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,.

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop
opening tilt
to Padres

Pick 3:
• • 6-9-9

Pick 4: I
3-5-9-1 " '
Buckeye 5:
1-2-3-15--18

Sports on Page 5

•

•

aI
\161. 41, NO. 244
01- Ohio Ylltly Publllhlng Compeny

. Pertly cloudy tonight,
low In · lower -40a .Thuradey, pertly cloudy,
high Jn upper 60s •

•

~Sections,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll1, 1998

12 Pegea. 35 centa

A Gannett Co. Newapaper

'Voinovich signs bill s.pelling .out proposed tax break
· be funneled to Ohio's 611 school districts in higher per-pupil stale subsidies and more help repairing or replacing school buildings.·
Auocleted Preas Writer •
.
COLUMBUS -An average Ohio homeowner could sa,ve about $200 a
Voinovich said that money already is written into state law. and will be
year on property taxes if voters approve a proposed penny incre41-'lli. in the
provided whether or noi the tax increase passes.
·
Critics ofthe state's response to the court order dismissed lhe propenystate sales tax, Gov. George Voinovich said Tuesday.
' .
. If voters reject the tax increa~e: tough choices for lawmakers strogghng
tax promise a~ a campaign trick. .
· .
·
to comply with tbe Ohi.o Supteme Court's order to fix the way the state pays
"Gov. Voinovich should ~ave signed that document with invisible ink."
said Senate Minority Leader Ben Espy. D-Columbus. "It would have the
for education, he warned.
"The Legislature is gQing to have to figure out how to f~nd thi~ ...
same effect.
· •
•·
Arter
all
of
the
fanfare
today. the net effect is that Ohioans have in a
.Voinpvich told reporters after signing a bill that include.~ a prom•~ to g•ve
law a memo to their legislators that says 'trust us· to enact a property tax
homeowners a 15 percent ~redit on their property tax bill - up to $275 ~
break."
if voters approve the tax increase May 5. .
Legislative leaders originally said voters would have to wait until after
"They're going to have to fund this through additional dollars ... or by
the.electilln
to learn how the approximately $550 million set a.~ide for prop· .taking money away from higher education and other state servicc;s."
· Half of the $1 : I billion raised annually by fncrea~ing the sales tax from . erty-tax relief would be distributed. But growing unea~ with the uncertainty
of the proposal forced the Republican~led Legislature to hurriedly add the
5 percent to 6 percent woul~ go to the property tax relief. ~ rest would
·more detailed language to the otherwise noncontroversial. budget-house-

By PAUL SOUI-JRADA

Dou.th.ett .anno·unces
'app~als 'Court bid

,Teens encouraged to 'kick butts'

By BRIAN J. REED
co companies were marketing directSentl"'l News Steff
ly to teenagers," Crane said. "It's no
' : · Marshall Brown "Bud" Douthett
Teepagers, who many feef are tar- coincidence that the three brands
ha~. announced he is seeking the
geted by tobacco companies. .are most frequently !Jsed by teens are the
judgeship vacancy oh the Founh
urged to·kick the smoking habit on · three most heavily advertised -District Court of. Appeals as a result
Thursday. to celebrate "Kick Butl~ . Camel, Marlboro and Newport."
· of 'the retirement · of. Judge Earl .
Day."
The inerea~ in teenage smoking
:Siephenson of Ponsmouth.
·The .third annual event is coordi- comes at a time when enforcement of
· · ·· The Fourth District Court of
• nat~ by rhe Campaign for Tobacco- sales restrictions i.s at its highest.
Appeals is a' circuit coun and has
Free Kids and is intended to bring Most ·stores clearly post signs noting
jUrisdiction in 14 counties in south·attention 1.6 the struggle 1~ educate that customers must be at lea.~t 18
:~m and southea.~tem Ohio stretching
young people about the dangers of ·years old, and identification is tegu· from Washington &lt;;:ounty in the east
smoking. ·
·
larly checked. ·
·
to Adams County in the west and
Teen smoking 'rates are on the rise
Cigarette machines. which for .
·encompassing all of those countie~ in
-- reversing il decline in adult smok- many years were the ea~iest access to
between along or near the Ohio Riving. Nearly·40 percent of high school ci_garettes for teenagers. have been
er.
·
student~ in the siate smoke Cigarettes, banished from most restaurant~ and
· · Douthett is a graduate of Ohio
according to Dr. Rob Crane of retail outlet~ and are now . found
Wesleyan Univenity where he
"Tobacco to 21," an organization almos! exclllsively iri bars and .tavreceived hla bachelor's dep and
workina for an increa~ in the l~gal ems. where customers mlist be 21 to
~Ohio SllfeiJnivenity Collep.of
• ...t...~ a•·e,
• ·• '
••nnw•
e
ent cr. •
• ·, ·' ~
...
Law where he earned .a doctor of '
NlliiOnal figures shOw that' smokMost taverns In Meigs County
jurisPf'll4ence degree. He has lerved .
ing by teenagers is·now at a 19 per- have eliminate4 cigarette macliines,.
as a judge in the Jack.'IOII County
cent high -- 37 percent nationwide.
choosing to sell the prQd~;~cts ·from
Municipal Court when he was yean; was a trial attorney for the
"Youth should act as tobacco con- behind the bar so that sales can be
appointed by Governor George Bepart~nt of Highways under then- trol .leaders and ~ivisis by spent· more ea.~ily regulated.
~novich in 1993to till an unexpired ~ttomey General Bill Saxbe and ha.~ heading activities designed to fight
State Senator Grace Drake. Rterm there. Since then, he has been 36 years trial court experience.
back against the industry that preys Solon. ~ sponsoredSenate Bill 221,
t~ic;e elected to the Jackson' County
He and his wife. Betty, reside in, on them," a news. relea~ from the which would take the legal tobacco
Municipal Court. Prior to that time, Jackson and have t~ree grown chil- Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids age to 21 and create tougher enforce- ·
he maintai~ 11 solo practice of law dren: Nancy Brandon of Washington, said.
·
·
ment provisions. which would stiffin Jackson after working initially with D.C., who is the mother of two· and
"Joe Camel." a cartoon image en penalties ·for retailers wf1o sell
Attorney M. D. Slavens for about a homemaker; a son, Brady, who is used by cigareue manufacturer ~- J. tobacco to underage smokers.
J'our years.
'
. an attorney in 'Cleveland with Roet- Reynolds • . was one image found
· La~t year. thousands of teens par. While practicing law, he has zel &amp; Andress, and-a son, Trent, who, · allroiCtive by unde~age smokers. and tici'pated In "Kick Butt ~ay." paniclie_rved as t~e Jackson City Law upon graduation from the U.S. Naval allucked by tobacco critics for that ipating in undercover buyin~ operal)n~ctor; chairman of ~he Colum~us Academy.in 1996, is now serving a~ appeal.·
lions. celebrity letter-writing camReg1onal Board of ~e~1ew, Bureau of an ensign on the IJ.S.S. Gettysburg,
Those' critics. however, cite cigil- paigns, holding raflies and other
Workers' Compensation for. se-ven a guided missile cnriser.
rene advertising. in general -for its efl9rts.
attempt to create a new generation of
In Virginia., Jeens tracked down .
cigarette smokers.
magazines which accepted tobacc~
"Recently unearthed tobacco ads. and then sent back subscription
industry 'doc~menl~ verify thattobac· Continued 011 pqe 3

rs likely won't
on their own

COLUMBUS (AP) - If lssu,: 2

said. adding that budget cuJs were

~i~~'t~~~:~~a:':re~~~~~~~~ mor:~~:~y~ouldrai~ethtstatewide

keeping bill.
.
.
.
·.
The Legislature still must decide how to _distribute the property tax cut.
said House Speaker JoAnn Davidson. R-Reynold11burg.
Voinovich stood beside an enlarged property tax bill to illustr.1te how the
tax cut might atl'ect an avemge Ohioan. But Davidson said latenhalthe break
might come as a credit on the state inconie tax. ·
Or it might not come at all.
.
I'
• The Ohio Supreme Court still hasn't ruled on a lawsuit filed by a conservative group challenging the way the sales tax increase got on the ballot.
The Solon-ba~d Ohio Roundtable argued that the Legislature improperly used a 147-year-old section of the state Constitution to overcome its·
inability to get 'the three-tifths majority 10 put a proposed constitutional
amendment on the ballot.
·
Instead. lawmakers needed only a simple majority. in the 99-meml!er
House and 33-member Senate to ask voters to write the sale tax increao;e
into state'law. ·

For voucher program ~

d
State au .i t

'

~ ·~

·•.

EASY ACCESS· For many Y.era, cigarette machines..,. an .
easy IOUrce of cigarettes for teanegera. Now, however, the
machines al'e found almost exclusively In bars. Bon~le Dennis,
owner of Court Street Grill, requires Identification for every cus·
tomer who u... this machlne.

·
·
'$
. _ d .
estions 1.9 million_in spen ing

increa'le on its qwn •. Republican sales tax by a-penny per dollar if votCLEVELAND lAP)- State eduMs, Holt also said that both stu- ered two years ending la~l Jun~ 30. to c;uch a city bus. he said. Since the
1
gubernatorial
cation officials said they are working dent transportation and .the consulAuditors said lhey could not gi~e au d'II was per,.orme d. Cl. eve 1and
· candidate Bob Taft ers approve.
Sllid.
.
The tax inc rea.~ would raise about c1n. and 1' n so·me ··a.·~s· already ha~e
~
h dl d d'
I b th
an opinion on the program's "eneml school bus routes have "been
Taft and Democratic Senate can- $1.1 billion a year and be evenly split ~ ~
tants ees are an c trect Y Y e
"'
d
.
h
didate Mary Boyle were among the between school imnrAvements and lixed. problems cited in an audit of Ohio Department of Educ:uion, not financial picture because of missing rearrange . cuttmg I ~ number of
,.,_
the expen'mental Cleveland school pro"ram administrators.
documents. llut they could make youn 11 sters taking taxis from about
speakers '(uesday at a candidates' property tax relief
a.~~
response
10 the
he
.
·
"'
·
vouc r program
.The voucher program is aimed at . s""'·ilic lindings in several areas.
1.000"' to 330. he said.
forum sponsored by the Ohio Farm . Ohio Supreme Court's ruling that the
•• e' pr6 "r.lm· 1s
. m
. 1
. s .m.ancy
,
.. improvin" education. opportunities
.--·Mnre than $1.4 m1llion
·
was spent
A sysh:m is now. in nlace to keep
1
111
Bureau Federation. Democratic can- current fundin·-e.. system is unconsti- · program D·"'
B
rt
·
H
..
:d
"
'" paid if a
·
1rec1or e
o11 sm
for low-income children who other- to transport children in the pilot pro- cab comp&lt;~nies from being
didates for governor Lee Fisher and tutional.
'
T ~·"- "The h'ld
d~· n, wise might attend troubl.ed public ·gram. mu~h of it on taxi fares. audi- student was absent. Ms. Holt said.
Bruce Dougla~. who planned to take
The c-ourt said it dOes not provide very
u..su.ay. .
c. 1 ren ar~ 1 g
well academically The1r allen
schools. It ha.~ been challen"ed in the tors said. In some cases. taxi compaThe audit also said there was a
nftrt .today in a debate in Columbus,
each child with a ·.. thorou"h
and effi- dance 1s
. . excellent
'
.. ·
· - courts by people who say state-fulld"'
..-•
c
nies billed 1he program even ·rl· a stu- 1ack ol· proper documentation for
sent their running mates to the forum. . cient" education. as pftJtnised in .the
.
. ,
ed payments to religious schools are dent was absent from school.
more than $379.()()() paid to consulBoyle's opponent in the Senate Ohio C011stitution. and relies too · A .state audit relea.o;ed .T~esd~y
tants·.
questioned about $1 9 m1lhon m unconstitutional.
· Assistant Education Su~rintenheavily on local -'"':"'r-:J taxes.
' . for the voucher
'
·
Moore ··~ 1,n··Md"d
L-"' Republican
hed . George
d
ld
spendmg
program.
The program prov1des
up to . dent Robe rt Moore sa1'd state Iaw
·~~ ~ the· s·tale d1'dn't
· n· Voinovich.
1
'""'a sc u mg con tel an cou - ·
" · ·
which allows poor public school stu- $2.250 per child toward tuition liJr, requires the voucher program to pay get the rig hi .paperwork to the audi~:!~~d spokeswoman Caryn CanFisher's running m~. Columbus dents to atterid private schools.
3,()()(1 students from kindergarteners
its own transportation costs. and bus- tors beli1re their deadline. But he ~aid
1
la(~~id after his speech that vot- Cj.ty Council Pre.,sident Michacel Cole- · . Most of the expenses cited by the through fourth graders in independent es were not available from the Cleve- · consultanls brought in to evaluate the
ers cannot expect the Legislature 10 · • man. told the .00 people at th forum . auditors came in' two areas. studeill and church-aniliated schoo!s.
land district.
program were hired thmugh a comThe audit was conducted by the ·
Taxis were the only option · petitive bidding pmct!ss. The records
con. s.1-der another tax •"ncre~se should that. l.ssue 2 would not- solve all ~f transportation. including taxi fare
the sales tax increal,e fail.~
Oh1o s schoo.l problems, but that 115 for students. and fees paid to.consul- firm of Deloiue &amp; Touche for State because the children were too young are available. he ~aid.
"If Issue 2 fails, it's not realistic. pas!lage wa~_ •mpartant.
tants for evaluating the program.
Auditor Jim Petro's ollie.; and covin my judgment. to think that the Legislature is going to come back in.ihe
""It's ourla.~i chance to respoll!lto
near future and vote even higher tax- the orders of the Supreme Coun," he
es ·than the voters just rejected." Taft said.
'
April . is Keep Ohio Beautiful Day is April 24. Earth Day calendars. each customer a free car litter bag. · azines. phone books and catalogs; ·
Month, and alf across the state many posters and brochures will be dis- Wiggins said. Those establislinients steel, bi-metal. and aluminum cans;
individuals and groupil wm be par- tributed to all Meigs.County scl)ools. wanting to participate can caH Meigs No. I plastic beverage and liter bot- ·
Loblolly pine seedlings (donated by CbuJliY Recycling at 992-6360 for ties; No. 2 plastic natural milk, water
Westvaco) will be offered free to all bag(
and omnge juice jugs; No. 2 plastic .
Also. recycle drop-off sites are colored bleach, detergent jug5, etc.;
·
• away." according to Meias County Meigs County elementary school
COLUMBUS (AP)- A pilot pro- tric arid' East Ohio Gas after its meet· Recycling_ and Litter Prevention Pro- students. Also. tlie program ha.~ order conveniently locate~ throughoui the glass containers - clear, brown and
gram started in Toledo that gives cus- ing today.
gram director Kenny Wiggins.
. blanks for anyone needing trees in county al Forked Run State Park green; nat cardboard - corrugated,
tomen a choice- of where they get
Approval of the expansj?" would · The Meigs County Recyclina and qlllUltities.($16 for 1,000 trees ·· min- (Olive Township); ~rlingham. Park . bevemge wrap, cereal, detergent, etc.
l~ir natu1111 gas could be expandeil allow cuAtomers to buy gu from at
Litter Prevention Program is a.qing imum of 1.000).
·At several of the sites there i5 a
Road (Bedford Township); Salt!m
staltwide.
least a dozen .suppliers ancl reduce 4-H, scouts, youth groups, churches,
In addition, all organizations and Center. state Route 124 (Salem contaioer for textiles and clothing
Columbia O..·of Ohio on Tuesday their Jas bill by a' much as IS per- community organizations. and busi- businesses panicipating in the Adopt- 'Township); Rutl~nd Civic Center. which must be clean and dry. All
asked ~ Nblic Utilities Commis- cent, as much .as $8 per month.
nesses to volunteer their-help during A-Highway program. sponsored by Racine Water Department and the items should be lightly rinsed, and all
sion of Ohio to allow it make its
Moving towards competition is April to clean up Meip County.
the Ohio Otputment of -Transpona- ' madside park in Syracuse; in Chester lids and caps must be removed ·and
€ustomer Choice program availabl~ necessary and inevitable, Ohio Con~
"It can be in your neighbortlood. lion. are asked to maj(e a special at Scout Camp Road; at the Recy- discl\fded.
to all of its 1.3 millioq customers . sumen' Counsel Roben Tongren villqe or township, wherever you effort to clean their section during cling and 'L-iller Prevention Office,
"We invite all Meigs Countiansto
statewide.
said.
choole." Wiggi!IS said. "The proanm Keep Ohio Beautiful Month, W'81ins Union Avenue. Pomeroy. and at Man- join in vohmteer rttivities · ~ part of
1'he PUCO will discuss' the pro"We have tcs'do this. It only makes will furnish bqs for picking up lit· said. ·
Keep Ohio Beautiful Mo ••• " Wig- ·
ley's Recycling in MiddlePort.
posal of the state 'a largest riatunal gas sense based on the,Toledo example," . ter, recycle as much as pouible, and
gins
saic!.. "It's our world ... Let's not
April 25 is Motorists' Awarei!Cfl
Sorted items collected ·include:
waste
it."
·
utility alona with pilot- programs Tongren said.
haul bqpd trash to the landfill."
Day and restaurants and. carry-outs neWllpllpers and Suilday in.~ns; magoperated by Cincinnati Gas &amp; ElecEanh Day is April 22 and Arbor with drive-in service lire a.~ked to give

raee.

·Keep Ohio

Mo.re natural gas customers
·eQuid be given choice of supplier.

to

•

B~autiful Month

activities plann~d

:~~~n~o~~-~~i::':r: .

(.

�•

•

Cotnmentary,
'nt~·

Daily Sentinel.

111 Court Strtet, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·215$ • FIX 992-2157

A Gannett
Co.- Newspaper
.
'

ROBERT t. Wli~Gm
Publfahtr
MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

What they are saying··~ elsewhere around Ohio
By The Associated Press
Recent Ohio editorials of statewide and national interest:
. · The Li~U News, Man:h 29
Supporters of the May initi~tive to increase the state sales tall ~ I cent ·
showed their desperation last week. They sped through the General Assembly a bill that details the· property tax credits they have promised if voters
approve the tax hike.
·
.
.
i ' Tax hike supporters have been arguing that the ., cent increase is neces~ ·, Sw)y· to brilfg Ohio's school funding system in line with the Ohio Supreme
l ' Court's dictates. To help ease passage of the tax, they have promised to
divert half of the riew funds back to Ohio property owners in the form of tax
• relief.
.
·
.
:
On the hustings, the pro-tax hike campaign has been plagued by quesl· lions from voters who doubt that lawmakers will make gond on their prorilis-

l
(

!I'

• A coalition is jelling between

Wl-

WA&gt;HtN6ToN
USED TO BE
KNOWN FOR I1S

MOVERS &amp;SHAKERS...

"'

• •

conserv~tives

. Rep. . Don
Young, R-Alaska, .the chief
statehood advocate
· among
Republicans.
says th!l new
income
tax
would brillf! in
about $4 billion
per year in new
revenue. That would help offset the
$13.5 billion a year in tall breaks and
&lt;&gt;ther federal transfers that the island
curr~ntly gets from W115hington
(according to l99S figures, the last
available).
Some in Congress are so eager
for statehood that they've waived
th.e English language requirement
for the 75 percent of Puerto Ricans
who speak only Spanish.
But the picture isn't .as bright as
the proponents prctenG.Aiinost 70
percent of the nearly 4 million people on the island don't earn enough
money to be subject to the federal
income tax. According to Rep. Gerald B..Solomon, R-N.Y., ifs hig~ly
unlikely that 30 percent of the PQpu-

" and the corporate com'munity
lation
(which is now taJt-exempt) can sen·
crate ~billion in revenue each.year.
The English translation of Puerto
Rico is "rich port," which is a bit of
a misnomer, 'Qle standard of living·
in· Puerto Rico is well below that of
Missi$sippi, currently the poorest
U.S. ' state. Puerto Rico's average
yearly income is somewhere
between $8,500 and $9,000, a full
$6,000 less than what Mississippians average, and an astounding 70
percent of the islart~ers live in federal low-income housing developments.
A Solomon staffer cites two studies claiming that it could cost an
extra $4 billion a year on top of the
· $3.5 billion currently spent each
year to bring,Puerto Rico up to U.S.
living standards.
The temptation 10 pic(( lhe. pOCkets of Puerto Rico's taxpayers is
almost understan~ble,_ gi~en the
amount of direct and indirect aid ,the
island already receives. But to pretend that thi~ debate is solely about
lofty ideals of citizenship and representation is folly.
If Congress wan!So'to create a new.
state, we suggest they begin in their

who believe a tall hike won't
fix what's wrong with schools and liberals wllo believe a I cent tax increase
isn't good enough. Com~ine that with cynicism among voters toward another tall increase, and the prospeciS for the initiative's passage this May aren't
good . .

1

Akron Belicon Jotirnal, Mal'Ch l6
.
. I,
When premeditated murder snuffs out the lives of little schoolchildren,
' the obvious reactions from all of us include sh«?Ck, anger and sadness. When
j the apparent murderers are themselves children, the senselessness of it all
rips into our hearts and raises questions we utter with a cry for humanity and
: understanding.
_
~
Why? How could,children do this to children? Is this not madness? Sick-.
,:.-ness?
·
.
,
What is !mown so far about this horror in Jonesboro, Aik., is sketchy and
i leads only to heartbreaK and questions.
·
There had been several similar and recent incidents involving students,
guns and mayhem in Arkansas and neighboring states: Did that violence
trigger a copy-cat idea? What role, if 'IllY• did .violence on television or in
other media play?
The local sheriff wept as he publicly reported the killings. We can all only·
weep as we ponder the senselessness and madness of this new horror of children killing children.
·

I'

"The whole aim of practical
politics·," H.L. Mencken famously
. remaJ;ked, "!s to keep the populace
alarmed -- and hence clamorous to
be led tQ,safety -- by menacing it
,
with an endless series of hobgobThe (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, MaR~~ 26
·
·
. Iins, all of them imaginary."
Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Michael Watson'banged the fatal
The latest hobgoblin? Toothgavel down Monday on P.I.E. Mutual Insurance-Co., Ohio's.liiJl:est medical paste, of all things. The Food and
malpractice insurc;r.
.
··
Drug Administration has ordered
As he ordered the company's liquidation, he said he wasn't silt'e whelher the makers of fluoride pastes to
its demise was a result of "inadequate regulatory authority · or .inadequate warn parents of the dangers their
exercise of that authority. It doesn't really matter at this-point..."
product' poses to children under 6
And from the narrow perspective of the case at hand, perhaps Watson was years of age. "If you accidentally
right To the people represented by 4,250 active claims against P.I.E., and to swallow more than used for brushthe 18,000 doctors whO_have paid irisurance premiums to .~e company and ing," reads.the new label on tubes
now find themselves With scant protection from malpractice SUits, all that 1 • oj . &lt;;otaate, "seek professional
matters 11. that t~e money IS gone.
.
, .
·
, ,
assistance or contact a poison 'cohTo Oh1oans m general, though, the broader quesuon of how P.I.E. s offi- trol center immediately." · '
cers were able to lootthe company so thoroughly and cover up tts msolvenToothpaste . poisonous? Yes,
cy· for so long matters vefY much . . ,
says the FDA. "FI!Joride is a
drug," according to Linda Katz,
the agency's deputy director. for
over-the-counter
drugs, "and has
1.
been associate$ with both acute
.JV
and chronic toxicity."
Thus, ~he new governmentmandatcd ,warning libels on tooth•
paste tubes have, of course,
prompted a rash of calls to fluoride
toothpaste makers, including Colgate-Palmolive and Church &amp;
Dwight (niaker of Arm ·&amp; Hammer

Phase

NATO

Barry's
World

Phase z.

.

toothpaste).
stitute been approved for use two
But cjocs years ago than the misnamfd Center
fluoride
for Science in the Public Interest
toothpaste
sought to have it banned, claiming
really pose a that it produced dangerous ·side
clear and pre- effects.
..
,
sent danger to
When. Frito-Lay began testpublic health? marketing c·orn chips with Olestra
Of course not two summers ago, ,CSPI-- perhaps·
The
New best known· for warning Americans
York Times about 'i he dangers of movie popreports · that corn,and Chinese food-- began an
Perkl!'' .
the
nation's advertising campaign in the three .
poison control test cities (Cedar Rapids, Iowa;
centers reported 4,453 cases ofunin- Grand Junction, Colo.; Eau Claire,
tended "fluoride exposure" last Wis .) direly warning consumers
year. Of those, 99 percent were not to buy the chips.
·minor and not one was life-th~atenCSPI said that nearly 200 coning.
.
sumers called its toll-freo line to
That's ~ow it is with these complain about the chips -- ' prci.of,
imaginary hobgoblins. When· held the advocacy group maintained,
up to scientifjc or statistical scruti- that Olestra was an unhealthful
ny, they a~ far less threatening food product.
than the populace -has been led to
But then, as with all politically
believe by either overzealous gov- motivated health scares, CSPI proernment regulators or politically vided the public with an incommotivated advocacy groups or for- plete, a~d therefore distorted. pictune-seeking trial lawyers.
ture. .
,
Another recent example that
For while the advocacy group
comes to mind is Olestra, the revo- . very well may have Jogged 200
lutionary food product that Procter (solicited) complaints, Frito-Lay
&amp; Gamble spent 25·years and more sold more than 200,000 bags of
than $200 million developing. ·No chips with Olestra in its three .tcst
sooner had the zero-calorie fat sub- . cities. That means that only one of

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Charles R. Allensworth, Sr.. 60, of Mason, W. Va., died Tuesday. March
31, 1998, at his residence.
He was a former policemilit for the :rown of New Haven. v;. Va., and
recently worked a&lt; a part time dispatcher for 911. He wa&lt; a member of the
·F.O.E. Lod~ 2171 of Pomeroy.
Mansfield 154°
Born June 18. 1937. in Columbus. be was a son of the late Carl G.
Allensworth and Lcah·Marie (Simmons) Allensworth. He was also preceded
IND. ·
in death by a daughter. Tamara Lynn "Tammy" Allensworth, and a sister,
Carlena Kay Allensworth VanMeter.
.
Surviving are.his wife, Carolyn S. (Bennett) Allensworth; four sons and
• ;::Jc=-ol-iJm_b_u.,s!_s_so-.1
daughters-in-law. Gharles R., Jr. and Linda J. Allensworth of Columbus,
William WayJlct Allensworth of Ma.&lt;on, Carl ·-Eugene and · MariaCita F.
Allensworth of Marion, Michael Shane Allensworth of New HaveQ: two
daughters and a son-in-law. Debra Sue Allensworth of Letart. W.Va .. Brenda Kay and Michael F. Warner of Columbus: two sisters: Mary Lou Swish60°
er
of Cheshire, Sue Alice Allensworth Woodyard of Jackson; six grand- •
~
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'
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'
children and several nieces and nephews.
·
~
The funeral will be Friday, April 3, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral Home
W.VA.
with Father Walier Heinz officiating. Burial will he in the Kirkland MemoUnits of the Meigs County Emer- RACINE
II :47- a.m .• Sixth Street, Hilton
rial Gardens.
gency Medical Service recorded eight
Wolfc'Sr
.. dead on·arrival.
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
home
Thursday.
6
to
9
p.m
..
with
a.Yigcalls for assistance Tuesday. Units
•
RUTLAND
il service at 8:45 p.m. •
responding included:
I:45 p.m.• Overbrook Nursing
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:57 a.m.. Beech Street and Center. Middleport. Lester Dodson,
"
Hartinger Parkway. Heidi Matson . VMH.
DOrothy_ B~iley, 95, Pomeroy, died on Wednesday. April I. 1998. .
SYRACUSE
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
8:40 p.m.. Pinegrove ' Road.
12:21 p.m .. Stiversville Road.
Portland. Albert Lascar, Pleasant Val- Alnnette Pierce. VMH. Central Disley Hospital. Racine squad a.ssisted: patch squad a&lt;Sisted.
10:30 p.m.. sta.te Route 248. TUPPERS PLAINS
Wiiliam
"Wid"
Fields.
Jr
..
94.
of
Hanford.
W.
Va.,
died
Tuesday.
March
3:27 p.m.• volunteer lire departLows in the upper 30s.
Reedsville. Jiii'Brown. VMH.
By The Associated Press
31.
1998.
at
the
Pleasant
Valley
Nursing
and
Rehabilitation
Center.
ment
and squad to-state Route 681.
Friday... Portly cloudy. Achance of
MIDDLEPORT
Southeastern Ohio
He
was
a
retired
coal
miner
and
member
of
U.M.W.A.
District
17
of
brush
fire on Joe Lantz projl&lt;:ny.
8:08p.m.. South Seventh Avenue.
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a showers late. Highs in the lower 60s.
Charleston.
Reedsville
VFD assisted.
Robert Davis, Holzer Medical CenSaturday... A chance of showers
chance of a shower or sprinkle. Lows
Born
Aug.
29,
1903,
in
Hart
fond,
he
was
a
son
of
the
late
~ames
Willi
a~
ter.
in the lower 40s. West' wind 10 to 15 during the day ...Otherwise partly
Fields,
Sr.
and
Martha
(Gibbs)
Fields.
He
was
also
preceded
m
death
by
h1s
cloudy.
Lows
40
to
45
and
highs
in
·mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
wife •. Maggie E. (Cunningham) 'Fields. wllo,died in 1984; a brother, David
.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 50s.
Sunday... MOstly clear. Lows in the · Fields, Sr., and two ~i~ters, Dorothy Peoples a.nd Bertha Da1ley.
the upper 50s.
..-#':_"''_''!¥'~.
, .. •·. '
·,,.
,,, ... '·•
' . '
Surviving arc tive sons and daughters-in-law. J. Clyde and Dorothy V.
upper 30s and highs in the upper 50s.
Extended foretasL.. . .
Fields
of
Hanford,
Earl
E.
and
Maxine
L.
Fields
of
Hartford,
Eugene
and
•
Thursday night ... Mostly clear.
Betty -L. Fields of Hartfond, Donald R. Fields of Hartfond. R. Wayne Fields
•
of Mio, Mich.; two daughters and a son-m-law. Geraldme Cntes of Arcadia. Fla.. Doris M. and Bill F. Grueser of Racine. 27 grandchildren. 48 greatgrandchildren, 10 great-great-grandchildren, and several nieces and
nephews.
.
\
·
.
IN ORDER TO BRING CUSTOMERS THE
The funeral will be Friday, II a.m., a) the Foglesong Funeral Home w1th
Obltuarl·· ara paid announc•mentt errengtd by local tuntral homee.
the Rev. William "Bud'.' Hatfield of!JJ:iating. Burial will be in the Graham
QUALITY_THEY DESE-RVE
Oblt&amp;lariM are publltlltcl 11 requtlllld to aecommOdlhltholt dMirlng mort
Cemetery.
lnformdon tlllin 11 provided tn the accompanying Deeth N!!CioM. ·
Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m.
WE WILL BE CARRYING A NEW LINE OF 10
•

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Meigs EMS logs 8 calls

Dorothy Bailey

•

(

.n ews-----Charles R.· Allehsworth, Sr. ----Hosoital
uotzer Medleal Center
Birth - Mr. and Mrs: Larry

Charles R. Allensworth. Sr.. 60. of Mason. W.Va., passed away suddenly
at home on Tuesday.
' ·
He was reared in MiddleporJ. Ohio and attended Sacred Heart Catholic
· School in Pomeroy through eighth grade. and went on to graduate from Mid\ · '! dleport High SC!hool in 1956.
.. ,. ,. Chuck was an avid follower of sports teams in the Meigs and Mason
county area throughout his life, with u special place in his heart for Middleport's 1957 state champion baseball tcarri, along with the Cleveland
Browns and the Cincinnati Reds.
, He was a former policeman for the Town of New Haven and recently
worked as a pan time dispatcher for 911. He was a member of the F.O.E.
Lodge 2171 of Pomeroy. Ohio.
.
Born June 18, 1937, in Columbus, Ohio, be was a son uf the late Carl
G: Allensworth and Leah Marie (Simmons) AllenswOrth. He was also preceded in death by a daughter. Tnmnn1 Lynn 'Tammy" Allensworth, who died
in 1.991. ond a sister. Corlena Kay Allensworth VanMeter.
·
Surviving are his wife of 41 years, Carolyn S. (Bennett) Allensworth:
four sons an~ daughters-in-law, Charle! R.•. Jr.. and Linda J. Allensworth
of Columbus, Ohio, William Wayne Allensworth of Mason. Carl Eugene
· and MariaCita F. Allensworth of Marion. Ohio, Michael Shane Allelfswonh
of New Haven; two daughters ond a son-in-law. Debra Sue Allensworth of
Letart. Brenda Kay and Michael F. Warner of Columbus; two sisters. Mary
Lou Swisher of Cheshire, Ohio, SUe Alice Allensworth Woody and of Jackson, Ohio: six grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
The funer~l will be Friday. April 3, I p.m., at the Foglesong Funeml Home
with Father Walter Hdnz officiating. Burial will bF in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
·
.
·
Friends may· call at the funeral home Thursday, 6to 9 p.m .• with a vigil service at 8:45 p.m.
,
.
·
,
'
·

Teens
encouraged
....
Continued from page 1 ·
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By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

Phase 3.

- ..\ /..,__...

/'"

Letters to tlhe editor

Enjoyed open house ·

1

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Ohio V-lley Publishing Comp•ny.IGJnnell C'o .•

.

'

...

Pnmrroy. Ohio 4~7ti9, Ptt 992-2JS6. S«nnd

class poslagt: (Hikl at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Membtr: The AuociJicd Prest. •nd'rhe Ohto
Newspap!!r Alsociatioo.

POSTMAn'ER: Xnd.addnm corrrclit.lnlln
The Daily Senrinel. Ill Coun St., Pomeruy,
Ohio 4S7fl9.

' SUIISCRIPTION RATES
87 Cerrltr or M..or ltCMitt

,

One Wcrk ............, .....................................12.1•1
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01'11: Yet1r ............................................... SI04.tll

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .............................................,...... JS Ce nts

nn a IIUtc, li* or U moiMh bllil. Crcdh will be
1iven carrltr e.ch •c:tk.
No •ubacriplion .by mill ptrmiu.cd in areas
wbc:rc home \:arrin tcrvkc I• av•lbbfc.
Publiihtt rnt"n~tl "the rlatuto •dju11 ratu dur·
ina tllie s\lblc:ription period. Su~ripl,_,. ratc
changes may bt implcmc.tcd by cllanj)nsthe
dwr:uton of the IUblaiption.

• \..:..:..1:__ , ..
·it(O'ft'lll'~
--~~~

"'(;Cin

. ..,.

Quality Since 1959

&amp;0\f&amp;f&gt;.

~

~ewelers

.

212 E. Main- Pomeroy,
Ohio

(740) 992-3785.

~~.... Also, Register ~or Our Easter Basket
r:
·Give-away - No Purchase Necessary -;.t.:fj/_~

No closing cost No alutual fee.
. Peoples Bank will Wli¥e dosing aiS1s on PquiUIIe
1111111 May 31,1998, and lbele iS no annual feel
l!quiUne can provide cash for 111/ purpose a
r.ew car, a wcalion, famlly beakh. And the interest
on your EquiUne may be laX dedudible.
EquiLine Is a muld-purpose line of credit·based
on the equity ln your borne. It 1Wrks like a checking
account .

~Jbe ta:llld is Ml up, spertall!qlrline

checks will be issuahad )WI' liDe of credit Will be
Milable for 111/ parpase. my11me.
You am wrile checlts wbeoe¥er you wish-no ·
need 10 apply bra k!&amp; for run tliscDure, disais&amp;
EqliUDe wllh. Plqllts lllaklilln Gtar.
If~ qualify, Peoples lllllk wll set up aline of
aedlt of up 10 110% of the appraised wlue
of your home less the ovtstandjng mortp&amp;e
. balance.
Jlor~

.

'

80_% of appraised value

$80,000

tess balance of monpge

$40,000

PciCI:atllliiDe of credit $40,000

SM moner 11111 mjoy lbe

..

ill+autajje of yoUr l!cpjline And just TIM
~:a you J~lrf.

'"

-----·14111•-.
-....-....--.. .
··=··Mill--....
_.,.._......
.......
. . . ..-...--·•·o.a.·
......---. _·
_
__...-._.....
_,_
..... _

..ac.a................ .....
....,....

1-MIIpCHOIJ

.

.

-

.,_

I'

'

IO~D 37l·llSS "5-mt 16a-4t74

13 Wecka.......... ~ :.. ......................... ......... I27.JU

1A11t!1
196-1.!69

2{j Wftlli............... ............ ,, .. .,,.,,."'""'".$S3.K2

c_,

!lil Wel!ki.............: .................................SIClt.Sb

1totts
Mttp
13 - b........... ,..................................... S29.l.&lt;
2~ lll&lt;eb....,............................................ J$6.1&gt;1&lt;
Sl Weeb..................... ,.........................$1119.72

$100,000

Appnlsed wlue

......,..,
992~1

...

__..~

......

llddoaC...,

tU-7"6 •• l!tl
517-*'
" ( • ' _ . , ...... . . . . . ~~~~755-I,S 99HIJJ 70-- 7971147 J76.7tU

...._-:;r:;;:c::;.a:-

.. _ _ .... ILlYII- YM

_ _ _ .. _ _ _ _ t.ollo_

•

ftiAtLSUISCRtPI'ION' ·

o.••

TO MAKE ROOM FOR THIS NEW liNE
WE ARE OFFERING 50% OFF
~ OUR CURRENT STOCK OF
KARAT GOLD CHAINS .

LOan.~

Subscnbrra.not duirift1IO pty.IM CMricr mly
rt"mit In 1dVance djrccl 10 'lbe i:&gt;1ily SentiMI

1

-LIFETIME GUAUNTEE

Arthur. daughter, Gallipolis.
IPnhli•bed with oennissioiiin)l!.

.,..,.

Your
Home
Eui

Fricby. Ill Court Sr., Pnrneroy, Ohk1. by the:

AND 14 KARAT GOLD CHAINS WITH A

SAVE 50% ON OTHER SELEOED MERCHANDISE

toF~

Pul!lishrd rvery artr,noon. Nottd•1 lhro111h

:.

'.

Discharges Man:h 31 - Janice
Stanley, Roger Spears, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Funk, Barbara Allen, Anna
Thacker, Eugene Hager, Paul
McDaniel, Wilmer Halfhill, Donald

Wave

cards with a twist: each card carried
a pro-health message. with postage
paid by the magazine. In another
school, teens filled a col'tin with
tobacco merchandise inside.
Crane said yesterday that rrKlre
than I billion packs of cigarettes are
con;urned annually- by children under '
18 .. and that 3.000 teenagers begin
smoking every day.
,
"If we don't seize the opportunity
to redu&lt;.-e teen smoking now," Cr~ne
said. "future generations are going to
wonder what we were smoking."

The Daily Sentinel

•··•· ·'::"
·_

SHi'rfi :~~Q-~(;lnee

Obituary-

·Finger.pointing
wides·pr.ead after ~rkansas tragedy
.
Gennett News Service
-WASHINGTON -The smoke
had barely cleared from the barrage of bullets that wounded II
and killed four students and a
teacher at a · middle school in
Jon~sboro, Ark., when the finger
pointing started.
·
T .vo young boys, ages II and
I 3, were arres_ted and charge_d
with the deadly amb~~ - Local
pol ice officials siid they acted
alone. But' in the court of public
qt': ....
--~
opinion the list of suspects is
.,NEA. ....
•
- much longer.
"Expansion"
"It makes me angry not so
much at individual children that
have done it as much as angry at
a world in which such a thing can
happen, " Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee said of the blood.y carnage. But. . while Huckabee
blanltd the world,· others were
more focused in their application
of blame,
,......_:
"Many, kids can get ·a gun
Dear Editor,
.
.
.
I was glad to be able to atten~ 'the ope.n hol.se held recently at the . quicker than they can get a
book," Children's Defense Fund '
·
Rocksprings Rchabi litation Ce11ter.
president Marian Wright Edelman
I was a patient there for 70 days last spring . . ·
I can say the personnel working there are ttulr'dedicatcd, patient, said during a CN'N interview. Jim
and carina people. They are a .certain ·type of people to do this. .
·Simon, an Arkansas gun ' control
opponent saw it a diffe!ent way.
Vlr1ll Walker "The problem isn't ihe auns," he
•
Racine told USA Today. "It's what kids
arc doin1 with them."
According to.a Time magazine

.

William •wid• Fields, Jr.

Today's weather. forecast

.

poll, 32 perare taught at an early age to hunt eJtposed to.
.
cent of Ameri- · and kill ..:... wild game. A cen-Our ref11sar to deal ctrcctively
cans think partury ago that may have been a with the ca\lses of violence has
ents -· or, hetsurvival skill . Today, it amou11ts made America the world's leader
ter put, the
to .little more than a bloody spon. in gun violence. In 1992, harid·lack of parcni"'-nd while parents teach their guns. were used ·to kill ' ll people
~
- ~
ing
is
kids to ' till animals, the gratu- · in Australia, 33 in Britain and 60
'··~'
responsible for
itous violence they are exposed to in Japan. Thin sal)le year 1~.200
the recent rash
· by the media desensitizes some Americans were killed by hand·
.
"
of ~choolhouse
youngsters to the value uf humari • suns.
.
shootings by
It's time for us all to admit our
life. Those who arg11e otherwise
gun-totiqg
are simply wrong. Behavior is complicity in the national carkids.
learned - and 'far tOo often ihe nase.
Thirty-one
media is the teaclt~r · of impresChildren too young to drive a
percent say themedia's glorifica- sionable children.
. · car shouldn't be allowed to fire
tion of violence is the cause or
The impact of ·mt;dia on a guns: Parents who let· television
shootings that have taken the child's sense of right and wrons baby~ sit their children abdicate
lives of schoolchildren in West should not be .discounted. Most _their moral authority to TV proPaducah, Kentucky; Pearl, Mis- kids spend more time in froiu of a grammers. Television networks
sissippi and last week in Jones- television set than with their · that refuse to label the content of
boro. One in four people say easy teachers or parents. Gangsta' rap, their programming stand on firm
·access to guns made these sense- musio that storifies violence and constitutional grounds, but thin
less murders possible.
debaaes women, is a bigger $eller moral footing. Those who thirik
Who's rlght7
among suburban ·and small-town · the risht to bear arms is absolute
·They all a~e . The truth is that white kid~ - than urban blacks.
plant the seeds of. this nation's
glln·,ontrol opponents are right
While the v-chip may ~ part self destruction, while those who
when they say "guns don't kill, of the answer. parents can, 't rely think gun control is the pani!Cea
people- do." But they wouldn't do on technology alone- to control to our r!ational . bloodlettinJ are
it nearly as often, or efficiently, if · tlie media images to which th~ir just as mis.Juided. · · .
. ·
.they weren't so l'liadily available children are eJtposed: The v:chip
To avoid- another Jonesboro we
in this country, a point gun-con- may keep some objectionable must move away from our ideo·
trol advocates ~orrectJy argue.
tele'vlsion programming away logical passions and" toward the
While many st-tes derly chil- from kids, but it'll take the active kind or dispassionate reasonina
dren ·the right to buy and own - not passive - involvement of that can help us ,fillil common
guns, rew restrict their use of parents 10 determine what radio ground on the matter ot aun viothese lethal weapons. Kids in .programmina, movies and CDs lence.
.
Arkansas and many other 1tates · their children · should not be

I•

~

I ,000 people registered some gastronomic complaint or another.
CSPI considered this a statistically significant _proportion ' of ·
complaints, -one-tenth of one percent ()f those who bought chips
with Olestra.
But if the advocacy group were
really honest with the public, it
would have acknowledged that
theic are numerous foods and
snacks that would generate as
many if not more complaints.
Indeed; some ,people cannot
drink milk because of a lactose '
intolerance. Some can't eat spicy
foods because it gives them indigestion. And some can't eat chacolate because it causes an allergic
reaction. Yet CSPI does not seek to
protect' the public from these
foods.
.
If there is anything positive to
say about.the fluoride and Olestra
scares, it's that they really haven't
registered very much with the publie. Let us take this as an encouraging sign that Anieticans have
grown wee.ry. _of heing constantly
menaced by a seemingly endles~
series of public health hobgoblins.
· Joseph Perkin Is • eolu•nllt
lor The San Diego U•loa·Trl•
huae.
·

.

Hilton N. Wolfe, Sr., 85, of Sixth Street in Racine, died on Tuesday. MIII'Ch
31, 1998 at his residence.
-1
dA ·
HewasbornonJuly 14.1912atRacine,sonorlhe_lateMitonan
o1e
Neigler Wolfe. He was retired as Meigs County Sam tan an and wa' employed
by the county's weights and ~ea~ures office. ·He was also the fo~r o~n­
er of Wolfe's Grocery in Ra~:me and owned M1dway Motor Sales. Dunng
World Wor II he worked at the Point Pleasant TNT Plant. and was a former
employee of Rawlings Motors.
. .
He was a member of the Racine United Mcthodis.t Church and a hfettme
memer of the International Order of Odd Fellows Ludge.
.Surviving are his wife. Ruih"Salser Wolfe ; three sons and two daugh·
tcrs-in-law: Hilton. Jr. and Marilyn Wolfe. Larry and Dolores 'Yolfe and
Duane Wolfe. all of Racine: eight grandchildren : 14 great-gmndchtldren and
several nieces and nephews.
.
Besides his parent\, he was preceded in death by hiS brother, Kenneth
Wolfe.
'Funeral services will be held on Friday. April 3. 1998 at I p.m. at the
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine, with Rev. Brian Harkness officiating ..
Burial will follow in the Carmel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m.

IToledo I 54° I

own blckyard·· Washington, D.C. -where half a million unrepresented
citizens are currently subject to the
whims of politiciani lhey didn't
elect. But that won't happen anytime
soon. That's because ,Washingtonians already pay a federal income
tax. .
'
•
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t
mE GREEK CONNEC110N - ·
New infonnation has emerged ab9ut
a story ~e first reported 1\early IS
years ago.
·
·
.
The author of a new biography of
Lyndon B. Johnson, Robert Dalleck
of Boston University, has solved 011e .
of the last .remaining puzzles in lhe
infamous "Greek Connection" to
Watergate. ·
.
.
We were the first to report, in·
September· 1983,. the fact that .
'Richard Nixon's 1968 presidential
campaign· secretly received more 1•
than half a million dollars in illegal ·
funds from the military junta in
Greece.
. .
.
The information about this was
brought to us by Elias Demetrocopoulos, a respected Grcelr journal-.
ist who had fled h~homcland in ..
1967 afier the generals took over. As
the 1968 elections were drawing
near, Dcnietrocopoulos broughi his
charges' to Lawrence O'Brien, who
was the campaign manager for
Democratic candidate Hubert H.
Humphrey. He also urged_0' Brien 1
to share the information wit)! Johnson.
Bu't 'the explosive charges,
which might have sun\ the Nixon
campaign had they heen p~oven
before election day --never emerged
ljntil years later. Johnson refused to
act on ~he information, or to hand it
over to the CIA for confirmation.
The reason? Johnson wanted to
keep the information to himself as a
hedge against .future investigations
by NiJton. He wanted something to
usc against Nixo11 in case the new
·administration began c9mbing
through back files in search of scandal, "and Nixon's Greek connection
would serve that purpose handSome-ly/' Dalleck writes.
~r .,
Jack Andenon and J .. Moller
are wrlte'n lor ·Un!Ud Feature'
Synclkate, Inc.

A ·scary way to protect public· health
By J011ph Pll'ldne

Hilton· Wolfe, Sr.

Charles R. Allensworth

MICH .

.

federal income

Over the 1997 Clvisanas 1\olidays, Santa Oaus figurines were
stocked in place of traditional statuettes of tile Three Wise Men and
the Vll'gin Mary in Puerto Rican gift
stores, To many on the predominantly Catholic island, this symbolized
encroaching Americanization more
than the legislatldn pending in the
U.S. Senate to make Puerto Rico the
51st state.
The statehood bill just barely
eked out a majority in the House and
is strongly 'backed by President
Clinton. But a 1993 plebiscite -- the
last island-wide vote on the mancr · - indicated most Puerto Ricans don't ·
want a formal union with the United
States.
So why the great push to make
the territory a stat~? As with most·
issues in Washington, it boils down
to money and politics.___ _
Politics, as in the two·1senators
. and several represen'tatives who
would be added to the House and
Senate. And money; as in the extra
tax dollars that would pour into the
Treasury if. the good citizens of
Puerto .Rico were subjected to the

1.
j
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AccuWcather8 forecast for

11)e Dally Sentlnei • ~age i'

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Death lil.otices

;

Thursday, April 2

Shou·ld Puerto. Rico beco·me 51st state?
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

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Wedn11dey,
Apt111, .1 -

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"

By Jilek Andlrlon
and Jlln Moist

'Est®fisfutl in 1948

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Wednesday•.April 1, 1998

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Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprll1, 1998

Wednesday, Aprll1,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•

OFFICIAL 1998 NATIONAL L:EAGUE SCH-EDULE
EASTERN DIVISION
MOIITR£Al

NEW YORK

Al\MTA

FLOIUOA

Mil ...... 4.10

Chi ....... 4.35
c111. .. 1:05
Clll. .... 4•30
Mi1 ........ 7·05
Mil ....... .7.05
Mil ..... t 05
Mol........ 1:05

PIIUOELPIIA

1'111 ......1'40

Phi ... .7.40
Pit... . 740
Ph . . 1'40
Ph .......1 40

CE!ITIW. DIVISION

MY
. NO
Phi .... 7:40
Pili. ... 1 10
, Phi. .... 110

PH ...... 1~0
F~

f~
F~

..... 7.05

...

1~

.. 7•05

All ...... . 7.05
Ml ......... 705

All ....... 135

1. .

Tue.

LA .. ..... 7:05
LA ........ 1.15
LA ....... t·t5

lfl 14

Wed. Apr 15
Thur lfl 16
frl •
17 Sll ......... 7:05
Sal. /l&gt;ff. 18
1.35
SIMI If/. 19
1:35
Mon. Apr. 20
Tue. Apr. 21 Sf ...... 7:05
Wed Apr. 22 Sf ....... 7:05
Thur Apr. 23 Sf . 1•35
Fri Apr. 24
Sat. Apr. 25
S.n. Apr. 26
Mon. Apr. 27
Tue /l&gt;ff. 28
Wed. Apr. 29
..

•

7.05
705
7 05
705
7 05
.1·35

Col ....... 140
Col. .... 740
Col . 140
Col
140
Ali .. NO
All .... 740
Ni ....... NO
SIL ........ 7 40
SIL ....... 740
SIL. ... 140
SIL
1 40

Aro
An

Con
Con
Con
Col

'

•'

C1

Cm

-

Con
705
7·40 SIL
705
1'40 SIL .. 705
1'40 SIL ... 135

Hou ... .740

Con
Con

Con ...... 7'05

...... .....
All ... 740
All
7 40
740
710
110

Col... .... .7.05
Col... ... 7:05
Col . 7'05
NO • 7:05
All .. .1:05

....

Arl

.

Hou ..... 7.40
Hou ... .7.40

Col
Col
COl

so ...... .. 7.0S Thr.r Apr.
so .......705 Fri. May
so .. 705 Stl. May
so .. 1'05 Sun. Miy

1 LA

An ...... 7.05
Aro . . 705
Arl . 135

COl
Col.

NO

7:40

Clio ... 7.40

Chi ... .. 7.10
Cho .. .. 1:10
Chi .. ...7.40
Mon 7·40
Mon 740
Mon .. 7,40
NYM ....7 05
.NYM . 7OS
NYM . t·35

Arl
7:05
Aro ..• 1:05

Ph .... 7.05
Ph... . 705
Ph
I 05

Mon May

NYU
NYM

Tue

May
Wed May
Thur May

NEW YORK

COI ......... 7:05
Col.. .. 7,05

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

SF ..... 7:05
SF ..... 1:05
SF ........ 5.05

4

5

... .... ...... .' Col .......12.35 Mon. Af&lt; 6
........... .......... ........... . Tue 1ft 7
.... .... ......... .... ···- .... . Wed lfl 8
ThiK. Apr 9

Ari ......... 1:0S
All . .....7 35
Ali. .... 7 05
HOU ....... 7.05
Hou ......7.05
Hou . :... 5 05
Hou ..... 5.05

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frl. Apr 10

Stl. lfl 11
S.n Apr 12

Con ..... 705
1·05 .
Cln
105

'":

Cin .

..........:1 .

.,,

Mon •
Tue Apr
Wed. lfl
Thur. Apr.
frl Apr.
Sal Apr.
S.n. Apr
M.on Apr.
Tue Apr
Wed. Apr

ThUr. Apr.
}{ft.

13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

7:05
7.05
7.05
7·05
Chi .. 7·05
Chi 7·05
Chi . ... 1:15
LA ... ... 7.05 Sf. .. 7:0S
LA .... . 1:20 Sf
7·05
LA .
1:20 Sf . .1205

20

21
22
23

Col .. 7·05
Col . 1:15
Col. ... 1:15

24
25
26
27
28

SF ......... 1:15
Sf ......... 7:0S
. Sf ..... 12 35

I'ITlUIIIGH

Mon. May 4
Tue May 5
Wed. May 6
Thur May 7
Fri May 8
Sal May 9

Fla ... ....12 40 All

. .... .............
SF .......... 7.10
SF ....... 710
SF
110

Col

. 110

7:05
1•20
705
Phi. . 1'20
All ... .... 2:20 Fla.. . . 7.05
All ....... 12•15 fll . 70S
All ... . . 7:05 Fla . . 1•05
Pill

CtNCIIIIIAn

CHICAGO

Hou ....... 1.05
Hou .... - 7·05
Hou ...... 7:05
Stl .... . 7:35
SIL ........ 1:05
Stl ......... 1:05

Cln ........3:05
Con ........7:35
Cln .......2.05
All .....7·05
All .. 7:05
All ..... .. 1:05
All.... .4·35

SIL ...... 1:05
so ........ 7:05
so .. ..,... 7 35

... .... .... ". ,

..

...•.. ........ -··

Chi. .... 7·05

Pit .,,, .7 05
Pit .•. . 7•05
Ph.. 1:05

Mil .... 7:35
Mol ... 1:05
Mrl ...... 1:05
pq ...... .7;05'
Ph .... 12.35

Clll ....... 7OS
Chi........1 05
Mil .......7·0S Chi... 7·05
Mil .......7·05 •Chi ... .7.05

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1... . .•

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,...

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

Sun May 10

... 7:10 Fla . 7·05 ,
710 Fla ... 7:05
.. 7:10 Pit ..... 7.05
Ml
7:10 Pit ..... 7·05
Fla .... 7.10 All ..... 7·05
Fla ... 7.10 All ... 7•05
Fla ..... 1.10 All .. 1·35

18

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

·- ..... .

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Hou . · 7·QS
Hou
1 20
SF..
7·05
SF .. .. .. 2:20 HOu ...... 7 05
SF ....... 1.20 Hou .... 705
Sf ........ 1.20 Hou ... 1 05

All ...
All ......
Fla .. ...
Fla . ...

19

liN

Stl. lfl
S.n lfl

Ull FilM.

Ull DUO

COl ........ .1:05

Mon . 7·10- ... .......... ..
Mon .. .7:10 NYM ...... 7:05
Mon ... 12:40 NYM ......a05

Stl, May 30 Mon .....70S
Sun May 31 Mon ... ...1.35

'

so ......
so .......

LDI '"'ft d

Tue Mar 31
Wedlf/1
Tnur 1ft 2
Fri. 1ft 3

Sal Apr.
Sun Apr.

frl May 29 Mon .. ..705

. ..•

SF........ 4·00
SF..........7·05
SF .~... .1~
Col..... .1 05
Col ........7.05
so .......1:10 Col .~ .. .. 1 35

COLOIWIO

11N

Fri

Wed. May 6 StL ..... 7.05
Jllur. May 7 Cln. ... 7:05
Fri May 8 Cln. . . 7:05
SatMiy9 Cln.. . 7:05
Sun. May 10 Cln ....... 1:35
Mon. May 11 Col. . . 7:05
Tue May 12 Col ....... 1:35
Wed May 13
Thur. May 14
Fri May 15
Stl May 16
Sun May 17
"""' May
Tue May
WI(! , May
Thur May
Fri May
Stl May
Sun May

LA ........ 3:10
..... .................
LA ...... 12:40
7:10
1:10

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

. 7:05

Sf .........7'05
LA.........7 05
LA........7OS
LA . . 105
LA .. 1:05

IIIIIJitoel

All ......... 7:10
All ........7.10
All ... 12:40
Pill ... 7:10 Mon ..... 7:05
Pill . ... 1:10 Mon ....... 7:05
1'111 ........ 1:10 Mon ...... 1.35

2 LA........ 7:05

7·05
Col .. 7·05

Col . . 7·os
Arl ..... 105

Mon .. 1·20
Mon .. .1:20
Mon .. 1.20
NYM .. .... 1.20 Mon ... 1.05
NYM ... 1:20 Mon . 105
NYM .. 1 20 Mon .. 6·0S
NYM . 605
NYM ....1 05
NYM .. 105
NYM ...605

7•05

3 LA. ........ 1:35
SF .. 7·05 Mon. May 4
SF .. 7.05 Tue May 5 Sll ..... 7.05

Sll . .. 7·05
SIL.
7:05
SIL ... .. 7:05

Hou ....705
Hou ....7 05
Hou .... 1 35
Ptlo .. . ...7 05
Phi. . 7 05
Phi . 135

.

30

Mon ...... 1:20

Hou . ..7·05
Hou ... ..7 05
NYM .... 705
NYM ... 115
NYM .. 1·15

so ........
so .......

SIL .....
SIL .
SIL
Hou
Hou ..
Hou ,

ST. LOUIS

so .......2:05
so ...... 7:05
so ..... 7·05

Tue. Mar 31
Wl(l, lf/ t
TlltK 1ft 2
frllf/3
Sal. {l,fr 4
Sun 1/&gt;fr 5
Mon.'Apr 6
Tue. lfl 7 AII ..........7:0S
Wectll&gt;fr8 All ........7:G!i
Thur lfl 9 All ..........1·35
Fri API 10 Fla .........7·0S
Sal 1ft 11 Fla ........1 35
Sun •
12 Fla ........ 1.35
Mon. /l&gt;ff 13

WESTERN DIVISION

CIIICAIIO

CIIICIIIIATI •

•

.. 12·35

Mon May 11
Tue May 12
Wed May 13
Thur. Ma¥ f4
fri MaY 15
Stl May 16
Sun May 17

Clli. . ... 7.05
Chi .. 7·05
Mil ..
7·05
Mit .. . 1·05
PI ....... 7.05
Pl ........ 7.05
PI .... ... 8.05
PI ..........4:35

Clio .. 7:05
Chi . 1•05
Mil
7·05
Mil ... I :05
Mil .... 1,05
Mon. May 18 IMII .......7.05

Tue.

Fn

19 ................... ' ............. .

May

. . ..... ..... . Wed. May
. ... .. .......... . Thur. May
SO ..... 7·05 Fri May
so .,7'05 Sal May
so ... 7:05 Sun Ma
Mon. May
Tue May
Wed May
Thur May

Pt11 ..... 7:05 NYM ... 7 05 Mon .7·05
Ptlo_. . 7:05 NYM .. 1 05 Mon . .7'05
Pill .. 7•35 ' NYM ...1'35 Mon. 12 35
Phi. ... 7:05 NYM ... 2 05 Mon .. 12 35
Mon ......7.05 Pill .... ...7.05 NYM . 7 35
"""' .... .7.05 Phi .. . 1 05 NYM
t·05
Mon ... 1·05 Phi. .1 05 NYM. 1 OS

20

21
22
23
24

. ... ....,
LA .......... 7:05
LA ......... 7.05
LA ........ 4.35

25
26
27
28

I

' ' ' ''''''

May 29 Hou .......7:05

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

COLOIWIO

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

SIL. ... 7·1!5
SIL. . 7 05
StL .... lOS

All .
.1 05
All .... . ...7'35
Ari .... .... 1 05
Ali .... 1 05

~ AIIG£t.g

Ull Dl£00

WI FIWI.

·Baseba-ll Tornadoes
get by Wahama 12-10
Scoring SIX runs on 1he fonal
inning, the Southern Tornadoes posled a dramatic 12-10 come-frombehmd wm over the visiting Wahama
While Falcons Tuesday night irtRacine.
Southern is now 1·1 overall.
Wahama hold played practically
error free until the fifth inning. when
their bullen-ridden gloves couldn't
contaon the white, threaded sphere to
the 1une of three miscues Jesse Lit·
lie opened the inning by reaching on
an error. Billy Young w:~lked :~nd
Benji Manu~l reache&lt;l.on an error
M1tchell came in to reli~taus . In
the second. Stuns had previously

relieved Varian who had started on
the h1l! for Wahama.
One Southern batter struck out,
then Michael Ash reached on an error
.. 1~ 1~1 in a run. Pete Sisson songled
home two. and Port Otll walked.
Sophomore Adam Cumings. who
had hit the ball hard throughout the
mghl. but had no hils to show for 11
then slammed a bnse clenrrng double
to give Southern the lead. Co,rey
Williams then followed up with a single as Southern ro:~red lo a 12·10
wm. That cappeda si~-run rally in
what proved to be the lrnal round.
An error and walk gave WHS a
\See SOUTHERN on Page 5)

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Friends of

MASON, W. VA.
773-5583

coanty

BOOK SALE

Wo1Mort614/~4·3101 ~

s... 61 ~'1.10 6073

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HARDWARE

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OFFICIAL.1998 AMERICAN LEAGUE SCHEDULE

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llondey, July 21, 111111

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AmoriCIIn 1Mg1111 vt• AP

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Like It or

'southern: Ervin. Sayre (\VP) und
Cumings
Wahama:• Varian, Sta~ts. Mitchell
(lP) and Huff " •

Wo•t Vlrvlnlo

•

By JOE; KAY .
.
1-5. 194l.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Smt
Reese made it to the major leugu~s .
Diego Pad!Cii wanted to start of( righl on the strength of his fteldin~ uml
in a plvotallteason for the frnnchise. made only one em&gt;r in his tirsl (~I
They !lOt their easiest opening win in . [!ames as a rookie. He cun't remcmtheir 30 years of baseball. ,
ber mnldng more than two in a
Kevin 'Brown won his San Diego Jlame, lei alone four.
debut and Wall!' · Joyner and Tony
"Borry said to llll! thai he had a
Gwynn homered Tuesday as the game like that one~." Reese said.
Padres rolled to a 10-2 victory and "Even the besl mnke ei'IQfll. I just
gave the Cincinnati Reds their worst have to put it behind me. We have
opening-day drubbing· in 36 years. , 161 games to'go and lllope we have
The Padres had a lot of help no more like that."
Cincinnati shortstop Pokey Reese
His errors led to three runs inlhe
tied a record with four errors and third and th~ Padre&lt; were rolling. By
Reds pilchfB let in runs on a wild the tlme il wus over. every ,•Inlier
pitch an~ a bases-loaded wallc
e~cept Greg Vaughn hod u hit und
Bur for the most part. the Padtes . Brown - who came into the gunle
did everything right in what they with a career 101:11 of se1·en RRisho~ is a turnaround season. They're bud a bases·l&lt;&gt;n&lt;l~d dnuhlc 1n 1lri1·e in
trymg 10 win the Nl West for the sec- three.
,
ond time in.three years and sway vot· · Even more impressive wus
ers to approve a new stadium later Brown's pitching. Brown, one of a
this year.
dozen players discarded by the Flori"We did some things well." said da Marlins after their World Series
Gwynn. the eight-lime batting cham· win, shut the Reds .out on n pair of
pion whose fltsl hit oflhe season wns hils over the fif't sill innings as lhe
a homer. "We got timely hitting. we score re1~ehed 10-0.
look ad1•antage of lhe errors.
"Thai's always been my motto:
"II' feels' good. We played pretty Give me 10 runs and I'll take my
good today. but there's n lone wuy to chances." Brown said. "I like our
go. We've gotlo do this RH&gt;rr limes odds anytime." .
than not. But it wus a good skirt ."
He wound up allowing five hits
The Reds couldn't hlll'e imugined and a run over 6 1/3 innings as he got
u worse beginning. The evening his eighth consecutive regullll'·!lenson
before the ppener. they d~llnted the it win, a career best. His only los.&lt;~es
fitns by tradinll Da1·e Burhu - the!r since July 27 were his lwo World
schednled orening day slarter - to Series starts against Cleveland.
Cleveland fur a minor leal!IICr.
"We couldn't be happier to have.
Then they went out and fumhlcd Brown pitch on orening day for us."
around in front of a crowd rif 54.578 Padres manager Bruce Bochy !inid. ·
that booed louder as the gaffes
,NotoeR: Brown improved to S-0 in
mounted.
si~ coreer starts ugainstthe Reds, his
"We didn't pl:ty very ll'ell. nn best record UJlUin~t any team. Brown
question aboul it." mannger J:tck is 4.() agoinstlhe Cuh~ nnd Giant~....
McKeon said. "That's probably one Gwynn went 0-for-3 agaill!ll Reds
or lhe worst games 'we've playetl in starter Mike Remlinger. H~·· only
·a month . Anytime you se~ Pokey .176careeragainstthe lefl-hunder(3Reese make.. four errors in three for-11) .... h was Cincinnati's ~~~mt ·
' innings, you know it's going to he a -lopsided orening 'day defeat siiiCe a
tough dny."
J2-4 loss to Philadelphia in 1962.
R~sc. 11 second-year player filling
~hnll admllled to hMpltaJ
' in while Barry lurk in recovers tfom
Cincinnati Reds owner MnrJle
neck surgery. mude four em&gt;"' on his Schott was..llll.mittC11to a _Cincinnati
f first three chan1·es of the season. lie hospital Jate'Tuesdny. hours :1flar the
l threw a hull into the R_eds' dugoort ior Reds Jostthell',season opener 10-2 lo
• the tirst. then Jluhbed o pair of the San Dielll' Pudre~.
: Jlrougders in the third. He tried to
A nursing surervisor atlllll Jew' recover on lhe second nne :md end· ish Hospital K~n\VtKxl "'onld not
. ed up .kicking the hull across · the .li'leuse details aboulthe conditioour
: infield for a douhle error.
~ · S~ilolt, ~. ulllil hospital riffic;ialstalk
Reese tied the mt\inr·league recnnl ·tO ihe Reds. .
•
for orening-day errors hy a shunstop
"Her condition is not life threat: - the Chicago. Cu~s· loll Slring~r ening." Supe,.;•isor.O.&gt;na locus suid.
, also made four m hrs debut on Apnl ~ Schon did punicipatc in thf irndi·
tionul restivitics. including lhe
p;rrude. that mark Opening Day. ·
Southern
Schott hns hcen hnnned from runbeats Falcons ...
ning the team through this season for
(Continued from Page 4)
oll'ensiv~ remarks she made :tboul
.
l lead in lhe tirsl, 1-0. The White Fal- minoril ies in 19%.
She llecmnc ctllllntlling p;rl1ner llf •
i cons then scored three more in the
· second on two errors. o walk and ri the team in 1984.
' Russell single to make the,-score 4-0.
, Southern fought huck with three in
, the third on wolks ·to little ·and
' Williams, then Benji Manuel deliv; ered a big double and three slmight
• walks forced in another run to make
the score 4- 3.'
WHS went up 7-3 in the third led
. by singles from Huff an\f Russell.
' while Staais doubled.
Southern made it7-6 in the fourth
on a lead-oiT doub(c 10 Josh Ervin. u
·. Mike Ash sing,le, a Pete Sisson dou' ble and an em&gt;r.
That set the stage forthe final hat; lie in the lifth.
• Dtmny Sayre 'got the win in relief
' of Josh Ervin. Sayre gt\\'e up three
runs on five strikeouts and tour
walks. Ervin gave up seven runs on
four hits. three walks und lilur strikeouts.
.
Wahama pitching f.umcd three.
walked seven and guve up eight
Southern hits.
•
The lone Southern hitter to ~,tel
1wo h1ts was Pete Sisson with a double and single. Other hittef' with 11 hit
apiece were Ash. Cuminlls, Willimns.
lillie. Manuel uml Ervin. ,
Southern hosts Miller tonight.
,lnoln11tllllll
·Wahamu
133-03=10-6·4
' Southern
03(). 36= 12 -8·4

.Batteries

'

-

San. Di~go· roll~
•
by·Cincinnati
Reds 10-2 .in
s~ason opener-

PICKENS

.'

Audiovox 440

,,

Call any Peoples Bank office
for 'reservations.

AIM 00111 POI.W.'OIIICIS IS (740)

•

..

Pui'h
Mowers
Now In
Stock!

$g 9.5

Plus, activate now
and get a phone
you can count on...
not a cheap giveaway.

..

The oally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

18 in. &amp;
201n.

· 340-Minutes for ~39.95
OF 380 Minutes for 49.95
520 Minutes for 89.95

Learn as local professionals discuss
• Appraisals • Title opinions
• Mortgage products • And more
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBUC
IJPOR PRIZE &amp; REFRESHMEN'fS

-

until April I!J&lt;J&lt;J.

.,,

April7, 1998, 6:30p.m~
Middleport Peoples Bank Office
\

'

a month

Real Estate Seminar
You're Invited

"

Cln ........ 7 05
Cln. .. ...7 05
Cln.. . 1•05
Cln ....... t ·05

o

Sal May 30 Hou .......2:05
Sun May 31 Hou .... 1·05

MILWAIIttfi

...

... ... '

SD .........6:05
so .... 7:05
so .... .... 7:35

.

'

- Thanclcly • Friday··
flprll1st. Zncl ancl 3rcl
'

191 w..lr Pb.414/9.V 1226

K..,tuclcy

117 w~ 6061325 2~
Wal No1606/32A 275P' •

10:00 a.m.' • 4:00 ·p.m.

2011 w s.cc.d $llw 61&lt;1/9t2·7010

P.Ome.Or

'
•

•

•

�.

•

.

•

•

Page 6 • The Dally 5entlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Aprll1, 1998

Wednesday, Aprll1, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Late-game rally helps In i~ns edge Mariners 10-9 in ope.rier
ByJIICOUR
SEATILE (AP) - Lou Piniella
can only •
his assessment of the
Seattle Mariners' bullpen is accurate.
If it's 001, it might be a long season for the Marine~ - even with
Ken Griffey Jr. and the team's other
big guns.
On Opening Night Tuesday,
Piniella's relievers failed to hold a
lead for Randy John.~n in a I0-9loss
to the Cleveland Indians.
"You peOple are unmerciful," the
exasperated Marine~ ll)anager told
. reporters after being asked severn I
times about the Mariners' bullpen,

which· blew 27 saves last season.
''I'm telling you, give these guys
a chance. They are going to pitch
~~~- !'ve said it before and I'll say

11 agam."

· Johnson took a 9-3 lead into the
sixth inning, but had to leave the
game after giving up three runs in the
sixth.
The Indians won with a four-nm
eighth off Bobby Ayala, loser Tony
Fossas and Mike Timlin. Timlin.
acquired last July 31 in a trade thm
sent highly regarded left fielder Jose
Cruz Jr. to Toronto. allowed a tworun double to Manny Ramirez an.d

then walked
is Fryman on five
pitches
with
the
bli.
s loaded
for the
. .
.
wmmng run.
"We have confidence and we
' know what we can do." Timlin said.
" But I walked the guy in. and you
never want to do that."
The Indians got their runs in the
eighth on two hits and five walks.
Mike Jackson. who earned a ~.e
.by, getting Edgar Martinez to·gro[nd
out, said the key for the Indians was
scoring t~ree runs in the sixth off .
·Johnson.
"I told the bullpen that we had u ·
chance to come b:lck if we could

score a few more runs off Randy and
get in tlteir bullpen." Jackson said.
Last sea.son's AL champion Indians won although Charles Nagy
allowed a career-worst four home
runs -to Griffey. Jay Buhner. Martinez and Russ Davis - and ninc
runs.
Tiley won because their bullpen .
- Paul Shuey. winner Jose Mesa.
Paul Assenmacher and Jackson was perfec1. 'retiring the final 13
Mariners in order.
Rumire~ had three RBis. whjle·
Sandy Alomur, Omar Vizquel and
rookie f:nrique Wilson each hud

·three hits for the team that came two
outs away from winning the World
Series last October.
Cleveland manager Mike l:far:grovc was particularly impressed by
Wilson, a 22-year-old !ICCood base- .
man who had 11110 doubles and a single against Joht!S&lt;In.
·
"He didn't seem intimidated at all
by Randy Johfl!!OII. wherea&lt; a lot of
10-year vetentn,u re intimidated." he
said. "It was real nice seeing a
yooog kid go about his business ~;ith
a spring in his step and fire in his
1
eyes."
,
'
Hargrove said ftc ·decided lnte
•

Scoreboard
..

A l.f, THIS WUJC

aaseball
Eastern Dl-..ision

w

Iwn

I. 1'&lt;1.

Boslon .................................... 0

0

.000
.lnl

N~w Ynrk ..........
........0
Toronlu ....................... - ..... - ...0

0
0 -.IXX:l

Baltimore .............................·..0
Tampa Bay ..........................0

I .(MX)
1 .000

C•ntral DMiion
Chicugo .................................. ! 0
CLEVELAND .. .............. ;.... t 0
Dt.•uoil .................................... !
0
Kansas C1iy .... ..
.. . .......... I 0
Minnesota ... ......
........... 0 0

!ill

'1:1

-

.(XX)

'h

Oa&amp;lond ................ ..... .............O
Seanlc .................... .................O

.000

I

.000

'I)

I

.000

\

Te-as ......................................0

~U;CINE - Middleport Literary
lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting Club, 2 · p.m. Racine Library,
and special cvcnLS. The calendar is Wednesday. Betsy Parsons to have
·not designed- io promote sales or program on novels by Gilman and
. fund raisers of any type. Items arc Macleod .
ptinted as space permits and cannot
CHES1ER -~ Chester Garden
be guaranteed to run a specific numClub.
tiomc of Eleanor Knight,
ber ~Jf'days.
'
Wednesday. 7:30p.m. ·

See RED and SAVE••• .

HOME IN ON THE

Whit.: So• 9, Tuus 2

De1roi1 I I, Tumpa Buy 6
CLEVEL:\NO 10. Settttlt 9

Tonight's games
M1nnc sllUt (:rewksbury H-IJ)nl Torunlu
21-!1), 7 :0.~ p.m. ·
Lklroit IMoehll:r 11 -12) nl Tamra 8 ;~y tAnoju
0-0). 1 ·11~ p.m.
Kan5id Ci1y (Rus..:h 6-9) nl Baltimore IErkbun
f6-7), 7 :0.~
N.Y. YnllkL~I (1\.&gt;tlinc lti-7J m Anahl:im !Fmlcy 1.\-6), I0:05 p.m.'
,., .. , """"'' ,.,.
CLEVELAND CWril!hl K-J ) nl Sc1111k (~oyer .
17·.•). IO:J!I p.m. ·
B~llitun (P. M11ninez 17-tl) a1 Oakland (C:mlliuni
10-7). 10::\!1 p.m.
•

cheon, Senior Ciiizcns Center,
Thursday. Reservation 992-2 161 by
9 a.m, day of meeting.
POMEROY- Meigs Ministerial
Lenten Service. Naomi .Bapitsl
Church. Rev. Robert Robinson
preaching.

r~~

drama.
REEDSVILLE - Ft'llc spaghetti .
Heath United Mcth ..~isl
supper, Recdsvillc'Unitcd Methodist
~HES HIRE -· Disabled Ameri- Public i'nyitcd.
Church. Music by the Vance family. can · Veterans. State Route 7,
Public welcome.
Cheshire. Ninth District mectin~ . MONDAY ·
Saturday. Dinner at ncion: meeting at
PORTLAND - Punland PTO.
SAT~RDAY
.
I p.m.
Monday. 7 p.m. Ul · Ponland grade •
CLIFTON~ Benctlt hymn si ng,
sehoul.
Saturday, 7 p.m. Clifton Tahcrnacle,
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs ,CoorClifton, W Va. featurin~ the Gahricl · erativc Parish to present "Lord. Is .It

WEDNESDAY

SAVINGS RE TAG SAVINGS!!!

Ka115il!l City 4. Bu llinu~ I

~"'

'

(XX)

Tuesday's scores
Chi~&lt;tgt)

'

'

0
0

.

.

I

,Thl8 weell at Foodllnd Mlnuflctlnr'a "Cents Otl" Coupo_na 11p to and Including ss. are worth Triple Face Value.
up to &amp; Including 55• Coupon• valued at more than SS. arel'ldelmlble at flee value only. Umll ont coupon tor each product purchall8d.
.
Umlt one Cotlee Coupon. No Beer, Wlnt or Clpretle Coupons will be tripled. Not valid on free coupona, Foodland
coupons, In-ad coupo111 or retail food etore c:oupona. The 1111011111 rtdlemed Cll'lnot u~ the price ol one Item. You
must purchllf product In alze apeclfled on the coupon. Thla'ofler applln only to manuflctured prodticta "Centl Off' ·
Coupona for llema we carry. To IIIUre product IVIIIIblllty for.aU our CUIIomerl, only one coupon per shopping llmlly
will be tripled on any brand 1tam during uch 1t0re vlllt. .
.·
·
·
.

Wtstem Dhision
A.nol1ein1. .......................... .... 0

'

CHEERLEADERS HONORED - Thrae Eaetem Mnlor cheerlead. WINS CHEERL~DING TITLE - The SY,.cuae aquad won lhe c"-lettdlng championship In lhe Southern Elementary .biddy league
era were bonored Sundlly at lhe EHS Winter Sparta ,banquet. Pic- tournament. In frorit are (L-A) JeAica Lyona, Nicole McDaniel, Morgan Brown, stephanie Snyder and Erin.Holman. Behind them are Megan
tured are Jamie Drake (left) and Nicole White. Senior Blllee Pooler , Wllllllnl, Stacy Snyder, Rachal Cottrill, Ashton Brown and Bathlny Ambergar. ·
was ab1111t from.lha picture.
. . ·. '
. '
.
·
.
·
·
·
.
·
·

Uri)It 6

'!:!

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

.

•

RIPLE

AL standings

.'•

Monday afternoon during the Indians' workout in the Kingdome to not
use Mesa as his clO!iCt' - at least to
S1art the season.
Mesa pitched~ 1/J perl~t innings
for the victory as a setup man and
JackSOD got the save. Last Octobell
Mesa failed to hold a ninth-inning
lead in Game 7 of the World Series,
and florida wound up winning in the
lith. .
"I just never really 'saw Jose turn
it up to where I felt like he was prep~red to go back into the, closer's
role,'' Hargrove said. "But ihat doesn't nican in two weeks he's not going
to be the closer again."

' P,OMEROY ..,.. Meig~ United THURSDAY
POMEROY - ,AA and AI-Anon
~ethodist Coopcrativc Parish to
lake applications for garden seed Thursday. 7 p.m.· at Sacred , H~art
and tomato plants Wednesday and · Catholic Church.
Thursday, 9 a.m. to noon.

(~mens

~'

r.m.

WEEKLY
ADVERnSED

Thursday's games

Botlon (Wakefield 12"\1~) at Oakland (Rogers
6-7). :u !l p.m.
.·
.
Minnesolo (Hawltns &amp;12) til Toronto (Hcntgen
1$&lt;101. 7:0$ p.m.
. ·.
l:Mroil (Worrell 4-R) ill l l1mpu Buy {Suun.kn
4-61. 7:0! p.m.
,Kan~~lll Cily (Rnpp 5-IU n1 Bullimore IKt:y 16101. 7 :0~ p.m.

FRESH RED 'RIPE

CALIFORNIA

.. "

.ChicugU White So~ (8otldwin 12· 1.11il at TCII!as
IJ-12), 1\::l~ p.m.
N.Y. Ynnktt:S !Wells 16- 10) :n Anaheim (Hill

STUWBERRIES

(~lc

Friday's games
Teus lll Torunto, 7 : 0~ p.m.
Chica!!o While So-. ul Tumpu Bay. 7:0~ p.m.
l).'tmil ut Uahin~. 7:05p.m.
Ku n~u5

Bnsrun .m Se:urlc. 10:0.~ r.m.
CLEVELAND at Anuhcim. 10:0!1 p.nl.
N.Y. Yonkctlll\1 0:1klnnd, IU:J5 p.m . ·

ASSt.

IaUII

Dhkk»n

w ..0

-

r.t.

Allant~l ........................ .......... 1

l:lorilla ........... .......... .'............ !
New Yurk.. ,.....
.. .. I
Muntrc:1l ................... ..,.. ........ 0
Phil;kkirhi01 ................ ............ 0

J.(J()

0

1.00

il

l.OO
.lXXl
.lXXl

-

1.111

-

0
I

C•ntr11l Pl•l~kNI
St. I.IIUiS .............................. I ()
Piu~bur!o\h ................... ; .......... 0 ~ (~

()()()

OticllatO .. ......... ......... .............. 0

I

CINCINNA'Il ........................ 0

I

Huuli!IMI ....................... ........0

I

Milwaukt.-c ............... :..............o

I

.000
.000
.000
lXXl

Wmtm Otvl&lt;llon
Cuh1to~tk1 ....... ................ .... I
0

1.011

Snn Dicl(tJ ...... .. ....................... I

0

I 01)

Sntl Frnl'k:i~t·u ................... ..... 1
Ari1nn:1 .... ,.... ).........................o

0 I.00
1 .ono
I .000

1..111 An~clc- .. .. .... .....

!ill

... ,_,.,0

'

t
I
I
I

Tuesday's Scores·

c..

Sma (;r;uu:ill,·n (licuhih·r I·FM lll H mt ~hlli

iH1Un JIIIIII 1 ~· 10 1,

tt:0!111.111.
( 'niL!riUJo !'llkll\11!1111 7-'.1) ;11 Ari tulla tllh1ir 16-

ThursdMy'• Kllmes

Lu~ An,.~:k••

(Park

1~-K)

Mnnrn:-o~ll H~'fll lilll·

ul Sl.

l.1~i1

!Pnlillt' ().

cCuttltt IJ· I~). 7:0~ r.m.
.
Phil•ilklf!hia (PI)nup.;~ 0·21 111 N.Y. ~'Ill ll&amp;•lll"r
11 -IJ). 7:ol0 p.nt.

71. 1:-IOv.m.

IOIDU'S

AllumutGim-i"'-•I.J· , ff

San Fmnr.:ilcn (Rlk'lt'l'· 1.1·61 ut

mno-m. H:~ r.m.

nu~lt•n

·

('ulomOO (1\MW:il) Il- Ull 111 Arizn.nu I1\lkk.'fst•n

-&amp;-21. 11:05 p.nr .

·

11• roll

Mllntm1l11f Ch!Catt('l Cuhs. 2:20 p.m.
Milwauk&amp;.'f at Fklf'idl:t. 7:cr.ll•.m.
. 1..t11 ""~l"~ ut CINCINNATI. 7:0."i jUII
, l1 1llltM£,h 011 N.Y. MctM. ' :.W p.m.

. . .._SAliMI 111ft

~:ASTERN CONFERENCE.
Al""-"ic Dktolon
~•

11' I. fll.

....

.m
.JI.

~!?,

•Orlundo .................................)7 36 .:147
J6 ,j(IO

~~

' ' Wushln.IOII ................: ........ J6
' Bostnn .................................. JI
' PhU:olrlrh~ .......................... l6

.

"-1
46

"All""' .. ................ ............41

1.9 · .m
Jt .l69

;!~

"Cl.EVELIIND......................41
•~DIInlit ......... ~ ........................ 34 39
I "'iew.kft ........... ,"'' " "'"'"H') I
41

-·-

•. r...................................... u

.6J9

.•

,4]1

l6 .111

. ~ . : . . . ...............~ - ~~

f6

12 PACKS

·.s

II

.

.

5 QUilT IlL

• 81.
_

SOUl CIIAII 01.

French Onion Dip

· Fresh

.

::Strawberry 8

EAS1lfAN'S · OHIO VALUY • .GALLIPOLIS

Cat Food

111m

Paper .To~e·ls

.."'BIG BEND .• TWII RIVERS

I

.

: •

8

2l

l•h
«1

12r•

Wi!SIIRN CONrllll!NC!
t.tww... ...-

II.

·

~ /'!

sn

COCA COLI

24 roll·

1~',

·~

n

Bath Tissue

.

, ......IHI
_Spring or .Distilled 'w ater

.·

I~

.161
.tM.

11

)'•IDdiaoo ............. .... .. ,.........."
'Chorlone ..............................46 l6

,

,4~1

.:161

Cnllrol-

•f·Olt:IJO ............ .... ............."

•.

.711

.

SOF1' II'

~Coffee ·

NBA standlnp .

t. .

........

24pt1Ck

'folgers .

Bas ketball

Ium

,

u.s ·39 01

• Philndclptrin Uf A.tl:uUjt. NO p.m.
• c.,tonMk• ;II Houllon. tl :~ I'm.
Stm Ditlu at St . Louis, M:IOp.in. '
• S;m Fnua.!i!'il:ll llf Ari~ona . 9:0:1i JUil.

Sof.l- Drinks

•111II." .· 2 87/

___ ,_.

FrldMy'M pmt!ll·

·K·Mi tKlli ............... ,...............~] . 21
·"'"' Y&lt;&gt;&lt;k ....... .. ........... &lt;10 33
~New J~rK')I .......... .................:.? J~

un. FLAVou

. 'I

IOCIYTOP

Far111·Sausage .

(HuiOI•

r-sone
steak

Associate Profel$0r ·
of family Medici!le

GALLON

ina ~m. .J:JOJa.m.
.
Su n l&gt;ietu• (A!'hhy 11-IIJ 111 (.' INCINNi\TI

U~S.D.A. SELECT fJOil'TIIlHDUSE Qll

.

8 II

1U. I :-10 fl.lll.
Chku'o Cuhs ( C~Ift7alcl 11-'J) ;d liloritla tMt'tl·

Mllwaube(knrll~rJioll

amilp
.
edtcine

HEINERS
OLD FASHION
WHITEBREAD

OUNGE
JUICE .

s ·aa

jUil.

.C::Z'ce

. I

200LLOIF

FLOUR

' (H:.rniM"h ] .!). 7:1l!ljUU.

.

John C. Wolf, D.O.

c

12-1.1 ). HI~ (l.m .
t'hu.:otfu t'ls (CI;Ifk l-I-tH a~ n urilla !Ht·n.·lliu
~ - ~1 . 7:0. 11,111.
' Sun l&gt;i~:~n!Hamilhlll 12-1) ~~C INCINNATI

~

...

HUDSON

Tonight's aMmes

1~115""r~IIISI.'hn1idl 10·
111tn K-M). l : .l~ Jl.lll.

.

25 L8 IIG SELF·RISIIG OR
ILL PURPOSE
..

l"il t•burfl.h tConJ,iv~t 11 -M) m Munln: al (Pt·n:l

1J) ut

.

. GUEST SPEAKER - Larry Hlckl, Reynoldsburg, ,_,.. 1
gi.teat apeaker Thuraday aa a part of an all-clay
-•Iori
held tor employeea and volunteere..of. Veteran• ,
lei HoePital.
Hlclts, 1 fire llfety educator with the State Fire Marlhll Dlvlialon,
uNCI "Gentrel Fire Safety" ·•• hie topic for the 1111lon whiqh w11
hald In the Melga Emergency Medical SerVIces ~lng at Pomeroy.

I.e.

N.Y. MetK I. Phihlllclphin 0 ( 1-'1
Sat• Dit·~~~ 10, CINCINNATI ·2
At~ml&lt;~ 2. Milw ;m l~....- I
Sl . lAntiJ 6, Lull Anttcll-, 0
w:ft'lfklll II . Cbit'IIJW Culu b
S;m Fmnd!U:tl 11. Houslun -1 (I.\)
(.'uhwmk,9. Ariw11a 2

.~). LJ ;()~

lAG

. ."c~
Bllell
,,,,,, ..,,

c

.

'.

""••ta
'·O.I.
.
,,,,,~,·" ..,,,,

FOODLAND·
· VEGETABLES

NL standings

.Ham

•
. .

,, 3

·

Pranlum

!

..

Citr"' Mimu..'liOfa, K :O~ p_m.

Ralt~rn

WIQE FUllY OOCJKEC), UJWER SAI.T ( 14-1&amp;UJ. AWL)

'- 8 II

9-12). 10:05p.nt

.'

lll

•.,
Question: I have donated blood cases.
Now. !hat is the bad news about
through the Red .Cross for sc~eral
years. I n:ceived a letter from them HTI..V-1 infections&lt;The good news
saying thai I have HTLV-1 and is that it isn't as bleak as it sounds.
should never donate blond · again. Less than I percent of tho5e with the
My family doctor doesn't know any- . virus develop the TSPIHAM condi- ·
thing aboul this infection. Can you lion. and only 2 to 4.percent develop
give some information abouj it in T-ee II leukemia or lymphoma. All of
your column'!
·
·
these illnc~scs · have a yery long
latency
period .- per~aps 40 to 60 · ··
Answer: The name HTLV-1
· rcf~n; to a spccific·. type of .viral years -from the time of infection to
• Infection produced h)' the "Human the development of disease .
The HTLV infectipn can be
T-cell Lymphocyte Virus type 1."
acquired
in several ways. It is passed
HTI..V- cla.qifed as a "n:trovirus" •
i:.in t!x: same bioloJlicnl cn!egilr): a.~· from an infected mother to her baby
too HIV virus. ortunately, though. 20 percent of the -rime. This trans.HrLV causes much · less serious mission occurs thro~ih bn:ast milk
infections than its hctter known and. thcreforc..is easily avoided by
bottle feeding !he b~by. ·This is a
- cou.~in, HIV.
• The H11.V•J VirUs Willi fir&lt;~ iden- concern in the pan~ ,of the world
•tified in 1980. largely as a conse- where the infection is'common, but
quence of AIDS research. Some not here in the United States• .
HTLV can also be acquired in the. ·
individuals who had catK.'CI'li of the
blood and il"munc system. spccifi- same way as· AIDS ilr hepatitis:
~ ally T-ccll leukemias nnd lym- . intercours.c with an infected partner.·
phoma.~. had initial sy.mptotns simi- . drug users sharing tlcedles, or tmn.&lt;lar to AIDS. 'However. it wa$ dis- fusions . To protect t~j!Uhlic blood
covered that theSe ,people were supply,.blond banks routinely screen
i'nf~ted with .HTLV and not HIV. for this infection.,Occasionally they
This led to the development' of reli- identify an individual who has this.
n!llc blood t.,;ts that could readily only 0.02.5 percent ot all U.S . donors
distinquish between these two types arc positive for this v.irus. just: as
ot' ic1rovirus infections. Researchers happened tp yQII. Though the risk of,
.have now bl:cn able to identify scv: developing· a serious ~ illness as a
:eral groups who hove a high pt'llva- consequehce of HTLV infection ·
from a hlood transfusion is low. it is
•lcncc of infectiOI!.
•. Residents of. Japan·. the still nn avoidable risk. Thal"is why
.€aribhean basin; Melanesia and· , the·Red Cross has told you to never
.
:.iame at'llas .of Africa have a high give hi&lt;Hld. .
incidence of HTLV·I infection. Fur·
thCr investigations showed that this
· virus sometimes produces ·a type of
•
. progressive nervou~ system disorder
"fa•Uy Meclldae" 11:11 weelily ·
' that causes problems with use of the co..ma. To , ••b•lt qMJdou,
.muscles, particul~rly usc of the legs · write te Jolul C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio .
and uritlary bladder. This specific UnlnJiity CoUp ol o.teop.ltllle
1- --concli' ltion is called TSPIHAM. Medlciae,
GroltYmor
Hall,
HTLV can.· also cause T-ccll Atllens, Ohio 45701.
leukemia or _lymphoma . in some
...

r

•

•

•

·Pound

I

'.
•

•

,,,,.

GCM "'N lliPE
•

CAFFEINE REE DIET COKE,

.

DIET ctJICE DR .

COCIICOia
Classic
.
CSIIi ,.
'I:Z.CIZ.

•

•'

't

�•

.

·--

.
• 'Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wed~day,

Aprll1, 1998

'

Aprll1, 1998

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Yard s.1e

70

.

•

I&amp;
MT. . DEW
PROD:UCTS

STORE IOUU
Monday thru

Pomeroy,
Ml~dteporl

6 VIcinity

•
•

$ 79

IAM-IOPM
298 SECOND ST.
Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO. LIMIT QUANTITIES
.PRIW GOOD THRU APRIL 4, 1998

7 UP, DR
PEPPER, CRUS.
FLAVORS,.MUG
ROOT BEER..

WE .ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
·SEE

Chuck Roasts ••••••

.
.
,
.
· d
• .
24
En s &amp; P1eces.,... · ·.
.
.
C
L•
k
.
.
·Sausa · e 1n s•• 9 9
·.

.MARIAH BACON

.. .

3Lb.box

MOUNTAINEER BRAND

.

$

.

Rocln~g~~
· 1012

~

. ·c
Breasts •••• ••••••••• ::-9·9· ··

SPLIT C~ICKEN .

SUPERIOR'S ·

. _

Hot

~

F~I!Y!II~HICKEN ~RUMSTICIS 01·5

••
r

9·

Th1ghs.•••••••••••.••L~..
PORK BUR STEAKS OR .
.
'
Roasts·
••••••••••.•••~.
.
.

.

.

··

DOgs~.~•• ~.~:-~69

c

COUNTRY·STYLI

Ribs.

·TIM'S CUSTOM

' .

~ .2/$ ·

~~

CRISCO
·OI.L

. Ut.

FOOD MitT
Open 24 H,.. A Day

..:Unch,Sandwlch
Including Pizza
12" $7.48 Deluxe
All Topplilae
Call In Orde,. Acceplld
740-387-7

COUITIY CAIDU

..

TROPIC~NA SEASON'.s. BESt

FIITO'S

h.
'
.
~21$3
.
Corn C 1ps ••••••••• .
h
.
·
9
9
c
.
C 1ps •••••• : .

MODERN FOODS
..

10.5 .•

'•

I ,
I

112

gal.

· .. ·

Bring you&lt; odds &amp; ends

and we will filllhcm ;

Rl. 124 Minersville, OH
.
7~992-4559

Mcfll ROOfiNG &amp;
P.IIIIJIIIG
·. SpeqiellziRflln:
.
New ~.Roof Repllrs,
Gutt.-, tntertor &amp;
Exleltor f'lif!llnfl,

. GRAS·.
PAPE.R
TOWRS.

Drvw-11 ...,..,.

.

Lc!WHt IIIII dUrlftll the
wlntpr mqlllhe of
.llf!.•l'lb.-Mar.
Qurtllly Mbllr OUMifltMI.
,.,. Ea.:• I'UIIY lfttllrH

SINGLE ROLL

1-&amp;1......a-IOIIY .
IIIII . 011,.

5 qt P,811S

.

':,r ::••• '

'

•

.

••

.WHITE·

K..~li
APPLE JUIC'E COtrONELLE
lAtH TISSUE .
c •

c

4ROLLPK

320Z.

•

.

(61

992-4277 .

Up ·To ·Dale Spor1s /Spreads &amp;
Morel 1-900·407-7765. E•t 66~2.
12.99 Per Min. Must Be 18 Yrs.
Serv·U 611H!4!&gt;8434.

112 Gold Retrieve~ 112 German
· Shepherd pups, 6 week&amp; old. 740·
985-9829.
4 Pupphis all male , part

~

•
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
liA
:Jl!• Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding . l'.tt:

,;,:.,

Commercl•l &amp;R8llldlfltlal
!fP.
.,i\.f! 27 yra. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured ill"•
~
Phone 740-992;.a987
· ~.
FrH E•tlmatea
Ownef: John Dean

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

BAUM LUMBER

·614-992·7643 .

NOW IN STOC:K A
NEW ECONOMICAL
29 GAUGE ROOFING
OR SIDING •

(No Sunday Calls)

r11Ilb

740·985-3301

614) 949-2

J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULATION
• Vinyl Sidi1111 • Soffit

· ·~ryDocks

• Blown lnsulolion

RHtonabiiRat.a

Joe N. Sayre

614-742·2138

HUIIIIDS
GREE.HOUSE
NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

HouaehOida. etc."

JHnWhlta
740-245 ••••

..

Euter Flowera,

R.L. HOLLON·
TRUCKING,

Panalea, Cl~e.
BrOCCOli,·Clullflowtr,
Hanging Ballclta,
Phlox, AzaiMa,

.

,1120
Milt geUmlt .
. Cal~ Randy

992-5050

DUMP'TRUCK
SERVICE
AgriCultural Ume,
Umeatone • G~l
Dirt. s.nd

.

Flclorv Cllolce Only

Septic Syatams
TraHer &amp;Houn Sites

II Call Me II
"' Buy Accumulations•
"Collectlblea, Antlquee,
Mlocellaneaue,

Special Thru
March
B tclit\DellvertHt

IURAND,OH.
AIIIICAN l.fGION
lEECH GlOVE ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN. 1:011 r1

.

' 985 4422

Chester, Ohio
..

1

.

Shrubl, Spruce
Treea
Open o.lly t-5
' Sunct.y12-5

NUDIIDS
GIIJIIHOUSE

'
S

.

,

•
.

I

Valley Rellnlohlng Shop. L1rrr
P~Hips, 740-evl!..578.
;

April 9th al tho' e!lurch . 9:00·?
Sponsored by: youth.

Gardena plow'l d near Aoos.:V.II

Grade School area . 304 ·17S·
2991 .
!" 1
Georges Por1ablo Sowmlll, - 1
naul your lOgS to tho miH jUit~H
304-815-1957.
r•

. ...:Pt. Pleasant

- &amp;VIcinity

GRAIIMV CARE: Quall1y Clllld
Care, In My Homo. Mondly Tllnl
Friday. 741J.311H022.
:

Garage Sale-3 Miles out Jericho
Rd. Fri. &amp; Sal. 9·5 Sweeper, ster-

Install Windshield•. Motor•• &amp;

'

Trano $100 &amp; Up, Aou11 t7, ,11e·
Side A· t TIKI, 7~1535. I

eo. car saat. pet cage, school
des\s, weed eater. lawn mower,
porch glider &amp; much more•

· Mol her ol two wan1ing 10 ~ bl·
b)'slttlng In mv home, loca....on
Greer Rd . Have retertncel. acM·
675·6046.

· Auction
and Flea Market

80

Painting. Plumbing, Re~lllg.
Any And All Odd Jobol Fru, Eo·
tlma1es, 740·24!&gt;-5151 .

Flea Market Set-Up Space Avail·
able Starting In April. At 33 East

Of Mason at Johnson's Produce.

Professional Tree Service; Stu{I'IP
Removal, Free ,Eslimatesr· tn·

(Space Under Shelter}. 740-SCt -

2963.

surance, Bidwell, Ohio . 814·•·
Shafer's Lawncare Service, ·
Es1ima1eS, Cai74Q.44Hl318. -

na-5765 Or 304·77:1-!1447.

We Offer Blcilhoe &amp; Dozer ....,.,
license &amp; Bonded , 740·MI9515.

Want• to'"Buy

90

p~k"'

Chocolate Lab 1 1/2yrs old •

load. 304·87!&gt;5035.

FINAN CIAL

210 ·

Buslneaa
Opportun!tv

- INoriCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
f8commends that you do busl·
ness wllh people you know. •nd

740-446-2624 .
Ma~

:

Will. haul junk or trash, away. $351

~~-=--=-~~~-=::Absolute Top Dollar: All u.s. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewlllry, Gold
Rings . Pre·1 930 U.S.'Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Ac:qulstttons Jewefry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
A.,.nue, GaH~s. 740~46-2842 .

Free Firewood You Haul Away,

male, neutered, has no papers,
needs room to run. 304-na-.5132.

~

9648, 614-367-7010 .

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complet~t
auction
service . licensed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304 ~

0155.

NOT to send money throuoh the
mail until you nave Investigated

Antiques &amp; clea n used lurniture.
will buy one piece or complete
household. OtbY uarun: 740992-8578 .

thO olloring.
COKE !PEPSI II
Best Prgoram In U.S.A, Excellent
locations S1.200 + Wkly Polen·

liat100% Fin Avail., 1·800·817·
6430 EJd.l 732.

FREE
CASH
GIWITSI
College. Scholarships.

Lo~t

60

UH

and FO\!ncl

982-5778

NMrRepay.
Ca~Tol Ff8e
HIOIJ.21 8-9000 EJd. G· 281~.

Old. ObSOlete or broken computer

S300 REINARD

equipmen1. any make or model,
will remove tor free . 304·675-,
7721J.

efS farm on Redmud Ridge. An-

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Arrt
Cc)ndition, 7~9853. ·

For return ol blaCk/brown German
Shephard taken flom Edith Rag-

· swars to name "Chance .• No
questions ask. Call John Rogers

EMPL OYMEN T
SERVICES

Hl00·28Hl576.
Found: Srnall Dog In Vicini~)' Of

Mill Creek Road &amp; Second Ave·
nue. Gallipolis, can To Identify,
740-44H855.

Help Wanted

110

Lost- sink gray male cat with yel·

AVON 1 All , Areas ! Shirley

low colar. lower end ol MilldlepOn
by river, 740.992·134-1.

Spears. 304-67!&gt;1•29.
Avon $8 -$20 IHr, No Door ·To •
Door. Easy casn , Fun. 1·800·
736-0 I68 ind/siS/r8p.

Yard Sale

78

If you have an established bual·
ness and unused parking ap1ce.
you mav qualify to be a U·Haul
Dealer. If interested call 800-212·

8515.

230

.

Profnalonal
Services

Livingston's b111emenl water·
proofing, all basement repairs
done. rree estimates. lifetime
guarantee. 10yrs on job experi·

ence. 304-675-2145.

REAL ESTATE

"

Bares Bra&amp;. Amusement Co.

&amp; VIcinity ·

111 ·5th, 325 Nofll'1 Vinton. Movlng Salt! Furniture, Tiller. Aidmg

Uowar. Camper Top Knives,

Must be 18 years Of Older. Free
10 ttavel. Cai74Q.266-2950. M-F,
8:01)...:30.

310

Homes tor Sale

2 Houses On 2 114 Acres With
River Frontage G'arlield Avenue.
Gallipolis, Main HOuse 2 ·3 Bed·
rooms, 1 112 Batn Fun Buemenl,
Second ,House 2 Sa.t ha, ·Good

412nd -413rd. 9:00·4:00, 333 Th ird

Con51ruction Office Clerk Wind·
ows 95. E)l:cet Spreadsheet Experience P.ralerred. Good Organ!·
zatlonal Skills Fax Resume To :

Avenue, longberger Bask~ts ,

330-478-8858.

0639.

Oet1verv Person Warehouse Help
Needed Full Time Posillon, Must
Be Able To . Orll.'e Standard
Transmission Truck. Call For Inlerview. 740·446-4109.

3 bedroom-large living room &amp;
kitcnen , 314 basement. approx t
acre la nd, nicety located 10
minures !rom 1own. Call after

Dependable And Flexible Certl·
tied Nurse Aid Needed For In
Home Care. Call AdriaiYI8 Or An-

3 Qr 4 Bedroom. OpttOnal Family

Room. 2 Baths, In-Ground Pool,
Central Air, $73.000 740-...8•

gie 1·800-4BHI334.

•..)..:.:73::.
. --~--~-

Excellent opporlunity 10 join the
long term health care field. SHicing part-lime LPN'S tor rotaling
shifts. Intermediate Care FaeMity.
. d.
we st Virg inia r·1cense reQulfl
Point Pleasant Nursing &amp; Rehabil1ta11on Center. State Routel2,
Rou'te 1. Box 326 , Point Pteas.._

3 or 4 Bedroom: two batn, ranch
style manufactured type horne.
1,600sq. ft. Situated on oneiKH
ol ground, Rayburn Rd. 1/.t MMe
of Sandhill. Addilionat acre1ge
available . Peaceful, privlte,
country setting . S62 .50b . 30•·
675-1296 4nytime.

·eyttylhlng·

Houaehold, Furniture, Clothes.

CollectabJe Barbie. Oaklev ·sun -

Ia

•

U saes.
5 Family Garage Sate: 330 Third

Avonue, ·Sa1urday 4/41h 9:00A.M.
· 3:00 P.M. Infant - Adult Clothing
Toys, Bikes. Household Goods .
Ra6n Or Shinal

A1J. YoniSillo MUIJ
lePoldln-.

... _,.baM

PEAPUNE: 2:1» p.m.

the ed

tttorun. Sundly

-111on 2 00
·- ~
• : edftlon
p.m.
Frldly.
tO:DO
smn.y.
•
a.m.

Umtltona 6 Gravel

' 992-ocm
.

LIMESTONE

FreeCaahl .
Stop In The Store
· For Details

mi.:, cute and playful, 740·992·

Hauling, Excavating
6 Trenching

.

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
. Cleaning .
258 Pearl St.
Middleport, OH

• Garages • Decb
~ 1' u Pale Build'mg
IIDrting at $5995
7.40-982-2772

.

SAYRE
.TRUCKING

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAL
50% Off ILL

• Replacement Windows

$300'

3/12/H If

.

• Fcncia • Seamllss
Guttwr • Roofing

·Powell's Super
Value.·

i••·

Furnitui-e repair, rttlnlth anct
toratlon, also euatorn ot:Mrl. Qhto

more.

Rutland Church ot God• Cl'!ureh
yard sale &amp; bake sale. Saturday,

Gallipolis

•Mower• •Chain Sawe •WHdeaters •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Briggs It Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
•!cho •Ryobi•Ropar •Rally ·Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI
lrlfts &amp; StraHIII: Master Strvkt Tedmidan
o.tdoor Paw.- lqalf•••' Assodal •(trtlftH 2 Crdt
State Route 338 ·At VIne • cine, Ohio

SR

l111a Week

Slletlhard. 304-67!&gt;5261!.
Four puppies, two males. two fe·
males , German Shepherd/Lab

Parts arrd Sflrvlce/1

Open: 7:30-1:00 WHkdlyo
7:30-4:00 Sl1urdoy
46384 241• ChtllfrtSJII.!

BANKROLL

21,..,.,

RaciNE Mawa CLINIC

RiM~hne

LIMnllet • Building Mlllrllll
Cuilam euiH Roof TruiiH
Polt 111m PICQgtt•
TotO WhHI HorN TriCiorl
· Hoi SprtngiSpu

Win A

Fn ,

Robert Barrens.
24 Rutland
Rd. Apnl 1-3. 1able &amp;- chairs, beds

BuSinrjsL Medical Bills .

3/JOIIIt mo lXI

.

Oustbultera Proleukmal Clean·
ing, Commercial And Rellldoll1lal
Call After S:DO P.M. 740-388·'!'22
Fre Ettlrnaln.
·

Giveaway

40

li,!l_. (i{!lt lit•~ tfi.IIJ iJ.~

:-JD COIIftiUCftOI

today fOr tree estimate
742·2101., 446-1622

3'Xi0'·$12.SO
3'112'·SJS.OO
3'XI4'·$11.SO

bATES
GUYS/GALS
· DATES
1·900·407-7782 E•t. 3453, $2.99
Min . Muat Be 18 Yrs. Serv~u 619·

Sefv·U 619-845-8434.

M:.N&gt;;~JIJrJ.,~---If{AAn.Mo.f!f!:tlll:.

. Plan ahead. Call

Metal 9" oc

.

Names + Numbers 1~900·2 85 ·
9077 Ext. 4585 $2.99 /Min 18 +

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
£ND' TOEND
MAY· I &amp; 2- ALL .DAY

-

•

819-845-8434.

"I" MILE

• Shrubbery Maintailance

ALEXANDRIA
MAVE GRUESER
Daughter of Kevin and
Mandie Grueser of
Reed!IYille, Ohio was
born · December 24,
1997, ·5:29 p.m. at
Mariena Memorial Hos·
pital. She was 19Y!
inches long and
weighed 7 pounds 8
ounces.
Palernal grandpar·enls
arc Gerry · and Mae
Hupp of Racine, Ohio
and (I he late) John
Grueser. . Malernal
grandparenls are Dale
and Shirley Rockhold of
Reedsville, Ohio and
(the lale) Donald Harris.
Paternal greal-grand·
parents are Jack and
Jean Grueser of Mason,
W. Va. and Belly Tyree
and (lhe late) James
Tyree of Syracuse,
maternal
great·
grandparenls are Wilma
Harris &amp; (tlie lale)
Mayford Harris of Long
Boltom, Ohio, Rufas
and Beulah Cline of
Reedsville, Ohio and
Norma Rockhold of
Reedsville, Ohio

180 Wanted To Do ,

shin&amp;.

Personals

OLDER OHIO LADIES Local

• Wetdeating .
• Tr11 Triming .

..

·Pizzas ••••••• ~~: ;:~~ 21•s.

•

. 34.5oz.

$ 99

.•

1

c

•

930Z.

.

TONY'S lrALIII $TYLE ·

S.75oz..

STOKELY"S
VEGETABLES ..

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

New Hours:
Tues·Fri 10·6 Sat. 10·4
Closed Sun &amp; Mcin
• Aeromalherapy Candles
&amp; Essenlial Oils
·
• Easier Baskels
• Handmade Sluff Rabbils
• Assor~ed Wooden Af18els

.

gal.

•

. SHOP

e Mowing (Residential &amp;
Commercial) ·

Gigantic church yard sale· saturday. April 3, 9am·? Harvest Outreach Church at Chester (Riebel
Rd.), loiS ol misc. "onls. Hot dogo.
pop and baked goods. A11 in or

I

Per Mln. Must Be 1B Vrs. Serv·U

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE . .

LAWN
CARE

~ ­

70iyeAWHk

•

BOR:EN .SliM

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Joe Wilson

j'J.!!: !Jl!!IIJl!!. il.!!l !j!~

9:00·1 Ra;n

Ridge &amp;. Plna Grove Rd . Friday,

84S-8434.

fll!~~ ~J

2·~.

S8turday, SUnday allarnoon.

"Bull' Your Dre11m"

. .•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling .
Stop &amp; Compare
~ FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Garage sale· 35100 FlatwOOd s by

Five Poln11, April
«shine.

JH!t

.tnc. eenetus. Game Wardens.
Socurl1y. MolnleriiCI. Pork ~
ora. No Exp. Neoded. For ~p.
And E•om lnlo can 1·800·813·
:ISIS. Ext 8475. .8. A.M. • 8 P.M., 7
Deys Ida. Inc
•

Three family, Intersection of Eagle

Are You An Exciting Romantic?
1-900·407·7781 Ext. 13859. $2.99

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

LARRY'S

.•

CHESHIRE

Hot A Cold

99 C
.Cauliflower.:;:••• ·. ·
$: ,,
lllc.................. 1.
$ ., ,
Orange Ju1ce...... 1.
$ ·99
2
Ice Cream •••••••••••• · .

Re.modeling

~

Hemlllck ·
Datl'very Available
Henltock Grove ADid
PoniarD)', Oj11o 45711
Ph. 74Q.II92·7285
After 4'P.M' ...., -

WLOUFE JOBS TO P1 .10

much mort.

&amp; mucb

(740) 843-5544

M·a • ·

....

Hot Braaktaat
Biscuit Sandwich,

FRE.$H CALIFORNIA ·

Custom Homes

CONSTRUCTION

Norw•r Spruce,
WhHe Pine and
c.~ ,..

Friday &amp; Saturday, ra in date
MOnday, 7 George Street, Mason.
S1ereo. boy 's 8·10, 0· 12

31121111 mel. pd.

CARPET

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Bono HollOw Rd .. MlcldleflOrl

Portland, Ohio

614-992-5479

BAUEDAHD
IURLAPPED TREES

........
· · ···99c

4464759 -

POMEROY, OH.

Just off Bradbury·Rd.
(~ook for signs)
Middleport, Oh
741J.992-5379
Oa &amp; Evenin Hours

Four family yard. sale- APril 1·3,

Pies and Cookies

.

113 W; 2ND ST.

4, 9arn,4pm.

and ln1pected

EatinuJte•

JEFF. WARf\ER INSURANCJ

Save Up To
75% Off

L~DS«:APE
~IJBSERY­

Ll.

.

·

Saoktng Rogls1ereci Long Totm
Care Nursing Ass is tants. Inter·
mediate C1re Ftclllly.-Rotallng
shifll', part Umt . West VI rginia
certiflea.tion required . Point
Pleaoanl Nurtlng &amp; R'!lJobll~t·
tjOii Con1or. Slato Aoulo 82, Box
321. Polnl Pleosant, WV 25S50.
(A Glanmark· Gonools 1ac1111y~
EOE.
'

ens. Tvrea Blvd .• Saturday~ April

ALL OCCASIONS
Birthdays, Holidays,
Weddlnge, Showers,
Anniversaries,
Graduatlol)&amp;, Etc.
Home Bokery Llcen1od

20Yrs. Exp . •
- Ina. Owner: Rick Johnson

3&amp;o• Communications

BARR'S

'

Gelllpolla, Ohio 45631
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding .
Insurances

CELLULAR PHONES
........

All Yon! Sllto lluo1 ae 1'11111 In
Aclvonco. Deodllno: 1:OOpltlllle
dty before the ed 11 to run.
Sundoy 6 Mon ley o&lt;ll11on·
1:00pm frldly.

wv.

005

614-992·3470

· POITAI. J08S TO IILIIIHII.

Five family yard sa!e, Sam Plek·

Linda's "
Custom Cakes

EOE

Inc. lefloll1o. No Experlttnco. For
App. And Eqm Into.. Coli 1·800·
813·3585 , Ell 8474 , 8 A.M. ·8
P.M.. 7 Deys tdo,lnc.

eo player, dishes, Home Interiors,

Call 614·843·5426

Llmestohe,
· Gravel, Sand,
Top·Soll, Fill Dirt

4

·

(614) 992·3838

8/4/TFN

~

A

C

Low Rates)

UmtltOnl Hauling

HouM &amp;Trailer $Rea

992·5513

•

•

•May 1·2, au day.

evl!~72.

end

monrhs, lOy&amp;, stationary bike. vid-

Vinyl Siding • Garages . ·
N'ew Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience.
Frea Estimates

WICKS
HAULING

200Z

.

.

..

-.

EXCAVAnNG CO.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

LOnG•s
conSTROCTIOn
-

Pomeroy, Mtddlepo rt, •nd 10

. Land ct..rlng &amp;
Grading
Septic Syetem I
Utllltlae .
Eetlmat11 ·

OFF
NOWI

';:::=±:::::::=.
··
(Ume Stone'·

HE IRS
OLD· .
FASHIONED
BREAD

10oz.

40%

Ohio River
· Campgrounds and
Batt &amp;Tackle, &amp;
Gen ..Merchandlae.
New It u1ed Heme. We
Bur · Sell • Trade: Tciol1,
f11hlng equip.; TV'I,
• CB'a. lllerwo• - little bH
of everything. Located
on · Ohio Rive• Campground•, St. At. . 124,

•2 /$
SJ39

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-corea • New Radiators
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

.

OPENINO APRIL t

12 PI 12 01 CANS

·USDA ' ~HOICE BONELESSL!'EEF

•Roorn Addition&amp;

'I' Milo Vollow Flag yord 111e.

HOWARD

RIDIItOIIIPIII

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

··NewGarag"
• •Electrical It Plumbing
: •Rooftng
•Interior It Exterior
• Painting
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATE6)
..
V.C. YOUNG Ill
•
992-6215
Pomeroy, O!llo

24 PI CUBE ·

s,.....,

.

•

Overbrook Contor. 333 Pogo
SltHI, Mlddltp0r111 MW occepl·
lng oppllctllono lor per1 1!l:'"
STNA'I ond LPN'S lor all 111¥•1·
Anvone Interested ple111 COfl'll
In and lill out IQ I!IPllcotlon. NO·

Aptlt ut, 2nd. 3rd, 41h . 8;30 A.M.
97 Dobbie Drtvo, Misc.l18ms.

ani . WV 25550 . (A Glenmark·
Geno~ lac,~ty) EOE.

Apnl 1s1 To April 19th, 8:00A.M.
·8:00 P.M. t 581 State Route 7
North. Household Goods. Rototill·

Experienced salesperson needed
with excellenr communlcalion
er. Lawn Mower. Vaccum .Ciean - skills to aall advertising for smau
er. Sew'Machinery.
local Christian and family till ·
· vision station. Must be willing to
3rd. 41h, Thurs. Fri.- Sal, work on commission. Send fl ·
~~~~:,!IO~S~o~c!!:on~d~A~,v-•n_u.:.
e. sume to TV27, 212 ,.ock Str~t.

~

April 3rd &amp; 41h 8·5 P.M. 1021
Slate Route 588, Misc •• Knick·

na&lt;*S. ClOthing Rain

eonca

leek Yord Slit: '!Win Baby nomo
&amp; Clothing jlnlon1 &amp; Up) Kldo
·' Clolheo To Size 7, Shoeo. Ma·
ternllf, Hou11hold Item,, Ap·
pllttnces, Toyl, E.,.ry1111ng Priced
1l&gt; Setll On Glvln SlrHI, Radnoy
Vllllge II Fridly &amp; 511\lfGOY, April
13111&amp; IIIII. I A.M . ~ P..M.

Frl &amp; Sit April 3rd &amp; •1h.' 220
Qebl&gt;le Drive, Lg. 2 Fomll)' Flrs1
T - $elf: Glrfo II-3T. loP II-2T.
All 81t&gt;y lleml, Cor SH1, High
Choir, E1c. Tooll. T.V .. Much

-·

Thuro ·SII, 1:,_, ... 3f Mldlson
Avenue

Behind

Plrza

Hut ,

Soot•N Ill for Ewt 1'01111

Thuro 112nd, '' Frll/3rd. 1 Milo
W. OI~RIIn~.

1 Pomeroy,

OhiO 45769.

Hair-&amp; Meke·UP Person For In·
1101ne 101omour Partieo. Eorn 178
·$150 Per Dly, llmittd Travel,

11011-4313&amp;3.

~ fumlllllng&amp; Slltt Rip, A•
qulramentl: Minimum 3 'IUra Ro·
taR ExperiOnce Including C~~~~:.
Window

Treatment•.

c.

Salas. Or Dogroo In
Ooolgn. Sond· Roournos To Tope
Furnhure G1lterl11. 151 Second
OH •51131 .

-

·Gelllooti:·
~

.,.,. gl.or lor, ltt&lt;IY &amp;I """·
lrao hOuolng &amp; diary, call 710·

Reo1a1 Income, $55,000 740-446·

5:30rlm. 304-675-ms.

J

-

BUY HOliES FROII M,OOO t ·5
Bdrm .. Local \)ol/1. &amp; Bank , . -1
Cal 1-8lJ0.522·2730, X 1701. ,

GOV'T FORECLOSED HCHMa

From Penn ies On 11 Ot:ll~t
Tax. Repo 's., REO's. Yoyr Alai.
Toll Free (1) 800·218· tooo
H-2814 FQrCurr.nt

lat.

u--. ,

-01.-..ct\

Houoo and prol)erly,
)e.
ere•. Ideal stan., ftomt.
St..l"orneroo' OH. 304-.am, :

hDf...,

Pornoror. 3 bldloom lloftle, ...lurnace &amp;
lank, 'handy m1n lltltclel•
roof, newer

$10,000. 614-237.01.\15,

•

4Middleport. ~ ..Oetory,' 3

a lr., 6ik ·
CUlloM ..,

br, 2 both, lerge l.r.
doors &amp; trim, &amp;mi11!'1

cabl~ets, Jenn-alr r1nge, dtlh-

oer.• bJ .,_.
•..a

washlr, delat:llld

polrrmtn1,740

'*:!
a
!
oo0

Hoftle.Fuly ~
w/goo hotoltng IYtlem"
..
up. Large fron1 l INICII _ . ,
Now '"""'Piing a~IIOnllor In lttrge olde deClo, httrn llyle ~
homo workert. Pfuuopp1y 11 11n building 11121, lola o1
maoon,Counly Action Gtvup, InC. lilue1ttcl &lt;1ft 2.7 101 2nd Jl1. _Potn1 Ploooon1. mtl.. ou1 CrobcrMk lid
Plo11e no lllorlllon :lpm. April 10 IPPfllcele 115
13111. MCAG, INC., it on EOf;, Ml ,_,H75-7133 E...... '....:. ·
F, NA.
11011 « 304415-7133.
,

66H83e«1-1·3511.

�•

..

~age 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.-

.J

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednetday, Aprl11, 1998

\Yed~sd8y, Aprll1, 1998 '

-. ' Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ollio.

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

-

~~~~~----~~~5===~========~~-- ·
'.&amp;.1'1'.

"'

"~

I

~LLEY OOP

__:_ _._N...:.E:._A..:.......:C..:.r..:.oa:.:•:..:w.:..o:._r.:...d_P_u_
·z.;..~l__e_·_· _ _,!

..... ....

ACII088

PHILLIP

1 ~
7 lnirotluced

ALDER

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

Ales• 1o '''w1aue

e~c~My-

••

54 Cerllln

~~~~ '.
··

~=-- -~

15 11111119
11 Extnme

Three bedroom home in Middle·
port, $300 per rnoalh plus ulilltiet,
7&lt;10-992-6M2.

Mobile homt &amp; lot for sale, 95
Coyton 1••70, 2 t&gt;r•• 2 baltl, ronge

All real estate advert1S1ng In
this newspaper is subject to
me Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 wnicn makes n illegal
to adventse "any preference,
limitation or discrim tnatton
based on race, color, rehg•on.
sex tam•liat status or national
origin, or any intentiOn to
make any sucn preference.
l+mitatlon or aiscrimlnatton "
This news;paper wtll not
· knowingly accept
adver1isements for r ~al estate
which is in vtola!IOn of the
law. Our reader's ate here~
informed that all dwellinga
advenised In this newspaper
are avail able or.t an equal ·
opp0r1unlly basi s. •

31 o Homes for Sale
Beautll4l Rhlftrtront Property At. 7
·South, Gallipolis, Near 218, Brick
Coloni a! 3 Large Bedrooms. LR .
OR. FR, Full Finished Basement
With Game Room 16x32 In·
· Ground Pool With "2 Decks Over·
looking River. By Appointment.
740-441 -0125.
Nice st or ~ &amp; 1/2, 3br, 1 bath,
covered patio, Pf~V~, feoced in
backyard w/24xAfl. abOve ground
pool (optional) small detached
garage. 261~ &amp; Garfield Ave. Next
to PVH , close to everything.
$79 .900 liM-875-2924 or 304675-3379 Leave Me,..ge.
Aancn. 2 bedroom. 1 bath. lining
room, dinlngroom, kitchen. 1.24
_acres wllh rtver frontage, enough
dyer frontage to make summer
camp site, located on SA 124,
Aac~ne,

on. 7ot0.94£J.2006.

•.

S.R. 684, Horrlsonvlie, 3 br. home,
· level lot, approx. 2/3 acre, new
roof , new vinyl siding &amp; deck,

owner wants 10 sell quickly, call
700-702-2808 evenings.

&amp; refrigerator , heat pump , outbuil ding, ~fge deck, 1etttng on a
nice lOt over IQ.Oking the rtver. call
740·892.· 2351 after 5pm. week·

'Two bedroom house, clean, ,..
fflgerator, no stove , no ·lnalde
1]811, deposit required , 7C0·992·

daya, anytime on weefotoos.

3090.

New 1998 1411:70 three bedroom:

420 Mobile Homee
for Rent

lnctudu 8 months F~EE lot rtnt.
Includes skirting , detu•e ateps
lnd aotup. Only $187.08 per
motlth with $1075 ctow(l . Call 1·

•

14X70 MoblllJR&gt;m• 3bJ. 1. 112
bath In Cam¢'tonli~•·675 ·
·6021 Call after 5:30pm.·

11®-837-3238.

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 loftl
14x70 rraller, 1300 per month, rw;t.
SUII under warranty, OWr'l' II· .Pfts. ~n 740-702-271•.
nancing available. 304·75S··
2 &amp; 3 bldroom mobile homea
1191 .
1260·$300, 18¥!11r. •ater· and
New Doublewide 3BR , 2 bath.
trash lncOidad. 740-992-2107.
11 ,325 Down &amp; $205 por mo. 12 Bedroom Beaulllul River VIew
888-928-3026.
References. Oepoalt, NO PETS!
REPO SPECIAL Moat Homoo
Fosters MObile Homo Parle, 740Never Lived ln . These Homes ololl-0181.
Are Orastfcally Reduced With
Speolal E·Z Financing . CALL 2 btdroom mobile. homo In ~tne
·
NOV( FOR P~E·APPROVAL . 1· area, no pets, 7&lt;10-992-5858.
888-736-3332 ..
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Refer·
Sln8tt"P•rent Pro"rem. Spectat ences ReQuired. No Pels, Rent
Plus Deposit, 7•0-797-4305, 700financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes . P1ymenta aa tow •• 408-0879.
$1•. Colt now 304-755-5885.
Two 2 Bedroom Mobile Home,
Special 16x80 3BA . 2 bath. You Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit, &amp;
References Required , In Porter
$1 ,325 Down, 5205 Mo. Free air
..... 61 .. 388-91 e2.
&amp; free liklrtlng. 1-800-691-t.m.
sPRING SPECIALS
lollltDown
U Ff•od IIIItH
$1HIIIo. Poymtnla

2 Bedroom Tralter, Large Living
Room, Appliances, Bob McCor·
mlck Road, 1275/Mo... + Ooposl1,
7&lt;10-o141!-68olol.

l17,t85on 3BR.
-Delivery ' set-up
Only AI Oikwood Homtt
,NI1r0, WV. 304-765-51185

2 ·Bedroom trailer, ratereneea &amp;
depoait. 304-675-1078 Leavo
m_essage.

MasOn ·area 3 bedroom. depoalt
raquirld. $295/mo. 004-f&gt;75-nB3.

TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $189/mo .
Free Sll·up &amp; Delivery. Only 3
Leftl On~ at Oskwood Homes NItro wv.300-755·5885.

Small two bedroom mobile hOme
for rant In Racine, 7&lt;10-992-5039.

Apartmenta
for Rent

440

Why Rent When You Could Own?
Big Sa'lllngs On Single! And
Ooublo-Widos. 6.75% To Quailfled Buyers. $499.00 Down Plus
Tax And Title With Approved
Crodl1) . W.ESTWOOO HOllE
SHOW, INC. 1-800-251-5070 Or
300-736-3688.

1 and 2 bedroom apartment&lt;, fur,
ntshed and unfurnished, aecurlry
deposit required. no peta, 1•0·
·992-2218.
Bedroom $200/Mo., +Deposit,
Ulllillas. 215 Spring Ava·
nue, Pomtrov. 300-422-!&gt;118.

Schull Modular 1995 28x56l&gt;P
Of Tl1e Line. Total Drywall 3 Bidrooms, 2 Baths. Family Room ,
Must Be Moved, Call French City
Homtll, 7&lt;10-446-9340.

NEW BANK REPO'S, ONLY 3

Svraausa· three bedrooms. two
full baths, two large garages.
much more. must see, 740·949-

Coll'fflGrcial Buildings For Sale Or .
Lease: 2 Buildings In CenleryiiJe,
OH Between Gallipolis &amp; Jack·
3 bedroom apartmenl, $'300 per
son, Just Off AI. 35 Both On Same
month plus utilities. plus depoal1:
Lot. Also ln.cludes House Pre·
2 bedroom apartment; Third
senlly Being Rented. Call 30•·
Slreet. Racine. Ohio, 700-247~8-6973. Or 304-965-3381, Hel-

3212.

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
12x65 Trailer 3br, 1 bath. 15,500.
CaH 300-f&gt;75--0878.

LEn,1-I00--2

2bdrm. apts., total eleCtric, ~P·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school In .town.
Applications available aa: VIllage
Green Apft. 149 or call 700-992·
3711. EOH.

340 Business and
Buildings

enGandoe.

4292.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

5 Rooms. &amp; Bath Apartment,
$0251Mo., $100 Oeposlt, Utilities
Paid, No Pols! 700·4•8·3•37 ,
7&lt;10-406-1837.
.

.(ATIENTION DEVELOPERS,
SIIALL BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATE)
~ng . 1·888--928·3426.
1 Coun Street; OlltipOIII, 1 fled.
63 .95 Acres. Appro• . 8 Acre
roo.m, Kllchen Furnished, Walk
14:.:70 Vindale Mobll.e Home 2 . Lake Galla County. COunty Water
Anywhere Downlown $22;5/MO.• +
badraom/1 bath with 7x1• pull AnD Electric 12 .eoo Per Acre . Ulllltitl, References Required,
out Uvlng room I 2x10 pull out 7&lt;10-388-8878,
1~ .
•
Master bedroom, new porch, for
www.guidopaltl.com/loc:affmovl
more Info can 30•·773·5'693
Beautllul 1 Bedroom Very Ckten,
10 Acres On ~elghborhood
1e3'lle message will return call.
Prjvate Patio. Oft Street Parking,
Road, 2-Mifos From 1•1 . Wooded
Aenl • Ulllitlts~ Lease, Releranc·
1988 Fore11 Park Doublewide, 3 Lot, Wi1h Building Site, $13,000.
Credil Chtck. 700-448-388-4
Bedrooms, .2 Baths. LA, DR. Heat . Call 7 40·4•1·0881 II No Answer os.
Al1of 5 P.M.
Pump, RefrigeraJor /Stove, Vinyl uava Message.
Skirting. Must be Mcwer 740·379·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
120 ft . long. 60 It lOng by 75 ft.
2962 Evenings.
BUOGET P~ICES AT JACKSON
wide. level lot in Middleport, rt·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
1995 Redman 16x80 With central duced from $23.000
$11,000
from 5279 1o $358. Wall&lt; toohop
Air, Oeck, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
7&lt;10-~-2290 .
&amp; movies. Call T•o-•,.6 · 2~68 .
Garden Tub, Huge Kitchen. All·
EQUal Housng Ollportunhy.
Appliance&amp; &amp; Many Extras! AI· Jim Watters Home Near Compte·
ready Set up On Lot! THe OVer tkln With 35x50 fl .· Metal Garage
Beech St Middleport. OH . 2br
Building Insulated. Also Trailer
Payment~ Of $298 Per Month,
furnished apartment. ulilllles
Pad Set·Up, 2 + Acres. Aural
7~71 .
.
· paid. deposil .&amp; references. 301·
Water. Approx. 7 Miles From
882-2566.
Gailipols, 7&lt;0-256-1335 ..
1996 Schult 3bedrooms. 2baths.
vinyl siding, shingled roof. barn
Loi WJih Septic Tarik I Water
Ctean 1br apt 'In H•nderton .
building. price reduced. 304 ~675Tap, Route 7, River View. 740$175/n!o. 300-675-1972 If nci an1275 or 304-!&gt;75-4183.
14 •70 3BA, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
I 179 per mo. Free air &amp; f{Qe skirt·

oeo.

1&amp;1Tim8 Buyers. E-Z FNneng
2 Of 3 Bedroom, Around $200 per
montn . Can credit 'line 1·800·
9ol6-5678.
t4x80 Glamour Balh, $179/Mo.,
304-736-7295.
ABANDON HOME Make 2 paymenrs. assume loan. owner u ~
nancing ava~able . 304-755-7191 .
Anenlion Mobile Home Owner~ :
Areas Largest II'Nentory Of Inter·
lherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps ,
Air CondtltOnars. Furnaces &amp;

256-6043.

364

ro

----·

'

Real Eatate
Wanted

Furnished Efficiency Apartment,
Cenlral Heat &amp; Air Cbnditloning,
Cari)OI Throughout. Priva1o ParkIng. AU Ulilitiel Furnianect Except
Eleclric, Private &amp; Quiet. 740·

Caah Paid For Land In Gallia
Counly, Bt~ckburn Reali~. 740·
446 0008.

446-26CI1.

Gractouillving. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparlmtnll at VHtago Manor and
Rlv.tUlide Aparlmants In Middle·
port From $249-$373. Call 7•o992-5060. Equal
()pporluniliel.

INEEDLANO
It You Have Land , I Need ·.To
Hear From You NOW! We Pay
Top US For Farms And Vacant
Land. 20 To 300 Acrea. Road
Frontage And Woods A Plua.
Call Mika Anltlony Land Co.. Lid.
1-100-213-8365.

-•tno

540 Mlecellaneous MercfJandlee ·
Steeping rooms with cooki og~
Also 1railar apac'e .on river . All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m..
004-n:l'!i851 , Maaon wv.

46o Space lor Rent
Mobile home aile available bet·
wltn ' Alhena and POmeroy. ca!l

7&lt;10-385-4367.

For 'Lease

490

For Lease·Jerlcho Rd. 3 btd·
rooni, 2 balh. BIG tot $400/mo.
300-67!1-'107.

MERCHANDI SE
'

510

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Rerrl·
gralors. 90 Day Guar•nteel
french CUy Maytag, 740·-446·
7795.
G.E: 12,000. BTU air condilioner.
30o&amp;-675..t697 ertet •pm.
'
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers. dryers, refrigeralora.•
ranges. Skag·gs Appliances, 76
VIne Stroot. Call 7417-448-7398.
1-800--199-3099.
Pofly'o- &amp; UMd Furnftln
Wo now I1IMI h"'' Surpiuolll
2101 Jetrerson Ave.
Open 9:30 - 5:00 Moo-Sal
300-!&gt;75-SOFA (71132)

We Moved! Used Furniture Store
Below The Holiday Inn In Kanau·
ge, Ohio. Beds. Dressers, Couch·
11, MattresSes. Etc. Hrs M· T·W.
10-4, 740-4041-4782.

Sporting
Gooda

WNaon'o Army Sull&gt;ltll
Bast prices ai1ywhtre· full tine ol
Advanlage Camo In time tor
turkey season . Great. setecUo.n ol
new and used boots; tots of new
and Ulld camo, Siltl 2 monthS
to •x: backpacking and camp1ng
itema; kid's clothes; u.s. made
Smllh &amp; Wenon knives and lots
more. Coma and check us out
We · are open 8:30am-8:00pm
averwday, Call us .at 740·992·
7093 or 1-800-3ol8-8176.

530

CICC Min iature Pinscher 10
Week a. Female·, Shots ·And
wormed, Mature At a .lbs. $150.
. 7&lt;0-256-6162.

like new 14.5 Wizard lawn tractor
with sweeper and cart, SUiiOO:
Wagner Power roller and sprayer;
·bedside commode and bath chair
ustd very tlnlo, 11011'1 for $50, 7&lt;10992-3014. .

Antique•

Prlf11tltlr- $99 lns1allallon wllh
$50 'l"tbale. Firat month free with
tree movie cnannet.s, StarOne

•

1
spacial. I •' 1nstol.a11on,.8002113-21140.
Prom dresa size M worn at Potnt
In 97, blue sequence. $SO. 304•
675-6418.
Queen Size Waterbed Complete.
Works GoOd, 740·379-2720 AF·
TER IP.II.
A I S Furniture

1967 Oido 98, 4 dr., AC,.auiO, ell
power, new motor wfth !111 th1n
20,000 mUea, rebuilt trantnUulon
with lou 1han 20,ooo· milts, .
several Olhar new partS, · good .
body (no rust), ~ llree, o.co~
lenl work car, 12.795, .7•0·949·
~(IYtolngs) .

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIV ESTOC K

11it ford Eoc«1 GT .
Rod In Color, Tires Ntw, Lolded,
Sun Rool 8-4,000 Mites
- $1,000
(304)41&amp;-IIH

6f0 Farm Equipment

__:___;___-:--:----.- 1,
New release TV Beanie Bab1es,
$9.50 each, Valan~o . 125; 740·

1210 Da'llkl Brown rracror, 65 hp.
diesel, tronl end loader bucket.
manure fot1c, bale spear and back
bale loader, good con.dillon ,
$5000: 154· John Deere manure
spreader, high rlotatlon t1re1, 220
bushel. new chain, $500; goff car1.
$1000; 7•o-742·308o4 or 7•o-742·
3089.

Beat The Spring Rush, get your
mowers &amp; trimmers. luned up
now. Sider's Equipment Hender·
son, WV. 3()4..675-7-421 .

Farm Llme Spreader a· tn Lengtn
Phone : 700-441-&lt;&gt;025.

11194 Cavalier, oroy, 2 door, 2.2.
air, standard, 50,000 miles, ~50
r&lt;m, 7&lt;0-949-3001 .
1994 Mercury Cougar XA7 , 8
Cyt., PS, PB, Power Windows.
Laathtr /Cfolh Interior, Air Bags,
'E•c.ltenl COndilton, Adun OrN8n
• Wall Taken Caro Ql - 44.000
Miles, $11 ,000 Firm. Strlous In·
qurloi ·Only. (:ail ·7•0-•46-7527.
After 5:00P.M.
1994 Ptymou1h Sundanct Aulo,
Air, • Doors, Excottenl Condfllon,
$3,600, 7&lt;10-«6-95S2.

---

1998 Mustang Cobra LaHr Red,
Leather Int., Mach 460 Sound
Syslem With ·co Pfa~r Loaso
Car 2 1/2 Years llllmoinlng $3671
Mo., 740·381-8899 Call Allor 4

541! MI1C8IIanilou1
Merchancllee
630

· 1962 ChoYy 6 Fl. Bed. CYL Auto;
1.500 Solid. 3 Pl. Disc 1150. Bottom Plows $25.00. We1111ered
Barn Siding, Slack .10 Unear Ft.
New Top Rated warer Treatmenr
~ys10m For Healthy O&lt;lnking WaIM 1375, 7&lt;10-367-neo.

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan AI Horne
8uy Olrocl and SAVEl
Commerciii/Homl Units
Ftom $199.00
Low Mclr!thtj Paymenls
fREE Color Calafog

1880 Ford ... Pick-Up $2,500;
Bov Dog Box Wi1l1 Comp
Small Or Largo Truck 1200; Wll·
dlife Trackir)g Collar ~hannel
1300; Electric Dog BrllkM Collar
S175; 5 Yoar Old Walker Coon

Coun1ry

Hound

seoo. Col 1&lt;10-~t.

2 House tral ..r axles wltlres
ssoaa, 6 House tratler lires on
rlmt S35ea . Red aluminum cap
top tits full ofzo 1rue11. $150. 004875-ol435.
•

Ohio. 1•800-537-9528._

COli TOday HI00-71Hl158.

19$6 l·24 Cavalier, All Powtr,
Sunroot 5 Speed, Kay10ss Entry,
CO Player, Now Tires, 113,000,
080, 7oi0-44Hl235.

· 3yr. old btaek gelded Tennessee.
Walker. Nalural galled. 52.000.
3Qot-562-5840.

111110 -1990 Cars For 1100111
Saizod And Sold

4 ReO Black Angus Bulls at
Cummings ~ngus Bull Farm
SOulhslde, wv. 300-675-6208.

n1e.

2 Llrdgo bags girls inlanl clothes
up to 61, 1111 riasonablt, very
good cond. ~CA Roper 35.000
bTU eir conditoner. used 2mos.
304-1175-1035.
•:r Gibson Hau-.rt Must Salt, .
Ow""' MovingI Newlt Decoraltd
lnteriOJ &amp; Elterlor Many Extras!
MusI See To ApprO(iale, For Apoolntmont. 61o-237-5655.

1998 Ptymoulft · Nton Red 2
Doors. 27 .ooo Miles, Automatic,
AC, AMIFM Casse1.1o, Alklng
$8,850, 0110. 7&lt;0-258-61119. .

1 Registered Black llfrioulin BuN
2 Years Old : 4 Good Cows Wllh
Cal••• AI Side 740-446-7380 Aller 5 P.M.

Two beauliful format dresses, size ;· 5yr old standard bred gelding,
7·I, each only worn once, call very nice dlsposlllon. I 1,800.
7&lt;10-965-3504.
304-1182·5&amp;10.
•
Used Working Washer /Dryer. eyr. old AOHA mare INC. Fund,
Longaberger Baskels (Unused) ches1nul. 3Q4-875-«90 If no on·
Large Purse, 97 Easter Ba&amp;kel 1
~r leave rhessage'
Uner Protecaor, 251h Anniversary
Baskel /Liner Prolector, Tandy
AOHA mare, 10 years. trail ridden
1.000 RSM Cot!1M., Prinl!lr, Bof1- A parades, traffic
eacellenl
ware, 740-446·8n8.
brood mara pr91peet, $3 , 0~0.

VACATION
ON us
FREE
· 3 Days And 2 Nighls.
CftooM One Of Manr foo Rletd
Localiont Lllol Miami---Oaylona Beocl1... AlllntiC Cily...
Orlando... Lao Vegas ... Branson.
MO... Na&amp;IWIIIe•.. Acapulco,
Or Many Oilier Btautii!A ~
Ouanlitln Lir*od.

PJ&amp;.i

Livestock

7oi0-992-2BOO.
Arabian Mare 5 Yeara Old. Well·
Broke, Gentle Saddle /Bridle
Available 7-40·448·22•0. Ask For
I.Mry, 7•0 U6 6881 .
SPECIAL SPRING
FEEDER CALf SALE
AlhlnoUWI-S01urday, AprM111111 P.M. All
Consigmenls -Hauling
Available. came Accepted Alief
• P.M. Ftlday. 7&lt;10-592-2322 Or
7o40-f&gt;98-3531

Loeafly
- EIC.·.
Trucl&lt;s,l'l1ls
4x4's,
1-800-522-2730, )(.3901 .

Credil Problems? we Can Help.
Easy' Bank Finencing For Uaed
Vehicles. Na Turn Downs, Call
VIckie, 740-«8-2897.
Seized Cars From $1 J5. Porsch·
es, Cadlllacs. Chevys, BMW's.
Corvettes. Also Jtepa, -4 WD's.
YOur Area. Toll Free 1·800·:211·
9000 E~t. A·28t-4 For Cufftnt

l:l6tings.
Upton Uud Cars Rt. 62·3 Miles
South of Le~m . WV. Financing
. 300-4511-1·

720 · Truckr. for Safe
1-ChlwyTrucll'
Cuslom30. Black In Color, Loodod, Body In Aoal Good ~$5,500, Faclory Big- •M.
110.000- -(300)418-1'"

&amp;X8 Heavy dutv utility trailer,
ca;z.~ ~;.t*lroad ready wlloading ramps. 004Modern 1br apt all urilltles paid '675-8308.
Wa11101 &amp; Dryers, $75 &amp; Up, Sold
NewtJOrn ooats, mus1 bOUle feed. 1988 lsuzu space eab sunrool,
except electric, 1250/mo. + de·
Parts, Huge' Buying Power Means
304!675--1926. ·
sliding window, bed liner, aula,
Afghan
S•5:
Indian
Bride
&amp;
With
Warranly
SeM~e
Avanabta,
posit. 304-675-1371 or 300-675The LoweAIInslalled.Ptice, Easy
Groom Set $50: Indian Pouerv
19 Yeara Experience, 740-446·
Hampshire Fair PigS. 40 _60 Pels., air. am·tm cassena. $2,800. 3()-4.
RE ~JTALS
Over The Phone Bank Financing .
3230.
~
Baokela 122.50; Coffll Grinder 9086,
·
7&lt;10-3711--21105.
1!75-29ol9.
Call Bennen·s Mobile Home HTG
olngfo tfficloncy _..,.,. In 112.150. 740-245-9802.
&amp; CLG H00-872-5967.
Waterlino Spacial: 31• 200 PSI
Regislered Black ~ngus Bull IIIIIO·Oodge 0Mlddlaporl , ulilities paid, 1375
V-6, 3.9 Uler.
410
Hou181
for
Rent
BIG
SCREEN
TV
FOR
SALE;
11e$21
.85 Per 11).0; I: 200 PS!
plus dtposi; 740-992-5304.
Proven. Easy Calling Genna. AIIUng;lol,ll!l!I, J&lt;I0-2A~51i115BUY IN MARCH
&amp;ponsi~e party to take on small
$37.00 Per 100; All Bran Com·
NoP~msUmi~1~
2 Bedroom 6693 Stall AouNI 588,
t ,OOOPds. SI.0007&lt;0-258-6043.
1981 Chevy ·S·10 •cyl, 5spd,
Nice clean etfienc~ apartmenl, montn~ paymtnts. Good a.ctil a ~:"N'f "it';':AP~IIES
E:Z Financng
Gailipoil, No Pets, Deposit ......
.
e:elling
Out
AQHA
Slalllons,
new
tires. new engine. $1,150.
&amp;
deposit,
no
pets.
references
3
cal Finance Une
must. calf 1-800-711-1857.
.........,, Ol1io. 1-IIOO-S37-9528
Required, 7ol()o4.43-2266.
~
30H75-73116 Of 1-1100-6115-7301
300-675-5182.
Brood Mares Yearlings 2 Yetlr or 304--674-ooo7.
1-800-808-5678
New! Grea1 Glhf CO/IIIdoo
Olds, Treadmilt Tack &amp; Farm,
2 aec::1room House In Gallipolls, Two bedrDom apartment In Po· Brand
Ftot_Se1-~~~
&amp;torage unit Black and chari~.
Wedding Oown·Btautiful Ivory
WID Hook-Up, CIA, No Smokers
1&lt;10-281-8522.
1991 IIIUZU PI:I&lt;•Up, ~.
me&lt;oy. ulililieo paid, no pelS, 740- Never out of box. St25. Hotdl up ~equlned, re·tmbroidef"td tac:a .
Discount Mobile Home P,arrts &amp; Or Pets, References &amp; Oeposlt,
351
Windsor. Automallc, 5 Sllr
992-5858.
940 discs. also holds tapes.
tile 10 wtth Yeil. Only $225. :JO.&amp;.
.Aceeuorles WJter Heaters. Vt·
Young Simmental Bulls Butchef' Whlets, very NICe Truck, Needs
7&lt;10-256-9180- 8-9 P.M.
740-992·8.838 after 8 pm . 87H040.
nyf Skl rllng Kits $299.95 , An •
. Hogs. • -H Club Pigs. 7•0-25tl" Transmission Rebufll. Neod To
. Nice on(. SA Unfurniii'Mtd Apart·
' chOta, WOod &amp; Fiberglass Slops.
:6;;:51:::0:..
.
Sol1740-256-1!1o17.
ment. Range &amp; Refrig. Provided. ~~~~;._;;;;;...--f 550~---Bulldlng
Roof Coatings. Doors, Windows .
water &amp; Garb•ge Paid. Deposit Browning Compound Bow. self
640
.SUpplies
Plumb!ng &amp; 'Electrical Supplies.
1992'&amp;-10 Exlondod Cob. 1991
Required, 7•o-••e-4345 After 6 climbinG tree stand. e· uuck
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
Barn
Kapt
Round
Saito
lbs.
5-10.
1989 S-10. 9-f&gt;. Aulo. 19111
'
P
.M.
speakers,
llofTX
Thundtr
Pro
500
· Blocll. brif:k." sewer pl.,.a, wind·
39 ChtiiiC01ho Rood, 3
Morel Call Bennetl's Mobile
0
wan
bOx
speakers,
Samsung
ml·
$15.00
Eadl,
WiN
LOad;
oi0-3~
~~
~:
/lo/C, Cook Moloro,
ows.
lintels,
etc.
ClaUde
Winters,
Cenlral
Air.
Heal,
Garage,
Homt sUpply At1·7&lt;10--9416.
0
Now Ttklng Applications-· 3' cr ...... 2-110- at&lt; condl- . Rio Grande, OH Calf 740·2•5- 2766.
-2583.
Wast 2 Bedroom .Townhouse uoners. Be 13• ·colOr TV, Sears
5121 .
.
Divorce Forca1 Sales· lake over
11194 Ford F-350 Claw Cab Duai3br House in Naw Haven, wv. Apartments 1295/Mo., 1410·448· 111" Color TV, F - VCR, BrownBARNEO-Aound . bails mlxod ly P.U. 7.3 Turbo Oiosof, Auto
payments, 2br, 2 batn. financing
$335/mo. • deposit. 304-773- 0008.
Ing VP 10 gaugt 11101 gun, llllm- PUBLIC NOTIC.E: Two slool
300-882-20n.
Trons. 3 OifltrotW Hircheo, 12.000
- --304-755-51188.
buildings never put up. Will
lnglon 700 Sonordo, 300
Large
round
baleo
of
hay.
S8ea.
Milos, $25,000 ' Call 740-446588 1
One ~room .,arlment In Mid·
make dtalllf Call Chuck 1-800Winchestar M•o- Redlletd
-" 3 Bedroom. f9V5 Down. $199/
w•lood30«75-1365.
2394.
4
Bedrooms,
2
Ba1ho,
Nlct
Yard,
dllporl,
7&lt;10-S9iz-2178.
3x12x58mm aHimatt IIUminltOr .320-2340.
Mo .. Only OakorQOd Homes. Bar.;_M.;_I•.;_tu=r::o;.::o::l
.
.:.:_a;.::l
f
a..:t::fa=:_&amp;
_
_
-lim-ot-n-y
,
llll94
S-10 Pick-Up, LS, 8 CyfinNon~priour:
No
lnt;dl
Pall.
RIO
One
bedroom
aparlmtnlln
~idsc:ope. For 1tau • ·- lobocbour"'"'· WV. :!IM-736-3009.
560 Petllor Sale
Grali&amp;o Area, 7oHe7-11633. •
dltport,,eN Ullfilitt Plfd, $270 per co -ll30f-f&gt;1'5-7113.
square baleo, round bates 12001. dor. fVr. 51-.p! 700 ue illl.
Glenwood. Palestine Rd. '-'aaon
Clost To City 5cl1o!&gt;fs . month, S100 dopoofl, call roo- Cor Baot loby Cfolhos ·To 3 2 Famelt Australian Shepherd 7
35411
co. 1989 3br mobile homO &amp; 31• Gatjlpolis.
:..;:40-::;:965-::::;::::;:::;·-----·1730 Vene &amp; 4-WDI
And TOwn , Rent With Option To 112·7808.
Puppleo,
8
Old
Ful
~
ac:re land. central a ir._ heal , 17
Yeors, Lilli - · lloby ShHIO I
td. 7.0.258 '29.
s.y, 3 BedrOoms, T01ill 7 -.s.
RMJIIIIIO PUCE
Mobile 10 ~ 7«).~5 ezw.
mnes from Millon E1it. $29.!00.
Force
Air
Furnact.
I
Out
BuHd·
Nlwttlwn,WY
Sefiout Inquire• Only. NQ ca111
A GrOOJfl Shop · P•t Grooming .
ing.".Atfrigarator &amp; Stove Fur- 1 Bedroom iPII. for eldtriW or Concrtte I PlltiiC Septic Tonko,
B,lqlm. 304-562-5&amp;10.
F..turlng Hydro 8ath. Don
300 Thru 2.000 Gallon• Ron
Shtlla. 373 Gtorgoa c;reek Rd .
....
Cal7-7-31120.
Evone En1--. JICkoon, OH
ili!llld.
5050/Mo., OI!PM &amp; UtilHugo 2Bx80 3BR. 1 112 balh,
7&lt;10-oi48-0i131 .
1-100-537-.
Slartlng at ONLY 131.999. Many
SPURLOCKUIIE
1"t GMC Solari Full Cullom
optiont available. 1·118·928· . Large lhfH bldroom farm houu, Up1lalrs 2 ·Room• &amp; Balh Fur·
&amp; FEIITIUZEII
VM. $3.950 740 ••• t222
AKC
Fomaft
Shtltit
Soble
&amp;
3028. .
Corr1111e1o Blending &amp; Spr-ing,
carPt1ed, garage, S-100 plus M· · Clton, No ....,, - · " ' "
While, Verr Ftlondt~. Lovoo
QJrily dopooil, 7ol0-992·5331- '
&amp; Doposh Roqufrod, 740-408'
AerosJar van, blue ·
LOtolod: Goffla CGun4y Unt, 1893 Ford _
CNidftn,
$1011;
Col
740-441-7111
• lMge aolee1ton o1 ulod 11011111. 2
1 1/2 Milo Soulh Of SLite Rou11 with blue interior, 10.000 milts,
NICe
cteon,
2br,
rotor&amp;
cit151e.
Or7-7378.
or 3 bedroome. S111rtng at $2995.
278, On Jimtl Emory Rotc1. Olk
xu.__,
9pocial ~-- pooil, no pefL 304-1175-5 112.
410
Fuml8hed
Quick delivery. Call 700-385Hit 740 612 9040.
llrn.
1fWY - 1
11750, 7&lt;10-AKC
llllglotorod
Btcnon
Puppin,
.
~1 .
'
~·Y• or 740-f&lt;48·21•4
One Badroom Ho,.. R ROOIIII
11 Stlter In 111171 2nd Plact In
1200/Mo.. S50 Otpoiotl, Col Alter
UlllrEo OffER " . --0og-1A"-·'
Elvia Items: Records. Books.
5, 304-1175-2117.
Circle Mottl Lowool Aoloo In Pllllo, Doll, Also Counlry To 11 1nc11n High, Pattn111 F"""
1H8 DoubfiWidt 311r,. 2 batho.
Tciwn. Newty AMWtdtltd, HIO,
Mlesoufi, Prlct: $400, 740-:i7~
I 1,899/down S2591mo. On I~ ol
1tll51ladgo"""·
-·
63,000
ICiual mllll,
81CIIIIftt
2 Apar1mtnll In Alo Grondt Clntm••· ,_,.,. &amp; Dfo..,.. Reoordl. 7&lt;10412-'IIH.
11011.
710 Autol for Sale
Olkwood H..,s Nitro, WV 30oiCOI1rfilion, 10!2.000 flrrn, call 740Areo ' Acroso From Colftgo, 1 ~
Of 11on1111y
755-W5.
182-tiii!O.
~oom. 1 Balh. Ullhlft Included, Contlruclfon -uro Wotcomo
1811 12•80 LO&lt;oltd JohnOOn'f
$200/Mo'. ~pooll Roqulrtd; 1 .1 .~~~~~7~-~
· ~t-5!1~ffi~-;_­
Bodfoom Aport"""'· 131 0/Mo., 1
Moblft Homo P1111 fVr Elol- ~-. 513-57ol-253i.
WIWAII-IIOriL
trn Avenue Willi ExpondO, 7&lt;0.18
B11nte, Small Jock Ru111fl Fo+!8-20113.
AEMIIDN MOIOR8
Smol2 . . _ , - . . . . . . .
GAWI'OUI
mate: Loolllng For An lniltmoto
~ard n11r Tupptre I'UIIno, 1250
LOir
•
Rotalfonahip, Wllh A Mite Joel
Ntw DOUbiiWidt Atpo, 4 hd:
Aoflopoli_od;;;, - '
Col lloiiEYinl. 1-I00-531-t52t.
I* month plue dopooll, 740-115WEIICLY IIA1'II
RutMI (SIUd Stnrlct) Call740r_,., ea111o. EM;' Torme, 1·

- - - - - - --?1

4

hay,--·

t·~~~~H~UrD~•:•:•I:o~lo~d~.~EO:H.

""*·
,.,

--·

""*·

__

w cw

a.

11101 U fi•.GIJ WEEIILY

;1500.

-In --

oloii-G553.

.

I

1983 Honda 550 Nigh1 Hawk ~,;,
Ttr11. New Brakes Low . Mites, •
Looko Now 7ol0-ol48-6692.

';'C:.

BARNEY
I CHANGED-ALL MY
SEAT COVERS
TOOEW, LOWEEZY !!

198!5 Yamaha 700 Virago Low • "'
Mlltl, Excellent Condllion,
$1.400, 7...379-9038.

1996 Honde ShadoW American
Clasok: Edllton 1100cc Elli:ollon1
Condnton, LD1s 01 Elflre'st J7,000
Firm, 7&lt;0-448-0983 Days After 5
P.M.&amp;-740-o146-7371. ,

:
•
•
•
•

fO{~
14 Ft. Y·8oltom Aluminum Boat, ;
tSOO; New Galvanized Trailer •
$fJOO; ~0 HP tlllercury Motor 1
$800, 740-24$-8109.
:

-I

THE BORN LO~ER
. ""PQP ~'(~ WE'Itf.-LIJC.b', 'c.kr.:£."q

1176 Altroglass fibergla&amp;s Bass

-. 1
... ~
[ 1f\INK IT WI¢ t... UIDIO YQIJ

I"

Wf\m 1-'f: WO "'IQD, N.L fi£ !W)

Boat And Trailer No Motor. Only
Trolling Motor, No Reasonable'
Ollorlllllusod. 7~-1415.

c.ouLDQioU..'( U~TEfool TO I~

~~~~/&gt;to~ Nl\ ~0'

.,_
·=
-

21 c:u.lllons

27 ...........

21

. 31 Rollln't . _ ;.
37 Cry of
•'
aui'prtij - ' .

·=
47=- .
3101 wine

41.r.t'

42 --Miey .

By Phillip Alder
H~many dilfetent deals are
played each year? Whatever your
guesstimare. mos1 years we seem 1o
get a nipon of each player holding a
13-card suit. But how uft~ should
this hapjlen? By· my calculation: it
should be once every several lifes. pans of the Eanh!
.
Last year. I wa.~ telephoned about
the South hand in the diagram. Doris
:raylor of Berlin, Md., picked il ~p in
september during a social game.
True, this was the first claim o( 37
points l'clever heard. Yet it wa.~ hard
nor to be skeptical. The odds are
IS8,7S3,389,899to I agairiM picking
.up one of the four 37-point hands.
To give you a beu.e r idea of these
odds, if you play twice a week. you
should llavc one of theSe hand~ about
every 60 million years •• and Doris'
exact hand every 240 million years!
However. Doris, who is 93 years
young and wonderful to talk with,
assures me the .;fkck was shuffied
.,properly by Myrtle Burba~ (Nonh).
Then it was dealt by Virginia Lee
Dennis (West). Ea•t wa.~ Kay Bromley. (UnfOJtU!iatcly.lhey didn't reconl
the whole deah--1 used a computer
. program to fill in the otber three

'-,

. "-Ilk:?

•.

52 Explojl(w
tnha. \

53 Act,....

Lupino '

8987.

New ga• tat1ka, 1 1on~ truck
wheels I racNatort. 0 &amp; A Auto.
Ripley, WV. 30•·372·3933 or 11100-273-8329. -

1"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

by Lull Campos

~ Ciptwr erypletfams are Ctll~ from quotatiOI'la by IIWI'ICIUS people. pa$1 and pra&amp;ent
.
EliCh~'" h ~ llanc:tl for another. T«&lt;IJy'l CW: H ~Is W

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;t .J.

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GAWC

c a·c w _·

MTNK

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occ

ZNK

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S N G DPREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Courage Is doing what yOu're alraid
be no courage unless ~ou·re scared.' - EddMI R~kenbacker.

to do. There can
,

'::~:~· '0@\\~lA- ~t.~S~ _
::::_·

.....,;..:.:.;~=:;;;.,.~ NltM iry ClAY I. POI1AII

Rtorrango loiters of
0 four
ocromblod words

flit

be-

law to form four simple words.

-'

.

I

M0 T E P

.

E RDE B

I

. ,

J

15

I -I .1

I•
I

NARPTY
.

-

_

.

"I don't tell my dales h~,

-

!•

.

woman revealed, ·1 believe eve,Y life should have a touch of
•
•
~-·-·-- .

I

f t Complere tho chudcJo quOted,
V by lilling in lhe milling -d•
you dovelop .from step

1
• ~~~~rsrtJ~~~~UIUS 1
•

.

':' • old 1am: the middle age~

1---~~-l:.....:.:,;l'i--T-[._:..,;-17-1

There's no
way
around-it,
.
.
·Classified Ads

Engine, transmlllion &amp; body
parts tor 1980 Pontiac Grand-Am,
tor more inlormelton cillt 300-675-

'

~.;
,. 1_
,•. I

•

1995 Ford R""'''!f lrucll bed, tong ' I
bod, $400 OBO. 700-949-2311 .
doys or 740-1M11--8Ytftings.

.·r

49 FNDCII lrllnd'

only three !'Oolnlmp. riot seven. The
play began and Doris said ro the oth·
ers, "You won'r believe rhe hand I
have." She repeated that once or
twice ._, she ca.•hed a few tricb
..-./~~~~ before pl,.:ing her remaining cards
~
· face-up~ the table. ·
Give Doris a place in the puinnesr~
Book of Records:-.

•

'1

50 Sou1ilelll
'
Asian hc"t J .. ~

· Doris oould nor believe her eyes.

Auto Parte &amp;
Acceuorles .

g(F:~~fR lETTERS TO

No. ~ below.

r I' r I' I' ·I' 1

IIIIIIII

SCUM LETS' ANSWERS

Engine • Photo - Hutch - Meekly- THINK
To remind myself to slow down, I hung up a sign in
my office Illat "~!3d : ·Don'l Talk Any Faster Than You
Can THINK"
·

!

n...

43"-

45 Anailar
48 -II

L-..L.--'-'--.l.--.1.---'

197• Slorcrefi Pop -Up Camper
S.teo ps. a. ~urn,ace, Refrigerator, .
51ove, 5 1
orta-Pouy, Nl~ef
740 446 '6811.
•

.

0....:...-,.lJLL..?I · 'So. after-- ihree - passes, "stjl~ in
shock." as she told me. she opened

Kawasaki STS Jel ski, olilt undtr'
warranty. three seater, 83 hOra.
~wer, bought new July of '97,
three matching· Kawasaki ski
v11ts and trailer all go with it,
$5000, 740-Boltl-2203 or 7ol0-9oi920.S5, will cOnsider lrade lor a
good ponloon boat

Camp&amp;rl&amp;
Motor Homes

.. erN&gt; ·:
23.-out

rneaaure

21 t...ndlld

hands.) ·

J

APRIL 11

I;

1975 M811ard'27' Wit~ Awning; : · •
1980 - t n g 1r Willi Awning; · :
1990 Eddte 18' 1972 Pr-r 20' · , ,
Wilh Awning. 1899 McCormick · •
.::Gaftir=·~p•.::llis.:..:·7.::40-446-:..:::..;1,:.51:.:;1..~ • : •
1861 uosko 4M Chivy Chauts - '
Loodod, Ex ' N Condition, Tat. - '
O..,l'aymfrlll, 7-1311.
'

!

:.:-=·

·l

'
• ·w

11114128 Ft Nomad Camper Ex- , :-'
ctftenl Condllton, S8,800, 7•0- : .• ,; j

ue zee.

11196 ,Guhnam

·s·-·

camper.~
very light .-eighl,
new. . .. -._owu.a
_......75-~78,

.·w

4

2511.· ~"i
like • . ~
•

....

-w • ...,..

1997 Tttry ~ 27 Fl=~
Fibefglall E1..,.,-, Loaded, lm· .. : ......
........ COndition! 111 ,500. 740- . -71,AI1orli P.M.

Smoolh:

SERV ICFS
____________________
·:
•

810

•~·

· Home -·
lmproyementl

M''•NT
. WATI!IIPROOI'INQ
Uncondhionlt lifetime ~aranlee.
LOiat references furnished. Es·
llll&gt;lilhtd 1975. COlt (740) oWe- '0870 Or 1·11®-217.0571. Aogori - .
WolorPII&gt;OIIng.
Appliance Parts And Sarvlct: All
Namo Brlnds Over 25 Ytora
pertiii'ICI All Work Guaranteed,
Froncil Cftr Moy1og, 7•0·441-

e.-

1795•

.

C&amp;C General Home • Main·
lontnct- Polnllng. vinyl siding,

"
- Y· dDoro, - · baltlo.
- - , . . , . . . 11(111 ...... For

frN lllimale Cll Chtl. 7ol0-llt2·
8323,
I

840 EIICtrical end
"' RelrlgeiiUon

o 0 '

..

AniiMnUII or CGMWCial wtrir.g, .• •

_ _ or......,..ua....-u-

conud oloolrlclln. Rt&lt;ritnour
Eltelrtco!, wvoooaoe. 304-1751788. .

'·
..:

BERNIC~

BEDEOSOL·
.

ditions in genml
be r~ther
pleasant 'for you most uf the day.
However.rhat which is mOIIC cnricing
and fun mighl not occur unlil tDWIIrds
evening. Know where to look for
romance and you"ll · find it. The
A!llro-Giaph Matchmi.ker instantly
Jtvcal~ which sign~~ arc'f(11111111tically
perfmfor you. Mail S2.'7S to Match·
maker, clo this newspaper. P.O. Boll
1758. t.fumly Hill Station. New
York. NY 101~.
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In
ihi~
· · - cycle ir"• to your benefit
to
• ::•1ima' livinJ." The !0011:
you ~ ft . odlm. the more you're
likely lo ta:ci~e iJI retum.

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 201 Yuur
~harming "Smile. quick wit and warm
humor make powerful imprts•ions
•Jhat can s~ll snc~-es.~ for you today.
Put1hein to the 1csl and,you'll see.
CANCER (June. 21:July 22)
~upid might sclki you for his principle ~er today. &lt;;ondirion.• look
promiilthg in the I'01IIanC1: iicpanment
for you and your llpe(ial !IOIIICOIIe.
LEO duly 23~Aug. 22) An
alliance thai is already of grar--, ig·
nifiCVJCC mighl be strengthened even.
funher today. Evenrs over which you
have no rontrul will orchestrate the
movconcnt.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sc!pt. 22) Lead
by exa!Dple today. because thi5 will
encouraJe iho!e who are involved
with you·to help achieve your pur-·
Jiolcs. Their suppon is CS!Cntial. ;
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Punue
your rainbows today, because you
WQII) be looking a! life throu... tint·
ed. Jlaue!· The bri4"t lpoiS ~ percave do 1adecd extlit ·
·
SCORPIO (Ott 24-NI!\'. 22) Per·.
110115 Who·IW Clqse 10 your heart will

benefit from your presence and
effort~ today. You'll help rhem do
what they will be una\llc to do on
their own.
•
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dcc.
21~nnorillnmlyouJodaymore

rhan you will need rhem. When you
enrer into an arrangement. you·n
increa.'IC irs possibilirics and winning
potential.
CAPRICORN (l)ec. 22·Jan. 19)
This is a good day ro focus your
effons . on . labors of love. Doing
things. you enjoy will provide an
addirional dirnellllion of fulfillrnenr
and pride.
·
AQUARfpS (Jan• .20-Feb. 19)
Being able to manage or dilef:l·Olh·
crs and have tllem like it is that exrra
spe~:ial somethinl! you pos!ICS., ioday.
lllllinctiely. you~ll ~'llpw to~
lild inspire. ,
PISCES (Feb. 20--Mareh 201 If
your inruition wllispers that your
_i_nv~mnelli$ will have a pod bot·
tom line today, don't itnore ihc
voice. It knows a lot .more than you
do.

'
•

•

.'

•• •

•
\

•

•
\

"''
TtiL

~~~6!

f'Oit.ffi~TP\I~T

1998 19 Ft ·Marade Wl1h • ·.3
Mercrulser And Trailer, Like New;
1996 15 Ft Aluminum SOl,~
Mymph Bau Boa1o Wilh 30 HP
Evenrude &amp; Trailer Loaded·
Reedy To Fish; 1995 20 H Boy- .
liner Cuddy With 4.3~Mercruiur:
&amp; Traitor Low_,.; 111110 18 Ft .
PleylyrM Ski Boel Wl1h 88 HP
Evenrude &amp;1'rolor; 1910 19 Fl :
Viking Otck Boat Complolety Rocondfltonod 1n11r1or i'/ilh 170 HP: '
~crulstr &amp; Traitor; 1 .Ustd 5 11 _
2 HP Johnoon I lfMd ·•o HP
Mercury; 1 UHd..50 HP Mercury
1 Used 90 HP Mercury; New
Marada Boa11 Hew Odyssey ~
-BoalS. 7&lt;10-256-6160.
.

22~01atoril .

19 Radiation

-

750 BOlli &amp;_Mot~

1989 Sealmp ·l9 112it deep-V,
beige wJ&amp;If\d Interior, lcyl,
t90hp. Mercrulser Inboard motor,
with traUei , lilt preservers &amp;
. bumpora. $2,750. 614-oloiS-3614.

21 Certain
lrw1ructor

,volcano.

·12 Specks

s s no
.joke. ,;_ honest!

Kawasaki 550 LTD Looks Good •
1150. oeo. 700-25&amp;-61119.

790

31 Bar cilllr
37 Toppla
31 Kind of IHther g SWiss,,_
10 Gl'*' cook
41 Stalul11 Slclflan
.. r..... or

•

Opening lead: Who cares?

FIDDLE
DIE 01111

~-~lr

s

auction :

I Show .l
1 B11ld
8 That girl

\!ulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
8outhJ '. W;~i· Nol1h Eut
P-ass Pass
Pass
3NT!!
Pass Pass
Pes•

FRANJ{ &amp; 'EARNEST

t996 Road Boas Go-Cart 8hp.~ •
Briggs &amp; Stratton englno, etecutc. •
11or1. lull roll cege, headtlghl ' ' :
tall ligh1. good cond. Cost 1,499' •
new, as~ng $750. 30fo458-.t802.

760

9· 6

Tennis pllipr
Arthur- ·

4 11410 - ·tung
5 Ending lot

menta
3ti Cllt IOUndl

•AKQ
•AKQ
tAKQ
..AKQJ

·740 · MotOI'cyclea ·

1998 Hondo 300E~ Now Condillon. Rode Le11 i'han 10 Hrs,
$3,500 Or Take Over P,$ymtnls,
7o10-441-2318.

1ts2 Ford Tempo Loadtcl 73,000
Mjlol, 4 Doors. E~celltnl Condl·
. lion $3,800; New Tlreo,.New Batter;. 7&lt;10-256-8854.

Buy or sell. Alverln·e Antiques,
112• E. Main Street, on Rt. 12•,
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 5:00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 lo
8:00 p.m. 740-992-2526, Ruu

~n.

• 8 7 6 2

· lti7 Gt.!C .ex.1 Cab •54 ,nolne,
auto, toadtd. 199• GMC Jimmy
outo, loodod . 304-875-4230 or
304-1175-4853.

1989 Cavalier 2.0 · • Cylinder
Auto, Air, High Mlle1 , $1,~00 ,
30ol-875-1310.

~

32FMWIFCI
33 Type of IIIII
:W Pronou,_.

• J to 9
•

1 'Ballet

mov_,l
2 PllliOiopher
DHQrta
21 -~tothe

.• 9 .8 6. 5

South

DOWN

wlill

~.,

:::::.::::.:.::..:.::..;.;::.~::-:- ' .
1989 ·Bronco U 4x4 )(LT: au · \
lomatlc, aW, loaded, ·175,000 muea, . ·
.JOOko. tt'Q runli good. $2950. 740247-4292.
.

1995 Harley Davidson Sprir\ger
Sotlah·black, exc: . cond. 6 ,-400
miles . .-.aklng $1.5,000. Call afler
olpm. 304-662·3o460.

1992 Cullan Supremo SL; 2
D.oors, Red, Bucket Seats, Fac·
tory Alloy Whoeta, Clean &amp;
Sharp! $5,995, Cook Mo10ra, 74044&amp;-&lt;1103. .

AC 2 fow no till corn planter.
·John Deere 711. hay blne. Ford
1011. transpor. disk , all In good
eondffion. 304-273-4215.

a:.s:: :!.e

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Uprtgru, Aon Evans Enlerprises.

.

·$3,896. 7&lt;~0-oW~!-1451 .

1969 Buick LaSabre.'to.c!ed, 1011
of new parts, good condition ,
$1800. call 7&lt;0-949-2203 or 7•0Boltl-2005.

1081 Chevy Lumina car, 3.1 Euro
modal, V-6, 81 ,ooo mllaa, blue
wllh blue interior, ·1WO door, aH opHons. J0750 OBO, 746-909-2311
days or 740-049-28olol evenings.

3 Point Backhoe, 3 Bonom Plows,
Gravlly Bed Wago.n, Mowing Ma·
chino, 1&lt;10-286-6522.

King Cunar Bush Hog . Vfcon Hay
Bailer, 5x5 roll. New Holland •12
Used &amp; Antique$
,
Hay Bine. Equlpmenl Same As
Furniture.
New. ~ 7 5-4·182 ·
____
30ol-_;_n_3-_.,;_530_1_
. ---~ Troy 8111 Garden Tiller 8 Horse
Shop Smith Mark IV Lots Of Ac- Power, ll'"' New, PhOne: UD-446ceasolrea Must Seltl 7•0·446· 8830 Evenings.
66112.
White 4 boUOm nml mounted
plOw.
$700. 004-875-•306.
Smith C•onB Word Processor
With Screen. Has Lo1us 3,
Spreadsheets, Hard Drive And A
Disc Orlve', More Features, Call
Pam At 7&lt;10-245-9635.

18ft~ 4bove Qiound pool wilh ••·
aeaaorlea/aprox. ~x&lt;40 privacy
lance/In exce\lent concijtion. 304·
n3-!i893.
·

EEK&amp;.MEEK

1967 $-10 Blazer 4 WO AC, PS,'
PB, nn, CRZ tookl /Rooo Greall

~~~

II F 1 gold
57 Begin•

20 DenaeNjl
21 -a.ndill
21 Decorltld the

., 2 .
• 9 4 3
• a7 3 2
.108754

WD,

sa.ooo,oao. 1oo-~185 , s-s.

uis8 Chevy Tahoe :i:l.ooo Mtl.es
1985 Ponltac Trani-Am Auto~ Ell:cellenl Condition , 4 Qoors~ ' 1
Air, Till, T-Tops, Block With Black
White, Ltalhtr lnllrior,'CO. 5.7
lnlorlor, Nict Car, $3,000 740- · lltor. V-8 , Allor 5 P.M. 740···~643-083:1.
.

NOTICE
Ftonch C~ Pot Gnoomlng
_
NowOpont
• . •
,Professional Grooming by Ap ·
pointments. 650 Second Ave.
GaHipoiiS, OH. 004-675-4858.

Mauve Laz~ Boy rocker recliner,
excellent condlllon , $100. 740985-389ol
Multi· Media Computer·With Over
$1,500 SoftWare, Euter Aabbltl,
New Zealand Whites, Silver M.,..tens, 740· 258-6647, 740·367·
7016.

1984, Merci.uy Lynx, 4 sp.,' runs
goo~. body' good; $300 or 080.
740-3!18-9693.

·1987 tsuzll Trooper . •

8585.

. Magic The Gathering Carda 11
Unopened Boxes of Ice Age Ser·
"' $35 A Box, 700-441-()918.·

992·5232.
Pink Splendor Barbie Doll, &amp; Erin
Beante Baby F01 Sate, Only Sartous InQuiries Please, 740·4461523.

Twin litze Manreaa &amp; Bo•sprlngo.
Like Now, Asking $50.00 For Sal,
740-ololl!-2859.

520

CFA · Persian kltttnll , very Hat f984 Buick ~ogal 'Black Wl1h
face , copper eye&amp;, ready by mid (lotd Pin S1rlpe New Tlr ... Air,
April, all oholl. 1250oa. :JOo\-675- tilt, Cruise. Runt Excollenl, 7407273. .
' 245-5964.
.

Looking For AVon Products, But
Don't Know Where To Buy Them
Call Pam loJ 7&lt;10-245-9635lrSIRI.

'Household
Goode

1982 Cutlus Supreme , 2 D. 280
VB. Good Condition , $1 ,900 Or
Bast Offer. 740-992-41188.

6 Australian Shehird.Pu'pple-.
7&lt;IO-ol48-3180.

Hand Mado Blanket Oak &amp; Maplo
Chest. 740 -379- 272 0 After I
P.ll.
· Johnson's Used Furniture:
Washer, Dryers, Hutches, -DI·
nette'a, Refrigerators, Sloves, Tel·
evialons, lfvtnQroom /Bedroom
. Suites. 740-•08-4039, 740-4411000.

17 Wlduiloutze
1a PN!Ix for pod

710 Auto• for ~le -

i- •

-.!:J.!.l~!!.l~.!!.l •.''

........ current
11 Funallon....

.• !.. •

�•

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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy ·• Middleport, Ohio

CCL hears about massage therapy

•

Wednesday, Aprll1, 1998

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

IN TH! COIIUOtli'LIAI
COURT. PI90IATI
DMilON MllCia COUNTY,
OHIO

m1s. 1w11 OIJtl' tor..,. et
... INI...,...,J
..... 14111, ,..,
Mwan
It .10:00 a.m., 11ft the llelp
County Courthau• ltepe,
Stltl of Ohio, t.

Public Notlc:.

Public
_....... c -

'

.........

_,...
·
BelntOty,
th• - .. m•

Ohio Lottery_

•

•

lnetrurnent.

reel
She said that the massage therapy
llld pr•ml ..a are
The South Central District Con. . _ -VM to Plulll• •PP,.IIId 11 ninety nl111
is good for relaxation, stress man- ference will be held at Rodney Unitlohulet •nCI ll1rg11 . J. thouund
dollera
agement, and edema reduction. A ed Methodist Church on April 17.
o.y Wade ...... - '
lohuler by Ceoll P. (. .,000.001 and mUll Ill •
question and answer period fol- llleme will be "Christmas in April" CJUitlllln or the 11t1te of
llrlclbutylllldwlfebyCIMCI lold lOr not leu thin nlnetv
-llargll J. Sctu•. en
lltullld In the TCIWIIIIIlp ~In Dllellloolt 188, nine theullnd Cloll1r1,
lowed h~r presentation and she·was and tjle ToddlerS to Tassels League
of Llllanon, County of p111 18 of the 111111 (188,000.00). Tttn percent
lr.comp-.d,.,.....
presented with a gift from the group. is hosting the event
llelgl lnd 81lllt of ONo,' t. c-y Deed Recorda. .
down when lhe biCI 11
Kathy Dyer opened the meeting
Seveml of the members are plan·
~:onlte
·
ICCipllellnd bllonca upon
wtt:,..;
following
dlecrllltcl
lublect
to
111
1
......
by leading the group in the pledge of ning [o attend. The league has a
Pu,...•nt to the onl• of rul eelltl tltulllel In the 11";:::,:.nCI · rlghte~f- dlllvery ol dHd.
allegiance and the Mothers' Prayer. money making project and a draw- the Probate Court"olllelge
The Hie Ia eubJICI to
Tawn•hlp ol Lebenan,
..... ~
1pproval
ol the llalga
for roll call members answered with ing for a Longaberger basket will be County, Ohio, In C~ll No. County
of Mtlgellicl Stitt 311 p
-588 : Volume County Probete
Court,
1
when they last flew a kite. ·
held on May 21. .
;;~~~~;~of
Ohio 1nc1 bounded nc1
•
lle
• Melgo llelgo County, Ohio. The
It was voted to . endorse the
de•crlbeCI •• follow: In C:O:~!!:c'P~::rc':~. 07• GUirdlln rellrvtl the right
Donna Pullins won the traveling
Town 2, Ring• . 11 1nd In 007S4 lncf.ONI0755 •
renewal levy for the Meigs County ·prize. Refreshments were served by
to rlj1C11ny lnd Ill bldL
1(10 ICre 1011 No. 181 lOCI
·Excepting from lhe lbove
Gary Rupe, Ouardlln of
Council on Aging.
Peggy Harris.
~ ~~~ In the Ohio d..orlbed premle.. the
Margie~ SChul«
'
peny 1 Purohaoe 1nCI follOWing:
.
~; (4) 1, I; 3TC
In Memory
mortpert~arly ct..erlblcl · Approximately 4.035
II tollowe.
being 2.087 ICrel In
louneled on the North by 100 1ere 'Lot No. 111 anCI
'
'
In Memory of
IInde formerly owned by 1.841 ecree In 1oo Acre Lot
Newton Kimper; on th• 112 11 11me 11e1 bltwHn
NEVA
M.
GRIMM
To offer sto~ suggestions, report lateElll bV tilt OhiO River; on SA 124 lnd the Ohio RIVer
On Her83rd
tilt South by ·IIndt or J,M.
IUrvty of Qeorgell
brealdng ~ and offer news tips
Cox; lnd 11ft tilt Will by the
Ohio Prol-lonlii
Birthday, Aprll1et
~:"~=~~~~ ~;·~;2 .:~~
No. 8044, Jl~•ry
Always 10 true,
more or leu..
'Slid EXCEPTION II more
uneelfllh end kind
Excaptlng - hell of 111 fully deecrlbed In Exhibit
Few In this world,
thl oll1nd 111 1nc1 a1 other "A" or an Entry llled M1roh
ml-alo In and underlying 3rd, 1111 In the Malge
are hard to find
the above ducrlbad County Prob1te Court In
A beautiful life that
prem~IL
. . No. m15 and 11mel1
Aleit IUblect to the right Incorporated herein by
eime to en and
or way gr1nted to c. H. ret-.
Wetzel to I. II. J-•· June . No opinion of title nor
She died, ·• • eha
211t, 1'118 lnd recordld In oortlfle~llon 11 to 1ccurecy
lived, our beloved
.Volume 1, Pl.. 271 of thto ol ...acrlptlon rendered by
Mother, and bas'
R-rell of Alghll of Wev the the prep1rer ot thll
friend.
We wJsh you 1
'
.
.
Happy
Birthday
New Six Week Session Beginning April 7.
upon thle l!u ·
.
Tuesdays &amp; Thursdays 7-8 pm ·
Though you are up
,._.....;;..,....,..,.TTumplke Ford,
needs • Business Manager tQ
Held at Royal Oak Resort
. In Heaven and fer
Mid Ohio
support o~r growth. Realistic first
away! "
For More Information Call Jeannie Owen,
Valley's
·
Love and mlaeld by
.;: year Income of $35,000 to $50,000 or
Fit
Aerobics at 992-6893
Leading
your loving family.
¥~ more. Industry leading benefits

CCL hears about massage therapy
• 'Janice Haynes, .licensed massage
'therapist, was guest speaker at a
recent meeting o.(. the. Middlepon
Child Conservation League held at
tl)e Rock Springs United Methodist
'Church.
.
· Haynes spoke of mMsage as
spanning a wide variety of therapeutic approache.s which works to
improve an •individual's 'health and
. well being through the hanas by
manipulation of muscles and other
'soft ti ssue of th~ body.

•

•

Padres hand
Reds secon~
loss in row
.

::'*OJ&gt;

Pick 3:
9-7-5
Pick 4:
4-3·1-4
SuperLoHo:
4-9-18-24-36-38
Kicker:
4-8-2·2-4-3

'

Sports on Page 4
&gt;

~

Happy
90th
Birthda
8r_artdrn
Pickens

The Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

"

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SMAll
·WANT ADS

1M&lt;

7

~1.'48, NO. 245
~1 Ill, Ohio Yltley Publllhlng Cornp1ny .

ABil PIKHI

Automotive
Retailer, has
lmmedlite
openings In the
following area:

:~pplicatlons will be taken at the Tuppers Plains Fire Department
.from 1:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. on the following dates.
~

. April 6th, April 8th; April 1oth
. . April 13th, April 15th, April 17th

· A Gannan Co. Ne-papar .

:J ones lawsuit dismls,sed by judge

.

·Appeal '99 ·p~r·cent'

certain~-attorneys
.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) _. Freed
fro"! the prospect of an embarassing
trial for sexual harassment, Presi.dent
Clinton responded today- with an
understated, "Oj!viously, I'm
pleao;ed." One of Paula Jones' auorneys described her as "tearful" and
said her legal team would meet today
to plot a "99-percent" certain appeal.
Both sides acknowledged that the
case is not yet behind Clinton.
.While Clinton savored his court
victory with an unlit cigar, the pres·
ident still must confront a criminal
inves1igation by Whitewater counsel
Kenneth Starr ·tbat grew out of the
Jones' lawsuit.
.
Mrs. Iones was not commenting
but her la~yers and supponers were
making the rounds of morning TV.·

Including group health and 401K
retirement plans. We provide the
proddcts and a great work
environment. You provide your
desire and commitment.
· Contact Brad Sang In per'ion
----:between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Monday
lhr4)U(l(h Friday at Turnplka ·Ford.
· Turnpike ·Ford Is an equal
opportunity employer.

BUSINESS
MANAGER

· The Meigs County Commissioners are proposing to secure grant
funds to assist in the cost of connecting to the Tuppers PlainS'
Regional Sewer District for the low Income and elderly reslderits
of the area who. qualify for the program.
.

2 sec~tc&gt;ns, 12 Pages, 35 t!enis

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll2, 1998

..

.·TURNPIKE· FORD

AftENTION
ftPPERS PLAINS RESIDENTS!

Clear tonlg'h t , low In
lower 30s. Friday, pertly
rain in afternoon,

.

.
'
WI don·' ilhink"this is over until the ' the victory, telling reporters today:'
. 8th Circuit rules (on an appeal)," "Obviously I'm pleased with the
Susan Carpenter McMillan, spokes· decision. 111e judge's ruling speaks
woman for Mrs. Jones, said today,
for itself."
,
·
, Responding to U.S. District Judge
Mrs. Clinton was more effusive.
Susan Webber Wright's opinion that "Both Bill and I havelelt throughout
Clinton's alleged crude advances on this 'whole thing that it would tum out
Mrs. Jones did not ccinslitute h~s- fine ... based on the fact that there
men~ Carpenter McMillan added: 'If was no ~vidence to 'support these
thai ruling stands. then you just have groundless claims," she told Ameri·
an open season on women here in this · can Urban Radio Network·.
country for groping and grabbi ng." · Wright's stunning ruling in Little
"Mrs. Iones was tearful ... it's Rock, Ark., on Wednesday did not
been an ordeal for her," lohn White- . vindicate the"president.· Ratller, the
head, Mrs. Jones' altof!1ey, said on judge said.Mrs. Jones' allegations fell
ABC's "Good Morning America." "farshortofth~rigorousstandards"
He said there wis a "99 percent" for establishing her job discriminaprobability of an appeal.
tion claim under Arkansas law.
In Africa with his wife, Clinton
Senior White House adviser Rahm
tempered his first public remarks on · Emanuel said today that Wright's dis-

.

'

missal meant that Starr, whose grand
jury investigation is probing whether
Clinton ·committed perjury and
obstructed justice in the Jones case,
needed to "move and wrap this up
quickly."
"There is going to be some questions by the Americans people why
you would have an ongoing investi·
galion of a matter when the judge has
decided that this case ha~ been dismissed," Emanuel told NBC'~
"Today" show.
former Clinton adviser James
Carville,. appearing with Carpenter
McMillan on NBC, said he yet hoped
to see the Jones case 'spawn another
investigation.
'
"I think a lot or money was
changing hands for a lot of people to

, I

tell a.lot of lies," Carville said.' "'fe
need a thorough investigation i~to
payola."
Their burden woUld be hlgh for
reversing the judge who threw out the
Jones lawsuit and spared the president a sensational, probably monthslong trial. Clinton looked forward .
today to gelling back to business in·
Washington. "I'm .very much looking
forward to going home and continuing the very ambitious agenda we've
got there," he said.
·
Although Mrs. Jones contended
she was placed in a dead-end government job for refusing sex with
Clintonon May 8, 1991 , Wright said
the former Arkansas government
clerk, who filed·.her suit in 1994,
"failed to demonstrate that she has a
case worthy of submilling to a jury.."

What's next
Mrs. Jones
• Her lawyers have 30
days-to decide whether
or not to appeal
• The Rutherford

..

Institute, which is

financing her suit, say they will
~ppeal all1he way to lhe SupreJne
Court

·

, ·

President Clinton
• Significant victory for

the White House
• Still faces legal
!roubles and mounting
legal bills

Kenneth Starr
• Does not directly affect
his work; Starr will
press on with his
criminal investigation
. • But impeachment

rumblings could stop
AP

.......----Artist in residence-___, House·in · udes $5 m·i llion for
Ravenswo d Connector project

····-···-·········-·····-··-

The U.s .' House of Representa- passed earlier.
The funding for the Ravenswood
tives has included $5 .million for the
Ravenswood Connector in ils. House project. if approved in the final stage,
"Transportation Bill. The legislation, . will be used for continued design
approving a lotat ·of $218 billion in work and construction to -augment
highway spending, was approved $1 .3 million previously appropriated ·
by Congress for the project.
·
last' night by a vo~t of 337 to 80.
A,mong the other seven projects
According to U.S. Rcpre§Cnlative
. Ted Strickland, P-Lucasville, the approved in the bill are t6e improve' · fundint ·levels •mUll ~~; ·mluU oU~asteiTl Aven~- -- Slat!=
cited with the Senate-passed ve!Sion Route 7 -- in Gallipoli~;. to 'lid in die
of the transportation bill, which flow of traffic; replacement of a ·

-,
'I
•.

The Commissioners urge all affected residents to take advantage
.of this program. Please contact the Meigs County Grants Office
at 992-7908 for more Information.

bridge across the Muskingum River
in Marietta; funds for the Chesapeake
bypass project: and the upgrading of
U.S: 33 to a four-lane highway to
bypass Nelsonville.
'
The House and Senate will now
work together to "reconcile" the
funding of individual p~jects,
because the Senate does not earmark
funds f~¥ in ' ivi&lt;!lllll·projccts when it
approves its trlulsportation funding.
according to Strickland's office.

Handful of Ohioans attack spend.ing bill
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Aa1ocllted Prell Writer
WASHINGTON - Ohio would
get a significant boost in road-build'ng money 'under legislation that
pasSed the House without atross·the·
IM?ard Ohio suppon.
The slate's overall share federal
gasoline , ta~ revenues would rise
·under the legislation from an average
of $6!16 ·million.a year to more than
$1 billion:
.
But that ?idn't please lawmakers
with an eye on the bottom line; Buckeye budget·hawks complained about
the bin allouing more money than the
balanced-budget agreeme'nt allowed.
and complained about more. than
1,600 line-items earmarlcing money
for special projects.
"The hlghway process still works

•

•
•

•

. George Bo'A'M of

ahown ..... with

FRIDAY, APRIL 3
HIO
Fools Rush In

1:11
1:11

11:11

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The Ot~~tl s (h:m
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A1rp1ane 11 The SeQuel

SUNDAY, APRIL 5
1:11 '"' IIID
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From The Earth To The Moon
(h ltSoc:le! 1 dllcl 2t
MISSIWI tmposstble
The' £:able Guy

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gives you the
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·and vitamins

,.
•
•

•

COlumnist· Lorrie .Lynch will
give .you the latest scoop on
_your f~vorite personalities in

The P&amp;ltagon Wa rs
1180 Orr(Jm.rf Mov•e

._,~,

.'

'

The Aeltc
Prunal Fear

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'1. (

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One Fme Day
· The L,u ry S.1ruters Sh0\'1

MAX
11:31

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Get

SATURDAY, APRIL 4

....

lluclenlw In the
lltllow, 1111 llt'Ved ..
Plalna Elementary .•• an
In realdlnce" alnc:. 1111 .Wiliiii''
llo-•. ·• gredu•te
· Cltllt•lend l,_.ltute of Art and
the Nova Scotllllnatltute of Art
In Hallflx, N.S., c.rutcla, 1111
worked with alllluclenta In the
· achool, from klndergartell
through allith .grecle, helping
1hem lelm the ptOCHI of
claveloplng ldeea In art, work·
.lngln groupe, and 131111 ntlng
a 'lnlahed prolect. Projacta
Involve three-dlmenalonel
- • ntflectlng the community - ttHa, a barn, and
wildlife, Included - •• well 11
underwater c:reaturea whlc:h
will hang from the celllnga ilnd .
a cave ac:ene. The flnllh~
- n wiH be feltured 11 ali art
exhibit 11 the ac:hool on Thu,.
dey evening, wfllc:h will 1110
Include 10111e opportunHIH for
handl-on artwork. The threedlmenlklnll lllima _ . .,....
pared for the new E11tem Ele.mentery School, which le
ac:hedulld to · open at the
beginning of the neitt ac:hool
~r. At right, lludente Amen-

WhosNews.

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·

· ··

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'

ell Berringer, JMH Nutter and
Jennlfw Hayman work on 1 3D trw. The prog~am II mlde
polllbla by grant fundi
thrpugh the Ohio Arta COUncil,

the ~llchlin Arta lnHietlve
and
Rlvarbend Aria·Coun·
ell. The Tuppera Plllna Ell-

meo•tat t

~

ld.ln the progt:am.

alao '111111·
. .

•

House, Senate clear"
··ecks bef.o..re break
~

'

•

'
''

.How they voted

• I

. COLUMBUS (AP)- State lawThe Senate, meanwhile. cleared its
makers, doing· some last-minute backlog' 'of legislation with ncarhousekeeping before their annual unanimous· votes on several' liills.
spring rece!t&lt;, have approved legisla· Among theril, bills requiring public
lion requiring more background agencies lo mail public documents if
information for foster' parent&lt; and requesied and requiring state park '
· better water testing al state !teaches. officials to test swimming area.&lt; for
The House voted 91-0 Wedlf\lsday high levels of baclma and IJ&gt; post the
• to ~cept some 'minor changes made results.
'
in the Senate la.&lt;t week to a bill that
The bills now,go to the House for
would require foster parent&lt; to be consiileratlon.
notified if their foster ahild had been
All together, the House and Senconvicted of any ·serious crimes, ale cleared the decks of about twosuch as murder or 111pe. The bill orig- dozen, mOstly noncontrovendal, bills.
inally ~leared the Hous!:'in the fall.
Lawmakers phin to takel next wee~
· Among the changes made in the oiT, and the next voting sessions are
Senall!. was a requirement that foster • not ~cheduled ufllil mid-May.
parents receive detailed reports of
The foster child legislation, which
psychiatric' reports, said sponsor Rep. is now headed to Gov. George ·
J~k Ford, D·1Jieelo.
Voinovich, was written after a Tol\l·

.
·
do. woman
was killed by her IS-yearo(d foster son, Johnnie JoiJfaq. He
was convicted of beating Jeanette
Johnson, 62, with a hatchet, dousing

her with kerosene and setting her on
· J
1996
fitre ·m her k'tic hen In
anuary
·
·
'th M
Jordan had bee.n I'tvmg
w1
rs.
Johnson ·and her husband for two
months. His history of violence
forced officials to move him into and
out.!&gt;f 19homcsimd fosteroperatio~s.
·
·
be
H
smce ·age 8· e was about to
· th ts
' t'tme 'Io a group
moued
• ag am,
home for I
g sex al 0ft ders
een·a c u .
en
·
. Her ~u~ba~: Charles. Johnson:
SIUd soctal se~1ces offi~1als knew
J~rdan had a history of vtole~ce but
dtd n~t tell ~he couple about h•s J?liSI.
Offictals sa1d the couple were gtven
Continued 011 page 3

By The AIIOCiated Prell
HowOhio's U.S. Represenlatives
vol~d Wednesday as ui.t House
authorized $217 billion in fedeml
spending for highways and mass
transitoverthenexlsbyears.
A "yes" vote is a vote to pass the
bill, which was approved 337-80.
OHIO
Republic~ns Boehner, N;
Chabot, N; Gillmor, Y; Hobson, N;1
Kasich, N: LaTourette, Y; Ney, Y;
Oxley, Y; Portman, N; Pryce, Y; Regula, Y.
·
'
'
•
Democrats- Brown. N; Hall, Y;
Kaptur, Y; Kucinich, Y; Sawyer, Y;
Stokes, Y; Strickland, :V; Traficant, Y,

.A..

· ul.e"s•on
Cher·
t't'l II• 11
IVCI
Pleads Innocent
·

WELLSTON (AP) - ·A teacher
onstrilcewhoisaccusedofhiuinga
security guard with an umbrella has
pleaded innocent io an assaultch~UBC.
Mitchell Baker, S1, of Wellston,
ente.red the plea Tuesday in ihe Well·
b
h f J k
C
ston ranc 0 ac son ounty
Municipal Court.
He 1·8• accused of ht'lt·•'n• Joseph
·
&lt;&gt;
Camp i_n the
. school bus g·~gc on
-·
March 18, lhe day after ihe strike
began, police said.
Camp, 28•of Troy, Micll., wu nor
injured. He is employed by Huffmaster Inc., the comJliUiy hired to
· nmvide security during ·lhe stri~-.
r·-111e maximum ~ penalty ~or..,.the
misdemcaiiO( charge is six months.in '
jail andaSI.OOOfine.
·
· About 121&gt; teachers are on strike
over wages in the 1,6()().pupil district .
·about 60 miles soutiL of Columbus.
Negotiations are scheduled for
Thursday.
• ·

'i

•

•

"'

.'

.!

the way it alwan has: badly, " said
Repuilic Rep. John Boehner. "II
shoncha es Ohio and it shon-cir·
cuits
ocracy." .
"'dded Rep. DavJ,d Hobson. R- .
Ohio: ...'f!lis.isasadday for Congress
... a reversal to the old ways of doing
business."
Among Ohioans. Republican John
Kasich was most prominent in U,e
debate, commanding an outnumbered army of lawmakers in a losing
battle of principle against' the popular bill.
He unsuccessfully pushed · an
amendment that would have gradu-·
ally allowed' the states to keep more
highway tax revenues.
"This fils the idea that maybe
Washington doesn't know best,"
Kasich argue&lt;~ prior to his amendment's defeat on a 98-318 .vote. " We
would essentially. say to the states,
'You tax yourselves afthe pump, you
.

pave your own roads. you make your
own decisions."' ·
His proposal drew scoril from the •
top Democrat on the Transportation
Committee, Rep. James Oberstar,
who scoffed that if K..Sich had beim
around in the Eisenhower adminis. tration there never would have been
an interstate highway system. ·
And the chairman of the committee, Bud Shuster, R~Pa., countered
that with more. goods moving from
state to state than' ever before, "There
is a greater need for us to have a coordinated, tied-together transportation
system'than ever."
I
Kasich also was opposed by ·rei- I
'
low Ohio Republican .Steve
LaTourette, one of the Transponation
Commiuee members who gave the
highway bill unanimous awroval.
• LaTourette said Kasich's proposal "predicts that there is no politics
t.:ontinued 011 page 3 ·
/

Donof riO
• t0 add ress
Me1gs
· • Democra
· · tS
·

·

,
.
·
.
,
John Donofrio, Summit County Meigs County Commissioner.
Treasurer, will be the featured speak·
"I believe that the Democratic Par-·
er at the Meigs County Democmtic · ty has an unprecedented opportunity
Pany's JeffersoniJI!Ckson Dinner on for victory this year," Maison said.
Saturday.
"Our state-wide candidates· are outThe -dinner will be held at th4: standing, with impressive qualifica·
Meigs Senior Center.
tions and a real commitment to the
Donofrio is the Ohio Democratic people of Ohio."
Pany's endorsed candidate for th~
"I hope that everyone will ta'ke an
office. He has served a~ Summil opportunity to meet our candidates
County Treasurer for the past 20 Saturday, and see wh~y we're so
years, and has received recognition excited."
and numerous awards from state aod
Tickets for the dinner are 10 ~r
national organizations for his man- person, with children under 12 admitagemcnt skills. He was developed · ted free.
·
andestablishednumcroustaxcollec·
lion programs.
· He and 'his wiftl, Mariiean live in
'
Akron.
,
,
S
"I have enJoyed servmg as urnmit County T~asurer for the last 20
years," Donofrio said. "f know that
the office of State Treasurer is an
imponant office that should never be
used as a ,political stepping stone."
"If elected, I look forward to
serving as State Treasurer, not as a
caodidate for the 11n1 opportunity
that comes 'down the road, but as an
0"""""ni"'
to serve all the citizens of
,.,.....~ .,
the Slate," he said. ' .According to P•"" Chairman Sue.
...,
-Maj,an. Congressman Ted Strick·
'lana, D-Lucasville. State Senator
Micheel Shoemaket. D·Boumeville, ·
aod Bill Oiler, the Party's c·andidate
for Slate Rep(esenlative. will also be
present, as well' as candidates for

s

.

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