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                  <text>Wednesday

Weather

April 8, 1998

Redmen sweep Cedarville, Page 6
Holy week services slated, Page 8
Family Medicine, Page 8

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

fomorrow: Rainy
~lgh:

Sports

•

SOa; Low: 40

San
Diego
hands Reds
3-2 defeat
Page4

§.1119;11
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Strickland says

Schools in desperate condition
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MORE THAN HALF of eouthem Ohio achoola hold cllli...a In
rooma not conatructed .. cluarooma. That waa one finding of
Congreaaman Ted Strlckland'a at:hool facllltlea aurvey releaaed
In Rutfand Tueaday evening. Strlcldand Is lhowrt here with I chart
dliplaylng aome of the locatlona whare children llttand cia••·

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:Growth of consumer
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.strong.est i.n four months

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· · •· 'f29.86 Valu~L

WASHINOTON (AP)- Ameri·
can consumers increased their bor,
rowing in February at the fastest pace
in four months. reRecting unseu.~on,
aJ?Iy mild weather that encouruged a
SJ:Nlno.ling boomlet.
·
· Consumer debt outstanding grew
. at.a 6.9 percent annualrute to a liell•
IOI\IIIIy lidjulllcd $1.24 trillion, the
fedc;ral Reserve said The!wlay. That
followed a moderate 4.S pen:ent rate
increase in January and was the
strongest since October.
Economist~ said the borrowing
reRected consumers' oplim1sm about
their financial prospects as well as
mild weather linked to the El Nino
ocean current. lr encouraged early
sales of spring men:handise.
'·· Also, strong home sales, spurred
'fly mllltgage rates near four-year
lows. stimulated sales of furniture
· :aqd other big-ticket items for the
;.Home.
·: . Still. the overall bend during the
· -pa:~r year ha.~ been for a deceleration
in borrowing in reaction .to ~ record
-t.35 million .iqdividual bankruptcies
:med last year. In November. credit

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John P.aulll

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4

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'

Meigs ·County Auditor Nancy
Plirker Ca!llpbell reminds homeowners that applications are now being
taken by her ollice for the homestead
e•emprion, a stare-reimbursed jlro·gram that provides real estate tax
:reductions for senior citizens and disabled peOple.
._
• · ' In order to qualify for the home·stead e•emption. you mu~t be at lea,'t
;tiS year.~ old during 1998, or totally
:ind permanently disabled. live in the

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WASHINGT.ON (AP) - A for:mer White House volunteer said
:ruesday she was CjUestioned by a
··grund jury ·about Kathleen Willey, a

Aeeorted Colorel
'

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Ree;.,rvolr Keep6 Food
Away from Fat

'

Good Afternoon
' ..
Today's Sentinel

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l Sec:tiont • 16 Pa~trs
Vol. 48, No. 249

•
SKU 1183360

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al student/teacher ratio. His response
was one teacher for every I 8 children
in grades kinderganen through third .
grade. .
·
When told the lirst grade teache r
at ~utland Elementary · has 30 chi I· .
dren in her class, he said. "We cannor expect teachers to do the impossible. One teacher cannot gi ve 30 lir.a
graders the type of attention they
deserve and need."
In addition, school s in this pan of
the state are not in good physical condition, he explained. They olien have
inadequate electrical wiring. ceilings. plumbing. windows. walls.
tioors and roofs.
"More public sc hools were constructed during the 30·year period
between 1908 and 1937 than were
constructed in the 30-year period
between 1968 and I '198," he said.
"This tells us our great-grandparents.
grandparents and parents cared
enough and valued education," he
Continued on page 3

sa·laries. for college faculty members up 34 percent
;

'

WASHINGTON (AP)- College
faculty salaries rose 3.4 percent this
year, with full professo.;s at research
universities now making just under
otirstandi~g actually declined - for .
$80.000, a study released Tuesday
· the first time in four years.
.
•
"Lenders are thinking twice about showed.
With inflation running at just half
issuing credit cards and consumers
that
mle, it was the largest increa.o;e in
are thinking twice about using them,
given the pileup of debr," said econ- faculty pay in a decade, ~aid the
omist Stuqrt G. Hoffman of PNC American Association of University
Professors.
·
Bank Corp. in Pinsburgh.
.
But
professors
still
lag
far
behind
Revolving credit, which is priother
professionals
when
it
comes
to
marily credit cords, rose at an annual rate of 8.8 pen:ent in February. salary, and their pay. when adjusted
That followed a 4.6 pen:ent pace In for inflation, is actually 4.4 pen:ent
January and also was the strongest in lower today than it w;IS in 1971-72,
the AAUP said.
four months.
·• The findings are based on an asso- Auto lending continued to eKpand, ciation surv~y of 1,839 colleges and
bUt at a slower pace in February, a 3.8 universities in 1997-98. .
pen:ent rule compared with 6.6 percent in January. ·
·
· "Car sales have been steady. but
at a high level," Hoffman said.
· Other kindq of consumer debt
grew at a 7 .K percent rate, the
DES MOINES. Iowa (AP) - A
strongest in si• n:mnths. This catchall suggestion by House Majority Leader
category includes loans for ,mobile Dick Armey that President Clinton
homes, education, boais and vaca- consider resigning ha.• been intertions.
preted "out of context," U.S. Rep.
The repon· doesn't include ,honie ·John Kasich' said Tuesday..
•
mortgages or home equity loans.
;'To a d~gree . in this case, it's
probably been _hyped way out of proportion by people who are interested
in writing a story !)!at causes a lot of
controversy," said Ku.,ich. R-Ohio.
"The way it wi!S told to me we've got
a tempest in a teapot brewing here."
home and have an annual income of
WhUe speaking to high school stuless than $20.800. There is a separate dents in Coppell, Tuns. on Monday,
application lor owners of manufac- i\nney said he w~Jid step down if he
tured homes.
·
found himset; facing the same
The deadline for filing for the charges of sexua; 'llpropriety lodged
homestead exemption is June against Clinton
, !.Campbell encourages anyone who
He declined Tuesday to distance
thinks they may qualify to visit her · himself from those comments.
office in the Meigs County CounHowever, Kasich - who heads
house Or-call at 992-2698 between the House Budget Committee and is
8:30 a.m. and 4 p.m.. Monday ·pondering a GOP presidential bid through Friday.
said it is time for calm in the contro-

College and university faculty
earned 42 pen:ent less than other professionals with similar levels of education, the study said. That. comparison was based on federal earnings
data for workers with at lea.'t 18 years
of education.
For example, the lowest· paid
engineers and lawyers earned roughly $8,000 more than the lowest-paid
professors in 1996, the study said. By
contrast, the highest·paid engineers
and lawyers earned about $62.000
more than the highest-paid professors.
lJicqueline King of the American
Council on Education, a group representing university presidents,
acknowledged that profes.o;ors haven' t
made any real salary gains since the

'
.
1970s, but said .schools are also. those with doctoral programs - was
under tremendous pressure to keep $79,346..
tuition down.
. The study also found increa., ing
"On one hand -the faculty. they disparities among faculty at diflerent
work hard. they're prepared with a lot types of colleges. although it said the
of education for their jobs - !his is gap was not as great as in many professions.
not a lot of money," she said .
"At the same time .. . institutions
Overall. faculty at doctoral-level
have to do all they can to keep their schools earned 28 percent more than
costs down. and·one of their biggest those at schools with some postgradcosts is salari~s. " she sai~. :· lnslitu: uate programs, 50 percent more tnan
lions are under a lot of competing those at primarily undergraduate
pressures." . ·
·
schools and 52 percent more than
The average salary for full' pro- teachers at two-year colleges, the
fessors at research universities
study said,

Kasich says Armey remarks
considered out of context
versy.
"I think to a degree. Dick Armey
.
was taken out of context,'' said
Kasich, who said Armey only offered
an opinion of what lte wou!d do. no1
a suggestion of what Clinton should
do.
"I don't ' think thai goes to the
e•tent of saying Bill Clinton qught to
re~ign. " said Ka.~ich. "We're making
way roo much of this. That's a very
different situation."
Kasich ha.' said Clinton should
step down if it's shown that he had
sex with a White House intern, and
then lied when he denied the affair.
Until the facts are soned out. Kasich
argued. there's little reason to weigh
in on the issue.
''Let's just.stay calm." he said.
Kasich on Tuesday was in the
midst if a five-day swing through the
state where precinct caucuses launch
the presidential nominating sea.ron.

. PRESENTED G1FT • Margaret Lehew, who will retire Friday as
controller of the Ohio Vallitty Publishing Co. after more than 40
years service, was presented 1 compuler daak and chair during
an open reception held at The Dally Sentinel Tuesday momlng.
Making the praaentallon on behalf of the company waa OVP Publisher Robert L. Wingett. A aecond recaption honoring Mrs. Lehew
waa held In the llfternoon at the Galllpolia Dally Trlbull!l. _

iF ormer co-Worker of Ms. Willey testifies to g~and jury

·12" . . ... . .
J

.

:Hqmestead exemption
applications available .

........

. $17.99
Valulll

Strickland said.
By JIM FREEMAN
school boasted a pot-bellied stove for
. "Our children in southern Ohio heat, an outdoor restroom, and a well
Sentinel Newe Staff
"The state or southern ' Ohio have been left to languish in condi- complete with personal tin cups for
tions that would not be considered the children.
schools is desperate."
Congressman Ted Strickland (D- appropriate . working environments
"Some schools are not much betLucas:ville} made that comment for a 'local county official, business ter than the school I attended more
speaking Tuesday evening at a school leader. member of Congress or gov- than 50 years ago.".he said.
· Addressing overcrowding, Strickmodernization forUm "Southern ernor." he added.
"The average school building in land said over half of all southern
Ohio's Schools on the Brink" at Rutsouthern Ohio is 46 years old. More Ohio schools hold cla..ses in rooms
land Elementary School.
Strickland shared the results of a than one in five schools utilize tem- not constructed as cla.~srooms . Classsurvey mailed to 289 public school porary classrooms to alleviate over- es are held in offices. hallways.
principals throughout Ohio's Sixth crowding· and keep class size man- reacher lounges. storuge area.,, cafe·
Congressional District that showed ageable. One-fourth require asbestos teria, assembly areas and other
four arei!S of concern: oven:rowding, removal... three schools out of four places, he reponed.
"One · school provides speech
poor physical condition of buildings, .do not have adequate medical facili lack of basic facilities, and techno- ties and one in I0 do nor meet the classes in ~ closet another hold~ an '
local fire code. Only slightly more cla.~s in a convened furnace room and
logical need.
"Each weekday, over I00,000 than half are accessible to those with band in a storage room. In several
children in southern Ohio repon to disabilities," he explained.
schools, library shelves, !lave been .
"Thill is just unacceptable. We are moved into hallways in order to proschool. Some of tl\~e children enter
school buildings that are modem and a wealthy nation and a wealthy,state," vide..;ldditionalclassroom space." he
said.
well-equipped. Unfonunately, as,this he said.
Strickland said he attended a oneOne parent attending the meeting
r.epon details, many other&lt; enter
buildings that are old, neglected, ~nd room school for several years while · a.~ked Strickland what the federal
oven:rowded... or even dangerous," growing up in Scioto County. The government recommends as the ide'

Mfr.'•-·

'OHIO
· l'lt:k 3: 5·8·3; Pldt 4: 9-2-1-7
~~

s: 1-14-19-24·3-4 .

w.yA.
·
o.Mr 3: 0-2-1; O.Uy 4: 6·6-8;0
. q t 9911 Ohio ""lley Pul&gt;liohloa Co.·

.

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~

onetime c11lleague in the social orike Oval Ofli~'e meetings, on a day that
who accused the President of making House Majority Leader Dick Armey
an unwanted sexual advance.
stood by•his·statement that he would
Han1lyn Cardozo did not respond, resign if faced with the se•ual. ill lehowever, when reponers asked gations raised against President Ciin·
whether she was questioned about ton.
anything her father - millionaire
Janis Keaniey•.who keeps ofticial
developer Nathan Landow - might records but also writes a daily diary
have told Ms. Willey.
spiced with her observations. testified
Independent counsel Kenneth bemre1he grand jury inV1$1igating a
Starr reponedly wants to know JlO.sHible presid.:nlial affair and
whether Landow, a major Democra- coverup but would .not comment
tic fund·raiser from Maryland. UIJICd upon leaving the counhouse.
Ms. Willey ntlt to tell Paula Jones's
Meanwhile, Armey, the Teun
lawyers about her encounter with who is the No. 2 man in the House
Clinton near the Oval Office in late Republican leadership, continued his
November 1993. ·
harsh criticism of the president.
_ Cli~ton h~ denied making an
· A day after telling high school
advwx;e toward Ms. Willey when she Sllldents he would (elip if faced with
asked him i( she could ltave a paid the ·kinds of sexual misconduct alleposition on the White House staff.
gations nliscdagainst Clinton, Armey
Reading a statement outside the said ·in a statement: "I stand by my
counhou ... Mrs. Cardozo said, "I rellllllks, which reinforced the imporwillinlly responded to questions tance of personal responsibility."
related to my relationship with Kath·
Armey said that when he spoke lo
leen Willey, with whom I serv¢ as a . government students at the high
volunteer in the White House socipl school in Coppell, Teus on Monday,
office. I answered all questions to the "I could not let these children think
best of my ability. I answered those this president is a Jlood role model."
questionlllrtlthfully and fllllhri&amp;Jidy ... He said f;:linton should be held to the
The Monic:a ·Lewi•sky grand jury .high standards expected "from teachalso summonecl the chronicler of ers, football coaches and CEO's."

'

Armey called the president "a
shameless person," gnd said: " If it
were me that had documented personal condUC\ along tbe lines of the
president's, I would be so lilled with
shame that I would resign. This president won't do that. His ba.,ic credo
in life is. 'I will do whatever I can get
away .with.' "
The No. 3 man in the House
· Republican leadership, ~e
. Tom
DeLay of Texa.'l. also has
rshly critical of Clinton, giv · g seri~s
of Roor speeches in recent days
questioning the president's character.
But the ' top House ~epublican ·
leader. Speaker Newt Gingrich of
Georgia. said he didn't agree with
Armey ~ut said he thought "the president" should teiJ_ the country the
truth."
"I think that the rest of us ought
to. be pa!jent and wait for Judge Starr
'to repon." Gingrich said.
Presic!ential aide Paul Begala
responded Tuesday. "If goofy ii:leiiS
ever go to S40 a barrel, I want the
drilling rights to Dick Armey's head.
.This is funher proof that the right
wing of the Republic111 Piny is
using the Starr investigation for partisan advantage."
~

.

Independent Counsel Kenneth
Starr is investigating whether Clinton
had an affair with Ms. Lewinsky and
il.~ked her to lie about it under oath.
Clinton and Ms. Lewinsky have
denied the allegations u.' pan of the
now-dismissed Paula Jones lawsnir.
but Ms. Lewinsky - in conversarions taped by a friend - said there
was an affair.
Ms: Kearney, who is ,the Oval
Offi'ce records manager. keeps track
of all the schedules, briefing memos
and other papers• that tiow through
the president's office.
But she also keeps a daily account
of p~~~d~ntial activities, choosing at
whim which high-level meetings and
presidential functions she wants to
narrate for history's sake.
Rather than write a dry account of
Clinton's day - a career di~rist does
fhar - the onetime weekly newspaper publisher spices her summary
with her own observations.
· "Mrs. Clinton wa.~ the hit of the
(White 1-!0ifse) family and received
loads of applause," she wrote on one
occasion. Another time she $aid that
an unscheduled presidential jog
" meant he would be more than his
usual tardy for his first scheduled

event."
Kearney· has been making such
observations since 1995. but late Ia.~!
year, her diary became caught up in
Justice Department and congressional investigations of campaign fund
rJising.
Her subpoenaed notes hecame
controversial when 1hey were belatedly provided to inve,tigarors. The
White House said at the time that Ms.
Kearney mistakenly believed that
computer notes were nor covered by
various subpoenas.
Ms. Kearney r.lfl the Arbn!lls
Stare Press, a weekly newspaper,
until 1993. - .when she came with
Clinton to Washington:
Her chatty account of a July 17,
1996 fund raiser recounted se'Veral
biting. panisan jokes from former
Texa.~ Gov. Ann Richard.~ along with
the observation that Richards·"did~
excellent job.''
On &amp;:j&gt;t. 26,. 1996, she noted In
bracket~ that Cl inion sang "Happy
Binhday" to Kearney's husband White House peBOilnel director Bob
Nash - and called him "the best '
employee I've ever had."

�..

Cominentaryl
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2151
'

•'

A Gannett .Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

'

Publlaher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
GeMral Ma1111ger

MAIIGAAET LEHEW
Controller'

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I.

Musings on life after
·.politics draw $kepticism

By JICk
and Jan Moller
It is no small lhing that the man
who Is trying to heal relations
· between Catholics and Jews 1s a Pole
.. Karol Wojtyla, otherwise known as
Pope John Paul U.
The sign~ point, however, both to
his sincerity and to the genuine
anguish he has felt about the Holocaust that decimated Jewry in Poland
and elsewhere.
.
Last month, in a carefully worded .
document, the Pope issued an official
statement described as "an act or
repentance" for the failure of many
Catholics to lhwar1 the Holocaust.
Several years ago, the Pope finally .
opened formal diplomatic relations
~¥ith the state of Israel.
What makes this all the more
extraordinary is that it has been
spearheaded by a man whose occupied countrymen did little to prevent
the slaughter of Polish Jews during
World War II. Nor did they feel like

By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Auoclllted Prest Writer
WASHING'ION - For the record, House Speaker Newt Gingrich talks
like someone who dreams of retirement, of tradm~ the burly-burly of politics for academic life. Of course, he knows hardly anyone believes him.
1
•
Least of all Rep. Bob Livingston. R-La., who is not-so-quietly seeking '
· support to run for speaker when he assumes Gingrich will step aside to seek
the presidency in 2000. Should that happen, the leading candidates to sue' ceed Gingrich would be Livmgstot\ and House Majority I..eader Dick
Armey, R· Texas.
When the speaker was asked about the maneuvenng by Livingston, chall·
man of the House Appropr•auons Co!llmillee, he sm1led. It was a smile that
· suggested he knew somethmg he wasn't about to pass on to the questioner.
"We'll find out next year if he's wasting his time," Gingrich said. "My
· eiiCSs is he's wasting his time."
' Gingrich, R-Ga., sat at a coffee table at one end of the large livmg room
of a suite on the sixth Hoor of a downtown hotel. At half-hour intervals,'
reporters were ushered in for mterv1ews - 16 in one day.
On the floor, a 'few feel away were copies, maybe 100 ot them, of,
"Lessons Leafned the Hard Way." the speaker's new book. "This is my
founh book," he told an interviewer.
.
This latest book is part confessional, an acknowledgment that he misjudged his mandate when the GOP's stunning victory in 1994 made it the
majority pany in the House and made Gingrich the first Republican speaker in 40 years.
.
.
.
.
"I am astonished at how badly I had underestimated the stze and mtenSI·
ty of the problems that would confront me as speaker." he wrote.
Tnose were the days he breathed fire, tossed verbal and legislative hand
grenades 311d was leader of a revolution.
No longer. The new Newt speaks in measured tones, more statesman than
firebrand. He talks oflegislallve goals like strengthening Social S"curity and
education and combating crime and drugs.
Gone is the fervent antigovernment rhetoric, the willingness to shut down
the government.
•
Ronald Reagan remains a hero. But so is Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Gingrith even has kind words for the current president. "Bill Clinton ~as
plenty of courage," he said in an interview taped by CNBC. "Anyone who's
taken the beating he has and stood up every morning has a lot of courage."
In his book, Gingnch concedes that the new Republican majority in Congress "much too cavalierly underrated the power of the president, even a
president who had lost his Jegislatilee Jllajority an~ was in a cenain amount.
•
of trouble for other reasons."
Clinton's troubles have stirred talk of impeachment among Hous$ members. But it's not.a subject Gingrich cares to dwell on.
.
' "This takes less than an hour a week of my time," he said, after acknowl, edging that he has d1scussed what to do if independent counsel Ken~eth
Starr sends the House a repon citing evidence of Impeachable offenses.
"I have a fiduciary obligat'ion to make sure the legislative branch is prepared," Gingrich s11d.
.
For all the talk of Clinton's troubles and poss1ble impeachment proceedings, the president's standing with the public remains high. Most polls say
that more than 60 percent of Americans approve of his job performance.
A recent survey for the Pew Center for the People &amp; the Press sa1d Clinton's popularity is rubbing off on Democratic candidates for Con@ress.
fifty-two percent of registered voters said they were inclined to vote for
Democratic congressional candidates, according to the survey. In the same
poll, 36.percent viewed Gingrich favorably, up from 28 percent a year ago
1bose numbers give Democrats hope they can regatn control of the
House next November, an accomplishment that would drastically change
Gingrich's plans for the future.
The speaker claims to he unworried about the prospect.
"The biggest thing going for us is history," said the former history professor. He pomted out thai the average loss of liouse seats by the president's
party in the m1d-1enn election of his second tenn is 47 seats.
" I know of no credibl~ person who thinks we' ll Jose control," he said.

apologizipg . for
And yet here, there is no feeling of a
it, in general,
void today._I can tell you there has
during the post·
been no sorrow.ltis because we lived
Soviet period.
not together, but sK!e by side."
During one
Poland was on~ a haven to Jews,
of our visits 10
who emiJrllled en masse in the 1300s
Poland,
the
when the then-Polish king invited
Catholic
them in to become the merchant
Church's officlass. Within a cenlllry, four-fifths of
c(al expert on
world Jewry lived inside Poland's
Polish-Jewish
Moller &amp;
borders.
relations
was
Ahderaon
Some 3.5 million Jews lived in
startlingly' can- '
. •
Pollllid .when Wood War II began,
did about the endemic nature of Pol- , fully .10 percent of t~ nation. l..ess
ish anti-Semitism.
than 7,000 have survived into the
With eloquence and emotion, , 1990s.
Father Stamslaw Musial suggested
For centuries, Father Musial
that post-communist Poland needed a admitt~. Catholic officials had fosmoral cleansing from the Holocaust tered outrageous stories about Jews •
and its anti-Semitic roots. 11Jough the • most typically that Jews kidn~
Geimans d1d the killing, and though and killed Catholic children to use
many Poles died - it was the Jewish their blood for unleavened bread. In a
.race that was nearly wiped out.
17th-century church in Sandomierz, a
':.It's a terrible thing," he told us. huge painting called "lnfanticida"
"Imagine 10 percent of the popula- features caricatured Jews.kidnapping,
lion murdered overnight in America. stabbing and dismembering Christian

.-------------------------:----------==...,

~eedle
By Joseph Perkins

The Clinton administration
made a sop to the loud and often
acerbic AIDS lobby five years ago
when it created the President's
Advisory Council on AIDS. Now
that pandering has come back to
bite them.
A few weeks ago, the council
embarrassed the Clintonites by
going public with a unanimous
expression of no confidence jn the
administration•s commitment to

" rr-

Appart;nlly, Dr. Hill is
unfamiliar with
a 1997 study
published in the
respected
American Journal of Epidemiology. II found
that
junkies
who panicipatPewrklna
ed in Montreal
needle-exchange
programs were more than twice as
likely to contract the AIDS virus as
those who didn' t panicipate.
Roben Maginnis, a senior policy
advisor w1th the Washington-based
Family Research Council, also cites
the experience of Vancouver,
British Columbia, which boasts
•North America's largest needleexchange program. !iince I994, a
recent study found, the ·incidence of
AIDS transmission among intravenous drug users has rapidly
increased in Vancouver, rather than
decreased ..
So, clearly,' the efficacy of nee·
die-exchange programs is iar from
indisputable. And even if Hill and
other needle-exchange advocates
trot out the1r · own stud1d to
" prove " that needle exchange
"works," there remain profound
moral and legal questions about
passing out clean hypodennics and

Between World War I and IL ~
Polish Catholic Church s~oked anll·
Semitism with right·wJOJ, reac·
tionary rubbish. One pastoral letter
by the primate of Poland charged that
"Jews fiJhl the Catholic Church."
The letter called Jews "the advance
guard of a go4fss life, of the Bol~
vik movement," and baldly Slating
"Jews are embezzlers and usurers
(who) engage in the white slave
trade."
.
.
J;!ven the communtsts carne_ down
ClntheJewsinthepost-warpenod.ln
the taie 1960s, the government spunsored an official anti-Semitic cant·
paign, blaming Jews for the nation's
ills and purging Jews from go~­
ment positions and state enterpnses.
Tens ·of thousands of Jews fled the
country in 1968, leaving only a small
number behind.
So it was with bai~ breath in
1978 that Israeli leaders received the
news that the new p!lpe was !4rol
Wojtyla, a Pole. But the first sign was
. good: his first papal aodieitce was
granted to an old Jewish friend,, Jerzy
Kluger, with whom he had played as
a boy in their hometown of Wallowice.
·
.
In the pre-war period, :wadowice .
was a town of 8,000 ~ ~
2.000 Jews. Kluger had fliCI~n the
Germans invaded Poland and joined
the Russian army. The Pope stayed
behin&lt;l, eventually trainin&amp;. 1!1. Jle. a
priest in an underground seminary.
But less than 3S miles from their
' hometown was the infamous
Auschwitz. Could the majority of
Catholics have done more to stand up
for the unfortunate prisoners In contentration camps?
It's a question the Pope has now
answered in the af!innative,though it
is short of an explicit apolosy. ·Still, it
haS been heanening to watch this
Polish Pojle become the first to visit a
synagogue, tour Auschwitz •• and
refer to Jews, like his friend Kluger.
as "our elder brothers."
Jack AnclenR md Ju Moller
.are writers for Unlled raaure Syn·
dkate, Inc.

syringes to drug addicts.
Indeed, it hardly seems. moral,
not to mention rational, to deliver a
pitiable soul from one f~ of
death .. AIDS •. only to deliver
.them to another •• drugs. It's like
government saying that it's •II risht
to pump your veins full of poison as
long as you don't pass alQng the
AIDS virus.
Also, if the federal government
sanctions needle exchange, allowing tax dollars to be used to dispense free needles, it will effectively decriminalize inl(avenous drug
use. For one of the condiiions of.
needle-exchange programs is that
the junkie who turns in a dirty needle ·· ·which he or she has used to
shoot up with cocaine, heroin or
LSD •• may not be arrested.
That's why the director of the
White House Office of Drug Policy
Control, Gen. Barry Mc&lt;:;affrey, so
strenuously
opposes. . needle
exchange. "As public servants, citizens and parents, we owe our children an unambiguous 'no use' message," he recently dccla,ed. "And
if they should become ensnared by
drugs, we must. offer them a way
out, not a means to continue addictive behavior."

So how, then, tq staunch the
spread qf AIDS through intravenous drug use, if not by needle·
exchange programs? Simple. By

attackin1 the real root of the problem •. which is illeaal
use. This
is best IICComplished not
junkies ~lean needles,
aids and abets their deadly
but by getting them into drug treatment l'rograms.
Maginnis, of the
Researc'h Council, cites a 1996
study of a Chicago treatment program that found that risky behavior
by intravenous drug users could be
signirlcantly curbed without handing out needles. By providing
health care, counseling, food and
housing, the dangerous sharing of
needles was reduced 8S percent
among par1icipants.
· This is the approach Shalala
ought to embrace. It accomplishes
the equally imponant public-health
goals of treating hard-core drug
abuse, while also slowing the
spread of the AIDS virus among a
high-risk cohort.
It may ftappen that the Health
and Human Services secretary
bows to the poljtical pressure of the
president's AIDS council and certi·
fies that needle-exchana'e programs
do not increase illegal drug usc. In
that case, drug czar McCaffrey
ought to resign in conscientious
objection.
JOHph Perkins Is a columnist
for The s,n Die&amp;o Ualoa·Trl·
bune.

.:Today in history e!!~2!"1 sho!!P.!~~,!~~,!~..v~~~,r!.~~~~~....o!.!~'~!L.
·, By TM.b-latecl Pl'llll

·

·
Today is Wednesday, Apnl 8, the 98th day of 1998. There are 267 days
., left in the 'year.
•
Today 's Highlighl in History:
.
On AprilS, 1946, the l..eague ofNauons assembled m Geneva for the last

• time.
On this date:
lsl 3, explorer Juan Ponce de !..eon clain.ed Florida for Spain.
l In
In 193S, the Works Progress Administration was approved by Congress.
In 19SO, ballet dancer Vaslav Nijinsky died in L.ondon.
In 19S2, Plesident Truman seized the steel indJJSiry to avert a nationwide
strike.
In 1970, the Senate rejected President Nixon's nomination of G. Harold
Clnwellto the Supreme ~oun. .
.
.
In 1973,artist.Pablo Picasso d1ed at h1s home nearMougJns, France, at
11e 91.
•

•t
0
e
e
I
Letters t th d or
.

1

Dear Editor:
I do not believe that parents should be able to exempt their childrea fro• kina the proficiency tests for the fourth, sixth and eighth
1racles. To let them do this would show that all are not equal in all
ways and if we do not do away with parents' being able to exempt
their thildrea from the proficiency tests,- then the next senerationa
to eotpe will not be-as proficient. as they should be.

lea Lee

~o•eroJ

•

Looking for a growth fund
who~e ponfolio manager is a bargain hunter? Then you might consider a growth 'and value fund .
Trying to figure out what type
of equity fund to invest in {i.e., .
growth, growth 'and income, batanced, nexible, etc.) is one of the
many tasks mvestors are con
· before wntmg
· · · a•
fronted w11h
·check to their selected fund family. ,Throw in the style question ••
as in " srowth" or "value"·· and
_ th_ere's more to look for.
David K. Schafer,' ponfolio
manager of, the Strong Schafer
V•Jue Fund, hiS been shopping
for st.ocks for decades. As an ana·
lyst. 1n the early 1970s, he fol lowed g~owth stocks. Aftet" the
market htl t~e sk1ds_ a few years
later, hts poml of vtew changed.
Although he thousht it was
" nice" to see stock prices going
up, he was "devastated" when
they heaan falling during 19731974 •· a bear market in whic~
many stocks lost SO percent of
the!f value or more.
It son of soured me on the
whole growth stock hich P/E
stuff," says the S8-year-old, who
~as mana~ed the fund since its
mcept1on m 1985.
But Schafer learned from that
experience and moved from being

•

one. Hence, 'the Strong Schafer
Value fund has a simple investment philosophy: Invest in stocks

fund's ponfolio. That's about a
dozen or so names 1110re than the
fund usually holds. The reason

Trying to figurre o1d wluJt typrt of equily {u11d to in rest ill
(i.rt., growth, growth and incomt; balanced, fluiblt, ttc,)
;, Ollt of thrt many talks inrtllorl art confrontld with
bt'ort wrilillg a chtclc to thtir ltltcttd 'undfiamil•. Throw
'-''
J'
~·
,
in tht , •J
...Ire qurestio11 .. as in "growth'! or "value" •• and'
th1r1'1 mort to loolc for.
with price/earnings (PIE) ratios for the increase is that the fund
that are less than the S&amp;P S()O's has taken in a lot: of money lately.
PIE ratio, a~d that have earnings In 1996, it had $1.8 million in
growth estimates greater than the assets. Today, now !hat the Strong
S&amp;P's over the next three to five Family is marketing it, assets
years.
have grown to more than 10 times
It also has a solid long-term that~mou.nl..
track record. From its inceptiori
B11I Mtller, portfolio manager
in October 198S through mid- of the Legg Mason Value Truil, is
March 1998, tl)e Strollg Schafer a value guy too. He likes thi~
Value -Fund has had an average investment style for a couple of
annual total return of. 16.8 I pt;r· reasons. First, it suits his nature •
tent.
• he persona111 likes trying to
Schafer likes 10 keep the find the best values for his
fund's assets 99 pertent invested. money. Second, research shows
And he prefers mid- and large- that value pays off.
cap stocks over small-cap ones.
"Academic research 1enerally
"All things being equal, which indicates that the (value) strateiY
they never are," he says, "I'll optimizes ihe risk/return trade
take the hii~ stock rather than the off," s~yl Miller,' who ~as been
small stock juai for liqutdity rea- manaJIDJ the fund asnce its
sons."
inception in 1982:
There were about 66 stocks ••
The U11 Mason Value Trust

•

conditions and high

Sadie Rae Carr

MICH.

Sadie Rae Carr, 8 I, State Route J43, Harrisonville, d•ed Tuesday. April
7, 1998 in the Holzer Senior Care Center, Gallipolis, following an extend·
ed illness.
She was born Sept. 14. I 916 in Gay, W.Va.. daughter of the late William
Alben and Goldie Sheets Morris. She wa.~ a sales clerk and a homemaker,
and affiliated with the First Southern Baptist Churoh of Pomeroy.
·She is survived by a son, David E. (Paula) Carr of Gallipolis; two daugh·
ters, Rae heal L (l..ee) Lefebre of Harrisonville; and Oonna R. Wilson of Hemlock Grove: two brothers, Cecil Morris of Canton, and Lloyd Morris'of Lon·
don. Ohio; a sister, Selah Wyatt of Sandusky: nine grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren; and several nieces and newews.
.
She was also preceded in death by her husband of SO years, Ernest "Monk"
Carr, on March 18, 1998; an infant d~ughter; five half-brothers, Ernest, Ersel,
Anhur, Leo and Cleo Morris; and a half-sister, Opal Pa&lt;Sons.
Services will be II a. !)I. Friday in the Birchfield Fon~ral Home, Rutland,
with Pastor Lamar O'Bryant officiating. Burial w1ll be in the Wells Cemetery, Harrisonville. Friends'may call Thursday from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at the
funeral home.
In lieu 'of Howers,' donations may be made tbe first Southern Baptist
Church Memorial Fund, 41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

bltbies.

exchange only aids a deadi.Y habit

fight AIDS. Now the council1s calling for the resignation of Health
and Human Services Secretary
Donna Shalala, who has refused, so
far, to bestow her blessmg on controversial needle-exchange programs.
•
A congressional moratorium on
federal
funding
of needle
exchanges expired on March 31.
That means that communuies
throughout the country will be free
to use federal heallh money to pass
out clean needles to junkies if Sha· .
lata cenifies that such programs
help stop the AIDS virus without
increasing drug use.
The AIDS lobby, unconcerned
about the nation's drug ep1dem•c,
ms1sts that needle exchange has no
dfect whatsoever on drug use.
"The science is indisputable,"
claims
Dr. Scott Hill, chairman of
EDITOR'S NOTE: Donald M. Rolh'-8 is chief of The Associated
the president's A'DS council.
conpti~lonal staff.

0

Thursday, April 9
AccuWeather• forecast for

Andenon

'EstafJ(ufu.ii in 1948

Death Notices

OHIO Weather

Pop·e·helps Poland overcom_
e ant.i-Semitism .

.&gt;The Daily Sentinel

.

Pege2

in its portfolio. Their investment
philosophy is to buy companies
that trade at large discounts to
what Legg Mason's assessment of
the companies' intriltsic value is. ·
"We are focused on value and
not on price," says Miller. "So, if
we can buy companies that trade
·at a bt'g dt's
11 h11 th ·
w is groW,ing
ey ar~
wonh, and coun
that worth
at some reasonable rate over
time -the market will corre~l that
disparity and we should do quite
well."
So far, the Legg Mason v111ue
Trust strategy has paid off. It's
the only fund that has beaten; tho
S&amp;:P SOO consistently for the last
. seven years endin 1 Deteniber
. 1997 . Since its inception, ! itS
. averase annual total return,
through february, w.s 20.61 per·
cent: The S&amp;P SOO's average
annual return through thai sime
time period was 18.75 percent.
But just because a fund ha a
value bent, don·n~pec:l it to· be
market-proof. If stock matket
prites were to fall pr~cipitou~ly,
value stocks would too.
•
• Dlaa V•Jomll II tH a•tllor
of "Stnlpt Ttllk Abnl M..._l
Fuads" ' ••d "Stnlglll .nlk
Abo•t l•nallag ror
RtllrAtat," bolllllfwlllcllare
pebllsllltd b)' .M~nw Hlil •

°

Y••r

...
I •'

' ' '''
n{IP) • IColumbus !so'

60'

•

I

~
'''' '
WVA .

Telitha Jane Casto

I''

Showers T-storms Ram

"

Ice

Flurries

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associated Press Graph/cs Net

.·Potentially stormy night will
.:yield more rain on Thursday
By The Associated Press
.
Severe thunderstorms swept across ~outhem Ohio early today, Wind gusts
' • · to 60 mph and large hail were reported in the Cincinnati area.
•.
Heavy min and lightning caused scattered power outages throughout the
• · · region.' However. authorities in the counties hit the harde~l by the storms
: · reponed no signif!cant damages.
.
.
•
Showers and thunderstonns were forecast for all of Oh1o tomght and
· Thursday.
.
.
.
Lows tonight w1ll be 45-55, the National Weather Serv1ce sa1d. H1ghs on
• · . Thursday wiil be 55-65.
·
'.
The record-h1gh temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta·
· . · tion was 83 degrees in 1893 while the recqrd low was 19 10 1972. Sunset
· . tonight will be at 8:02 p.m. and sunnse Thursday at 7:03 a.m.
Weather forecast: .
Tonight .. .Showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower SOs. Southw_est
wind 5 to 10 mph, becoming west. Chance of rain 80 percent.. .
Thursday... Peiiods of ram. Highs in the upper 50s. Chance of ram 80 per·
· · cent:
·
• .·
Thur;day night...Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. Lows around 40.
. Extended forecast:
Friday...Cooler with a chance of light rain during the day. Dry at night.
Highs in the lower 50s.
. ·
. .
· . • Saturday... Partly ~loudy. Morning lows 10 the upper 30s. Htghs m the upper
' ' 50s.
,
'd ""-· H' h .
Sunday:.. Mostly clear. Morning lows in the lower and m1 .NS. 1g s m
the mid 60s.

~·Tod~y's

livestock report

\: COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaHogs 50 cents higher: sows I.00
.. Ohio direct hog prices ut sele~ted lower; caule I.00 to 2.00 higher.
c buying points Wednesday as provid·
Summary of Tuesday's auctions at
•... ed by the U.S. Depunment of A~ri­ Caid&gt;Yell. Eaton. Farmerstown, Lan. culture Market News:
caster and Wapakoneta:
Barrows and gilts: I .00 to I .50
Hogs:
higher; demand moderate to good on
Market hogs; 31.S0-36.50; light
· · a moderate movement.
sew;; 24.1)0-32.00; heavy sows 25.00·· l! .~. I·2, 230-260 Jbs. country 32.10.
points 33.00-;l-1.00, few 34.50-35.00;
Feeder pigs; 28.00-40.00 head.
' •· planr;; 34.00-35.50.
All hoaJ)i 25.50 and down.
•.
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 28.00Cattle:
. ·. 32.50; 210-230 lbs. 25.00-28.00.
Slaughter steers; choice 58.00Sows: weak to I.00 lower.
64.SO; select !!4.00-61.00.
U.S: 1-3 300-400 lbs. 21.00Shiughter heifers; choice 56.0024.00; 400-500 lbs. 24.00-26Jl0; 63.00; Nelect 53.00-59.00.
500.6()() lbs. 26.00-29.00, few over
600 lbs. 3o.oo.
" ·. Boars: over J()(Jibs. 15.()()..!'7.00:
" ' . under 300 lbs. 18.00-2 1.00.
Am Ele Power .......................48\
Akzo ......................................100
Estim~~d receipts: 34,000.
"
AmrTeeh ...............................47'1.
Prices from Procluters LiveAahland 011 .........................52"1.
' stock Association
ATilT ............. ~ .......................&amp;&amp;~
Wednesday's trends:
Bank One ..............................63 ~.
Bob Evans ............................21~.
Borg-Warner ...........................65
Broughlon............................. 16 ~.
Veterans Memorial
Champion ...........: .................13'1.
Tuesday admissions - none.
Charm Shpa ...........................4'·
Tuesday discharges - Myrtle City Holding ............................46
Federal Mogul .....................ss~.
1 Haning.
Gannett .................................74'1,
Holzer Medical Center
Goodyear
.............................70"'•
Discharges April 7 - Rosezan- Kmart ...............
:................... 17~.
na Stratch. Beulah Hook, V1lma Krt;tger .................. ;...............47~..
•.· • Pikkoja. Mildred Seall. Paul Miller, Lends End ........................... 37'~..
. Mrs. Michael Will and son. Teresa Limited .................................29'·
Olk Hill Flnl ............................ 28
Love. James Cunningham.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan OVB .........................................41
One Valtey ............................38~..
Allbnght. son. Kerr.
Peoplea ................................... 48
{Published with permission)
P..m Flnl...............................20'~
Rockw811
...: .......................... ss.,.
;·
RDIShell
...............................
,.
The Daily S«mtiitel Seara .................................... 56'·

Stocks

,

Hospital news

S&amp;,.
S,.

ShOftiY'I'.................................

Star Bank .... ~........................82'·

Wendy'• ................................22'1.

hhti~ltcd

every arrcrnoon. Mltnda ~ throuJII
' Friday. Ill ('nun St .. Pomen,,.. Ohi(l, b) t~
Ohk&gt; Vatlcv Publishing Comp11nyiG11nnen Co ,
Pnma:tow Otua •~7(t9. Ph. 992-21Sfl. Second
'. '
., c.lau p:.;;aae pa~id at 1\lmcroy. Ohio.

'..

,

Worthington ......................... 18'·

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotea prov!ded by Advest
of Galllpolla.
•

M•btr: llte Assactlltcd Prtss. and the Oh111

; ••

.

'

POSTMAST£1t: Send addrtss (Ofrcc:uons m
l'llle Dally Stnlind. Ill Court St , Pomtrlly,
Otllo 4571&gt;9

One W\.".:k. •• l:'' .. ... .. .. .... •••• .. • • $2 Ull
'•.. OM Month.....
. ...........SM.7U
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SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dally . . • .. . . . .................... J~ Cen11

1.. "~ Suttscnhtrs 1t0t dc511inc to pay ttK earner may
r.:mtl in adv10cc direct to The Datly SeflliliC!I
on ';f nu·tc, slk or 12 month basis. Credit Will b.!
Jl¥~1'1 CIU'rkr e~W:h week.
s~o~bKnptlo ft

by mall permiued tn lll'eH
wlwre ltooM: cankr K"f\'tee i1 •vliiAbtc.
No

• Publilhcr fd(fWI u~ rlfht to ad,.... rlln chlrl•a lite sybscripuon period S•bsc:rlption Ill!:
c:lw~~~~ts may he irnptcmtn1td by chana•n&amp; the
dtlradon oft~ JUblc;rlplioft

NAILSUISCRimONS

~-~C-1
" ... ' ........ """" ............ $27.30

13 W..b.
2fi Wetb................. .. ........ " ..........15!.112

....
I

•

~·

•.

52Weeb......................................... $111.4i.5b
Oltbldt ..... c ....,
13~b......................................... $2:9.2!11
2fi Worlt. "' ........... "' "' .:........:.......... 156.1\11 '
52-Wetb......................................... SIII'I.7Z

a..n

Mildred Leota Hauber
Mildred Leota Hauber, 63. Long-Bottom. died Sunday, AprilS, 1998. at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospjtal, Parkersburg, W.Va., after an extended
illness.
.
Born May 29. 1934, in Rutland, daughter of the late Lloyd D. and Ora
Midkiff Sinclair, she was a homemaker and former member of the Daughters of America, Chester, and the Long B911om C9mmunity Association.
She is survived by her hnsband of 24 years. Paul "Junior" Hauber. and
a daughter, Melody Roberts, both of Long Bottom; four stepchildren and
their spouses, Deborah and David Dailey of Reedsville, Douglas and Bren·
da Hauber of Long Bottom, Denise and Lawrence Johnson of Racine and
Scott and Kim Hauber of Tuppers Plains; several stepgrandchildren and
great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are Jwo sisters and a brother-in-Jaw. Lela Delores Hawk
of Long Bottom, and Mary and Roben Bowles of Pomeroy; a brother and
sister-in-law, Charles and Margaret Sinclair of Pomeroy;'several meces and
nephews.
·
· .
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Roy Robens, and a SIS·
ter, Eloise Hoffman.
Graveside services will be held Thursday, II a.m. at Cherry Ridge Cemetery, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Norman Butler officiatmg. Arrangements are
by White Funeral Home, Coolville.

Francis M. Hudson

••
••
•

March bank balances released
Pomeroy Village Clerk Kathy Hysell reponed balances in v!llage
accounts· at Monday evening's regular meeting of Pomeroy V1llage
Council.
Bank balances for March were as follows: Genef1!1. S32.S63.51;
safety, 7,790.68; street, 13,068.89; SIDle highway. 3,385.01; fire,
11.857.9S; cemetery. 9.08 1.88; water. 26,053.28; sewer. 26,926.33;
guaranty •meter, 20. 1.27. I 8; utility, 4,268. II ; fire truck, 0; ~rpetual
care cemetery, 7.321.24; cemetery endowment, 38_.446.59; pohce pen·
sion, 5,623.30; building fund. 1,891.72; oven1me grant (pohce).
6,050.41; recreation, 2.583.63; FEMA I, 61.70; Permtss1ve tax •
2.610.37; Jaw enforcement, 5,259.69; COPS FAST Grant. 1.814.74;
FEMA 111. 4,027.09; Downtown Revitalization, I JS.65; Total fu~ds:
$230,937.95 .

Patrol cites driver for insecure losd

The driver ofa truck hauling pea gravel wa.~ cited for insecure load
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State liighway Patrol following an
accident at I 0 a.m. Tuesday on State Route 124 near Racine.
.
Troopers said gravel fell from the tailgate of a westbound truck dri·
ven by Eric F. Gould. 22. 30745 Barringer Ridge Road. Portland. onto
eastbound vehicles driven by Terry L. Clark, 37, 48999 .SR 124,
Racine, and Roben C. Hill, 69, El'fl Street, Racine, causing slight dam·
age to both vehicles.
No damage was reponed to the truck. owned by Jeffers Coal Truck·
ing &amp; Excavating, 41276 Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy.

Schools in

desperate~ ..

Continued frol)l page I
said. "We have to do for (our children
and·grandchildren) what (our ancestors) did for us."
"Not surprisingly, these ag1ng
buildings are deeaying at an alarming
rare."
'
Southern Ohio schools also suffer
from a lack of essential facilities
including cafeterias, libraries, adequate classrooms, gymna.~iums and
other rooms.
"Auditoriums,
gymnasi~ms,
libraries and music rooms may be
taken for grunted in some pans of
Ohio, but these major facilities are
luxunes that many schools in south·
em Ohio do not' enJoy,'' smd Strickland. "It's unfajr."
Strickland brielly addreS&lt;ed technology in the classroo!ll. noting that
many schools have antiquated wiring
that will not support computers or do
not have access to the Internet.
"When utilized in the classroom,
the Internet can be a valuable and relatively inexpensive source of vast
amounts of information. Every
school in southern Ohio should be
wired to the lnter.net." he said.
For example, he said schools with
access to the Internet can access the
Library of Congress in Wa.•hington,
D.C., perhaps the largest depository
of mformation in the world.
"This tr;mscends tniditional barri·
ers of geogmphy and income... it
makes the whole world available." he

~eigs

sa1d.
Strickland avoided discussion of
state programs designed to addre~
school facilities, but said Congress 1s
considering zero-interest ·or low·
interest bonds to help disujct,s ~y_for
renovations or repairs ·to l)ld billld·
mgs. or to construct new buildings.
Strickland was introduced by
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Buckley who bnefly outlined the sit·
uation with Meigs Local Schools.
Buckley said the Meigs Local
School District has received assis·
tance from its permanent improvement levy which has been used in
pan for matching funds for gr.tnts
includmg an Appalachian Regional
CommiSSIOn grant which helped
place computers in Meigs High
School.
Rutland Elementary is fortunate in
that it has a computer lab used by the
students, he said.
Addressing neighboring districts,
Buckley said Eastern Local will he in
good shape since it is getting a new
elementary school and renovations to
the high school. Southern Local has
the opportunity next month to mod·
emize ns district through a similar
state/local project, he added.
"All our buildings are rather old
with the exception of the high
school." Buckley sa1d.
Approximately 75 _people auended the forum held in conjunction with
a Rutland PTO meetmg.

announcements·

Meigs ElVIS logs 7 .calls

the toots you
need for
Garden &amp; Yard
Work

wiD H glv.. Ia ••••/Gtilll• Cn•tles IIJ

• Wheel Barrows

.a6..,- HEARING AID CENTER

•Rakes
•Shovels

•
••

Friday, lpr.ll 10, 1991
In Dr. I. Jackson Balles' Office·
224 last Main, Pomeroy .

9:00.Noon .
•: c.IW.fr•I·I00-634:526'
5 fer •lmn••ll• ..........

• n. 111h wiiM ah• ., 1 Uc..llll H•=llti Altl SpJdalist

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hearing or undenltanding conversation Is Invited to •
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coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75 00 value.
•
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ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
INII.IRANCE PROVIDERS
WALK-INS WELCOME

•

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PICKENS

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•

Local briefs------,

Francis M. Hud~on. 83, of Southside. W. Va., died Tuesday, April 7, at
her home.
·
She wa.' a homemaker and member of the Harmony Baptis~ Church m
Southside .
Born Sept. 9, 1914, in Buffalo W.Va., she was a daughter of the late Elick · Conservation Coalition
Puppet show planned
and Genie (Bartram) VanSickle. She was also -preceded in death by her husThe Meigs County Conservation
A puppet show will be presented
band. Paul William Hudson, who died in 1978; two sisters and three brothCoalition will meet Tuesday, 6:j(J at the Stiversville Community
ers.
p.m. at the Shade River.Coonhunters Church, 7 p.m. Saturday. The public
Survi•ing are three' daughters and sons-in-law, Nina and F. Manforrl
Association Building on the Rix:k invited to attend.
Bowles of Southside, Cleo Cerquettmi of Saint Helena, California, and
Springs FaiiJlrounds. Pomeroy. to disCheryl L and Gary L. Matheny of !..eon; two sons and a daughter-in-Jaw,
cuss fund r.tising projects to defeat Lodge meeting
•
Douglas and Nellie Hudson of SouthSide. Roger Hudson of Rohnert Park,
proposed anti-hunting ballot issue.
Shade River Lodge F&amp;AM will
California; four grandchildren, three step-gr.mdchildren and two great-grandi\11 club representatives. hunters, hold its regular meeting on Thursday
children.
'
· angler&lt;, trappers and other&lt; wel- at 8 p.m.
The funeral will be Friday. I p.m., at the Crow-Husselt funeral Home,
come.
Point Pleasant, with the'Rev. Steven L Caner and Rev. Fred D. McCallisSunrise servite set
ter officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens near Point
Chamber or Commen:e
Sunrise service at the Ash Street
Pleasant.
The monthly luncheon meeting of Free Will Baptist Church, MiddleFnends may call at the funeral home Thursday. 7 to 9 p.m.
t~e Meig.s County Chamber of Comport. will be held at 6 a.m. Sunday.
In lieu of Howcrs. donations may b~ m~de to the Harmony Baptist Church
merce will be held Tuesday, noon at Regular Sunday services will be held
Memorial Fund, in care of Irene Brand. treasurer, at U.S. Rt. 35 South, South·
Carleton School in Syracuse. Guest at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
side; W. Va .. 25 I 87.
'
speaker will be Susan Oliver of the
Meigs County Council on Aging.
DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Me1gs Saturday,
Sunrise services
I0 a.m . . at the Pomeroy Librdry.
Sunrise services will be held Sun- Michael Struble will be speaking on
Units of the Meigs County Emer- POMEROY
day. 6:30a.m. at the Syro~Cuse Church the architecture of the lock houses in
gency Med1ca: ServiceJlCCorded sev5:12 p.m .. Spring Avenue, Dou- of the Nazarene. An Easter egg hunt Me1gs County.
en calls for as, !Stance Tuesday. Units glas Mowery, VMH , Middleport will be held at I p.m.
respondmg included:
squad assisted.
'
RACINE
'
Multiflora
rose
control
signup underway
I0:31 a.m .. Hill Road. Christina
CENTRAL DISPATCH
The Meigs Soil and Water Con- sen will have until July IS to com- '
4:23 a.m.. East Main Street. . Robinson, treated at the scene.
servation D1strict will accept appli- plete the )1ractice.
Pomeroy, Gemldine Hawk, Holzer
For more information and to sign
cations for. Multiflora Rose.Control
Medical Center, Pomeroy squad
through AprjJ 16. To be eligible, you up l'or the program, stop by the Meigs
assisted;
must be a cooperator with the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation D1stric1
5:55 a.m .. Grant Street. Middle- Seminar planned
Soil and Water Conseivat•onlJistrict Office, 3310 I Hiland Road. Pomeroy.
pen. Carol Manley. HMC;
•
A free lour-week seminar "12 and he willing to follow a two-year ·by April 16.
9. 17 a.m., Mulberry Avenue, • Ways to Develop a Positive Attitude" maintenance program following the
Pomeroy. Jessie Wells. treated at the will be held beginnmg Tuesday. 7 year of treatment. Maximum costscene; .
p.m. at the Syracuse Nazarene share will be S IIMl for one acre of
4:56 p:m.. Grant Street, Carol Church fellowship hall. Meetings treatment. All eligible participants
Manley, ·HMC, M1ddlepon squad will last one hour and refreshments will be entered into a drawing and 10
assisted;
w1ll be available. Material will be farmers will be chosen to panicipa(e
9:12 p.m., Chester Road, handed out the night of the first meet· in this year's program. All those choPomeroy, Robert Rifne. Veterans ing. For more information call 992· Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy squad 2514.
~ssisted.
·

FREE HEARING TESTS

SUIISCRII"''ION RATES
ly C.rritr or Motor ROll It

•" •

Telitha Jane Casto, 89, Long Bottom. died Tuesday. Apnl 7, 1998, at
Overbrook Nursing Center in Middlepon.
A homemaker, she was born Feb. 5, 1909, in Statts Mill, WNa., daughter of the late Everette Casto and Hallie Johnson. She was a member of the
Meigs County Seni9r Citizens.
.
.
·
She is survived by. a son and daughter-in-law, Dwain 0. and Wilma Ca.~­
to of Ponland. one g,andchild and five great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband; Otis K. Casto. two brothers
and one sister.
'Services will be held Friday. I p.m. al Ewing Furieral Home. Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Duane Stutler officiating. Burial will follow in Casto Cemetery, Fairplain. W.Va.
.
friends may call Thursday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

..............
COUPOi

Ncwspaffcr Associ11tion

...

• The Dally Sentinel • page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, o'hlo

Wednesday, AprilS, 1998

�.

The· Daily Sentinel
NL baseball ·returns
to Milwaukee; Phils
slip by Marlins 9-8

3-2 in 1o irn.ings
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - In Iron! of
55.454 in lhe home opener. Carlos
Hernandez com mined an embarrassing baserunning blunder lhal ktllcd ,,
potential rally
Four mmngs la!er he bounded
down the first-base line, watching hiS
tymg. twq-run homer satl mto the
first row of seats in left-center ltdd
San Otego went on 'to beat the
Ctncmnati Reds 3-2 on Greg
Vaughn's sacrifice Oy to the lOth
tnnmg Tu'esday, the Padres' thtrd
comeback win in the season\ lirst
seven games.
"Carlos came through huge for us,
because 11 sure dldn '1 look good
there." manager Bruce Bochy said.
In the fifth, Hernandez ~stagged
oul because he dtdn'! catch umptrc
ltm Quick's reversal of a play at ,econd Hernandez slid inlo !he bag on
Chns Gomez's shol that shonstop
Barry Larkm snagged and 1hrew to
Brei Boone.
Quick ruled Hernandez ou1. bu1
changed h1s' call when Boone ·
drop~lhe ball. Hernandez. f,lctng
cen1er fie I~. wasn't aware ol the
reversal and staned walking 10 the
dugout. Prompled by pitcher Pete
H?m1sch. Boone ran over and 141gged
Hernandez.
"Yeah, I worry abou1 th.tt .
because I don't play that kmd' of
game," Hernandez sa~d "I saw htm
when he called me out and I JUst
walked away Then, boom, he wem
to tag me and I was surprtsecl.
'Wha!'s going on here?' I never sec,
I never hear anything because of how
many people in the stadium. I really
get mad I don't hke 10 do that kind
oJ show."
Bochy smd everyone on the bench
saw what WtiS happening and- yelled
to Hernandez. m his firs! season '"
sl,tning catcher fot !he Padres.
"ll's the most helpless feeling tn
the world." Bochy satd.
Had Hernandez been paymg allen-

lion. lhe Padres. down 2-0. would
have had runners on first and second
Wllh no OU!S
Hernandez, who wa.&lt; San Diego's
No 3 cmcher on openmg day 1997,
redeemed himself when he htt lhe
first polch he saw from Jeff Shaw in
the nmth for his first homer Wally
Joyner was aboard on a one-oul single
''I'm not used 10 htlling home
runs," Hernandez sa1d " I' mJUS!Irytng lo get my basehtt. I got lucky he
threw me that fastball and I JUmped
uti! I was ready to swing at anything
close on the first pilch "
Shaw (0-1), who had saved three
stra1ght games last ,week , kicked
hunself for throwmg a fastb.tll
"He's a fin&lt;t·ptlch, faslball hiller."
Shaw s,ud " I should have thrown
h1m a slider We have a game plan on
every h111er Why I wen! away from
11. I have no idea."
Tony Gwynn smgled off Shaw
leadmg off the lOth. One out later,
Joyner singled to send Gwynn lo
ihtrd. Vaughn followed wtlh hts Oy 10
lefl. and Gwynn scored Slandmg up
Trevor Halfman (2-0) allowed
one htl m the IOth as the Padres beat
the Reds for lhe third time in tour
g.tme&lt; ihts seuson 11 w;os lhe thud
!nne m thetr firsl seven games !hat
lhe Padres staged a Iale comeback
Harntsch. makmg hts first appearance in San Otego smce a ntghlmartsh opentng day with the New York
Mets a year ago, 'hul out the Padres
lhraugh eoght, allowmg JUsl four
htts
The Padres louded the bases afrer
Hernandez's homer. but Sieve Fmley
popped up to sho~stop Barry Larktn,
ac11vated from the 15-day dtsabled
Its! before the game.
Harntsch has two no-decisions
against the Padres ihts season. Las!
Wednesd.ty, he allowed homers to
Ken Camimu and Fin ley as San
D1ego ralhed from five runs down to
bear I he Reds I0·9 m Cmcmnati

WASTED EFFORT- The Clnclnnall ·Reds wasted the eight-Inning,
four-hit pitching starter Pete Harnisch laid on the visiting San Diego
'Padres Tuesday. Because the bullpen blew the lead In the ninth and
the Reds didn't coine back In the 1Dth, Clnclnnalllost 3·2. (AP)
San Otego's Joey Hamtllon. the
wonncr of thai g.tme. fell behind 2-0
m !he fi rst mntng Tuesday after
allowong RBI songles by Eduardo
Perez and Reggte Sanders on consecultve ptlches. HamJIIon allowed
three htts and walked one 10 the ftrsl.
He sen led down. facing JUSt one bat·
ter over the mtntmum unttl he left
ufler seven He walked 1wo more. but
one runner was emsed on a dcfuble
play He slruck oul seven
Noles: Larkin , whp had surgery 10
fix a ruprured neck disc on March 13.
was ucltvated from !he 15-day disabled ltst belore the game He's been
ready to go for several days, bui w.tsn't eltetble to be activated untol

M_nnday .. The ceremonial ftrsl
pllch was ihmwn out hy San Otego
naltve Terrell Davts. MVP of Den·
vcr's Super Bowl win over Green
Buy here on Jan. 25 .... Reds first
baseman Sean Casey is &lt;ehedulcd 10
undergo surgery on Wcdnesduy m

Cmconnalt to slab1ltze a broken bone
below his nght eye. He was tnJured
when he wus hll in lhe eye with a
thrown ball before the game l,tst
Thursday . The paid anendance of
55.454 wa• the largesl crowd for a
Padres home opener and the second·
l.trgest regular-seuson crowd ever. .
Hamillon passed the 500-stllkeout
pl.tteau and has 503.

ABL to make Chicago franchise league's 10th team
CHICAGO (AP) -The Amencan Basketball League is •! Xpanding
ro Chicago, the women's pro league
confirmed.
ABL executives wJII make .m
ofticJal announcement today at the
Umvers•ty of lllinots-Chicago Pavilton. which will be the home of the as
yet unnamed Chtcago ieam. a leag~

spokeswoman confirmed.
players, tncludmg Ch1cago-area
Nashville and St Louis were the nattve Caihy Boswell, are expected at
olher finalist&lt; for the. ABL's lOth Wedn~sday 's announcement.
franchtse, league officoals satd las!
Also expected to attend will be
week. The ABL Will begtn its thtrd former Choc01go Bulls guard Cratg
season neKI fall.
Hodges and hos wife. Alltson, who
ABL chief executive and co- were mstrumental 111 bnngmg the
founder Gary Cavalli an.d two ABL franchiSe to Chicago. the league satd.
_

The league is also expected to
announce !he new home or the
A! lama Glory at Wednesday's news
~onference.

The ABL comple1ed it&lt; second
season in March when the Columbus
Quest successlully defended its lttle.
The league plays a 44-game .ched·
ule.

By The Associated Press
It figured fans &gt;n Mtlwaukee were
happy. stnce NL baseball returned to
theircily for !he first ,ime 11133 years.
And it made sense !hat fans in
Phtladelphm were happy. 100 - after
all. the woeful World Series champs
were tn town .
.
"That 's the largest crowd I've
ever seen here." Brewers puc her
Scon Karl said Tuesday after 51.408
came to County Siadtum and saw
Mtlwaukee beallhe wonless Montreal Expos 6-4. "There were ttmes last
year when I actually enjoyed pilching on the road more because !he
crowds were so loud. so exci1ing "
Mtlwaukee became the firs! team
lhts cenrury to swtlch leagues. It was
the first NL game m1own since Sept
22. 1965. when !he Braves lost to !he
l-os Angeles Dodgers in II tnmngs
They moved to At lama !he followmg
senson.
"We fell lfl '66 because no one
came to the games." s;ud Expos m&lt;tnager Felipe Alou, a l"ormer Milwaukee Bmves "So. it was encournging
10 see so many people Once !he
game starls. though, you don 't have
time for nostalgoa."
In Philudelphia. Phillies' fans
could be excused tf they celebrated
on !he way to 1he ballpark' Af1er all.
Florida purged moso of us top players alter w1nn1nH the World Senes as

owner H Wayne Huozenga decnn.tled the rosier.
Whole the Marlins extended the
ntghl into extra innmgs, Doug
Glanville hi! an RBI smgle Wtlh two
ouls tn the I Oth inn mg. gtving !he
Ph1lltes a 9-K wm and sending Flonda to tis seventh slr:ughl loss followtng an openmg·duy victory
"In a lo! of w,tys. we're paying
the pnce of bcmg young and tnexperienced." Marlms manager Jim
Leylancl smcl "In !he minors, you can
overcome your mtstakes Up here,
until you reline your sk1lls. you pay
for your mislukes."
At Coumy Stadoom. Jeromy Burnilz and Jose Valemin homered '"
Mtlwaukee won Its six1h slraight and
dropped the Expos- another payroll
purge vtctom -lo 0-J.
.
Karl {1-0) gave up IWQ ~arned
runs and seven hilS-in 6 1-3 inntngs.
und Doug Jones pttched a hi!less
ntnth for hts lhtrd save. Duslln Hermanson (U-1) g.tve up lour runs and

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- WHAT: A 9 hour CPR &amp; First Aid Course
WHV: Most employers want workers to have this training
WHEN: Saturday, May
a.m.- 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 16.- 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
WHERE: Buckeye Hills ·career Center, Rio Grande, OH;
Human Resource Building
WHO: ADULTS
• Coaches
• Teachers
• Child Care Providers
• Camp Counselors
• 4-H Advisors
• Scout Leaders
-.
• Swim Instructors
• Swimming Pool Owners
HOW: Offices open Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. or until tO p.m.
Mon.-Thurs. or call 740-245~5334
COST: $40 per applicant
11 Is !he pol1cy of !he Gallta·J&lt;ickSon·Vinton Jolnl VocatiOnal SchOOl Oialrlc11ha1 eduCational programs and other activtlles
be conducled in adherence to T11le IV ollhe CMI Roghts A¢ ol1964, Tille IX oflhe Educaliona1Arnendmen18 of 1972, ~
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n&amp;tllme someone's going lo make
tl," satd Pacer coach Larry Bird,
whose team escaped woth a one-poin1
win Sunday when Milwaukee's
Mtchael Curry missed a polenlial
game-winner.
Thomas htt the back of the rim
wilh the final shot of lhe game.
"That's a shot! normally make in
my sleep." be said.
Cleveland rallied from a 76-68
deficilto take a 78-761ead w11h 3:08
remaintng. Thomas and "lesley Person. who led the Cavaliers with IS
poinls, sparked the I0·0 run wo!h
back-lo back threc-poinlers.
Antonoo Davis. who finished wilh
19 pomls and 15 rebounds. ended a
6.43 'scoring drought for lndoana. hitting IWO free !hrows lo He the game
at 78-78 with I: 10 to go.
Shawn Kemp finished with 16
pooms and II rebounds afrer missing
live ol his first stx. shots. He also provided his home-state crow.d with a
ht•ge scare.
,
Kemp was caned off on a strelcher with 2:44 !efl in the second quarter after he was madvertenlly
elbowed tn the chon by · Dernck
McKey. He re!Urned to s!art !he second half and !ted the game a1 80-80
by hilling 1wo free throws wtth 26.2
seconds lef1.
" I didn't really even ask what
happened." saod Kemp, who slumped .
to the noor unconscious. "Thai's
whal !he ~arne is about. You get hit
and you ' ve got to bounce back and
HANGING ON- The Indiana Pacers' Antonio Davis grabs the rim
take 11 and just go on," he sao d.
after
dunklhg the basketball In front of the Cleveland Cavaliers' WesIndiana took a 2-1 season senes
ley
Person
(looking up) during the second quarter of Tuesday night's
lead o1·er Cleveland with one game
NBA
game
In l,ndlanapolls, where the Pacers won 82·80. (AP)
to play at Ound Arena. The 1eams ,lfe
on pace lo meel in !he first-round of
have to get out on the coun and show opponunity to play themtn the playthe Eastern Conference playoffs.
11,
: · Kemp sao d. "If we have the
"We realize that we can play
offs, it should be a good series."
ttgaonstthe Pacers, !he problem is you

'Mailman' puts on season-high 56 point show

ANNOUNCEMENT
TRAINING and EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES

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Jacks.on played for two learns last
season- Denvet and Indiana - that
combined for 60 victories. The Pacers went 39-43 under Larry Brown
and faoled to make the playoffs.
Indiana's 53rd win Tuesday was
the franch1se's most victQries smce
entering !he NBA
"Thai's something lo be awfully
proud of, especially wilh what we
had done lasl year," Jackson satd.
"Let's take ttme to smell the roses "
Reggie Mtller's 22-footer with 8.8
seconds left gave Indiana !he lead for
good at 82-80.
Moller, who finiShed wtth 15
pomts, dod m the Cavaliers for the
second It me thos season. He hit two
three·pomters m Ihe final29 seconds
on Jan. 30 as Indiana beal Cleveland
89-83.
"They got confused. I was sur·
prised I was so-wide open Thai's the
hardes! shot to make," Mdler said.
"We had a defensive breakdown,"
•aid Cavaliers coach M1ke Fratello.
who walched Carl ihomas follow
Chris Mullin ofT a screen mstead of
followmg Miller to the left -wmg.
Thomas !hen mtssed a wtcle.open
20-foo!er at lhe buzzer.
"Thai's !he second game tn a row
we gave a wtde-open look at the
buzzer. The odds are agamsl us that

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six hils in ftve mnings.
At the Vel. Pholadelphia rallied
rmm an 8-4 delicit. overcoming ·a
grand slum and five RBis by Derreck
Lee.
Rt cky Bonalico ( 1- f) potched two
hille&lt;s innmgs for -the wm Rookie
Jesus Sanchez (0-1) was the loser
In other games. Los Angeles beat
Arizona 9-1 in the firs1 game watched
by new Dodgers owner Rupen Mur·
doc h. Arlama rou!ed Pmsburgh 11-3.
St. Louts beat Colorado 12-11, San
Franctsco beill Houston 5-4 m 10
mnings and New York beat Chtcago
3·2.
Dodgers 9, Diamendbacks I
Eric Young hit a lwo-oul , lwo-run
double ns Los Angeles hroke oul o'f
a t1e wllh ,t live -run founh mnong 'm
!he home opener at Dodger Stadt urn.
Chan Ho Park ( 1-0) scu11ered seven htts in sox tnnmgs. droppong the
expansion Dmmondbacks to 1-6.
Wtllie Blatr (0-2) gave up sJK runs
and eighl hrts in 3 2/3 innings. ' '
Braves II, Pirates 3
Chipper Jones homered 1wice otT '
Jason Schmidt (1 -1) in the firstrhree
mnongs at Three Rivers Stadium.
where a sellout crowd of 43.21\H saY{ "
lhe Pirates lose theor fifth straight
home opener.
Hulf the fans left before u poslgame fireworks show. Tom Olavine
( 1-0) allowed live hits in seven
shu1ou1 mnmgs and s1ruck out five
Cardinals 12, Rockies II
Tom Lampkin homered and drove
in four runs m the CC¥lrs Fteld opener. St Louos buill a 9-1 lead off Pedro
Aslacto (1-1) and Mike DeJean.
Withstood u seven-run soxth innmg
and scored three more ntns in,the sevimth.
,.
' Mark McGwtre, who h1t homers
in his first four games thts season,
went hom~or the second
straoghl game bui drove in two runs
With a groundout and saCnfice 0y.
Cliff Politte (1 -0) allowed five
runs - one earned - and five hils
in 5 2/3 innings. and Kenl Botlenfield
pi!ched the nimh · for his second
save.
Gianls 5, Astros 4
Pinch-hiller Rey Sanchez singled
in lhe wonning run ofT Billy Wagner
in the lOth as San Frnncosco won its
home opener J.T. Snow shd around
the lag of catcher Tony Eusebto to
score the winnin~ run

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Transactions

l'nni~hl's games
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By ANDY RESNIK
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mark
Jackson says- he won'! be salosfied
with anything less lhan an NBA title.
But gelling 53 wins in a season is
ntce 100.
"li's OK to be a lillie bit harsh and
say negative things aboui us, but lhe
·whole ptclure says we have won 53
games," Jackson said af!er Indiana's
82-80 v1clory over Cleveland Tuesday night. "We have had a great sea-

/

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t\ll.lllla II !Jurshur)!h 1

AL standings

Pacers notch 82-80
win over Cavaliers

Page4
Wednesday, AprilS, 1998

Padres beat Reds

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Aprl18,199$

Sports

•

'

,.

,.
,.•
-

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
Danny Manning went down Wtlh
another knee injury, Shawn Kemp
was knocked unconscoous and Rod
Strickland pulled up lame.
The only lhings falling faster 1han
star players were the sh01s coming
out of Karl Malone's hands.
Malone scored 56 potnL' - the
most by anyone tn lhe NBA th1s season - a,, Ulah edged Golden Siato
101-99 on im eventful Tuesday night
that included a slew of onjuries to
some of !he best 'play,ers tn the
lengue.
Manning's injury appeared the
most senoils. He was flown back to
Phoenix after injuring the anterior
cruciace ligament in his right knee
during the SUns' 103-97 victory at
Sacramento. Mannong ha.• already
undergone reconstructiVe surgery on
both knees afler surfenng ACL
onJunes in lhe past.
"I believe I've blown it out again.
!hat's my personal oponion." a dejected Manning said as he sat on !he vosuor"s Imming room at Arco Arena.
"''m expecting the worse and hoping
for the best. I've been there before. I
know what to expect."
Kemp was knocked cold when he
collided with Derrick McKey's elbow
during the second quaner of the
Cavs' loss at Indiana. He was carted
ofT 1he coun on a stretcher berore
returning 10 play the second half.
'"I dtdn't really even a,,k what happened," Kemp sa1d. "That's what the
game 1s about. You get hit and
you' ve got to bounce back and take
tt and JUst go on."
Strickland suffered a stramed left
quadriceps lale in 1he lirst half of the
Wizards· loss at Chicago. He played
oniy two minutes on the seL'Ond half.
"We have sox games left and I
want to be able to play. It can be dayto-day. Who knows, tomorrow or the
nexl day I c;m reel a whole lot better." Strickland said. "I was goong 10
try to get out !here and finish playing.
bul I spoke 10 the doctor and he said
of I go out and there and play on il. I

may pull it and be out the rest of the
year."
In other games. Chicago defeated
Washongton 103-85, Minneso!a
topped Miami 92-89. Atlanui beat
New York 92·79. Portland defeated
Dallas 99-91, Houston topped Denver 104-87, Milwaukee downed
Toronto 114-105 and Vancouver beat
the Los An,geles Chppers 110·94.
Jazz 101, Warriors 9!1
AI· Oakland, Calif.. Malone had
!he secon~ml total of his
career and the fourth-highest in Jazz
franchise htstory.
He shot 18-for-29 from !he field
::::-including a 4-footer with 2.2 second left for the win- and 19-for-23
from !he line in hos highest,.sconng
game since 1990.
"You get inlo someihing like this
two or three times in your career."
Malone said. "I fell that ever)' guy
that wa.&lt; guariling me wa.~ at my mercy. I'm not bragging about it, but I
really felt that way." ,
Malone scored 25 of his points 111
the third quarter. ohcluding a onehanded fling from 30 feet a.~ the peri·
od ended. and added 12 poims in the
founh as Utah won its fourth s!ratght
game
h was the highest-scoring ondovtdual eflorl by anyone in !he league
sonce Olen Rice scored·56 for Mtami
agatnsl Orlando on 1995.
"It's an awesome feeling when
you're 34 years old and your learnmates say. ·carry il. fella.' :• Malone
said
Suns 103, Kings 97
M,mning was earned off the coun
by two 1eammates during the first
quaner after he fell &lt;Jurong a fast
break opponunity while trymg to
handle a pass from ClifT Robinson.
"I got bumped a liule bi1 and lried
to stop." he sa1d. "The pass came and
thai's alii remember. Tben I wa.• layin~ on the ground. I don 't know tf I
twosted lhe knee OF what."
Manning, a leading contender tor
1he Sixlh Man of the Year award
while averaging 13 7 points per game
in hos Hlih NBA season. previously

underwent major surgery on both his
left knee (Dec. 18, 19.95) and his nght
(Jan. 14. 1989). '
Robinson scored 33 pomt.
rebounds as the Suns withsl
a
fourth-quaner rally and gamed I tr
soKth straight victory.
Bulls 103, Wizards 85
The loss dropped the troubled
Wozards (38-38) I 112,games behind
New Jersey for !he eighth playoff
spol m lhe Eastern Conference.
• The Bulls won their 13ih straight
behind 30 pomts from ,Mi,chael Jordan and 20 rebounds from Dennis
R.odman.
"Rod Strickland gO! hurt and they
lost the head of the body.'' Jordan
said. "They didn't know where to
follow from that point He ignites
thetr offense. Wtthout him. they really didn't have.any leadership."
Wilh Strockland out, the Bulls
pulled away m the thord quaner.
ou1scoring the Wizard' 30-14.
Timberwolves 91, Heat 89
At Minneapolis. Kevin Garnett
had 27 poin!S and 14 boards to lead
the Wolves withtn one VIctory ol a
franchise record tor wins .
Alonzo Mournong. who missed
!he two prevoous games Wtlh a frac·
lured cheekbone. had 28 potnts and
none rebounds whole wearing a face
mask
"Very uncomlortable," he sao d. " I
g01 a I tide lighihoadedness and I ~ot
dtzzy out there. but 1fs no excuse.
The doclor warned me that once I get
my blood level up I'm going !oexperience these symp!om~ r ve jus! gol
to work through it."
Hawks 92, Knicks 79
At Atlanla, D1kembe Mutombo
mulched a soason·htgh With 19
rebounds m additoon to 17 points and.
SIX blocks. Alan Henderson ac.lded 20
potnls and Mookte Blayloek had 17
Charles Oakley of New York wus
called for a nagranl loul on
Mutombo If illS upheld. he will mJSs
tonoghfs game agamst M1am1 for
accumulming hos seventh llagram
foul potnl.
"I didn 'I do nothtng."' Oakley

''
..
- · Municipal judge.dismisses· charge.s
.
'
'~:

.

•.''

against anti-Chief ·Wahoo demonstrators

By JOHN AFFLECK
,
CLEVELAND (AP)- Clevehtnd
'· lndmns fans can expect to see people
,, demonstratmg agairist the learn's
Chief Wahoo logo outside Jacobs
Field .on Frid~y ·after charges were
dismissed against!hree protesters.
Cleveland Municipal Judge Kath·
leen Keough threw out charges Tuesday agamst three pro1es1ers who
bumed an effigy of Chief Wahoo
before a World Series game lost
Oclober.
Juanila Helphrey, one of the proteslen. said she'll be buck qutside
Jacobs field when Cleveland plays
ils home opener Friday asainsl the
Ahaheim Angels.
"The slruggle continues." she
'" Hid.
.,
Helphrey and lhe olher demonslrators believe lhe learn's grinnins.
red-faced logo is a racist slereolype
:. and 1hat the club shOuld get a new

'·•

nickname.
Keough said the de"fendants were
prolesling on an area that a federal
judge had set aside for demonstralions. and a small tree that was singed
111 !he tire wasn 'I damaged.
Tbe judge 1hrew out the charges
before lhe case went to a JUry and
said she did not believe prosecutors
had enough evidence 10 gel a convicllon.
.
Tbe dummy. dressed in jean~ and
a swealshin and sluffed wilh newspaper," was ignited dunng a protesl on
Oct 23 oulside Jacobs Field before
Game 5 of lhe World Series belwecn
Cleveland and the Aorida Marlins.
"It all boiled down 10 protecting
the free speech of t~ose involved,"
defense.allomey Terry Gilben said.
"If a nag-burning is pmnilled, then
surely lhe burning of a Wahoo - a
racist image- is protected."
Varnon BeUecoun, 66. of Min-.

neapoli&lt;. wtts areused of ''"ning the ,
fire and was charged wtlh crnmnal
dam ..gmg .md endangerrnenl and
res1slin~

satd. "Just trymg to block htm out A
guy like that, who os 7-fool-4, coming over my back - JUSt troed to
block him oul "
Trail Blazers 99, Mavericks 91
AI Dallas, lsaJah Rider scored 26
potnls and Walt Wtlliams, Rasheed
Wallace and Broan Gram all had 17
ooints for the Tmtl Blazers

Clemens suffers
. gr~i~ pull,_ to miss
s~art for Blue Jays
By BEN WALKER
Clemens. B01h runners 'even!ually
AP Baseball Writer
scored in a four-run first innmg,
Even before he took lh~ mound. keyed by Marty Cordova's lwo-run
RogerCiemens could tell some1hing lriple.
wijs wrong. The Minnesota Twins
Bob Tewksbury (I-I) gave up one
knew tl, 100.
run and two hits wilh no walks in
Clemens pulled himself after JUS! seven mmngs. He rei ired his fmall8
seven pilches, leaving wilh a slrained bailers.
nght grom Tuesday mgh1 m ToronLast Wednesday. Clemens pilched
lo's 12-2 loss a! the Metrodome.
Toronto past the Twins and Tewks·
. Clemens sa1d he hun htmself bury 3-2. giving up just two hils 111
while warmmg up m the bullpen. He seven innings
re1urned 10 the clubhouse, and his
"The firstthmg I saw was Person
conditton did notomprove
warming up mthe bullpen," Lawlon
"I came 111 10 do some slretchmg sail!. "I don 'tlike 10 see anybody get
and as we stretched it, I got a lillie hun. but lthoughl, 'Wow, we don '!
sharp pam and though!, 'Maybe I bel· have to face Clemens ' "
ter not do !hat." " Clemens said.
In other games. New York lopped
Blue Jays 1rainer Tommy Cratg" Seaule 13-7,Anaheim beal Boston 6said i1 was a mild main, and com· 1. Bal1imore defeated Kansas 11-7
pared !he inJury to one that caused and Detroit downed Tampa Bay 3-1 ,
Clemens lo mtss one sian las! Aprtl.
Yankees 13, Mariners 'I
"I thmk tt was sman on hts pari
Chuck Knoblauch homered on the
to shu! it down rather than try in~ to lirsl pttch of !he game. 01nd Darryl
throw through tt an~. end ~p m.tsstng Strawberry and Jorge Posada also
two or ihree w~ks. Cra~g saod
·connected in a s~&lt;-mn lirsl tnnmg at
Clemens satd he doesn 1expect lo lhe Kingdome.
mtss more !han one stan. at most.
Slrawberry hit lwo long home
"I don'!ihtnk l1ore it. and a mat- runs and a double and drove in four
1er of fact, I'm prelly sure I didn't. " runs. He had not homered since 1996
Clemens smd. "I thm~ I've .sot a after spending most of la.O! year on
pretty deep slfam. so I m gomg to !he dtsabled lis!
have 10 go tomorrow and see how I
New York manager Joe Torre
feel "
held a team meetmg before the game.
Clemens ( 1-1) wound up as lhe Then the ,Yankees. who hit t&gt;nly 1wo
losmg pllcher m the shurtest stan of homers in gelling off to a 1·4 stan,
hos c.~reer
broke loose against Jtm Bullinger (0"We knew so~1ethmg was ~rong 1)
because he d~~n t warm up ltke he
Davtd Wells ( 1-1) pttched New
usu~lly does, Twtns .m:mager _
Tom York tojust 1ts ftflh wm m 11s last23
Kelly &lt;ntd "We dodn't know 1f be gamesatSeallle.Aiex Rodnguezand
· was sick or what "
Robert. Perez homered for the
. Clemens walked leadolf holler Martners.
Mall Lawton on five pitches and fell
Angels 6, Red Sox 1
beht~d 2-010 Brenl Gales before callKen Hill shu! olil Bpslon,on five
mg 11me. Manager lim Johnson went hils ror eight mmngs qnd Phol Nevon
to the mound and look out the Toron- and Darin Erslad homered a! Ana!o ace
heim. ·
''Normally when Clemens ihrows
Hill (2..()) walked none, struck out
h1s hogh ptlch you can barely see il." four and re1ired 13 of his last 14 baiLawlon satd. "But I had no problem ters.
picking up hos firs! p1tch. It was one
Nevin and Erstad homered off
of the rare time~ when I was ac!Ual- Tim Wakefield (0-1). Cecil Foelder. in
ly hoping Clemens would throw 111e his 22nd at-bai of !he sea.,on, drove
a strike."
' in hJS first run for !he Angels wtlh a
Robert Person relieved and double.
walked Oates, a walk charged to

Peoples
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,trresl.

Juan Reyna, 51. of Cleveland. and
Helphrey. 57, o( Cleveland Heigh1s.
were charged wi!h aggravaled dosorderly conduct ;md criminal trespassmg.

Bellecourl. preSJdenl of lhe
Natoonal Coalition on Racism in
Sports and 1he Media. said he was
ela1ed wi1h the ruling. Reyna said 1he
Irial gave !he proteslers a ·good
chance 10 air their views publicly.
"It was an education for everybody." he said.
The team had no commen1 on 1he
decision. But club officials have said
in lhe pa.•tlhatthey don'l plan on getling rid of Chief Wahoo.
Proseculors said lhe ~monstra ­
lion wenl beyond legitimate prolest
because 11 endaneered fans

• Balloonal • Refresh~Jte~tsl • Prlzeal
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�•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wed~ay, April 8, 1998

Redmen sweep Cedar:ville in doubleheader, pass ·.500 mar·k
· The University of Rio Grande
baseball team jumped over the .500
mark Tuesday and extended its win
sp-eak to four consecutive games after
a sweep of Cedarville College in a
Mid-Ohio Conference twinbill at the
Stanley J..,. Evans Athletic Complex in
Rio Grande.
·
The Redmen (12-10-1 , MOC5-I).
currently tied for second place with
Walsh and 1itlin in the MOC standipgs, had to- come from behind in
both games to register their second
siraight sweep over an MOC oppot)ent. Rio Grande won 6-3 and 3-2 on
Tuesday.
'

.

Cedarville (l- 14, MOC 0-6)
jumped on the 'scoreboard in the top
or the first inning in game one when
leadoff man Micah Hutchins singled,
stole second and then scored on a single by Josh Lunney to take a 1-0 lead.
After being retired in order in their
half of the first and blanking the Yellow Jackets in the visitors' second
inning, Rio Grande's bats came alive.
Jason King walked ·aqd ~ric
Stevenson followed with a double
that set up some long ball heroics for
Jeremy Ward. Ward crushed a threerun homer, his second of the season,
10 give Rio Grande a J-1 lead. Ward's

.

-

second inning blast proved to be the
game winning RBI, but the Redrnen
weren't through scoring.
Steve Htchcock led aff the fifth
with a single tlien scored on an RBI
single by Kevin Green after stealing
second 'base. Green scored when
Shawn. Sommer connected for his
second home run of the year to make
it6-1.
Cedarville scored two runs in the
sixth 11nd then was retired quietly in
the seventh as the Redmen prevailed
6-3.
Gary Stanley (3-1) picked up the
w'in and pitched his first complete

game this season. He struck out five
batters while giving up just five hits.
Stanley walked just two baJters.
Johnny Freese took the loss for the
Yellow Jackets. The Redmen tagged
him for eight hits, including the
round trippers by Ward and Sommer.
Game two was scoreless unti I the
fifth irwing when Cedarville tallied
twice dff Redmen starter Matt Austin.
Apair of wild pitches allowed Trevor
Creeden to score the firSt run. Nathan
Verwys then singled and later scored
on single by Mark Wood to give
Cedarville a 2-0 lead.
.
Rio Graqde fouglit back wilh run

a

in the bottom of the sixth. Sommer Rio Grande. He surrendered just two
seored on an RBI double' by King to hits.
Gabe Schlappl was saddled with
cut the ~licit to 2-1· and set up some
the
loss for Cedarville. He struck out
final inning heroics for the Redmen.
After Austin retired the Yellow three and walked three while giving
Jackets in order in' the top of the sev- seven hilS to the Redmen. Four of the
enth, Ward drilled a pinch hit doubie seven hits came in the final two
at1d )hen scored on an RBI single by inning
.
Rio Grande travels to Ohao WesJQe Thomas, his only hit of the day.
Thomas stole second and Green fol- leyan University today for a 3:30
lowed with a single for the game win- p.m. game in Delaware. Th~ Redmen
ning RBI to give the Redmen a 3-2 then visit Shawnee State Fnday for a
non-league twinbill before returning
decision.
· Austin (2- ll struck out eight and home Saturday to face Malone in
walked three to record the first com- · another key MOC doubleheader.
Saturday's game time is I p.m.
plete ~arne vict6ry of his career with

Red Wings beat Blues 5-3, stay in race for ho·me-ice advantage
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hockey Writer
While teams are scrambling at the
. bottom for playoff positions, there's
a heck of a battle going on for home ·
ice at the top of the NHL's Western
Conference between the Detroit Red
Wings and Dalla' Stars. .
With a 5-3 victory over St. Louis
on Tuesday night. the Red Wings
pulled even with the idle Stars for
most points in the West.
"We ' re doing a little scoreboard
watching," Detroit's Kris Draper
said. "We just want to keep winning
hockey games, and if that happens it
could beinterestingattheend."
Although Detroit and Dalla.~ both
have 99 points, the Stars currently
hole! the conference •s No. I playoff
seed because they have two more
wins·than the Red Wings. The Red
. .
W.mgs have fitve games remam1ng
and the Siars six.
1
Meanw h1.Ie. th e san Jose Sh arks
made some headway in the torrid battie for the final playoff spots in the
West with a 6-0 victory over Calgary.
San Jose, Chicago and Edmonton
·
b h Sh k
al1 have 72 po1nts. ut 1 e ·ar· s
hoi d down the sevent h position
·
because.
of more victories.
Dmper scored the tie-breaking
goal with 2:061eft in regul;~tion as the .
Red Wings extended their winning
streak to four and broke the Blues'
five-game winning streak.
· be ·
Dr~per- snapped a 3.-3 tte, atmg
St. Louis goaltel)der Grant Fuhr to
finish olf a three-man break with·Larry Murphy and Steve Yzerman. Yzerman's empty-net goal clinched the .
•vin with 1:13 left.
" We need contributions ·from all

of us," Draper said. "It seems like
when we' ve had problems we've
been relying on one g~cy or one line
to get us going. We need scoring from
all different area.~."
Detroit goaltender Chris Osgood
made 21 saves as the Red Wings took
just their second win in six meetings
with St. Louis this sea.,on. Grant Fuhr
had 18 saves for the Blues.
AI Macinnis had a goal and an
A'ssist for the Blues and became just
the sixth defenseman in NHL history with 1,000 career points.
Elsewhere, it was Montreal 3,
New York Rangers. 2; Phoeni~ 2.
Pittsburgh I; Toronto 3. Florida I;
and Boston 4, Ottawa 2.
· Sharks 6, Flames 0
At San Jose. Mike Vernon and
Kelly H'rudey teamed up for a 16_
54 ve shutout as .the Shark-4 beat the
Flames.
s·an Jose broke open Tuesday
night's game with a three-goal flurry
early in the second period on shots by
'Mike Ricci, John MacLean and Ron
Sutter.
ca(gary remained lOth, eight

Eastern Conference 'with BbslOn.
The Canadiens· and Bruins moved
within a point of fourth-place Washington. Buffalo was two points away
in seventh.
·
Thornton scored his sixth on a
power play at 10:55 when he lifted
his own rebound over Rangers goaltender Mi'ke Richter.. Brisebois followed with his ninth at 11':22 when
his point shot deflected off Wayne
Gretzky's skate pa.st Richter. Mark
Recchi converted his own rebound on
a power play at 18:24 for his 32nd
and a 3-1 Montreal lead. ·

Gretzky and Adam Graves scored . to 1-4-2 in their last seven games.
for New Yilrk.
Maple Leafs 3, Panthers I
Coyotes 2, Penguins 1
Mats Sundin scored his 31st to
Rick Tocchei knocked in a cen- lead Toronto over Florida.
tering pass · from Cliff Ronning at
With live games remaining. the
15: 19 of the third to key Phoenix's Maple Leafs are nine points shy of a
victory at Pittsburgh.
playotr'berth and all but out of conTh~ victory moved the Coyotes tent ion·. In order for the Maple Leafs
into sole possession of sixth place in to get into the postseason. they wbuld
the Western Conference race with 74 have to win' all of their remaining
points. The Coyotes, who have six games and San Jose, Edmonton and
games remaining. won their first in Chicago would have to lose all of
Pius burgh in their last five trips.
theirs.
The loss dropped th~ slumping
Sundin, who leads the Maple
Nonhea.~t Division-leading Penguins Leafs with 69 points, scored his sec-

ond goal in as many nights and has
three goals and seven points in his
last six games.
·
Bruins 4, Senators 2
At Ottawa. Steve Heinze scored
three consecutive goals to power
Boston. ·
Heinze scored his 19th and 20th
goals in the first period and added his
21st in the second in giving the Bruins a 3-0 lead.
.
.
· The Senators 'remained eighth in
the Eastern Conference, two points
ahead of idle Carolina. Ottawa has six
games left, C~rolina seven.

M
h
Woods ·g ets nod=to.rep·eat as asters c· amp .
·

·

By DOUG FERGUSON .
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - 1iger
Woods turned pro 20 months ago
with two simple words: Hello, world.
H
d
A
N ·
e returne to ugusta at1ona1
with an equally shon but chilling
message.
"I'm back," he said.
The words that ~ollowed could not

have been any more comforting to the
rest &lt;Jf the field out to prove t_he Ma.•points shy of the final playoff spot.
.
·
1ers 1s
1 1 1 '"--" • domatn
"We were a little lethargic in the.
H' no18·so edy n-vuus
· 270
h·. h
1s
-un
er-par
w
first period. picked it up in the sec- · brok · h ·
d1
b R 1c d
ond and then let up some in the
e t e recor ast set y aymon
third," MacLean said. "We played Aoyd iri 1976. can be even lower. His
playoff hockey when we had to. but . game, from 300-yard drives that led
we weren't as disciplined as we need to Short l·rons 1'nto ·the greens and no
.
.
three-puns over 72 holes, is even bet10 be...
canad'~ens 3• Ra· ngers 2
ter
.The confidence that' "'oods
can
n•
. At New York; Scott Thornton and
Patrice Brisebois scored 27 seconds add another green jacket to what ~n
apart in the second period to lead the could be a very cramped locker is
Canadiens over the Rangers.
even higher.
The Canadiens' victory gave them
"I think this year is much easier,
83 points to tie for fifth place in the . because I knqw how to win here,"
Woods said Tuesday. "I think as the
years go oq. it will be even easier,
because I know the nuances of··the
golf course now."
What makes the 62nd Masters so
compelling is the anticipation
whether Woods can repeat his per•
Host Southern pounded out 12 hits the the third and fourth then pushed . formance from. last year. along with
in scorching the South Gallia Rebelt_ _the winning numberto 10-1 with four these questions on how he did it:
-Wa~ it his awesome. length off
10-1 Tuesday afternoon in a non- big runs in the fifth. In that frame,
league baseball contest iri Racine.
Davis tripled and Corey Williams
Josh Ervin picked up tbe win in doubled for the big blows of the
seven innings of work. while Andy inning. Young had three RBI's and
Nibert suffered the loss.
Williams two.
Michael Ash. Adam Williams,
In suffering the loss. Niber:t gave By BARR)' WILNER
and Josh Davis each picked up two up 12 hits, I0 runs, eight walks. and AP Sports Writer
hils each with Davis hammering a the R~bels made two errors. Bailey
Family matters most to Tara Liptriple. Other .Southern hitters were came on the last inning in relief.
inski.
Corey Williams with a double, Adam
Ervin fanned seven. gave up one
Lipinski said she's turning pro,
Cumings a triple. Billy Young a sin- run. eights flits. had 10 strikeouts and and giving u'p a chance :it another
gle. Jesse Little a single. Benji two walks. Southern made two Olympic gold medal. so she can
-Manuel a single. and Josh Ervin a errors.
begin repaying the sacrifices her
single.
Soothern (4-4) goes to Wellston parent~ made to help her become a
South Gallia scored its only run in Wednesday.
skating champion.
the first to take a 1-0. lead as Steve Inning lllllb
" I've been thinking a lot about
Queen. Matt Mumpqwer. and Court- South Galli a
100-000=1-8-2 turning pro. thinking since Nagano,
202-240=10-12-2 but I really needed tirne to think more
ney Booth singled.
Southern
Southern scored two in the first on
Ballelin
about it," the 15-year-old Olympic
Southern: Ervin (WP) and Cum- champion said. "I'm really c~cited
wal~s to Corey Williams and Cumings then Young cracked a two-run ings
about it and a little relieved. I really
single·to make the score 2-1.
South Gallia: Nibert (LP). Bailey wanted more time with the family.
Southern scored two runs each in and Harrison
more time at home."
Not that she won't have a busy
.Tornadoes throw combined no-hitter
schedule, beginning tonight with the
Champions on Ice .tour opener in Baltimore. Lipinski, who will be paid
about $15,000 for each show. won't
· lose tM:r Olympic eligibility until she ·
appears in a non-sanctioned event.
That likely will occur April 24 in the
• Southern plated 14 runs in the first Southern had 10 hi~~; alone in the first made-for-television "Skate. Rattle
~nning in thumping the South Gallia . inning when it .Cored 14 runs to take 'n Roll," · in Charleston, S.C. although she might op1 for the •·uJtiltebels 23-1 Tuesday night in Racine a 14-1 lead.
Ovefl!ll, Southern had 15 hils and mate F~r" event in Binghamton.
~ring non-league girls varsity softwalked 13 times around a five-error N.Y.. on April 23.
oball action.
defensive
stand by the Rebels. ~ _ But · Lipinski. t~e _youngest
• Pitchers Trisha Warner and RegiSouthern hitters were Cyrithia \Qiympic. world and U.S. champion.
na Manuel combinFd for a no-hitter
Caldwell with a 3-3 night and three made it clear that family ties would
1o help po511he win.
·South Gallia went.ahead 1-0 in the runs scored; Kara King was 2-2.and keep her closer -to her Sugar Land,
first. then Southern (7-1) nestled in two runs scored; Ashli Davis was 4- Texas home.
"Now I'll have four-day weekfor a ~..&amp; ball·thumpong first mnong. ' 5 with four singles and three runs
scored; and Trish Holman was a per- ends and be able to be with my ramfeet 3-3 with a·walk.
ily, beca~r.~e they mean so much to
Other Southern hitters were How- me." she said. "I don't wanlto be 21
erton, Lyons, McKinney. lhle and - and·not know my dad.:'·
Early Wec!naday Mixed
Warner.
Lipinski's father, Jack, an oil comBowling,Lap (As of April I)
In
picking
up
the
win
Warner
pany
e~ecutive, rarely tlllveled with
·l'am
.
Record
allowed
no
hits.
walked
four,
hit
one.
his
daughter,
remaining at home in
S&amp;.S Sport.~ Cards
66-38. .
Meigs County Golf Coune 64-40 fanned one and gave up one run. · Sugar Land. Lipinski trained in
Thunder Alley Lanes
52-52 ·Regina •Manuel relieved with one Detroit with Richard Callaghan,
Life On Mars
46-58 walks, one strike out and no hits. joined lliere by her mother. Pat.
f:.O.E. 2171
44-60 Southern made no errors.
"It was totally Tara." Pat LipinsTony's Carryout
40-64
Christina Apple suffered the loss ki said of the decision to leave
' Ta~m high -'es: Meigs County with 23 runs, 15 hits, 13 walks and behind rival Michelle Kwan and, for
Golf Course (2027) ·
·
one strike out. South Gallia made five now, f~et about defendinR her title
. Team hip piM: S&amp;S Sporu ci'Tilr.l.
in the 2002 Winters Olympits at Salt
Cards (7:!1}
Southern goes to Wellston Lake City. "Tara based this decision
Mett
Wednesday.
on getting the family together again."
HJah serial: ·John TJ!ft (557), lgaj• &amp;!!till· ,..
· Lipinski curremly plans to spend
Roger Carpenter (539)
South Gallia
100-00 =1-0-5 three days a week training in Detroit
HJah p!llt: Carpemer (214); Jer- Southern • (14)02-70= 23-JS-0 and four days in Te~as. She will,
ry Curry 1213)
a.tlerles
however, be ~ng frequent appear·
Southern: Trish Warner (WP), ances for Disney World •• one of her
BJah serlei: Margaret Eynon Manuel and Davis
endorsers. She will be lithe opening
(S41 ); Helen Phelps (528)
South Gallia: Apple (LP) and of Disney World's Animal Kingdom
Hip p!~~t: Eynon (202); Phelps White
later this month and a movie role is
at&gt;0)
being discus.~

Baseball Tornadoes
beat South Gallia 10-1

·
·
·
·
Even Woods explains his success
the tee to fairways that run hard and game is far more advanced than at
in
terms of "the whole package."
fast because of the severe slopes?
this time a year ago, he has won only
-Was it his'jron play that gave three iimes - the Byron Nelson Most of the pull' were qphill because
him ample opportunity to make Classic, We&gt;tern Open and Johnnie he was able to control his approach
· rc~ · ? H
h.
h
6 w·lk Cl · · Th ·1 d
"
b1 1e . e never 11 1ower t an a a er ass1c m a1 ,an - smce shots with short irons. set up by a
great week of driving.
iron into a par 4,
he last left Augusta.
•·Puuing wa.~ just a renection of
-Was it the fact he made every
Els has won four times, including
p~u inside 10 feet and never took
his second U.S. Open title and the everything working out from the tee
h
h
B H'll 1 · · 1 1
h
more I an two put~ on greens t at
ay 1 nv1tatmna ast mont • box all the way to the green," he said.
Colin Montgomerie got the best
are reputed to be the most difficult in ~hen he atoned for blowing an eightthe world?
· . stroke lead to Woods in the final look at Woods' mastery of the greens..
- was ·11 a fl uke.?
round ·m Th a1·1an dby crus h'mg h'1m ·m . He was three strokes back going into
"I know that wa.s an outstanding a 36-hole final.
the third round when he suggestedor
wa.~lit boa.sted?- that his e~tperi­
performance, and anybody that had
Justin Leonard's three victories
that once in a lifetime would be,very since then include the British Open ence in major championships would ·
excited with that type of perfor- and The Players Championship two be of greater value that Woods· sheer
·mance," said Tom Kite, who finished week•• ago.
talent.
Woods made every putt that matsecond last year by a mere 12 strokes.
And another )layer in his 20s,
· ." But whether that is actually · David Duval, finished last season tered in a round of 65 - Mont- ·
· I''toettme
· or whet her he does w1t• h three stra1g
· ht v1ctor1es
·
· an d gomerie had a 74- and took J nineonce-m·athat a couple more times, I have no added his. fourth PGA Tour win in stroke lead into the final round.
"If he play• and putts the way he
way of knowing," he said. "We don't Tucson two months ago.
know whether 1iger is going to do
Is anyone capable of putting did last year. we've got a real battle
that again. but it's going to be fun to together the kind of tournament on our hand~. " Montgornerie said.
"I'm sure 1iger played the best and
see if he does - or anyone else, for Woods had last year? .
that matter."
. "Oh, sure," said Nick Faldo, a putted the best. and that's why he
The anyone else could be any- three-time Masters champion who won by the record margin he did.
body.
joined Jack Nicklaus in 19'10 a• the .
"If .someone came out' here and
"I don't believe it's Tiger Woods only players to repeat. "If you play · didn't miss one unded!l fect-1 still
against the field. I think it's Tiger well from tee to green and you're hoi- can't believe that. But if sotrieone
against Augusta National, and it's for ing evecything. Just because you does that, he will probably win." •
the rest of the field to do the same," have a wedge doesn't mean you rip
All that's left now is to sec
'said Ernie Els.
it at the hole. You've got to be sman whether that someone wi II be WIIOd.~.
While Woods says his overall all week ... and have a·great putter." Again.

Lipinski professional career to start tonight

\

:Southern softballers
~roll past Rebels 23•1
.

Almost as soon a.~ she won at while she wa.s enhancing her skills as
In 1997, Lipinski dethroned Kwan
Nagano, Lipinski began thinking the \&gt;est technical skater among the a.s U.S.. world an~ Champions Series
about turning pro. But she wanted to women.
champion.
.
Her decision to forgo future
be sure there would be no shortage of
"Everybody has to do what's best
Olympics also means there will be no for th~m." Kwan said. "For me. the
competitive situations.
"The thing holding me back was more showdowns w.ith Kwan, the·17- best decision is to stay eligible,
I couldn't imagine myself not com- year-old who won her second world because I love to compete."
peting," Lipinski said. "Then I real- title last Saturday. They met three
The only time professionals were
ized I could compete against Kristi times this season. with ·Kwan win· . allowed to compete in the Olympics
Yamaguchi · and other amazing ning the U.S. championships and wa.&lt; 1994. The reinstatement window
Skate America but Lipinski taking the that applied to ineligible skaters no
skaters."
Lipinski's amazing rise included a · biggest prize of all while Kwan set- longer exists.
tled for Olympic silver.
va.~t improvement in artistry even

ANNOUNCEMENT!!
TRAINING &amp; EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES!!
· A 120 hour:
PRE-EMPLOYMENT CERTIFICATION TRAINING PROGRAM

that will certify workers for employment In the following areas:

PRQDUCIION/MANUFAc;ruRING
Designed to meet local industries' need of
individuals who have skills in
communications; teamwork, math;
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Call 740-245·5334 Ext. 209 or,
Stop by:
.
Adult Services at Bucbn Hills Career Center~
M-Th; from 8 a.m.-10 p.m.;
Fri. &amp; 1st &amp; Jrd Sat. rrom 8 a.m. • 4 p.m.

FREE TO ALL QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

CHAPPELL HILL. Texas (AP)A natbed truck hauling cars rear-ended a school bus Tuesday. tearing a
hole into the backside of the bus and
injuring at lea.&lt;r eight children. two
~ seriou.•ly. . ·
·
;
The accident. involving a Bren' ham Independent School District
: bos. occurred about 4:30 p.m. near
! Chappell !:fill; 60 miles northwest of
• Houston. said Mike Cox . a
: 5p0kesman with the Te~a.~ Departmenl of Public Safety.
; n.c bus had pulled over on a road
' near U.S. Highway 290 and was let-'
ling children off wf1en the truck
· slammed into ' its rear left corner,
·Brenham school Superinte[ldent 'Vir·
~nia Collier said. The left top comer
\ of the bus wa~ ripped. exposing the
• interior of the'bus.
• 1\Nenly-five students. ases 6to 18. '
, were on lhe'bus. Ms. Collier Yid.
' Two ·girls: IS a.nd 16. were taken
&lt;by helicop1er to a Hous~ hospital.
• The younger girl. was unconsciO)Is .
' and in critical condition with a head
injury. The second girl was in stable
condition with a laceration to the
•back of her head and llbdominai pain.
! At least •iiiiiUdelll$ we.e trealed
: for minor injuries It another hoJpital.
: Authorities did not immediately
release any information about the
truck driver. . , ·

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NOW?

CINCINNATI (AP) .,.... Once
again, it's the People vs. Larry Flynt.
The Hustler magazine publisher,
who beat an obscenity rap once .
before. was eharged again Tuesday.
This time, it's for videos L not his
~ a~azine- and this time, it's more
sertous. .
.
Flynt and his brother, Jimmy,
were i~dicted on 15 felony counts,
including selling obscene videotapes
to a 14-year-old boy, engaging in. a
pattern of corrupt activity and ·conspiracy to engage in a pattem.of corrupt activity,
If convicted of all charges, the
Flynt brothers would face up to 24.
years in prison.
"They threw everything at me but
the kitchen sink," Flynt said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles.
"HusJier today is more e~plicit than
the' issues they prosecuted me on 20
ye;~rs ago. But (County Prosecutor
Joseph Deters) still doesn 't want to
tackle Hustler because he doesn't
think he can get a conviction under
the lay.t."
Flynt hal; been down a similar
road in Cincinnati, in the case
detailed in Milo.&lt; Forman's 1.996
movie "The People vs. Larry Flynt."
In 1977, a Hamilton County jury
found Hustler obscene and convicted
Flynt of pandering obscenity. He
served six days of a seven-to-25-year
·prison sentence, and the conviction
wa.~ overturned on appeal.
Flynt has said he wants a~oiher
trial on obscenity charges because he
believes a jury today would find that
Hustler does not violate community
standards. He said being cleared
would ·make it easier for him to persuade other retailers to-sell Hustler in
Cincinnati, where· for years shopkeepers did not stock it out of fear of
prosecution.
· La&lt;t year, Flynt handed out free
~opies of Hust!cr downtown and
lhen opened the only sex shop in
town: his Hustler Books. Magazines
and GifL~ store, which offers videos.
sex toys and ·Hus'tler along with
mainstream publications,
Above the entranCe. Flynt put up
· one of his favorite quotations: "Freedom ... is not for the thought you love
the most. but for the 1hought you hate
·the most."
Proseclltors did nothint- until a
14-year-old boy allegedly bought an
obscene video in Fly!lt's store, sold it
to a friend and bragged about the purcha.o;e; The boy then· went to police,
who sent him into the store twice to
buy materials. ·DeterS said. The
indictment also charged that the
brothers distributed materials show,
ing explicit sexual cqnduct.
"I'm not going to say whether ·
Hustler is obscene." Deters said.
"This is abotit. videos. He can sell
whatever he wants. But if he sells
obscene videOs, obscene materials, he ,
will be prosecuted."
Flynt said Tue~ay that he didn't
know the circumstances of the
alleged sale to the boy. but he sai&lt;! he
has an alibi - he was in California
at the time.
He said his company ha.&lt; a policy
• of not selling adult materials to juveniles arid that he wa.s surprised by the
charges of engaging in a corrupt
activity.
Jimmy . Flynt surrendered to
authorities Tuesday and is free on his
, recognizance to await an. April 21
.arraignment in Hamilton County
· Common Plea.• Court. Larry Flynt
will surrender in Cincinnati . at or
be fori: the armignment and is expect1ed to be released on his recognizance. his lawrer H. Loui~ Sirkiq .
( said.

: bus accident

Pre-testing of Buckeye Hills Career Center on Thursday, Aprill6,
1998 at 6:00p.m.
Both classes begin April20, 1998.

'.

again charged
in Cincinnati

~. are injured in

Designed to meet the requirements that
local retail stores han established for
lheir future workforce, in the areas of
math, a:onomics, safety, and other retail
issues.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Larry Flynt

i Eight ·children

RETAILING

...

'

Wednesday, AprilS, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Big Bend, Buckeye~allipolls,
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•

J)a~y· Sentin~l
Pagel

&lt;

WedneSday, April·&amp;, 1998

'•

Not al-l in·mates are con artists - some just like to ~orrespond
inmates who correspond with people
they've never met. do not try to
Ann
manipulate them for money, stamps,
Landers - cigarelles and so on. I know of only
two inmates who bragged about how
they ripped off pen pals.
I corresp·md with several people
on the outsia•· and have never asked
. Dear Au Landen: Although I anyone for anything. I do not appre·read your column regularly, I have ciate being placed in the same cate-n:ever been motivated to write to you gory with that jerk in Florida who
"until now. · The leller .from has no sense of dec~ncy... Bill in
.. 'CreSiview. Fla., Inmate" did it. I Jackson, Mich.
VII incarcerated in Michigan and
Dear Bill: 1 appreciate your let.-ha.ve been in this system long ter. Here's another one:
·' enough to know that the pen-pal
Dear Ann: I have been an inmate
SC!Im your Florida inmate claims is for several years and know more
v.J:ry common is, in fact, not com- about prison life and inmates than
mon at all.
the generally misinformed public. I.
I believe the vast majori~ty~o:f_!!!;~:!.,!l~ha~t~'~'C~r~e~st!v~ic~w~,!F~Ia~.•~"~h~as

ami!p
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

·Granddaughter's sweaty
·feet may be· just 'nerves'
Question: My granddaughter has
a problem with sweaty feet and
palms. They are always wet. She
even takes an extra pair of socks to
work because her feet get ihat wet.
She has been to a doctor with this.
but with no success. Can you tell us
:something about this?
·. Answer: Sweating serves .a very
important purpose. It is•one of the
. ways your body regulates temperature. When it's hot, you sweat, and
·-:as the sweat evaporates it cools your
""ikln and the blood in the dilated ves~s near the skin's surface. When
~ this cooled blood circulates through
yO..r body. it lowers your intern~!
•_temperature as weU,
·
• · In &lt;ertain situations, the sweati~8
'reaction may· be confined to a ccr. lain ~ of the body. This can be
' ·due to clothes that don't allow the
· ~kin to "breathe" - that is, the
sweat can't evaporate. Similarly, I
:think most of us have a pair of shoes
· l~al are so snug and warm that our
. feet sweat even though the rest of
our body is comfonable.
But as you are no doubt aware,
people also sometimes sweat when
they arc nervou!f·or under emotio)lal
•stress. A common,example of this ls
he weaty hands and feet that we all
icnce when under emmional
s
:- Remember how yqu fell the
':f!r.;t time you met your in-laws'/
; How nbou1 flcforc taking that impor· tani test'' Cold hands. fa.'t heanbCal
· and wet underarms and feel. Your
: gwnddaughlers chronically wet
'hands and feet may he nol~ing more

sweating of other body pans, too,
but the hands and feet may be the
most obvious iri some individuals.
• Let me explain all of this a bit
more technically: Sweating is a
complex activity that involvesinteraction between the sweat glands of
the skin, the circulatory system and
the nervous system. In fact, the condition is even more complex than
this because ihe activity of the
nerves controlling the sweat glands
are under the influence of the nerves
of the brain an~ spinal cord. not to
mention the general influence on all
body tissues caused by hormones.
Problems - or normal physiological
signals - in any of these ateas can
cause sweating.
If your granddaughter is an otherwise healthy individual, it is most
likely her sweating ispartoftheway
she responds to emotional stress.
Her doctor will certainly want to
make sure that she doesn't have any
of the other more serious conditions,
though.
Increased sweating on your hands
and feet can often be controlled
·using the same over-the-counter
· antiperspirant products jhat you usc
to keep your underarms dry. (Yes.
they are just as safe Ui usc in this
manner as in their "normal" usage.)
Other individuals may need additiona) help in the fonn e1f medication
taken by mouth. Beta blockers and
calcium cliannel hlockers - most
often used for high blood pressure
rclicf'and other circulatory problems
-can oflcr significant relief. These

than a response tn the sircss of work

medicines. along with stress man-

. ;,o~nd hnme. ·
!' Ahnonnally high .levels of thy- ·
;.1110 hnnnonc. a condition called
·hyperthyroidism. can also prnducc •
..~w~aly hands ~nd feet. Other causes
:include low blood sugar, intense
pain, fever. most cancers and sever'31- disorders of the nervous system.
1Most of these conditions cause

agcment counscli.ng. arc usually suecessfu'l in controlling excessive
sweating of hands and feet.
"Family Medidne" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall, '
Athens, Ohio 45701.

lhe personality of a pit viper and has
not had a p~ce of mail or a visit in
his 10 years of incan:eration. For
him to say all inmaies are con artists
is as ludicrous as saying all postal
workers are gun-toting homicidal
maniacs.
One of the first things I leame:
about inmates is that they arc
fathers, brothers, sons, cousins,
uncles and grandfathers -- a true
cross section of the American public. They are carpenters, truck drivers, politicians, dentists, doctors,
farmers and war veterans·. You name
it, we have them all.
I correspond with people from six
states. They have given me .friendship, advice, encouragement, constructive criticism and hope. --Pine

not even sure he owns a pair.) I feel

Bluff, Ark.
Dear PiDe BluJI' and .U other

uncomfortable approaching him
Inmates wllo wrote: You've given about this and would ap~ciate
us some lccen insight. On behalf of your advice. -- New York Wedding
all the people you educated today, I Belle
say, "Thank you."
Dear ·Belle: Your wedding day
Dear Ann Landen: My fiance should be remembered as a f!lorious
and I arc planning a summer wed- occasion, and you have the right to
ding. Everything is working out the . see that it is. In my opinion, it is not
way we dreamed, 'except for one unreasonable to expect the clergy to
thing. The clergyman who will be wear shoes.
Don't wait until the last minute to
performing the ceremony has a habit
of wearing .sandals (no socks) on make this request. Tell him as soon ·
every occasion,' even in tlie dead .of as possible, and suggest where he
winter.
might find exactly ~he right pair.
We do not want to see his bare
Dear Ann Landen: I work with
feet at our wedding ceremony, espe· a woman who does ·her laundry
cially when everyone else will be every day and washes ·her car three
dressed formally. Is there a polite rimes a week wheiher it rains or not.
way to ask him to wear shoes? (I'm " Maizic" spends a fortune on'

clothes and always looks like she's
going to a party. I've seen her put on
earrings just to cut the grass.
,
I read·J;omewhere that this type of
behavior · indicates a deep-se~ted
problem. Is this normal or what? ~­
Danville, Pa.
Dear Dan: Granted, "Maizie"
may be a bit compulsive about her
car and her laundry, and she apparently likes to _look her best, even
when she mows the lawn, bull don't
see that this is huning anybody. My
question is: Why does this bother
you?
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700. Los Angeles, Calif.
90045•

Meigs Churches plan special Holy. Week servic,es
Church in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Riverbend 'Cluster of Episcopal Easter Sunday. Grace Church in
MAUNDY THURSDAY
• "Lord, Is It IT' drama at Asbury Liturgy with communion from Churches. will he held on 7 p.m. at · Pomeroy will hold mass at II a.m.
United Methodist Church in Syra- reserved sacrament will begin at 7 Christ Church in Point Pleasant.
*The Reedsville/Long Bouom
cuse, Thursday at 8 p.m .. presented p.m. at Grtlce Church in Pomeroy.
W.Va.
Charge. United Methodist Church.
by the Meigs County United
will have Sunrise service at Long
• Good Friday services for the
Methodist Cooperative Parish.
Reedsville/Long Bollom charge, EASTER SUNDAY
Bouom Church at 7 a.m.. with
• St . Paul United Methodist United Methodist Church. will Ill:
• Hysell Run Holiness Church.(! hrcakfast to follow.
Church in Tuppers Plain~ will hold a held at Reedsville United Methodist a.m. Ea.,ter sunrise services and
• Alfred United Methodist
Maundy Thursday drama. "The Church at 7 p.m. Rev. Dwight Bro- communion: Sunday school. 9:30 Church will hold it~ Sunrise service
Greatest Servant of All," at 7 p.m.
hard will be the speaker. and special a.m.; worship. 10 a.m.: evening scr- at 6:30a.m. Breakfast will follow.
• A Communion and foot-wash- singing is planned.
vice. 7 p.m.
• Chester Uni~cd Mcthodi~t
ing service will be held on Thursday
• Chesler United Methodist
•Syracuse Church of the Church will have Sunrise service al
at 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse First Church will present the drama, Nazarene. 6:30a.m. sunrise service. 7 a.m., with breakfast following the
Church ofGod.
''Have You Seen My Son?" on Fri- Easter egg hunt at I p.m .
service.
• Maundy Thursday services will day at 7 p.m.
• St. John Lutheran Church, sun•sunrise service will be held
be held for the Riverbend Cluster of
• Hillside Baptist Church, State rise service, 7 a.m.; communion ser- Sunday, beginning with breakfast at
Episcopal Church~s. with Eucharist Route 143 in Pomeroy, will have a vices, St. John, 9 a.m. and St. Paul 7 a.m. at Pomeroy United Methodist
and Passover meal at 6 p.m. at St. Good Friday service at I p.m. The Lutheran, II a.m.
· Church. Sunday school will follow
John's Church. Ripley. W.Va.
service will include special singing
*The Hemlock Grove Church at 9: 15 a.m. with celebration at
• Maundy Thursday Community and music from the Hillside Baptist will have Easter sunrise services at 10:30 a.m.
Service, 7:30 p.m.. at the St. Paul .Choir.
,
6:30a.m. with a breakfast to follow
• The Portland-Racine congregaLutheran Church.
• The Meigs Ministerial Associa- in the Grange hall. The worship scr· tion of the Reorganized Church of
. lion's Lenten Services will conclu,de vice will be at 9:30 p.m. with the Jesus Christ of Lauer Day Saints
GOODFRID~Y
•St. Paul Lutheran Church. Good with the Stations of the Cross at the children to present a·program. Gone wili have Easter sunrise servocc Qn
Friday service, "Jesus Message from Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy, Zopp is.pastor.
Sunday, 7 a.m. with Pastor Jerry
the Cross", 7:30p.m.
beginning at 12 noon. The public is
• Easter Services will be held at Singer speaking. Breakfast will be
• The Rutland Freewill Baptist welcome.
Hillside Baptist Church at II a.m. cooked and served by lhe men of the
Church will hold its annual Good . • Mount Union Baptist Church Sunday, with special singing and church at 9 a.m., followed by an
Friday hymn sing at 7 p.m. Pastor ·near Carpenter will hold Good Fri\._ music from . the Hillside Baptist Easter egg hunt and treats for the
Paul Taylor invites the public.
day services, 6:30 p.m. Easter
Choir.
. .
children. The church ·is located on
• The Rutlanti Ch11rch of lhe rise services will be held at 6 a.m~ • Sunrise service will be held .at Lovell Road off of Ponoand-Racine
Nazarene will hald a 'community- Pastor Joe N: Sayre invites the pub~ St. Paul United Methodist Church in Road.
wide candlelight communion on Fri- lie.
Tuppers Plains at 6 a.m. Breakfast
• Easter sunrise services at the
day, 6-8 p:m.
.viii follow.
Reedsville Fellowship Church of the
• Riverbend Cluster of Episcopal HOLY SATURDAY
*JAil churches of the Riverbcnd Nazarene will he held at6 a.m., outChurches will observe the Stations
• The Holy Saturday observance Cluster of Episcopal Churches will side, or inside in the event of rain.
of the Cross at · noon at Christ of the i:l~at Vigil of Easter, for observe normals time~ for mass~ Btcakfasllo fallow. All welcome.

s....,.

Meigs student .win SAR-historical oration .contest
The annual compelotoon of the
Dougla..s G. 'High Historical Oration
Contest was held by Ewings Chapter
Sons of the American Revolution at
its regul~r meeting. '
· James Lochary of Amesville.
chapter president. conducted the
contest. Whitney Ashley. daughter
of Keith and Emma Ashley of Rock
Springs. won the .:ontest with her
spce.:h on tyranny of the U.S.
Supreme Court to stop prayer. Whitney is a freshman at Meigs L&lt;leal
High ·School. She received $100
cash prize and will represent the
chapter at the state finals in Cincinnati in May where she-will he eligible for more cash prizes.
·The chapter b working 10 select
its annual awards for good citizen•
ship. !lag display. heroism. and law

enforcement. Nominations for these
awards are now being accepted.
They may be from any place in
southea.•tem Ohio.
·
Dole Colburn gave a report on the
Chester Courthouse restoration. The
nooring has been done. A cookbook
10 raise money is nearing completion having collected 900 recipes for
it already. A dinner at Royal Oak is
also being held.
· A genealogy workshop is set for
Saturday. April II , at the Athens
County Mu~eum on 65 Coun Str..
Athens. The time is 10 a.m. Any .person wis)ling a.&lt;Sistancc to join either
D.A.R. or S.A.R. may allcnd. There
is no charge to auend. Parking is
free.
·
Resolutions passed lasi month to
have federal funding to preserve the

original Star Spangled Banner have
been sent to all appropriate Ohio
congressmen.
Pres. Lochary explained the history behind the lapel roselle of the
S.A.R. The tri-.color pin is huff. hlue.
and white, which were the colors of
the uniform 1&gt;1' Gen. George Wash- .
ington. Only lineage societies usc ·
roscllcs as emhlcms. ~
Keith Ashley reponed attending
the ·SOh anniversary luncheon of
Rctw-n Jonathan Meigs Chapter
D.A.R. at Gallipcllis. He extended
the greetings of the S.A.R. to the
ladies there.
Myron Jones. graves chairman.
reported that stones l\1r Revolution- .
ary War soldiers Safford :md Hayward are ·now set in Pine Street
Cemetery. Gal!ipcllis. Dedicatiim

ceremonies will he set later ·this
summer f,ir their dctJiL:atinn. Twu
mnrc stnncs 'need ln he sci in Addi -

son Township fnr James Fulton und
Samuel Bingham. Thi,, will he dnnc
the lirsl full week of April.
The speaker for lhc cvcninf; was

Ruben Mdnlurf of M.:Connclsvillc.
He is the president nf the Morgan .
County Historical Sociciy. He spoke
·on the hist&lt;&gt;ry of Morgan County. He
spoke about the famous painter.
Howard Chandler Christy. that
painted the scene of the Constitutional Convention in the U.S. Capitol. Pres. Lochary presented him ·
with a .:enilicatc of appreciation.
Tad Cucklcr introduced his bmther. Steve Cuckler. as a guest fnr the
evening. The next meeting is set li1r
Thursday, Arril 23.

·IRS!
Just in time lor those spring repairs •••
twelve hours (three evenings) 'of~
BASIC HOME REPAIR.
Mark your calendars now •••
·,
.APRIL 28,.29 &amp;30
from 6:00 p.m. ·1 0:00 p.m.
,.

.'Ji~d as a free service to non-profit
.,,..ps wishing to announce meeting
·l!nd. special events. The calendar js
.tiOl

designed to promote sales or

.lUnd raisers of any type. Items are
:.,-intcd as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num-

na
Wednesday, I p.m. at the
Meigs County Human. Services
Building in Middleport. The meeting is sponsored by the Meigs County Board of Commissioners .

THURSDAY
POMEROY- ANAl-Anon regular meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building .
SYRACUSE- Communion and
foot-washing service Thu!'Sday. 6:30
p.m. at the Syracuse First Church of
God.

LONG BOTTOM Ha1.el
Community
Church
on
Dewitts
Run
~ofdays.
Road. Long Bottom, will hold
revival through April 12. 7:30 p.m.
:wEDNESDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
! SYRACUSE - Open house nightly with special speakers and
,..¢ncsday, 1...1 p.m. at the Syracuse singers each night. Pastor Edsel Hart Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
Post Office to promote the Frank · welcomes all.
p.m. for nomination of officers.
L,loyd Wright stamp: New P!JslmasREEDSVILLE - Ea.&lt;tcm Local Refreshments served at 6:30 p.m.
ter.Bonnie Brown will be sworn jn at
Board of Education special meeting
IJ. p.m. Refreshments. All welcome.
"
Wednesday. 5:30 p.m. in the high
POMEROY ·- . Preceptor Beta
· .,MIDDLEPORT - An informa- school library to ldiscuss change Beta sorority meeting Thursday, 6
,lionll meeting for MCigs County orders anti extra orders regarding - p.m: at the EpiscopnM'arish House
in Pomeroy.
•Crat'lsmen interested 'in promoting renovation and new construction.
••
•

.

.

....', ..

••

•

--Topics covered will-be:
Night #1 - How to repair a lamp ·plug, lamp. switch, ~all
switches ~lectrical wall outlets. ·
·
·
. Night #2 - ~ow to ·repair plumbing ·problems, including ·
flush tank problems; sink and tub drain maintenanc-e; fixing
plugged sinks and lavatories; and repairing dripping faucets.
Night' #3 - Wall repairs: Repairing small plaster cracks;
repairing drywall and plaster holes; an_
d ... installing various
wall fasteners for hanging objects.
·
·
CALL BUCKEYE HILLS.CAREER CENTER
ADULT SERVICES TODAY
AND REGISTER
7e245-5334 Ext. 209- Coat $45.00 for all three nights!
Class will be held on our Hlo Grande campu•

:rhe Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'!"ednesday, AprilS, 1998

Clinton forum co·rrals nearly all generations
By CHRISTOPHER CLARK

heard Clinton tell the audience that
AIIOCIIted p,... Writer
SIOO billion of the surplus could add
KANSAS CITY, Mo: - Almost at least a year to Social Security's
anywhere 14-year-old Ben Carpenter financial· stability "with no other
lOoked during President Clinton's · changes being JM(!e."
Social Security forum here. there was ·
Fresh-faced Jeens, college stulikely to be someone 50 or 60 years dents and those in their 60s and 70s
~is senior.
gathered for the forum that could
• No matter. His stake in the OUt· evenlually affect them all.
.
~cime of the debate was just a• big.
Clinton has said he wants Con" It's imponantto be here beCI\USC ' gress 10 unde.rljlke Soc,ial Security
I think the system won't be around overhaul in 1999, well ahead of tfoe
unless we gel together to tulle about unofficial deadline of 2029 - the
it," said Carpenter, one of about 700 • year many say Social Security will
teens, baby boomers and graying dry up unless (;ongress acts. Ex pens
Jjlirecs who attended Tuesday's town . say an estimaf~d 77 million retiring
meeting on Social Security.
baby boomers will swamp the system
:-· Carpenter. who has been studying- and gradually chok~ its ability to
the jssue recently with Classmates at deliver on al) its promised benefits.
h(~ · suburban Overland Park, Kan..
Allen Kel,in. 66, certainly didn't
school, said he liked the idea of using ex~cllo find so many younger peo. the nation's first budget surplus in 30 pie curious a\lpullhe futur~ of Social
years to help keep the·troubled Social Security, a program Clinton called
Security system solvent. He hnd just "one of the greatest successes in our
"

nation's history."

"The youth, they're coming up in
the world." Kellin said with a wide
smile as he left the forum at Penn Valley Community College. "Me, I'm
on ·my way out ariyway. The young
people need a break. A lot of them are
·going to need this Social Security."
But how Social Security will look
·after the influx of baby boom~rs was
at the core of the debate. Calls for
some form of privatization - in
which individuals invest a portion of
their payroll taxes privately prompred .both positive and negative
responses.
"That 'is a real scary thing, privatization," said Ruth Savidge, 49, an ·
elderly-services case worker from
Wichita, Kan. She . was especially
worried that investment companies
could gain from a privatized system.
"If anybody should profit" off of
Social Security, it's the seniors."

Others liked the idea.
"I think leaving part of that money up to your~elf (to invest) is a good
idea," said Mohammad Jouhari, 22,
a management information systems
student al the University of Central
Oklahoma w,ho auendeil the forum
with other students from hi s school.
. " Not all of the money. but some. You
can make it 'grow."
Other ideas for fixing the system.
including raising the retirement age
and reducing cost-of-living adjustments for Social Security recipients,
appealed. to some audience members
but were rejected by others. One saw
room for nearly all the suggestions. ·
"I think a lillie bit from each one
of those might do it," said 63-year.old Ju'ne Padgell. moments after
. snapping a picture of Clinton as he
shook hands with audience members
after the forum .
More than 133 million Americans

pay for Social Security through payrolltaxes. with benefits paid to about
44 million Ameri cans , including
retirees, the disabled and the familie s
of working-aged people who die. The
average retiree receives a monthly
benefit of about $745 , with disability payme nls averaging about $705 a
month .
·•
Clinton said guaranteeing Social
Security for millions of baby
boomers needs only small changes, ·
not a massive overhaul. And with a
balanced federal budget, the president
said, reforms don't need to include an
increase in payroll taxes on workers
and their employers.
·
Clinton listed basic principles he
believes should guide change, in ~ lud­
ing keeping Social ~CfUri~ a program that pools everyone's resources
to protect against poveny and disability.
"If you do all that, could you con-

slrucl some system that also made an
allowance for private accounts? I
think you could, yes," Clin!on said.
"But would I favor a totall y pnvatized system? No. becausnhen you
couldn't have a universal system that
was ·fair. "
During tlie four-hour eve nt, Clinton 's gra.~p of policy minutiae was on
full display as he pointed 19 oversized
charts displaying trends and labor statistics, including one showong the
shrinking ratio of workers for each
Social Security retiree.
.
Clinton refused, however. tOotfer
· any solution.
" If 1 pill a specific pia~ on the
table now, it will underrnme and
weaken the debate. not strengthen it,"
he said.
The president chose the.Americdn
Association of Retired Persons and
the Concord Coalition · to organize
Tuesday 's event

Indian tribes hoping to diversify economic base
.·

· DENVER (AP) - Three indus·
trial parks, a golf course, a telecomin.unications company and a couple
of casinos arc making Arizona's Gila
River Indian Community an eco-

•

.

.I

nomic succe'ss story.
National Center for American Indian
· 0 eve 1opment.
.
h
P
h
The reservation, .orne to I e tma · Enterpnse
and Maricopa tribes, is using casino.
"Their potential is ltemendous,"
dollars io help bankroll a diverse eco- Robbins said of the reservation 40
nomic·base for the future, said Ken miles south of Phoenix.
Robbins, executive director of the
The tribe's success was outlined
·
'
Tuesday for Indian and business
Indiana stumbles across 'prison reC?Or~s leaders from around the nation durINDIANAPOLIS ·(AP) _ John
When he emerged from. prison, he ing the center's Reserv;Uion Eco..._
nomo·c Summo·t.
uillinger, one of the nation's most -organized a gang thatstole $318,000
studied methods
1 ·pants
1
Part. ·~
I!Oiorious ban,k robbers, conlided to from II banks.
While one of the to The
·
do'verso'fy the economy for the.
pri~onofficialsin 1933that~esome- • nation's most fenred bank robbers, ·
.on's roughly 300 Indian reservatimes attended church a~d spent Dillinger became a folk hero of sons nail
.ns, ranging from franchising 10
v
evenings "at home or th picture for those who lost everything in the liA
· ~how."
·
Depression
generating pro~ts through the Inter,. The next year. Dillinger was
gunned down &lt;!Utside one of those
P,icture shows- "Manhallan M~lo­
\ln!ma," staping Clark Gable.
After his deotll, some ofthe prison
records for the gangster sat buried·
among old ''files until an Indiana
Department of Correction employee
~tumbled upon them in early Febru-

net. ·
.
Robbins said tribes are expanding
into such areas as cqnstruction,
tourism, industrial development and
gambling. And nowhere is that more
evident than at Gila River.
When the 372.000-acre reservalion began diversifying, it had a buillin advantagl! in location, community
manager Urban Giff said, II is close
to metropolitan Phoenix. Interstate 10
· and railroads. It has an estimated
· 13,000 tribal members, and the com-.
bined tribal office and casino payroll
is more than $44 million.

In addition to its agriculture indus. And tha; means more than just
c'aso'nos·, whr'ch boos! revenue and
try; the. dcommunity
casinos,
. 1 khasF'twob'rd
Lak
·trigger related development, from
1
three '" ustna par s, tre
e
h
for boating and entertainment, an air- Jodging to res~ur:;,nts. B~t fe.~e~ • :
1 ebb~aloonds n ds
"field and a telecommunications cod m· 20 percent_ 0 "&gt;R
· pany. which has been upgrade to operate casonos, o ms sao -an
include state-of-the-an fiber optics only a handful make money at it.
technology.
. "lfyou,talk to many of the Amer·It also operates a golf course, ocan people out there, they feel that
which was purchased. when nearby Indians are just rolling in money,"
Will'
A' p
b
1·d
·R bb'
·d uv 1 ·f
1 lndi
1 tams or orre ase c ose . " . o ons sao . oe, 1 you g0 o
•
"We•re tryong
·
"d
1 ·f 0 go· out to the end
to provo e our an coun ry, 1 y u
.
members wol· h I he same type o·r ser- of th e rao·1road trac ks you see that
· and opponunolles
· · Ihat are e.pe- 1nd'oan coun1ry has had very Jiule
voces
·
ed
1
1 " a·rr ·d
·m
tb
·n "
nenc somep ace e se, 1 sa1 .
1 pac
Y gamt g.

ary;

· The recently discovered informaincludes Dillinger's first prison
mug shots and his confession to a
botched robbery in Mooresville that
first landed him in the Indiana Reformatory at Pendleton in 1924, It also
includes the Slatements about churchgoing and movie-watching. ·
"This material is extremely valuable," state archivist Jerry Handfield
Jr. said Tuesday. "There are sOme
unique items lhat to my knowledge
have not been researched."
Included in the files is Dillinger's
written request that he.be transferred
to the State Prison in Michigan City
and a sealed order signed by the gov·
emor granting that wish in 1929:
There also is a parole order the gov·
einor signed releasing him from
prison in 1933, the year he and his
gang began an infamous spree of
bank robberies and killings across the
Midwest.
After he got out of prison, he kept
'in touch with his parole ·officer,
including the monthly report written
md signed by Dillinger stating .that
1e went to church and the movies. In
aJ)other, he denies attending ,meeting's, dances, picnics or parties during the past month.
·
"None," Dillinger said. "I go to
the show, fishing and swimming."
But he was leaving something out .
~on

Slcie air bags
to.be offered In
more cars ·
NEW YORK (AP) -In a ftrst for .
a major American autoniuer, Ford
Motor Co. said it plans to offer side.
air :bags on all models, starting as
standard equipmenl on ·its luxury
cars.
Concerned aboul rising death rates
from side-impact crashes, the
autOmaker said that within several
years ii plans to offer s.ide air bags in
all of its cars and Wind~tar minivans,
The New York Times reported today.
Ford was to make a formal announcement today.
·
The side air .bags would ~ built
into the outer side of the driver and
front passenger seals, inflating on
impact to protect an occupant's head
and ncclt. The bags inflate parallel to
the rider, instead of toward hiJ;Il or
·
her.
.
· lniti~lly. the side air bags will be
inslalled as an option on the new
Mercury Cougar coupe and then will
become standard equipment on lu~­
ul')' models, such a.~ Lincoln sedans.
By 2000, the side bags will be
aqded 10 _vinually all OJher Ford models;
The bags will become standard
equipment on less-expensive models
is more buyers-begin choosing them
as an option, Robert Rewey, Ford's
vice president for marketing. sales'
and service, told the nme.~.
J"'early 7,000 Americans die each
year in side-impact crashes involving
two vehicles.
· . General Motors Corp. announced
lh'is we,ck that it .plans to offer the
bags in 15 more oJits models. Si~ of
OM's 81 models already contain the
devices.

'

Fr~sh . Crisp

Broccoli

(83·1 00 Oz.) Powder or

Liquid All
nt

c
•

(640Z.)

, Liquid

. sn~ggle

Grade A

Large

Softener

C

Umh 1 please

78

w/coupon &amp; add't
$10 Purchase.

CouPon goad 415

.

ttwu 4/1 1,"98

'

OPE" 24 HOURS ·
7 DAYS fl WEEKI

• UlfS
• W'STERN UNION
• PUBLIC FAX
• FEDERAL EXPRESS
• VIDEO R.ENTAL

;

! .,

UNLIMITED
.
.
DOUBLE COUPONS!
EVERY DAY UP TO 50¢

•

Umh1...._ I
w/coupon &amp; add1ll
$10 Purchase.
COupon gOOd 4/51
lhru 4/11, 1998. I

�;

•
•

Plge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Wednesday, April&amp;, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'
.

STORE' HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

II WSA I

::'
•,'
•,

.
.

..
'

c

,.•·:'
•'·'
,.
,.
...

.'
~

7·UP, DR. PEPPER,
ORANGE CRUSH,
MUG ROOT BEER

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
EVERYDAY~SEE

STORE FOR DETAILS

; queen at the recent Valentine dinner
• held at the.Zion Church of Christ.
1They were presented with roses
; and a corsage and reigned over the
r . evening's festivities.· .
·
;
A potluck dinner preceded . the
:. program which had a theme o(
• "Love". There were songs about
:. love by the congregation and also
~ special singing by individuals and
groups.
~
Grace Warner had a reading, "A
Vale ntine from Heaven", and Dan
• A,rno14 read, "On the Subject of ·
Love".
;
Carolyn Kesterson and 'Linda
~ • McKinney sang "You Love Me" . Pat
f
Arnold, Bonnie Arnold, Carolyn
Kesterson.· Linda McKinney and
~ Becky Thompson sang ''Love Found
a Way". Linda McKi nney and her

2 LITER

•

c

.'
. '

.'
1.

.' .

..

r
f.

I, '

'

USDHHOICE

...

"

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AUNT JAN.'S

$ l9

LESS BEEF

T~p Roun.d Steaks •••••• 1
BQNELES_SBEEF BONE·I~ .
s 19
Round Steak ••••••l:~..... l ·

HAMBURGER

11

•

••

•'

i

·DILL .CHIP.S

t

32 oz.

'•
~

c

$

BUCKET BEEF

~

•
~

...

LB.

'

'

.

'
•·.

(
Turkey Breast••••••••~~.. 9.9

GOlDIN DELIGHr FROZEN
OSCAR MAYER

..

·

f&gt;

-.~.2••~.

Lunchables •••••••••

•·

,.
J •

FISCCHER'S ..

.

Sliced.Bacon •••••••••••~~.
LOUIS RICH

~

~
~

OR

'

.

J
·c
••

12 Pl.

•

¢

•••
•

c

••

•
..
•

.·

•
•

.$ 169

.

~
t

'

$ 169
·.

~

'·

..• ~-

.••

BIRTH
ANNOUNCED
Matthew and CaroiM Richards
•
of Crown City ennounce the
;
birth of a daughter. Sylvie Anne,.. Marie ~sam• .Richards, born
~
March 12.
:. •
She
weighed . six
; ·: pounds, 15 ounce&amp;, end joins a
;
brother, Cody Scarberry, · at
•
home. Paternal grandparents
~
are LM and Eva Rlcbards end
~ maternal grendperenta are Anne
~ and the late Lawrence Scerber·
ry, ell of Racine.

KUFT

99(

,.

Tu ey Bolog a••••:.... . .

~

-MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNERS
7.25 oz.

0

$

e
,".
•
i•

need. In addition, for this award,
first consideration will be given to
applicants who have taken at least
one women's studies course.
The Ethel H. Moll Scholarship
for $500 is opeq to any woman over
the age of 25 who is returning to college to complete an interrupted education and who will he a first-, sccolrd- or tlflrd-year student on the
Athens campus. She must have a
minimum grade point average of 3.0
and demonstrate financial need. In
both cases, scholarship winners have
the money applied to their university expenses.
The Donna Chen Women's Equity Award for $200 is presented to the
person, group. program, or activity

that has most successfully expanded
equity for women and girls in the
greater Athens area.
The for Antonucci .and Moll
scholarships, applicants should submil a one-page letter stating their
scholarly goals and objectives to the
Ortice of Financial Aid and Scholarships, Chub Hall 020, Athens OH
45701. For the Donna Chen
Women's Equity Award, please send
your nomination, along with an
eKplanation of why you are making
the nomination , to Aileen Hall,
director, Women's Studies Program,
001 Presiaent Street Acaaemic Center, Ohio University, Athens OH
4570 I . All applications/oomiriations
are due by May 1.

tar .Grang· e 778 .makes ·plans fo.r upcoming events

Bonnie Arnold conducted il segFinal plans for the consignment
men! called "Heart Beauty Shop" in sale to be held at.the Grange Hall on
which members of !he congregation May 2 were made at the recent regread parables concerning the heart.
ular meeting of Star Grange 778.
A s-kil by Dan Arnold and Steve
Consignments arc welcome from .
Stanley called "State of the Heart'' · Grangers and non-Grangers. The
concluded the evening.
·
cost will be 20 percent for small
Those ancnding were Harley and-.. ·items and five percent for items sell-.
Kathryn Jphnson. Uliscs Barraza. ing for QVer $500.·.
Hyung-Do Kim, Ann Lambert, CarThere wiH be a $20 listing fee for
ric Wears, Dorothy Reeves, Dan and large items with a minimum bid that
Pal Arnold. Jllathan and Becky are nol sold.
Thompson and J~nna, Linda and
For more information or to list
Lindsey McKinney an.d David Noel , items for the sale residents may conCarolyn Kesterson, Jack Elam. tact Rick Macomber at 742-2163;
Steve and Julie Stanley, Jeff itnd Ray Midkiff at 669-4241 or Tom
Peggy Bole, Tracy Ho, Grace Warn- Bartley at 669-3317.
·
er and Ida Murphy. Coming for the
The meeting was cnnducted by
program were Norman and Allegra Master Patty Oyer who extend~d ~
Will, Scott McKin ney, Bonnie welcome.

Susan Oliver. director of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cenler, spoke on the I mill renewal levy
which will be on the May ballot. The
Gmnge voted to endorse the levy.
Carl Morris reported on the. legislative conference that he. Tom
Bartley and Ray Midkiff attended al
Friendly Hills Grange Call)p recently. He ·reporLed the main topic was
school funding issues .
Rachel Ashley. Ohjo ··state
Grange female aJllhassador reported
on the upcoming Mid-Atlantic
Youth Conference to he held April
,17-19 al Friendly Hill Camp.· '
Grangers from seven states ·arc
expected to atte nd.
Janis Macomber reminded membcrs that TB tests will be given at the

grange hall on April 13, 4:30-6:30
p,m. and wi ll be read on April 15.
4:30-5•30 p.m. The community is
invited to participate in the testing.
The Meigs Counly Grange banquc't was announced for April 24 al
7:15 p.m. 'at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center wich Salisbury PTO serving the .baked steak
dinrier. Tickets arc $8.50 for adults
and $7.50 for children.
The speaker will be Jancr' Price,
National Deaf Chairperson. Tickets
may he pu~chased fro many subordinate Grange masler amj should be
purchased by April 17. . .•
Vicki Smith, lecturer, presented a
program on April and Easter.
There were readings "April" by
Opal Dyer; "Easter Legend'' by

Smith; and "Fruits of the Spirit" by
Jan Macomber. All participated in a
game. Rhyme Time.
Smith also announced the Ea•ter
Program .sponsored
by ' . . the
Wilkesville Civic Association for
Friday. April 10 at 7:30 1i.m. at the
Wilton Civic Building . All 1"Cre
inviled to attend.
Deaf
Chairwoman · · Janis
Macomber reponed on Crystal Ear
which is being adverlised. She
rc(llindcd members !hat it has not
hcen approved by !he Federal Drug
Aoministration.
There were 34 members. juniors
and visitors present for the meeting ·
and potluck supper preceding the
meeting.
·
·

Recipes for a prepared - ahead Easter brunch·
eggs, milk, flour, Parmesan, lemonpepper seasoning and thyme. Beat
until smooth with a wirc.whisk. (Or
comBine
in a blender). Pour into a
OVERNIGHT CHEESE SOUF·
bowl
,
cover
and chill.
FLE'
The next·day, preheat oven It) 425
ASPARAGUS
GRUYERE
Makes 6 servings
d~grees :
•
BAKE ·
I pouQd pork breakfast sausage
Pour
egg
mixture
over
layers
in
Makes
6
servings
.
6-to-8 slices bread, crusts
baking
~ish.
Bake
about
25-30
min·
·I. pound fresh asparagus
'remo~eil
utes, or until a knife inserted in cenI tablespoon olive oil
I apple, peeled, cored and thinly
ter comes out clean. Sprinkle with
I cup chopped on.ion
sliced
·
.one-half cup chopped red bell shredded cheese' and bake 3-5 min4 eggs ·
, utes more, or until cheese is melted.
pepper
.2 cups milk
Nutritional analysis per se..V3 eggs
. one-half reaspoon tlry mustard
ing:
296 calories, 14 grams fat, 136
·2
cups
milk
· I cup shredded sharp Cheddar
milligrams
cholesterol. 26 grams
I
cup
all-purpose
nour
cheese
carbohydraie,
233 mill ig rams sodione-fourth cup grated Parmesan
Fry sausage in a large skillel,
um .
breaking up into pieces as il cooks, · cheese
one-half teaspoon lemon-pepper
and whe,n brown drain on paper towSAVORY
BREAKFAST
els: Transfer 10 a 2-quan ca.•scrole or seasoning or garlic sail
one-half teaspoon dried thyme or STRATA
6 indivi&lt;!ual souffle cups. Tear bread ·
Makes 6 s~rvi ng ~
-4.
into l-inch pieces and place on top tarragon, crushed
5 cups cubed day-old bread
I cup shredded Gruyere or Swiss
of sa11sage. Place thin apple slices on
4 links Italian turkey sausall,C.
cheese
top of b~ead .
casings
removed, browned and
Wash
asparagus
and
break
off
Combine eggs, milk, mustard and
crumbled
·
cheese until ~ggs arc well mixed. and discard woody bases. Cut into I
onc-fourlh cup chopped sunPour over layers in casserole. Cover and o~e-half-inch pieces. Cook
dried.
tomatoes, packed in oil
asparagus
in
a
small
:imount
of
boiland refrigcrale overnight.
(reserve
oil)
ing
water
for
3
to
4
minutes.
or
until
Before serving, preheat ·oven to
onc~
half
cup chopped.onion
crisp-lender. Drain and set aside . .
350 degrees.
·
I
tablespoon
chopped fresh roseIn a large skillc1. cook onion and.
Bake one hour. or until golden
· brown. Cover with foil if they gel pepper in olive oil until soft. about 4 mary
I cup shredded Monterey jack
tw brown. Small .~outncs will take minutes over medium heal. Remove
cheese
(4 OUijCCS)
.'
from
heat
and
drain.
Transfer
(
O
3ahnui 30 minutes.
6 eggs
Note: This dish can he· made just quan rectangular baking dish. Top
I and one-half cups milk
hcfqrc serving. without storing with cooked asparagus· spears.
I teaspoon salt
Cover with plastic wrap and c~ill.
ovcrni~ht.
. · ·
one-fourth
' teaspoon freshly
In
a
large
mixing
bowl,
combine
Nutritional analysis per serving: 370 calories. 23 grams far, 197
milligrams cholesterol, 19 grams
carbQhydralc, 777 milligrams sodium.

ByANNEBYRN
The Nashville Tennessean

~

~

.
k
.
·
·
1
9·
9
.
Cube.d 51· ea ••••••••••••••
. SPECIAL HARVEST
FRES"
HAMBURGER
.
$139
18.
.
d
.· HOT DOG .BUNS
Ground Roun •••••••••••
..

Den Arnold end Julie Stanley

~ · Church Valentine royalty named
•
Dan. Arnold and Julie Stanley dLaouvge'~t. er. lindsey, sang "Arms of
•· were crowned V.alentine king and .

'

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1

The Ohio University Women's Women's Studies Program. "those·
Studies Program has announced that who donate to make these scholarapplications are now being accepted ships and funds possible demonfor two scholarships and one award · strate the importance they . place in
- the Eli;zabeth Antonucci Schol\lf· the futures of deserving women and
ship, the Ethel H. Moll Scholarship. . girls. It is an honor for the Women's
and the Donna Chen Women's Equi- Studies Program to be entrusted
with the responsibility of selecting
ty Award .
These ongoing scholarships and the recipients ."
The Eliiabeth Antonucci Scholawards are pan of the ,program's
effort to reach ·ou~ into the greater arship for $200 is open to any
Athens area to aid women in finan- woman ' living in Athens, Vinton,
cial need, as well as to those women Gallia or Meigs counties who will
returning to college after interrupt- .he a first-, second- or third-year stuing their careers, and to honor those dent enrolled in the College of Arts .
people and/or groups working to of Sciences on the Athens campus·of
brighten the future of women and Ohio University. The stu!lent must
girls in utheasterri Ohio. Accord- have ~ minimum grade-point average of 3.0 and demonstrate financial
~1-1\•ileen Hall, director of the

'.

. 2 LITER

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH/
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
. · PRICES GOOD THRU APRil 11, 1998

DOUBLE COUPONS

'
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tO LA
PRODUCTS

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

OU women's studie~ offers schol.arships, awards

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R.C.

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...Cele~ratin1 0111 2St~ Anniversa~f

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio·

Wednesday, April&amp;, 1998

a

10 and one-half-inch thick slices
ground black pepper
French bread or firm bread
I te aspoon dry mustard
4 large eggs
one-founh teaspoon ground nulmeg, optional
2 cups milk
2· leaspoons finely chopped fresh
Spray a 9-inch sq uare baking dish
with nonstick cooki ng spray. Scatter thyme or one-half teaspoon dried
•
bread cubes in casserole. Sprinkle · thyme
one-half teaspoon salt
sausage evenly over bread.
Pour I tablespoon reserved sunone-fourth t~aspoon· black pepper
dried tomato oil into skillet. Add
I po~nd fresh spinach, stemmed,
onion and saute until tender. Add wa~hed and torn into bite-size pieces
tomatocs.and rosemary, stirring until
2 cups shredded Monterey jack or
blended. Tum onion-tomato mixture mozzarella cheese (8 ounces}
·our on top of sausa~c . s111oothing 10
Lightly grease a 9"by- 13-i nch
create an a even layer. Scalier cheese ·shallow baking pan.
over oniQn layer.
Lighrly butter each slice of bread
W~islt eggs. milk, salt, pepper,
and cur inro l-inch cubes. Place half
dry mustard·and nutmeg in a medi- of the cubes in pan. In a sin all bowl,
um bowl until. well. blended. Pour whisk )ogether eggs, milk, thyme,
egg mixture over c.asserole. Cover salt and pepper. Spread spinach over
and refrigerate for 8-ro-10 hours or bread cubes and top with remaining
overni ght.
bread. Press down on the bread·firmBring to room temperature before ly. Pour egg mi~ turc over bread and
cover wilh shredded cheese. Cover
baking.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. and rcfri!lerale overnight.
Bake casserole for 35-45 minurcs, or
Remove frittata from refrigerator
until set
and lcr srand ar mom temperature
·
Nutritional analysi, per serv· for I hour.
ing: 634 calories. 26 grams fat, 27 1
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
milligrams .cholesterol, 69 grams
Bake, uncov.ercd, fo r 30-40 mincarbohydrate. 1,6R7 milligrams utes. or until lightly· browned 'and
sodium.
·
puffed.
·
· Nutritional analysis per serV·
OVEN-PUFFED SfiNACH ing: 388 calories. 22 grams fat, 19M
FRITTATA
milligrams cholcstcrul. 2X grams
Makes 6 servings
carbohydrate. K25 milligrmns s&lt;xli2 tablespoons unsalted butter. um .
~n ft cned•

•

••... . •

SPARKLE

~

PAPER

.
'99·
(
Tossed Salad••••••!~.....•· · ·
$ 79
.
.
·
1
'
210 M.lk
I ••••••••••••••··~~.
79 (
Cream Cheese••.a.~z~...... ·
s4·
.
·.
.
99(
Ritz Crackers •••.'::-~.~~.21 Cool Wh1p ~•••••.••~.~~•••••~
ss 99
,
.
.
·
5
FACCoffee ••••••••::·:2:••·•• · . .· Ice .Cream .....~~::~••• ~ 2 4
.

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•
•'
•

SINGLE ROLL

••
•
•

$·

·'•
••
•
•

•••

UNITED VALLEY BELL

0l

GAL

KR~FT PHILADELPHIA

NABISCO CHIPS .

or

CHASE &amp;SANBORN.

. .

VEGETABLES
14.25·

I

Purchaae 79t

15.25 OL
Umlt12
Ple11e

29

4

Additional Purchase 29C

•

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DELMONTE

·CHEF BOYARDEE

SQUEEZE KETCHUP 2 CHEESE PIZZA 'KIT
2aoz.

-79c

32.5

SJ·99

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••

BIRTH~Y

CELEBRATED •
• Timmy Dextar, 1on of Ted and
Cryatal Dexter, ~lebrlted hll
•
10th birthday on March 27 with •
•
•
party held at hl1 home on Hysell
•• Run
Road, Pomeroy. .
.
••
Games were played and
refl:eahments 1erved. Attending
•• were
Rob, Tracy end Nikki Law'lon, Oick, Joann end Joilh
Smith, Charlie, Angle and K~rlle
Hall, Amy Lawson, T.J. Light,
Matt Gilbert, Chelsia Riggs,
Josh A•hley, Brandon Kimes,
Dustin Vanlnwagen, Joel Lynch,
~
Sarah Englea, Denny Morril0f1.
••
Alao ·attending were hi8
•~ slater, Maklyla, end hll grand·
parente Bob end Nancy Menlty.,
• Odell and Betty Manley, and Tim
•• and Libby Nelson •
Sending gilts were Josh
Kimel, and out-of-town aunts
•• end ·unclet Jamie and Tina
Klm11 of CeiHornia, Tim end
Janet
Holt . of Columbul, end
••
sieve
and Dorc11 Manley ·of
•
•• Nortlt 'Caroline. He wae alao
• taken to the Sklta-A•Wiy by his
•
••• parenta I« sn additional cellbretlon.
•
•

NORTHERN

BATH
TISSUE
12 lOLL Pi&amp;.

•••

.$ 69

~
~

•

MODERN FOODS PREMIUM

..

GRADE A
LARGE EGGS

·.

.

.. ·

.

·

Wave

~

TOWELS
FRESH

•

'•
••
•
••
•

.

PLAY
BANKROLL••

...

4

..-.

-..
-

·AND STOP IN TO
REGISTER FOR
PAIIASOIIIC 20•
COLOR TVIYCR
COMIO

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Peoples llaitk will MiYe dosing oos1s on Equiline
unlil May 31,1998, aDd there is no annual feel
EquiLine can provide cash lor any purpose-.
new car, a vacation, ramny ldth. And lhe iillerest
on yliur l!qUWne may be lax deductible.
Equiilne is a 1111!1ti-purpose line of aedit baed
on the equily in your home. It worb Uke a cbeclclng
• QCCOUnt

..

' Once Jbe IOOOIIIlis set up, spn! l!cplilln;.

checks wJll be issued and JOUI' line of credil :wiD be
available for 'II'/ Jlllpore. any lime.
You an 'lrlle cbeclls 'lihriiMr)'Oil Vtish--oo
Deed to apply ilr a 1om for full discb1111:, discus
Bqnlllne wlbl\qlb lllaklom olcer.
.
If )'011 qualify, Peoples Blllk will set up a line of
credil of up 10 a\.of Jbe lppl'lised wlue
of your bome less Jbe .....
IIJOdBII8e
.

For I

'

•adi•

,.,.,

I '}J/1:

Appnlsed wlue

suio,ooo

~" of appraised \'llue

$80,000
· $40,000

Less .,."of mor~pge

Polai••aJ llae ~ cmlit $40,000
SM !IIOIIef and enJoj lbe ·

iMiniD8t &lt;i )'IIUf Pqillne And jusl WM
JIIU, lrf.
'

......=
,,. .

-.----·H411•.i..i. ..

.... ll!"oi _ _ _ OllYol--

--IMlt
.
-·---..
•. a-=............-

- · · . . . . . . . . . . . . . pr,-. .... .
Rio
_ _ _ _ ..... _ _

--·----~.-.''"'.:•"Mtllll!ll-..... _ ·
o.oDG.M-i
,_ ____ _
:::'!'.!..~-

:·,.

.•

,'.
•••
•

'

to Fees
Your
Home
Eui
LOan.

No closing cost No almual fee.

•

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�. ...
Page

12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, AprilS,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page .13

1998

CHECK THE

Do\TIS

Public Notice
IN THE COIIIION PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DMSION MEIGS COUNTY,

-a

" -

"
•

OHIO
Gary Wtdt Rupe, aa
Guardian of lht
of
. Margie J. Schuler, an
tncornpatam penon
c-No. 27715
NOnCE OF SALE
Pureuant to tht order of
the Probate Court of Mtlga
County, Ohio, In c ..t No.
27715.1 will offer for •le at
auction on April 24th, 11118,
at 10:00 a.m., on the Mtlge
County Caurthautt tltpt,
Pomeroy, Stata of 01110, towit:
Situated In lhe l'awnahlp
of Lebanon, County of
Mlllge and State Of Ohio, tawtt:
The following dttcrlbed
real tttata aituated In the
Townahlp of Lebanon,
County of Mtlga and Stall
of Ohio and bounded and
deacrlbtd aa ·followa In
Town 2, Ranoa 11 and In
100 acre lola No. 181 and
No. 112 In the Ohio
Company·a
Purchase and
DISCUSSES IRS PROPOSAL - Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Tex.) talks about the honest taxpayer pro- more parttculirly
daacrtbtd
tective program's proposal .to overhaul the IRS and help curb
·
. alleged abuse by the IRS. (AP)
•• foltowa:
Bounded on lht North by_
Ianda formerly awned by
Newton Ktmpar; on tht
Eaat by the Ohio River; on
the South by Ianda of J.M.
Cox; and on ·thl w..t by tilt
and
County Road,
containing 93 1/2 acr11

.

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Public Notice
Public No11ce
fully d"crlbed In Exhibit
more or leta.
Excepting one half of .., "A" of en Entry flied March
the ott end 1111 arid ttl ottier 3rd, 1111 tn tht Metga
mtnertlt In and underlying _ County Probatt Court In
the above d11crlbed c.- No. 27715 and umt It
lncorporattd herein by
preml-.
. ..
Alto aubjtct to lht right ........nee.
No oplnllll'n of IIIIa nor
of way granted to c. H.
W-1 to I. 11. Janet, June certification aa to accuncy
21at, 1919 tnd recordtd In of deacrJpllon rendered by
Volume 1, Page 271 of the the tht prep~rer of thlt
Recordt. of Rlghlt of Wey lnatrument.
Said prtmltta are
Mtlgll County, Ohio.
appralaed
at ninety nlnt
Being the ttme real
dCJIIIre
eatett conveyed to Paul M. thouaand
(SH,OOO.OO)
and
muat bt
Schuler •and· Margla J. aold lor not ltll thin
ninety
Schuler tly Cecil P. nlnt thouaand dollara,
Bra~bury and wife by dttd
($19,000.00). Ten percent
recorded ln.Datd Book 188, down
when the bid Ia
Ptge 19 of the Melgt accepted
and balance upon
County Oatd Rtcordt.
delivery of deed.
Subject to all '""'·
Th't ttlt It tubltct to
tattmtnta and rlghtt•Of· approval
of tht Malga
way _of record.
Probate Court,
Reltrtnct ·Deed: Volume County
311, Page 599,, Mtlga Molga County, Ohio. The
Guardlin rtllrvtttht right
County Datd Recorda.
ALidhar't P1rcel· No: 07- to rtltct any and all bldt.
Gary Rupe, Guardian of
00754 1nd 07-()0755
Margie Jean Schuler
ExctpUng from tha above
(3)
25;
(4)
1, 8; 3TC
dttcrlbtd premlttt tht
following:
Public Notice
Approximately 4.035
acrea being 2.087 acrea In
100 acre Lot No. 181 and
Notice of Drtwlng Jurare
1.948 acrtt In 100 Acre Lot Rtvlatd Code, Sec. 2313.20
182 aa aame· n.. batween
Office of Cammttttantre
SR 124 and the Ohio River of Jurora, Melge County,
I I par I aurvay of George F. OhiO April 1, 11118
Seymour, Ohio Pralualonal
To All Wham It May
Surveyor No. 8044, January Concern:
On Wtdnetday, the 15th
7, 11118.
Said EXCEPTION Ia mort day of April 1991 at 1:30

.

o'c:locll. p;m,, tt tho otno. of

linda's
Custom Cakes

Public Notice

.

.

CHEY.IER'S
CARPET CLEAIIIIG
SPRIIG CLEAI
SPECIAL
. 50% OFF All

ALL OCCASIONS
Blrtlldaya, Holldayt,
Wlddlnp, Showera,
Annlver..riH,
Graduatlona, Etc.
Home Bakery Llctnttd
Md tnapacied
Plea and Cooklaa . ·
(740) !143-5544
Portland, Ohio .

Tht Ohio Dlvlalon of
Wlldlllt will
have
approxlmetaly 32 Ac
available for farming. Thla
will be 1 5 yr com and hay
rotation on Forked Run
Wildlife Area located In
Olive Twp., Malga Co.
Bid forma,end Information
may be obtained from Mark
Hemming, Arta Manager,
Coopar Hollow Wlldllla
Area, 5403 C.H. A 0 Road,
Oak Hill; OhiO :45858.
Telephone (740) 882·7524.
Bldt will be recalved until
3:00 p\m. Apr1110, 11118
(4)6, 7,13tc

, .... n1

.

20

CELLULAR -PHONES

CARPENHR SEVICE
•Room AddHiona
•Ntw Garagea
•Electrical A Plumbing
•Rooting
•Interior A Exterior
Painting
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
.. V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112-6215
Pomaroy, Ohio

·

-

'-

,,

DELIVER'( DRIVER
EARN EXTRA $$$

Yeara Of Age &amp; Have Uae Of An

M&amp;J

Dtiverl Needed ·for 300 To 800

Remodeling

8835tsyracu18).
Puppie1 PanflOaton
T""ler, 740-·
256-6251
EY~.
Regillerod White Gorman
~~~· To Good Hom~. 740-

··
,

.

Yorker Benji dog male, Oeutered
wtall fhota. Female cat -Tiger,

- URA NeE
JEFF. WARNER INS
•

113 W, 2ND ST.

I

POMEROY, OH.

614• 992• 5479

.::both need laYing good home.

"Build Tour Dream"

I

~-~ ••, •.-...

1998 Martin Street

.

Joe Wilson .

1 ~·
•.:.Po..::m=er:,:o:,:y~,..:O:,:h~l~o-45::,;7;6.:9_ _ __:&lt;.:&amp;.:.1j4)~99rzi2~·,.i41i,i2,;,n~

·r

RADIA,.OR.

193:::.·- - - - ,
304
67::::s-1:.::
::·:::.

\60 Lo,:a:E~~:und

I For
re1urn of blacllibrown Gorman
Shephard taken lrom Edith Rooera farm on Redmud Ridge. An·

9!4/TFN

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

OIIRING WIDL£ IWJIG SUPPUB.

• Vinyl Siding • Soffit
· • Fascia • Seamless
Gutter • Roofing
• lleplactrlllnl Windows
• Slolionory Docks
• Blown Insulation
• Garages • Decks
-' U x ~ Pole Building

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10·6 Sat. 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
• Eascer Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels ,
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fill them.
Rt 124 Minersville, E&gt;H
740·992·4559

CANDlE SHOP

;
I

•

2 Tltr Angel Btrdblth
Fountains, tncludta pump,
lor$129.00
· Candltl, Rtfllla,

Atramatharapy,

Wooden Allglla, .
Slufftd Rabbitt &amp;Beare
· Optnl\l"..f~.tH
Sit. 111-4; Clootd SW1. &amp; Mon.
At. 12f,llneravtllt, OH
740-tt2-41St

Sptcit1121ng In:
Ni!W Roaft, Roof Repalra,
Outtera, Interior A
Extarlor Painting,
Drywall Rtptlr. •
.._......... during tht
wlnttr manu.. 01
Jan.·Ftb.·Mar.
QUM/Iy Wott Gutlllllflel
Frtt Eat• Fully tnaured
1-614-11112-1057 .
"'lddle
011.

NOWOPENFOR
.SPRINC- SEASON
Enter Flo-ra,
Pansies, Cabbage,
Broccoli, Cauliflower,
Hanging Baaketa,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Shrubs, Spruce
Trites
·
OP.fn Dally 9.-5
Sunday 12·5

12-Pack 12-oz cans

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
S r.Cuse

992·5n&amp;

select Blend
CoHee

7~·2772

LIIDICIPI

.HOWARD

•a•••

•Commercial
•Realdentlal
Owner; Mickle Hollon
Chaster, Ohio •

740-985-4422

Ohio River
Campground• and
Bait &amp; Tackle,
Gen. Merchandlll.
New A uaed tlema. Wi
Buy • Salt • Trade: Taala,
fllhlna equip., TVa,
CB'a, at~eaa - little bit
of everything.- Located
on Ohio River Oampgraunda, St. Rt. 1a4,
Radne, Ohta:
74Q.NI.1012

a.

AMERICAN lEGION
GUN SHOOT
SUN., I:80 PM

• Ftctory Choke Only

-.

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LOttG'S ·
COttSTROCTIOtt

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

••

614-992-3410 .

Gatllpolla, Ohio 45631
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
· Insurances
20Yrs . Exp.
· Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

992·5050
.

IR141

LIMESTONE DELIVERED
STARTING AT

Stop &amp; Compare

985·4473

SPECIALS ON 5PRINQ CLEANUP

741J.98s-tl74

..

SAYRE

!

Chester, Ohio·
.
11/12........
' .

;

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeitone It Gravel
Stp«lc Systems
Trailer It Hou11 Sitts
~•1:0na!* RiiH

.

Joe N. Sayre

White Pine and
Cantdlan
Hemlock
Delivery Available
Hemlock Grove Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 740-992·7285
After4 P.M.

' s

. 1htst,....

614-742~2.138

4411 .oo 53

'

·

Full or part time, .sell starter, moti·
vated 10 succeed, must have
sales experience and be a~e 10
work with public, knowledge of
floor coyering &amp; decorating a
ptus, tong time commitment n"·
essary, send resume to : Daily

Sendnol, P.O. Box 7211-60, Pomoray, 011. 45 769.
Home Remodeling Rio Grande,
Need Estlma1eS On Siding -Concrete Work Windows · Painting ·

And Windows. 614-444-2669.

· Is to run. Sundly

Friday. Mondl)' ldltlon

Immediate openings for house-

edition • 2:00 p.m.

Ohildrens, Adulls, Toys, Compul· 326, Polnl l'toaaanl, WV 25550.

:•r::_
: _ ·_ _•_ _ _ _
· --I (A Glenmark-Genesis Affiliate) .

. Big Garege Sate Rain Or Shine. _E_OE_....:.,_ _;,_ _ _ __
922 Jericho Road, Cheshire, April Local lruc:k driver, Clan A COl
required. log hauling. 740·992·

. 9th, 10th, 11th.

S163.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
a. VIcinity
·e· Mile Yellow Flag yard tale,
Pomeroy/ Middleport Uay 1· 2.
Reg111tr, pick up flags now.

All Yard Salta Muot Bo Paid lp
Adv1nce. Dndllne: 1:00pm the
d1y before the 1d Ia to run.
Sundty &amp; Mandly edlllon1 :OOprn Friday.

Garage Sale-3 Miles out Jericho
Rd. Fri &amp; Sal 9-? Dehumidifier,
VHS movies, Chrittmas tree, roll·
a-away bBd , portable TV, karo·
1ene hea18r, enc,clopedia, !tailer
hiiCh &amp; much more.
·

80

Auc.tlon
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull t1me a&lt;Jctioneer , complete
auc1 10n · setYice
lic:•nsed
166.0h10 &amp; We11 V1rgin1a, 304·
773·5785 Or 304· 773-5447.

90 Wanted 10 Buy
1983 Tnroygh 1985 Honda CReo
for Pall~ 740·245-lle07.
Absaluli Top Dollar : AU U.s: Silve' And Gold Coins . Proofseta,
Diamonds. AntiQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre - 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. AcQuiSttions Jiwelfy
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
AYonue. Gall1pohs, 740-446· 2842.

Ant1ques. top pr1ces paid, Riverme AntiQ\les , Pomeroy, .Otuo,
Russ Moore owner. 740-89225:!11 .
Ant1ques &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one p1ece or complete
nousohold. Osby Martin, 740·

orn

AY~e,

GaHipoijs,

&amp; 0 1\uto Parts . Buying
wrecked or sal\laged vehicles.

J

30H73-SOJ3

Va cnnt land (41 4 Reasonable
PncQ) On land Oon1ract, Part
Pallure And Part Wooda. 740·

lfNNEEQED
For In Home Care Of Female Pa·
tiant. Par1-Time Day And Evoning
Shilts Only One Weekend Per
Mcnth Send Resume To : CLA

~~~·r~~~~~~:~~~. ~~i~\r~~::lug~

45831.
Need ABabysiner In My Homo. 2

Cl'lildr&amp;n Good ~ay, Lite House·

worf&lt; tflduded, 7'40·379,2734 .

' Notaries Needed : Mortgage
Banker Needs Signers For Mort·
gage Documents. local Travel
Required . Fax Resume To Grail
At FlraiPius Oirec1, CA 1·800-

..00-&lt;6110.

.

Now takin~ applications lor·drivers at Dom1no's P1zza In Pomeroy.
Now ~Tiking Applicariqns For Ex·
periencad Ca,panters &amp; Rooters,
Must Have Hand Tools, Must Be

E•porklr&lt;od. 740·245.0437.

Now Taking Applications At Domino's Pizza, Gallipolis, &amp; Pomeroy

Locations.
Paris Man1ger Needed, Experlenc:ed Nace11ary, No Phone
Calls, River Front Honda, Gallipo·
lis, Ohio.

POSTAl JOIIS 10 $IUS ottR.
trlc. Benefils. No Experience. For
App. And E•am Into., Call 1-800·
B13-3565, Eu 8474, 8 A.M. .g
P.M .. 7 Days fds.inc.
Relllit

STORE DETECTIVE f!TORPIT

EMperience In A Retail Environ·
mont Preferred. This Po1tnon Re quires Varioua Days, Evenlnga

AndWeolwnclo.

· .

We Offer Compllilive Wagas
And ·oenefita, And Complete
Training. For Conaiderallon, Ap·.
ply In Peroon Or MaN Resume ro:
Hilla Oepat1me111 Storee, Atln.:
Qen•r•l lllrtater, 1' Oltlo River

45131. 01·

Plaza, OaUIJilllla, OH

\ler•e And Drug ·Free Environ-

ment

•

Sacuri1)' Guardt- muat be able m
work any lhift including most ....

kenda. Muat have clean police
record, good - hlaiOry, rellablt
tranaportatldh, valid drivers 11~ ­

J67 -7891 .

cenae, home phone and muat
have black tteal toe ttfetr
lhOII. Ply ltl.rt at .5.50 ,.,

Wanted lo Buy: Good uucf Hot
Tub For Sick. 7.&amp;0-44&amp;-2515.

8:00am-~:00pm. ttrcppalilii.ll :

Wanled To

hour. 32-.a houra per weetc. Call

Bu~ :

Junll Aulo'l Arrt

Condition, 740--446-8153.

740·689-2874 Monday. Friday

WILDlifE .101110 821.ao ..R.
Inc . Banelill. Game Wardena

Security, Malnttntct, Park Rang:
Wanltd
To
Buy:
U~td Moblta trl. No E•p. N-d For App
ANNOUN CEM ENTS
Hom01, 740·448·0175, 304-e75· And Exam tnrv CaH i-100·113:
5985.
3585, Ext 8475.-1 A.M . . a P.M 7
~. NOW IN STOCK A
005
Personals
Dayalds,tnc ·
· ·•
EMPLOYMENT
NEW ECOMOMICAL
BE ABEmA
180 Wantld To Do
SERVICES
29 GAUGE ROOFING
Dot»ndlbla man will mow 1111
3252
1
small llll&lt;ltna. polnl, .,.1up ·.-.,
. OR SIDING
Mpt-lhol1olpogtt.
!!.C:.._FrH Etllmalea. 304 • 7.:
comocutl3171111tll.hrn
110
Help Want,..,
-·
, •
Metal 9" OC Rib,White
$2.!1VIMin.Mut18a18YrL ,
ono
3'Xl0'·$11SO
Touch-Tone Pl1ono Requ&lt;ed
m DANCERS WANTED SSI
Outlbutt-.t Pralt~tlontl CINIIProcan Co. (802) 954-7420
h&lt;tlltnl opi&gt;Oflunily '"' the riglll tng, Co"'"*&lt;!ll And Relldt!ttlll
3'XI2'·$15.GO
!
3'114'· 17.50
.
. ENT1CIN01 EXCITINOIII!ur DolO girl ISOOI•)pll - aoming po. ~Aller 5:00 P.M. 740-311-1&amp;22
ten1ial.
No 11.
ea:pCall
n.cenlrr.
muat J;:nwo::;E:III::-:••=-~-=~--11 Waltlngl Call t-1100·407-7712 be
OIIOOII
014·812-83117
Lllflllltr •luilllni ......
En.
7957,
S2.811Min.
18o
Sor•·U
(an,llmo)
or
304·675·5g55
ahar Fumicu,. ""'"· rellnltll l1f1CI ,...
t.-lultllloofn0 1:,:8-64_:.::&amp;-84:_:.:34.::..:,__ _ _ _ _ 1 8pm Wed lhru Sft
lintian, lito CUllOm-. Ohio
:.
Van., Rtllnlahfn&amp; Shop ltrrr
.
Polo
lam
Pac~····
MEET
Taro WIIM1 Horta 'INcto&lt;l
AVON I All Arttl I Shirl'l' P1ollps, 7.00.812..111. ' ·
NEW PEOPLE
Ho18prtngaSpea
Spur~ 304-B7S-142ll,
THE fUN WAY
Optn: 7::JO.I:OO _ . . . , .
Gtrdtnt Plowed - r Rooaoo tit
lOOAY
Conallu&lt;lion OHice Clarh Wind- 2::1d_e Seh,oat lrta.
7:»4:do'-v
1·-370o3305
1
ow1 95. Excel Sprudahttt Ex- ·&lt;113M Sfl241•
EII.H71
paroonce P........,, Good Oogoni. Oto
t2.81Por Min.
za1oonat Skltlt fu """""To: 1-. 'Ill• Alrtallle ........... ..n· 1
Mull Be 18 Yra.
330·411·11856,
304....-75-1157.
loot .... filii ... ...
s--u 8111-845-843-1 '

BAUM LUMBER

I

.9&lt;10-e::,._

Medical Explorers' Meeting
Thursday, Arpil9, 1998, 7 p.m.

r111lli .

Cafeteria·
Speaker: Brandy Barkey

J

BALLfDANO
BURLAPPEO TREES
Norw•y Spruce,

Sh!IW !hklttn ....................'7.31)
for SOl bog

. Pleasant Valley

''

~~~~~~~ ~;.';: ~=~~m~o;;,~ ';f~:

Box 33, Gallipolis, OH 45831, 740-

House cleaner, every Fridav.
Racine area, aile hours work, 740·
949-2682.

Clean Late · Model Can Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Of Newer,
Sm1th Bu,ck Ponttac, 1900 Easl-

12!1 Corrt,lett tton. ...........'S.60
11%1........................'8.00

'·
•.

Va.)OrS..Aey

Changing Tablo. l!oy'a Clolheo.
AlJ, Yard SatH Mull
Bo Paid In AdYiftCO.
DEAQL!t,)E: 2:00p.m.
lho day bolorethe od

992·6578.

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY •
33100 Pine Grove Rd,
Racine, Ohio 45771
.74CHI4fl.2481
Pig~- ......................... 6.2

:~TRUCKING

_; 985-4422

LOAD

ESTIMATEES
7/22/tfn

:

$65 A

CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

FREE ·

DUMP:rRUCK
:
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
. .
Umeatotte • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Eatbi'Uites
446-4759

CLEI·AND'S OIJ'I'DOOR ·
MAINTENANCE

Remodeling

R.L. HOLLON
' TRUCKING

,6,

Green Terrace Top Of Hill
April 1blh, ,th, 8-4, Baby Items,

pt, Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity ·

•Complete

CAR.,ET
Just off Bradbury Ad.
(Look for signs)
Middleport, Oh
740-992-5379
·Dav &amp; Evenina Hours

.

Call614·843•5426

•NewHomei
•Garages

TIM'S CUSTOM

'

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

.ROBERT BISSELL
tONSTRUCTION

Save Up To
75% Off

.

. • Room Additions

Mileage Limit
Call Randy

Gravel, Sand,

Seeond Avenue, Apr i 9th .
1998, BA.M.-?

1 02'

• New Homes • Pole ·Buildings

Special Thru
March
8 ton Delivered
$120

Limestone, ·

::::::=:::..:::::::.:;:;;.;.:;:--:-:::-:E~~:perlenced Prateaalonal Phle·

Smith at 614-992-7440.

Yard Sale

·• Vinyl Siding • Garages

LIMESTONE

·HAULING

17-t-301 Eaat 5th Ave. Suite 112

eor.~.....T- 75110.

keeping/laundry aide. Pari· lime~
rotaling shilta. Painl Pleasant
April101h -11th, 9-6, 167 Wood· Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center,
land Drive, Gallipolis, Clothing : S1f11e Route. 82, Rou1e 1, Box

.

WICKS

Earn $1,000 Weeldy. Stuffing en·

_.,.., no prior OJt»ri.,.., free
details. nod SASE to: N.B. Dept

• 10;00 1.m. Saturday.

31301811 1 mo pel

(UmeStoneLowRat11)

.

JUC

-POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
END TO END
- MAY 1 &amp; 2--- ALL DAY

e Mowing IResidential &amp;

RUTlAND, OH.

BEECH GROVE ROAD

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

LARRY'S LAWN
CARE .

11118/1111

lr*irmllion Call800-437-11784.

1014 leaye Maasage, Family Pel

Gallipolis
a. VIcinity .

Ume1tone Hauling ·
Commerdoll
HOUII I Trailer $1tH I ·
e Weedeoling
Lind Cleulng a.
e Traa Trimming
, Grading ,
• Shrubbery Molnlenonce
Septic System &amp;
Plan ahead. Call
UtllltiH
for free estimate
today
Estimates
742·210:1 ., 446•:1622
(614) 992-3838

laWJtlerviCII

OPENIIt APRIL I

;

EXCAVATING CO. :

Computer Graphics
De11gna
All Landacaplng &amp;

*I Buy Accumulatlona•
"Callecllblea, Antlquea;
Mlacllllane01111,'
Hiluael!alda, lllc."
Jean Whitt

KIOCEil

starting of $5995

1 Health lnl. AwaJiable, For More

phone cal•
New Homes &amp; Remodeling ·
. lfl':.· 7&lt;0-985-3ol39.
lost:
7
112
Month
Old
Male
Cho·
FRUSTRATED? NO IlEAL AD·
~~- Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding 'l '"'l
colate lab, In Radnev Area, AnVANCEMENT POTENTIAL?.
lin.
:. Commercial &amp; Residential ·
MI. . swersJo hla~e~ Oscar, II Found
· OLASS CELINO?
Contact , 740 -448-1500, 11 )'Ou are employed and lao! you
~ 27 .yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured f11n, Please
RewardOf $100.
are In a no galn ailuatbn, you owe
yourself 10 consider joining
~
Phone 740-992·3987
~ l.,ost: Bla~k And Gray Sibaoan irthe1Gla.wen
Group. This It a high
Husky Puppy, Answers To"lce~
income profe11ion, rapid ad·
Free Estimates
last See" On Hamilton .Road On vancement potential , and self·
415198 Reward Ollered, Please
Owner: John Dean
satisfaclion helpinQ families. For
Call 740-379·2145 Or 740·256· your
last job interYiew, call Steve

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

COUITRY

And Good MVR. Experience Alao Requktd, WMkly Pay

Found: small dog, Meigs County
ta~rgrounds, tamale, housetJained.

sweft to name "Chance.· No
questions ask. C811 John Roger&amp;

1/A

Oxy-

992·5583

Mile Radius Mu11 Have Cla11 B

Ll&lt;enN

Floor Maintenance Poeltlon·
mull have experience In strip·
pjng, waxing, bUIIing, Cllrpll care
and other duties a1 assigned.
Pick up application at Rock·
1prlng1 Rehab Center, Rockaprlngt Rd., Pomeroy, OH. No

1-800-287~78.

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Accet f:legulator Repair
Welding Supplies ~ Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

740-~7-7838

McfEE ROOFING I
PAINTING

HUIIARDS
GRrENHOUSE

•

.Brluany Spaniel Puppy, Call Alter
4:30P.M. 740-4411·26110.

Yrs. Exp. •·Ins . Owner: Ronnie Jones

Custom Homes

360• Communications

Open 24 Hre. A Day
70ayaAW"k
Hot Brealdalt
. Biscuit Sandwich,'
Hot&amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Tapptnga
C1ll In Ordart Accepted

YOUNG'S

coca cola:
Classic

.

1·800 ·296·

lndependtnl Con1rac1ore Needed
.
For Otli&gt;ory Ot Champion Oloer:·
Grlndln9 Free To Good Home: 1 Yoar Old torits Telephone Book For Ohio
Valley Area. Mull Be Atlea11 18

70

CAFFEINE FRI;E DIET COKE.
· DIET COKE; SPRITE OR

.

Lab &amp; Huohy
mixed, cwtcs old, wormed, mother
grul dog, loves lcida. 304· 182·
3292.

Mill ·St\111\P

614-992-7643

FOOD MflltT

4ll/1-.plll.

"'EF

11

AYo n · S8 -120 1Hr. No Door To

Euy Cuh l
Wttka. Door.
0139 indl~..rep.

frtt Puppi"·Biad&lt;

•tr\fl\

FREE ESTIMATES

C"EStti~E

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•M11onry
•General
Commercial tind
RealdtnUaf
24 Hr. Bobcat Sarvtce·
Available
Frtt ElfhrYrt• .
No Jo/J Tao Smell
Brian llarrlaon c
(740) 985·3Ma

. . ,. . semi-Boneless
Ham
Pound

Si'~T

2

7o00-2&lt;5--llll:l5,

.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

992..()()n

P/B Controdors Inc.

WHOLE FULLY COOKED, LOWER SALT ( 14-18-1.8. AVO.)

organize a trade exhibition in Cuba
to promote the sale of the products
and services of the U.S. medical and
pharmacculica!_industiies.'' · ·
The license was issue&lt;) sixmonths ago but Nathan said no
annou~cement was made then
because of the confidentiality
requirements of normal tmsiness
practice.
_ ,.
The State Department minimized
the significance of the license
approval. contending that since
1992, a dozen licenses have been
approved for U.S. companies . to
spend funds in Cuba to promote chc
sale or medical items.
In contrast , John Kavulich; president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and
Economic Council; said "permitting
the trade show is the single most significant change in U.S. commercial
policy toward Cuba in 40 years."
Confident that he has government authorization, Nathan said
arrangements should be in place to
stage tile exhibil late this year or
early next year. ·
~· . ro THuR , r 1&lt;1
Initial reaction on Capitol Hill to
ll
~
10
lhe PWN announcement was nega·
tive.
·

7 Puppln. Roady In

. - · - - · - - -·

' .,

Sf9~

part coon. 3Q4.e75-58!i0.

Garages • Replacement Windows

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning .
258 Pearl S\.
MI.Jidleport, OH

3J12/'111 mo. pd.

'

PoUnd

Giveaway
'7 lolllld pupa, pari RciiWtilor, cuse, OH 45779.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Room Additions • Roofing

don Pool for noo 1998 SWitrVring
Seaton Ala Baino Accoplod Unto!
Mar 7. Submit ln Writing, W1th
Tnuning And EJCperienct, To Ja·
nk:.e ZWiftlt'lg, Clerk •Tre•turtr, At
The Sy racuH Mumclpt.l Building
Or Mall To-P.O. BoJI 2813 , S~ra ­

lnaure'd Vehicle lmmtdlale
614 949-:2804
Fuzzy. black eioh« week old Openlnga AYallabte Call MOS At ,
1-800-alH400.
pupplel,
Shepherd/lib
mix, ier
lhota
and wormed,
7-'0-992r-~~~~~~-., r---~-----------------'T r--~----·;;,·______....;,______...;._,] EBS

•

''

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
State Department is disputing a
_, Connecticut company's claim that it
received goverr.:nent pennission to
arrange a trade exhibition in Cuba
for U.S. health care suppliers.
PWN Exhibicon International
... L.L.C. said it received such pennission last October but the State
Department said the company mere, ly obtained agreement to travel to
Cuba to explore the possibility of a
"
trade show.
Department officials said the permission was consistent with the
long-standing policy of facilitating
the
sale to Cuba of medicines and
.. ·• medical
equipment for humanitarian
purposes. The sale of such items is
one of the few exceptions to stri n·
' · gent curbs on trade and financial
~
dealings with Cuba.
PWN President Peter Nathan
expressed surprise in a telephone
interview that the State Department
- ~ad said the government had given
the ~reen light only fpr exploratory
tiCii~ ities. He accu•ed the go,vemfllCIII of "obfusntlns" the issue.
QuotinJ from. tho ll~onse. he said
.. It P+nnill cravol to Cub• "for the
PfRO~ of pefllllnlnf_)he.lieensee to

Parts and S.rvlcell .

State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

}

soneles• rre of
Round Roast

40

•

lrigp &amp; Sfnllt~~: Mosttr Strvkt Ttdittldll'
.o.tdHr Powtr E, lp••llt Anedllloll: Ctt'lllllti2.C:ydt

••

u.s.DA

.ISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•Mowers •Chain Sawa •Weedeatera •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga A Stratton •liTO •Murray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gllar
ANI) OTHERS I

the Commt ..tontrt of
Jurort of lllllge Co=~~
Ohio, Ju...,. will be pu
drewn for lht llay 1HI
Term of lht Common PIMa
Court of Hid County.
Wal'- Breclford,
1.0 llcCoy
commlaatonen ol Jurore
Drawing will be held at
the. office of the llelila
County Boerd 01 Election•
located at 112 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, OhiO. .
(4)81tc

. smithfield PI"Bmlum ·

us 8434.

llltnl1 Mna CL11m.

Public Notice

.

Com·pany says U.S.
licen$e granted for
.. .
trade show in Cuba
..

·-

T!

•

.'

.

H00·407·7782 En 3053, $2.118

Min. Mull 8t 11 YrL S.V.IJ 11i-

8

..

And Ult Guatd Po1itiona Allon·

Do\llS

Internal IRS report cites
threat to ~axpay·er privacy
'u
,
----------~---------;0~="~ur~
From·Our Famzly To Yours
::U~!r ii~!:!.

By ROB WELLS
. SSNs (Social Security numbers)
AP Tax Writer
obtained from sources available to
WASHINGTON - Undercover the public," the report said. In three
auditors for the Internal Revenue of the cases, the investigators also
Service were ahle to telephone the p·rovided the filing status of the peoagency and obtain tax records of pk to gain their records.
other people by using jusi names,
In 32 percent of the cases, IRS
addresses and Social Security num- workers asked only for a person's
bcrs.
name, address and Social Security
"Under current procedures, ·an number. In . 27 percent, the IRS
impostor who knows a taXpayer's sought additional personal or tax- ·
name, address and Social Security related infonnation lhal an impostor
number can find out tax and income would be unlikely ' to know. The ·
'infonnation from the Internal Rev- report didn't provide a further breakenue Service with a simpl~ phone down aboul the remaining calls, but
call," according to a 1997 internal noted some IRS workers "asked
IRS audit of agency practices.
.extensive authentication questions"
A copy 'of the audit, dated Sept. by using an IRS database to validate
30, 1997, was obtained b{I'fie Asso- a cai!C'r's i&lt;lentity.
ciated Press. In response to the find· Watson said the undercover
ings, the IRS said it quick!·, investigators, in some cases, had
" strengthened its procedures last fall pennissi'on to use a wide range of
by requiring taxpayers to . provid~ infonnation from some. individuals
more detailed infonnation from their _whose tax records were the subject
tax returns in order to receive sensi- of the test. "It was a very extreme
tive records.
test," he said.
"I am extremely confident that
The audit "identified weaknesses
what we require exceeds what very in the way the service discloses
well might be required in private information over the telephone,"
industry," said Ron Watson, the IRS and warned of increased risks as the
executive
officer for customer scr- IRS expands its telephone system
"
vice. "We have put far more. strin- - wit~ the goal of resolving a · cusgerit requirements in place now.
tomer 's problem with a single call .
·•Js it an absolutely foolp\oof sys"As more transactions arc han ~
tem'" Watson continued. "I don 't died over the phone, the risk of
... think any system is foolproof.' ' Wat- unauthorized disclosure increases,"
son said Tuesday he welcomed the the reron said. Some 60 million
., . report's scrutiny _because it enabled calls were answered on IRS toll-free
the agency to improve its systems.
telephone line ~ in the 1997 fiscal
IRS is required to guard against year.
unauthorized disclosure of taxpayer
As a result of .the investigation,
records wh tle allowing taxpayers IRS workers in the telephone cusacccss to their own files . "'We t~kc . tomcr service centers· arc supposed
these kinds of reports very. very to ask for more detailed information
seriously," Watson said.
from a tax return. Watson declined
IRS internal auditors conducted to be more spcctfic, saying he didn't
109 test calls from 17 offices in the want to further assist people who
Northeast and West between July would attempt to illegally obtuin the
1996 and February 1997. They records.
1
posed as· local taxpayers. including
For "high-risk calls " involving
- with their permission - some change of address or release of tax
prominent business people'. a mayor account information , the IRS is supand a sports announcer. They were posed to seck at least two other
not identified in the report.
pieces of information m addition to
"Auditors were able to secure tax name, address and Social Security
and income infonnation over the number.
phone using names, addresses and

AppHcati ons For Pool t,~anager

OUYBICALS

WANTADS

Help Wanted

110

Personals

40%

Now Taking Applicatons for

OFF

Assistant Manage11 at
Domino's Pizza
· Pomeroy &amp;Galllpollti l,.ocallons
Experience preferred.
No
ells.

NOWI

-

30H7s.

l

�Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

• Middleport, Ohio
- Pomeroy
.

Wednesday, Aprll8, 1998

" - 1 0 PIUiUII• ,...-

320
ORAMMY CARE: Qualll)' Child
care 1 u Ho
u...
Tl..
~~7~-nday ... u
-::-:..:::.:--~;...::.=::---::--1
Jonoa lawn 1 Cora SaMe. Froo
E - . 740-24~. . '

Frldl1..

for

Pomoroy, 3 bodroom homo, _ . ,
roof newer furnace &amp; hot water

Lilt u .....el

' IIOOUl&amp;R HOUSE

~~~~~~~~=:I 26'~58'

A
Ranch Style Modular
;
House Will Be Auctioned To The
PtDfeUionll Trot Sarvic:o, SlUmp Hlghell Bidder On Mal a, 11188
• Removal. Free Estima~el In- At 12:00 Noon At The Buckeye
•
a•~•t Ohio 81
Hills Career Canter located At
o, ' 1Ur11nce,
-- •
· &lt;1-388- R"oo Gra nd e, Chi o. Publlc Vi~
jiM8, 81-7·71110:
1
Mo1nda11_ Through Fridav From
Shafef'o Lawncore Sarvlct, Free
· To 3:00 P.M. Please
Ellimo..,Col7ol0-441-o:J18.
Call "0 ·2•5· 533' For An Appointmont Formal VIewing Of Tht
Wan1 to do lawn mowing. 304- Houio Ia D.a;ng Tho Bucko1e
675-8720.'
Hills /Ohio Val lej EXP.O On Saturdaj. ·April 18, And Sunday, April
Want 10 mow grass In lower
, 9, 1996; 12:00 Noon -5:00 P.M .
dlepon area. Call 740·118:!·21110, Eadl Day..
ask for Ctvis.
River View 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
Wo Olfor Baclohoe &amp; Dozer Wot1l, Jn.GtDund Pool, 740-258-931113.
License &amp; Bonded, 7•0~3889515.
S.R. 884, HarriaorNille, 3 bf. homO,
level lot, approx. 2/~ acre, new
Will Care For Eldtrlw Or Handi- roof. new vin~l aiding &amp; deck,
capped ,.,eon 1n My Home, Rot- owner wants to sell _
quickly, call
O&lt;OflC8I, 740-441 ·1 536.
740-742-2848 avonings.

•

-·no

,

Will haul Junk or trath awav. $351
pidoup load. 30«1lS.S035.
,VIII Mow &amp; Trim Your Lawn Ex·
perl ehced Reasonable Rates,
References, For Free Eatimataa,
740-388-11041.

FINANC IAL

21 o

Business

Opportunity
•Bulinaas for S&amp;re• Small Restaurant /Grocery On Appro• . 3
Acres With River View, Serious
· inqulri.. Only Prk:ed To Soli I Call
740-256-6100 All&lt; For Own«.

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALlEY PIJBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do busl neu with people wou know, and
NOT to aand money lhrough the
mall untli you have Investigated

CASH ·
GRANTS!
Collogo. Sc:holarshipa.
Bu~ne... Med&lt;:al Bill$.
Never Repay.

~-..,---,---,-.::;:__;._

If you have an 8stablilhed bull·
MII and unused parking apace,
you may qualify to be a U·Haul
Doole&lt;. It inlllrelled coli BOD-2828575.

I

=::-::---::-:---::--:---1
230

onGandee.

350

ProfessiOnal

.

ServiCeS . ·

~~~p:::-::::::~;~1

Loti

&amp; Acreage .

120 ft long, 80 ft. long 1&gt;1 75 ft.
wlda, leva~ lot in Middleport. rt·
duced from $23,000 TO 117,000
000, 740-992·2290.

BIG SCREEN TV FOR SAllE; Re-

Go kart and extras, $500, 740·
9•9·23118 after Spm.

NewHaven.wv

INEEOLANO
If You Ha¥e Land, I Need To
Haar From You NOW! We Pay
Top Sst For Farms And Vacant
land, 20 To 300 Acres. Road
Froptage And Woods A Plu1.
Call MikA Anthony Land Co., lid.
1·800-2t3-83115.

RENTALS
Houses for Rent
Small 2br house, stove &amp; refrig.
arator al 129 George SL New Ha·
ven, Wv. 1285/mo. 304-773-9111
LoovoMo...ge.
·

1995 Crayton Mobile. Home 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Gas Fireplace, Garden Tub On Ronlll Lo~
Financing Available, 7·40 -2459138 Leave Manage.

3 Bedrooms, Renr + Ulilirles +
llepoli~ 740-707-&lt;4345

1" Tlrr,o Buyerl E-Z Financing
2 or 3 Btdroom. Around $200 per
month. Call credllllne 1· 800·
048-5178.

39 Chll~colhe Road, 3 Bedrooms,
Central Air, Heat. Garage, 740·

446-2583.

ABIINDON HOME Make 2

3br House in New Haven, WV.
$335tmo. + deposit. 304· 7735881 .

_30QO.

420

Moblll Homes

for Rent

Sale

wv.

al)'le menufac1urod typo name. . NEW lANK FiEPO'll Only 3 lofll
1;eooeq. ft. Situalad on·ona acre Slill undtr· wauarit", owner li·
of graund, Rayburn Rd. 114 Mile
.
'
off Send hill. Additional acr . .go nanctng available.
30•- 755-

avallablt. Paacolul, private. I _71;,9~1-~;;~d!.~A.':ii;;;j;:
coun1ry aeuing ~ 182.500. 304 ·; ~ew
175-12011~tt,31!5 Down &amp;

2 1 3 bedroom mobile hom..
$280-$300. sewer, wa1ar and
oaah lncluded,.74Q.982-2187.
2 Bedroom Beautiful River VIew
Reterancea, Oepoalt, No PEIJt
FOIIOI'I Mobile Home Pork, 7&lt;0-

«HI181.
2 Bedroom Mabile Home, References &amp; Deposit Required, 740:
367-oe32.
2 Bedroom Mobilt Home, Roferem:ea Required, No Pet1, Rent
Plua Deposit, 740-797-4345, 7&lt;0446-0870.

x

Small Aportment Upalllrs, Clost
To Gallipolis &amp; Grocery, No 11ats,
Reference~

740-446-1158.

Three bedroom apartmen'- $300
plus deposit and utilltlel, Third
Street, Racine, Ohio, 740·247·
•282.
Upstairs 2 Roome &amp; Bath Furnilhod, Cloan, No .,.., Roforo&lt;1ce
&amp; Deposit Required, 740·448 ·
1518.
.

450

614-388o8182.
'
24 Foot PDniODn Boat for, Sale; 2
Bedroomlrailw7~1-1538. ·
2br, 1 ba1h, mobile home, Gelllpolio Forrw. t2501mo. rent t100
dopoli1.304-675-71111 .
· :
Smell two bedroom mobrlo homo
b'rerMinRacine, 740•2·5039.

440

A,.........;.litS

'(; R;;.t
11 and 21&gt;tdooom --~fur·
dopooltlind
raqulred.
no Pill,
740·
nllhad
unfurnished,
security
:.;11112-;,;;.;;22;.t..;l_
. -----:--1 Bedroom Aparlm.nt N.weac
and Cleaneat. in tt'le area. near
t270 Pkis Ulli~ OoPolll
and Leaao Required f140)l•62G57

Cement MQrter Mixer 8 HP Honda Motor Asking St ,200 Hardly
8Mn Uaod, 7&lt;1().2.5-9033.
Concrete &amp; Pl11tic. Septic Tanka,
3DD Thru 2,000 Galiano Ron
Evans Entarptlses, Jackson, OH
1-800-537-9528..
Couch matchir\a love seat &amp; oak
colfoo 111blo. ItSO. 304-67!&gt;-8983•
or lelve mouago.
EngtMd ICortalr Couch &amp; Chair,
Good Condltlon, Asking: $350,
740.._373.

Golds Gym S125,llke Now, l40·
24!Hl405.
Grubb's Piano- tuning I repairs .'
Problems? Naed Tuned? Call the
piano Dr. 740·446.. 525
Hanel Made Blanke! Oak &amp; Maple
Chest, 740·379-2720 Allor I
P.M.
JET
AERATION MOT~
Repoired, Naw &amp; Rebuilt In Stoclt
Call Ron Evono, 1-800·5374528,

Furnished

RoOms

Johnaon's , Used Furniture:
Y(ashar, .Otya11, Hutches, Oi·
Circle Motel Lowell Rates in nene'1, Refrigerators, 510'181, Tel·
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO, evlaiona, livlnoroom /Bedroom
Clnemax, Showllme &amp; Disney. Sulloa, 740-44'·•039, 74D·4•6 Wookly Ratea, Or Monlhly Ratet, 1004.
Con1truc:tlon Workers Welcome
740·441-!ill98, 740... 1-5187.
MaytaliJ Washer I Dr~er Works
Good; $150, 7«1~·8•87.
Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Also trailer space on river; All Mul1i-Medii Computer With Over
hook·upo. Call after 2:00p.m., $1,500 Software~ Easter Rabblls,
304·773-5851, MaiC&gt;OWV. .
New Zea!ond Wh1111a, Silver Mortons, 740·258-61!47, 740-367WIWAII ANN 110\'EL
7018.
118 SECOND AVENUE
· GALLIPOLIS
Now That Spring 11 Hero II Is
SPECIAL LOW
TI!Ot To SiOCk·Up On Your Avon
. WEEKlY RATES
Skin-Sa-Soft Moisture Suncare
SINGLES .180.00WEEKLY
Plus, To Co-der Call Pam At 74D·
2•5-5443.

460 Space tor Rent

Patio Tabte •. Four Chaifl With
large mobile home lot for renr on Cushions &amp; Umbrella $100 740·
Sendhm Road. 304-875-71171.
446-40&amp;1.
I
Mobile home site available bet·
WHn Athens and 'Pomeraw-. call Pri-U· $ga inllallallon With
SSO rebtto. Flrot month he wlih
740-385-4367.
lrea movie channels, StarOn•
opoclal, ••• lnata11atloo, 800 For Lease

490

2113-21140.

For LHse Mobile Home: Site On
White Road With Ele~lflc City
Water, Septic Tank, Near Holzer
Holpltal $150, 740-4411-•389.

R6SFumltY,.
- · WY
Buy. Soli. Trodo

Uaod&amp;~~H
Furnlruro.

MERCHANDISE

3D4-773-5341 .

.
_ _..,_
, - - - - - - - . Rainbow vacuum cloanor, Acer
51 0 Household
computor, 31•51 aluminum ahutGoods
tora. 3D•·882-3121 8am-1 2pm.
304-882·3274 al!or 12pn.
Appliances :
Reconditioned Royal Oak camping membership
Washa11 .. Drwers, Ranges, Refri- tor aale, reasonabfe priced, call
grators, 80 Oaw Guarantee! 41g·888-•905 afltr 8pm or call &amp;
F'reneh Cl1y Maytag, 740·448leaYI message ·&amp; I will return
77$.
.

yourc:aJ.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
r~Jngel . Sttogl Appliances, 78
Vine Street, Call 740·446 -7398,
_1-800-4118-34118.

Smith Corona Word Proc;easor
Wirh Screen, H11 latus 3,
Sproodahtell, Hard Drive And A
Disc Drive, More Fa.turea, Call
Pam Ill. 7&lt;1().245-ae35.

Pouya- l Uttd FumltUN
we now- 11tmt !lurpluslll

WARM UP: High Efficiency Nowrat An4 lP Gas. Furnacao, lilt·
lmo Warranty On Heet Erchang·
or. "'I You Don't Call Ua We Boih
loltl' Froo Elllmatoal Add·On
Heat Pumps Clniy Sligh!)' Hlghaf.
Call Us Today. 1gge Is Cur 28th
¥ear In The Htating a Cooling
Bualnenl740·4•8-8308, 1-800-

2101JellerlonAvl.
Open 8:30 . 5:00 Man-Sat.

Super Capallty Wnirlpool Wllh·
.,., llryef.100, 7ol0-256-1170.

520

2111-11098.

Sponlng
Goods .

Now Rtminglon 1100 . lT 20
go~. •soo. 74D-1182-1!154 ahor

Spm.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uptight. Ron Evans Enterl)fllaa,
Jlc:keon, Clhlo, 1-800-537-9528.

•

WOLFfTANNNI BElli
TOn At Home

- n · a Army SUopluo
Boot prk:oa anywhe&lt;• full line ol
Advanlage Camo In tifhe for
1urkty HalOn. Graat ~Maclion of
new and uaed boots; Iota of new
and uaed camo, liZH 2 monrhl
10 4X; backpacking and camping
lc•ms : kid's clolhes; U.S. made
Smilh &amp; Wesson kni\111 and lots
more. Come and check us oul.
We .,. open 8:30am-8:oopm
..orydar. Can ua a1 740-882·
7003 Of 1·800-34Ht711.

Buy OlriCI end IAVEt

c:orm.c:ioiiHome Unill

From ltll8.00
loW llonllly Pavmtnll
FIIIE Color Cata1otJ
Cd-_y 1-600-711-1!158.
Walorllno Spacial: 31.4 200 PSI
t21.a5 Plr 100; 1" 200 PSI
$37.00 Por 100; All Bttioa Com~ Fi11inglln

S10Ck

RON EVANI -ENTERPRtiES
Jockaon. Ohio, 1•1f00.537·9528

Older 12&gt;50 mobile home with
w.dding Gown-Beautiful ivory
Ariilques
~--===--::--l big loll, and all utili!)' hoOiwpo
~~quined. rt·embrolderad lace.
For Salt By OWner: Nlcoty Daco. Rutland, oul of high wo1ar, ao
alz• 1D- viii. Only
rtlld, WOIIIIaln- 2 . , . _ , $8000, Cat 711J-742·2070.
1 -oom Apomnoftt. - _ -Ro- Bur ar aell . Riverine Andqu••, etWO«l.
Home loca1ed In Chtahlra, AI· ;;::.::.:..::._;__;._,..,--:a-.: 1 frigofa101' tnctudad, No Polo, 740- 112• E, Main S~oet, , on fl1. 124,
Pomoroy. Houro : M.T.'41(. 10:00 Whtol horso lhp. oldlng mower,
Rent: 2 Bedrooms,
l-an11 . . .2Y3.
aumablt Loan, 7&lt;1().387-7117 Afa.m. 10 1:00 p.m.,
1:00 to· nlca. NOll 0110. Jolin Dotro 210
nM
On
Land
Contract,
Can
5
1lr ~ .
On lot, 7ol0--1810.
1br optrlmtn~ prlvto•. quiol. Do- e :oo p.m. 740·N2·252e, Ruao rider 10hp. Kothar onglnt, nlca.
OoV'T FORECLOSED Homos
posit Roforoncu S2501mo. 30•· MooraDIIinor.
1,400 080. M.T.O. lhp. ridaf r from Pannioo On •1 Delinquent ..... Porool
875-1550.
onalnt, """ ....... good . • 30D
Tao, Ropo'o, REO'o. Your Ar... lltMoncln'j.an 2, 3 &amp; • Ndraom
0110. 304-671-3124.
Toll Froo (1) 80D-218·900D Fxt hOm•!~. ar•oota aa tew •• F2u8tdrnlo'""h-~fR • k~~,"f,.1po~~
H-281&lt;ForCurrontlillingo.
~
Building
550
;:-:;--~.:.:..-:-::-.::;:::::::..___ ,
flaferonco Roqulrtd, No Poll; 12a20 carport, can bt ooon at
Suppllft
tn Now Hewn-Could bO 1 ot8tter Special 18180 . 38R, 2 IIIIth. :-::;:::
·112=.21l=11:.:.:AIIIr=.,I;.P.;.i;,ltl..;;..-:--·( 101 Po.rl St, Mlddltpar~ 7~home or rontal property, boon •1.325 Down, f205 Mo. F-air
1182 2311.
Block, bflck. plpoo,- wlnd...,. . f300/mo. ready now, dut I helltlr1lng. 1-ION81•m.
Zlldrm. apta., total t1octrlc, ap•
.....
Nn181a,
011:.
Claude
Wlntors,
• llnoso, . - . to Hil $25,000
plfanCia furnlahtd. ..,ndtJ room AmaZine Moltbollom Brook
Rio
Granda,
QH
Call
H0-245·
linn. Far moro lnlo call 304· 773JlllllljQ RCIALI
lticili11H. CiiOM 10 - I In _,_ TIWatlllt Late 10 ., 2110 II&amp;, c.1
5t21 .
57""
" " ' .,._
Appllcadona ..atleble " 1' Villaeo FDr tr• c6noullatlan and Froo

530

am. --

s..,.,

,..,.._Spacial

f1•.--304-755--.

Ul'lretlllalaa

Located In Mason, wv. a
....... Plt11atls
Rooms.
2 Ban, B a - 2 cor
' " '." ',"
...
Carport On 1 Aero Of Land 2 '
-D
..
"
' ' ,.,..
Pbrchao.304-77:J.5815.
'
OuoltrMOoltUI
._
. . . . . . . . ., .
~~-....~ -dlul - ...,, 3
.
'
br, 2 booth, .!:-.!·'- 1 fr .. oak
TAXA CIA&amp;. . ·
cloott ' trim, . I .... lllr .......... t1 "''""·
cablnoll, - a i r ronto, dtolt- F,.. ...... I ,~ro,:.=r 1
- · d o - ..... bJ .... 1.a11 C1111ir • 0 , U
HIPi*&amp;t•U--t20. ' .
. : •WV.II+-

2 50

i!-'711.E
- ~a.1-4110fCB"-7~· Sli1,1tti740,...1-11N12
&lt;#
• vn.

560 Pet• tor sate

• dqu1 Po•ltot
Watc•3 Roam• I BtUpa•·trs,
No ftn
'""'· CWind
'" In
1 1 W• ac
1 hIO, Ofd
1 '
Poll, Willi Pltd
Gallipolla,
up Wra
ono,
Gold And Sn-. Good Uaed
7.00.-1100.
.::::.:;:..;.;.;;;,;.._____
f'nlioc1of
BHUdlui1 -m· Vor~'-· Alllur110. Old Clotb, ~- · Podo, Ofl ru. """"' Frameo, Camara ea-.
Rant • U11t1tot. ' - · Atolata"' Fll"rlfle 81011111 422 Socancl
n, Crodk Chad!, 7&lt;10-44t·3Hol 4tle, Gllllpollt, Ohio (740l44tAflor5P.II. •
18t5

,.,.._.eamom.

u..o. "'-

NOTICI
FronchCivPocO.-Ing
.
Oponl

Profeuional Grooming by Ap·
pointmtnll. 650 Second Avo.

Gallipolis. OH. 304-8~58.

must Cal 1-8QG. 7~8-1857.

.,

304-675-SOFA (7832)
Twa .2 Bedroam Mobile Home,
Vou Pa~ Utilities, 1 Dapo111, 1
Relarencas Required, (n Parter

I

~88i8l8~2Jio~34~28!.~~~~~~
Dou·
Fac;-

1 Bedroom lptl. for elder!y or
diaablod, HUD aulotod. EOH .
304·882-31 21.

lrigerator, no stove, no inside
Pets, deposit required, 740·182·

large eeiKrion of used hDmH..2
--~---:--::--:---1 or 3 beilroomt. Slarting at $2095.
310 Homes for
'Quick deliver,. Call 740-3859621 .
3 a..toom Homo Completely ReLIIIITED OFFER
modlled 2 Car Garage With Second Flaar Approx. 2 Acre&amp;, Yard, 1088 Ooublewide 3br, 2 balhl.
Fond, Boou11ful landocoplng 1 11 $1 , 808idown $259/mo. Only at
0akwood Hom1t1,Nitro. WV 30•·
4ltlilta0own218, 740--33.
75!&gt;-5885.
3 Bedrooms, 1 112 B1tns. 314
Baaament, New Roof, Siding. Make 2 Paymenta Move In No
Windowl, On 2.4 Acr.. In Hart· Payments After -4 Years, 304- T.JI-.
. ford.
$27,!ill0 304-882-381i8.
_729_5.-::-:-:--:-:-:---:--:--·1
· 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Optional Family New 1988 "x70 thfll bedroom,
Room, 2 811hl, In-GroUnd Pool, Includes 8 months fREE lo1 rant
central Air, $73,000 7"'0-4-48· Includes skirting, delu•• 11ep1
73.
and setup. Qnll $187 .08 per
.:41::.:::....::--:---:-~:-::-:::-:-.~1 monll1 with ·slo75 down. Call 1·
3 or • 8tdroom, two balh. ranch 801J.837·3238.

ICrtl
of ground.
Mi!M
4 Bedroom
h0ul85 on
Rl. Nor111
82 on of
2
Pt Pleount on Pon• Craoio Rd.
304-773-S1IT.
IUY HOMES FROMM,~ t ·5
Bdrm., Local G&lt;w't 1 Bar* Rapo't
Cll 1.1f00.522o2730, 111».

Small Monthl1 Pa1menta. Good
Credit A Must. Call 1·8DD·718·
1657.

turiti•.

-446-0008.

Full Blooded Collie Puf&gt;!&gt;ioo. $75;
No Papora &amp; S150, Wtth f&gt;¥poro.
740-4-41·1083.

Reaponaible Party To Take On

Awnings, 740·446·8630 Aftet e
P.M.

Hugo 28r80 3BR, 1 112 bath.
Starting ot ONlY S39,8g9. Many
opuons available. 1-888-028·
3428.

1

BIG SCREEN TV FOA . SALE:

Fasl Track like New Gave $300
Asking $200 080 740·251-1489
After '6, 01' Leave Meuage:

Div·orce Forcas Sales· Taka over
payments, 2br, 2 bath, financing
ovtilablo. 304-755-551!8.

RE AL ESTATE

G1'8cloua living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middleport. From $2•9·$373. Ca;l 74D·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·

Brand New ! Gteat Giftl CDIYideo
storage unit. Black and cherry.
Nwer out of box. 1125. Holda up
to 940 discs, all~ holds tapes.
Cell 740-992·8638 after 6 pm.
COs &amp; mpoa not lnctUdtd..

Roof Coatlngl, Ooara, Windows,
Plumbing 1 Etectrical Supplies.
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedgts And
Morel Call Bonnetr&amp; Mobile
Homo 5uWII AI Ht0·4&lt;111-0411.

knowjngly accept
advenisements tor mal estale
whk:h is in 'lliOiation of the
law. Our reaelefs are hereby
informecl that atl dwellings
ad'llertised In lhls newspaper
are a~tailable on an eqUal
,opponunity basis.

_740-:=-2::-45-::-5443.=:-::-::::-=::-:"~:-l
_

·Nice cte~n efliency apartmenr,
4.85 Acres Ridgewood Estates- re'lerenc:as &amp; deposit, no pats.
Sandhill Road. Water, electric &amp;
304-175-5162.
cabla $18,000. !ll'-117!&gt;-5828.
7 Shadid navigable crHk aide Two bedroom apartment In Po320 Mobile Homes
740112 acta camp sites, county wa- meroy, utilities paid, no poll, _
. for Sale
ltr, electric. St,SOD-S2,500ea. &amp; aQ2-5858.
locked galt. 1 High 11101 lor ptr·
12x60 Recemtw remodeled, must manent c-bina, 112 acres, some Now Taking Applications- 35
Welt 2 Bedroom Townhault
see appreciate. 304-675-6149.
locked, tome nol, same utilities. Apanmonta S2051Mo., 740-44812x65 Trailer 3bt', 1 bath. SS.SOO. Wr!tt or ¥isit Roy &amp; Nancy See· 0008.
Cal 30 4-875-48?8.
Pleuant Ridge Rd . 10 Miles
,;_,~_;._;.______ I South ot Pt. Pleasant oil WV Rt
One bedroom apartment in Mid·
14r70.38R, $1189 Down &amp; ONlY 2GallipolisFerri,WV.
dlepor~ 740·~·217&amp;
1179' per_mo. Free air &amp; free lklrt· Nice teveltot ~43 112' x 123') on
if"G. 1-88&amp;9.28-3&lt;t26.
Broadway Street, Middleport, One bedroom apartment in Mid·
1g70 12J080 3br, 1 bolh. on rentod $8000, 74D·992-6968, leave mas· dlopor~ all u~lldeo paid, $270 per
month, S1 DO do,ooll, call 7'40·
aage.
lot 304-882-3691 .
992·711011.
1a13 12x65 Cameron trailer 2br 360
Real Estill
Point Plaasanl WV: Nice 5 Raom
w11 room add -on . s•,5DO. 3D4Wanted
Unlurnishad
Aporlmenl, 304-6 75;882-38t2.
•
1115,Aftor8RM.
Cash Paid For Land In Gallia
1978 1-ix70 Mobile Home Minor County, Blackburn Raalty, 740·
RIVER BEND PUCE
Repair $6,000 Includes ,AC &amp;

$25,000 740-2SH574.

AKC Slber.ian Husky Pups e
weeks, 111 snors, Wormed, 740.
379-2383Calhy.

.-2802.

N8W single efficiency apartment In
Middleport, uiiHII•• paid, $375
plus dopOII~ 7&lt;10-1102·5004.

30 Acres With Timber Clolt To

Galllpolll Wlth Good Home Site,

auumeloan,
owner.
watef· menta,
nancing available.
3)4-755-7191
basement repairs
estimates, llfallma Anentipn Mobile HomeOWners:
guarantee. 10ytt on job axperi· Areaa l&amp;fQft&amp;l Inventory Of ln18r· like Naw DupleX. large livi119
enca. 304-875-21•5.
therm &amp; Coleman Hut Pumpa, Room, Fully Equipped Kitchen,
.~
Air Condilionen, Furnaces &amp; o;nlng Aroi, 2 Btdroomo, ShaM&lt;
Parts. Huge Buying Power Meant /Bath, WID Hook-Up, Altached
The loweat Installed Price, Easy Garage, AC, Fully Carpeled, 2 112
Over The Phone Bank Financing. Miles West On 588, 740· 446Call Bennett't Mobi'* Fiomtt HTG 2802.
&amp; CLG 1-800-872-5967.
'
.
Nlca clean, 2br, references &amp; deBUY IN MARCH
poai~ no pols. 304-675-5182.
No Paymontalln~ ..Illy 111118
2 Apartments In Rio Gra•de
"
E·Z Flni..:01g
Calt Fini~Una
Area : Acron From College, 1·
. All real estate adventslng In
t·too-848-5878 ,
Roonf, 1 Bath, Utilitiet Included.
tnis newSpaper Is sub)ectto
Frao
Set-up
l
0o1vtry
$200/Mo. Deposit Required; 1
the Federal Fair Housing Act
Bedroom Apartment S2901Mo.;
at t96a which makes it illegal
Clayton Mobile , Homo Fow Ullllllos Included, 1·888·8•D·
to adventse ~anv preference,
Months Old, like N.w On Large 0521 .
limitatiOn or discrimination
Rented lot, Soil Choopl 740-+t0baSed on race. color, reflgion.
0428.
Single HouN 2 Bedroomo, Cull~
sex famtual status or national
Hlotorlc, Reolden11al Ar11, Dooriglfl , or any Intention to
Discount
Mobile
Home
PartsVI··
&amp; l~~~~:.~7•:o~·:":6~-2~2:6~7,
Acceuortaa·
Water
Heatett;
make any such preference,
nyl Skirting Kits $299 .95, An·
limitation or d iscrimination .~
chora, Wood &amp; Fiberglall Steps, Two bedraom house, clean, re-

This newspaper wftl not

Are Vaur loaking For Avon Pro.
ducta But Don't Know Whtrt To
Find Them? Aloo, It You Would
like To Soli Avon, Call Plm At

aponsible party. to take on amall
monthly payments. Good credit a

·
1
1994 16x80
India&amp;, E•celant
Condition 314 Aero lend, Locoted
on Hllliop Drive "" Neighborhood
Road S-44,000 (740)-441--0681

C&amp;!IToUFtee
1-800-21a-eooo Ext G· 2814.

AKC Collie pupa, aable &amp; white ,
3. logal Size Filing Cablnoto, 4 S250 oach : AKC Sholtlo pupo,
Drawer With locka, llko New, llble l whitt, bl-black, trl, $250$250 For AI17&lt;0-2Se·1218.
$350 ; AKC Pomeranian pupo,
-=------:-:----::--1 male1, beauUtul colora, $350
exa Haav~ duty utility trailer, each; 111 vat checked ancl ahota,
road reef!)' Wlloading rampo. 30&lt;1- dow r - . 01u 700-elle·
675-e348.
1085

On l

I :::::::_::=-::~--::-:----­

8am-5pm.

FREE

u

so•·

1981 Oakwood 1085. $12,500.
axe. cond. 1988 Clayt,on 14x70
wfheat pump. $13,900. Will de·
liver local. Call K .&amp; K Mobile
Homes 304·675-3000 barween

1he ollllrlru.

D - •··

MerchandiM

ot BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wutwood Driv.o
340 Business and
!rum U78 to 135&amp;. Walk to shop
l movlu Call ~•D-446- 2568.
Buildings
Cornrnata.J Bulldingl For Silo 0r Ell'* Hclualng Oppooamll)'.
Leua: 2 Buildlnga In ContorviUt, Furnished Efflp.,.cy Apartment,
OH Between Gallipolie &amp; Jack- Can1ral Heat &amp; Air Conditioning.
101\ Juat Off Rt. 35 BolftoOn Slme
Carpal Throughout, Privola Park·
lot, Alao lncludoa Houu Pro- lng , All Utilitlea Furnlohed Except
aondy Being Rented, Call
54Ha73. Or 304-085-3381 , Hoi· Electric, Private I Cult1. 740·

AUCTION '

Ml10ellaneou1

sale

1·~ 8 ieT ~ P

tonk, "handy man apocial",
$10,000, 81•·237-()125.

~44-:-:0~~---- ~ 540

Mobile Homes

.

2 AKC Rag Booton Torrion 1·
mala 1-r.mala · over 1yr old,
hOuH brolton, bur ono got ana
ktl. 30«171-2215.
'
.

A Gtoom Shop ·Pill Grooming.
•Foaturtne Hrdro la111. Don
Sheoll. 373 ·Gtorgea CrHk Rd.
7«1 4~8 0231 .

Rottwoilor pupplas, s male, 3 fe.
malt, $150 each, ut aho11,
wormed &amp; vet checked, ready 10
go, 30&lt;1-882-3021 .

1971,.Chtvy Caprice 400 engine,

QOO!konditlon. 30«17!&gt;-5744.

1886 Chavy A1tro cargo van,
good condition, $2,150, 740-1182·

1875 lincoln Mark IV Good 480
Engine And Au to Trane. $800

61SU~er

140·-~-

5pm.

198a Bronco II XlT, V·B aulomalic, air, loaded, 175, opo
miles, looks and ,uns ooQd,
$2800, 7&lt;0-24H282.

v-e-

au·
1880 Ponllac Leman I,
tomatlc:, g~ad running, no ru11,
7-2-7302 evoningo.

.

.

1087 Corvette convertible, white.
304-67!&gt;-5843.

740

disc, lnttrnatlonal,

•AKJ0987
•

·It
3NT

BARNEY

s•

WHAT'S WRONG
WITH TH' OLD I

~=: ;:.:~~~~: f:~:~
3089.

-IF«·

3 PI Hildl Diak, 3 PI
tllzer Spreader 2 Honedrawn
Turning Plows, Mulch Ha1. 740·
446-.s.M.
AC 2 row no till corn planter.
John Deere 7fr. hay bint. Ford
10ft transport dlsk, .allln good
condition. 30&lt;1-273-4215.
Beat The Spring Rueh, get ~Our
mowers &amp; trlntmers tuned up
now. Sldats Equipment Hendaf'aon,
304-87S.742t .

wv.

John Daere 20 tO (UIIel tracror,
42hp., wide lront, good tubber,
$4100: 20 hp. Nome lawn •actor,
two voars old, 41!" cu~ $900, 740742-2387.'
Mault Forguaon 1010 4 WD
With Still Mower, $5,898 1•0·
258-1530, 740-258-1371.
Your Area John
For RooidonUai·A~{c;~-;.,;;;_;;;!~
lawn Equlpmont Compoct Utility
Tractoro From 20 To 38 HP. All
.Sizet or .. wo And 2 WO Farm
Tractors, Ha~ EquiPment. John

=eu~l"t!~~~~s.~~:!
AI 2.g% On lawn Tractoro And

l'OW Rott Frnancing On Now And
Used Equipment Carmichael's
Farm &amp; · law~ Gallipolis, OH 740·
448·2•·121-800·584-1111.

630

Livestock

51 Fair Pigs 40-tiOiba $550o. Call
304·578·2570. MiltoRalnay.
Angut bull, 14 months old, appro•. 2so lba .•
qso. 7•0742-2133.

·seoo

~~~-----------IPECIAL -NG
FEEDER CALf SALE
.
AthonaUvH1ockSaiUrday, AptP 111h 1 P.M. AM
eon~~g,.,. Wei"""". Halling
Available. Canlo Aa:opled Allar
4 P.M. Fridal. 7ol0-!'&gt;82-2322 Or
.7-8-3531

CIIAIIPION DRIVE

.. ClUB PIG~
Friday, April 10, 1998 7 P.M.
Fayal.te
Co.
Fairgrounds,
Waohlngton, C. H. Ohio, Salling
200 Head Free Buwlng Service
Sale Day Phone: 814 -335-9120:
Goner Genetics, 614·871-7897,
614-875-1892: JadV Swine Farm
614·884:4147, Rick Siarr 114·
998-5347, 8U·JI98-2515, Nor•:
Go/1/a Co. Champion W•• Putchasld From Thil Salt, 4 Ynrs
Cur 018, Come Talu&gt; Atook/
Club Pigl Excellent Bloodline,
Botn January 24th To Februarw
28ih, Call 740-24!&gt;-5872. Or 7&lt;0387-o583.
Ea11er rabbits, 4·H rabbill .1
chie~ns, Pine Grove Farm,
Roclno. Ro1J0r Dillon, 740 ·G4g-

Auto With Air, S3,SOO, 740· 379 ·
9105 Evenings.
1990 Cadillac Seville high mileago, like new_ s•.3DD. 30 4 .8 75.
1651 or 304-5 75-6197_

1g98 Honda Shadow American
Clantc Edition 1100« Excellent
Condition, Lots Of Exlra'al $7,000
Firm, 740-448·0883 Davo Aflor 5
P.M. &amp; Weekends 740....a-137t . ·

1991 .Chevrolet Caprk:a 'station
Wagon , EMcellent Condition,
65, 175Mile' l40-446-oo 24 _

1998 Kawasici Bayou ,. Wheeler
Excallanl Condition, 2 Year Fac·
lory Warranl)' 12.500, 74D·258·
6888 LMVI Meluge.

19;4 Yamaha VZ125 Excellent
Shape. Runs Good, . Asking
St,800, 700-441·1890.

1991 Chevy lumina car, 3.1 Euro
model. V-8. 8 1.ooo miles, blue 1987 XL883 Sporllltr, BlaCk
with blUe interior, two door. all op- Whh 1200 Kit, Too Many Extras
tiona, 4soo 080, 74o.g4g.23 11 To Lilli Fonward Controls $9,500,
dayt or 7,.0.049·264-4 awnings.
740-3N-Q105 Evenl!lll.

s

1992 Buicl! lo5abfo SE. White, • 750 Boats &amp; Motors
Door Sedan, Eacollonl Condition,
lor
1 Lacal Ownar, Pleall Call Afler
e P.M. 740-4..S.:.1543.
'84 170 B111mt11ttr bass boat,
135 hp. Evlnrudo, now OMC ooll·
1992 Oida Delta 88 Ro1a1 Excel- 01g motar, -llvto walo, Pro Pod.lent Condition. Take Ove, Pay - 11talltat, lou of storage, rides
men11, l&lt;D-3118-9128, 740· 388· ;.~3~uns great, $350Q, 740·885·
8851
- - ·- - - - - - - - 1 - . . , . . . - - - - - - - 1993 Dodge Shadow ES, V·8, 5 ·1~ Ft: Flbarglaaa Boat Johnaon
Speed, lao dod, $2,100 080: 86 - · Now Sallo, Cttrptt,
1111110 Dodge Spltil ES. V-o, Auto, (load Trailer, t1,500, 740·318-loaded, $1,200 080, 74D-258- _113_54_.-:-----:---1233
·
111eg Sea Imp 1a 112ft dotp-V, ·
1994 Plymouth Sundance Aula, "beige Wiland lnlerlo;, ec::yl •
Air, 4 Ooora, Excellent Condition, t80hp. Mercrulser Inboard mator,
740-448·9552.
wilh trailer, life prlltrvers &amp;
bumpors.W, 750· 81 .. 44B-38 14.
1005 Cutll's Supreme.Sl, V-8
.
.
Engine. loaded, s 12.000 Front 1975 GlaalrOn Tri·Hull Wllh Tratl·
wo, !Sunroof 304 •1575• 4888 er 85 HP Mercurw Molor, 304Work;Homo:304-m-S2CO.
·.:.87_!&gt;-_7;..52:..1_
. ------11178
Allroglall
Fiberglus Ball
1g95 , Dodge Sltatua 31,DOO
Mllea. Take Over Pavrnenll, 740- Baal And Trailer ·No Motor, Only
Trolling Motor. No Reasonable
2!i&amp;-8381.
·
Ol1or Reluaod, 740-441-1415.
1988 Monio Carlo, Au-tic, Ex. eeltent CandiiiOn, 22,000 Mllea, 1981 Ya10oha G.a Converted To
loaded, $15,300, Firm, 740-388- ·15 HP Ouibolld Englno Slored
Inside Excellenl Condition Runs
. 8099 _ , , _ . , 11 A.M.
Grtall $1,00D OBO 740·4461898 Z·24 Cavalier, All PDwer, 71011.
Sunrool ~ Speed, Kevltll Entoy,
CD Play11, New Tires, .13,000, KIWt!!llld STS Jet Ski, still under
warranly, three •ater, 83 horaa000, 740·44Hl235.
powar, bought new Jul1 of '87.
Bod Credit, No Credit, -rupt· three matching KaWiuki ski
. &lt;17 Wo Con Holpl Bonk Financ- VIlli and trailer all go with II,
ing On Used Vehicles. 140·441- tSOOO, 740-11'\9·2203 or 740-9•9·
2045, will conaidar lrada for a
0507.
good poniOon boot
·
1980 -t990 Cars For S100111
Seized And Sold
760. Auto Parts &amp;
locany ThsMonlh.
AccessOries
Trudl, .., •._ Et&lt;:.

FR,o\NK &amp; EARNEST

·-.
.,
.I

-

(

:

'·

J//IC
,,
.
'

.. ,,.

.,l'Ht: BORN LOSER
I

';-rop I'IZC:'\.OOtlb

I CAN'T l-IlT

ALITTLE KID

em: HIM ..

LIKE TJ.IAT..

Camplf'l &amp;
Motor Homes

sate·

or
·a F d F 5 E
1 or
1 0 atondod Cab,
short bed, XLT, 351 automatic:,
bod~nar. vilor, 1~,000 mlleti, two
rone brown, $4200 000. 740 .840_
2844 01 740-941M874.
:-:::::-:::-"-:-:-=------1
1972 Chevy Good Condlllon Wilh
Now Tlras, Erhaust, AJot Of Er·
traot 7«l·258.jj574.

·

~

!'!!!

iO,OOOMilea
Pllono (304J~11Itl

810

Home

"Compfott Blondi'!.fl I Spr•oodilng,(188G Chevy S· IO, 4 Cjl., 5 sp.,
lmprovlmlflll
Loca•: NNt Gllta
ladder rack &amp; tool bo1, runs &amp;
look a good, $2,200 080; 304 ·
'A. . .NT
1 112 MHo Soull1 Ol
882·3821 ·
m , On Jlmoo Emory Road,
W~TER-IIQ
Hil, 7&lt;0-612..-. .
19!11 S-10 Truck 8a,OOO MUoa. 5 Uncondillol1flllifotlmo IJUOran. ..
Spood, 740-•48·7318.
local rotoroncoo turniahed. EaTRANSPORTATION
:'::-:-':--:':~:=-::.::...-:-'-::'-1 mbltshtd .1G7S, Call (7"lla:!
1 - Ford F-350 Cr8W Cob Duel- ~70 0&lt; 1·800-287·057t.
~-:-----,.~-----JIY P.U. 7.3 Turbo Oiaaat, Auto #_,pftJOIIII(I.
710 Autollor S.ll
Trona, 3 Dlllllrtnt Hiie:llaa, 12.000
-:MIIoa.
__:-S25-._000-740.,.-"..:~..:2394=·---I Apjifionca Par,. And 8onr0..: All
1gV4 S·10 Pick·Up, LS, 8 Cylin· No1111 Branda Ovor 21YMra Er·
dar, Air, Sharpl740...
porion.. All Work GUir11ntMd
Fronch City May1ag, 740-441:
730 VIlli &amp; 4·WDa
'83 Ponlac Grand Prix SE, whi10
C&amp;C • Ganeral Home Matnwith gray tn1onar, Mag ,whttll, 1a70 S1aplldo " ' 1100 au10, au1omalc, :1.1, apoilar, vory n1co 33&gt;1 2.50 tlru $3,500. 304,.75- 10Mnt:a- Plinttrlg, •tnyl aiding,
7370.
. . _ , , doorl, ..- . btf1t.
... M750, 740--2311 days or
...... hOmo - " and .... Fr..
1g89 Dodgo co,.orlion Vtsn AI loot Hdma•· call Cha~ 7 711J--- - · Exlblo, fS,SOO, For Soia Or
6323.
1-.441a.

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

ms.

rri.ta,

840 Ellclllcllllld

1818 F·1SO 4X4, 302 5 apltd,
10,..r..._t1Qn·
•;;;;i;::"
lhor1 bed, air, 1001bor, American j~kj;;;'j,_;rjj;;-;;;;;;;
Recine Whaols. $3800, 304-n3- ~

I

50311

·
·
t1180 F-2110 •
5 Spoid, Iliaool. ,7,800, 740 ue 0311.

wo,

--•-or

- c i a l wiring,

.....,. or,..,..._ Mo.., 1).
unttcl aloctrlclan. R~nour
Eloc1rlcal, ~. 304·171-

1711.

•

2111'• along
alelfyl

Phillip Alder
Teaching bridge is a lot of fun for
me. Yet occasionally I set up a prac- ·
lice deal for a panicular theme. only
to realize;, when it is being p!ayed by
my students. that an alternative line
works much beuer.
Today's deal is an example. Tak·
ing the club suit in isolation, what is
the right play for only two losers?
And how do you play in live diamonds given the full North and
South hands?
The bidding is 'txciting. Despite
only nine high-card points, East is
right to overcall two spades. Opposite
some di.amond length. South bids the
contract he thinks he can make_ But
West finds a ·good vulnerable sacrifice: four spades doubled is only one
down. Yet South gives five dia- ,
moods a try.
Taken on its own. the correct play
in the club suit is low to tbe nine,
then. assuming it loses to the jack or
queen. low to the JO. This works
whenever West has the jack or queen
(or both). The alll:i'native of low to
t~e king works only when West has
the ace. II is better 10 play West for
one of l'!'o cards (Ihe jack or queen) .
rather than one specific card (the
ace).
However. with a nonclub lead. the
contract is Jaydown even if l::a.&lt;t stan·
ed with.the ace-queen·jack of clubs.
South draws the missing trump using
his ace or king. unblocks his top
heans, crosses to dummy's diamond
·queen. ruffs the last bean in hand, and
plays offtlie~pade ace. Having eliminated the majors, he lead&lt; a club' to
dummy's nine, endplaying Ea.&lt;t. He'
must either return a club, whtch
allows dummy's king to score, or
concede a ruff-and-discard.

to
a positive ·manner. This is an ani·
'
.
nn
· tude that brin-gs happines~.
~ ThuOOlly. Apnl 9• I,.,.g .
.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) .A
11te most notable SUCCC11SCS 10 the
h · f · ·fi
I
ahead
l'k l I orne frum maner I ans 0 s1gm tcance 0 you
yende!U'
ore .t e Y oadcY. begun materiallycanbefinishedtoyoqr5at·
· . f · oda
the
le· ·t
e a~ors ~ou ve a1re
very as'
- ARIES ( arch-2t:April -l9l Try .. 1s actton I . y. or. a1
.
.d b k
put on the track to succtlll.
to opc;rate tn a ·131 • ~ manner
LEO.(July 23-Aug, 22) Your obvi·
.!odaY 10 •II or your affairs. even .1:: ous fai~s will ant·act favorable~ that could make you 3 111
·attention from Olhers today. Should a
testy. Relax and let others WOI'!YI mediaior of sons be required, you'll
about what to do .00 how to do 11 • .........,.,y be pe"•ed for the assign·
Know where to I~ for romancund ""~ .
eo
you'll ti'nd _it. 11te Allro·G~pll ~iRGO (AuJ. 23-Sept. 2i) Fol·
~aJchmaker mst~tly re~ :whr low your Innate instincts · today
11gns a~ romant~eally .-.ea or reprding ways to keep your maleriyou. Mad $2.7S 10 ltbldltllliker. cl,o , aJ afl'airs in proper balance. Your val·
this newspiiiCr. P.O. ~x 17S8. Mur· ue consciousness will be keen and
ray Hill Slalion, New Yort. NY you'll know bow to walk 1he'nmow
10156.
· ·
line of gain
·
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Out·
LIBRA (Sept. 23.0Ct. 23) Today
doorlldivitieslhll~ityou~ouse you're likely 10 be a much better
your metllll and pllys1cal attnbutes leader than a follower. In matters of
could ·wort ~ for you today personal imporllii!Ce. take meuures
wltMI your feehnp of well-belns are 10 keep the c0111101 of tllings in your"
- - Don't'be. couch~· halllk
. GEMINI (toby 21·1une 20) SIN· . scORPIO (OcL 24-Nov. 22) If
ltionl in ·~ ~ld 80 _tldter you handle impqrtant developmen!S
smoothly for you luuey, OW108 10

focus
lion on you. you'll be far more
effective· today. Don't worry about
recognition. credit will come .to you
later.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov; 23-Dec.
21)-,Try -lo go where the-action is
today so that you can enjoy others.
lltey. in tum. will enjoy you. Yciu"tl
be able to mi~ comfonably with any
group or sathering.
. CAPRICORN (~. 22-Jan. 19)
By undetpbying recent achievements
: you can enhance your image 1oday.
Exercise humility and let a.&lt;sociates
do all the boasting on your behalf.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19)
' · The key til aening maximum coop. eration from 'others loday is -10 treat
,; them e•actl)"a.\ you"d like to be ueated. Try it. you'lllike it•· aild so l"'ill
. they.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma(Ch 20) You
'could be extremely lucky today in
ways that will not be i_mmedia1ely
obvious. SolllCOite miaht do some·
thing consbueli~e to advance your
interest, but you niay not learn of it
until !a1er.

There's·no
way arountlit,
Classified Ads·
World

•

30 IJidy'a - .
u~nt
31 s.
fDJt
37 GaM " tlljlh

31-·-·

• Q

.

'(OIJR D06

::720::';;;Trucks::"'~;:..:f=::-:---l

-.OCK LIIE
6 FEIITIUZER .

1G70 Chovallo Mailbu 355, Mu·
nclo • SPotd, BodV Good. Runo
Good, 1!Ira Rolllaa Lot More Accauorlea To Go Wl111 It te.OOO
711J-4411-.

BO
v .·

1-800-522-2730. )( 3D01 .
New gaa lanks, t ton truck
Credit Problems? We Can Help. wheels &amp; tadiators. 0 &amp; R Auto,
E111 Bopk Financing Foo Used Ripley, WV. 30•·372-3933 or 1\lthit.:lea, No Turn Odwns, Call b-273-1328.
7·_____ WANTED . TO BUY:
.,.vicki
__
.• ;_'7..,.00-4;.._46--.:,...:289:.:....;
t961 ·
1
Seized Cars From $175. PoriCh- Through 1972 CheVtlla Or Elca·
et, Cadlllaca. Chev~s. BMW's,. mlno Cons~.fa, ·Can Also Be A
Corvenea. Also Jeeps, .tWO's. 1i70 Throuah 1872 Manta C.rlo
Youi Area. Toll Frtt ·1-800 -218· Conoole. "iiiiST BE HORSHUE
9000 h t A·2814 For Current SHIFTER fYPI" Phona : 740·
li&amp;tilll•·
.
441·1053.

11!84 Yallow S1ona Camper, 35', 2
oapandO'I, full lizt bedroom
2088.
1 - llzo bod), full lize 1\Vino &amp;
~1Chon, tul li&lt;e 11.,.. &amp; ref.,
Palomino Ouarler Hora1, good
new carpet, vlnvl, Ill window•
'
oai horle. 30«17!&gt;-5040.
havtp custom Kirsh bllndll11m;
~raaw. 11)ust ' " to appreclale.
640 Hay &amp; Grain
Hrious calls only, $8500, 740t
Straw for oa1o, $2.00 por bole,
11112-6173, 711J-1182-:!1115.
7&lt;0-1182-3853.
Ca-"".
11185 Fl•t:•~fl ~~u~
~.
...,....,
Seed &amp; Fertilizer
.:.:.=.~~::-:.:.:.~--:--~-1 Fumac:e,
·..,...,, - . SlrM.
1111 Ch'!'?Trudt
Ex1ra Nlco, Usod Vary . LiUit• .
Dtkllb Sood Corn. Kay ·Farmo.
Cuo10m 30, Ble~ n Color. LoadS3,1J90, 30&lt;1-773-511W.
·
•
Call 304-875-1501 If No Anowor
ad, 8ofl)' In Root Good Sl1apo,
SERV~CES
Loovo - -· $5.500. Fac10ry
II10Ck •54,

6511-

·,"

s:r.eoo.

790

Pass

Pass
Pass

28 Nolautol
28 Actor Navello

41

Moltlar-Gif~
.,.....
.-

42 Au.ntlofi.

• getting aound

.43 Colotfill •
44Prod

45 Pulla .
47 Fruit

By

sale

Upton Used Caro Rtll2·3 Mlfeo
South ot leon, wv. Financing
Avella*. 304-456-1089.

26

Paas
' Pass

...trod.

12 Aida (abbr.)
18SIMDatage

22 - of London
23 WI'IW'a encl.
24 Sc:hacllllli '
25 Holey
.

·Another line
lurking in
the trees

II

!Oilao, ercellorit condllion, $1500,
7&lt;1().742-3t04 ovonlngo:
111111 Honda 250r • Wheeler Lola
Of Em'o174-44H418.

Mettler Tire&amp; Ercellont ConditiOn,
12.200, 304-882-21!il.

2.

4A

O~ning lead:

ONE?

..

Pass

1D 01 an ag&amp;
11 City In

21GulciH

6 4 3 2

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Soulh
Wesl North Eaal

Motorcycles

_ _·_ s-_..;_tD;...- - - - - - 1
1989 Corsica high miles. new
&amp;
$
•o 30 4 675
1·
.
rea c ..~~~.' 1 ·Ro1 .db ·
•
5'253
' ·-,uurn a ·
199Q Bereita 2.2 Four Cylinder

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Auto, Air, High Miles. s1 ,soo. ·1903 ~250 Proactlon 5 uapan~~E;~~fl~ol!d!,~ro~ad~y~,$:8:50:11989
liOn Boyesen Rad Valve New
304 87 13
1210 David
diesel, front
manure lork, bale iplar and
bale loader, good condition,
SSOOO: 1115-t John Deere manure
oprooder, high flollllon tlreo, 220

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Water Cooled, Shott Drive, LlkA
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=-~=-::--:-::"-=~-1 Now, 740-441·0443.
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1888 Fonl Eacort OT
Red In CGIDr, Tirea New,laaded,
1987 Yamaha 350 Warrior Good
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$1900, call 740·949-2203 or 740•
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S1,350, 740-245.508 7.

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1981 Chryoler LeBaron 91 ,DOD
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SCIA,tjl UTS ANSWEIS

Wheeze • Rusty- Judge -Jaunty· REST we HAD .
"When this trip is over," the wife moaned, "I wHihave
to sleep for three weeks lo get rested frory1 the REST
- we HAD."

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P,~~ge 16 • The Dally Sentinel

•
Wednesday, April'&amp;, 1998

Pomeroy • -Middleport, Ohio .

He hurts, she hurts ...

'

Wonien hurt mOre, in more ·places, but cope better
ly I"AUL kECER

discomfort sour their mood.
"Women (cported 40 percent
·· BETHESDA, Md. ,(AP)
. more pain than men. but women
Women are more likely to feel coped better with it," said Dr. Franaches .aad pains than are men. but cis Keefe of Ohio University.
He's the aUihor of a !tudy of
":'?lllen are better at c'oping, reccvenn11 and not letting such physi.:al pain iri 99 women and 48 men suf.
afflictions upset their lives, fcring from arthritis.
researchers say.
Women, said' Keefe, tended to
, •Studies prescnte&lt;l Tuesday at a regard pain as a call-to-action, and
cpnference of the National lnsti - they took measures to overcome the
lutes of Health found that the abili- discomfort or to relieve it through
ty_·,t o.deal with pain gives women a what he called "emotional copstrength denied to suffer-i n-silence ing." This coping included di smales.
tracting activities, venting emo·A; study of men and women who tions, seeking support of others and
had arthritis, a common disorder of even finding comfort in prayer.
asing that affects both genders,
Men used fewer such coping
foilnil that wome n tended to have a skills and, in the long run , suffered
keener sense of pain than men, but more.
that men were more apt to let the .After a day of arthritis pain, said

AP Scle~~te Writer

Keefe, "men have a greater carryover of negative mood.
Women are.less likely to report a
negative mood," meaning that they
have more quicklv recovered from
the emotional efkcts of the pain.
li. woman's keener perception
and vulnerability to pain, in the
long run, "g•ves them greater
strength, " said Dr. Karen Berkley, a
pain researcher at Florida State
University.
"Their tendency to identify pain
and to do something about it is
greater. " said Berkley. "This is a
positive thing . ... It (the tendency)
puts women in the condition of
being able to mobilize ways to cope
and to conquer pain."
For in stance, said Berkley,
women are more apt to prepare for

the pain they know is comins from
childbirth or surgery, and seck solu·
tions in advance.
They learn to cope with , tech·
niques such as relaxation or distraction or by seeking expert help.
Men, however, tend to wait and
get ambushed by pain and then
cope poorly.
" A man tends to say 'it's going
to hurt, but when I get to it, I will
deal with it,"' said Berkley.
These gender differences disap· ,
pear, she said, when a serious,
painful dise~se, such as cancer,
takes hold.
. Part of person's perception and ·
response to pain is lew;ned in child·
hood, said Dl. Patricia McGrath of '
the Child Health Research Institute
in London, Ontario.

For instance, she said, children
tend to evaluate their own injuries
by how their parents react.
"Children look to l'eir parents
for how to respond to bumps and
scrapes," said McGr~
"The more a child is taught to
not show pain. the les ilcely they
are to show it."
Women also are conditioned
toward pain by recurreni head and
abdominal disoomfort ellen ex peri·
enced in the preteen years, said
McGrath.
An experiment in mice suggests
that estrogen, a female hormone,
and testosterone, the male hormonc, cause a different perception
of pain, reports Dr. William !senberg ofthe University of California,
San Francisco.

·-

· He sai4 tests show male mice
have a higher tolerance for pain
thallfemale mice.
. .
But when females are InJected
with testosterone, they tend to rcaet
to pain in the same way as ma.les_.
Conversely, males .'"!ect~d wat~
estrogen become femmme tn thear
pain response. .
.
.
Isenberg satd thts reacuon
apparently can be local effect.
For instance, when one paw of a
female mouse is injected with ~ale
hormone, she wtll react to P~ln tn
that paw just like a male mouse
while cpntinuing to have the female
pain response in the other paw. ·
"Testosterone tends to raise the
threshold 'of pain , while estrOj!en
can lower the threshold," he s•id.

Feminist leaders finding themselves at odds.over Paula Jones ruling
By MICHELLE BOORSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
Feminist leaders are finding
themselves at odds with one another
on nearly every aspect of the Paula
Jones ruling : Was it legally or
morally correct? Will it -make ,men.
more cautious in the workplace or less? Was President Clinton let
off easy or unfairly taken to task '!
"I think at this time, a good
many feminists are very relieved
that this case was dismissed," said
· Catharine A. MacKinnon, a law
professor at the universities of

Michigan and Chicago who writes
about women's ~sues.
Former Rep. Pat Schroeder said
she agreed with U.S. District Judge
Susan Webber Wright's ruling last

From some .quarters came the of the National Organi. .on for
same silence that has existed since Women.
Mrs. JQnes filed the ·lawsujt four
"Women .were going to go with
the policy decisions and _the one
years ago.
Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan, who supported their politics," IreAnita Hill and former Texas Gov. land said. "But I think it matters
Ann Richards either declined inter- I how the president treats women and'
.view requests from The Associated 11would like a better set of cimices."
Some feminists said the ruling
Press or failed to return repeated
phone messages asking foi com· conforms with current jexual
ment on W(ight's dismissal of 'he . harassment law, which hasn't yet
defined how a single incid~nt case.
"It's outrageous that the feminist like the one Mrs. Jones allejed establishment never supported her," could ~ severe enough. to dijhlpt a
Paglia said of Mrs. lone~. "Just person's work environment.
because it's not legally actionable
Others said Wright had erred.
doesn't mean we have to refrain
"If you try and remove yourself
from making ethical judgments."
from the· politics of this and say,
Feminists made ~ political' deci- what's the law going to do when
sion, said Patricia Ireland, president · women get called 'into the_CEO's

week, which said that Clinton's
alleged behavior may ha ve been
"boorish and offensive" but was

the Philadelphia University of the
Arts.
MacKinnon said the ruling
shows that "what's done to women
not sexual as~tault.
. Mrs . Jones said Clinton sum- · doesn 't count and men do."
"What .(tha ruling) means is that
moned her to a Little ~ock , Ark.,
hotel room in 1991 and exposed women think they're going to have
to put up with men exposing themhimself to her.
Asked ;.,hethcr she would have selves at work because that isn 't bad
felt harassed if what Mrs. Jones enough to be considered severe by'
claimed had happened to her, the courts," she said.
Eleanor Smeal , president of the
Schroeder said: "No. I would have
been disgusted, sick, mad and all Feminist Majority in Arlington, Va.,
sorts of other things, .but as long as agreed wi!9 the decision.
She said women have noted the
you've got your job and no one
knows it's transpired ... ."
support Mrs. Jones did get and will
" He drops his pants - if that take comfort from it.
isn 't sexual harassment, then some"I believe it will embolden some
thing is really wrong," said Camille women who thought they didn't
Paglia, a lecturer and writer from have a case;" Smeal said.

·Detla BtJrke redesigns her

lif~

with a book, new line of clothing

'

'

.By REON CARTER
The Cincinnati Enqulrer
Delta Burke has rebounded
from the pain of her much·
publicized weight gain and
"Designing Women" set bat·
ties to blos~om into a confident woman. comfortable with
herself inside and out.
To promote her book
"Delta Style: Eve Wasn't A
Size 6 and Neither Am I" (St.
Martin's; $24.95) co-aulhored
with Alexis Lipsitz, the actress
has embarked on . a 15-city
tour and hit the talk-show circuit to share a message of survival.
She recently talked about
her new book and attitude.
QUESTION: How would
you describe your book? It
seems to be part autobiography, style, beauty and self·
esteem guide.
ANSWER: We sold the
beauty book idea first. That's
where the makeup and
y,:ardrobe tips come in, but i
didn't want to stop there. I'm
a complex woman. I needed to
share my story because I
thought it would be helpful to

other women. Maybe they're n'l really mater. I could lose
going through some of the I0 pounds withoul . even try·
same things I did and are won- ing. (At her heaviest, she was
deringhowigottowherelam 215 pounds and a size 22.
emotionally ... When I started She's satisfied with her size
my clothing line, I experi· 14·16 today).
enced such an outpouring of
There were times when I
emotion from · people . This had a special cook and fitness
book is my way of sharing trainer and was very unhappy.
with them.
·
I' didn't lose anything.
Q. Were there parts you · I'm tryi_ng to get people to
were hesitant to share?
feel good about themselves. I
A. No, not really. I was pretty wasted my youth not believopen about everything. I've ing in myself and punishing
always been a talker, a sharer. myself. I'm 41 now. I didn't
That's not to say some things want to be in my 60s making
weren't hard 10 revisit.'
the same mistakes.
Things got pretty ugly at Q. Do the Delta Burke Col·
"Designing Women," and lection and Delta Blue Jeanlooking through a lot of old swear (launched In 1994)
clippings brought back memo- key into the mind~body link
ries. (She starred as Suzanne that you emphasize?
Sugarbiiker on the CBS comeA: Yes. I think the clothing
dy for five seasons).
helps women feel better no
But I tried to keep the over- matter where they are on lhe
all tone of the book upbeat, so weight scale. ·
in the end it would be inspira- .
I know when I'd put on
tional.
dumpy clot)les, I felt more
Q. What's your message?
depressed. When you put on
A. I wanted to show how prelty clothes or sassy clothes,
much is in the head.
you can act accordingly.
I found that when I've been .. · Before I started my line,
happy living life to the fullest, there weren'l a· whole lot of
the issue about !llY weight did· options out there for real-sized
women (sizes 14-26) besides
the same ol' big tents in dark
colors. Or stuff like big
sweaters with balloons on
them that were puffed up with
air. We certainly didn • t need
more of that. It was very frus·
!rating.
.
Q; Why do you prefer real·
size to the more often used
plus-size label?
A. Because bigger women
are reality. Many of the
images of beauty that we are
bombarded with are not reali·
ty for the average woman.
Q. Do you think everyone
can get something out of
your book?
A. Yes, especially women.
It doesn't malter what size you
are. It's all psychological.
Once you get to that good
place in your head, anyoJ!C
can be ·happier with who they
are.
Q. Why dic;l you . and bus·
hand Gerald McRaney (star
of CBS's "l&gt;romlsed Land")
to make your home
· in N~w Or,leans, so far from
Hollyw01J(I? •
A. We discovered it logelhcr. ll's a unique. friendly place
that's great fun . Orlando is my
real ho"1c10wn. but New
Orleans has become my new
·~
one. Mac is itl S:tll Lake City

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lance and wor~ing around our
schedules better this season.
He's always been there for me
whenever! .needed his sup·
port.
Q. Does the book and the
success of your clothing line
and Butterick
patterns
mean you.' re giving up acting?
, ·

(

t

A. These other projects
have taken up a lot of my time
in the last couple of years, but
I'll always act. I'm still looking at parts that .intetesl me. ·
There's so much aggravation
that goes with this business,
it\ best to take your time and
choose those things you really
believe in.

•••
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ttl RED ttl PINK ttl LAVENDER

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Re111e111ller loll's For
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'7a-t.8
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.
. .
. . '1\ai
.... \o Conyement
114 mi. At

.
.

»

\~ (1/4 mi. nGIIh of POiniiOy/

'' j\t•'\ ~ ~~ MMOn, WI/
77H721

91\\l

-----

•Hauls; M-8 1111 t; Sun. filii

..
)

I

about 10 months out of the.
year for his show
Q. Has the distance been dlf•
ficultroryoutwo?
A. It was very hard the first
season. But that's the reality
of the business we're in. We
grab trips here a&gt;ili4bere, and ·
we're making it WQrk.
We're handling the dis· ·

Delta Burke

: t~

office and he does what was alleged
in this incident, suddenly it sounds
pretty awful,'' said Kathy Rodgers,
executive director of the NOW
Legal Defense and Education Fund,
. founded by the National Organization for Women but now a separate
organization.
Smeal said she felt Mrs. Jones _
failed to prove she had suffered.
"Plus, when ·she said 'No,' it
stopped and there appears to have
been no reoccurrence." she said.
"i b~Ye the public agrees With
this d cist n," Smeal said. "Most'
wome didn't think it was a big
deal. A lot of people would say,
'Boy, you ought to see what's hap·
pened to me."'

2400 Fa to 11 A\18.
(Acfou·from K-Msrt)

Oslllpolia, OH

· 446-1711

Houre: M·8 1111 1;' 81.1'1. 101117

.

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