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'I,IIIS

Projects planned
by garden dub

EJHS HOMECOMING - Eastern Junior High School held its homecoming last month with the
theme "Magical Moments". Shown are, from left: Jennifer Goeglein, Holly Broderick, Jamie Hupp
crowning Elaine Putman, and seventh grade attendant Nichol Honaker.

Fellowship group
meets in Rutland
Preparing food baskets for needy
families was planned during a meeting of the Meigs County Women's
Fellowship of the Church of Christ
held allhe Rutland Church.
Marie Snyder of the Middleport
church asked member.; lo bring
nonperishable food .items to the next
meeting. Monetary donations wi II
also be accepted. She is assisted by
Charldene Alkire.
Several quilt blocks were turned
in; members were reminded to get
them in as soon as possible. The finished quilt will be acutioned with
money raised going to missions ..
Kathryn Johnson and Ann Lambert
are co-chairmen for the project
Paula Pickens of the Bradford
was song leader. Kathryn Johnson of
Zion had the opening prayer. and
Pomeroy 's Charldenc Alkire had
de•otions. She used "Musings from
a Country Preacher."
Linda Bates, Middleport,
presided at the meeting. An
impromptu cho ir 'ang a special
song.
The program was on stewardship
of natural resources . in particular
"The Perrys'' from Morristown, Tenn. will be performing at the the wildlife we lake for granted. The
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport next Thursday, feeding and caring of birds was the
topic of Janel Bolin's program. She
March 19, at 7 p.m.
The group originated in 1970 and are presently with Daywind showed how 10 make a bluebird
Recording Artists. They do over 250 performances a year in the house and gave out folders from the
United States and Canada and just recently had the number one Oh10 Department of Natural
Southern gospel song, "Not Even a Stone. • Their other top 10 Resources. She staled that the bluesongs include "I Remember the Day", "We Shall Reign" and "This Is bird houses need to be in place ·by
What Heaven Means to Me."
mid-March in thi s area as the birds
A nursery will be provided for children. Pastor les Hayman ·arc locating nes~i ng sig hts I:OW.
invites the public to attend.
Kathryn Johnson was awarded the
Pictured are Mike Bowling, seated, and from left, Nichoie Watts, bluebird house in a drawing at the
Tracy Stuffle, and libby Stuffle.
close of Bolin's program.
The next meeting will be al the
Zion church on March 26 with Rutland to have the devotions . Ann
THURSDAY
School. 7 p.m.
Lambert had the closing prayer and
POMEROY- Meigs Ministerial
refreshments were se rved at the ·
Lenten scrvic~ . . St. P~ul Lutheran
RACINE Racine Youth close of the meeting.
Church. Fr. James Bernacki preach- League signups. Thursday. 6 10 8
mg .
p.m. and 10 a.m. to noon, Racine
Kindergarten building.
POMEROY - AA and AI-Anon.
7 p.m. Thursday, Sacred Heart
. Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.

---Community Calendar---

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Sports on Page 4

3·5·6-8·12

Mostly cloudy tonight
with a chance of a rain or
snow shower .. Lows in tile'
30a.
Saturday,mostly
cloudy. Highs In the 40s.

•

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 231
i:l1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newap11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 13, 1998

Common Pleas Court. where the suit
originally was filed. The stale had
asked the Supreme Court to hear the
case.
" No adequate legar remedy exists
other than prompt resolution by this
court of the issues raised,"·Chief Justice Thomas Moyer wrote in the
majority opinion.
Moyer was joined by Justices
So the Ohio Roundtable's David Francis Sweeney. Paul Pfeifer and
Zanolli is making his argument any- Alice Robie Resnick. Justices Deboway.
rah Cook, Evelyn StrallOn and
"The next move is 10 just direct- Andrew .()IJuglas dissented.
ly move the issue from the ballot,"
The sales-laX increase, from 5 perZanoui said Thursday in respon se to cenHo 6 percent, would r.tise more
the court ·s decision to take over juris- · than $1.1 billion annually and prodiction in the case.
vide the money to meet the Supreme
The court, noting that the election Court's order to fix the way the stale
is less than two months away, voted pays for education. Half of the mon4-3 to consid~r the lawsuit instead of ey would go to schools and the rest
waiting for the Franklin County would go to property-tax cuts for

Pro,ducer prices dip
for 4th straight month
WASHINGTON (AP) - Led by conliri~d sleep declines in energy costs,
prices paid to producers such as factories and food-processing plants fell for
the fourth straight month in February.
The 0.1 percent decline .in the Producer Price Index came on lop of a 0.7
percent plunge in January, the biggest one-month drop in more than four years,
the Labor Department said today.
·
February marked the 12th month in 14 that the index has declined or
remained unchanged. Over lhe .xrst 12 months, it's fallen 1.6 percent.
The price drop for goods rurchased by wholesalers; combined with moderate price increases for services has trlutslated into near price stability for
American consumers.
And that, along with moderate wage hikes, have created the biggest gains
in purchasing power in two decades and allowed the Federal Reserve to keep
interest rates low.
_
Energy prices, down 1.8 percent lasfnfonth:after a 3.7 percent drop in
January, fell for most of last year. Their continued descent has been. credited to El Nino, which brought unseasonably warm weather 10 mucti of the
United Stales.
,
Floods and storms from the same ocean-tide phenomenon have drowned
vegetable crops in California and pushed food prices higher. Food rose 0.4
percent in February. Vegetable prices climbeo 3.9 percent, including increas•
es of 62.7 percent for tomatoes, 45.2 percent for green peppers and 32.1 percent for sweet com.
Excluding the volatile food and energy sec1001. prices edged u'p 0.1 percent. the first increase in four .months. A 2.1 percent increase in wholesale
cigarette costs accounted for the rise.
. Computer prices dropped 6.6 percent, lhe largest one-month decline ever,
surpassing the 6.4 percent drop in May 1997.

homeowners.
However, the Solon-based Ohio
Roundtable filed the lawsuit on Feb.
19 seeking lo prevent the issue from
reaching the ballot
In its lawsuit, the group said the
Legislature misused a 147-year-old
provision in the Ohio Constitution to
put the issue before voters. Lawmakers tried previously to pas.~ legislation that would have used a constitutional amendment to ask voters
to raise taxes.
But the 99-membC:r House failed
twice to gel the 60 votes needed to
put an amendment on the ballot.
Without an amendment, the Legislalure needed a simple majority for passage.
The Ohio Roundtable said the
Legislature resorted 10 the conslilu-

·',&gt;· .~

~ .

l

Ohio Federation of Teachers
still undecided about Issue 2

CINCINNATI· (AP) - While Ohio"s largest teachers· union has
endorsed a proposed sales-tax increase being presented to voters on May
5, a rival union is still debating the issue.
Delegates to the Ohio Federation of Teachers· 60th annual convention
tional provision only because it could
were
to vole today on whether to endorse the lax increase, which would
. not gel the voles for an amendment
benefit
Ohio schools.
The Supreme Court ordered that
If
the
union suppons the penny increase, it would be without the back·
documents be flied by both sides in
ing
of
its
president.
the case by March 20. It also ruled
"I
can't
support it becau~e it's fundamentally flawed," OFT President
out oral arguments.
Ron
Marec
said Thursday. " I! doesn't solve the problem and it doesn"t
Anomey General Belly Montdo
what
the
Ohio Supreme Court said to do."
··
gomery was pleased that the court
The
Supreme
Court,
which
declared
Ohio's
system
of
paying
for
recognized the immediacy of the
schools unconslilutionalla.~l year. gave the Legislature until March 24 to
issue. spokesman Chris Davey said.
come
up with a new funding plan.
"The reason \t is so important that
The plan being presented to voters would increase the state sales tax
this be considered quickly is because
from
5 percent to 6 percent. That would raise $1 .1 billion per year. which
we have a May 5 ballot initiative
would
be evenly split between education and residential property-lax relief.
pending." Davey said.
Marec, of Brecksville. said he feared that the public would never pass
Zanotti said Thursday\ ruling
another
school levy if the sales-tax increase were approved.
confused him.
·
"Two
or three years down the road, some school district is going to
" We don't know exactly why we ·
go
to
the
public
for a levy, and voters are going lo say, ·why should we
don't have the right to a hearing."
pass
the
levy.
you
got the sales-ta&lt; increase?""' Marec said.
Zanotti said, "We"ve been denied an
..
Governor
Voinovich.and
the others who support this are trying to se ll
oral hearing before we had the right
it
as
the
solulion.
and
it
isn'
t"
to request one."

Aid sought

.

for some
TP sewer
customers

DISCUSSES TAX - State sen. Michael
Shoemaker, D-Boumevllle, held a questionend-answer aesalon In Pomeroy Thursday to
diScuu the proposed state ules tax for edu-

cation, u wetl as other
laauee.
Approximately 50 people attended the meeting,
including loc.l sebool superintendents and
aeveral educators. .
•

Massive hig.hway bill .wins approval in U.S. Senate
By NORM BREWER
Gannett News Servlc;e
WASHINGTON - The Senate
passed 96-4 Thursday a massive, sixyear $2 14 billion measure considered
crucial for stale and local highway
construction projects and for
improvements in mass transit systems.
The legislatioro earmarks $173
billion for highway building and
safety programs - .$151.4 billion of
lhalto go directly to slates. That is 36
percent more than was in the 19921997 plan.
Mass transit is to gel $41.3 billion.
a 31 percent increase.
Congress passed a stopgap high-

way funding measure la.~l fall after
Rep. Bud Shuster. R-Pa., chairman of
the House Transponation and Infrastructure Committee, demanded
spending that would have busted the
budget. The logjam was broken when
senators '!greed to shift 4.3 cenl~ of
the gas lax. which had been used for
budget deficit reduction. to transponation programs.
The gas tax money firfances most
of the additional $26 billion for .
highways and $5 billion for ma.o;s
transit. compared with what Senate
committees approved last year. To
keep the budget intact, cuts - still
unspecified - must be made in oth·
er federal programs.

Shuster and his allies still want
several billion more than the Senate
bill provides. Shuster said the House
may not act on the bill by May I when the stopgap measure expiresbut that there will be enough money
••in the pipeline" to keep road projects going.
The 800-page transportation bill,
worked out . during two weeks of
de bat~. was hailed as a boon to the
economy, with supporters estimating
42,000 jobs are created by each $1
billion in transportation spending.
"It is truly a !&gt;ridge to the 21st
century. " said Seri. Christopher
Dodd. D-Conn., putting a new twist
on the Democrats' 1996 presidential

campaign slogan.
Senate Environment and Public
Works Commiuee Chairman John
Chafee. R-R.I., cleared the last major
hurdle when he came up with more
money for seven stales whose sena·
tors said they would lose highway
funds under a new distribution formula. Those slates: Arizona, Indiana,
Michigan. Oklahoma, South Carolina. Texa.~ and Wisconsin.
However. most senators were
plea.~ed with the new formula. which
guarantees stales gel back 91 percent
of the money they pay into the Highway Trust Fund. Now. some slates gel
back as lillie a.~ 70 cenL~ per dollar.
In the first major lest for affirma-

live action laws, the Senate defeated
58-37.an amendment by Sen. Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., thai would have
scuttled a Transportation Department
program intended to award 10 percent of federol construction contracts to minorities and women.
The Senate approved amendments
banning driving with open containers
of alcohol, and said stales must enact
0.08 percent a.&lt; the blood-alcohol level for drunken driving. Stales that
balk would lose highway money.
The bill also extends from the year
2000 10 2007 a reduction in I he gas
tax imposed on fuel that has a 10 percent blend of ethanol. Cost of the subs id~ was estimated al $3.2 billion.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Sources of iinancial a"islance for
customers of the Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer District are being
sought as the project nears completion.
Sue Maison, treasurer for the
board. said Thursday the Farmers
Home Administration may make
funding avai.lable to low-income residents of the district. and Meigs
County Commissioner Fred Hoffman
anno.,nced plans to initiate a proposal total could also help residents.
The sewer system in Tuppers
Plains is being funded through grants
and loans from various public fund ing sources, and customers on the
system are required to pay the cost of
connecting their home.to a lap.
Each customer in the district will
also be required to finance the retirement of the debt incurred to install the
system, a1 an estimated cost of $4,400
per customer.
New customers on the system will
be required lo pay the same amount
toward a fund for future expansion.
According lo Maison, customer
charges will be divided into two components: operation and maintenance
and capital improvemenl~ .
The actual cost of operating the
system ha~ beeri set at $13.75 per Cl!S·
lamer, and the additional cost for capital improvements will place the cus·
Ierner's monthly bill at S33 for a period of 30 years, unless the customer
pays the $4,400 share for improvements in a lump sum.
Additionally, customers who purchase property and connect 10 the
system after it becomes operational
will be required lo pay the $4,400 as
(Continued on Page 3)

Cancer rate drop cheers medical community
1982
CHEVROLET
2500

414

ROCK SPRINGS - After Prom
Party meeting, Meigs High School
library, 6 p.m. Junior class parents
urged to allend.
·

2-o-6-7
Buckeye 5:

By JOHN McCARTHY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The president of
a conservative group trying to block
the sales tax-increase issue on the
May 5 ballot is upset that the Ohio
Supreme Court will not hold a hear.ing on whether the issue is constilu· ·
lionaL

equip.

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and ·
Developmental Disabi li ties will
hold a special meeting, Thursday, 4
p.m. al Carleton School.

Pick 4:

High court's ruling on funding
issue irks anti-sales tax group

CUMMINS DIESEL, 4
wheel drive, A/C, power

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday, 6:30 p.m at Grace
Episcopal Parish House.

5-7-3

···~=!~il,;..q~~$ll!l~li!~~

41,468 MILES

RUTLAND - Rutland baseball
signups Thursday, 6 lo 7:30 p.m. A
meeting 10 follow and all coaches
are asked to allcnd .

'

Pick 3:

1996
MERCURY
VILLAGER

Auto, A/C, VB, cruise, tilt,
PW,PL .

1994 DODGE
RAM 2500

POMEROY - Sen. Michael
Shoemaker. meeting about school
funding and education issues, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at Carpemers Hall ,
Pomeroy. Will answer questions
about sc hool fund ing , buil~ing
maintenance, and rcpa1r of current
facilities. Parents. teac hers, students
and school board me mhcrs to auend. ·

... .

v~~~~~

Ohio Lottery

NCAA men's
tournament
action begins

'

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,,

A!C,AM/FM

I

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
OAPSE 17. 'lllursday, Meigs Middle

~~w

Wl~l~li~S

lTpaage

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053. regular
meeting, Thursday. 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments at 6:30p .m.

I

Thursday, March 12, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio .

Projects of remembering other.;
reviewed by garden club members
A report on sunshine projects was
gi•en when the Rutland Garden
Club met recently at the home of
Pauline Atkins.
Marjorie Rice reported on the
valentine sunshine program which
she and Atkins conducted at the Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended
Care Unit Belly Lowery and Donna
Jenkins helped with refreshments
for the party.
The group planned a therapy session for the patients to be held sometime this month, and donated money
to buy some needed items for the
facility.
Members were invited by the
Wildwood Garden Club to attend a
meeting at the Meigs Library and
the county meeting to plan for the
regional meeting was announced.
The regional board will meet on
April II at Chester in preparation
for the spring conference to be held
on April 25 at the Senior Citizens
Center. The Salisbury PTA will
serve the luncheon.
It was reported that flower
arrangements had been taken to
churches by Lowery, Rice and
Atkins.
Devotions were given by Atkins
and roll call was answered by naming something seen that said
"spring."
Members sang "Happy !lirthday"
to Clotine Blackwood and Marcia
Denison. Margaret Parsons had celebrated her birthday on Feb. 2.
The traveling prize from Blackwood was awarded 10 Denison.
The pro gran) consisted of several
reports on birds and flowers. including "When You See Red, Tllink Cardinal" by Blackwood. She noted that
the cardinal is one of the most popular songbirds and is the stale bird of
seven slates including Ohio. They
are truly songbirds, she said, since
even the female sirigs all year long.
To eat or nest they like sheltered
places.
Insects account for a third of their
fOod intake during the warm season,
she said, and when the eggs hatch
the parents share feed . Blackwood
concluded by quoting artist John
Audubon who said "In richness
plumage, elegance uf motion, and
strength of song, this species surpasses all its kindred in the United
Stales." .
Rice gave lips on attracting birds
lo a yard . She said to furnish water
for drinking and bathing, provide
feeders, and plant the right mix
shrubs, flowers and trees for shelter.
She also suggested setting aside a
corner of the yard as a wild area and
maintaining a small protected area
free of plants for dust bathing.
Dorothy Woodard talked about
the amaryllis to add color to winter
and how lo care for the plant so that
it will bloom year after year. She
· said the bulbs are tropical and the
sap is poisonous so iris important to
keep them away from small children. She talked about the growth of
bulbs which have stems many times
reaching two feel and giant blooms
ranging from deep red to pure wl)ite
with a sweet scent Bulbs should be
reponed every few years, she said.
Welcomed at the meeting were
Stella Atkins who has had a long illness and guests, Allegra Will and
Eva Robson's nephew Bob.

.

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medical Writer
WASHINGTON- Reversing an
almost 20-year trend, the rate of new
cancer.cases among Americans final-·
ly is inching down - prompting doctors lo proclaim new hope.
More than 70,000 fewer people
than expected were diagnosed with
cancer between 1992 and· 1995, as
cancer rates dropped 2.7 percent
each year, according lo government
data released Thursday.
'"We are witnessing an unprecedented downturn," said American
Cancer Society chief executive John
Seffrin. "The rate of this downturn
can and therefore must be accelerated."
But everybody did not benefit:
Some cancers, such as deadly
melanoma, still are rising, and black
men and Asian women in particular
missed o~l on the progress.
"We have to make sure the best
(medical) practices are being applied
to everyone, .. said National Cancer
Institute Director Richard Klausner,

warning that cancer remains "a
daunting problem."
What is happening? Scientists
could not say exactly- they still are
analyzing 23 different cancer.;.
··These data are crucial as we
develop cancer policies and programs." explained Dr. Edward
Sondik of the Centers for Diseao;e
Control and Prevention.
But they said tobacco use, blamed
for one-third of all cancer ca.o;es, has
dropped. Also, people are getting bel·
1er testing. meaning not just that cancer is treated earlier but that, for
example. pre~anccrous colon polyps
can be removed before ever turning
into tumors.
It is believed that at least onefounh of all cancers could be pre·
vented by eating more fruits and veg- ·
etables and less fat, but scientists
were skeptical that diet had an impact
yet - obesity actually is rising.
The new study by American Cancer Society and government scientists
found cancer nites increased by 1.2
percent every year from 1973 to

1992, when the sudden drop began. 1.1 percent ayear, mostly because of
Preliminary re~ulls from 1996 men. who began quilling smoking
suggest the downturn is continuing. earlier than women. Among women.
only blacks and Hispanics saw a lung
Sondik sa.id.
The findings come almost two cancer decrease. and·deaths dropped
years after doctors spoued:.the first- only among Hispanic women. Male
ever drop in cancer deaths. That mor- deaths. like cancer ca..es, dropped
tality rote dropped by a total of 2.5 amo,ng allroces. But because an estipercent between 1990 and 1995. rep- mated 3,000 teen-agers stan smoking
resenting about 30,000 fewer deaths every day. scientist~ wamed.lungcancer could quickly rebound.
than expected.

The bad news: Black men have
the nation ·s highest cancer incidence
rates, and they still are climbing
almost half a percent a year. Women
from Asia and the Pacific Islands saw
no change in cancer diagnoses but
their deaths increased.
In addition. dtadly melanoma
from too much lime in the sun is rising, as are non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
and bladder cancer. Uterine cancer
reverlied a pre- I990 downtrend to
level off.
Progress against specific cancers
varies greatly: ·
• Lung cancer incidence ~ppcd

• New breast cancer cases had
increased 1.8 percent a year between
1973 and 1990. They then leveled off
except among black women, whose
cases still rise almost I percent a year.
But these figures are misleading
because they count only invasive
breast cancer, not the very early
·"ductal carcinoma in situ" - too
small to be caught except on X-raydiagnosed in thousands of women
annually. DCIS is on the rise, but how
dangerous it is and how 10 treat it are
very controversial. Breast cancer
deaths dropjJed 1.9 percent annually
among white and Hispanic women .

IN FOR TREATMENT - Registered nurse Aracell Delparane,
left, removed the chemotherapy Intravenous tube from Delorea
Spina, right, of Wenaque,I\I.J., at the The Cancer Institute of New
Jeraey in New Brun&amp;wlck. New cancer cases among Americans
went down for the first time ever, the government reported Thuraday. (AP)

I~

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Friday, March113, 1998

Commentary

Page2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio '

Satunlay, March 14
AccuWcather• forecast for
MICH

FDA stalls on glucose monitor

The Daily Sentinel
'EstaMisfid m 1948

111 Cour1 Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·2156 ·Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

I·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

TM Stnliacl wwlcomet l.rttr• to th• editor from IYaderw on • DtlMd ""'~ of toplca.
Shan lflflrl (300 wort11 or 11.,) hive 1111 btsl , , . _ of biting pulllllhtd T)IJ»d Itt·
111 moy bl ldlltd. EICh should lncludo • 1/gnllure, oddrlu,
and cMytlme phone nUIJ'IMr. Speclty 1 data It tttere'• • ,.,.,..,ce to • pnvloua article
or tett.r. 111111 to: Uttwt ro rn. Edlfot, The S•ntiMI, 111 Courl St., PotNroy, Ohio

,,., ,,., ,._lind
451111; or, FAX

to 114-1192·2157.

What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio
By The Associated Press
Recent Oh10 edllonal s ol stalcwtdc and natiOnal mtercsl
The Columbus Dispatch, March 9
Saddam Husscm IS a war cmmnal Rcccnl VIdeotape shown on "60 Mm·
utes" of sumvors of haq's 19S8 ram olmustard gas on the Ci ty of HalabJa
prove n, perhaps more con\lnungly 1han 'd1d the 1990 1nvaston of Kuwait.
the m•ss1lc attacks on Saud1and Israeli Ctlles dunng the Pcrstan Gulf War or
the burnmg of Kuwait 's or I wc lb ~
On March l,,lhe CBS News magaZine mred pictures of what Saddam d1d
to hts own pt;.Q~ I e - the Kurd s of rhc northern lraq1 c1ty - I0 years ago
Ftve t'housand people d1ed when Saddam dropped chcm1cal weapons on the
Kurds
The suffenng lraqts , 1ncludmg the Kurds, are prrmc examples of what the
recent debate about bombmg Iraq was all about
Amencan atrstnke s on Iraq have been averted, at least for now, by Unit·
ed Nation s diplomacy But a dangerous regime 10 a troubled part of the
world rcn1a1ns m place, and there ts no easy solut1on, short of committmg
the Umted States to a full -scale ground war and· k1lllng or marming more
lraqr CI(IZCOS
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, March 6
Clarms of sexual harassment m the workplace have soared - doubhng
s1ncc 1991 - as has confusion about what legally constitutes it. Justice
Antonm Scalia, wnung thrs week for a unammous Supreme Court. has tned
to mJeCt "common sense" mto a debate 100 often short of it.
The case mvolvcs a man whose bosses and co-workers on an orl ng
repeatedly abused hrm tn undentably unwelcome phy srcal and sexual ways.
The company. he says, . cfused to put a stop to thetr conduct. So he qu1t, and
he sued Bul a lower , ourt rul ed that federal law on gender discnmmat1on,
from wh1ch polic1es " n sexual harassment denvc, doesn't cover same-sex
harassment '
Scaha and hts colleague s ruled , as some lower courts have, that the "sexual " m legal harassment refers to conduct, not gender or orientation.
Whether the accused or the accuser IS male or female. heterosexual or homosexual. harassment law may apply m the workplace
The courl no doubt w1ll have to revtsrt the •ssuc , as w1ll a pubhc faced
wtrh 1hc ultimate m superror-subordrnatc workplace relationshipS rarsed by
1hc Lcwinsky-Citnton allegations

By. Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler
A new dev 1ce that could make
life much eas1er for America's 16
million dtabetlcs ts now ava 11able rn
Europe.
But don't as k your Amcnca n
doctor about the D•asensor; chances
are he or she has never heard of 11
That:s because the Food and Drug
Admrn1stratron has managed to
''" by the
throttle four years of cf&lt;-::11
product 's makers ro get go"1'rnment
approval and brrng thts ne~ev1ce
to market
The Drasensor 1s descnbed by 1ts
makers as the world's first " non·
•nvastve" glucose mont tor It was
developed for dtabeltCs who must
pnck thetr fingers at least once a day
to help momtor thctr body's bloodsugar levels If a d1abctoc's blood
sugar becomes too unbalanced , the
result can be blindness. k1dncy drs·
case. loss of lnnhs or even death.
But rather than usrng a needle,
the Dtasc nsor uses an 1nlrarcd beam
of light to dctermmc the body's glucosc level The machrnc's makers-·
P1usburgh-bascd B1ocontrol. Inc . -·
readil y admrts that thctr product
docsn 1 work on all dtahcl1cs But u
docs work on some. a cla1m they say
1, hacked by chntcal evidence
So lar, they 've had a hard t1mc

Today in ·history
By The Associated Press .
Today IS Fnday, March 13, the 72nd day of 1998 There arc 293 days left
m the year
Today 's Highlight rn H1story
·
On March 13, 1852, Uncle Sam made hts debut as a cartoon character on
1hc New York Lantern
On !hiS date
In 1639. Harvard Umvers1ly was named for clergyman John Harvard.
In 1781 . the planet Uranus was drscovcred by Str Wilham Herschel.
In 1868. the Impeachment tnal of Prestdent Andrew Johnson began rn the
US Senate
In 1884, Standard Time was adopted throughout the Umted States
In 190 I, the 23rd prcs1dent of Ihe Umted States, BenJamin Hamson, d1cd
m lnd1anapol1 s
In 1925. a law we nI mto effect rn ,Tennessee proh1b1trng the teachmg of
evolul ton
In 1933. hanks began to re-open after a "holrday" declared by Presrdent
Rooseve lt
In 1938. famed attorney Clarence S Darrow d1ed 1n Chrcago
In 1941, the Lerner and Loewe musrcal "Brrgadoon" opened on Broad·
way

•

produces finger-prick equipment.
The late Dr. Sant1ago led the panel's

opposition to B1ocontrol, at one
point referrrng to the Diasensor as
"the fngging machrne " Witnesses
also descnbe Santrago as makmg
d'rsparagrng
· eommeo ts about B1'ocontrol stock owners m the hallways
before the meeting.
Nard's allegations have found
receptive ears wtthm the congres' 1 su be omm1 ttcc that oversees
s1ona
the FDA. whteh has been fightrng
srnce 1995 to rcfomn the agency. As
a comm1ttec source told our assoct·
ate Kathryn Wallace. the FDA gen·
crally doesn't waste time with panel
rev1ews for machrnes that don't
work.
"Th1s case has the markings of a
set-up to push a preordarned deci·
s1on," the source told us.
Nard says that the problems
began the moment hlucpnnts of the
Dtascnsor were first sent to the FDA
rn 1994. The plans languished well
beyond the agency's 180-day dead·
hoc Then B1ocontrol was told three
t1mcs to perform more stud1es and
resubmit data
The agency completely altered
the top1c list for the rcv1cw panel the
mght before the rcv1ew. The compa·
ny trted to keep up wnh the shift m
· agenda and labonously compiled

BILLCU~
u~

Irving Knstol
among them ..
who
thrnk
NATO
has
s1mply
become Irrelevant,
and
therefore what
happens to It
docsn 't matter
much. But of
course no mstt·
Rusher
tution that b1g
ever fades away voluntartly Some
people, therefore, have hunted des·
peratcly for new a~signmcnts for
NATO. arid one .. Bosnia .. has
even actually been found. But the
mam emphasiS has been on the geographical expansiOn of NATO to
1ncludc former Communist-hloc
nattons. several of·whrch arc eager
to attest to thctr "Wcstcrnncss" by
stgnmg up
The chtcf nbJccnon to thts ts th.n
11 lrrttalcs the Russtans. who understandably don 't like sccmg a nuhlary alliance they don 't belong lo
suddenly move hundreds ol nulcs
closer to thcrr border But there rsn't
much the Russ1ans can do about 11

Just now, and in any case they arc
saving the1r really h1gb dudgeon lor
the day when NATO may seck to
brtng the three Baltic slates .. Esto·
nia, Latvta, and Lithuama .. mto the
alliance.
If Russia again becomes a maJor
military threat to Western Europe ..
say. rn 25 years or so -· 11 may find
political means to undcrmrnc
NATO. A fascist Russia, for example, m1ght find sympathi7ers m Hungary or Poland eager to pull thctr
countrtes out of NATO altogether
By the same token, the NATO
alliance might be very glad that 1ls
frontiers were so far cast
But there 1s quite a d1ffcrcnt sec·
nano that you can be sure hasn't
bcciT overlooked rn Brussels or
Washmgton .. or Moscow Suppose
the marn m1l1tary threat 25 .years
from now comes, not from Russ1a,
but from Chma'!
II Chma began to threaten us
nc1ghhors along the eastern coast of
Asta. the diplomats ot the Western
world would ccrtamly get busy
offenng mduccmcnts to Russ1a to
hnc up wtth them. And what better
mduccmcnt could there be, at that

IToledo l 38" I

information for the panelists -· daljl
Nard chums the reviewers never
saw.
.
But even if all the rev1ewers
received Biocontrol's data, chances
are the results would have been the
same. All but a small mrnority ofthe
17 panehsts lacked the expenrse to
comment on thrs machine, congressional sources say, wh1ch IS not
uncommon in FDA rev1ews.
"Panels are too vulnerable to
manipulatiOn," one congressiOnal
investrgator told us Though three
House brlls are pendmg to hasten the
approval process for experrmental
treatments, chances are shm that any
of them Will become law thts year.
NO MORE HUD? -· Three years
ago, Republican rnsurgents in Congress trred thetr best to d1sman1le the
beleaguered Department of Housing
ami Urban Development.
These days, when (onncr HUD
Secretary Henry Ctsncros sits under
md1ctment and Amcnca's housing
problems arc no closer to berng
solved. GOP leaders arc strangely
mum on the toprc .
Instead. the woman trymg to shut
down the agency IS someone one
m1ght expect to support a govern·
mcnt department that tncs to help
low-income people lind affordable
housrng.
Gale Cincotta. who heads the
Ch1cago-bascd housmg group
NatiOnal People's Act1on. has had II
up to here wuh HUD. Cmcotta
thmks the agency has become so
tangled up rn bureaucracy that 1t's
completely lost touch with the plight
of the urban poor. She's served on
several advrsory commtttces at
HUD, which she says have given her
a first-hand. glimpse of the depart·
ment's ineptness.
"That w~ole building (HUD)
should be shut down and everybody
(working there) be given a job
somewhere else," Cmcotta told us.
"If you want to make money,
1mplode it and sell it to Stallone for
one of his movies. There's got to be
a better way of dealing w1th people
m (inner-cit1 ) neighborhoods than
what they do."
Jack A11derson and Jan Moller
are writ~,., for United Featl&amp;llt
Syn,dieate, Inc.

.

says, "to sh1eld a 6-year-old from
the
rnt1matc
deta1is of adultery" no matter
how careful the
language you
usc .
I'll tell you
how one modern
mother
deals
w1th the matter
wnh her ch1l·
Plalgenz
drcn. When II
comes to any of

• IColumbus!40'

Airport weather personnel
cutback draws opposition
Showers T-storms Ram

Flumes

tee

Sunny Pt Cloud}' Cloudy

Via Assocrated Press Graph1csNet

Wintry conditions hanging
around for the weekend
By Tha Associated Press
Cold temperatures that chrlled Ohro th1s week won' t go away over the
weekehd
About 1-to-3 inches of snow ts expected by tonight along Interstate 80 in
northern Oh1o Other area.~ across central and southern Ohio Will see little
or no accumulations.
There may be a bnef shower of snow and ram tn some parts before 11 turns
mto flumes Saturday morning.
Ohioans will be greeted with another blast of cold air Sunday. H1gh temperatures w1ll be in the low to mtd·30s. These readrngs will decrease noticeably by the beginnrng of next working week.
The record h1gh for today at the Columbus weather statron was 78 rn 1990.
The record low for today was 7 in 1896. Sunset today will be at 6:36pm.
Sunrise on Saturday will be at 6:45 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a chance of a rain or a snow shower Lows
m the mid 30s Southwest wind I 0 to 15 mph. Ch~nce of prectpitation 30
percent.
Saturday. .Mostly cloudy-with a chance of rain or snow showers. Highs
m the upper 40s to low 50s. Chance of prec1p1tat10n 30 percent.
Saturday night .. Mostly cloudy and colder with a chance of snow show·
, ers. Lows m the m1d 20s
Extended forecast:
Sunday .. .Mostly cloudy. A chance of snow showers m the mornrng.!i•ghs
m the lower 40s
Monday ... Partly cloudy A chance of ram during the night. Lows in the
lower 20s and h1ghs m the mtd 40s.
Tuesday.. Mostly cloudy wrth a chance ofrarn. Lows m the lower 30s and
h1ghs rn the lower 50s.

~Local News in Brief:Arv theft reported to depi.Ities
Brlly DoCll, Titus Ro;d, Rutland. reported io the Meigs County Shenffs
Department that hts all-terrain vehi&gt;le was stolen Thursday evening.
l'he red 1997 Kawasaki Bayou 300, two-wheel dnve ATV was stolen from
hrs mother·•n·law's porch. accordmg to- the report The theft ren'lams under
mvest1gallon.
.

B&amp;E at abandoned home investigated
Mike Appel. Carpenter H1ll Road, Rutland. reported Thursday afternoon
that an abandoned home he owns at the junct1on of Harmon and Carpenter
H1ll roads mColumbia Townshtp wa' burglanzed at an earlier. unknown date .
Thieves stole a meter box and attempted to steal wmng from the walls,
accordmg to a Me1gs County Shentfs Department report .

:Today's liv(;!stock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - lnd1ana·
. Ohto d1rect hog pnces at sel~cted
. buying points Frrday as provided by
-the U.S Department of Agriculture
Market News
Barrows and grits steady to fully
, 50 cents h1gher: demand good on
.moderate movement
U.S 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
pomts 34.00-36.00, few 36 50; plants
34 50-37.00
U S 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 29.00·
, 34.00. 210-230 lbs. 2600-29.00.
Sows firm.
U.S 1-3 300-400 lbs. 21.00.24.00: 400-500 lbs 23 00-25 00.
500-600 lbs 25 00·28 00. few
over600 29.00
Boars. 15.00-16.50. under 300

The Daily Sentinel

.on things that are hard). Be someone
who doesn't g1ve up."
Here are other excerpts from Nettleton's "The Ten Commandments
for children," published in the Feb·
ruary issue of The Lutheran magazine:
-- You shall have no other gods
before me. "Keep heroes in perspective. They are regular people who
are good {It one thing or good at one
moment. Michael Jordan, swell as
he is, couldn't handle some pans of
your hfe as well as you do."

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She speaks of the commandment on
adultery in terms of "giving up" or
"quitting;" (Isn't that what adultery is?
We give up on the promise to be faithful to our spouse.)

•

I

(f

porn!. than Russian membership in
NATO?
The Russ1ans mtght be tempted
to offer an aggresstve. cxpans1omst
Chma a free hand m cast Asta. in
return for its prom1sc to leave Russ1a
alone. But that 1s the mrrror-imagc
of the deal Stalin made with Hitler rn
August 1939 .. and rt C()llapscd dts. astrously, nf course, when Germany
invaded Russta rn June 1941. In any
case, an alhancc between RusSia and
Chtna, though COOCCIVablc, IS hardly
likely. They have a uommon border
about four-thousand miles long, and
It has rarely been free from fnct1on .
NATO's current eastward expan·
sion, therefore, IS best seen ·as only
rnctdcntally aimed at deterrmg
Russian aggrcasion westward. Its
longer-range stratcg1c advantage is
that 11 pos1t1ons the Westem allrancc
where tt can. rf and when appropn·
ate, mcorporatc Russ1a rn a larger
combrnatron a1med at contarmng a
hostile Chma
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
gulshed Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study or Slates·
manship and Political Philosophy.

•• Honor your father and your
mother. "Answer your mother when
she calls you. Every now and then,
do a chore nght when your dad asks.
Imagine hrs surpnse. When you
have a hard dec1s1on to make, visit
your grandmother and collect a little
wisdom over cookies."
.. You shall not steal. "Ask your
brother 1f you can borrow his fitst·
baseman's glove before you take it.
Don' t drink Mom's last d1et cola.''
·· You shall not kill. "Help·thrrigs
hve. Water plants. Weed the gardCn
Feed the dog."
,
.. You shall not bear false wttness
agamst your neighbor. "Tell the
truth. When you he, you can't help
but like yourself less."
.
.. You shall not covet your ne1gh·
bar's house. "It's not bad to hke
other people's stuff or think another
k1d has a more exciting life. You
1. might even pick out people you ltkc
and be hke them in little ways. But
.
m all the brg ways, stay yourself ·~
the commandments. Pamela H1ll
.. You shall not take the name of
-·You shall not covet your ncrgh·
Nettleton g1ves "pracncal 1llustra· the Lord your God rn varn . "Choose bar's wife or anything that 1s your
liOns of how each commandment your words carefully. You can hurt nerghbor's. " Other people may
m1ght apply to the hves of my k1ds " With cruel words You can heal wrth seem ncher, luckier or more popular.
She speaks of tbe commandment words like 'You have the best sm1le' But you can't really be sure how
~n adultery in terms of "gtving up" . and 'I like being with you' and 'You much JOY someone else has. Find
or "quitung ." (Isn't that what adul- do that so well' "'
your own joy and bring a little to
tery rs? We g1ve up on the prom1se to
-· Remember the sabbath day to other people when you can:··
be fa1thful to our spouse .)
keep it holy. "Stop now and then to
George Plagenz Is a writer for
Nettleton says, "Lots of people notice you have a nice life. That's Newspaper Enterprise Asstlcla·
g1ve up (on their fnends , their 1deals, what a SJlbbath is meant to do "
lion.

Earl F. "Bill" Glass, 80, M1ddleport, died Thursday, March 12, 1998 in
Holzer Medical Center, following an ~xtended illness.
Born March 9. 1918tn Ponsmouth, the son of the late Earl B. and Alma
Bradburn Glass, he was retired from IBEW Local %8 rn Parkersburg, W Va..
after havtng been a l)'lember for over 50 years
He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II, was a member
of the VFW Post rn Mason, W.Va., and was a member of the Amencan L.egton
m New Haven. W Va.
Surv1ving arc h1s w1fe, Betty Arnold Glass of Middleport, two sons and
daughters-m-law. Bill and Marlene Glass of South Shore, Ky, and Jeff and
Tina Glass of Pomeroy; a daughter and son·m·law. Krm and Kenneth W1lt
of Hamsonville; and three grandchtldrcn.
He was also preceded m death by an mfant son, Rodney Glass; and a srs·
ter, Ruth Lewis.
Serv1ces wtll be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Middleport Chapel of the F1sher
Funeral Home, With Rev. James Keesee officratmg. Bunal w1ll be 10 the
R1verview Cemetery, Middleport. Fnends may call at the funeral home from
4-8 p m. Saturday.

IND

Discussing adult issues with children
By George R. Plagenz
We are rcadmg and hcanng a lot
about adultery these days We adults
understand the word. bul what do we
tell our young chrldrcn and preteens
when they ask what adultery means?
In a column titled " Piarn Talk" m
USA Today, AI Neuharth tells how
he handled the matter with h1s
daughter, Alcxts, who IS 6 years old,
nearly 7
"Usually, rcadmg the newspaper
together has been enlightcntng for
her and enJoyable for me," he
-wnrcs. "But m the past few weeks
the pictures and headlines about
President Clrnton and Momca
Lcwmsky have made 11 sticky
"L1ke millions of parents of
young chrldrcn I had to dec1de how
to handle 1! · stonewall her a Ia
Clrnton h1mself or cautiously try to
answer
Neuharth chose the Iauer. H1s
descnption of adultery called a
spade a spade in ch1ld 's language. If
I had brought up the subject with my
mother when I was 6 or 7, she would
have sa1d, "You're too young to
know about thmgs hke that" and
changed the subject or walked away.
She would have stonewalled tl
I suppose that would be called
ball pedagogy t,oday but I notice that
one psychologi st, Dr Lawrence Bal·
ter, would have agreed with my
mother " It is probably best," he

Earl F. 'Bill' Glass

•

The·real reason for expanding NATO

vou

I

persuading the
FDA. And Biocontrol offictals
we spoke to
believe
that's
becauSl'
the
·
exper!
rev1ew
panel that studted
the company's
application was
brased from the
Molter &amp;
Anderson
start
B10control spokesman Jack Nard.
who has waged a one-man war
agamst the FDA for more than two
years, belrcvcs the panel rejected h1s
company's product because the pan·
cltsrs themselves had bu1lt-in confl1cts of mtcrcsl that corrupted thetr
evaluation of the D1ascnsor He c1tes
one panclrst rn particular. who was
employed at the time b~ a dtrccl
competitor ol Btocontrol
The FDA dentes any b1as rn us
dcclston-makmg, and says Brocontrol's appltcatron was rcjcclcd
hccausc company offic1als couldn't
prove rhat thctr product actually
worked
Nevertheless. FDA offic1al Bruce
Burlington acknowledged rn con·
grcsstonal testimony that he allowed
Dr Juho Santrago to serve on the
advtsory panel even though he held
a pa1d postt1on with a company that

Tit b.

By William A. Rusher
The Senate rs about to vote on
raMymg the. expansron of NATO to
The (Dover/New Philadelphia) Times-Reporter, March 5
rnclude Poland. Hungary and the
A recent T1mcs Reporter cdltonat-on the .proposed 1-ccnt mcreasc m the Czech Republic, and mdicauons are
Oh1o sales tax for cducat1on smd you needed a scorecard to sort out the leg- that rt w1ll have little more oppOSI·
Islators
uon than a fish gorng over Niagara
And now 1ha1 1hc 1s-uc " headed for rhc May hallot. you sull need a Falls m the ram .
scorecard to son out those for and agamsl
One wtshcs thai a maJOr geopolrt·
For example rhc Ohto Education Assoc iation. the state 's largest teachers' •cal deCISIOn hke thts could be taken
unum . IS suppurtmg the '"uc. hut the Amcrrcan Federation ol Teachers IS after a senous evaluation of 1ts pros
orposm~ II
and cons. but the truth seems to he
And 1hc Oh10 Coa l1t1on for EqUJly &amp; Adequacy ol School Fundmg, that Mr Chnton cndor&gt;cd 11 dunng
whtch 1111t1atcd the sun lcadrng to Ohto's school linancmg system hemg hJS 1996 race for rc-clect•on as a sop
declared un&lt; onstttut tonal. says the $1 I hdh on a year pac kage tsn 't enough to the cthnrc voung blo" concerned
Bul to date Ihe coa liti on has n't lound any prnposal to he adequate
That may 10 fact , tum out to be as
good a reason as any. because the
pros and cons don ' t point m any
clear drrccuon
Ever srncc the .:ollapsc of the
WI-\'( SI-\OtJL" ~ &amp;E.LIEVE itt~i
Sov1ct Umon. the free world has
VOu WIL.\.00 WHAT '(OU
wondered what to do with NATO.
There
, in Brussels, it srts. h1g, pnw·
SAY
WIL-L Do'!
crlul and e•penstvc, perhaps the
most successful mrlitary alliance 10
/
htstory. wh1ch defeated ILS adversary
after a gnm 40-ycar struggle rn
wh1ch no shot was ever fired rn
M'l'
anger along the pnnctpal front
Q\JES1'10N,
What 1s to become of II now?
There arc thoughtful people ..
E'AACI't.V!

Barry's
World

NASA says asteroid
will bypass the Earth

OHIO Weather

Friday, March 13, 1998

1•1

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MAILSUBSC RIPTIO~S

laslde Mt ..l co..17
I l Weeks

2n We&lt;ks
52 W.eb

•

$27 30
.. . ..153 K2
.
11115.5(;

Rat" Oofltde Melp Cottolf
13 Wceb ..
.• .. . . .$29 2S
2n Weeks
$l6 611
52Weekl .
$111972

r•

lbs. 18.00·20.00. few 21.00:
For the week. barrows and gilts
2.00 higher: sows steady to fully 1.00
htgher
Esttmaled recetpt.: 35.000.

Stocks
Am Ete Power ....................... 49'1.
Akzo .................................... 1041.
AmrTech ............................... 43,.
Ashland 011 ...........................56'!.
AT&amp;T ..................................... 64),
Bank One ............................. 59~.
Bob Evans ............................ 21\
Borg-Warner ......................... 611,
Broughton ............................. 14'1.
Champion .............................14'/o
Charm Shps .........................4"1.
City Holdlng ..........................48l.
Federal Mogul .........................50
Gannett .................................
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Kmart .......................................16
Kroger ..................................46l.
Lands End .............................40'1.
Limited .................................29'1•
Oak Hill Flnl .......................... 27\1
OVB ..................................... ..41~
One Valley ............................. 361o
Peoples .................................41 '1.
Prem Flnl ............................... 22l.
Rockwell ............................... 5~\
RD/Shel\ ...............................53 /o
Sears ....................................53''1.
Shoney's ............................... 4~.
Star Bank.............................59"1•
Wendy's ................................ 211.
wonhlngton .........................18l•

64,.

_.__,_

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotea piovldad by Adveat
of Gallipolis.

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- A plan by the
Federal Avtallon Administration and
the National Weather Servrce to elim·
mate federal weather personnel at
248 regiOnal atrports across the
nation - rncluding the Wood County Airport m Parkersburg, W.Va. creates a "dangerous" situation. the
14,()()().member air traffic controllers
umons says.
In a cost·savrng move that began
March I, atr traffic controllers at
small· to medrum-s1ze airpons from
Greenvtlle, S.C., to Olympia, Wash .,
are now reqUired to monitor weather
with a computenzed system critics
say is inaccurate.
"The problem rs that the equtp·
ment (the automated surface obscrvmg system known as ASOS) makes
drastic mistakes and errors," said
Wade Stanfield, an atr traffic controller at the Charlotte-Douglas Atrpon in North Carolma.
Stanfield also IS chairman of the
safety committee of the National Air
Traffic Controllers Association. the
umon that represents the a1r traffic
controllers
" It can be dangerous at atrports
because pilots are makmg !herr land·
mg decisions based on what the
weather is," Stanfield said. "We
need to keep human weather people
in place."
Arr traffic controllers manage atrport traffic and g1ve pilots takeoff and
landing adv1ce.
FAA officials declined repeated
requests to be interviewed about its
computenzed weather system and the
safety issues raised by the air traffic
controllers union.
ASC&gt;S 1s mcapable of detectmg
thunderstonns, tornadoes. hail and
1ce pellets. snow amount and depth.
cloud layers above 12,000 feet. driz·
zle, dust, volcanic ash. and virga.
wh1ch 1s prec1p1tallon that evaporates
before it h1ts the ground, accordmg to
government, union and air safety offiCials.
The FAA estimates the automated
system will save about $250.000
annually at each airport. Localiues
still wrll have the option to employ
weather personnel at arrports. bur tht
FAA won't pay for them.
The nation's largest airports also
w1ll rece1ve the computerized weath·
er system but will contmue to employ
National Weather Serv1ce personnel
pa1d for by the federal government.
Robert Massey. chatrman of the
avtatron weather committee for the
Airline Pilots Association, agrees
that there are safety tssues ra1sed by
ASOS and how the FAA ts usrng 11 at
reg1onal atrpotts.
"Ot course 1t's a safety rssue, "

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Massey sard " We need to have
accurate weather. The FAA has made
some big stndes m correctmg some
problems. but there are still gaping
holes."
Stanfield said h1s union has been
m "constant negotiations" w1th the
FAA over ASOS
" It's a yard-stick sensor, it doesn't provide us wnh the infonnatron
we need over the env1ronment of th~
atrport," satd Calvrn Smith. an atr
traffic controller in Lexmgton. Ky ..
who provides techn1cal adv1ce on
ASOS for the umon
"Could enough thmgs happen to
cause a problem?" Sm1th asked
" Yes, but we hope that doesn' t hap·
pen.''

Carolyn Strock. manager ot the
Wood County A1rport in Parkersburg.
WVa .. said she doesn't thmk the
FAA's plan raises immedrate safety
issues Strock said her air traffic con·
trollers. who aren 't members of the
union, are "competent" to monitor
the weather.
But Strock sa1d she 1s concerned
that the FAA is moving to computer·
rze completely the weather at regional airports.
"The (long-term) 1dea IS to get rrd
of people and automate. " Strock
said. "That's not gomg to protect
people" ,
At least one lawmaker IS rarsmg
concerns about the FAA's act10ns.
Rep. N1ck Rahal I. D- W Va. who
sits on the House Transportation and
Infrastructure Committee. which
oversees the FAA, told FAA Admrn·
istrator Jane Garvey m a March 2 let·
ter that the plan "1s nothmg short of
a total and intentional degradatiOn of
flight safety" at the Tn-Stnte A1rport
m Huntington, W.Va.
Rahal! said his concerns stemmed
from the quick-changmg weather
conditions in the Mountain Stale

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Med1cal Service recorded four
calls for asstslnnce Thursday. I) mts
responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:33 a.m.• Walnut and Broadway
streets, RaCine, Donna Wolfe, Veter·
ans Memorial Hosp1tal ,
_2.53 p.m., State Route 338.
Racme, Helen Arnott, VMH. Racme
squad assisted:
4:43 p.m., Bashan Road, Racine.
Tammy Bluoin. VMH, Racme squad
assisted.
REEDSVILLE
12.09 p.m.. SR 681. Clarence
Baker, Camden-Clark Memorral
Hospital.
RUTLAND
11 :11 a.m., Dunbar Road. W1lham
Moore. Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal.

By TODD LEWAN
AP National Writer
NEW YORK - Hollywood
couldn't have wntten a more perfect
ending to a sc1-fi thriller.
Just Wednesday. a group of mter·
national astronomers was warning
Earthlings that a mile-w tde astero1d
was headmg toward the planet The
streakmg mass was likely to pass
W1th1n 30.000 moles of us, and sd·
enlists warned n mrght - m1ght actually 1mpact.
And 1f 11 dtd? The asterotd , they
sa1d, would release energy equal to 2
million Htrosh1ma-sozed atomrc
bombs It could cause tidal waves
Continent-sized fires . An erupt ton of
dust that could cast the world '" shadow for months
"Asteroid 1997 XF II" was added
to the International Astronomrcal
Un1on's list of 108 known "paten·
toally hazardous obJects." or PHOs
Astronomers forecast 1ls am val w1th
startling preCISIOn. Thursday, Oct. 26.
2028. around I :30 p m EST
" If it was only a few months
away. we should be deadly womed."
smd the man who tssued the asterOid
alert Wednesday. Bnan G. Marsden.
drrector of the Central Bureau for
Astronomical Telegrams 1n Cambrrdge. Mass "But With 30 years.
astronomers w1ll solve the prob·
lem "
Actually. one day was all they
needed.
Thursday afternoon. astronomers
at NASA's Jet Propuls1on Laboratory sa1d new calculations indicated the
asterOid would come no closer than
600.000 m1les away from the Earth.
" We are saymg now that the probability of an impact is zero," said Don·
aid K Yeomans of JPL.
"From the new data we have ana·
lyzed. I would agree that the probability ol an 1mpact seems smaller than
11 drd on Wednesday, but it is not
zero." Marsden saad in today\ New
York Times.
The asterord will make a prev1ew
engagement on Halloween. 2002.
when It wrll pass wrthtn about 6 m1l·
lion miles of the Earth and g1ve SCI·
enlists a chance to more accurately
estimate ns orbital path, Yeomans
sa1d.
But the Earth 1s safe No more
doomsday space rocks. At least, not
before 2029
Sttll. for the one day that sc1ence
fiction looked It ke science tact, haz·

ardous traffic in the solar system gen·
crated a lot of excitement instde and
out of observatones and lunar plan·
etary laboratones
Astermds left thetr mark on the
front pages of the natoon 's boggesl
newspapers. and tmpact craters dug
by a.~terotds that crashed m S1bena,
Canada and Mex1co 's Yucatan Penm·
sula 65 million years ago became hot
top1cs on TV and rad1o programs
For Hollywood, AsterOid 1997
XFI: couldn't have come - and
gone - at a better trme. Theaters are
already hypmg the May 8 release
"Deep Impact," produced by Steven
Spedberg. which deals wrth the
scramble for shelter space when
comets approach Earth.
"Armageddon," stamng Bruce
W1lhs as an explosives spec1alist
shuttled out to space to blow up an
approachmg meteor before 11 slams
mro Earth. opens July I
Dr Donald A Reed. pres1dent and
founder of the Academy of Sc1ence
Frcuon, Fanta~y &amp; Horror Frlms m
Los Angele s. was so t1ckled by
Wednesday's asteroid wammg that he
headed home early to reread hrs
1930s ed1t1on of the sco -ti novel
"When Worlds Collide ·
"Thts IS great Thtsll bnng peo·
pie back to the end-ol-the Earth
mov1es," he sa1d. Then. with a pang
ol conscience, he added ''I'm 62 and
I won't be around m 2028. but I do
hope that this science fact turns out
to be sc1ence fiction "
John F. Walvoord. chancellor ol
the Dallas Theologrcal Sem1nary and
a self-descnbed believer rn the hter·
al prophesy of the B1ble. sa1d Aster·
01d 1997 XFII "may be a foreshadOWI~g .. of the second-commg of
Chnst.
He ctted B1ble passages that
descnbe port1ons ot whole stars
slamming the Earth. a red moon.
blackening skies and drastic climate
change. "It could be a stgn of some·
thmg to come. we JUst don't know
Just one astero1d doesn't make the
whole p1cture."
Or make a dent on Wall Street.
There were no maJOr selloffs, and "so
lar. the a.~termd hasn't npped a hole
through the 30-year bond market."
sa1d Basel Bullard. a New York
stock broker near the end of Thursday's tmding sesston "That's a good
stgn ..
Scientists. of course, look the
asteroid more senously

Aid sought for some TP
(Continued from Page 1)
a tap fee before they can connect to
the system
Meanwhile. Hoffman sa1d that
the commtssionen; are now trying to
seek grant fundmg to assiSt low
income and elderly customers rn
hookmg on (o the system.
Those funds would be used to
ass1st in the cost of mstalling the sewer lines from the resident's home to
the main sewer lines and also to assiSt
in the cost of removmg or fillmg the
old septic systems now rn use Hoffman sard he feels the substantial cost
in perfonning this work Will create a
financral hardship to many resrdents
Hoffman sa1d that an appltcat1on
form is now bemg developed by lhe
commtssroners to determme elrgrbrl·
ity. and meetmgs will be held in the
community to prov1de assrstance 1n
completmg lhe application.
A pnority system will be establrshed, wh1ch will grve asststance to
those who need it most. w1th a h1gh
prronly bemg g1ven to the elderly and
low-income resrdents .
Applicants will be required to provrde finn estrmates from at least two
contractors on the cost of the work

necessary for the complete mstalla·
tron process.
The commtssroners e•pect to
rece1ve a substantial amount of fund·
rng to asstst with the proJect and urge
all altected restdents to take advan·
tage ot the program
Halfman sa1d he has been contacted by township trustees about
fundm g to assiSt with pavrng several
roads m the community wh1ch were
altected by the construction ot the
system The commtssioners are con·
stdenng fundmg sources for those
road repatrs and expect to obtain
asstslance

fill Ill.
, . . UI, 1:11, 11:11
lat..... r..

- .. 11101.4:11. r..
t:II.M

Hospital news

lal:!l

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admiSSIOns - Helen
Arnott, Ponland.
Thursday d1scharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March 12 - Rudy
Stewart. Carl Orender. Ol1ve
Townsend, Helen Hudson. Teawana
McCaulla. Tamm1 Adamson. Mrs
Kenneth Krser and daughter, Julie
Dodd, Tab1tha Dean, Larry McCoy,
Brandon Waters.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Skinner, son, Rutland.
(Published with permission)

fill Ill.

421.121

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
FIFTH STREET
RACINE, OH 45771

Revival Meetings will be held at the
First Baptist Church, Racine, March 15·18
at 7:00 PM nightly.
The speaker will be RAY STAG NO,
evangelist and teacher at Grace Ministries
in New York City.

The Public Is Invited!

..

...... _
fill Ill.

�.,

Sports

The Daily Sent~t;l

•·

Friday, 'March 13, 1998

Indiana, Cincinnati, North Carolina win
WASHINGTON (AP) - h was team we're playing doesn't know
1he " 'me song with a different refrain we' re 'good," Richmond forward
for the Richmond Spiders, who Nick Patrick said in a break between
pulled off an early-round NCAA choruses.
Everyone should know that Rich·
toumament shocker for the fifth time .
As if 14th-seeded Richmond' s mond (23-7) is good. or at least capa62-6 1 viclory ove r third-seeded ble of making a mess of the seedi ngs.
South Carolina wasn't enough, throw Since I984, the Spiders have defeat·
in Washington 's one-point upset over ed Auburn, Indiana, Georgia Tech
Xavier. an overtime game involving and Syracuse. All those teams were
Bob Kni ght and ' 43-point perfor- seeded fifth or higher, while Richmance by a kid from Fairleigh Dick- mond was 12th or lower.
"The guys said it besl 1he other
inson. and it 's easy to see why the
MCI Center was buzzing for some 12 day," Spiders first-year coach John
Beiiein said. " We are proud to be
hours Thursday
"The descriplion of what this affiliated with Richmond because of
month is." Washington coach Bob their reputation. The guys here wantBender said wtth a shrug. "March ed to stan their own tradition, put up
their own banners."
Madness ...
Unfonunalely for South Carolina,
The Spiders were mad with glee,
their
tradition remains one of firstjumping up and down al midcoun
round
futility. The Gamecocks (23-8)
and chanting their self-made rally cry,
were
ousted
from the tourn ament in
"Uh-oh, they don 'l know' " in the
the
opening
round
last year by unherlocker room over and over again long
alded
Coppin
State
- only the third
afler Gamebacks guard BJ McKie's
time
a
No.
I
5
seed
beat a No . 2 ~
tip-in failed al 1he final buzzer.
and
are
now
0-4
in
NCAA
firs1 -round
"Every time we come into an aregames
since
1973.
na. we just take 'the attitude that the

Memories of Coppin State played
on the minds of South Carolina's
players for the last two days, and
coach Eddie Fogler said he expected
lhe press to write that the Gamecocks
"choked."
"I don't know. Maybe we did," he
concluded.
Oklahoma's first-round losing
streak IS even longer - five games
~ after the No. I0 seed Sooners (221I) fell 94-87 in overtime. to No. 7
Indiana (20- I I), which ended a threegame tournament skid of its own.
Indiana coach Knight paid
$I0.000 to coach the game - upting
to choose a fine over a one-game suspension for lashing out at a referee in
a Big Ten game two weeks ago.
"If I'd have had lhese same three
officials in that other game. I'd ha'e
saved $10,000," he said. "!thought
that as the game was going on. I
mostly thought that when we were
ahead."
For a while, it seemed as if Knight
really could've stayed home, because
Patterson and Guyton were playing

__

---

MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Firat round

Sec;ond round

March 13

MarCh 1'5

~A6M

M""""'~Slate
(5JTidiChri.

Greenlbofo,

51. Louis, Mo.

N.C.
Maltfl19

Uttch 20

. (12)1'la!iN !b..

( 1:i)v.~pettil0

St.Loub, Mo.

jtl)W. Michl'ilan

!31 St11110rd

t.!

. (U) Rk:flmOnd

Ofeensboro.
N.C.
mlndilnl
Mlrd119

NATIONAL

"' .......

SOUTH

s.-w1 AAtoniO,

WEST

Texu
1.4ard128

1'
1
---·

(li)Rdofd

(81 OklahofM 51...

t~Syracuet

St. Pe1etsburg. Fla.
....... 20

Cd1.
March 19

p2J~
~~

i

CHAMPION

!t l!l~

'

1111 W.ih!llgll)fl

I

•.

(101 DetrCM1

1 !I)Gto. W.IIh

~SI.

I

S1.LOU''f. M"

.,.. ..

!') ttNooif

N...., Mlldco

Marvl'rd 12
[4) Marylan1

tt3JBu!ler

St. Pet8flburg,

OJIJCUI

March 22

l

F~ .

~·

Marcn 21

!31 Mictllpon

Sl. Petersbulg. Fta
""'"'20

Iwl .

ltl.ht.

Miruni ...................................44 20

.688

New York................ ...
Orlando..........
Newlmey ....

27

.l6l

.. J2 )C)
.J3 JJ

Wuhingcan ....... ... .... ...........:n

.116
Jib

Jl

.516

BOIIGn ........ ........... ........ :...... 29 :U
Ptlil:ldelphia ...

J9

.46H
..\61

Centnl Dtvislon
Oticago ..............
.. ..46 17
lndiuna ................... ..............43 19
Charlot!~
·········· ..... JQ 2J
Allllnln ......................... ..... 31 24

.?lO
.694
.629
.607

.Jl

.. .... 22

CLEVELAND.......
. .... ~) ~0
Milwaukee ............................ 29 :u
Dc1roi1 .................................. 28 J4
Toromo ................................. l.\ 4!1

-·-

..124
.475
.4!i2
.ZI.l

1~
II
II
14
20~

2'!

6~

8

n

16
11'h
Jl

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwnt lNvllion

n

L 1'&lt;1.

.............. 4j

16

a.-Son Antonio .. ...... ........... 43 20
MinDesola ............................ )) JO
Houston
................\2 .ll

.ns

.610

)

.S24
.508

I~

14

VI\ACOUver .......................... H

46

.246

)()

Dallas.

49

.212
.094

Jl
40'!

.... 14

Denver ......................... ......... 6

........ 2~ )I 7 ~7 ~~~
Carolina ...
winner vi , Syracusc-lonn
winner,)() minutes after previousaumc:
·
WESTERN CONFERENCE
AI Tho GOCKJII Don1t
Central Division
Kentucky-South Cuolinn Stare winner n .
Iwu
ll' L I fla. !if
Massachusetts-Solntl..ouls winner, 2JO p.m.
Oalllu.........
.. ..... J~ 16 10 Kfl 191
Mic~ignn - Dnvidwn winner va. UCLA-Minmi
Detroit ..
..... J~ 111 n 11.1 197
winner. ~0 minutes afref prevtoosa:r.me
St. Looi' ......
.16 2.1 8 KO 202
Phoenil.
.. ....... 2~ 21'1 12 62 17H
Midwesl Recional
Olicngo ..
24 21J II ~Q 1~4
Tod1y's flnt·round actJon
Toronto ..................... 2J 1J ll S-' 152
AI Thl! M,rlld. Ofr.lat.oma Cily
Mississippi (22·6) 111. Volparaiso (21-9), 12 JO
Padfic Oivistoo
.p.m.
Colomdo ....
. ..."\4 17 ltl K-4 t(}M
Texas Ouistian {21- ~) va. Florida S 1a1~ ( 11· Lo~ Angdes ...
.. .... Xll .l II 71 Itt~
I~). 30 mirtuJes nfler previous 8llJfle
&amp;lmoolon ................. l~ .\0 10 60 166
Rhode Is land (22·RJ vs . Murray S!:tt~ (29-J). San Jose .
2~ l2 7 .~7 1 ~9
7:.'\0p.m.
Calgary ....
20 .\.\ 11 ~2 172
Kapsas 04-:l) vs. Pn.irie View (1]-16), 10 Anahc:im .....
10 .\.'i '' 411 I SO
minutes :~fter previous aame •
Vam:ouvcr .
. I&lt;J ·' 6 II 4lJ IHI
At The United Center, ChlcaJI:o
Clemson ( 18-13) vs. Wcttern Michigan (20-7),
Thursday's s.:ores
I2:30p.m.
Buffaltl J, San Jo ~ I
Sntnrord (2(}-4) VI. Col~gc or ChnriL'~Ion &lt;24Cul ~nry ~ . Busttm 2
~) . .\0 minu1es oJter prev1ous aamc
·
N~w J crs~)· 2, C;m1linu U
Purdue (26-7) vs. Oelnwnre (2(}.9). 7 :.t~ ru11. ·
Wushint~lnn 2. N . Y . I ~ I anUcr~ I
St. John "! (21-9) vs. Deuoit (24-5). JO miouce1
Muntreal4. N.Y. Rung.l:'n I
after previous gnme
Philmklfhi:t ~. VmtL'OIIYCr 2
Ol.!troit . . ChtC&lt;l}!t1 0
Secupd-round action
IJ!u~nill .'i. Dalbs 4
Sunday, March IS
Ttlr\lllltl 2 . Los 1\nl!Ck~ I
At The Myriad
Missisllippi- Vulpuruisu winrtt:r vs . relus ChrisTonight's games
tian-Florida State winnct". 2:20 p.m.
EJmunton 111 Florill:l 7:."\0 fl. Ill.
Kun.w.~-1'rai ri~ Vil"v. winner vs.. Rhode hlnflll.
Annl~i m :11 D:JII:L~. R:."\0 11.111.
Murray Stut~ wirlnn .10 minu1u nfl~r Jlr~vious

174

~R

K-Scaule................
..47 I~ . 7~8
K-LA. Laken ....................... 44 IR .710
Phoenil ...............
....41 21 .661
PO!IIand ...........

.. Jl

26

.m

Sammenro ........................... 26 39 .400
Golden Srme . ............ .... .. .. I;I 48 226
l.A.Ciippen ........................ l ~ -19 .210
x-cli"'hed rlnyoff bmh

)

6
ll 'll

22'11
B

West Regional

)4

Tbui'Jday's·nrst·round Korts
Mury1nnt.182. Utah S!ule 68
Illinois 64, South Alabamn ~I
Illinoi s Stutc 82. Tennmcc 81 (0T)
Arir.ona 99, Ni(holh St:uc 60
Wes1 Vir_ginia 82, Temple ~2
Cincinnali M, Northern Anzonn 62
Utah M. San Fmnci1eo 6K
Arkansn.~ 74. Nebraska 6.~

Thursday's scores

c.lil.
March HI

Tonight's games
Dtlroil al Boslon, 1 p.m.
Milwoukee :u Indiana. 1 p.m. ·
Allwua a1 Phil:Welphia.7JO p.m.
Otnrlolle Ul Orlnntlo. 1}0 p.m.
Vancouver at Utnh. 9p.m
Golden Slnte at Pbocnil, 9 p.m.
Toroot() at L.A. Clippers, 10: ~0 p.m.

Saturday'• games

Minne$otu ut Seilllh::, :uo p.m
Wa~hington ut Omrl(lltc. 7:JO p.m.
New Yurk n1 ClEVF.LA.ND, 7:30 1un.
New Jerstynt Dallas. !I:JO p.m.
Sul!mmc:nltl at Hnu5Jnn. 100 (l.m.
Otic:tgo :11 San A.ntnniu. KJO p.m
Philat.lelrhiaut Milwaukee, 9tun.
Portlnnd nt IXnv""· 91l.m.

(10! Sl Loull

12) l&lt;tntudfr

(2)

DJ,·Islon I
'Cilillon M..:Ki nlc)" hi. Mu~ !li llon Washinttltln
~4

lotte (20-1 0), 12: 10 p.rn.
Michipn State. (21-7) vs. Prinu:lon (27-J), JO
minul~ after previous gonnc
AI nt MCI Crnltr, \hshlnaton. D.C.
Richmond (2J-1) vs. Wushington (19-9), 4:Jg
p.m.·
Connecticut 00-4) \11 . Indiana (20-lll. JO
minutes :1ft~rprcviou ~ gu~

20To

Today's nrm·round aclion
At Rupp Anna. Lnlnatnn, Ky.
Synteu5e (24-K) vs. lona (27-5), 12 : 2~ p.m.
New Mclli..:«(2~·7) vs. Butler (22· 10). ~0 tnin·
utes after pn:vi014s gurtl(
Okl;~hclm;l Sial~ (21 ·6) vs . George Wamington
(2-1-Kl. 1:40 p.m.
Duke (29-3 ) v!. Rndfnrd (20-111. 30 minutes af·
t.:r prcviou&amp; J3ft"ll!

At The Ctorlia Dome, Atlanta
Kentucky (29·4) vs. South Car11lina Stute (227).12: 1~ p.m.
, Mas~huscms (21·10) vs. Sai ni Louis (21- 10),
~

minules after Jlfl:vious tamt

Mi ehigun (24-lt) v~ . Dol\lidum (20-9). 7:40
p.m.
UCLA 122-Kl vs, Mian1i (IK-9). ~0 minulcs;lf.
ILT pn:viuu!l J!illiw:
Strond•round IK"IIon

Sunday, March IS

$)5 950
f

GM

.

..... ""1.®
.., '

WINTER WEATHER IS ALMOST OVfRI
BEAT THE HEAT • BEAT THE RUSH

AIR CONDITIONING CHECK

$2143

Check Pressure and Operation

•Certified GM Technicians
•ASE Certified Technicians
•GM Diagnosti~ and Essential Tools

NOT RUNNING liGHT?
POOl fUlL ECONOMY?
TUNE YOUR ENGINE 3aoo v6

$,121 60 ~-·

Includes air and fuel filters and sparll plugs.

•Any parts or freon extra

•Other engines may vary slighUy more or less in price

**II repairs are needed an estimate will be given

REMIIIDEI Of OTHER SPECIAlS STill AVAIUBlE THRU MARCH 3 Isf
Flush Cooling System ............. $59.95
Rotate &amp; Balance Tires ............ $24.95
Rotate &amp; Balance Tires with
Front End Allgnment .. ~ ...........$59.95

Transmission Servlce·700R4 .. $87.95
011, Lube &amp; Filter with
FREE 1 Gal. of Solvent .......... $19.95
'At Ispecials as per previous advenisement

DON TATE MOTORS
CALL: WES HOLTER OR RICHARD COLLINS
Service Advisor
Manager
(740) 996-6614 or (BOO} 837-1094

Division II
Ci n. McNkholns 90. Bellbrook ~2
Cin . Roger Bncon 80, Greenon .JII
Col. Dm:hcror1 ~7. Bl!llt:)' ~
Cui. Mifnin 70. Col. Brigl!s60
DclVt!l" 60, St. Clainville 49 ·
H,unihon Oatlio 74, Milton-Union 42
Philn ~6. Cnrnbridgc 47
Rt11.:ky River 4!1. FiUn-iew 41
Yuung. Rayen ~2. Struthm 4~

, Dl•l•ion Ill

Hamledfenry 71, Bluffton~
Haviland W11yne Trnct 73.lima Cnth. 66

Ohio H.S. girls'
regional tournaments

..

5To

Was$9,950
1!1'*1111111 Slllrl ,~ ••,

..

Stod&lt; tmber 8Tll61t

~J

Zanesvill~ Rostemm 4!i. Lriruin Cn1h . J4

Hockey

Basketball
HEAT . Pl;cccJ r Ktitll 1\:~kins ,uu

-

w

~

POMEROY, OHIO

Mon.·Frl. 9 am•8 p•; Sat. 9 am·S pm

~
·
1
·
CHEVROLET
P

MIAMI

the

inJurCd li ~l. W:~i vcU G M:llcnlm Hud::thy.

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantk Divbkln

n

IwD

1. I

N&lt;Wl&lt;n&lt;y ........ ~ ..............40 16 9

Philud&lt;lphia ...................... lJ 20 10

Washinl_!tun ...................... 29N II
N.Y. Romgers
....... 20 21ll7
N.Y. hlandcrs
... 22 ~J 9
FliK"idu ........
.. .. IKJ~ 12
Tanljl:tBay ..
.. IJ42 I)

Pittshurr.h .
~·hmt~nl

Ros1on ...

ru.
K9

!if ad

ORLAN!)() MAGIC" Pl:tccJ G l'tuny Hartlaway ~• n lhe mjureJ list. A~ltvalctl G Ma1L Price
frnmtht' mjuretlli ~t . Si}!tu:J K Kevm Ollie 1t1 a !ll!L' ·
ond IO.Jo1y ~nnlrai.· t .
PHILAOELPI~IA ?OEMS · Si)!: tll"ll C llo:nui1
DenJnmin tn a IO·,~ IY ( nlllr;l(t .

1111&gt; 1-21
76 IKJ l-Ui

69 176
~J 161
~.1 165
411 1 ~1
~~ 121

167
liM
17K

U17
2(»(

Northtallt Division
.. ................ J J IR 14 KO IK6 1~2
................. ..\1 2!i It 70 IK6 162
.... 272-f 13 67 IM 156

Font hall

1998 PONTIAC

Nal101111\ Footb3111AIIIf:Ut'
l'i\ROLINA I' ANTHERS · A~lcc,lllllcrnu
with C frank G:1n:iu on illhn.'t.'-ye:~r ~· t mtr:K t .

NEW ENGLANU t'ATRHHS :
Anit Smith and Curtis M ~G\-c .

:it~ncd

NEW YORK JETS: Trad:J Fll l.un:mm Neal
!tithe T:tlllfl:t Day Du..:..:liiM:CU fur an u nli•~dtl Sl' J
1
I J9~ tln1ft chni..:c. Sif:lll!d QU Glcu n F••lc_y 1\1 ;1

uue-yc&lt;tr

~· 1mlr.t..:t

Cll!l:n:.iu ntltruu)!h

J'191J A~c,'

to term~ with Ill~ Amhuny l'leaJoill!l

2 Dr., CD player, auto., air,
tilt, cruise.
MSRP ...............$18,235.00

Power seat, V6, auto., air,
cass., CD, keyless entry.
MSRP ...............$25,393.00
Dlscount............. ,2,234. 74
lnvolce...............23,158.26
Rebate ..,.............. 1 ,000.00
Dealer Markup ....... $10.00
Jour $

Dlscount. ............. 1,277.02
lnvolce ............... 14,957.98
Rebate ............... $1 ,000.00
Dealer M~rkup ....... $10.00
91
Jour

$7990 or $169 per
NO MONEY DOWN

Brt•• New 1!11
PIBIIIt sunnre SE Cllllf

1r11d Nrw Ill Pilllie Tr••l
flu •r EIIrl*tl Mllllll

S)5,950

•.

Was $17,950

1151Rllft. . IHl4

'3.4V-6 Power
' Nt Cotlliflon
• Dull Alillegs '
• 4 Wheel And-lock
Bnllt8s
• Power WindJ fotrtl)fl
• Power Dotri.Ot:lll
• Power DrMt'l Seat

• P. Alar 1141'r11d111

8lod&lt; Nt.mber ~A

475 South Church Street· Ripley, WV Hl00-822-ll417 •372-2844
lllelltlay-8a!Airday 9 a.m. • 8 p.11. •Sllocllly I p.m. • 8 PJ11

&gt;

•'•

·•
J,

'J

_SJ0,950*

• AMofM Clsselll!
• Cl.om Ql~ lnletlor
• Almoll Keyless ERry

• Rear WM!wr'Mper
• Delay Wile~

• 7Passenger SeatnJ
• T!ICbl Catl!d
• AftJniun Whlail
• LDidld!

• 4 l'llteel Ori'lt!
'4Jil11Jrtee V-8
•Aimmllic
• Air Condliooitg

• AM.fll Cassetle
• Tit Stoelitg

• C!Use Control

• CUsDn Clolh
• , . . WlndOwl
llllelior
• , . . Door llllil ' AUniun Wl!eels
• Powwlllr!GII
•I.Oidld!

•5-Speed

•NolofMs-

TmnsmiSSion

• OJsllm Qllh

• ~ Ylheol
ArtHod&lt; Blakes
• Dual Ailbags

• Rear Scxiter

• Power Sreemo
• Power B18kes

Interior

• Styled Wheels
•WalE~

1998 CHEVY

LESABRE

Tax &amp; title extra. Payment figured on 9.75%
APR . 60 monlhs. Of!er based upon bank

$22,650*

1998 BUICK

SUNFIRE SE

OL

$10,950

Sled&lt; tmber 81'1MA

BUICK•

N11ion.l Blllllit'ltl.llll AliSOCiatkm

1.8D/a APR Up To 31 Months!**

•AI P- • F!.ly loaded!

"

. lAC:.

I@~
~
\!).
I

•

Was $12,950

OPEN MON.-FRI.
8·5 .

(614) 992·6614 • (800) 837·1094

Auto., air, stereo.
SEVERAL TO
CHOOSE FROM

nny Blmr tllltlr 414

be no match for bigger and stronger lead. the Lumberjacks had an answer.
Cincinnati, but it wa~ tight from stan Bobby Brannen, the lone consistent
to finish. NAU led by a~ many as six, offensive threat for Cincinnati with
Cincinnati never by more than four. 24 points, made one of two free
The Lumberjacks - in their first throws to put the Bearcats up 62-59
with 24.7 seconds 10 play.
NCAA tournament appearance But Northern Arizona is the top
came tantalizingly close to joining the
three olher No. 15 seeds to beat a No. three-poi nt shooting team in the
country, and Michael McNair calm2 seed.
''It's a sellish point of view, but ly made one from 22 feet to tie it 62·
we deserved to win." Northern Ari- 62 with 17.4 seconds left.
Cincinnati tried to get the ball into .
zona coach Ben Howland said. "We
the
middle to Brannen. but couldn't.
came here expecting to win. They're
instead,
it went to Baker, whose
a great team. They're very athletic ,
wide-open
shot fell through .
but this really stings.'
The Bearcats (27-5). who won
" I wa~ the second option." Baker
their lOth in a row, blamed them· said. "Coach told me if I got the ball,
selves.
go straighl up off my tiptoes. I was"This brought us back to reality," n't going to hesitate. I had an open
Baker said. "We can't take anyone look and l took the shot."
for granted. It was a wake-up call . Kawika Akina, the quick Hawai today. "
ian point guard who had seven steals.
1\vice the Lumberjacks (21 -8 ) led tossed up a desperate three-pointer at
by six points in the second half.
I he buzzer that bounced off the front
Each time the Bearcats took the of the rim .

$10 OV~1{ ltiVOICE !
DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

8

~redit

1~

-----

1996 CHEVY

$8,950 $8'W950
$]0,950
as
$t0,950

Cl.'nlt:r~O

SiO:'r.tmber Fli221A

Choose From!

Ill IMC !81•1 SI.S PlmJ

, DiviSion IV semifinals
Botkiru ~4. Fon Loounic 4~
Hopt"~~rdl Loudoft 61 . KaJidu !i2
_Mtu-ion Plcu.mm ~~ - R i Jt~edule JK
Mins1er64. S. Ch;u-tc~1on SE ~2
Mowry~town Whiteoak 7K, N. AJam:s 44
N. Robln~un Colonel Cmwford&lt;H. l.ihcny

NaUon;al U11~ur
CHICAGO CU BS: Opttontd RHP Scc:vc Rnin .
RHP Ju ~ t i n Spct~r. C Pal Cline. IN F Jn ~un
Maxwell and IN F Rut.! McCall 111 Iowa 1•f the PCL.
RHP Jn~ ~~ n Ryun an'l INF Jnsc Nieves tu W~5t
Tcnll("!S\.'1: of ttk Suuthc rn LeaF.UI!. ;uul RHP Jn);(!
Elipi1101l w Oaywna nf the Flnritla SIUtc League. A•siJneU C Alan Zinter. INF Tim Umc'l( and Or Ocr·
rick Whi1c tu !hc:ir minor-lc:tgue ~11m1• ·
LOS ANGELES IJOOGERS: Namcd Pctcr
O'Malley dwirm:m anti Doh Graz.iano llCc§itlent.
cffcclivc when majur lcug11c uwnl!n appwvc the
~tic of the fr.m..:hisc to 11 ~ Fnx Gruu p. •• Jivisiun of
News CmJl C lain ~&amp;:U RHP Ste\'~ Mont~umery uff
w:1h·ns from the Ballltnutl.' Onnlc5. MuvcJ lNF
Trirr Cromer fmtn !he IS-d:.y 111 the: 60-W•Y di ~­
ablcd liJol
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Optimk.'tiLHP Arn1.1mlu Alm:mz:L RHP Rid1 Crumlwn:. RHP Rick
Hd5(rnwo. RHP Scan ltlwc, JNF Lui~ OrJ az.INF
PladJll Pnl:tn~·u ami Of S~.:uhnrn u)!h Green 1u
Mc:mphis uf the PCL. autl I U Chri~ RichurU anU
OF Ju:1n Munnzttl Arkansa~ 11f the Te,:t ~ Lc:tgu~: .
AnigneU . LHP Rid Anli.tel. RHP Jn5c Omttisla.
RHP Ruu_y Mcadtam. (' Sta~y Kll•tncr. C Dave
S\·hmiUt, (.' RccU .S"-..:ris t. INF Rn~nu Mejia anJ
OF Wn Cham~rliiiu 111 tl~ir nunt lf· lcattu~: cmlll).
SAN DIF.GO PADRES. hsM~IICII RHP Kcvm
Lumun to their minnr-kaguc Cilllll'·

coach from 1986-93, said his team
succeeded in dictating the game's
tempo. but missed too many open
shots.
"I thought we needed to have a
low -possession game." Wainwright
said. " I didn't wanl 10 get in a runand·gllJl game. but I thought they had
more firepower and rebounding ~ Ali
l have to say is I have no regrets
about what my team did.''
Mark Byington scored 18 points
for the Seahawks, while Stan Simmons had 12.
Wake Forest slarted the game
with a I 0-2 run, hut went the next
eight minutes withoul a point and
matched a season-low for a first h;!lf.

tournament... l.:;&lt;C:! !.on: .: tin: : ue;: .~d~fro::,::m..:.:Pa::li:ge:..:4~)

round casualty of the NCAA tournament Thursday before pulling out a
65-62 victory over the upstart Lumberjacks on D'Juan Baker's threepointer with 3.6 seconds to play.
But the Bearcats survived. making
West Virginia the only surprising victor in tirst-round play at BSU Pavilion on the Bojse State campus. The
Mountaineers, the No. 10 seed, routed seventh seed Temple 82-52, the
most ope-sided loss in the Owls' long
NCAA tournament history.
·Hogs like slop, and there was
plenty in Arkansas' 73-65 win o~er
Nebraska, a game that featured 43 ·
turnovers. Utah's Michael Doleac
sank 15 of 17 free throws as the Utes
beat San Francisco 85,68,
In Saturday's second round, Huggins sends his team against his alma
~ mater West Virginia and Utah faces
Arkansas.
Nonhem Arizona was supposed to

.

Choose From!

9,950 $7,950 $8,850
Was $21,950

Bowd~er40

Sebring McKinley 64, Chuncl

•

56-52 in the first round 'of the NIT.
Wake Forest will play host to Vanderbilt in the second round of the
tournament Tuesday night.
Odom said the Demon Deacons
(16-13) played lentati vely in the first
half, which ended in a 20-20 tie.
"We challenged our team to stand
up and play with as much vigor and
hunger a.1 the Wilmington team wa•
playing with," Odom said of his halftime speech. "We challenged our
team to take the bnli inside and play
good defense."
Wake Forest also got some help
from the Seahawks, which were
playing in their first postseason game
ever. N.C.-Wiiminglon coach Jerry
Wainwright. a Wake Foresl assistant

By CHRIS DUNCAN
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP)
-Wake Forest players sat in stunned
silence Sunday as national television
cameral showed them waiting · and
never hearing their name called by
the NCAA tournament selection
committee.
For one half on Thursday night,
they looked like a team still stinging
from the di sappointment. It took a
fiery halftime speech from coach
Dave Odom to remind them they still
earned a postseason berth and a
chance to win a championship.
Tony Rutland and Robert O'Kelley combined for 39 points and Wake
Forest survived 36 percent shooting
to edge Nonh Carolina-Wilmington

$14 21 .7
Prlc•.. . I

4IID

~- -

.

To!. Ubtky 8~. Tol. S1an 67
Tol. St. John's M. Fremont Ron 46
Tol. Waitt 73. Tol. Rogm 12
Tnl. Whitmer St Tol.

camp.

OAKLAND AlltLETICS: Opliull(lf KHP.Oill
Kint! and HHP ·Blnkl! Stein ju E4J monron nf !Ill!
PCL. :tnt.l Tum fkmwll :uld C Ramon Hernnntl....'l. tu
HuntSVIlle uf Ilk! s,iull~n lc.!:IJUc!.
TEXI\S RAN GERS : Rdeascll RHP S~n11
Klingctlbed frum hi5 minnr·lcaj!UC .,:,mtmt:t.

Hudso n~~

Wake Forest gets. past North
Carolina-Wilmington 56-52

NCAA men's

Baseball

2To

Choose From!

2.l2

Amtric11n Luaue_
UOSTON Rt:U SOX . OpiHHtcU P 6 rit1n
Bt¥"kle) illld P Ptrcr Munro 10 Pawtuckel of the lnlernatinnal League ~ ~~~~ P Rnfad B ctan~ourt to
Trenton uftl~ F..:~~te rn l...c:tguc=.
CHICAGO WHn'E SOX : R~newcd tht cunlr.n:b uf RHP .Jouues Uilldwin. lHP MiLe BerhHti.
RHP Dill Sim:ts, OF Mike Cunk!mn atld IN I~ 01ris
Snopc:li.. Opuun"'IJ KHP Lkreli. Ha.~selhnlf unl.l RHP
llilb Huwry to Cal~my 11f the PCL. uud RHP J!lhn
1\mhrusl' anJ .\ 8 Cnrlu~ U..'t! Ill Oirmingllam uf 1he
Southern U:af!m=. A~Uipucd P Mil:t Henlhctltl , SS
Jiisuo Ih:llacro, or M..:Kay Chri s ten:~en. OF Jdf
Liefer o111d OF Jerry Whittukcr 111 thei r minm·

' Was $t9,950

15To

Tlrzah Dodson, Allison Williamson, Jessica King,
Kayte Davis, Shannon Soulsby, Marla Drenner,
Michelle Drenner and coach Jlmmer Soulaby. Not
pictured when photo was taken: Alicia.Werry and
assistant coach Mark Werry.

174

200
191l

Transactions

$]7 950

Was$t7,950

162
lf'l9
I!W

Buffnlu 111 Pillsbu1gh . .l p.m.
~truit at Philudelphia. 1 r .m
Oiicago at T11mpa Bay. J 11.m.
Phoenix 111 St. Louis. ~ p.m
Culnmdn ;II lm Angclell. :l p.m.
San Jo~ at Carolht:t, 7 p.m.
Vaocouvl!r nl N.Y. hlanUcrs, 7 p.m.
Washin~lon 111 O!liJWa. 7·.lO (1.111.
New Jeney al Monll'l."nl. 7·10 p nl.
( o~ lgary al Toronto. 7:m p.m.

te~tgll(

SWldusky 76, Mun~ficld Sr. 1~ (OT)
Stow 43,

South Regional

Choose From!

SEVENTH-GRADE MARAUDERS- The Meigs
seventh grade girls basketball team recently finIshed a successful season with an 8-3 record. In
front are (L·R) Jenni Priddy, Ashley Fields,
Mindy Chancey, Stephanie Story, Lindsay Bolin,
Katie Jeffers and Brook Bolin. Behind them are

Cle. Collinwood b~ . Ck!. Glenville 64
Clc. Eau Tech 71. Cle. South 6~
lima Sr. 74, Oeliance ~7
lorain Adm. KinR 54. Meijinu 4~

Saturday's second-round action
AI Tht Hartfonl Civic Center, Hartrord, Conn.
Nonh Cnrulina (.11 -]) vs. North Olnllina Otar-

Was $t4,950 ·

110

Salurday 's games

Wcu Virginia (23-KI,

Tournaments

PrinL.'CIOn 69, UNLV 57
Michi&amp;un State KJ, Enstern Michigan 71
WIUhington 69, Xavier 68
~~ ... Rk:tlmond -62. Sou1hCo.rolinu61
Indiana 94. Oklahoma R7(0T)
Connec1tcUI 93, Fairlc=igh Dlckinson S!i

f

(27 ~5 ) v1.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Thunda)"t nnt-round stores
Nru1h Curolin.'\ R8. Nuvy ~2
Nonh Carolina Chnrlottc 17. Illinois-Chicago

12 950

IK7
IH

0Jit:;Jgu at FtnriJa. 6 J1fll
F.dmumon :11 Camlina, 7 j).01.
C11lur.1dtl nt Ano1hcim . K11.111.

U!!lh (26-3) vs . Arknnus (24-K). JO minuh:s
afte r previous grunc

East Rogional

~~----~~~~-=~~

1n
I ~y

Sunday'sgarnes

2:20p.m'.

NCAA Divison I
men's tournament

Cncnnl1l

129

AI BSU Po•ll"'", lloiJt, Idaho
Cincinnati

Sunday's games

Well Vlo:Oftll2

ad

N.Y. Rlmgm at Boston, .\ p.m.

Maryland (2~ IOJ n . llliooill (23·9). 4 : ~0 p.m.
Arizona (28-.. ) vs. llliaoh State 12~ - ~). ~0
,minuii!S after previuus aume

Minmi :u Orlando, noon
Utah at Detroit, noon
LA. laken at Vuncouver, ~ p. m.
Bostnn ut A1lan1:1, ~p . m .
llll.li11na nt N~:w York, 7:30 p.m.
D:allas al Phoenil. K(l.m.
Toronto at Golden Slme. Kr .m.
L.A . CliJIJ'l'rs al Portland. 10 p.m

Tempt 52

(101 Wet1 Virglnll

-·-

PinsburJ!h al Ouft"alo . .\ 1i.m.

Saturday's second-round •dion
At Arco Arc .., Sacramcnlu. Calir.

62
Anaheim,

.... 26 2R 10

OttllW;l. .. ,

MeKico· D~o~tlc.r

At The Unlitd Center
Sumford-Co lle'e of Charlcuon winner vs .
Clemson-We11ena MtchigM winnrr, 2:1~ r .n\.
Purdue-Deluwnre winner vs. St. John s-Oetroit
winntr, J0 mi11ute~ nfler previouJ gnme

Minmi 97. CL..EVELAND14
San Antonio 91, Saernmento Kft
Houlton II~. New Jt:r5ty 104
Dillas 104, Chicugo 97 (0T)
Denver 91t Vnmouvtr 9J
Portland tJ5. Minnesot:. 92
l.A. I...:tken IOH. L.A. Cliflpers H~

San FraroiCO

S!Uit!·

gum&lt;:

Patine Divlskm

Nebtukro

~-

(l4)0111id10A

.......

1 ~9

New

Atlantk DMdon

:rum
•-Uiah.........

62 148

winner n. Oklo.homo
Gearge Wuhing1nn YtinriCf, 12:10 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

like a million bucks. Knight si mply
watched a1 his Hoosiers shot better
than 60 percent most of the game and
led 65-46 with 13 minutes to play.
Oklahoma came back to tie it on
Corey Brewer's three-point play with
29 seconds left in regulation, but the
Sooners had nothing left for overtime. Indiana scored the first six
points of the extra period.
"We were spent." guard Robert
Allison said. "After coming back like
we did, it's hard to finish up that last
five minutes. The emotions, you just
let up that little bit. and that's ali it
takes."
What it took for II th ~seeded
Washington (19-9) was a defensive
play at the buzzer tO hold on to a 6968 win over·sixth-seeded Xavier. The
Huskies, who forced I7 turnovers
and held Xavier (22-8) to one field
goal in the final 9:53, clinched it
when seven-footers Patrick Femeriing and Todd MacCulloch both got
a hand on the ball as T.J. Johnson
attempted a layup as time expired.
It was Wa1hington's first NCAA
victory since Detlef Schrempf led the
Huskies pa1t Duke in' l984, and Bender's first ever as a head coach.
"This is really spec ial." said Bender, the only man to play on Final
Four teams with two teams, Indiana
and Duke. " How many teams get to
come back and practice anqther
day?"
The best individual show - and
it was quite a show - was turned in
by Fairleigh Dickinson's Elijah Allen,
who made 14 of 17 shots from the
noor and w~s 9-of- II from the line
as the 15th-seeded Knights (23· 7) put
a scare into second -seeded Connecticut (30-4) before falling 93-85 .
· Allen, a senior guard, had never
RISING TO THE OCCASION -,- South Carolina's BJ McKie leaves
scored more than 30 points in a game.
but he was shooting from anywhere his feet to shoot In front of Richmond's Jonathan Baker during Thursand everywhere - and usuall y mak- day's NCAA first-round game In Washington, D.C., where Richmond
ing it - matching the third-best per· won 62-61. (AP)
formance in an Ea't Regional game.
Appropriately enough. Allen him- Bob Huggi.ns had insi&gt; l~d there was
"He was magnificent," Connecti· self best summed up the day's enter- no way his Bearcats would look past
cut coach Jim Calhoun said. "We had tainment at the MCI Center.
Northern Arizona.
12 tapes of him, but never saw him
"I( you didn't enjoy this," he said,
Wrong.
do what he did tonight. Allen had a "lhen you don't enjoy anything."
Cincinnati came precariously
West Region
close to becoming the biggest lirst·
night I haven't seen in 26 years of
At
Boise,
Idaho,
Cmcmnati
coach
Division I coaching."
(See NCAA on PageS)

..... l6llll . 61 159 149

Buffnlo.'..l ...

Duke-W.~adrC\rd

NBA standings

UlahSt11111

Anaheim, Calif.

~~~
t ill'~

PIIMIIml

f7) MIUachuHtll

-·
..........
-·
·- ·
UNLV 17

1

G&lt;oensboto, N.C.
Mard'l21

N1tlonal
Championship
SanMonlo
TeiCBs '
March 30

Marth22

i6) CIIITIIOII

p4) C. ol Chultlltw!

ts) Pmo.toll

I'

141 MIIIIHIPPI

I

.........

Flntroulld

EAST

Ill Rhode tsl•rd

i

...

.........

Semlfln~lt

Stmlftnlll

MIDWEST

(11Kanlal

piSJPt-

Regtonell

',

AI RuppAnn1

Basketball

The Daily Sentinel •. Page 5

NIT first-round play ends

Scoreboard

Crl•h•u~ Msrch 13, 1998 .

NCAA men's basketball tournament begins

· ----~--

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

approval.

Prlc•••

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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Jones' attorneys struggle
to keep alive Clinto·n suit
WASHINGTON (AP) As
Paula Jones' allorneys try to keep
alive her lawsuit againsC President
Clinton . the gro up paying her
lawyers' "'penses is threatening to
.:omplam to authorities that her per"'"allega l Jefen" fund is deceivi ng
rontnbut nrs.
Mr' Jo nes' lawyers were to file
arguments today in federal ct&gt;urt in
Lillie Rnck . Ark .. '" to why her her
.'-lcxual hJr.l:-.:-.mc: nt cast! ~ hoU i d go to

trial '" ,cheJuled May 27 . Clinton'_s
attorne" told the court last month the
suit shOuld he \!i smi sscd.
June .; Iawver..; are Irving to show

a pallem ot wcll~en bcneliting or suf·
ferin~ harm on the job. depending on
ho" - they re,ponded to Clinton's
alkged :-.n ual aJvancl!s. The lawyers
muiJ provide to the court statements
of womc.:n v.ho gaw deposit ions. an~
could make puhlic Cl inton's depositilln in the case from Jan . 17.
The pre; ident has denied Mrs.
Jones · claim that he a.sked her for oral
sex m I'!'! I and was responsible for
de nyi ng her proper raises and
ad vancemen t as a resu lt. At the time,
Cl mton wav governor of Arkansas
;ind Mrv. Jones was a clerk with the
,tate\ indu stria l development"

the Rutherford Institute.
about eKecuti ve privilege.
Brent Perry. a Houston lawyer
"You know I' m notl~l king about
who represents the legal fund, has that." he replied whe n re porters
said its disbursements "have been asked him about any new controvernecessary and appropriate."
sy to shield the president's private
" They have covered such things discussions with advisers. ..
as Mrs. Jones' travel expenses to
Also at the courthouse Thursday,
allend court-ordered proceedi ngs, Chief U.S. District Judge Nonna·Hollegal fees of the fund's own counsel loway Johnson held a closed heari ng
and private investigator's fees," he on leaks to the news media in the
said.
Lewinsky matter.
Perry said Thursday that from July
Clinton's · private lawyer. David
1997 through last February. the Jones Kendall , and Ms. Lewinsky's auorlegal fund received a. net $ 105,000- ney, William Ginsburg, want Starr
mostly through a direct-mail appeal. admonished for leaks of grand jury
He refu sed to release any records of matters. Starr. who also was present.
the fund.
has denied his office was leaking
White House auention turned to secret material.
the civil lawsuit after nearly three
Lawyers representing several
hours of grand ju ry testimony Thu rs- news organi zations, including The
day ·in Was hi ngton by pres idential Associated Press. attempted to have
aide and confidant Bruce Lindsey. the hearing opened to reporters and
Prosecutors are investigating whether the public. Johnson said it would be
Clinton had a sexual relationship with "premature" to rule because the nonformer intern Monica Lew insky and media allorneys had not read the writasked her to lie about it under oath . . ten arguments - but said she might
Li ndsey, de puty Whi te House decide to release transcripts later.
counsel. ca me to the cou rthouse
Via mail and the Inte rne~ the fund
without the large contingent of controlled by Mrs. Jo nes has been
lawyers who accompanied him dur- solicitin g donations on the premise
ing a previous appearance, when he the rnoney·would go to defraying her
rai&lt;ed concern s with prosecutors li tigation expenses.

agency.

The Rutherford Institute, a conservative lawft rm in Charlouesville,
Va .. ts helping Mrs . Jones' lawyers
with their legal case while raisi ng
money for the allorneys· expenses.
But even as the institute works on
her k gal case. it has threatened to go
to the Internal Revenue Serv tce and
state auorneys general to argue the
Paula Jones Legal Fund is misleading contributors. according to an
indiv idual fami liar wi th the dispute.
The legal fund is under the control
of Mrv . Jones and her husband, and
asks contributors to support her liti·
•at ion e.penses. Neither Rutherford
~or her law firm has received any
money from the Jones-controlled
fund. accord ing to John Whitehead of

.1998 LINCOLN

NAVIGATOR

Land transfers
The Fol lowing land transfers were
recort:led recentl y in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Dad. Michael B. and Maria Way·
land to C lar~nce J. and Carol A.
Fairchild, Bedford:
Deed. Franklin and Ida Mae Martin to American Legion Feeney- Bennett Posr 128, Midd leport;
Deed. Francis W. Flanagan and
Shirl ey J. Humphrey to Shirley
James. Olive:
Deed, Gary G. Hines to Deanna D.
_
Hines, Salisbury parcel:
Deed. Ruth Simpson to Gary Jor,
dan and Kathy Ritchie. Sutton;
Deed, Roy E. and Maurita L.
Miller to Billie A. and Ruby A. Davis,
Chester:
Deed, Jen nie L. and Terry Adams
to Richard Carter Caruthers and Barbara J. Wamsley, Bedford;
Deed. Fra ncis A. Case to Edward
A. and Judily A. Crooks, Salisbury;
Deed. Shi rley M. Edwards to
Robert G. Edwards. Olive parceL

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p-()(e~smg fee Roammg chdrge.s. ldxes. loll\ and f'ftworl
wrcharges may apply. OthEr restnctl()(lS and chilr!J('s may
~ply. Sub_~e&lt;:t to uec!lt approval. Not valid wnh any vltle~
offer See ~~ as!llaate f01 complete det~ls Ofltr ends
Mat ch ll. 1998.

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ntw anNa!ron, mrrumum serVIce comm~men! With a local authouze~ earner and credrt approval. ArtiVaDoo f@e IS u•qUired. A month~ ~ervl(e
l' lon d~ance lw and rho~tqes fOf amrme wdl be made. ~m vary dependmg on the olan yqu select. Camer ma~ rmpose d ftar or pro·rated penalty fee for ear~ ter·
~r.iau~ 11 you termmare ~ervtce Wlthrn 120 days of acnva uon. 10 avOid a BOO charge from RadroShac~. you must rrrum the phone. Returned phones must bE accom·
runted by grft certrfl&lt;are Mrssut1) 01 aSlS charge wrlf be imtued.

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1 ] 0 3 year coniracl\ onty Nor vahd wrth PG phonts or ptepard cellular plan\. Cus tomN must actrvate a cellular pt"one and mustrema111 rn good 11arv:lrnq
: rh ; , 1 ~ cootract farlurf 10 do rtus wrll cancel your member~hrp wrth thl' Cross Country Motor Club. Actwanons rn Calrfornra, H,lWan , Ortgon, Wrscon~n aod
Wyommg"!u receNt memberShip rn (ro~l Country Mo10r Club of Ctlrform~. Int., 60)100, MA021~). Cu~tOOlt'fl rn all other ~Idle~ w~l re(t'lvt' member~hlps rn Cro~~
[aunt~ Motot Club, In&lt;.. Boston, MA 02155. Offe• ends Match ]I, 1998
·
.
1 1 RadiO)Nit mres and Ot:altr~ l~tnr R!ldlllShact de~ltrs and fral'l(hrlm may not !lt' partKrparmg rn thr1 ad 01 stock or IPfCr~ ·or del mry rtfm t~ertrstd
v 11d

tfo~ 1 h~t'

Friday, March 13, 1998

11
along
Public NoUct
NW 1/4 of thl Ctnltr
prtctdlng panftraph.
Public Not!C!
Road T-14 (Mount BhDI'!',.ng
C:l:"cltd
In The Common Pl111 Court 0.8057 acre conveyed to Townahlp
Union f:IOICI), CrOHing I 30.,..11
Brtndo K. Darat by diad ·inch
of llalg8 County, Ohio
Elm at 210.87 fttt for to blddtra upon return of
Tht Farmtra 81nk &amp; racordtd In Volume 45, rellrenca; thlnct North 28 tht apeclfloatlone In goOd
Pagt 783 of tht llalga
Savlnga Company,
1 t
1o oondltlon and wlth poltagt
County Olllclll R-a;
dtgrtet 22 m nu 11 1 or ixpre• chargtt prepaid
Plaintiff,
1
7
04
0.8207 ecra conveyed to tecondt watt 10 •
within ten (10) da ... alter
"
VI
North 32 dtgrttt 23
••
Roland e. Wildman, Jr. and and
The Rlv-.lk, Et AI,
mlnut11 40 ttcondt Weal tht datt bldt are opened.
Joonn Wildman by datd 221.30 flat along the ctnltr Dtpotlt will not bt rtlundtd
Dtlencltnta
recorded In Volume 4&amp;,
C11e No. 97 CV 129
T 14 u-pon rttum of documtnlt
Pagt 151 of 'lht Mtlga of Hid Townthlp Road •
at a later data or documanta
Ltgol Notlct Shtrlft'a Sale
(Mount
Union
Road),
thtnee
·
~ h bl
County Official RICOrdl: · aouth
oiRtaiEdagrtta 42 In pocr condldon. ~:tc
d
24
0.9174
ecro
oonveytd
to
Aa Sheriff of Mtlga
minutia
atconda
Wall
lor
contrecta
Noa.
1,
2
and
3
28
county, Ohio I hereby offer Branda K. Daret by deed 309 ,37 feat 10 tht point of only thall bt accomptnltd
In
Volume
47,
recorded
lor aele 11 10:30 o.m. on
1
by e contract bond In an
beginning, croll 1ng an ron amount equal lo the total
April 10th, 1898 A.D., on tht Page 773 or tht Mtlga rod
at
29
.27
faet
lor
front atepa of the Mtlgt County Ofllc:lal Recorda;
ralertnct, containing 1.0 aum of the propoaat
0.3984 ocra conveyed to acre,
County
Courthouoe,
mon or Ia... Including all add alternatet,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
lht Rolond E. Wildman, Jr. and excepting all legal rlghlt of aupportad by a Powar of
following dtacrlbtd real Joann Wildman by datd way.
Attorney, for the bonding
reoordad In Volume . 48,
tltalt:
Addraaa: 311691 MI. Union agant, a cartlllcatt from the
Page
151
of
tht
lltlgo
Tht following dttcrlbtd
Rd., Rutland, OH. Tax map ·Department of lnaurance
·. or
real aatate altuottd In County Olflolol RICOrdl;
parcel ID No. 17· authorizing tho auraty
0.11054
acre
conveyed
to
Sutton Townahlp, llalgo
to do aurety
01 Tax ma P or compeny
butlnttt In the State of
County, In the State of Ohio, llltchtll D. Chapmen by 00888.0 • 17
788'00
Ohio, and a total aum oflhe
100 Acre Lot 297, Townahlp dted recorded In Volume parctiiD
That No.
the -oo
dtctdtnt
2, Range 12, and 100 Acrt 48, Page 879 of the Mal.go Swterlngtn hat felled to propoaal, and llltd with
Lot 298, Townahlp I, Rongt County Ofllclol Recorde.
Said real talllt wet pay uld · egraament tuch propoeal. Bide are to
13, In lht Vllloga of
tccordlng to tht ttrmt and bt ttaled and addrtt~ to
lpplllttd
at $200,000.00
Syracutt, of tht Ohio
condlllona thereof; that the tht Treaturtr of the Eutem
Salt
of
real
ttlllt
to
bt
Compony Purchaaa, and
dtfandantt Unknown Loctl Schoel Dltlrlct Board
btlng the Cora Bartell lor not ltta than two-thlrda SpouH, 11 any, of Wanda A. of Education lor the State of
(2/3)
tht
oforeuld
property (Volume 20, Page
Swearingen, alto known aa Ohio, offlct of the Trtaeurer
605) of the Malga County approlatd value. C11h In Wanda Ann .swwaarln11•n.l of Eattern Local So:hool
hand
on
dalt
of
ala.
Official Recorda), bounded
, Dlatrlct, 38900 State Route
Said aole Ia aubJtcl to and the Unknown
and dHCrlbtd •• lollowt:
Unknown Spou111, In any, 7, Rttdav111e, Ohio 45772
approval
by
lht
Common
Beginning at an Iron pin
of tht unknown Htlrt, and plainly marked on the
tel by thla aurvty In the Plaa Coun, Mtlga County, Davllltt, Llgatttt, and outaldt "Bida for Looae
Ohio.
Eoat lint of Patrick H. and
Jemta M. Souloby RapreHnlatlvtt of Wanda Furnlthlnga for lht New K-8
Mary O' Brien property
Shariff,
Malgt
CouDty, Ohio A. swaerlngen, alto known Elementary School and
(Volume 313, Pogt 439, of
• Wando Ann sweorlngen, Eaatern High School for
(3)
8,
13,
20
3
tc
the lltlgt County Dted
OICtalld, thtlr Execulort, Eoattrn Local School
Recorda) at thllntartlcllon
Admlnlatratort, CuatOdlana, DIat r Ic I .
Add~lonally,
Public
Notice
with tha aouth Una of Wallar
Aalgno, or Guardlana, my envtlopea ehall Identify the
Floyd and Anna L.. Routh
PUBUC NOTICE
claim to have an lnltreat In contract numbtr(e) baing
proparty (Volume 006, Page
FORECLOSURE OF
uld reel
roperty. bid.
275, of the Malgo county
MORTGAGE
~::~:;:~~~:. decedent
damande Dlatrlct
The Eastern
Local
School
Olllclal Recordt), tald
Common Plut Court,
Board of
Education
Rouah lint 1110 btlng the
lltlga County, Ohio
on tht flret with tho tpproval of lht
lOuth right ol way of what
CASE NO. 96-CV,007
acilon fer Ohio School Facllltlea
wao the Ohio River Eltctrlc
Beneficial Mortgage Co. of
$35,488.&amp;4; · with Jnfi real Commlaalon re11rvea lhe
Railway end Power Ohio vt. Unknown Spouaa, thereon at 14.25 percent per right to reJect any and all
Company;
If ony of
.
annum from Januory 23, blda.
Thence along the aouth
Wenda A. S-rlngtn,
UIINI; that Hid mortgllgl bt
By the Ordtr oltha
Una of tht Rouan proparty ·
ate., till.
lorteiOHd; that tha amount
Uta M. Rltchlt
. South 50 dtg. 01' 49" Eat!
Unknown SpouH, If ony, ollltna on tht proparty bt
St:hool Dlatrfct Board of
a dlotanct of 75.81 feat to ot Wando A. Swtorlngen, . maraholltd; that tha real
Education Trtaturer
on Iron pin aet by lhla oleo known at Wenda Ant) property be aold and tht
John C. Rice
aurvay and South 89 dag. Swetrlngtn, and lht amount dut plaintiff bt paid
Sohool Dlatrlct Board of
18' 57" Eaot a dlaltnca of Unknown Helra, Unknown from the proceadt of the Education Board Prtaldant
42.61 IHI to an Iron pin HI Spouott, If . ony, of the 1111, together with coatel-(::3:..)8.:.;,_1'"'3,:..;20~,2~7~==by thla IUIVIY
Unknown Htlra, Davlattt, haraln; , that daftndanll
PUBUC NOTICE
Thtnct South 53 dtg. 23' Ltgalttt ,
end
UnknownSpouae, llany,ol
The
following
13" Eaat a dlelanct of Reprattnlatlvat of Wanda
Wando
A.
Swearingen,
also
eppllcatlona
and/or
verified
345.11 IHI to I point In tht A. Swtortngtn, alao known
known
I I Wanda Ann complalnta ware received
weot line of the village of 11 Wenda Ann Swearingen,
SyracuH proparty (VOlume Decaaaed, thtlr Executoro, Swearingen, and the and the following draft,
332, P1ga 457, of lht Mtlga Admlnlotratora, Cuatodlana, Unknown Helra, Unknown propoaed, or final acllona
Spouata, II any, of the wert laaued, by tht Ohio
County Dttd Reccrdo);
Aaalgna, or Guardlant,
Thence along the wtal, upon w~qm atrvlca of Unknown Helrt, Dtvleaea, Environmental Protection
t II I I t I I ,
I nd
Agency (OEPA) latl wttk.
aouth and taot 11n11 of tho aummona cannot bt made, L
village of Syracuat South btcoutt thf realdtnct and Repreaantallvea of Wehde • Actlona" Include the
38 dag. 26' 40" Weal a oil other oddrettaa of aald A. SWIIrlngtn, oleo known adoption, modification, or
dllllnct of 131.50 IHito on dalenditnta art unkn11wn 11 Wende Ann Swearingen, revocation of ordtra (other
Iron pin HI by thlt ourvty and cannot with rataonabla OICtattd, lhtlr Executors, than emergency ordera) ;
paaalng an Iron pin tel for dlllgonce ba aactrtalned, Admlnlllntora, Cuetodlane, the laauanca, denial,
reference 11 11.54 ltat, are hereby notified that on Alllgno, or Guardlana, be modification or· revocation
South 85 dag. 25' 20" Elata Januory 30, 1998, the required to HI up thtlr lltn~ of llcanaH, perrhlta, ltaHa,
dlatanct of 458.00 fHito an plaintiff II ltd a complolnt In Cll' lnttraot In aald real varlancaa, or ctrtlllcotea;
Iron pin HI by lhla turvty Common Pleot Court, property or bt forever and the approval or
and Nor)h 38 dag. 28' 40" Melga County, Ohio, In Clot borrtd from auartlng the dloapproval of plona and
Eaat a dlatanca of 38.DO Itt! NO. 98·CV..00007, ogalnat tame, and for attorney ltaa, .aptclllcatlona . "Draft
·Actlona " are written
to 1 point paoelng an Iron Unknown Spouat, If ony, of andooata.
Tht dtftndante Unknown jtlaltmenta of the Director
pin HI lor rtfertnct at I 8.24 Wanda A. Swtorlngan, tic.,
Environmental
SpouH,Itony,ofWandaA. of
flat:
tl al., alleging that on Moy S-rhl11n, alto known It 'iProlactlon't (Diractor'a)
Thence South 53 dag. 23' 28, 111117, decedtnt Wanda
13" Eaat 1 dllllnca of A. Swaorln11n, lito known Wanda Ann Swoorlngen, Intent with reapect to the
133.84 feet to 1 point In the 11 wondo Ann Swtorlngan and the Unknown Htlra , llaouanct, denial , ate. of a
Unknown Spouaao, II ony, penhlt, llcanat, order, ate.
waot Uno of RuaHII end/or (hereinafter •swaorlngtn") ol
the Unknown ·Htlra, 1nttraoted peraona may I
Donna Powtra (VOlume 001, tKtCuttd and delivered to
1
Page . 211, of tht lltlge plaintiff a wrllttn loan Devlaetl, Ltgatata, and 1tubmlt written commtnta or
Rtpreatntetlvea
of
Wanda
requtat 8 ·public meeting
County Official Racorda);
agratmtnt (htrtlnafler A. SWearingen, alto known regarding drefl actlona.
Thence along tho woat "ogrtamtnl"), that cltctdent
and oouth lhiaa of Powtrl Bwtarlngan hal dtfaulltd In 11 Wende Ann Swearingen, Commanta or public
DICttted, thtlr Extcutora, mtttlng requella must bt
South DO dag . .05' 04" Wtal tht poymtnl of told Admlnlatrttora,
Cuatodlana, aubmltted within 30 daye of
a dlatance of 18.8S fttt to agreement and owtt to
Aoalgne,
or
Guardlana,
notlca of the draft action.
an Iron pin 111 by thla plolnllff $35,4118.94, with hereinabove named are "Propotad
acllona" art
aurvty and South 89 dtg. lnttrttt thereon from further nodfled that thay are written atatementa
the
54' 56" Eaat a dlatanca of January 23, 1898, at tht rate required to anawtr aald dlractor'o Intent ofwith
25.17 fHI to an Iron pin HI of 14.25 ptrctnt per onnum; complolnt
on or btlore April reapect to the Issuance,
by thlt eurvay.
.that •• aecurlty tor tht 17, 1898, which lnclud11 28 dtnlal, modification ,
Thence South 53 dag. 23' payment of 11ld agrtamant, daya
lrom ha leal revocation, or renewal of a
13" Eaat 1 dlatanca of 211.85 dtcadtnt Swurlngtn publication,
or Judgment permit, ncanH, or variance.
Itt! to an Iron pin tal by aKecuttd and delivered to may be rendered a Written comment• and
thla aurvay at tht edge of plolntlfl her certain dtmandtd thareln.
requaata for a public
an aflty;
mortgogt dttd, lor tht Nor:man II. Frank Co., LP.A. meeting regarding ·a
Thence along the wttt realdenct at 39891 Mt. Norman M. Frank, (001536) propoaed · action may be
aide of 11ld otley South 00 Union Road, Rullond, Ohio
&amp; Attorney lOr Plolnllff, aubmltttd within 30 daya of
dag. 05' 04" Well a dllllnct 45771, conveying lht
Bantllclal
Mortgage Co. of nollct of the propoaed
of 31 .11 fttl to on Iron pin following
dncrlbtd
Ohio action. An adJudlcotlon
HI by thla aurvey;
prtmlua,
33 North High Stm~ Suitt hearing may be held on a
Thence South 53 dag. 23'
Dttd Book Volume 327,
SS9 . propoaed ec:tlon II a hei rlng
13" Eaat a dlatanct of 28.31 Page 871, Situated In t~e Columbua, Ohio 43215-3078
requttt or obJection ola
fttl to on Iron pin ttl by townahlp of Scipio, county
Telephone: 614-221-1882 received by the OEPA whhln
thlt turvey In the eatt lint ol Mtlga, State of Ohio, to- (2) 13,
20, 27, 13) 8, 13; 20 8 30 daya of luuanct of the
of 100 Acre Lot 297;
wh:
propoaed action. Wrtttan
Thtnca along the . 1111
Legal dtacrlptlon for
Public Notice
commenta, requeeta for
line of 100 Acre Lot 297 property located In aectton
Notlct To Blddora
South 00 dtg. 05' 07" Weal 3, townahlp 7N, range 14W, Sultd propotala will be public meetlnge, and
a dlltanct -of 880.40 feat to of Scipio Townahlp In llllgt rtcolvtd lor tht Ohio adJudication h•arlng
muat be aent to:
Ohio River poaalng an County, Ohio.
School
F ac 1.111111 requeata
Hearing
Clark, Ohio
pin HI for rtfartnct ot
Beginning at a point 1111 Commllllon. by tht Eaatam Environmental
Protection
815.021HI;
about 1325 1111 lrom the Local School Dlatrlct board
Agency,
P.O.
Box
1049,
Thanca along tha aouth Southwtal corner of tnt Of Education at tht Ofllct of
lln11 of tOO ·Acre Lott 2117 northwttl quarter (NW 1/4) tht Traaaurar of the Eattem Columbut, Ohio 43216-1049
and 298 (tha north bank of according to dead volume Local School Dlatrlct Board. (Ttlephona: 614-844·2129).
the Ohio River Ia ttaumed 277, poga 581 of aald 38900 Stott Routt 7, "Final Actlona: are actlona
to approxlmota lht aouth taction 33, 11ld point of Rttdtvllle, Ohio 45772 und.l of lhe director which are
lint of 1DO acre loto 297 beginning btlng marktd by 2:30 P.M. Eaatem Doyllght effective upon lttuonct or a
and 298) North 88 dag. 24' an Iron rOd on tht aouth lint Tlmt, on tht I 5th dey of alated ttlactlvt data.
08" Wttla dletance of 84.05 of aid NW 1/4 ttctton of April, 1998 and opened Purauant to Ohio Rtvlttd
feel to a point, North 88 aald atcllon 33: thence, Immediately thtreofter, lor Coda Section 3745.04, a
dag. 54' 31 " Weal a dlatance north 90 dagrtll wtt147.35 Fumlahlnga end Equipment flnel action may be
to
tht
145.94fttllo 1 point, North fHI fOllowing tht aoutn lint lor tht K·B Eltmtntory appealed
Environmental
Rt
vlaw
89 dtg. 03' 53" Weal a of 11ld NW 1/4 tiCtlon olong Schoo( and Eatttrn High
dlatanco of 170.23 IHI lo a 1 ltnct lint end morlltd by School for Eaatem Local Apptolt Commlaa lon
(ERAC) (Formerly Known
point, South 87 dag. 21 ' 47" a HI Iron rOd.
School Dlatrlct. Stparote Aa
The Environmental
Will a dlatanca of 254.42
Thtncl following the next
will bt ractlved lOr tht
Board
Of .Review) by a
!tel to 1 point, North 81 thrtt callt:
Furnltur• parton who
waa a party to 1.
dag. 52' 52" Weal a dlatanca North 09 dtgrtu 53 (Conii'ICI No.1) $138,000
proceeding
before the ·
ot 146.72 IHI to 1 point, mlnuttt 88 aeconda aut, Office Furnlahlnga
director by filing an oppaol
North 79 dtg. 47' 14" Wtlt a 178 .04 Ital; North 48 (Conlnct No.2) $107,000
within 30 daya of notlca of
dltta nce of 9S.48 fttt to 1 dtgrtta 58 mlnuttt ·22
Window
Trtatmant tht final octlon. Purtuent to
poln~ and North 87 dag. 37' 'atconda 1111, 82.45 fut; (Contnct No.3) $33,000
28" Wtata dlallnct ol41 .14 North 66 degrtta 17
llualc Furnlahlnga Ohio Revlatd COda Section
.3745.07, a fin al action
IHI to 1 point In the 1111 mlnutta 41 aecondt tall; (Conlnct No. 4) $12,000
d e nying ,
lint of Patrick H. and !lory !14.70 IHI;
Kitchen
·a ppllancaa la l ulng ,
modlfyii'Q, revoking , or
O'Brien property (Volume
Eaat point HI end marked (Contrtct No. 5) SV.OOO
renewing 1 parmlt, llctnH,
313, Poga 439, of lht lltlga by on Iron rod ; thence
In Accordance with lht
verlanca which Ia not
Count Dttd Racordt);
following o lint aouth 24 plene and apaclllc,tlona or
practdad
by 1 propoaad
Thanct along O' Brien. · degraae 42 mlnultt 28 prepared
by
Vargo,
may bo appealed to
North 00 dag. 41' 03" Eaata aeconcie wtat 2BO.t0
Cttlldy, lngh1m. end action,
dlatanct of 14118.34 Itt! to baing tht llmt lint Glbbe Archltecta, Inc., tOO tht ERAC by filing an
lht point of beginning dttcrfbtd In clttd bock
Front SlrHI, lllrllttt, OhiO appeal within 30 daya of
lauence or tha final action.
patting an lnin pin tel lor poge 581 to tha point277
0j 45760 tnd on lila In tht ERAC appaala muat bt flied
rtfertnct at 111 .48 feet, beginning aubJtct lo all
olllct ot the Exacutlvt with: Envlrol1mantal Review
containing 25.079 acrtt, lagalooH.;,anta, containing Director Olllo School
mort or leu, of which 7.714 0.4221 ecrta mort or 1111
Facllltltt Commltllon, 118 Appealt (:ommltalon, 236
ocrea Ia In 100 Acre Lot 298
Dttd book volume 7 Eoat Broad Street, Suitt Eaat Town Strait, Room
end 17.365 ICrtl II In 1D0 page 887
' 1400, Columbua, Ohio 300, Columbut, Ohio 4321 5.
copy of tht apptal ·mutt
:Acrt Lot 2117, aubJICIIO Ill
Situated In tha Townlhlp
end thl Olllca of tht A
bt atrved on the Director
legal eaaemanta and rlghll of Solplo, County of Malgi, Trlaaurtr
Local wlthln 3 daya alter filing the
1
ofwoy.
School
State of Ohio, To-Wit:
with the ERAC.
Tht above deacr:.llon
Baing In Section 33. Town
Route 7, appnl
1.-uanct of Claaa 2 Scrap
wet madt In accor anca 7 North, ronga 14 Wtat ol
48772.
with on · actual aurvty the Dhlo Company'•
of pllno 1nd Tlrt RICOVtry Raglllratlon
con ducted by Eugant purchaaa tnd btlng
1nd lonna, Tht Junk Tiro Company
Triplett, P.S . 18788 dtacrlbtd 11 followa:
further 41188 Hilla Road
.
conducted on 4/24, 5/8, 518 beginning at a point Eoat
moy bt Pomeroy, OhiO
Application
No(a)
D6-4882R
.
and 5/10, 1998. Btortng art obout 1325 lttt from . tht
the Office of '
1hle flnel action not
oaaumtd 1nd art uatd only Southwttt corner of tht
upon rtquatt
to txpraaa angular Northwttt quorttr (NW 1/4)
omount of prtctdtd by propoatd
· action end Ia apptaloblr to
mtaau-nt;
tald
33, btlng
told ~~~~ Upon
payable
·Audltor'a Po reel Noe. 20. of
point
of Stctlon
beginning
IICIIpttoofthta ERAC. A Scrop Tlra
00050.000 end 20-GD052.00
morktd by on Iron rOd on
accompanied by a Recovery Facility Cloaa II
,Excepting trom tht obovt .the aouth lint ol aid NW
a1 n1med obovt, Raglatrttlon CtrtiROU,.waa
doacrlbtd raol ltlllt, tht 1/4 of aold Section 33;
Architect will forward ' IIIUid to Tht Junk Tlte
l t fOIIowlt~g parctla:
thtnct Eott 288.74 feat cop ln
ot
bidding Company.
' (3) 13 1tc

f.'::l':

~

F.rld.ay, March 13, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.'

NontiNG NUNS,.

Carmichael~s

Farm &amp; Lawn

.992-2196

•.::..- ..... tt1:\- ~unt;.

... .....""::-

UKEADEERE

c .

•

MUFFLER SHOP

992·2196

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Drive

Gallipolis
Across from Gallia Auto Sales on old Rte. 35 West
New Summer Hours Mon.-Fri. 8-5;.Sat. 8·3

4615

94·111

0UTltT!tiRD

PHONE992·2196
j

Guaranteed Service

.,

&lt;r~ .

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.lil] • E 1--1

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1·8

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

106 North Second Ave. • MlddiBport, OH

•

992·2825

THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES
COMING UP: BUSCH GRAND
NATIONAL

r--=,---. BEU.SOUTH MOBIL·
ITY/OPRYLAND 320

WHERE: Nu!MIIa

Speedway USA
WHEN: SUnday,
March 15

DEFENDING C PIOH: StOlle Porte
TRACK QUAUFYING

BAUMlUMBER

. . iS.. . .
When rou wanl hdtne rightTM

to_Bobbw' HM*!n. :m .

WINIT'ONCUP-

haa won mOre than one race. Previous

I. Mille Matlin, 410.
2. Jtfllkrton, 432.

3 . ~ M~ , 440.

Clfl:

JEFF

.

G

WARNER

--~==
,_..,OM.,.
tta•~M

.....

Olllct: - l W
1-7424111
, .. , .1~1

- -

2. Joe Rullnwl, 170.
3. F.Jk*
1115.
4 . . . . &amp;pqvu., 10).
5. ar.g Blflle, 155.

s.Milt t&lt;M~Nth, 421.

"·.~mmy s~. •21
II Terry l.abotQ, 54.
•. a-t Lilli. 310.

abound, arwJ an lmpresatve sign and
8Kp&amp;naive menu do not often trans·
late into cullnaty satlafac1kln. One
exception Ia Nashvllle'a edHion of ·
The NASCAA Cafe. A11 lmprlllive
array of stock car memorabilia still
plays second ftd&lt;lle to 'the oenu-

.

winners were Green, Jack Ingram, Bobby

Labonte, Rick Mast, Steve Ptl/1&lt; and
Darrell Wollrlp.
NOTABL£: Cllavroleta have won four of
the previous abc raceo. B&lt;tlck and Pontiac
claimed the other two. No Ford has 011er

won a Buac:h GN race at Nashville....

Only two otlast vear'atop five - nm

Fedewa and Jeft Purvis - are entered
thla year.... No ex.-wlnner$ are entered.

7 . ..,

s.we.. 141.

.

e. Bob Ktllbwlld, 142.
II. &amp;ten Miler, 158.

t. Jifl' ~.~.

ADVERTISE ON
THIS PAGE ·

.Call 992-2156
Dave Harris
Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle
Ext. 105
For More
Information

... Mike McLaughlin and Larry Poa110n

aN ex-Nashville pole winners.

~]:lrnml

--~

Jeremy Mayfield

6 . Joe~UO.

~

Purvltl

llonal food .

c.r.a.

4. &amp;.d.lhat Jooee. 420.
5. Rlncfy l.a.loit, 410.
II. Herm11 Sldllr, M.
7. , . , Dillon, l 7V.
II. Mlrl Grw\, 317 .

6. Bit Elkin, 427.
II. Jlft' GorOOn, 412.
7' Man; Meltln, 408

.I~
- ,,

Be caretut when samptng the
cuisine ol Nas!MIIe. Touristtrapo

IO.I . A
Mike~
:t$1 . . ---------====;;:;:~===::----------o n -, 100.
I'IIOFILI

IUICN

t . f\ISiy w.a.;.., 505.
2 OM Eamherdl, 44e.

www.toro.com
•1997 The Toro Company

Fo r Homeov. ners
Insurance

18, 1Qg8.

RACE RECORD: David Green, CheviOIet, 78.217 mpl1, MtllCh 18, 11195.
OTHER FORMER WINNERS: No one

POIIIT5 STANDINGS

•---

RECORD: Slt~lnQ
Mtlltln, Chevrolet,
113.!5ee mph, MtllCh

Q
,_,

St. Rt. 248 Chester
985-3301

•

Dear NASCAR This Week,

Why don' t we sec any Dodge
or Chrysler products out rheie
competing with the Fords and
Che vys? Some of those new

JROMWTWHI

Chrysler products look as if 1hey

WINSTON CUP SERIES:

a qualilying SOBSion marlted l&gt;f

were specifacally manu ractured
to go out there and uy to blow
the doors off those Ford and
OM guys ....
Kevin Smith

turprlaeo. Todd

Bodine, w11o
ltld laJied to make the field
lhrte In a ""'· qualiflecl
88001111, and votaran Dick
Trickle was third.
BUSCH GRAND NATlONAI.:

Rain dominated Primestar 500

·weekend at Atlanta Motor
Speedway, so much so tltat ~ he
race had not been c:ompleted by
NASCAR Thlo Week's cfead.
lines.
The ieams had ·only 45 minutes o1 Friday practice before
quailying. and evan that was
marred by a serious aocldent.
Rookie Steve Part&lt; sullered

Mansfield, Ohio

Jlta drlvtlro - . even leo8

Dear Kevin,

lorlunale then the Cup t1r1von
Rain washed out both rounds ol

Chr ysler cont inu es 10 insist
th at it has no plans 1~ compete
in the: Winston .Cup Series,
althougb there is considerable

qualifying, leaving the Stltl300
llnt&lt;JP to be set by PCint stand·
multjpe ~actures after bouncing lngs and entry poetmal&lt;a.
off the track's Wall in three &amp;epa·
Then the rains postponed the
rate places. The driver of the
Saturday race, and when the
Pennzoll No. 1 Chevrolet under· Sunday Cup race was subsewent surgery to have a pin
quently postponed as well, the
placed In the broken lemur In
Stlhl300 could rot be run on
his nghtleg.
Monday. No make-up dale had
John Andret1i won the pole In
been 881 1&gt;t pr... time.

sentiment from Chrysler own·

ers ror the factory to reth ink
this policy. Dodge has competed with mod erate success in
NASCAR 's Cnlftsmu Truck'
Series.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
1was wondering why Richard
Petty docs not accept or displ ay

fOP TEN
Weekly ranklnga by NASCAA This Week writer Monte Outton. last
weell's tfllldng lB In P81tntheSel .

e. Jeremy Mtylleld 111

1. Jaff GoniOn (I)
Holding Chevy line
2. Rutty Wllllct (2)
KrlOW$ Taurus beat
3. Dele Etm- (3)
The last hurrah?
4. Mtrlt llartln (4)
Big inVeg.,

Summerfields
Restaurant

Chester
985·3857
o•·•~' ltU'I·:

n.n ·

12:30-6:30

Coming-out party?
1. Jell Burton (7)
Starting to ruotle

Roger Penoke.
.
CAREER RECORD: 113
Can he mal&lt;e anolller run?
One of the season's big· starts, 0 wlna, 1 pole, 7top
8. Bill Elliott (8)
ger atones is the "arrival' of fives. 13 top t Os, more
Regaining lost touch
young driver Jeremy May·
than $2.8 m1111on In career
5. Dale Jarmt (IS)
10. 11obby Labonta 110)
fleld. Lcng considered a
eamlnga.
Worltlng klnke out
On the verge
star of the future, Mayfield
HOW DO YOU FEEL
moved near the front of the ABOUT THE CURRENT
Winston Cup point race thla SEASON? ' I guaaa It would
ON THUCHIDUU
year alter a merger in the
be pretty much of an under·
ofl·season
between
his
team
st atem~nt to say we're feelRice
Wklnw
and Penske Racing South. Ing good. The season has
Mard1 8
PrimHtel 500, Hampton, Ga.
Mayfield finished In tho
A. """"'
really gotten oflto a groat
Maret! f.:! - r,.nSQulh ..00, o..1ingtan, S.C
Marcl12i
Food City 500. "&amp;IIIDI, 111"111.
top live in two ollhe sea·
J. Gotaon
R. V'oillllel
start lor us."
1"*111118 600, FOR Wonrl , TUM
J. BlttOO
son's first three races. He
HOW CLOSE IS THAT
~11 9
GOOIJy"l 1500, Mlrtinl'o'llll, VI.
J. """"'
· is one of she current Win FIRST \IICTORY? ·we feel
April 28
DIIH&amp;rd 500, TeiiCiegl, AIL
Cllitomla1 500, Fot1.1M. Calif.
ston Cup drivers from the
Mavl
we're right on lhe verge of
J. """"'
May 1&amp;
The Wn.ton, Concord. N.C.•
Kentucky
city
of
Owens·
J.
""""'
winning one. We had a car
May24
Coca-Cola 600. Concord. N.C.
J. J. """"'
boro.
capable ol winning every
M•y 31
Miller !00, Dcwer, Del.
..-..
AGE: 28
June I
PonMt 400, RICivnoncl , Vt
race so far, and I think
,....,......_ r. ..-.. WIFE:
Miller 400, BrooNyn, Mlc:h.
June "
Christina
we've shown everybody
PQIXI"IO DOC, Long Pl:n;t. Pa.
J. HOMETOWN: Grew up In we're for real.•
.
Slve Man 300, SOnciiN, eMf.
Owensboro, Ky.; resides In
Pepsi .aD, Dlvtcna BMch. Fla.
CAN YOU KEEP IT UP?
Jilly lube 300, loulcrl. N.H.
J. a-n
Davidson, N.C.
"Balleve me, I know lhla Ia
Peml~ 500, t:.ong Pond; Pa.
CAR: No. 12 Mobil 1
ea~y In the season. really
Ford Taurus, owned by
Bud • t 1M Glen, WdQnl Glen, N.Y.
early. We're not sitting here
J. T.Bodlno
Aug. 16
O.VIIbiu 400, Blooklyn, Mdl.
Martin
Michael Kranefuss and
planning where we want our
Goody'1 SOO, BristOl, oT.vt.

,.7
...,.

""'"

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

-

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

.."""

....

CMT JOO, LouOOn, N.H.
- . , !500, ""'· S.C.

•AII·II• event

111 Court St.
Pomeroy
992-2155

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

"""

'*'"'

"""'
,_

t&lt; Wo/IICO

J. J. """"'

e. ~

The veteran driver tleat;rlbed
the lnclernant Atlanta W911thar
In pllllosop/llcalterms. 'II
yvuVtr been arouncltltiB busl·
ness lor any lertglh of tino,
yvuVtr sal through a lot ol roln

and even some snow and

from Timmonsville, S.C.,

won 83 races during his
career.

www.stthlusa.co m

See us for Your StihtPower Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

flrltllct.

table atlhe Now Yorlt ban·
quat or anything like that.
lt'a not that we aren't conli·
dent becauaa we ara. But
we're raallstic encugh to
know thatlhls Is a tong,
long eeason. We're not
even a 1Olh of the way
through it yet. So much can
happen In a real short
pericd of lime. You can go
from hero to zero in tha
blink olen eye.'
HOW DOES A YOUNG
DRIVER AND TEAM COPE
WITH ADVERSITY? ·ouf
goal Is to ·make sure that
when bad things do hap·
pen, we've dona everything
we could do to avoid it. I
don't ever want to be In a
wreck and so far In my
. career, I haven't been In
very many of them. But I'd
rather be in cne battling for
lhe win than In one beHIIng
for 20th."

finlahed filth. oeconct and
in the nuon·a ttret
races.

Hyou've got a

_,ton

or a

oommom, wmo: NASCAR
lltll- YOIW TUm, C/O

The
!Iuton
- Gaatonle,
· 2500 E.
FrankHn
ltvd.,

N.c. -..

lne·a
team
I=their
hlo
in the
~ Tabasco,
Prlmeotar
on the
rcw. Bodine had

• With their backs to
the wall, Todd

new

Bod·
p!/1

driver and

new sponsor,

500

~

front

failed to maltethe
sta11ng field In the

I

Q

:r

S!lasort'a first lhrae

races.

..

NuhvUie.

1. Who were the three Flock brotherl?

Cup Series 1n 19m

0

also- 11

place to attend a ~tad~; car
race. ~ you can tear youroett
away from tho quaint olfllalr-

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

RuSty Wallace 'loving every minute' of being in first place

RAONG ON THI..\I~r'

3. Where did Wendell Scotl win hlo only rooo?

WHO'S NOT? Daootl Waltrip,
wno Mished 33td, 4111 and
35th during the u me &amp;pan.

555 Park St.
Middleport

992-6611

ground's ~ay. check out
lions, Inti donl lkM youroett
to the tourisltr/11)1.

wtnd, huntctnes: he IBid.
NASCAA Thla- Wrltor
Dunon gf- hla
OPinion: "Been lhera. ttone ft.
. The ptOj)le ...., -nv take ft
on tho c:t&gt;n In bed MB1her
ant the tans.•

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.

.Mu&gt;lt: City U.S.A., II a graot

2. l'v!lo was the woman drlvar who had lour top. tO linlohea on the
W~t~ston

Dear Brad,
In deference to his mother's
wishes, Petty does not display
references to any alcoholic be\1erage on his cars.

Fan Tips

TRIVIA

Ruety Wallace, who

Geoff Bodine vs. lhB elements

accuse Cale Yarborough
of stroking his way to a
championship. The only
man ever to win three
consecutive Winston Cup
lilies , Yarborough won.
nine races in 1976, nine
in 1977 and 10 in 1978.
Yarborough , a one·time .
semi-pro football fullback

~ -~ .,

........

al the COU"'try mueic attrac·

"lAo\&gt;. pue ~~ '(108 "I

AIOIIIID THE WAGE

By llontt Dutton
NASCAA This WeeK
HAMPTON, Ga.- Fint place
in the Wi nston Cup point stand·
ing.s (entering At lanta) had Rusty
Wallace feeling, well, on top ur
the world.
.. That's a great position to be
in, and we' re Iovin&amp;every
minute of it," said Wallace. "The

fifth, second and third for an
be clicking bcuer than lbo way we
ave.raee of 3.3. That comp.ucs
were staning off this year. ll's
favonbly with 1990, when he
preny hard foe-us toar&amp;uc that we
wu seventh, sixth and fi fth in the shouldn 't atl~sit that ~
fi rst th ree races. Wh en he won
type ofs i r u at i~l"j
bis ollly c; t nship (1989), he
HEELS IN'JtQ)IOH : The sud·
began the
with fi nishes of den IOS5 of'Steve Puk to injury
181h, first - 3 st(
put the firat·year Winston Cup
T rM! ~ JICit A OIANGI1
team of Dale and Teresa Earn·
Robert Y• tes was almost apolo- hardt icto a fit of planning and

way wc 'rt running, we're going
to get our share of wins . What
I'm tickled tu dea th about ri&amp;ht
now is the ract that the consis·
tcncy we have is at 1n atl · limc

'•o"•icclcin,,.an~~.urcncR
inegnohiua~wsion
...
......
..
chief of his N&lt;J. 2S ford team.
Richard Labbe, who worted
with driver Kenny Irwin last
year,~
· u replaoe Reno.
•1 ly doa'Jiike change," said

get the car in rhc: field whc;n sccond·rOund qualifying was rained
out on S.1Urd1y. Mile Wallace
would have driven the Pennzo il·
sponsored Monte Carlo if the

session had not been canceled.

The Eamhardts' Craftsman
Truck Sc:ric.s driver, Ron Homa·
day, will pilot the car at Darling·

ton and Bristol.
Rich Bickle, who finished
second in the truck series point
stlndings last year and had a
Winston Cup ride fall thro ugh,
Phil Parsons climbed ipro the
c:ould be the choice whe n HorJla·
high."
backup car without practice lime day returns to the trucks. Norris
In 14 full scasofls, Wallace has
and gave Park'• No. 1 ~le t 1 said there are no pla ns to bri ng
never staned this impressively. In \ Yates.
what wu soing oo1he a first-round qualifyina apccd, f) up Dale Earnhardt Jr. for a
the fin:t threc: races, he fi nished
"tMr part of last sc.ason seemed to though it was nGt fast enoosh to' Winston Cup try.
Copyright IIIII T1to Gillon CN.C.) a.mq • D t - by UnlvtrNI
Syndleoto 111001 25U'r:W • For rot- of Morclt 0
~
Pitkl~.• ,· n.iuro'cs will keep him
~
sidelined, by the beil current
estimate, for 3 to 5 monthl.

Racenut'a Home P·~
.
,.,.,.html
http~/oas ls . ot.com/-ra

Strong potnta: One of meov
BftOS SPICed wltl1 hUrt)Or, . I
oplnk&gt;na and unaball&gt;etl /
tavorttlam toward one Of
anotner driver. team and
"""" of ~· lncludtt wo
- ~loctlon of links Ill
olller lfttt.
I

Wllk potnta: Annoying
~

ollaytng light-blue

ovtr teal background. Also,

htl enllltiiiUm hli'liliiCI a .

page was 1ao1 updat..
ed on Feb. 24, 1ggs,

bit:·ll~

'tl

',.

P... 0...., by EM Porlef/Tht Qulon O.ZMM - - - - '

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!!

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

Denblgh Garrett

Inc~

Ripley, WV 26271

~

Bus. Phone (304) 372·3673 ·
1-800-964-FORD
Rt. 21 at the Rlpley-Falrplaln Exit 1132 ·

Come See Us For All Your ·
Parts and
Service Needs

'

•.

FIUD Of THE wtll ·

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

32

-....

WHO'S HOT?

The rtch ltlltlory ol NASCAR
No one could ever

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Sortt. •

The Daily
Sentinel

By llorllt Outtort
NASCAR Tills Wee1t

8. Terry Labonte (8)

....

.lotr'l ~TNt Wiele;

Jartmy Maylltld IIJ11 ltla 111m Ia 'on lite Vlflia• of winning -

anytnina lhiJ '" to do with
Busc:h?
Brad Hamner
Shelbyville, Ind .

Advertise on this page

Call 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Don ·Riffle Ext. 105
For More Information
•

'

tO

co•

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
· Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Friday, March 13, 1~8

Yard Sale

70

.

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

Apostolic
Chur&lt;h ol Jesus Christ ApoSiolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Evening - 1:30 p.m.

Church of Christ

Episcopal

Pomtroy Cbun:b ofChriAt
212 W. Main St.

Grace Epi!Copol Church

Minister: Danriy Bias
Sunday School • 9:30 a,m.

326 E. Main S1., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev . D. A. duPiant ier
Holy Eucharist an4

W=hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Coffee hour following

Pomeroy Westside Church ol Christ
. 33226 Children's Home Rd .
Sunday School - I I a.m.
Worship - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Wedncoiday Service• - 7:30 .
Middleport Chun:h of Christ

As~embly of God
Llbtrty Ass,eml•ly '
P.O. Bux 467,

5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.

"

Mason, W.Va
Pus1or: Neil Tennant
· Services- 10:00 4-!fl· and 7 p.m.

Wor5hip- 8: 15 , 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Baptist Church (Southern)

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd S~nday

Pastor: Jim Ditt y

Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chopel

Flalwoods

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

FomtRun
Pastor: Chad Emrick

Rose of Sheron HoUnetS Church

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King

Thursday Services • 6:30p.m.

Heath (Middleport)

Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Wednesday Se rvice- 7 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 630 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport

Zion Ch•rch or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Warson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Chur&lt;h
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Tuppen Plain Chun:h ol Chri•t

Worship - 10:45 &lt;l.m.

Instrumental
Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service • 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main St.

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

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

First Southern Baptist

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant

Bradbul')' Chun:h oiChrisl

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a. m., 7:00p.m.

Pasror: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Fint BapliSI Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer St. , Middleport
Sunday Sc hoo~ · 9:15a.m.

Rutland Chur&lt;h ol Christ
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
\Vor§hip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Worship- 10: IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Bradlont Chur&lt;h oiChri!l
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Racine Finl Baptist
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Siher Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Linle

Worst.ip - II a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Mt Union Bapti•t
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Libtrty Chrislian Chun:h
Dexter

Pastor: Woody Cali

Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.

Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Church
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday wo,.hiP. - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study - 6:00p.m.

Lanp•llle Christian Chur&lt;h
Sunday School - 9:30a.m. .
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedncoiday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church

Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St Rl. 7, Middlepor1
Sunduy St.hc.x1l · lO a.m.

p,stor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school - 10:30 a. m
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Eve ning . 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30

Reed.,ille Chur&lt;h ol Christ

Hillsidt Baptist Churth

•

St. Rt. 143 just off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. John Neville
- JO a.m.

Worship- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Won~hip - 10: IS ~·Dl ·

l'ortiand-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer

Beth1ny
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Wednesday Serviets · 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services-

The Chur&lt;h ol Jesus
Christ ol Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.

· 51. John Lutheran Church
Pine: Grove

East Lelart

S1., Mason

Church of God

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-

Mt Morioh Chun:h ol God

Fon:sl Run Baptist

Pastor: Rev . James Satterfield

7P·j·

R~tcine

Sunday School - 9:45a.m.

Pastor : Arius Hurt

Worst\ip - 11 a.m.

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Mt Morilh Baptist

Rolland Chur&lt;h ol Gnd

Sunday School - 10 a. m.

Fourth &amp; Main

~t . ,

Middleport
Pa~tor : Rev. Gilberl Craig, Jr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Syracuse Firsl Chur&lt;h ol God

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday School - 930 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell

Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.

Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.

Evening Services- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser.'ices- 6:30p.m.

Rutland F.... Will Baptist
Salem St.
Sunday School - lOa.m.

Church ol God ol Prophecy
OJ. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor

Pastor: P.J . Chapman
Worship . 11 a.m.
WedneSda y Services- 7 p.m.

Catholic
S1cred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulbe rry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pasto1: Rev. Walter E. Heinz

Sat. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.: Mass- 5:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45"9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mii SS · 9:30 a. m.
Dailey Mass · 8:30 a. m.

Congregational
Trinlt[ Chun:h
Second &amp;

yrm, Pomc10y

Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:25

Endlime House ol Prayer

Pentecostal
Ptnt....lll Aaatmbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Evening • .7 PJ!l.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Middleport Communit1 Cbun:b
575 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Middleport Ptolecoolll
Thin! Ave,
'Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m.
CooiYille United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline

Hazel Community Chur&lt;h
OffRt. 1-24
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.

Hocklngport Church
Grand Street

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish

Ton:h Chur&lt;h
Co. Rd, 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won~hip - 10:30 a.m.

Allred
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - I I a.m., 6:30p.m.

Seventh -Day AdventiSt

Mont CIJ.apel Cbun:h
Sunday school - 10 a.m.

Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy.
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky

, S..enda-llly Adveotllll

Worship - 11 a.m.

Saturday Services:

Wednesday ~rvice - 7 p.m ..

Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worohip- 3 p.m.

ML Olive Community Chur&lt;h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

United Faith Churth
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pasror: Rev. Robtn E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday SChool · 9:30a .m.
Worship·- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship
Char&lt;h olthe Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Reednillt
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. service

Middleport Presbyterl18
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Long Bottom

Pastor: Gregory A. Cundiff

Loog Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wqrship • 10:30 a.m.

Harrisonville PresbJicrlao Cbur&lt;h
.
Worohrp - 9 a.m.
Sunday School . 9:4S a.m.

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

Sunday School-9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Chun:h oftht Nazarene

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Syracuse Firwl Uoiled Presbyteriu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson ·
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

4AM·12 PM Mon.·Sat.;
Sun. 6 AM-Midnight
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot&amp;Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Introducing Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Topping•
Collin Onto,. Accepted
7 40.367-7838

II Call Me I!
*I Buy Accumulations*
"Coilectlblaa, Antlquea,
Miac;ellanaoul,
Houaeholds, etc."
Jean White
740-245-9448
Public Notice
County OHCI Racortla.
Parcel 3: Sllu111 In
Section 17, Town 9, Range
14 Well, Commencing 11 1
point In lht aouthwoat
comer ol aeld Slctlon 17;
thenc• oa1t along the aouth
Unt11laald Section 17, 1217
IN~ more or leaa, to 1n Iron
pin In the aouthea1t corn1r
ol tho old achool houM lot,
aa rtcordad In Deed Book
172, Pege 878, In lhl
recorda of the Melga
County record1r'e Office,
and btlng 1ht reel point ol
btglnnlng lor the land
'herein doacrlbod; lhtneo
north 90 degre11 00' 00"
out continuing 1long the
1outh Uno or aald Section
17 and lhl exlatlng
northerly right ol way lint ol
Ac1clemy Street (Townlhlp
Road Number 142), 1.12.00·
loot to an Iron pin; thence
north 0 deglfta 00' DO" eaat
along a Uno, 158.00 le1tto
an iron pin; thence north 90
dogr- 00' 00" weal •long
a lint to an Iron pin In the
aut Uno ol aald 1chool
houoe lot, 112.00 tee1 to tho
·point ol beginning, end
containing 0.4011 ac,.l;
Subject .to all legal
hlghw1y1 and oaMmonta ol
record.
Prior Deed 8of. Vol. 245,
Page 489, Mtlgl ·county
Recontar'1 Offtce.
De~~&lt;:rlptlon lor the above
ducribed tract being lht
rnuHa ol a aurvoy made by
Rlchatd C. Glugow, R.S.
No. 5161.
Dttd Rlltrenco: VolUme
278, Page 23, Melgl County
D11d Reconts. Parcel . Noa:
17-CJ0740 &amp; 17-D0741
Prior lnatrument referencea:
Volume 317, Pag1 561.
Property addre11: 35272
Pagavllle Road
Albeny, Ohio 45710
Appreiaed at $27,500.00
Torma ol aale: 10% C11h
olaalt and balance on
olcleed.
James M. Souleby
Sheriff, llelge County
Rick D. Deblaoia
Ltrntr, Sampson &amp;
Rolhluea

Syracuse Churth of the Nazartne
Pastor, Robert J. Coen
Radio Ministry- Ravenswod Station

4-4:30 Saturday
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

ML Hermoa United Bn:tl11n
In Chriat Ch1r&lt;h
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robtn Sanden
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

•

. Wednesday Youth Serviet -7:30p.m.

Full Gospel Ughthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
.Evening 7:30p.m.

Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7:30p.m.

Church announcements s onsored by -these area merchants
RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Cabinet Making

P/8 Contradors Inc.
•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
Construction
•Masonry Construction
•General etc.
Commorclol 1nd Rtoldanllll
24 Hr. Bobcot Service
Avlilablo
FrH Eallmere•
No Job Too Small
Brian llorri110n
(7~) 985·3948

Alzheimer's Support Group J}·~il~r.
March 17, 199B, 7 p .m .

Tu~s .,

Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
Rehab Center
For more information call
Carol Barr at (304) 675·5236

TIME FOR SPRING
· CLEANING?

1 '"''"~·&lt;:·t;,f

Custom Homes

Remodeling

~~

"Build Your Dream"

Mileage Limit
Call Randy

linda's
Custom Cakes
ALL OCCASIONS
Birthdays, Holidays,
Weddings, Showers,
Annlvertarltl,
Graduiltlona, Etc.
Homo Bakery Ucenoed
and lnapoctod
Pies and Cookies

(740) 843-5544

992-5050

Portland, Ohio·

_ _ _ _...__ _ __
1
Public Notice

.1112.1111 mo. pd.

1----..;..-----;

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

C!J.ASSUFUEIDSI

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Factory Choke Only

BINGO

In Memory
SHARON
(SHAWNEE) INGELS
POOLER
God gave you to

memories .we sl mre
and miss you more
deeply tvith each
passing year.
_
Dad &amp; Mom (Hap &amp;
Elnora) and Sue,

Bobbls~:w~

Sentinel
Classifieds

992-2156

in a_ hurry... TR.Y
CLASSIFIEDS ·

liKE

EWING FUNERAL HOME
'Dignity.and Service Always'
Estab)ished 1913

DIA_,

REAL Tlf'll

MVERL..

•

992-2121

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075

•millroius

•cltmnlc fatigw
•arthritu
•s[Htrts i•Jury/prtVtntio•

540 W!ST UNION mm

d:! l

ATHENS, OHIO .S701

r P.HONE 040) 594·2227 FAX O.cl) 594-6624
'ltMTA Mttrrbtr •uw'"'" 1ry oJU, Star. Altdical s,,.nJ

Joe Wilson \
(614) 992-42n \

Aocoptlng Worlte,. compen..llon Pellenll

•

,. ....
21 11

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction service. licensed
t66 ,0hio &amp; West Virginia , 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

.90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: Ail U.S. Silver And Gold Coins, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisilions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

AIIOnue. G.Oiipois. 740-446-2842.

Antiques. top prices paid, Riverine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Auss Moore owner, 740-992·
2526.
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture ,
will buy one piece Or complete

household. Osby Martin. 740·
992-6576.
BA.Jying Hardwood Timber On

pending On Quality, 740-256·

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

6172.

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeri&gt;matherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade SlUff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fill them.
Rt. 124 Minersville, OH

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Clean late MOdel Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick PQntiac, 1900 Eastern Avenue, GaUipolis.

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

J &amp; D Auto Parts . Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles.

20 Yrs. Exp.
- Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

Extra Large Steel Pet Crate.

Free E.timates
446-4759
441·1191

740·992-4559

J0.4-nJ-503:!.
Wtnlld TQ Buv:
CaU (J0.4)615·t051
Leave Message

wanted To Buy: used Mobile

Homes. 740-446-0175. 304-675-

5965.
We Bu-y Auto's In AflV·Condlllon,

· RACINE MOWER CLINIC

Call 740-388·9062. Or 740-446·
PART.

Parts and Service//
•Mowers •Chain Saws •Weedeaters •Authorized
Dealer For:
·Briggs &amp; Stratton ·MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo ·Ryobl •Roper ·Rally ·Hydro Gear
0
AND OTHERS!
Briggs &amp; Stratton: Master Strvko iadtnldan
Out
ower EquipiMnt Assaclatlon: Certified 2 Cycle
Stat
oute 338, • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

(614) 949·2804

3/1

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

ApJ;icaliona and job doscripUons
for a pan-time secretari·
al position at Meigs Cooperativ&amp;

ava~able

Parish at 31 t Condor Suaet. Applications wMI be taken untU

March 20. 1\l911. 11 you have

questions, call the office at 740-

992-7400, Tuesday-Friday, 9amlpm.

SAYRE
.TRUCKING

LO"G·s
CO"STROOIO"

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeltone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Res110nab/e Retea

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Joe N. Sayre

614-742-2138

Call 614·843·5426

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

CELLULAR PHONES

' •New Homes
•Garagas
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

360° Communications
"-

· JEF~.
f1

F.REE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

WARNER INSURANCE

113 W. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

Applications Are Now Being Taken For 1 Bedroom House In Ma·
son.W.\)A. $300/Mo., +Deposit,
Utililies Included, No Pets. Call

740-245-1489.
Avon $8

~ $20

/Hr, No Door ·To·

Ooor. Easy Cash. Fun. 1·800361-0466 indfslslrep.
Avon - $8 ·$20 /Hr. No Door To
Ooor. Easy Cash! t -B00-2960139 indlslslrep.
Bates Bros. Amusement Co.
Must be 18 years or Older. Free

to travel. Cai1740-266-2950. M-F.
8:00-4:30.
COMING SOON
New Sports Restaurant
Needing general manager, k1teh ·
e~ managemen1. kitchen help,
kilcnen prep, bartenders. host ·
ess. servers . Please send re sume to: Twisters Sports Bar 107
Academy Drive Ripley, WV
25271.

Dealers &amp; Ois tr1butors Warited·
Great money making opportunity
car. home. healln. body care product s ava ilable. For demo &amp;

sa••. lop qua lity in walarle ..
tecnnology !rom ETI. Call Scott
Smith @ 304·882-3972 Retail Oi;~~2t 80082 0 6893 Pinl

7/22/tln
MON. &amp; WED.
Dependable Aid
And Flexible C~rliIn
6:30P.M. I:.---(L.;.I.;;m.e•S•t•o•n•e•.- - , L-~-=-=~~6~1~4::·::9:.:9:!2~·::5::4:,:7:.,:9::___~::JI Home
Care. Call AOrlanne Or An·
1-8IJ0-4St -6334.
RUTLAND
Low Rates)
YOUNG'S
FRUSTRATED? NO REAL ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
CARPENTER SE VICE
POST 467
GLASSCE1LING7
WICKS
•Room Additions
you are employad and feel you
N G
no
STAR BURST
'
ew arages
005
Personals
11 to yoursellto consider loining
HAULING •Electrical
&amp; Plumbing
tha Loewen Group. This is a high
•Roofing
BEAUTIFUl
income profession , rapid
$800.00
•lnterlor &amp; Exterior
1-900-407-7781
1399$2.99 /
and
Limestone,
Painting
Min . Must Be t8 .. Serv-U 619· salistaclion
families .
$70.00 OR MORE
your
Gravel, Sand,
Also Concre te Work
Smith at 6t4·992·7440.
lle·d Nurse

Needed For

g~

II
are in a

GIRLS!
E~ct .

645-8434.

PER GAM£

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

(FREE ESTIMATES)

614-992-3470

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

In Memory
In memory or my
grandma and grandpa
on their birthday.
Gone But Never
Forgotten
MARY EBLEN
March 13
MARLON (Doc) EBLEN
March 18
I Love VoiiBbth
Happy Birthday!
Love, Your
Granddaughter, Robin

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
WILLUUL.m&amp;'r GILL.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

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

Agricultural Lime,
Llmestol)e • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
i 985-4422

( . _...... llat•J).

Chester, Oh!o

SU$IE

Help Wanted

Veterans Memorial Hospital SNF Unit
is looking for caring, dedicated
individuals to provide care to our
reeidents. STNS's preferred, hut will
comider training the right applicant.
Part-time poaitiona with flexible
acheduling available.
Apply in peraon at VeterBDB Memorial
Ho1pi_tal, Human Reaources Office.

AI

260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992-7147

gain situation, you owe

ad vancement potential,
se lfhelping
For
last job intervi ew, call Steve

Lose Weight Fa st! Sate And

Easy 6t4·384-0053, Doctor Aeconmended.
Stan dating tonight! Have tun ,
play Ohio's dating game, 1·800ROMANCE, extension 7484.

40

Giveaway

3 Female Pups Whl!e Shepherd
&amp; Police Dog Mixed Call Alter 7

Have An Avon Parry In Your
Home And Get A Free Gilll Call
Ahsha Rojas At 740·245-9635,
An AVon Independen t Sales

Representative.
Housekeeper in Gallipolis, 740-

379-2303.

MEDICAL DFACE

Immediate openings lor experiPM. 740-256· t 593.
. anced, front desk workers. 8111 lng/CPT ·and ICD·9 COdJng/in ·
Beautiful Puppy, Black Mother : surance skills and computer fa AKC Golden Aetnever, Father: miliarity and good phone sk ills
Unknown, 740-379-2639. ·
essential. Organized . people oriEight puppies, mother Reg. borUer ented.' &amp;nthusi asli c person pre le~red . Ability to manage multiple
cotUe. c811740·74.2-.21 23.
priorifies . High volume environFr ee 6 Wee k Old Pu ps , lab &amp; ment dedicated to Quality care.
Back otlice skills a plus. SchedCoRie Mil&lt;ed, 740-256-1-489.
uling 1nterviews ASAP. Resume
Medium Sized Long Ha i re(~ Dog, to: Box CW-9 c/o Poi nt Pleasant
Very Good With Children And Register :too Main St. Pt. Pleas·

~=::::;::;:::tW2~5/tltlllln~~~ ~ Good Watch Dog, 740-446-9762.

ant, WV 25550.

r

Middleport Park Recreation is
now laking appli cations lor life-

.-

bhavst Work
We do Custoat B....tl._,.,

Converter lad $84.95
Most Cars
Used Tires 12.00 to I 5.00
StrYIIt Job S16.95 4 qt. oil
General Repair Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulberry
Pomeroy
Phone 992·9949

- l Mixed

bred part husky &amp; part

Collie . neutered. t t/ 2yr old iemale, needs good country home
304-675-7223.
Mixed Collie Puppy, 740-4469864.

60

Lost and Found

Male Goldf!n Retriever With Blue
Collar, Around Bidwell, 740-245·
0366.

70

Yard Sale
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

1!All Y1rd Salee Muet 81 Peld In

l Advonco. Deadline: I :OOpm tho
~I dly before lhl 1d 11 to run,

I, Sunday l

Noodey edition·

_· 1:00pm Friday.

172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

edttlon • 2:00 p.m.

Friday.-Mondey edition
- IQ:OO a.m. Satunloy.

Shares, 40160 Or 50150 ' ' De-

----======;;;;;...;.-----:.· llfome for the
STNA's
El4erl'

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD!

;;.., 3'

Public Notice ·

(C·B) 1nd Folden Road (T·
26), thence aouthilrty 11ong
Old Dexter Road tbout ns
lett (0.15 mile) to the true
point or beginning ol
Paaraol Cem1t1ry Road,
thence eaaterly about 3,275
feat (0.112 milt) to a Dead
Public Notice
End at . the P11raol
Cemetery.
.
PUBUCNOTICE
The
Board
ol
Notlcl Ia hereby given
Commlationora
ol
llalga
lhll on the 6th ol April,
1998, at 1:00 p.m., In the County, Ohio, will view the
olllce ol the Board ol aile on the 8th day ol Aprtl,
Comml ..lonere ol llelge 1998, at 10:30 1.m. Tho pill
County, 1 hearing will be dtlcrlblng tho IOCIIion ol
held on the propoaed thl . ro1d propo,aed to be
dodlcatlon ol Peareol Ro1d dodictlld may bt viewed 11
(Townahlp Road 1¥395), the office or th1 Bo1rd or
Salem Townahlp, Molga Commitalonert ol Molga
County, OhiO, Court HOUII,
County, Ohio.
, The propoud dedication Pom-y,Ohlo
(3) 13, 20 21C
lo doll&lt;:ribtd aotollowe:
Beginning al the junction
. ol Old Dexter Church Road

1----------_,

lltctutlliv&lt; trltlWC" '"""ieMU thqt 9'! bclnful f(lr,·
•chnmic: pa~ •mlllclt ttrWIIJisprailu •Jtrrn

I -a i
i

120 E. Fourth Sl,.et,
8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241·3100
OH Sup Ct 110012992
(3) 6, 13,20 3 tc

You'll Find
., The Clasalflecls

Jrolo41

'O
.L---~~~~----~~~~~

8 ton Delivered
$120

11Q

MEIGS CO. BIKERS
"SPRING PARTY"
Sat., Mar. 14th at
WAYNE'S PLACE

JANICE S. HAYNES, BA, MT
h~
;r,n
MASSAGE THE~IST
-5 •

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

·

~t.t~~~~~~~~c~

2/1:1J02/tln

! &lt;
V'H

Special Thru
March

Unda,

Phone 740-992-3987
Free Estimates

M&amp;J

LIMESTONE

tu as tl · rose in
winter. And just as
suddenly as th.e
winter rose disappears, He look
you- home. The
only sound was
rltat of our hearts
breaking and the
sighing of our
souls. Knowing
you are tvilh Cltri.t
~earu krrowirrg we
will be together
agairr. 'Tiltherr we
hear your voice
and lauglrfer in the

Un;ted Breth ren

Eden U•ited Bretltn:a in Chrlat
2 112 miles nonh of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robtn Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. I&lt; 7:00p.m.
.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

~

•
CHESHIRE
FOOD MART

Faith Gospel Chur&lt;h

Nazarene

Chtsler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 ~.m .

~ln_~:ai_Services-

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Worship' - 9 a.m.

Thursday Services- 7 j).m.

Syracuse Miuion
1411 Bridgeman St.; Syracuse
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.

Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

MI. Olivel!nlled Methodist
Ofl124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Evening· 6 p.m.

Bailey Run Road

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

New Ult Vk:lory Ceater
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. I&lt; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. I&lt; Youth 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Emmeh Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service· 7 p.m.

Racine

Graham United Methodist
Wor§hip - 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.

HarrisoDYillt Commuolly Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedncoiday -, 7 p.m.

Faith Valley Tabtmaele Chur&lt;h

Worship . 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

United Methodist

Northeast Cluster

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Clifton T1btmade Chur&lt;h
• Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.

Pastor: Randy Barr
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
· Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russloll
Sunday School - 10~ a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:110 p.m.
Friday· 7:00p.m.

Wednesday service-6:30p.m.

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

Rev . George Weirick
Worship. 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:(10 a.m.

Pastor: William Van Meter

(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship~ 10 a.m.

Sutton
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Worship- .11 a.m.

Railroa~

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

Worship - 10 a.m.

Lutheran

Hartlont Chur&lt;h ol Chris I in
Chriatlan Union

Faith Baptist Chur&lt;h

Cannel
Pastbr: Dewarne Stutler
Sunday Schoo - 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - I I a.m.

Victory Baptistlndependant
525 N. 2nd St Middleport

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

10 a.m.

Momlng Star
.Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Chun:h ol Jaua Chria~
Apostolic Failb
1/4 mile past Fon Meigs on New Uma Rd.

The Believers' Fellowship Minilll')'
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

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

Shorlff'a Sale
Real Eelate
Caae Number 97CV088
l!nlted Companlee Landing
Corporation
Plaintiff
VS
. Michael D. Bogga, etal
Doltndenta
Court ol CommOn Plo11
U.lga County, Ohio
In pursuance ol an Order
ol Sale to me directed from
aald Court In the above
anlltled action, I will expoM
to 1alo at public auction at
the courthouse on Aprtl
17th, 1998 a\ 10:30 a .m. ol
aald day, the following
described real eatate:
Slluated In the Township
of Scipio, County ol Meigs
and State of Ohio:
Parcel 1: Being In Section
17, Town 7, rangt 14, ol the
Ohio Company's Purchaee:
Beginning on tho South lint
olaaid Section 93 roda Eaat
ot tho Soulhwtel corner
thereof; thanQe North 12
rode Jo lhe land formerly
own1d by J.P. Boaworth;
thtnca Weot about 18 rode
and 10 1/2 foot to the
Northeast corner ol School
Houee lot In Pagevllle
!leparate Diatrlct; thence
south 1o rod a to tho
S'outhout corner ol aald
School Hou11 Lot; thence
Eoat eo loet; thence South 2
rodo;' thonco Eaot 1bul 15
rode to tha piiCt of
beginning, contolnlng Orlt
and ont-lourth (11/4) acre•,
mort or la11.
Parcel 2: A1110; the following
land lying Etll ol and
adjoining Loto No. 40 and
41 aloreaaid commencing at
the southau1 corner ol
oaid Lot No. 40; tltenct E. .1
20 rode and e loot; thence
1'/orth 19 rode; to the place
ol beginning, containing
Two and One-hall (2 1/2)
acres, more or 1111, and
baing In said above named
Section 17, Town 7, and
Range 14.
Laat Prior Conveyance:
Volume 245, Pag• 489,
Mllga County D. . d ·
Reconta.
Excepting and reaarving
to tho Grantors .4011 ac,.a
aa d11cribed In Land
lnatallmont
Contract
recorded In volume 141,
Page 509 ol tho Mtlga
CountY Mortgage Raconta.
Lael ·ooed Roloronce:
Volume 276, Page 29, Malga .

Rejoldn1 Ute Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday Si:hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Wednesday . 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

S•owville
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.

· Calv1ry Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Sunday Si;hool 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.

Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
WcdnesCiay service, 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Public Notice

Pastor: David Dailey

Hobaoo Christian Fellowship Cbun:b

Faith Full Gospel Chun:b
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve·Reed
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Worship- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

SUversvllle Wont of Filii!

Chrialiln FeBowahip Cooler
Salem St., Rutland .
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -11 :15 a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m .• 7:00p.m.

Salem Center

Christian Union

Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.

Thursday service, 7 p.rn.

Rullontl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Won~hip · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Service• - 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Chur&lt;h

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday seryice, 10 a.m.

· Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
·
Won~hif- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sul\&lt;lay - 6 p.m.

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick

Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes

Faith Chapel Open Bible Church
923 S. Third St., Mlddiepon

Pastoi-: Keith Rader

Laurd Clirr Free Methodist Church
Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.

Worship · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Setvices -7 p.m.

Pastor: James E. Keesee

Wednesday 7 pm

RockSprlags

Bible Study, Wodnesday, 6:30p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

773-5017
Service lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robtn E. Robinson
Sunday School - 9:15a.m
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.

Hysell Run Holinas Chun:h
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens

f::t

DEAQL!NE: 2:00p.m,
the day before the od
11 to run. Sundly

~

Owner: John Dean

(No Sunday Calls)

Fail• Fellowohip Cn1111de for Chriat

603 Second Ave. Mason

Worship- 10 a.m.

Children's service

Reo11anized Church ol Jesus Christ
, o[ Latter Day Saints

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
EveniOg • 6;30 p.m.

Great Benet, Route 124, Racine, OH

Wesleyan Bible Holines• Chur&lt;h
75 rearl St., Middleport.

Latter-Day Saints

Hickory Hills Chur&lt;h ofChrisl
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - IOa.m.

Min enville
Sunday School - 9 a.m:
Worship- 10 a.m.

Folrview Dible Church
Letan, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: John Han
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
w ....hip - 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

AppeUieCeater
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade

Pastor: Chad Emrick

Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00a.m., I0:30a.m., 7~ p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p,m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.

'

H1rvtsl Oulreltch Minllllrles
47439 Reibel Rd., &lt;;hester
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. I&lt; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvii'CS- 7 p.m.

Specializing In:
New Roota, Roof Ropalra,
Outtera, Interior &amp;
Exterior Painting,
Drywall Repair.
Lowell ,.,., during the
winter months ol
Jan.-Feb.-Mar.
a~allty Worlr Gua,..nrFreo Eot.• Fully ln1ured
1-814-992·9057
Middleport, Oh.

New Homes &amp; Remodelin~
ill'' Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofilfg, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
iil.!!J 27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured

k.\

614-992-7643 .

20 Yrs. E•p. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

12/18/lfn

McFEE ROOFING &amp;
PAINTING

Whitt's Chapel Waltyan
Coolvifie Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday SerVice - 7 p.m.

Other Cl1urches

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

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger

Portl1nd Finl Church ollhe Naan:oe
Pastor: Mark Matson
Wor!&lt;hip- 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivln

Pine Grove Bible Holineos Chur&lt;h
1/2 mile off Rt. 32.l
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

FroedomGooptiMlaiea
Bald Koob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday Sdtool -9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Wednesdar Services ·. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

(614) 992-3838

No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services_

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

Pastor: Keith Rader

Sunday School9:30 a.m.

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

Pastor: Samuel Basye

Worship . 9 a.m.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Pastor: Jeff Smith

Rutland Chur&lt;h dllhe Noza....,e

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • ReplacementWindows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Llmeetone Hauling.
House &amp; Traller:Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
UtiiiUea
Estimates

Cori&lt;lon lnlentenominllloaal Chur&lt;h
Kingsbury Road

Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Enterprise

Pastor:Terry Steware

Chester Chun:b ollhe Nuo......,
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orate
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ JD CONSTRUCtiON tt'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Soulh Bethel New T-meol
Silver Ridsc
Pastor: Robtn Barber
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvoce -7 p.m.

Wtdnesday Services- 7 p.rit.

Cenlnl Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.

Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

Bearwallow Rldll' Church ol Christ

Wednesday Servire-7:00 p. m.

Tuesday Service~- 7:30p.m.

Hoi mess
Danville Holiness Chur&lt;h
31Q57 Stale Route 32.l, Langsvlle

Sunday school -9:30a. m.
Worship · 11 a.m . and 5 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
·
Worship . JO a.m.

Sunday School 10:30 a.m.

Sunday &gt;ehool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship . i p.m.

570 Gram St., Middleport

Pomeroy Charcb ollhe NozareM
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Orimm)r.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 o.m. and 6 p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Worship · 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Keoo Church ol Chri•l

Pastor: Les Hayman
Suuday Service · 7:00p.m.

Tuppers Plain• St Paul

A1J, Yard Saleo Muit
s. Pokl 1n AtiVInco.

guards. App lic at ions can be
picked up at Village Hall between

8am-4pm Monday through Frlday
Nail Tech Need ed For Busv Salon 740·441 · 1880 Or 740 ·256 6366 .•.·
.
Person to woik on a da iry !arm.
Must have experience operating
fa rm machinery, 40 hours per,
week guaranteed . Call 740-949·

2502 evenings.

·Set Up And Service Of Manufactured Homes -Experience Re quired. Apply At French Ci ty

Homes, Inc. 269 Upper River Rd.,
GallipoHs. OH 7~· 9340 .

Shirt Presser Needed For Cardinat Dry Cleaners 19 Ohio River

Plaza. Gallipolis, Apply Wednes-

day March 18th , Between 8 A.M.
&amp; IOA.M.

�r

Page 1o• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, March 13, 1998

•
Friday, March 13, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PJin.LIP

ALDER
MERCHANDISE
AVON

All Areas ! Shu ley

t

For rent wnh 011t1on to buy 4 bed

Spears 304-675-1429
Located Johnson s Mobile Home

Stylist Needed New Salon W1th
Or Wtthout Clientele Busy Corner
Contact Brenda s Kut &amp; Kurt 740
441 0583

Stylist Needed No Clientele Nee

assary Contact Carol K ng Finest

Sl)&lt;lng Salon 740-446-8922
The Career Opportunity 01 A Life
time One Of The Nations Premier
Mortgage Co Will Soon Be
Openmg In The Ohio Valley In
flnity Financial Solutton Inc
Takes Pnde In The H ghest Qual
lty Customer Servtce And Exten
sive Vanety Of Programs At
Some 01 The Lowest Intere st
Rates Allatlable In Todays Mar
ket We Are Now Accepting
Resume s From Seasonal Loan
Offtcer And Experience Mortgage
Processo r Ca ndidate Should
Have Atleast 1 2 Years Expert
ence And /Or College Degree In
A Related Fteld Our Success
Has Led To Untmagtnable Growth
And Untlmtted Opportunlly For
Our Employees We Current y
Offer Top Pay In The Industry
Pa id Vacations &amp; Holidays And
Comprehens ve Medt ca l Plan If
You Constder Yourself Htgl)ly

Ambitious And Sell Motivated
Don t Let Thts Opportunity Pass
You By Individuals W1th Bank Or
Finance Company E)lper lence
Are Encouraged To Apply Fax
Resume To 717 346 5261 Or
Ca I Toll Free 1 888 779 4437

Ask For Mr Hatley
WELL TENDER NEEDED apply
m person at J 0 Drllltng Campa
ny Aacme OhiO Must pro111de
own transportation applications
accepted Monday thru Friday
from 8 ooam 3 OOpm untll3120198

YOUTH DEVELOPMENT PRO·
FESSIONALS Do You Believe
That Every Chtld Deserves A
Healthy Happy Nurtunng Envl
ronment In Wh ch To Grow? Re
cruttars From Mooseheart Child
City And Sc hool Are Seeking
Canng Energettc Pat1ent lndtvtd
uals Or Couples To Aestde In
Our Campus Homes (Located 40
Mtles W 01 Chtcago) To Pro11lde
Guidance And Support For Our
Ctnldren Newborn Through Htgh
School Age Must Be Over 21
Have HS D1ploma E•pertence
Workmg With Youth College De
gree Preferred Comprehensive
Tratntng Provtded Salary
$1 2501 Month + Free Room And
Board (Over $750 Value) Bene
hts lncludtng Free Medical In
surance Pen ston Plan And
4038 Recrutllng (" NEW PHONE

NUMBER ') 8881755 2680
www moosetn!l org

180

Wanted To Do

Furn lure repair reftntsh and res
torauon also custom orders Ohio
Valley Reftn tsh tng Shop Larry

PhillipS 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to tl18 mtll lust call

304-675-1957
look1ng For Handyman Jobs In
Galha County Reasonable &amp; Relt
able 30 Yea rs Experien ce In

Bu ld ng Industry Call Chuck 245
5104 No Job Too Small!
Pa1ntmg Plumbmg Remodeltng

Park Eastern Avenue Wtth Ex

pando 74()-446-2003
All real estate adverttslng In
thts newspaper ts subject to
the Federal Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It tltegat
to adverttse "any preference
hmttatlon or dtscnmoatlon
based on race color religion
seK famthat status or nattonal
ongin or any Intention 10
make .any such preference
hmttauon or dlscnminat1011 •
This newspaper w111 not
knowtngly accept
advertisements for real estate
whtcn IS 1n v10tauon of the
law Our readers are hereby
tnformed that all dwellings
advertised tn thiS newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity bas~

Make 3 Payments &amp; Move In A

New 14&lt;70 3bedroom Call 1
eoo.92s-6m
New Doublewlde Aepo 4 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Easy Terms 1

800-383-6862

Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Bath Large
Uv1ngroom Large Kitchen 1

Acre GallipoliS Ctty Schools
$62 000 537 Plymale Road 740·
446 4323
2 Story house sttttng on 60x150
tot Jt&gt;r 1 bath located In OUfton

304 n3 5129
8 Acres 3br doublew1da modular
home detached 2 car garage

Asking $50 000 304 57&amp;2972

600-637 3238
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 leltl
Still under warranty owner fl
nancing available
304 755

7191
New Double Wide 3BR 2 Bath
FREE Delivery &amp; Sat up $24 999

ment Carport 1 3 Acres Close
To Rtver Valley School 740 «6

1367
Between Gell!polls &amp; Jacl&lt;son, 112

New S1nglewide 3BFI FREE Oe
livery &amp; set up $16 999 1 888

92B 3426

Single Parent Program Special
flnanc1ng on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom·
homes Payment• 11 low 11

S1 80 CaR now 304-755-5885
SPRING SPECIALS

146Dcwn

9 9 Fixed Rates
$198/llo Poymento
$17,1195 on 3BR.
free Delivery • Sat"'i&gt;
Only At Olkwood Homea
Nltnt, Wll 304-75s.5885

Hardwood Floors Approximately
2400 Sq Ft Also Has Barn Out

buildings Garage S110 000 Call
For Appolntment 740-6112-3530

Middleport beautiful two story 3
br 2 bath large I r &amp; fr oak
doors &amp; trim Smtth s custom oak
cabinets Jenn air range dishwastier detachad garage by ap

polntment 140-992 5243
In Mktdleport two story large LRJ
DA three bedroom one &amp; 1/2
bath laundry room attached car·
port ntce fenced yard wtth lots of
flowers good netghborhood close
to schools call 740 992 3787 or

740-992 5438
Prtce reduced 2902 Anniston
Onve Pt Pleasant 3BR Family
Room wiWoodburner NICE! Call
Homestead Bend Broker 304

882 2405
Rench 2 bedroom 1 bath lining
room dlnlngroom kttchen 1 24
acres wtth oyer !rootage enough
rlyer frontage to make summer
camp site located on SA 124

320

Any And All Odd Jobs' Free Es
!mates 74().245-5151

~h

74().949-2006

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $189/mo
Free Sal up &amp; Delivery Only 3
left! Only at Oakwood Homes N1
lro wv 304 755-5885
Very Ntce 3 Bedrooms•2 Baths

16x80 Mobile Horne With Lois 01
E•trast Already Set Up On Lot
Take Over Payments Call 740

44&amp;0571
Why Rent When You Could Own?
Big Savings On Stngles And
Double W1des 6 75% To Oualt
lied Buyers $499 00 Down Plus

Tax And Title With Approved
Credit) WESTWOOD HOME
SHOW, INC 1 800 251 5070 Or
304-736 3888
NEW BANK REPO'S, ONLY 3
LEFT, 1-3113-e862

340

Restaurant for lease or rent
equipment or rent for something
else owner wtU help quaiWied people good location call 304 862

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

1Ox50 mobtle home 1973 model
Professtonal Tree Service Stump
Remova l Free Est1matesl In
surance Btdwel1 Ohio 614 388

9648 614 367 7010
Tired 01 Spendmg Your Evenings
Or Weekends Oo1ng Laundry
740 446 4818 After 6 f M For
Help Cleamng Supphes Provided
Reasonable Rates.

Will Babystt In My Home Any

HOUrs Call 740.388-9689
Will haullunk or trash away $351

pickup k&gt;ad 304-675-5035

Would Like To Care For Children

In My Home On Weekdays
Clean loving Atmosphere 10
Years E)lpertence E•cellent Ref
erences Ca~ After 2 30 PM 740

441-Q359

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bust
ness wllh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you ha11e Investigated
the offering

ATTENTION

Poem &amp; Song

Writers Who W1sh To Be No

$12 500 (740)245 0452 Alter 5 30
pm
t2•65 Tratler 3br 1 bath $5 500

Call 304-675-4678

1968 DetrOI!er mobtle home new
w1rlng &amp; plumbtng co mpletely

220

Tnm $5 000 OBO 740-4411107

' DIRECT LENDERS '
$2500 sso 000
ConWidatlona Cash Loans
Bad Credit No Prot;ern
No Ad'l Fee 1-58().7850

230

Proleseional
Sarvlces

Liv ingston s basement water
proofing all basement repairs
done free estimates lifetime
guarantee 1Oyrs on JOb expert

.,..., 304-675 2145

70 acres pnme hunting land se
cludad and pnvate road frontage
building sties $42 000 ftrm 740
!843-5453

1971 Monticello 12•60 e•cellent 1
condtt1on range relrtgerator
washer dryer atr gas furnace
carpet two bedroom bath vmyl I
underpmmng $5500 740 985

BRUNER LAND
74Q.441·1492

3929 or 741l-98~ 3770
1988 Oakwood Mobile Home

14x70 With Heal Pump G E Re
fr1gerator &amp; Stove Dishwasher
16x24 Add1t1on
($12 000)

Gallla Co Gall polts Neighbor
hood Ad 10 Acres Lots Of Level

$19 ooo Or 22 Acres Wl1h Pond
1NOW $24 000 Fuendly Ridge

$260 $300 sewer water and
trash 1ncluded 74Q-992 2167

Refrigerator $75 Dryer $75 El&amp;c

rrlc Range $75 Washer $95
Washer $205 1 Year Warranty
Skaggs Appliances 76 Vh)e
Street Gall1p:&gt;lls 740-446-7398

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer
Park References &amp; Deposit Re
qutred 614-4461104
Room Located On McCormick
Road 740 446 6844 Leave Mes

Best prices anywhere· full line of
Advantage Camo In time lor
turkey season Great setectton of
new and used boots tots of new
and used camo sizes 2 months
to 4X badl:packtng and campmg
Items k1d s clothes U S made
Smith &amp; Wesson knives and lots
more Come and check us out
We are open 8 30am 8 OOpm
everyday Call us at 740 992

message
2 Bedroom no pets reference requ red on Sandhill Road !l04

675-3834
2 Bedrooms State Route 7 South
References &amp;

Deposit No PelS 740.256-1566

7093 or 1 Bll().346 8176

3 Bedroom 14x70 Electrtc Heat

1740} 256-6574

530

3 Bedroom in Mason HUD ac

cepled 304 n:&gt;sr37
38edroom 1 112 bath US 35

t 124 E Mam Street on At 124

Lock 11 $300/mo S200 deposit
Option to buy Sell $26 000 10%

Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to

Down Owner Financing 304 346-

6 00 p m 740·992 2526 Russ

1739

Moore owner

540

6PM

15 Honey Ptne Kitchen Cabinets

15 HP Snapper R1dtng Lawn
Mower 4 Years Old 38 Inch Cut

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
mshed and unlurntshed security
depostt required no pets 740-

$650 740-386-0406

992 2218
2bdrm apts total atectrlc ap
pltances furnished laundry room
facllttles close to school tn town
Applications avatlable et VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992

I

3711 EOH

&amp;I

2583

I

456 t/2 Second Avenue Galltpo
I s 2 Bedrooms AC Appliances I
$425/Mo $225 Depostt Utlltttes

Patd 740.446 2129
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Dnve

AttenUOn Mobile Home Owners
Areas Largest Inventory 01 Inter
therm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
A r Conditioners Furna ces &amp;
Parts Huge Buying Power Means
The Lowest Installed Price Easy
Over The Phone Bank F1nancmg
Call Bennetrs Mobtle Home HTG

&amp; CLG 1 8QO.B72 5967

nyl Skirting Kits $299 95 An

Home Supply AI I 740-446 94t6

500 Gal Solar Mtlk Tank 4 Surge
Randall Mtlkers Electric Washer

For Pipeline &amp; Milkers 75 Almo
Milk Pump Phone 740 886 9161

After600PM
6 Rooms 01 Used Carpet Call

740-446 1846 740-446 2075
A.maztng Metabolism Break
Through Lose 10 to 200 lbs Call
For lree con5ultatlon and Free

Brand New! Great Gift! CD/v1deo
storage unit Black and cherry
Never out ot bo)l $125 Holds up
to 940 dtscs also holds tapes

Beech Sl Middleport OH 2br
lurntshed apartment utilities
pa1d deposit &amp; references 304

882 2566

Call 740·992 6636 alter 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not klduded

Grac1ous ltvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at lltllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments m Mtddle

Brunco Wood Or Coal Burn ng
Ftreplace Insert Butlt In Blower

port From $249 $373 Call 740

And Thermostat

992 5064 Equal Hous1ng Oppor
tum ties
In New Haven 1br furntshed apt 1
tncludes washer &amp; dryer deposit !
&amp; references 304 882 2566

New stngle efftclency apartment In :

Mtddleport utilities paid $375
1
plus depos« 74D-992 5304
1
Nice clean efftency apartment
references &amp; deposit no pets

$700 740 446 7375 Or 740 446
7171
Comtc books for sale Ent1re col
leclton must go! $125 OBO 74Q-

Evans Enterprises Jackson OH

1 BOO 537 9528

pakl no pots 74D-992 5858

ECONOMY
HeaUr)g And COOling
Up"Grade Your
Present System

1 600 649 2323
740.245-9009

Apartments $295/Mo 740 446
0006

1

Football ca rd coHecttOn over
$2 500 in cards $5 &amp; up many
valuable one of kind &amp; rook1es
gomg lhru dtvorce have to sacrl
ftce only serious callers please
see and make "Reasonable OHer'
for all or some F1rst come first
gone 740 992 6700 leave mes
If not home

I!sage

leave me&amp;sage

Three room furnished apartment
Ne)lt to ~ossard Library $350

JET

360

Debbie or Judy at Bossard U

RENTALS

410

Houses for Rent

3 Bedroom ful l basement ga

month Deposit no pets Contact
Orary at (740) 446-7323
Upstair&amp; 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
nlshed Clean No Pets Re1Brance

&amp; Deposit Required 740 446

t519

450

Furnished
Roome

Business! 740 446 6306 1 800

t111

Ph 740-446 1104 74().441 0450
Round hay bales 1 600tbs $15
4 Miles North on Rt 2 Hickory
Chapel 304 675 7BOB
Square bales of hay second cut

ung $1 50 a bate 740 992 5333

Johnson s Used Furmlure
Wa sher Dryers Hutches 01
neue s Refrlg$lllllors Stoves Tel
e111s1ons Ltvlngroom /Bedroom

Suites 740 4~6-4039 740 446
1004
Lift Chair In Good Worktng Con

dillon $125 740 379 2720 AF·
TERBPII

rage patio S4501mo $250 de
posit + utilities references 3(14

675-4489

3 Bedroom $995 Down $199
Mo Only Oakwood Homes Bar

boursvllls WV 31)4.736 3409

314 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Fttttngs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son Ohio 1 80().537 9528
Whirlpool Dryer 2 Years Old
$100 2 Year Old Gibson Dryer

Located Near Galtla County Line
1 112 Mtle South Of State Route

279 On Jlmee Emory Roed Oak
H1ll 740-682-9040

Homes for Sale

Evenmgs

1984 Chevy 4x4 305 Auto Re·
bu11t Transm•sslon New Paint

740·256 9061
1988 S·10 Extended Cab 4x4
$3 000 1976 Chevy 314 Ton 4x4
$1 000740-4JI1-Q132

UK, ffi\Ef I

1989 GMC Salall Full Custom
Van $3 950 741!-44&amp;4222

550

95 Butck Century V 6 loaded

1991 Chevy Lumtna APV van sl)l
cyltnder automatic high miles

46k $9400 74().843-5216

runs good $2800 1987 Ford

1972 Corvette. Sllngray auto ale

Aerostar CargO van 4 cylmder 5
speed 90
mtles, runs good
very dependable lois of rust

Autos for Sale

41 Sheets Steel Siding /Roollng pw 1111 11 numbers match new
3600 Sq Ft 18 Gage $,2500 Re
paint &amp; carpet $7 200 740 992·
bar 314'x7' 1500 $1 000 Or $1 00 6190
A Stick 45 90 lbs Bags 01 Por
11and Cement $200 Or $6 oo A 1986 Ford Tempo auto alr good
Bag 74D-446-7877
condttlon low miles run&amp; &amp; looks
good $1295 neg 740-992-6824
Block bnck sewer ptpes wtnd
owS lintels etc Claude Wmters

Rto Grande OH Call 740 245
5121
New House Or Barn Trussels

42x60 Ft With 10 12 Root P1tch
2x10 Construction Coast $8 600

Sell S4 800 740 894 9400 740
886 5405

560

1966 Otds 98 Regency Maroon 4
Doors Excellent Shape New Mo
tor Transmlssi()n, Ttres, Starter &amp;

Struts Asking $3 995 740 446
0795
1988 Corstca Low Mtleage 4
Doors 740.448-3699
1968 Ponltac Bonneville 4dr, V
6 auto air good clean car high

Pets for Sale

3 Male AKC Reg Black Labs wl

m11eage S2 500 304 882 3652

I 991

Plymouth

1992 Chevy S 1o Blazer 4 3L v
6 two door air conditioning new
llr&amp;S $7000 740 698 7019 740
992 6583
1994 Jeep 2 Doors Auto Air

39 ooo Mileage S11 500 740
379-2726
1995 Astra Conversion Van
55
mtles all wheel drive
528 000 new assume payoff

740

ooo

Motorcycles

cans after 9 00 pm

to sell $1000 740·949·3096 No

1994 Yamaha 250 Timberwoll 2
WO Red Adult Dnven $2 800
Steve 740 446 4172 740·256
1619

1990 Honda Accord 4 door au
tomattc loadect excellent condl

750

t1on $5600 740 992 5866 alter
SOOpm

BIG NATE

/Belore 10 00 ~M 740-245-9467

1989 Ford Tempo CD player two

740 992 3679 after 5pm

All

Of $1 700 S6 500 Call Alter 6 PM

304-675 7642

At&lt;C Labrador Retrtever puppies
shOts wormed vet checked two
males tell one female 11 weeks
daughter of Nttro Express Pitt

Voyager

i iOn From Qodge Dealer At Cost

$1900 calr 740 949 2203 or 740
949 2045

740-446-0231

~

t-10 ~TUNJ...Y ~INl:tiB.'(,
Vf.~'( 5/M.lL

Wheel Drive 94 ooo MII&amp;J On!r
1 ooo Miles on New TransifiiJ

$1000a 304 675-6046

door 5 speed 11 0,000 plus
miles strong car paipt OK need

~TI\1~01

~

good work van, $600 304 773
5305 alter 5pm

t 989 Butck l.aSabre loaded Iota
of new parts good condttion

Featunng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

~

~ 10 fV..IJ€ (.Q)\

ooo

Ped1gree 9wks old 1st shots &amp;
wormed 3 ltmes housebroken

A Groo m Shop ~et Groommg

~

runs good $3250 740 247-4292

71 0

Building
Supplies

THE BORN LOSER

lc a.r loaded clean looks and

TRANSPORTATION

Dryer $70 74().446-9068

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1990 Pontiac Grand Prb lE Au
tomatlc AC , Stereo Cassette,

1989 Bass Tracker 1811 tiber
glass ftsh /s kl boat w/150hp
Johnson trolling motor exc

95 600 M1 les $4 000 Negotiable

cond $5 800 31)4.675-1176

AKC Regtsterd Chtnese Pugs
One 7 Week Old Ffmale Puppy

3903 Alter 5 30 PM

1995 17ft Pro Craft Bass Boat
t2 24 501b thrust trolling motor

$425 One 3 Year Old Provlen
Female $300 Gall740-446 4816

1990 Sunblrd LE Convertible Au
to mat tc Atr New Top Extra

80hp Ioree engine, looks ttke
new SIOOOO 304 882 3652

AKC Regtslered Golden Retnever
puppies seven weeks old $200

eacn cetl740 742 3166

Workshop Will De

Clean 79 000 Miles $3 500 740
379-~5

1991 Ford Taurus Very Good

AKC Siberian Husky Puppies
Blue Eyes Beautiful Rare Colors

Males $200 Females $250
741),446-8627
Female Sheltle Sable And Whtte
In Colot Very Frtendly Loves

Condlton 64 000 Miles 740 367
0394

I 991 GEO Strom G S I Exc
cond

ps pb air auto 740-388

8268
1992 Plymouth

I

'

! •

r..N~•w

THE ANSWER

Jack Russell teme rs females
etght weeks old wormed first
shots tatls docked $200 each

740 368-0406

740-698 7055

Speed AMIFM Cassette 1 Own
er Exce llent Condition $8 000,

1993 Dodge Shadow V·6 5
Speed Runs Good Looks Good

$2,750 OB0740256-6169

FARM r,SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

nice 304-675-1226
1993 Tracker LSI 62 000 Miles
Tratler Hitch $8 600 740 446

61 0 Farm

Equipment

275 Massey Ferguson Tracto r
Good Shape Farm Equipment &amp;

Wagon 740-379 2697
4 track 4 whee ler harry drag
sprayer NH corn chopper NH
round baler Massey tractor Allis
Ch tractor manure sp reader
Claas drum mower 4 plow &amp; 2
plow 2 hay wagons 2 sileage
wagons hay tedder NH square
baler hay elevator bush hogs

2739

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS·
St0N8, Used IReOwlt AI! Types

1994 Mercury Cougar XR7 Elec-

tri C Red 8 Cyl , PS PB PW
Leather Interior Double Over

head Cam Wishbone Suspen
ston Air Bags E)lcellant Condl
lion Adult Dr iven Well Taken

Fnday, March 13 1998
By Phillip Alder
On the second of four Fnday the
13ths thts year how do you v1ew
supershtton?
There are supersttt1ons at the
br~dge table hke " queen over Jack."
bui they are excuses for avotdmg
analysts
On thts deal, South was tn four
spades West led a heart Easl taktng
two tncks in the sutt before extttng
wtth a dtamond After wmntng tn
hand, declarer played a spade to dum
my's ace and a spade to hts ktng
When the queen dtdn t drop, South
conceded defeat, lostng one spade,
two hearts and one club
• That was unlucky. ' clatmed
South "The spade queen wasn't
over the Jack And I took the per·
centage play tn trumps '
...
"That ts such a stlly superstttton."
JJ~Tot-E 01(,(&gt;J5(TE-1l\€ C£lo\IWR
observed North "h 1s true that at the
At£ fttQJ:.IC(WI\5 m.Ell/m£ 1 rubber-br~dge table, where players
rarely shuffle properly, a queen m1ght
stay glued to a Jack from a prevtous
deal, but tt ts hardly a rehable rule
UPQn whtch to rest the success of
your contract
"Also, you faded to lake tnto
account that mfonnatton affects the a
pnon odds Here East made a take·
out double of my one-club opemng
Thts strongly tmphed that he was
short 10 clubs and long m the other
three sutls As 11 is parttcularly dangerous for a player 10 double when
short m spades, you should have
finessed tn trumps on the second
round "
Edmund Burke, an lnsh phtloso·
pher and statesman, clatmed super·
slttton ts the rehgton of feeble mmds
Joseph Hall. a Fonner Btshop 01 Norwtch 10 England smd 11 ts godless
rehgton And Goethe felt tt JS the
poetry of ltfe To each hts own 1

,..

SERVICES
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1995 300EX, Gocd shape $2BOO
17401367.-QSSO

Appliance Parts And ServiCe All

1995 Chrysler Concord 29 000

Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perlence All Work Guaranteed

1249

!lARCH SPECIALS
Ford New Holland 3010S 42hp
independent PTO 1 double spool
valve 2 wheel drive $12

4w&lt;f $17 000 8l5% fmanclng

sao

Piqua round bale feeder wagons,

304-675- I226

38 leed ope01ngs ~ad from rear
$2 300 Piqua round bale hauling

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths Trl Lev
tl Spring Valley Area 740 4~6
8251 Al1er 5 ~t.l

wagons hauls 8 round bales

$1 900 Kaefefo 5ervlco Canter
St Rt 87 Pt Pleoaant l Ripley
Ad 304-1115-3874

Germany
Roman tyrant
Irritated
Flower holder
Egyptian
goddess
29 Confined
31 Fit for
Ingesting
33 Glossy fabr~c
36 Newt
40 Deposited
moisture on
41 Braas
instrument
42 Traffic ti•up
43 Tenms player
Lend I
44 Char's ex,

24
25
27
28

Sonny46 Double agent
47 --about

48 Left
50 VItal statistic
52 Day before a
holiday

53 Type ofleat

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher CI)'Piogram&amp; are created !rom quotations by famous people pasl and prltSenl
Each leUet 1n the c.pher stand$ for anolher Today s c/IHI G eqwJIS U

' NI ' Y

WFYNWK

Z F K W

TMFO

I RF0

Nl

UFSW

Lli.l't' j.!O&amp;~t\. M•l&gt;

1.,C:&amp;~;C~~:G~.eneral

Matn·
PaintingHome
vinyl siding
doors w1ndows baths
home repair and more For

lree estimate call Chet 740 992

1995 Honda Civic E~ with rear
spollar two door 5 speed, loaded
excellent condition 111 400 740
:~85 , between 9 ooam

,6323=~------...:....­
840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

1995 Toyota Avalon L:aalher

Residential or commercial wtnng

Sunroof Loaded Excelent Condi
lion, 46K Mllee $22,500, 7~0
44 1-1 880 74o-256-63SB

now service or repairs Mast,er Ll·
censed electrician Riddnour
Electrical WV000306 30~·675
1786

IRKVGER
EW I

IV

NY

F

RWFMIR

ZVOEKWYY
TNZIGKW

F

KVHWKI

WDFOY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'Noth1ng trom Mozart?' - Conductor S~r Thomas
Beecham on heanng h1s seventieth btrthday telegrams

'::~:~:~' S@\\&lt;Al~-L&amp;t.trs~~
ldlled br ClAY l ,OIIAN
Rearrange leHers of
0 four
Krombled words

WOlD
GAM I

th.

below to form four s1mple words

UT H C 0 E

NA Y I R

I

1~

II

.,......,.-NI _A...-F"T-""R
I r-K...---11
I ..~'.
5

1-:,

We are so ternfied of dotng
the wrong thtng that we may
never .· ··the • • • - • thtng

ri--:::G--:R:--:-1-::F--:D:-:-1___,,

r

I

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1

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IIII

Complete the chuckle quoted

Dtvert • Apart - E1der - Utmost- TRIP on IT

MARCH13I

MAO -

•

ASTRO·GRAPB

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Saturday, March 14, 1998
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) A stt·
uat1on m wh1ch you· re tnterested has
been undergotng some posUtve allerations that weren'tapparent to you or
othen; -· unttl today Trytng to patch
up a broken romance? The Astro·
Graph Matchmaker can help you
understand whal to do to make the
relationship work. Mad $2 75 to
Matchmaker, c/o thts newspaper,
P.O. Box 17S8, Mwray Hdl Stat1on,
New York. NY 10156.
ARIES(March21·Apn119)Several valuable relabonshtps can be
streng1hened today if yoll show a

wtlhngness to cooperale Do what's
necessary wtthoul bemg dtrected to
do so
TAURUS (Apni20.May 20)Condttlons that dtrectly affect your work
could be more favorable today than
they wtll be tomorrow Synchromze
your moves to the present trends
GEMINI (May 21-June 2()) A cal·
culated nsk mtghl be 10 order today
pertamtng to somethmg you have
analyzed thoroughly Oo not be ttmtd
m domams where bold measures are
requ1red
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Somethmg profitable could develop
for you through a shared endeavor. II
mtght not look hke much at first
glance, but appearances can be
decepttve
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Newly
acqutred knowledge could have a ,
poSitive effect upon an important
dectslon you may have to make
soon Contmue to keep up wtth the
latest bulletms.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today,
you could be rather fortunate 1n an
mvolvement thaus not as run-of-the·

mtll as you first thought It mtghl
yteld more than anuctpaled
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) A
chance soc1al encounter Ieday mtght
tum out more Jnterestmg lhan tf tt had
been planned Excttement ts tn the atr
tf ygu JUSt lei thtngs happen.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) The
chotce ts up to you today, you can be
etther pos1t1ve or negat1ve The Iauer
thoughts tnvtte fatlure, whtle the for·
mer ones usher tq success
SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Today, you could be lucKter than
usual through your frtends and con·
tacts Do not be too proud to accepl
favors from those who are anxtous to
help you
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Your chances for success in commereta! endeavors today wtll be
based upon your abthty to make OO·
the-spot :uljustments as needs anse.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) A
better way of domg somethtng mtght
occur to you today, even though tt
could mean maktng a radtcal adjustment that should be considered senously.

IIIII

The only thtng you can do on a shoeslnng today ts
TRIP on ITt

ciiT' Off "'s

1111'~

~hel

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

•

Waterproofing

French City Maytag 740·446
_77_95
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

E WI

IV

IVSFP .

BUT M l»o'l "IS VIS\DIIt !'.0

tt~ENThll ~IM, 11t

tabllshad 1975 Cell IHO) 446
0870 Or 1 BOO 2B7 0576 Rogers

Baal The Spring Rush get your
mowers &amp; trim mers tuned up

1995 Eagle Talon Like New
$10 BOO, 74().3811-6909

23 District In

'fJI() WAl ~~ ~~ SIICCESSFVL,

Uncondttlonal lifetime guarantee
Local references lurnlshed Es

Care 0144 000 Miles Take OVer
Payments 614 44S.7527 Alter 5

$7 500 740-446-8044

13 Type of curve
18 Gun grp
20 Tiff
21 Swimmer
Williams

IFRIDAY

11f)SE ~ e1 s~. ~ lOCAl. Ml11S1'

Ripley wv 304 372 3933 or 1· SIJ0.273 9329

810

9 Yew or pine
11 River In
Belgium
12 Ore analvst

&amp;oty
7 Digging tool
8 Dry

22 Card

New gas tank s 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R Auto

la'l)e and small blade king cuner
Slleage blower 740 742-2123

M1ies Tilt $13 000 1995 Jeep
Cherokee Country Wntte &amp; Gold
$16,000 740 256-6495 740 256-

nobleman

5 Alrcraltaman

aaaaon
39 Top of a wave
40 Conacrlptae
42 Agree

o 000 Transm ls

exc

cond Blue book $12 700
$10 000 firm 904 675 5277 after
6pm

4 French

36 Fishing pole
37 French

SIDnS &amp; Clutches 740.245 5677

1994 Ford Probe GT w/20 000
miles, numerous extras

elephant boy

34 Slngar Franklin 2 -and void
3 --Rhythm
35 Dried grape

For Truck 1984

Chevy 1 Ton Truck $150 740,
446-7877

Access Over 1

1993 Mazda 929 loaded very

1 Hollywood's

On the day of
superstitions

ROBOTMAN

or 740 949

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

4 Speed Trans

DOWN

Openmg lead • 7

way around it,
Classified Ads

2045 will consider trade for a

Lazar Turbo

g:~kaga

I'M JUST I-IERE TO
DRESS THE 5ET.

MAAM . I DON'T

good pontoon boat

760

Charged All Wheel D11ve 5

220~

cutting
machine
49 Open
declaration
51 Scali
54 HorMmenshlp
achool
55 Slngar
Frankie 56 Knob
57 Slskel s partner

by f, /l,ng m the m•ssmg words
' - - - ' - - ' - - " - - - ' - - ' - - - ' you develop from step No 3 below

Kawasakt STS Jet ski shit under
warranty lbree seater 83 horse
power bought new July of 97
three matching Kawasaki ski
vests and tra iler all go with lt

$5000 740 949

KidS $200 740 446 7375 740
446 7171

dtesel tractor, 8x2 transmission
Shelving Ideal

•

Vans &amp; 4-YiDs

I 989 Bronco II 4x4 V·6 automat·

$75 Whlllpoot washer $100

merclal Nice Machine Asking

from Toyota Plant Very nl e

1990 Dodge Dakota V6 3 9 Liter

1978 Ford 250 $2,500, 1911
Fo(d ~so $3 soo 740 446-0159

Walerltne Special

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1800

li&gt;ekato Seed Corn Kay Farms

Koherlng Skldloader 45 HP Com

ol Point Pleasant 20 min es

1986 Bronco II 5 Speed Trasmls·
&amp;ton Best Olfer Over $500,
Several Other Parts 740-446·

Ttcket&amp; for sale Bleach and Sev
en Day Jesus .Fr day April 3rd
7 30 at North Parkersburg Baptist
Church can 740 949 3098 for de

SPURLOCK LIME
6 FERTILIZER
Complete Blending &amp; Spreading

..

1981 Chevy S W8 305 Auto
$1 BOO 1986 S 10 LWB New 2 5
Auto 0 D New Seat $2 BOO 740
446 7877

730

Call 304 675 1506 If No Answer
Lea\'e Message

PAW U SOME
VARMINT IS
MOVIN IN ~,..;
ON YORE
TURF!!

NIGHT
II

1978 Chevy 1/2 Ton Pick Up
(7401 446-3243 Call After 6 p m

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

now Siders Equipment Hender
son WV

3 Bedroom l shaped brtck ranch
2 car garage 2 full balh~n
100x300 level lot 5 miles So h

1978 Chevrolet 307 Automatic,
108K Miles Solid Truck $1 500
740 367 7114

Jacl&lt;son Oh!o I 800 537-9528

000 Gallon

SOMEBODY HIT t.EKE'S
HENHOUSE
LAST

Trucka for Sale

5595

~

BARNEY

Upton Used Cars Rt 62 3 M1les
South ot Leon WV Financing
Available 304-458-1069

Straw lor Sale 304 675 5086

STORAGE TANKS

Answer to Prevtouo Puzzle

(abbf)

u.. a lawn-

combination

Excellent Cond ttiont 740 245-

Upnght Ron Evans Enterprises

32

48

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer North
Soutb
West North East
Dbl
t•
Pass
Pass 2 •
All pass
Pass 4 •

V1cl&lt;le 740-441&gt;-2897

720

• 10 9 4 3
• A 7

1 Type of remark
6 Alde (abbr)
10 Oman
12 Electric current
unit
14 Toddlers' toya
15 Rude looks
16 ust mo.
17 Annapolis grad
19 Poor grades
20 Saw-toothed
23 Cute
2&amp; Posltlv• vote
27 Llmou30 Charga with

.. 5 2

Trucks 4)(4 s Etc

leave message

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Aon Evans 1 800 537 9528

REAL ESTATE

310

Hay Round Anct Square Bales AI
fa/fa /Orchard Grass Milled Call

Ml•ed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

29HKI98

Locally ThiS Month

Very Good Condtlton 740 446-

Grubbs P1ano tuntng &amp; repatrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
ptano Or 740446-4525

Call After 5 ~M 740-245 5946

(740)446-4824 or (740)44&amp;0910

• AK J 6

• 9 3
• KQ J 8

Veh1cles No Turn Downs Call

985·3902

Parakeet In cage $30 304 675
7223

Hook Up $279 Plus Utlll«es De
posii/Leaso Require~ (740)4462957

Wanted 4 Or 5 Acres In The R1o
Grande Or Green School Dtstrlct

Hay &amp; Grain

• Q9 8

•KJ743

Easy Bank Financing For Used

WARM UP H1gh Eff Clancy Natu
ral And LP Gas Furnaces Lt le

Call Us Today 1998 Is Our 28th
Year In The Heaung &amp; Coolmg

1

Credtl Problems? We Can Help

Mixed grass hay lor sale 740

Computer CompaQ Desk 2000
Penlinum Pro Fa • Modem 740

300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron

1 Bedroom Near Holzer Range l
Refrigerator Furn shed WI D

Real Estate
Wanted

$650 304-675•1176

East

South

1 80().522 2730 X3901

3098 No cellsafter 9 00 pm

Lose!' Free Esttmatesl Add On
Heat Pumps Only Sllghty H1gher

Ing on used Vehicles 740·441 - r

Mare 13yrs old bay color sound

Hay Square Bales $2 00 Each
Second Cutting Grass Mixed
740 682·3956 Cenlerpolnt Area

er 'II You Don't Call Us We Both

Bad Cred1! No Credit Bankrupt
cy? We Can Help! Bank Financ-

Black Angus Bull For Sale 740
388 8823

SportscarrJs for sale very nice
selection ol Insert cards and
rookies All at least 112 or retail
prtces some even 75% off Call
now for best selection 740 949

llme Warranty On Heat Exchang

West
.. !0
•Qt087 2
• 72
.. 98643

Se1zed And Sold

Good mixed hay $2 square
bales Call before 9 p m

Please Leave A Message

• A 6 5

• K Q J tO

1980 1990CarsFor$100111

640

Call 740 245 9635 II No Answer

• 5 4

Doors Auto Air 31 ooo Miles,
$7 200 OBO 740 ~340 740.
256 6467

01;07

oa t3 98

• A 6 52

19 ooo Mileage $7 900 740 379- :
2726

SPECIAL SPRING
FEED(R CALF SALE
Athena Llveotock Saleo

Used Less Than I 0 Times
Bought New $350 Sail For $250
OBO Also For Sale Smith Coro
noa Eleectnc Typewriter $140

Nortb

1997 Neon 2 Doors Auto Atr

Smtih Corona PWP 4200 Word
Processor W1th Monitor It Has A
Hard Dnve And A DISC Drive It
Comes W1th Spell Right Corona
Cole Ill For Spreadsheets Lotus
And Word Perfect II Has Been

949-3096

Concrete &amp; Plasttc Septic Tanks

Nrce one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments In Pomeroy utilities

Large WOOded Building Lots W1th
Some RestriCtions Near 5 A 850
Less Than 1 Mile From 4 Lane

Mlddlsport Oh 740 892 6968

4 H Feeder Pigs 30 To 40 Pds

Ava!tabje Cattle Accepted After
4 PM Friday 740 592 2322 Or
740-698 3531

AKC lhasaApso female 3mos
old vet checked all shots $250

446-9216

304 675 5162

Third St Racme 740-247-4292

Black And

Brass In Co lor Stainless Steel
Chtmney Liner And Cap Included

One 2 bedroom apartment $2601
per month plus utillltes &amp; depostl

Dis co unt Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Accesso ries Water Heaters VI
chars Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps
Roof Coatings Doors Wtndows
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies
Block tng Wood &amp; Wedges And
Morel Call Bennetts Mobtle

ALift $450 74H46-4782

Beante Babies - Buy Se.fl &amp;
Trade New Current And Aeltred J
1 Have Hundreds! 740-388 8483

Call For Free Maps + Owner Ft
nancing lnlo Take 10% Off Us ted
Pnces On Cash Purchases!

Nice level lot on Broadway Street

Livestock

Saturday March 14th 1 P:M An
Cons1gments ~coma Hauling

Buy Se l Trade
Used &amp; Anltques
Fumture

4x8 Steei ,Stngle Axle Trailer Wtth

Samples (740)441-1982

trom $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 740 446 25li8
Equal Hous ng Opportunity

Same Area City Water DyeSVIIIe

304 736 7295

630

Works Good 740 379-2720 AF·
TER6PM
Mason,WV

1996 Dodge Neon, 27 000 Miles,
2 door Coup Espresso $8 ooo
OBO 740 256-1539 740·256·
1371
1996 Plymouth Neon Green, 4 •

Queen Size Waterbed Complete

Kenmore Washer $80 Hotpolnt

2 console humidifiers Combus
ttaneer Stoker stove all In good
condition, 140 742 2648

Now Taking Appllcattons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

74()-44 Hl541

ments 1 937 866-2B22

0409

1990 Fleetwood 14x70 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths $235/Mo A1r

$252/Mo Pay 011 $17 200 740
388 6741 740.388-3389

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

&amp; Countertop $1 500 740 367

{'partment8
for Rent

Requ11ad 740 446 4345 Alter 6
PM

~88

This Type Tractor s &amp; lmple

740 31'9 2126

tads

Nice 14x70 Situated On A 5 Acre
lot Located Johnson Ridge
Road $350/Mo + Deposit /Ref
erence&amp; 740 367 0433 Alter

Meigs Co

Nice 11 • Acres $10 500 Very
Prfv.lle

Antiques

Buy or sell AlveriRe Antiques,

Nice One BR Unfurnisl\ed Apart
menl Range &amp; Refrlg Provided
Water &amp; Ga1bage Paid Depost l

1991 Fatrmonl 14x70 $174/Mo
Pay Olf $9 200 3 Bedrooms 2

Sporting
Goods
Wllaon'a Al111'f SurpiUI

Last 21 8 5 Acres $7 500 or 6 5
Acres $8 000 City Water

$1 200 Pay 011 740 446 8741
740 388 8389

8N 9N Jubilee 600 BOO Series

740 446 2412 Or 1 BOO 594

520

500) OBO + Extrasl 740 2586980 304 895-3742

Danville Nice 17
Acres $18 000 $2 000 Down +
$238/Mo 5 Or 9 Acre Lot In

Prlmeatar· $99 with rebate Free
HBO with first month free Oller

304 773-5341

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes

Wanted Ford And Massey Fer
guson Tractors OlcSer Model&amp;

740-682 7830

RI S Furniture

Open 9 30 5:00 Mon Sat
304 675 SOFA (7632)

740 742 2714

($4

14x80 Glamour Bath $179/Mo

Money to Loan

wtde level lot In Middleport re

duceo trom $23000TO $17000
OBO 740 992 2290

1971 12x65 Concord Mob1le
Home Very Good Condition Oak

1991 Gorest Glen 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths 21 E•pando 1-4xSO Air

to AB Hell Rt 1 Box 476 8 Galli
poliS Ferry WV 25515 Supplies
Are Limited WRITE TODAYI

I 20 It long 80 It long by 75 It

Road 011 St Rt 790 For $10000
740-256 1789

Earn $104 To $160 In 1 Day ln11
Ita Your Fnends Over To Your
Home For A Professtonal Glam
our Portrait Party Call 1 800.426

NESS AT HOME Free Informs
tlon send bustness s1ze SASE

740 3811-8676

4 Acres Recently Landscaped
Rural Water Tap Ready For
Home Located Hannan Trace

Baths 740 386 6741 740
8389

HOW TO START AND OPERATE
YOUR OWN PROFITABLE BUSI·

63 95 Acres Approx 8 Acre
Lake Gallta County County Water
And Electric $2 600 Per Acre

remodeled $6 000 304 675
6149

tlced 1 BOO 600 0343 0111ce Exl
1295

8363

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
SMALL BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATE)

740 742 2803
12x60 2 Bedroom w th expando
on rented lot In Park Lane CA
Outbu1ldmg Carport
Porch

14 x70 2 bedroom 1n country

3 Bedroom Apartment Stove

Automat~

ending soonl18()().263-2640

Polly 1 New &amp; Used Furniture
We now have Arrrry Surplus!!'
210 t JeHerson Ave

740 446 3697

440

Ptano t9 B2 Continental Town

Car

$200 74().992 6227

14x65 2 Bedrooms Locate~.! Sk1ct
more Road Total Electric Phone

Refrigerator Included 740 446-

Bualne8a and
Buildings

2955

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1t References Requtred 740 446

Bladen $275/Mo

Years 0~ $375 740 379-9461

Hot Point washer and dryer set
electne $100 solid ptne 10 gun
gun cabinet excellent shape

9342

2 Bedroom tratler references &amp;
deposit 304 675 1076 Leave

111&amp;.736-3332

Aecondlttoned

Navy !M ultt Pla td Sofa Bed 2

I 600-499-3499

Hook Up $250/Mo $200 Depos

7148
REPO SPECIAL Most Homes

ranees

App

Washers Dryers Ranges Aelrl
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ci ty Maytag 740 446

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

1 Bedroom Tratler Close To Galh
polls Nice Clean Wtth Utility

~rgeyard

Household
Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Mobile Homes
for Rent

sage

Never Uved In These Homes
Are Drastical ly Reduced W1th
Special E Z Financing CALL

510

7795

3090

Excellent Cond•llon Owner Fl
nanclng Avatlable Call 304 722

room Dining Room 2 Full Bains

BUY HOliES FROM 14 000 1 5
Bdrm Local Gov't &amp; Bank Repo s
Cel1 80().522 2730 ~ 1709

pets deposit reqUired 740 992

2 Bedroom Tra11er Large living

PRE.OWNEO HOMES

Mile 011 Route 35 3 + Bedr:oom
House On 21 Acres Family
Room With Ga$ Fireplace L111lng

Racine

z Monthly

NOW FOR PRE·APPROVAL 1·

All Bnck 3 Bedrooms Full Bas·

lngerator no stove no lnstde

Sat up $17 999 1-688 928-3426
New 1998 14)170 three bedroom
lflCiudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sktrtlng delu•e steps
and setup Only $18lt.08 per
month with $1075 down Call 1

1

Two bedroom house clean re

420

Payments 1 888 928 3!126

Homes for Sale

lurmshod S5251mo plus deposit
304-675-7B73

New 16 Wide Free Deliver y &amp;

Low Down Payment E

310

room house central a1r &amp; heat 1
car garage fenced In yard
Stove relrlgerator/dlshwasher l

45 Heat unh

(CC)

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

Along the River

Page 12

Inside

Friday, March 13, 1998

ehanging role

Wife doesn't need to tell why she wants to leave gay husband
allhough he knows I am aware of his
sexual
orientalion . I cannot slay in
Ann
lh1s mamage, but I don'1 know what
Landers
to lei\ our fami ly and friends . TI1ey
1~ 7 . L." An1:dl'\ Timl' '
w1ll lhmk I have lost my mind 10
S yndJCotLl" JnJ \ ll' ahu ' •
Sp lt.hnl&lt;'
leave such a wonderful man . I jusl
can. , bring myse lf 10 tell anyone that
Dear -l. nn Landers: I wen! he mamed me under false pre1e1.scs
through .1 d.tTicuh di vorce . and il and has a re lati onship with a ma.1 .
Please help me. I don'! know where
'"" many years before I could 1rus1 IO turn .-- Heansick in the USA.
enough to let someone new into my
Dear Heartsick: You do no! owe
l1fe. When I mel · Dave." I thought
the details of your breakup I n anyhe was the man ol mv dreams \Vc
one. Thi s is an intense ly pri vate mal fell 111 IU\ c ;mJ m ~1rrlcJ Everyone
,(er and should rcmam so S1mply

change the subject.
Dear Ann Landers: My hus·
band, "Dexter," and I have been
married a linlc over a year. We were
clean ing the closets rece ntly and
ca.me across the wedding album
from Dexter 's prev ious marriage,
wh1 ch ended in divorce. I asked him
10 gel rid of lhe p1c1ures, but he
refused ;md said. "Those pictures
are a part of my past, and I may want
Ia reOeel on th em in I he future." He
sa1d he hoped I wou ld understand.
Well. I musl confess th ai I don 't
" understand ."

say. " We agreed to go our separate
ways ~GJ.w;c the re were too many

Ann . we arc planning to start a
family soon. and I don' t want our

areas of di &gt;agrce mcnl." If anyone
presses fm de1ail s. say. " I reall y
don·, wan! 10 talk about 11 ," and

son or daughter 10 see th ose pictures
and ask rnc about Daddy and the
'·othe r hride." Dexter said he will do

ll wa~

v...:: l..nc-w th ought
mah.:h.

a pnfcct

We had been marncd I 0 months
when I disrovcrcd that Da,·c wac\
ga' . \Vc ha\'C nm JJ ,CWi,C LI it.

-Sermonette.crushtng news hur\1 into her lt fc.
A routine ("hcd·•· up :-.lmwcU that

the dread diSease had spread. Pat
a&lt;kccl prayer Irom her chu rc h famil y
and !he y gathered around I n ex press
their IPvl'. support and prayers
When I ~ at dow n tu wt itc this
morning. i llw ught of Pat when I say
the ve rse o n my dall y calenda-r.

Every Day to its Fullest
By Bonnie Shiveley
Pal. 33, happil y planned a Chri stmas cclebmlion of Jesus ' birth for
Bi ll and their two sons. John . 10.
and .Jeff. 8. But in the midst of the
happy holiday se ason, she learned
!hal she had cancer and needed
immed iate surgery. The bright holi days turned bleak. After surgery Pal
bounced back and rejoiced in the
good news !hot she needed no further lrc::t tmcnt.

Fifteen wonderful hcallhy years
passed . The Lord honored her
praye rs lo sec her children grow to
maturity. John married Tammy and
!hey delighted her wi lh her firs!
grandchild . Ahigall .
In 19'16. pain began to plague
Pat 's legs and hack . Her oncolog ist
had had n..:ws -

hone l.:anccr. Pat

confc;scd. "There are limes you
ha ve I n 'crape me off lhe fl oor. "
A woman of great l:Ouragc and

failh . she lniS icd her mighty God .
After tn.: atmcnt. she re turned to
wor ~ as ~~ nur~c. and had a pcrfl!ct
worl.. rcl:on.l 111 the nex t year.

"Even th ough I wa lk lhrn ugh !he
valley of I he shadow of deat h. I fear
no ev il ; for Thou an with me ."
Psa lm 23:4 NASB .
The hoau 1i fu l sofl1aupe rose on
lhc ca lendar reminded me that s~e
rem ains faithful 10 her Lord.
Pal slays busy in church, playing
lhc organ , si nging in the choir,
leaching children in Sunday School
and working in Vacation Bible
School. She is an encouragement 10
her friends - always exprcssmg lhc
beauty and fragran ce of Chri s!
Je sus' love and faithfulness.
· I' m sure Pat has experienced lhc
vall ey walk . Oflcn, she has said she
docsn·, fear the process of dying or
death . She said, "I have made a conscious choice not 10 dwell on negati ve things. Dea 1;n g wi th cancer has
made me mort aware of the pres~
cncc of lhe Lcvd in my hfe. My fai th
and rclationsh;n with Him is I he reason I'm doing so we ll. I can go
through thi s because I know I have a
ca ring. lov ing Friend with me alllhc
lime.··

Father, I pray thai you Will continue lo help Pal live every day 10 its
fullcsl. and may her story of slrcnglh
and faith reach oul 10 many who are

~o

By LENITA POWERS
Reno Gazette Journal
Fnday (March 13) supposed ly
mark&gt; 24 hours of l10lding your
hrcalh unld you 111akc il lu Saturday
the 14th.
Nol literall y holding your breath.
of course wh1ch would rcsuli in very
bad luck.
One ~:&lt;p l anatio n for lhc unlucky
reputat ion stems from Chri st's cruci-

fi xion on a Friday and the 13 people
presen t a1I he Las! Supper.
The Last Supper also gave rise lo
the · be lief !hal spill ing sa il is an
omen of bad luck. See, Judas was
nol only a rat-fink , but a klutz as
welL Alleastlhai's how he was piclured in Leonardo Da Vmci 's
famou s painting, which shows Judas
overturning !he salt shaker. And look
what happened to him - bad luck
for eternity, although that probably
had more to. do wilh spilling the
beans than thai saiL
As for Friday, it was known as
'hangman's day, " I he day when executions typicall y were carried out
and . thus, a day of ending, nol
beginnings. Add Fridav to the date
13 and you· ve got a double whammy. That 's why it 's not considered a
good date to gel married, start a ne"
job, set sai l, embark on a journey,
turn over a mattress. clip your nai ls
or wean or child .
Triska.dekaphobes who rear Fri .
day the 13th and hope to beal poss ible ill fortune by slaying home in
bed loday. be forewarned . There arc

Community Calendar
grn up.., Wt\ hmg to ann ounce rncc11ng
and :-. pl' r lal l'VC nts. The ralcndar i.s
JWI d ~ :-. 1 gncd tt l pr0 mo1e ~a le ... or
fund raJ . . a !'i nf an y tyr c. Items arc
pnnkJ a... ~ ra~..:c penn it ~ and cann&lt;lt
he g ui.lr:.mtccJ to mn a \ p Cc iii L' num -

hcr of da) ' ·

ALFRED - Northeast Cluster
hymn Sing. Alfred United Mclllodi sl
Church. 7 p.m. Sunday . Rev. Sharon
A. R. Hausman . pastor.

CA RPENTER - Gospe l smg.
Sund ay. 2 p.m. al !he Baptist
Church. Stale Route 14.1 . Carpenter.
Featuring lhe Summerville Family
and The Brady Fami ly of Mineral
Well s. W Va. Joh n Elswick. paSi m.
in vites puhlic

FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church a1 Long Bollom
wi ll helVe a hymn Sing Friday m 7
p.m . al lhc chu rch. Singe" wi ll
incl ude lhc Pcac·c Makers . Puhhc
lll\' IICd .

CHESTE R
Ba ll signup.
Ches ler Ekrnenl ary gy m, Friday. 6
10 7 p.m .; and Sa turday. 9:30 10
I IJO a.m.
HOC KI NG PORT - Revival.
Friday. Saturday. ·and Sunday. 7 p.m.
Hocl-.1 ngpon Unit ed Methodi st
Church , spec ial si nging Fnday.
Marl &gt; Shon of Chesler Evange list
John Elsw1 ck.
SAT URDAY
BURLINGHAM -

Saturday. 6:.10 p.m Take potluck
dt .sll C;unp to furni ~ h IIICL.II. ma'thcd
po t :ltoc ~. ro ll s and licv.;ragcs .

CHESTER - Youth rally. Harvest Ouuc:1ch Minislrics. Riche!
Road . 6 p m. K•rrale dcrnon slrati on.
mu ... Jc and

. RACINE -

Revival , First Bapthrough
Wcdnc&gt;day. 7 p.m Ray Sta gna.

IIS I Churc h. Racine. Sunday

evange l1st and tcad1cr at Grace Min ·

istries in New York City, will be
speaker.

• Featured on page C1

where we live. too.

From walking under ladders 10
lhc dreaded broken mirror, here are
some other omens !hal haunt us. as
well as some thai help us, in and
around the home eve n when it 's not
Friday the 13th:
- Ladders. A ladder, even a
strai ght ladder lcfl lcanmg against a
house , forms a triangl e. which represents lhc mys tic number three or the
Trinity of Christianity. To brave of
defy the Tnnity in olden limes was
to play inlo lhc hands of !he devil.
This one of those superslitions that
have an escape clause.
Any ninny absent-minded or
near-s ighted enough to pass under a
ladder without realizing il can avert
the resultant bad luck by crossing
two fingers and keeping them
crossed until he or she sees a dog.
Linda Tripp doesn't count.
-Broken mirrors. Mirrors were
once believed to be !he tools of evil
magicians. Broken mirrors further
were equated with bad fortune or
pending death because they renee[
back a broken image. Today, many
people still belie ve breaking a mirror resulls in seven years .
- Baby cradle. A superstition
once held !hal if a woman rocked an
en1pty cradle , it would be filled
again within a year. However, keeping your hands the heck off any cradle in sigh! is not endorsed by
Planned Parenthood as a trustwonhy
method of birth conlrol.

- Lucky horseshoes. Nailing a
horseshoe over lhe door of a house
Ia bring good luck remains one of
the most prevalent supcrslilions
today. II originatcs . from the hclicf
!hal lhc devil alway s traveled in circles. so when he amvcd al the heel
of the horseshoe . his evil move ments were halted and had luck was
kept away. Con ve rsely, to retain all
lhe good luck in a horseshoe , il has
to be nailed with lhc open part point ed upward so all the good luck won ·,
run out. And some horseshoes arc
luck ier !han others. The greatest of
luck purportedly comes from a
horseshoe thrown off the lefl hind
leg of a gray mare.
- A clean sweep. A new broom
should firs! sweep somelhin·g into
the house before it is used to sweep
dust out or it will sweep all the luck
away.
- Happy home. To ·bring luck
into a new hou ~e, go in every room
bearing a loaf of bre~d and a plate of
salt in your hands. However, for
really good luck, go through every
room bearing the six winning numbers to the nexl California lottery.
- Silverware. · f a knife is
dropped on the floor a man is coming lo visit. If a fork falls , a woman
is coming. Anott..:. superstition
holds that if you drop a fork while
selling !he la~lc , il mea ns lhc end of
your love affair.
'
- Say it with nowers. h once
was considered unlucky to bring
nowers that were ou1 of season into

SON BORN - Brian and Lea
Ann King, Pomeroy, announce
the birth of their second son,
Wyatt Garrison, born Jan. 9,
weighing seven pounds, 15 and
a half ounces.
Grandparents are Lloyd and
Eva King King, Roger and Paula
Gaul and Chloris Gaul, all of
Pomeroy. Great grandmothers
are Sadie Carl and Barbara Sargent of Pomeroy, and Leone
Machir of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The Kings have an older son,
Austin.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

the house.
- The ny. Thi s won ., fl y a1 I he
hcallh dcparlmcnl , bul 11 a lly fall s
1010 a glass when you' re dnnking
from il or aboullo drink from il. it 's
an omen uf prosperity. It's also a
sign that you wi ll be ge tting a new

drink1n g glass in lhe immed.alc
future .
- Boots. Plac ing a person 's
ho01s on a table mea n! there would
he a quarrel. This superstition easi ly
can he proved today hy pulling your
own muddy hoots on the lahle and
wailing 10 sec whal happens nex t.
- Rodent remedies. Minced
mouse was once believed to cure
measles, wh1le eating roast · mou se
was lhoughl 10 slop children from
wetting the hed. Today. the mere
threat or feeding someone vermin
can cure almost a~ything .
- Open house. Opening all the
doors in a home was once held lo
make childbinh easier. Leaving all
the doors ope n these days is
believed Ia make burglarizin g your
home easier.
-Jumping Jimmy. A cricket in
the house was believed lo bring
good luck. It 's . departure was
though! 10 be a sign of coming misfortune. To kill a cricket was considered unlucky.
- Southern exposure. To prevent bad luck. residents were surposed 10 face their beds towards a
church or, otherwise, to the South.

BUDGET APPROVAL - The GaiiJpolll City
Comml11lon praparn to approve the approprla·
tlon of lunda for the 11198 flac:el year Friday
evening. Da.,lte pleas from AFSCME, the com·

8W$
In 18921 Benjamin
H.arrlson was president
and John Lowen was born
ROCK SPRINGS - BeA·
jamin Harrison was president of
the United
States in 1892,
ICW1hen John
I.Owen was
born, and
Lowen's has
been an inter·
esling life.
Lowen will
turn 106 on .
March 26. He
. resides at
Rocksprings
Lowen
Rehabilitation will tum 100 on
Center, where March 2t, and
he remains
etaff members
active - play· · II RC)Cbprlnga
Rehabilitation
ing bingo,
Canter
ere
auending
planning
•
church serparty to cel•
vices and ·
brate.
watching the
goings·on of his fellow residen!S
and the staff at !he center.
Born in Covington, Va.,
Lowen's career experiences have
included a six-year slint with the
Barnum and Bailey Circus, driving a team of horses that pulled ·
tlie wagons loaded with circliS animals from circus site to circus site.
After his lour with the circus,
Lowen wen! to work for U.N. ·
Halderman Construction Company, and worked for the firm for
35 years, building roads across·
the United Stales. A.mong the
projects which he worked on was
the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
A party in Lowen's honor is
being planned by the staff at the
center, but Lowen sees no greal
accomplishmeril in his longevity,
and seems a bit surprised !hal so
JIIUch allenlion is being paid to
his birthday. Alas, he offers no
! ~eret" to reaching old age.
-• His spittoon is by his side, evidence thai he enjoys his chewing
tQbacco, and he admits that he
still enjoys the occasional cigar
and a beer now and then, two
diversions that the staff oblige.
Those staff members are
impressed with. Lowen's relative
good health - he's still "up and
around," and wilh the exception
of a few minor aches and pains,
Lowen is among the more active
residents at the center - prelly
good, since he's also the oldest
resident there.

in ..th~ t-c ~t ine .

1

The Sentinel News Hotline
To offer story suggestions, report late.99 -2156 breaking news---and offer news tips ·--- - .

LE GOING ON NO

MONDAY
CHES HIRE - TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Scns1hly I #OH 1383 will
mcel Monday. 10- 11 a.m. a1
Cheshire United Methodist Church.
Weigh-in from 8:30-9:45 p.m. For
more 1nfom1al10n ca ll lone! TI10mas

Good Morning

)

POMEROY - Free Ohi o Humcr
Educati on Course be~mning: Mon-

CHE~

fFR - Harvest Out rcaeh
Mim slrics. youth rall y for hend area
youth . 6 p.m Saturday. Games.
rnu s1c and n.: frc~ hm c nt s.

SYR AC USE - Syrac use Youth
League hasehall \l gnups w1ll be held
Saturday and March 21. I0 a.m. 10
noun al the elementary school.

day. 6-9 p.m. and continu ing Tuesday. Wednesday. 6-9 p.m. and Saturday, 9 a.m. 10 noon a1 the Pomeroy
Gun Club.
TUESDAY
RACIN E - Southern Loca l
Building Cumm111ec meeti ng Tuesday, 6 p.m. in the high school cafeteria. Public welcome .

Today'a ~=--.Sesdbtel
10 Sections • 9ii' Pages
Calendan

"' (740) 367-0274 .

DINING ROOMS
il~

LIVING ROOMS

BEDROOMS ·

12 MONTHS SAME AS CRSH - 98 DAY LAYAWRY

,., ...,..,

.•

[)

QUALITY FURNITURE I•LUS
Across from Farmers Bank

42123 State Route 7 • Tuppers Plains , Ohio 45783

1-740·667-7388
1-800 -2 00-4005

• Entlrtllnmtnt on P1ge C&amp; •

. \ ~f oo~ 1

HI: 40s
Low: 20s
Details on

Partly cloudy page A2

tnfintl

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 15, 1998

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Ci ty Commission
approved an ordinance lo set appropriations for fiscal year
1998 of $7.639 million, despite AFSCME union members'
pleas lo reconsider lhe resulting lay-off of three employees.
Starling several months ago, the commission conducted
special budget meetings to discuss whal lhey would have 10
do lo guarantee no deficil for lhe year. The commission
decided they had no choice bur 10 make cuts.
Three oflhe cuts are in manpower: in the water lrealmenl
plant, wasle water lrealmenl planl and in waler/sewer maintenance. Besides these three cuts - which go inlo effecl on
March 31 -one non·union police sergeant was dismissed in
mll81on approved the budget - an action that late February.
Union representatives have pleaded with !he commission
lncludaa the lay-off of three city union employ·
111. At the end of February, one pollee l8flltlnt to reconsider these cuts. The union has wrillen numerous lei·
was dlamlaled to reduce coltl.
lers lo lhe press seeking answers from !he city, bul !he com-

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

sold.
Janis Macomhor, Deaf ChairperPlans were diSc ussed for lhc son, reminded members thai lhc
125ih Anniversary cc lehralion in Grange is still cnllecling pup can
March. 1999.
tabs and Camphcll 's Soup Lam!&lt;
The .Meigs County Grange Ban- through I he May meeting.
quet was announced for April 24 al
Eldon Barrows. Legislative
7: 15 p.m. at the Senior Center in Agenl, reported on Rcclatnuli r)n
Pomeroy.
funds in Washington . D.C.. 1ha1 need
Grangers discuss events
The Salisbury PTO will serve. 10 he released. and I he Social SecuFinal plans for the annual soup and tickets are availahle from Meigs rity Trusl Fund. ·
.supper, 10 be held on March 20 from County Grange Masters al a cost of · Jessica Cundiff was initialed as a
4t0 7 p.m. were discussed when Star $8.50 for adult.&lt; and $7.50 for chil- new member into me order.
Grange #778 mel recently. The sup- dren. Tickets musl he purchased by
Lecturer Vicki Smith presented a
per will be held at the Stale Grange April 16.
program on Sl. Patrick 's Day and
Hall , and the public is invited.
Christine Napier, Gallia Counly Spring. There was a re ading.
Plans were discussed for a con- Grange Deputy, annuunced a Vision "Spring" from Rose Barrows, and
signment sale 10 be held May 2. 2000 Membership . meet ing. In he "SI. Patrick 's Day" hy Vicki Smith.
Those with items to go in the sale held on March 24 al 7:30 p.m. al There was a quiz ory Si. Patrick's
should. contact Rick Macomber al Eno Grange Hall. Grangers from Day by all . and a reading, "Thanks."
742-2 163, Tom Bartley al669-3817, surrounding countics wcrc invited to hy Smith.
or Ray M1dkilf a1 669-4241.
aucnd.
There were 37 mcmhcrs. visiwr.&gt;
The Grange will charge a 20 perA TB skm lcsling dime will be and juniors prcscnl.
cent commission on small items and held on April 13 at the Star Grange
The nexl meeting will be Fun
a fi vc percent commission on large Hall from 4:30 10 li:30 p.m., wilh Ni ght. and work on Community Seritems.
results lo be read on April 15 from vice Projects (ABC quills) on March
1'hcre will also be a $20 listin g 4:30 to 5:30p.m. The public is invit- 2 1.

**MARCH

·Page B1 •

,

1

·

J, ' )'

. ; :... ·.

I

·~~'

Vol. 33, N~·.:~P.i
'

I

Despite protests, budget passes; lay-offs inevitable

.

MASON . W.Va. - Agaj&gt;c Life
Ce nter in Mason , W.Va. will hold
&gt;pecial services wnh the pruphwc
team of Rev. Michael Springier and
Rev Ern1c Cadick on Sunday al
10:.10 a.m. and 6 p.m

Franken goes
for laughs with
political satire

tmts

90045

to

NCAA second
round playoff
action continues

•

Send quesuons 10 Ann Landers, Cre ators Syndicate, 5777 W Century
Blvd., Sui!~ 700, Los An ge les. Cali f.'

rt.:frc·.;/uncnts.

Mu s1c hy H1 gher Ca ll ing .

SU!\IDAY

of child cilre

I wish "Charloue in Georgia"
and all mothers of triplets continued
fulfillment with their children and
grandchildren. -- Arthur in Largo,
F:a.
Dear Arthur: Your leiter reminded me of the McCaugheys in Iowa,
who had seven at once. I wonder,
now !hal all the publicily has di ed
down. how much help they arc getling from friends and (he communi ty. Please lei me know, dear readers
in and around Carlisle.

Burl ingham

ModL'rn Woodmen. ' leak dinner.

1! &lt;Hil C ~ .

MIDDLEPORT - Norm Arrington of Princeton. W Va ., a Bihlical
dramatist. will he appearing al the
Ash S1rec1 Freewi ll BapliSI Church.
Su nday. 7 p.m Pastor Lcs Hayman
mvnes the puhlic.

a lot of superstiti Ons !hal. hil us

Zachery Ward. son of Wa yne and
Linda Ward of Portland. has hccn
accepted by Nonhwcslcrn College
in Lima, 10 begin classes in lhc June,
1998 session. He will major in the
AuiOmotivc Technician program. He
auended Meigs High School.

good. hut once ag:.un .

Th~ Cummunity Calendar is puhli ~ hcd :1' a fr~l: ~erv i ~.:c to non-profit

enriched her life. It was truly heartwarming and brought 10 mind a
story I heard not long ago about · a
woman in our town who gave birth
to lriplels.
This woman became an inslanl
celebrity to everyone excepl her
next-door neighbor, who took the
event in a rather matter-of-fact manner. While hanging out her wash in
the backyard the next morning, she
said to the new mother, "Hey -- I
heard you had triple IS. That's nice."
The new mother felt denared and
replied, "Did you know thai triplets
happen only once in every 10,000
bmhs 0 " Her neighbor dropped the
bed sheet and said, "Goodness gracious! How did you ever have lime
10 do any housework ·&gt;"

It's Friday the 13th - is your house in order?

During !hal lim e. lhc Lord gm ng through. thei r ow n \'alleys
hk"cd her sun . Jeff. wi th Amy. Pat now. May each one realize how
and her lam il y !raveled 10 Nashville important i1 is Ia have Christ wa lk
for I hen· hoau tiful "cdd ing.
·wi th- the m moment hy mnmcnt.
In earl y IYYX. Pal "-:IS elated !hal Am en.
she lc lt

whatever you say. i hope you will
tell him 10 throw them out. -- New
Bride in Sunny California
Dear New Bride: Since Dexter
has expressed his wish to keep those
pictures. you should be gracious
about il. They are no 1hrea11o you . I
hope you will ap&lt;&gt;logize and tell him
it 's perfec tly OK.
If you and Dexter have children,
!hey should be told about his previous marriage . The best way lo
broach lhc subject would be to show
!hem those pictures you wanted 10
throw away . Trust me.
Dear Ann Landers: "Charlone
in Georgia" wrote about how much
joy having triplets brought her, even
though she had three other ch1ldren .
She desc nbed how lhe children

.

·~Lasslflecls
!!mlcs
Editorials
Along the River
Obituaries

C4&amp;5
DZ-5
Insert
A4
Cl
AS

Sports

Bl-8

0 1998 Ohio Ylllcy Publish ina Co.'

'Quilt for a Cure'

QUILTIN() FOR CANCER- Once thll quilt II completed
It will be uled by The Fabric Shop to rain money for the
Melga County Cancer Society. Shown quilting are mem-

bars of the Trinity Church group, from the right around the
table, Pauline Mayer, Lola Burt, Mildred Arnold, Elsie
Hlnea, Bernice Riffle, and Lucretia Smith.

.Craft project benefits brea·st cancer research
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY- Several years ago a designer convinced her
employer to contribute a percentage of all profits from quilting
fabrics she designed into funding for breast cancer research.
The designer, Bonnie Stratton, whose molher is a breast
cancer. survivor, and the company she works for, Northcoll,
named the program "Quilt for a Cure."
The Fabric Shop in Pomeroy carries the "Quilt for a Cure"
fabric line, and displays the logo so that customers can know a
part of. the money they are paying for fabric is going 10 help in
the search to find a cure for breast cancer - a disease which
afflicts one out, of eight A.merican women.
Becky Anderson, owner/manager of the shop, herself a cancer survivor, decided she would like to take on a project to benefit cancer research.
She talkCd witlf Meigs County quilting groups- the Forest
Ibm Methodist Church, tlie Hemlock Grove Grange, and Trinity Church groups; along with individual quilter.;- and it was
decided that a program to raise money for cancer research be

started here.
In early February, the quilting frames were sel up al The
Fabric Shop and work began on a colorful double·wedding
ring quilt design.
Groups are scheduled ih on different days, usually on a
weekly basis. Others are encouraged lo share !heir skills and
invited to stop by !he shop and sign up for quilling time. All
malerials are being provided by Anderson.
The fund raising comes in when !he quill is finished . Residents will be asked to donate and a drawing will lake p)ace,
probably sometime in May. All or lhe mone'y will go to lhc
Meigs County Chapler of the American Cancer Society.
Anderson views quill making al lhe shop as a continuing
project, allhough she knows thai will depend on how many residents wan! 10 become a pari of quilling for a cause .
Most of the participants are women in !he higher risk age,
some are survivors of cancer, and all share an empathy for viclims.
That's why they gladly share their special·ralems in the pro·
jecllo find a cure.

•

S,.Cial ~nu.•

•

Capltlil Projeeta

(iJ S,.CIII ANenmenta

II.,.,..,.,..,

mission's answer 10 the union has remained the same - lhe
culs are necessary .
The union's president, Floyd Wright, said his main reasons for objecting to the layoffs include:
• The budget does not and has not had a deficit;
• The commission wants 10 increase funds in !he general
fund, bul the cuts are in areas not associated with the generContlnued on page A8

Strickland urges
TRAC·to delay
hearings u.ntil
local rep is in place
GALLIPOLIS - Sixlh Dislricl Congressman Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, has urged the Transportation Review
Advisory Couneilto delay any further field hearings, including one scheduled in Bill ·would guarantei/ iocaJ
Athens on March 271h,
input in road:buJidLngJ
until it has added a representative from southern · GALUPOUS- On the
33rd annlvereary of the
Ohio.
"Legislation mandai· Appalachian Regional Coming southern Ohio repre· million, Rep. Ted Strickland
senlation on TRAC has last wnk Intropassed the Ohio House of duced the Local
Represtnlali ves and is
now working ils way Control Enhancethrough lhe Senale," said ment Act, 1 bill
which would
Slrickland.
"The decisions made require the ARC
by TRAC will impact our and states to
region for generations. consult local
Surely TRAC can wail a communities end hold pubfew weeks until a soulh·
ern Ohio member is lic hearing• before changing
appointed. Anything else or eliminating any segment
would be ·an injustice lo of the Appalachian Developour working families and ment Highway System. Cura hindrance to future rently, the governor of a
growth in our region."
state, with the approval of
The Ohio Senate is the ARC, can change or
expected 10 pass the bill as
soon as ApriL Strickland ellmlnata portions of the
questioned why, in lighl of Highway Corridor without ,
Ihe legislation's impend· . consulting local govern· ..
ing passage, TRAC · is menta. Strickland said he
planning 10 conlinue hear- would also Introduce a bill
ings.
that would help guarantee
Coin cide ntall y,
lh e that rural officials participate
fi rsl 1wo schedu led hearIn each state's transport&amp;·
ings occur in regions of
tlon
planning.
the slate which lack
TRAC represenlalion.
"While I and olhers raised our initial objections that TRAC
was no! representative of all areas of the state, I was concerned
that our region would be los! in !he transportation shuffle,.'' he
said. "My concerns will not change as long as TRAC conllnues
holding public meetings before its new members are.added."
"TRAC is cl aiming !hal is wants an open and fa1r process.
According to lhe Ohio Department of Transportalion, the
!Cason for the field hearings is lo gel inpul from our local
communities," Strickland added. " It see ms lo me !hal !he
besl way for TRAC to gel !hal inpul aboul southern Ohio is
Ia wait until a southern Ohioan is a pari of lheir group before
they hold any more hearings."

Grant funds abstinence-based sexuality curriculum for students
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
· Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY- A gran I of.$64,508 has been
received from the Ohio Depanment of H~lth
to slart an abstinence-based sexuality 'urrku·
lum for high school studen!S in Meigs County.
The funding will be supplemented by local
monies in the amount of $48,381, giving the
program a total budget of S112,889. ·
Meigs was one of 35 grant proposals to be
. funded in Ohio. The program will be carried
out in all three high schools under the direction and supervision of Jon Jacobs, Meigs
County Deputy ·Health Commissioner and
project director, and Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lcntes, abstinence education program
director, assisted by other Health Department
. and Family and Children First personnel. ·

The curriculum 10 be utilized is "Sex Can fused," she sa id.
She described the components of the abstiWail" and. the target population will be 15 10
17 year olds who are "underserved ", according nence-only educational and motivational proto Norma Torres, R. N., Health Department . grams as:
• reaching the social, psychological and
nursing director, who is active in developing
heallh
gains related 10 abslai ning from sexual
the program.
Torres stressed the importance of an absli - activity ;
• teac,hing !hal abstinence from sexual
nence-ba5ed program and lisled leen pregnan·
aclivily
outside of marriage is !he expected
cy as "the number one problem in Meigs
societal
norm
for all school age children;
.
County."
·
•
leaching
!hal
abstinen
ce
from
sex
ual
She noted that birlh control and family
planning are not included in !he curriculum. activity is lhe only perfect way lo avoid AIDS
"The curriculum is intended to promote absti- and a myriad of other sexually 1ransm1lled diS·
nence unequivocally as the wises! choice for ease~. oul-of.wedlock pregnancy and other
young people. Telling young people, 'don't health risks; ·
• leaching !hal a mutually faithful monogahave sex, but if you do make sure you use protection', is a double message and can leave mous relationship in the context of marriage is
young people less directed and more con- the expected norn;

OSU's Interim president to speak at chamber banquet
GALUPOUS - Gallia County
native Richard Sisson, Ph.D., interim president of Ohio Stale Universiry -will be the featured speaker a! the
6ist annual meeting of the Gallia
County· Chamber of Commerce 'on
Thursday, April 16 at 7 p.m., at the
University of Rio . Grande Student
i\rinex.

o.r.n,l '"IMI

0

"The chamber and &lt;;Ommunity informatio~ base~
are most fortunate to have'Dr. Sisson . on his vasl,experi·
return to his native Gallia County as ence and expertise
our special guest for !he 61S1 annual in higher educa·
chamber meeting," said Chamber tion," Roach said.
President Gary Roac~. . .
. . . Si.sson be~me
"We take great prrde m hrs brrl- mterrm pres1den1
liant career, and know he will bring of OSU on Dec. 15, 1997. He had
an important message to us, sharing
COntinued on page A8

•teaching !hal sexual activity outside of !he
conlexl.of marriage may result in harmful psychological and physical effecls;
•teaching that bearing children oul-of-wedlock is likely 10 have consequences for the
child , lhe child's parents, and society !hal are
detrimental;
• leaching !he teenager not only how 10
reject sexual advances bul how alcohol and
drug use increase vulnerabilily to sexual
advances by lowering of inhibitions; and
• leaching lhe importance of auaining se lfsufficiency pri or lo becoming involved in sexual activity.
· Torres explained !hal !he plan calls for uti lizing an approach based on the premise !hal
abstinence should be taught within a frame Continued on page AB

Work continues on Meigs URG branch
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
Workers renovating lhe Meigs
County Branch of the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande Com"
munily College are facing a March
27 deadline.
That's when a ribbon-cuuing .cer·

,.

emony will be held al lhe branch
located at !50 Mill Street in Middlepori.
Workers [or Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy arc consl rucling
1wo classrooms, several offices and
a student lounge in the building !hal
formerly hou sed lhe Middlepon

Holzer Clinic.
The clinic recently donated the
sile lo th e Meigs County Communi- ·
ly Improvement Corporation which
is leasing the building lo the school.
Two different local conlraclors
have worked on the projecl, accordContinued on page A8

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