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Page 12 • ,.., Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

. Thursday, March 19, 1998

Tarheels beat
Mich. State in
tournament

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

rwt.~~~~.~~"
t" .
IIIII"'
...

Pick 3:
3-3-8
Pick 4:
3-7-3-3
Buckeye 5:
7·11·13-16-24

Sports c:»" Page .4

t:::::::

.:'f'C. ': .

• . ',
. I! '
•

•

"I

•

.

..
- ..: .

..

Ram
Showers ton
In the
30s.
Saturday,
with light
rain and drlule. Highs In
the lower 40s .

•

en tine
IIDI. 48, NO. 236

2 Sections, 12 Pagee, 35 cente
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 20, 1998

C1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

, Poll says retirement cheers working Americans
president of,Princeton Survey Research Associates. which conducted the polls
for Pew.
One linding is that working people " have different expectations than you
might think, given the experience of today·s retirees ... said Cola.&lt;anto.
Nearly half - 48 ~rcent - of Americans who are ~till working said they
see retirement as "a chance for a new beginning." People aged 35 to 49 were
most likely to take this view.
Only a third of current retirees reported their nonworking years have been
a fresh start, however. More, 39 percent, said retirement has been just "a continuation of life before." and 20 percent said it was "a step down" for them .
It "suggests people have gotten too optimistic." said John Rother. a
spokesman for the American Association of Retired Persons. "Really only
a small minority have put away the savings that allow people to pursue their

WASHINGTON (AP) - Working people·think retirement will give them
a chance to make a fresh ~tart, but most retirees say their lives are about the
same as before~ or worse, an upcoming poll fmds.
The "Image~ of Aging" survey. which will be relea.,ed in its entirety early next month, is part of a $12.5 million campaign funded by the Philadelphia-based Pew Ch&lt;l(jtable Trusts to get Americans talking about the future
of the nation's Social: Security pension system.
The kickoff is Saturday, when the re~idents of 10 cities are invited to join
an "Americans Disc\lss Social Security" video conference with President
Clinton and membeP.I of Congress. More forums and periodic releases of
polling results culled from interviews with 15.000 Americans will follow.
"Our whole purpose ... is to understand the context of opinion and impressions that will surround the Social Security debate.'' said Diane Colasanto,

dreams. "
The Pew project overlaps with Clinton's plan to promote 1998 as a year
of public dialogue on Social Security. h w.ill be the topic of his weekly radio
·address Saturday. and Clinton has asked the AARP and the economic watch·
dog group Concord Coalition to sponsor four regional town hall me&lt;tings.
starting April 7 in Kansas City. Mo.
The president's promise to follow up next year by a.~king Congress to make
changes to prepare Social Security for baby boomers ' retirements has mused
activists from Wall Street brokerage houses to senior citizens centei'O. as well
as lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
Key congressional budgeteers Sen. William Roth. R-Del .. and Rep. John
Ka.,ich. R-Ohio, are pushing legislation that would test a new system of pri·
vale investment accounts.

'A real
rough
time'

ODOT plans $5M
worth of highway
project$ in Meigs

USED CAR &amp;
.

DCK

By JIM FR~MAN
Sentinel tf!Ws Staff
Ohio Department of Transportation District 10 expects one of its
busiest and most expen~ive construction seasons .this year.
Deputy Director J ' Dowler estimates that District
projects for
1998 will amount to approximately
$100 million, including two big projects already underway on U.S. 50 in
Athens County, and a third U.S. 50.
project in Athens County scheduled
to sell this June.
Total construction in Meigs County for 1998 is in the neighborhood of
$5 million. aCcording to ODOT Di~­
trict I0 ~pokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
District 10 includes Athens. Gal·
lia, Hocking. Meigs. Monroe, Morgan. Noble. Vinton and Washington
counties.
·
Meigs County project~ include a
bridge replacement on State Route 7
near Eastern High School, resurfacing SR 124 from McKelvey's Comer
at the junction of SR 338 to
Reedsville at a cost of $897.962.20.
and from Pomeroy to Racine for
S486.656.85, and resurfacing all of
SR 325.
Paving work is expected to stan
around May I and be comp leted by
Sept. 30.
Work ha.' already started on the

S490.000 SR 7 bridge deck replacement project near EHS by Maiden &amp;
Jenkins Construction Co. of Nel,onville. Completion is slated for July
31. Pedigo said. ·
The Shelly Co. of Thornville will
reinforce large plastic pipes running
beneath SR 7 on the new four-lane
and also on Salisbury Township Road
673. The $147.183.50projectentail~
reinforcing the pipes with beneath
each of these roads with steel liners
by June 30, 1998.
In addition, a four-lane bridge
deck repair project over Naylor's Run
Road will be sold in May or June at
an estimated cost of $835.000.
Some jobs left over from la.&gt;t year
will also be completed. including a
bridge replacement project on SR 143
n·~ar Hanisonville and resurt·acing of
the U.S. 33 four-lane near Pomeroy.
- &amp;'!lergency projects include riverbank stallilization along U.S. 33 in
front of the Pomeroy Kroger-store
($1.733 million) and repair of a 'lip
along SR 248 on the Chester side of
Bashan Road ($1.100 million).
Other emergency projects include
a slip repair on SR 338 north of the
Raven~wood Bridge for $2 15.000.
slip repair on SR 124 at Pewitts Run
near Long Botto~n for $7(~}.000 and
a slip repair on SRni~tthe Shade
River Bridge. three . m{es south of

Ohioan pleads
with Congress
to reject higher
rate on loans
for disaster aid

Long Bottom for $803,ooci.
Gallia County projects ~lated for
completion include the construction
of a tum-off lane from SR 7 to Little
Kyger Road near Cheshire. installa·
tion of a' tmffic light at the junction
of SR 7 and Olive Street in Gallipolis. resurfacing SR 588 from Gal·
lipolis to Old U.S. 35. resurfacing SR
325 from Rio Gmnde to Vinton.
resurfacing SR 141 from the
Lawrence/Gallia line to SR 233. and
resurfacing SR 554 from SR 160 io
SR 7 in Cheshire.

Gallia County emergency pro·
j~cls include the repair of a slip on
Old 35 just west of the new ODOT
gamge. and several slips on county
roads throughout the county. including one .on Gravel Hill Road near
River Valley High School.
The emergency projects were
schedukd as a ri:suh of Maich 1997
floods. These projects are being funded by the Federal Highway Admin·
istration.
In Athens County, ODOT will
resurface SR 681 from SR 356to the

Albany corporation line. along with
other paving project~ . In addition. a
slip will be repaired - using emergency funding - on County Road 44
east of Shade.
ODOT will also be resurfacin~
roads within Ohio Department oi·
Natural Resources' facilities in
Athens and Vinton countie.s; painting
bridges in Gallia. Hocking. Morgan.
Noble and Wa.;hing!On counties: and
installing raised pavement markerS
and replacing guardrail throughout all
counties of the district during the
1998 construction season.

Judge wants 'maximum risk' inmates out of private prison
BRIGHT RED.

W~P.
!J!i2J ~"
5.4 VB. New body Style

1994 CHEVROLET

vs,~.'N.~l.Juise, ti",

Both have A/C, P. equip.

door

TRADE IN
1997 FORO ESCORTS

o, A/C, 4 doors.

RED, GREEN &amp; WHITE

o~ ~!.JcP,lW, lt.,B~~Pse~.

1~~~POS
f) Auto

M cass.

ONE GREEN + ONE MOCHA

SPORTY

LL UNDER 14,000 MILE

AKRON (AP)- A federdl judge
ha.&gt; said the District of Columbia
maximum risk inmate~ at a private.
medium -security
prison
in
Youngstown must be ·removed to an
appropriate prison.
Two inmates have. been stabbed to
death in the pm month at the Nonheast Ohio Cerrection Center. which is
· opemted in Youngstown by the Corrections Corp. of America of
Nashville, Tenn.

·farmland

Pr:~~-ervation

B('AARON MARSHALL

4x4, auto, A/C

ONLY

5

10,995

SIGNA\3~/-sHI~.q!!, Js~l~StAJIcass,
PW, PL. cruise, tilt, leather interior, power seats.

proposals

avail?.ble. I want those people out of
here. ·
. . .
Bell said that the transkr .0.1 pnsoners who have. b&lt;:en llknllloed as .
maxtmum-secunty ~osks wa.&lt;a mostake . and that the lacoloty was supposed to house only medouno-securo - .
ty inmates.
.
.
"They shouldn t be there on the
lirst ~!ace - . you know It and I
know, Bell sao d.
.
"You have to get them out ot there

all. " Bell said.
Bell's order was a follow-up to
one he gave last month halting further
tmnsfers of priSIJ':lers from D.C. to the
Ohio private facolity.
Already. II inmates identified a.'
maximum-security risks have been
returned 10 prison in .Lonon. h is
uncertam how many more moght
have to be returned. because the
proson os undergoong an extensove
inmate reclassification that may take

because they shouldn 'tbe there at

several more months.

slowly makff way intorlegislature

nJ~~YJ!Y, ~W.~.Aa~

equipment RED IN COLOR.
e other is V6 atr power equip
GREEN IN COLOR.

The prison has been the subject of Lonon. Va. Thirteen inmates have
an inmate lawsuit seeking to move been stabbed at the· Youngstown
the toughest inmates to a maximum- prison since it opened Ia.;! May.
security prison. On Tuesday. Gov. .
U.S. District Judge Sam Bell in
George Voinovich signed a bill into Akron on Thursday ontered the
law allowing local authorities to return of all Washington. D.C..
investigate problems at privately inmate~ identilied a.s maximum 'secuoperated prisons that accept inmates rity risks .
.
from outside Ohio.
When D.C. Assostal1t Attorney
. The prison. designed for 1.500 Paul Klein objected that there is no
on mates. has 1.700 I rom crowded place else to put them. Bell shot back:
prisons in Washington. D.C .. and " I don' t much care what options are

5

4,995

aoo-1 ,,t~~~c,fP.Isfe9ri~~. AM/FM
VERY NICE USED TRUCK. LOCAL TRADE IN.

~~~~~~~~1t~,~~~

Gannett News Service

COLUMBUS -in August 1996.
in front of a roomfu I of farmers at the
Ohio State Fair; Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich appointed an Ohio Farm·
land Preservation Ta.'k Force to study
preserving farmland in the state.
Twenty months later. as a pair of
legislative proposals underwent their
initial hearings at the Statehouse thi~
week; it appears ooly a small piece of
the 21-member taskforce's recom·
mendations is on track to pa.~sage.
Likely to whisk through the General Assembly this year is Senate BiII
223, which allows state or local government to pureha.se development
rights, known as conservlllion easement~. to preserve tf)e agricultuml use
of land.
"It's pemlissive, not mandatory,"
said the bill's sponsor, Sen. Grace
Drake. R-Solon. "It just gives coun·
ties the tools to do it if they want."
Similar programs underway iti
Pennsylvania and Maryland pay
farmers the diffenmce between the
agricuhural value of their land and
the dovelopment value of their
acreage.
Under the bill, counties are per·
mined to levy or increase the sales taJt
to acquire development rights or

.

retire bonds issued for that purpo~e .
It also rreates the agricultuml Conservation Easement ' Purchase Fund
within the Ohio ()epartment of Agricultural.
·
· It ha.' the backing of the state agricultural department and was put
together after six month~ and four
drafts with the input of builders.
developers . environmental groups
and farming groups.
"We really have to focus our
e!Torts on getting some legislation
through that can take advantage of a
federal farmland protection program.' ' said Patrice Gillespie,
spokesperson for the newly·oreated
Office of Farmland Preservation in
the Ohio Agriculruml Department.
She explained that the bill would
leverJge a federal program that offers
matching fannland preservation dol·
Iars to states that have development
right purcha.o;c programs in place.
Meanwhile. the bulk of the task·
force's report is including in a sweeping farmland preservation bill. sponsored by Rep. Gene Krebs. R.Camden. that underwent sponsor testi·
mo.hy in the House's Local Govern·
ment and Townships Committee.
The legislation. kno!"n as House
Bill 645, includes provisions that
would cre,ate vo.l'!ntary countywide

comprehensive land-use plans
designed by local ollicials. create
areas that would be designated !lor
agricultuml use while changing th&lt;l"'
region's estate lax laws and give pre I~
erential treatment to areas where a
city expects to grow in the next 25
years.
It also encourages inner-city
development by exempting building
materials in community reinvestment areas and creates a.lilllte-wide
management information system in
order to improve development planning and coordination.
But this wide-ranging bill is
already genemting criticism from
relators and developers who fear the
comprehensive changes made in the
legislation. The state's agriculturJI
depanment has also not backed the
bill.
"We want percolation on this
issue," said Krebs, who said he
hopes that House committee mem·
bers can hash out the details keeping
in mind the proposal's l,arger goals.

If the bill doe~ not pass the legis·
lature, Krebs vows to introduce it
again.
"This bill will be signed by a governor," he said. "I just don't know
which one."

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - An Ohio
woman who wa.s flooded out of her
home la.'t year made a trip to Capitol Hill in the hope that her story
111ight make things easier far [amilies
hun by the next natumrdisaster.
Minta Herrin of New Richmond.
Ohio. implored lawmaken; to reject a
Clinton administrdlion proposal to
charge a higher interest rate on disaster loans.
" Rai~ing the cost of a disa.,ter loan
would be a real problem for a fami ly like mine." she told a House com·
mittee on Thursday.
When the Ohio River overflowed
i'ts .b.anks la't year. the Herrin home
was swamped under 5 feet of water.
ltaving the family with few salvageable possessions when times already
were tough.
Mrs. Henin. 25. had given binh to
her second child just weeks earlier
and her husband was still recovering
from a heart anack.
" It was a real tough time- just
overwhelming financially," she said.
The family got a 12-year loan to
help them set up housekeeping anew
and after some di!Ticulty got some
donated furniture from a relief
agency.
She said the thought of others in
her predicament having to ligure out ·
how to come up with an extra $20 a
month on top of an already unexpected payment led her to agree to
testify before a committee evaluating
the Small Busines~ Administration 's
budget proposal.
The' SBA. which administers the
disaster loon program. ha.~ proposed
liliing its interest-mte cap to 6 percent
from the current maximum of 4 percent - for an averJge· incre:&gt;se of S20
a month to borrowers.
The head of the SBA. Aida
Alvarez. called the proposal both lis.cally responsible and sensitive to disa.•Her victims.

The number-crunching side of the
Clinton aJministJ'ation also defended
the idea. JiJCk Lew. deputy dinx:tor of
the Oflice of Management and Budget. told the commiitee "the alterna.
tive would be to reduce loan volume
.... We think that would not be lidvis·
able."

...... ·i

,'

.,

-· ··, J
,~_.

.

... .
f

: f';:"
;-. •"• '

. ...

CALLED TO SCENE- Pomeroy firefighters were called-to the
leak at the oouar General Store on East Main Street
Thursday attemoon. A cargo truck making a delivery to the store
austelriad a ruptured fuel tank. Fire ChJef Danny Zlrlde aald the
truck lost an estimated 80 gallons of dleul fuel, which waa disposed of by the village In accordance with EPA regulations. Diesel
fuel, accOrding to llrkle, evaporate• easily, eliminating the .need
for extenslva cleanup.
·
r....tne of a ~I

•

But Alvarez and Lew found them·
sel ves up against Small Business
Committee members who were ske'pticalthat there wa.' no other way for
the SBA to lind a $125 million sav.
ings in its budget.
After live stmight ye:us of similar
proposals - each shot down by Congress - the committee's chainnan,
Rep. Jim Talent, R-Mo., said he
hoped that SBAofficials would ab;m.
don " the illusion that this is the best
budget the SBA ha.~ ever submitted."
"From the point of view of the
disa.ster victim, I think this 'take it or
leave it' attitude is giving them the
back of your band. and government
~hould be better than that," Talent
said.

••

�•

-

-

•

•

-

....

~

•

!'r ._.,-..

.......

-~

-

-

'Comtnentary

Page2
Friday, March 20, 1998

OHIO Weather
AccuWeather~ forecast ford"''';"'"

Air Force base puts golf above child care

coals and members of Congress
'WtaiJ[ufwf on )948
As the winter slowly thaws on the -- who, along
natton 's capital, thoughts of faor- woth actove and
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
ways, putttng greens and btrdtes are retored 'molltary
614·992·2156 ·Fax 992·2157
surely dancong through the heads of personnel, have
exclusovc access
bog shots all around town
Andrews '
Perhaps no one more so than the to
duffer-on-choef homself, for whom posh courses -A Gannett Co. Newspaper
stealtng away for a round of I~ woll should have to
surely be a welcome re spote from the watt for a tee
Moller &amp;
ROBERT L WINGETT
sex scandals engulfing h1s prestden- ume like most
Anderson
Publisher
ordonary cotozens.
cy
But of the prcstdent os hopong to And never mmd that there are 19
play a few rounds thts spnng at one other military golf courses wuhon an
MARGARET LEHEW
of hos favortte golfing playgrounds, easy drove of Washtngton
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Controller
the country-club-hke faclhttes at
As we first reported 10 1995, the
General Manager
Andrews Au Force Base, he may be Pentagon has spent $7 m1lllon to
hard pressed to get a tee tome At bUild a lavtsh new course at the
rrw Sentinel welcomes /etters to , . edltOI' from r,.d.,., on • bra.d ran~ of topics
least that 's what the overstated base Yet after more than three years
Shott 11n.n (300 wOfdl or leu) have tlte IHst cha"" ot being pubJIMt«&lt; T)'p«&lt; '-1Im,. prtftrntl and 111 may ,., odllod. EM:h should ln&lt;:ludo • •lgnoturo, oddreN,
rhetonc of base officoals would lead of plannmg and construction, n's
•rkltMytlme phon• numMt Specify 1 d1r. It
1 rtftrtn" ro 1 ptevlout llflcll
you 10 bel1eve
sull not fimshed So we can assume
,. leltor. 1111111&gt;. Lillors to lho Editor, TIN SonHnel, 111 Court St , Porn.roy, Ohio I .
Offictals at the suburban Mary- that the two ex1s11ng courses woll be
L..:45:111::::''~"'::.·,:;FAX::.,::;10~8::;14-:;:B92:::;·:;2r::57:.;..-------~. "":':'
.... -:-"
.--..~.__,_:• land base-- home to Aor Force One- terrobly overcrowded agam th1s
- have trted to quell a pubhc outcry spnng
over the construcuon of a thord, ISBut before you dredge up too
much sympathy for the poor go lfers,
cons1der that the fundmg for the
two
cxosttng
courses
are
routonely
course
comes from the same pot of
By TOM RAUM
money
(the Morale, Welfare and
Jam
packed
Associated Press Writer
God
forbod
se
noor
Pentagon
offtRecreatiOn
fund) that 's used to
WASHINGTON -A year ago, PreSident Clmton was gettmg gnef from
some Democrats for cozymg up to congressiOnal GOP leaders on ossues like
balancong the budget and cutung taxes
These days. he 's been govong those same Republicans a wode berth
In lact. for whatever reason , the pres1dent has been onteract10g less frequently, and less personally, w1th members of both panoes on Congress. suggest lawmakers and theor a1des
Republicans say he 's clearlv distracted by the allegallons of sexual mtsconduct. Democrats, meanwhole, say GOP congressoonalleaders JUSt aren't
do10g much thts year that requores constant consultation
After some sponsors of a boll to enlarge NATO to 10clude Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic satd Cl10ton needed to rally support to get the
measure passed ontact, he sprang 1010 actiOn last weekend - woth faxes to
leaders
"Thts ume a year ago, we were talk10g pretty regularly about budget and
taxes and I thought tl was, you know, kmd of strange to get a leiter on Saturday on my fax machme at home," satd Senate MaJOnty Leader Trent Loll.
R-Mtss.
In the faxed letter, Clinton urged that the Senate - whoch late Tuesday
began debat10g the NATO expansiOn boll - not attach a provtsoon calhng
for a three-year moratoroum on new members after the three are admitted.
The lener to Lon was sogned "B oll Clinton " An idenocal one to Senate
Democratic Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota got a more personal
"Boll "
Clinton has never had pantcularly close rapport with congressmnalleaders of eother party, and thts year those relatoons are further straoned
He leav~s most legtslattve lobbymg to chtef of staff Erskine Bowles,
whole Treasury Secretary Robert Rubtn rerruuns actove on tax and lntemauonal Monetary Fund 1ssues
Most of Chnton's appearances w1th members of Congress seem carelully scnpted and desogned to monom1ze Chnton 's exposure to questoons from Republican lawmakers as well as from reporters.
On Tuesday, Chnton made a JOint appearance at the Capitol to d1scuss
ways to strengthen a new law desogned to guarantee umnterrupted health
msurance for Amerocan workers when they change JObs - but whoch he
claomed ts beong undermoned by onsurance compames.
He left without takong questtons and headed for a St Patrick's Day lunBy William A. Rusher
tory of attacks on
cheon sponsored by House Speaker Newt Gmgroch. R-Ga
Just as the natoonal war on tobactobacco, woth speThe luncheon was attended by leaders m the lmh peace talks . Reporters
Cial emphasos on
were perm itted to hear some remarks ~y Gongnch and Insh Pnmc Monoster co seems poosed to won 11s most
developments on
Bert1e Ahem, but not Chnton 's The presodcnt left the Capnol ommed1ately stunmng voctones -- forb1ddmg
smokong JUSt about anywhere save
the past three
after lunch, walkmg two steps behond a bagpope escort, blowmg full blast
decades.
Lon suggests that many Wh1tc House officoals are engaged 10 damage m one's own home or the Great OutAs the
control. rather than push10g legoslat•on " 1 thmk he (Chnton) IS lrymg to doors, and forcmg the tobacco combook ·s subtttlc
keep focu sed - somewhat- on the legiSiattvc agenda It seems hke there pames to pay hundred s of b1lltons of
dollars to governmental agenctes for
suggests,
Mr
ts less contact from the presodcnt "
Sullum IS broadly
At the Wh1te House, spokesman M1ke McCurry retorted, "We've had the nght to contonue selling a percnt1cal of those
constant d~alogue woth the leadership on the H1ll on the ossues The problem fectly legal product -- a few calm
Rusher
vooces of reason are betng raiSed to
developments. but
IS . they're not movmg anythong up there The prestdcnt conunucs very acttve
protest the mountong hystena.
he never ra1ses hiS VOICC and IS
work "
In mod-December. London s scrupulously fa1r to tobacco's foes
Whole Gongnch has kept a generally low profile rcgardmg Cltnton's prob!ems Lon has been sharply crittca l and House MaJOroty Leader Dock Armey. respected EconontiSI magazonc A man who has never smoked a
R-Texas, keeps fielding questions on the logiStiCs of a posstblc ompeachment warned that "the attack on tobacco cogarcllc h1msc ll hiS preoccupahas crossed the admlltedly fLny tion with the ISsue os easo ly
acuon
Asked Tuesday 1f he could ex pl am why pubhc support for Clinton lone that d1stmguoshcs moral enthu- explaoncd by the fact that he ts a
siasm from 1lhbcral vond1cllveness, sc mor cd1tor of Reason magaztnc,
rcmamcd high desptte new re•clat10ns Armey satd onl y, No ·
and at such a lime good fun should a libcrtanan JOurnal of op1noon
" Docs ottrouble you'" he was asked
y1cld to good thonkong
Because For the COnVCOienCC of low-mtnd··Yes"
they
arc
nursmg
theor
dudgeon
and cd detractors, however, he ha s
Woth such comments m the atr, personal meetings between Chnton and
appended an Author's Note
savonng
the1r
voctoncs
rather
than
congress1onallcadcrs conccrnmg legiSlatiOn arc hkcly to be straoned
thonkmg
wnh
care
,
ant1
-smokers
acknowlcdgmg that the R J
Clmton used to get so mvol vcd m mailers before Congress that he had a
Reynolds company once paod h1m
believe
themselves
to
be
upholdmg
rcputatton for makmg calls to lawmakers at all hours, regardless of the
liberal soc1al pnncoples when, m for the nght to rcpnnl an artoclc he
clock
had wnncn on secondhand smoke ,
Sen Bob Kerrcy, D-Ncb . got one such early morn10g call about a year fact , they are traducong them "
Now there w1ll be published, on and that Phthp Morns has conago But whole he played goll w1th the prcs1dcnt about three weeks ago, Kerrcy hasn 1 had an) off-hour phone ca lls from hom m a whole sa1d a1de Greg Apnl 8, a whole book on the contro- trobuted to the Reason Foundauon
versy "For Your Own Good The (wtloch publishes Reason) and has
We mer
Ant1-Smokong Crusade and the also advertosed on the magaztnc
EDITOR'S NOTE - Tom Raum covers national and international Tyranny of Public Health ," by Jacob Itself The donations and ad revSullum (Free Press), os a calm and enues comboned have always
affairs for The Associated Press.
comprehensove look at the long hos- totaled less than one percent of the

By Jack Anderso11
and Jan Moller

1

.

President Clinton's hands-off
lObbying tactics: fax attacks

~?~·d~~;::,e~~ ~;:~:~sb:!au~7':~~

finance milttary child care And
whole the Pentagon brass was busy
dreaming about the new course's
lush green faorway s, they balked at
buolding a much-needed ch1ld care
center at Andrews. sayong the $5
millton pnce tag was too much for
them to bear
Consoder also thlt numerous
reports on recent years from the General Accountong Office and the Congressoonal Budget Office have cautiOned that the MWR fund's
finances are on shaky ground And
wh1le the generals and congressmen
tee tl up al Andrews , thousands of
enhsted soldters around the world
woll have to make do w1th woefully
sub par hou song
Andrews officoals dod not return
call s from our assocoate Aaron Karp
seekong comment for thts column
That's not surpnsmg, so ncc base bogwogs have also ognored loud' pubhc
dosapproval of the new course, as
well as the needs of the more than
300 chtldren l1 vtng at the base who
arc on a wa.tong hst for chold care
UNDER THE DOME -- Whole
there's scant cv1dence to support
Hollary Rodham Clinton's out·

MICH

landosh claom of a "vast roght-wm ~
conspuacy " agaonst her husband, 11
os true that many of the Republicans
throwong stones at Presodent Cltnton
resode m glass houses
Thos was quote evodent dunng a
recent House subcommottee hearong
at wh1ch Rep Bob L1vmgston, RLa -- who has desogns on succeedmg Newt Gmgnch as House speaker
.. was left woth egg on ht s face fol lowong some dosparagmg remark s he
made about the admomstratwn.
As w1tnesses wa1ted pa11ently to
tesufy at the heanng, whtch was
ca lled to look 1nto whether the
Whote House has mosused taxpayer
money, the powerful Appropnatoons
Comm111ee cha~rman wondered
aloud why the Whole House counsel's off1ce IS larger now than ever
before He wan ted to know, among
other thongs, 1f taxpayer-funded
lawyers and the~~ staffs were actong
as a pnvatc legal serv1ce for the
emballlcd pres ident
Rep Steny Hoyer, D-Md , one of
Chnton s mos t loyal defenders,
responded hy f01noshong a memorandum thao l1.1d been corculated
among House Republicans on the
spnng ol 1996 The memo, whoch
was sent to all comm lltec and subcommlllec chmrmcn by then- Rep
Bob Walker, R-Pa , and Rep J1m
Nu&gt;&lt;lc R-lowa. "on behalf of the
House leadership,.. 1s labeled
" urgent "

It asks that the chatrmen of the
varwus comm lllee s and subcomiruttees provode mformalton to the leadershtp that moght be damagong to the
Clinton-Gore re-electoon campatgn
Walker and Nussle onstruct the ·
chaormen to task their commottee
staffers woth revoewong government
reports and newspaper articles to
find "anecdotes" m such subJect
areas as "waste, fraud and abuse"
and "eth1cal lapses" on the Clinton
admonistrauon
After readong the memo's contents, Hoyer asked Lovongston tf he
was concerned that co ngressoonal
staffers -- whose salanes are paid by
taxpayers -- had been put to work as
partosan dtrt-doggers.
" That's not a w1se memo, " an
embarrassed LIVIngston conceded.
"In fact, ot's a pretty dumb memo "
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Here's soo
m e cool words on a hot topic

•
•

•
•
•

•

•

•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•

•

foundauon 's budget
of lung cancer every year The roof
Opposnoon to tobacco goes promptly caved m on tobacco . '
much further back beyond former
Mr Su llum spends many pages
Surgeon General C Evercll Koop cvaluatong the se superheated ailethan you may suppose In I 604, gat oons, and concl udes that "peaKong James I publi shed "A Coun- pic who live wtlh smokers for
terblaste to Tobacco" ("Shall decades may face a shghtly hogher
we .abase ourselves so farrc . as to mk of lung cancer Accordmg to
imitate the&gt;c beastly lndoans?"), . one estimate, a nonsmokong
and the battle has gone on , hot and woma n who hve.s woth a smoker
heavy, ever smcc For ccnlunes, faces an add1ttonal lung cancer
tobacco kept on wmnong , II was nsk ol 6 5 on 10.000. wh och would
only on the moddle of thiS century, raose her lofcume nsk from about
when smokmg's causat1vc reia- 0 34 percent lo about 0 41 perttonshop to lung cancer (w hoch Mr. cent
118But 3/8 there IS no ev i·
Sullum rcad1ly concedes) became dcncc that casual exposure to secestablished, that the 11de hegan to ondhand smoke has any 1mpact on
turn
your hfc ex pectancy"
Even then tobacco 's opponents
W11l a book as calml y and perfaced a logical d1lcmma Tobac- suaSive ly reasoned as th1s one
co's harmful effects were rccog- have any perceptible effect on the
nozed almost uno versally, yet ncar- antl-smokmg bngadc ' I doubt 11
ly a quarter of adult Amcncans Woth Caltfornoa already makong 11
chose to smoke By what roght unlawful even to open a restaurant
could they be ordered to stop?
or har cxclusovely for smokers, and
The answer descended like scrv oced by' employees who
manna from heaven m 1990, when smoke, we arc past re~soncd arguthc Envoronmcntal ProtectiOn ment Do as you are told
AdmmiS!ratoon released a draft of
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
a report classofymg secondhand guished Fellow of the Claremont
smoke as a " known human car- Institute for the Study of States·
cmogcn," and followed that up '" manship and Political PhilosoDeccmber 1992 woth an cstomate phy.
that 11 causes three thousand cases

Lett~rs to the editor

Put a clergyman in the White House

Resident says pets are vanishing

By George R. Plagenz

Dear Edotor,
There ts somethong strange goong on around here 1 raosed two kl!lens on
the bottle thos wonter. I kept them m an old van They would not come out of
that van woth the door standmg w1dc open They grew up to be almost full
grown, fat as mud and treated like bab1cs allthe1r lo ves
Last Wednesday, March 4, 1998 I sent my grandson to feed them When
he opened the door to the van the k1ttens were gone There IS no way they
could have goncn out of that van Bes1des they would not have come out
anyway They were JUSt plaon gone Someone had to take them out and took
them away I am deeply concerned about thos. We live at the end of a road
and a lot of dogs and cats are dropped off on us. We had four or five half
grown cats to disappear before These are outdoor cats We sull have some
1hat are w1ld but every one that we tamed has dtsappeared
1 wonder of we have dev1l worshipers on thts area They would take the
ammals and torture them to death as a sacnfice to theor god, the DEVIL. Am
1 the only one losong pets or are there others out there?

If anyone else out there IS losong pets mystenously gove me some feed
back. 1 would hke to know where they are all goong and of they have been
tortured to death These two kottens had never had theor feet on the ground.
'They were cared for as of they were babtes. I kept an electroc heater in the
.van for them when they were tmy I would JUS! hke to know what IS gomg
on
Mary F. Smith
Middleport

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Saturday, March 21

The Daily Sentinel

ttl,..,

.

Friday, March 20, 1998

Wnh moralny m the Unned
States goong to hell in a handbasket,
Presodent Chnton needs more than
ever to appoont a "chancel cabmet'
to advose h1m on the moral state of
the coun!Jy and what to do about tt.
The New York Times says that
Jackson has become Chnton 's
"spintual advoser" since the Monica
Lewmsky scandal surfaced But a
"chancel cabmet" would have
broader rcsponstbtlttoes.

Jess~

It would be made up of clergy
whose observations would serve as a
kind of natoonal consctence. The
churchmen would be drawn from all
sectoons of the country -- from the
big-ctty cathedral to the lillie brown
church m the vale -- and would act
as the preSident's eyes and ears,
reportmg back to h1m on the people 's hopes and fears, their dreams
and msecuritocs
Above all, the "chancel cabmet"
(the chancel 1s the area m the front
of a church where the clergy officiate) would speak out on matters
roght and wrong, the Ach11les ' heel
of Amencan poliucs.

Are the clergy
up for such a
role' They may
be
When
fove
clergymen were
named to the
mayor 's Cnme
Commossoon '"
Cleveland on the
1970s, they were
Plagenz
nd1culed as "the
God Squad " "What do they know
about crome 0 " cntlcs asked "These
are preachers who have led sheltered
loves "
It amused one of the members of
the God Squad, Rabbt Rudolph
Rosenthal , to be charactenzed as a
" naove clergyman on a naughty
world."
"I studied on New York under
~abbt Stephen Wise," Rosenthal
recalled " When Mayor Jommy
Walker was tummg the ctty over to
the pol111cal vuhures, Wose
denounced him, causing Walker to
wryly observe, ' When Wose attacks
the politiCians, the steamship business to Europe pocks up.' It was better not to be around when Wise was

condemnmg you "
Have we been ncglectong thiS
valuable clergy resource when we
need it most m our natoonal hfe'
Thos would not be the first tome a
prestdent has sought the help of the
clergy In the modst of the DepresSIOn Jn 1935, Frankltn D Rooseveh
called on the momsters of the country for adv1ce .
" Because of the grave responSIbthUes of my office," Rooseveli
wrote to the clergy, "1 am turnmg to
clergymen for counsel, feehng confident that no group can gove more
accurate or unboased v1ews "
It was a one-tome thing, but Roosevelt later remarked how helpful
the mmisters' responses had been.
A "chancel cabmet" would operate l1ke Andrew Jackson's "kitchen
cabmet" of the 1830s. The "kotchen
cabmet" was an onfonnal group of
presidenual adv1sers. It mcluded
newspaper editors, longtime friends,
family and official Cabinet members.
Because of their unofficial status,
they were poctured as keepong out of
sight by coming into Jackson's

James 0. Allen
.. .
INO

''

\'

'

• IColumbus 140" I

Laura M. Riggs Hoffman

Southern Ohio faces
flood watch for tonight
By The Associated Press
Some heavy ram expeete&lt;l m southern Oh10 tomght could cause flash
floodong, forecasters sa.d The Nat1onal Weather Servoce posted a flood watch
for the regoon
Bnsk northerly wonds corculating around a low pressure system Will change
the ram to snow on parts of northern Oh1o tomght and Saturday woth accumulattons of up to an mch.
The first full day of spring on Saturday woll be gree ted by unseasonably
cold temperatures on the m1d-30s.
The record-hogh temperature for thos date at the Co lumbus weather station was 78 degrees on 192 1 whole the record low was I m 1885 Sunset
tonight woll be at 6.43 p.m. and sunrose Saturday at 6·34 a.m
•
Weather forecast:
Tonight ..Showers. A chance of an evenmg thunderstorm. Lows tn the
upper 30s. Chance of ram 90 percent
Saturday... Colder w1th hght ram or dnzzle. or ltght snow hkely Htghs on
the lower 40s. Chance of precopotatoon 40 percent
Saturday night. .A chance of ram or snow showers. Lows on the lower and
mod 30s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday.. .Mostly cloudy and cold wnh a chance of ram or snow showers .
Highs m the lower and mod 40s
Monday and Tuesday... Contonued cold woth a chance of ram or snow showers. Mornmg lows m the upper 20s and lower 30s Daytome htghs 40 to 45 .

Shooter showed no signs
of disturbance: neighbor
COLUMBUS (AP) - While
Shasta Dotson was planntng a new
life. Wilham Evans was quoetly groev1ng over the breakup of 1heor eightyear romance, fam1ly members and
fl'lends saod.
• Then on Wednesday mornong ,
Evans walked up to Ms. Dotson's
work statoon at the Oh1o Bureau of
Employment Serv~ces. ra1sed a handgun and shot her to death, the State
H1ghway Patrol saod. Evans, who also
worked at OBES. then shot homself
1n the head and d1ed three hours later.
Phtltp Lytle s31d he saw less of
Evans, who loved next door, after the
breakup about a year ago, bul he
knew hos lnend was deeply hurt The
two were neoghbors on the working class neoghborhood for about I0
years.
.. Any breakup can be traumattc,'
Lytle saod Thursday · Somettmes he

was gone for the whole weekend He
was broke up about 11 ..
Ms Dotson, a 40-year-old songle
mother wllh two teen-age sons, was
about to marry another man The couple on Tuesday sogned papei'S' to buy
a house m Commercoal Pomt, a rur
al ~ommumty JUSt south of Columbus. her stster-m-law Claudm told
The Columbus Dospatch for. a story
pubhshed Thursday
"She has struggled for so many
years as a songle p.orent trymg to
make the nght decosoon." Claudoa
Dotson sa1d.
She cou ld not be reached for further comment on Thursday. There "
no ltstong for her m the Columbus
telephone d~rectory
Evans. 51, was the dorector of
busoness management at OBES and
was Shasta Dotson's boss Ms Dotson was the agency's ch1ef of oflice
serv1ces

Gallipolis livestock auction results
Prouu.:ers L1ve,tod Market
report Irom Gall1pol" lor saks condu.:ted on Wednesday: March 18:
Feeder Caule
200-300# St. $85-$ 101. Hf $78$87. 300-400# St $88-$97 HI $7X$90 500-650# St $78-$89 HI $63&lt;
$76. 650-800# St $65-$78, Hf $58$66
(Feeder Callie sale IS the second
Wednesday of each month)
Steers
•
He1fers

Cull Cows
W~ll Muscled/Fleshed $35-$39
Medmm/Average $32-$36
Th111/Loght $28-$33, Bulls $42$45
Back To The Farms·
Cow/Call Paors $385-660. Bred
Cows $1HS-$600: Baby Calves $5110, Goats $20-$78
March 16 grJded Ieeder cattle sale
ave --St.--$77 21, Hf.--$69 25
For tree on-farm VISits, please
call M4-446-9696

The Daily Sentinel

Stocks

!USPS 11:1-960)

office by way of the Wh1te House
knchen and up the back staors.
Jackson sa td he hoped the
" kotchcn cabmet" would be a
'moral force" to keep the shaky
umon together Chnton 's problems
are d1ffcrcnt from Jackson's, but the
same moral force Jackson desorcd ts
what IS sorely needed to keep the
country together now
·
Today, nothong os safe from the
moral contagoon of a corrupt soc1cly
In a recent "BlondiC" comoc s tn~.
Dagwood asks hts young nctghbor.
Elmo, of his parents let h1m watch
much televtsoon.
'
"Only when we watch 11 together," he says "Last mght we saw
show that had sex and voolence ani!
cheatmg and lymg and stealing." ·
When Dagwood asks why hos
parents let hom watc h that, Elmo
says, "They had to It was the 6
o'clock news"

a

That was m the funmes, but ot
was sad

George Plagenz is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

P~o~bh shed

every dtcrnoon, Mond ay through
Fuday Ill Court St Pomeroy, Ohto, by the
Ohto Valley Publllhmt: Company!Ganneu Co.

Pomtroy Ohto 4.571"19 Ph 992·21 Sll Second
dau postage patd :at Pameroy, Ohro

Membtr. ThC' Assotuted Preu
Nc:wspapcr Auoc taiiOn
p0ST'~1ASTER •

~nd

the Oh111

Stnd addreu corrections lo

The Oa1ly Scnt1 ncl, I ll Cowrt St . Pomcrov
OhiO 4~7fl9

SINGLE COPY PRICE

3S Ccnrs
Subscrt~rs

r~m1t

not tlc:mmg to pay the carrtc:r

m~}

tn advaf\Ce dmct to The Da1ly S.Cnt1nel

on a three, Six or 12 month b;wus Cred11 wtll be
JIVC:O c~rncr each

wa:k.

No wbscnpltria by matl permllted 1n areas
wkre homf CIOIC:I UJVICe II IVIIIable
Publtsber reserves lhe RJhiiO adjus1 rates dur·
rnJihe subs.cnption penod SubKnpctOn rate
cht ngrs may be Implemented by chans1ng the
durartott of the aubscnphon

MAILSUIISCRimONS

tuide MripCouoly

IJW..u

S2730'

lAS w..u .. ....

•... .. Sl31!2

lZW..kt .. ... ... ...
. ... .St0$.ltl
1111010.- Mtlp C..aly
IJ Wceu ... .
S292S
lAS W..to . S56 61&lt;

52w..u ...

.

A.m Ele Power .....................49'1•
Akzo .................................... 102~.
AmrTech ............................... 47'/o
Ashland 011 .......................... 56'·
AT&amp;T ...................................... ,66
Bank One ....... ..................62'1.
Bob Evans ............................. 21
Borg•Wamer ..................... 621.
Broughton ............... .............. 14~
Champion ............................. 15
Charm Shps ..........................4""'
City Holding ........................ .48
Federal Mogul... ................... so~.
Gannett .................................68'/o
Goodyear .............................. 71 '·
kmart ..................................... 16't,
Kroger .................................. 44~.
Lands End ........................... 37'}.
Limited .................................. 29\,
Oak Hill Finl .................-......... 28),
OVB ......................................... 41
One Valley ............................. 36'/o
Peoples ................................... 43
Prem Flnl.:.............................. 22
Rockwell ............ ...................54'! .
AD/Shell ,................................. 55
Sears .................. ................ 58'·
Shoney's ................................. 4Y
.
Star Ban)l ..............................60'1.
Wendy's ................................21 '1.

Wortlllngton..........................1n,

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

so09n

•
4

James Owen Allen, 72, Gallipolis Ferry. W Va , d1ed Fnday, March 19.
1998 al the home of his daughter, Cathy Searls, on Galhpohs Ferry.
Born Apnl 24, 1925 m Mason County. W Va., son of the late Emm11 and
Fanme Conard Allen, he was a mollworker at the Huntm gton N1ckel Plant,
aU S. Army veteran of World War II. and a member of the Molestone Church
of Apple Grove, W Va.
He os survived by one son and daughter-m-law, Roger and Darlene Allen
of Apple Grove: five daughters nnd sons-on -law, Frances and Danny N1he~
of Lesage, W Va , June and Harvey Pnce of Apple Grove, Barbara anu Johnny Cochran, and Cathy and Shelby Searls, all of of Southsode. W v. , ,md
Ltsa and Larry McCarty ol Apple Grove; a brother, Monte Allen ul Pithburgh, Pa. five sosters, Magg1e Williams of Mtssoun, Lucy Stover and Wilm.1
Parsmge r, both of Gallipoli s Ferry, Margaret Echart and Des"e Hanley. hoth
ol Huntmgton, W. Va, and 13 grandcholdren and four great-gr.111dchildrcn
Servoces wtll be 2 p.m. Sunday m the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home Pomt
Pleasant, W.Va, woth the Revs Lee Batrd and O'Dell Bush ollic1allng Burial woll be on the Beale Cemetery. Apple Grove Froends may call at the luncral home from 6-9 p m Saturday

Serv1ces for Laura M Ro ggs Hortman. 92. Columbus who doeu Weune'day, March 18, 1998, w1ll be held Monday, March 23, 1998 at I I ~()a m at
the Jerry Spears Funeral Home, 2693 W. Broad St.. Columbu s
The Rev Roy F1sher will olficwte, and bunal w1ll be •n the Fore'! Lawn
Cemetery 10 Columbus Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2- and
7-9 p m Sunday

Frances E. Lovsey
Frances E Lovsey, 81, New Marshfield, died Thursday, March 19, 1998
at her daughter's home m Nelsonvolle. followong an extended Illness
Born July 20. 1916 m Waterloo Township. Athens County. daughter of
the late Emmell and Estella Rob1neue Carmen, she was a 1934 0"raduate of
New Marshfield High School
She IS surv1ved by her husband of 60 years, Hamson Lovsey. daughters
and sons-m-law, Arlene and Wayne Keoms ot Batavoa, Phyllis and John Bundy
ol Groveport, Charl oue and Larry Jones of Reynoldsburg, Manlyn ani! Paul
Johnson ot NelsonVIlle, Lmda Johnson and Lee Hysell of Rae me. and, Sharon
anu Roger Black of Rutland. a son and daughter-on-law, Go Ibert and Chns
Lovsey of Athens, 19 grandchildren and SIX great-grandcholdren, and several meces and nephews.
She was also preceded m death by a son, Hamson Ga1l Lovsey. a soster,
Elizabeth Z1mmerman, brothers, Howard and Kenneth Carmen. and an mfant
brother
Servoces woll .be 2 p.m Sunday 10 the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home,
Athens, With the Rev. Edward Jones officoatmg. Bunal will be'" the New
Marshfield Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 4-6 and 79 p m Saturday.

Robert F. Musser
Robert F Musser, 79, Rutland, doed Thursday, March 19, 1998 at hts resIdence
·
Arrangements woll be announced by the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fosher
Funeral Home

Meigs announcements
Retired teachers
Meogs County Retired Teachers
woll have theor lirst meetong of the
year on M:irch 28, noon, ut Tronity
Church Pomeroy Paula Gaul woll
speak on home health care. For luncheon reservattons members are to
call 742-214 1-247-2723, or 9853890.
Dance to be held
A round and square dance woll be
held at the Tuppers Plains VFW, Saturday, 8 to II p m with True Country playong With Jom Brown, caller
Signup set
The Meigs Umted Methodi st

Meigs court news
Suit nled
' (Editor's note: A lawsu~ outllnea
the grievances of one party agalnat
another. II does not establlah guilt
or Innocence.)
Mostt Tate, Cra1g, Colo , is askmg
for damages on excess of $25.000
from Grella S Turnbull, Pomeroy.
The suot, filed on the Meogs County
Court ol Common Pleas, stems from
a March 22, 1996, motor vehtcle
accodent.
Summary judgment
A summary JUdgment of
$136,885 48 and order for foreclosure was ossued to Oh1o Valle) Bank
Co on a covol su11 agaonst Rochard L
Haggerty.

Patrol tickets

driver in crash
The Galha-Meogs Post of the State
H1ghway Patrol cued a Pomeroy
woman tor drovmg under the •ntluence and faolure to control followmg
a one-car accident on Sah,bury
Township Road 635' (Bndge ) early
Thursday.
Troopers saod Audrey R Haren berg. 20, 204 Lasley St.. was southbound. one-tenth of a mile south of
County Road 24 (Umon Avenue ) at
I 45 a.m. when the car she drove
st11!_ck a guardrail
The car wa' moderatelyaamaged.
according to the report.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March 19 - Shannon Scon. Sharon Smith, Helen
Wau gh, Wilma Sm1th. Luella
Carltsle, Ruby M1ller, Emory Taylor,
Mary Evans. Mrs Wolloam Edmonds .
and daughter
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Jason
Walters, son, Crown City
(Published with permission)

Cooperatove Pamh, 311 Condor St ,
Pomeroy, w1ll be takmg appllcauons
for garden seeds and tomato plants
for low 10come lamlltes Apnl 2 and
3, 9 a.m. to noon.
Cleanup set
Cemetery cleanup 1n Letart Township w1ll begm on March 30 Items
on graves wh1ch owners want to save
are to be removed before then
Pollworkers sought
The Meogs County Board of Elections IS seek10g poll workers to a&lt;sost
m upcomong elecuons. For more
informatiOn. contact the board at9922697.
Dance to be held
A round and square dance With
cloggong and line dancmg \\til be
held Fnday 8 to II am. at Long Bottom Commumty Blllldong Out of the
Blue Will prov1ded the musoc and
Arthur Conant will be the caller
Meigs CIC annual meeting
The annual meetong olthe Me1gs
County Commun•ty Improvement
Corporation woll be held March 25,
7 p.m. at the new Me1gs County
Branch of the Umvers1ty of R10
Grande/Roo Grande Commu 011y College on Middleport. All CIC members
and interested part1es welcome

' The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Marietta seeks return
of plate frorn museum
MARIETTA (A P) - The Coty
Counc1l has asked a Massachusetts
museum to return a plate buried nearly 250 years ago at the future sole of
thiS hiStone Oh10 R1ver commumty
The a~1l act apparently was buned
at the confluence of the Muskmgum
.tnd ,Oh1o nvers 1n 1749 by the
French explorer Celeron de Boenv1lle
.os a claun on the land for Kong Louis
XV
Alter lis diScovery 1n 1798, 27
years pa"etl helore the plate was
shipped to Worcester, Mass , where 11
'' now on diSplay •n the American
l\nl1quanan Souety Museum
Student' 1n a li lth-grade class at
Ph1ll1ps Elementary School have
made a cia's proJ ed out of cam-

palgnong lor the plate's return to
Manetta
The C1ty Counci I on Thursday
held the second and thtrd readmgs of
a resolution - then unammously
passed 11-to speed up the counc11's
olliCial support ot the 1dea.
" People say government moves
awfully slow, but I've never seen
governmenl move so fast on thiS
ossue," C~uncolman Tom Stacy saod

The campaign has drawn support
from L1eutenant Governor Nancy
Holloster, a former mayor of Manetta. who told students that she woll
wnte a letter to the museum Holloster also sogned a petition su pport1ng
the move.
'"It's really cool." saod one olthetr
teachers, Ca11ltn Hondman "We're
excoted about what th iS could do "
The rehc belongs on Manella. not
tn Massachusetts, ' he saod
"We JUS! had a problem woth thos
plate that was from here bemg on
Massachusetts, but were not sure 1t
the owning museum will agree,'' Ms
Hondman sa1d
Another teacher. Barry Warden,
sa.d although there os lmle chance
that the museum w1ll g1ve up owner·
shop ol th e plate, he hopes the students' eltons w1ll not go unnotoced
"If we don 't gel 11 back, I'd hke
to see us compromiSe ," Warden sa1d
"We d hke to have 11 here for three
years at the Campus Martius Museum and &lt;~gn an agreement to have 11
tnsured for those three years ••

,....· ObituaryObltu.,,i•• are paid announcement• arranged by local runeral homea.
Obltuartel lrt publlahld 11 requ11ted to accammodato thoa• d11lrlng more
lntormlllon than te provtdad In tha accompanying O..th Noticee.

Frances E. Lovsey
FrancesE Lovsey, 81, of New Marshfield. doed late Thursday momtng,
March 19, 1998, after an extended Illness at her daughter's home on Nelsonvolle
Born m Waterloo Town ship. Athens County, on July 20, 1916, daughter
of the late Emmell Carmen and Estella Robinette Carmen. she was a 1934
graduate of New Marshheld Htgh School
She os survoved by her husband ol 60 years. Hamson Lovsey: daughters
and sons-m-law, Arlene and Wayne Ke1ms of Batavia, Phyllis and John Bundy
ot Groveport, Charlone and Larry Jones ol Reynoldsburg. Manlyn and Paul
Johnson of Nelsonvolle. Lmda Johnson and Lee Hysell ot Racone. and Sharon
and Roger Black of Rutland, a son and daughter-in-law, Gilbert and Chns
Lovsey of Athens, grandsons and w1ves. Trevor and Tammie Bundy of Lancaster. Cratg and Stacey Jones, and Eroc and Tarn Jones. all of Reynolusburg.
grandsons, Todd Keirns of Dayton, Chad Keirns of Batav1a. Ryan Bundy of
Groveport, John Bundy of Shelbyville. Ind., Bryan Jones of Reynoldsburg.
Jeremy Johnson ol Racone, and J.R. Hysell of Mason, West Virgon1a: granddaughters and hus.bands, Jenntfer and Chuck Sullivan of Columbus. and Shelley and Jeff Otworth of Rutland ; granddaughters, Cheryl Jones of Reynoldsburg. Amy Lovsey of Athens, Heather Lovsey of New Marshfield. Wendy
Johnson of Woodsfield. Summer Johnson of Racone, Meltssa Werry of Rutland. and Altcoa Werry of Rutland. great-grandchildren, Alexis Jones of
Reynoldsburg. Ashley and Ryan Bundy. both of Shelbyville, Alhe Bundy of
Lancaster, and Collon and Jarrell Otworth, both of Rutland, and sever~! meces
and nephews.
She was preceded on death by a son , Ham son Gaol Lovsey: a siSter, Eliz·
nbeth Zimmerman. brothers, Howard and Kenneth Carmen, and an infant
brother
Semces woll be 2 p m Sunday, March 22, 1998 m the Jagers &amp; Sons
Funeral Home, Athens, wuh the Rev. Edward Jones officoattn2. Bunal will
be on New Marshfield Cemetery Fnends may call at the funeral home from
4-6 p m Saturday, March 21, 1998.

EMS units respond to 13 calls

Unus of the Me1gs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1ce recorded 13
call s for a.&gt;sostance Thursday. Umts
responding mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12 42 a m., Barrmger R1dge Road,
Portland. Wilham FlaiSag, treated at
the scene;
I:24 p.m , Wnght Street,
Pomeroy Boll Hudson. treated at the
scene.
1·36 p.m., Overbrook Nursong
Center. Mtddleport. Clara Davos, Veterans Memonal Hospital:
2 21 p m , New Lima Road. Rutland, Robert Musser, VMH, Rutland
squad asSisted.
5 20 p m : Roversode Apartments
RACO meeting
The Rac1ne Area Commulllly Moddleport, Charles Eakons, VMH,
Organozation wdl meet Tuesday, 6 30 M1ddlepor1 squad assosted,
7 13 p m.. V11Jage Manor Apartp m at Star Moll Park. New members
ments Middleport, Dallas Wetherwelcome
holt. Holzer Med1cal Center, Middleport squad assosted.
II 31 p m , Condor Street,
Pome roy. Sherry Jernagan. VMH,
The followong acuons to end ma r- Pomeroy squad a"osted
nage were filed recently m the otf1ce
MIDDLEPORT
of Me1gs County Clerk of Courts Lar8
I
8
p
m . Powell Street, Ilene
ry Spenceri
Sny
der,
treated
at the scene
Dossolutoons asked - Edw,ord
POMEROY
Eugene Pauerson Jr., Pomeroy, and
I 05 a 111 • Stale Route 124,
Cynthoa K Pallerson. Pomeroy.
George
Ande "on. VMH,
March 19, Bryan Lee Holman, Port3
p
m
volunleer fire department
land. and Jam1e Lynn Holman,
and
squad
to
EN Mam Street. d1esel
Pomeroy, March 16
fuel
leak
,
no
•nJun c' reponed
Dovorces asked- Teresa A Whitlock. Reedsville, from M1chael S
RACINE
Whitlock, Reedsville. March 19, CarI I II a m , Hayman Road.
ol J Reed , Racme, from Odrey Reed,
Charles Ohlinger, PVH
Racone, March 18 .

Actions to end
marriages filed

"h 's great that we could be a part of
lt."

RUTLAND
4:43pm., VFD and squad to Mam
Street. fallen electnc lone. no tnJuries.
TUPPERS PLAINS
5 21 p m , SR 7. Juloa McCopptn,
Camden-Clark Memonal Hospital.

�1

Frl~y. M!lrcb 20, 1998

Sports

The Daily Senth.!ttl
·

·

.

.'

Caval·iers get 90-85
victory over Kings

.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) For a team with three rookie starters.
the Cleveland Cavaliers are unusual·
ly poised on the road.
Cleveland improved to 17-18
away from home with a 90-85 victory over the Sacramento Kings on
Thutsday·mght.
After seven straight losses on the
road, the Cavs have now won two
straight . .With 16 games remaining
this season. wmning on the road is
.VItal.
Veteran Shawn Kemp watched his
youthful teammates earn the win
after fouling out with I:22 left. He
finished with 19 points and 14
rebounds.
" It 's late in the season, so the
young guys are used to it," Kemp
said. "They realize they have to step
up also It's a challenge. It worked
out."
The Cavaliers moved into a sixth·
place tie with the Knicks in the Eastem Conference playoff race .
"We played well in some of those
road losses, but we had nothing to
show for them," Cleveland coach
Mike Fmtello said. " Now we've won
a couple. It's a good feeling."
The Knicks' 82-771oss nt home to
Portland dropped them into a tie With
the Cavs.
"You can't worry too much ubout
what other teams are doing," Cleveland rookie Brevm Knight said. "If
we win games, it puts pressure on the
teams in front of us and puts distance
on the ones behind us."
Another Cavs rookie, Derek

post
wins
Connecticut, Utah,
North
Carolina,
Arizona
. !Jr., .,_
By The Associated Press
,
So this is what they really mean
by March Madness: buzzer-beater
after buzzer-beater.
Connecticut and West Virginia
were the latest to play the game. The
Huskies won at it Thursday night.

wh1le the Mountaineers misfired.
Second-seeded UConn edged
long-shot Washington 75-74 in the
NCAA East Regional semifinal when
Richard Hamilton hit a rebound
jumper as the game ended. It was
Connecticut's third chance in the last

eight second~
"The ball just came to me and I
said, 'Make sure I gather myself
before I let his one go,"' said Hamilton, the Big East player of the year.
"I gathered myself, let the ball go and
it went in. "

Alter it did. the bench emptied and
the OConn players piled on top of
each other. Their reward is a date
Saturday with top-ranked North Car·
olina. which disposed of Michigan
State 73-58 at Greensboro, N.C.
(~ TOURNAMENT on Page 5)

MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Flr*t round

Second round Reglonals

March t 3

Semifinals

March 15

Semifinals

Regional•

MIDWEST

(1) Kansas ttO

l

1Kansas715
(16) Pr VlewA&amp;M 152 •

•

Second round

Firat round

March 12

March 14

EAST

.. - --- -- · "
iiBI Rhode Island
18) RhOde Island 87
• ,
' Rhode Island 110 I
i
191 Murray State 14 r .. .. -- ·
1

· ------ .. · '

Sl

151r.,... Christian 87

,

IAordaSiaa77,0T

(12) Florida State M
-·

LOUIS,

Mo.
20 i

March

,

'

1

J 13) Valparalso

-

(4) MISSISSIPPI eD

MiChogan Sl

; Va:lpar'aiso 83

Va~rai~ _!~ ~

St. LOUIS, Mo.

(6) Clemson 72

March 22

·----- ·---- .w M~hlgan65

(II ) w MI,C~'gan 7~ :

(3) Stan~o~d 07_

(3) Stan1ord
~~ ...,
~- ·

.. Stanford 83

1141 Col. qa106tn 571

171 St JOlin's eo

(1~) ~0e_!~i!_~--~--J
(2) Purdue H

1-·---- ____ ,

March 20 i

Detroit 65

1

l

1(2) Purdue

NATIONAL
CHAMPION

1Purdue80

(1 5) ~~~8!!'.5!._

J~

'

~

San Anton1o,

SOUTH

(t) Duket14

lona81

•

~

(4) New Mexico 79
~.., ~ -~

~·

March 28

·· 1
,r""·~"''5' ""racuse
--·--

~ ---~ · · - ---

i

1

St Petersburg, i
Fla. ~­
March 22 .

j

16) UCLA&amp;S

By RONALD BLUM
ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. (AP)Rup.!rt Murdoch now has a baseball
team to match his standing in the
media.
The Los Angeles Dodgers, perhaps the premier franchise in the
Nationat League. was sold to the
media mogul's fox Group on Thursday by the O'Malleys after baseball's
club owners turned aside objections
of rival Ted Turner and gave their
overwhelming ~ppro~al.
"This· is' u historic change," Colorado Rockies owner Jerry McMorris said following the 27-2 vote in
which Atlanta and the Chicago White
Sox dissented and the New York
Mets abstained.
. The deal is worth about $350 million. a record for a sports franchise.
The Dodgers join a Murdoch empire
that mcludes newspapers in the United States, Britain and Australia, a
film studio, television networks and
cable networks.
"Smce Fox entered sports, we
have been amongst the strongest
believers and supponers of major
league baseball," Muri:loch said. "As
owners of the Dodgers, we will work
hand-m-hand with the other owners
to further assure the long-term
growth and success of America\ pastime.··
Turner, baseball's first media
mogul -owner. voted no in his role us
vice chairman of Time Warner Inc.,

'

NOT THIS TIME!- Connecticut defenders Jake Voskuhl (40) and
Monquencio Hardnett (30) reach to atop the shot of Washington's
Donald Watts during Thursday night's NCAA East Regional semlfl·
nal game In Greensboro, N.C., where Connecticut won the battle of
the Huskies 75-74 on a last-second shot. (AP)
•

()seed

Scoreboard
Midwest Regional

Basketball

ToniJhl 'll Rmlnnal ~latt
AI Thr Kitl Ctnh•r, St li.Mli"
Pllnlt!C (2K-71 VS Sl.lllf\lrJ tl K-4 ), K05 r m
Rh ode- bl .mJ (2-1 -K) vs Vulpttr;n su (21 -9)
10 2:'i pIll

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atbnttc Dhi'lilon

Iwn

~
-lb

New Yllfk
New Jersey

lC:!
l'i

W.tshln):ttl1 1
Orluntltl
Bm ton
Phri,JJelpl11 a

\.l
H

Mt.Ul\1

Ctntnl
ChtCII~\1

I.
lO

n

M7
'i4'i
'i 22

l '.

'i07

ll

)lM.J

29

17

4l'J

l'i

4U

JK~

21

Re~ional
Thursdu y ·~ sfmtfinp;l scvrts
U1.1h 6\ Wcsl \l•r~:•ma 62 •
An znna/17 M.1ryi.11W.I 79

II

12
12'

16'

20

49
4b
42

lndmna
Ch.JrlottcAtl.mt a

11

742

20
2-4
4{) 2'

1197

1

6l6

7
H'•·

;\tl

lO

~ 4~

lO

-1~~

2•J

16
1,

-tliJ

I~

'iO

21 I

C Lt~ELA ND
Dctnll t . ,

-·-

61 ~

G..:u r~1.1

7'J. \' ,mJ~rt&gt;tlt M
Frc, nu Sl.lli.: II~ H,,w,UI Ill

20
11'

l\1 1d w t~l

L

~

1-S.ut Anmnu1

-~~

2!

(11-1~

H(l U ~I tlll

1~

~\()

11'

MuHICStll.l

"
ll1
I'
11

ll
11

~no

I&lt;'

-l K 11

•-Utnh

Orill a~
V:tm:o u v~ r

L&gt;cn\'Cr ,

~~

~0

6U

f»anfit I)IVIston
'iO I~

710 -S.::11rtl..K-L A l.. 1 ~1.'r '

-16
-1-1

710 -Ph,lt.:rUA
PC1rtl.u1tl
S.k:I.Ulk.'!ll tl
L /1. Cilppu'
Gtlldl'U ~lilt
' d llh.llt•J pl.l)l111 "·:nh

?W
11 I
ll ti

70~
(-J., ]

"

2~

5f1 1J

b'
11

~b

42

lK~

2'i ' ·

I~

'i I

2!7

1-1

';J

212

l'i'
16'

n

M m~ sOI . I ( I K - i 'i l .. ~ rr .::~ nt lSI.\I ~t 2J - 11 J 7

ur 11 "\() p m

rn-

Division I semifinals

Division II final
lJovl!r (20.61 ..,,. Har111hon 8t1d1n t 2-l-l)
day 2 rm

Chantpiun~ hip

Pt&gt;t&gt;bb t2 'i- \) 111 Oi.tl!rtn Falls (27-0) Saturd.ty II a 111

Division IV semifinals
Mnrmn Plens:mt (2 ~- 1 I vs M1nstt&gt;r (2li-1 ) Fnd:,y . 2 r til : 7..:Jik.'IYtlk Rose, rans ( 19-7) ~~ ~ Bas1.:\lnl Ho,~y,cJ I - lHudon t l'i-1), Fnday 4 rIll
Ch.unp1unslup S,h\H\J,,y, 5 jllll

Ohio H.S. boys'
regional tournaments
Thursday's seminnal scores
l)ivi ~ ion

Akr,ut llm·had {-, l

'!~

W,,,ll1ll)'lilll 1JI

Punl.md K2 :-.,-,\ ) urk 77
Hfllt\l •&gt;n

IO''i

Cl I VJ:I.AND

IX} S.ll(,UJk'llltlK\

Toni~ht 's

games

Nt!"" 1L·11.::y ,11 lnthana . 7 p m
/l.il.&lt;nl .1 11 N.·w Y,~r l: 7 'Op m
U1.1h ,11 l'!ul.ltk•lpht .l 7 '0 I' 111
Pur· l , u ~t l .11 Ur i tll•lu 7 10 pIll
(~t &gt;kkn \ 1,11 0.: ,U M1 .11111 7 'Up 111
l tlllllll\1,11 J&gt;..·tr&lt;lll X p rn
\ 111Ultl \t'( dl Chllol~ O X pIll

r

Mllltlt' ~nt ,t K
ClurhiHt.· 11 S HI Antumn

lkn \t'l .11

Sc.111k

·''I

m

K lll p m
A ~1~cr s. 10 \0 p 111

Saturday's games
V.tnLtiUH'I .tt

Iwn

JnJl'fl\'lllk.'Uu ' bl . IJlunmllt: ld -llJ
L • hcn~ - lkn l ttn ilK P,·um tlk- -1 2
M 111 11~r
J.d.\url (\·nwr 'il
Nu rw.d k S1 l' tul -1-! RI CHMONO DI\I.E

N V hlath.k"•"
Fluml.1 .
T.11nr.1 llay

MHlt\C~ut:l

I&lt; p

11 1

H o u~t o11 .11 D:tlt.t§. K lO 11m
1\.:ntlil• ,11 Phut.'111710 \1 p m

(J'

CLEVELAND .u LA Cl1ppcn; 10 lOp m.

Sunday's games
Utah :u Nrw Yllrk 1] 10 p m
Atlamaa10tlm11 . 1210pm
Port1allll rd M1:nm \ p m
Chl (oll!Oat 'l oronhl 1 r m
Ph•l:uktplu.t .11 lltlMon. l 10 11 nt
W&gt;\ s lun~t n n ,11 Nl"W krSL"'j l 10 pIll
Gnllkn Sr.Lir at Od.utt.lo, l JO p 111
l nJt .u ~ .L al Mtlw.tllk ~c l JO rIll
L ,\ L 1l rn .11 Sn.:nml•nt11 'i p m
P h l)CI\1~ al S.m Anlt.llliO, Rp m

Cllllltel!ll UI 7\

W.ISIHII).!IU\1

74

fino \
Nonh C:tr\"llllla ( n . l ) \ s Con!teli iCUI 02-4) b
S aturd:~ y's

pm

South Regional
Tuni~hl's stmifinal sla lr
At Tropir:.tntt Firld, St Pf't rnburg, Fla.
Oul:e("ll 1) YS Symcll~ (26-R), 7 \9 r m
Kc=mud.y ( 11--11 vs UCLA (24 8), 9 59 p m

Sunday 's fi nal
Semifinal wmncr! ~ p rn

-1 I 17 ,,

PhthLidphw

l'i ~0 II
q 1' II
!1!\117
21 lJ JO
11'1 l? 12

W,tslu n}:lllll

NY

R.m )!c- r~

l'i .4 i •J

Jill
XI 1%
1\ 17 ~J
f1l WJ
q 17 1
-lK l 'iK
19 I N

llA LTIMORE ORIOLES Pl.t ~ ~d Ol IJ ,mny
Clyhurn nnti RHP Ewn:tt Stull t111 the t 'i·tl.tv th ~­
.lhkdh sl
BO STON Hl.l &gt; SOX &lt;..'l. t~mc ..l 01 M t~lr,·
Cun ll\1 1 11 )!~ 111 1 w.II Wfl l!llllllllc ('l m:lnll.llt Hl lh
NI ~ W YORK YANK U ·.:S A ~• l ),m l'J I. HI'M L\..l'
MtrnO~ KHI 1 W.t,un Hcrcd1,1. I&lt;HP M.1n y J.tti/CII
RHP D:umy Ktm INl' l1h1l H1.111 INr Mth• Luwd l OF R1cky 1...-J.,,.. 111d 01 S h. u ~e S pt.' ll tt't IH iht.' lr
mtmlr· ka¥111!" \'l l 111p l..-~
'IAM I1 A llAY DI :VIL k i\V S 1' 1 ,, ~ ,- J RHJ•
l.ln.m Hd .uand LHI' Tc-m:l/ W.ulc 1111 thl· 1"·1 l.ty

~ 14

Muntn:al

12~7

H J ~ -1 1 ~

~K ~-~ 1-;

71 171'1
11

Ot!,(Wo(

~7

n'i Hill I IlK

Ci t• St l l!n. llt u~ (\'1-7 ) v~ Mmn Bud11d (2 l SaturJ.1y 7 l{) p.rn
At Tulrdo
L.tk ~wr-...al

St [ J .

Division II

AI Oa11un
H,1mihun B.1J1 n (20-~l l'li Cm R t~t:l'l fl nul\l
(!J-2 ). S;uurtl .t~ . 7 10 p m
•
At llo~Un~~: Grrrn
C\1! Mllllm t2 1-ll vs Clc 8cntdu.:lt lli.'( !7-KI.
S.JturJ ay , 1 10 r IH
At Athtn!!
NF.W LEX ING TON (l fl-9) vs Dowr 122 2J.
Saturtllly. 7 10 p m
AI Canhm
Akn m Hob.m (2 1-4) vs You Mooney 122-21.

With

c~ l cr

.tml LHI' hm Cn.wcll 111

1111h i lllil)ltlh~

ol tllc-

Amc rt~.:. m 1\smc1.1111111

Sl.'nl INI" ~nltcrtu l'clnitiiiC
.mtl 01 · On 1c Tmuuoms uulfl l!hL tu lntlt .lll:llltlhs
HOUSTON ASTf.I.OS A Mll l~ll.::t.l C Mlldt
Mdu ~Kcy h1 tlt~u mmtrr-1\'•titlk:' ~amp
lO~ AN(l] ~ l.l ~~ lJODGI :HS lktumctl

!&lt;HI'

Marc l.k ~dlt li nc~ to the Ch:vc:lnnt.l ltu.lml\5.

B•sketball

Natlonul Dusktlbull As~utlutlon
CHI\RLOrl E HORNETS 1\t:IIVtllcd I· Dun.Ll d Kuya/ fn11n the inJur.:tl hst Pltu:cd F Trav1s
Wdh.1ms unthc IIIJUrl'tl hst
NEW JEKSI.i.Y NI~TS Acttvm~tl F Jnysun
Wtllt,un~ frum ahc IIIJUICJ li sl ,,lilio:Cll r Don

Nnna~c

NEW "NGLAND PATRIOTS

So~ncd

WR .

Brmn Stnhl~m
N~W ORLEANS SAINTS Stpnctl Lit An&lt;lrc
Ruyal lu 1111 11(!l·r ~h~o-'1:1.

Ht~~:key
Nation.ul Hockry Ltal(ue
'
NHI. Su~llt!IU.Icd lkarmt RcJ Wtngs 1: Martin
Lupumt.: h•r twu llamcs wttlmut puy nnd !incd him
SI.OOO fttr 'run·~:hc-~kmg l~muntnn Oilcr!l r Rem
Mum1y 111 n Mard1 17 ~amc
BOSfON IJRUINS: St,.ncd 1: R11h D1M1ttt1 In u
thl\.'t'-yc:1r cun1n"1
BUWAU&gt; SABRES. A~'l'lito II..TIIL"' with G
Dnn1inilt H.uck una multiyc:u cnnlm.:t
PHOl3NIK
Rc-·Stt:tk.-d Julm Yktll(n toil noc-yc;Lr ~:nntmct
I'AMPA DAY LIGHTNING H.cauiJncJ F
Brent Pelcnun 111 Mllwaokl'C ttl ilk' IHL
VANO&gt;UVER CANUCKS Rcmllctl G ('un:y
Htrsch and I) Chri s Mchl lililcr lrnm Syrarmc of
the AHL Placed G Garth Snnw un lhc InJured re~crw ltst. Au1~11t:tl &lt;: Drundnn Cunvi.:ry 111 Sym-

covun=.s-

c

MncLc.:tn unthc IIIJun•d h~1

At OaJhm
Ctn Indian Hr ll {IH·bl vs O~ y Chm 11an (2\I).Fnday 6pm
AI Athtns
Spam H1 ~ h la nd (24- 1) vs CHESAP EAKE
(lJ 1}, Fnday . 7 \Op m
AI Tol~do
Havrland Waynt= Trn~.:t: (22 2) vs Rocky R1vt=r
Lutheran W {22·2&gt;. Fnday 7 lO p nt

AI Canlun
Chantl (22-2) ~s Mamllun Tuslaw
(21"'1), Fnday, 7 JOpm
B ~dford

•1

tn

-·-

w

1110

fum

l1·ntrul lltusll

n

1611
1"1

111&lt;

!.if !.iJI
n 'J2 2lM 1 \/,

.t t ll1

IA11 u11
St I L'll\'

l7 IIJ
1(,

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("lu, ').:"

~7

\()I I

I

K7 1!17 lf1\
2ll~

161

~~~

HrX I M
~() 'O I ~
h-1 1K-I t •JI
! -1 1ft K 'ih l'i7 1'17

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I l ltolllu

r ..c:lfir Uivi~~
Ctt lor.IJu

_l'i ltJ HI

l_.o, Anl!cb

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s.ut Ju~

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71
26 JJ IU (12
27 JJ 1 Ill
. 2117 11 H
20 1-1 ll "
21 n 10 12

\1

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2~

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x-chm:hed playoff hcrth

Thunday's scores
!Juff,du b. Flonda I
Boston -l. Torunt n 0
AtJ;L~i m l . Phtladdplu:1 l ( I ~)
Ottcn ~o I. Mun11enl 0

Colomtl o 4, M IOCnt ~ J

2U7
PJ4
17h
IM
IIJJ

17~

177
1%
171J
2-10

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161 lO'
211

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Tonight's games
New J.:!!.cy .11 W:l\lnn!!-11111 7 p m
.m~ouvcr oil OU.IW:I. 7 10 p 111

v

C.1ruhn.1 ,,r o.,llai. X:"10 tl m
.N Y l ~ l.ull.k.'!s .u Cu l ~11y. 9 11 rn

Saturday's gamts
Pluladclphi n ut PmWurgh, l p m

Division IV
AI C~umhw

Norw nlk Sr. Paul (2 \ -2) vs Grandm:w His
( 16-9). Sururdny, l p m
AI Oayfoo
D.1y J c fl ~no n ( 19·:'i} vs Mmster (IK-b). Salutday J 11m

Bomm at Bufralc. J p m
Deu·01 t at N.Y Rangers. ;\ Jl m

Monday • Saturday 9 8JIL • 8 p.m. •Sunday t p.m. • 8 p.a

Aoniliaal Tnmj)&lt;l Buy. 'pan.
Cuk1udu nt San J u~t l p m
Phocm"' &lt;~I los Angeles. l p m
A n ~ ht Lrn Ill M u nt rc=~ l . 7 :10 Jl lll
W.1 ~hm g1 on 111 New Jersty. 7 10 p 111

-.
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•

1

nati, but,,b!: missed each time down
Nonh Carolina. in its first season
the stretch against third-seeded Utah. under Dean Smith's longtime assis"I had .!!ood looks at them. they tant, Bill Guthridge, moved within a
just didn) fall down for me," a tear- victory of its fifth Final Four of the
ful West said afterward.
·decade . Guthridge tied Indiana
The Utes (28-3) play defending State's Bill Hodges for the most wins
champion Arizona on Saturday nt by a first-year coach. Hodges accomAnpheim.•I!SCalif. The top-seeded plished the feat in 1978·79. with LarWildcats e ilninated Maryland 87-79. ry Bird in his lineup.
Tonight !. ~t's Duke vs. Syracuse
''I'm excited about hemg one
and Kentucky vs. UCLA in the South step away, I certainly hope we can gel
at St. PeteiSburg, Fla. In the Midwest there," Guthridge said. "But I' ve
Regional atiSt. Louis, it's Purdue vs. been there a lot and I don't feel any
Stanford an3 Rhode Island vs. Val- different as a head coach - except
paraiso.
when you (reponers) bring it up."
East
The Tar Heels also would tie the
WashingtQn (20-1 0) took its first single-season school record for win s
lead 74-73 wjih 33 seconds left on a by beating UConn.
·
three-pointerj&amp;y Donald Watts.
Mateen Cleaves. the Big Ten playConnectic:ot's Jake Voskuhl's shot er of the year. led the Spartans (22The District 13 all-star doubleheader will start wilh the girls' game bounced off lhe rim and Hamilton's 8) with 18 points, but was 7-for-21.
on Monday, March 23 at 6 p.m. at the follow missed. After it was tipped
West
University of Rio Grande's Newt from the olher side, Hamilton
Even the presence of Jerry West,
grabbed the lqpse ball and hit a fade- the most famous West Virginia alumOliver Arena.
In both games, the Division 1·11 away jumpet 10ver 7-foot Patrick nus_of_t_hem all, couldn't help the
stars will compete wit~ the Division Femerling, the ball falling through Mountaineers (24-9) purr another
lll-IV dream-teamers.
the basket as t~e buzzer sounded.
upset when they couldn '1 .buy a basThere will be three-point shooting
"It seemed,all IO'guys got a hand ket in the final moments.
and slam dunk contests held d,uring on it," he said. "Then the worst thing
" We still had· enough time to t1e
that could have happened. hap- or win the game," coach Gale Catlett
the halftimes of each game.
pened."
..,
Admission is $3.
said. "We couldn't convert at the
Calhoun was not thrilled with his end."
team's performance in improving to
Michael Doleac had 25 points and
32-4.
nine rebounds for the Utes, who have
" We looked like most teams look averaged 28 wins the last four seawhen they play ~s." Calhoun said. sons. but not gotten beyond the
~unday
"My theory was·we were out of gas. regional final.
I have no idea why because we had
"It ·certainly wasn 't an artistic
The Tri-Valley Conference all star five or six days of rest. but we were game," coach Rick Majerus said.
"But I was proud of the way our guys
baskelball game'.wilf be played on out of gas. We had no energy."
They'll need 'o recover that played. We hung tough."
Sunday, March 22 at Southern High
against the Tar He~ls (33-3).
Mike Bibby scored 18 of his 26
School's Hayman Gymnasium.
•
points
in the first.half as Arizona (30..
The game will feature the conferAntawn Jamison had 20 points
4)
spuned
away from Maryland (21ence's lop senior girls and boys in and 14 rebounds. 'Vlnce Carter added
bolh divisions. The girls' game will 20 points· and 10" rebounds, \\\IJile 11 ). After trailing by 14 early in the
get underway at 6 p.m. The boys' Shammond William,s ~ad 18 J!jilints second half. Maryland closed within
one wilh 10:32 remaining.
contest will srvtat,7:30 p.m.
and a carecr-tyinJI Jjine rebounds.

TVC all·star
basketball
· game

0

Georgia, Fresno
State capture NIT
quarterfin·al wins
By ED SHEARER
ATHENS. Ga. (AP) - Lorenzo
Hall is back for Georgia.
The 6-foot-9 senior reserve was a
major factor Thursday night, scoring
12 points in 18 minutes as the Bulldogs bolted into the NIT SJ;mifinals
with a 79-65 victory over Southeastem Conference rival Vanderbilt.
"I knew there would be another
day I could show my skills to the
home crowd." sa1d Hall. who lost h1s
start in~ job early in February.
.
"A lot of people were asking.
' What's wrong with Lorenzo"' I
dealt with all the questions and tried
to keep my head up."
The victory sends the Bulldogs
into Tuesday night's semifinals
against Penn State in Madison Square
Garden.
"Hall did an outstanding job ...
Georgia coach Ron Jirsa said. "He
played really well. He's had some
good practices, and Larry Brown
needed a linle more rest. He came in
and did the job for us."
It was the first time Hall has heen
in double figures since scoring I0
against Auburn on Jan. 3.
In the other National Invitation
Tournament quarterfinal , Fresno
State edged Hawaii 85-83. fresno
State plays Minnesota in Tuesday
night's other semifinal.
Freshman Jumaine Jones led

Georgia ( 19-14) with 20 pomts' and
12 rebounds. including se ven straight
points during a three-minute stretch
of the second half that put the Bulldogs in control.
Drew Maddux scored 19 poinh to
lead Vanderbilt (20-13).
"I believe they have the hest ath·
letes in the SEC," Vandy coach Jan
van·Breda Kolff said of the Bulldogs.
"When Jones and Dernck Dukes
shoot the ball well outside, they are
very difficult to guard inside."
The Bulldogs got 21 points from
their center position. with Brown
adding nine to H&lt;ill's dozen. Dukes
finished With 10 points. as did Ray
Harrison.
"It's great to he going. but we' re
not satisfied with that," Jones said.
"We can get 20 wins and get rings.
That's what everybody is talking
about. "

Jones' three baskets in " row
rgm "M-5K lead with 5 : ~7
, ., a lead that reached I0
st over two minutes later
when Dukes mnde a three-pointer
and G.G. Smith hi I two of three free
throws. Smith was fouled on a threepoint attempt with 3:14 to play.
Dan Langh1 had II and James
Strong and Vince Ford 10 each for
the Commodores, who had no field
goals after Langhi 's basket cut Georgia's lead to 61-58 with fi:03 to play.

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(Continued from Page 4)

District 13
all-star twin bill
set for Monday

1 ·&amp;

x-1&gt;.1ll .t,

. contract with baseball. It has a $43
million a year national cable deal,
and local TV agreements with 22 of'
the 30 clubs.
Owners had been fearful of Murdoch, wondering if he would use his
vast influence to pry players loqse
from competitors
"In our minds. there are walls
between the businesses, and they
don' t really connect." News Corp.
president Peter Chernin said.
Chase Carey, New Corp.'s cochief operatmg officer, met with several teams Wednesday trying to make
them comfortable with the idea of
Murdoch as a fellow owner.
"They answered our questions
about having the financial interest in
21 other clubs. That was our biggest
concern,'' San Franc1sco Giants owner Peter Magowan said.
Texas Rangers president Tom
Schieffer said Fox's TV involvement
with baseball was a key·factor in convincing owners to accept Murdoch.
"They've been good partners with
baseball. and I think that relationship
spoke well of them as a potential
partner, and I think that's what carried the day." Schieffer said.
The O'Malley family had owned
the Dodgers since October 1950,
when the team was still in Brooklyn .
Walter 0' Malley revolutionized
baseball, moving the D()(lgers lo Los
Angeles after the 1957 season, building a gleaming ballpark with hiS own
money

"We came to play Carolina,"
coach Jim Calhoun said. "The only
way to get to the Final Four is to go
through Carolina."
West 'Virgmia, a lOth seed, went
home after Jarred West missed three
shots in the fin&lt;~l minute and the
Mountaineers fell to Utah. 65-61.
West's three--point bank shot'in the
final second last week gave them a
victory over .second-seeded Cincin-

1.8°/o APR Up To 31 Months!*'*

K-l l tn I ~ K
71 IL)-1 17U

the corporation that assumed control
of his company and the Braves two
years ago . .
Turner, a bitter rival of Murdoch
in the'lfV business, attended his first
ba.~eball meeting in nine years to cast
his "no" vote, missing a Time Warner board meeting for the first time.
While he has skewered Murdoch
in the past, Turner cooled his rhetoric
this time. His only questions during
the ~eting were whether Murdoch
was 'llircal fan and how many boseball glimes he attended.
Murdoch wasn't there to answer
for himself, instead sending the No.
2 anil'3 executives from the Dodgers'
new parent company, News Corp.
Braves chairman Bill Bartholomay
said Thrner congmtuh1ted the Fox
executives after the meeting and
Wished tbem well.
"I thought Ted Turner sliowed an
extraordinary amount of class," acting commissioner Bud Selig smd.
White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf,
often a contrarian. would noi explain
· his vot~. The Mets abstained because
their co-owners were split - Fred
Wilpon for the deal and Nelson Doubleday against it.
Selig. whn has owned the Mil waukee Brewers since 1970 and i'
now baseball's senior owner. s.iid
Fox brings expertise as baseball's TV
partner and in marketing.
Fo~ is in the third season of a
$575 million, five-year national TV

NCAA men's tournament...

~,;u54:.

WESTF.RN CONFERENCE

S.tturJ.Iy, 7 10p m

Division Ill

I'J I ~

1'! II
!h n ?

(.';twhrhl

At Aknm

,

A~I I.:C tl Ill 1Cfii1S

CAMOL.INA PANTHERS· Stt:ncJ S Hrcnt
1\lcK&lt;t!dcr 111" thr~-..:-yc.Jr Cltnlnu,;l
GREEN 1M"( PACKERS Sij:IICd I&gt;E l&gt;cxtLT .

2U'J

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Dutf,,\t•

rm

t~ I Y th ~.1 llkd lt ~ l 1\~Sil! ltC d I.HP H1 d1 Rnh~.: rt~u u .
LHI1 G rc ~ Cat~ lrc t. l' lkn Mntma INI !"my Nl..·l'l
;ulliiNI (. lm s Prndwttln tllct r nunur-kai!,Ul' l iiiiiJI

()t\i~lon

Nortlll'a\1

( I IJ - ~) vs

llllr · \~· ·ll!U C Lo llll)l

ATLANTA fAlCONS Ap,rt.'C tltntcml~ w1th ·
CD Rmw.ly Fuller on 11 two--year cnntr:~et .

IKK

At !'olunthus
C:tl l Oruokh.ll t:11 t 2 ~ - l ) vs C.UII&lt;IU M ~ Kin lt:)
t22 -21 SaturJny 7 "\() p m
r\t D11yton
,
D.ty Culo11.::l While 120 "\ ) vs Cm Wuhrnw
( j \} . fl ) fnd .ty 'I pIll

~

CHICAGO cuns · As~•l!•tc-tl RHI 1 Kl'nllll'
Stccnstr.t oltttl !&lt;HI' \)ave- Swartlh,tuith tu th.:n nu·

lD MAAlt

I II
J'i l
17!
lXI&lt;

Division I finals

,-,,1 St Juhn

k.ll!lll!"~.:.lmp

Sl~ncll

Mti\IJox IU ,1 llllC-yl!tlf l"Oillr.tcl

!.if !.iJI

I)J

1 .~

NCAA men's tournament
East Re~wna l
Thur«tay's ~t'mi fin al scur•s
Nort h (;trolma 7 I M1 ~h1g an St.tte 5K

ll: 1 I &amp;

New JcrM:y

P!ll slmr~lt

W:ln 1 IV· I) S&lt;!IUH.i:ly . 7 10

IN I" W\·~
Helm ~ OF Dtmtm Hollins \.HI' Dcrnn Ehcrt ,md
l.HI' Jnhtt Knd.~·r In Htdtmnttd nl the lntcrnaiiUtJ.tl
Lc .t \! 11 ~ . LHP llru ~c Chen . l.HP Mtc all llnwil' .
RHP !l W,I)'Ih' J.ktlhs l' ra,cu.d MalliS .mJ OF
G:or ~c l.umh :lrtlhl Gro.: .::u v dl~· u\ th~· Soutllcrn
Lc , , ~ \t l', .wd l' h:rn.IIHhl l.unur .utJ INF Gk•nn
'WLlh.tms tu l&gt;an v1 llc 111 1hc (',,ml ltltl l.cntr-11~' A,..
sti!IIL'd I.HI• Otl.1hz l'crcz. l' Mtkt• Mahtln~·y . INF
M.•rk IXN1ts:t atltiiNI (icnc Schulltn lhctr nmwr-

u.~IMOn

Alllllllli\

SOU rH L-'I.SlTR N I()

t ).

ARIZONA CAKUlNAlS

Nat tonaiiA·a~u~·
l\ ~s • 1uw J

A ll ANT I\ URAVI:S

F.ASTF.RN CONFFRF.NCF.

Dllislon IV
llcrlm H1l;ul\1 1M Luwd hdlc W
IJ.•y Jl'i t!!ntln 74 Cm ~vc n H•ll • 'ib
Oclphu ~ St J to hn ' ~ 'i-' Cunlllk'l\1,11 1\
Gr.mJ111'W Hh 7l, Gl OUSTER IRIMBLI.
'I

IJ t ,~ t wilJ6

O.lll.11 Kll ( ,.1IJL'fl St,lll' K:! 10'1J

Nallunal Foochllll Leu,;ut

RHI 1 Jul.') Etsdtc-n OpllllltcJ KHJl Swn Wmch-

,\ml'ril'un I ,t•agur

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lllll'fll,ltl! rtt:l) I .A' .lfLI ~

l'INC: INNI\TI IUJ&gt;S

ANA HEIP.I ,\ NGL L~ P L1~c~ll' lol\td G•c-clll'
2U K.111Jy Vl'\ .11~ ,uui RHP Pep H. 1m~ un the I 'i-

SEAlTLE SUPERSONICS· Signed C Gcnrl!-e
Ziikk 111 a ~1.'\:uml I0-duy ~:unlmct

NHL standings

II
Y11U Mu mry -1'1 Akrnn St Y-S1 M -16
Ohi~un

Allu11.1S-I r...t d~~o !Uh~!ll
i 1&gt;h U1h&gt; I~ Dt. lll t:l JOl (01 )
N~-~~. kr 1t 1 •I\ Or l.lnJpl(7

111

lOKO N IO I!LUI JJ\ "t :-i ' K c k. l ~~\t 01 · Phil

l'l.utlll'l OjllwncJ :\S I uma ~ 1\; r~·t, (" Jul1u Mulot·
qucr:t .mJ f{HP Carl u~ i\ltn:n11.1rh1Syr,lrUM: ul thl·

'i7

Thursday's SCC)ft'S
ln.!t w,,

Mall~' )'

Lu~ An~d ~s
t&lt;up crt Murdod ~

d tl, lhb\11 ~ 1

Hockey

I

S h . tl:~ r HI ~

~.ttur­

Division Ill final

Thursdav. Murch Zfl
Sc- rmfm: 1l lo~cn , 'i p m
St·nllhn.d wum,-r, 7 l Op m

11
11

7(llJ

~~

I9

,.

?HI

Mujur Lcai(Ul' Du~rbu11
Appruvcd tlu: ~.Ill' ul lhl'

DoJi:\l"rs lnrm 1\·tcr 0
(iroLtll

121-2 1 Vlt Pu.: kerin~l\\ 1\ 124-21 Fntl.ly 7 rIll . T~• l Ce nt Ca thllh L· (1 li- 1) H D.ty
Ch,tnuu:uJc--Juhcnnc 12.'1 -2), Fr1day. Y p ·m
Ch.,mpmruhip S.uurJny. t! ;\0 1• m

!'Ill

n

Iwn

MI.!~

w :~.bwnrth

Tue•day's semifinals

0 1\'ldun

Busehull

DaYislon Ill
Ch:11nn Fnlli 46. Vwmlles 40
Pl!cblcs ~2 . C:"1ah:1 Murp,ureuu 49

At MadisonSquart (;urden. Nr'tl York
Pe nn St ( I!{- I]) ..,, G\'(lf j!lt t\9 -1-H 7 ur 9 1{)

WESTERN CONFERENCF.

Transactions

Dover 42 , w.,u~cnn 40
Ham1 l10n Smhn 4~. Poland St'nnn.1ry )~

'fhursday's third-round scores

"'"

Kj1111
N Y h l.m\lcn .11 h .l nlllllhltl Xp 111
1
S.111 Jmc .11 Ph Ul lliK 1 I'm
St I mus .11 C.tl)!.lry IJ )I 111

DIYI!ilon II

NIT slate

Clltl ,1)!U l J! 111

AI Mht: l\1 1 ,,\ Ut t.IW;I. 7 (} Jl lll
N Y t( : ut~CU ;1t Plu\,idc \plu•

Thursday's seminnals

Saturduv 's nmll
Ut .th t2K- l ) v~ 1\n.ttliltl (10-4), ~ -ID 1• m

Divl~lon

...

Mtlwauktt
Tnrnnl n.

West

•!'

Sund•y's ~amrs
P111 sbur~ l 1 ut D.lll.ts, l \l Ill
lJu ~l&lt;\11.1 1

Ohio H.S. girls'
state tournaments

Sunda) ·~ nn11l
St• nutin.•l wmlk-rs 2-m r m

w.

V.111 ~uuvc r .L t Ton1111 u 1 \() p m1
St L••u lli .u Et.lm&lt;mluu I(J 10 11111

AI Toltdo
L•bt:ny-Hcnl\10 (20-4) vs Delph os S1
John 's ( IM -6), Sa1urdny. 3 1'1 m
At Canton
lm.kp..·••tlc-nce (19- 'i) vs fkrlm Hiland (21- l ).
S atunl:~y. 1 p m
Fmdl :~y

Anderson, sa1d he never watches the
scoreboard d~ring a game.
"No way, we shouldn't be doing
that," said Anderson, who scored 18
points "We' re hoping that they lose,
but that's after the fact. I didn't know
they lost unril you just told me."
Wesley Person scored 16 points,
Kmght had 13, and Zydrunas
llgauskas had 12 points and 12 ·
rebounds for the Cavs. Their reserves
outscored Sacramento's 26-2.
"It was very slow out there and
we seemed to be uncomfortable playing at their pace," Kings forward
Corliss Williamson said.
Williamson scored 21 points and
Otis Thorpe had 20 for Sacmmento,
which has lost six straight and I~ of
15. Mitch Richmond, playing with a
sore right knee, was M:oreless in the
first half and finished with 12 points.
"Mitch was off tonight. he was
playing hun," Kings coach Eddie
Jordan said.
llgauskas, one of those rookie
starters. rebounded a missed free
throw and M:ored from close range to
put the Cavaliers.ahead for good. R584, with I :02 remain mg.
Anderson followed with two free
throws with 43.8 seconds left. and the
Kings then missed three three-point
attempts in the final 30 seronds.
"Down the stretch, we just didn't
make the shots which are crucial to
the win," Jordan said. "We missed
FOULED- The SacraR\Into Kings' Billy Owens (30) Is fouled by
open shots, and that really hurts when
you're involved in a slow-paced Cleveland center Zydrunasllgauskas (right) as the Cavaliers' Shawn
Kemp trails the play at left durl.ng Thursday nlghJ's·NBA contest In
game."
Sacramento, Calli., where the Cavalla.r s won 90-85. (AP)

Media mog~l Murdoch buys
L.A~ Dodgers 'from O'Malleys

I

March 20

·• - ¥·-·· New Mexico 48

(13) 8u11er 82

Texas

-.

St. Petersburg. Fla. ,
Syracuse 58

San Antomo,

Texas
MS!Ch 26

Ouke71

1515yracuso 63

Waahlnglon 11

Texas
March 30

---·---JSt. Louis, Mo.!I

I

113

Greensboro, N.C
March 21

National
Championship
San AntoniO.

The Dally Sentln•l• Page 5.

'

Frldav. March 20. 1998

NCAA men's cagefest resumes play

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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94 CHEVY-5·1 0PICKUP 4cyi., 5speed, 57,ooo miles
....................................... 6,400
98 CHEVY S·1 0PICKUP Ext. Cab, LS, V6, auto., air, CD player, 37,000 mi... •17,600
93 CHEVY LUMINA Z·34 Extra Clean. Bl~ck ..................................................•1 0,490
95 CHEVY K2500 PICKUP 3/4ton, 4X4, 350 VB, auto., air, tilt, cruise .......... •17,400
97 FORD EXPLORER XLT 15,ooo miles, loaded, like new................................S24,800
97 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN vs, air, cruise, ti~. a.ooo miles....................•19,860
96 DODGE RAM D150 PU VB, auto., air, cruise, tilt, cass., 18,000 miles ...... *17,450
97 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP 4X4, VB, 5speed, air, tiH, cruise, 31455 ~iles..... •22,500
96 CHEVY 5·1 0BWER V6, auto., air, tiH, cruise, 4Dr.................................. •18,600
Bankruptcy clots not mean that
you can never again finance a
new vehicle. Call mt for dttllle

·on how you can drlvt a nice car
now. Alk for Mr. Barcua

•

·-- -·--- ----- -

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.

...____._

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�•
Friday, March 20,1998
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

NOTHING RUNS

UKEADEERE"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

II

992·2196

fJi;;a

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

Gallipolis

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

94-111

•

You've Got Queltlons, Vh'Yt Clot AnleJIIS.

.

1.1'\ ~

PHONE 992·2196

1:1

'

f::l ·

:..

Apostolic

•

,

Uberty Auembly or GGd
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Paslor: Neil Tennanl
ServictS-

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

THE WI.NS T 0 N CUP CIRCUIT

THE WINSTON CUP SERIES
TranSouth Financial 400

AlMOST HOME COOliNG

WHERE: Darlington (S.C.) Aacewav
WHEN: Sunday,
March 22
DEFENDING CHAY·
PION: Dale Jarrett

QUAUP'YING
RECORD: Ward Burton,
Ponliac. 173.7Q7 mph,
Uarch 22. 1996,
RACE RECORD: Dale

Earnhardt, Chevrolet,
139.958 mph, Marth
28, 1993 (500 mites) ;
Oavld Pearson, Ford,
132.703 mph, May 11,

.• UM LUMBER
St. .Rt. 248
Chester
985 3301 .

1968 (400 miles) .

NOTABLE: Since winning lhis race in 1994,
Earnhardt has been stuck at nine career victories at Darlington. one shy ol Pearson's au-

POINTS STANDINGS

...-•,....

When you wanl Hdono rifd"'
www.toro.com

1. Ru.ly W1latl , 50$
2. Oalt E.,...,_ctt, 449
3. Jtrerny Ma~ . «6,
4. Jmmy Sptn*, 429.
5 Bill Elllotl, 4:Z7.
6. Jtfl Gotdotl, 4\2.
7. MM Matlin. 4®.
8. Teny ~. :MM.
9. Owl Uttle, 380.

auacH

D!f!NDtNG CHAMPION: Randy L.aJoie
QUALIFYING RECORD: Jetf Green, Chevro·
let, 168.337 mptl, March 22. 1998.
RACE RECORD: M!ch111 Waltrip, Ponllac,
I 38.140 mph, Sept. 6, I 992.
NOTABU: Mark

llle Public Square.

Oarllnglon BGN races, one more than Harry
Gant and two more than Oeoff Bodine and
OaiO Earnhardt. ... Darlington hat hoat&amp;d at
least one BGN rac:e In every nason ainc:e
the aeries began in 1992 .... Eight times the
winner~ ol Oarllng1on races have atanect on
tt'le oulllde of the front row.... l.aat year Jeff
Burton finished aeoond to LaJoie In the
spring race, then went on to win In the ran.

reoot'd .... Despite taking eight ol the
top 10 polltlona at Atlanta and 13 001 ol 14
at L..aa Vegas, Ford has won only one raca
and trails Chevrolet in the manufacturers·
point race .... Gordon haa captured four ol
tlme

the iaal five races at Darlington, tne ontv
exception being Jarren'a viciOry in this

1. Ron Homeday, 180.
2 . ..k't Atlttmlln, 170.
3. Rick CareHi, ISS.
4. Jack Spr~, 180
5. Greg Bltlle, 155.
e. Jot Nt~ . 150.

3 Mllte Mcl.qh~n . 531.

4 Jot Ne~ . 510
5. Dell Earnt"eft!l .II . 507.
6 Hermie Sadler. 468

Ricky 'RUdd

I.a.

7 , Jay Sauter,

Kensett!. 485.

8. Bob Knelowlki, 142.
9. Bulct1 Milkt.', 138.

7 Marlt Mtrtln, 48S
g .Juan Ktlltr. 488

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I have been a fan of racing for
some time, and have enj oyed
watching lhe sport grow to whal it
has become uxtay. AI this point, I
am beginning to have some concerns for the future of the sport.
My concern is ocn1ered around the

- - ,:._'j
· _!I~RO~M~IA~ST~Wfi~K___
..._- -

c.aJEFF ~ll
WARNER'!J

_....,==
_,_.,.

111 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1-742,.., ., . . . 1111

-

••

0

victory and first of the season.

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL:
· t figured something was
going to happen." ~aid Bell·

multiple team owners.
Dale Earnhardt crossed the fin·
ish line fint at Daytona, but he did

·As soon as I saw some
contact. I just do~e to the
bot1om,· said Mclaughlin,
a Chevrolet driver from

South Mobility/Opryland 320

winner Mike Mclaughl in.

not win the race. Richard Olil-

dress Racing won the race . I'm
sure 8t that point he was so de.spcrale that he would take a win any
way thai he cOuld get it, but the
fact is thai he had a teammate that
pushed him on nearly every restart
of lhe race end then procec.dcd to
block for him when m:cessary.
Also there are . liigns tha' RuSty
Wallace and hjs teammate arc prepared to do whatever is necessary
to get lhem to ttle front Then we
have Jack Roush with five ·cars in
the race. Together lhcy can almosl
dictate what happens in a race.
Wilh the money at stake at such
high levels, the temptation of multiple learn owners to team up in a
race is too great. Then you have
the situation where some owners
can barely field one car in a race.
This will remove the competitiveness t nd reduce racing to the !~vel
of professional ball.
Edward Warford

Waterloo, N.Y.
Casey Atwood, a 17-yearOid local racer, won the pole

Mclaughlin and Robert
Pressley were racing side-by-

side for the lead wilh eight

and finished second. followed

laps to go In the boisterous
Nashville Speedway USA
affair, whefl Pressley triggered

by Dale Earnhardt Jr., Randy
.LaJoie and Jason Ketler.

a wreck with two slower cars.

Mclaughlin's average speed

The final laps were run under
caution, clinching fOr
Mclaughlin his fourth career

was 111 .762 mph In a race In
whlctl the lead changed hands
1B ti mes among six drivers.

TOPnN
Weetdy ranklnp by NASCAA This W~ writer Monte Dutton. Last
~·s rMking II In pwenlheses.

1. Ruoty Wolloce (2)

Jeremy Mayfield (6)
How long can it last?
7. Bobby LAbonte (10)
As usual, Grandest Prix
8. Terry Labonte (8)
Doing his darndeSt
8. Jell Bunon (7)
Likes Texas ... really
10. Bill Elliott (8)
But can he win?

6.

Newfound conSislency
2. Jolt Gordon (1)
Consistency lacking

3. M1rll M1rtln (4)
Ne...er say cle
4. Dille Elmhlnlt (3)

Angry aboul1he Fords
5. Dole JtrNII (5)

Rounding Into form

Stanton, Ky.

JaM~

Chester
985-3857
01•1·: ' IC U 'l·:

.,

\\

12:30-6:30

Dtte

Alee

1te7 Win'* Pole

March 22 · TlanScuth 400, O&amp;rl!ngton, S.C
Food City :500, Briatot, Tllf'lll.

Mtrctl 29
April$
April19
Apf~

2G
M1y 3

.WI"t-16
May 24
May 31
June 6

June

14

June 21
..k.ne 28
July 4
July 12
July 26

trctr~We

Gooctft ~ . Marti nsville. va

OieHwd sao. lall•dev•. Ala
Cllifomla 500. Fcntana , C.W.
The Wnstoo , Concord, N.C!

Aug. 1
Aug. 9
Aug t6
AuQ. 22
Aog_30
Sepl_8

Bllckyard 400, SpNctway, Ind.

Sept 12

Exidt 400. Richmond, va.

Bud allhe Glen, Watkins Gltn, NY.
btV1Iblu 400. Brooklyn, Mieh
Goody'•

111 Court St.
Pomeroy
992-2155

CIAT 300. loudon . N.H.
Southern 5(10, Oar1ing\on, S C.

Mclaughlin and Pressley
lradod palnl and sheet melal
down the alrelch of the Opry·
land 320. Once McLaughlin
reached out 1ht! window lo
shako his flat at Pressley, who
wound up craehlng while In lhe
lead with eight laps to go.

Bailey. Anthony Joseph (A.J.)
Foyt Jr., Grover Clinton
{G.C.} Spencer, John V.
(J.V.) Hamby, Donald Kefth

(O.K.) Ulrich, George T.
(G.T.) Tallas. H.F. Slick·
leather. Joseph 0 . P .O.)
St1ton, Arthur J. (A.J.) Reno,
B.E. Renfro, Julian H. (J.H.)
Peny, M.A. Peterson , LIOVd

Dolph (L.O I Onlnger. G.
Thomas (G.l) Nolan. T.R
Miller, V.E. Miller and John
Oelphus (J.D.) McDuffie.

Ridenour
Supply
St. At. 248
985-3308

Denblgh GarreU Inc.
Ripley, WV 26271

••

Ash Slr.. l, Middleport
Pastor: Lcs Hayman
Sunllay Service • 7:011 p.m.
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rullond Flntlllpllll Church
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wo.,.hip. 10:4' a.m.
Pqmeroy Flntlllpdsl
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Fint Southern Ba,tlat
4,1872 Pomeroy Prke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wo,.hip · 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Flrtl Bepllsl Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
61h and Palmer St., Middleport ·
Sunday School • 9:1S a.m.
wo..hip . 10:15 a.m., 7:011 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Elliot!

J . """""'

""""

R. W&amp;llaot

B. l.abon!e
T. l.abomt

Arldretti

.._

"'""'
"''''""'
Mo""

'"""

J . Gordon
M"'"

J . Bunon

Scttradtr

Jatrtn

Nomlldle&gt;

""""
Matlin

T."'Bodine
'eenooo
""

--

J. Gordon

K 'Nailact

J. Gordon

8 . Labonte

J. Gor0011

Jarren

E~ioft

Martin

M""'

J. Burton

w ""'"'

lng go-karts and molocross
events in the late 1960s.

AGE: 41

WIFE: Unda
CHILD: Landon Lee, 3
HOMETOWN: Grow VP in
Chesapeake, Va .. resides In
Comelius, N.C.

NASCAR 11111 Wllk
Rtpor1or- Du1tc&gt;n glvn
hlo opinion: 'Robert Presoley
Is 1&gt;0111 an aggniSIIve and a
l'&lt;lngry drM!r, noJ having won a
race~""" 199(1. M. Nashville,
Preooley may llave wontl!d the
victory iJS1 a Dlt too bed~."

Oarltng1on races.

WHO'S NOT: Richard Pelty's
No. 43, which Mas not won

1

TRIVIA
1. wtlat f\811 of famet won nine reoea as a dfiYer Md 39 as a C8l
CNifiOf1
2. What lndla"la drtvtf Wll known 18 "0\argln' Charlie"?
3. INho is the editor of Nallooal Speedsport News?

a race at Darlington since

!liNIOII003 ~ 't

1967.

Hyou'Ve oot• queollon or 1
-~ wrflo: NASCAR

Thlo Wool! Your Torn, C/o
The Gu1on Guo11o, 25110 E.
It will turn around. How long "-..f.f'!"l!l!~ ~_tvd., Glatoniat
you have to go before it turns
·,.,.....
around is what I'm concerned - - - - - - - - - -

CAR: No. 10 Tide Ford
Taurus, owned by Rudd
Performance MotOf'sports.
. with.·
CAREER RECORD: 598
Slans, 23 poles, t9 wins, 149
ARE YOU PLAYING
top Ss, 2931op I OS, nearly
CATCH-UP? '1'hal's a Iough
$14 million in career earnings. question. We've got a tot of
HOW·DO YOU FEEL
people working, a iol oJ.Ial·
ABOUT THE CURRENT
Mled people, bull think il's
SEASON? ''Welie defin~ely
the brisk pace thai we're
got to. get the performance up. having to run now, wl1h the
Whal really killed us was
test scheoule being what rt Is,
engine failures in the first two
end the race schedule being
races. ... I just have to believe what ills. We have just been
n·s kind of a fluke , or !hal's
behind in car preparalion.
whal I'm hoping right now."
We h011en't.been able to test
WHAT CAN YOU DO AS A with the new Taurus like we
CAR OWNER TO TURN
need to."

WHO'S HOT: Jeff
Gordon, winner of
lour of the last five

THINGS AROUND? 1'm prot&gt;
ably not the be~t in tho world
a1 mollva11on. m trying lo gel
lhem (the team) to hold their
heads up and lry lo gel along.

etlflri.O z
tuiMO I.IOIICO .I

I,I*IZIOI(l

........

I

I
a

I

ltl

lllclne Flrsllllptlsl
Sunday S!:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:011 p.m.

•

Silver Run Bo~l
Pastor: Bill Lillie
Sunday School- llla.m.
Worship · lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
· ML Union Baptlot
Pastor : Joe N. Say"'
Sunday Schooi-9:4S a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30p.m.
•Betblehem lllpllsl Cbur&lt;h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worshie · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Brble Sludy. 6:00 p.m.

Valley
Lumber&amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St.
Middleport.

992-661t

• Mike McLaughlin
destroyed his primary
car In praC11ce for the
Opryland 320 at ,
Nlllh'lllle. Pulling lhe
bed&lt;up car ofllho
trailer, Mcl.au8hlin

mana~lo
Bl·

!fled 21 '
ver k

aglc

Tho labrat _
_,or
NASCAR't 50ih 1nnNer&gt;ary ~
'NASCAR: Tho Thunder o1
Amer'ao,".
wiltl more lllan 200 color pholoe in 111192 pageo. Thlo beau·
lifulworl&lt; (HerporHorizon: $40
~ hard CCM!r) lo broken Ulllnlo
SiX I8CIIonl: Compllillon,
Trltmph, Dovollon. Famly,

Bus. Phone (304) 372-3673
1-800-964-FORD

Rt. 21 at thB Rlpley-Falrplaln Exit 1132

Come See Us For All.Your
Parts and
Service Needs

Labonte gives Ford credit for building 'a great race car'
ing feedback has always been
no."

Atlanta. Goodyrar lead engineer

provide harder tires both 11 •
means of iflCrc~ins ran&amp;c 111d
slowing the speeds on trac:ks liko·

Tom Ff-eund discu"scd the post race evaluatio n conducted by the
sole supp;]
'-.ottiJes to the
Winston
fefies.

the 1.54-mile A*-1 track.
"Harder lire
ne&lt;:css&amp;rily
the answer," he.
. "The dri·
vers, the em., the way they are

The announcement last week of a
split between Darrell Waltrip and
hi s sponsor, Spc:edblcx:k, leaves
the veteran driver sponsorless
for the fir5ltimc in his career.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

ATLANTA ANALYSIS:
FoUowing 1irc - wc~r problems al

Among all the controversy
surrounding the new Ford Taurus,
it is refreshing to hear at least
one General Motors driver com·
plimenl Ford officials for the
development of their new

"What w
~tcd,-to addn:ss
sct up, they don't like to elip and
Winston Cup model.
was w-ear rates 1nd compound
slide. The drivers w1nt t.o drive a
Noling that many Ford offici~ !~ tiring. related to high lateral load certain line, tnd the big issue ·is
had suggested in 1tte offseason
on a race track Jik ~ At lanta," said t~ want to race side- by-aide.
that the car would n01 be com(X't· Freund. "The main goa l wu to , •• With a harder tire, the grip level
itive, Dobby L.aDonu: said.
lessen wear and 10 addre.u the ·; would definitely be down and the
"That's kind of the way you play luring issue."
c:ara in trafflc ~ould be even
the game somc1imcs. They dicl
He admitted that the tire did
worse.
everything right They did every- not rerQedy the anticipated
"We have put harder thCI on
thing they're supposed lo do, and problerps
people in 1tste. and
I commend them for it. They·vc \ Freund wu asked why
this is the direction tbe dflvcrs /
bu ilt a grea1 race car.''
Goodyear docs not sim ply
want to ao, and the ovcrwbctm/

u•trft )

Waltrip hinted that the matter
may wind up in the courts after
announcing lhatthe Kent, Ohio,
company had ..-iolated its contract
with his team. The company has
declined comment.
For the time being, Waltrip will
continue to compete on the Winston Cup circuit withoul a major
sponsor on his No. 17 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo.

que~tlon-tnd.:anewti

nlam " wlllch fono .con

.

qUII!Iqr(l o1 CMS P'"klfit
~A 'Htimpy" Wheelor.

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Cha"'h of Christ
212 W. Main Sl.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School • 9::\() a.m.
wo..hip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Willi polnta: No oubl r '

oneo; 1M other 1111n '"

''""""• the CMS ole II 01
oVerlY dNrllen1 fliiiWOiho&lt; .

reOt-ni&gt;li
· ll't PNIIY•ond
lnfolmolillt,-M!l-deolgned
fakiy~.
·~

':

Pooaeroy Wnlllde Cburch of Christ
33226 Cbild"'n's Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.

Copvrlah•IIH The Oooton (N.C.) Guono • Ol•t"buttd by UnlvorUI Ptnolyndlclll (IOOJ211Hn4 • f o r - - of llordl11.

Uberty Christian Chu"'h
De.tler
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening· 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service. 6:30p.m.

Chun:h or God or Prophecy
O.l. While Rd. off Sl . Rt. 160
Pastor: P.l. Chapman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

CongregatiOnal

Advertise on this page

Sunday Schoof • 9;30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 s.m.
Wednesday Service~. 7:30p.m:

Holiness
Daavllle Hollneso Chun:h
310S7 Stale Roule 325, Langsvlte
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday wo,.hip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer ser~ i ce . 7 p.m.

Gnbom Jj~lled l'fetllodill
Worship · 9:30a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Servico ·7:30p.m.

Middleport Community Church
57S Pearl Sl., Middleport
Paslor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Scllool 10 a.m.
Evening. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Follh Volley Tabematle Cburch
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Syrttwe Mlsalon
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesdsy Service. 7 p.m.

Coolville Uallcd Methodist Porish
PasiOr: llelen Kline
Coolville Chu"'h
Main &amp; Fifth S1.
Sun~ay School- 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Tuesday Scl'\'ices · 7 p.m.

Haul Communlly Cbu"'b
Off Rl. 124
Psslor. Edsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Belhel Chu"'b
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
WORhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Dy.,vllle Comrnually Chu"'b
Sunday Scllool ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hoc:klniiJIOrt Chu"'h
Gnnd Street
Sunday School-10 a.m.
· Worship· II a.m .
Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.

ML Olive United Metbodlot
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pas1or: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m.

Mom: Chapel Chu"'h
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Torch Churth
Co. Rd. 63
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Melp Coopendve hrish
Northeost Clusler
Alfnd
Pasco{: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Worship. )I a.m., 6:30p.m.

Folth Gospel Cbur&lt;b
Long &amp;nom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
\Vednesday 7:30p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Chu"'h or lhe Nazarene
PaSior: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

Chesler
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Worship . 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services· 7 p.m. "'

Loag&amp;tlom
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30a.m.
Reednille
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Frrst Sunday of Month. 7:30p.m. service

ML Olive Communlly Chun:h
Pastor: lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.
Uniled Faith Chu"'h
Rt. 7 on Pomtroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ReedJYIIJe Fellowohlp
Chun:b oflhe Nourene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Rondolph
Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

fllllwoods
Pas1or: Keilh Rader
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship • 11 o.m.

MomlngS1ar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- II a.m.
Wo.rahip • 10 a.m.

Rodoe

United Methodist

Enle'l'rise
Pastor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Endtlme Howe ol Pnyer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Roben Vance
Sunday worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday service -6:30p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Centro! Clutier
Albury (s,,.....,
Paslor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
. wo,.hip. II a.m.
Wednesdoy Services . 7:30p.m .

Holy Eucharist and
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.
Coffee hour followin&amp;

Cormei-Sutton
Camel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Bible Sludy Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Ellt.Le1at1

Episcopal
Rector: Rev . D. A . duPianticr .

Horrl,.,ovllle Community Chu"'h
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday ·9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Pastor. Brian Harkness

Tuppen Plains SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.

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

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

Pastor: Jerry Singer

Triillty Churdl
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Paslor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and wO&lt;Ship 10:25

Church aiUlOWicements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!!

Reorganized Cburcb of Jnus Chrisl
or Lotter Doy Sololo
Ponland-Racine Rd.

Believer~'

Fellowship Mlnialry
New Lime Rd., Rudand
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Belhony

Sl. hul Lulbenn Church
Comer Sycomon: &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunday Schoof • 9:4~ a.m.
Worship. II 1.m.

.

The

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Our Sovlour Lulheroo Church
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday Scllool • 10:00 a.m.
Worahip • II 1.m.

Hortront Cbu"'h or Christ In
Chrlsdan Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hu~hcs
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
- Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Apple and Second SIS.
Paslor: Rev. David Russell ·
Sundoy School and Worship· 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Snowville
Sunday School · 10 a.m
WO&lt;Ship · 9 a.m.

Lutheran

Hemlock Grove Church
·. Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

,.in.

Sunday Scllool • 9:!S a.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m.

St. Joba Lulherto Cbur&lt;b
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick
Worship · 9:00 i.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 am.

Loopvllle Cbrisllao Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
•Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

ML Morloh Church or GGd
Racine
Pastor. Rev. Jarries Satterfield
Sunday School ·9:45a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Services.. 7 p.m.

Fallb Full Gmpd Chun:b
LongBotlom
·Pastor: Steve Reed
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

Salem Center

The Cbun:h or Jeaus
Christ or Loiter· Illy Sllnll
St. Rl. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School10:20-ll a.m.
Relief Society/Prieslhood II:OS-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-IO:IS a.m.
Homemaking mcetina, lst Thu~. • 7 p.m.

Hickory Hills Chu"'b or Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

s,,..,... Flrsl Chun:b or Gl!d

Somd Heart Co1bolk: Church
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,.992-5898
Pastor: Rev . Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:4S'S:IS~.m.; :-'ass- S:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:4S-9.1S a.m.,
Sun. Maoo - 9:30 a.rrr.
Dailey Mass • 8:30 a.m.

SlnJng point Or:l.•.ollfl• .
namt111J1 -1llfl 'PIG• aport
~ lhe •All&lt; !jumpy'
• :0

Chun:b or Cbrfst
Comer of St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
·Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School- 9:30 s.m.
Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:1111 p.m.

ML Moriah Bopdsl
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middleport
Poslor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday Scllool · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:4S a.m.

Catholic

TOUGH TIMES FOR D. W.:

Br~drorrl

Church of God

Rudand
Sunday Scllool ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services · 1 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

R~olclng Ure Church
SOON. 2nd Ave., Nliddlepon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Hobson Chrisllaa Fellowship Chu"'h
Su'nday service, 1&amp;.00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youlh Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday servia:, 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Rudond Chur&lt;h of Christ
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Rudond Chu"'h or GGd
Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School , 10 a.m.
Worship- ll11.m., 6
Wednesdoy Services· p.m.

Rutload Free Will Boptlst
SalemSI.
PaSior: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday SChool • 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Toarnwork and Sp&lt;;l.

Rul)aod Commuail1 Church
Pas1or: Rev. Roy MCCany
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Sdvenville Word ol Faith
Paslor: Davia Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

Chri11l1n Fellowohlp Cooler
Salem St, Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
wo..hip. 11:15 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

RockS~riop
Paslor: Ke1th Rader
Sunday Scllool- 9:1S a.m.
Worshi~ · 10 a.m .
Youlh Fellowshrp, Sunllay • 6 p.m.

Brtdbury Chu"'h or Christ
Pruotot: Tom Runy(ln
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Cohary Bible Chur&lt;h
Pome roy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pas1or : Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Fol1h Chopet Opus Bible Olu"'h
923 S. Third St, Milldleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 s.m.
Thursday service, 1 p.m.

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

Llurd CIIIT Free Metbodill Cbu"'h
Paslor: David DeW in
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wotship • 10:30 a.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7:00p.m.

Forest Run Bopdsl
Pas1or : Arius Hurt
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

Au11qully BopiiJI
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m.
Sunllay Evening· 6:00p.m.

Peari Chapel
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.

Hyoell Run Hollna~ Cbu"'b
Sunoay Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Fallh Fellowship Crusade for Chr1sl
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Agape Life Cealer
"Full-Gospel Olurclt"
PUiors John &amp; Pany Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
77J.SOI7
Service lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

Minersville
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School . 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 o.m.

Wealeyoa Bible Hollo... Cbu"'h
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Children's service • 10 a.m.
Worship . 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7:30 p.m.

Fairview Bible Chur&lt;h
Letart, WVa. Rt I
Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Siudy. 7:00p.m.

Horves1 Outrucb Mlaltlrtn
47439 Reibel Rd., Olesler
Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

Heolb (MIIIdleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:IS o.m.
Youth· S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Christian Union

.

-----book

Instrumental

HII!Jide lllpdot Cbun:h
Sl. Rl. 143 juS! off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. lames R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· lls.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

ri·

Shoes" picked up hlo
fourth career victory, a
1rtbutelo McLaughlin
and his Team 34 crew.

Tuppers Plain Church or Cbrut

Other Churches

Sunday S&lt;hool . 10 a.m.
wo ..hip . 9 a.m.
Thursday Services . 6:3() p.m.

Pine Grove Bible Hollo... Church
1/2 mile off R1. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a,m., 7:30p.m.
. Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

Zion Chu.,h.or Christ
Pomeroy, Ha"isonvllle Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roser Watson
Sunday Scllool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m. (
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m. _ /

Old Belhet Fret Will Bopllst Chun:h
· 2S601 S1. Rt 7, Middlepon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services • 7:30

Fol1b Bopllsl Chun:b
Railroad Sl., Mason
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· II lJII., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Stfvices: .··7 p.m.

Forest Rua
Pastor: Chnd Emrick

Rorie or S~&gt;an!n Hollo... Cbu"'h
Leading C"'ek Rd., Ruliand
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeling- 7 p.m.

Keno Church or Christ
wo..hip. 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday

Reed..llle Chun:h or Chrisl
Pastor: Philip Slurm
Sunday School: 9'30 a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Victory Bopdstlndepeadanl
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon
Pastor: lames E. Ke....
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

AROUND THE GARAGE

Over the years. a number of
NASCAR dri¥ers have been
teferred to e"clusively by
their first two initials. So it
was with Herring Burl (H.B.)

Chester

"""'""
"""""""

J. Gordon
J. GOidon
J. Gon1on

By Monto llut1on
NASCAR Th~ Week
In each of the last 15
Winston Cup seasons, Ricky
Rudd has won at least one
race. The streak is one of lhe
sport's more impressive.
The 1997 season was a
strange one for the independenl VIrginian. Ruod won
twice, at Dover, Del., and lndi·
anapolis. The Brickyard 400
viclory was by far the biggeSI
of Rudd's career. But Audd
had a woeful second half of
the season, at least after Indy,
antl finished 171h in 1ne point
standings, breaking a streak
of eight years in the top 10.
Audd began his career rac·

FEUD Of THI WEEK
Mike Mclaughlin vs. Robert Pressley

The rich hlotory of NASCAR

See us lor Your Stih~
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

K. WIII&amp;Ct

JarTen

500. Brietol. Tenn.

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

SIIH~
www.stihlusa.com

'"'""
R. Wallaol
''"""

J. GOI'Oon
J. Bunon
J. GOfoon

Marton

. - Cca-Coia eoo. Corw:ont. N.C
Miller $00, Opvtr, o.l.
~K 400. Fllchmcnd , V... Mill• 400, Brooklyn. Mien .
Pocono MO. Long Pond, Pa.
$aq Man 300, Sonoma, CaHI.
Pepll 400, DaytOflll Eklac;tl, Fla.
Jiffy LU01300, LouOon, N.H
Pennl)ivanla 500. Long Pond, Pe.

Sept. 20
MBNA 400, Oov.r, Oal
Sept. 27
Hanes 500. MartiniMIIe, va.
•AJJ·1181 ~

The Daily
Sentinel

'""'"

em. Fen Worth , Texas

Thit Wetk

Dear Edward,
We hope you ere wrong, but
your points are well taken.

Ricky Rucki inlpectl...,.,. p1Up. Rudd 181rylltg 10 Improve onedr:npp1Ai41ng 11f7.

011 THI SCHIDUU

Summerfields
Restaurant

Fret WllllllpU1t Chur&lt;h

PROFilE

'1 997 The Toro Company

For Homeovme r s
In sur ance

Manln hal won five

Dave Harris
Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle
Ext. 105
For More
Information

nouc•

.

I Randy LaJoie. 570
2 Bucklhol Jone1. 5-49

7 M1k1

Darflngton II ll'MNd with a number
of short-order rntauranta that offer
race fana an appealing anernallvt 10
ttle tranchlln. Among tne more
notabe are B.J.'o, on Harry Byrd
Highway nev the track: Cromer's
Pizza al1 03 Poor! Sl.; lhe Dairy ear
at 318 Pearl St.: Joe'e GriM at 306
Runell St.; and Jewel's Deluxe on

Pastor. AI Hartson

Burwallow Jlldp Chu"'h or Christ
Pastor:Tcny Stewart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Call 992-2156

IUICH ORAND NAT10NAL
COIIINO UP: Dlomond Hill PlywoOd 200
WHERE: Darling1on (S.C.) Raceway
WHEN: Stturday, March 21

10. Jeff Purril, 461 .

10. Bobby Hami~on . 373

WINITONCUP

ADVERTISE ON
THIS PAGE

race a ve•r aoo.

COMING UP:

Calvory Pll&amp;rim Cluopd
Hanisonville Road
Pastar: Rev. Viaor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30p.m.

Youlh Minisler: Bill Frazier
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:1S, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

O'Jil

992-2825

Worship · llla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.
Middleport Chur&lt;b ofChrlit
Sth and Main ·

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

il·-~

Guaranteed Service

'

-~

1\f/ooLEPORT ; o\'\

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-80!

ltad18111aeK

.

461 SOI.iTJ:t THIRD

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

8

'

't:t\-COUJl{p

Services
See Bob Hayes

Parts
See Stave Meadows

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
668 Pinecrest Drive

MUFFLER SHOP

992·2196

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday March 20, 1998

Church or Juus Chris~
1\poslollc Follh
1/4 mil~ paSI Fort Meigs 011 New Lima Rd.
Paslor: William Van Meter
Sunday· 7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday.7:00 p.m.
CIIRoo Taberiaa&lt;le Church
Cliflon, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
wo ..hip. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.
New ute VIctory Center
3173 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
Paslor: Bill Slaten
Sunday sirvic:es • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp; Youlh 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pealoo:ellll Auembly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Paslor: William Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
.
Evening -·7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentec:otlal
Third Ave.
.
Psslor: Rev. a ark Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syrttuse Flnl Uollcd Presbyleriu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Hlrrlsonvllle PrnbyJerion Church
Worship. 9 1.m.

Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Preobytertao
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventi st
Sevenlh·llly .Wvutlat
Mulberry HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
c Postor. Roy l.awinsky
Salurday services:
Sabbath School- 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Henoon United Brethren
In Chrill Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Paslor: Robert Sanders ,
Sunday Scllool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdsy Services· 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brtthren In Christ
2 1/2 milr:S north of Reedsville
on Stole Route 124
Pas10r: Rev. Robert Markley
1
Sunday School • I I o.m.
j Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.
Wedolesday Youlh Service. 7:30p.m.

Full Gmpel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunllay School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday· 7:30p.m.

S1ncuse c•un:b otthe Nazarene
Pastor, Raben J. Cocn
Radio Ministry- Ravenswod Station
4-4:30 Salurday
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

South Belhel New Teo1ament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School· 9 a. m.
wo.. hip . 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service ~ 1 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids (or Christ- 7 p.m .

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Orimm,Jr.
Sunday School ·9:30a. m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Carleton lntenlenomlneUonel Cburt.h ·
Kingsbury Road
Pas10r: Jeff Smith
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m,
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Che5ler Chu"'h of the Nazorene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

F~om

G05pel Mission
Bsld Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
PB5tor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Rutland Churth or the Nazartne
Pastor: Samuel Basye

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Portland Flr1t Church orthe Nruarene
Pastor: Murk Matson
Worship · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 1 p.m.

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coo lville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo ..hip. 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

·Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE~
SERVICES ;;:::::J;__
214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

~·.:--

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

Your Tloo"'!hto Wirh Spec:iGI Coro"

TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?
CIHn out your butmllllt or
•ttlc with the Mlp of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION I

·.

I

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

in ,. lwrry... TRY

EWING FUNERAIJ'!OME
"Dignity and Service Always•
Established 1913

992·2121

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

•

�_\

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Citizens bristle at order to stop Bible study

Public NoUce

In Till Common PI- Court
of M•lu• County, Ohio
western South Carolina. home to The Farmere Bank &amp;
more than 600 churches The pastors S.vtng1 Company,
Greenville News
say the county ·s stand wtll make • Plaintiff,
GREENVILLE, S C -The Rev
cnmmals out of thousands who. each VI
One Wenger meets wtth fnends and
week mvtte fnends 10 thetr homes to Tb1 Rtv1rwelk, Et AI,
famtly around hts dmmg room table
Defendlnll
study !he Btble and dtscuss thetr c 111 No. 87 cv 120
to dtscuss the Btble and help them
fatth
lagll NotiCI Sherllf'1 Sale
over hfe's hurdles
·The
realuy
ts
every
day
I'm
dtsof R11l Eallte
County offictals ordered htm to
obcymg
the
law
because
I
have
famAI
Sheriff ol M1lg1
stop
county, Ohio I hereby offer
h
tly devouons m my orne and am for lilt at 10·30 1 m on
Zomng authonlles hav~ threatened
domg mtntStry every day Wtth my April 10th, 1998 A.D., on the
tamtly, · satd Wenger, assoctnle pas- front IIIPI of the Melgl
tor of Mount Zton Chnsllan Fellow- County
Courthouae,
Pom1roy,
OhiO,
the
1 following d11crlb1d
shtp
real
The Community Calendar Is
ctal mmtstry, Mtke Kmg. magtctan
"I m breaking !he law, but that's 1 •-•:
published aa a free aervlce to nonwtth Gospel IllusiOn Mtnt stry. 10 somelhmg I wtll not stop domg Thts
The following d11crlbed
profit groups wtahlng to announce
am Sunday
m~ans !he stale can control not only real ntat1 11tuated In
meeting and special events. The
your rehg10n but who you soctahze Sutton Town1hlp, M1lga
calendar Ia not deelgned to pro1 County, In the State of Ohio,
MONDAY
Wtlh tn every way"
tOO Acre Lof 297, Township
mote sales or lund raisers of any
MIDDLEPORT - OhKan Com
•Reactton at the state Capttol tn 2, Rang• 12, and 100 Acre
type. Items are printed as space
Club, Monday, 7 30 p m Rtverbend Columbta was tmmedtate
Lot 298, Townehtp 1, Ringe
permits and cannot be guaranteed
Arts Counctl bUIIdtng, Mtddleport
Republican Gov Davtd M
13, In thl VIllage of
to run a speclftc number of days.
Syracu11,
of the Ohio
Open to pubhc Auctton refresh- B
I
d
eas ey sat , " 0 ur ancestors gave Company Purchlll, 1nd
ments,
new
membershtps
accepted
FRIDAY
thetr blood. loti, lean; and sweat to baing the Cora Bartelt
gtve us the nght to assemble and wor· property (Volum• 20, Pag•
POMEROY - Metgs County
POMEROY - Umty Smgers, shtp II outrages me that anyone 805) of the M*lllt County
Arthnlls Support Group Fnday I 0
Coolvtlle, performtng at Rock needs to be remmded that zonmg reg- Olflct•l Record1), bounded
a m 10 II 30 am m the confet ence
1nd deacrlbed a1 followt
room of the Metgs County Senwr Spnngs Untted Methodtst Church, ulauons never can wtpe out consttiU·
Beginning at an Iron pin
honal guarantees '
Ctttzens Center Anyone who has Sunday, 7 p m Rev Ketlh Rader
11 t by thl• •urvey In the
Beasley satd he conducts prayer Eall lint of Patrick H. •nd
arthnlls or has a fnend or lamtly mvttes pubhc Refreshments followmeetmgs m the governor's manston, Mary O'Brien property
members wtth arthnlls ts mvued to mg program
(Volume 313, P1ge 439, of
and all but dared any zonmg author- the Meta• County Deed
auend
TUESDAY
tiles to try to stop htm
Racorda) at the tnt1reectlon
GA.LLIPOLIS _ The GallipoliS
RACINE - Racme Area ComAnd legtslatton was mtroduced m with the 1oufh line of W1Rer
the slate s~nale 10 bar counties from Floyd and Anna L. Rou1h
Area Parkmson 5 Support Group. 2 muntty Orgamza110n meetmg Tues(Volume 008, Page
I d acttvtttes property
p m at Grace Unlled Melhodtsl day, 6 30 p m at Slar M 1II Par k N ew
pro h 1bi ling ch urc h-reate
, of the Melg• county
275
Church Buddmg, 600 Second Ave' members welcome
m the home
Official Recorda), IBid
Gallipolis Dr Davtd C Hogg semor
Wtth area churches mobthzmg to Rou1h lin• al1o being lhl
POMEROY - Metgs County
fight and Wenger saymg he hkely Iouth right of way of what
Pastor of the Methodtst Church, 10
Health
Department
free
tmmumzawtll
sue, Greenvtlle County offictals Railway
w11 th1 Ohioand
River El1ctrlc
d
speak on keepmg a posmve allttu e
Power
lion dmtc, Tuesday 9to II am and
scrambled to defuse the stluallon Comptny;
ALFRED _ Orange Townsht~ Ito 3 p m at the Metgs Multtpurpose
County Counctl Chatrman Paul
Thence along tho aouth
Trustees, spectal sess1on, Fnday, 7 30 Center 112 East Memonal Dnve,
Wtckenstmer mtroduced legtslattOn tina of the Roush property
Pomeroy Chtld to be accompamed
10 allow prayer meeungs m homes. South 50 deg. Ot' 49" E11t
p m home of cle rk 0 ste Fo II rod
1 dlatanc• of 75.S1 fHt to
by parent/legal guardtan, and have
and County Admmtslrator Gerald an Iron pin 111 by thll
SUNDAY
tmmumzatton record More mformaSeals asked the zonmg board to aurvey and south st deg.
REEDSVILLE - Eden Umted uon. Call Health Department. 992reconstder
18' 57" E11t • dl1tanc• of
Brethren Church. near Reedsvtlle. 6626
42.01 IHI to an Iron pin Itt
by thl1 aurvey
Thence South S3 deg. 23'
Stale Route 124 youth Sunday spe·

By SCOTT WYMAN

to fine Wenger up to $1,000 a day,
saymg land use laws prohtbtt htm
from usmg hts home for ' churchrelated acttvtttes • They satd hts
small prayer meetmgs tum hts home
mto a church- and that he lacks the
spec tal permtsston needed to set up
a church
Wenger's pltght has shocked pastors throug~out thts regton of north-

-Community calendar-

I

I

-:========T=:::;;::;:;:;=.==-::::r:=;:;:;;:;:;::===l-==;::;,;~~;:=::i 345.11
13" Eut a dlalance of
fHt to a point In th1

..:

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
TO BE SOLD BY SEALED
BIDS BY THE SYRACUSE
VOL. FIRE DEPl:
t - t983 Chevy 16 If.
Panll Y1n (broad truck) It
he• e 350 engine (rebuilt),
ell aluminum body U1od ••
1 reterve truck Minimum
bid $1,500 oo, •old 11-11
1 • Boat, 15 It aluminum,
Y-bottom with a 6 hp
Evlnrude motor. Minimum
bid S400.00. Sold al-II
For more Information

contact 992·7181 or 9925564 Bldo open April 7th II
'7 00 P m
We have the right to rojecf
any or all bide
(3) 20, 23, 2tc

Ohio, Th1 F1rm1r1 Bank
and Savlng1 Company
parking to~ to Hll for ceah
the following collateral:
1118SCHEYROLET
C-10 PICKUP TRUCK
2GCCC14H4G1133059
The Fermer• B1nk 1nd
Saving•
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio 1'1111'1111 lhl
right to bid at thl1 eele, and
to withdraw lhl lbovl collateral prior to ••••·

Further, Th1 F1rm1r1 Benk
1nd Savings Company
rtHrvll the right to ~tel
1ny or all bid• 1ubmltted.
Further, the above colla!erel will be IOid In the condillon It II In, With no
expreaa or tmpll1d war·
r~ntt• given.
For further lnlorm1tlon,
contact Tim at 985-4280
(3) 18, 19, 20 3TC

Public Notlca
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby glvln
that on Saturday, March 21 •
1998• atff:OO l.m., 1 public
Nle will be held at 211 W11t
Second Strtst, Pomeroy,

.L..:.....-:================:1

_:..:;_::::;.:.._.::.:.;.:.:,:::::;:;:.::.J,._________

10,450

950

I was $13.950

Was $12.950

20To

Choose From!

~

$6,950

$]1,950

l!ll4 BliCk CrlllrJ CISIII

I'PJS Bile~ l.tsa•rr Cui•

was $13,950

Was $8,950

Slack Nunbel eQIA

t.oadad1

...

Sloclc N""ber 7978A

• AI Power • Fuly Loaded!

sg 950 $]0,950
I

Was$13950

Was $12,950

I'I!ICHIY Iii SrltS Pl~lf
Slodl 'Nunber Br.!72A

$10,950
Was$12950

I!Bl Clrvy Blllft 1• fll
Slodl Nunbe181'04A

• 43V-6 POMtr• Fuly Loaded!

475 South Church Street· Ripley: WV I 800822-(}417 •372·2844
Moada,-Bal.lnlay 9a.a -8 p.a · Suoday I p.m. - 8 ~

w111 nne of th• village of

Syracult property (Volume
332, Page 457, of tho Melgl
County Deed Reconll);
ThenCI alpng the Wilt,
south and 1111 nn11 of the
village of Syracuee South
38 dig. 28' 40" Will a
dletllnce of131 50 flat to an
Iron pin 111 by thle 1urvey
Pilling 1n Iron pin 1tl for
reference at 11 54 feet,
South es dag. 25' 20" E•at a
dlallnce of 468 00 flat to an
Iron pin 111 by thll Iurvey
end North 36 deg. 26 , &lt;10"
Ealta dlltllnce of 38.00 flat
to a point paaelng en Iron
plnlat for ref1rence at 18.24
feet·
Thane• South S3 deg. 23'
t 3" E11t 1 dletance of
t 33 84 feet to a point In the
w11t nne of Ruuan andlor
Donn• Powtr8 (Volume 001,
Page 211, of the Meigs
County Official R~eorda);
Thenc• along th1 wtlt
and 1outh lin•• of Power~
South 00 d1g. 05' 04" Well
a dl1t1nce of 18 65 flit to
en Iron pin 111 by thl1
1urv1y and South 80 deg
54' 56" Elet • dl•tenc• of
25.17 fHt to an Iron pin 1at
by thla aurvey.
Thane• South 53 deg 23'
13" E11t • dt•t•nce of 20 es
l81t to 1n Iron pin eet by
thll 1urvey at the edge of
en allay,
Th1nc1 along the weal
1lde of Hid alley South 00
deg. 05' 04" W111 a dlallnce
of 3111 fill to an Iron pin
HI by thlaaurvey;
Thine• South S3 deg 23'
13" Eaet a dllllnce of 26 31
fHt to 1n Iron pin 181 by
thll IUrY'Y In lhl 8111 lint
of 100 Acre Lot 297;
Thence 1torig the ••••
lint of 100 Acrt Lot 297
South 00 deg. 05' 07" W11t
a dl1tance of 880.40 1811 to
the Ohio River paulng an
Iron pin aat for reference at
S15 02flat;
Tbance along the south
ttn11 of 100 Acre Loll 297
end 29S (lhl north btnk of
thl OhiO River II IllUmed
to approximate the south
line of 100 acre Lot a 297
and 208) North 88 dtg 24'
06" Wilt a dl1tance of 84 05
feet to a point, North ss
deg. 54' 31" West• distance
145.94 fHt to • point, North
89 deg 03' 53" W•at a
dlatance of 170.23 l81t to a
point, South S7 deg 21' 47"
W81t a dlatanca of 254.42
1111 to a point, North 81
deg. 52' 52" Well a distance
of 148.72 1811 to a point,
North 79 dag. 47' 14" Walt a
dlallnc• of 95.46 1111 to a
point, and North 67 dag. 37'
2S" Wtat a dlallnce of 41.14
feet to 1 point In the 1111
lin• of Patrick H. and Mary
O'Brl•n property (Volume
3t3, Page 439, of the Melg•
Count Deed Record1),
Th1nce 1tong O'Brt1n
North oo deg 41' 03" Ell! a
dlatence of 1496.34 lett to
the point of beginning
peulng an Iron pin ut for
refarence at 111.48 feet,
containing 25.0711 1cr11,
more or lest, of which 7. 714
ICrll II In tOO Acre Lot 208
and 17.365 ICrll II In 100
Acre lot 297, IUbllcl to Ill
teg11 ea11mtntl 1nd rlghta
of way
The 1bove d11crtptlon
w11 mad• In accordenca
with an actual aurvey
conduct1d by Eugene
Triplett,
P.S. 18786
r:onducled on 4/24, 5/6, 5/0
1nd 5/10, 1998. Bearing trt
IllUmed and ara ueed only
to 1xprua enguler
ma~surement;

J!UdRor'• Parcel Not. 20.
00050.000 lnd 20-00052.00
Exclpllng from the above
descrlbld real tlltll, the
IQI~no perceta·

•

Friday, March 20, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Public Notice
o = ecre conv1y1d to
B nde K. D1ret bv deed
r ord1d In Yotum• 45,
Page 783 of the Melg•
County omctet Reconl•;
0.5207 .ere conveyed to
Rol1nd E. Wlldm.tn, Jr. and
Joann Wlldmen by d11d
rtcorded In Volume 46,
Pegt 151 of thl MIIQI
County Oftlclll Recorda:
0.9174 ~ere conv•yid to
Brande K Caret by d11d
record1d In Volume 47,
Page 773 of the M1lg1
County omelet Recordl,
o 31184 acre conviyld to
Roland E. Wlldm1n, Jr. and
Joann Wildman by dlld
recorded In Volume 46,
Pag• 151 of the Malgl
County omclal R~eord•;
0.9054 acre conviyed to
Mitchell D. Ch1pmen by
dead recorded In Volume
48, Page 679 of the Metg•
County omclal RICOrde.
Said real eetatt wn
appralled 11 $200,000.00
Sat• of rHI ntate to be
for not 1111 than two-thlrdl
(213)
the
aforeeald
apprallld value cash In
hand on data of nit.
Said aala II IUbjiCI tO
approval by the Common
Plea• court, Meta• County,
Ohio.
Jamea M Soulaby
SheriH, Melg1 County, Ohio
(3) 8, 13,20 3 tc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Common Plell Court,
Malgt County, Ohio
CASE NO. 98-CY.(J()7
Beneficial Mortgage Co. of
Ohio v1. Unknown Spouae,
If any of
Wanda A. Swearingen,
etc, at at.
Unknown Spouae, If any,
of Wanda A Swa~rlngen,
alao known a1 Wanda Ann
sw .. rlngan, alld the
Unknown Heirs, Unknown
Spou1t1, If any, of the
Unknown Hairs, Devl1111,
Legatees,
and
Repre11ntst1vaa of Wanda
A. Swearingen, 1110 known
11 Wenda Ann Swnrlngen,
Dectalld, their Extcutor8,
Admlnl•tratora, Cuatodllnl,
Alllgna, or Guardlane,
upon whom aervlce of
summons cannot be made,
because the residence and
all other addreua• of 11ld
dafendanta are unknown
end cannot with reuonabll
diligence be ascertained,
ara hereby notified that on
January 30, 1998, the
plalntiH flied a complaint In
Common Plea• Court,
Mllga County, Ohio, In ca..
NO. 98-CY-00007, 1galn1t
Unknown Spouse, If any, of
W1nd1 A. Swnrlngen, 1tc.,
at at., •lleglng that on May
2S, 1997, diCident W1nd1
A. Swnrlngen, at•o known
ae Wanda Ann Swearingen
(hereinafter "Sw11rtngen")
executed and dellvartd to
plaintiff a written loan
agrttment (hereinafter
"agr81ment"), thet diC&amp;dtnl
Swearingen haa deftulted In
the paym1nt of utd
agroem1nt '"d owtt to
plaintiff $35,468.94, with
lnterttl thereon from
January 23, 1998, atthl rate
of 14.25 percent per annum;
that 11 ••curtly for the
payment of aal~ agrHmant,
decedent Swearingen
ax1cuted and dallvered to
plaintiff her certain
mortgage dotd, for the
re1ldenca at 39691 Mt
Union Road, Rutland, Ohio
45771 , conveying the
following
ducrlbtd
premises,

Deed Book Volume 327,
Page 671, Situated In the
town1hlp of Scipio, county
of Molga, State of Ohio, towit·
Legal de•crlptlon lor
property located In aectlon
3, townahlp 7N, range t4W,
of Scipio Townahtp In Malga
County, Ohio.
Beginning at a point ealt
about 1325 feet from the
Southwlll corner of the
northwtll qu1rtar (NW 1/4)
accordlfti to deed volume
277, page 561 Of tlld
e.ctlo n 33, eald point of
blglnnlng being marked by
an Iron rod on the 1outh line
of aald NW 1/4 aactlon of
11ld eectlon 33 th1nce,
north 90 degrH• wnt 47 35
feet following the Iouth line
of 1ald NW 1/4 eiCtlon along
a lance nne and marked by
a latlron rod.
Thence following the nlld
three calla
North 09 degree• 53
mlnutee 56 oecondt ea1t,
17S.04 feet; North 48
degra11 58 minute• 22
18COnda eaat, 82 45 lett;
North 66 degrees 17
mtnut11 41 eeconda eaat,
94 70 feet,
Eut point set end marked
by an Iron rod, thence
following 1 line aouth 24
d1gre11 42 mlnutu 28
11conda waat 280 10 feet
being the 11me line
d11crlbed In dHd book 2n,
p1ge 561 to the point of
b1glnnlng, •ubjact to all
legal 1111ments, containing
0.4221 acre1, more or leu.
Dtld book volum- 327,
page 667
Situated In tht Town1htp
of Scipio, County of M1tg1,
State of Ohio, To-Wit
Betna In Section 33. Town
7 North, range 14 Wilt ol
the Ohio Company'•
purchue and being
deacrlbed 11 follow~:
beginning at 1 point Eaat
about 1325 1111 from the
Southwell corner of tht
Northwtlt qu1rter (NW 1/4)
of eeld Section 33, 11ld
point of beginning being
marked by an Iron rod on
th• 1outh line of 11ld NW
1/4 of ••ld Section 33,
lh1nce Ell I 298.74 fttl

Friday, March 20, 1998

Public Notice
Public Notice
along tha South line of aald $40.00, m1il1 payable to tha;
NW t/4 of th1 Center of Architect. Upon receipt of a.
TowMhlp Road T-14 (Mount requ11t, accompanied by e:
Union Road), cro..tng a 30- dtpoalt aa namad abov1,
Inc~ Elm at 280 67 1111 for th• Architect will forw1rd
of
bidding
referenc•, thence North 26 co plea
d1gr~11 22 mtnut11 10 documentl •• named In th•
1econdt Will 107 04 lett preceding paragraph.
1nd North 32 dagreaa 23 Shipping charg•• collact
Depolll will be rtfunded
mtnut11 40 11cond1 Weal
221.30 IHI along the center to blddtrl upon return of '
of seld Townehlp Road T-14 the •pacification• In good
(Mount Union Road), thence condition and with poatage
1outh 24 degren 42 or expreu chargee prepeld
mlnutll 2S aeconda Will within ten (1 0) day• alter
309.37 !ttl to the point of the date bld1 are opened.
beginning, croulng an Iron Depoalt will not be refunded
rod at 29 27 feet lor upon return of documents
reference, containing 1 0 ate later date or documenta
acre, more or lose, tn poor condition. Each bid
excepting all legal rlghla of for contract• Not. 1, 2 1nd 3
way.
only shall be accompenltd
Addrlll' 39891 Mt Union by a contract bond In an
Rd., Rutland, OH. Tax map amount equal to tha total
or parc11 ID No 17- sum of the propoul
00886.001, Tax map or Including all add ahernattl,
percaiiD No. 17.()0756.00
supported by a Power of
That the decedent Attomoy, for the bonding
Swearingen hal ft'led to agent, a Clrtlflcete from the
pty 11ld agreement Department of tn1urence
ICCordlng to the term• and authorizing the 1urety
condition• theriot; that the compeny to do eurety
dtftndanta Unknown bualnlll In tha State of
Spouse, If any, of Wanda A Ohio, and a total tum of the
Swearingen, alao known as proposal, and flied with
Wanda Ann Swearingen, such propose! Blda are to
and the Unknown Haire, be sealed and addra11ed to
Unknown Spoul81 In any, the Treasurer of the Eaatern
of the unknown Heirs, Local School District Board
Devisee a, Lag aten, and or Education for the State of"
Repr11ent1tlvoe of Wanda Ohio, office of the Treaaurar .
A. Swlarlngan, also known of Eastern Local School
11 Wanda Ann Swearingen, Dlltrlct, 3S900 State Route
Decaaltd, their Executor~, 7, Raedavllle, Ohio 45772
Admlnletratora; Cullodlanl, and plainly marked on the
Astlgnl, or Guerdlena, my outside "Bidl lor Loose
claim to have an lntereat In Furnllhlnga for the Naw K·8
1ald
rut
property Elementary School and
Therlfore, plllnllft demand• Eastern High School for
1udgmant eg1tn•t decedent Eaatern Local School
Swearingen on tho flrat D IatrIc t.
Additionally,
caue of action lor envelope• thallldlntlfy the
$35,4eS.94,-with lntereat ·contract number(•) being
thtriOn at 14 25 percent per bid
annum from January 23,
The Eaatern Local School
1998, that seld mortgage be Dlttrlcf Botrd of Education
for~eloled; that the amount with the approval of the
of Ilene on th1 property be Ohio School Facllltlea
marehllled; that the real Commlealon reeervea the
prop1rty be told and the right, to reject any and all
amount du1 plaintiff be paid blda.
from thl proceeds of the
By the Order of the
eala, togtthtr with costa
UseM.RRchle
herein; that defendants
School District Board of
Unknown Spouee, II any, of
Education Tre11urer '
Wanda A. Swearingen, also
John C. Rice
known 11 Wanda Ann
School Dlatrlct Board of
Swearingen, and the
Education Board Prealdent
Unknown Htlre, Unknown (3) 6, 13, 20 27
Spous11, If any, ol the
Public Notice
Unknown Heirs, Devlaaea,
L 1 11 a Ia e a ,
a n d 1--~===::.:.:::...._
Repreaentatlvaa of W.anda
PUBUC NOTICE
A Swearingen, 1110 known
Ordinance No 1998-1
11 Wanda Ann Swearingen,
Annual Appropriation
Deceaeed, lh1lr Executora,
Ordinance
Admlnlatratoll, Cuetodlan•,
VIllage of Rutland
Autgna, or Guardians, ba
Fl1cal Ye1r Ending
required to tel up their llent
DIC. 31, 199S
or tntereet In said real
Unencumbered Balance
property or be forever
Jan. fat, 1998
barred from aa~el11ng the General Fund ......$9,368 14
ume, end for aHorney fees, Special Revenue
and COlla.
Funds ...............S1,717.92
Tbe d1f1ndante Unknown EnterpriH
Spouee, II any, of Wanda A Fund ............ 105,ns 56
Swllrlngtn, also known as Total
196,881 62
Wlnda Ann Swearingen, Taxea ..... . ...... 11,503 00
and the Unknown Hetra, OthtrSourcaa
Unknown Spou1ea, If any, General Fund .....45,365 00
of the Unknown Heirs, SpiCIII Revenue
Devll&amp;ll, Legatees, and
Fund ................ 15,600 00 • •
Repre11ntetlvea of Wanda Enterprise Funds .. 179,000 •
A Sweerlngen, 1110 known Total....... . ........ 239,965 00 . •
11 Wanda AM Swearingen, Grand Total
Decealed, thalr Executora, General Fund
66,256 14
Admlnletratora, Cuetodlena, Special
A11tgn1, or Guardians, Ravenua ............... 97,317 92 •
herolnabon named are Enterprlaa
further notlfttd that they are Funds ........... 284,775.56
required to 1nawer said Total ... .. . . ... $448,349.62
complaint on or before April Eatlmoted Reeourcea
17, 1998, which Includes 28 Currant Expenlte and
dey• from he laat Other Expenditures
publication, or judgment Security of Peraona and
may be rendered a Property .. .. .. .... 28,500.00
demanded therein.
General
Normlln M. Frank Co., L.P.A. Government .......36,920.00
Norman M Frank, (001536) State Highway
5000 00
Attorney lor Plllntlff, Slr811 Construction,
Benellcltl Mortg191 Co of Maintenance &amp;
Ohio
Repair .................21,000
33 North High SlrHt, Suite EMA Money
888 1166 OHDSR ....68,784 00
Columbue, Ohio 43215-3076
Water Fund ....... S1,500 oo
Telephone 614-221-1862
Sewer Fund ......... 62,000
(2) 13, 20, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20 6 Sewer Debt
tc
Fund ............
46,00000
Baste Uttllty
Services
_ __;P:...u::b::I::.:IC:...N:..::::;Ot::,lc~e::...__ Replacement .• 4,00000
NOtiCI To Blddera
Fund.. .... . .
10,000 00
s111ed propoll11 will b8 Total
of all
recalved for the Ohio Approp ............ 365,704 00
School
Facllltlel EIUmated populatlon ... 600
C
1 1 b th Ea1t
omm 11 on, Y •
em Federal Cen1u1
Local School Dl1trlct board Population ................ 467
of Education at the Office of
Thla Ia an unaudited
the T,..1urer of thl Eaettrn Flnancl•l Statement.
Loc1l School Dtatrlct Board
I certify thJa report to be
38900 Stat• Route 7, corr~et and true to the best
Reedevllle, Ohio 45m until of my knowledge.
2.30 p M. Ea1tern Daylight Roaemary Snowden-Eskew
nme, on tha 15th &lt;11y of
' Clerk·Trea1uror
April, 1998 and opened
337 Main St, P.O. Box 420
lmmedllllly thtreefter, for
Rutland, Ohio
Fumlahlng• 1nd Equipment (3) 19,20
for the K-8 Elam•ntary
School end E..ttrn High
School for Eutern Local
School Dl•trlct Saparate
'
bldl will be r~eelved for the
Cluaroom Furniture
Public Notice
(Contract No.1) $136,000
'
Office
Furnllhlnga
(Contrect No. 2) $107,000
PUBUC NOTICE
•• ·
WI n dow
T reatmant
NOTICE Ia hereby giVen
(Contrect No.3) $33,000
that on Saturday, March 21,
Mualc
Furnishings 1998, at 10 00 a.m., a public
(Contract No 4) $12,000
aale will be held at 211 Walt
Kitchen
eppllancn Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmart Bonk
(Contrect No 5) $9,000
In Accord1nce with the and Savings Comp1ny - 1
plan• end lplclflcatlons parking tot, to sen lor caah
J
prepartd
by
Vargo, the following collateral:
'
C1118dy, Ingham, and
1993 YAMAHA SCCA II
Glbb1 Architect•, Inc., 100
MOTORCYCLE
Front StrHI, Marietta, Ohio
JYA4DUE03PA018845
45750 and on flit In 1he
The Ftrmert • Bank and
offlc• of the Ex•cutlve Savings
Company,
Dlractor 01 :o School Pomaroy, Ohio reoerveo the
F1cllltl11 Commltllon, as right to bid at thla sela, and
Eaet Broed Str81t, Suite to withdraw the above col1400, Columbu1, Ohio literal prior to aale.
43215, and the Offlct of the Further, The Farmers Bank
Trellurtr of E11tern Loc11 and Saving• Company
School Dlatrlct Board r rt1ervee tha right to rtllcl
31~00 ala Route 7, any or all bld1 1ubmltted.
R
, Ohio 45772.
Further, the 1bov1 collet·
Cople of pl•n• and eret will be aold In tha con1peclfiC1tlona 1nd form•, dillon It 11 In, with no
togethlf with 1ny furthlr expreea or Implied werlnformetton dlllred may be rantlel given.
ncurtd from the Offlca of
For further lnformallon, •
the Archltact, upon requt1t contact Tim at 985-428i.
:of a chiCk In the emount of (3) IS, 19, 20 3TC
' ••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

• ·New Homes
•Garages

..'

MIJ

I

All Ytrd S1lt1 Mutt Be hid In
Advance Oeadllnt 1 OOpm the
dey before the ad 11 to run

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7/22/tln
(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

WICKS

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
Public Notice

I
I

\

\

113 W. 2ND ST.

.. --·--McFEE ROOFING &amp;
PAINTING

SpecialiZing In:
New Roofa, Roof Rtpalre,
Gutter•, Interior &amp;
Exterior Petntlng,
Drywall Repair
Lowa•t rates during the
winter montha of
Jan,Feb.-Mar.
Qualify Work GUIIraniHd
Free Eat.· Fully lnaured
1-614-992-9057
Middle ort, Oh

Public Notice

Announcements

BINGO

PER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

"Build Your Dream"

POMEROY, OH.

1 1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, OJotlo 45769

614-992-5479

Shtrlff'a Sale
acree, more or Ieee, and
being In aald above named
Real Eltata
Section 17, Town 7, and
C11a Numbar 97CV088
United Companlts Landing Rlnge14.
Lui Prior Conveyance·
Corporation
Volume 245, Page 489,
Pl1lntlff
M1lga County Dttd
YS
RICOrdl.
Michael D. Bogga, at at
Excepting and reaervlng
Deland ante
to the Gr~ntora A011 acres
Court of Common Plea•
u deacrlbed In Land
MIIQI County, Ohio
In purtuanct of an Order lnatellmtnt Contract
of Sale to me directed from recorded In volume 141,
11ld Court In the above Page 509 of the Matg•
entitled action, I will expose County Mortgage R~eordt.
L11t Deed Reference:
to 1111 at public iuptlon at
thl courthouee on April Volume 276, Page 29, Melga
17th, 1998 at 10:30 a.m of County 081d RICorda
Parcel 3• Sl1uate In
11ld d1y, lhl following
Section 17, Town II, R•nge
described r~al ..tate:
Sltuat1d In the Township 14 Weal, Comm1nclng at a
ol Scipio, County of Melga point In the southwut
corner of aald Section 17;
and State of Ohio·
Parcel t . Being In Section thence eaat along the aouth
17, Town 7, r8nge 14, of the llnl of aald Sactlon 17, t2S7
Ohio Compeny'• Purchllt: fett, more or less, to an Iron
Bagtnnlng on the South line pin In the aoutheaat corner
of seld Section 03 rode Eaet of the old school houae lot,
of th1 Southwest corner aa recorded In Deed Book
thereof, thence North 12 172, Page 676, In tha
roda to the land formerly recorda of the Melg•
own1d by J P Bosworth, county racorder'a Office,
thence W11t about 18 roda and being the real point of
and 10 112 feet to the beginning for the lend
Northeaet corner of School herein deacrlbed; thence
Hou11 tot In Pagevllle north 90 degretl oo· 00"
Separate Dlatrlct; thence alii continuing along the
South 10 rod a to the south line of aald Section
Southeast corner of said 17 and the existing
School House Lot; thence northerly right of way line of
E11t 80 IHI; thence South 2
Ac 1demy Straat (Townahlp
roda,' thence Eaat abut t 5 Road Number 142), 112 00
rod• to the place of feet to an Iron pin; thence
b1glnntng, containing One north 0 degrees 00' 00" east
and on•fourth (1 1/4) acres, along a Una, 150.00 feat to
an Iron pin; thence north 80
more or lila
Parcal 2: Alao; the following degrees oo· 00" wtal along
land lying Eaat of and a line to an Iron pin In the
adjoining Lola No 40 and
4t aforeuld commencing at
the Southllll corntr of
1ald Lot No. 40; thence Ee.et
20 roda and 8 feat, thence
North 19 roda, to the place
of beginning, containing
'TWo and One-half (2 1/2)

MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$900.00
$70.00 OR MORE

Sunday &amp; Monday edition·
1 OOpm Frldoy

" WARNER INSURANCE
JEFr.

RemOdeling

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Umeatone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer .Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System
Utilities
Estimates

a.

614-992-7643

(614) 992·3838

(No Sunday Calls)

t2/18/lfn

Public Notice
teet lint of uld achool
hOUit lot, 112.00 IHI to the
point of beginning, and
containing 0.4011 acrea.
Subject to all legal
highway• and eaumenta of
record.
Prior Deed Ref. Vol. 245,
Page 4S9, Metga county
Recorder's Office.
Dt~crlptlon for the above
described tract being the
resulta of a survey meda by
Richard C. Gl11gow, R S
No. 5161.
Deed Raflfenca Volume
278, Page 23, Meigs County
Dead Recorda. Parcel Nos
17.()0740 &amp; 17.00741
Prior ln1trumant references
Volume 317, Page 561.
Property addreu. 35272
Pagevlll• Road
Albany, Ohio 45710
Apprateed at S27 ,500 00
Terms of sale: 10% C11h
day of sale and balance on
delivery of dHd.
Jamea M. Soutsby
Sheriff, Melg1 County
Rick D. Deblaala
Lerner, Sempaon &amp;
Rothfuaa
120 E. Fourth Street,
8th Floor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 241-JtOO
OH Sup CU0012992
(3) 6, 13, 20 3 tc

I:=J~~~~~==
Public
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice 11 hereby given
that on the 6th of April,
1998, at 1.00 p.m., In the
office of the Board of
Commllllonera of Melga
County, a hearing will be
held on the proposed
dedication of Pearaol Road
(Townahlp Road #395),
Salem Township, Metgs
County, Ohio
The propoaad dedication
11 d11crlbed aa lollowe·
Beginning at the junction
of Old Dexter Church Road
(C-6) and Folden Road (T·
26), thence eoutherly along
Old Dexter Road about 775
feet (0.15 mila) to the true

KEVIN GRADY
March 20th

110

Always 1n our
hearts,
Always on our
mtnds.

Joe Wilson '
(614) 992-42n

·~:::z:=:===~~

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

In Loving
Memory

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

1TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeltone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sltea

Commercial and Rttldtntlal

24 Hr Bobcat Service
Available

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt , Sand
•
_
985 4422
Chester, Ohio
uY2S/96Mn

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

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

County, Ohio, Court HouH,
Pomeroy, Ohio
(3) 13,20 2 tc

In Loving Memory
Of

ANNA "JO"
SHOEMAKER
Bom Sept 12, 1gs7Died March 21, 1993

Metgs County Humane
Soctety lhnft Shoppe
Open Tuesday -Saturday
Bag Sale Starting Tuesday,
March 24, 9 00 am
Ends
March 28

:..~NEW RIVER BAND
Appeanng ,Fnday 8 00-12

00

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB
Guest lnvtted

NOW IN STOCK A
NEW ECONOMICAL
29 GAUGE ROOFING
OR SIDING

t11Itb

Metal 9" OC Rtb/Whtte

3'XI0'·$12.SO
3'XI2'-$15.00
3'XI4'·$17.50

lumber • Building Mlleriale
Cullom Bula ROCI Trum1
Pole Blm PICkiQII
Toro Whnl HorH Tractors
Hot Springs Sp11
Open 7 30-5 00 Wnkday1
7 30-4 DO S1turd1y

46384 SR 248 • Chtllar
Ohio
3/'1lt/1 mo

Help Wanted

Commercial
27 yrs exp.

TECHNICIAN
AND

HUMANE AGENT sought to perform cruelty
tnvesttgatlons, enforce Ohio ammal welfare laws,
and provtde humane educatton The person
holdtng th1s contract pos11ton (twenty-five hours a
week). under the Metgs County Offtce of the
Prosecuting Attorney, must have a htgh school
diploma and (preferably) tra1mng related to
animal care al)d/or tra1mng tn law enforcement
and/or a background tn soctal sarvtces or
medtatton Thts ts an emergency· response
posttton that reqUires a detatl-onented person , tn
good health, ehgtble for bondtng and tnsurance,
wtth excellent oral and written skills Applicants
must agree to full background checks Tratmng
1n euthanasta and antmal cruelty tnvesttgations
wtll be provldsd Salary 1s $12,000 a year. Sencl
resume, wtth names of three references, to
President, Me1gs County Humane Society, PO
Box 312, Athens, OH 45701 before April 1,

'

Sadly mustd by aaugrntr, 11
'JI.utfi Strode,
'But and 'Bob Umgtn

•

Wsntsd to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sll
ver And Gold Coins Proofaets

Diamonds AntiQue Jewelry Gold
Rings Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterling Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
M T.S Coin Shop 1!51 Second

Avenuo Gallipolis 740.446-2842

will buy one piece or complete
household Osby Marun 740

992-6576

6172

Clean

Late

Model

Cara

Or

Trucles 1990 Models Or Newer

Smllh Buick Ponllac 1900 East
er11 Avenue Galhpoh&amp;

:114 773-5033

Potts log And Lumber Company

Buyl'l) lSI &amp; 2nd Cui Timber 740.
886 9861 740-886-8840

• Vinyl Sid1ng • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile

Homes 740 446 0175 304 675
5965
Wanted stand.ng trees tree tops
or fence rows for firewood 740
992 2904

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Wanted Fly Wheel For Wtscon
sin 10 HP Motor On A Bolens
lawnmower Model ITA 100 740

Call 614·843·5426
L.--------------.....1

Call 740 388 9062 Or 740 446

446-1756

We Buy Autos In Any Condlfton

PART

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances
20 Yrs Exp
• Ins Owner Atck Johnson

Free E8tinwte8
446-4759
441-1191

CHESHIRE
FOOD MART
Open 24 Hro A Day
7DaytAWeek
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Topplnga
Catlin Ordare Accepted
740-367-7838

linda's
Custom Cakes

LANDS(; APE

who palled •w•y on
March 21. 1997
God looked around Hts
garden and found an
empty place
He then looked down
thts earth and saw your
111ed lace
He put Hts arms around
you and lifted you to
ret,
God s garden must be
beautiful, He always
takas the best
He knew that you were suf·
faring He knew you
ware 1n pain,
He knew you would
never get well on earth
agam
saw the road was get
ung rough and the hills
were hard to climb,
He closed your weary
eyelids and whtspared
"peace be thine "
broke our hearts to lose
you but you dldn t go
alone,
part of ue went wtth
you the day God called
ycu home

-

CO"STROCTIO"

1916-1997

'Ilea nor 'R Wmgett

90

Buying Hardwood Timber On
&amp; Residential
Share&amp; 40/tiO Or !50150 ,, De·
t
tl
...
pandtng On Quality 740 256·
Ltcensed &amp; Insured

.LO"a·s

3/12/MI 1 rno pd

In lovrng mtmory of

licensed

WoOl VIrginia 304·
773 5785 Or 304-77:1-5«7

J &amp; 0 Auto Paris Buying
wrecked or sah1agee1 vettlctes

ALL OCCASIONS
Birthdays, Holidays,
Weddings, Showers,
Anniversaries,
Graduations, Etc
Home Bekery llceneed
and Inspected
Pies and Cookies
(740) 843·5544
Portland. Ohio

COMPUTER SYSTEM

1998

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages Pole BUtldtngs, Rooftng S1d1ng

BAUM LUMBER

Well daughter Sat·
urday wtll make 5 years
stnce you went away
And there s not a day
that goes by that your
mother doesn I thmk of
her sweet daughter
Anna, God only
knows how much I love
you and mtss you
But you are out of
pam and 1n Gods care
But your molher wtll
always care and love
you
Sadly mtssed by
Mother Ruth Carpenter
&amp; Famtly

service

Ant ques &amp; clean used furniture

•Room Addltlons
·New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

_

aucuon

•as O~oo &amp;

2526

Owner John Dean

TRUCKING

Auction
and Flea Market

Ant1ques top prices paid Rlv•r
lne Antiques Pomeroy Ohio
Aus&amp; Moore owner 740 992

Brian Morrleon
(740) 985-3948

Send resume and wage requirements to:
Computer Technician
Fruth Pharmacy
Rt 1, Box 332
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

l~

•Mowers •Chain Saws •Weedeatera •Authorized
Dealer For
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
Briggs &amp; Stratton: Master StrYice Techllklan
Outdoor Power Equlpmtnl Association: Certllled 2 Cycle
State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138
point of beginning of
Peareol Cemetery Road,
thence ••atarty about 3.275
feat (O 62 mila) to a D11d
End at the Pur~ol
Cemetary
The
Board
of
Commtulonera or Meta•
County, Ohio, will view the
alte on the 8th day of April,
199S, at 10 30 a.m. The plat
dt~crtblns the location of
the road propo11d to b1
dedicated may be viewed at
tha office of the of
Board
ol
Commlnloner•
Melga

lecUbles many one and two dollar

Rick Pearson Auction Comp&amp;l))',
full lime auctioneer complete

Parts and Servfce/1

Free Est/mites

HOLLON

163!5 Lincoln

Items many other items

RACINE ftiOWER CLINIC

FrH Eallm•fes

Le

Salurday

80

No Job Toe Small

~ R.

da~

Heights rain or shine lots of col

mise Items also antiQUes

Rea1onab/e Rates

Public Notice

Spring yard sale Thursday Frl

Thursday Friday &amp; Saturday
36e7o Bashan Rd Lo11g Bottom

20 Yrs E•p · Ins Owner Ronnte Jones

Phone 740·992-3987

In Memory

:{c\1'1\

P/B Contractors Int.

SAYRE

Fruth Pharmacy is recruiting a member
for Its MIS Dept.
Individual must possess basic software and
hardware
knowledge,
UNIX
operating
systems, computer and system troubleshooting skills, and networking experience.

Turkey Hunting Semtnar
Healthcare of Leon Buffalo
(AI 62, Trible Road Leon WV)
Saturday, March 21 1998
9am -1 pm
Free
Pubhc

GALLIPOLIS~HIO 45631

ltl•1'1 10,n\pO'I/811[1.@,fii\tll·c::.~tUrRP
0

(614) 949·2804

TROUBLESHOOTER

.

...

Remodeling

360" Communications

•Complete

30

Custom Homes

CELLULAR PHONES

I

BALLEOAND
BURLAPPEO TREES
Norway Spruce,
White Pine and
Canadian
Hemlock
Delivery Available
Hemlock Grove Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 740.992·7285
Aller 4 PM

II

Call Me I!
*I Buy Accumulations•
"Collectibles, Antiques,
Miscellaneous,
Households, etc ·
Jean While
740-245-9448

New Hours
Tues·Frt 10·6 Sat 10·4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essenttal Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabblls
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bnng your odds &amp; ends
and we will fdlthem
Rt 124 Mtncrsv:llc, OH

740-992-4559

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN LEGION
BEECH GROVI ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUNY l;OOPM
Factory Choke Only

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Sh~rley

Spears 304-675-1429
Avon $8 $20 /Hr No Door To

Ooor Easy Cash Fun 1 800 ,
736-0168 1ndlslslrep

Babys1tter needeo In Racine area

740-949-4004

Batts Bros Amusement Co
Must be 18 years or older Free
10 I13Vel C.ll740-266-2950 M F
8()0..4 30

Soard Certttled X Flay Tech
needed to work part hme in mo

oue

x Ray

m

GatltpoltstPt

Pleasant area Please send re

sume to Honzon Mob1ie Health
Inc 1302 7th A&gt;Je Huntmgton

WV25701

COMING SOON
New Sports Restaurant
Needing general manager klfCI1
en management kitchen help
k tchen prep bartenders host

ess servers Please send re·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

sume to Twisters Sports Grlll
107 Academy Drive Ripley WV

25271

30 Announcements

COUNTER SALES /TRUCK
DRIVER POSITION FOR W VA
tng to lhe recovery ol a Sloten rea ELECTRIC SUPPLY CD In Gal

$500

reward tor mlormat10n lead

Kawasaki 300 Bayou 4 wheeler
stolen 3112/98 740 742 1365 or

740-742 9530

hpolls Must Have Electrical (Not

Etectrontc) Sates b:perience Or
Electocat Vocationa l Degree To
Be Constdereel Send Resume To

I Elva Browning will not tie re Personnel Dnector P 0 Box
spo nslble for any debts other 6668 Hunungton WV 25773
6666 EOE MJFNIO
than my own

OATA ENTRY
Data bese entry Good Keyt O Month old male Oalmaltan bo~rdlng skills Self-1t1rtlng
good with kids to good home Prevlou• eJperienc:e preferable
Send resume end ulery reollly 304-.csa-.t!US

40

Giveaway

11 Mo11th ol&lt;t Tricolor Beagle

quirements Ia Box SF-2 c/o

Point Plteunt Atgltter 200

runs good good "'lth children to Meln St Poinl Pleuent, WV

good home on'f 304-675 7911

25550

6 Mixed Puppies Two Solid ColOr

Dependable And Flextble Certt

Three With Blue Eyes 740 446

lied Nurse Aid Needed For In

9351 After 6 PM

Home care Call Adria nne Or An
Qltl-600-481 6334

Beagle &amp; Ta mer m•xed 6mos
Old wnne &amp; yellow cat 304 675

5590

DRIVERS

WANTED!

Free 6 Week Old Pup s Lab &amp;

500 Mtle AadtUS

Home Every Week9nd

Collie Mixed 740-256 1489

Health Insurance Prov6ded

Full Blooded Black Lab Good

A:,~·:rKc::=.,,

Wnh Children 740-367-0502

Male dog Aollwe •lerl Chow m1x
good wntl chtldren 74()-992 2904

60

Lost and Found
$300 REWARD

For return of black/brown German

Shephard lakan !rom Edllh Rog

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

110

era farm on Redmud R1dge An

swers 10 name 'Chance· No

Plan First In First Out

01spatch late Model Conv
Tractors With FlatbeO Trailer&amp;

Cori1p$til/ve Pay
Parcontage 01 Gross
Contact

1-800-1154-4167
NO REAL AI).
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL?

FRUSTR~TED?

GLASS CEIUNG7

questions ask Calt John Rogers

11 you are emptoyed and feel you
1 80().287 0576
are In a no gain Situation you owe
11 to yoursell to consider joining
lqsl 1 Mare Pony Re d W•th the Loewen Group Th•s Is a high
White Blaze Face R1o Grande 1ncome protesa•on rapid ad·
_Ar_ea..:..._74_0.:.24~5~54
_92
_____ vancement potential and sell
1 sati&amp;lactlon helping families For
Misstng Since 112 4, 98 Tan
cocltar Spantei Last
your last job 1ntervlaw call Steve

Williams Hollow Road Wa•trlng Smllhel614-992 7440
lmme&lt;hate openings lor CNA PTI
FT Requires wv cerlil•cation
Mu&amp;t be able to work all thlfts
Yard Sale
Excellent bana111 package lor FT
70
employees CoMtact Sandra Relt
mira RN DON 304 675·0860
Galllpolll
Ext 124 Laktn ts an EEO Em·
&amp; VIcinity
Jl/O'iar
Uleguards (Pnowy Will Be Gtven
Al.l. Ytnl SliM Must
To CartifloG Appl~an:s) Concas
Be Paid In Mvonce.
slon Workers &amp; Admlnlon
REN!LINE: 2 00 p.m.
Worktrl. AI Gallipolis Municipal
1111 dly ....,. thud
Pool Applications Mil)' 81 PlcQd
Is to run 84llldll)'
Up AI Tne Gallipolis Parks And
odlllon · 2 00 p.m.
Rttree11on Office Localtd In Tho
Frldoy, Mandl)'Municipal Building, 518 Second
• 10 00 a m S.turdly.
A.....,., Galllpol- Ott

Choker Wllh PA Rab•es
Info Appreciated Cali 74&lt;l·4A6·
1476

:=====:::===I

�. ,.... : . . .

- ---- --- ·

- ~- -

Pa.ge 10 • The Daily sentinel

Ftlday,·March 20, 1998

Friday·; March 20, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

r'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

"'

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

34 Before combllt

1 Type of apple

7 Open aquore,
In lilly

43 Pleaun1·
45 Boy

13 Llk1 ocean

water

Have An Avon Party In Your
Home And Get A Free Glftl Cell
Allsha Ro1as At 740·245·9635,
An Avon Independent Sales
Representative
Mtddleport Park. Rec reat ion •s
now takm g appl•cat•ons for liteguards App l•catlons can be
picked up at V•llage Hall between
8a.m-4pm Monday through Friday

All real estate advertls•ng m
tniS newspaper IS subtect to
the Federal Farr Housmg Act
ol1966 wh•ct1 makes •l•llegal
to adven1se any prelerence
hm1tat•on or d•scnmrnahon
based on race color rel1gron
sex familial status or na11onat
ongin or any mtent1on to
make any suet"! preference,
l•m•tahon or d•scr•m•nahon •

Need someone to work m home
to eare for wile 304-675-6132
Se cret ary /Aecept•on• st Responsible Pe rson Must Have All Typmg, Olflce Skills, Adve rtising Experience Not A Must But A Plus
All Replies Stnc tly Confidential
Send Resumes To CL A 431. clo
Gallipolis Da11y Tnbune, 825 Th1rd
Avenue. Gaii~ OIIS OH 45631

This newspaper w111 not
knoWingly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which 1s 1n v•ola!IOn ol the
law Our readers are hereby
mlormed that all dwelltngs
adven•sed mtn1s newspaper
are avanable on an equal
opportumty bas1s

St ylist Needed New Salon W1th
Or Without Clientele Busy Corner,
Contact Brenda s Kut &amp; Kurl, 740·
441 -0583

Styli st Nee ded No Cl1entele Nee·
essary Contact Carol King Finest
Styhog Salon 740-446 -8922
The Fam•ly Resource Network ol
Mason Co unty Person nel Commruee IS now accephng resumes
lor lhe pos•t1011 ot Fam•ly Ae ·
source Director A Masters De gree 1s preferred and a Bachelors
Degree IS reqUired m Public Ad·
mm1strat1on, Human Services. or
a related f1eld Expenence 1n program management orgamzallonal planning and grant wrilmg Pf8·
terred, as we ll as demonstrated
ab1hties In commumty orgamza·
uon commumcat1on and leaderstup The pos•tlon will lo cus on
the overall manage men! of the
FAN , '"accordance With the policles and regulatiOos set lorth by
the Mason County FAN Board 01
Oifec tors Salary range from
$17 000 to $22,000 The deadline
lor resumes will be April 3. 1998
Please send resumes 10 Mason
Co FAN Pers onnel Committee
P 0 8011 393 Pt Pleasant, WV
25 550 Tn1 s pO SitiOn IS a grant
funded pos1110n through the Gov
Cabmet on Ch•ld re n and Fa
mKies
Vesper Cable Markellng &amp; Audlt•ng IS look•ng for Sales Reps to
Market ca ble TV services In Vtr·
gmla &amp; Kentu cky as well as
Po•nt Plea sant, WV Must ha ve
reliable transporr allon Weekly
travel requ 1red Hea lth Insure
W1U pay Per-D1em towards week·
ly expense s Excellent Income
potential VMC 15 also looking tor
potential Sales Managers and 1
qua l•fl ed mstaller Call Scon
Vosper al 1-800-686-4B26

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $2t .60 IHR.
INC. BENEFITS. Game War·
dens Secunty Mamtenace ,._Park
Rangers NO EXP. NEEuED.
FOR APP. AND EXAM INFO
CALL t -800·813·3585 , EXT
6475 8 A M. • 9 P.M. , 1 DAYS
fda,lnc

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms . 1 112 Bath s Oak
Cabinets. Carport. Barn 1 Ac re
$79,500, 740-448·0035
ll Acres ·3br doublew •Oe modular

home In Glenwood . detached 2
car garage Askmg $50 000 304
576·2972
BUY HOMES FROM S4,000 1 -5
Bdrm . local Gov'l &amp; Bank Repo's
Call1 ·800 522-2730, X 1709
Mrddleporl beautiful two story, 3
br, 2 bath, large I r &amp;. lr , oak
0001s &amp; tnm , Smiths custom oak
cabm ets Jenn-alr range , d•shwa sher detached garage, by ap
:p&lt;J.:.'.:."'.:."'"".:..:.'.:.7_ol0.:.·9.:.9:.:2..:
·52.:.4.:.3.:..:._ _
In Mrddleport- two story large LRI
DR . three bedroom, one &amp; 112
bath, laundry room, anached carport mce fenced yard w1th lots ol
flowers. good ne 1ghborhood, close
to schools, call 740·992-3787 or
740·992-5438

1·

Ranch. 2 bedroom 1 bath hmng
roo m, dmmgroom, kitchen, 1 24
acres w1th oyer !rootage, enough
o yer frontage to make summer
camp site . located on SR t24 ,
Aactne, Oh, 74()-949-2006
Very nice two story home Wllh two
car garage, located rn Gravel Htll
Community in Mlddlep.ort Corner
101 with newer Siding. roo!. wmdows and much more, cal l 740992-6737 or 740-992·304t0

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12x50 mobile home, furn •shed,
central air, 60x90 lot, call 740·
992·2309 anyttme

180 Wanted To Do

12xEIS Trader 3br~ 1 bath $5,500
Caii304-675-4678

Dependable. honest lad les w111
do your housecteanmg 304-5762147 01 674-0598

14 x70 3BR 1999 Down &amp; ONLY
S159 per mo Free arr &amp; free sklr!lng 1·888·928·3426

Expenenced Carpentry Framtng
To F1n1sh Remodeling Add -Ons.
Dec+&lt;s 740 441 0296

1968 OetrOIIar mob1le home, new
widng &amp;..p lumbing, completely
remoaeted. $6,000 304·675·

Expe rienced Child Care Available
Near Holzer Hosp1tal, Accep!lng
Ages 4 .. Any Days /Sh1fts, 740441 ·9806
Furnllure repalf rel•ntsh and restorahon. also custom orders OhiO
Valley Relln•shmg Shop Larry
PhiN1pS 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill, don 't
haul your logs to the m111 JUSt call
304 675 1957
House cleamng And In Home
Care References 740.446-4089
Pam t1ng Plumbmg, Remodeling,
An)' And A!l Odd Jobst Free Estimates 740-245-515 1
Proless•onal Tree Serv1ce Stump
Remova l, Free Est1matesl In
surance Btdwell OhiO 614-3889548, 614 3677010
Will Care For Your Ltllle One In
My Home N1ce Clean Frtendly
Chmhan Atmosphere , 740 3799887
Will do tree tnmm•ng, landscapmg, Jerhlwng, haul1ng and othe r
od&lt;liOOS, 74Q-992·290o0

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunlfy

INOTICEI
OHIO VAll EY PUBLI SHING CO
recommends tha t you do bus• ness w•th people you know . and
NOT to send money through lhe
ma•l unt•l you have •nvest•gated
the otferrng

11 vou have an established bus1·
ness and unused park1ng space
you may qualrfy to be a U-Haul
Dealer II 1nterestea call 80D-282·
8575

230

Professional
Services

s baseme nt water proolrng all basement repa•rs
done tree esuma tes . llleume
guarantee 1Oyrs on 10b expenence 304-675-2145
L•~mgs t on

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale

6149

1972 mob•le home. 12x55, ask•ng
$6500, 74Q-742·t323

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent ·

New Dbublewlde 3BR. 2 bath .
$1,325 Down &amp; $179 permo 1·
888-928·3426

1 Bedroom Tr!lifer Close To Gallipolis, Nice Clean Wllh Utility
Hook·Up, $2501111o , $200 Oepos·
rt, Raferertces Flaquired, 740-446·
9342.

PRE-OWNED HOMES
Ex cellent Co ndltton , Owner Fi nancing Ava• table Call 304· 722·
7148
'
REPO SPECIAL Most Homes
Neve r Lived In These Homes
Ar e Dras11cally Reduced With
Spec1al E-Z Financing CALL
NOW FOR PRE·APPROVAL. t·
1188-738-3332.
Single Parent Progr1m. Specral
llnanctng on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Payment• 11 low 11
$180 Call now 304·7S5-58a5
Spec•at 16K60 3BA, 2 bath
$1 325 Down $179 Mo Free air
&amp; trea sk~rtlf'lg 1-800-69 t -6777

SPRING SPECIALS
S499Down
9 9 Fixed AIIH
$t98/Mo. Poymenll
$17,995on 3BR.
Free Delivery &amp; Set-up
Only At Oakwood Homn
Nllro, WV 304·755-5885
TAX SPECIAL
New Jbr $999/down $189/mo
Free Set -u p &amp; Delrvery Only 3
LaW Only at Oakwood Homes N•lro WV 304·755-5885
Very N1ce 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths.
161180 Mob1te Home With Lots Of
Extras1 Already .Set Up On L&lt;lt,
Take 011er Payments Call 740446·0571
Wny Rent When You Could Own?
B•g Saving s On S1ngtes And
Double W•d es 6 75'1. To Quailhad Buyers $499 00 Down Plus
Tax And T1lle Wr th Approved
Credtl) WESTWOOD HOME
SHOW, INC 1-800·251·5070 Or
304·736-3888

NEW BAN~ REPD'S, ONLY 3
LEFT, t.aot).-2

330 Farms for Sale
Mtn• Farm 20 85 Acres Plus Ell •
Large Pole Barn With Concrete
Floor. 1994 Sl Rt 325 N . 1 114

Mile N 01 Sl Rt 35 Appratsed At
$56 000 Does Not Include Trailer,
Phone 937 568·4500

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
SMAll BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATE)
63 95 Acres Approx 8 Acre
Lake Gallla County, County Water
And Electrtc $2 600 Per Acre
740.388 8678.
www guldepath comllocaVrTlOII
120 II long 80 II lPng by 75 II
wl,c:fe , level lot m Middleport, reducod from $23.000 TO $11,000
OBO. 74o-992·2290
60 Acres W•th 30x55 Barn And
Pona $55.000 (EwmgiOn ) 740·
388·9352

BRUNER LAND
74()-441·1492
Gallla Co.: Gallipolis, NeighborhOOd Aa • to Acres. lots 01 level
S19 000, Or 22 Acres W1th Pond
NOW $24 ,000 ~11endly Rtdge ,
Last 2! 8 5 Acres $7,500 Or 6 5
4cres S8 000 Crty Water

1979 Buddy Mob1le Home Very
Good Condt!IOn, On Rented lot,
7ol0·441 ·1327. 74()-446·2805

Meigs Co. : Danv111e . N1ce 11
Acres $18,000 - $2,000 Down +
$238/ Mo , s Or 9 Acre Lot In
Same Area . Cny Water Oyesvllle
N1ce t1 + Acres $10 500 Very
Pnvate

1sl Time Buyers, E-Z Financing
2 or 3 Bedroom, Around $200 per
month Call cred11 hne 1·800 948·5678

Call For Free Maps + OWner Financing Into Take 10o/. OU Ltsted
On Cash Purchases•

14x80 Glamour Bath, $179/Mo .
304· 736· 7295

Bu•ldtng lots In letart , WV 1/2
acre each, along US 33 304-8953880

Anenhon Mobile Home Owners
Areas Largest Inventory Of Inter·
therm &amp; Coleman Hea t Pumps,
A~r Conditioners, Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huge Buy1ng Power Means
The l owest Installed Pr~ce, Easy
Over The Phone Bank F1nanc1ng
Call Bennetrs Motllle Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1·800.872-5967

BUY IN MARCH
No Payments unnl Juty 1998
E-Z F1nanc•ng
Call Ftnance Lne
1 500·948·5678
Free Set-up &amp; Delrvery

La rge Wooded Bu1khng LOIS Wrth
Some Aestncttans, Near S A 850,
Less Than 1 M11e From 4 Lane,
740-441-0541

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Casn Pa•d For land In Gallia
County, Blackburn Really, 740..6-0008

RENTALS

41 0 Houses for Rent

D1scount Mobtle Home Parts &amp;
Accesso ries Water Heaters , VI·
nyl Skuung K1ts $299 95 An chors . Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps ,
Root Coating s. Doo rs, W•ndows
Plumb1ng &amp; Electrical Supplies
Slocl(tng Wood &amp; Wed ge s An d
More• Call Benneu s Mobil e
Home Sl.llPIY At 1·7ol0·446 9416

2 Bedroom Hou&amp;e At 36 Chillicothe Road •• Gallipolis Oepos1t,
References $325/Mo • No Inside
Pets, 74o--446-2419

3 Bedroom $995 Down , S t99/

3 Bedroom house new carpet
$425/mo -+ depos•t. references.
no pets 304-675-2149

Mo , Only Qakwood Homes. BarboursVIlle, WV. 304-736-3409
Glenwood, Palestme Rd Mason
Co 1989 3 Be droom mob1le
home &amp; 314 acre land Appraised
$29 700 se11 lor $27 ,000 No
calls alter 8 OOpm 304-562 5840

Huge 28k80 3BR . 1 112 balh
Starling at ONLY $39.999 Many
opti ons ava•lable t -888 ·928
3426
La rge selection ol used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Stan~ng at $2995
001ck delivery Call 740-3859621

UMITED OFFER
19ge Ooublew1de 3br 2 baths
S1 ,699/down $259/mo Only at
Oakwood Homes N1t10, WV 304·
755·5885
located Johnson's Mob•le Home
Park, Eastern Avenue Wllh Expanoo 740-446·2003

Ra.nch 3 88drooms, 1 Bath Large
Lrvmgroom , Large K•tchen , 1 New Ooublew•de Repo, 4 Be dAcr e. Gallipolis C11y Schools, rooms , 2 Baths, Easy Terms 1·
$62.000 537 P ~male Road 74()- 800-383-6862
446 4323
MIJSI Movel 1980 W•ndsor Mo 3 Bedro-om &amp; Balh Large Ou l·
l Home, Remodeled, Lennox
bu ilding Cl!y And We ll Water. Heat Pump, 2 Bedrooms. DishWaterloo OhiO 304-736-2193
washer, Built In Microwave, 3
Year 010 Aelngerator, Kllchen IS·
J Bearoo m L shaped orrck rancn, land , De ck Included Ask•n g
2 car garage 2 lull baths on $8,900 740.367·04t5
'C Ox300 le\el lot 5 m1les Soutt"l
Jl Pom1 Pleasan t 20 mtnutes New 1998 14x70 three be droom
lrom Toyota Plant Very n1ce mcludes 6 months FREE lot rent
304 675 1226
I
slw t1n9 . deluxe steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
Nrce 3br Country krtchen, base- month wllh S1075 down Call 1·
ment double car commerc•al ga· 80CJ.837·3238
rage ,rw/apt, sm all barn on 1/2
acre Call Somerville Realty 304- NEW BANK REPO 'S Only 3 leN!
675 3030 or 304 675·343 1 Jean Srlll under warranty, owner fl.
Casto
nancmg avariab le
304-7 55 719 1

2br house, stove &amp; refngerator at
129 George St New Haven. Wv
S26Simo 304-773-9171 lea ve
Message

6 Rooms 1 bath. mea yard 304675 -343 1 Evemngs . 304 -675·
3030 Oays
Applications 4re Now Being Taken For 1 Bedroom House In Mason W VA $300/Mo , + Deposit,
UIIIIIIBS Included No PelS Ca ll
741).256-1489
Large three bedroom farm house,
carpeted garage $400 plus securlfV deposit. 740-992-5331
Ntce Furmshed 3 Bedroo ms .
Available For Approx•matel y 6
Months, Construct ion Workers
Wetcome'74Q-446-2515-

10 Minutes From Gallipolis 2
Bedroom Trailer, On 5 Acres
Land Nice Building Front And
Bacl&lt; Porch $350/Mo • + Doposlt,
74().367.()433

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$280·$300, sewer, water and
trash Included. 74Q-992·2t67
2 Bedroom trailer, reference&amp; &amp;
deposit. 304~675·1076 Leave
mesSBgll
2 Bedrooms, State Route "' South
Bladen, $275fMo, References &amp;
Otposll, No Peb, 74G-2!6-t568

3Bedroom, 1 112 bath US 35
Lock 11 . $300/mo $200 doposll
Option 10 buy Soli $26,000 t 0%
Down. Owner Financing 304·3o461739 or 304·543-ti!09
Mobile Home For Rent Add1son
Aree, Ml,lst Have Good References. Depost, Ront, 7oi0·36H866.

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and J. bedroom apartments, fur·

mshed .and unfurnished. s&amp;euflty
deposit reqlllred , no pets , 740·
992·2218
1 Bedroom Apartment Upsta~rs,
Second Avenue, GallipoliS, $2501
Mo , Clean New Carpet, Remodeled Above R1ck Carls Tavern
740-367-0433.
2bdrm apts , total elecrrtc, ap·
pl1ancas furnished, laundry room
taclllt1es, close to school in town
Applications 8\l&amp;llable at V1Uage
Gceen Apts tol9 or call 7ol0·992·
3711 EOH.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Orlvo
from $279 10 $358 Walk 10 shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Hous10g Oppor1unlty.
Beech St Middleport , OH 2Dr
furnished apartment , utrht•es
pa1d, depoSit &amp; references 304882·2566
Gracious llvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunilles
In New Haven 1br
includes washer &amp;
&amp; references.

New smgle elllciency
Middleport, utlhllea paid,
plus depOsit, 74Q.992-5304
Nice c lean efflency apartment,
references &amp; depos•t. no pets
304·675·5152.
N1ce one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments m Pomeroy, utihhes
paJC, no pets, 74()-992·5858

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
11 horse Craftsman tractor, new
knitting machine, $7!!, 740·992·
7211

12 Used Oak kitchen cabinets,
co unter top &amp; si nk $700. 304·
882-2623
15 Honey Pine Kitchen Cabinets
&amp; Countertop $t ,!!00, 740·367·

0409
30' Hutch Glass Doors, $125,
740·379·2720 AFTER 8 P.M.

4 Tickets Bush Race . Uarch
28th , Br1stote $100, 740 446 8252

•· x tOO' Corrugall!d Pipe $24 99
P1ttsburgh Pamt's Best Ce1lrng
Paint $12 99 Gal.
also Have
Bulk Seeds, Onion Sets, Cy·
press Muloh, Top &amp;;1, Potting
Soli, EIC AAINT PLUS HARO.
WARE

we

304-t75-4*.
500 Gal Solar Milk Tan•. 4 Surge
Randall Mllkets, Electric Washer
For Pipeline &amp; Milkers: 75 Almo
Milk Pump. Phone· 740-886·916t
Aher6 00 PM
Amazing Metabolism Break
Through Lose 10 to 200 lbs , Call
For free consu lta tiOn and Free
Samples (740)«1-1962

Brand New! Great Gift! CDMdeo
storage unit. Black and cherry
N!Mir out of box. St25 Holds l4l
to 940 discs , also holds tapes
Call 740·992·6636 alter 6 pm
COs &amp; tapes not ftldiMled
Concrete &amp; Plaslle Septic Tanks ,
300 Thr u 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH
t 800-537-9528
Cub Tractor, Heston Hay Bmd ,
1977 Chevy Pickup Truck , Per fect Condtt1on 304 937-2691
Ntght Time Only

Drop ·IAIIfTal&gt;te, 60'
Wttllt2' leal,
Wlllnut Fln'-lled,
8 Chairs, $200,
ECONOMY
HeaUng And Cooltng
Up-Grade Your
Present System
1-800·649·2323
740-245-9009

One bedroom apartment 1n Middleport, all utilities pa1d, $270 per
month , $100 deposit, call 740·
992-78()6
Aefngerator Furnishe d WID
Hoo~·Up $279 Plus Ullhlies De·
pos1ULease Requtred (7-40)4462957
Pornt Pleasant WV N1ce 5 Room
Unfurntshed Apartment, References &amp; Oeposn AeQutre&lt;l, 740·
446-0041 . After 6 PM

RIVER BEND PLACE
New Haven, wv
1 Bedro om apts lor elderly or
diSabled, HUO assrsted EOH .
304·882·3121
Two bedroom apartment , $260
per month plus depos1t and uhll-"
11es, Tnnd Street , Racme 740·
247-4292
Two Bedroom Apartment For
Aer&lt; tn R&lt;&gt; Grande No Pels. 740379-2540 Or 740-379-9887
Upstaus 2 Room s &amp; Bath Fur n•snect Clean No Pets. Retere.rce
&amp; Depos1 t Requtted , 740 4461519

450

Furnished
Rooms

C~rcle Molal Lowe st Rates tn

Town Newly Remodeled HBO,
C1nemax. Showt•me &amp; D•sney
Weekly Rates. Or Monthly Rates
ConstructiOn Workers Welcome
740-441 -5698, 740-441 ·5167
Sleep tng rooms w1th cook mg
Also tra11er spa ce on r1ver All
hook-ups Call after 2 00 p m ,
304 773·5651 Mason wv

Grubb's P1ano- tunrng &amp; repa~rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
p.ano Or 740-446-4525

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Reburlt In Sled
Gall Ron Evans, H!OQ-537·9525

Johnson's Used Furniture
Wa sher. Oryen . Hutches Dl nene's, Aefngerators, Stoves. Tel
evlslons, llvingroom /BedroofTl
SUites. 740·446·4039, 740·4•6·

t004
Lilt chair, eKcellent cond•llon. approx one year old $500, 740 742 3149 after 5pm
Mobile home frame , ready to go
ideal for low boy car hauler or btg
bale hauler $500 Call K &amp; K
MoDIIe Homes 304·675·3000
8am-Spm
Mov1ng Sale Cub Cadet Lawn
Tractor 4.4 " CUI. 18 HP Hydrostat•c TransmiSSIOn, Excellent Cond•·
hon $2,375. Console Stereo $50.
Cna~r Anct Footstool $20; Book shelf S10, Rocker S15, 740-446 9627
Prlmeatar~

MERCHANDISE
~~--~

Household
Goods

2 Apartments In R10 Grande
Area . Across From Coll ege, 1
Room, 1 Bath, Utllnle&amp; Included,
$200/Mo Deposll Roqu~red. 1
Bedroom Apartment, $310/Mo ,
Utilrt.,s lnciiMled, 5t3-574-2539

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers , dryers. refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances, 76
r=~~all 74o-4.8:7398,

Small, twa bedroom, full basement,
near Aacme, $300/mo plus uhlr
ues. 740·949 2587 evenings No

&amp; Used Fuml1ure
Polty'a We now hawlvmr SUfJllus'll
2101 Je1!erson Ave

Open 9:30 • 5·oo Mon-SaL
31)1.875-SOFA (7832)
Rofrlgoralor $75; D&lt;ytr $75, EJec.
1r1c Range 175. washer S95 .
Washer 1205 1 Year Warranty,
Skaggs Appllanc98, 78 VIne

Stt!lfUlalifllolis. 74Q..4.46.7398

$99 w1lh rebate Free

HBO with f1rst month tree . OUer
ending 0001111 8()().263·2640
Queen S1ze Waterbed Complete
Works Good. 740-379-2720 Af·
TEA 6 P.M.

R &amp; S Fumlturw
Mlton,WV
Buy Sell. Trade
Used &amp; Anbques
Fumt11.&lt;e
304-773-5341

460 Space lor Rent
Mob•le home Me available belween Atl'lens and Pomeroy, call
74()-385-4367

SunOuest Pro 145 Wolf Ianning
bed, great cond11\on, extra sel
new DUIDS, as~ing S1. 700, 740·
742·t348
Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21.95 Por 100. t' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per tOO , All Brass Compression Alllngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Dhk&gt;, 1·800-537-9528
Wedding gown wllram &amp; veil ,
size tO, satm w/pearls $400 negollable 740·446·3283 t Oam·
'llpm 304-674-4648 ah01 8pm

seahaw~ Paddle Boat. 5 Person.

Green 1Wh1te. $250, Brass
Daybed, No Mattres&amp; $170, Swt·
vel Rocker Pat1o Chatr Wh1te
St&amp;OI W!Pad (lnclud41S Foo t Stool
S75) 740·446·2629, loove Mos·

saot
Smtih Corona PWP 4200 WOf'd ·
Processor With Monitor II Has A
Hard Drive And A Otsc Orrve It
Com.es With Speii-R •ght, Corona
Cole Ill For Spreadsheets, lotus
And word Perlect It Has Been
.Used less Than 10 T1mes
Bought New $350. Sell For $250.
OBO. AlSO For Sale Smtln COlO·
noa Eleectrlc Typewriter $140,
Call 740·24~·9635 II No Answor
Pi9ase le...., A Message

we

Two Reg Quarter Horse Bay
Mares, 2 Years, S1,000 Each
Firm. 74()-245-«!70

640

Hay &amp; Grain

HAJSALf•

Square bales, second and third
culttng, orchard grass. alfalfa.
white clover, $2 00, Paul R Karr.
Chester, Ohk&gt;, 7&gt;41).985-3538

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Building
Supplies

Block , brick, sewer ptpes, windows. lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121
New House 01 Barn Trussels
42x60 Ft W1th 10 · 12 Roof Pitch,
2x10 ConstructiOn Coast $8,600
Sell 54.800. 740·894·9400. 740·
686-5405

STEEL BUILDINGS • BRAND
NEW • ENGINEERED • CERTI·
FlED DRAWINGS 40x60xt2 ·
$15,400 Value Now $8,800,
50k100xt6 534,000 Value Now
$11,752, 80x200xt6· $82,400
Value Now $39,761 Call Toll
Free 1·888·588-9349
Steel Bu1ldrngs New, Must Sell
30x40x12 Was $10,200 Now
$6,990, 40x60xt 4 Was 518.400
Now $9,990, 50xtOOxt6 Was
$27,590 Now $tP.990; 601&lt;200xt8
Was $58,760 Now $39,990 t·
80().40&amp;5126

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad .
AKC Registered Labs, 1st Shots,
3 Months Old 740-446-1575

AKC Registered Rotlweller Pup·
p1es, Had 1st Shots, Parents Well
Temporea , 740·446·8603, 740·
446-4822
AKC S•berlan Husky Pups Male,
Females, 1st Shots wormed.
Ready 3130198. $200, 740-379·
2383Cathy
Border Collie Pup For Sate.
Wor'r&lt;ing Dog, 74G-28&amp;-2496.
Cockat•el B~rds For Sale. 740·
38Hl714

NOTICE
French City Pat Grooming
NowOpenl
Profess1onal Groomtng by Ap·
pointments 650 Second Ave .
GallipOliS, OH 304·675-4858

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
4 track 4-wheeler harry drag,
sprayer . NH corn chopper, NH
round baler. Massey tractor, AlliS
Ch tractor. manure spreader:
Claas drum mower, 4 plow &amp; 2
plow, 2 hay wagons , 2 s•leage
wagons , hay tedder . NH square
baler, hay elevator , bush hogs,
large and small, blade ktng cutter,
~~ ago lllower; 74Q-742·2t23

SPURLOCK UME
IFEATli.IZER
Complato Blending &amp; Spreading.
located: Near Gallla County Uno,
1 112 Milo South 01 State Route
279, On Jlmos Emory Rood. Oak
HIM, 740-662-9040

TRAN SPORTATION

710 Auto&amp; for Sale
new top, freshly
good con0111on,
740-742-:!658

1 318, very
$3500,

as~lng

'95 Bu1ck Century, \1· 6, loaded,
461&lt;. $9400. 74Q.84J.5216.

1962 Chevroltt Super Sport, 300
Cu Inch. 300 HP 4 S!&gt;e!ld. Excel·
lent Condlllon. $8.500."740·388·
0406
1972 Chevy Monte Garlo, $1,800,
740-367~

1982 Cullasa Supreme, 2 D. 260
V8 Good Condlllon, $2 ,t00 Or
BeSI Offer. 74()-992-4568
1985 Nlssan Maxima pw, pdf till,
cruise, air, power sunroof, power
seats. 5t.495. 304-B95'3tt7
1988 Chevatte $500, 7•0·367013?
t 988 Ford Tempo euto. air, good
condition, tow m1)es, runs &amp; looks
good, 51295 neg. 74().992-6824
1988 Dodge 3t8 Engine Auto.
Air, Tilt, Cruiae, ROO, lift Kif OUt·
law II Wheels Sharp $7,500 Firm,
74()-367.()433

t !188 Fonl Eacort GT
Red In Color, T1res Now. Loaded,
Power Sun Rool64,000 Miles
$1 ,000
(304)'15&amp;-t899

949-204S
t989 Chevrolet Celebrity, Y-6 automatic, new ~res. Gall Ron Hams
·at 740·992·2161 for ful1her lnformallon
t989 Fora Van $t.400 Coli Jenny
AI. 740-44&amp;-9t07, Evenings
1989 Gao Metro 4 Ooors, Good
Work Car. $t,200, 740-446-0744.
1981 Chevy Lumina, 3. 1 Euro
model, V·6, 80,000 miles, Dlue
wllh l&gt;tue Interior. 211oor. all op·
lions. SS.OOO OBO. 74Q.~9-2311
da)'s, 74G-949-2&amp;14 everongs

1992 Plymouth Lazer Turbo
Charged . All Wheel Drive, 5
Speed, AMIFM Cassella. t Own·
er, Excellent Condltton, $8,000,
74G-388-&lt;l406

MARCH SPECIALS
Ford Now Holland 30tOS 42np
diesel tractor. Sx2 transm1ss•on
mdependent PTO. 1 double spool
valve 2 wheel dr1ve. $12 ,500
4wd $t7.ooo a 75% rnanctng.
Ptqua round bale Ieede r wagons ,
36 feed opemngs, load !rom rear
$2 ,300 PIQua round bale hauling
wagons , haul&amp; 8 round bales
$1 ,900 Keele~• Service Center
St. Rl 87 Pl. P1t111nt I Rlplty

Ad. :JCM.IH.31R
MaSSI&amp; FerguiOn 230 Diesel 7.0
Hours. Wtlh 5 Fl Bush Hog.
$8,000, 74G-&amp;12~3530

620 Wanted to Buy
Wanted . Ford And Massey Ferguson Tractors, Older Models
BN. 9N Jul&gt;tl90, 600 ·800 senes.
Th is Type Tractors &amp; lmple·
mBnb.

630

t-937-866-2622.

Livestock

2 Fav Pigs $50ea. 304-456·1806.
4·H Feodor Prgs, 30 ·40 Pounds.
6yr old Cheatnut Mare. $800.
304-875-2359.

FOR SALE · REGISTERED SIIIIIENTALS tO Month Old Rod
And Whll•bull ·Siro CAlJFITIME
t 0 Mon1h Old Red Holler ·Sire
MACKFRID 741).2•5·5030 Beforo
9.PM

1998 Ford F·t50 4x4 302 lull rnjected. auto, air, new lransml&amp;·
slon $2,900 304· 895· 3237 or
304-895-3080

.THr PORCH t t
..I'M FIXIN' TO

t993 Ford Ranger Supsr Cab. 4
WD. AC, $8.900. 740.985-0075
1993 GMC Safari Van fully load·
ed. ONLY 69 .000 miles. oxc
shape $8,700 304-675-7Q39.

t993 Oldsmobile ' 98 Regency
Elite fully loaded, new tires .
77 000 miles $10,900 Con&amp;jder
118(de 3Q4.87S.t570
1994 Fore! Escort, tow mtles,
$4000. 74G-992·2116
t 994 Plymouth Colt, RuOs Great
67,000 Miles, $5,900, H0·2459088. leiMI Message

1995 Uncoln Town Car, SignatLKe
SBIIBS Loaded. 32.000 MileS. Slill
Under Warranty, Asktng $20,000,
74()-388·6047.
1996 Chrysler LHS loaded, low
M•les, Excellent Condition, Call

74Q..4.46.9833Ailer 8PM.
1997 Naon 2 Doors Auto. Air
19,000 Mileage, $7,900, 740.3792726.

'

Cred1t Problems? We Can Holp
Easy Bank F1nancln9 For Used
Veh,ioles, No Turn Oowns, Call
Vic:klo. 74o-44&amp;-2697
Upton Used Cars Rl 62·3 Miles
South of leon, WV Financing
A- . ~t069

720 TruCks for Sale
'91' Chtvy S· tO. • cylinder, 57k
origins! m~es , ..king $3500, call
74()-7~·2658

t 984 Chevy 4 WD, Till, N::, Runs
Good, 305 Engine, Good Wor~
True~ . Aoklng $3,800, 74Q.44&amp;0744.

~tlt: tul&lt;,"""'\:)

Motorcycles

t995 Honda 300EX, Good Shape
$2600 74Q-367..zy.j50
1998 Yahama Warrior 350 "'
whe6ter exc. cond $3,200 304885-3237 or 304-885-3080.

1 R•llgioul
2

~~loot

S~olltl.

3 Blood Huld

countryside

8 Fed. agcy.

6 Comia ctoae
7 Of die

4 Safety-

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19 Globe

22 Make• a
touchdown
24 Type of copy

2S Waeewantof

rival

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c. os-e..

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!

34 Talks Idly

-,.,....
u

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....

35 Perfonns

ltllfln
38 llrtil bread
38 Metal
•
decoration

39 Fleh

covering•

40-- Lucy

42 Pllying
marllle
44 &amp;I IWI)',
49 Native metal

50 1141metlln, for
lhoot
52 ChiCken-

53 Alley-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptogram• .,. CJNe.d from quot8tions by lamo~.~S peop. past end pr&amp;Mr'll
Each lenti In IN cipl»r slllndl fOf III'IOihef Todlly"s cW T ~ V

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UYIIZMGI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION· 'H I start lo become a 'star.' I'll lose contact w1th the
nonnal guys I play beSt." - Gene Hackman

'::~~;~' S@~4tl~-l£t.~s·
1411o4 toy CLAY I . POLLAN
Roorrongo tenors of
0 four
scrambled words

=jiiiil

'

•

/"S

There's no
.way around it,
Classified Ads

1he

be.

I

TWASYE

I

1-1--.-v_A,..K-r-E...,NMI ~

.III

1~

.;.

Famous quote "A Jury ts
made up of people who wtll
dectde who has the best----··'"

I

LUJTYS
f.-.Y.~;;_:,.1.....;;..,1.;_;1'::'5=-,lr;:&amp;--i

I

.

.

•

•

Q

Compiele rhe chuckle quOied
by frlhng m the mrs.s.no words
you develop from step No 3 below

8 PR~~~~s~\~smms IN
i) u~~·~~N~~E LETlEIS

I' I' I' r ,. r I
IIIIIIJ

SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS
Gusher- Lover· Savor- P1rate • SLEEVES

You can tell a person's character by what they tum
up when offered a job, thetr nose or thetr SLEEYES

IFRIDAY

MARCH20I

BUDGET PRICE TAANSIItS·
SIONS, Used /Rebutll, All Types,
Access Over 10,000 Transmls ~
"""'· &amp; ClutChes 740-24S.56n
New gas tanks, 1 ton lrUCk
wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV 304·372·3933 or t ·.
8()().273-9329.

Campers &amp;
• Motor Homes

.

SERVICE S

~~¥~~~~~~~~~~R~e~g~ard~le~
ss~off~ear~iy~indicators,
~
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Home
Improvements

810

BASEMEHT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond•honal lifetime guarantee.
local references furnlahed . Ea·
tabllsned 1975 Gall (740)446·
0870 Or 1·800.287.0578. Rogort&lt;· ·.
Waterproofing

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
penance All Work Guaranteed,
French C•ty Maytag, 740-448·
1795
C&amp;C General Home Maintenance- Painting. vinylstd1ng,
carpentry, doors, Windows, baths,

home ropa• anc1 mora For

-

free ast1mate call Chat, 74G-992-

8323.

840 • Elec1rlcal and
RefrigeratiOn
llesldenllal 0&lt; cammerclal wifing.
new ..._ or ropalra. Muter U.
cen~ed

electrician

Rldtnour

Electrital. ~V000306, 304-675- ·

t786

'

lAIII

low to form four simple words

~

350 Olds engine, runs good:
$t50,740-742·2539

1996 Dutchman 18ft. exc. cond:
loaded, no down payment, assumo loan 304-875-5522

WOlD

1

•

1991 Camper 15 112ft In goocr
c:orxl 304-875-6289
:

Photographer
Dlane-

30 Flea In panic,

1

2·305 Truck Englnos 304·576·
2635

790

Mineral uHd

11 Fanatic

Soutb

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

Cricket

posltlona
31 Swiss river
32 Soak(Hu)
33 Any.'a deg.

10

By Phillip Alder
Last Fnday, I gave a deal in which
n declarer clatmed he had played wtlh
the odds by following the old rubnc
"eight ever. nine never." When you
are missmg just the queen m a sutt,
with a combined etght cards you
finesse on the second round, where·
a.~ wtth a combined nine card.~ you
play off the ace and kmg. expectmg
the queen to drop.
That 1s a reasonably reliable maxim to follow when you have eight
cards. But when you have nine, for
several reasons it may be right to
finesse on the second round .. or even
on the first round.
Against three no-trump. West
leads the spade seven: four. 10,
queen (or king). How should South
contmue?
From the Rule of Eleven. it is
known that West has a spade sml that
is ready to run if East can gain the
lead and push a spade through
South's remaming honor. Subtracting
"{(~ ...
seven (the card led) from II tells
001' t\
South there are four spades higher
\l'oT(D
than the seven m the other three
hands. Here. declarer has seen them
T'EUI&amp;..E.!
all: the eight in the dummy, East's 10.
and his queen and king
Declarer has five tricks outside
clubs: one spade (trick one), three
hearts and one dtamond. So, four club
tncks are enough. The right hne ts to
play a club to dummy's ace and a
club to the jack If the finesse loses,
the contrnct is safe because West can·
not run h1s spades. Here. the finesse
~
...... /
....... wins and declarer ha.• I0 tncks
pur tn
'
r ··~ don• Note. though, that tf declarer plays
:ur,ger &gt;
-~
ew
off the ace and king of clubs. East
.._
"" t n tonal
wins the third club trick wtth his
a"' ~'t~ 1on5
i&gt;u+os
queen and 'retums a spade. ktlhng the
etter than
contract. · ·
kurl1t'\g u1
Always consider the deal as a
of
front
the nurse&gt;'
whole -· and don 't forget the Rule of
Eleven.
~
.J.•
• _1.. ...s::

Kawasak• STS Jet ski, stdl under
warranty, tnree seater. 83 horsepower, bought new July of '97,
three matching Kawuak1 ski
vests and tra11er all go wtth tt.
$5000, 740·~9-2203 or 1•0.~9- .
20ot5, w•ll cons•der trade for a •
good pontoon Ileal.

Bad Crsd1t. No Credit. Bankrupt·
We Can Helpl Bank Fmanclng On U&gt;eO Venocles, 740-441-

t980 -1990 cars For StiiOm
Sailed And Sold
locally 1l1ls Month
1iucks. 4x4'&amp;. EIC.
H!00·522·2730, X 390t

N..reW&lt;! DID II
1'\ELP KILL lo\'1'

Wf\0~

~y?

0607

"'iE~ ocm, ~e&gt; r mw 11

'DtD 1 f\W. Tf\t'('Vt. (.()IIi. UP "'
WIn\ ~ P~TOI TO taP PE00L

1992 Excel Bow R•der 18ft SX
Volvo in/outboard motor. tur·
quolse/while, am·fm cassette ,
Bow-Well cover convtrtlbte top,
side curtains, Mooring cover, Eagle galvanized trailer &amp; wheels.
very low hours. garage lcep~ vary
good condll&lt;&gt;n $7,000. 304·2736259 8am·4 30pm. 614·949·24t4
after5pm

29

DOWN

Seven days later

lngs

1989 Bass Tracker 1811 Uberglass fish/ski boat w/150hp
Johnson trolling motor, exc.
c:orxl. $5,800 304-675-t 116.

sounds

25 MaH ccmtai27 Coach Bear -

a1 cattle

1993 Ford Aerostar van, blue
with blue 1ntertor, 70,000 miles,
Um•ted edtt •o,., new tires, \18ry
cteanl $7.000 OBO. 740·~9 ·
23tt days, 740·9•9·2844 oven·

367~131

ascetic
57 Reveal

Opening lead. a 7

:EVER'BODY OUT ON

199 Plymouth Voyager All
Wheel Or~ve 94,000 Miles Only
1,000 Mile&amp; On New Transmls·
slon From Dodge Dealer AI Coli
Of $t,700 ~.500 Gall Alter 8 ~M
/Before tO?J PM 7ol0-245-9467.

Honde Z SO Special lots ol
chromo $650 740·4-46-8237 AI·
,., 7pm. can 740-367-oott .

vehicle)

56 Ancient Jewl1h

28 Princeton'•

1987 S·10 &amp;Iazor 4 WD AC, PS,
PB, Till CRZ looks !Runs Groali
$4,295
·t451

740

51 G,..k god
54 Turned
55 Drove (a

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

1986 FuH Slzo Bronco • Now
Tires, New Banery. Engine 10,000
Miles. Excllflent Condllk&gt;n, $8.200
74o-44&amp;-34B5

1996 Chevy 4wd 112 ton. cruise,
lilt . am-fm cassette Asl&lt;ing
$t6,500080 304-875-5332

hearing
48 Actor Peter -

• 8 3

WRAP A
PACKAGE

t994 Joop 2 Doors, Auto , Air,
39,000 Mtloago. S tt,500. 740·
379-2726.

nlckna1111
47 Ortllfn for

6KJ8S4

BARNEY

1985 Jeep Cherokee Now Tlreo, :
Gooa wor~ Car. Neoas Starter . .
$600, 74()-256-1663

12 Ft Aluminum Boat, Wnh 5 112
HP Motor, &amp; Trailer. $550 7,.0:

Beat The Spdng Rust"! , get your
mowers &amp; tummers tuned up
now Sider's Equipment Hendersoo, wv 304-675-7421

Koherlng Skidloader 45 HP Commercial N1ce Machine Ash•ng
$7.500. 740-446--8Q4.1

1984 Chevy 4x4 305 Auto, Rt~
buill Transmission, New Paint,
7ol0-245-906t

t989 Buick laSabro. loadoa, lots
of new parts, good cond111on,
St900, call 7ol0· ~9-2203"' 74Q.

7 HP Troy 8111 T1ller, Good Condl·
ton. $650. 74Q-446-t542

John Deere 7ft hay blne, New
Holland onnder mixer, AC two
row no 1111 corn planter, 10ft
transport d1sc, all 10 good cond•non 304-27:1-4215

South
•KQ2
•AK4

t980 CJ 5 Jeep 4sp0, runs good.
St 000 304·675-B2t•

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

t99t Nissen PU Coli 700·387·
7~43 Or L.aave Message

JO 494A Corn Planter. Vanety Of
Plates. Rei)dV To Plant. Good
Shape, 740-446-1010

• 10 6 5
• J 10 8 3
+ K J 10
.. Q 9 7

• Q9 6 2

48 Martllfntl'l

24 Makes pigeon

•AJ973
• 9 6 5
.. 10

·

14 Sorer
15 Actreu Blake
16 Sacred
Egyptian boatle
17 Many oza.
18 Spoil
20 Actor Guleger
2t Silent ftowera?
23 Sign of a hit

(abbr.)

A 6 3 2

East

197t Toyota l nd Crulsor 6 Cy·
. ~ .000. 740· .
Iinder. Body G
3'79-2730
~ '

1988 Pon11ac Bonneville 4dr, V·
8, auto, a1r, good clean car, high
mileage. $2,500. 304·882-3652

1991 Ford Prooe, PS, PB, PW, V·
6, 1989 Ford Bronco, 4 WD, low
Mtieage, 7~245-9239

Cadet t860 18 HP Hydro 50
Inch Mower Deck John Deere
11 1 John Deere S -82 Troy Burtt
Ttller 6 HP, All Nice /Clean. 740446-9227

t998 Mazda 4x• Exltnded Cab. 5
Speed, Air, Excellent CondiUon,
66,000 Milos, Ratall St5,400,
Asking St3.500. 740.379-2!168

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

500E lnternat•onal Dozer, 6 Way
Blade Wen ch Canopy, 1972 In·
ternat1ona1 4 WD Truck . 3 Ton
740.256-6574

~ub

•

West

Ph 74Q..4.46.tt04,l4Q.44t.Q450
SPRIHQ BREAK

03·21H18

• 8 4
• Q 7 2
t A7 S 4

Mixed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison, 1210 Second Ave nue , Gallipolis, Oh10, 740-446·
4336

550

North

t993 Ford Ranger Bey!, Sspd,
31 ,550 miles, atr, topper, excel·
:.:::..:.;::.:..:...._~----llent condition. one owner
$5,995 304-675-5827
Goats And Chickens For Sale,
1996 Ford Ranger XLT AM/fM
740-258·1098
Cassetta, Aulomatlc, A1r. PS, PB,
Hampshire Fair Pigs, 40 -60 Pds .. Bedllner Cover, 35,000 Miles,
$9,300, 814·44&amp;-2847.
740-379-2805

While Washer StOO 2 Whllo
Dryers $75 Each, Guaranteed To
Workl740·448-9066

74G-~t02

WARM UP: Htgh Efftelency Nalu·
ra t And lP Gas Furnaces, life·
-,e Warranty On Heat Exchang~
, ' II You Don't Gall Us
Bolh
Lose!" Free Estlmatesl Add-On
Heal Pumps Only Slighty Higher
Call Us Today. 11198 Is Our 281h
Ytar In Tile HoaUng &amp; Cooling
Business! 140·446·6306, t ·BilO·
291-!)098

Fair Pigs For Sale, $~0 Eech,
740-742.2457

Now Thru March 21st, Square
Boles, Was $2 .00, Now St.25
And $1 50 EaCh t Milt North On
Routs 2, 304-875-3860

7~t95.

One bedroom apartment In M•d·
d~pOrl, 740.992·2118

1 Bedroom Near Holzer, Range,

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jael&lt;son, Ohio, 1·80CJ.537·952~

74tJ.446-ll23t
Baby bed, swing, car seat, stroll·
er, 2 in 1 high chair 304·67~ ·

Now Ta~lng Apphcalions - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo , 740·446·
0006

Pomeroy- 109 Peacock Ave nue.
one bedroom. $212 pl u~ deposll,
cati741).698-E002

Two bedroom house, clean, refngerator na sto\1&amp;, no inside
pets depos1t required, 740-9923090

Buy or sell R1venna Antiques ,
1124 E Mam Street, on Jtt 124,
Pomeroy. Hours M T w 10 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday too 10
6 00 p m 740 ·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner

Curreny &amp; Retlfed Beanie Bab~s
740-446-0-423 Even•ngs Or Saturday &amp; Sunday

Appliances
Recondllloned
Washers. Dryers Ranges, Relrrgrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag, 740-446·
7795

Three bedroom house m Middle·
port , 5300 montn plus aopoSII
and utillllos, 740-992·3t~

Antiques

NICe One BR Unfurnished Apartment Range &amp; Aefng Prov1ded
Wa1er &amp; Garbage Paid Oepostt
Requ~red . 740-446·(345 After 6
PM

510

pets

530

4548

N1ca two bedroom house located
•n Pomeroy, AJC , equ1pped kitchen, n1ce yard , call 740-992·7833
alter 6 OOpm, depos11 and 1aler·
ance requred

~nside

Wilson's Anny Surplus
Best prtces anfwhere- fulll1ne of
Advantoge Ca mo In lime for
turkey season Great selectiOn of
new and used boots. lots of new
and used camo, sizes 2 months
to 4)(, backpacking an~ camping
Items. kid's clothes. US made
Smith &amp; Wesson knives and lois
more Come and check us out
We are open 8.30am-8 OOpm
everyday Call us at 740 -992·
7093 or 1·800·346·8176

_IO.....,...,..IPuule

37Vatagn
40 Maket 1ngry
41 Clam genu•

Saturdav. March 21, 1998
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) Conditions ~ rather unusual today in
that the best things that come 10 you.
will occur. withot~t expending \00.
much effort Ride the wave while it
lasts. Tcying to palch up a bi'Qicen :
romance? The Astr&lt;Klraph Matchmaker cim help you undentand what
to do to make the relationship work.
Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph. c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hili Station,. New York. NY
IOIS8.
'
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
I

L

thtnk will help advance your work or
be
hopeful tooay concerning the out· career. Act now. because your initiocome of events. 1lte results at the end tive could wane later
of the day wtll)usttfy youroptimtsm.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 221 A
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) social acquainlance ts eagerto talk to
Something significant you accom- you _abppt somethtng beneficial.
plish today could have fringe bene· What this person tells you; Tie or she
fits you didn't anticipate, because the will share wilh·very few others.
bonus portion might not be apparent
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-0(c.
at first.
2 I) Solutions can be found today to
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Some clear up a mauer that has caused you
unexpecled developments might arise unrest. 1lte answers you'll devise will
today that could put your faith to the make the problem run for cover.
test. Victory wiillx: yours if you do
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 1'9) if
not waver in your beliefs.
you feel a strong impulse '? contact
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22} lmagina· a friend today, follow your mtutllon.
tion and initiative make a dynamic This person might have somethmg
combinatton today. If I were betting very important to discuss with you.
on someone 10 acoomplish their aims,
AQUARIUS (Jan .. 20-Feb. 19)
it would be you . . ·
Carefully attend to the suggestions of
VIRGO (Aug. 2,3-Sept 22) Today, people who know how to make mon·
you'll be able to win support for a ey.Thelipstheygiveyoutodaycould
cause you and your mate are cham· be significant and productive.
pioning. If each puts the rigltt person
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20) As of
in the right -place. your goal can 'be . today, you might gain control over a
realii.ed.
·1
matter in which others have been
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) Do not , caning lbe shots. This is the opem.ng
treai lightlr any of_your ideas that you ' you~ve wanted. Make it work.

..

�··'

By The Bend

- ·-

The Daily Sentinel

.

'-

Page 12::
.
Friday, March 20, 199~

Along the River

Mother shou-ld stay out of couple's plans for having a family ~
in the past the decision would have
to be m~tual.
Landers
Apnl s parents have been pres-'"'·c.,''''"' 10 ~
sunng them to ~ave another chtld.
,,,.""' ... c""'"
Last week. Apnl smother, who was
,,.....,
obviOusly very pleased, told me
.k d A ·1
·
-~===;..------J M1 e an
pn are gomg to start try·
Dear Ann Landers: My son and mg m August to have another baby.
daughter-in-law (I' ll call them
When I expressed surpnse, she
'd · h
· ,_ "A . ·
·
"Mike" and "April") have a 17- sat Wll a wm• . pn 1IS gotng 10
month-old child.
try, .,but Mike doesn't know about 11
Mike is adamant about not hav- yet.
.
ing any more children. April would
It occurred 10 me that Aprtl may
like to have another one but has said stop takmg ~er btrth control ptlls
without Mtkc s knowled ge.
lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjj;;;::;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii-------- - - - - - - - -1

A
,. nn

.

Beat of the Bend ..
by Bob Hoeflicn

Gcez' ' I' m impressed.
The Middleport High School
Alumni Assoc iation has sent out its
lcner of invitati ons to the annual
assoc iation banquet and dance and
all of the literature is in black print
on vivid orange paper. These were
the school colors of the former Middleport High School and the mail ings arc quite effecti ve. Sure got my
ancntion. I haven 't seen that done
before by the Middleport organizati on.

While we're at it, do let me men tion that the annual reun1on will be
held on S51turday, May 23, in the old
high school auditorium with dinner
from 6:30 to 8 p.m.. entertainment
from 8 to 8:45p.m. ; visiting and pictures from 8:45 to 9:30 and a
dance-music of piano and drumsfrom 9:30 to II :30.
The closin'g is before midnight
and that 's good for those of us who
turn into pumpkins at the stroke of
12.
Beny Kern of the Shade area
thanks all of you for the birthday
cards and gifts. Betty was born on
Feb. 29 and so has an official birthday only once every four years.
However, some of you remembered
Belly despite her "unbirthday" this
year and she really appreciates it.
The Bertha M. Sayre Missionary
Society of the Racine Baptist
Church has done a good deed .
The soc iety sent $25 to the
Women 's Auxiliary at Vetera ns
Memorial Hospital to place bunny
rcpl1cas on one of the auxiliary 'S
three Easter season trees. The soci·
cty pl aced rabbits on the tree in
memory of deceased members.
Perhaps. your. group would like
to do something similar to that in
order to support the spring fund
dnvc of the auxiliary. The way it
works is that you donate $5 to the
auxiliary and a rabbit is placed on
one of the trees to honor someone
who is real spec ial with you or in

memory of a loved one .
The white trees- in the lobby,
the cafeteria and the ex tended care
unit-arc reall y hccomtng attractive
as pink and hluc bunnies are added
to the "honey of a bunn y" trees.
So far. the auxi liary has rece ived
money 10 place 70 rabbit s on the
trees .. If you'd like to help-the goal
is 120-just se nd your money, the
name of your honoree and tree location preference 10 the auxiliary at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. 115 E
Memorial Dri ve. Pomeroy.
I bcl.icvc it will be thi s Saturday
when Ronald Herdman of Pomeroy
·will be appearing on the television
"Cash Explosion" show of the Ohio
Lottery. Bet a lot of you will be
rooung Ron on come Saturday
night.

. I have made it a prac.tice not to did you do to deserve this?" "Is it getting rides . When she climbs up Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cent~
Jnterfere. Wllh the ktds bUSI~ess temporary?" "At least you walked the back of the chair to give me a ry Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
unless I m asked for an optmon. most of your life."
kiss, my-heart just melts.
.
However: thiS ts a maJOr matter, and
My· all-time favorite is "Can you
She will never fear people who Cahf. 90045
I feel obhgated to mform my son.
have sex when you're in a wheel- are different or in ni:ed of assistance.
What would you do tf you were chair?" to which I now answer My t'nfirm 't .
II
.
lio get a current weather'
·
·· A o R
.
'
1 y ts a rea earnmg expe·
'" my poSitt on, nn . -- ancho Cor- " Well , tl 's a lot like trying to do it lienee for her.
dova, Calif.
while standing in a hammock •. a bit
I have come to the conclusion
report, check the
Dear Rancho: I would stay out difficult because it requires perfect that h m · th
•
- h
. bed
.
u or IS e grea1es 1 weapon
0 1 I e coup 1c s
room and medt- balance." They usually look against ig
cine chest.
It's .enough
that April's
stunned • and then ' they laugh .
Each encoun
noranc,~.er wt'th a c1od IS. a
.
.
.
parents are pressunng her. Don t add
When I learned I had multiple chance to educate someone and
10 the mtx .
sclerosis, the thing I dreaded most make a new friend .
. Dear Ann Landers: You 've was the reality that I might have to
A great deal of my inspiration
LEGAL NOnCE
pnnted many letters about well- use a wheelchair some day. 1 needn' t comes from your column, Ann .
The Public Utilllies Commission of;
meanmg people who can b~ mscnSt- have been concerned.
. Thank you .... Mrs. W.J.K. in Los
Ohio has set for public hearing Case:
ttve and thoughtless. It tsn t always
My power wheels are great for Angeles
No. 97·102-El·EFC, to mview the .
at lunerals , et_ther.
.
·shopping in these new huge malls.
Dear Mn. W.J.K.: You certainly
fuel procumment practices and poli· ·
Just try bem g Ill a wheelchatr. For and I never complain that my feet are the poster girl for the wheelchair
cies of Columbus Southern Power :
Company, the operation of its Elec; ·
some unknown reason, people who hurt . Wanmg tn long lines is never a bngade. Thank you for a letter that
tric Fuel Component and related
normally are rntelhgent and thought- problem.. People_ are always kind ect'ucated and encouraged a lot of
matters. This hearing is scheduled
~~I blurt out statements ~~e ..these: about letting me m.
people today.
to begin at the Commission offices
What happened to you·
What
Our tiny granddaughter loves
Send questions to Ann Landers,
at 10:00 a.m. on March 24, 1998.

Spring memories
By Bonnie Shiveley
Today, when the sun crosses the
equator, day and night are exactly 12
hours long. That's the end of winter
and the beginning of spring! I love
it 1 I remember a ti~e when my
school teacher must have loved it,
100.

I lived on a farm in Adams County. My brother Kenton and I walked
Robert Franklin Ginther-you all down the road to a one-room schoolknow him as "Giny"- is having house tucked between the Ohio hills
some senous health problems and and the Ohio River. When the gray
certainly could stand some encour- gloomy days of winter ended and
agement about now.
Spring came. our teacher happily
He 's been in and out of Riverside marched all eight grades across the
Hospital in Columbus over a period highway. We climbed the hill and t
of time.
studied our afternoon lesson in
"Gmy" is a Middleport High God , forest of learning.
graduate and foll owing his universiWe identified Lady's Slippers,
ty training returned to the school Dutchman 's breeches, Jack-in-thewhere he was a popular band direc- pulpit and other wildflowers. Shagtor for a number of years. He must gy bark on a tree meant it was hickhave a load of former students still ory and made good switches li ving in our area. "Giny'' and his beeches had smooth gray bark. As
wife , Hazel, friends report , have we roamed the woods, we discovbeen to every Middl eport High ered bubbling springs and sparkling
School Alumni Reunion since graduating and it is hoped that things will
- improve so they' ll be able to pop
down from the Columbus area to
anend this year.
·
Cards and notes will reach
"Giny " at 3389 Reddin g Road .
Upper Arlington, 43221 .
I think today's young people arc
subjected to too much criticism.
After all, the examples being set for
them aren't the greatest in the world
arc they &gt; Do keep smiling.

• F. .tured on page C1

sent Ine1

News Hotline
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992-2156

spnng s. Fun-loving classmates
always found big, sturdy wild grape
vines to swing on. With our spirits
soari ng to the tops of tall trees. we
hopped, skipped and jumped back to
school. Those happy carefree days
will live in my memory forever.
The Bible speaks of flower s:
lilies, crocuses and almond blossoms. All nature praises its creator.
Isaiah 55:12 tells us that the eanh
rejoices at the presence of God, trees
clap their hands, mountains burst
into jubilant song. Ecclesiastes 3: II
(NIV) exalts the master designer.
"He has made everything beautiful
in its time. "
We should praise God.• too. Jesus
said that if people kept quiet, the
stones would cry out in praise. I
agree with the Psalmist in 150:6,
"Let everything that has breath
praise the Lord."
Father, thank you for the vernal
equinox, when Winter turns into
Spring. We praise You for longer,
warmer days when the green earth

blossoms. Thank You for swee t
childhood memories of learning
about Your creation with my teacher ·
and schoolmates. Amen.

colleedble bean

All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the Commission at180
East Broad Street, Columbus. Ohio .
43215·3793
.

Company

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tntintl

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 22, 1998

U.S. Census Bureau reports

Vol. 33, No. 6

8.4 percent; and Washington,
63,612, up 2.2 percent.
According to the census, births
• Gaiiia County, W!llch had a also outdistanced .the number of
count of 30,954 In 1990, saw a deaths per county.
The census also estimated that
6.9 percent lump by last year
the number of people who either
to 33,085.
• Meigs County's population migrated to or out of Gallia Coungrew
4.4 percent, from 22,987 ty in 1990-97 totaled 1,400, and
past several years, Gallia, like the rest of the state, saw senior economist who analyzed the
886 in Meigs.
to
23,994.
births outpace deaths, according to census figures. The information last week, told The ' - - - - - - - - . . : .·_ _ _-.....J
Preparation for the 2000 census by
county reported there were 3,003 births to 2,228 deaths. Associated Press that a greater level
the bureau has begun by making oontact with oounty govMeigs County's population grew 4.4 percent, from of detail in making the estimates can bring a greater like- ernment, said Karen Sprague, administrator for the Gallia
22,987 to 23,994. The county reoorded 1,845 deaths but lihood of error.
County Board of Commissioners.
had 1,995 births.
For rural counties, like southern Ohio, the error could
General information, such as thd number of o(QWnOhio assists the Census Bureau in its estimates by be as much as 5 points, he said.
ships and villages, has been requested from the commisproviding binh, death and other statistical information.
Around the region, the census estimated that popula- sioners, and .maps and road update queries have gone to
Bureau statisticians looked at population changes using tion grew in Athens County, which had 61,276 residents the county engineer'~ office, she explained.
vital statistics, foreign immigration, state-to-state reloca- . as of last sunt'iner, up 2.9 percent over 1990; Jackson,
"They're seeking information from us like when a
tion and other factors.
32,404, up 7.2 percent; Lawrence, 64,485, up 4.3 per- private road becomes public, !lr if roads have been
But Steve Kelley, a state Department of Development cent; Scioto, 80,756, up 0.5 percent; Vinton, 12,034, up vacated," Sprague added.

Gallia, Meigs population

regional population growth
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlma•S.ntlnel Stiff
GALUPOUS - In keeping with a statewide trend,
:population in southern Ohio has grown since the federal
-government conducted the last major census in 1990.
· In figures released last week, the U.S. Census Bureau
:said that Ohio's population had grown 3.1 percent
between the Iast census and J~ly 1997. As of last sum·mer, there 11,186,331 people living in the Buckeye
State, as opposed to 10,847,114 in 1990.
'
Gallia County, which had a count of 30,954 in 1990,
saw·a 6.9 percent jump by last year to 33,085. Over the

C!)nservatlve
_
continues fight against
O.hlo sales-tax lncrtase
COLUMBUS (AP) - If law·
makers want voters to approve a
state salestax increase
for schools,
. : Laat Y"r, the they might as
:Ohio Supreme wcii decide
· Court gave every educagave lawmaker~ lion-related
~ year to over- issue, argues
11aul·the atata a the leader of
achool funding a conservaayatem. tivc policy
Time's up group.
.,
Tutaday "If-the peo• Speolal l'ePf'rt pic are now
on P"ll' AB the ultimate
authority to vote on anything, we
say let them vote on everything,"
David Zanotti, president of the
Ohio Roundtable, said at a news
conference on Friday.
Zanotti's comments came as
his group was filing more docu·
m]lnts wi_th the Ohio Supreme
Court in its legal batt!e to keep the
Droposcd sales-tax increase for
schools and proper(y-tax breaks
~ff the t.,ftly 5 primary ballot.
The increase, from 5 percent to
per-cer1t, would raise more than
billion annually and hel(&gt; meet
· Supreme Court's order to fix the
the state (&gt;ays for education.
a lawsuit liled last month, the
~'Stllo~t-ba,sed group claimed that
I~;::~~~~ misused a 147-year-old
~1
in the Ohio Constitution
get the issue to the voters.
But if the ballot · issue is
J-alllovved to stand, Zanotti vowed to
it to his group's advantage.
: "It's going to be a real free-for" he predicted.
.
The state responded earlier this
·r".--L saying the Legislature did
exceed its authority.
: "Plainly, ultimate power in
Ohio and under the Ohio Constitu·
tion resides with the people," the
state said in a brief filed by Solicitor Jeffrey Sutton.

·a

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NCAA regional .·
finals action
continues

·lbtisan keeps
ancient art alive

,...----------"'1

---Sermonette---

Inside

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlme•Sentlntl.Statr
GAWPOUS- Over the past several weeks, students in the Gallia
County Local elementary and middle
schools have had the opportunity to ·
receive drug~free messages through a
magic .show performed by Garry
13oothe.
Boothehas been travelin~ around
the ·m·state performing a magtcal drug
aw1!1'CqR!IS propm in a 32 county area
free of:Charge. · • l.
·' ·
·
Thc~ogram •.which is sponSored by
the 25,
union men and women of
the Tri- te Building and Construction Trades Council and the Contractors Association, has reached over
51,000 students in the past two years. .
During Boothe's show; magic is
performed to keep the children's atten·
tion while teaching drug-free messages, self-esteem, anti- domestic violence, as well as what role models are
and how children can beat ·the odds .
against them in today.'s society. ·
"DI')IgS have nothing to offer you •
but they ' hurt," explained Boothe.
"Drugs confuse a lot of young people
and they get hurt."
As an example of how a child may
get hurt by drugs - which were identified as alcohol, cigarettes and marijuana 7 Boothe used a cigarette
placed on a trap.
Placing a cigarette on the base of the
tr&amp;(&gt;, he explains that if a child reaches
even for thllt first cigarette the trap
could close and hurt them much like
. the addicting-effects of drugs.·
He enco11raged the children to go
IT'S .MAGIC _ Sheila "Lulu" Stewart, 1econd grader at Southweattm Elamen·
home and talk to their parents about tary, hll her mind read by Magician Garry Boothe.
·
drugs.
:
"If someone decides to use a drug, eigarettey are usually ence; and
•four out of five domestic violence crimes are committed by
what they fall into," explained Boothe. "Everyday 3,000 young
·
people begin to smoke. Of tho&gt;e, 1,000 will die early because someone under the influence.
A trick using rings showed that if children depend on
of the effects of the cigarettes."
To show that it is okay to be called names if a child refuses friends and family they can all work together to live a safe and
"
to start smoking or take other drugs, Boothe used a square say- drug-free lifestyle.
He explained these relationships are like rings that
ing that although a child may be called this they are really well
work together but can be separated. He would put the rings
rounded. The square suddenly- turns into a circle.
Briefly, he also touched oo self esteem saying, "If you feel together in a chain link then separate them.
"If you make the right connection with people you will have
good about yourself- it is called self-esteem."
Another major problem facing children today is absentee good role models," said Boothe.
He added that these children should look up to people as
parents in the home. Over 2 million children are without par·
ents. One reason that this is caused by is drugs and deaths asso- role models.
"When I look out at all of you," said Boothe to the children.
ciated to drug and alcohol abuse.
"I see a group of kids that won't get hurt by using drugs. I pre·
Boothe provided these statistics:
•out-of every violent crime committed three out or four is diet you guys are going to stay off drugs because you know
better."
committed by someone using alcohol or drugs;
Starting after spring break, Boothe will begin to present his
•one out of three drowning victims drowns because they are
performance to the children in the Gallipolis City Schools ele·
under the influence;
•one out or two persons who dies in a fire is under the influ· mentary and middle schools.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal regulators have proposed a $55,000 fine against the.operators of an Ohio uranium plant for alleged safety
$6.5 Million allocntod for
lapses. ·
The Nuclear Regulatory Prketon plant transitron
PIKETON -A $8.11 million
Commission said Friday
its inspections of the grant from the Depa11fnent
Portsmouth Gaseous Dif· or Energy 11 dtllgned to
fusion Plant near Piketon, help 10uthem Ohio prepe111 ·
Ohio, found several violalor the ponlble
tions of safety require·
reatructurlng of
mcnts:
the
Piketon Ura·
The alleged violations
included inadequate staff nlum Enrichment
training, putting contain- Plant.
ers of uranium too close
"The lunda
together and ineffective will allow the .
company-conducted
Southam Ohio
inspections at the plant, Dlveralllcatlon Initiative and
which is about 60 miles
south of Columbus, Ohio. other organization• to com·
The United States plete projects In botll Pika
Enrichment Corp., which and Scioto counties that will
runs the plant under a · algnlllcantly lncreaee Job
lease agreement with the opponunltles In the lour·
government, was review- county area that would be
. ing the NRC staff report
Friday a)ld had not decid- affected by changtl at the
ed whether to pay the fine uranium enrichment plant,"
or lodge an appeal, U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland
spokeswoman Elizabeth said Friday.
Stuclde said.
"Thla significant Invest. In January, USEC paid ment In our part of Ohio will
a $55,000 fine for security mean literally hundreds of
shortcomings at its plant
in Paducah, Ky. It has new, good-paying Jobll lor
until April 20 to decide our femlllee," Strickland
whether to pay the fine in aald. "SODI aaumates at
the Ohio case.
leaat 400 new Job• to reault
In a letter to the com- from Zahn'a Corner Induatrl·
pany, A. Bill Beacb, NRC al Park and at leaat 200
regional administrator,
new1 joba to reault from the
said the violations its
New
Boston lndultrlal Park.
inspectors found 'posed no
And, that'• Ju•t two projectt
immediate safety issue.
However, he wrote, thll money will help lund."
" the magnitude of the
The funds will blllnveatunderlying problems indi - ed In seven economic develcate that USEC was not opment projects In southern
effective in identifying
Ohio, Including a capital
and promptly correcting
these problems" in the Improvement project for the
program,. which is sup· Pike County Airport , the
posed to preve nt unin - development or a regional
tended chain reaction s geographic Information ayainvolving the uranium tem, and a market analyala
processed and stored at of southern Ohio labor.
the plant.
USEC enriches uranium for use as fuel in nuclear power
· plants, selling it to customers in 14 countries.

Campaign activity heats up in southern Ohio's Sixth Congressional District
Primary opponents take aim at Hollister for travel, declining to debate
· GAWPOUS- Campaign activity is picking up in
southern Ohio, where a former congressman, a 'current
ljeutenant governor and three political unknowns all
want the same Republican congressional nomination .
· ·
Former Rep.
On Hollister's travel Frank Cremeans,
R,Gallipolis, has
Clndldate Fl'llnk Cremun• purchased space
urged Gov. George Volnovlch on 86 billboards
to •ensure that the lnterutl or across the 6th
ell Ohlo1n1 era addreued by Congressional
directing hll lieutenant gover· District, spending
· nor .,. the atate'e lieutenant $50,000 but of his
· governor ••. to ltiVI all arua own pocket, The
or Ohio, whether they fall Columbus Dis• · along the camp1ign trail or patch · reported
not." Thursday.

I

.

In past campaigns, Cremeans· has been willing to
spend more than $500,000 of his own money, but the
billboards are the first sign he is willing to .open. his
checkbook for the 1998 campaign.
Cremeans has been running a shoestring campaign
because his fund-raising ability has been hampered by
his party's mainstream closing ranks behind Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister.
Instead of having a paid campaign manager, Cre·
means told the newspaper that he will do that job himself.
In addition to Hollister, Cremeans is opposed in the
primary by Mike Azinger of Marietta, Tom Sharpe of
Belpre and Grant Michael Brown of Chillicothe.
On Saturday, the Azinger campaign issued a statement criticizing Hollister for refusing to participate in a
planned April debate before the Lawrence County Chris·
tian Coalition.

on saturday, the

According to a campaign-issued
Mike Azlnger cam·
the congressional district she is
release, while all other GOP candi·
pslgn Issued a
competing to represent," .Cremeans
dates agreed to the {arum, "Hollisstatement crltlclz·
said.
ter backed out."
lng Hollister for
"However, the . fact that Gov.
Her campaign man ager was
refusing to partie/·
Voinovich is helping her campaign
quoted as saying, "I do not want to
pate In a planned
by sending her, in her official
tie her up in ApriL"
April debate before Mike Azlnger elected capacity, to the Sixth DisAzinger's brother and campaign
the Lswrsnce
trict for well over four-fifths of her
manager, David Azinger, said, "She
County Christian Coalition. official appearances, is an embarevidently has a few things to hide. L - - - - - - - - - -------' rassment to the office he holds."
"Perhaps there are issues she does not want to discuss
Cremeans urged the governor to "ensure that the
with the other candidates."
interests of all Ohioans are addressed by directing his
Meanwhile, candidate C~means,_said he was "dis- lieutenant governor ... the state's lieutenant governor ...
turbed" by a recent report th~tenant governor's to serve all areas of Ohio, whether they fall along the
schedule included, "public appearances within the Sixth campaign trail or not."
Congressional 'District far more than any other area of
The winner of the five-way primary will take on Ref&gt;.
the state."
Ted Strickland, D-Lucasviile, in November.

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