appears to go back to at lea.~t
missioners
would appoint an interim
' The poll foitnd that St percent of
A telephone message wa.~ left. 1992. O'Brien said.
those questioned said they supported ·today with Oddi's attorney William
Colley and Central Committee clerk and the Republican Centt;;tl
Issue 1 and 27 . percent said they Meeks.
Chairwoman Jo 'Ann Davidson. who Committee would appoint a replace·
opposed it. TWenty-three pen:ent said
Oddi, clerk of coun since 1995 is also speaker of the Ohio House, on ment. That person would have to see~
. they were undecided. .
·
and an· office employee since 1969. Wednesday hand delivered a letter to . election in November

GOP leader says clerk"of court expected to step down

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sec~ons • 16 Pages
. Vol. 49, No. 5
Cekadar

JO

O·niOnlc:
Comks

12·13·14

....

15

z.

~lhlrla!s

3

Sports

Wqt!Jcr

. 5-6-.7-8
3'

Lotteries
RUnAND ROOF RIMIRI • Roof replllra

blglln thll Wllk on thl Rutllnd Cl¥tc Cenlllr•
Worbr.l , wltll ·Home Creek EnllrpriHI,
Pontll'IW.... lnlllllly COftl'lnt . .........
1n t1m1 tar
Shaw. Till
1ecelved two
, 1 t40,000 Community
DM,topn.ent lock GriM throuah tha Mllp

=v.Mty

v1••ae

.~ .

OHIO
Pick 3: 512; Pick 4: 3725
Buckeye 5: 5-8-1"2-26-37
W,YA.
Dltlly 3: 047; o.lly 4: 3~07
0 1998 Ohio Valley Pubtilhina Co.

�</text>
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