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                  <text>·Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Y Thursday, February 26, 1998

Ohio· Lottery

Meigs girls
.eliminated
byWCH

Pick 3:

722

V6, A/C, case, New
velnlclle trade In

Auto, A/C, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass.

ONL
9500 MILES
DAR WINNERS -- Winners of the DAR contest are pictured here with their parents, contest chairmen and teachers. Left to right they
are Patricia Holler, Emma Ashley, DAR representatives; Rachel Ashley, Don Deyber, Ryon Wachter, Angie Rigsby, teacher, Judy Marshall,
Rachel Marshall, Jennifer Harris, Robert Harris, Jr., Trennia Harris, Robert Harris, Jr., and Pauline Atkins, regent.

DAR contest winners .presented awards
Awards were prc'icntcd to Win - Harrb . sixth gro.u.kr at Ri vcn'IC\'-'
ners of the American History Essay Elementary : Ryan Wacht er ol EastContest and the Good Ciuzcn Con - em Elementary : Rachel Mari e Mortest at a recent mceun g of the Return shal l. Sowhern Jumor High: Au!-:tin ·
Jonathan Meigs Chapter Daughters Tyler Lillie . Southern Juni or Htgh
of the American Revoluuon .
SchooL
Students
read
Awards for the Ameri can Hi story their winning essay on 'T orts m ·
Essay Contest were prese nted by Ameri can History" al the meeting .
Patricia Holter. chamnan. 10 Morgan Judging was completed by th ree
Ni cho le Weber. fifth grader at judges.
Rtvcrvicw Elementary. Jennifer
The DAR Good Ci tizen Program

and Scholarship Conte st Award was
presented to Radtcl Ashle y. a senior
at Meigs High School. by the contest
chatnnan . Emma Ashley The program i ~ ope n to all sc n1 or class stu dents and is intended 10 encourage
and re ward the qualities of good cit izenship. The senior class of each
school makes th e final selec tion of
the st uden t to be the school's DAR
Good Citizen . The Scholarship por-

liOn of the COniCS( IS admin iStered by
a faculty member. Each contest
entry IS evaluated by independent
non-DAR judges:
. Pauline Atkins, regent , congralulalcd contest wmncrs and all those
contesl parti cipants who entered the
competition . Atkins noted that
essays thi s year were outstanding
with good participation from the
sc hools .

Girl Scouts busy with activities -

1995
CHEVROLET
'S·10
PACKAGE,

A/C,

SUPER
NICE TRUCK

ONLY
49,000 MILES
1994 FORD
CROWN
VICTORIA
LX ~ACKAGE, leatner,
A/C, alum. wneels, power
equipment.

LOCAL
TRADE I

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1994 FORD
F·150 XLT

Auto, A/C, V6, PW, PL,
cruise, tilt, leather

4 wheel . drive, A/C,
cruise, tilt, AM/FM case,
48,000 miles.

LOCAL
TRADE IN!

LEASE

1995 GMC 2500 SUPER CAB 414
COCKlES ARRIVE - 1,299 cases of Girl Scout cookies arrived in
Pomeroy early Tuesday afternoon for distribution to Girl Scout
troo~s throughout the county. According to Unit Administrator
Shin~y Cogar, the most popular cookies were Thin Mints at 266
cases followed closely by .Samoas at 258 cases. Above, Mary Freeman, representing Syracuse Brownies, Cogar, and Cheri Johnson,
representing Middleport Juniors, examine stacks of the cookies.

AUTO, A/C, VB, POWER WINDOWS,·LOCKS,
CRUISE;, TILT, AM/FM CASS

PARADE OF NATIONS - Girl Scouts participating in Thinking
Day which was held Saturday afternoon at Eastern High School participated in a parade of nations in which scouts portrayed Girl
Guides from other countries. Here, Ashley Miceli and Brooke Parker, from left, members of Junior Troop 1039, Tuppers Plains, carry
the U.S. and Ohio flags. Their troop represented Australia In Thinking Day activities.

Literary Club members
hear review of 'Sanctuary'

WAITING THEIR TURN - Members of Daisy Troop 1339,
Reedsville, represented South Africa during Thinking Day activities
Saturday. They are shown here waiting their turn to present a program consisting of an African song of welcome. Thinking Day is a
time for Girl Scouts and Girl Guides to remember their affiliation
with millions of other girls around the world .

Indoor camp meeting planned
An indoor c~unp mee tin g spon sored by the Mcrgs Area Holines'
Associau on wtll hcg m Monday and
continue thruu ~ h March 8 at the
Laurel Cli ff Free Methodist Church
ncar Pomeroy.
Services will he held al · 7 p.m.
each ni ght except Sunday when the
servtce wi ll bcg tn at f) p.m.
R. G. Humble will be the evangeli st and there will he special music
by Jim and Cathy Stsson and fam il y.
Prcsc rvicc musrc will he provided
by the churches of the assoc iation.
There will be a nursery for ages hinh
10 three and junior church for chil d,..,n . age four 10 sixth grade .
At the servt ces there will be a
yout h section so lhal tee ns can sit
togct llcr and on Saturday mghtthcrc
will he a yu uth ni ght with all teens
being in vited for food. fun and fel -

"Sa nclu,uy" hy Nora Rohcrts was
reviewed hy Eilee n Buck &lt;~ I a rcu·n1
meeting ol the Middleport Literary
Club held at the home of Ida Dtchl
in Pomeroy.
Rohcn ~. well known lor her novl'b ol romance and my,tcry. ha ~
hcc n \VIdcly rccog ni1.etl in her f1cld
"-'1Jh :.1 lmost eve ry awmd g1vcn lnr
t: .'(l'C IIcnLC in romance writmg .
reported Mr&lt; . Bud . Her hooks can
almost alwap he found on the heslsc \1..:-r ll ~ t s and she is rarely out of the
puhlt c eye. she added .
-&gt;Buck mlroduced Hie main charac ter. Jo Ellen Hath away. as she
return s to he1 ~: hi!Uhood horne on
one of the Sea Island' off the Georgia Coast. The house i:-. now hcin,g
run a~ an mn hy her lami ly. hut she
h:is hcc n cSiran~cd fro111 hoth home
and fanul y for man y yc,rrs .
··sanctuary" is th e name of the
beautiful e'late. hut it had not provtdcd a haven for her al.lcr the my' tcnous d1 sappcar.1n cc of her mother

lowsl11p fo lluwmg till' s~.:n· icc
Add1tinnal lllforrnati t) tl on the
camp mcct1n g lll ~IY tx· ohta1ncd fro m
the Re v. Greg Cundiff. 'N:&gt;-7Y56 or
Re v. Dal'l(l DeWitt. 992 -4152.
The Mci~ :-. An: a H11 lmc..,s A..,su~..:i ­
:.Hion 1s made up of ci~ ht L" hurch -Hyse ll Run Holme». Laurel Free
Methodist and Nanrenc Chu rches
at Syracuse. Chester. Pon tand . Mrd dlcport . Rutland and Pomcrov.
The a ~soc iat! O il was or~a~iLcd 111
By MICHAEL SCHOPP
1962 and churches lake turns hostRoci1Cstcr Democrat and Chront ing monthly sc rv1cc s w ith ~~ di!Tcrcn t
cle
pa, tor preac hin g each month These
Blue . nmure's-scrcne. gentle giant
servtcc' arc hcl rl the fourth Tuesday
.
or
colors,
has a lightcr·sidc. So light.
from Se rtcmhcr through May.
in
fact.
that
ca ndy makers keep lakexcl udrng December and MarciL
ing
it
10
the
sweets.
Act ivities mcludc month skating
First there wen; the mar~hnwl ­
at the Skate-a-way to m nlcmpor:rr)·
low
&gt;of breakfast cereal 's Boo- Berry
C hri ~ ti a n mu ~ 1 c with devot ions
and
Lucky Charms. Then came
through the fall and win ter.
braver l'enturcs ltkc blue M&amp;Msand Jcl l-0 .
Now. brae&lt; yoursel f for a swee p
Blue
Pee ps.
of
Applicati ons for 10 scholarships of $500 each to he awarded by the StewPeeps
are squ ishy. marshm allow
art John son VFW Post 9926 in Mason arc bein g accepted from post memsugar
animals
that me most often •
bers and thctr fam tli es th rough Aprrl 15.
seen
hangi
ng
out
in Easter baskets
A Post 9926 spokesman s,at d if all sc holarshtps arc not awarded to memYe
ll
ow
is
the
most
popular color.
bers and their families, then other veterans and their famil ies will be confo
ll
owed
by
lave
nder.
pink and
sidered. Those who app ly must be accepted at a college or uni Yers lly.
while
.
Resumes should slate the applicant's rcl att onship to a ve teran as we ll giv- ·
Until bl ue blew in .
ing the coll ege where accepted and the major course of st udy.
·· we se le cted blue in keeping
They arc to he se nt to VFW Post 9926, P.O. Box 586, Mason. W Va 25260.

years be fore . As Buck related the
e1·cms that began to take place after
Jo Ellen's return . it became plain that
it was not to be a sanctuary for her
now.

Buck
maintained
suspense
thrnughout as she introduced lhc
ot he r characters and delved into the
"ck mind of the man who threa tened the It fc of Jo Ellen. As she concluded. Buck revealed the answer&gt;
'" the deadly sec ret s that "Sanctuary " held .
Nora Roherts. as usual. included
th e clement of romance as well as
myste ry. so the heroine seemed to he
able to look forward 10 a much happier life
Prc st dcnt
Martha
Hoover
pres ided and read · a lcllcr about
S"IARS . a readrn g program involvin g vul unlccr&gt; 111 school s that mrght ·
be of mtcrcst to mcmhcrs.
Thirteen members responded to
roll call with co mment s on the book
and the author.

Marshmallow candy goes blue with
barely a peep

Scholarship applications being accepted

.

''

wi th the current consumer trend
toward that color," says Greg Bar·
ran. vtce pre sident of markct mg for
Ju st Born Inc .. the Peeps makers.
Blue's dip into confcctionary culture is the latest in a series of bold
new terri lory expl ored by the primary color. The March issue of Self
maga zine has an article on how blue
is the "i n" co l or·~n clothing. especiall y fo r spring dresses.
The Pantone Color Institute ,
whtch track s' and markels co lor
trends and standards , says that 35
percent of Americans claim that blue
ts their favorite color far and
away the leader - and that blue is
the "official color for lhc end of the
millen ium ."
And to think , there wasn 't even a
memo. Not eve n a Peep .

1994 FORD
EXPLORER XLT

1993
CHEVROLET
CORSICA
Auto, A/C, AM/FM cass,
new car trade In_

LOCA
TRADE I
1992 FORD
E·150
uto, A/C, power wind·
ws, power locks, cruise,
lit, AM/FM caas

CONVERSION
VAN

1991 GEO
TRACKER
4x4

54995

1995CHEVROLET 1500 SUPER CAB
AUTO, A/C, VB, TILT, CRUISE, AM/FM CASS,
19,000 MILES

1990 FORD
PROBE
uto, A/C,
M/FMCD

tilt,

1988 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

cruise,

ve,

uto,
qulpment

power

NEW GRAND
MARQ.UIS TRADE

.,

... .F!'
,.
: rl~
: ...
~
~
1::::::: • • • • ..• • : •
'
O•

1:::::::

:• ,. ,

•

•

•

•

I

I

"

•

'

Cloudy

8028
Buckeye 5:

7 -9-19-25·30

1995 FORD
PROBE SE

' .u .

Pick4:

Sports on Page 4

1997 FORD
RANGER XLT

,'!'&gt;P ;o&lt;·~
. ~
._,.;"··'.,.~·-&lt; .,_· ,r~·.=:o;:-ir
~..
..:"&gt;'
~
~- -'l' t:&gt;(,; •.

Cloudy tonight, low In
low 40s, chance of showers . Saturday , cloudy ,.
showers, high near 60.

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 221
,g1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannon Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 27, 1998

New bridge will be built near old span: ODOT
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New:; Staff
The replacement bridge for the aging Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will likely be co nstructed near the exisling span. lhe Ohio Department of Transportation announced this morning.
II would appear that the existing Pomeroy-Mason Bridge will continue
to carry traftic between the Pomeroy -Midd leport and Mason, W. Vu. areas
while a new bridge is buill in a location either just upstream or downslream
from the exisling slructure, according to a press release from ODOT District I0 headquarters.
A public meeting lo discuss the preferred route for a new Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge will be held sometime this spring. according 10 ODOToffictals. The
department has eannarked $25 million for construction of a new bridge in

2002.
ODOJ's consultant. Sverdrup Inc. of Columbus has been studying lwo
feas ;ble corridors for the new structure. The first corridor straddles I he exist-

ing bridge while the second is located in the Kerr Run area where U.S . 33
meets the Ohio Rtver.
'To this point. lhere is overwhelming public input for the existin£ location," said ODOT District 10 Depu1y Director John Dowler.
With the community support for lhe existing site iri mind. Sverdrup analyzed the structural capacity of ttle existing bridge piers and abutmems to
determine if they could be used to hold the new bridge. However. in u report
lasl month. Sverdrup recommended lhe existing piers not be used. ·
Although adequate for the exisling structure. they would be inadequate
by modem requirements for load caparily. JUSt as the existing bridge is inadequale by modem standards, ODOT said.
As the studies come out. the area near the existing span has come oul as
lhe desirable bridge location for several reasons. according to Tom Hedrick.
ODOT District I0 planning and programming administrator.
That site would have less environmental impact and cost less than building a bridge at Kerr's Run, he explained. To use Kerr's Run site correctly.

the brid2c approach would have to be tied into the Rock Spring' interchange.
k~td ~
.
There ha' been ~ome loc:.t l speculati on abo utt)' ing in the e:&lt;i~ tin g bridgt!
si te with ..,tate Rout e 7 via a ..,hort highway acrth.., the hill . . tn R1 1ut~ 7
"Th,rl wa., a consideration in the 'oils.'· Hedrirk explained. He -aiJ th e
iJca might ha\'e some merit. hut is not being ron,1Jered to the co... t mvnh·cU .
AI one time . ODOT thought a ferry could be hired to carry lr,rffi c whtlc
a new bridge wa s buill on the old pier- and abutments. With reu,ing the old
pi!!r' now ou t of the qu~ ... rion. the exi..;ting o.;tructure would hl' lefl ... tanding
while th e new hrtJ~e h buill .
Meanwhik. th~ ~u nsultant ha." been completin~ tidd work. Inc luding sub~ urface invest1 g~uion:-.. '-llong the! alignme.nts immediatl!ly up... trcam ~nJ downstream of the ex i, ting bridge. The consu ltant has also been dra lting com - .
ponents of the required envtr 0nmenlal document.
Once buill . the new bridge will become the respon"btlity of Wesl Virginia.

Parkersburg schools report case

Test results awaited in
Legionnaires•.case
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
'
Local health oflicials conlinue to
awatl the results of laboratory tests
perfonned on standing water at Middleport Ekmenlary School.
Jon Jacobs of the Meigs County
Health Department said the test
results are expected 10 arrive somelime Friday afternoon. Originally.
those results were lo have been provtded early this week. :md then were
10 have arrived ye&lt;lerday.
The tests were ordered on waler
found on the building's leaking roof.
in collection containers in the building and other sites where -standing
wmer collem.
Barbara Logan, 53. a second gmde
school teacher in the building. died
from complications of Legionnaires'
D1scase on Wednesday, causing concern among parenl~ that lhe slanding
water at the building might be a harbor for lhe bacleria which causes the
infection .
Meanwhile. a teacher's aide in
Parkersburg. W.Va. has been diag nosed with the infection. and a public meetin g was held there last night
to answer questions from lhe public
about the s~fely of the students at
Bknnerhassen Junior High School.
Health oflici:lis there are giving
the same re~pon~e to pilrt:nb' concerns that those here have given: the
likelihood of infection due to roof
leak s is "remote."
"Mariella A.M." reporled this
morning that parents with t:hiltlren in
the Parkersburg school arc concerned

that moldy ceiling tile may have harbored the bacteria which infected the
teacher lhere. a theory lhal health·
officials in Wood County have dismissed as "highly unlikely."
While the bacleria is known 10
develop in stagnant potable waler.
health officials say that the water
which harbors it is usually heated
water like lhal found m heating and
ventilation systems. Jacobs and
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Buckley have both noted that no other cases of lhe illness have developed
amdng 1eachers or studenls. Ths
incubation period for the disea!;!;_ is a
maximum of len days. and usually
live days. according to Jacobs.
Logan had been ill for approximately three weeks.before her death.
According 10 a nurse practitioner
with Mid-Ohio Valley Health Departmerli." quoted in "Marien a A.M.. "
males are almostlhree times ~s like­
ly to be infected with the illness as
females. and those over 50 are most
likely to be infecled.
Children are not oflen infected
with the bacteria because they generally have strong immune systems.
according to a St. Joseph's Hospital
physician quoted in "Mariclla A.M."
Symploms. according to Pal
Mays. are lack of appetite. nausea.
muscle aches. head&lt;lche. kver and
chills. abdominal pain :rnd diarrhea.
L~gionnaire, · Disease is cons1dered a
respiratory illness because the bacleria i"i in~c: ~ tct.l into the lung'~. COIU"iing
pneumonia-type symptoms.

Voinovich, district judge
consider killer's future
COLUMBUS (API - The fate of
convicted killer Wilford Berry Jr.
rests in the hands or two men : a federal judge and Gov. George
Vo1novich.
U.S. Dtslrict Judge Algcnon L
Marbley said he will rule today on
whether Berry. who is .,chedukd to
die by injection at 9 p.m. Tue,Jay. is
competent to watw appeals that
would delay his death .
In the meantime. Voinovich. who
has the power to Slop Berry\ execution at any time. is reviewing the
c;.~se . He spent several hour!\ on
Wednesday reviewi ng Berry's hi story with hi s chief legal adviser.

spokesman Mike Dawson said.
··onl'e he's l'tunpleted his review.
h~'ll make a d~l'ision regarding
dem~ncy.'' Dawson s~1id .
Vomov1rh had rt.&gt;ad ~,;orne of the
hundred' of ktlers - incl uding one
on behalf of Pope John Paul II asktng thai Berry he spared. but
Dawson said the guv~rnor will base
his tlc-ci,inn on thC" tact' of the L'a.,.e .
Berry. J5. who w,ts convicted of
killin~ hi, bo&gt;S. baker Charb J
Mitrotf Jr.. in Cleveland in 19X9.
would be 1he fiN prisoner e ~ecuted ·
in Ohio si nce 1963. The 'late reinslated Ihe dealh penalty in 19X I.
Continued on page 3

Youth still missing
The search is still on for 14-yearold Samantha Wilcoxen who wa, last
seen Jan. 16 in the Pomeroy area.
The girl apparently ran away from
a J'oSier home in the Portland area the
morning of Jan . 16. according to
Sheriff James M. Snulsby. She i.s
approximately five -fool. four- inches
t:lil and has blue eyes and blonde hair.
Soulsby said this morning lhat his
depan mem has checked on ·a number
of le:rds but have not come up with
any new infonnalion on the whereabouts of the teenager. There have
been rio responses to information
placed with the Nalional Crime Informal ion Center.
"We're slill investigating, checking things out," he said. "We've
checked several places in several
stales: there is nothing new."
Anyone wilh informalion concerning her whereabouts is advised 10

call the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department at 992-.1.17 1.

SAMANTHA WILCOXEN

OUTSTANDING - Lacy Marie Banks took one of the three outstanding awards at the Mel!!s High School science fair. Her exhibit dealt with different types of music and how they affect heart
rate at various times of the day.

TOP AWARD- Kristina Kennedy captured one of the three lop
awards in the Meigs High School Science Fair judging Thursday afternoon. Her exhibit compared the effects of commercial
antibacterial soap on bacteria.

Meigs science fair winners announced
Eight students received .superiors
on their science exhibits at the annual Meigs High School science fair
judged Thursday afternoon.
Receiving special award-t for nutstanding exhibits were Lacy Marie
Banks whos~ exhibil was on "How
does Hip-Hop Affect your Tick
Tock?". Rebekah Smith whu used
"Do Violent Movies Affect y&lt;'ur
Blood Pressure and Pul se". and
Kristina Kennedy. who used "Comparing rhe Elfec1s of Commercial
Antibacterial Soap on Bacteria" as
her theme.
Others with superior award.&gt;were
Matt Justice. "Plants and Pyramid
Power -Is There Truth 10 the Mylh ":
T J King. "Frostbite. Which Gloves
Protests the Best": Francn Romuno.
"The Emotional Power of Music ":
Bridget Vaughan. "Synthetic Based
vs. Petroleum Based Oil ": and
Hyung-Do Kim. "Is Drinking Wale(
Offered in Me1gs Cnunly Heallhi'"
There were 1Y proji!Ct!\ entered in
the science fair. Besides the eight
Continued on page 3

Activists
demand total
smoking ban
HEBRON. Ky. !API - The
largest airport in one: of tht! large'!
wbacco-growing slatt! s i' under
attack. for allowing smoking,
Anli-smoking activists on Thursday demanded a ban on smoking at
Greater Cincinnati-N\)rthern Kentucky lnternalional Airpon.
Spokesman Ted Bushelman said
1he airport has installed exhaust fans
and doors to limit the spread of
smoke from smoking areas. He said
the airport cannot ban smoking in
bars at the airpon because those businesses lease lhe space for lheir use.
Bushelman said Kentucky law
says any government building has to
allow smoki ng area.,. The airport's
management believes 1ha1 its build·
ings are government properly,
Bushelman said.
Ahron Leichtman. execulive
director of (:itizens 'for a Tobacco·
Free Society, said he thinks Kentucky
law applies oni:Y 10. state buildings.
not to the airport.

SUPERIORS - In addition to the three students taking "outstanding" for their exhibits in
the Meigs High School science fair, five others

''-'---&lt;/!;-·
..,,

:~

" ........

.

-l::'?~

Working the 'swing shift can be fun ... e.pecially
for second graders. Thursday's spring-like weather provided youngsters at Syracuse Elementary
!M:hool with the opportunity to play outside. Here,

students in Mr... Sayre's second grade class ('\torgan Brown, Lindsey Buzzard, Trenton Ros~berry
and Ryan C hapman - from front-to-rear) Sei! who
can swing the highest.

..

�Friday, February 27, 1998

Commentary

Page2
Friday, February 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

;us· .

I Death.,_Notices I

Saturday, Feb. 28
AccuWeather• forecast lor dayttmc cond111ons .ond h1

l •

MICH

~ The Daily Sentinel
'Lstll6fisliei in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

-liN--

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

TlloScolloctwolcomet-.tolllo_from_.,.,_,.,..,.,.._

poo-.,

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'-1
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,.,. - , . , _ """'"'""',. . - . &amp;eJt , _ /ncltltM • . , _ , -.....
onddo'flltrNp,.,.numbfl. s,..:ltr• -HIIIete'u ro-lo•pooofouutllcl•
o: t.llor. 11o11 ,•• Loll.,. to Ill• /Editor, ...,. S..tlne~ m Coun St . _,...,, 011/G
4!781; or, FAX to6t4-fm·219.
~...;:::.:;;:.;;:.,;,;;;;.,;,;;;,;;::;::;;,;,;.

_________...,______..a

Letters to the editor

·Government should get out of gambling
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler
Two decades ago. tl would've
been unthmkable for any polttlclan
to even be seen w1th a known gambler The connotauons 11 carrted -corruptiOn. ~raft . mob tnfluencc -would vc heen conSidered a careerkiller
These days mstead of shunnmg
gamblers -- 1hc gmcrnment make&lt;
them bustncS&gt; partners
ConSider the snuatt on today.
when leaders Of ):loth politiCal parttCS
can t run fas1 enough to collc c1 the
camp31gn doll .or s that now from
gambling s prolits House Speaker
Senate
Newt Gmgnch R Ga
MaJorlly Leader Trent Loll . R-'.1tss.
and Prcstdcnt Clinton have all ven
tured to Vegas 10 ptck up campa1gn
loot wuhuut a second 's thought -- or
a word ol bad publiw'
'
But after tw o decade&gt;
of unhn died growth. the gambling Industry

has expeneneed
tts share of setbacks lately A
growmg backlash IS underway
across the country by Citizens
and
localities
who don't want
casrnos mov mg

mto thetr· back- Anderson &amp;
) ards
Moiler
Spurred on by
conservattves Congress last year
created the Nat1onal Gambling
Impact Study CommtsSion and gave
11 ltm1ted subpoena power. It's supposed to exam me what harm, 1f any.
legal gambling has brought to the
commumttcs where 11 cxasts
But tf the US government IS
scrt ous aboul crackmg down on
gamblong we d adviSe 11 to first get
out of the bus me» tlsclf
For lhc hetlcr pan of tht&lt; decade,

Uncle Sam has been a partner m one
of Caltfomta's most profitable gambling halls, the Btcycle Club of Bell
Gardens, Caltf
The card club was ongmally
setzed by the Justtce Department tn
Apnl 1990, after several mdtv~duals
wtth financtal ttes to the club were
convtcted of laundenng drug profits
It was then turned over to the U S
Marshals Servtcc, whtch manages
and sells assets that arc seiZed by the
government
Only the government d1dn 't sell
the B1cycle Club Nearly ctght years
after the se tzure. the government
sttll owns a mmonty stake m the
club. and contmues to rake m profits
from Its card games Over the years
the government has made more than
$30 mtllton from tts gambling vcn·
lure . and the money's st1ll rollmg m
Even so, Justtcc Dcpanmc~t offictals swear they're trytng thctr best
to sell the club

Clarifies agency's role
Dear Eduor
The reccnl p1cketmg of Planned Parcnlhood ha&gt; caused me lo wonder 1f
1hc p1ckclcrs know ihc lolalmc"agc thai 1hcy arc scndm~ 10 I he pubhc and
1f they e'en know what · planned paren1hood · means
When people ialk ahoui women gomg lo get abon10ns m dark alleys m
the davs helorc Planned Parenthood 11 meant that !here were no comra.cp'" es a'adable to them 1 The role of Planned Parenthood and of other Family Plannmg agcnc 1cs was to m•kc 11 po'&gt;1blc for women 10 have a loVIng
sexual rcla11onsh1p wllh ihw husbands wllhout havmg to worry as to
whcthc1 a p1cgnancy would result
In those days famd1es were large women had many children despite nsks
to the11 health and thc11 only contraccpi1Ve opt1on was ahonwn The Roman
Catholic church forbade women from usmg comraccpuves. and many states
had actually passed laws forb1d,dmg the sale of contracepti ves D1d you
know that 11 was not until 1960 that 11 was legal to buy contraceptives m
Massachusetts 1 Those Jellies and condoms and pills so ohvtously ava1lahle

lf1TU~,

RATl~t(;l

J

.

now w&lt;:rc not then

However. contracepttves on average arc onl y 98'W cffecttvc Some
women have husbands who refuse to let them usc a contraceptive and who
themselves refuse to use a condom For many of these men who oflen arc
out of work or poor. chtldrcn are the maJor source of thctr self-esteem.
r·gardless of thetr betng able to g1vc the ch1ld cmottonal and finanetal support It 1&lt; at thiS pomt that some women who feel they must nol have a baby.
opt for abon1on, even after counseling Many ol these women feel that gtvcn
thetr ctrcumstanccs 11 ts a ncccsstty The Supreme Court deciSIOn granted
lhem the nght to thts chotec
There arc fewer than 60 Planned Parenthood Cltmcs tn 1he United States
where .tbonwns arc perfdrmcd, and these eltmcs account for less thop IO'i!
of ah0rttons performed the Umtcd States
'
Atlonwns have never been performed tn the cltntcs of Planned Parenthood ul Southeastern Oh10
Planned Parenthood and the other famtly plannmg agcnctes have as thctr
pnmary purpose women's reproductive health and the avotdance of unmtendcd prcgnanctcs Thousands of women come to these agenctes for pelVIc
and breast exams. the fittmg of dtaphragms. and prenatal exams. and for
AIDS tcstmg and total reproducttve care (Even men come for tcsttng and
cxammauons ) The com of these servtce&lt; m these not for profil agenncs arc
hased on a shdmg scale and the abtltty to pay Some women pay n01hmg lor
rhcsc .. crv1ccs
Plannmg to have a famtly and to dc1crmmc when and how many " po'' 'hlc wtth the usc ol contr.ICcpt!Vcs -Aod Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Ohoo serves the ~&lt;omen m our area hy provtdmg them with the health
care and pregnane) pre• cntum methods that they need for respnn,ohlc parenthood
'

'/t

Peg McDargh
Athens

Sunday hunting
Dear Editor '
Rcfl.!rnn!! In Mr 8Jhr\ lcucr Fch ~0 nn Sun&lt;.Ja\' hunun ~ H.: ha ... ,onh.:

lions and fmd ways to se ll the rluh
Over the seven -year pcnod.
court -appomtcd tru ... tcc dutrcs have
vaned wtdely and thetr compensation has grown exponentially lhc
report note~ · Compcn,.uron ha~
ranged from ahout $2 000 per month
for the lirst truslec. to .m ,1\er.tec nl
about $21.000 per momh lor th; second trustee to an uncapped llat raic
ol $]511 per hour lor the current
trustee th.u has average $60.000 per
month. c,_cludtng expenses
Wtth salancs like that . tt 's no
wonder the trustees haven 1 heen too
eager to pan wtth the B1cyclc Cluh
Of course. the B1cycle Club ts
merely the most hlatant example of
government's symhlotlc relauonshtp
with the gamhling mdustry Every
state tn the un1on except Utah anJ
Hawau currently allows some lorm
of gamblmg -- whclhcr 1t's state lottcncs. horse rae mg. slot machrncs Or
castnos The revenue lrom thc~e
games. whtch tend to attr~ct the poqr
on promtscs ol qu1d mtlhons pad
state coffers .md spare lawmakers
from the unple.tsant task ol havmg to
ra~sc taxes
The results of the Gambling
CommtsSion s rcpon arc sttll more
than a year away But whatever concluSion the experts draw, don't he
surpnsed tf the rcpon ends up gathenng dust m a corner somewhere
Our elected leaders would never
dare to shoot the government's ca:;h
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate,lnc.

~IJ!l...
~n

U.S. cautions Taiwan freedom movement
By William A. Rusher
In a largely unnottccd hut poten ttally maJor development a htghpo"ercd group of former US olf1
crah. recently Vl!&lt;illed Tar"'·'" Tc~.:h
ntcall) the vt"t was stnctly unolliua l ·· hut .unun!! tin.: cr1!ht mcm hcr., ol the dcput~tlon "'-t.:--rc fonncr
Clinton Dclcn'oC Secretary Wilham
Perry ('" cha11m,m 1 Prcstdent
Bu-.h ' natum.rl \Ccurll) ,,J, r. . cr
Brent S~.: owuolt former cha1rma.n
ol the Jomt Ch1ds ol St.tl t Gen
John Shahkash' th and lonner commander m ch1el nl the U S P.oulic
Command Adm Roland Hav es
Groups ul that hell don 1 tr.tvcl
ahroad wrthout the knm\ kc..h..'l.' .md
approv:.tl of the gmcrnrncnt .~nd rt,

Rusher

were
wtdcly
hatlcd as "gnaltng the end
of the KMT's
hr . . torrc hammerlock
on
power 1n Tal ·
wan and many
ohscrvcrs predict that the
DPP Will ·'""

wm

uon~

the clcc
I or the

natwnal lc!!r,J.ll urc th1s comm1!
Dcccmllo!r '
'
If that happen' the 1ntcrnattonal
cnnscquenccs could poten11ally he
\.l.!rrou' For wlulc the n~ltronal govcrnmcnl under KMT control has
c.orclully '" 111~cd annoymg Bet]tng
hy o.;cckrng lO turn Tarwan mto ,,
n;ttton who\C tlc,trny would he
wholly scp.tratc lrom matnland
Cluna. the DPP has long toyed wuh
exactly that 1dca It, 'pokcsmcn
have assured tho! Tatw.mcsc people
thut \UCh a move woult.J gam greater
rntcrnattonal rcco~nrllon fnr the
,,!Jnd and more nulrtary a."'s r. . tancc
from lhc Unucd States
The US State Department 'ecms
to have taken the DPP\ Novcmher
\ tuory a'i a \I gil lhat 11 had hcttcr get
hus) changmg the DPP' tnmd The
fiPil \lCp was to have lnrmcr A"'sts-

tant Secretary nl Defense Joseph
Nyc and former U S .unha."ador to
Beljtng James Lilley 'stop over tn
Ta1pc1 JU~t as th(' ~...urrcnt Dclcn~te
...cnctary. Wlllr.lm 'Cohen w.l.,. vrsrt
mg BetJIOf N)c lr.onkly s.ud that
Washmglnn tavun:t.l .1 ... uuatwn 10
whtch Ta1w.m d1d no1 'cck mdcpendcnce an~ the maml.ond d1d not u'c
for~.:c agmnst II The rcsuh as Nyc
put lt. would he a st.ttu' quo ol ·no
war no peace no unrlic.nmn . no
mdcpendcncc
Then came the vtslt ol the et~ht ­
mcmhcr (klc~.,trnn tir~t t.Jcst:nhcu
ahovc lh. purpose ~cems tn have
been to m.1ke tt de.lf 1n talks w1th
both government (KMT) and DPP
ollictal &gt; lhat the Unttcd States
wnul«... oppo~c any move lO dcd.trc
Ta~wan mdcpendcnt The KMT may
led reasonably comlnnahlc about
thiS. hut 11 unquestionably pub
hca\y pressure on the DPP tn mndtfy tis tr,tdnumal stand nn thiS tssue
Actually. there may have been
le" to the DPP's Novcmher voctory
than met the eye TI1c KMT wa'
,c,crcly handtcapped hy 1n1ernal
feud' . and a numher ol 1h c.mdtdates had to run. not only a~amst
thetr DPP opponent- hut agamst
renegade tndcpcndcnt KMT candt·
dates who. 111 effect acted •" "spoil·
c~ · These accounted for several of

Tht remit, a&lt; Nye put it,
would bt a &lt;talu&lt; quo of "1111
war, 1111 peace, no unification,
1111

independe11ct. "

'
the DPP v1ctnnes
In rslancJ -wrdc clccttons on Jan
24 lor uty and county councilors
sm.tll-crty mayors .• mt.J town~h1p
ch1els the KMT got Its act together
and won 525 ol the KYO cnntest'
wnh the DPP wtnnmg nnly Ill
(Mnst of the rest went to rndcpc n~cnts )

Sui I the KMT" tn no posttton to
lecl wnlidcnt about vtctory tn the
Dcccmher elections for the Lcgtslatlvc Yuan At present 11 "hangmg on
hy the thmnest posSible maJnrtty So
the warntng dclt vcred to the DPP hy
Washmgton's " un offictal " deputation "timely nonetheless
llll\ IS no lime (0 he aggravating
BCIJint! unncccs . . arrly On the other
hand rl 11 a\lord' dmng ,o. T3rwan
l:an tount on U S support agam~l
any mamland rntht.tr) agg rcs!\100

William A. Rushtr is a Distin·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
ln.•titutr for the Study of Statesmanship and Politkal Philosophy.

'This car will be unoccupied' - Understanding the Rapture
.

Barry's
World

WELCOME. TO iHE.

\

oul a dnvcr may
crash but the
believers m the
car wtll be res·
cued
Some born ·
agatn Chnsuam
leave rnstruc
trons

on

the

dashboard of
their car telltng
their pa&lt;sengcrs
Plagenz'
what to do tf they
suddenly find themselves tn a dnvcrlcss vch1clc
Do not pantc. the tn&lt;trucliOns
say 'Shut off the 1gntt1on and steer
the car to the Side of the road ·
(Tht&lt; t&lt; caster sa1d than done
When you shut off the 1gnttton of a
car wnh power stecnng you can no
longer steer the vehtcle )
The event St Paul IS descnbmg
to the Thcssalontans IS known to
born-agam Chnsttans today as the
Rapture The word comes from the
Laun word " rapt, .. meanmg " to
sctze or carry off...
What St Paul ts saymg tS that at
the final moment m human htstory.
known as the Great Tnbulauon -- a

But as Christian fiction joins the mainstream
best-seller book lists, the Rapture is regaining its
biblical overtones.
cosmtc dtsaster spoken of m the
Book of Rc,elattOn "-'Armageddon
-- everyone and cverythong w1ll be
destroyed except for the heltcvers,
who wtll be carroed ofl to safe ty on
the Rapture
Rapture has lost most of tts reltgtous connotations today It now
refers pnmanly to tlie expencnce of
bemg "carrocd away · to the hc1ghts
of entasy on Eanh
But as Chnsttan fictiOn JOms the
mamstrcam best-seller hook hst'
the Rapture ts t'cgatnmi tts btbhcal
overtones
A new sencs of thnllcrs about the
apocalypse (or the LaM Days) ts
called "I..cft Behind .. (a reference to
those who wtll be left behtnd when
the dreaded ttme of Armageddon
amves)
A recent rcvtcw calls tbc first
book in this sencs (also lttlcd "Left
Behtnd"J a "novel tn whtch every-

IToledo!4B' I

Bettte Gladwell, 74. Middleport. dted on Thursday. Feb 26, 1998 at 1he
Roekspnngs Rehabilttatton Center m Pomeroy She was born on January
24, 1924 m Mtddlepon. daughter of the late Delbert and Theresa Henry
Becker She was employed by Ohw Bell Telephone lor more than 40 )Cars
be lore her rettrement
Surv1vtng are a son and daughter-m-law. Larry and Debb1e Gladwell ol
Cleveland, a brother, Don Becker ol M1ddlepon. three granuch 1ldren. a ntece
and four nephews
Bestdes her parents. she was preceded m death by her Sister-In- law. Betty Becker
Servtces wtll be held al I p m on Sunday. March I. )998 at the Mlddlepon Chapel ol Ftsher Funeral Home With Rev James Kessee oltic~at­
tng Bunal w1 ll follow tn Ktrkland Memory Gardens tn POint Pleasant. W Va
Fnends may call at the luneral hom~ on Saturday from 7 to 9 p m and
on Sunday from 10 am unit I the ttme ol semce

IMansfield Iso" I•

~

'

' ' ' '

() ,

David Sayre

W VA

'''''

who arc supposed to ovcr:tcc opera-

cow

\ahd ohJCCt~ons 11 mdced they d1d occ ur ·'' he outl11;ed
'
However cvcrv uun has two s1d~' .tnLII 11:\.'1 that 'OIIli..' o l th..; ohJI.'l iiOn'
he mentioned arc 1sol.lll'c..l lni..H.Icnh •md ... uuiJ .1pplv to hunlln!! .my day ol
the week not JUst on Sunday
In 20 years of m1l11ary sen Ill' I hunt ed .1 lot nl , Iall.'' 1ndudmg J.tp.m
and Ala~la TI1crc . . ccrncd to h..· no Ill dk~..:h m ;.m\ ol tllC\C plalc:.. lrom !'!ale to a''umc th.uth~:.. one &lt;.Juln 1 ~o
Sunday huntmg
to Tat~ an to d!'I\:U\:-. thr rnu.: nt . . ~ ,y
In rckrcnrc In chun:hc, the~ .He thcrr t' \Cf~ tl.l) olthc week and often- !o.~lUCC
urn~' 1herc arc peopk '" and around them '""kmg Granted Keith W&lt;~ld
The prc~.:rprtaung C\COI w,,, the
1wi ld hie ofliccr) '' onl) one w.orden hu1 he has lull cuoper.ollon wtth the VIC lory l.hl No\ cmha ol the
... hen II\. department bndo"ncr~ :~ncJ other cnlorlcment agencrC!oo d needed
Dcmtx.:r.rtu.: Prog-rc,..., l\c Pan v (DPP)
Trc,pav.. cr' ar~ dealt \\ rlh :.H:um.Jrngly rc.1d the u mn rlotc' durrng :-~nd allcr over the l o n~ domrnant Kuomrntang
huntmg \..:a!ooon
(KMT) rn Tam.tn ' ckl..:!wn .. for
A... lor uu1 pcr.uron lx:t\\ecn hunter~ and l.rndowners nnly the hunter~ ~:an counly ma~"tratc' and lll) rna) or'
nuh· thr' work Some tanner~ \\ould welcome huntmg on Suml.ty I don't The KMT h,od nner la1lcu to come
;ce "here thts ~&lt;ould cause more l.md to he posled The hunter. etther he or rn tiro.;l rn nati OO\\Jd\' I.'ICtll~ l n.., .md
... he .hk.., for pcrrnr ...... ron to hunt the lando" ncr crthcr granl~ 11m he Uoc,n't rl v.a... c:.;.pntcd that 11 v.nuld Uo ,n
Let ... take an example and an argument for Sunday hun11ng
.tgam .tlhell namm h ln, tcad lhc
Two turkey pcnnn' lor ... pnng huntmg cost S40 You plan to hunt hur DPP Yo on I~ ol the l:nntt·..,t..:d 'c~th
vnur
schedule "changed .. now you arc unahl&lt;:. Hl cv~n hunt Saturday. the KMT won onl) c1ght .md mdc
,,, vou w1ll he "orkanl.! ' 'x dav' a week You ~.:ant hunt late aflcrnoon as the pcndcnh won thr~c ThL'"'c rt~ ~oult ...
legal hun11ng hours ar~ 112 hour llo!forc s~nnsc unt1l noon
You could. tf allowed lo hunt on Sunday. get tn three mormngs of hunt'"g I have two permoh from last year. they don't make a really 'good cup of
tea
By George R. Plagenz
Most hunters apprcuatc the pnvtlc ~c of hunttng There wtll always he
The mc, ... ag~ on rto~t decal ... nr
those that abuse any program Deal wuh them on an mdtvtdual basts don 1
humpcr
'tillers on .l~.h u rnohrl c, ~~
put everything 1n one ba,ket
cry,tal clear What could he plamcr
than Gn Bulls' ' or Rcc)cle I
M.L. Cooper
More dtlflcull In unravel " th"
Shade
rear- ~ rndo" ''g:n
In ~.:a."c of Rapture thrs ~.::ar w1ll he unoccuprcd ·
- It " what mtght tx:_callcd a pnva tc JOke · understood only b) a
'clec l fc" - hut to fundamentalist
ChnsliJns \\ ho wtll :\mrle k.nowrn2"'LL- SCI-.t\l&gt;AL
l) as the) read 11 specdmg along the
frec"ay
It'" not a JOke It rs true
CI\A~NEL
While th1' m:o y sound unreal.
nulltnn&gt; of born-agam Chnsllans
take St Paul literally m what he says
ahoutthc end of the world m I Thcs.
'alontans 4
" For the Lord hunself .!mil
descend from heaven and the dead
tn ChrtSI shall nsc fir&lt;t Then we
who arc al1ve shall be caught up
together With them 1n the clouds and
meet the Lord m the atr ..
In other word&lt;. when the end of
the world comes. the believers wtll
be &lt;natched away to safety by Chnst
wherever lhcy arc .. even tf 11 " at
the wheel of an automobtle careentng down the htghway The car wtth-

'""k

The fate of the Btcycle Club was
the , subject ol a harsh aud1t repon
released last week by the Justice
Department's Offtcc of Inspector
General The audit -- whose concluSIOns were dtsputcd by the agency's
cnmmal dtviSIOns -- suggests that
the ~ovcrnment has been less than
d11igcnt on trymg 10 gel out of the
gambling bust ness ' In the meantime.
the market value of the gr·· ~.;fO ­
ment's share has fallen tn recent
years as new compctllton has
cropped up
One rca-on lor the long delay
may he the trustees who arc charged
wtth managmg 1he government's
Interest m the club S1ncc 1990,
accordtng to the repon . there have
been three coun-appomtcd trustees

Bettie Gladwell

one 1n the ~&lt;orld who " saved ~y:
Chnst ascends to heaven tn an.
Instant, Jc::avmg l:ar!"o without dn\lcr~ :
and planes Without ptlots "
There arc \Ccne' of death and:
destruction 1n kccptng wllh the :
Armageddon theme " hut no prolan - ·
oty and no 'ex ·
The book ' l..clt Ilchm~ · ha.' sold .
500.fXXJ ~.:oprcs 'ln&lt;.:e It was first :
published tn I'1'15 A sccnnd hook m ·
the sene' tilled "Tnhulatlon :
Force ... ha.' 'old 300,000 cop1es :
The latest entry m the senes "called :
" N1colae ·
Publishers Weekly calls the rch- ;
gtous hook market "a hot top1c.' as ~
readers who not long ago were ,ay- .
tng, "There ts no meanmg w ' ltfe"
now arc askmg, wllh mcreasmg fer\ Or, " What" the mcamng of ltle , ..
Geor-ge Plagenz is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enter!loise
Association.

Showers T·storms Ram

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

V1a Assoc!Bted Press GraphrcsNet

Today's weather report
By The Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Tomght. Mostly cloudy wtth a
chance of showers unttl mtdntght
Lows m the lower 40s Ltght and
vanable Wind Chance of ram 30 percent.
Saturday .Mostly cloudy A
chance ol showers and thunderstorms
in the ·afternoon Htghs near 60
Chance of ram 40 percent
Extended forecast
Saturday ntght Cl'?udy wllh a

chance of sho\\ers Lows m the lower 40s
Sunday.. Occastonal ram Htghs
near 50
Monday . Ram
ltkely Then
cloudy wnh a chance ol snow showers at ntght Lows. m the upper 30s
and highs near 40,
Tuesday Cloudy wtth a chance of
ram dunng the day Otherwtse partly cloudy Lows m the lower 30s and
h1ghs m the mtd 40s.

Applications for HEAP
still being accepted
Gallta-Meogs Commumty Actton
Agency conltnues to aceepl Emergency HEAP appltcallons lor the
1997-98 heat1ng season through
March 31
"February's chollmg wmd'. coupled wtth the cost of home heaung
fuel . contmues 10 create a profound
hardshtp on the workmg poor, as wdl
a.&lt; households on a llxed mcome
throughout the area," HEAP Coordinator Letha Proflitt satd
Emergency HEAPprovtdes financial assistance to low-tncome households threatened w1th dtsconnecuon
ot the1r heatmg source, have already
had thetr servtte diSconnected. or
have a. less than I0-day supply ol
bulk fuel
To be eltg1ble for the program
both the mcome gutdelmes and the
emergency requ11emen1s must be
met. Household tncome IS deli ned as
gross tncome of all household memb.:rs. except earned tncome of de pen·
dent mmors under .tge IM
Allowable .mnual tncome tor a
one-person household " $ 11.835.
two persons, $15.915. three people
$19,995, four pec•ple. $24.075. live
people. $28.155. and SIX people.
$32.335 For eac~•. oddlllonal house·
hold member. add $4.080
The program allows a one-ttme
payment of up to $175 per healing
season to re:itore or matntam homt!
heatmg serv1ces
Households wtth heat supplied b)
PUCO-regulate~ uultt~es must be

enrolled,;, the Percentaue ol Income
Plan (PIP) to tie eltgtbie for emergency benelits
Home VISIIs can be arranged Lo
asstst the elderly. diSabled or home bound who are unable to get to
CAA's inlake sues.
Appl1catums are also avatlable lor
the Regular ~AP program . an .lddlllonal heaun g asststance program on
a non-emel);ency nalure The 1n~.:ome
gutdehnes are the same for both programs The dead Ime lor Reg~lar .
HEAP appl 1cattons "also March 3T:
Applica~Jens for bot~ e:o,gram:;
can he made Monday through Thursday. 9 am -noon and 1-J p m.. at
e1ther the Gallta County HEAP
oltice. 859 Third Ave. Gallipolis. or
lhe -Metgs County HEAP off1ce.
J9J50 Unton Ave Pomeroy The
CAA Central Office at Chesh~re
accepts appl1cattons Monday through
Wednesday. 9 am -noon and 1-3 JO
p m No applications are taken on Fnday
For lurther mlornl&lt;l!mn. c.111 the
Chesh11c olllce at 36 7-7 J~ I. or 9926029 m Me~g' County. 446-68.\9 tor
the Galha County CAA Outreach
onice .•md 992-5605 for the Me1~s
County Outreach olfice
A""tance can also be obtamed hy
calling the HEAP toll-free number. 1800-282-0HBO Heanng- unpatred
appl1cants With a lelecommunu.:atron'
devtce lor the deal &lt;TDDl can call
toll-lree. 1-H00-686- 1557

Land transfers posted
The followmg land tr.msle" were
recently '" the nllice ol
Metgs Counly Recorder Emmogene
Hamti!On
Deed, Genevoeve Swartz to Vonda K. Garnes. Pomeroy parcel.
Deed. Rhea J. Wtllis to Bnan K
and Davtna J W1ll". Sc1p1o parcels
Deed. BP Exploratwn and 01llnc
recorde~

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ZIJ·960)
Pubhstlal rver¥ aflcrnoon, Mond:n thtollgft
Fnday Ill Court St Pomcmy Oh1u l'lv 1M

Oh10 VotiiCy 1'\JblbhtnK Company/Gannett Co
4~7fl9 Ph 99111 &lt;ill 5(c11nd

Pomtroy 01'11o

class posrage p;ur.J at Pomeroy Otuo
Mca~b«

The Assocnned Pr('ss anJ the:
Ne"spaptr I\SSOc 1 ~11011

Ok~t'

POSTMAn£1 : Stnd ilddreu couec11ons tn
The Oa1ly Scn11nel Ill Cuurt St Pomt'toy
Oh10 •5769
SUISCRIP'TION RATES
By Carritr or Motor Ro.tt
One Wed•....•••••••••••••..••.••••..•••.•.••••••..••..••..•••
One-Month
..
OneYur ........................... .

SINGLE C'i' PY PRICE
Oa1ly .....................................
3" Cen1s
Sub5crtbtrs not desmng to pay the earner may

rem11 1n advance duect 10 The Da1l y Scnllnet

o n a lhree. nx or 12 monlh basts Crrdu w1ll be
g"'tn. canter each week

No subscuptJOn by ma•l ptrm t!ltd 1n areas
whtrt" home c.amrr stNK:e IS ava1bblr

Publtsber raaves the rtJhl 10 adJust rates dr.~r
lftJ !Itt subscnphon pcrtod Subsa•ptwn utr

dlanrcs ril.ay be Implemented by changmg
durat.on af the subscnphon

t~

MAILSUBSCRtmONS
l•kle Mdp Cou•ly

13127..10
26 W..ks •
. ISJHl
'ZW..ks -·.. .. .. .
. $10556
Rain O.Uidt Melp Co•JI}
13 W..ks
. ll9ZS
lA\-k•
$56111&lt;
S2Wl!eks

•

$10972

to Dale F Ellis. Mtddlcport
De&lt;d. D.tl&lt; F and Marg1&lt; R Ellis
to John W Cl.trk Otl Company. Middleport parcels.
Deed. Robert J, :ond Addalou
LewiS to Johnny Btll and Jenn1l&lt;r M
Hoback Sutton parcel.
Deed. Donald C Shaffer to J
Scott H1ll. Ractne p.orcel':
Deed. Carole A and Ronald E
Phillips to same. Salem parcels

Davod Jesse Sayre. 57. Ponland. d1ed on Fnday. February 27. 1998 at The
Ohto State Untver,l ty Hospllal m Columbus
He was a self-employed auto mechamc. owner of The Velvet Hammer
m Ravenswood. W Va He was a BaptiSt
Survtv~ng are hts w1fe. Gwendlyn Sayre. hts mother, L.oura Sayre, Clendenin W Va stx daughters J.mel Mane Sayre. Fatlh Spece. Audrey Tallman. and Brenda Suer. all ol Ravenswood. W Va. Le,lte Sayre. Elkhan. lnd .
and Angela Sayre. Raven swood. W Va. live brothers. Ohley Sayre.
Ra,en swood. W Va . Joe Sayre. Rae me. James Albert Sayre. Sev1lle. Basil
Sayre. Westlake. Randall Sayre. Cleveland. four Sisters Gamet Taylor, Clendenin. W Va , Mary Jones, Clendentn. W Va . Wanda. whose address ts
unknown. and Ma\ ts Possa. Cuyahoga Falls. fi\e grandsons and two granddaughters
Fnends may call Saturday from 6 .o 8 p m at Casto Funeral Home m
Ravenswood Funeral Home and on Sunday at Hafer Funeral Home tn
Elkvtew. W Va one hour pnor to the serv1ce. whtch wtll be held there at 5
p.m. on Sunday

Economic growth not
as good as first thought
WASHINGTON lAP) - The
Amencan econpmy entl&lt;d 1997 by
grow~ng at a 3 9 percenl annual rate.
nol qutte as fast as f1rst est imated but
sul l a robust finiSh to a remarkab ly
strong year
Tbe new esttmate of the fourthquarter advance 10 the tnOauonauJusted gross domes!tc 'product , lhe
, urn of all goods and servtces produced wtthln U S boruers. marks a
dvwnward reviSion from last month\
4 3 percent est1mate
The change lett the GDP mcrease
for the full year unchanged ala ntneyear h1gh of 3 8 percent. the Commerce Department sa~d today
The growth was accompl"hed at
the same ltme mtla!ton sub"ded to
ihe m1ldest rate tn 32 years. 2 percent
tor all of 1997 and a scant I 4 percent
annual rate dunng the last halt ot the
year.
Stocks opened mtxed on Wall
Street after the report ·s release Proltt-takiOg depressed broad-market
tndexes but the Dow Jones mdustn al average pushed mlo recoru temtory. nstng 30 potnts to 8.520 by mtdmornmg
Economtsts expect ASian linanc1al
turmotl wtll dampen US econom1c
growth to about 2 5 percenl thiS year.
pnnctpally by balloonmg the tr.tue
deliCil Becau'e ol currency dev.tlu.ttlons, As1an countnes can 'ell at
loY.cr prrces than Amcncan competitors And ASian consum~rs have
much less purchasmg power with
wh1ch to buy U S goods
There were hmts ol troubk to
come 10 the lounh-4 uarter report
Trade actually helped US gro\\th m
lhe founh quarter. a rela!tvely rare
occurrence. but not ne.~rly a&lt; much"'
lirst estimated The esumate ol export

growth was cut trom an II 3 percent
rate to 10 percent lmpon growth was
much stro.nger. 6 4 percent for the
quarter versu' I 3 percent
The December tmport mcrease.
whoch waso 't known at the ttme of
last month\ 1ntt1al esllmate of founhquarter GDP, was the largest Since
'.~~arch 1993
The changes to the trade numbers
more than oflset a large upward reviSIOn to the esumated tncrease m
mventones Though mvcntory bu1ld·
tng supported h1gh growth m the
lourth quarter tl 1mpltes some slowtng early thts year That's because
bu&lt;tnesses can sell goods tram tnventory rather than dem.tndmg mcreased
producuon lrom factones
·The U S. economy " about to
slow." satd economtst Bruce Stemberg of Mern II Lynch "The strength
ol lhe founh-quaner acuvny w,,,
based on two sectors that wdl reverse
We expect both trade and mventones to be down sharply 10 the first
quarter ..
Other sectors ol the economy '"
the lourth quarter look much the
same on today\ rcpon as they d1d m
la~t month"s estrmate Consumer
spend1ng. accounttng lor about twothrrds of economrl ,ll:tiYIIy. grew ,11
,, J I percent rate mstea~ ol 1 2 pcrcc:nt Hou~rng constnu.:tron mc r~.1sed
at a 9 7 percent rate versus Ill 4 perl:ent Busrness t:on:..tructron and
mvestme nt 10 nc!w equ1pment
tkclined at a 3.5 pacenl rate tnstead
ol 3 6 percent
The e'tlmate ol growth 111 gov·
ernment spendmg was cut I rom a I 6
percent rate to 0 ~ pncent The revt·
Slon wa' mostly .occounted lor by the
s,tle ol the Elk Htll' nava l petroleum
reserve to pnvatc busmesse'

Meigs announcements
Lenten services
Spec~al Lenten sef\ oces will be
held at the Pomeroy Un lt~d
Methodtst Church wllh B1ble ' tudy
Sunday.16 30 p m. w1th preachmg at
7 JO p m wllh 'pec~al guest Rev
Ketth Rader Pastor Bob Robm,on
IIIVIIeS the publiC

uepanment at 992-6626 lor more
Jnformat1on

Trustees to meel
The Salisbury Township Tru stees
w1ll meet on Tuesday at 6 p m .11 the
1ownsh1p bwldmg on Rockspnnmgs
Road

Public meeting set
Immunization clintc
The Tuppers Pla10s Reg1onal
The Metgs County Health Depart1 ment wtll oiler a lree evenmg Immu- Sewer D~&gt;trtct will hold a publtc
nization cltnoc on Tue,day S-7 p m mtormatron meetrng at the Tupper"
at
the Metgs Multipurpose Center m Plams Elementary School on Mon ·
Am Ele Power ...................... 48'.
Pomeroy
Every ch1ld must be day at 7 p m All homeowners '" the
Akzo .................... } ........ l 01 1.
accompamed by a parent or legal d~&gt;tnct are asked to attend lhe meet·
AmrTech ............................. 41 ~.
Ashland Dtl ......................... 54" •
guardtan With a copy ol the c ht l~\ mg Flters about the meeung Will be
AT&amp;T ....................................621.
tmmumzat ton report Call the health placed at area reSidences
Bank One ............................. 56\
Bob Evans ............................ 20',
Continued from page I
Borg-Warner ................ ~ ...... 59',
•
•
Broughton ........................... 14;•
Champion ........................... 15 .
,upenors. 15 entnes receJ'a:d e~cel­ tncl elementary educat1on supennCharm Shps ......................... ..41.
lent ratrng!-1. and "'x. were g1ven tendent. and Dane Blake. mamlc ·
City Holding ......................... 43',
awards ot good
nance s,upen ntendent ol Southern
Federal Mogul... ................... 491,
Judgmg
!he
entrtes
were
Ann
SISOhto
Coal Co
Gannett .................................64',
son.
sctence
teacher
at
Southern
Hogh
toward the program
Contnbutors
Goodyear ........................ 691.
School. Jants Carnahan educatiOn were PDK ConstructiOn , Larry
Kmart .................................... 13).
Kroger .......... .................... 41 .,.
coordmator tor tht Metgs Sod and Kennedy, D D s.: Harold Brown.
Lands End ............................... 40
Water Conservauon Dtstnct Bobb1e D D S . John Lenlz. prosecuung
Limited .................................. 291,
Htll. med1cal technologiSt for Holz- attorney. Vaughan\ IGA . and E
Oak Hill Finl ............................ 27
er Medtcal Center Laboratones. John John Strauss. D D S
OVB ...................................... 36),
Costanzo, Me~gs .Local School D"t;&gt;ne Valley ............................. 3611o
Lmda Sm1th "the sc1ence teacher
Peoples ................................. 42),
who coordmates the sctence fall
Prem Flnl ................................. 24
Rockwell ............................... 59l.
Holzer Medical Center
RD/Shell ................................ 54l.
Dischar-ges Feb. 26 - Andrea
Sears .................................... 53'1-.
Shoney's ................................... 5 Tilley, Mrs Davtd Mtller and son.
Star Bank............................. 58"• Opal ManiOn. Be!Sie Supple Mrs.
Wendy's ............................... 21 l.
Chad Smclatr and daughter, Phyllts
Worthington .......................... 17'1.
Vimng, Freda Robmson
...!-•-·Birth - Mr. and Mrs Wilham
Stock reports are the 10:30
Foster.
daughter. Btdwell
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
(Published with permission)
of Gallipolis.

FURRY FRIENO - Louie li'te Hartwell Hare was on display
Thursday afternoon at the corner of Court and Matn streets in
Pomeroy. The Hartwell House has as its mascots the Hartwell
Hares, said bUSiness owner Bobbie Karr, shown here adjusting
Loute's apparel. Karr said she received numerous comments on
the jumbo-sized stuffed animal.

Meigs EMS logs 8 calls
Unus ol the Metgs County Emergency Medteal Serv~ce recorded e1ght
calls lm as&lt;ost.mce Thursday Untts
responding tnclu~ed .
CENTRAL DISPATCH
IO SR a m . Memonal Dnv&lt;.
Pomeroy. ElSie Crouser. Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal.
5 43 p m . Gold R1dge Road.
Pomeroy Ruby C3'il lle 0 Blene"
Memortal Hospital .
I0 52 p m . Th11d Street. Rae me.
Paul Lew''· VMH. Racme '4uad
asststed
RACINE
3 39 p m . volunteer lire department and squ.td to state Route BX
one-car acudent Ilarbara Sa lyers.
Jodt Cumm1ns. Kelly Parsons. Ltsa
Johnson. MeliSsa Johnson. Sherro

Reed. refused treatment
o 12 p m. Th11~ Street. Patnck
Sn 1~er. tre,otcd at the sce ne
RUTLAND
II 35 am. Metgs Mme 2. Darrell
Tilley. HMC. Central D"p,uch squ.td
.tsSisted
SYRACUSE
12 27 p m . Trouble Creek Road.
Portland Bryan Smtih lreated al the
SCt! ne
TUPPERS PLAINS
2 33 p m . volunteer lire department .m~ squ.1d to stme Route 7.
motor-veh1cle ,OLctdent. Mtchael Nutter and Julte Smuh. treateu al the
sce ne. Amy Nutter. Camden-Clark
Memonal Hospital Centra l Dtspallh
:-iquac.l assisted tran sporung Gene
Wtll to St Joseph's Ho,pual

Two-car crash results in injury
A Rae me youth was InJured tn a two-car .tcCident Thursuay t1n State
Roule 3]8 the Gallia-Me~gs Po,l ol the State H1ghway Putml reported 1
Meli"a D Johnson. 13. Walnut Street ,, passenger 111 ,, c.1r dnven by •
Ltsa D John,on. 3 1.•1bo ol W.olnut Street. R.ocme. refuse~ treatment at
the 'rene troopers satd.
L1sa Johnson wa.' southbound .11 3 J I p m tn Letan Town,h1p when
she was unable to stop m t1me an~ struck the rear ol a stopped car unven
by Kelly J Parsons. 27. 4H4J5 Blind Hollow Road. Rae me. accordtng to
the palrol
Parsons was stopped southbound and was t.1lk1ng to the occup.tnt of a
nonhbound veh1cle when the cra'h occurre~. troopers satd
Damage was moderate to both cars Johnson was ctted lor .&gt;ssured clear ,
diStance. and Parsons was ttcketed lor stopped/slowmg speed to tmpede
trallic

Voinovich, judge.. ;ontinued rrom page I
The Akron Beacon Journ.tl report·
ed today th.ll M1troll \ l.und y ha s
dec1ded lo sk 1p the exc~ullon Rel.oIIVCs m .. te.tUa\k~J lo ht.• n:prc,ented
by the ,trn:,ung ol!icers - Kenton
Counl&gt;. Ky. pohce P.ltrolm,tn
Charks Voorhees .utd Delclllve
Duane Rolhen - .tnd Wdll.un F
Flono ol Brt:&lt;.:kwrlle .•rn rn\ e.., Lrg.ttor
hored when Mllroll w.h reported

Weaver. ~eputy .1110rney general. .

miSSin£.

Attorney' lor the- . . t.th:: who ha ve

dubhed Berry 'The Volunteer"
becau'e he ha ' taken sleps In speed
up hr' exe~.::ullnn ,.Jy h~ 'hou ld get
h" wosh The Ohl&lt;l public detcndcr '
otlrce whrLh Is se~k1ng to hhx:k the
t:XI!l:UUon despite Berry\ v.r . . hc'
.argu b th.11 Bi.!rry rs too rnt:nt,rlly 111
to m.ake the Jecrsron
Reg.truks&gt; ol how M.trhlq rub
hoth ,,ue, .m: ex:pcu~d t1) umt1rnh:
liltng .1ppcal' all the w.1y to Ihe US.
Supreme Cu url
Three 6th US CircUli Cuurt ol
Appe.d' JUdges m C1nunn.o11 likely
wr ll um .. u..ler the c.t'c durrng the
week&lt;nd or on Munday. '·"~ Mark

FAMOUS COLE
INDOOR CIRCUS
NEW SUPER GALACTIC
SPACE ODYSSEY
EXTRAVAGANZA

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
SUNDAY, MARCH 8
2:00 &amp; 4:30 PM
Sponsored by:
POMEROY/MIDDLEPORT
LIONS CLUB
Tickets: $6 advance
$7 day of show
Available at:
RITCHIE'S AUTO SALES
660 &amp; Main, Pomeroy
KENNY UTI, CPA
216 YI E. Main, Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER INS.
113 W. 2nd, Pomeroy

Stocks

Meigs science...

Hospital news

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of
Your T,lephone Service, Then You Can
Call Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Free!!'
DIAL

r;

992·7834

~

Holzer Clinic .. ..
Jiere J or ')'our Jiea[tfi, Jiere J or ')'our Life tune

�Sports

The Daily

Sent~-;1

Friday, Feb~uary 27, 1998

Washington Court House ·gets 49-36 win Qver Marauders
Court H o l ht.!

tnn ~ a~han t.t gt'

ot a

~IrOn~ tl11 rJ p!.:IIDJ ,mJ ~ 1.: 111 Oil 10
M~' t!" 49~ \t) m g trl ~ · Dt vt !'.trm
11 dl '\tn ct t Pum ;.~ mt' llt ..,t: mtllnal act tun

dt!fl!at

Thur.-.da]

~\elll l l~ .1 1 Chdl!cothc

Htgh

j(~hc

Sc·honl
Th ~

""'' .1 Y-H le.1d wllh 3 55 left on a
\',dcnc Kn1c bucket.
Be\.· ~~ S~1 1th gave Metg' thi! lead
.1t Ill·'! un .1la; -In Wllh 3: II left. Bui
Ktn !! lllt .t 10 hl1Hcr anJ thc:n drained
,, th;ec po1ntcr to gtve 14- 10 advan\,Jge "11h I 17 kll K1ng. only a
:..ophomute ~LmeLI ntne 1n the penod

lu-.,, end ... the M .mtuLlt' rs se~­

Blue L11H1 . .,
A buc·ket b) Brunke Williams With

son 1\l lh .1 In -!1 record O\erJI I Jnd
thm~p' lnok br 1gh t for ncx l y~ ar as
~verynnl' n: turn . . Plu . . the M.lrauJers
hc~ve Tnu .1 [),11" hJck Davis

of the fourth period pulled Meigs to
wilh in 35-16 Bul Washin2ton Coun
House a1ded by a benc h t.;-chmcal on
Me1gs went on a 6-0 run and took a
41-16 kad .
Me1gs was able to pu ll to wi thm
-14-33 w11h 3· 13 len on a Beck)
Sm11h free lhrow. bu t was unabk to

pomters. Washmglun Court Hom•e
went to lhe hne 16times and hll 10
· for 63.
,
,
Court House pul led dow'n ~0
rebounds led by Amber Wilson w11h
seven. Michelle Stalten c~dJed SIX and
Maggie Neuder f1ve . The Blue Lions
turned ihe ball ove; 12 11me&lt;

The Marauders had a balanced
scoring attack. but fai led lo place
anybody in double figures. Shrimphn
led the way Wl\h n1ne. Brooke
Wlih~ms added SIX. Smilh five.
Amber Vinin g, Tmcy Coffe y and
Tonya M1ller tour each. Tangy Lau(See MARAUDERS on Page 5)

Commllling si• turnovers in the ti mes. Despile a Southern time oul to
lir.il quaner. lhe Southern Tornadoes regrou p Nonh Adams continued its
fell to a 20-3 delicil and never recov· mission.
. ered enroule lo dropping a 61-35 firs I
The en li re game against Frankfon
round Division IV girls' dislrict tour- Adena. North Adams' victim in the
namem game at ihe Universily of R1o secltonal championship. ihe Devi!ish
Gmnde.
Darlings sh01 75 percent Nonh
Southern conlrolled the lip. but Adams malched !hal effort wilh a 76
missed a close inside shot and North percent , hooling mark lor ihe firs!
Adams conlrolled ihe boards. Thai penod.
was an omen of things lo come as
Southern went inlo lhe half down
Southern conlinued to gel just one 31 - I 0, bul came back 10 play decent
shot and oul, or even worse even any ball the second halt
sort of try al the basket. Southern
Behind three poimers from Cynmade SIX lurnovers.,in ihe first quar- thia Caldwell . Kirn Sayre. and Kim
ler and scored onl y one tield goal in Ihie Soulhern made a gallant comelie frame. a Nicole Benson jumper al back in the third fmme, once cutting
the ~: ~ 'J mark .
the score to 36-2 1. In reality, South· The first period ended 20-3 In thai em had four chances 10 cui the lead
frame. lhe Dev1lish Darlings broke to a1 leas! 36-29. however. ihree
epen a 2-1 lead al the 5:32 mark Soulhern lumove rs and a miss slailed
w~en 5'2" Kat1e Glasgow hil her firs! lhe comeback drive. Whal Soulhern
of lhree long jumpers. one a three had Jccomphshed went down lhe
poimer that began Soulhern's lumble. dram. when Nonh Adams slole the
Megan Sparks !hen wenl to work bail tw1ce in the lastS I seconds oflhe
in the post and scored lhree stra1gh1 , frame 10 again pull away to a com-

At South Webster

4.5 seconds lel t pulled Meigs 10 wnhm 14- 12 .tftcr one pt.:nod.
A Jennli er Shnmplm buckel off a
Williams ,lsstsl ll od ihe score at 14Two even ly-matched learns, Galwas an .1II -TV C pcrtn rmt:r ,,.., a all wnh 7.2.\ left 111 lhe hall But the
"ophumon:. d!l d h,t., l"lt.'t' n nul s 1n~.: c Blue Llllns then toll k a IB- 14 leJd li poli s. 11 -9. and Me1gs. 11 -9. lunner
Decemlx r \I.Hh .ti!:.Jct ureJ ankh~.
\1.-Hh lour n11nut~.., to go tn th~ half Southeastern Oh10 League rivals.
W:.~shm gwn (t Hirt Ht&gt;U:-.t.' r;thC"o
" hen Enn Caud1ll hll one ol two free v.d l sq uJre off tn the 1998 D1vision
II sec11unal basketball tournament at
th rt.'corJ h 1 t 7-) u\ cr .d I .Uld the Blucthro~~.
Ltons wall llll'l'l Nt:\\ Lex mg10n lnr
Me1gs c.u11e back and pul led lo Soulh Websler Saiurday mght.
Tipoff lime is 8 p.m .. or shonly
the dl'MICI crmvn nt.'XI \VeJnc..,J:.t~
wllhlll IY-1 Xon J I angy Laudermilt
New Lc xm~ ton t.kk.ttcd Iron ton -IY- hudcl 111 the p,lln t With 7.H seconds after Ihe 6: 15 game wh1 ch pits
46 tn thl' l'\....~nm{' ltr...,t g.lme
ldt But the Blue L1ons look a 21 -18 Portsmouth agamst Rock H1IL
Coach Chm Stou l has three
,. It ha . . hccn .111 L' llH)IH mal \\CCI.... l ll f
lead tllhl lhc: locker room at the half
M.trautlcr hc::uJ ~.; o,tL h Run Lng.111 JnJ when K1ng hll a pa11 of lree throws staners (four lettermen) reiUrning
lrom las! year's sq uad. Meigs, a
the cnt ne ~1 c t ~..., I P\..LI Schnol Dt\ - \VIth I 5 ~eL·o nd 'i left.
,
tn ct . Ht \ . ., ,, tcr B.trhJr,t P·'"''ed .m.:t)
\\ ,h hlll gton Court Houo.;t! used member of ihe Tri- Valley Confer·
WeLine . . d.l\ rntH ntn!l .tit er .1 rnunttl
o11h1de shonung 1n Ihe lh1rd penod to ence ·, Oh10 Division. scored some
ion !.! b.1Ul ~ \\ tth Lc-~ t onn.ltr.:\ lJ,..,_ ' '''" lo pu ll awc~y from the Lady 1mpress1Ve wms during the regular
e.t~;. She \\,1'\ . t poi)u l.tr te.tLhcr .Jt M,Jr.Juders. Sandy Halliday h1t the campatgn
The Marauders downed a s1rong
Middleport Elcmelll.lr) and,\ s t ru n~ l1rst ol 111 0 lhree pomters she made
supporter ul L1dy M,u,1uder h,,, kel- 111 Ihe pc11od ul tile 6.16 mark to pu1 Welbion squad 64-63 on Feb. 13, and
Vimon County, a team !hal has some
Court HOli\C on top 24-1 H.
ball
of
Ihe area's lop aihleles. 65-64. on
Metg' J UIIlp~ d l)UI to .tn e.trl! X -~
The l:llue Lllllls n:u led four buckJan.
20. in their season ope ner. the
lead when Amber V1n1 ng hn J pl&lt;nr et&gt; Irom he)ond the arch m lhe pen Marauders
JOlted R1ver Valley 5 I -50
of !tee: thrnw" \\ tlh .;; 55 left 111 the •xl c~ n d trx'k" 35- 241ead into the linal
and
on
Feb
10. lost to Belpre. a slate
p~nmJ.
ftr~t pt:nod But h.K~ ~.:unc tlw Btu~
se
m1 -finaii st partic ipant
luurnamenl
Lton ~; who 'v\enl on a 7-0 run .tn d
A buckcl by Shrimphn alt he stan
lasl year. 6 1-58.
Probable Marauder &lt;taners are
Dan Hannan. 6-3 JUnior forward.
who" averaging 18.7 points and nine
rebounds a game. Brad Davenpon. 5I0 semor 'gUJrd , ihree points a game:
Colin Roush. 5- I0 sen1or guard. six
po1nls a game: Sean Q'B nen. 6-0
scmor forwJrd, four points a game;
and J T Humphreys. 6-3 JUntor cenler. R4 points and five rebounds a
game .
Olf the bench w1 il be Wayan
McKinney. 6-3 jumor forward/ce mer.
who 1:-. avcmg1ng seven poults a
game: Nei l G1 les, 6- 1 semor forward.
lwo pomts a game . Angelo
Rodnquez , 5- 11 JUnior guard, nine
pomts and four steals a game: Steve
BehJ. 6-0 sophomore forward , seven poims and T J. Davis. 5- 10 senior.
1.5 poinls a game.
1
Me1gs is averaging 64. I pomts :.1
game and gtvmg up 65.4.
it wil~be 1he first hardwood meeling between ihe 1wo schools ,i nce 1hc
1994 sec ll onaltoumamenl contest Jl
ihe Un1verStiY of R1o Grande ThiS
will be ihe lifth time ihe two learns
LEAVES THE FLOOR- The Meigs Marauders' Amber Vining (20) have met 10 tournamenl play since ihe
leaves the floor long enough to take the shot in front of Washing· · 1974 campa•gn GA HS holds a 4-0
ton Court House's Valerie King during Thursday night's Division II advantage .
district tournament semifinal game at Chillicothe High School, where
Winner of Sal urday\ game wi ll
the Marauders lost 49·36 . (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
advance to the di!-itn ct tournament at
Ohio Univers ily 10 Alhens and play
New Lexmgton on Friday. rvtarch 6
al 8 p m.
All games
24
The Marauders will be looki ng fur
Team
W L
P OP
New I eXInglon 57 Alhens 42
thelf
firsltrip to the dis1ric1 smce Ihe
Chesapeake
19 1 1351 1174 Won .- n :.ocal. 53 C ~rclev• lle 49
1%7
campaign. GAHS losl to CirManella
16 41 3011057 Feb. 27
clev
ille
m'ihe diSiricl final s laS! year
Wheelersburg . .. 16 5 1411 1296 M•am1 Trace vs She nda, 6 p m
R1ver Valley
13 7 1134 1088 Green l1 e ld vs Logan Elm . 8 45
Coach Jim Osborne was undeCid Logan .
.. 13 7 13431 211 pm
ed on h" ' lart mg lineup Wednesday,
Portsmouih ·.. .. .. 12 8 135 7 1248 Feb. 28
bu t the usual slaners have been
Greenlleld .
.12 8 11 071030 Hlil s boro vs New Lex tngt on , 3
Andray Howe ll . 6-0 senior and Cody
Me1gs.
. . 11 9 12831309 pm
Lane.
5-7 sophomore al ihe guard
Gallipolis .
.11 9 111 9 1075 Washmglon CH vs Warren Local, 7
positions; Chns Lewis. 6-3. jumor.
aves ..
.13 1114301367 pm
Fa1rland
9 12 1284 1309
Divis1on IV
center: Mike Garlen. 6-2 senior and
PI 0 leasanl .
. 8 12 11851203 At Alexander HS
Kevm WJiker. 6-0 JUn•or at the fo rx-Athens
8 13 11 731270 Feb. 27
wan] posllions w11h Ian Fenderbnsch.
Warren Local
.. 8 13 1064 1237 Easlem vs Symmes Valley, 6 15
6-2 jumor'1"orward. Bnan S1n1s. 6- 1
South Gallta .
7 1311 781381
Soulh Ga ll1a vs .Soulhern, 8 p m
1unior forward and Jeremy Payton. 6Eastern .
4 16 11 02 14 72 Feb. 25
1 ~oph omore forward off lhe bench
• x-Jackson
3 18 1213 1487 Division Ill
; soulhern
.. .2 1810171 390 At University of Rio Grande
Howell i~ avt:ragin~ 16 8 poinl\,
Feb. 24
3.5 assists and 2 5 steals a game:
1Post·s~~Cs~~~~~~:a~:~1~n
Belpre 72 Soulh Websler 37
Garien I .0: Lewts ~ ll and 4 7
• Feb. 24
Oak H1ll 71, Crooksv•lle 48
rebounds . Walker. 2 6. 2 5 rebounds:
; Division II
Feb. 25
and
1.5 assists a game Payton , 6 I
• AI Soulh Webster HS
Wheelersburg 62 , lronlon , 56
points
and 2 6 rebounds: Snns 2 9
' Fa~rland 59 Jackson 44
Wells lon 63 Federal Hoc k1ng 48
• Rock Hill 85 Soulh Poml 57
pomts and 1 I rebounds. Lane II 5
Feb. 27
; Feb. 27
Chesapeake vs Oak H•ll , 6 p.m.
poinls. 2.5 ,\SSJSts and 2.5 slea ls:
• Northwesl vs. Fa~rl an d . 615 p m
Belpre vs Nels-York 8·15 p m
FenJerbosch. 6.4 poi nls and 2 5
: R1ver Valley vs V1nlon Coun ly. b Feb. ~e
rebounds.
•pm
Leal Grove vs Wellslon. 1 p.m.
Galli poliS ts Jveragmg 55.4 pomls
Alexander vs Wheelersburg, 4 p.m.
: Feb. 28
a
game
and g1ving up 53.7.
; Portsmoulh vs Rock Hill 6 15 p rn
AI Athens HS
, Gallpol•s vs Me1gs. 8 p m
The' Blue Devils are CO illiO"~ ofl a
Feb. 28
• At Chillicothe HS
Logan vs Ch•ll•colhe, 7 p.m
pa11 ol dose dekals. M-6 1 at Athens
; Feb. 23
W•nner vs Manetla on March 7, 7 on Feb. 13 and n-66 tu Wheelers•Shendan 67 Waverly 65 (ol) Feb. pm

'"II

get any closer.
King led all scorers us the sophomore scored 17 p01n1s. seven below
her average. HJII iday added nine.
Wa, hington Court House hit IS of 5 1
Irom the lloor for a cool 29'7c. That
would have bee n much lower butlhe
Blue L10ns hll five of eight three

GAHS, Meigs clash in sectional tourney

-Area cage standings-

burg in overtime last SaiUrday.
The Blue Devil s most impressive
wms during regular season play were
over Logan al Logan, 70-67. ~1 ve t
Valley. 55 -35 al the Universily of Rio
Grande. and Porismoulh. 68-63 , at

Ponsmouth. The Blue Dev1is played
Southcaslern Oh10 League champion
Manetta on even terms a\ Gall 1pohs
on Feb. 3 before gomg down 10 a 555 1 defeat.
Tickets for Saturday's game are $3

:·or boih Sludents and aduiL' and may
be purchased al the principals office
at both Metgs and Galli a Academy
H1gh Sc hool
The tickets are also good for the
Portsmouth-Rock Hili baule.

LAID OFF, UNEMPLOYED: TRAINING FUND$ AVAILABLE
Gallia-Meigs CAA has available JTPA dislocated worker retraining funds . These funds can be used
to assist with the cost of tuit1on, ·fees. books, and other allowable cost for eltgible/enrolled dislocated
workers who live in Gallia or Meigs Counties.
Dislocated workers fall into several types, the following are four common types.

. ltJ

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Cl1.1rlott c
C l ~vd.mJ

Last Day To Pay 1st Half Real Estate
Taxes Will Be MARCH 4, 1998
10% PENALTY Will Be Charged Af.er
The March 4th Date on Real Estate
Taxes.
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
Howard E. Frink

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464

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Stock Number 7Tl236A
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Was$ 10,950

19951111nda 1:1v1r

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The Soulhern H1gh School Alhlelic Boosters Club wil l sponsor an
elememary ba skcih:Jil 1ournamen1
SaturdJy and Su nday. M,lfch I at
Soul hern H1gh School.
Ht!re :1 re the p:unngo,;
Girls' action
Saturday - Tuppe" Pl.tnl&gt; vs
Portl and :11 9 a m : Ch~ ... tcr No 1 V\ .
Riverv.ew ,\l 10· 15 a.m : Cooll' ille
vs . Chesler No I at II 30 a m : Syracu ...e No I ''" Syr~cuo.;e No 2 at
1145 p m
Sunday- Victors ufTP-1\llllcmLI
and Che,tcr No .~- Ri\' Cf\' 1\!W g.Jilll' ~
al noon: wi nncrs of Coli \llle-Cheqer
No. I and Sy racuse games at I IS
p.m.
Saturday, March 7 - Final at
12 30p m.
Sixth-grade bo)·s
Suturday- Portland ,., Chester
m ~p.m.: Riven·icw ' ' Syr:u.: uo,;e :ll
3. 15 p.m.
Sunday- Portland-Chester Win ner vs. Cooll' iil e al 2:)0 p.m :
Ri vervicw-Syracu . . e '1Ctn1 ' ... Tuppers Plai ns at :1:-lS p m.
Suturday, ~larch 7- Ftnal at 2
p.m.
Firth-grade boys
Suturday - Tuppe" Ph11ns l's

Siock Number R6103
Loa&lt;lo&lt;l!

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$7.950

Regular-season action
lo:11sl
N1lnhc:1SII!rn 72 . IJnstnn U 70
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Sunday - Tuppers Plams-Pon land wumet "' Chc,tcr ;u 5 p m.:
Cool villt' -Rtven·tew

wmncr

Syraru'e 3t I&gt;' IS p m
Saturday, Murch 7 3:30pm

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Fuwi al

Directions
to South
Webster posted
The Me1 gs Marauders will play
the Gailia Academy Blue Devil s in
lhe boys' DIVISIOn II sectional tournament aclion SaiUrday even1ng al
Sou l~ Websier High School
To get to Soulh Wehsler. lake U.S.
35 to JUSI north of Rm Gmnde lake
State Route 279 to Oak HilL Turn on
State Roule 93 south oul of Oak Hill
lu Slate RoUie 140 (about lhree
m•b).
State Roule 140 will take you lo
Soulh Webster The school " locaied
on the right hJnd side of S.R. 140.
Soulh Websier " located ahu•Jt 12
m1les Irom Oak H1 ll.

assists led hy Smilh and Lauderm11t
with with lwo each. The Marauders
hJd nine sleal s. Smilh had three.
Quarter totals
Wash1ngtnn C. H.
14-7- 14-14=-19
Me'"'
12-6-6-1 l=JI\
Washinglon Court House:
Sandy Halliday 1 -~- 19. Mandy Longberry 2-0-0~~. Erm Caud illll-0- 1= I.
Julie Wall 2-0-0=4. Amb~r Wilson 10- I.=J. TtiTJny Sont hwa lJ il- 1-2=5.

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Valerie K1nc 4-2-3= 17. Mtchclk
Siullen 1-0- 1;;3, Mauuie Neuder 1-111=3. Totals: 12-5-10:;,~9
Meigs: Am~~r Vimng 1-0-2=4.
Becky Sm ilh 2-0- 1=5. Jcnn 1fer
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2.9°/o API Up T.. 48 Months!**

REPUICEMEHT WIHDOWS
* Any Size UP To 83 United Inches
*In Existing Wood Double Hung Opening With
Removable Wood Trim
*Solid Vinyl *Tilt In *Double Hung
*Welded Sash &amp;Insulated Glass

+iii"-

$9,950
Was $11,950

r.•evylallna ArV MIAIIIR

,950*

$179.00 INS~ALLED~

Stock Number R6079
•V.ti

*Bring in your window sizes for FREE quote
Offer Good This Weekend Only!!!!

$17.950

=-

Was $19,950

475 South Church St.rect · Ripley, WV I-800-SZ!-0417 · 372-2844
Munday-&amp;lllrday 9 a.m. • 8 p.m. •S.uday 1p.m. • 8 p.m

See .·our ,di$P.J8y .'at the "'NIVERSITV MALL;
' ,·~. .·.. HO~E &amp;Qd GARDEN SHOW·
I.
· · -LAthens, Oh. ..
,.
~
Februa· ·21 thru March 1 .._

::. .

QUALifY WINDOW SYS,EMS
•!'
•

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••

110 Court Street, • Pomeroy, Ohio

1·800·291·5600

Brand New I'NB Chrvy
Aslra C1nvrrs1an van
• Aulomatic
• ~ r Con:l1hon
• Power Win&lt;i&gt;ws
• Power locks
• AM/FM Cassene
• Cnuse Conirol
Sieenng

• 4 Caplmns Chm~
• Rear Sola Bed
• Fibelglass Flunntng
Boants
• Loado!l!

$14,950*

$12,650*

nrand New 19qs
Chevy Lumina

nrand New 191J8 Chevy

s-serles ts m cab Pic~ up

• Air Cond•hon

• n!Sieering

•All Condl~n

• Cusiom Cb~

• Auloma~c

• Delay Wipe~
• Dual Aubags
• Wei Eq~pped'

•LS Pa:kage
• Rear Anb·lock
Brakes

• Alumoum \\1\eels
• WeiEq•pped'

• Power Sieenng
• Power Btakes
• Power Door Loclis

In tenor

• Power Steenng

• AWFM Casselle

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Monday • Saturday 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. •Sunday I p.m. - 8 p.m.

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iCumi nued from Page 41

:dc'fmih and Amy Hysell .1dded lwo
.each.
The Mamuders hil 15 of 39 for
:38'7.-. ihe maroon and gold missed
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und Colley had li ve each. Me1gs
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1gg5IIUICk Hegal CUSIOIA

shan in Southern's comeback bid.
A game summary and slati slics
will be in Sundays ed1110n of the Sunday Times Senlinel.

NCAA Di\•isioo I '
women's. scores

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'

WHO'S OPEN? - Southern's Cynthia Caldwell (right) prepares
to find an open teammate to catch her pass as an unidentified North
Adams player defends on the play during Thursday night's Division
IV district tournament game at Nllwt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande,
where the Lady Devils earned the right to lace South Gailia in the
finals next Friday with a 61 ·35 victory. {Photo by Scott Wolfe)

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men's scores

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EXTENSION GRANTED

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1997Oldsmobile Al:hlcva

Pnnlantl.Lt lloston . 7 r

!!! L e&lt;!.

Equal Opportunity Employer

To
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Guillen ~ 1.11c at CLEVELAND b p rn

Alhmlk l)i,ilmm

33105 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-9g2·2222

f

New Yurk . I I'm

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

!!!

Was 111 ,950

ut

All,mt ,\ al

NBA standings

If you fall into one or more of these categories,are currently attending training , or plan to attend soon,
Please contact Gallia-Meigs CAA to obtain a JTPA Preapplication:

I

LA Utkt:rs
De n ver .~

1)1\lmn,\

$]0 950

Sunday's games

Basketball

C'lm.:,Jgo

859 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
74().446·1018

SHS Athletic Boosters Club's
youth cagefest to start SaturdaY-'

Scoreboard

Type I
Laid off due to a business permanently closing with a layoff notice or public notice of the clos•ng.
Type II
A- Laid off due to a business closing or cutback
B- Has a layolf nolice or public notice
C- Unlikely to return to that type of work
D- Eligible for or received unemployment compensation
Type Ill
A· Worked at one type of work for 12 or more months
B· No lo nger employed and unlikely to return to that type of work
C· Unemployed for 15 of the last 26 weeks
Type IV
Ind ividuals profiled by the O,hio Bureau of Employment Services

8010 North State Route 7
Cheshire, OH 45620·0272
740·367-7342
740·992-6629

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

North Adams rolls
by Southern 61-35
in district semis

Friday, February 27, 1998

Division II girls' district cagefest action continues

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Th~ Blur: Lttm ., of "-'-t,htngton

Pomeroy • 'Middleport, Ohio

&lt;\7:.!:.!1\11 · 1:.!:.!07:ili
•

~O 'ii

�•

From flowers to ·dead
cattle, El Nino causing
waves across California
LOS ANGELES (AP) -As the
number of California disaster areas
grew again and federal authorities
vowed to help. Lynn Altman waited
for the rain to let.up to run to her car
with a cart full of impatiens.
··11 would be nice if I could get to
the back yard without having to go
through Lake Rose- that's the rose
garden." Ms. Altman said during a
visit this week to the Armstrong Garden Center in Santa Monica
Across California. the effects of
the seemingly endless string of El
Nino-related storms crop up in different ways - from massive landslides and vast sewage spills to thousands of canle dying of exhaustion a~
they stumble through thick mud.
Residents are also delaying spring
planting. which has nursery oflicials
worried. Nursery goods are the thirdlargest crop in California, and the
California Association of Nurserymen said it is a $6 billion ondustry
when retail sales are added.
"Spring in Southern California
usually begins as early as January or
February bm if it continues to rain.
it'll push back the spring season.
which is our largest selling s.eason ...
said Elaine Thompson. executive
director of the association.
As he looked at the muddy Laguna Canyon. Federal Emergency Management Agency Director James Lee

Win promised $20 million to help
repair roads and buildings torn up by
rain and mudslodes . He di.scussed the
situation Thursday with President
Clinton.
Federal disaster officials have said
the government will spend $250 million in California because of El
Nino-related storms and flooding.
Storms have caused more than
$475 million in damage statewide
since January. Thirty-five of the
state's 58 counties are federal disaster zones. making them eligible for
aid. and 42 countit;s have state disaster status.

As the state began to dry out under
sunny skies. experts warned it was
too

~oon

to say the worst was over.

Two more months of heavy rains are
forecast and damage can continfie
long after the rain s.tops as water
seeps into bedrock. undermining
once-stable roads and hills.
There also is a huge mountain
snowpack waiting to melt.
"If there is one saving grace in
this storm pattern it's thai it's been
fairly cold at the higher elevations. so
the snow is staying in the mountains.
But we're expecting one of the major
snow melts of the last two decades
this spring and · summer," said Jeff
Cohen. spokesman for the state
Depanment of Water Resources.
The water content of the Sierra

(jurors) weren't inlluenced by one of '
the 25 most inlluential Americans,"
he said. rererring to a 1996 Time
magazine article that included Ms.
Winfrey.
·
Juror Pat Gowdy. however. said
discussions turned on the First
Amendment.
"We fell that a lot or rights have
eroded in this country. Our freedom
of speech may be the only one we
have left to regain what we've lost."
he said.
Also exonerated were Ms . Winfrey's production company and
Howard Lyman. a vegetarian activist
who was a guest on the show.
On the show, Ms. Winfrey said
she was "stopped cold" from eating
another burger after hearing Lyman\
.warnjngs that including processed
cattle in cattle feed- a practice outtawed in the United States last summer - could spread mad cow disease.
Mad cow disease is suspected of
causing the deaths of 23 people in
Britain. The brain-destroying illness
has never been found in U.S . cattle.
When cattle prices fell to I0-year
lows in the days after the broadcast.
the plaintiffs - three cattle-feeding
operations and four ranches termed it the "Oprah crash."
Ms. Winfrey's side argued that the
dip .was caused instead by high feed
costs. oversupply and low prices of
competing meats.
Cattlemen cast doubt on the
domestic threat of mad cow disease
and attacked the TV show's producers, questioning their motivations
and editing of the program. They
claimed producers wanted a "scary"

Nevada snowpack stands at an average of 171 ·percent of normal, rompared to 190 percent of normal during the record year of 1983.
East of Los Angeles. dairy farmers said cows mired in the mud were
dying from exhaustion at three times
the normal rate. cutting milk produce
tion and endangering livelihoods.
At least 6,500 dead canle including 1.400 in the last three days
- have been removed from dairies
in a I 00.000-acre area that straddles
Chino and Ontario. where 25 percent
of the state's milk is produced.
Gov. Pete Wilson declared the valley a disaster area on Thursday. making farmers here eligible for govern- ·
ment aid. I
"This is hard. when you have a
cow that's working for you and producing for you and you're waiting for
it to die," said Jennie De Boer of De
Boer and Sons Dairy in Ontario,
which has lost 35 cows this week.
"It's always your best cows that are
going through the most stress becau&lt;e
they're producing the most milk."
At a cosLof $1.300 per cow, the
deaths have cost local owners $6 million. Industry oflicials fear many
more cattle are weak. making them
vulnerable to deadly infectio;s.
California is the largest milk producer in the nation. sdling about $3.2
billion a year. according to the Western United Dairymen.

health official said he doubted that
many low-income people would avail
themselves of the suicide law. was
passed in 1994 and affirmed last year.
Even if they did, it wouldn 'I be that
expensive, he said.
"These are cheap prescriptions.
and health care provider time will not
be significant." said Hersh Crawford.
head of the Oregon Office of Medical
Assistance Programs.
Oregon is .the only state where
doctor-assisted suicide is legal.
The new. policy is scheduled to

take etl'ect in about two months. but'
it still must withstand federal.scniti ny because Medicaid receives federal matching funds. Congress passed
a law in April that forbids federal
money from being used to cover doctor-a~sisted suicide.
But that doesn't necessarily preclude coverage under the Oregon
Health Plan. Abortions can't be funded with (ederal dollars. but Oregon
covers the service by using only state
money.

..
'

~

BUICK"

Sticker. .................... $27,797
Discount ............... $2,473.93
Invoice ............... $25,323.07

0.1Wt'ai.Motors
ProtramCar

1998 CHEVROLET
· 1TON DOOLEY CREW CAB

Sticker ........... $25,259
Discount.. .... $23 t 1.55
Invoice ..... $22,94 7.45
Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0
Rebate ............. $1 000
Dealer Cash ......... 500

1996 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Sticker ........... $31,560
Discount... ... $3998.72
lnvoice, .... $27,561.28
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

tottr
price

tottr

27,971

8

General .Motors
ProeramCar

1996 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER

sgggg

1997
SAFARI
AWDVAN
Sticker........... $29,259
Discount... ... $30:28.77
Invoice .... . $26,230.23
Rebate ............. $1000
Dealer Cash ....... $500
Dealer Mark Up ... $1 o

tottr

prta:e

24,74023

8

Friday, February 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Reporl: Suspect in Birmingham
bombing linked to Atlanta biasts
NEW YORK (AP)- The suspect
. in last month's bombing of an Alabama abortion clinic has been linked to
bombs at the Olympics and at .an
Atlanta abortion clinic through steel
·plates used in the bombs' construction, The New York Times reported
today.
·
The plates in the Atlanta bombs
were cut from steel found at.a metalworking plant in.Franklin. N.C .. that
employed a friend of Eric Raben
Rudolph. according to unidentified
rederal officials.
The plates apparently were
designed to shape the direction of the
explosion. the newspaper said.
Rudolph, 31, is a fugitive charged

with planting a bomb that , itted a
security guard at a Birmingham.
Ala., abortion clinic last month.
Agents continue to hunt for him in
rural we stern ·North (arolina.
The bomb at Centennial Olympic
Park in July 1996 killed one person
and injured more than I00. Two
bombs that blew up in January 1997
at an Atlanta abortion clinic injured
seven.

Investigators earlier had hypothesized that the same person or people
might have been behind three Atlanta
bombings: the abortion clinic. the
Olympic Park and a gay nightclub
bombed in February 1997.
On Wednesday. a federal agent

speaking on the condition oJ'
anonymity told The Associated Press
that lab analysis of I 112-inch nails
used in the Birmingham bombing
matched nails used in the Atlanta
abortion clinic bombings. The nails
matched those found in a storage
shed rented by Rudolph.
The batch of nails "was produced
and sold in a small area," the agent
said.
In November, investigators
announced that steel plates were
used in all the Atlanta bombs. The
Olympic Park and abortion clinic
bombs were one-eighth-inch .thick,
but cut to different sizes. while the
nightclub bomber used quarter-inch,
thick steel.

Tornado victims pick up pieces

Add't Dealer
Discount. ................. .. 2,.183.36
Dealer Mark Up .............. $10

1.997 CHEVROLET
VENTURE VAN

28

1998 GMC C1500
PICK-UP
Sticker .... :...... $18,312
Discount.. .... $1696.34
Invoice ..... $16,613.66
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

fottr
price

16,62388

8

KISSIMMEE.
Fla. (Ap) .
Michael Dowdy's home was hos
Dutchman camrer. a shelter for the
38-year-old di, abled man and his 12year-old daughter. Chelsea. It was
destroyed in a !lash this week by a
tornado.
Gone were $2,()()() worth of personal belongings, some taken by the
tornado and the rest plowed under by
bulldozers cleaning up the Ponderosa
Park Campground. And now Dowdy
feels like he's getting the runaround
as he looks for help.
He called the Red Cross and they
told him to call the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Some-

one at FEMA suggested he call the
Red Cross.
"I'm playing it by ear right now,"
Dowdy said Thursday. "I would like
to establish another home."
Deadly tornadoes that ripped
through central Florida late Sunday
and early Monday didn'tjust destroy
homes and buildings -they yanked
the social safety net from many residents who had no insurance or were
underinsured.
For example. Dowdy underinsured his 32-fool camper. valued at
$7,000. by $2.200. The belongings he
and his daughter left behind when
they fled the camper were insured for

on 1y $500.
As pall of the recovery effort. city
and slate officials are trying to make
sure .those people knew what services. loans and other assistance are
available. They also want to avoid the
scams and delays that marred the
recovery after Hurricane Andrew in
1992.
Those displaced by the tornadoes
will receive vouchers for a month's
rent. food. medicine and prescription
glasses. and will be given access to
three service centers &lt;et up by the
Red Cross, said Elizabeth Dole, presidem of the American Red Cross.

~=~~~~~:;==lr-==:;:~~~~~=i==;;::;~;===T=========l
Public Notice
Public Notice·
Public Notice
Public Notice

Cash Basla Summary
Financial Report For the
Fiscal Year Ended
December 31, 1997
Racine, Melgo County
Governmental Fund Types
Revenua Receipts
Receipts
Local Taxes ......... $21707.43
lntergovernmentll
Revenue .............. 61 ,629.02
Charges lor
Servlces .............. 47,841.81
Fines, Ucenaes,
&amp;Permits ............ 10,148.00
Mlecellaneous ..... 98,635.68
Total Rocelpts .... 239,961.94
Expenditure Disbursements
Disbursement•
Current
Security of Persona &amp;
Property .............. 33,087.41
Public Health
·
Services ................ 3,619.38
:community
Enillronment ............ 113.06
Basic Utility
Services ................ 8,275.68
Transportatlon ..... 26,924.48
General
Government ........ 31 ,605.28
Tolal
Dlsbursementa.277,751.55

Total Receipts over/(Under)
Dlobursaments .. (37, 799.61)
Other
Financing
Sourcea/(Uoas)
Tranalers~n ......... 1o;960.33
Tranalers-out. ... (I 0,960.33)
EXpend. Dlsb. &amp; Othar
UatO/Net ............ (38,172.11)
Fund Cash Balance Jan.1,1997 ...... (191,009.88)
Fund Cash Balance
Dec. 31, 1997 .... 153,220.27
Proprletlry Funds
Operating Revonuea
Receipts
Chargea lor
Services ............ 102,590.47
Miscellaneous ........ 3578.59
Total Racalpts .... 106;168.59
Operating Expeneea
Dloburaomentl
Current
Peraonal '
Services .............. 26,290.12
Travel
Transportation .......8948.92
Contractual
Servlcea .............. 35,991.88
Supplies and
Materlals ............. 13,946.95.
Total
Dlobursementa...85, 177.87
Total Receipts over/(Under)

Dlsburaemento .... 20,990.72
Non-Operating
.
Revanu80/(Expenaea)
Debt Strvleo......... (5748.76)
Total
Other
Fino.
Sourcea/(Usta) .... (5748.78)
Expend, Dlob. &amp; Other
Uaei/Net ............... 13,544.29
Fund Cash Balsneo
January 1, 1997 ... 91,156.70
Fund Cash Balance Dec. 31,
1997 .................... 106,398.86
Reserve lor Encumber.
Dec. 31, 1997 .......... 1697.87
Non-Expend Trust Funds
Operadng Revenues
Mlecellaneoua ............ 27.20
Total Recelpts ............. 27.20
Operating Expenaet
Total Receipts over/(undor)
Dlobursamenta ........... 27.20
Expend. Dlab.. &amp; Other
Uaea/Net ...................... 27 .20
Fund Cuh Balance January
1, 1997 .................. 21,725.00
Fund Cash Balaneo
Dec. 31,1997 ....... 21,752.00
Agency Funds
Receipts
Charges lor
Servlcto .............. 13,501.00
Operating ExpenMa
Suppllasand

Materials .............. 11657.00
Total
Dltbur•mtnta ... 13,657.00
Total Receipts over/(Undor)
Dlabulumenta....... (156.00)
Expend. Dltb &amp; Othtr
Uati/Net ................. (156.00)
Fund Calh Balance January
1, 1997 ....................... 443.01
Fund Caah . Balance
December 31, 1997...287.01
Total Memorandum Only
Recelpta
Local TIXea ..........21,707.43
Intergovernmental
Revenue .............. 61 ,629.02·
Charges for
Servlcea ............ 163,933.28
Fines, Uconaea &amp;
Permlta ................ 10,148.00
Mlecellaneouo ... 102,241.00
Total Recelpta .... 359,656.73
Dlaburaementa
Security of Person• &amp;
Property .............. 33,087.41
Public Health
Sorvleoa ................ 3,619.38
Community
Envlf0nmtnt ............ 113.06
Balle Utility
Sorvlces ................. 8275.66
TranoportaUon .....30,373.79

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Public Notice

Public Notice

General
Govemment ........ 31,910.35
Ptraonal
S.rvlcea .............. 26,290.12
. Travel
. Tranaportatlon ...... 8948.92
contractual
Sorvlcee .............. 35,991.88
Supplleaand
Materials ............. 27,603.95
Cepltll Outlay .... 159,711.57
Debt S.rvlce ........ 10,660.33
Total
Dlaburae..,........:376,588.82
Total Receipts over/(under)
Dlaburaamenta.. (16,828.09)
Tronaler•ln ......... 10,960.33
Tranlera-Out ...... (10,960.33)
Debt Servlcea ....... (5748.76)
Total
Other
Fin.
Sourcei/(IJMa) .... (5748.76)
Expend . . Dlab. a. Other
Uaea/Net.. ............. 19,381.28
Fund Caah Balance
Jan. 1, 1997........ 304,334.59
Fund Cuh Balance Dec. 31,
1997 .................... 281 ,656.14
Rt1erve lor Encumber. Dec.
31, 1997................... 3315.17
Summary of Indebtedness
Outatlndlng Jan. 1, 1997
O.W.D.A. Loans ... 92,065.62
OthorBonds&amp;
N
10,660.33
otea...................
...................102,725.95
Total
Now lseuea
Other Bonds•&amp;.
732 91
Notas ............... ~.... S3, 732·91
~~~:~d
S3,
'
OWDA Loans .......... 3907.45
Other Bonde &amp;
33
~:~s .....................1140660
567·78
Outo~~di'~'ij'i:;i;;;'.' 31: 1997
OWDA Loans ....... 88,156.17
Other Bonde &amp;
32·91
Noteo ...................171
83, 7
891 08

Beneftclal Mortgage Co. of
Ohio va. Unknciwn Spouse,
llany of
Wanda A. Swearingen,
etc., et al.
Unknown Spouse, II any,
of Wanda A. Swearingen,
also known as Wanda Ann
Swearingen, and the

.........

Public Notice

Unknown Heirs, Unknown
Spouses, If any, of the

Unknown Heirs, Devisees,
Legatees,

and

Representatives of Wanda
A. Swearlngan, also known
as Wanda Ann Swearingen,

Deceaeod, their Executors,
Administrators, Custodians,
Asslgno, or Guardians,
upon whom service of

summons cannot be made,
because the residence and

ell other addresses of said
delendenta are unknown
and cannot with reasonable
diligence be ascertained ,
are heraby notified that on
January 30, 1998, the
plaintiff flied a complaint In
Common Pleas Court,
Meigs County, Ohio, In Case
NO. 98-CV-00007, against
Unknown Spousa, II any, of
Wanda A. Swearingen, etc.,
at at., alleging that on May
28, 1997, decedent Wanda
A. Swearingen, also known

as Wanda Ann Swearingen

(harelnaltar "Swearingen")
executed and delivered to
plaintiff a written loan
agreement (hereinafter
"agreement"), that decedent
Swearingen haa defaulted In
the payment of said

Public Notice
north 90 degrees west 47.35 and the Unknown Hairs,
feat following the aouth line Unknown Spouses, In any,
of said NW 1/4 section along of the unknown Heirs ,
a fence Uno and marked by Devisees, Logateea, and
a set Iron rod.
Representatives of Wanda ·
Thence following the next A. Swearingen, also known
three calls:
aa Wanda Ann Swearingen,
North 09 degrees 53 Deceased, their Executors,
mlnutaa 56 aaconda east, Administrators, Custodleno,
178.04 foot; North 48 Assigns, or Guardians, my
degrees 58 minutes 22 claim to have an Interest In
seconds east, 62.45 feet; said roal ! property.
North 66 degrees 17 Therefore, plalntiH demands
minutes 41 seconds east, Judgment against decedent
94.70 feet;
Swearlngan on tho first
East point set and marked .!'~ause of action for
by an Iron rod; thence $35,468.94, with lnterast
lollowlng· a line south 24 theraon at14.25 percent per
degrees 42 minutes 28 annum from January 23,
seconds west 280.10 teat 1998; that said mortgage be
being the same line foreclosed; that the amount
described In deed book 277 of Ilona .on the property. be
page 561 to the point oi marshalled; that the raal
b~glnnlng, .ublaet to all
property be sold and the
legal easements, Containing amount due platntiH be paid
0.4221 acres, more or leas.
from the proceeds of the
Daed book volume 327 sale, together with costa
page 667
' herein; that defendants
Situated In the Townsnl~ Unknown Spouse, If any, of
of Scipio. County ol Meigs. Wanda A. Swearingen, also
State ol Ohio, To-Wit:
known as Wanda Ann
Being In Section 33, Town Swearingen, and the
7 North, range 14 West ol Unknown Heirs, Unknown
the Ohio Company's Spouses, It any, of the
purchase and being Unknown Hairs, Devisees
described as follows: Legatees,
and'
beginning at a point East Representatives of Wanda
about 1325 teet from the A. Swearingen. also known
Southwest corner of the as Wanda Ann Swearingen,
Northwest quarter (NW 114) Deceased, their Executors,
of said Section 33, said Admlnlllrators. Custodians,
point of beginning being Assigns, or Guardians, be
marked by an Iron rod on

required to set up their liens

the south line of said NW
1/4 of said Section 33;
agreement and owea to thence East 298.74 foot
plalntlll $35,468.94, with along the South line of said
Interest thereon from NW 1/4 of the Center ol
January 23, 1998, at the rata Township Road T-14 (Mount
o114.25 percent per annum; Union Road), crossing a 3Dthat aa sacurlty lor tha Inch Elm at 280.67 feet for
paym9nt of said agreement, reference; thence North 28
decedent Swearlngeoi degrees 22 minutes 10
executed and delivered to uconds west 107.04 feei
plaintiff her certain and North 32 degrees 23
mortgage deed, for the minutes 40 seconds West
realdanca at 39691 Mt. . 221.30 feat along the center
Union Road, Rutland, Ohio of said Township Road T-14
45771, convoying the (Mount Union Road), thence
described south 24 degrees 42
following
premises,
minutes 28 seconds West
Deed Book Volume 327, 309.37 loet to the point of
page 671, Situated In the baglnnlng, crossing an Iron
township of Scipio, county rod at 29.27 feet .lor
of Meigs, Stale of Ohio, to- reference, containing 1.0
wit:
acre, more or lass,
Legol deacrlpllon lor excepting all legal · rights of
property located In section way. ·
3, township 7N, range 14W, Address: 39691 Mt. Union
of Scipio Township In Meigs Rd., Rutland, OH. Tax map
County, Ohio.
or parcel ID No . 17·
Beginning at a point east 00686.001, Tax map or
about 1325 feat from tbe parcel tD No. 17-00756.00
Southwest corner of the
Thai the decedent
northwest quarter (NW 1/4) Swearingen has failed to
according to deed volume pay said agreement
277, page 561 ol said according to the terms and
section 33, said point of conditions thereof; that the
beginning being markad by defendants Unknown
an Iron rod on the south line Spouse, II any, of Wanda A.
of said NW 1/4 section of Swearingen, also known as
oald section 33: thence, Wanda Ann Swearingen,

~=~~iV"""""'" • ·

Balance ............. 268,998.86
lnveatmenta ......... 21,752.20
Calh on hand ............. BO.OO
Balance ............. 290,811.06
Total Treasury
Outstanding
Checka ................. (9092.92)
Total Balance ..... 281718.92
Memoranda Data:
Assessed
Valuatlon ........... 4072790.00
lnalde10 Mlll ............... 10.00
Outsldo10 Mlll ............ 39.70
Estimated Population ... 750
Federal Cenaua
Population .................... 729
I certify tho following report
to be correct and true, to
the beat ol my knowledge.
Karen Sue Lyons
Clerlc/Treaaurer
Main Street, Radne, 45771
(2) 271tc
Public Notice
PUBUCNOTICE
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Common Pleas Court,
Meigs County, Ohio
CASE NO. 98-CV-007

or Interest in said real
property or be forever
barred from asserting the
same, and lor attorney fees,

and costs.
The defendants Unknown
Spouse, If any, of Wanda A.
Swearingen, also known as

Wanda Ann Swearingen,

and the Unknown Hairs,
Unknown Spouses, 11 any,
of the Unknown Heirs ,
Devisees, Legatees, and
Representatives of Wanda
A. Swearingen, also known

as Wanda Ann Swearingen,
Deceased, their Executors,
Administrators, Custodians,
Assigns. or Guardians .

heralnabove namad are
further notified that they are
required to answer said

complaint on or before April
17, 1998, which Includes 28
days from he last
publication, or judgment
may

be

rendered

a

demanded therein.
Norman M. Frenk Co., LP.A.
Norman M. Frank, (001538)
Attorney for PlalntiH,
Banellclal Mortgage co. or
Ohio
33 North High Street, Suite
888

Columbus, Ohio 43215-3076
Telephone: 614-221 ·1662
(2) 13, 20, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20 6
tc

BABR.CLOtHIERS
General .Motors
PropanaCar

1998 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

1996 CHEVY CORSICA

Sticker ...........$39, 145
Discount. ..... $2974.42
Invoice ..... $36,170.58
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate ..... : ...... $2000

169 PER MONTH

8

*NO MONEY DOWN
P1yrnen1 biHCI upon e. 75% APR
Fln1nc1ng FOf 10 montnt ptymtnt
tuDttct to Cteelh lpprovll. l111 ,
ntte fHs not tnctudtd

fottf ·
prtee

1998 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

145 N. 2ND AVE.

992-2351

MIDDLEPORT

'97MODELS

Sticker ........... $20,000
Discount.. .... $1694.62
Invoice ... .. $18,305.36
Rebate .... .. ......... $750
Dealer Mark Up ... $10

f•"'
prtee

34,1

8

SJ7

BEGINS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28

1998 CADILlAC SEDAN
DEVILLE
Loaded, leather
• 8000 miles

only,

•aa,aao

1998 CHEVY
K2500 PICK-UP
4X4. 3/4 Ton
Sticker...... $25,054.95
Discount ...... $3095.17
lnvoice ..... $21 ,959.78
Dealer Mark Up ·... $10

fottr
prtee

1998 PONTIAC
SUNFIRE GT
Sticker. ..... .... .$17,570
Discount.. .... $1231.5~
Invoice ..... $16,338.48
Rebate ................. 750
Dealer Mark Up ... $ t 0

THIS SALE IS HUGE%!
EVERYTHING WILL GOII

to"'

S2J

'95
MODELS
* Cadillacs
*Blazers
'94 Chev.
Blazers
, 4Doors .
"2" U. Models- Loaded

1997 CHEVY S-l 0PICK-UP
Sticker ......................... $! 1,582
Discount.. .. ........ .. ........ $563.82
Invoice .................. . $11,018.18
Dealer Mark Up .............. ... $10
Rebate ...... ,.................... $1500
Dealer Cash ...... ............... $500

tott'

prtee

CD Pl!lyer &amp; Leather
lntttrlors, ·Low Miles

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

Sticker .. ..... ... ... ....... ...... $12,815
Discount.. ... .. ................ $949.94
Jnvoice ..............~ ...... $11 ,865.06
Rebate ... .... .. .... .......... .. $750.00
Dealer Mark Up ....... .. ... .. ..... $10

~=.-

•n,12s•

..

AND

MUCH
MORif.

~

'

.

'96MODELS
* 80NNEVILLES

*GRANDAMS
* BONNEVILLES
*SUN FIRES
*SKYLARKS
* LUMINAS
* GMC JIMMYS
*GRAND PRIX

9:30 A.M. TO 7:00 P.M.
General .Motors
PropamCar

Gov. Lincoln Almond said ThursBut the vaccine is in short supply.
and doctors' oftices have repeatedly day he wants to set up meningitis
run out as Rhode Islanders hurry to clinics in schools acros.s Rhode Island
for a more orderly way to carry out
get their children inoculated.
Nolan said I00.000 doses of the the inoculation. The first schoolmeningitis vaccine would arrive in based clinics could open next week.
The plan runs counter to federal
Rhode Island today. supplementing
guidelines. which say ruutine vacci60.0(X) doses already in the state.
She has said there is no outbreak. nation in communities without an·
only .•poradic cases of meningitis in outbreak is not worthwhile because
the state. and the rush to inoculate is the vaccine is not eflective in children
under age 2 and because each dose is
unnecessary.
But in an attempt to quell what effective for only three lo five years.
"We have decided to be abunNolan called the "panic" over meningitis, state officials plan a televised dantly cautious .... We may be doing
town meeting tonight to discuss the -this all for nothing. We.don't know,"
Almond said.
disease.

Gea

1996Convertible,
NEW CHEVROLET
CAMARO
Red, Black Top, Z 28

sl

Oregon decides taxpayers should
help pay for assisted suicide, 10;..1.
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) - An
Oregon health panel voted to require
taxpayers to he)p pay for doctorassisted suicides of terminally ill poor
people.
The state Health Services Commission voted I0-1 Thursday for a
proposal that said delivering lethal
dmes of prescription drugs should be
covered as a "medical service" for
the 270,000 low-income residents
covered under the state 's health plan.
Although the state hasn't set a dolJar amount for the new policy, a

IOk::isJTd::llle

Stock IIGM1601

' show to boost ratings.
trhe lawsuit had been expected to
be a crucial test ofTexas· st:olute that
protects perishable foods from knowingly false statements. known here
and in 12 other stales as "veggie
libel" laws. In Texas. plaintiffs must
prove a perishable food was attacked
with knowingly raise and defamatory statements. ·
Hours after the verdict. U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson ruled
not only that cattle was not a perishable food but also that there was no
evidence anyo~e OQ the show knew
they said anything false.
But Robinson did not rule the law
unconstitutional, as Winfrey anorney
Charles Babcock had requested. One
observersaid the jury still might have
chilled the effectiveness of such
laws.
··After this outcome. I think La&gt;
Vegas odds on this kind of lawsuit are
going down. They don't look so
attractive." said Thomas Baker. a
constitutional law professor at Texa'
Tech University in nearby Lubbock .
Ms. Winrrey. who has filmed her
show here since Jan. 22. taped three
episodes Thursday night as she and
her st~ff prepared to return hume to
Chicago. Today's edition featured her
defense team. spectators who attended the trial and television reporters
who covered the case.
She said on the show she be'lieved
the jury would return a verdict against
her or come to no decision at all. M.s.
Winfrey credited close friend Maya
Angelou for sending I~ mini sters
here to pray lor her.
She alsu repeated her post -trial
exclamation: "Free speech rock s'"

.

740•992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094

' ...~ ....@... (!)

Three deaths lead governor to
call for vaccination at schools
PROVIDENCE. RJ . (AP) - The
re&lt;·enl deaths of three children has
caused a rush on meningitis vaccines
and led the governor to plan to set up
inoculation clinics in 1\chools ucro~s
the state.
Three children from different
communities have died since Jan. 12
after apparent bouts with meningitis.
The most recent was Monday. when
a 5-year-old boy died.
Because children are falling ill
with the bllcterial infection at increasing r.lles. state Health Director Patricii Nolan ha' recommended that
250.000 stale residents between the
ages of 2 and 22 be vaccinated.

MOTORS~ INC.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Oprah takes her victory
celebration to the airwaves
AMARILLO. Texas (AP)- With
her emotions ranging from jubilant to
weepy and pensive. Oprah Winfrey
told her viewers that she con•iders
her court victory over Texas cattlemen one for freedom of speech.
Bound for weeks by a court gag
order, Ms. Winfrey dedicated an
episode of her nationally syndicated
TV talk show to the five-week beef
disparagement trial she won Thursday here in cattle country. The show
was to air today.
"They said I couldn't get a fair triat in Texas and you proved them
wrong," Ms. Winfrey. who at times
danced and pumped her list. told 300
audience members at Thursday
night's taping. She went on to thank
each of the 12 jury members by their
first names.
A judge's order prevented any of
the jurors from appearing in person
on the show. Ms. Winfrey said. She
wept .several times. but also tlitted
around stage holding a copy of
Thursday afternoon's Amarillo
Globe-Times, "with its "OPRAH
WINS" head lone.
Cattlemen had blamed her April
i6. 1996. program dealing with mad
cow disease for faltering beef prices
and sued her shortly afterward for
more than $11 million . The jury
decided the cattlemen didn't prove
the show falsely disparaged them.
Plaintiffs' attorney Joe Coyne said
hos clienls will appeal. While he erectited jurors for thoughtfully hashing
out the case during about six hours of
&lt;jeli:Jeration, he also said the defense
had a bonus that outweighed any
· home-tield advantage.
··You'd have to be blind to say

Friday, Febru~ry 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

*GRAND PRIX
*GRANDAMS
*CENTURY'S
* REGALS
*BLAZERS

95 Park Ave
New 98 Park Ave
Trade 31,000 miles.
Lady Driven.

Eqedtlle
Best

-96 Plymouth

Caravan
19,000 low miles.
1-0wner Uke New
Condition

15,900

5

"89'' GMC
.JiiDIDy

Chev
.Mark Ill

"93~~

£onverslon Van
Only 25,000 low
miles
"Showroom a.tan"
'

Automatic- 4 wheel drive,
350

va, extra clean,

t-owner, loa!led
GNGt for towine!

$7,995
'

�'.
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February

' -- ~--

•

Church of Christ
PoDIOroy Cboir&lt;h ol Christ
212 W. Main St.

Episcopal
Grott Episcopal Chun:h
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy

Minister: Danny Bias

Redor: Rev . D. A . duPiantier
Holy Eucharist an d

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Apostolic

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Coffee hou r following

Pomeroy W0111ide Cbun:h of Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wor.;hip - IOa.m., 6 p.m.

Holiness
Danville Holln01s Chur&lt;h
31057 State Route 325, langsvlle

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dr. J. D. Young

Mason, W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Te nnant
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.~. and 7 p.m.

Sundav School -9:30a.m
Worship-8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Harrisonville Road

Worship - II a.m., 7:30p.m.

Wor5hip - 9:30a.m.

(Southom)

Pine Grove Biblt Holiness Church

Pas10r: lcs Hay man

Zion Chun:h of Christ

Suuday Service- 7:00p.m
Sunduy School - 10 a.m.

Pomtroy. H11rrisonv ille Rd . (Rt.l43)

Wednesday Sc:rvicc-7:00 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:JO a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m .

Pastor: Roger Watson

Tuppers I'll in Chur&lt;h of Christ

East Main St.

Worship · 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Lourol CIIIT Fm Mothodisl Chur&lt;h

Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant

Brodbury Cbur&lt;h or Christ

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

First Blptist Chur&lt;h
6th and Palmer St:, Middleport
Su nday Sc hoo~- 9: 15a. m.

Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
We&lt;lncsday Service- 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty

Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
.Vor.;hip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.', 7:00p.m.

Silver Run llaplist

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Bill Lillie

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wor.;hip- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

ML Union Blptbt
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.

Dexter

Evening· 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening -6:30p.m.
Thur&gt;day Service -6:30 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Btthlehom B1ptitt Chur&lt;h
Great Btnd, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Woll5hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study- 6:00p.m.

Worship - JO:;JO a.m., 7:30p.m.
W..cdne5day Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlotk Gron Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp

Old Bethel Fra: Will Blptist Cbur&lt;h
2861'11 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Evening -7:30p.m.

Thursday Services - 7:30

Paslor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

52.1 N. 2nd St . Middleport

Pas1or: James E. Keesee
Worship - IUa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrv1cc:S - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- II a.m.
WMhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Chu r ch of God
ML Mort.h Cbur&lt;h of God

Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Satterfield

Forni Run Baptist
Pascor . Ariu.s Hurt

Sunday School . 9:45 a.m.
E~c:ning · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptist

Rutlaad c•un:h or God

Fourth &amp; Main ~~ , Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilber1 Craig, Jr.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worshi~ -

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

J0:45 a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Chtster

Nazarene

Apple: and Second Sts.

Pastor: Shaion Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Wor&gt;hip- 10 a.m.

Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Sunday Evening -6:00p.m.
Rutlood Frtt Will Blplist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taykn

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Thursday Servic~ - 7 p.m.

Cloor&lt;h of God of Propbtq
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Joppo

Pasror: PJ . Chapman

Evening· 7 p.m.
Wcdncsday Servi~~- 7 p.m.

Catholic
S.Crod Hoort Cotholic Chur&lt;h

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servict:!. - 7 p.m.

L.ong Bouom

Congregational
Triaily Chprch

161 Mul berry A~e ., Pomeroy. 992-5898
Pil')tor· Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Sun. Con. -8:45 -9:15 a.m.,
Sun . M~ ·9:30a.m.

Sunday school and wurship 10:25

Oa•le y Mass · B:JO a.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Roodlsvill&lt; Fellowship
Cbun:ll of tht Naunae

Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smilh, Sr.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Syi'ICI!If Chur&lt;h of tilt Nuoroao
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Radio Ministry· Ravenswod Station

4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Mill Work
Cabinet Making

0

Syracuse

992-3978

'

Dli•t. CkllcUI 911Cy m
INSVIlAN
.
CB .

~~~~-~~-

-::._,
_
• __.
- - .,._
--

Bill Qulcblie2-IIS77
Sentinel
Classified•
992-2156

12 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

'

:iMSOUIIIStconciA-iiit
lllddloport, OH 45110

114-112-5141

llluceR. Flohor • Otroctor
5tO EMt llotn StrMt
-..y,OH45719
114-112-5444
JonnetR.
.-Diroe10t

RACINE MOWER

Brogan-Warner

CUNIC
Briggs &amp; Stratton

INSURANCE
SERVICES

~(EII:RtsterE•St•Ervtce Technician

1

~ U!12ral ~- ,:Jnr.
-

05 1

HEATER

949-2804

REIIIAII~I

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!

~

·
214 E. Main

United Brethren
ML Hoi'mon llnllod Brethren
In Christ Chur&lt;h
Texas Commuriity off CR 82

Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Woll5hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicos- 7:30p.m.

•

Eden Uoiied Brethron Ia Chrbt
2 1/2 miles nonh of Reedsvi lle

on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley

Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

nME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?

Clean ()ut your basement or .
attic with the help of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
Mei,gs County i 0/deu Fwrur
&gt;Jt

~ut MAIN POMOO~ OHIO 45769

614/992-2644
6141992-6298
VuA

EWING FUNERAL HOME

'Dignity snd SsiVice Always•
Esfflblish8d 1913

SIIVIRS-

WICKS

Special Thru
March

992-2121

KINGS'

HAULING

8 ton Delivered

. Limestone,

$120

Home lmprovemenls
33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
'
PoleBams,
Decks, Painting

Gravel, Sand,

Mileage Umlt

Call Us For A Free Estimate

Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

Top Soil,

:

'

614-742-3090
614-742-3324

Call Randy

992-5050

..
1111[1

COMPirrER
PERFORMANCE
UPGRADES

614-74~~~2Z~, mo"'

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp;SAFETY
SALES

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENTS
In anticipation of the opening of the Meigs
County Branch, the University of Rio Grande is
accepting applications for the following
positions:
COORDINATOR OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH
This parHime position has flexible hours, mostly
late afternoons and evenings on Mondays
through Thursdays. In addition to being an
office manager, the successful candidate will
assist students and faculty with various
university duties . Successful candidates must
have demonstrated computer skills; good
organizational skills; be a people person and be
familiar with the Meigs County Community. An
Associate Degree is required with a Bachelor's
degree preferred. Preference will be given· to a
Meigs County resident.
PART·TIME . FACULTY
Part-time faculty members in lhe areas of
English , Math, Business Computers, Business
Management and Liberal Arts and Sciences. A
Bachelor's Degree in the disc ipline is required
with a Master 's Degree preferred . Previous
teaching experien?e preferred . .
Interested applicants shou!d send a IEltter of
interest and resume with the names of th ree
references before the deadline of March 16,
1998 to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR
D·lrector of Human Resourc_es
University of Rio Grande
Campus Post Office Box F27
Rio Grande, OH 45674
The University of Rio Grande is an Equal
Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE
STARTING
FRI. FEB. 20
I

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

614-992-7643
Sunday Calls)

Remodeling

80

-

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

&amp; PAINTING
Specializing In:
New Roolo, Roo! Repalro,
Guttere, Interior I
Exterior Pointing,
Drywall Repair.
Lowe~t rataa during the
winter monlho .ol
Jon.-Feb.-Mor.
Ouallfy Work Gu11r1nleed
free Eat • Fully lnoured
1-614-992-9057
Middleport, Oh.

n:J-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

!

20 Vrs. Exp. • In~ . Owner: Ronnie Jones

(614) 992;!~7~

Public Notice

Balance •• of
Dac. 31,1 997 ..... $13,710.00
Trailer Parka/Campground•
1/1/97 """""""""' $3,881.00
Recelpto .......... ,,,,,,,,823.00
Tola1.. ........................ 4,684.00
Expendlturea ..,,,,,,,,,290.00
Balance aa or
Dec. 31 , 1997 ....... $4,384.00
Food Service Fund
1/1/97 """"""""' $14,814.00
Rocelptl ................. 14,562.00
Totol ........................ 29,376.00
Expenditure• ........... 9,164.00
Balance I I ol
. Dec. 31, 1997 .... $20,212.00
Federal Fundo
1/1/97.,.,,.,..,.,,24,087.00
Racelpto ............... 156,349.00
Advancea(Tronofera
In ......... ,................. 7.~19.00
Total ............,, .. ,, 187,455.00
Expenditure• ...... ..171 ,423.00
Balance ao of
Doc. 31,1 997 .,, $16,032.00
State Fund•
1/1/97 ""'"'"'""" $41 '131 .00
· Receipts ........ ,,., 183,153.00
Advoncao/Tronolero
ln.,,.,,,.,, ............ 2,943.00
TotaL .................... 227,227.00
Expendlturoo ....... 215,623.00
Balonce as or
Dac. 31, 1997..... $11 ,604.00
Total ol ell Funda
1/1/97 ""'"'"'"" $102,038.00
Receipts ,,,,,.,,, 661,226.00
Advance/Translera
ln ............................ 9,962.00
TotaL .... ,., .., .. .,,, 773,226.00
Expendlturao ....... 697,313.00
Tranalaro Out.. ......... 9,961 .00
Balonce as ol
Public Notice
Dec. 31,1997 .... $65,952.00
MEIGS COUNTY GENERAL Jon D. Jacoba, R.S.
Deputy Health
HEALTH QISTRICT CASH
Commlooloner
RECONCILIATION
(2) 27, 1tc
Ao ol Oecambar 31,1997
Tolal Depoolt
Balance ............. $27,073.00
Total Outstanding Bolanci
· and Checks as or
Dec. 31,1997 ........ 6,121.00
Total ol all Balances as or
Dec. 31 , 1997.... $65,952.00
Summary of
'
,Receipts/Expenditures and
•
balances lor II seal yoar
•
ending December 31, 1997
Board ol
Health 1/1197 ........ $1,814.00
Recelpta ............... 306,339.00 Don't get stung'by high}Jrices!
Tota1 ...................... 324,484.00
Shop the classified S«lion.
Expenditures ....... 300,813.00
Advancao/Tranalera
In Memory
Out ... ...................... 9,961 .00

RUTLAND
•
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE

'ROAD ·
GUN SHOOT

American Legion Pos.t 602
will have a Fried Chicken
Dinner with trimmings
March 1, 11-?, $5.00

Fadory Choke

Only

BINGO

Public

MON. &amp; WED.

UNLIMITED TANNING
for the month of March
for $25.00

6:30P.M.

SHEER ILLUSION

POST 467
STAR BURST

RUTLAND

992·2550 .

stooo.oo

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS

$70.00 OR MORE

All Clothing 50% Off

PER..GAME

ROCK-A-BYE BABY

I

qEECH.GROVE
ROAD

992·707~

.

In Memory Of
WANDA GUINTHER
who paSied away
Feb. 28, 1987
Gone but notlorgot1en.
Sadly missed
b the Famll ,
&lt; Card of Thanks
The Family Of
MARGERY A.
DOUGLAS
wis h to express our
heartfelt thtnks to
everyone who comforted or B18lsted ua
with kind words,
prayera, Carda or food
d11rlng her Illness and
at the lime of her
death.
Special thanka to
Rev. &amp; Mrs, Clark
Baker, the Pomeroy
Chapel ol the Flaher
Funeral Home, the
Middleport United
Pentecoatal Church,
Dr. Jamea Witherell,
staff ol Rockaprlnga
Nursing &amp; Rehab
Center, Modern Woodman &amp; America, Colleen Brlckles, Theresa
Shaffer, and Craig &amp;
Kathy Dougan. May
GOdBieaaVou.

90

COrtSTROaiOrt

Hauling, Excavating
Trenching
Umeitone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syatema ·
Trailer &amp; Houae Sites

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

a.

Over 20 years experience.

Reasonable Ratti

Free Estimates

Joe

Call 614-843-5426,_,.,.

..

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
•EIQctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-62\5
Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Ool!ar: All U.S. Silver And Gold Cotns. Proolsets.
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 u.s. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Ac(luisltions Jewelr y
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, 740-44E·2842.

Lona·s

SAYRE
.TRUCKING

N. Sayre
614-742·2138

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pe arson Auction Compan ,
lull lime auctioneer. co mplete
auct ion
se rvice . lice nsed
lll66,0h io &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

Joe Wilson

i

It

All Yard s·alea Must Be P1ld
Ad~anee . Dellldllne: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run ,
Sunday &amp; Monday tdltlon1:OOpm F~day.

"Build Your Dream"

General Solicitation
Statemenl
The Private lftduatry
'council (PIC) and the
·Governing Board of Service
Delivery Aroa ·Number 24
(SDA 124), which lnclud81
(Athono, Gallla, Hocking,
Lawrence, Melga, Perry,and
VInton) Countleo, are
· oollclllng propoaalo lor
oervlceo to be provided to
youth (Title 11-B and Tills IIC), adults (Title 11-A) and
dlalocated workers (Tille Ill
EDWAA) under the Job
Training Partnerohlp Act.
Thaaa aervlcea will be tor
Program Year 1998 (July 1,
1998 to June 30, 1999) on 8
county baola. Each riFP
muat Identify a County. II a
proapectlve
~ervlce
provider wlahtl lo bid on
more than one (1) County, 8
oeparate · RFP muat be
submitted lor each County
Identifying the County .
Program• operated durlng
· Program Veor 1998, which
meet
contracted
performance standards,
may be extended lor an
additional yaor or operation.
The application proceaa
requlrea that aubmltted
propoaela:
(1) Contain detailed,
accurate and complete
programmatic and budget
Information.
· (2) Follow the preacrlbed
lormat ldentllled In the RFP
packet.
There will be a blddoro
conference on March 9,
1998/1: 30 p .m. RFP
packagea will be given out
at thlo lime. All RFP
packagoo-wlll. be due March
19, 1998/12:00 . (Noon).
Located at:
Servll:e Delivery Area 124
lronton-Lawranca County
CAO
305 North ·Filth Street
Ironton, OH 45638
(614) 532-3534
(2) 24, 25, 26, 27 (3) 1, 2, 6 tc

145 N. Second
Midd
OH

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

M&amp;J

McFEE ROOFING

30 ·~nnouncements

Route· t41 , 3 112 Miles. 27th ·2nc(.
Childrens I Adult Cl othes . Wood
Youth Bed, Lamps, Home Interior,
Dishes. Misc. 740-446-1379 .

FREE ESTIMATES

IPOMEFmY OH

odiUon • 2:00 p.m.
Monday edition
-!O:OOa.m. Sotunloy.

F~doy.

Inside &amp; Out Rummage : Riding
lawn Mower, Bed, Sweepers, T.V.
Push Lawn Mower, lots Of
Clothes ,' 4 Rooms Full, Saturday.
Monday. Tuesday, Wednesdav.
t0-4 , 1699 McCormick Road.

Garages • Replacement Windows

Give us a call for system repairs,
sates, upgrades or consulting.

Public Notice

HelpWanted

&amp; SE~VICE

172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

..
110

the dly befom thllrl
11 to run . Sunday

B.ISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

"Your Oue Stop
Computer ·shop~'

Custom Homes

SUN., I:OQ PM

FLORIST

We Rll Doctors'
Prescriptions

REIIL n111

LIMESTONE

ENTERTAINMENT "OJ"
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

these area merchants

hurry... TRY

-

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

STAR BOUND

Evening 7:30p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

a

.

Wednesday Youth Scrvico- 7:30p.m.

Tuesday &amp; Thur&gt;day ·7:30p.m.

992-5432

in

Acuptlng Worlre,.. Com,-nHtlon Plltl•nta 211311 mo.

12/11/11r&gt;

Sabbath School- 2 p.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 3 p.m.

992-2955

WAll ADS BET

PHONE (7'"1) 69-C-2227 FAX (7.0) 59A-662A
•AMTA Mtmbtr •LictiL,td by Ohit~ Srurt Mtdicul BtHJrd

Saturday Services:

Pastor: Ro} Hunter

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
985-3308

992-5130 Pomeroy

ATHENS, OHIO .U701

Seventh-Day Adventist
Soveotb-D1y Ad..1tlst
Mulbeny Hto. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Crow's Family Restaurant
"Fearuring Kentucky Fried Chicken·
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•arrltrili.•

'sproriJ irtjury/prrvtntiott
5-CO WEST UNION STREET

(614) 992-3838
.

•cltmttlc fatigru

'migraints

Middleport Prftbytert.n
Sunday School - 9a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

FuU Gospel UaJ!thouM
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy

RIDENOUR
SUPP_LV

- .

lntqm#w ""'LULU l«hnifw tbqt qrr hcWvl u,r;
•t:~tnHiic ptJin •mu.rclt straitul1prailu •st~s.t

Unintone Hauling
Houn l Trailer .Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syatem &amp;
Utilities
Esttmatea

H1rrbon¥lll&lt; Prosbytori1n Church
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

Wednesdly Servicos- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids lor Christ- 7 p.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL

MASSAGE THERAPIST

Worship - II a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

Church announcements sponsored_

.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

ML Olivo Commuity Chur&lt;h

Uaited F1itll Chun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass

Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Firsl Sunday of Month -7:30p.m. service

HOWAR.D
EXCAVATING CO.

JANICE S. HAYNES, BA, MT

Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Evening . 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Rov. Roland Wildman

Syrocu,. Flnt United Prftbytorian

Wedn&lt;day Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship . 9:30a.m.

Second &amp; lynn, Pomeroy

Sat. Con. 4 45-5:15p.m.; Mas.&lt;- 5 30 p.m.

Presbyterian

Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rftdsvlllo

Evening - 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Long Bottom

Sundly School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip . 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a,m.
WOr&gt;hip. 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff

Pastor : Bob Randolph
Worship ·9:30 a.m.

Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker

F11th Gospel Chun:h

Middieport Chur&lt;h of tho Nuoreae

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Evening Services- 6:30p.m.

Middleport Poalocoslll

p.m.

Mono Cblpd Cbur&lt;h
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- II a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

W01 _, :-.ip · 11 a,m.• 6:.}() p.m.

Synaue Flnt Chur&lt;h of God

Alltiquity Blptist
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

PastOr: Sam Anderson

Grand Street

Ton:hChur&lt;h
Co. Rd. 6)
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Alfred

Wedntsday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening -7:30 p.m.
Wednosday Scrvico- 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Northtast Cluster

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
. Evening - 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Chun:~
575 Pearl St., Middlepoit

Wednesday Scrvicos - 10 a.m.
Hockingport Cbun:h
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Meigs Cooperalin Parish

Pastor: Randy Barr

Pastor: William Hoback

Dyesvlllo Community Chun:lo

Worship - 10 a.m.

Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Poolf&lt;OIIII Asaombly
St. Rt. 124, Racine

HIIUI Commualty Cbun:b
OffRt. 124
PastOt": Edsel Han
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsnip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Bethel Chur&lt;b
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School -9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wor.;hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

AJ.1. Yord Solei Muot
Be Paid tn Advonco.
O£ADLINE: 2:00p.m.

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

·Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Wednesday -7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Endtlmo House of Preyer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

E~ening • 6

Worship· 9 a.m.

MI. Olive Uaited Mothodist
Off 124 b&lt;hind Wilkesville

Pastor: Bill Staten
SUnday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

•

Coolville Chun:h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wrdnesd:ly Sen~ ice . 7:30 p,m.

Now Ufe Vlctocy Contor
3773 Goorgos Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH

Syrocuao Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Helen Kline

Un1ted Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun)

Wednesda y Service · 7 p.m.

Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist P1rish

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worsnip - II a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m. ·
Worship- 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.

Sunday ~hoot- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

St. Paul Lutheron Chun:h

• Clifton, W.Va.

Filth Volley T1bom1do Chur&lt;h

Worship · 9 a.m.

Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Rid no

Corner Sycal'(lore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev . George Weirick

Pastor:Jim Hughes

Foith Baptist Chorch

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Christian Union
Hortford Churth of Chrbt in
Christlon Union
Hartford, W.Va.

Victory S.pti5t lndcpcndant

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Worship. II a.m.

Wonhip - lla.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesda y Services -7 P-ITl-

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)
East Lollrt

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Clifton T1bem1clo Chun:h

Wednosday service-6:30 p.m.

Sutton

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood. W.Va.
lntrim-pastors: Rev. Robcn Hupp

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship- 10 a.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Our Snlour Luthoron Chun:h

Roodaville Chun:lo of Chritt
Pastor: Philip Stunm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Hillside Blptist Cbur&lt;h
St. Rt. 14) just off Rt. 7

Pastor: Theron Durham •

Worship· 10 a.m.

Worship -9:00a.m.

Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday Xhool - 10 a.m.

· Hanlsoavlllo Commualty Chun:h

MorningStar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Sunday School . 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: William Van Meter

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

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

Pine Gro~e

1/4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd .

Tho Bdlovon' Fellowship Mlnistcy
New Limo Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Rev. George Weirick

Chur&lt;h ol Joauo Christ,
Apostolic F11th

Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Canpel

Lutheran
St. John Luthoron Chun:h

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
~orship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Friday - rellowship service 7 p.m.

Sunday Scnool - II a.m.

Lonpvlllo C~risd10 Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Foreman

Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Relief Socie ty/Priesthood J I :05-12:00 noon
·
Sacr:smc:nt Service 9-10: 15 a.m.
Homemaking me~li ng. l st Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Rojoldn1 Ufe Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Worship . 9 a. m.

Christ of Lottor-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 am.

Uhorty Cbrlsd1a Chur&lt;h

Evening • 7 p.m.

Long Bottom

Btthllny

The Church.or Jesus

Pastor : David Dailey

Sunday School 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Steve Reed

Sunday Scnool- 10 a.m.

Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m_.

Stivonvlllo Word of Foith

F1ith Full Gospel Churc:b

Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler

Sunday Scnool -9:30a.m.

Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins

Sunday Scnool- 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

Wednesday se~icc, 7:00p.m.

Snowville

.

Pastor: Rev. Blackwood

Holrooa Christi•• Fellowship Chon:h
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 9 a.m.

Pa.s~or : Jerry Singer

Colvory Bible Chun:h
Fomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Reorpniud Church or Jesus Clllist
or Latter Day Saints
F'ortland·Racine Rd.

Pastor: Rev . franklin Q,ickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Salem St., Rutland

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Latter-Day Saints

Pastor: John Hart

Sunday Scnool -9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

Chriotloa Fellowship Center

Salem Center

Surfday Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Hidwcy Hills Cbur&lt;h or Christ

Sunday School - IO..m.
Wor&gt;t.ip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servie&lt;.~- 7:30p.m

Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Ministe r: Bill Amberger

Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

1

Rutland Community Chur&lt;h

Brodford Church ol Chrbt
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Jt.dno Fin! Blptist
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robcn E. Robinson

Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.
· Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10;30 a.m.
Thur&gt;day Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

Rut11nd Chun:h of Christ
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Foith Chapel Open Bible Chun:h
923 S. Third St., Middleport

Wors hip · JO a.m.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Faith Fellowship Cnrsado for Christ

P01ri Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Woll5hip- 10 a.m.

Sunday School- 9:15a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- IO:JOa.m. and 6 p.m.

Fairview Bible Chur&lt;h
L&lt;tan, W.Va. Rt. I

Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor: Keith Rader

Pastor: Da~id Oe:Witt

Pastor: Tom Runyon

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Service time: Sunday 10:30 H.m.

Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday - 10 a.m.
Rock Sprinp

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth- 5:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wors hip . JO a.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church

Sunday Scnool -9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Agape Ufo Center
"Full-Gospel Churcn"
Pastoll5 loon &amp; Fatty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
.773-5017

Pastor: Chad Emrick

Wed nesday Se rvice - 7:30p.m.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Worship - 7:30p.m.

Instrument al
Pastor: Srol Brown
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion . lO a.m.

While's Chopel Wesleyan

Other Churches
H1rvest Outrnc~ Mlalstria
47439 Reib&lt;l Rd., Chester
Pastor: Rev . Mary McDaniel

Mlnon•llle

75 rearl S1., M iddleport
Pastor: Rev. John Nevi lle
Child ren's serv ice· 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pasror: Mark Matson

Worship. 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicos- J.p.m.

Sunday School - 9:)0 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Woslt)'an Bible Hollnoss Church

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Port11nd Flnt Chun:h altho N1urono

Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivln

Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Su11day Sdool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se rvice · 7:30p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mlsalon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev . Roger Willford
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Heath (Middleport)

112 mile off Rt. 325

Wtdntsday Strvices- 6:30p.m.

Ash Street, Midd leport

Pastor: Mark Mouow

Pastor: Chad Emrick
Su nday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Th ursday Services · 6:30 p.m.

Sunday Scnool -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 P·'1'·

Bt1noallow Rldgo Churc:b of Chriot

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor.;hip- 10:30 a.m.
First Southom B1ptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike

ROSt of Sh1ron Hollnoss Chun:h

Pastor:Terry Stewan

570 Grant St., Middleport

Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist

Forest Run

Lt:ading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunda)" ~hool - 9:JO a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer mcc1ing- 7 p.m.

Pastor-Jdfrty Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Pastor: Jim Ditty

Rutiand First Baptist Chur&lt;h

Wcdne!Ktay Service . 7:30 p.m.

Worship Service J0:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services .

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor.;hip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m

Worship . 11 a.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool 9:30a.m.

)(ingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Sinith
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Pastor: Samuel Basye

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Rat woods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Carleton lnterdenomlnJtJonal Church

Rutl1od Cbur&lt;h of the Nuoroao

Enterprise

Colvary Pilgrim Chapel

- 7 p.m.

Pasror: Rev . Herben Grale

Pastor: Keith Rader

Youth Minister: Bill Fratier

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Fl'ft Will Baptist Chur&lt;h

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Woll5hip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

Wedncsd&lt;~y Sc~iccs

Sunday school -9:30a.m.
Worship - I I a.m. and 5 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Chad Emrick

Wednesday praye r service · 7 p.m.

KoooChor&lt;h of Christ
Hope Baptist

Chester Chun:h of tho Nuorono

Wednesday Services ·7:30 p.m.

Pastor: Re~ . Victor Roush

Pasior: Robert Barber

Centn~l Clu1ler
Asb~ (Syrocuso)

Yard Sale

..:-'.

Silver Ridge

W(dnesday Service:· 7 p.m.

70

·pi"

South Bethel New Tosllment
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

19~

.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services -7:30p.m.

Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday wo,hip · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson

Pomeroy Churc:bof tho Nuoreae
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm)r.
Sunday Scnool- 9:30a.m.
Wonnip,- 111:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Sunday Scnool 10:30 a.m.

Middleport Chur&lt;h of Christ
Assembly of God
Box 467, Dudding lane

Tuppen P11i1s St. P1ul

27,

9

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Antiques, top prices paid , Riverine Antiques . Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner. 740-992-

2526 .
Antiques-

no

item too large or too

small. Al so estates , app raisals .
relinishing , custom orders. 740·
992-6576
Clean l ate Model Cars Or
Trucks . 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pont1a c. 1900 Ea st·
ern Avenue. Gallipolis.

J &amp; D Aut o Part s. Buy ing
wrecked or salvaged ven i cles .

CELLULAR PHO~ES
•

360° Communications

"

w

. .

JEFF. WARNER I_NSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

304-773·51&gt;33.
TtMBEfl: we pay cas h lor 1racts
of timber. If interested in selling
your timber please le t olJr pro
lessiona l fores try stall manage
vour timber lor inco me, wildlile ,
and a place to enjoy the ou tdoors _ Superior Hardwoo ds ol
Oh io Lumber Co., PO BoK 606 ,
Wellston. Ohio 45692, (740)384·

5677 .
Wanted To Buy·
Extra Large Steel Pet Crate.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Call (304) 615-t05t
Leave Message

wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes. 740· 446-0175 , 304-6755965.

SUSIE
Rome for the
Elderl; _
At

260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992·7147
Exhaust Work
We do Cuslom Bettdlng
Converler ladt $84.95
Most ~ars
Used nres I 2-00 lo 15.00
S.rvke .loll $16.95 4 ql. oil
· General Repair Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulberry
Pomeroy
Phone 992. 9949

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION
Don't let winter
give you the blues.
Start today with a
addition or

2/10/1 mo. pd.

Little things
are Worth A lot

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

/he Classified Section!

DUMP TRUCK

ANNOUNCEMENTS

'"

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

005

Avallabte

Free Esl/mares
No Job Too Small

Brien Morrison
(740) 985-3948

Personals

ATTENTION LOVERS III CALL
NOWlll 1-900-285·9287 . Ell .
8079, $2.99 Per Mm . Must Be 18
Yrs. Serv·U 619-645·6434.
Slart oatrng tonight! Have fun ..
play Ohio's datmg game. 1-BQO.
ROMANCE . extension 7484.

30

P/ BContradors Inc.

Commercial and Residential
24 Mr, Bobcat Strvlct

remodeling.

Call Todayf Free Estimates!
992·5535 or 992·2753

' ll/2S/9&amp;1fn

-Bobcat Service
•Concrete
Construction
•Masonry Construction
•General etc.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

new home, new

just a little

Announcements

Herbal Heating ror Women ,
March 7th . 10-4. Educational DP·

WILL RAUL-

JUST CALL.
992·2646
Gravel , Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

SNOW

REMOVAL
Driveways,
Parking ·Lots, etc.
Call Anytime
Home

614-992-3141
Cell Phone

591·1897

ltililit'"'· Hoolinc.

CHESHIRE

FOOD"fiRT

4 AM-12 PM Mon .-Sat.;
Sun. 6 AM-Midnight
Hot Breal!fast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot&amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Introducing Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Topplngo
Coil In Ordero Aceopted
740-367-7838

l oves

304-675- I 907.
9 Month otd male . solid bl ack. II
2 Lab &amp; 112 Hu sky dog, to good

llottll''· ltt· ttwtldiu~

home only. 304·458· 1623.

IJO\IE CIU:EK

Four mon th old puppy. father
AKC bla ck La b, mother hall Lab,
hou seb roken . needs attent1on .
740·992·3240

Pomeroy

Free oupp1es . Lab /Golden Ae ·

992-7943 992-5404
992-6810
.'

good pels , to good home only

tneve r m1x, ra1sed 1ndoors. make

304-882-3638.

60

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop 8t Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985-4473
7/22/tln
•'

.

Lost and Found

2 female Foxhounds , 1 has collar
wrth Corby Cleek 's name on 11.
740.· 843·5393 Of 740·843·5346.

ROBERT BISSEll

Foun d : Bla ck &amp; Whrte Female
Pup. Lavender Color t 100 Block
Of Second Avenue , 740-44 1-

9819
FOUND: Nice brown Jadl:et, felt in
oll1ce ol Health &amp; Hu,man Re ·
sou rces. Call 30-4 -675 -0 880 to
claim.

'

Avon $8 ·$18 /Hr, No Door ·To ·
Door. OUtck Cash. Fun &amp; Relaxing. t -800-736-01 68
Avo n . $8 ·$20 /Hr No Doo r To
Door. Our ck Cash• 1-600 -2 96·
0139 lOCI/SIS/rep.
8abysfller Needed For Two Child·
ren On Weekdays . Fle(rble Shrlts.
740·256-t070.
CNA'S
Eldercare of wv ts now accep ting appliCa tions lor part-lime and/
or full· t1me CNA'S expenenced m
tong -term health care. licensed rn
wv. Apply 1n person be tween
9am-5pm at 107 Miller Onve Rtp·
ley, WV. EOE.
Dealers &amp; Oist rrbu tor s Wanted:
Great monev makrng opportunity
car. ·home. health. bpdy care produ ct s ava tiabie . For demo &amp;
sale, top quality m waterless
technolo gy from ETI. Call Scott
Smttn @ 304·862·3972 Reta11 DI-

rect

1-800-820 -6893 .
163062.

P'n•

g" 1-800·481·6334

Giveaway

7wk old puppies. to good home.

--

AVON ! All Area s t Shirley
Spears. 304·675-1 429.

Dependable And Flex1 ble Certi fred Nurse A1d Needed For In
Home Care Call Adnanne Or An-

ShOts. Hou sebr oken .
ChiiCiren. 740·388-9824

E\TLRI'IUSES

Help Wanted

Women 's
Delense -Aerobr cs :
Starts 3/2nd. Mor n1ng &amp; Eventng
Classes. 62 Stale Street , Gallrpo-

40

\"l'\\

110

Ded1 ca tecl To Offering The Best
In Care. Sce n1c Hills Nursmg And
Reha brl1 tatt on Center Is Hnmg
STNA 's (State Te sted Nursrn g
Assistants ). All Shilt s Ava1 lable .
Contact Sta t! Development Oirec·
tor. Pam Caldwell. For Delads. 311
Buckrrdge ,Jitoad . Btdwell. OH
456t4.

6 Month Old Fema le Puppy, All

Ct·nl·r:ll ( ·un ... tntl'lion
D11Jl'l" ,\ Harhhm·.
Stpl ir S,\ ~1t.·r11~ .

'

portuntty. Focus on we tl ness is·
sues rela\lng to women 's health care. tuncn and supplies mclud·
ed. Workshop near Albany. Maps
sen t upo n registration. Fee S45
Contact Herbal Sage Farms. 740·
742·S AGE herbsage@eureka·
net.com

ltS , 740·388- 91 29.

(Jlaason•••• Rot.s). ·

We Buy Aula's In Any Condition,

Call 740·388 -9062, Or 740-446PART.

LOSt· male Siberian Huskv, blue
eyes. wihlefblack. blue collar, Big·
ley Ridge area . 740·985-4385 .

740-992-5335.
Lost: Small Brown &amp; Wh1 te Corgi
Dog , lOOkS "Like Fox , With No
Tad . Answers Name: Danny. Vi ·
cinity : Morgan Center Road &amp;

Dn 11ers Needed For 300 To 800
M1le Rad 1us Must Ha ve Class B
L1cense And Good MVA. ~peri·
en ce Also ReqUired. Weekly· Pay
&amp; Health In s Available. For Mo!JI
lnlorma!IOn Call 800-437·8764
fEarn 2K Pe r Week Can 1·800· ·
636 ·6773 Ext_ 9741 For Reco rCI::.:'"!...g_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ea sy Work! EK ceHe nt Pay! AS ·
se mble Pr odu cts At Home. Call
Toll Free. 1-800- 467 -5 566 , EKI ,
12170.

FIRE YOUR BOSS
400 Opportunrtres To Make
819 SS From Hamel
FREE INFO 1-888-430-7576
EKI. 3208 (24 Hrs.)

t

Have An Avon Party In You~
Home And Get A Free Gifll CaiiT
Al isha Aor as At 740·245-9635;
An Avon lnoependent Sales;,
Representative
In Search Of Motivated, Friendly,' ·
Caring, Team- Player. Part-Tim'1
LPN Posit1ons Open For All SMtsr
At Scenic Hills Nursing And Re·r
habilitation Center. Contact OlreC-1
tor 01 Stall Devel opment. Pam~
Caldwell . To Lea rn More About.
Empl oyment Opportunities, 311 r
Buckri dge Road . Bidwell . OH''.
45614
~
.Making Money Witt! a Typtwrlter or Computer!
Several UniQue Ways . For lnbr·
mauon Write To:

Tina Sanders P.O. Bo&lt;t 253 .
Amherst, Ohio 44001

Needed lmmediataly l Service · .

Frank Road , 740·3118-9478. ~

Techn ician Mus.t Be EPA Certl· : r

Lost: Male Black Cat Witn While

fied Apply In Person: Comfort AJr , t
Systems Inc. 407 Third Avenue ,·:
Gallipolis, Ohio.
·1

Markings. Rodney Area, 740-446·

8662.

1

'I
l

.

�fv

~,.,., ~ ~·

Page 10 • The Da,1ly Jentmel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 27 1 1998

&gt;I

February 27, 1998

The

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

OHIO RESIDENTS ONLY
You Can Make A 011 e ence In A
Ch ld s L le Earn Do a s Wh le

1998 3br 2 baths lots ol extras

Work ng At Home And Be Tea

set on lol Call for moe mfo 304

ed Respecll ully HoN? By Becom
ng A Foster Pa en1 Call Ed Nee
co &amp; Assoc 1 BBB 577 6085

755 7191

Plt.J mbe rs An d P pe l !A s U
ti577 W II Be D s r but ng App en
1 ce App cat ons Beg nn ng Fe
bruaty t 6 Through February 27
App l cat ons Can Be P eked Up
AI 1236 Gall a Sl eet Po tsmoulh
Oh o From 7 30 AM Unll 4 00
PM $35 00 Appl cat on Fee EEO

AN SUPERVISORS &amp; AN S
Elc;le care ol WV s now accept
ny •ool cat ons o pa t me RN
Supe v so s and LPNS expe
ence n long te m health ca e
t censed n wv Apply t e ween
9am Spm at 107 M lie Dr ve
A pley WV EOE
Secu ly Ala m Systems !lo CCTV
In staller Techn can Prev ous
Alarm Or Low Vo tage N ng Ex
per ence Is A Plus Bu W I Tan
Quailed Cand date Must Be
HC'nesl Rei able Bondable And
Capable 0 1 Work ng W hou t Su
perv1s on Dependable T anspo
tallon A Must (Prete AT uck)
Loca 28 Year 0 d Company 0 I
ers E~cel ent Pay sca e w h
Ra sas Upon Job Perlo m3nces
And Tenu e Benet 1P og am
Please Reply W th Resume
solutely No Phone Ca Is) To

(Ab

So me one To Wo k On Wee
kends Saturday Morn ng To
Monday Mo n ng To Take Ca e
01 Elderly lady Send Name Ad
dress &amp; References To PO Box
128 Vmton OH 45686

The Fr ck Gallagher Manulacl r
ng Company In Wellston Oh o Is
Seek ng A H ghly Quailed Equ p
men! Ma ntanance Meehan cal/
Electr cat For Its 2nd Sh It Opera
ton In tally The Tempera y
Wo rk ng Hours w1 Be 12 Noo n
To 8 30 PM AI erwtHdS The Job
Duties W II Become A Full T me
Permanent 2nd Sh II Pos 1 ons
Wtth Some 0 T Ava able Stan
ng Pay Scale Is $12 3 Per Hour
Plus A Full L ne Of Bene! ts After
The Probationary Per od Must Be
Able To Pass A Wn ten Test
And A Pr e Employmen Phys cal
And Dtug Test All Quailed Can
d dates Please Seno R&amp;sume To
P 0 Box 227 Well ston Oh o
45692 We A e An Equa Oppor
tunuy Empto~er
romacelh s Entertainment C ub
M ddleport OH took ng for house
band Must play up to da te var e
ty mus1c be ava table lor Sa tur
days !rom 7pm until m dn ght Ap
pi cations and se t up t me w h
one hour ol mus c n pe son s e
qlJired Call to nterv ew 740 992
4514 3pm9pm

AI ealesaeadvensng n
th s new~papc s subect o
11 e Feoera Fa Hous ng Act
ot 968 wh ch nakes llega

Spac ous 3 BR /2 Ba Complete
De! 11ery &amp; Se t Up App ox $200
Per Month 1 60Q-251 5070

Th s newspape w 1 not

OAKWOOD HOMES

8x32 Office Tra1ler or use as an
add on of 2 rooms to present mo
b e home $5 000 740 446 4782

SPECIAL OW S'

know ngly accept

Barboursv le W VA

aelver1 sements lor real estate

Dream Home Se es
304 736 ~409

wh ch s n v olaton of the
no med !hat all dwe 1ngs
ddver1 se I n h s newspaper

a e a\a lable on an equal
ppo tu ty bas s

Ranch 3 Bed ooms 1 Balh Large
l v ng oom La ga K !ch en 1
Ace Gall po s C ty Schools
$62 000 537 P yma!e Road 740

Anenlon Mob le Home Owners
A eas Largest Inventory 01 Inter
therm &amp; Coleman Heal Pumps
Air Cond t one rs Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huge Buy ng Power Means
The Lowest Installed Pr ce Easy
Over The Phone Bank Fmanc ng
Call Bennetts Mob le Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1 BOO 872 5967
Cu1tom made t)omeawhere
the customer sets the
prlco &amp; we own the bank

Only AI
Oakwood Homes
of Nitro WV

446 43.23

304-755-5885

3 Bedroom Aanche w/heat pump
&amp; s tuated on p vate 66 acre set
t ng n leon Allordably pr ced at
ONLY $59 900 Call Gary Ga 1
son to no mat on or p vale
v ew ng 304 586 9032 or 304
757 7545
3br home 1 acre ot oca ted m
Gall po s Fe y across !rom 84
Lumber Pf ce educed n~ce
304 675 5010 alter Spm
40 A.cres 3 Bed ooms 2 Baths
LR l arge Aec Roo m Dmtng
K tchen 2 Ba ns 1 With Horse
Stalls Large Workshop 4 Car
Ga age 1 log Cabm 1 Hunt ng
Cab n 1 5 M ns From Gall pots
2:&gt; M ns F om Hunt ngton 740
256 t 484 If No An swe leave
Message

BUY HOMES FROM $4 000 1 5

D scount Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accesso r es Water Heaters V1
nyl Ski t ng K ts $299 95 An
chors Wood &amp; F bergtass Steps
Root Coatmgs Doors W ndows
Plumb ng &amp; Etec r ca l Supples
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
Morel Cal Bennetts Mob•le
Home Supply At 1 740.446 9416

FIRST TIME BUYERS
EZFnancng
Call for pre approval
I

Large selec t on of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Start ng at $2995

992 5333 740 992 1064 740
446 1529

Abalemenl $179 500 304 273

Mobile Homes
lor Sale
SPECIAL DWS

Spac ous 3BRI28A
Complete Delivery &amp; Set up
Approx $200 per month
1 600 251 5070

LIMITED OFFER
WHY WAIT
DONTWAIT
W II Pay For Yout

Aap d Tax Refund
Use as down payment
Call the cred t 1ne

WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
304 736-3888

W II Do Housec edn ng A o
Wa sh W ndows Pl"one 740 446

8055
W II haul JUnk or trash av ay $351
piCkup load 304 675 5035

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportumty

1991 A verv ew by Redman
2bed oom 2 bath v nyl s ct ng
sh ngle oo l 2x6 nsulat on oak
cao nets porcn nc uded wasn
P.r d ye r opt onal exrellent con
dt on $15000 Cal 304675
6768 afte 2 30pm
1992 Oakwood Mob 1e Home
14X70 2BA 2 Bans Hea Pump
GE appl ances excel Cond R1 2
Leon w va $13 500 OBO 740
256 6980 Alter 5 pm

FIRST TIME BUYERS

Doublew de Repo Free De li very
And Set Up 304 736 7295

re co mme nds hat you do bus
nes s w th people you know and
NOT to send money throug h the
ma I un t yoi..l have nvest ypt~&gt;d
the offenng

BUTCHER SHOP SLAUGHTER
HOUSE Old Eslabl shmenl Bus
ne ss Centrally
8 dw ell Porte
Chance To Own
ness Blackburn

Located In The
Area EH el en
You Own Bus
Rea ty 740 446

0006

230

ProfessiOnal
Serv1ces

L vingston s basement water
proofing all basement repa rs
done free est mates ltletlme
guaran ee 10yrs on jOb expe
ence 304 675 2145

3 Bedroom 2 bath 1998 model
home ncl udes Free set up &amp;
de Ivery Skirting air color TV
&amp; VCR Included A I lot $2t9/mo
Only wh le supp es last Call to

day 304 755 5885
5 New 1'997 14 W des Unbehev
able P ce Must Sel Belo e Jan
3 t sr To Close Out Pt1ys1cat
Year Call Cred 1 l ne 1 800 948

5678

4514 ask fa&lt; Chns

N ce clean 2br relerences &amp; de

pos I no pels 304 675 5162

MERCHANDISE

Pomeroy 4 bedroom HUO w1th
stove &amp; refrigerator references
no pets call 740 992 6888 after

510

Household
Goods

530pm

Appllances
Re co nd toned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aelr
graters 90 Day Guarantee
French C ty Maytag 740 446

pels $275/mo $250 deposll
~ 773 9192
Two bed com house clean re
frlgerator no stove no Inside
pets depos11 requ red 740 992

7795

14x60 Tra ler 2 Bedrooms W&amp;D
Open K t &amp; I! A State Route 218

$300/Mo 740 256 1044

Open 9 30 5 00 Mon Sal
304 675 SOFA {7632)
520

Sporting
Goods

740 446 0761
Area 74Q-256 6574

Moore owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

200 amp disconnect bOK out
s1de w/ratn hub Call K &amp; K Mo
b le Homes 304 675 3000 Cam

Two bedroom tra ler in Middleport

Apartments
for Rent

3 P1ece llvmg Room Su te

$100 304 675 5739

1 and 2 bedroom apartmonts lur
n shed and unfurn shed securtJy
depos I reqUired no pets 7 40

Amaz ng Metabolism B eak
Through Lose o to 200 tbs Call
For free consultal on and Free

992 2218
2 Bedroom Apa tment On Fi rst
Avenue Gall pofis 740 446 8221

Samp&lt;ls {740)44 1 19B2
Be ge Sola Sleepe $340 Gilder
Rocker sao K tchen Table 6
Chars $300 New 2 Months 740

2 Bedroom Apa rt ment 76 V ne
Street Ga!11pol s Ot110 740 446

245 5393

2 Bedroom apt n New Haven
stove &amp; relr g $285/mo water &amp;
trash nctuded 304 773 9171
leave message
2 Bedroom !urn shed garage apt
very nice In Cl ton $225 per mo

pus $100deposll 304 773-918 1

Concrete &amp; Plast c Sept c Tanks
300 Thru 2 ooo Gat ons Aon
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH

1800 537 9528
Dynamark Ad ng Mower tOhp
36 nch cut electr c start A 1
condlt on 304 773 5835

5566

350 Lots

{ATTENTION DEVELOPERS
SMALL BUSINESS
COUNTRYESTATE)
63 95 Acres Approx 8 Ac e
Lake Gall a Coun y Coun y Water
And Elect c $2 600 Per Acre

740 38B 867B

1 1~ aces lor sa te 740 742

2803

-

Gallla Co Gat polls Neighbor
hood Ad 0 Acres Lots 0! Level
$19 000 Or 22 Aces With Pond
NOW $24 000 Fnendly A dge 6 5
Acres 57 500 Or 6 5 Acres
$B 000 County Water
Meigs Co Danv111e N1ce 17
Acres $18 000 $2 000 Down-+
$238/Mo 5 Or 9 Acre Lot tn
Sa neAea CtyWaer
Call For Free Maps -+ Owne F1
nanc ng Info Take 0% 011 L stad
Pr ces On Casn Purchases
Bulld~ng

to ts 10 letart WV 112
acre each along US 33 304 895-

3880

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

F rewood For Sale Delve ed $35

740 256 1922

ESTATES 52 Westwood Or ve

lrom $279 lo $358 Walk 10 shop

G rls baby clothes (0 24months)
name brands wedd1ng dress
s1ze 22124 (10 brtde magazme)

&amp; moves Call 740 446 2566
Equal Hous111g Opportun ty

!

Fum shed Apartment Near lt
bray Employed Person To Share
Apar men! Welh Tea che r Reier

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Oh o 1 BOO 537 952B
Wood For Sale $35 A Load

Delver 740 388 801 p
550

w 11

Building
, Supplies

Block b ck sewe r p1pes wind
ows I ntels etc Claude W nters
R1o G ande OH C!lll 740 245

5121

560

Pets lor Sale

1 Pomeranian Pup Fema le
Cream Colored AK C Registered
1 Female Beagle Hunt ng Dog

Real Good Dog 74Q-256-6095
AKC Reg Black Labs born 12/
25197 shots &amp; wormed

WANTED AKC Reg Chocolale
lab puppy 304 675 6046
A Groom Shop Pet Groom ng
Fea u mg Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

$150 Neg 740 256 6904

M xed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

Ph 740-446 1104 740-441 o•5o
Square Bales $2 00 Each 1 M le
Message

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos lor Sale

1866 Plymouth V 8 Ex.celent

Shape I BO 000 Ac uBI Miles
$3 000 F1 m 740 446 2163 Aller

5PM
1969 BUICk GS $3 000 740 682
7512
1969 Mustang 6 Cyl nder Auto
Excel ent lnt $5 000 304 675

JET
AERAnON MOTORS
Repat ea New &amp; Aebu111 In Stock

Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 952B

Grac ous I v ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at v uage Manor ane1
R vers1de Apartments In M dd e
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Eqt,Jal Hous1ng Oppor
tunt es

Mag c Chef Etectnc Range Euro
pean Burner Almond Excellent

In New Haven 1br furnished apt
mcludes washer &amp; dryer depos1t
&amp; references 304 682 2566

$99 w th rebate Free
HBO w th first month lree Offer
end ng soonll BOO 263 2640

6B2 7512
1977 Ghevy Corvette 350 Auto
52 000 M les T Tops White !fan
In enOl" Best Offer 740 446 1021
1"985 Mercury Grand Marqu s
Automat c 302 V 8 Remanulac
lured Eng ne Ha s Apptox mately
45 000 M les Full Power Alum
num Wheels $1 200 1990 Dod
dge Caravan Automat c 2 5L &lt;4
Cyt Exce llent Cond ton $3 200

N1ce clean elllency apanment
relerences &amp; deposit no pets

no pets 74Q-992 585B

Now Tak1ng Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo 740 446

580

Fru1ts &amp;
Vegetables

Cress Greens AI eady Cut $10
You Cut $5 Charles McKean
Farm 740 446 9442

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

$2 650 00 Or Best Oller Or
Trade In 740 25EH424

•

BARNEY

$6 500 304 675 5827

THAR

245 5672

304 675 7386 or 304-674 0007
1995 Ford F 150 XL a/c 4x4
5spd 74 000 m1les $15 000

304 675 1754

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

•' TO PLAC~ AN 0"&gt;~~. P~ESS '01"1~. TO
CANGfl. Arl O~l&gt;tlt, P,tSS TWO. FO,
BIL/..1/116 INFO~MATI0/11, P~ttsf Ttf,~f.

441-1)996 A11er 4 PM
Vans

&amp; 4-WDs

1978 Jeep P1ck Up 3/4 Ton 4x4
l W B 4 LUI New Pa nt Many
E.&gt;lra Parisi $3 650 OBO 740
256-9309
SIZB

to,

SA/..~

FOil r&gt;ISGONTII'IIJEI&gt; ITeMS,
P,EIS fiV~ TO ENfl.OLL 11'1
A MfMO,Y COU#fSt TO
lfEM~MBf, OPTIOI'IS,

cus
:

call Gary F Hysell 7&lt;0 992 42B3

P~ress

1983 Chevy SWB 4x4 Steps de
1986 Full S1ze Bronco 4x4 Au

lomallc 740 446 6869

P,~SS fOU~.

ITEM!,

..... "

THE BORN LOSER

1988 Astra Cargo Van 4 3 En
g ne Automat c 26 000 M1les On
New Eng ne Loaded $2 195 740.

P"

P"

1'£.'1, POP, CI{ECJ( Till~ OUT I

1-W ~~~~ I~ WI\"-11 CN..L

1987 L ncoln Can t Has Every
tn ng Runs Good $1 ooo F rm

,

"-COO..

~- C.~T

446-8158

1987 Ford Escort GT good con
di on $1200 740 949 2665

"'!l B ns

lei E&amp;M Help You Gel The Vp
per Hand On Cutt ng The Cooling
B !Is Now $40 00 Servicing Cost
And We Will Have It Done In
Reasonable Time Call E&amp;M At
740 441 1236 For Your Early B rd

0% n e est on John Deere Hay
EqUipment and 5200 5300 5400
5500 Tr actors Oller Good thu r
Feb uary 27 w1lh John Deere
Cred I App oval Ca m chael s
Farm &amp; lawn Inc Gall pol s

Oho {740) 446 24121 BOO 594
1111
Ford 3000 01ese1 Ma ssey Fergu
son 135 PS Massey Fe guson
35 0 esel 861 Ford 64 1 Ford
800 Ford Cub Cull vators Stele
Dresser Bush Hog s Grad£!r
B ades 12 And 14 Inch Plow s
Massey Ferguson AdJUS able
Di sc NH56 Hayrakes N H Hay
B nd Hay Tedders 2 Row Cult
vatot Po\alo Plows Caron Frmsh
Mowers New &amp; Used Parts For
Ford And Massey Ferguson
Kessel s T actor And Equ pment
1 M te Past Holzer Hasp tal Jack

son Pike 740 446 8906 740
446 7787
Hyd au I c o I lowest pr ce n
town Vent free gas hea ers pro
pane &amp; natura gas on sa e now
Slde(s Equ pment 304 675 7421

John Deere l awn Tractors Spe
cal F nancing Ava lable W th
John Dee e Cred t App ro val As
Low As 7 9% Up To $250 Ae
bates Thru Feb 28th Car
m•chael s Fa m &amp; Lawn Inc 740

446 2412

800 5941111

CN~~~KI

1988 S 10 4x4 W 1h Or W1thout
Snowb ade Automat c AC Ton
naue Cover Runs Great $4 500
740 446-8158
1989 Bronco II Edd1e Bauer Edi
t on loaded 4WD 5 speed ex
cellent co nd ton $4400 740 992

2762

1993 Dodge Caravan SE Sports
Wagon 4 capta n cha rs sport
wheels luggage rack exc cond

Used 25+ 4KP Case Trencher
With Backhoe Attachment And
Case Max Sneaker Cable Plow
Used 6510 0 lch W tch Trencher
wit h Ba ckhoe Anacnment and

420 Dllch Wii Ch Walk Bah nd
Trencher 1 614 694 7842

620 Wanted to Buy
Wanted Ford And Massey Fer
guson Tractors Older Models

8N 9N Jubilee 600 BOO Sones
Th s Type Tractors &amp; lmple

ments 1 937-600 2822

Athena Llve1tock
February 28th 1 pm Bread/Cowl

Livestock

and Ca"" Sa~l All Cons&lt;gmenls
I You Don I Call Us We B&lt;llh' Welcome Hauhng Available Cat
L .:~ t• Free Estimates' Add Of\ tie """"~lied a«er 4pm Friday
Heat Pumps Only Shghty Higher (740)592 2322 or {740)698 3531
Call Us Today 1998 Is Our 28fh
Year In Thp Heating &amp; Cooling Fal Hogs Whole or half $ B9 per
pound on dress weight WV Sau

sage Co 304-682 3194

SINCE N&lt;&lt;;.IE OUMPEO
HIM NAIE::&gt; SEEN GOING.
THROU(,H THE STN,ES OF
GRIE"tNG SHOCK OENIAL
1\MGUl OUEST IONINC, AND
t-CC.EPTANLE

$7 000 304 882 3139
1995 GMC S1era SLE 4x4 350 V
8 8 Bed Automat1c Power
Wmdows &amp; Door Locks 740 446

.,,.H-1"'1

2532

7

OBVIOVSL~

HE S STILL
IN THE
OUE.SIIOfll~

STAGE

WH'C-:.

WH'( 7

1M£ Jeep Cherokee 740 379

PM

9047

1991 Ford Fest va runs good a r
94 o6o m les $2 300 304 675
7:103

1997 Ford Ranger )(LT 4 WO

5 400 M1les 74Q-379-9381

t991 Fo d Taurus Very Good
ConCI ton 63 ooo Miles 740 367

350 V 8 Aulo 8 Bed Heavy Du1y
74Q-446 2532

North

Easl

3.

Pass

0394

Pass

Pass

Pass

825B
1992 Della B8 Loaded $6 500
7•0682 7512
t 992 Geo Storm amllm stereo
a r 5 speed new 1res mmt con
d han $4995 740 992 6824
1994 Lmcoln Mark VIII Fully
Equ pped Ser ous lnqur es Only
Ask ng $19 000 740 245-5903
1995 Camara Convert ble Z28
Black/Black Leath er lnte or
Very low M les Loaded L1ke New

miles excellent cond liOn $9 200

98 Banshee lour wheeler take
over payments ca ll 740 992
£544 W&amp;ekends
1996

740 3B8 8041
1995 Ne.on 4 Doors Wh1 e Auto
A r Cassella T II 73 500 M1les

$4 750 00 OBO 740 256 6340
740 256 6467
1995 Saturn SC2 Automat c Au
CrUise AM/FM Cassella Trunk
Release $12 000 Call After 5 PM
(S enous lnQu r1e s Only l 740
446 4015
1996 Z 24 Black Loaded All
Powet Suhrool 5 Speed $13500

Call All er 5 30 PM 740 441
0235

rodents

47 Pre adult

name

J

F

SCVD

KO

HROOJUSC

BJMA

KO

uc

DR

J D

0

PKMCOOK

WCLAWKPC

J

L RM

D

A R

MCKW

HRSJDJXO

SNMM
WCLAWKPC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION I hate Tcha1kovsky and w1ll not conduct h1m bul 11
the aud&lt;ence wants h&lt;m &lt;I can have him - P1erre Boulez

'::~:~:~' S©~~lA-"t.!rS"
Ed1tod

WOlD
GAM I

by CLAY I POlLAN-------

0 four

Reorror~ge

letters of the
scrambled word$ be
low to form four s1mple words

L A D U VE
S AV I T

, IG uI DIE' B1 I~

I
.

.

.

.

5
_

The first th1ng I ran 1nto af
ter I bought a new car my SIS

::;N,

r---------.

I

ter s1ghed

15

Classified Ads

.

•

.

•

.

•

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTU5 I
.:J IN THES SQUARES
A
V

I I I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
•

.

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Enamor Beefy Doubt Versus FOR the BONUS
At lhe end of the year I have not1ced thai some em
ployees work the1r fingers FOR the BONUS

IFRIDAY

FEBRUARY 27 I

800-273 9329
790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1991 Jamboree 23 motor home
Ford 460 Cll gen awn1ng at lull
bed iileeps SIK m crowave
shower 35 ooo miles like new

$2 1 000 Call 740 742 2045 aller
530 pm
SERVICES

ASTRO-GRAPH
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llellme guarantee
local relerences !urn shed Es

•

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

labllshed 1975 Call (740) 446
0870 Or 1 800 2B7 0576 Rogers
Waterproolmg

Appliance Parts And Se vice AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
pe 1encEI All Work Gua antaed
French City Maylag 740 446
7795

1::::::-::---:-----

6323

Electrical and
Refrigeration

4x4

Residential or commercial wlri~
new serv ce or repairs Master Ll
censed ele ctn c1a n AldeftC~ur

3B 000 m les &amp;19 500 304 675
2677

Eleclrlcal WV000306 304 675
1786

z 71

by Lula Campos
Celeboty CC*Ier CfYPioorama are created from qUOiattons by famous people past and p as•nl
Each lette n the c(ltler stands lor anothe Today s clue Yequa s F

New gas tanks 1 ton truck
wheels a rad ators 0 &amp; A Auto
A ploy wv 304 372 3933 or 1

840

1996 Chevy Silverado

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Access Over 1 0 000 Transmls
SIOnS &amp; Clutches 740.245 5677

720 Trucks for Sale
1976 Chevy c 30 Food Delivery

1

way around it,

THE'( TEACH '(OU

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessones

South ol Leon WV F1nancmg

Truck Propane Heated $3 000
OBO 740-446--1065

MAKE SURE 'f'Ol) WASI-l
'1'0UR PAWS AFTERWARD

1100

C&amp;C General Home Man
tanence Pamllng vmyl sid ng
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mob 19 home repa.r ar'ld more For
free estimate can Chet 740 992

Ava lable 304 458 1069

Seaver
54 Long nosed
I ISh

Complete lhe chutk le quoled
by f II ng n the m ss ng words
L--l.-.J........il---l.-.J...-1 you develop lrom step No 3 below

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS
SIONS Used /Rebu 11 All Types

0607

Cred t Problems? We Can He p
Easy Bank Fmanclng For Used
vet11ctes No Turn Downs Call
V ck1e 740.44&amp;-2897
----Dunebuggy Closed In W th Heat
e 2160 cc Stroke Motor Motor
Needs Rebu ilt $2000 740~46
1t37
Upton Used Cars At 62 3 M les

1nsect

48 Chances
49 Arrow
po1son
50 Young boys
52 Baseballs

.

:104 773 5835
760

command
(2 wda)
r-T-mr-mr..,.....,.,.... 22
TV dog
23 Character In
Othello
24 Ginger cookie
n:-+--+-+--t--1-~ 25 Car for a VIP
26 Shade trees
28 Peruse
29 Debtors chits
3D Bare
31 Determination
37 Not
performed
38 Future bks
41 Useful
.,...f--t--l--l--l 42 Experts
43 Cry of pain
44 Large

By Philhp Alder
Suppose haymg a 1wo way
finesse you must tmd a queen to
make your contract Usually you
should delay playmg that sull for as
long as poss1ble Learn all you can
about the d1 stnbut1on ot the other
lhree su1ts before comm1Utng your
self However what happens when
the mtssmg queen ts 10 the trump
su11° Then 1f you don I touch the sutl
!here IS a danger the opponents w1ll
score a cheap ruff
In th1s deal though Tobt Sokolow
JUdged correctly th~l she could delay
makmg lhe crucml dec1s1on It
occurred dunng her team s VICtonous
march to I he Ven1ce Cup fllle last year
'"TUniSia
North s three diamond cue btd
showed at least a l1m11 ra1se 10 hearts
three plus trumps and I 0 plus h1gh
card pomts
West led the spade ktng East play
mg the seven to show an even num
ber (a queStionable method) After
w10n10g W&lt;fh her ace Sokolow led a
d1amond West went m wuh the ace
of course and sw1tched to her sm
gleton club Declarer won w1th her
kmg cashed lhe dmmond queen and
ruffed a diamond w11h dummy s
heart eJght Now declarer called for
a spade wh1ch ran to Wests 10 Back
came the spade queen wh1ch South
rufted
II was 11me to work out Wests d1s
tnbut1on It seemed lhaE ,he had sfart
ed wuh three spades s1x d1amonds
~ nd one club (Holdmg two clubs
presumably West would have con
lmued that swl when 10 wllh Ehe
spade I 0 ) II so Wesl had three
hearts B~ckmg her readmg of the
deal Sokolow cashed her heart ace
then ran the heart !llck N1cely done'

Never Been Rode Out 01 Yard

810

1 BD0-522 2730 X390 I

Shadow

12 Gratled In
heraldry

to last

XRBO 011 Road Honda {like New)

69 Shadow 4 door Turbo Cruise
T II Ground Ellects Spa ler

1980 1990 Cars For $ 00 1
Se1zed And Sold
Locally Th s Month
T uck.s 4x4 s Etc

Honda

19 Fabulous bird
21 Army

allowance

45 Charles
Lambs pen

I

$6000 74Q-742 3302

{740)388-1122
1995 Pont ac Grana Am 4 Doors
l oaded 1tahc Blue Excellent
Cond t on 58 000 M les $9 900

Motorcycles

11 Weight

WESNUI
1--,1,;.:-;.1...::.
.,;.I:.....;-17.:....,-1-1 O
6

WHEN '(OU'RE A
PUPPV ONE OF
TilE FIR5T THIN65

304 B82 3132 74Q-992 722B
740

5 Actor Silver
6 Plant disease
7 Emotionally
cold person
8 Whale group
9 Bltea
tO Mohammedan
prayer leader

K

PEANUTS

95 S 10 4x4 4 3l LS B3000

1991 GEO Strom G S I Exc
cond auto a1 ps pb 614 368

4 Leave out

i.n-+-+---+- -1

1998 2500 EKI Cao 4x4 SL Pack

Bad Cred1t No Creel t Banktupt
cy? We Can Help! Bank Fmanc
ng On Used Vehicles 740 441

WARM UP High Elf c ency Nalu

Business! 740 446 6306 1 800
291,0098

1990 Pont ac Grand Pr x LE Au
lomat c AC Stereo Casse tte
95 600 Mites Ve y Good Cond1
1 on 740 446-3903 Aller 5 30

$1 500 080 740 25-1233

One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasant lurn1 shed ve ry nice
and clean no pets 304 675

ral And LP Gas Furnaces Life
r &lt;'Tl&amp; Wananty On Heat Exchang

1990
Cadillac
Fleetwood
Btoughat]'l 5 7 eng ne 4dr good
cond ton $5 000 304 675 1139

1 Missile abbr
2 Kindergarten
staple
3 Space agcy

Leave the
key sui

1993 S tO V 6 5spd bed damaged good hres ps pb $1 250

997 Dodge •h:4 0 eset 1 Ton
Dually Compeltely Loaded Excel
tent ConditiOn Must Setll 740

Wesl
2•

AnaWer to Previous Puzzle

DOWN

K 8 5

Openmg lead •

GOES TH
WHISSLE

Cylinder Low M les Excellent
Cond liOn Askmg $7 500 740

1985 Mercury Lynx new t res AT
many new parts 82 400 m11es

looks good $1 200 304 675
3182

Soulh
I¥
4¥

1993 Ford Ranger 6cyl 5spd
31 450 miles a1r topper eKcel
lent condition one owner

730

46 Aug time
47
1
Hockey
Etpoolto
51 Theater district
53 Tropical lizard
55 Alternative
56 Drank like 1
dog
57 Type ol seed
58 Uaea a pencil
part

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

1991 Chev S 10 PU In Very

Good Condltoon $4 300 740 446
7289

1982 Chevy C 20 lull

610 Farm Equipment

630

Range RelrlgeraiO&lt; Furnished W/
D Hook Up $279 Plus Ullll11es De
posiVlease Required (740)4462957

Clear

BIG NATE

Service Needs EPA Cer11lled

One Bedroom Near Holzer

Dodge Dakota

tom van V 8 400 engme 30k
great lor towing &amp; !rave ng lots or
new pans ask1ng $3950 see or

AC PW Pl CD Player 740 446
6869

0006

1386

t988

740 446 7215

1987 T Type Bu ck Regal T Tops

614 694 7842
Spr ng Is A ght Around The Corn
er II s T1me To Get Your AIC
Unns And Heat Pumps Cleaned
Cleaf'lllng Your Units wIt Help
Save You Money On "Vour Cool

Nic e one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroom
apartme nts ln Pomeroy ulllllles

• 7 4 2
tAJI0863
•QJ974
• 10
South
• A4
¥AJt052
• Q9 5

Each 740 446-432B

Cassel e AutomatiC A r PS PB
Sed I ner Cover 35 000 Miles
$9 500 614 446-2847

740 446 0274

Prime~ tar

SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL

304 675 5162

• K Q 10
• Q 6 3

Auto $1 800

1969 Nova SS 396 375 less
Motor &amp; Trans $3 000 (740

304 7736111

Cohd lion $100 740.446 970B

Modern 1 Bedroor'{l Apartment

740 446 0390

V6

East
• J ? 6 5
• 7

West

1985 Toyo1a P ck Up 2 WD 4
Sp~ed 4 Cylinder 19B6 Chevy

1996 Ford Ranger XLT AM/FM

1986 N ssan Pulsa r $1 000 OBO

600 900PM

•
• A 63 2

(740)245-9449

Astra Van

02 27 98

••

Hyde Brakes Complete Front
End Hood and Fenders T 11 Aa
d1ators Auto Trans miSSIOn and 5
Speed 2 Comp lete 370 2V Motors 2 85 Gal Gas Tank Pump
and Gauge 20 wneels and Tires
Rough and Stra ght Tread Drive
Shafts and M1sc
Parts

3960

740 379 2645

Bdrder Cot es 6 Week.s Non
Aegl sle ed $150 Call Between

1981 GMC P ck Up Good Condl
I on New 1997 Ullhty Trailer Tandem 14x81 Rear and Front Axles
Brakes Rear and Front Ax as

1993 S 10 Pck Up 5 SP&lt;!ed,286

1996 Mercury Lynx 2 Doors 5
Speed Rea S!Xlller Clean Ins de
And Ou Runs Real Good $900

Call304-675 1695

ences 740 446 4335 {6 00 9 00
PM )

paid

667 3369 or 740 667 3267

$21 95 Per I 00 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per I 00 All Brass Com
press on Flit ngs In Stock

441 0573

&amp; Acreage

Hay for sale ex.cellent horse hay
Never been wet $ 50 J,;Br bale
Contact Harley or John AICe 740

1982 Ford F700 Dump Excellent

Antiques

6 oo p m 740 992 2526 Rus s

Pa tty furnished 2 bedro om
country settmg no pe ts depos t
$150 tent $280 monthly water
trash pa1d 740 992 5264

Oulet Country Setting w11h beau
lllul mob1 e home lorced to sell
F na nc ng available 304 755

BOO 251 5070

Good M1xed T1mothy Orchard
G ass Hay Second Cutting 01
0 chad Grass 740 245 9212

Buy or sell A ve r~ne Ant Ques
1124 E Ma1n Street on At 124
Pome roy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday OOto

3 Bedroom Tra1ler Mercerville

Eff c ency Apartment Share Bath
607 Second Avenue Gall pols
$160/Mo Uti t1es Included 740

3 4 200 PSI

for bolh 74Q-992 4133

7398 After 2 PM 74Q-367 7B86

NEW SHIPMENT

Water! ne Spec at

Marlin 22 w11h scope and s ng
Auger 1Of22 w th two cl ps $200

530

Hay &amp; Grain

640

N On AI 2 304 675 3960 leave

Polly • New &amp; Used Fumlture
We now have Army Surplus!!
2101 Jefferson Ave

2 Sels 01 Used Fo ks 1125
Each {740)379-2655

14x70 s 3 Br 12 Ba Free Dehv
e Y &amp; So Up W AC $19 750 I

446 2200

9B5B

440

NEW BANK REPO 5 ONLY 3
LEFT 1 800-383-6862

Waterbed For Sate K ng Size 5
Drawers Beautiful Headpost 740

AKC Doberman Female 6
Months Housetramed Mostly
Obed1ence Tra ned Red /Rust

New DoutJie W Cle 3BR 2 Bath
FREE Del very &amp; Set up $24 999
Low Down Payment E Z Month y
Payments 1 868 926 3426

S ngle Parent Program Spec at
I nanc ng on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedr oom
homes Payments aa low aa
$180 Call now 304 755 5665

TOSA.CCO FOR LEASE LA
WRENCE COUNTY 3 000 PO
BASE 740 256-1746 AFTER 5
PM

Washers dryers refngerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V ne Street Call 740 446 7398

5pm

New Aepos Never L1ved In Only
2 Lett Free Del very &amp; Set up
Ca ll F1nan ce L ne Fo r Free Ap
proval t 600 948 5678

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Enterpr ses
Jackson Oh o 1 800.537 9528

Hoover Ehte Upnght W1th Attach
ments 17 Amp 3 Years Excellent
Cond1tlon $45 F rm 740 441

Mobile Homes
for Rent

740 669 3765

Ear 01 Corn $2 75 A Bushel An
drew Troyer 469 Richards Road
PatriOt

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

1 800-499-3499

P1 Pleasanl Caii{740)44Hl12B

Sevan year standard bred geld
ng sound gentle b oke to cart
and lo r de gentle $1000 call

BAANED Round balls mtx ~ d
hay never wet 304 882 2077
•

740 446 023

740 992 5039

BRUNER LAND
741J.441 1492

379 282 740 379 2481

Deposrl 74Q-446 2801

Street front comme clai space
204 North Second Avenue M1CI
dlepo t large with bathroom and
otl ce area $300/mo $300 de
pos1t one year lease 740 992

Two 2 bedroom tra1 ers on New
Lima Ad ca I 740 742 2803 afie
6pm

992 2290

1994 Ce ntury 14x70 3 Bedrooms
1 BJth CA G E Appl ances Ex
ce en Cond 1on $16 900 740

NICe 2 Bedroom 1 112 Bath Home
Near Rio Grande $3251Mo +

420

R &amp; S Furniture
Mason WV
Buy Sell Trade
!Jsed &amp; Ant ques
Furn lure
304 773 5341

740 385-4367

New 1998 14x70 lh ee bed oom
nclu des 6 months FREE lot rent
Incl udes sk 11 ng deluxe steps
and set up Only $t87 08 per
month with $I 075 down Cat 1
BOO 837 3238

120 leet tong 60 feet long on oth
er s de 75 feel w de le\lel tot n
M1dd aport $23 000 OBO 740

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Mob le home s11e ava table bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

2405 or 304-682 2447

2 Bedrooms 1 M le From Gall po
liS water &amp; Trash Included No
Inside Pets Releten ces Re
qu red $250/Mo $100 Depos t

Ex ce llent Cond ton Owner F
nanc ng Ava table Call 304 722
7148

t974 Rock wood t2x65 tra ler
2br 1 ba h I v ng k tchen
$2 500 Needs some work done
304 575 7604 Call al e 1 OOpm

460 Space lor Rent

Ml Vernon Ave N ce 3br central
a r appl ances basement pallo
references required 304 882

Make 3 Payments &amp; Move In A
New 14x70 3bed room Call 1

PRE OWNED HOMES

W ll Care For Elderly 0 Hand
capped Person In My Home Ael
e ences 740 441 1536

304 773 5651 Mason wv

Oepos I 740 446 092•

Road 740 388 1100

928 3426

4144

Sleepmg rooms w th cookmg
Also Ira er space on rver All
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m

La ge House At 123 Fourth Ave
nue Gatllpot s $300/Mo Plus

HOME SHOW 304 736 388B

New S nglew de 3BR FREE De
I ve y &amp; se t up $'16 999 1 688

Wilt care lor elderly n your
home days only Man F Ex
penance &amp; elerences 304 576

740 441 5698 740 44 5167

2 Bedroom Trailer Water &amp;
Trash Paid No Pets Bulav11te

W/AC $19750
800 251 5070

1971 Mon t cello 12x60 mob te
home k.e new ange e r gera o
wa she a d d yer a r th ee yea
old gas lu nace ca rpe 2 bed
oom
tu I bath 1res axles new
v ny unQerp nn ng $5500 740
985 3929 or 740 985 346

In cou ntty two bedtoom house
total etectr c w tn good s1ze yard
on Oh o Rver by Rae ne Water
sewer trash all mcuded n ent
$350 pe month S150 deposit
Available about March 10\h Can
seeanytme call 7409491012

W II Pay Fa Your Rap d Ta x Re
lund Use As Down Payment Call
The Cred I l ne WESTWOOD

E Z F nan c ng Call For Pre Ap
p oval 1 688 736 3332

Furmshed
Rooms

Crete Motel Lowest Rate s In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
C nemax Showume &amp; D sney
Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rates
ConstruciiOn Worker s We lcome

74Q-446 4543

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob le homes
$260 $300 sewer water and
trash ncluded 740 992 2167

14x70 s 3BR/.2 BA
Free Del very &amp; Set up

2 Baths Owner F nanc•ng Ava 1
abe 304 736 7295

450

Available Ma ch 1sl 3 Bed
rooms Bath LW Garage 152
Gav1n Road Rodney II VIllage
$425!Mo Depos1t &amp; References

UMITEO OFFER
WHY WAIT?
DON TWAITI

NEW SHIPMENT

MUST SELL 14x80 3 Bed ooms

All active 5 Room Col ege Sec
and Avenue In Gall poll s Close
To Cnurch 740 446 2267

Two bedroom basement garage
central al located In park dr ve 1n

2940

320

Upsta rs 2 Aooms &amp; Batn Fur
n shed Clean No Pets Reference
&amp; Oepos t Requ red 740 446
1519

Only' 304 BB2 2904

9621

80Q-928 6777
NEW CONSTRUCTION Beau
tlu Two Sory Colona 414 Th rd
Avenue Ga 1pols 3 Bed oo ms 2
1 2 Baths LA &amp; FA Fo mal on ng
Room Oak T m F rep ace Mu ch
Mo e tiome El go e For Tax

4 Room House in Harlford Dou
blewide lor sate or rent 1n Oh1o
on St At 143 Serous lngu~re s

Qu ck del very Call 740 385

Prom forma 1or sale $50 worn
once black saM h nestone lr m
u 1 eng1h s ze 13 14 cau 740
992 7534 after 4 3Qpm

Three room furnished apartment
Next to Bossard L brary $350 per
month Deposit reQu~red no pe ts
Contact Debbie or Judy at Bos
sard L brary at (740) 446-7323

410 Houses for Rent

3090

Hou se and property approx 4a
cres Ideal sta ter home Beech
S Pome oy OH 304 882 2077

three bedroom I ame house w th
1 5 acres mil n a secluded qu et
neighborhood $29 500 Owner
agent Dale E Taylor Realty 740

RENTALS

Small clean quiet carpeted no

Handyman Special Cash Only
2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1 100 6 Upl
Only 3Le« :104 755 5561

Bdrm local Gov 1 &amp; Bank Repo s
Call 1 800 522 2730 X 1709

LAND CONTRACT IN
POMEROY

888 736 3332

Pome oy two bedroom carpeted
cab e trash u1 hiles pa d $4851
mo $485 deposit one year
lease Middleport two bedroom
hardwood floors stcwe $250/mo
$250 deposit s1x month and one
year lease offered 740.992 4514

Call A«er 5 PM 740.245-5946

1st T me Buyers E Z Financing
2 or 3 Bedroom around $200 per
montn Fee del very &amp; set up
Call cred t l ne 1 aoo 948 5678

to oUvert se a y p ele ence
I m tat on or d scr mmat on
based on :t e colo el g on
sex lam 1a status or naoonat
o gn or 1 y ntenton lo
make any sudl p eterem;e
m tatono esc mna on

law Our eaaers are hereby

Wanted 4 Or 5 Ac es In The Am
Grande Or Green School Olstr ct

Refrain !rom
noticing
7 Set flre to
13 Uproer
14 Alligator a k1n
15 Transporting In
1 yellow
vehicle
16 Convoy
17 Steak or liver
18 Whale
20 Duck
21 Bikini e g
23 Speck In the
ocean
27 Terminating
32 Old womanish
33 Scrub
34 l'tpe ol ray
35- Arabia
38 Pogo for one
39 Map within a
mar,
40 Folow
42 Funeral Item

Saturday Feb 28 1998
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) T1m
mg IS of extreme u11portance today
so 1f you re mvolved m somethmg
cnflcal don l let 1mpa11ence dtstort
your JUdgment Wan for the best
moment to make your play Trymg to
patch up a broken romance' The
Astro Graph Matchmaker can help
you understand what to do to make
the relattonsh1p work Matl $2 75 to
Matchmaker clo th1s newspaper
PO Box 1758, Murray Htll Stauon
New York, NY 10156
ARIES (March 21 Apn119) Even
though you m1ght not be aware of 11

assoc1a1es will be tuned mlo your
spec1al S1gn1tlc~nl &lt;nteresl today
They w1ll ~nllc1p~te the une~pecled
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20) Your
besl chances lor ach1evemen1 tod~y
w1ll come through your progress1Ve
contacts Associates who are too
steeped m 1rad111on won I be very
helpful
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Th1s
cycle 1s sllll favorable for the fulhll
menl ol your hopes Somethmg tng
gered by chance could reaffirm thi s
and help elevate your expectauons
CANCER (June 21 July 22) A
sudden sh1ft m circumstances could
g&lt;ve you an opportumty to achteve a
career objective that has been elud
mg you Move fast when thmgs start
to break
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) There ts
no need for alarm today tf you re
pressured 1010 makmg a snap dec&lt;
ston Your JUdgment ts rehable and
your evaluatiOns should be accurate
VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Some
one w1th more clout than you possess
m1ght enter the p1cture at th1s lime

and make some &lt;Onstruct&lt;ve adJUSt
menls you weren I &lt;I lowed to dev1se
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Do not
be reluctanE abuuE acceptmg an md1
reel soc&lt;al mv11~11on you m1ght get
tod:ty There may be a n~wcomer at
the g~thermg you lllmd 1nterestmg
SCORPIO (Ocl 24 Nov 22)
Today you wuld be more mgemous
and resourceful than usu~l w11h your
do-11 yoursell proJects at home Work
on your msp1r.tl10ns
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Try to keep today s plans fleX!
ble so you II be lree to part1c1pate m
something fun that nught pop up
Unusual developmenls may occur
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19)
Be extra alert 10 your commercml
deahngs today You m1ght be able to
ptck up somethmg of value others
have been overlookmg
AQUARIUS (Jan 2.0 Feb 19)
Today g1ve pnonty to personalmter
ests even tf you exclude demands
placed on you by others You wdl not
be f~wned upon tf you look out for
youfself

·~
'

�.

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Along the River

School-to-Work .
programs

Friends worried that overseas romance is too much -too fast
Ann
Landers
L'N7 , ~ An~;d~ TmJC~
Syn&lt;h t iU t anJ C1caw"
S) ndoC~IC

Dear Ann Landers: Please help
-- and fast. Time is an important fac- on his own .
tor here .
So now Michael is here for a twoWhile trave lin g through England week viSit, and he and Sarah (after
last summer, my friend "Sarah " met four days) decided they are going to
a good-looking Engli shm an. She get married. Sarah is fl ying him
and " Michae l" spent 18 hours back to the United States in two
toget her. and she came home totally months for the wedding.
convinced that he was tl1e man of
Ann , all of her good friend s arc
her dreams.
be side themse lve s. We feel as 1f we
They corresponded for several should say something. hut Sarah is
months. and the n suddenl y, she convinced Michae l is her dream

come true. She has become obsessed
with thi s romance. We think he is
obsessed with becoming a U. S. citizen. They are both only 23 years old .
Should we keep our mouths shut
and wish her luck" Rush your opinion. It could make a difference. -Apprehensive in N.Y.
Dear Apprehensive: I'm typing
as fast as I can. I agree that Sarah
should slow down and get to know
Mi chae l better before she ties the
knot. and it' s OK to suggest it. I
doubt. however. that my opinion (or
yours) will make an ounce of difference because Sa rah so unds li ke
she's a goner.
Dear Ann Landers: The Naming from "Careful in Columbia.
Md .. " to di scon nect mi crowaves

when not in use applies to other and in a way that is far more effec. small appliances as we ll . Please tive than anything I might have said.
print this letter. I wish I had seen one After I read your letter, I went to the
like it.
kitchen and unplugged all the appliOne afternoon when no one was ances. Thank you.
home, my house sustained $42,000
Dear Ann Landers: When I read
worth of damage from a fire star(ed your response to " Windsor.
bv a defecti ve toaster oven.
Ontario," about keeping snakes as
· The ove n, which was only 3 pets, I felt compelled to write. You
years old. was not in use but was said snakes need to be watched careplugged i'n. Tite insurance company fully around small children and anit~~~ paid the cost of rebuilding t~e
mals. You are so ri ght.
house brought a claim against the
Do yo u recall the newspaper
toaster oven's manufacturer and was story about the python that attac ked
eventu all y reimbursed for the loss.
a pregnant woman"
Please tell your readers to be cauThey had to cut its head off in
tious with appliances and unplug order to release her. Evidentl y, her
them when not in usc. -- Concerned husband enjoyed having pet pythons
in Capitola, Calif.
and had convinced hi s wife they
Dear Capitola: You 'told them were harmless. She awoke one night

to fi nd the snake coi led around her
abdomen, apparently intrigued hy
her un born child.
A python is a wild creature and
cannot be blamed for behaving naturall y. Howe ver. anyone who keeps
one as a pet does not, in my opi nion.
show much good sense. -· T.M. in
Lockport. Ill.
Dear T. M.: I agree with you, but

Calif. 90045

wi th Mrs. Grace Weber for their
February mee ting.
The vice president , Fran ces
Reed. opened the mee ting reading
the purpose of the UMW. Weber
gave the opening prayer and read
"Count Your Bless in gs." Sixty
shut-in call s we re reported and
cards were sent to friends. A game
was played and prizes given.
Refreshment s. using a Valentine theme. were served to those
named and Delores Frank , Regina
Reed,
Nin a Bos ton, Pearl
Osborne, Rosemary Vance. and
Lillian Pickens. Frank received the
door pri ze.
Mrs. Vance will host the next ·
meeting.

Alfred UMW meets
Thelma Henderson was the
leader of Quiet Day Service for a
The
Middle port-Pomeroy Call to prayer and Self-Deniai,Rotary Club recently sponsored a "Expanding Mi ss ion: Helping
4-Way Speech Conte st involving Others 10 Cross over Jordan" was
students fro m Eastern , Southern the theme of the quiet day and call
and Meigs high sc hools.
to prayer and self-denial service
The Rotary 4-Way Test - Is it conducted at the recent meeting of
the truth? Is it fair to all con- the Alfred United Methodi st
ccrned? Will it build good will and Women.
better friendship? Will it be beheAll members took part .with
fi cial to all concerned? - was to readings and di scussion and
be used by the students as the b~i s recounting difficult decisions in
for their speech, tying -in the test their lives. Members agreed that
with their every day life.
prayer. giving and self-denial are
The speech could not be less most important.
than five minutes or more than
Rev. Sharon Hausman gave the
seven mi nutes.
opening prayer. President Nellie
Winning the first-place prize of Parker we lcomed members who
a $100 U.S. Savings Bond was read the purpose toge ther. SccrcEvan Struble of Syracuse. The sec- tary Martha Poole and Treasurer
ond-and thi rd-place prizes consist-_ Os ic Mac Follrod gave thw
ing of $50 U.S. Savings Bonds reports with 46 friendshi p c&lt;r lls
were JcS&gt;ica Wheeler of Dex ter hc ing recorded.
and Derek Smith of Racine .
Program Resources Chainn an
respect ively.
. Sarah Cald we ll announced that
Struble will represent the Mid- 1997 reading reports were to be
dlcport-Pomcroy Rotary Club m reported by March I0. Rev. Hauslhc district contest at Chilli cothe in man reported on money raised in
Rotary speech contest

match in~

Ntan:h.
: Also partiCipating 10 the co nt c ~·il

the count y for Co·op
fllnd s.

was Stace y Warden of Racine.
• All the students received ccr• ificatcs and praise for their effort s
in partic ipating in the contest.
Robert Beegle was the speech

A get-we ll card was signed for
mcmhcr Marjorie Guthrie and a
birthday card for Alma Swart z.
Foll rod had the praye r calendar
and chose William Crowe . mi s-

corn rni ucc chainnan.

sionary to Zaire. The soci ety ·

signed a hi rthday card for him .
Henderso n gave the miSsion
report from "In God 's Hand" in
announcing the hirth of a daughter. "Response," telling of the work on
Rachel Ann. on Feb. 15. Grand- John 's Island . S.C. This work was
parents arc Ruth and Ll oyd started in 1954, 10 aid mi grant
Brooks. local. a0d B1ll and Linda worke rs and their families on the
Spec ht. Wellston.
islands. Aid is given for dail y
Hele n and Edson Parker, . needs and espec ially for edueaAlhany. visited the Poole-Parker llon.
home rece ntl y. Laura Cohen.
Martha Ell iott was hostess and
Akron. visited he r parc·nts. Mar- served sandwiches, angel cake and
"ucritc and De lbert Stearns.
.icc cream to those named and Elo- Mary Hayes. Grove City. visit- re nce Ann Spe ncer and Ni na
ed her sister. Ruth Brooks. recent- Robin son.
ly. and Jim and Mary Hale and
The next meeting will be at the
Glen na Buchanan. Barlow. visited church on March 17. wi th
Imogene and Lester Keaton.
Spe ncer as program leader and
Parker as hostess.
Reed leads UMW meeting
Door pri zes were won by
The
Reed svill e
United Holter and Eleanor Knight.
Methodist Wo ~e n met recentl y

"Open Our Eyes"
By Bonnie Shiveley
I did not want to hear the ophthalmolog ist say that I had glaucoma. I didn 't want to be blind. I di dn't want the inconvenience of ·usin g

eye drops t~i ce a day.
So I cried - picked up my prescription and tried to remember to
use it morning and ni ght. I would
forget, then I couldn't remember if I
did or didn 't. Some of you can idcn-

ti ly. right ''
Fin all y. I made a note of eac h
time I used them. That worked and I
settl ed into my dail y routine almost
·
four years ago.
Today my eyes arc still in the safe
range . I thank Go!l every day for the
medicat ion that allows me to enjoy
seeing hi s beautiful creation, and for
my ophthalm olog ist who keeps
close watch so my eyes will be
healthy a long time.
Milli ons of people have the
"silent disease," glaucoma. About .
half don' t know they have it because
they don't notice any sy mptoms.
If you haven't had an eye exam
recently, please have one ri ght away.
Your eyes are worth it!
Glaucoma can be treated successfully. It often docs not lead to blindness for patients who follow their
treatm ent regimen stri ctl y before
vision is affec ted.
There are different kinds of glau-

coma and !lifferent treatme nts. My
eye drops prevent the pres sure
buildup which damages the optic
nerve that tran smits visual information to my brain. I am extremely
thankful to have good vision.
John 9:1-4 1 (NASB) tell s about a
man born blind.
Jesus and hi s di sci ples looked
upon a blind beggar. Aft er Jesus told
men that He (Jesus) was the li ght of
the world, He made a salve , applied
it to the man's eyes, "And said to
him. 'Go, wash in the pool o f Siloam
.. . ' And so he went away and
washed, and came bac k see in g."
This mirac le generated great
excitement. The crowd asked. "Is
thi s not the one who used to si t and
beg?" He kept sayin g. 'I am the
one."' Reli gious men questi oned his
parents.
Pharisees angrily questi oned the
man because they said it was unl aw ful 10 heal anyone on the Sabbath.

He re pl1cd. "One 1h1ng I do know.
that. whereas I was bl in d. now I
sec .

Jesus heard that b1t of new' and
found the man. He said. "Do you
believe in the Son of Man'" The for mer beggar reverent ly said , "Lord. I
believe ... And he worshipped Him.
Before I accepted Jesus as lilY
Savior. I was as spi ritually bli nd as
the hcggar. Jesus shed light into the
darkness of my life.
If we we re to meet Je sus today.
He may ask. "Do you be lieve 10
Me ,.. What would you say''
I'll be glad to sen d a lillie hooklet to you th at will help you know
Jesus. Wntc Bonnie, P.O. Box 95 1.
Xenia. Ohio 45385.
Father. t h~ nk You for good doctors who care ahout our health and
for our great Physic ian. Jesus.
Open our eyes that we may sec
and know Him. Amen.

•
10

Peoples N
I
I On The
dAg inI

--.

..

~~

•

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
1911 Eastern'Ave. • Gallipolis

A

--

•

---------------------------SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28
9:00 am to 12 noon

Alfred News Notes
Katrina and Roher! Brooks arc

Car Loans To GO!
• Saturday 9n1~ Special Low-Rate
Bank Financing On New And Used
Vehicles! On The Spot Approval!

Comn1unity Calendar
The Comm uni ty Calendar is published as a free service to non-profi t
groups wishing to announce meet ing

and special events. The calendar is
not deSigned to promote sales or
fund rai sers of any type. Items arc
pri nted as space permits and cannot

· be guarantec!lto run a spec ific number of days.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Rut land Baschall
signups Friday. 6-7:30 p.m. at the
fire stati on. Meeting lo foll ow

·Balloons! • Refreshments! • Prizes!

mer pastor of the Chester Church of
God. wi ll be the guest speaker at the
Rutland Church of God Su nday. I I

• Listen To Win During A Live Broadcast
By Magic 101 ·The Rock Station!

a.m. in I he morni ng worship service .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rev ival.
Tuppers St. Paul U. M.C. Revival,
Fred Ad kin s. · evange li st. Speci al
mu sic by Li nda Gleason .
MONDAY
CARPENTER
Colu mbia
Township Board of Trustees. Monday. 7:30p.m. at fire station .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Rev iva l
POMEROY - Friends of the
at St. Paul United Methodi st Church Meigs County Library, Monday. 7
beginnin g Friday. 7 p.m. wi th Evan - p.m. at the Pome roy Library.
ge list Fred Adki ns.
SATU RDAY
SYRACUSE - Suuon Township
TUPPERS PLAINS __: Tuppers Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
St. Paul UMC revival. Fred Adkins, Syracuse Municipal Building.
evangeli st. Special music by Dwi ght
Boigan and Rev. Wendell Stutler.
RACINE - ·. Racine Vi llage
Council. Monday. 7 p.m. at the
SUNDAY
Racine Municipal building.
RUTLAND - Bill Hinds. for-

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

I

~

neceasaty..

· loana . .t to ·
credit l!lPIOYlll.

Point Pleasant

Mason

674·1000

773~5514

New Haven
882-2135

Loan Hotline
675-ASAP

Datalla on
Mostly cloudy,
chance of rain

pageA2

entintl

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 1, 1998

City's '98 budget will include layoffs
By KEVIN KELLY
.
Tlme•Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS -This year 's general fund budget for
the city of Gallipolis will include personnel layoffs, City
Manager John LeBlanc said Friday.
Following an executive session Thursday, the City
Commission returned Ia a review session with revised
numbers calling for personnel reductions in city depart·
ments, LeBlanc explained. A final total on general fund
expenditures was not immediately available.
The commission voles on the first reading of an ordinance approving the budget on Tuesday.
LeBlanc declined to say how many employees will
be affected because those workers will be notified of termination on Monday.
He added that he had already briefed presiden!S of the

Salisbury Twp. set
to begin flood
mitigation program
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township will begin to implement
a program to lessen the effects of
future flooding with a $618,000
grant from emergency management agencies.
The Federal Emergency Man·
agement Agency, the Ohio Enter-·
gency Management Agency and lhe
Ohio Department of Development
announced that the township
received part of$1.3 million in hazard mitigation grant funds to be used
to elevale or purchase structures
datnaged by repeated flooding:
T))e ~!lnds are bein~ ~~ovided
·fllr. lroluotary programs tnltlate_g..,U
lhe local level to end the cycle .ol
repeated destruction and rebuilding along Ohio rivers. The funds
were made available under the disaster declaration issued by Presi denl Clinton for the Ohio River
flooding last March.
Matching funds were provided
by the state through the genera}
fund and ODOD's Community
Housing Improvement Program.
Of the $618,087 awarded to
Salisbury Township, FEMA will
contribute $231,783, phio EMA
will provide $231,782 in matching
funds and ODOD will contribute
$146,722 in CHIP funds .
The township will . contribute
$17,800 as in -kind demolition
work. By agreeing to participate in
the mitigation project, the land
purchased by the township will
remain clear of structures that
could be threatened by future
flooding.
According to the trustees, 19
flood-prone homes in the townshiip will be elevated above the
floodplain, and one will be purchased, demolished and the area
left as open space. Three homes
will be flood-proofed .
The location of the project is
near Willow Creek and Ball Run,
north of State Route 124 and SR
143, west of U.S. 33.
GALLIPOLIS - A local orga nization, the Area Agency of Aging
Dislrid 7 Inc., was recently award ·
ed a $138,000 grant from the Ohio
Department of Development to
provide emergency home repairs.
These emergency repairs will
be provided to correct heating,
electrica l, plumbing, structural
defects, roof repairs and improve
handicapped accessibility.
They will be provided for 54
elderl y households at or below 35
percent of median income in a tOcounty area including Galli a
County.
The Area Agency of Aging District 7 Inc. was one of 71 organizations in 69 counties across the,
state of Ohio to receive the grant.

Today's Gtban·5adbwl
11 Sections • 98 Pages

A Division Of CitY National Bank • Member FDIC

• Story on Page Ae •

HI: 50s
Low: 30s

Vol. 33, No. 3

I,

Good Morning

·saoo value. No

• Page Bt •

tmes

Agency nets $138,000 grant

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Debate over
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you ca n be sure there arc many

Send questi ons to Ann Landers.
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen tury Blvd. , Sui te 700. Los Ange les.

Las Vegas 400
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snake fanciers out there who do not
I'd rather have a canary. At least
they sing.

---Sermonette--_:____
__
Society Scrapbook
Revival services set
The Tuppers Plain s St. Paul
United Methodi st Church will
hold revrval meet ings th iS wee kend Friday through Sunday, 7 p.m.
each eve nin g. Fred Adk ins of
Stockport will be !he evange list
Special music will be prese mcd
by Joe and Jam ie Humphreys Friday night, Dwight Bogart and the
Rev. Wendell Stutler on Saturday
ni ght. and Linda Gleason, Sunday
ni ght.
In cOnJuncti on with the revival
on Satu rday evening, the St. Paul
Youth Group will be hosting a free
will offering soup supper. The
Rev. Sharon Hausman invites the
publ ic to join the congregation of
St. Paul for the weekend revival.

$1 ""

PaRe 12

Friday, February 27, 1998

heard nothing. She wrote to him several umes. inquiring about hi s
silence. Still nothing. In desperation.
she mailed him a round-trip plane
ticket to the United States. That
worked. Michae l said his excuse for
not writing was that he was embarrassed because he didn 't have
enough money to come to the States

Inside

Calendars
CJass!Oells
Comlg

C2&amp;5
D3· 7
Insert

Editorials

A-4

Along the River

Cl
AS
Bl·6

Obituaries
. So011s
C 1998

ohio Valley·Publishlna Co.

city's two bargaining units - the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Employees, and the Fraternal Order of Police - about the layoffs.
The layoffs are effe ~tivc March 31, the day before the
budget becomes official once the ordinance passes both
readings, LeBlanc said.
Although the city brought a $625,000 general fund
carryover into this year, the increasing cost of operating
services and doing business threatened to reduce the
reserve to less than $50,000' if all of this year's budget
requesls were granted.
Commissioners were in agreement the carryover
going into 1999 should be around $350,000, necessitat·
ing line items cuts.
·
.
.
And while a proposal by LeBlanc and Ctty Aud1tor
Deborah Hughes that would reduce hours but not lay off

Notification of termination comes Monday

employees was developed, commissioners had to
consider job reductions, LeBlanc said.
"Our problem is, the cost of services is going up,
but our revenue is not increasing," LeBlanc said.
"As we 're trying to improve services and do some
of the projects we want to, that's money coming out
of the general fund and we don't' have i_t."
LeBlanc said the city has to tackle such immediate projects like the Chillicothe Road lift station repair,
estimated to cost in the $250,000-plus range, as well as
plan for an annexation move, downtown ~evitalization,
the Eastern Avenue access road and other mfrastructure
improvements.
.
The propo~al_ LeBlanc ~nd Hughes pre~ented also
delayed or ehmmated cap1tal purchases th1s year for
equipment, vehicles and computers, and those sugges-

celebrates
Black History

Source of deadly bacteria remains aquestion

BLA(X

t~:~t~:~Choirs
from
Missionary,
Mount Mariilb,1

·p~,i~ii~~. Tri-St,~ne aftd Forest

,Run Baptist Church's participated.
Each visiting choir sang two
songs. Some of the . selections
inclulied; Steal Away, Remember

Me, Swing Low Sweet Chariot,
Trouble in My Way, Walk With
Me, Wade in rhe Water, Jericho, I
Surrender All, Jesus, I Love You
With All My Heart, Jesus is Mine,
Have a Liule Talk With Jesus,
and Since I Laid My Burdens
Down.

Special solo performances
s · H
· ·
were by abnna urt,_a ptamst,
who played An Amencan Cele~
brati~n. and Mary Armstrong, a
singer, who sang I Surrender All.
The celebration was the beginning of a weekend filled with

PATTY CRAIGI Ra;~CTS on the y11r 11148ln GaiNa Coun~
ty. Craig 1poka of new Inventlonl, prlcae of products and Nr·
vlctl, IIIII'tllltlon of blacka and whites and· how her filth
helped give her strength In an unfair society thlt Hperatld
black end white.
scripture, prayer, offering, song, story telling and unity. Through
the program, the church is hoping to unite people for a more pas·
itive future.

• triC
• tS.
Plan's· extra sch001funds vary WI•deIy amo_ng dIS
From AP, Tl~ies-Sentlnel Reporta
COLUMBUS _ While some school
districts in Ohio will.get millions of extra
·dollars next year undi::r the state's new
school-funding plan, others will get no
extra dollars al all.
The Legisll!lure 's plan to overhaul edu·
cation funding.'includes an extra $326 million for schools during the next school year.
The Ohio Sup~e Court ordered lawmak·
ers almost a year ago to change the way
thai the state pays for schools.
Voters will be asked on May 5 to
approve a penny-per-dollar increase in the
slate sales tu , with the ·extra money to be
used in the new funding plan. If voters
reject the sales-tax increase, the state would
still have to come up with the cash.
Lawmakers have stipulated that the new

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - Testing results received Friday
night show Middleport Elementary School was not the
source of Legionella bacteria that led to the death of a
Pomeroy teacher last week.
Barbara Logan, 53, a second grade schoolteacher in
the building, died Feb.
·
25 from complica·
lions of LegionMeigs Local Superinnaires' Disease, caus·
ing ~oncern among tendent Bill Buckley
parents that the said Saturday that
standing water at the Quest Laboratories of
building- might be a
San Juan Capistrano,
harbor for the bacteria which causes the CiJI/f., report«/ Its findIngs around 8 p.m. Friinfection.
Meigs
Loca l day. "Everything came
Superintendent Bill out clear, • Buckley
Buckley said Saturday that Quest Labo- _
said.
.
.
ratories of San Juan Capistrano, Cahf., reported Its findings around 8 p.m. Friday.
.
"Everything came out clear," Buckley sard. .
Buckley said five different samples were sent m for
testing; one from a spigot in Logan's classroom, one
from the water heating system, and three from roof
leaks with two of those collected earlier by teachers in
the building.
However, with the school eliminated as one source
of the bacteria, the question remains: Where did Loga n
contract the disease?
"It could come from anywhere," Buc~lcy said .
In the last two weeks, Buckley has studied numerous
articles and reports on Legionnaire's Disease.
"It's scary," he said. "One report said 40 percent or
more of the adult population have antibodies again st it,
meaning they've been exposed to it."
Legionnaires' Disease is so named because it first
appeared in 1978 at a convention of American Legi on
members in Philadelphia. Twenty-nine people died
from the outbreak, which was later blamed on water
stored for the hotel's HVAC system.
·Officials said the water carrying the bacteria is generally heated water between 95 and 115 degrees Fahrenheit.
The disease generally causes severe flu and pneumania-type symptoms as the bacteria is ingested through
the respiratory system. The Ohio Department of Health
reported 154 cases of Legionnaires' Disease in 1996,
the latest year for which figures are available.
A teacher's aide in Parkersburg, W.Va., was recently
diagnosed with the infection, and a public meetin g was
held there last week to answer questions from the publie about the safety of the students at Blennerhassett
Junior High School.
Health officials there are giving the same re sponse to
parents' concerns th at those here have given: the likeli hood of infection due to roof leaks is "remote."

School 'clear'

Q

MARY ARMSTAONQ tinge
a solo n1mtld I Surrllldtr
All, during the Paint Creek
Baptist Church Songfelt.
Black Hlatory waa ramtmbered through song HIIC·
tiona from several eree
churches.

lions have been incorporated into the budget, the city
manager said.
"We did everything we can do, anything we could
come up with to meet the objective," he said.
Departments will have time to absorb or plan for the
reductions, LeBlanc added.
"They're trying to make it as painless as a reduction
can be," he noted . "If there was any other way we could
have done it, we would have."

Test shows school
not the sourse of
Legionella bacteria

·church
By JENNIFER RICHTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALUPOLIS - As a way to
celebrate the close of Black History
Mohth, the Paint Baplist Church and
their guesls presented a Black History Songfest on Friday evening.
Guests from several area Baptist
celebrate black

Glilltpolle City Minag1r .John LeBlanc
decllntcl tO ny how many tlllployeea will
be lffected beceult thoH workare 'will be
n~mld ot termlnltlon on Monday. T11e
leyoffl are effective March 31, the diY
btfora the budget beCome• Official once
the ordlnenct p11111 both rt1dlng1,
LeBlanc.nld.
·

Some school districts will get a lot
more. But about one in six schools
, Hera lrt the ntw proftctld Incra•- for will get less than a 2.8 percent
IChOOI dlitrfcts In Glellil'lnd Matg•·countlea: increase. - which is close to the
1 "Mau : 1 cbiDQ«
current rate of inflation.
42.811,
1,718,813
Mike Billiraks, president of the
. 7.32 1 .~ ·
4811,327
Ohio Education Association, the
' 13.10 it'
'1,0114,251
state's largest teachers union,
Local . 8.71 •: ;
144,H4
expects a mixed reaction.
i.OCII . 13.611 ··.,:
397,020
"So me will accept it, some
. won't," he said Friday. " But that
money go toward textbooks, building does n' t mea n people won't support the
repairs, smaller classes and ail-day kinder- sales tax increase."
garten.
The reason school di stricts will not be
Two of every five schools in the state receiving as much as others under the new
will get at least a 10 percent increase. That funding formula is because they are not
adds up to more than $1 million per year poor enough . The formula is weighted in
for schools such as Lima, Ashtabula, Mid- favor of poor rural districts and brg-ctly
dletown, Zanesville, Logan and Sandusky. schools.

148-year-old courtroom receives much-needed facelift
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmea·Stntlnel Stiff
POMEROY - Meigs County's 148-year-old courtroom
received a much-needed facelift recently.
All the work was done "in house" with the exception of
blinds and carpeting, according to court Bailiff Michael Canan,
who said the project followed renovations to lhe jury room.
"[ noticed it was drab and depressing," he said of the jury
room.
In the jury room , Canan and other court employees pai.nted
the room and replaced old ceiling tiles, added a small refngerator and a coffee pot, and put some photos on the walL
"It made it look inore like a living room ... instead of a dun·
geon," he said.
.
.
.
· "We made it look good for very little money, so we decrded
to do the courtroom next, " Canan explained.
In the courtroom, Canan and other court employees painted
the trim and walls, covering the "crummy-looking" paneling,
refinished the bench and counsel tables, and installed a wheelchair ramp making the witness stand, counsel tables and bench
accessible to handicapped people.
The carpet was then laid and Venetian blinds installed .replacing garish, outdated curtains.
.
Canan then installed a new state seal behind the bench and
is now in the process of installing wooden letters reading

"Meigs County Court of Common Pleas."
•
Plans call to raise the low counsel be ~ ches ...:... ~ppare ntly
built when people we re s(10rter - an addrtronal fo ur mches and
to install a rail, made from a 150-year-old courtroom gate,
along the wheelchair ramp const ructed by Canan and court
employee Andy Baer.
.
The counsel benches, made of three dofferent types of hardwood, cleaned up well, Canan noted. .
.
.,
"We still have to remove some antique chewmg gum , he
said. ·
..
The new paint and blinds made the courtroom seem arner
and brighter, whil e the new carpet helps keep the room quteter
by absorbing echoes.
For 148 years, nothing was spilled on the hardwood floor,
noted Judge Fred W. Crow III. Then, about two days after the
carpet was installed, a child threw up right on the new carpet,
he jokingly added.
Crow said he is pleased with the renovation work.
MEIGS COUNTY Common Pleas Court Ballm Michael
Judge Dan Favreau· of Morgan County gave the renovations
Canan,
right, Ia preparing to put the finishing touches on
a thumbs up, while Athens County attorney K. Robert Toy satd
renovation•
to the 148·year·old Meigs County Common
the facelift made the room appear more spacious.
Pleas
Courtroom.
He Ia ahown here with Judge Fred W.
Crow proudly noted the money for the renovations came
Crow Ill.
from the court's budget; requ iring no additional fundmg.
He also pointed oul a new recorder's stand, and photographs ly looking for a picture of the judge who served from 1950 to
of former common pleas judges along one wall. He is cu rr~nt - 1953, and for photos of judges preceding J.P. Bradbury.

•

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