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Ohio Lottery

Braves are
~ffto best
.team start

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Pick 3: '

3-84
Plck4:
2~4

Showers, · ch1noe of
thunderatorml tonight,
Iowa neer SO. Seturiley,

Buckeye 5:
16-21-28-32-33

Spa"ta on Pege 5

ahowere, highs nur 70.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,

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'Final offer' -to secessionists:

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surr~nd~r or ponce will attack

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By MARK BABINECK

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The obeerv1111t:e ws•
tKntfld by Steve Behs,

right; rep,...ntlng the
¢0unty'• Osy of Pr11yer
C~mlttee. Membertl
of the minleterla/ comMcLaren and his wife, Evelyn, would
be kept a1 the Presidio County Jail
munity, laity and .
and prepare for court' together.
•choot groupe sll parMcLaren has two warrants for his
ticipated In the Nrvlce.
arrest, one accusing him of contempt
of court for filing bogus liens, the . Above, • group of chll·
.d ren from Rejoicing
other charging him with burglarizing
a neighbor's hou.se. He. and six oth- . Life Chrletlsn School
ers in the trailer are now wanted on
ofletwd, a mueical preorganized crime charges· sle111ming
tude to the Hrvlce.
from the kidnappings.
(Sentinsl photo. by Brl·
O' Rourke said authorities were
anJ. Reed)
anxious to end the standoff, which

two people McLaren said were part
of his group, known as the Republic
of Texas. The group, whicb has split
move belonged to .a group of Texas into factions, wants Texa,&lt; to secede
secessionists after their lawyer deliv- from the United States.
O'Rourke said police, who have
ered what he called the state's final
offer: Come out or police are comirig. kept their dis~&amp;nce . so far, were prein. ·
·
. pared to end the standoff and arrest
"Know that there are people out the 13 occupants of the ramshackle
there who love you and don 'I want trailer McLaren calls his embassy. Its
you to die," lawyer, Terry O' Rourke power was cut ThurSday night and
said laic Thursday in a public plea to McLaren's group found themselves
his client, Republic of Texas faction- sun:ounded by helicopters, annorcd
; ·allcader Richard McLaren..
vehicles, dogs. horses and slate troop- entered its sixth day, after police on
• : - "The government has made its ers.
Wednesday detained seven heavily
last, final written'offer. 'J'hey are peo"I closed the letter to my client by armed men at a truck stop in Pecos,
pie or'their word. They are willing to saying, 'It is essential you pick up the 70 miles from the standoff. Three of
do what you ask in substance. Rick, phone and say you are coming out them carried Republic of Texas memthe time to come out is now," because they've made it clear that bership cards and at least some said
· O'Rourke said.
.
they're going to execute ·1/le war- they were going to Fort Davis.
::: There was no Word · about the . rants,'" O'Rourke said.
Two men carrying a semiauto- ..
· 'gro~p's response by early today.
·
State Departmen.t of Public Safe- malic rifle, Republic literature and
Gov. George Voinovich and other ' . "We ate overjoyed," said Ron
O'Rourke delivered a similar ty spoke~man Mike Cox r1lfuse~ to group insignia on their license plates By PAUL SOUHRADA .
· defenders argued that the $5.5 million Marec, president of the Ohio Feder, ·'·
warning 'in person to McLaren. discuss the·timetable.
·~· .
were also arrested that day, ·not far Ateoclllted ,,... Writer
whose stan&lt;loff with police began
"He's got it (the offer) and is able from Fort Davis.
·COLUMBUS - A state appeals program offers school choice to low· at ion of Teachers.
Marcc said. the ruling should pul
. Sunday with the kidnapping of a cou- . to study it," Cox said. "We llave said
An Illinois man was arrested court ruling has about 2,000 young• income families who could not oth• :pie neu McLaren's mountain home, , all along that we want peaceful out- Thursday while carrying a variety of sters finishina up their fint year at erwise afford to send their children to an end to the voucher program after
the cuiTCnt school year. In the budget
• · f1S miles SoUtheast of El Pa.~o. ·
come and not a Wild West oulcome." . weapons, including a semiautomatic pfivate schools in Cleveland won- private school.
.
Critics said the program aids a few bill now pending in the Ohio Senate,
The couple, since released. were
O'Rourke did not detail the state's . rifle .
dering where they will go to school
seized in retaliation for the. arrest of offer, but said it would.guanu.uee that
next fall.
' children at the expense of the public Voinovich had proposed spending
$1 S.S million on the program over
'I'hC I Oth Ohio District Court of school system.
App'eals oil Thursday ruled that ·a
"We think every child counts," the two years heginning July I.
· Voino~ich · said he was disapstate program that gives poor parents said Carole Shields, president of
pointed
in the outcome but braced to
vouchers to send their children to pri- People for the American Way, a
keep
fighting.
vate sc:hools ~. including religious Washington-based civil liberties
"We knew if our side lost we'd
schools ~ is unconstitutional.
group.
.
appeal,
and if their side lost \Jley 'd
'The court• .ruling on a_challenge
"We shouldn't tolerate saving
appeal,"
he said.
·
· .
.
brought by the Ohio Federation of some kids and leaving 'others
Michael Charney, editor of the
Teachers and a group of 'taxpayers, behind. "
Cleveland
Teachers Un'ion newspa· said the program violated the
In July, Franklin County Common
per,
said
parents
who participated in
re~~uired separation of church and
Pleas Judge .Lisa Sadler upheld the
the
voucher
program
should give the
constitutionality or the program, but
state.
,. The 'pilot program !hat began in hoth sides have pledged to continue city schools a second chance.
"This is a wonderful opportunity
Cleveland last fall offered $2,500 thi: fight to the U.S. Supreme Court,
for
parents of children in the city
scholarships in taxpayer money to
The appeals court on Thursday
·school
district to experience the
allow low·incorne parents to. send unanimously rejected the state's argumany
new
educational opportunities
. ~ir children to private schools, ment that the program was not delibincludina those affiliated-with a reli- erately created to aid religious we have for children in grades K ·
.,
schools and that the state ~-hould have through three, including .aiJ-day
pon.
.
· Parents of. about 2.QOO public no say in whe~ parents choose to kindergarten and increased emphasis
'.
· on math and science in the early
school .students in kiilclergarten send their children.
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lhrciup third lf1de rec.ivecl vouchHowever, the coun noted that ~Q grades,'' Charney said.
Cleveland school officials were ·
, on to attend one of ~3 private pereent of !he schools participating In
reserving comment until they
schools: ,
·
: -the pro~rn were religious-based.
Ohio wu the fint stale, in the
· "The only.real c~oice available to reviewed the deci sion, said
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llllion 10 fund a voucher JX01f1111 that most parents is between sending sjlokesman Rick Ellis.
.
The district wants to know
includes reliaion·atfiliared IChools. ·their child to a sectarian school and
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whether the VOUChers pro8flffi CIUI
Earl_
i
er
this
year,
a
1111e
judae
in
·
havinatheir
child
remain
in
the
trouGruellr, llrtn ~........... ....
POR
ROYALlY
W'IICOIIIin blocbd a Mil_. P'- bled Cleveland City School Dis- continue during the 1997-98 school
dlrt• .. •--•••••• HlglltahoDI PIGift 1t1n1 end
10 OIIIJIII(I ill voucher propam IO trict," Judge.John C. Youn1 wrote: year while the c:ase is appealed_
. . nni!MellelriiMDY llltl.'ftle ..... lillbe
"That's the only way it will have
illclude reliJj0111 schoola, sayina it "SIICh a choice can hardly be charICing MR ?l ' I
plalan ...
. hlld lltiUniiY nlglllln Ill L.lny R. MD rl "'
an
immediate impact on us," Ellis
.
~terimd
-.
'genuine
and
indepenmill"' Mplllllion of church and
RDiilrt Gl AI end
_............. 1111if
II I l l I . . . fnlln 11ft,
said
.
. . . . llldllllolle .
dent'"

p,_., Writer
FORT DAVIS, Texas- The next

Aaeoclllted

State voucher program found
'unconstitutional' by judges

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,c.a..-n

• OLDSMOBilE •LEXUS • UIYIITA

A day for prayer

Pape and the mayor agreed that it stand and it was reported that the
Sentinel Correlpondent
does hamper developmeni, selling baseball association will be operating
.
A 10Wi1 meeting will be held to property in the .floodplain.,Pape said it.
Pool cleaning was discussed.
discuss the proposed revised flood- that if tthe plan goes through, "you
Council
extended appreciation 10 Mr.
plain ordinance, it. was decided at might as well call property in the
and Mrs. C.T. Chapman and Jim Rif·
Thursday night's meeting of Syracuse floodplain wasteland." ·•
Village Council.
·
Connolly explained thaf it is out of fle for helping mow'the grass in the
· Date -and time of the meeting will the hands of the village arid up to the .part.
· Councilm~n Mony Wood said a
be announced later.
Ohio Departnm~nt of"' Natural
; Council, at its April meetins, gave Resources ilnd the Fe~ral Emer- bauery was n~ for the )nli:for'and
.a firsu;eading to a .~vised flood plain gene~ Management Agen~y. With new boards for -the scats ·in the vitio~iilance, .which is required in order that, Coonolly suggested contacti'ng ' tors•: ciugOill ne~· replaccnleilt.' lie
to he in complaince with state and Michael B. Gease of ODNR in set- also asked about tearing down the old
foideral regulations. Non-compliance, ling up a town meeting for discussion concession stand and was reponed
it was noted, means that the village· on the floodplain.
.
that it will be done soon.
will not qualify for grants and resiCouncilman Larry Lavender ' Applications are being taken for a
dents in the .floodplain area will not reported that residents walking along maintenance man for . the village.
b¢ able to secure flood insurance.
College Street encountered two dogs, Connolly said that tables at the old
· Meeting with council io discuss one a pit bull, which is illegal in the state park need to be replaced. Pickthe revised ordinance were former village. The matter retferred to the . ens reported that a stop sign is need•
~yor ~im -Pape and Bryce Bond. police chief.
ed at Bridgeman and Second, and
~. now serving on the SyraIn other action, council voted to council. agreed that signs would be
cuse!Radne Regional Sewer Board, . purchase a backhoe .and an end replaced.
said tha! he did not feel the govern- loader. Since council is a member of
The mayor's report showed
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nient should have the authority to tell . the Ohio · Corporation Purchasing receipts of $1 ,269. Police Chief Tim .
~ople how or where to build. ·
Program, the purchase of a John . Gillilan reported he issued 33 citaA ,:ommunlly pr11yer
Pape said that his home, which is Deere backhoe can be made without tions, investigated one accide'nt, han- ·
aervlce o~ the et,. of
in the floodplni~. was built in 1949 advertising for bids.
'
died three complaints, one of which
aitd has never had water in it.
·
Council reported three applica- was domestic violence, served a war. the flelge County .Cour·
"1 do.n't have flood insurance," he tions for · pool manager and rant. and had four new tires put on the
thou..
the culml·
said, "an\1 I don't intend to purchase announced 'that interviews will be cruiser. ..
·
nstla,t of • week-long
: any."
held at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday.
' Janice Zwilling, clerk/treasurer,
obeervatldn of the
Councilman Bill Roush' noted that reported . fund balances of gef1Cral.
Mayor George Connolly pointed
,_tlonal
of Pr11yer
out that banks will not loan money to . the poie barn recently built has been $14, 71 I; street construction,
. · those building in the floodplain approv.ed and.inquired about the sta- $30,739;
unless they have flQO\I insurance.
tus or ,work on the fire/thick. Ebef
. The. mayor also noted that he has Picken&amp; ~~~U~ in ~rvice
, .,jm~tte4:~i&amp;IM·.:pa_mi~..builcl-in· the... this weekend.- .' ::,. · ~ - . ,_:;.;;_
vill!~e~;,,;.: • .::,_" "' ·":''· •~ •
" Roush asked ~boutt~· lln~!!IS'i'M·

By KATIE CROW

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2 Section•. 12,...., • A a.nn.1t Co. lkidl~ I~ IF

Friday, May 2, 1997

·Syrac~se plans.town
meeting on ordinance

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Comn1entary
The Daily Sentinel
'EsttJ6fisfw{ in 1948
111 Court Sbeet, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-182·21116 • Fu 992·2157

.2r

·A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubU.her
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

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or letfft. lh/1 to: La,_. to the Editor,
- 1 ; or, FAX fo 114-11124111.

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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J"P» Bentlttel, t1f CDUI'I St., PolrMroy, Ohio

All the world's a summit

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Industry blames trees for dioxin l·evel
WASHINGTON - Among the
moSI infamOIIS mo~nts of Ronald
· Rea8an's political career wu the time
in the early 1980s when he told
Americans, with a straight faee, that
the scourge of acid rain may, in fact,
he caused by trees.
· He was wrong, of course, yet the
episode told many environmentalists
all they wanted to know about Rea,· gan's commitment .to protecting .
America's natural n;:sources. · · ·
But the embarrassment of that
incident basn't ~topped a coalition of
polluting industries from trying to
peddle a similar line. Representatives
of the paper' and polyvinyl chloride
industries are trying to convince regulators and the public that a lethal
chemical called dioxin is actually
produced mainly by the burning of
trees during forest fires --and not by ·
their products, as many believe.
The Environmental Protection
Agency first repl!fled in 1985 that
dioxin was one of t~e most danger,
ous chemicals it had ever tested.
Under pressure from industry, how,

ever, the EPA deei!led to ~sess iiS
report in I 991; only this fill will the
long-awaited final report be released.
The report is expected to confirm

- a major soun:e of dioxin -- was·only
beginning in I 930. ·
·
Clearly worried that the EPA
repon will lead to increased regulation, t1lC industry bas sponsored an
"objective'.' study of its own ..
By
designed to .show, not surprisingly,
that pe"'le have little to fear from
current levels of dioxin and the
indusiri~s that produce the chemical.
The study -- known as the Rigo
the conclusions of a 1994 EPA report, report -- was paid for in part with
which stated that "the weight of tbe · $150,000 from the Vinyl Institute,
evidence suggests concern. for the whose ~e~bers are . among the
impact of these chemicals on humans largest d10xm producers.
at near current background levels."
The institute's executive director,
Background levels are levels of diox- Robert Burnett, has also authored a
in in the general population. .
contin.gency pl~ in. case the, E~A
Environmentalists agree that trees ~.oesn t share thetr VJews on dioXIn.
today do contain dioxin. But they also
(The)cEPA wtll probably c~lude
contend that the dioxin found in trees . that the mcrneratr~n of chlonnated
is the result of dioxin-producing c~mpounds !s the ~ngle largest co~industri~. Scientists note, for exam- tnbutor _to d!oxm. Bu~et~ wrote m
pie, that samples of trees from before a memo, whrch was revrewed by our
1930 contain only I to 2 percent of reporter ~·~e Anderson. . _
the amount of dioxin found in trees
. Although droxrn-produc1ng rndustoday. That's Important, since the tnes have generally resrsted governcommercial production of chlorine • ment attempts to regulate them, many

Jack Anderson.
· an.d
Jan. Moller

companies have voluntarily taken
stepS to reduce dioxin emissions. The
paper ind11stry, for example, has
spent $1 biilion since the mid-1980s
.to reduce its dioxin output. to the
point where they are now responsible
for less d_ioxin pollution than any other dioxin-producing industry.
As a result of this type of volun. tary reduction, dioxin levels are much
lower today than they were 20 years
ago ·' good news for,environmentalists. Yet ·that hasn't stopped some
industry representatives from reviving the same argument that once
brought ridicule upon Ronalll Reagan.
·
. UNDER THE DOME .. Republicans have been wondering for months
why the fuod-raising scandals that
have eng\llfed the White House have
so far. failed 10 dent the president's
popularity ratings, One reason may
be the withering credibility of the
man who's running the House probe
into ·Clinton's campaign finances ,
. Rep. Pan Burton, R-Ind.
The bombastic Burton, we learned
this week from a report in the news'
paper Roll Call, recently contaCted a
good friend and campaign·contributor, Dr. Robert Ross, on behalf of his
daughter. Ross runs a medical school
in the Caribbean. Burton's daughter,
it turns out, just happens to be looking for a place to attend veterinary
school. After hearing of Burton's
interest, Dr. Ross went as faras start. ing to arrange enlployntent for Burton's son-in-law, a doctor, in case the
couple should firid themselves in the
Caribbean.
A spokesman for Burton told us
the congressman simply contacted
Dr. Ross "to find out what (his
· daughter's) options were after she
was rejected by Purdue University."
But Burton is not the only prominent Washington politico who has a
college-bound daughier. And we suspect that if President Clinton had contacted a 1 Democratic contributor on
, behalf of daughter Chelsea, who will
be starting college this fall, the subpoenas would already be on their way
to the White House.
· Jtick Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

By CALVIN WOODWARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - . Calling the Philadelphia volunteer conference a
"summit" is an odd word choice, considering how far .a mountaintop can
be from the grass roots being celebrated there .
But summits are all the rage these days, in the White ijouse and out. The
name lends a rarefied air to events that, in terms of geography and often consequence, are closer to sea level.
President Clinton, who attended the Presidents' Summit for America's
ATHLETIC ...._
Future on Sunday and Manday, is among this era's eager summiteers. So
OE PARTMENT..,.
are his wife, the vice president, the United Nations and world noodle-makJ
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ers.
The noodle-makers gathered at the International Ramen Summit in Tokyo
•
ATHLETIC
last month for a few days of slippery business.
A "conference." a "convention." a ·~eeting " (unless it's a "town hall
DEPARTWOM~NT
meeting") seem a little too pedestrian for organizers of such things.
No, "summit" is better. Sounds like something Moses would do.
The United Nations is preparing for Earth Summit II in June, to review
why so little happened after the first one.
-In '1945, a year of carefully chosen words. Franklin Roosev~lt. Winston
Churchill and Josef Stalin met in Czar Nicholas Il's former palace by ihe
Black Sea to plot Germany's tina! defeat and shape the postwar world. ·
• .
The Big Three Conference, it was called at the time. Or the Crimea Con• ference. ·
There was no talk of task forces, except, perhaps, the real ones at sea' and
•
under fire.
Ii later became known as the Yalta Summit. It stands tall in history.
Eyeing the Soviets in 1959, then-Sen. John F. Kennedy said: ''It is far
better that we meet at the summit than at the brink."
Almost 20 years later, President Carter laid the groundwork for peace
between Egypt and Israel at the Camp David summit in Maryland's Catoctin
MountainS. ·
·
·
These days. Group of Seven communiques say little and can mean less.
Less is at stake, of course, than in the transition from World War to Cold
War.
But the Group of Seven.'s summits, the next one coming up iri June in
Denver (elevation: 5,260 feet), at least draw together world leaders.
After researching citations of the word, senior Houghton Mifflin lexiNow at last, li)Ore than 52 years sure they
stay w~re yesterd,ay's released k)o the NationaJ" Security . depending on your point of vie~:
cographer Joe Pickett said, "It's clear we 're going to have to revise our def·after
his
death,
a
spacjous
memorial
historians
put
them. (Thdlnas Jeffer- Agency,' we know how thoroughly
On the plus side,. those who felt
inition."
" It's not necessarily some earthshaking thing that's taking place," he said. to Franklin D. Roosevelt is being son, for example;' is currently taking the four Roosevelt administrations . (and l was one of them) that AmcriThe company's 1992 American Herita~ Dictionary of the English Language, unveiled on the banks of the quite a beating as a slave-owner, and · were rici&lt;Jied by Communists mas- ca's place was beside Britain in the
querading as New Dealers -- a fact battle against Hitler's Germany most
Third Edition, defines "summit" as a conference of leaders, "especially the Potomac.
That there should he a memorial
that became deadly dangerous when always be grateful for the devices
highest ranking Qfficials of two or more govemme~ts."
was
probably
inevitable,
given
FOR's
Calvin
Coolidge,
of
all
people,
staged
the Cold War broke out in 1946. Oth- (Lend-Lease, the "destroyer deal"
Now one world leader, or even none, will do.
rank
in·the
hagiography
of
the
Demoa·major
comeback
during
the
Reagan
er
researchers have established that, · the total oil embargo agai~sr Jap;m)
U.S. corporate chiefs and African dignitaries gather~d last week for an
cratic
Party
(they
put
his
face
on
the
years.)
while
Roosevelt illl)lOst certainly did- whereby Roosevelt maneuvered
Attracting Capital to Africa Summit and a speech by Hillary Clinton. Vice
dime, after all), and those of us who . But in Roosevelt's case there has n't know 'that the Japanese were plan- A!llerica into !he war. Having the
President AI Gore went to a Technology Summit a while back.
count ourselves privileged ·to .have been a distinct shrinkage oft'egard in ning to attack Pearl Harbor, he had Soviet Union as an ally was :an
·Outside politics, doctors convene a Cardiomyopathy and Heart Failure · voted against him ought to he thank- the past quarter-century, owing in part deliberately provoked them into embarrassment, but a· Europe ('lnd
Sumlnit. Urban gangs meet in summits. And the world is wiser about "doo ful it wasn't designed ·and built ear- to new information. We now .have attacking somewhere, arid let the mil- Britain) permanently under Nazi conwop singing by ear" and other such topics: thanks to the East Coast A Cap- lier. For there was l! time, in the years Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.'s shrewd itary and naval commanders · in trol would have been a far greater
pella Summit:
.
immediately following his death in assessment of him ("A second-rate . Hawaii tlrke the rap for his own fail- one. The Soviet Union could be, and
Black ski lodge owners hold a National Brotherhood of Skiers Summit.
1945, when the Roosevelt-worshipers intellect and a first-rate character"), ure to alert the armed forces that war was, dealt with in due course.
Their first, in 1973, was called merely A Happening in the parlance of the were number!'&lt;~ in ihe scores of mil- · d J h M
The other day a·bunch of(mos'tly
an o n aynard · Keynes • ·prt· hy was
· inevitable.
day but was later renamed. At least t~ey're being geographically correct lions, and only Cecil B. deMille summary on emerging from a c.onBut ~nquestionably FOR's chief elderly) Roosevelt idolaters ran a full- they meet on mountains.
could have conceived a monument
legacy was· the enormous federal page newspa
' per ad p·roposing t)tat
·
fcrence · with him ("An economic bureaucracy· th at he and h'Is '11
In Philadelphia, elevation 100 feet, the Presidents' Summit for Amcri· huge enoug h torefl ect the1r· esumate
.e ow their hero be officially recognized as
illiterate"): We know how shabbily New Deal ers des•gne
· d and·Impose
·
d equal with Washington and Linco' In
r. ca's Future wraps !'P Tuesday. lt doesn't have a Moses, although some think
of the man.
.,.._.
h
R
1
'
·
·
h
he
treated
his
wife,
and
how
courah
A
·
1
Th'
be
!: summit leader Colin Powell is close.
ouuay 1 e ooseve t .ever m 1 e
on t e merrcan peop e. IS, to
i~ the American pantheon. Hereafler,.
--country is a good deal lower. Most- · geously she rose above it.
sure, Wl!S to be expanded manyfold if they have their way, Presidents'
,_ · )]:DITOR'S NOTE: Calvin Woodward covers national afl'a~irs for The Jy, no.doubt, this is simply because The historical record has acquired under Lyndon Johnson, whose Great Day will be set asid.e for special ven·
· tY was m· ,.ended to be• and was, eration of the Big Three: But I doubt
nobody Unde r 65 Can ha ve any· some interesting retouches too . .J1 is · socre
Associated ·Press.
dependable c.ontemporary recollec- agreed, nolO{, that the New Deal nev- a vast expansion of the N~w Deal. th
}
11 • ff Le1 the
-·
ey canRushmore,
pu 11 0 ,·for starters
m .try . or
tl.on of hr'm. Presr'dentr"al re· putatr'ons er succeeded in ending the Great But the•cen1ra1concep1 of B'rg Gov- Mount
•
•" · Today's Birthdays: Author-activist Dr. Benjamin Spack is 94. Actor rise and fall as they come under the Depression · - only our participation emmcnt as the. solution for the
William A• .Rusher is a Distln' " Theodore Bike I is 73. Actor Roscoe Lee Browne is 72. Rock musician Link
f
d.
t
t.
in
World
War
II
did
that.
Thanks
to
·
•
'II
R
It'
d
.
scru 1rny o ever more ts an gener·
natron s 1 s was ooseve s, an to guished Fellow of the ClareiiU!nt
Wray is 62. Comedy writer-voice actor Lorenzo Music is 60. Bianca Jag- a(ions. and one can n~ver be quite the Venona Papers now being him belongs the· credit -- or blame, Institute for tbe Study of States·
ger is 52. Country singer R.C. Bannon is 52. Singer Lesley Gore i~ 51 . Singer,'
manshlp anci Political Philosophy.
songwriter
Larry Gathn isA9. Rock smger Lou Gramm (Foreigner) rs.47.
.•• Actress Christine
Baranski is 45. Actress Jenna Von Oy ("Blossom" ) is 20.
..
Thought for Today: "Even a liar tells a hundred truths to one lie; he has,
••
to,
to make the lie good for anything." -:- Henry Ward Beecher, American,
"
,.• clergyman,(l813·
1887).
•
The commandment "Thou shalt members, most of those who visit the ing tt(e night
commandment.
•
'•
not
kill"
is
often
advanced
by
people
sick
come
only
once
and
consider
n.c..ancient
Jews
regarded
adulLuther
made
i!
even
harder
to
&amp;ct
·
••
who oppose war or capital punish- they have fulfilled their obligation to tcry as a threat to family stability. a passing mart on the cpmmandment.
ment -- even hunting. Such forms of "visit the sick." Mosa never come at which''was a keystone of the Jewish Only those, said the Protestant
••
•••
killing ~ere not, however, prohibit·
nation and culture. Adulterers. there- reformer, who "live a chaste a~d
ed
in
Old
Testament
times.
fore,
received the death penalty. · .decent life in word and deed and love
•
•••
!!
ria_
Jesus later broadened this com- and honor their spouse" have fulfilled
A more accurate rendering of this
,.
commandment would be, "Thou a11 .
mand!Jientso that a man who "lusts the requirements of this command.
:••
h
I
s a I do no murder." Intentional · The commandment with the most ~ftcr a.woman" is as guilly of bfC!Ik· ment
killing was punishable by death (cap- "sex appeal" is ''Thou shalt nQI com- tng the moral law as the man who
Geerp PJaaenz is a syndicated
;..
ita! punishment).
·
·
mit adultery.'' U.S. presidents, pnliTli- . commits the actual deed. It was this writer for Newspaper Enterprise
In a word, this commandment nent politiciahs, wealthy executives thrit bi'OIIght forth 'Presidenl Carter's Atsoc:ialiOn.
·
i
'
does not fotbid capital punishment, and society matrons regularly run confession that l)e, had broken this .
...••
theslayingofenemiesinwarorthe ·afoulofthiscominandmentandmake .
•
killiog of animals. What it does for- goodMoscopyt
·soc
·forietithees .~~
. uigahou.,.history
1 .
.
.
·
. .
bid is all killing not explicitly autho·
uuu
•
'r"'
nzed.
·
have had laws and customs to deal · By 'nle Assocletwd Ptwia
,.
Martin Luther, however, went with adultery, which is sexuil int«- , . 'I)lday is Friday, May 2, the 122nd day of 1997. There are 243 days left
beyond a literal interpretation of tbe •course by a mlllried person with m the ye~. . . _ · _
commandments.
In the case of this someone other than his or her SJIOIISC.
Today s Hrghhght m Hrstory:
.
.
••
one,
said
arenot
not"hurt
o"ly for1n not at1 socie~es. however, has
On May 2• 1863. Con fed
·
bidden
toLuther,
kill. Wewe
must
nor
. crate Gen. Thom as "stonewall" Jackson was
•..
harm our neighbor in his body."
. adultery been treated as a crime as it accidentally wounded by ht~ own men at Chancellorsville, Va. He died eight
•
was under Mosaic law,
days later.
·
:
Luther,
who
cirnsidered
tbe
com·
English
common
law
neld
that
Qn
this
date:
.
.
.
·'
•
f!!andme~ts to be not Only prohibi- only the woman was to 1r1arnc in an
In lSI !I, artist Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, France.
.
'
bons
11111nst
wrongdoing
·but
com· of-"'-·
I
1670
the
H
dso B Co
h
redb
En
•
mands 10 rightdoing, went even fur- act -ltery btd it was not a crime,
•
,
u n ay . was c arte
y gland'a Kin1 ChaJ:Ics;'
•
ther, This commandment also only a moral wrong. In the Puritan II.
.
de ands that
coloniea. fines, . whippiaas and
Ill 1890, the Okllhoma 'lmitory wu oraanized. ·
.
•
•
••
m
we "help and befriend imprilonment were used to cWUil
In !932; Jac:lt Benny's first radio show mllde its debut on the NBC Blue'
;;:~hbor in every b!xlily need," adultery. Statutes provided for the Nccwork.
,
, ,)
•
One of the ways to __._ our- death penalty, bui it wu rarely
In 1936, "~and the Wolf," a symphonic tile for chikllen by Seraei:
•
.. enfon:ed.
Prokofie~. had ill world (RIIIiere in Moscow.
:
selves would be to uk in what ways
Al the other end of the spectrum,
In 194S, the Soviet Union announced lhe fill of Berlin and ,the Allies :
•
•
we have "befriended" uyone lately. some societies have e¥11111111Ctioned UIIOUncad the llltmldlr of Nazi uoops.lnltaly llld Jlll1l of Aullria.
•
actl
of
kindness
have
adultery
iii
ccrtlin
circudillucel.
It
In
1957,
Sen.loleplt
R.
MI:Cinhy,lhe
':C"IIIDMIIIIR.tptblica.
frum
Wis:
THE NORTHERN MIGRATION OF
- caWderecJ 11 act of couneay-' coasla, cllecht B:A
Naval Hospital In Mlrylanll
. • 1• ;
SNQWBIADS HAS BEGUN
A hospital and nursing-home JJI!ciOUJncu ror aa ElkiiM 10 oft'er
h 1960, coavictec1•11 ~ ~ ~--l~nl author Caryl
•
•
chaplain says that; outside of family his wife to a visitor who ~ spend- - eDCIItld 11 Su Quentin ~- tn Califontta.
·

UNIVERSITY

,_

~ust

how ·'great' was· FDR?
will

William A. RUSher

:·.

...

..
.

F.p llowing commandments to the letter·

•

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! Friday, lilly 2, 1811
'
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l
. ,. ••'I
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•

The D•lly Sentinel • Piie 3

.

OHIO W t·, Jth c r
Saturday, May 3
ACCIIW~ forecut

•••
••

H. Winebrenner

MICH .

•
IToledo I 58" I

. .:
~

•••
••'

....

Charles H. Winelnnner, 86, formerly of Mlrietta. died on Wednesday,
April 30, 1997 It Holzer Medkal Center.
He was bom on Sept. 9, 1910 in Mason County, W.Va.,
of the l81C
Slllldel R. and Leona Hutton Winebrenner. He was the president of Best
Office Machine Co. and a member of Christ United Methodist Church.
He was also a member of American Legion Post 64.
He is survived by a sister, Dorothy Whaley of Shade; a sister and brother-in-Jaw, Grace and Buford A. Jarvis of Huntington, W.Va.; and two ne!lhews
and a niece.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Evelyn Huffman Winebrenner; and a brother, Russell Winebrenner. ·
Servjces will be I I a.m. Monday in the Hadley Funeral Home, 500 Fifth
St., Marietta, with the Rev. James Couis officiating. Burial will be in the East
Lawn Memorial Part. Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday mom.
ing prior to the service.

son

IND.

...
........
•

'""

• IColumbusl64• I

.......

Prosecutors unveil first
exhibit in McVeigh trial
'

and acknowledg~ he did not clean or ·
"swab~' the truck used to transpott
·;
the evidence, and wore no protective
CLEVELAND (AP) - There was one ticket sold naming all five num•·
suit,
bers
in Thursday night's Buckeye 5 drawing and it's worth $100,000, the Ohio
:
The defense appeared to suggest
said.
·~ ·~
by its questioning that Nellis could Lottery
,
The
winning
ticket was purchased at the Shady Lawn Inn of Cincinnati.
have contaminated the evidence in
There
were
112
Buckeye
5 tickets with four of the numbers, and each is worth
,
•
some way.
,
$250. The 3,948 tickets showing three of the numbers are each worth $10.
and the .41,125 tickets showing two of the numbers are each worth $I.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out $307,416.50 to winners in Thursday's Pick
• B ....__A
,_._ _.
really dt' d come to th1's " Kraus sives laboratory, prosecutors insisted
·, y ''"' aeoc...... Prell
Lows from the upper SOs to around
'
·
3 Numbers daily game.
~
,
· ~ More thunderstorms will rumble 60. Sou.thwest winds IO to 20 mph. recalled, ·referring to the book's , the problems did not compromise the
Sales
in
Pick
3
Numbers
totaled
$1
,503.5
.
.
govern'men! case against McVeigh, who faces the
theme Of war agar.nst oL.
.: across 0 hio IOI!ight and early Satur- Cha~e of rain '80 percent.
u~e
•
In the other daily game, Pick 4 Numbers playe wagered $419.082 and
, !,day, forecasters said. Temperatures
Saturday... Occasional showers.
McVeigh replied: " It ~ould possi- death penalty if convicted of murder will share $117,800.
·.:._overnight will be moStly in the SOs. and thunderstorms. Highs from the bly come to this," Kraus said.
and conspiracy.
·
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $385,843 .
• Thntorm activity will end on Sat· upper 60s to. around 70. Chance of
Kraus, McVeigh's second cousin,
· Prosecutors concentrated mostly ·
The jackpot for Saturday's Super Lotto drawing is $16 million .
. was among several witnesses who on McVeigh's alleged attempts to
·: urday . but showers will linger, the rain 70 percent.
·: National Weather Service said. Highs
Saturday night...Mostly cloudy testified Thursday about McVeigh's make a bomb with ammonium nitrate
· : will be in tbe 60s;
· with a chance of showers. Lows in 'mind-set before the April 1995 Okla· fertilizer and racing fuel - the same
- ; ' It will be dry but cooler over most the mid 40s.
homa City bombing that killed 168 ingredients believed used to blow up .
A Middleport man was injured through some trees.
people and r'n,;ured more than 500 · the Oklahoma City federal building. following a one-car accident early
The car was moderately damaged,
, : of the state on Sunday.
Extended forecast:
'
·
Sunday ... Becoming partly and
Prosecutors also tried to show
Among the witnesses was a for- today on State Route 124 near Salem .and Mitch was cited for · driving
•• The record-high temperature for
Mc "er'g·h went on a nat1'onw1·de m.er arms dealer who said McVeigh, Center, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the under the influence and failure to
• this date at the Columbus weather much cooler. Highs in the Jollier and
"
·
search for bomb materials, including a Gulf War veteran, was so eager for State Highway Patrol reported.
: station was 88 degrees in 1959 while mid 50s. ·
control.
the record low was 30 in 1994. SunMonday... Partly cloudy. Scattered a detonator, rocket fuelll!ld a b!lmb- a detonator he was willing to drive
.
Larry
L Mitch Jr., 22. 461 S. Fifth
.I
making manual
.thousands of miles from Arizona to Ave., was taken to Veterans Memor, set tonight will be at 8:26 p.m. and early morning frost. Lows in the mid
Th d ,
·
ted toda
, : sunrise Saturday at 6:29 a.m.
30s. Highs 60 to 65... .
-.
e e.en~e wSash e~peFc
hy Virginia to get it:
.
ial Hospital by · the Meigs · EMS.
·;
Weatbef.forecut:
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy with a - to .cross-examrne am _urman. w o
"He said he needed it bad," said where he was later treated and
sard that before the bombm~ she rent Greg Pfaff, recalling· a· phone call
released.
~ - Tonight... Showers developing chance of showers. Lows in the mid .
• .. • ' .•with a chance .o f thunde.rstorms. 4os. Highs 65 10 70 _
ed a .Ka,nsas storage facrltty to ~horombMcVeigh six months before the
Troopers said Mitch was east.•
·
McVergh s co-defendant Terry
m mg.
bound .at a high rate of speed at 12:40
Nichols, who was using an .alias.
Pfaff, who met McVeigh at gun
a.m. when he lost control of his car
During cross-examination Thur5- shows in New York and Pennsylva- ·in a right curve. The car slid off the
•·
·
day, the defense attacked the evi- ' nia, never sold him the device. ·
· right side of the road and overturned
:
· Divorees 11011pt, aranled
Court in the following cases: Tuppers deuce-gathering procedures of the
Dllvid Darlak, a high school friend
· : ' A divorce action has been filed in Plains Regional Sewer District vs. FBI; suggesting its work wu slip- from upstate New York, testified he
· ; Meigs County Common Pleas Court Roselyn Taylor; T.P.R.S.D. vs. shod.
had not -heard from McVeigh in two
: by Raelynn Clampitt, Reedsville, Stephen Watson, · and others;
While searching the Kansas home years when McVeigh called him in
: against Ronald Reid Clampitt 11. T.P.R.S.D. vs. Sidney A. Grimes, and of Nichols, who will be .tried sep~~· 1994 to ask where he could buy raci Coolville.
others; T.P.R.S.D. vs. Wanda Wolfe; rately, FBI agent G. William Nellis ing fuel.
: A. divorce has been granted to F.C.C. National Bank.NS. Patricia A. testified that he found 1as cans,
Anoiher witness, racing fuel .salesMiddleport Village closed out
: Dawn G. Hawley from .Ricky E. . Triplett; and Dayid .E. Dunkle, and ammunition, photograp~s and an man Glynn Tipton, recalled that II
April
with a balance of $227,303.99
: Hawley. .
.
.
others, vs. H~len .HiJO&lt;I.
·audio-cassette tape.
man he was "90 percent" certain was
·in
all
funds. according to the report
1 •·
Cases dlunlued
He admitted under defense ques- McVeigh approached 'him in October
· " Dismissal entries have been filed
A default judgment in the amount tioning that he did not change gloves 1?94 about buying rocket fuel and of Clerk!I'reasurer Dennis Hockman.
So far this year, receipts · have
~it) Meigs Cot.~nty Common Pleas of $3,686.47 has been sranted to City while picking up ~ various items. . racing fuel. Tipton never sold anytotaled
$407,357, while disburse·
•
_Loan Financial Se.rvices against
thing to the man. who identilied·himments ·since Jan. I have totaled
:
Pati'ick s. Cleland.
self as John.
.
Prosecutors say nitromethane fuel, $356.527.
Balances in the various funds
'
IV
Suits Rled
Seven calls for assistance were often used in drag racing, was mixed
were
$43,355, general ; $12,806.
' t Am Ele p -....................,..40'1. · A foreclosure action against Gary answere Thllrsday by units of ihe with ammonium nitrate fertilizer to
street;
S1.436, mini golf course:
• : Akzo ......................................84'4
R. Canterbury, Vinton, Doris Canter- Meias County Emergency Services. make the truck bomb. Rocket fuel,
$824,
law
enforcement; $3,526. fire
• AmrTech .................................81 · bury, Vinton, and the ~eigs Coul)ty
CENTRAL.DISPATCH
anhydrous hydrazine, can also be
equipment; $·18.921.75. fire truck;
: Aahland 011 ...........................44\
Treasurer has been filed in Meigs .
II :21 .a.m., 'to Rocksprings Reha- used as an explosive.
$354 , COPS fast; $1 ,342, pool
• ~ AT•T .................;...................34'1.
County Common Pleas Court, seek- bilitation Center, Nellie Watkins to H~spltal
4
improvement; $4,210, economic
. l• BBaobnkEOne
.............................. Z:~
ing a J"udgment in the amounts of Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
.vane ............................ ,.
Veteraps Memorial ·
development; $8,417, law bloc~
" Borg-Werner .........................43\
$15,897.98 and $2,654.14, alleging
I :46 p.m., to Powell Street for
Th rsda
d . .
C 1 grant ; $1,467, ODNR boat launch;
· : Champion .............................17'1.
default on a mortgage co~tract..
Carol Wines, to VMH.
u Y a mrssrons aro
$34,627. refuse: $46,225. water sys' Cherm Shpa ..........................
A judgment suit has been filed in
RACINE
Wines, Middleport.
tem;
$28,130. sewer system; $1,256,
City Ho1= ..,..................;.....31/o
the court.by General Motors Accep- ·
11:38 a.m., to Stite Route 338,
Thursday discharges- Melinda
$26. cemetery ; $33,046,
·
recreation:
1
Feder~
u .......................28o
tance Corp. , Columbus, agairist Helen Hayes to VMH;
McLain.
meter
deP.,sits.
·
..1l
Thomas E. Allen, Portland, in the
8:06p.m., to SR 124, Bob Beegle .
Holzer Medical Center
5
3
'"merf.....r ..............................13£
amount of $9,874.26.
to Holzer Medical Center.
Dilclraq;a May J -. Sallie Rose,
·Lende"e""ct""''"""'"'"""""""'28''
REEDSVILLE
Amy
Blazer, Elizabeth Gillenwater,
n ............................. ,~~~
Ltd. ;......................................... 18
M rl . II
9:23 a.m., to SR 681, Gertrude Carl Bailes.
! OVB .......................................
ar aie censes
Bass was treated but not transported;
(Pirbllslaed wlth permlssioa)
, One Valtey.............................38:0
Marriage licenses have been
:SS
p.m.,
to
SR
124,
assisted
by
2
: ~ ................................. 31 ~
issued in Meigs County Probate Ce 1D'
h ~ Jud Puck 10
., Prem Flnl...................;........... 15~ Couh to James William Clifford, SO,
ntra tspatc ' or Y
ett,
·:· Rockwell ..................................17
Veterans Memorial.
, R~l .............................. 177't.
ani:l Judy Kay McClellan, 42, hoth of
RUTLAND
~ Slloney'l ................................ 4~
Middleport; and William Michael
12:08 a.m., to Pearl Street in
·j· StarBank ..............................42~ Blount,4l,andTamaraLynnTaynor- Middleport, Ocle Sears to Pleasant
. Wendv'l .....................;..........2()\
Blount, 33, both of Pomeroy.
Valley Hospital.
,

A

:

V

~

.,a

DENVER (AP) - Exhibit 1 in
the trial of Timothy McVeigh is a
copy of "The Tllmer Diaries," a novel that begins with a truck bombing
of FBI headquaners in Washington
by revolutionaries
KyleKraustestlfiedthatMcVeigh
sent him the copy in I991 and later

U... aJZia

l' Showery Sat ur·.day WI
·; y1eld 'to-cooler weather

Buckeye 5 draws winner

.

ask~t~:~u~h.:e:~h~~:~;ningifit Crit~~i~~Uf~ ~ :~r:r~~:~~x;.:

One-car crash injures area man

' :i Courth'ouse

ne·ws of reco
' -r·d

Middleport opens
May with hefty
financial balance

:

Mel".gs EMS runs

s•,..cks

.

n·ews

13

2=·. . . . . . . . . . .

5.,.

ANNOUNCING

3"'-

The Grand Opening
of the
Middleport Church of Christ

: Worthlngt0n ............."........... 18~

-·-·-

Stock report• ere the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advlst
. f Oelllpolll•

'

'

I

-.
-

Berry's World

Geor,.e R.· n•ag·.en'Z·

.
,.
-·
-

T9
.
day
l•n
h
.
l
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s
·tory
1

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FaataiiJ l,jfe Center·

· J-The Daily Sentinel
(UII'II21J.Nt)

"'blithed ewey ii'Mn-. M-y Illnlulh
l'rida!'. I It C... Sl., ....._, 0..0, by die
Olllo v.lley ............. c-l"'CJ-Co..
.......,., Otllo 45769. I'll. 992-2156· SecOtld
&lt;IMI ....... poid at........,, O!Oo.
'M

l r1 The AuodiiOd ""'"- aod die OIIIG

--10

New r; : Auol:iadon.

~··

Sel!d
tho Dally Seodoel.
Ill........
Coun St.. Pumavy.
qhlo 45769.
'

., Conloror-lt/IICIIIPI'ION RATU

Ooe - .............................................$100
Ooe ..............................................SI.'IU

0oe

Celebration Service ·- 9:30 am ·

v. .............................................. sto..oo

.....
..... .

lnnlllrll7 ~ry
Allrl Cllrrrilll Yll
._

5

·-

...

....

• 4 lllllrriii MIW
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• C4IIDIII Cltilllnllrtar

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IINGUICOPY PIICI
DollY ........................... - ..... ............... 35 COIIII
-

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.............. .., .......... 1111)'

- · · · .....,. .. ,., Dolly - ..1
iiii 1 - · · orU- ..... Cloill wlllbo

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~0 lltblc:rlpd011 b)' lnlil p:a ....... '11 -

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&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;&lt;;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;

for Al.l, Jr .. &amp; Sr. Hi
Teens
6z00 - 9:30 prn

.

- -----------------------12'-25
. ·-····-·--·..···---·- ----li·ll:------··-.
.·····--··-···--·-··IGI-72

I

,.

OPEN HOUSE
1:00-4:00 pm
Special Music ALL Afternoon ·

·Gffllf#/§ UIMfP&amp;UOOIEI!1 .

TQmPederr ..
country · ·

l;tlan , .

MAIL. . . . .'fiiOie

--

Sunday, May 4

rn

I II f by chMtl• ..

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FLOOD DONATION- The Catholic ChJI'ltlR of the Dloceae of
Steubenville has ·made a $5,000 donation for flood relief In Meiga
County. The Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz, right, pastor of Sacred Heart
Church In Pomeroy, presents the check to the Rev. Keith Rsder
of the Melg1 County Cooperative Pariah, which Is handling the
flood relief project work here. Heinz reports thst similar donations
'h ave been made for flood rallef In Gallla and Lawrence countlea.

"

•

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�••

.

The Daily Sentin~J"

Sports

Braves beat Reds 4-2 to notch best start
in team's history
.

'

Los Angeles in the second game.
With the playoffs now eight days
old , none "of the second-round
matchups are set yet. The Cbicago
Bulls,. Utah Jazz, New York Knicks
and Houston Rockets, all of whom
won their opening-round series 3-0,
must wait to see who tneir ne~t
opponent will be.
.SuperSonics 122, Sum 115
At Phoenix, the Suns battled back
from an 11 -point defic.il in the final
two minutes an~ tied the game on
Chapman's circus shot from 25 feet
away.
Phoenix got its chance to go for
the tying three-pointer when,Detlef
Schrempf missed the second of two
free throws . with 5.4 seconds left,
leaving Seattle ahead 107-104.
"I thought I was safe," Schrempf
said about the miss . " I thought,
'They have, about 1wo seconds, and
they'll have to throw up a pmyer.'
They did.''
After a timeout, the Suns
in bounded at midcoun and Chapman

made an over-the-shoulder, running
grab of.a crosscourt pass from Jason
K.idd. While still movins. he
launched a high-arching, 25-footer
1\Ult swished through.
"It was an unbelievable shot,"
Sonics coach George Karl said. "At
that point I thought the g()!is were
against us. but our guys played well
in overtime.''
Kidd · sank a tliree-pointer I :OS
into overtime for a 110-107 Phoenix
lead - only the second lead of the
game for the Suns. But Seattle battied back, ·drawing even on
Schrempf's three-pointer and going
ahead for good 112-110 when he hit
two free throws with 2:54 to.go.
Gary Payton, who finished with
28 points and 14 assists while playing all 53 minutes, made a layup at
the 1:52 mark, and Hawkins made it
117-112 with his three-pointer vvith
45 seconds remaining. .
'
Schremp f had 26 potnts in his
.
.
hest PIayo ff game thts
senes, Kemp
had 24 _points and 20 rebounds and

Hawkins had 17 points and 10 Seikaly.
.
nobounds.
Alonw Mourn ins led Miami,
K.idd and K;evin Johnson paced which won the first two games by 3S
the Stins, Kidd with 23 points and 14 and 17 points, with 23 points and 13
assists and Johnson with 23 and I L rebounds. P.J. Brown had 20 points
Chap~an had 22 points and Danny · 'lind 13 rebounds, whileJatpal MashMannmg had 19 points and 10 . bum made si~ three-pointers and fin·
rebounds before fouling out with 38 ished with 19 before fouling out in
seconds to go in regulation.
·the fourth quarter.
Mapc 99, Heat 91
At Orlando, Hardaway played the
The closest the Heat got in the
entire game and shot 12-for-23 with second half was 61-57 with 4: 14 left
seven rebound~. four steals and three in the third quarter. Orlando regained
blocked shots. He scored a playoff control with an 8-2 spurt and led by
career-high 42 Tuesday night to help. at least five the rest of the way.
Orlandp , stave off elimination in
Game 3:
· The Magic are looking to become
"W.e make Penny look like the only the sixth team in NBA history
second coming of Michael )ordan," . to rebound from a 2-0 deficit to win
Miami forward P.J. Brown said.
·a best-of-five series. The.last team to
Derek Strong had 15 points and do it was Denver against the Super·
eight rebouitds, while Game 3 spark- Sonics in 1994.
·
plug Darrell Armstrong finished with
12 points and nt'n•~ rebounds t'n a
"There •s no pressure at .all on
career-high 40 m•·nutes •or
the
Mag"
••
us, H"ardaway sat'd. ""
' ..e weren 't
ic,. who played without inJ·ured
d 10 b · h"
starters Horace Grant and Rony ~~~:.~;;"
e 10 1 IS series this

••

"If they 're going slow enough,
we'll take the lead," Pulpit's trainer,
Frank Brothers, said. "If we get a
first half of 48, and he's up there,
that's fine. It's not going to happen,
though."
If it does, there goes Irwin's
lunch.
Pulpit, owned by Claiborne Farm,
and Captain Bodgit have split two
previous meetings. Pulpit beat Captain Bodgil in the Fountain of Youth
on Feb. 22. and Captain Bodgit came
from behind to heat Pulpit in the
Florida Derby on March l 5.
The first half in the Florida Derby was 47.6 seconds, almost .slow
enough to make Irwin puke.

.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - l.be
folks at Camp Bodgit can't stand the
thought of a lazy pace in the Ken·
tucky Derby for their Captain Bodgit.
" If they go the first half-mile in
· 48 seconds. I'm going to puke," said
Barry Irwin , n:tanager of the Team
· Valor syndicate that owns Captam
Bodgit.
.
.
Captain Hod gil will he among the
favorites Saturday in a Kentucky
Derby field of 13, devoid of a true
front-runner. That means the early
:leader might he a horse that r~ally
doesn' t want it , like the early
' favorite, Pulpii.

·oiamond tournament
pairings an·nounced
The Meigs Marauders received
the top seed in the Division III sec·
tiona! softball tournament starting on
Monday. May 5. with the Sheridan
Generals getting the second seed.
Belpre (5-7) will host Fed~ral
Hocking (4-5) on May S with the
winner traveling to Meigs to play the
Marauders 16·2 on Tuesday, May 6.
The other game in the upper
bracket will put Nelsonville-York (56) hosting New Lexington (5-6) on
May 6 with the winners playing the
winner of the Meigs-Belpre/Federal
Hocking winner on Fnday, May 9.
In the bottom bracket, Sheridan
(6-5) will host Alexander (l-14), and
:Vinton County ( 1-11) will host Wellston (0-7), both of those games will
alsd he on Tuesday. The winners will
face off for the ~ottom bracket title
on Friday.

All records are at the time of the
draw with the e~ception of Meigs,
which is current record.
·
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League rivals Jackson and Warren.
Local received the top two seeds in
the Division III sectional baseball
tournaments starting on May 12th.
River Valley (7-8) will host Gal.lia Academy (l -15) on Monday,
-May 1:;! with the winner playing at
Warren Local ( 10·6) on Wednesday,
May 14 for the upper bracket title.
In the lower bracket, Jackson (I l5) will host defending regional
champion Meigs (14-6) on May 14
the winner advances to district play.
All records are at the time of the
draw with the e~ception of ~cigs
·which is current.

Kanawha Valley Dragway
posts results of latest races
In last Saturday's Kanawha .Valley Drag way action. the top three linishers in each division were record·
ed (listed by name. home town , car
and speed):
'
Pro Division: Kevin Venoy, Long
Bottom, 1970 Nova, 102.73; Fred
Kisor,Wellston. 1965 Chevcllc,
109.75.; Jim South. South Point,
19!15 Camaro, 112.78.
Modified Division: Duke Sny,
der. Waverly. 1968 Roadrunner.
89.1; Brian Potter. Huntington,
W.Va .. 1968 Ranchero, 81.22; Chuck
Roach. Proctorville. 1982 Caprice.
77.58.
5-Seeond Shoo~ut: Mike Rowe,
Beaver, 1969 Chevelle. 120.64; Proc

Robinson. Ashland. Ky.. l Y95
Spitzer. 137.61 : Justin Hill . Racine.
Beretta, 116.88.
Junior Dragster Division: James
Watson, East Lynn. W.Va .. 5Y.K4 ;
Aaron Carper, Spencer. W.Va ..
58.29; T.J. Snodgrass. Gallipolis.
60.48.
Quick '!I Dragster Division: Proc
Robinson , Ashland, Ky., 1995
Spitzer, 137.19; Ray Livingston,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., 1991 Spitzer,
132,74.
Quick 4 , Doorslammers Divi·
sion: David Hudson, Marmen: W.Va.,
1989 Berella, 146.57; Steve May·
nard, Kenova, W.Va .. 1986 Mu.•tang,
135.95.
.

They split ·paths then, with Cap- Irish-bred who was third in the Santain Bodgit winning the Wood ta Anita Derby.
.
Memorial and Pulpit capturing the
Phantom on Tour was the only
Blue Grass in their final preps for the horse that worked Thursday, turning
Derby.
· in a time of 35.6 for three furlongs
"I think Pulpit will be the one up under regular rider Jerry Bailey.
front and . going," . Irwin said.
"Just when you think you have
"They 're · going to figure no one the race figured out ... I meBQ. look
wants to go with them.
at the '94 Derby. Everybody was
''I'm just wonied if we win, we'll saying Holy Bull would take the
all get arrested in the parking lot," lead, and he never got anywhere near ·
Irwin said. "There's so much rever- it," Bailey said.
ence for Claiborne Farm, if you heat
In post position order, the field is:
them you feel like you've done Crypto St~. Pat Day; Phantom on
something bad." ·
Tour, Bailey; Concerto, Carlos Mardtlier candidates for the early
quez; Captain Bodgit, ·Alex Solis;
lead include Santa Anita Derby winSilver Chinn, Gary Stevens; Celtic
ner Free House and runner-up Silver Wmior, Francisco Torres; Pulpit,
Charm, Arkansa.~ Derby runner-up Shane Sellers; Hello, Mike Smith;
Phantom on .Tour, and Federico · jack Aash, Craig Perret; Shammy
Davis, Willie Martinez; Deeds Not
Tesio winner Concerto, owned by
· Words, Corey Nakatani; Crimson
George Steinbrenner.
The classy· stretch runners in the Classic, Robby Albarado, and Free
field include the Captain, Jim Beam House, David Flores.
All suu:ters will carry 126 pounds,
runner-up Jack Aash, Arkansas Derby winner Crypto Star and Hello, the

CLEVELAND (AP) - Now, if
only the Cleveland Indians could get
this kind of pitching more than once
a month ..
Yes. the Indians hit four more
home runs Thursday night. No sur·
prise there. But they finally combined power with pitching, and the
result was a 7-l victory over the
Oakland Athletics .
·
"I think we need a bunch more
games like this." said lack McDow· ·
ell . who made a dominant return to
the starting rotation after an embarrassing demotion to the bullpen.
McDowell (2 -2) allowed only
one run and three hits in seven
innings . striking out a season-high
nine and showing everyone what he
thought of being a relief pitcher.
"I know emotionally I was a different player tonight," said McDowell, who started the season with a
12.51 ERA in three starts.
"I think having numbers like that
and reading the things that were con- .
sistently said about me kind of put
my back against the wall," he said.
"That and being put in the bullpen.
I think, shook me more than just get·
ting knocked around."
The Indians pushed their season
ho.ncr total to 53. tops in baseball .
David Justice hit two, giving him
a
team-high
nine. Manny Ramirez
·
hit one, and Omar Vizqui:l hit his
first, meiming every position player
. on the roster has at least one homer.

I. bl.

ALLEN IVERSON

Iverson
gets NBA

.

rookie
honors
By JOHN F. BQNFATTI

·

A stress fracture kept Pulpit from
racing as a two-year-old. He broke
his maiden at Gulfstream on Jan. II ·
and has won four of five career
starts.
. If Pulpit doe~n't take the lead;
Brothers said he was sure "he'll he
close."

"No one player should put the question whether you've still got it,"
pressure on himself:• said Justice~ Giambi said: "There wru; ·no queswho went 3-for-4 to raise his aver· tion tonight... ,
McDowell, wearing sh()rt sleeves
age to .402. "You know that il" you ·
don't do it, the guy.. right behind you despite wind-chill readings in the
high 20s, la•t started on a similarly
is just ns qualified."
Despite all that power, the Indians chilly night. May 18 against Milmerely eve~ed theirrecord at 13-13. waukee. He was ba!tered for the
The struggles have heen due to the third straight time and demoted to
worst pitching in the American the bullpen. where he pitched si~
League, a trend McDqwell reversed scoreless innin!ls of rcli~r· after 254
for at least one night.
· straight starts.
"That's how we should be play·
ing almost every day," Vizqucl said .
McDowell (2-2) showed a lively Stock car driver
fastball, devastating splitter and even dies from injuries
a few slow curves. allowing only
Jason Giambi's first-inning single
NEENAH, Wis. (AP)- A stock
through(\ 1-3 innings.
·
car driver died this morning after
"In a town like this where the
crashing into a wall during qualify·
c~pectatiuns are high. people sla':ll&lt;i
ing trials at the Wisconsin lnterna· .
tiona! Raceway in Kaukauna.
.
,
Jim
Pagel,
42,
died
at
about
1
a.m.
Outlaw Super
after surgery at Theda Clark Regional Medical Ccnier. htispital officials
said.
Pagel was taken unconscious
from the track after his race car hit a
The 410 Outlaw Super Sprints, as wall at a turn during qualifying triseeh on ESPN .and TNN. will make als . Pagel crew mcmher Ken
a return appearance to Skyline DeJardin said Pagel ·was slumped
Speedway near Stewart tonight, over as rescuers ran to the car.
whim Jim Nicr will defend his title.
Dojardin· said it ' was difficult
. The series will be joined by Late removing Pagel from the car because
M()(jcls. Pure Stocks, and Four cylin- his arm was pinned against a roll bar.
ders. A huge field of cars is expect·
Pagel. beginning his si~th season
ed to put on a great show this or racin11 at the half-mile truck in
evening as several new cars arc to Kaukauna. spun out at the end of a
debut. Racing begins at 7 p.m.
two-lap qualifying run.

.~ ~

Boston ................. :.. ll 12
New Vork .. ,........... 14 U

../

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4't:

. ~19

4 '~:

1~

.4S8

. 6

Delroil ................. .'. II

16 .407

7~

.522

12
16
Cbicaao........... .... ..... H 11

.:\20

CLEVELAND .... ...!) 13

j

14

Solurdoy's gam..
Phixnix til ~arcle . J :JOp.10.

Sunday's games

7 .720
8 .680
t.oo·Anactea ....•...... l4 11 .560
San DieJO ... ............ IO U • .400

"5.3

.407

Wnttrn Dhillon
Sealllt ........ ............ l6 II .!'i93 ·
Texas ......... ............ l4 10 .583
· Anahr:im ................ l2 12 ' .500
0.-kland ..... ............ l:i

Tonight's games

Colo&lt;ado ........... ..... 18
Su franc:iJCO .... .... 17

.~
.~

i

•
R

Transactions

lbursday's scores

.,
'.

' Thundoy'SS&lt;.'Ores

N•tlonll Le..ut
·
COLORADO ROCKIES: Pln&lt;td

Annlieim AI Boston, ppd .. min
BahilllOrt ~. Minnewta2
K1111s1UJ City 8. Toronto 0

'

ab~

Tonlghl's pmes

Tonipt's games

(Maddu~ J·l ),·7:40p.m.

Floridu
2· 1) ul Hou_.on
(Rcynoldl3·2), R: . p.m.
Phi111del~i11
0-4) a!, Color;,nlo
&lt;Thompson . -I J, 9. 0~ p.m.
Oticngo Cubs (Telenmco 0.1 J Ill Los
Angeld (Mani.nez 2·2), 10:0~ p.m.

0.1), 7 : ~!11 p,m..
Ookland (K:~r~&gt;uy 0· 2) nl 8allimorc ·
7:3~

p,m.

'

Anabcim (W11tson 0·2) ut Chicugo
~hiteSox. l~ldwinO-~). 8:0!111,.m.
N.Y. Yanker:a (Cone 2-2) al l&lt;a11sas ·
City {Pitule)'O·IJ. K : O~ r .m.
Boston (Selc
I):K : :t~

~·I) ul Te~tas

· Saturday's games

(Guzman 2-2).

0· ~ 1 :11
(Muuin~tJ · IJ. l JSp . m

Anuhcim (U SfWin!!cr O·Ot n.t Chica~n
Whi t~.· Snx (Drabclo: l·.l ). 7 :0~ p.m.
·

IH:Imjllon I ·J). K:0.5 1p.m.

N.Y. Y;mk\'C!ri j Pctlllu: ~ -0 ) at Kun~as
(."ity IBeh:her 2·.'1. K :O~ Jl.IU.
.On~lon I Ave: V 1· 11 HI TCIUts Iburkc:n

l..o~ Angelc.~ IVullk~

J.I).I'I:J~p. lll.

.

Milwnuk.a: CMdllmaltl J-21 :11 Sc:IIIIL•

Pius~urJlh

Dctroil m. Cl£VELANll I :0~ r.m.
Mint.:liota 111 T~tmt\lu. I :0~ 1•.m.
Ouklnnd Ul Bultimon:. I:J5 p.m.
AnaiM:im at Chic:t~n Whit~ Sux. 2:0!11
p.m.

College

.t1ucti ~:tu

1

Cubs ill Lns Antt:cl.:~ . 4.05
..a : l l:~

·
DUENA VISTA : N:uncd Alclt. A)'l!r:t

wrc~tllnjt cn:tch.
DUKE: Annumu.:l'd tl~ rcsi~nalion ur
Mike Furbcll., WtJ!llC'Il · s tmt:k. ;md ftdU ouKI

mcnl uf Jitt:k Lliwis.

Cfl:)!; ~·COUUiry Ctl:lt.:h .

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ti~'\'

"because of the excitement that he
brings."
The endorsement wus imprcssi\'C
considering Jordan and Iverson !!"'
into an argument un the llour in a
game earlier this season. Former
76cr Charles Barkley said the only
award Iverson deserved was fur

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Univcrs11y will .inin the ~·onfcrcn~c. ctl'~o..'1: ·

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·•

)'l!ltr~untm..:l.

St-. Umi~ ttl N.Y. Met~ . I :-tll)un .
Philt•ddJihin :11 Cnlnradtl . .~ :0~ J1.tu.

Sunday's games

'·

Soccer
1\-lajor IA~ut Soc:«r
COLUMBUS CREW: AJI.rced lu
tenu s wjfh f 'Briun Mt'Bridc 111111 fnur·

Sunday's gaiJIOS

(FHS!IC'rtl ~ -0) , 10 :()~ Jl.lll,

"

Primeau.

Cuhs IMullmllanll J.J J at
I··''· 10:0~ 11.m,
M t1 ntrenl t Hermunsnn 1· 1I ;u Sau
l&gt;i.:(ln (W•Irrdl J .~\. 10: 0~ p.m.

turned pro after only two seasons at
Georgetown, also garnered high
praise from several of the league's
stars, including Michael Jordan.
"Was I a one-mun offense like
that when I was a rookie'/" Jordan
asked after Iverson's 44-point·effort
against the Bulls.
· Jordan said Iverson was his
~hoicc for rookie or the year

A Totally Terrific, Trantlormlng, Tein ..
·Romans t2:2
Come &amp; get UNP~UOOED fro"! the World.
. · &amp; PLUG Into Chrtstf · ·.

tilr grubbinlt :11\'IKmer wiKl had wriul!n :1
crilicul column.
F.OMONT(}N OILERS : Annuuu..:I!LI
· Ilk! rcllignation ol' oJssi~t:mt coach K~viu

Chit:&gt;~lltl

· Monis was trying to get a jump
in case he had to break up·a double
play. He wound up causing one.
"The last play epitomizes wMt's
happening, " Knight s'aid. "There 's
no way professionalnan let some·
thing like that happen."

Flrtt SO Tetnt thrtuth the dter will reeelve 1 FREE CD •r C1111tte

Nutionll Hockey Lfl«ut
NHL: Suspcndo.l Buffalo U Dominilo:
H:~k thrw g;mte~ 01nd li111:d hi1\1 $10.000

Pitt ~ burgh !Lnui:ta 2·0 ) ill ' Atla11t u
J(iluvinc 4·0), 7: IU r.m.
FluriLln tS:aundcn .0· 1I aiJinu slo n

Btthimore

tating 'gaffe.
With Barry Llrtin 011 iecond and
Hal Morris on fiBI and one out,
Lopez nllliced that MorrisWM suay·
ing a little far with Eddie Tlubeuee .
at bat.
The catcher flashed a sign 10 tint
baseman Fred McGriff that he would
throw down on the next pitch.
Taubensee . swung through it for
strike three, and Morris was easily
picked off by the catcher's perfect
thro\.v.
It's the kind of play that good
teams make and bad teams ljllow. .
·. "I figured we've gotto finish that
game somehow, some way," Lopez
said. "I figured that was the hest way
to fini~h the game. !feel like a pitch· er SCIUng a save."

· May 4, 1997 . Doo_rt open at S:JO p.m.r

Hockey

tlfatiO !Wrlghl ~ · I 1. J : ~ r..m.
CINCINNATI ISmdc)' 1 -~ 1 "'Sa n
Fnmdscu IVan L1111din(!h:•m 1·2 \. .r:m
p.m.
.

1 · 0~ 11.1~1 .

Oakl:.mU I Mohler

·

Louis fAikl)' Benes 1·61 a1 N.Y .
'Mt'ls (R~d 2· 1l. 1:40 p.nt
PhiluLid11hia (Portu.@.ul 0- 1I 111 Cui·
St.

Saturday's ~ames .
Deuoir tMnehlcr 2· 1I :tl CLEVt:.
LAND CColt1n D· l J. I :0~ r .m
Mmnesntil (RnhcrtSI11l 2· 1) at Tt•r&gt;~llln

l.eng~.

NEW ENGLANO PATRIOTS: R•signo:d S t.urry .WIIighum.
· SAN DIEGO CHARGERS: Signed
WR Tony Mar1intn l'our·ycur cuntr:1ct.

Fnmcisco {Fcrmmdez.J·I ). 10:05 p.m.

lt.m,

COWlt

FootbaU

(Burkel! ].

(O"Ami..:n O· li nt Sentllc
tJnhnllun 3-0J. 10: 0~ p.m.

'1

P:x.:if~~;

Natkmal FoathalliA'akut
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Signed OL
Nnthan Pnrkli m n thn:e·yenr contmtl.

Montreal (Juden 2·0) 111 Sun Diego
1Voll:nzut1• 1·3l: 10:0., p.ft).
CINCINNATI.(Schourek i-2) ut Sun'

Milwuttk~

..
'

Vcp.as of the

&lt;t:funoz

{Pcr~on

{Key 4.0),

Seo11 Li\lin~stone on the IS-day disub~
Iilii retrlli.~eUve to April 29. Purchil!led lht
· ' oontract or INF Terry Shunlperl from l.ali

'

(Ra8f

liil, rctronctive fro AJ'I(il 10.

PllTSBURGH 'PIRATES: Opdoned
LHP Jeff Grunger to Clll&amp;ar.Y of the PCL..
St.N DIEGO PADRES : Pl"~d lNF

S1: Louis (O.borne 1-2) 111 N.Y. Mets
(Reynoso 1..0), 7:40p.m,
PituburJh (Schmid! I - IIIII Atlanta

Delroir (Lira 0-2) at CLEVELAND
!Ogea 2-2). 7:0!11 p.m.
Minn-eso111 (Rudkc 1· 1) 111 Toronto -

A number of NBA veterans spoke
out against the tactic, including Karl ,
Malone, who said it wa.~ " a muck- ·
ery of the game.''
Even 76ers president and part·
owner Pat Croce, when he fired
coach Johnny Davis and general
manager Brad Gr&lt;:enherg .artcr the
season, 'said he wa• embarrassed by
the maneuver. But Iverson. who

R:HP Dnrren Holmt!t on the 1!1-dny di !!-

CLEVELAND 7, Oaklqnd I

ons are bllttin1 .317and leadina the
The Reds have tried everything
lea1ue in pilchina (2.54 ERA).
.- manaaer Ray Knicht gill himself
When ,4-tluta traded David Jus- ejected Thursday to try to fire up the
lice, Marquis Grissom and Jermaine team - but nothin&amp; has worked.
Dye in the wuinll days of sprinr
· "People think I'm taking it light·
training, everyone wondered whether
ly. Well, I'm tired of that," said
the chemistry would be .the same and
Knight. who has aenerally remained
the offense would be as good. Kenupbeat despite 13 losses in the last 15
ny Lofton and Michacl'l\acker have games. "Winning and representing
diversified the offense by batting
this organization means everything
.387 and .410, ·respectively.
to me. We've got to stan fighting. I
The names bave changed, but nlll don 't care what we have to do."
the confidence.
. For starters, they could start pitch"It's different, " Tucker said. ing - 1he staff has the NL's worst
"Guys come.to the park and pretty
ERA at 6.26. Burba(3-3, 7.29 ERA)
much know what they have 10 do to gave up homers to Tucker, Javier
help the team. Everybody has his job Lopez and .Ryan Klesko as the
and goes out and does it.
· Braves pulled ahead 4-0.
"Even if we're down a couple of
John Smaltz (3·3) compounded
runs, there's no pressing. There's a .the Reds' misery by allowing only a
pair of runs and five hits over eight
confidence there that no maner how
far we're down, we 're going to pull
innings. Closer Mark Wohlers came
on and the game seemed out of
it Out."
reach.
The Reds are findinJ! disaster
around every comer of the diamond.
11lat's when the Reds got o.ne last
Cincinnati has lost 19 of its 26 games glimmer of hope - and. ultimately.
and set .a franchise record with 18 . the chance to make onc.morc devas·
losses in April.

Iverson. . . .(Continood from Page 4&gt;

Baseball

Moouenl 4. Hous&amp;on 0
St. Loui1 ~. Florida 2
San Die1o 7. N.Y. Mt:ll ~
Colpfudo ~ . Chicqo Cutn 4

)

..._,.

Sprints to run
at Skyline tonight

Orbmlu liiMinmi , ll::iOp.m.
l&gt;muic • AIID.Nn. TBD. if neceuury
· Portl:u~ nl L.A. Lakcn. TBD, if nee·

Aoluma 4, CINCINNATJ2
Los ,.naete. 5, Phillllletphio 0
PinsburJh 3. Son Francisco 2·

,.
2

.481

2~2

Aclanla ul Dl=croh. It p.m.
L.A. Lnkm:t\1 Ponlomd. !0:30p.m.

Wtlttm DI•Woa

II

' kW41Ciry ... ........ l2
Minnesoto .............. ll

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Aile~
Iverson was so confident that h~
deserved the NBA Rookie of th~
Year award that he called it "mt
award" three weeks hefore the en'
of the season:
.
· ,
As it turned out. he was right . :
Iverson won the award today. HC
received 44 of 115 votes from sport$ ·
. writers and broadcasters who cover
the NBA.
. .
I
Minnesota's Stephan Marbur~
finished second with 35 votes ana
Vancouver's Sharcef Abdur-Rahinl
third with 25.
,
Iverson, 21 , was the leading roolq
ie scorer this year and his average of
23.5 points placed him si~th overall
· in ·the NBA. Yet Iverson faced stit1'
competition from Marbury an~
'Abdur-Rahim. ·
Marbury's supporters pointed o~
he helped transform the Timber 1
wolves into a playoff team and alsq
· led all rookies by averaging 7 . ~
assists, and Abdur-Rahim ·led th.l
. Grizzlies witli 18.7 points per gJ~mel
Iverson may have cinched thd
award with his streak of scoring 4()
or more points in five straight game!&amp;
earlier this month, the. longest high~
scoring streak by a rookie in leaguq
histury.
·
I
· Showing both an outside shootin4
touch and scint,llating slashes to tti~J
basket, Iverson scored 44 againsC
Chicago on April 7,' 40 ugainsC
Atlanta on April 9, 44 against Mi'l wuukce on April II, a career-high 51t.
against Cleveland on April 12 and 41)
against Washington on April 14. I
. The accomplishment w~\s sonlc-:
what tarnished, however. because all:
five games were losses. contributing:
to a 22-60 record. the third-worst lin-:
ish in .76ers history.
·
:
Also, in the Bullets g;~mc, the:
16crs called three umcouts at the end•
of n bl.owout loss to set up plays fori
Iverson. He ended up hitting an i
imcuntested 3-pointcr in the final20i
seconds.
J
(See IVERSON on Page 5)

&amp;Bille 122. Phoenix 115 (01'1: seri~~
lh!d

. CtNCINNIITI ........ ..7 19 .. 269
CbiCII&amp;0 .••....•. ..•.......•6 lO .231

C.-DI•Iolon

!.,

Orlando 99. Miami 91 : serie~ lied 2· 2

.'~20

,
C~l Dhillon
HouMon ................. l~ 12 . ~S6
Pittlburgh .............. J3 13 . ~
S1. Loui1 ................ 12 14 A61

Iii

~20

·roronto ...... - .......... 1 r

NilwiNkce ............. ll

••

lllursday's ftr•t·rouad scores

.m

New York .: ... ......... ll I~ .444
Phitadt:lphia ............. M 17 .320

a..&amp;tm DlwWon

~.....

11
12

Monlrcal ............... . 1;\

ALs~ndlngs

!ill

6 .169

AIIIUlln .............., .. 20

Floridn ............. ..... I~

Indians tally 7-1 win over A's
By KEN BERGER

.»:

Ita

Baseba ll

and $700,000 of the $1 million
purse will go to the winner. Shammy
Davis and Jack .flash will run as a
Nick Zito-traincd entry.
Brothers has more to worry about
than just the pace.
.
Not only is Pulpit a little high
strung, he also will try to win the
Derby without ever having raced as
a two-year-old, and only one other
horse has done that, Apollo in 1882.
"I understand there is a reason for
that statistic," Brothers said. "Bull
like. this spot for him, I really do. I
realize we're bucking 115 years of .
history, but he couldn't be doing any
better."

Scoreboard

•

Kentucky Derby touts Captain Bodgit-Pulpit rivalry
By JOHN NELSON

Cincinnati Reds took the Braves' gave up three homers Thprsday to
April suceess - a major-league IICCount for all four Atlanta runs.
record 19 wins - and transplanted " They bave speed, power and areat
it to a new month. At 20-6, the . pitchil)f. You have to throw a perfect
Braves are off to the best start in game.
franchise history and wi11ning cQm;
The Braves have been as close to
pliments froni every team they beat. perfect over the fnt 26 games as any
"Against these guys, you just team in franchise history. The
can't miss, " said Dave Burba,. who defending National League champi-

ClNCINNATI (AP) The
.Jitluta Braves needed only one
;month and onc day to end all the
,.. doubls about whether they could be
~as JOOd as before their spring-train· ·ing makeover.
;:.- They're even bener.
A 4-2 victory Thursday over the

Sonics &amp; Heat win to force series to fifth games

AP Baaketball Writer
There will be at least two deciding Game Ss this weekend.
The Seaule SuperSonics and
Orlando Magic avoided elimination
from the first round of the NBA playoffs by getting a pair of mus1-wi11S
Thursday night,
Seattle survived an incredible,
game-tying three-point shot by ReK
Chapman with. 1.9 seconds left in
regulation and defeated the PhoeniK.
Suns 122-115 in overtime to force a
Game 5 on Saturday.
Orlando, playing without two
injured starters, got a 41 -point performance from Penny Hardaway
and defeated the Miami Heal 99-91
. to force a deciding game Sunday.
Two more teams have a chance
tonight to force their series to the
limit.
The Atlanta Hawks. trailing the
Pistons 2- I. will need to win at
Detroit. The Portland Trail Blazers ,
trailing the Lakers 2-1, play host to

.

By JOE KAY

Friday, 1118y2,1.7 '

.NBA playoff action continues
By CHRIS SHERIDAN

The Deity Sentinel• ,.... 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
I

�Pomlror. tlddllport, Ohio

Pomeroy •lllddleiJ«t, Ohio

---Community calendar·__;._.~

111e c- ...., Calnd•• 11
pubH d • a tree senice to proGt IJ'OIIPI wl ' '-. to
·-dDI Md •pedal
Tile
caleBdar Is DOt dedptd to pi'C):
mote ulel or fWid rallen of uy
type. Items are printed ali spac:e
permits ...d cannot be auannteed
to run a ~pedfk number of days.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS •• Tllppen
Plains, VFW A11xiliaty, Thursday,
Potluck 6:30 p.m. meeting at 7:30
P.m . with election of officers.

.,I

t',.._

.

I

.p.m. Wortc in the entered apprenlice
depw.
MASON, W. VA. • VFW Post
9926, I arNu Auxiliary. poppy drive
Sarurday, 'I a.m. to 2 p.m. Rain ·cancels.

S.. Mao· 9:30 o.m.
Dolley Mao • 8:30a.m.

· BRADBURY •• Dr. David M,
Lucas, 10:30 a.m. suest lpeAker,
Bradbury Churdl ot'Christ.

POMEROY •• Demo derby setn·
inar, free, Rock Spri!IJS f~.
2 p.m. Sunday. C. tips ud new
SUNDAY •
· niles to be presented: Sponsqred by
MIDDLEPORT •• Dedication Meigs County Fair Board aikl Out·
'services to be held at the Ash Street law Demo Derby.
Free Will Baptist Church Sunday.

Apostolic

·Meigs youth attend Teen .lnstitute
Seventeen students from M,eigs. Meigs; Vinton, and Washington.
Coilnty schools attended .the 1997
On Friday night, Roy Clark, Jr.
·Southeast Ohio Multi-County Teen provided entertainment. Son of the
Institute retreat held recenily at Can- famed "Hee-Haw" musician, Roy
ter's Cave sponsored by Health Clark Jr. is an accomplished fiddler,
Recovery Services.
dulcimer, banjo and guitar player.
'' Teen Institute is a positive peer He is also somewhat of a historian,
prevention program for students in with his special area of expertise
grades 6-12that includes activities being the rich heritage of the
In the schools. Substance abuse pre- Appalachian region and how the
'_yention strategies, team · building, songs native to this region reHect its
self-esteem, leadership and deci· culture · and traditions. He lives .in
sian-making skills are emphasized Walker, w.va: and works with trouduring the program.
. bled youth at a rehabilitation center
· Students participating in this in the Washington County area. ·
year's Teen Institute were se.lected
On Saturday night, motivational
by personnel from their respective speaker, Mark Garrett keynoted the
schools and Health Recovery Ser· . program. A Nelsonville resident and
vices staff members. The program a. graduate of Hocking College;
brought together over 170 students Garrett has made a name for himself
from seven counties. including as a dynamic motivational speaker.
Athens, Gallia, Hocking. Jackson, Using real-life examples from his

FRIDAY
· HARRISONVILLE ·· Meigs
County Pomona Grange, Friday.
7:30p.m. Scipio Fire House in Har.risonville: Baking contest will be
judged.

REEDSVILLE •• Olive Townsl)ip
Trustees, Friday, 7:30 p.m.,
own sometimes troubled past, he ·
township
garage.
·
. challenges audiences to ·"Take
Charge Of Your Future" and overHARRISONVILLE ·· Meigs
come any and all obstacles along the
County
Pomona Grange 46, Friday,
way. Advancing the "GIMA" theory
7:30p.m.
Harrisonville Fire Station.
of goal setting ~nd ~~Chievement,
llaking
contest
to be held.
Mark addresses groups ·from youth
conferences to corporations.
The Multi-County PRIDE Group SATURDAY
MASON •• First birthday celeprovided entertainment on Saturday
bration
for Agape Life Center,
evening . .
Throughout the weekend, partici- Mason, starting Satur&lt;!ay. Speakers.
pants parti·cipated in leadership weekend services, Chuck and Karen
training, educational workshops; Clayton of Dillsboro; Ind.; May S, .
teambuilding exercises and discus- Jim Legg. Charleston, W.Va. ; May 6
, Scott Carlson, Titusville, Pa.; May
sion groups.
7, Israel Kim. McClean , Va.; SunHealth Recovery Services is par- day, 10 a.m . and 7 p.m., with all
tially funded by the Gallia, Jackson other services, 7 p.m.
and Meigs Alcohol, Drug Addiction
SALEM CENTER ·· Star
and Mental Health Services Board.
· Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange
878, meeting, Saturday, potluck supper, 6:30 p.m.; business meeting, 8
p.m. Hemlock Griinge to be guests.

Giving thanks for the still of the evening ·
By BONNIE SHIVELY
Canada Goose protected h~r week·
Devotional Writer
old goslings as they. pecked at the
On this lovely quiet May evening · grass and Manard · ducks glided
my· hu.IP1111d aod I took a country . ac.ross the smooth pond water. Back
·
walk .
Freshly from the road, purple and white wild
planted fields and !lowers· bloomed. Nearby, a big
mowed · grass black bull and Nellie, the cow,
along the road grazed contentedly. ·
looked so neat.
Back in our lane, we rounded the
The
mournin'g sharp curve and admired tlie reHecdove cooed her - tions of the orange-pink-red sunset
'hello.'
on our placid pond. Papa Goose restSheared ed at. water's edge and· patiently
sheep watched waited for Mother Goose to hatch
over their little lheic nest of eggs.
lanibs and the red-winged black bird
' In the field behind the house four
cawed from the power line . .The rabbits played. chasing each other

round and round. With tails twitching. the cats had their eyes fixed on
the cottontails, and with bellies to
. the ground crept through the yard,
·only to lie down and watch. The
bright red cardinal and his mate Hittea fr(im tree to tree. A few birds
. sang, then the mockingbird closed
the evening chorus as twilight set·
tied over the quiet country.
The Psalmist wrote, "Be still, and
know .thatl .am God ..! will be exalted in the earth." (Psalm 46: 10)
·
Father, thank You for the still of
the evening. Amen .
(Bonnie Shiveley li.ves in Xenia.
Her post office box is 951.) .

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411, Saturday, 7:30

py aide, bus aides, a·health scrvtccs
coordinator .(RN' and two replacement buses. the executive director
reported.
Beha said t,hat the proposed 1.8
mill levy will enable the Board t.o
continue services which ·have
already been established and implemented, increase the .level of scrvices as enrollment in the school and
adult programs grow, allow · for
replacenienl of two buses··during the
next ~ight years'.and allow for a capita! construction project to .acctim·
m()(jate the growing space needs due
·to an increase in enrollment during
the past live years.
According to Beha, the capital
construction project would include
two phases of construction added to
the existing facility. The first phase
will add 4200 .square feet to the
Adult Services Program and habilitation activities and for the school
age transition class. It would also
allow for some renovation of exist·
ing space for beuer utilization of the
production area of the program. This
would be completed by the end of
1998.

•

..

.

'

Free wur Bopliot Churdl

Rlverla Converalon;
loaded,.beautiful van

94 CADillAC SWAN DlYIUf,

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Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10;45 a.m.
POIIImiy Firat Blptbl
Paslor: Paul Stinson · '1.
EaSt Main St.
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10;30 a.m.
' Fint Sou...m Bl~dst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor. E. Lamar O'Bryanl
~un~y School • 9:30a.m.
WOrship • 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wodneoda~ Services· 7:00p.m.
Fint laptbt Clntn:ll
PUI&lt;lr. Mart Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
. Sunday School • 9;15 a.m .
Wonhip -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servl&lt;:e- 7:00p.m.

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89 OLDS 88 ROYALE 4dr, V6, al ptiWII', nice cat ......................................... '3,995
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89 F.OID XIJ RANGER, long b.l, V6, !IIIIo, sharp..........:.......c....................... '4,695
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'

ML Vnlota lapdat
Putor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Schooi:9;4S a.m.
Evening· 6:30 P·111·
Wednesday S.tvla:s ; 6:30p.m.
· Betlllell• Blptlll Cltun:ll
Great Bend, ~utc 124, Racine, OH
,. l'lllol : Daniel Bcnliue
v S\lndoy School· 9:30T.m; , ··- c
Sunilay Worship • 10:30 a.m. 4 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study , 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel me Will 81(11111 Chun:ll
. 286ot St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evening • 7:30p.m.
Thumday Sctvia:s • 7;30
Hlllllde Blptlll Churdl
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • lla.~., 6 P·IJI:
Wednesday Semces •7 p.m.
Vl!;tory Bopdot Jlldependatll
S2S N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: !amos E. Keesee
Woiallip ·10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedqaday Services • 7 p.m.

..

To Be·Published

·1X3 Greeting· $10.00

Friday, May 9 ·

1x5 Greeting .
with Picture: $13.00

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

ForUt Run Blptlat
. Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School-tO a.m.
,... .. Wonhip • 11 a.m.

.~

ML Morlllt Bllttbt
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor.. Rev. Oilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.

(YOUR MOTHER'S
· NAME)

HAPPY

MOTHER~S DAY
(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

LOVE, ·
JOHN, JOE
· AND
SUSAN

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
~D

Deadline F,r Thie S_{Hcial
Mother .. Day Tribllle I•
Tue.day, May 6, 12 Noon

r•

SC. Pul Lutltena Cllun:ll
Comer Sycamore a. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Ocorao Weirick
'
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Wol'lhlj&gt; • !I a.m.

Hanford, W.Va.
Pulor: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
· Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30 p.m1
Wedneaday Setvices • 7:30 p.!JI.

Un1ted Methodtst
G.....• Ulllled Metlsodkt
Worship· 9:30a.m. (111 A 2nd Sua),
7:30 p.m. (3rd .t 4th Sun)
Wednesday SoJVia: • 7:30p.m.

Church of God

•

'

·

0... S.vlolar Lulltenn Cllun:ll
Walnut and Henry Sta., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lnlrim pastors: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m .
Worship • I! a.m.

Reednllle Churdl ofChritt
. Pastor: Philip Sturm ·
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
· Wonhlp SeJVIc:e: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30

ML Morlllll Churdl of God
Racine
Pastor: Rev ..James Satterfield
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m.
.Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Pineo.-

Rev. OoolJO Weirick
Wonhip • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School -10:00 a.m.

ML OHvt Ulllted Metlsodllt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spin:a
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thumday Services • 7 p.m.
Melp Coopendnl'lrlsb
. Nortbtalt Cluster·
•
.
AJI'red
P•tor: Shuon Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

I

Rudond Clutn:h of God
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Chun:ll of God of Propbecy
0.1. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapm..
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Servia:s • 7 p.m. '

Ave.•

St.Jolmtrt zuet..rdl

'

CIJeoter

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Wonhlp-9a.m. ·
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thumday Services • 7 p.m.

..

JopJNI
.
Pastore Bob Randolph
Wol'lhip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m .

.....

-

.

Sunday Scliool • 9:30a.m.
Wol'lhlp. 10:30 ~.m.

·.

Congreg&lt;Jltonal
, Trlllky l;hurc:h

R&lt;edavllle
Past&lt;ir~ Rev. Charles Mull
WoiShip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
.
Fil!l Sunday of Month • 7:30p.m. service

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor:.Rev. Roland Wildm!Jl
Sunday school and worship 10:25

RACINE PLANING MILL
.Mill Work
Cabinet Making

Syracuse

•

992-3978

.

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Mairi Stntet I

RAWLINGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

992-37fJ5

264 South 2nd .

Middleport

.......,

Rlttlaad
Sunday School· 9!30 a.m.
. · Wonhlp • 10;30 a.m.
Thunday Servlceo • 7 p.m ..
SltlemCtttter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School • 9:15 a.m.
.WoDhip • I 0:15a.m.
Sno•nlllo ,
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 a.m.

Culllel
Putor; Kottneth Bak&lt;r

~

•

r..tletll1
.Pallor. Brian llar1tnoos
Sunday Scltool· 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • 9 a.m. ·
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Chun:h
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School tO a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

.....

PutM: Brim Hukneu
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m . .

Follis Vlllley Tobtmo&lt;le Church
· Bailoy Run Rood
Pastor: Rev, Emmett" Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thlll!lday SalVia: • 7 p.m.

Coolf!lle.Unlted Mdhodllltl'lrllh
· Pastor: Helen Kline ·
Cooh'llle Churcb
Mlln 4 Filth St.
Sunday School • 10 o.m.
Worshi~ • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Servtc:os • 7 p.m.
~
BetlseiCburdl
TI1Wftlhip lld., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
WoJShip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servlc:es -10 a.m.

Syroatae Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., SyracuSe
Sunday School • 10 a.m.·
E~nina - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servii'C , 7 p.m.
Huel Community Churcb
OffRI. 124
Pulor: Edsel Han
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10;30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Hodd,.P.rt Cllurdl
Grind Street
Sunday School· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday SeJVIoes • 8 p.m.

Torch Chur.~

Dyavllle Communll)' Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m . .
Wol'lhip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

N:1z:1rene

Mone.Chopel Chun:h
Sunday school· 10 a.m . .
Worship· ll a.m.
Wednesday SOrvicc • 7 p.m.

0,, Rd.63
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip , 10:30.o.m.

Ro&lt;kte Filii Chrdl of tile N _ .
Pallo~ Scott Raoc
.
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m,
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednoaday Setvices • 7 p.m•

Follis GGapel Church
Long Bouom
·sunday School - 9:30a.m.
· WoJShip. !0:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

Mlddhpoot C~un:ll of tile N...,....
Pulor. On:aory A. Cundiff
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
.Worship · 10:30 o.m., 6;30 p.m.
Wednoaday Services • 7 p.m .

ML Oli&gt;e CoiDIDunky Cbun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednoday Service· 7 p.m.

RHdaY11lo Fellowlltlp
CIJIIrdl of ... NIIIIAIN
Pulor: Mark A, Dupler
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednaday Setvlc:es • 7 p.m. .

Vnited Folth Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass ·
Pastor. Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m..

-....

Fairview lltiJle Chun:h
uJart, W.Va. Rl. I
Pastor; John Hart
Sunday School· 9:30 a,m.
WoJShip • 7:00 p.m.
Wednesdliy Bibto Study· 7;00 p.m.

Stlvel'lvRie Word ·otFahh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m:

Eaddine Hooae o.f Pnyer
(at Burlinpllll church off Route 33,
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship - 10 a.m.
· Wedoesday service.· 6:30p.m.

Putor: Kottnelh Balter
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Womhip ' 10:45 a.m. (111 A 3nl S1111)

Willie's Chapel Wetloyu
Coolville Road
PaStor; Rev. Phillip Ride11011r
Sunday School • 9:30'a.m.
Wotship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ServiCe - 7 p.m•.

Chrllllan Fellowlltlp Ceater
Sa&amp;em St, Rutland
Pulor. Roben E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerYicc- 7 p.m .

Harrisonville Communil)' Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday • 9;30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
. Wednesday· 7 p.m .

'

Freedom Goopel Million
Balcl Knob, on 0&gt;. Rd'. 31
Pastor; Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.

Calvary Bible Cllnn:h
Pomeroy Pike, 0&gt;. Rd.
PaStor; Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
WoJShip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SoJVice · 7:30p.m.

, . .New Lime Rd., Rutland
·
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Se.Vic:os: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
. Sunday, 2:30p.m.

M....taaStor
· Pastor: Kenneth Baker·
· Sunday School • 9;45 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
. Thumday S.rviCH • 7;30 p.m.

.I
r·

Faith Chlpel Open Bible Chufch
923 S. thin! St., Middlopon ·
Senior Pastor Micltael Pangio
Resident Pastor Richard Vermillion
~ sunday service, 10 a.m. ·
Wetbtesday scJVIa:, 7 p.m.

'l1le Belle'l'll'l' Fellowship Mlnlatry

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun) .

Corteton lnterdanomlutioul CllloJrdl
Kin1,1bury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
)
Suoday School • 9;30 o.m.
·
·•
WorshtpSOrvicel0:30a.m.
· No Sunday or Wednesday Nipt Scrv~ ,

Filth Fellowablp Cl"'ll..de for Chrtat
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
· Servi~ : Friday,_7 p.m. ·

Fallis FuU GGapel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Putor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WOfllhip • 9;30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday· fellowship seJVice 7 p.m.

.......,

y SeJVice • 7 p.m.

Appe Ufe Center
'Fuii·Gospel Church'
Piston John &amp; Patty Witdo
,603 Second Avo. Mason
773.5017
.Service limo: Sunday 6:00 p.m.

Hobson Chrtatlan Fellowship Church
Rev. Clyde Henderson
Sunday service, 1&amp;.00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7;00 p.m.·
Wednesday soJVice, 7:00p.m.

Pulor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sei'via:s • 10 a.m.

Luth eran

•

Hellliock G...,.e Church •
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sundoy school-10:30 a.m.
Worship • 9:30a.m .•. 7 pcm.

RDdond FrH Wlll Blpllst
Salem St.
Pastor. Rev: Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a,m.
.., Evenina- 1 p.m.
Wednesday Setvicn • 7 p.m.

~

Rdoldng.'Ufe Churdl
5.00 N. 2nd Avo., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Cbun:h of Jesus Chris~
. Apostolic Faith
1/4 mile past Fori Melgo on Now Uma Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m•
F~iday-7:00 p.m.
Clifton Tobemo&lt;le Churcb
Cliflon, W.Va.
Sunday School· 10 a.m .
Worship· 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.'
New ure VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pas1or: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. A 7 p.m. ·
Wednes~ay • 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pell.tecosaal Aililtabt)' ·~ ~
' . ~
SRl24Ra
t. 1.
, cmc

~(.... ...-~

.

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School -10 a.m .
EveninJ - 7 p.m. ,
Wednesday Servicei- 7 p.m.

.

«!)~

Middleport Peatec:ootal ·
Third Ave.
· Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m. .
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.

Pres byteri an
Syi'II&lt;Uit Flnt United Pmbytertu ·
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.
Harriaon•lll• Preob)'lertau C~urch
·worship- -9 a.m.
. Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Middleport Prabyterl.la
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m. •

' Seventh -Day Advenlist
Sevtnlh;Dit)' AdVIIItlll
Mulbony His. Rd., Pomeroy
. Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

Untted Brethren
ML Hem10a Vnited Brollsron
In Chrlot Chun:h
Te.as Olmmunily off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School ' 9:30a.m.
. Worship· !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Edon.Vnlted Bnthrea In Chrill
2 lfl miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor. Rev. Roben Markley
.
Sunday School • II a.m.
Sunday Worship· 10;00 a.m. &amp; 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday Servicts ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth SerYice -7:30p.m.

th~se area me·r chants
TIME FOR SPRING
Crow's
Family
Ramurant
RIDENOUR
\
CLEANING? .
/(6llluclly Fried ChickiHI'
CleB.n ou( your basement or
SUPPLY
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
attic with the help of the
I

'FHIUring
•

Chester
985-3308

' 992-5432

CLASSIFIED SECTION!

(PLEASE PRINT or TYPE)

NAME:--------,----,-----__;,-----

I YOURNAME(S)..;__ _ _- - : - - - - - - - - - - , . . , ; . , - - : - - - 1
.
I
11
I

You don't have to look far
to spy the best buys in the
·classifiedsl

•

:YOURADD~:---------------------------~------·--

"nilE FOR SPRING

I ·cJTY,STATE: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . : . . - - - - - " 1

1 PHONE: ________.,....-::-----------------------,.;

I

Lanrllle Christian Churdl
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship • !0:30 a.m, 7:30p.m. ,
Wedn~ ~ice 7:JQ P;!ll· ..--

Aatlqull)' Bopdtl
· Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 a.m.
Thumday Setvioos • 7:30. p.m.

' illlcntlH.n C.lllolle Clturdl
t6t Multony
Pomeroy, 992-S898
: r-: Rev. Wolltr E. Heinz
;Sat. Con. 4:45·5: ISp.m.; ~~~~- 5:30 p.m.
.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9.15 a.m.,

rCia(:i:E-o'N£-- l'i;GuEriNG..:StO.oo-B. i xsGUEUNG-w'ffliCiii'Ri:$ii.oo-,
1I .M01111R'S

Uberty Chrlsdon Chun:ll
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening· 6;30 p.m.
Thul!day Setvicc • 6;30 p.m.

•

Fiil Out The Form Below and Drop Off With Paymerlt To
The Daily Sentinel "Mother's Day"
P.O. Box 7'f9, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

·'111e Chardl ol J CIIrlll ofl.atter:DaJ ~
St. Rl. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
·
Sunday School10:20-lla.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood llcOs-12:00 noon
SaciiJI\eni'SeJVIce 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thun. ' 7 p.m.

lbnest o.ttuo:h Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., CheSler
Putor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Servic:os: 10 a.m. &amp;t 6 p.m.
Wedneaday SeJVices · 7 p.m .

JlockS'Jtttp
Pulor, Kollh Rader
' Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

Reorpalled Churdl of J - Cloriol
of Latter Da7 Salall
Portland·Racine Rd. ·
Branch Preoidenl • Micbllel Duhl .
Sunday School .· 9:30 a.m.
· Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Setvices • 7:30p.m.

·· ·-

Other Churches

.

Latter-Day Suints

'

Hltkory Hllla Church of Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoakin's
·Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday SeJVIces • 7 p.m.

Syncuoe Ftnt Churcb of Godl.
. Apple and s&lt;cond SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and WoJShiP' 10 a.m.
Evening Servij::es- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m,

C;1tholic

SUSAN .

.

1

.

Fllllls Bapdat Churdl
. Railroad St., Masoo
Sunda7 School • 10 a.m.
Won_!'Z • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wedn
y SeJVices • 7 p.m.

(PICTURE)

The Da:ily Sentinel

Bndford Church of Chritt
Comor of St. Rl. 124 ~Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doua Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberg., .
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 8;00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday Setviocs ·7:00p.m.

Wedn

Pastor; Mark Matson
WoiShip • 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 6 p.m.
'Wednesday Services· 7. p.m~

Pastor: Robert E. Robinson ·
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Womhip • 10:30 a.m. .
Bible Study Tuolday • 10 a.m.

RDdud CGmlll'litllJ Cburdl
Pastor; Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday Scho!JI· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday SetvicO&amp; • 7 p.m.

Wo~,:C. · l0a.m.,7p.m.

Iller CIJ1li'CII of tile

H - (Middleport'
Pastor: Ve1111SJ1ye Sullivan
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
WoJShlp • 10:30 a.m.

Pad Chapel
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m ..

""'

Soulls Bethel New Te118-l
Silver Ridae
Pastot: Roben Batbco
· Sunday School· 9 a.m.

Pwtlnd Fint Cluordo of ... Nazarone

Weoleyoa Bible Holt- Cllun:ll
15 Pcorl SL, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Ctlildren 1• service - 10 Lm.
Worship· 7:30p.m.
.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Launl CUll' me Melllodlll Cburdl
Pulor: Peter Tremblay ,
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. uul7 p.m..
Wednesday SeJVice • 7:00 p.m.

.

· FomtRua
..._, Cha~es Neville
Sunday School ' 10 a.m.
• Worship • 9 a:m.
Thumday SOrvlc:ea • 6;30 p.m.

Milltn'fllle
Putor-: Charles Neville
Sunday School • 9o.m.
Wonhlp • JO.a.m.

• Rutlond Cburcb of Chriot
Pastor; Eugene E. Underw~
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

.•

Sunday School ; 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

Pitstor. Rev. O'Dall Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeJVico ·7:30p.m.

Hyaell Run Holla ... Churdl
Putor: Robert Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wor.~hip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thul!doy Service • 7:30 p.m.

. Bndbury Church ofChril!
Pastor; Jake Olpley '
Sunday School-9:30a.m. '·
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Silver Rua Bl~lll
Pastor: Bill Uttle
Sunday School- IOa.m.
. Womhip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednosday Services· 7:30·p.m.

.
,

Jllotwooda

Putor: Keith Rader

Plae Grove Bible Holt- Cbun:b
Ill mile off Rt, 325

Tuppen Plot. Church ofCluilt
·Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service - 9 Lm. ,
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School-10;15 a.m.

Rldae Ftnt Bopllst
Putor: Rev. Lawrence T. Haley
· Yourh Pastor: Aaron Young
. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worohip. 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SeJVla:s • 7;00 p.m.

Pulor: Kollh Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.mt
Wonblp • 9 I.IJI.

U.dlns Crock Rd., Rutland
Pistor: Rev. Dawey Kina
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sundoy woJShip -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayet mecdn&amp;· 7 p.m.

Zlotr Clmrcb ofCluiot
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RL143)
. Pastor. Roger Watson
. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
· Worship· 10;30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Setvlccs • 7 p.m;

N.......,.
PutM: Rev. Horbon Gtale
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W -•1 11
6
• •.,, P• a.m.. ~.m.
• Wednotday Serv.lccs • p.m.
I!MJ .d CIJudlof ... N~
Putor. Samuel Buyo
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7·p.m.

lt!leritrtae

a- of Sh.oroo Hollntu Clntrch

'

·p

, . . Go~pe~' 'ah'h •
Hiland Road, l'omcfGy

3304~

Putor. Roy Hunlei
Sunday School' to a.m.
Evenina7:30 p..,,
Tuesday &amp; Thumday . 7:30p.m.

Pll•el'lt1 Churd. of the Nazlreae
Pallor: Rev. Thomas Mc:Ciun&amp;
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. t0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednotday SeJViccs: 7 p.m.

Sunday SQool • 9:45 a.m.
Worship • llun. ·
Wednesday~ -.7:30p.m. ·

Calvory Ptlpim Cltlpel
Harrisonville !load
Paslot: Rev. '-:ictor Rowh
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship·· llo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvic:e • 7:30 p.m . .

Bnnrlllti&gt;w Rklae Cburcb ora.rtot
Pastor: Jack Ollegrove
Sunday School -9:30 a.m •..
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday S.tvices, 6:30p.m . .

ASh'Street, Middleport
· I'Uior. Lea Hayman .
Sunday Service • 7;()() p.m.
Sundoy School -10 a.m.
Wednesday·Setvla:-7:00p.m.

·

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

In other club news Rotarians
Maxine Gaskill'· and Gene Riggs
were welcomed back to the club
after their winter hiatus in Aorida.
Birthday greetings were sung to Jim
Mourning and Gene Riggs. A happy
anniversary wish· was extended to
Gene and Judy Riggs. A special presentation was . given by Pancake
Breakfa~t Chairperson Lloyd Blackwood to all the sponsors . of this
year's successful pancake breakfast.

•

Keao Cbun:h ofChrtll
• Worship · 9:30a.m •.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Putor-Jeffrey Wallace ·•
1st and 3rd Sunday

~

Phase two would be completed
during 1999 and 2000 and would
add 4200 square feet to the school
program with the addition of two
classroom· learning centers, a. facility ·
cafeteria (to permit full program usc
of the gymnasium) and some
kitchen renovations. Total project
costs, including site development,
arc project to be $951 ,000 over the
three year period. $300,000 of the .
cost will be provided 'by a capital
construction grant through the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental Disabilities
obtained by Represen.talive Joh~
Carey in the FY '97 and '98 state
. capic budget.

information meetings. Clara Mae lence in New York.
Sargent gave the treasurer's report - A ·surprise layelle· 'Shower was .
and noted that the bake sale held at held for Melissa Harkness. The
the Aower Festival was a success. UMW presented her with a rocking
Hat and miuen funds were collected. chair and several members also gave
Members decided against having gifts to her.
Refreshments were served ·by
an election day dinner in · May. The
group will be instrumental in serv- Alice Wolfe and Clara Mae Sargent.
ing the Cooperative Parish Volunteer A baby theme was carried out with
Appreciation dinner on May .14, 6 teddy• bear plates and napkins. Tlic ·,
p.m. held in the Racine social rooin. cake ·was inscribed "Welcome
Plans were finalized for. the Baby."
Get well cards were signed durmother-daushcer banquet to be held
May 10,6 p.m. at the church. Reser- ing the fellowship hour.
Aitending were Opal Diddle,
vations. may be made by calling
Opal Diddle (949-20SI), Clara Mae Chris · Hill, Sally Caldwell, Karen
Sargent (949-2604) or Lee Lee (949- Walker, ·llrenda Hill, Lois Bell, Marilyn Bogard, Teri Powell, Donna
2454).
The mission report was given by Matson, Sharon Hili, Melissa HarkMelissa Harkness. Lee gave some ness, Ruth Frank, Margie West,
disturbing statistics on children who Gladys Shields, .Margery Roush,
live in poverty. Also she related the Etta .Mae. Hill, Jennifer Walker,
magazine "Response" editor's per· Clara Mae Sargent, Alice Wolfe and
~al experience with subway vio- Lee Lee.
I

\

.

·I6urMom
.....- .
. . . I!!.

Program on Mothers presented at UMW
Karen Walker presented the program "I Learned it from my Mother:·
a1 the April meeting of the Racine
United Methodist Women.
The focus statement centered on
intergenerations--acknowledgilng
and celebratina differences. Traditions and family values were discussed and scripture from . Timothy ·
was read . Marilyn Bog.,.P was read·
er and members sang "For the Beauty of the Earth". The program closed
with prayer by the leader.
Lee Lee, president, led the business which opened with the reading
of a devotion by Helen Steiner Rite.
She led the group in reading the
Lit111y on Purpose.
Olris Hill pvc the secretaty's
repQI1 and lhlllk you notes were
read f'rom ABC quilt coordillalor,
ADK president, Jim Spencer. Mildred Caruhlll 11K1 Cora Beegle. A
memcnndum was read concerning

.
• ll a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wodneodoy Setvice • 7 p.m.

"·"

MR/DD. program presented at Rotary meeting
Steve Beha. c•ccutivc director of
Carleton School and Meigs Industries. was featured speaker at the.
meeting
of
recent
~iddlepon!Pomeroy Rotary.
· · Beha gave information on services provided for children and
adults .with developmental disabili.iies and .their families who reside m
Meigs County.
.
He discus&amp;ed .the new 1.8 mill
continuing levy to be on the May 6
ballot for the purposes of maintenance, capital construction and opcration of Carleton·Sc~ool and Meigs
Industries.
He sai'H that the levy passed in
1992 provided funding for additional services to· be provided by the
Board. Those additional service~ for ..
the benefit of children and adults
with developmental disabilities
included physical therapy, speech
tnerapy. occupational therapy. three
ildult habilitation staff members, an
additional multi-handicapped class.
two additional pre-school classes, a
full-time center-based Early Inter·
yention program and service coordinator, part-time adapted ('ohysical
education. part-time physical thera-

.

CllotnlloftlleN-PIII&lt;lf: Bill Stireo
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wol'lhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

r!"!:.~to

lluY11lo H.u.. Clntrdl
31057 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Youn&amp;
• · S1111day school • 9:30a.m.
·
Sunday worship ."10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer sctvia: • 7 p.m.

Mlddhport Cllurdt ofCluilt
5th ond Main
PUaor.Alllortson · ,..
Youlh Minister: Bill frulcr
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wmship- 8:15, t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se"'iocs • 7 P·~·

871

Ceetnl Chtolor

Hol1ness

. Poaint7 Wallldo O.n:ll ol CUitl
332211 ChUdn:n'a Homo Rd. I
Sunday School· 11 a.m. · ·
Wol'lhip • !O..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlc05 • 7 p.m. 1 ·

u...,.

su.day School • p 1.111.
Wonblp • 10 o.m.
Tueoday SeJVieol- 7:30 p.lll.

G,_9;L
la.rdl
326 E. aln Si., Pomeniy
Re&lt;:tor: Rev. D. A. duPllnder
.Holy Euchlrist and
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour followh•

212 W, Moln St•
Pulor: Nell Proudfoot
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonlnp- 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednotday Setvices • 7 p.m.

RUTLAND •• Rutland Township
Trustees, Thursday. 6 p.m. Rutland
Fire Station.

LEARNING ABOUT PREVENTION ftldent8 learned ,
&amp;buM pntvantlon atratagles
at canter's Cave. Among the 1.70 student. and staff attend:during the racent Teen lnatltute Retreat
Ing - • theaa from Meigs Tim Peavly, Taryn Doidge, Swcle Read, JennHer Heck, Chandra Moon, April
Foreman, Bethany Cooke, Seva Cline,· Amber Keasler, and Jason Counts, student st8ff; Tarnealca
Counts, C.D • .Ellis, JOhn Cooke, Max Bratton, Chris Snouffer, ·charla Burge, Cory Stewart, Melissa
Davie, Jake Birchfield, Scott Johnson, Amanda Miller, Anne Story, Michelle Kennedy, Kayle Stover,
Andrea Nautzllng, Sara Flta, Benjamin Blacl&lt;burn; and Bill Koon and Jessica Radford, Health Racovery
Services, Inc., mff.
.

'-lor: Sharoa

Church of CIH 1st
Pootieroy Chtudo oiCitrill

.LETART·· Leiart Township Tru~s. Monday, 6 p.m. office building.

RACINE ·• Southern Local
kindergarten registration and screening, Thursday and Friday at kindergarten room. Call for app&lt;lintmenl,
949-2664. School nurses will be present to answer questions concerning
imm·unization requirements. Take
birth certificate, social security card
and immunizations records.
·

urch Directory
,....... ............

t

There will be a dinner at noon IUid
services start at I p.m. hila Les
Hayman iavites public.

MAKE CHICK PAYABLE ro THE DAILY SENTINEL

I .
~
L- _._ - - _ _._ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---~ ---.J

a••NING?
out,.,.,.
•imllflf or
llfllc .... ,.. , . . ol,..

C,_,
'

. : CLASSIFIED SECTION!

"'

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED ADt

P,J,
•

PAULEY~ AGENT

NationWide Ina. Co.
of Columbua, Oh.
804W. Main
992·2318 Pomeroy

'fi

EwiNG FUNERA'- HOf.tE
"Dignity

ant! ~.Always•

Emblllhed 1913
'

OHIO

992·2121

I

�••

P11ge I

e

•

Frldlly, lilly 2, 1111

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The J)elly Sentinel

•

'

The O.lly Sentinel•.,....

Ohio

Public Node 1

....................
I'U&amp;IC NCmCI

5

NOTICIIe ..........

1117, .. 10:00 ........ .....
.... will ........... 111
Llnooln Hill,
ClND,ID ... tar .... tarlowlnll Cl
1117 CHIVIIOLET t-10
PICKUP
1QC8114-

....,,_.,.....Cet
.......... . . . . .

70

Yardllll

110...,. ... ,
.

POII!II'OY,

:

lllddllport
• Vlclnfty

'*-:"'fl

n

'

SyracUM

81YIIIt8
ColllpllnJ,
•Pomeror, Ohio, . - .

=~~~~.r:.=

In Loving
MemoiyOf
' NANCY ·

Card of Thanks

Society scrapbook-.-. -

MEIGS REUNION
ber of Preceptor. Beta Beta Chapter, .
Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
' Plans are well underway for the who died in November. Special attending were Carolyn Grueser,
class reunion of Meigs High Class guest of the chapter at the dinner Carol McCullough, Jean Powell,
of 1972 to be held Saturday, May 24, was her daughter, Mary Mora. Xi · Ann Rupe , Norma Custer, Donna
at the Meigs County. Senior Citizens Gamma Epsilon's president, Patty Byer, Eleanor Thomas, Ruth Ann
·
.
Pickens, narr,ated the service. ·
Riffle, Carol Adams, and Clarice
Center.
Dinner will tie at6:30, dance fol Girl of the Year selections were Krautter.
lowing with Jon Buck, discjoekey, announced by the chapters, with
playing music of the seventies. It Carolyn Grueser being named as
was reported that .there are approxi - Preceptor Beta Beta's choice.
mately 60 reservation s already
returned with the majority of them
being from classmates out of the
.
'YV 21
airMeiqs Countlj .
area.
Local classmates are urged to
observance of

wi/1

'

send in their reservations as soon as
possible. Those who did riot recei ve
a reservation form or know of a
classmate that did not receive one
, are asked tu contact Dave
Krawsczyn , 985-3975, Connie Lanning Marcum 985-4141 or Marge
Riggs Barr 992-7285.

PATTE"SON
· May2,1984
May2,1997
We ml11 ··you a
little too often,
We mill you a
little too much,
Wi mill you a
little more each day,
have, · b11n
without you with ua
tor 13 I~ years, ·
God kne'!'. what
wa1 beat whett He
took your hand
early thl1 morning,
There will be no
more pain
or
dlacomtort, you will
be in angel from
thla.day forward,
. We love and mill
you very much,
Hu1bancl, Children
and Grandchildren

w,

National Day of Prayer.
8:00p.m. 'jriclcllj, Ma!12ncl
1:00 p.m. Satun;ta!1. Ma!1 ·3rcl
8:00pm Saturclaf1, Ma!13rcl

SYUCUSE

Saturday, May 3 and
Sunday, May 4
12 Noon U~tll 5 P.M.
Co~nplete

Line of Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Plants
Beautiful Hanging Baskets
Lar.ge PotJed Hybrid
·New Guineas
4 ln. Geraniums and ·
·Asso.rted 4 ln. Plants
Large Azaleas, Rhododendron
Shrubs· &amp; Trees

\

FOUNDER'S DAY DINNER
The annual Beta Sigma Phi
Founder's Day observanc~ was held
at the Blennerhasset Hotel, '" Parkersburg, W.Va. Thursday night.
.
The celebration was ho.sted by X1
Gamlna Epsilon Chapter and included a tribute to Maida Mora, a mem-

·Free Refreshments
•Free Hanging Baskets to be given
away ev•ry hour
•Free Live Plant for Everyone

Speech/Language Patholqgists
from Pleasant Valley Hospital
will provide FREE
speech/hearing screenings to
. children of all ages in ·
celebration of Better Hearing
and Speech Month
.•Children's Clinic
· (2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant)
•May 7, 1997, 1 to 4 p.m.
· If you would like to schedule an
i

ad ctner .. I I ; hOitt number

(1114) 2811111.
aucoaeelul blddtr only
will be notified. The
--•ful bidder lhould
note lhe1 • perfOrmance
~ le required 10 be
poeted. Th• amount

.,..,. on 1M "llld Form"
for aacfiiiUUnt-

.

ft1 23, a, 30; (5) 2; 4TC

I.
I

l

.

~.

Public Notice ·

CHICKEN &amp;
RIB BBQ
SUNDAY,
MAY4
11 A.M,
POMEROY FIRE
DEPARTMENT

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bid will be accepted In
.the
Mttge
County
Commllllonera'
Oftlot
until 12 noon, 5:19-87 for
111pplylng end lniiiiiiHng a
new elr-condltlonlng •Y•·
ttm tor the County Court
Houae per the lollowlng
ecope:
• Supply ona I!O:ton AC
unh with two compl'M80fll,
• Supply one chilled
wlllllr evaporator bllrral lo
rtplect nllltlng unh locllt·
ld In the beHrntnl.
• Labor to remove Did
tvaporllor barrel.
.
• Labor 10 lnllall MW
evaporator bllntl.
'
• Labor to 1111 naw AC
unit, to be loclltld behind
the courl houu.
• Supply all piping,
wlriiiQ, conduit, lneullltlon,.
end piping hanger• 10 .co,.
nac:t AC unh end evaporator berral (four CDDPtr llnae

end two eonduli 'jln.. of
apprOximately 150 n. each)
• Labor IO 11111111 plpiiiQ,
wlrlnt. eondult, lneulltlon,
and
piping
hangera
- n AC unh and evap-

KERRY'S KARAOKE
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nile

You Don\ H.,. Tol""" for
To Spy tile Bat Buys In
the Cltlttl(lfdt.

MOOSE LODGE

Happy Ad

5tuatiolal Results

LIVElli
1·9Q0.(414)·1 020.
bt. 1482 '

Tlr8d of peylng high
cost labor ra111?
HOok.up charges?
We'll mldch or beat
. anyothlr ·
competitor'• price?

33 AUTO CLINIC &amp;
24 HR. TOWING
. SR 33 Pomeroy, Oh.

·• Evacun and cherge
. new ayalem with freon.
• llerlup end .cheek out
eyatem to lneure proper
opel'llllon.
• Ona concrete ped
locatacl behind the Courl
HOUH tO Ml - AC unit
on. Pld aiD neede to be 2'0
fNiby10IMI•
Side will be opened II
1:00 p.m., Mey ·1t, 1tl7 In
1118 Commlaalontra' Ofllce.
Commlaalo.-.. rteervt
the right to IICCtpt Dr rtjecl
eny or el bldt
Qlorle Kklee, Clerk
• Melp County

.."FINE LINE"

S.HOOTING MATCH ·
Forked Run Sportsman Club ·
Friday, May 2, 19n
7:30p.m. ·
ShootiiiQ Hog • 2 Halves;
freezer

,_IYtd.

Commllalonert

'-;:=======::::;,

T'lJRKEY/HAM
Homemade Noodles, "
Green.Beans, Slaw, ·
Mashed Pot"toes, · "

would like to
thank the citizens
of Long Bottom

BINGO .

I

POST 467

.

for the carc11,
gifts, phone Clllll
and 1 apeclll

.MON. &amp; WED.
6:3.0 P.M.
STAR BURST

Southam High School
Tllkeouta IVIIillbll.
-.ro. Studeritll

plel1ure to hive
~rvedyou.
PhllpD;· R~

,.lllred Rani
11£Si\ioYE · Carrier
ROAD

I

Dessert. ·

11 :Qo-2:00 at

Hwatmy

$1500.00
$50.00 ....

Roll,

~;

'Tea, Lemonade, Coffee r.
SUNDAY, MAY 4 H

thlnkl to thotl
thlt .uendld my
Retirement Party.

. FLOWER SALE·

PfleiS 40
TODfiYI

POMEROY, OH.

II

Free E.umatn

Howard L

wrtw.er

Gutters ·
Oo\VIIapoutl
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES~
3117f9o4/TFN

IRIIBLS
•Small Engines
•Lawn Mowers
•Chain Saws
•Weed Eaters ·
2 mi. off Rt. 7,
Leading CrHk Rd.

·..-. Big Be~Fabrkatlon, , .·
Machine li.Welding Shop

614-992..7643

ROOFING
·
•
NE:W-REPAIR:

M-S 9-5

R.

Monday-Fridly ~ 8:00 a.m.' 4:30 p.m.
SaiUiday •,11;00 a.m: , 12 noon .

·Garages .. Replacement Windows
.Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and.RESIDENTIAL
FREE 'ESTIMATES

·.

.260 Condor Street ; .
Pomeroy, OhiO .457e9
A Dlvlalon Uri Nlcholt Metal, INc,
Phone:
992·2406
. Fax:

•I IPftC ·

·'

••

· r...,. .....,..,.... .

·.

PO~JOBI

• Fertilizer (B•g O
or Build ·
'
· : : .· • DeKslb &amp; Pioneer Seeds ·
~ '[ i • Small Seeds • ChemiCBis
;; :
·• Twine .• Feed • Lime·.
~- - . i. . ' . 915·3831
.,

I

'

I I

'

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985·4422

POMEROY, OHIO .·
614~992·7119

!012S/9611tn

·. . Cllllrilng'Saptlc Systems
Port.A.john • Rantala • Servlcecl
No:Extrll Ch9 fOr Even~•
ttr, Prompt~lce
7

Daily Horoscope,
up·to·clate soap
res1lts. Cal nowl
1·900j263·2700
EXT. 6925.
$2.99 per 11in.
MISt H 18 yrs.
Strv·U .
(619) 645·8434

Rejoicing Ufe

Christian School

Flats $6.00
Saturday: 10 to 3

·

IWa).

..

Sunset Home :
.Construetion :
New Construction·8i
Remodeling
Kitchen Cabinets :
VInyl Siding - Roots
Decka • Garages :

SOJ.ID'VJNYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

I
.

Free Est/mete•

..

'

I

llf \'EARS ltl8fJSINESS, .

••FAt;TORY
DIRECt,'
PRI£ES"
Quality Window Syst~ms

. ~'liillif~l. pet

Raan•a

Roofing- GuttersSiding

.· : .

CONSTRUCTION : .

'J

110 Court St,

Ar,r,lJIJtiCI r.H r1 I c42 People loll 11 ·25 •
In Tho Next 30 Day a. '
·!l,uoranlaelfl1 -800·8110- ;

Olllo.

.
WVI023477

MIDDLEPORT

614/992-7274

'

REPAIR OR .NI;\Y: ··.·. ·

537 BRYAN PLACE

Free Estimates

.~ ~ · J.~~~~
,J:~:~~~

· · i ..

·.. Farm

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

DIN'S

.

AII'Btlon ~or oSIIIM I R..... '.

··;·~~+o..;.,_----~~;.;.._.....;._,...;_-1

.. 614-74!.'·341~ )

Chester, Ohio ·

992_.

Old Bley:

c-plete Maeltlne Sllcip Senlee rabtlcallOa
Steel Salet, WeldloaSvppl!es, ladwtilill Gu
Radiator
&amp; Replac:emeat ·

Niw ftC?Jnn • VInyl Siding New

.

IUI.-7 2841
FrlnCh Doo11,
Olahwllhor,
Chlldrono .

.koJM impi'Oflelhertll. Call Today!

BISSE .· •BUILDERS, INC~

992·2772
8:00 e.m.-3:30 p.m.

•Replace111111t Wlnclow~
•Build G~rages
. :
•Storm DoDrs &amp; ·
Windows
•RDDII Atldillons

'''

'I
!'

FREE ESTIIIIATES :

....,.....

..
..."·

MGA Construction Services :
Elect.rlcal - PlumbinG - Carpantry
·Repairs .;. ·conversions - Remodels

.~-,

w l •.

.

oRoctftng
4t•llililor a Exterior

..

~ENTEFI
~lbirry Helghtl,

. oPtllnllng

• · Pomerov

m.

'

' · ROIERT·IISSELL

CONIII!tUCIION
;.
Homes .·
"Giil'lgel
.oC~pletl

.

l
..I

, t ESnMATE~S

~~Nn~

In Good Condl
. Jlon, Call 614-245·
5887.

.

Er.1Pl OYr.H:: NT
Sf:RVICES

bier.

..

Will do houat CIMnlng, Olptr~
S.,13.

.
Will mow

·cuSTOM

llllt.,

s.n. 3od '

Would llkt To Walch ·--An Older· ...
Peroon Each Day' At Notdld tn
Tho Crown City Or Gellpoilla
AANI. Bl4-38-1o:l6.
.:·

411,

~INArJCIAl

nc.. flatwoodl Rd..

FrldoJ Mtr 2nd, 0 • •· S.lunay
·1111 3rd, 0 ill!, n-d. eul·c;.;;o:.;m;;:pu.;.;tor.;,_U_ao_ra__
N•_od_t_d-.w-.-rll 210
grtl. cloflll. 1 mloc.
·
own ~aura. l20k .ID 150klyr 1·
Sat. I Sun., 31085 Beohln .Rd, 100 311 7118&amp;11108. ·
Rlllnl.

Iq

EVENING MEAL

Bullnett
Opportunity

.

. .

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

.
In Pt. Pltaltnt .

lor lu-.304-117S.I272.

Camp Grounda,
II, TV. !ldno ~-

MltMn ......

l~na

WOuld like to tear down okl btrn ' '

s..t lnd liUttl snot, .... 1-3,
Thuradly, FrldoJ, ........ .....
4:30. .

' . . 014-14J.21S8

.

area. Call 304-675-3901.

lltdolltport, Ohio, 13t HyHII

• Stump Grinding

AT
'
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER
Mul~rry Helgbts, Po..e.,y

Ptofasalonal TrH Soivlce, S.....,

Removal, F,.e Eatlmateal ln -

ence, ·hive referencea. 3CM47&amp;-

.
:s.el'•'.. Ca., · ··.·SltiRPEiilll
•·.' 949·2.647-

I

304-1175-4817,

lng 'nd experience. Hav• ,..n,
rateram:et. SB.OO per hour; CaM
Proula Gilbrldo, 814+11-23211.

. -~ liUI'P~S
..

.

~RI·•~ P .,. •
Joe'N, Sayre · . .

c

millfuat cal

81'.-«6-30110.

• Top • Trim • Removal

Free

10 1ho

SI'RINO ClEANIHCI

. :·$EIVICE

·• ·Hou.. SitM . ·.

20 YIS. EKp. •· Ina. Owner: RoMio Joneo

haul your logs

304-675-1957,

Wii care lor Lho l1dt or ~ 2·
3 dayo per wook. Havo NA lnlln-

:Mie#IW. . . . .
JJm•ltoue a G...,..
SepiiC Syaten6e .

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

Got Your Spring Cleanl"ii Over
Wilh Now &amp; Spend Your Summer
In leisure. Call Now To Gel Your
Spring Favor Cleaning Dlocountl

892-2181

.

terior Trim, Dec:kl, Cabinet In·

llall,tioo Caunrtrrops, Reltf'enc-

auranoa, Bidwell, Ohio. .814·31891148, 814-3e7·70tl); :

· lli'dlll ·
.

Stop &amp; Com~
FREE

'

Expeolancod Cirpenny Work, ln-

Wonlld: Uaed Hordwaod Flooring Goooges Portable Sawmill, don't

.

: TabiMtor$10
.. ..
•.
Call
.'

""'u Jim Stull304-875-i272.

Noad yard work done? Call Sain

$ENIOR QIIZENS

·------1···--ij.--..;.....;-....
Aem~llng

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950·3359

$4iturdlly; May 3
.. , '.iOO • 4:00

~~a Plumbing .

rebuilt Referencea-Free Elll·

Condltion,
Notd Not Run Or Mo- · C II F E ·
•1 4 3tOr Seaarer, UOtar Bike 814--446· ea, 8 0' atimat... u - , _

FLEA MARKET

.oR!Iom Adcittl- .
'"""'GMtgee .

'I
l ;:- 614-992~70

.
Wanted: lnclktn .Mo,torcycle Any

RUMMAGE SALE

·(ARPENiEl SE1YKE

. ,
Al8o 0oncret. .Work .
(FR~ UTIMATn)
¥OUNO
.. ' 91Na111
" - ' " · Olllo .
. .
.. .

Caro 8t4-4.te.W.RT, Or 814-3888062.

...

-

v.c:.

Wanted To Bur: We Bur Junk

Brian Andet'son

. .··· YOUNG'S

WICKS
.HAULING

n.,.l,

decks, vinyl tiding, add·On ·addi·
lions, cabinet refadng or

Eve. Ph. 9*2&amp;34

ChC~Ster, Ohio :

(Lime Stone-.
Low Rltll)

E•per;.n&lt;»d CIIJ*'Jrr and r...,..
doling. lnaldo and ou1alde,

~Ph. 992-3871

Johl"! Teafoi'd

Llmtstone, ·
•I ~~ Gravel, Sand, .
I
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

j

..... SehpHelp

Repair. Custom
Orders, Awards,
erigiaving

..

&lt;

3

. . . .apalrs .

Golf Sales, Club

"

o-r .

Ucensed • Bonded
Insured

· · Golfleaona
'
.

• Umestone
• Gravel
·· • RefUse • Etc.

.

614-992-3120

-

Koun~ Klub

. (614) 742-3100 .

· Quality Work at
a Fair Prlcel
550PaQeSt,
Middleport, Oh. 45780
Home Ph,
Don Geary,

HAULJNG
;Will hllul_- jut c.H.
R0101111bl1 Rlltas

D.GeaJ7's

........
=..

The

'

''

Cheshire. May 1, 2, 3. Jeans. ,
leather cOats, children's
clothes, lots of misc.

Card of Thanks

·,~,...
.
. .. "Stop putfilw off tlwae IJIIU!Ia ~d

FWARIER IISUUICE

We honor Golden
Buckeye Cards
&lt;Ji:&gt;en
. . Daily g.s Sun

Galllpolll, Ohio .45831.
'

1~~&amp;.;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll
Annowlcementa

•Remodeling

~~:~~~~$2.00 ea.

. 949·2168

SERVICE

II-.

•Addition•

115¢.$1.25

992-1330

DUMP TRUCK

Eur Workl Eacotlon.t Perl At,
oomble PfodUcta
cal
- - .1-llolch 81., Mlddlt- Toll Fr• t-100·417·1111 EXT.
...... ..., •12nd.
.
12110.
•

•NewHomll .

!60' Communications

-Rubber trees &amp;elephant
ears·$5.50
·

992e2483

BIG GARAGE SALE
121 South LOcust St. In

(5) 2, t, 11; 3TC

.

r. :113 w. 2ND.ST.

Bloomlrig &amp; Foliage
Baskets $5.75-- $6.75
ln. Alsolt. Pots

$3.81 per min.
M11et be 11 Jd.
ilerv-u (f1t) 141 '1434

4117t11M.

Friday &amp; Saturday Night
9:00 P-t:n-·1 :00 a.m. ·
Popular Band

oretor.

Eom 11.000 WHI1Ir ..,.,. ......

a. 1117, Dle-

~

~$6.5QIIIt

GIFTED
PSYCHICS!!

QuALm

Presents

1•

o,.,. For Sprint
Setuon

'TRUCKING

COURT STREET GRILL
Public Notice

5 .,,......., . ,,

ACE, Dopl: IHI,
mond lilt, CA e1JW.

.

Pansiea $6.50 llat
•
All wgetable &amp; bedding ;

R. L. HOLLON

AI

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE

P8id't

••u•n..,._

742·2925

Spring Open Bouse

Funds for these scholarships are
provided by giOs from alumni and
friends of the University. alumnae of
Western College, corporations.
foundations. and community organizations .
·
For more information on Miami
University -Alumni Scholarships,
students inay contact the scholarship
area of Student Financial Aid,
Miami University, Oxford. (513 )
529-8757.

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF IIALE OF
SURPLUS 8UILDIN08 OHIO
. DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DMSION OF REAl,
ESTATE AND LAND ,
MANAGEMENT
WIL.iiON WETLANDS
WILDUFE AREA
Soaltd bide will be
received by the Ohio
Department of Naturel
Ro.Ourcea, Dlvlelon of Rnl
Eatete
end
Lend
Menegement, Bldg. C-4,
Fountain
Sq~era,
Columbue, Ohio 432a4, up
. to end Including Mey 13,
11187, until 3:30p.m. for two
(2) eurpiua building•
located In Middleport
T-nahlp, Mtlge Counly.
All bide are to be
eubmltted on fornie
• turnlehtd
by
the
Depertment of Netural
Reeource• no later than
Mey 13, 1VV7. The State
raHrvee the right to reJect
· any or en bide.
For "Bid Forma• or
fut1Mr
Merk lnfDrmlllon,
Hemming, con1act
•M8MIIIr1 1403 C H &amp; 0
Road, O.k HIH, Ohio 4111118,
114,.12·7124 or Sendy
~. Dlvlelon cif Re•l
Eelate
end
L8nd
Manegernent, 81 the eboVe

1182-5771

"W.S.ue-rou
.None,"., ...

MU SCHOLARSHIP
MichaelT. McKelvey, Syracuse,
has been selected to receive the A.
R. McMicken Memorial Scholarship at MiatTii University for the
coming academic year.
'
Students receiving Miami Univers ity-Alumni Scholarships are
selected ori the hasis of superior academic and personal merit from over
5.500 candidates each year. This
year, nearly 3,000 students will
receive scholarship assistance total ing over $5 million.

Public Notice

Now

In Memory

CDII.....I prior 10 .....
Further; The 1'11'11111'11 11enk

.

p PFeUIIIP

Pelt-TIIM GYI,._ _ . ..

No Olllltltion. ...., LIIAII1t:

•CILLtJLAR PHONES
.
..

EIH22374U
The F - llenk and

PROCLAMATION SIGNED - Meigs Local Supt, Bill Buckley met with achool Right to Reid and Mlth
Week dlrectore to sign a proclamldlon designating May 5-9 for thl obeervance. Dlrectore p!c:tured left
to right, front, Tammy Chapman, Janet Hoffman, Julia Vaugha!'l, Tara Wooda, (Buckley), Wendy na1ar,
Liz Story, Becky Triplett, and Linda McManua, and back, Bryan Zirkle, Roger Birch, Tereaa Carr,
Mayer, Paula Chancey, Vlc.kl Haley, Barb Math-a Crow, Judy McCarthy Ron Drexler, and Tim Lawson.
Directors not able to attend were Shirley Van Meter and Ed Bartels.

~"

....

"""""
h p eAI-.- , _ . . . . . . .

,.,

Middleport Church
of ihe Nuarene
would like to thank
the following for
their eupport during
thllr Sundey School
Drive:
Adolph'e, Dairy
QuHn, Locker 219,
~hlo River Bear C,:~.,
Johneon'e, Me I
Pa'e Diner, Sub-Way,
Mill St Book Store,
Crowa, Captain D'a,
· Fruth'a, Pizza Hut,
McDoneld'a, Dan'a,
Middleport Dept
Store, Long John
Silvera, Wendya,
Domlno'a, Hilla, BIS
Wholeule, King
Bulldere, John I
Diana Aah, Dol:!
Lowery, George
Steward, Ponderoaa.

. . . . . . TTl

IRUSMTIRS

.

614 88.8 1378

'

Uwn llowiii(J ..
~

'1\aesdlys aad Thlll'ldlys
Serving from 4:30.5:15
Doaatlon $4.00 for .....

·;IO"ortAnr
.
.
'

'

'

8~n1oltONN '.

'Public is invited
II

'

.'

.

.. ... .. _...

'•

.:: .
'

I

..

�•

Friday, lilly 2, 1117

•-

Friday, lilly 2, 1187

The o.lly 811"!-' • P

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ACROSS

PHlLLIP
ALDER

Pwll Plue, lllvar llfkfllo Plan.
11&lt;-441-41710.

•••eo

1887
3 or 4 liodroom.
$1,358-.._ 1228/mo. Frao olr.
lldrtlng, &amp; dlltwty. only •• QokHomo.e NltiQ, WV. 304-755AllrNI .ts)ale OCI\II- og 111
thiS newspaper IS Wlfed to
lie F - 1 Fak HpOIInO Act
o1 19118 _ , ~ Mllegal
t o _ ....,........,...
Imitation or~
based on race, color, relglon,
"" lomlllalatalui or national
origll1, or any Intention to
malce any such preference,
Hmltatton or clscrlmlnatton."

This newspaper wll no4

•

koowlngty aocept
advertisements for reeleatote
whlet11!1111 vtolallonol the law,
OUt reeder'S are hereby
lnlormed flat all dwellings
Mvertlaed In ltojs n . _ r
are available on an equal
otlPOnunlly basis.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ,

REAL ESTATE

1808 Lincoln Hoightt, PD......,. 2
or 3 bedroom. equipped kitchen,
lull baaemant, FP, CA, fariced
'"""yard, S35,000.

3 Bedroom Ranch Style Ho.,.
Barn, Moln·

1enance Fr.., Located: Addison
T...,.lip,

..__ .......,

5115.

•••-1112.

AJHENI MOBTOAQE cg
Arancinv aYallable for Houand llolile HomtL New or ulld
pun:ha- Rollntnclng: 811-

1111-: Lind can...,11. No

appiiCIIIIon Ill: Allwlla ol crodlt
Cd ~ .,r a,.. onalyllial

.,r

Brick Houao-Comer of Birch Ave
a SelldhiU Rd. Nowlr roniodeled,
2.5 bathe, large living room wt
IIane fheplac:e, ramlly rooin I
dining room, 3 or .t bedroom .
30&lt;1-87!&gt;8201 • .

Fat- by Owner
llldd......,:
38 Rutlond Sl, 3 bodooom, 2 balh,
AIYorvlaw, now vinyl aiding, naw

carpet, new kitchen, asking
~1100-

248 North Third, 3 bedroom, 2
balh, 1 story
5 yro. old, 1a11

hoU•.
abatement. all remodeled, large
roome, storage shed, asking

....1100.
228 Cole SL, 3 UrJII, al new windOWl, new carpet. Gllterior painted,
rtmOdeled, bottom unit very large,
upltlllra smaler units, tarat rent
f91 0. aoklng $63.500.

z

-

IT'S BIQ. · 1gg7 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE. $1,8~9 DOWN,
$31g/MO. FREE DELIVERY I
SETUP ONLY AT. OAKWOOD
HOMES. NITRO, WV. 304-755-

32311.
Limited Qflerl 1g07 doublewlde,
3br, 2bath, $178g down, $2791
month. FrH dellvarr &amp; aotup.
Only at Ookwood Homoa, Nitro

wv. 304-7515885

.

New 188714x70 throe bedfoom.
lncludll I monlhl FREE lot rent.
Only $181.88 per month .with
$1050 down. Calf 1-800-837-

32311.
New Bank Repo'of Only 3 leh,
ownor llnanc:lng available. 304755-7181 .

Rtngoa, RtfriGuarantetl

420 Mobile Homes
torRent

u ..............

JB Klfn, kiln dried hard wood1
compotlll¥1 prices. St At 12,
Woat Columblo WV. 304·773SOioor 1-800-1188-711113. ,

--

Lo...aeat Aild Ltzy Boy Rtclclf
Rtcllnor 125, Eoch. Collet. . .

3 ·Bedroom House Trailer For
Aen~ In Rio Grondo, Dopa~~ No
Polo, 814 -379-2720 AFTER I Kltc11en Corpot $8.50, Sato on All
P.M.
Room lizo Cerpot and VInyl -Mo~
Corpol8 814-4411-7...
Bllo"'l Drive 1230/Mo., Including
Water, For Application 814-448- Super Twin Waterbed With
3840,814-~7.
Headbolrd, Mattre11 and Halter
175 Call Aher • p.m. (8141441'111 Rood
325. 2 Bed- 11111!1
room Unfurnlahecl UobiJa Home,
No Pela, No Smoklllg, Roll&lt;onc:e
Aoqulrocl.814-245-6822.
·

on core

on

Apatbnents
for Rent

001&lt;'

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Modern Ranch style 111fiarge lam·
ily room w/wood bumer, eat-In
ldtchen, dining room, central air,
oorport, back dock,' 3 .Oh. 1o11:
(;all Sornorvlllo Realty 304-875to:IO or 30&lt;1-875-3431 .
.

1 AC &amp; 2 AC lots tar sale in
Sc:enic Valley
Subdivision.
Wedge Really, Broker 30•-6752722.

1.35 Acrea 241185 lrailer Sbr. 2
bath, cable, city Water, out build~ 30• · 578-25•1. $27.000

Sam Somervllle'a Artrr~ Camoufloge by Sondyvlllo P.O. lor Wild
t~Mk., ••.. an. Noan-Spm. FriSun. :lllo4-213ofi865.
'

IATEWIE Dal

UHF NHF An.....a I Hanfwota,
&amp; Sarvlco.

Arnold T.v. -

1 1 Acres, f;lulaville Pike, Gr•at
Locttlonl&amp;1•·37'8-25e8 •.

Park Drive. Laroe living ·room,
41nlng room, nlco kitchen wl
range &amp; relrlgat111Dr, 2bedrooma,
lot 80x100. Quick poHeulon.
c;:oll Somerville Realty 304-175-or 30«175-3431.

1 t .2g5 acros In Bodford Town ship, price 19000, coli 814-7423508 aher 5pm.

S~rac:uM~ 1hr•• bedroom, one
· Jnd 112 bathl, LR, DR, fomily
fOOIII· oak kitchen, now corpo~ full
.,.aement, electric furnac:elheat
ump, two-car garage (28x32),
anc111• acroa, nlc:t, 814-882-

40 acres 5 M"e1 From Town,' on
s 1818 A
2t8 W'll
Sell •11
oute
· 1
~ or

fiS.

Parts. 814-258-857~

B+ acres Gallipolis ar8a. Apprax.
3 mUes out Neighborhood Rd,
corner ol King. Ad, $16,000. 614-

"1-1!112- meaaage

·

·i$.::"

two IIDrY COIOniol,
t focetlon lor clildron, three
greet condition, lrnme"a• poaaeaalon, 814-882-5558
!1'81....-a2o654

t-

4 · Lola Available, Rodney II
$5,000 Each, Make Oiler On All
Four. 614-245-5928 Afior 5 P.M.

.._ ....It H

J20 .....,.

OIMS

far Sale

5el7 IOa.O Kozr. parlect river

. 8nrnor land
814-775-tl'n
Galtla co.: GaiNpolil, 2 Mllu Out
Ntigborhood Rd., Two 10 Ac:re
Parc•la •u.ooo +. Gr•an
Schooll, Counly Water, Friendly
Rldga, Privati 18 Acres lti,OOO,
8.5 Acroa 17,500, . 8.5 Acrea
SI.OOO. GrNn Schools. County
Waltr. Toona Run Rd. - (31 tO
Aero f'erl&gt;a!o, $10,000 • ·

por1lafly lumlllled, 12500:
CHit condition- 14a70 ~loYal
. ewe. two bedroom, two bath,
Co.: . Near Athena Co.
11,000: 1882 14x80 Fairmont,
bed;oom, balh, tara• front Bol'dor • Remat• 10 Acrea
.,.. beck dock. St3,soo:
Olir tt.ooo 0own. StOff
nl' Turner, 114-982-2886 or
Alao, In Same Aroa, Nice
Silo On 5 Acraa t7.500.
1
· ~~4~111~2-~2383~~"'="-:---~
i '070 t2xl0 2· Bedrooms, All I ·Arntre SchoofL
IICtrlc, 12;500, OBO .814•448·
172. 114-2IH251.

. • ,.

AORICUL'IIIIIAL LIIIE 8ERV•
ICE

Washer, Dryer. Refrigerator,
Sto¥1, Freezer, Mlcro,..ve, Color
T.V. 814-2511-1238.

Your Niw Buah Hog Dealer For
lltadae. Bockhoea, Cuttarl. Flnlth
lolowera, Loadoro, Etc. 11 Carmlc:l1ael'a Ftmt &amp; Lown. 11._....,

XI

SllverHowk Bow, 35-50
weigh~ 25-27 d-. olghta, quiVer, or-.. $125. 30«175-5253.

:24:;1,::2..:0r~t::!-.c»-:;:!lilj::;:4~1.:;11~1-;___

Antiques

Bur or ull. Riverine Anlfquoa •.
112!1 E. Moln Strao~ on AL 124,
Pom•roy. Houro: loi.T.W. 10:00 Sofit Bed Ofivl Green With Bur·
Lm . • 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to oundr &amp; Blue Cover 1250, 1141:00 p.m: 81•·8g2·2521, Run 448-01157,814 448 84~.

630

callont Btudlng, Slote Run

Forme, ..locklonlt&lt;-2111-5395.·

olocrtc,

2511-8287.

Nice two bedroom oportmont In
Rtclno, 1250 month pluo udlld11
and dopolli~ - - 814-1182-

71143.

·

p

18113 POntile Grand rlx

E

-'-ii

Speed, With Air, 18,400 Mlloa,
15.250 080, 814-2118 8340. 8147
258-848 1904 Goo Trockar Coriv. Top, 4
Wheel Drive. Whl18, AC, AMIFM
Celltll8, 17,500, Bto-387-7481.

I

750 Boats &amp; Motors :
,
far Sale -.
1

loodod.$12,000. 304-(175-5311.
1985 Chevrolet Corllico, 32,0oo
. '" '
C
AC PW

•.3

with 11\in Dec:k.
Lller !/8, MorCfulaer, with Am Fm. Caautta,
and Ski Accessory. et•·2~8393
21 FL Berfinor Bow R&gt;lor Boot VWith Equipment. Everything
Gooa. Mull Sell Due To Illness,
81._....,2030_
.
Btu Boat Procraft 111'10 Flblr·
9laas With Troller &amp; 70·HP E~­
'""- TroiU'JII!&gt;IOr (2) Hwnmloo·
=hat~n!:'~' Well 21
'

-

··

t

bloodliri.;~plar. o~:r' E~.:.K:~d~~ndltio~ ia.o~ Boti Sal: dc!lr)G' 011 ~I ~x
Flrm.(6i4)448-7127

•
It-

fltw

ron Boats -Cuny' Cablna ·
Riders -Ball Boata -Johns)n
Outboard lolotDra Saloo. Sorvlca
o1 all outboarda, cettilled m"""'nlc. Marina Sorvlcoo, 2131 K'1r
St-, Byraou•, Cillo.
,•
114-tft·B!iZO.
•. ',

Al8111ar•d black Anou• brld 1995 Dodge Noon • Doora,
heflera and 18,700 Mile a, Auto, Air, Asking
I'M&gt; ~4 monllold, 814-8118-85111.
$7,2!iQ OBO, 814·258-8340, 614Horae1 For Sola Child .2!18-84!1 7.
....... O....tor Horll •••- 1886 Honda Accold LXA, Auto,
...-.
10.
AIC, Loaded, Bot Fct Wor. 760
AutO Parts &amp; . ,
·
23,000
llllaa.
E...tlent
Condition
ACC&amp;ISOr1eS ·•,
Rug Llmoullin Buill Red, Black, 614 448-8481 _
I'Dife\1. 1 To 2 VIars Old 81&lt;-3877800, 81&lt;-387.Q!i07.
·•
Aulll LOans: AulD Dealor ~illl Ar· 1878 Trans-Am Paris, 1514· 388·
.
:
•oxaa Lon• Horn Bull. 3.; old range Financing Eve.. II You . . 7.
"
•
•
Have Blln Turnocl Down ilefare. 6 Speed Overdrlva Trans Fri&gt;nt
Reg ·ranneu•• Walker Mare. Loan• Available For No Credit,
Rear End For A 1988 2 Whe•l
30f.OI6-3113S.
Bed Credit And Btnlcruptcy BuyDrive Rorlger. 614-387-7182.

Hay.&amp; .Graln

Round Balaa Hay For Seta 814..e-24t28A.II.-SP.II.
4" heavy corrugated pipe, 1001L
roll, $21 .99. PAINT PLUS HARO.
WARE. 304-875-4084.

lRANSPOf11AliON

CARS FOR fiOOtTrucill, boate,
• -whetlora, motqr ho.,.., furni ture, 'lectronica, computers etc.
by FB~ IRS, DEA. Avallll&gt;le your
area now. Call 1-l0o-5t3-•343

Well
Pass

Nonb

P8Bs

Pass

1..

' !NT

Pass

3NT

•

3C.m-

4F. .

5 w........
6 Fllh IIIII
7 Gl..tfWlllte

......

• Carrtea

tPoUt . . . '

10 Qoaway,

,,,.,......,.
=·drink
ritomblt

21 Cry
.''
. 24 Act
25 Jlcob'l 10ft

ze .Nane

Carblnl
29 Type of atory·
27

All pass

30.11ono1Jr•m pt.

31 WindoW unit
37 - SI8ndlrd

:t:*' .
.c..

• Sa.t 1 tennla

'

tiU,,Y

A'OUT l'r1.

..
,.

BORN ·LOSER
Bli!lJ(U:&gt;! TII"-T-li\ST UC:&gt;f\TNI N6 ., . ,
" ~K£ ~OOTlOC

rova:.

~;U&gt; 1-\EiZe.! i're Tl\E Uc.Kl'5 OFF
' IN Tfi.E roT Cff Tf\E. Hoose ?'

.

r-.IOT~Of

Tfl~!

'...

1

&lt;O©tt&lt;ll~-l&amp;t.trs·

::::

0

I

•

B RE EL
5
16

.
I .I

Transmlsslona..
and Up. Uaed V
Over 10,00~
Trans rei
14-24['-

7

~~~~]~~~~~~

•.

1:;;
~

Over the years I've found
that when something i$ done
.:. . for your own gOQd, you can be
W U L 0 AT
lsu~eyou····· ·--·11. .

'I I
1

I I I I'
•

•

e

Complete the . thll&lt;:klo quoted
·by fill ing in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

''

~

'

DON'T FOR6ET THE · '
ENLISTED MEN, MA'AM ..
SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
. Bleach. Puffy· Maybe· dosage- EMPLOYEES
We had very poor service at a posh restau111nt. My
friend believes that tips are wages We pay other people's
EMPLOYEES.
.

1074 Ford ano ton. 380 4 apaod,
P8, PS, dual _ . , 12' Rotbod,

I FRIDAY

runa good, new brakea, t1200,
114-247-4282.
1978 Chevy Pick-Up !880 Model
·ford PICk·Op Porta 1887 Dedgo
Shadow Will Take Boat ortor, 814·
408 3243

B•outy Shop Equipment: Lorge
wac Unl~ Dryer &amp; Choir, Hydrollc
ctwir, $1. 448 1'n!

1 -lnd Dofla·
2 tnvtlatlon lbbr.

.
flllluKoltal
Perhaps you like to' follow this
1111 comiCI
adage: "Always return partner's lead."
50 NlwllexiCO
~ However, in bridge you ~not say "al"'oalony
ways ~ or •never• - each deal m111t be
52 Plcllll; fllancl
.taken on itl own merits. CUnlil -a cou·
53 -lndltalrty
54Walm
ple of years ago,•llhought it wais right
1011111 pllnt
alw•y• to lead up to honors. Then I
57
Nalgltbor of
saw a deal in which that was the
Fr.
\; i
. !
'wronl' line .of play. D!!clarer had to
.~Ud a&gt;~~ay ftom the bonorsll
Thio deal waa played last January in
I&gt;O
1
'the Australian capital of Canberra.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
,.. (A~I&gt; 'FO~ A BOS$ TtfAT
:East, Phil Fent, didn't return his paf')by Luis Campos
:ner'o suit, instead finding an exceUent
$\JGGfS"T$
Cellbnty CiptMir cryptaQram1 are etnled from QUOIItionl by flmoul ~. pill Md pntWII
swlleh to·defeat the contract.
EaCh 1enei in 1he ClpMr llandllor enolher. Tcdly"f ~; 0 ~ K
.
.
S
outh's
two-no-trump
rebid
showed
TfotE~f'S NO
18-19 points. He added a point for his
PUBHHD
DIIN'XU
JUUS
JBC
' MSEU
decent five-card suit.
~tAL
••
· After winning the first trick In hand
GRUPU ' K
B
vs a AIIXVU,
.
with the club quee11o South, Australian
. t
international Peter Gill, played a
II .T
OYSC
EUPQaVS
spade to dummy's 1 o and East's
queen.
.
· ·
·
•
'I) M N
CUXUHMY . '
TUBPHUKKSUKf!
U East returns a club,. declarer
. makes the contract. He wins in the ·
ZBEO .
SVEAMHKMS.
durpmy, cross~s 1o han,d with a. spade
r
. 131 ·~
!:££.. -Tl\!5 FlA$U&lt;:offi"
to the. ace, cashes the ace-ltlng of dia- PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Film music Is like a small lamp thai you 'place below
monds, and lettds a club to durttmy. the screen to warm If: - Aaron Copland.
I I~ WOIQ(.IN.
f&gt;!
TII~T e£?
He· takes the Q -J of djamonds before ·
"
playing a heart to his jack. West wins
with the queen and cashes his last
TIIAT DAllY
club, but then· he has to concede a
PUUUI
trick to South's heart king. Declarer's
- - - - - - Hllo4 ~Y a.u •-· POUAN
nine tricks are one spade, on.e heart,
Rlcmange lett•rt of the
lour diamonds 'and three clubs.
·
four Krambled words "-·
· However Fent tw!tc.!l!!!l acc;urately
loyrt to form four simple words.·
., ... ; ' .,
to the heart io~jiCt, queen: liVe. Now "
.West, Andrew Muir, reverted to clubs.
B I K A M0
The contract could no longer be made,
, · 'because if South tried the aame endr;:::=:i::l::::-''-,......----, ~ r..:..,;;:..,,.:....;-,;_,__.., ' play, he would bave Dve losers: one
spade, three hearts .and one club.
Let's revise that adage: Always return partner"&amp; lead unless you have
something better to do.

720' Trucks for Sale

&amp; """""· 30&lt;1-874...1148.
BCS205 With PTO Tllor &amp; M-r·
$300: ttl HP Cra1tman Lawn MIl With &amp;gg., 42 111ch Cut With
Chain 1800, 81 ......2871 .

~.;T.::+;;+-

'Think before obeying

I:

Boby bed, high chair, cor aut,

''H~~*'l~
· t::

11

E•at
Pass

Turn Downal coa Ruth 81'.. 48-, S!E~;~
2887. ·

Alroy Surplus Como~ftage, llqota,
Lots Of· Misc. Items, Guaran1ead,
Lowett Prlcoa, 814-448-1012.: .

. 1283 Actorpftli
Bruc:e -

Time

En 5-83118
Credit Problema? Gauroniaod Financing, tO'II&gt; Down, P~ymento 1 ~__;__ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
Aa Low Aa 1180 Per Month. No,-

Above ground awlmmtng pool,
4x18, induda1 all acce11orle1,
like now, $500: 12x50 mobile
homo, good for atoroge, 1750 :
61&lt;-11112-1841 .
.

3;:-fve

Pass

!

ero,CeiDiane8tH48-8t12.

.

. w1111

38 Thlttcll Pllrt1
41 F1¥Mte

I

&amp;40

$='

llfance 84 Duck :
·
21 Spill an • ,...r
· •
DOWN
·32 -Ending 1or

·

YOU tiAVf A 6tT·Wet.."

than 50 houro. Mull I • •
,814 _742 _3042 . if or

8 Powor Custom Troilor, Loaded
1894 Thunderbird All Power,
lollionroof, AIC, TIL Crulaa,
·3.8L, V-8, 22,800 .MIIoa, THI fn
Cofor,llull Soflll1....1-1434.

24

'-!In....,....

51WWIeo~-.,..,
81

lm+-+-

.

4,oilo

r

47 v..llon opol
.. In flnt11 'hlned
55 Alrttnll Info
HE-. -

By Phillip Alder

1885 Honda 300EX, oxc. collll.,
$2,700. 304-675-2847 after :4!&gt;mM

XCII· .

42Atti11JIIIII
... Curvy ......

1087 Chevy 5-10 2.6 Fuel .fnjec:tlon 4 CrHndor, 5 Spaid Tranamlallion, 11,500 Nogotlable, 11•318-2135.

Booll fly Redwtng, Chippewa,
Rocky, Tony tome. Guoronteed
LGMII PrlcH At Shoe Cola, Gal·
lpoiL

r

'

.

'

plpn, wind-

.

8Sitlbliah a apeclfk: r~Bhip.

irwlll, ... Claude Wfn.....

ICOAPI~ (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) )'l,ld

to

that encoirf~ga you to do
-hing apecial for h ·oneo you love.
· You will be rewarded In Yllrled wa~l

iiiipuiM. today

~;;;;;~~~~

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-lhc. 21) All
eyes could l»foCused..on you today. ao M
you're going lo moke an oppearance In
lroi'll ou group, lllke a Nttle elllr8 lime to
~-

..

CAP.A ICOAN COec. H · Jan. Ill Your
keen inaigllla can be put lo profitable

, . c....., ......, Homet•m

.._ _today_U.. a can11t41 blend 01 your
• l1unchell and yoUr lOgic for beiii'IIUIIL

.,...,.781,

.......... 2 ....... 117,500.

1. .. 14170, 2 'BHrooma. 2
...... ....., Eatta'l, Mull Sea
.. '$P t I I 11-1-0701

• 9. z

I •

DADIUIN
PEIItlN'll

1885 Honda 300 EX good cortll -·
Uon, naw Urea, rima. sprockottl &amp;
chain, life time rear bear1n4s.
$3,500. 304-882-3311.
•

,:~~~~~~::~~

40 Allow lo lilt

STOP YORE

,.,__ Bow....
._
1-·~ ,, c~IY
. _, _...,
,.
· tre Uarcruiaer, upgradtd ttetao,
boat and nlfet In condli:,

; ; VIM 14-WDa
18l'l ...,...., 121111. -

10 4

• 0. 52

...

111'11111*1

Opening lead: • ·4

umrted 3.8
exc cond

cowo, -11:1111 rollra,

.4,000 PSI Hot &amp; Cold Wattt AlwGracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom ., Pre11ur• w~ahtr,Pond•roaa
Bpartmen!a at Village Manor and II HP Englna, L.o ll Extrasltt•Riverside ~partmenrs In t.tlddl• 38&amp;-0413.
port Frclm $238-1304 . Call 814992-5064. Equal Housing Oppor- 8 hp. Troybill tiller, 5 hp. Snoppor
tunitift.
tiler, 814-742-3062,_

Nice 1 Bedroom Unlurnlthed Ra~lgeratDt, s - . Gao Hal~ Porch
Vlrd Eaotorn Avenue, I2751Mo.,
12511 Dopooft. 2 ........ 81&lt;-

,.,

•

•

.2li ArlliJLI And Chi-AMUJ Buill
I'Or~RouonobiJ Pile'od, Ell· 1985 Camoro Z-28 muat oall,

,,2110,

Furniahed 3 Rooma I Bath, No
Pots, Rolerence And Deposit Required, at•-ol46-t51B.

..,, EHO.

LIYastock

D.nlatarod bla•• An9u• hull,
f';:r aid
81&lt;-742-2!51.

.

Downtown Gallipolis: Uodern 1
Bedroom, All Eleclrlc, Carpeted,
Complete Kitchen, Eloculc: Heat I
1Jr Conditioning, 8 14·o146..stl3.

Newty reriOY&amp;ted 24 family unlll,
located
cloae
to
ahopplng,achools, library, bank 1
much more. Electric heat, air
conditioning, laundry flcllltr,Sewor, wator 1 trash Included n
rent MaJntence provided, extlr·
minallon done monthly. Income
limlto do applf, HUD accepted,
for appflcolon ollnlormatlon cell
304-882-3718. Mon 9-5, Tuaa &amp;
Wed 9-3, Fri :W. Old Ash Vltfaga
Apta 8th &amp; Georoo St New Ha-

rnetL 15,500. 81o-24H562.

1881 Honda CBR 800S3
Illes, Like New, Take OVer Paymenta Or Payoff $8,500, 81&lt;-3TS2135.
.
,
.

Naw Holland '7 FL ·Hay Blndor
81,..__2514.

Sporting

---

......

houll lhck. Rod. 1 White, E,qtlent Condition! 2 Brond New Hitl-

1882 Pontiac Sunblrd LE 711.000
Ford SuiiCIIO w.lghto Sat Of 8 ~~M~tloa,~·~2.~Slii~B~I~4~44~8~1185~58~~·,.--,,.,With Brockll 1280, 814·3708381.
1892 Thundorblrd AT, PS, PB,
. PW, POL, AC, And Monti 55,000
Hrdroullc 011 eto.tS-Sgal poll. lliloa, Exc:ollent Condition, 814Sldoro Equf-nt, Hendaraon, 245-51118.

Ford 3000 Dlo1e1 5 Ft. Bruah
7 Ft. lllado, $8,300, 814-

South

1984 CBA 800AR 1,000 Milia.
Full Two Brothorl Racing B•-

1882 ChiVy Lurillno Euro Spar~
3.4 Bcyl, -·briGht red, tlnl!ld
glaaa, 4 door, mull oao. 17,000
0110. 304-675-2;128-

Truck and 325 gallon link and
pump to hlul Wltor, et•· 742·

'
- - u .ooo.
m4.
. lt4-012-

•

M'-llclltM
alclly

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

1~~~_:::::~.:J:
LIWn Mow•r partl • ·repair. ientCondlllon. eto-:~70-folt7:
I
5
Sldlra EqulpinoN_ 30&lt;1-875-7421.
1884 Dodao ~ 4 Cylinder
t884 i.lar11do 18 Foot .Opon llljw,

Goods

530

188! Cheoly Camero AIIIW Sport
C*lf anydme alter 1:OOpm: 3o411S-38fi4llondi)&gt;-Sorura.
1882 Buick LoSobro Llml tod,

18118 300 EX • Whaoler, Exctflent Condlllon, Like Now, $3,3ptl,
080, Coli In Evenlngo, 81•·.44!11100.
I

D 00 ld

520

7

Rio Orondo, OH Clll 114-241- • ::-:c·c·
5121 .

, bllnda, curIncluded,
after

• K QI 7

''

u t1 PiOtlll•t .......

• Q 10 3

t083 Kawaaald 125 runs or ..t,
good cond, good tlroa, lncludel
helmet, goggiOI I kick otand.
11.500. 304-675-112811.
:

1892 Ford Thunderbird All - ·
V-8, Auto, AIIIFM Cauono. AC,
Runa, Looks Great $4,750, 814..,.1118.

WV.304-f75-7~21-

-

furnace,~

oarvtca. Now &amp; uoed tlru 1nd
wheell. 814.e88-3438, 81o4-8888471 orevtnlnal814-59311142.

corn plontor. J •
w 8 ~row
corn ptantlt. Coli after epm. 304875-1187.

Block, brick, -

... bldroom.

fcoal'l'l)

23~

• " 5 2

1991 Polorla 250, Trail Boaa, ~
wheel dr1Yt,· 1887 Honda 300EX.
(814)388 GOI2 .

773-5188.
FAAIITIAE SEAYICE
Traclllt, liadthoa, atd«rar, mobile,

JD 1300 narrow 8row plotoloaa

&amp; rolerCIIICII- 304-882-2568.

Furnished EHicloncr All Utllltloa
Ptkl, Shere Beth, S1501Mo., 918
Second Avonue, Galllpollo, 814·
448-3845.

610 Farm Equipment

1890 POntiac BonnovfUo, Exce~
lint Condl"on, Runa Wall, lolaraon $3,700,• Sao At Empire Fur"'-CIII11._....,1875,fl.4. 880 S bird naod1
k
~~~ a'
"'"" wor '

tOO~ •wd ltoctor, 218 houro, 31,000 lriloa, lout door, "-oom
-51hp. ovorytl11ng on I~ like naw. - · lOIIi.. With red 11111rior, brand
lrea, .-y option, 3800 v.e,
- 113,500,
TI&lt;080 150 Willi, 814- • •500. 304-182-3552.
81~-982 -1718 or 304-

Enjoy Your Own Racalver And
Antenna. Chooae Progrommlng
You Like. Olah Syatama Swt At
12 t 8 P1u1 One Year Ptogram·
mlng Coot. To Order Calf Toll
Free 1-888-f53-7380 Ext. 120.

TWII bed!oom, gao hll~ two
out ol Rudond on New Limo
11&lt;-7•2-2803.

440

f.urnltur~, children'• aummar
clothao, motornlty clollea, blby
lterno •nd Iorge toy1. Co~ 11•882-3125.
.

PV

rARr,l SUPPLIES
&amp; liVCSTOCK

,_ buying

...r-

For 11la, 1 badroom home In 1'0rnero~. will aell on land contf'l.ct,

22!f.l-

•KJ832
·oAK

1888 Harley Davklaon 12QO
Spor-, 10,000 llltaa, BurgundY
I Black, Apprclx. $1,500 Extraii,
Only Se,IIOO, 81&lt;-882-5174.
.

Own Y""' - -Ill Brand 1 and 2 bedroom aportmenll, lur- ·
now HUD app- hamel ready nlshed and unfurnlahod, security
lor !natant doiiVOfY. Trado4n
depoalt required. no pttl, eucome. Your choice: 2BA; $850 1182-2218.
down. only 1175/mo. 3BR $1,050
down, only $190/mo. "llonator 1 Bedroom Near Holzer Extra
Size Special' t8x80-Youra for Nlco, Goa H~ s - . . + UtiUonly $1,450 down S2351mo. All tloa, OepOiit Req, 814-olol&amp;-2857.
homes Include deliver~ 1nd Ml·
up, 1-Syr. warranty, tyr. of home- Nlca 1 Bll Apt Central Air, WID
owners Insurance paid In full. Hook-Up. Cloao To Golllpolla. No
Plus Wyou call now, rour choice 1'8111814-olol&amp;-2072
ol free akfrUno or 81mo. free lot
Bedroom Upotalia Aportnient,
·rant 0 pa'rk of your choice. No ·2
$385/Mo., $100 Oepool~ All Utiliapplication rtfusldll Phone In
your fru application for pre-ap- till Pllid, No Pall, 814 448 3437.
proval to (806)413-8813. H no.on- 2bdrm. apta., total electric, ap~
IWif leave l"'lUT\8 and numbllr on
pliancea furnished, ~undry room
mad'ira.
lacililiH~ CIOM to SChoo' in town.
Appficationa
available at: .VIllage
SPRUCE RIDGE, 1192, MUST
SELLI Excellent condition, two Green Apta. N9 or ce11 .614-892bedroom. ont bath. central air, 371 t. EOH.
dec;;k, waaherldryer, calhedral 3 rooms &amp; bath In Clllton WV
ceiling; aet up at Spreading
304-675-3218.
I t2,500, 114-582-3388.
454 112 Second Ave. GtlllpoiiL 2
~ Fanns for Sale
BR., AC, Appllancoa. $450 Mon.
$228.00 dopoalt. UtllltiOa Plld.
27 Acrea More Or Leu, Moatlr ca••l-o~o~&amp;-2128
Tillable Mollly F•nced 34x•a
Horae Barn 8 Stablea, 3 Bedroom BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Houae $79,000 , 614-388-8504 BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
O.va 0. 814-288.()21 I E"""nga.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
tom 1280 to $334 .. Walk to ahop
340 Business and
1 nioviea. Coli 614-446-2588.
E"'al Houlling Opportunity.
Bulldlrigs

on inspection. Coli 304-67S-540!4
or 304-675-1408.

9 f
A Q-9 6
7 6 4
K6 54

t887 va,.he Mot~~·•· 350,
.
utility 4-whooler, $1 ,800 . 30,675-31154.
I

Pornoroy Thrill Shot&gt;-

Largo llfectlon ol uaed ho.,.. 2
or 3 bedooorns. Stortlng II S:JGS.
Quick dollvory. Call 1-800-837-

~~~

·=·

ao tlltMtilll com. u

S.th

Oakwood Homte 11 the only
d01lor In tha trl· l .. te aroo that
'bulldl end 11111 their own
homo&amp; For factorr drec:t prlc:ta,
ahop OAKWOOD HOMES. Nf-

1RJ. Wol. -~-

--~~

c-

I
(p4oel.)
tllnny
12 Fotwt II map
Jnla,
.
13 lllnglr Ono .
14 ..... ....
11 Aillrlr llot. .td
11 - 17 TlnJ -

• 7 5
• Q J 10 3
• A J 7
Eaol .

wea

FAClOA\' DIRECT.
NO MIDDlE MAN.
SAllE SS1$.

roniodtling, asking StB,OOO, call
HI14-82S--4950.

HouN and property, approx. 4a·cres. Ideal atarter hume. Beech
. · ~.PD.._ OH. :J04.4182-21177.

CHda II, red, ••a cand.
$4,!5K 304-6'1'W1118.

Wo hiVI flOOD lo $~000 por
home In dl~aat•r r•ll•f funds
avlllelil 10 help you purcheae a
roplocll!lont homo. Callt -80046fl. 7871 1D aer appointment tar

11 Filhot, 3 bedroom, 1 balh, ex- Land and Building. Crawford'a Beach !rt. Mlddlo~ort. 2br lurterior painted, new earpeto same Grocery, Henderson WV; Priced nished op~ utilities paid, depoalt

11&lt;-11112-5858.

ovr/J:Uon,

•
•
•
•

~1402/1114-512-

Beautiful ihrao bedroom, 2 112
bath log homo
ule, largo livIng room, cuat. kltchon, lull lin·
llhed bellmtn~ oxqulllite woodwort&lt;. loll. largo wlirfpooiiUb. li&lt;Y·
light, heat .pump, CA, aatolllte,
2252 oquar• lao~ sn.ooo oao,
81&lt;-742-2581 .

• J 10 6 3

2 lledooom, lloctrlc hMI Qn rant•
. ad lol.l2.1l00. 304 812 2118

51115. lkNIOd ortor.

310 Homes far Sale

With Garoge I

Vtry nlca Dol motion p.u
upplol,
10Wb old, c.J 30f.57l,ot005.

1811 LNtln --..!11111 .... -

Towne ear, like new 001\dltton,
301 Y-1, 11500,
II
710or30f.173-'11L

11hudderof
tNr

,.....,_.....,

ps 11

Hf tHAI S

410 Hou••fDr Rent
2 fit houoa, can I» utn 512 Srd
St. Naw N -. Dell., 11-12 &amp; 1-

8.

AQUAAIUI (J11n. 20-Fab. 11) Today
you're endOwpd wltll 1111 lllllily 1o usa

I

words In 1 maaterly ..llhlon. Uaa your
~ ol pri.taelon CllnllniCIIvtfy.

fill CD (M. M o· ul1 20) llomotl*'ll
banaflelal II llfftln(J pettainfng Ill Y.OUr
flllllrlal . . . .. Ill..,_,, rxaw IOdiJ, I

COUld lllppen lillY -

:

.

'

··AIIIia (Mirali 21-Aprl111 Ycu 11101111

lor,....

....... COUld be lillY ..........
IOdly . •They COUld help open tloon ol
oppoolurillle tar wltlllh ,au do nac ._

.......

.

..•
-'.
•
)

'.

• &gt;

•

�~,,.,.

~rlbNI•~Io,.
In eroiWn &lt;!1~11

•

~-on,.,. C4

...

'
'

..

'

•

'·
k"'

·-·.

tmes -

'

..

I " ..

'
I

.

•

'

' .•
,'·'
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
~

,.....,.

Detllleon
PElt AI

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 4, 1997

'

•

Vol. 32. No. 12

I

ftlleigs voters decide MR/DD t.e'IY Tuesday
8y IRIA;N .J. REED
'
r!nlll-aentlnel 8blfl
,. . . .
·
; . S~CUSE ~A $951,000 capttaltmprovement pro·
J~ is mciuded m the proposed 1.8 mdl levy for the
Mei8S COunty Bo~rd of Mental. Retardation and Dcvel·
\'!'mental Disabilities to be dectdcd by voters oa Tues·
day. .
.
·
' .The program,. which provides ed~cation, ~~bilitation,
· !)1erapy .and. auided workshop servtces, tratmng, vocallollai and work servi17s to, children and adults with
jleveiopmentsJ d~bllities, currently receives 3.3 mills
!II property.'~ millage.: . ·
,
.
: •.1be addtttonal,. contmumg levy would fund maintehance and operation of Carleton ·School and Meigs
lnclustrles, aa•well as a proposed capital construction

proj~ wbich would provide additional

space for the
board's !lllult services pro.u.am, habilitation activities
apd the school-age transition claas.
. A second phase of construction would add facilities ·
for early intervention and preschool proarams, including
the addition of two classrooms, a cafeteria and kitchen
renovations.
.
Total cost for the capital improvement project is
$951,000, $300,000 of which ·would be provided by a
grant from Ohio Department of Mental Reiardation and
DcvclopmentsJ Disabilities. Those grant funds would
~live to be obtaine!l through this biennium budget, end·
mg in 1998.
'f!tese facility improvements,. according to the board's
Executive Director, Steve Beha, are necessary due 'to

·

.

·

inc:reas~(l enrollment in the programs during the past
fiye years. Enrollment in the early Intervention,
preachooi and school-age p[Ograms has increase(j by
300 percent, according to Beha, and now bas 75 participants. . ·.
·
··
'fbc lldult participation level has increased by 40 percent to 60. These figures also include the families of
clients, since many ·seriiecs arc home-based, Beha said.
The board currently employs 45 staff members hi its '
programs.
,
If paaiied, the levy will generate approximately
$380,000 per y~ar, according to Meigs County Auditor ·
N1111cy l'arker campbell, based on a collection rate of 9~
percent. The MR!DD Board's levy campaign estimates
the cost of the levy for the owner of pr0 perty appraised

-

·

·

at $60,QOO to be $37.80 per year.
· 'In that the county government receives only 4.3 mills
of inside' millage, the MR!DD Board would actually
receive more funds from local property taxes than the
count)' general fund, if Thesday's levy proposal is
approved by the voters.
'
.
Continued on pege A2

. Strickland study exploriJs .
'college affordability ·gap'
GALUPQUS - College students in southern Ohio are completing
school with crushing debt burdens which now equal over half of their like·
ly starling wages, a study conducted by Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville,
concludes.
·
·
The study, which was released Friday by .the Sixth District representative
to the U.S.
·
•
House,
finds Debt per student per fiscal year
that · regional
college students
averaged debts .
totaling nearly
$3,400 in 1995
- a 43 percent
increase over a

I

• G.
president and
.P.ubli&amp;JiCr of the
l'ub·
'Jtshing':&lt;;o., .which
.
the
:riew'P~Ptr. ai~
employees
a letter sent Thursday that he
·
to retire. -He bee;&amp;me pubr'li!lher in 1965, and is the third
of the Bush family to
I~:~~~:::~
·:
the newspaper.
His aons Fied'·and David BUsh,
·who alao work at the newspaper,
~ill be·pursuing other interests.
· · In the ·letter, Bush said he is
;talking with a limited number of
-newspaper companies "whose
~tioa, corporate' str.tegy and
commiiment to . newspapers
would . ~ attractive to us."· ·
; ' He did,not disclose the names
~f the companies.
· "We. seek ·a successor owner
··that will be in the best interests of
:tp~ community an~ employees as
.well as the comJ*ly's sharehold.9rs," Blish said.
·
; Dirks, Van Essen &amp; Associ·
·. qte~. i newspaper merger lind
;~cquisiljon firm based in Santa
:Fe, N.M., is ,representing the
:Bush family in the sale.

ediless
• ihe
Sixth Congres· ·
sionai District
13,401 .
grew by 39 per'
.· cent between
1991 and ,1995 - more than two·and a half times the rat9 of inflation.'
"Since 1980, the cost of a college degree has increased· fasler than any
other big ticket consumer product, including heal!h care," Strickland's
. report concludes. "At th~ same time, starting sal•ries for today 's college
graduat~s have not come close to keeping pace."
-..
According to the study, starting salaries for new college graduates have
ba~ly budged - increasing only 6 percent since 1990, from $23,500 tp
$24,920 in 1995.
The average family income in the 6th Congressional District is $22,000
annually, according to Strickland's office. ·
·
The southern Ohio Democra,t said the findings undci\!Cote the need for
Congress to approve the &lt;;:linton admini,stration's education plan.
'
. . Th~ plan would increase Pell grants for low·iocom.e ,college studen~
from the current level of $2,700 to $3,000. It also would allow older students
to be eligible for the g.rants. ~.ndcr current rules, students older than z.i
aren't eligible.
:
At the University of Rio Grande, president Barry M. Dorsey agreed with
the reports conclusion - that students and their parents need more financial
·support.
·
·
· .
· ~I haven't seen the study," Dorsey said Saturday morning, "but l would
certainly support any program that would help reduce the costs of higher
ediiClltiOn~"
·
.
'
"
Dorsey said that while Rio Grande has been diligent in attempting to con·
~ tain the spiraling costs of higher education, the universit;r is subject to
changes in•the eeonomy that impact on the operational level ·of all institutions .
Cnntlnuad on Pall• A2

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Good Momin

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tm Oblo Volley Publillhlna c..

Comm· ion··narrows search for new city manager
ay KEVIN KELLY...,.. , . •:

Tlme•Sw~el ~ . ,,

· · · .· ;
, ·•· .•. ,,.

GALLIPOLIS - &gt;'IWo- months :into .. the
process, !he Gallijlo.l.is Cti
· .Commi~ion ·.bas
. ··
\. ' · •
narrowed·the field in tts se,
for a ctty manager. .
· .
Commission President' · I. O'Rourke ssid interviews ue
still bei~g conducled with .~ntiai candidates, and while the
commission· is not near a deCision, "we're closer than we were
befotc."
.
. •••
'
·
CQmmissioneri
have,
had'tllree
in-person
interviews
to
dat~
1
and se.veral via.teiephone, Olllourke said. Another face-to-face
Interview wit~ a candidate' la tche~uled for next weekend, she
added.
' J·
·
:O"We'l" pretty much to the 'JiOtnt where the field has been
narrowed," she said, noting that up to 75 applications were aUbmilled for the position by the deadline of Jan. 31.
. .
Of the three poasib'iUtlei the commissioners lia.vc personal-'

·

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· ·

city manager's post was vscated by Gl.ctin
Smith. Within a two-month period, the
commission chose Matth~w Coppler to fill
two are from .
and one is from Nebrasb.
·the slcit.
- ·
applicants were based around the country, from Maine to
.Coppler, wh~ · had previously been village manager· In
Mrit~iana, h 'd
Carlisle, resigned his Gallipolis assignment, effective Jan. 3t,
. The co~!i:lb~ is looking for a candidate with at leaS! filie to become city manager of the ,Canton area suburb· of
years of experience in city administration, an educational back- Louisville. In the two yeara he served in Oallipolis, Coppler
gro11nd in that area, in addition to a track record in economic was credited with a numl'er of organizational and developl'lll!nt
development. O'Rourke said· the city n~eds an administrator initiatives.
·
wbo can hit the ground running due to the number of improveHis departure canie as a new retail shopping center was pro·
ll)ent and job creation proje&lt;:ts started within the past yel\r.
posed for Eastern Avenue and efforts were lau.nC!ied to devel·
"The candidate would have to fit that description, education , op a master pian for improved business and civic opportunities
and expcrience-,vi5e," she said.
. .
In th~ downtown.
The number of applications was down significantly from the. ·
Bob Condee, who served as interim City manager between
reponed 300 the city received in the summer of 1994, when the Smith's departure and &lt;;oppler's appilintment, is apin filling
·
·
the void until a replacement is found.

: ~ . i'u~enant Goyernor ~ours ;~~Ilia 'S_
chool

. , C~ARY - Lt. Oov. Nancy l{olilster aot a joi!ICd in the ;Visit by f&gt;?ncip~ Marvin McKelvey, Oal·
M~ia Services unitaD$1 have seen
'd9aer view of the efforta of aome local Sehool•to-:Work iipolia Cf!Y Schools Siaperla~ndent Jack ~yton and
·prpducti~n. techniques at WSA'f-'}irpjectl durin&amp; I
bfstops Friday in Oaliia.q,unty. local S'IW coordinator-Canda~ Pope. . , . : .
TY: ~nd htgh Sl!h?Dls with "':1th .
: ~ •Sebool·to-Work ~ a ltltc 8rll!t proaram that pti()Vidcs
"She waa ao, impressed wttb the ope~liO!'&gt;''' ~d
thetr own televtslon "ptodtlcttol\
edUcation- and work-baaed expcrion~ for students, Lance Clifford, ~rl&gt;·study, Ooordinator w1th the, city
units.
.
.alona With collective activities, to introduce them to·the schools, who aaslated in acttiD8 up,HollWel' '1 vifit t~ .
Oth.cr . technologies., al\ 'uch
:#rk~D8 woild. .
. , .
· . .
. , qrce~. "Sbe.'s invited lilc lltudella to appear on televt·
diverse sties as t~ Phtiip Sporn
::Holliltcr,accompanlcd by state S1W Dbector Robert ston m Columbus, fro~ my undentlndlaa."
P!mt and the Gallta ~unty Cour~y. wu flnt iatrndu~ to a review of projecll dur·
WORN wu cstabi~Jhed· at Oteen •aeveral years aao
thouse have been vtstted by tbe
.. :illl • lundleOn at .tlle Univenlty of Rio Gran4e/Rio and is operated by s!xth lf8de '!'*nts who learn about
studen~,. Clitlord ~ld .
:Oiuclcl Commllllity Collep.
,
• tile field of ciectronu: broack:aiUIIJ. .
Hollilter also vtcwed andther
:: Later, 11 Orceii.FJenientary sd.ooi, itudcnts worldng
'The stUdents, supervised by McKelvey and teac:her
S1W pro!ect in the city system, ,
the -:~;s own· telcvlaloil Illation, WORN, out· C'mdy Calvert, ha~ pe IQ Rio Grande to view multi,
~ b . t th ~~etDrah'rdl!,!_bop Paper ide&amp;.Things, .
::iijla tlieir .,.....Ilea to Hillllller IDcl Radway, who were media projects created by the I!Diverslty's Inatruc:llonal opera
Y6trs rou.,. 1 .,-ra I'! pro¥ supp1y

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to Work'.. projects

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services to their fellow atuclentnnd pin prac:tical cleri· ·
cal experience.
· . .
·
The program iSS.I!pervlled by teachers Alicia P1udrce
and Barbara Burnett.
.
·
"It was a gOQd experience, It oouldn't have l!eea better," Cl,ifford said C!f Hollister's visiL
.
.
~unng the Rl!&gt; Opndc stop, Ho~llater .and a.htay
~IYed an ~rvl~ of S1W proJects m Reaion 7,
wh•ch ~~p~sea th11 aec:doa of tbe ltlte, and condlictlld
~rsonal VI~·!'. and shariD8 of ac:dvidea.
'
. '
The acttvthcs marked another Ia 1 aeriel of f'CIIII
visits to southei'D Ohio by Holllatcr, till fbi 111 MlriMia
!flayor who is plannit• a run rot Oblo Ul tkSJ . . . .
m 1998. .
..
·

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