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                  <text>P-ae18 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday

Thursday, Aprll9, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Weather

Ann landers column, Page 6
Christians observe Good Friday, Page 6
Cavs snap Bulls win streak, Page 5

Today: Cloudy
High: 50; Low:40
Tomorrow: Clear
High: 60; Low:30

4 WHEEL DRIVE

A/C, AMJFM

can,

topper, locll tnlde.

V8, A/C, power tqUtlp-JI!Jfl

ment, tilt, crulae.

Few voters request absentee ballots
for
primary
.

LOCAL TRADE

1996 MERCURY
VILLAGER

NAUTICA,
a~o. ve, leather, power
equipment, crutae, tilt.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
, If ~eigs Counly's absen1ee ballot
requests· are any indiclllion, lumout
for the May 5 primary election will
be very low.
Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections. said
ThurSday that while the office usually sends out over 100 absentee ballots on the first day of itie mailing

Elections at 992-2697. Voters may
also vote in person at \fle board office
on Mulberry Avenue lhrough May 4,
during regular.business hours: 8:30 to ·
4:30; Monday through Friday.
Absentee ballot requests must be
made in time to allow the board 16
mai) the ballols no later than May 2:
and
those ballots must be received
Day.
.
'
Appliclllions for atisenlee ballols back prior to Election Day.
Voters who are registered to vole
are available by calling the Board of

process, the board has only sent out
65 ballols 10 date: with the election
less than a month away.
Absentee voting·is made·available·
to senior citizens, diose who work oul
of town on Election Day, college students and others who are un~ble lo
visit lheir polling places on Election

anywhere within the stale may ca.~t a
ballot at their cum:nt polling place on
Election Day. If a voter moves from
one precinct to another within the
county, th"e voter should repon lo his
or her NEW polling place on Election
Day, where they will be permitted to
vote. Voters should ·never return to
their former polling place once they
have moved.
The deadline for new voler regis-

1996 FORD
F150
SUPERW

XLT, auto, A!C,
crulae, tllt, power wlrld·l
OWI·Iocki

.

l:nterfaith families face spirited weekend
By-CATHY GROSS~N
Robenses arc very clear on two roof."
USA TODAY
points: They have no conversion
She b~ gan the newsleller because
From seder to sunrise scr.vices, agenda. And they believe it's better .. I' VC seen toO many situations
Passover prayers to Easter hymns. for families to know and respect two wher,• people felt forced by instituthis will be a spirited weekend for faiths than tn have a passel of holi- tions, families or partners to make
tho\e among the nearly I million day panies signifying nothing, says choices they didn't want to make
Jewish/Christian U.S . families who Joan Hawxhurst.
and wound up feeling resentful: Peocelebrate both traditions.
Hawxhurst . a Methodist· and ple have questions and they need
"We'll have the first seder on granddaughter of Bapti st missionar- open-minded,
nonjudgmcntal
Good Friday. hunt for Eas.tcr eggs ies. · married a Jew. She is the resources'to.hclp them."
'
before the second seder on Saturday, founder of DI.-IFR and publi sher of
She sees many couples who proand Sunday morning everyone will Dovetail newslcucr. whi ch she ere- fess to he happy secularists -until
go to Mass with me," says Mary ated in 1992.
their children arrive. Suddcnfy they
Helene Rosenbaum, whose priest _ "There arc people. maybe even arc confronlcd with memories and
skips the sprinkle of holy water niost people. who pick and choose choi ces charged with deep meaning.
when he reaches her pew.
the easy. pretty pieces and put them
"The separate traditions arc valuShe is a Roman Catholic who together into something nice and able in and of themselves. When we
married a professor of Jewish stud- trivial. Theology gets pushed under try 10 mush them together. the hcauics .at Dickinson College. Carlisle, the rug." Hawxhurst says.
.
ty will 'he lost. We will end up with
"But more people arc trying to ·simply secular feel -good stuff. and
· Pa. They' ll spend this weekend in
the dramatic retelling of the great.come up with a way of Jiving with it's not enough .. It won 't compel
and very different - central stories integrity and respect that renccts people 's allegiance .'' says Mary
of their two tcligions.
their reality - two faiths under nne Roscnhaum, executive director of
Good Friday, when Christians
·

01-IFR and author with h.,. husband
of a book called "Celebrating Our
Differences" (White Mane. $19.95).
·:1 can believe in Jesu·. as the
risen Lord , -and my husband
absolutely docs not, and it's all
right."
--· Well. maybe not all right with ·
everyone. Jewish institutional leaders sec a train wreck. Jewish/Christian marriages may be just I percent
or the nation ·s households. But the
intermarriage . numbers loom large
for America's tiny Jewish popula·
lion.
·
Of those I million intermarried
couples. only 28 'percent arc rearing
their children in the Jewish religion,
and just 45 percent want their chiiJrcn to know tlicir Jewish cul]ural
heritage. according to studies by the
Jewish Outreach Institute.

.,

hclicvc Jesus was crucified. coin*

•

A/C, auto, power equipment, tilt, crulae, AM/FM
CD

EASTER HOUDAY • Children acroH Melga County are enJOy·
lng a brief Euter break today with all county echoola c:lottd ror
GOod Friday. Schoolaln the~ and~ loall echool cbtrlctl reopan Monday with c:hlldren going back to IChool Tuee-

.4 cyl, auto, power wltnd·t
owa-locka, cruise, tilt.

EXTRA CLEAN

Douglas

NICE

1997 FORD F150 SUPEiCAB LARI4T
..

412,

. '

AUTO, VI, POWER EQUIPMENT, LEATHER

AM

COLUMBUS (AP)- Some educaiion and labor groups. dissatisfied
with the state's plan for d~aling with
a coun order lo fix Ohio's ~chool­
funding system. have united to campaign against a proposed •penny
increa..: in th~ sales Ia~. .
"Tije people wantlhe Legisl111ure.
to do the job. and to do it right." Sen·
ate Minority Leader Ben Espy. D' Columbus. said at news conference'
J'horsday.
'fh9ugh , the proposed sales-tax
increase - from S percent to 6 per·

1994
NEW YORKER

ve,

AJC, auto,

equipment, leather,

trade

a

ONE OWNER

'

Good A tternoon

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND AM

AiC, auto, power WI~IG·I
o~a-locka, tilt, crulae,
51,000 mlln. · ' '

1987DODGE
Today's Sentinel

RAM SO

2 Sections • 12 Pages
Vol. 48, No. ~SJ

Auto, 4 Cyl, AM/FMiradio

~akmlar
~lmll:!eds

.

!d!mics

• I

Editorials

u
1!·9·1!!

u

1

.

(Mal

·3

51111:1!

H

~YIIif[

.1

Lotteries
OHIO·
,,
Pldt 3: 654; Plcll4: SSS I
Burbye,$: Q-13-18-20-32
W.VA.
.
.
o.Jiy 3: 090; D.ily 4: 2036
0 19'!!1 ohio Valft.YPutoltohtOJ Co.

IFR).
Dovetail and couples like the

•

David beland..said the annooncement
· ·• t
·
Fisher issued a statement praising
Douglali a.&lt; "a 'man of both courage
and principle."
While Do11gla.• was. announcing
his· withdrawal, Taft's campaign
released a letter to Fisher a~king him
to immedialely return all campaign
contribulions received above what
ordinarily would he allowed under
campaign finance law.
. 'Fisher wa~ allowed to accep1 con·
tributions above $2.500 per individ·
ual becau,;e DoUglas bankrolled his
,own campaign. At. the end of the primary Fisher would have been
required to give up any leftover
money that was more than the S2.500
limit. ·
"He doesn't need the money now,
so he should ~:ive it all back." said
Brett Buerck. Taft's campaign ·
spokesman.
Jon Allison. a spokesman for
Taft's otlice, said Fisher has until
April 23. the pre-primary reponing
deadline. re~oorn the e~lt"d money or
give it to charity or to lhe Ohio Elec-

' w~ ...a."cla!'s ilct~..

tions-Commission. ~.:.. :-. -'~ · :......oe~
Fisher's i:ampaijin will ~tum ali
the money it is required to return. ·
campaign spokeswoman Judy Boubao
said. But since that provision of campaign finance law had never been
used befbn!. Fisher's staff n~s time
to study it. she said.
She said Taft was punly lo t;lame
for any confusion. ·
"It is a la.w that Bob Taft sup- ·
paned and helped to write. I find it
ironic." Barbao said.
Voters in downtown Columbus
hUrl mixed reactions to Douglas'
withdrawal.

Henry Berryman of Columbus
said he doesn't pay allention to politics until a few days before an election. He said he wa.s familiar with
Fisher's record but had never heard
of Dougla•.
.
Melea Wachtman. also of Columbus. said she tell deprived of an
opponunity to exercise her right lo
vOle.
" I think voters should always
have a choice," she said.

Unions, education groups organize against ~ales tax increase

.RIGHT WHITE
1994 PONTIAC

~ay In Eastern Local. C.hlldren w8re buly Thuraclay afternoon ·
With Ealtlr ectlvltlta, IIICI these lclndlrgilrtn.-. at Southern Local
In R8!)1ne who are lhoWn hunting Eaater egp.

he's putting party first

COLUMBUS.' lAP) - Bruc.e · how fal' DoUglas was behind in the
said the· numbers were ·nat poll.
·
•
thefC and he would nol hun · the
Douglas spent close lo $1 million
Democrats' chllnces in November by on television ads and a brochure
staying in lhe race f01' governor.
mailed to thousands of Democratic
Douglas ended his self-financed ::: households. spokesman Dale Butland
campaign on Thursday, nine weeks Said. : ,
Douglas. 65. had mad~ education
afler he began it. He said his pqlling
showed lhat he wa~ too far behind lhecilreofhiscampaign. But he said
. Fisher with less than a month to make his polling found that v01ers favored
up the differen•-e.
,
more money for schools but not the
So De.mocrat Lee Fishe.:. a fonner reforms he advocated, such a~ smallauorney general. won' t have a pri- er cla.s size and ail-day · kindermary on May 5 imd will face Repttb· ganen. ,
. lican Secretary-of State Bob Taft on
He believed lhatthe proposed 1Nov. 3. Douglas pledged his suppon cent sides ta~ increaSe on lhe May 5
for ~isher and the rest of the Demo- ballot to help finance education and
..
.
Jlive property ta~payers a break is
cratic tic~et.
. ''I've devoted a great deal oftime ina~uate . .
and Jreasure to helping Democrats
His plan would have raised the
over the years.and I'm not prepared sales tall, by 1.5 cenl&lt; and the cigato "!!lfishly -sacrifice my pany for per- reue ta~ by 25 cents a pack. providsonal gain," Dougla.• said at a news ing $1.5 billion more each year for
conference. surrounded by his fami- schools and about $500 million for
ly and staff.
pmpeny lax relief.
Toward tit~ end of his speech, his
. "In 1998. Ohio's wOrking families
need a Democratic gGvemor."
voice faltered as he thahked his wife.
James Ruvolo. a Douglus consul- Dec, for her suppon.
tanl. would not comment when asked
Ohio Democratic Pany Chairman

19,5 MERCURY
MYSTIQUE

1.~% APR .financing
on
. 1998·Pontiac Sunfire·
for 36.Months

$~.YS

Ddil~las

)

cides this year with the first night of
Passover.-whcn Jews tell the story of
freedom from bondage in Egypt.
The stories may be ancient, but
the ways that modern American
families celebrate have undergone a
revolution now that 52 percent of
Jews who marry choose non-Jewish
panners.
Couples who might once have
withered under the pressure of
grandparents or the strictures of
clergy to choose one exclusive reli- ,
gion wijl proudly cclcbratc·hoth.
"There arc many who say, 'You
can 'I .do thi~.' To these people we
say. ·Deal with the real world,"'.says
professor and columnist Steve
Roberts . the Jewish husband of
broadcast journalist Cokie Robcns,
a Roman Catholic.
Friday night the Robenscs will
celebratt their 30th seder when 36
people gather at their Bethesda. Md ..
home to share in the Passover meal,
taste ;ymbolic' foods and ~ad from
the Haggadah's sage stories. prayers
an1f snngs.
~:•ster Sunday he' II he beside her
in l'hureh.
.
"It was never an option for me
not to be Catholic.'' says Cokie
Robcns. whose mother. former congresswoman Lindy Boggs. is the
U.S. ambassador to the Vatican. ''I
don't know how. I've rievcr liccn
anything else ...
Yet ··she's the best Jew in my
family. We never had a seder growing up:· says Steve Robens. whose
grandparents were ardent Zionists
und socialists if not religious Jews.
Their serious intellectual grounding in ethics and social service gave
them common values if not a common history.
The Robenscs arc very public
advocates of including bolh faiths in
family life. sharing open leucrs 10
lhcir son and daughter in books and
magazines. They were 1hc keynote
speakers at last weekend's first
1111ional conferen~e on inclusiveness
sponsprcd by the Dovetail Institute
for Interfaith Family Resources (01-

1995
OLDSMOBILE
ACHE IVA

1996 MERCURY
COUGAR

trations was Monday.
.
. Volers will nominllle their panics'
candidales for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General,
Auditor of Slllte, Secretary of State.
Treasurer of State, U.S. Senator.
Congressional representative, State
Senator, State Representative, County Commissioner. County Auditor
and judicial candidates.
Two state is.~ues relating 10 school

funding, two county-wide· levy proposah. a schooi ~nd..jssue in Southem Local School District and several village and township levies will
also be determined on Election Day.
In addition to the Republican and
DemOcratic primaries. a Reform Party ballot will be available statewide
in the primary, with the 'Pany's candidates for Governor and Ueutenant
Governor. John R. Mitchel and
Lawrence Anderson, respectively.

Barge aground,·
oil spill cleanup
is underway

HOLY WEEK PROCESSION • Penitents carry figures of Christ ancl Virgin Mary thr9Ugh the crowds during a traditional Holy Week proceeelon In Seville, southern Spain Wednesday.
·
. .
·
.
'

Padres
humble
Reds 6-?
Page4

.
1997 FORD
F·150 XLT

·1997 fORD
RANGEl XLT
ve,

Sports

April tO, 1998

'·

. ..

.,

cent~ is touted by suppmers as key
to meeti~g the Ohio Supreme Coun·~
order to come up· with a beuer way
to pay for public educulion. opponents say it does not do enough.
Espy, one of the co-chairman of
lhc Vote No on Issue 2 Coalition, sai4
lawmakers wolilll be forced to start
over if vole.rs reject the sale ta~
increa.'ie.

Clinton

1~.

Backers of the ballot issue predict '
legislators 'willtake away-a different .
message.
"The signal to the Legislature is •
that people don'.t want to invest .
more in education," said Cliff
Treyens, spokesman ,for the Every
Child Counts campaign.
Supponers of the Ia~ increase.
which would generate about $ L 1 bil-

lion annually. are raising millions for
a television ad campaign that began
airing Tuesday.
·
Ron Marec. pres.ident of the Ohio
Federation of Teachers and the other
coalition co-chairman, said his group
also plans 10 run ads.
·
So far. lhe United .Auto Workers
have pledged financial suppon for the
group. Marec said.

heart of toba~co country ~o sell regulatory plan

CARROLLTON. Ky. (AP&gt; visil wa.s aimed at increa,in~ piessure · Tohacco fanners and others lis·
Workers at Southern Stales farm on the industry not to light Congress teQed intently to ,.,hat he had to say
cmwded into an otfK.-e and lislent:d il' as it works to curb teen smoking and . about the crop thai . is economic
President Clinton pled'ged to "do compensal~ states for smoking-relat- lif~blood of this Ohio River community apd 01hers like it
. right by famHies that grow tobacco" ed health care costs.
· even as he pres~d · his message
"Tobacco farmers have not done
The workers ne~t door at Southagainsl teen-age smoking in.the hcian . !'IY!hing wrong. You_' ~ growing a em States farm .couldn't get in to see
of tobacco country.
legal crop. you're nOill!iing the mar- the president's address, so they
Coming a day after major cill""'lle keling of lhe' tobacco to children," packed·Manager Daryl Satechewell's
makers sounded a death knell for a · Clinton said Thursday at Kentuckiana office to listen. "He's beli~vuble,"
niuinnal tobac~-o ,;etllement. Clinton's Tobacco Warehou.re. ·
Satechewell said.

The diesel fuel remaining in the
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)·ruptured
tank wa~ transfem:d to othA Pennsylvania-ba•ed tow with 17
er
tank.~
to
minimiie the possibility of
empty coal barg~s ran aground on the
additional
spillage, Westerberg said.
Ohio River, puncturing its fuel 'tank
. No municipal water intakes were
and spilling an estimated 1.000 gallons of diesel fuel into the river.
· threatened by . the spill, the officer
The Campbell Transponation Co. said. The vessel remuins aground and
of Charleroi. Pa .. owner of lhe MN salvage is expected IP tak~ several
Elizabeth M. dispatched crews 10 . days.
The OhiQ River remains open.
clean up the spill Thursday, said Lt.
Westerb&lt;;rg
said.
Eric G. Westerberg, public affairs
The
cause
of the accident is under
officer for the U.S. Coa.st Guurd
Marine Safety Office in Huntington. investigation. However. Westerberg
The Elizabeth M ran aground . said there is no evidence the incident
about five miles ~pslream of was related to a walkout by riverboat
Pomeroy, Ohio. The Coa't Guard was . pilols in New Orleans. The operating ·
noiifted of the ac~;ident aboul 12:20 company has been·unaffected by the
labor dispule. 1he lieutenant said.
a.m. Thursday. Westerberg said.

Hqu$8 Republicans
consider hearing
testimony from Starr
WASHINGTON (AP)- Anticipating a formal repon from Kenneth
Starr. House Republicans are con_sidering a plan to have the indepen·dent counsel testify before Congress
about any evidence or impeachable
offenses that he turns up against President Clinton.
.
GOPollicials, speaking on condition of anonymity. said Thursday thai
under this proposal. Starr would be
. called to explain his findings before
a panel of lawmakers. These officials
cautioned that no decisions have
been made. and even if they decide
to go ahead. numerous details remain
to be worked out.
These include whether such a
session would be open to the pubIic.
and what kind of questioning Starr
himself would be subject to by the
lawmakers. Nor is it clear .what oth·
cr witnesses. if any. might he called.
Asked about the proposal. one
Judiciary Committee official '\Uid it
wu.s "pure speculation based on the
assumption thar there .would be·a
referrdl to Congres:s. Any dec1ston
. about pr01.-edure wtll nol be .made
until and unless the mdepe~de~t
C&lt;~un:sel m.akes such a referrdl, th1s
olfictal sa.od. .
. ,
Starr ts mvesttgaung w~ether
Clinton had a sexual relationship with
former White House intern Monica
Lewinsky and encouraged her to lie
·about it in the · Paulo Jo11es sexual
hara..smentlawsuit.
A White House st~ward. Glen ·
Maes, ap~ared Thursday beli1re the
federdl gmnd jury investigaling the
Lewinsky matter. Another steward.
Bayani N~lvis. previously testifieiJ. ,
Stewards often work near ' the
president. and prosecutors apparent·
.ly ate interested in what they muy

have seen.
Starr also is investigating possible
.obstruction of justice of lhe 4-yearold Whitewater investigation in
Arkansas. and he is delving into t~e
Clintons' relationship with their former business panner. the late Jim
McDougal. As a lawyer in Lillie
Rock, Ark .. Hillary Rodham Clinton
did work · for McDougal's failing
savinl)S and loan.
Starr's offi•-e and House officials
have bolh said in recent days they had ·
not been in contact with one another
abqut the independent counsel's

w0rk4

'

. Even so. speculation has he~n
intenljC in Congress that Starr wou Jd
issue a formal repon to lawmakers by
the end of May.
DiS~=u.ssion of a possible hearing
featuring Starr comes at a time when
House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
Rep. Henry Hyde. R-111 .. chainnan of
the Judiciary Committee, are planning for an event 'that would he
unpn:cedented: the submi.&lt;sion of a
·formal repon by an independent
counsel

oullining

impeachable oflenses.

cvidt:ncc

of

·

Starr was appointed under legislation that was enacted :~fter Richanl
Nixon ·resigned from office mther
than face ,impeachment proceedi[.gs
in the full House. The law requires
any independent counsel to notify the
House "of any substanti:ol and credible infonnation ... that may constilute grounds for impeachment.''
Republicans were careful to
~·•1ibe a~y hearings that might foilow submission of S!arr's repon as a
review oF his work. not as pan.of any
fonnaHmpcuchment inquiry.

Ohio, Wildlife Council
OKs
fall hunting, trapping season dates
.
.
.

By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbui .Bureau
COLUMBUS The stale
Wildlife Council approved !IeaSOn
dates and other rules and ~gulations
for Ohio's fall hunling and trapping
seasons, Wednesday evening in
Columbui.
Hunleri can take one deer in 111051 ·
.of the state, bul In a 14-county
~gionoflioathwtOhio-knownas

Zone C - lhal includes Galli&amp;,
Meigs, Ross, Pike, Noble•. Moraan.
Monroe and Washington Coulilies, an
additional ~r may he harvested.

Ohio's statewide deer gun ,;eilson
will span sill ~ys, November 30
throilgh December S. II Includes a
Sunday (November 30) for lhe lint
time as a result of legislation signed
into law by State.lawmaken earlier
this year.
·
"This represenls a ·lona·awaited
pi to give Ohio hunters more hunt·
ina op)!Onunilies," said Michael
Budzig. ,chief of, lhe Division of
.Wildlife. "In p~evicius surveys, we
have learned 1ha11he lack of time is
whal p~vents many people from
hunting more ofte1t, due lqely· 10

work and family commitmenls."
ln ' lhe 14-coqnty southeastern
Ohio region where two deer call be
1a1ten. the deer gun season runs one
day longer inclUding December 6.
In Zone A, a S 1-counly spanning
acros.• much of the nonhern part of
lhe state including Sandusky and
Ottawa Counties, hunlen may lake a
deer of either lex on the lim two days
of lhe deer gun season or • buck only
in lhe, .em~ining four days.
In·other pans of the stale, hunlen
may take a deer of eilher sex during
11'1e deer gun ,;e~n.
·

The stlllewide primitive deer season spans five days .from December
26 lo December 30; including Sunday
• December.27: Statewide archery.season runs from October 3 through Januwy 31, 1999.
Pall turkey seawn will be from
October 19-25 in 2l soulhem Ohio
counties including Meigs, Pike, Ros.'l,
MOI]IIUI. Monroe, Noble, and Wa.'lbinglon Counlies. A limit of one wild
turkey of.eilher sex may he harvesl·
ed.
•
·Spring wild hlrkey ftunling season
will he ftom April 26 dtrough May 16

•

in 57 counties ineludingthe southern •
region which was gmnted a spring
turkey season. Sandusky and Ouawa
Counties are n01 included in lhe 57county region.
Addilionally. nuisance animal
!rappers are now allowed to usc
body-gripping snare traps mea.,uring
. seven in~hes by !ICven inches inside
a building for lhe porpo,;e of removing nuiliance wild animals, such a•
raccoons and skunks. The snare !raps
have been ~riticized by some animal
rights groups as cruel and inhumane.

�Friday, Aprll10, 1998

-~Co1nmentary

Page2
Friday, Aprll10, 1998

'EstaDtiSiid in 19118
· By Jack Anderson
and Jan Molle~
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
We report with great regret that
614-992·2156 • FIX 992·2157
the most secretive agency in Wash; lngton may not be the Central Intel' ligence Agency.
Last month, for the first time in
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
history. the CIA · voluntarily
; released the total amount spent
ROBERT L WINGETT
' each year through the_ int~lligence
• Publlaher
budget-- $28.7 billion.
•
The number was no great secret;
. for years, reporters have been told
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
that the intelligence budget was
Controller
somewhere
in the neighborhood· of
G-.1 Mllll!llr
' $30 billion . Nevertheless, the dis: closure represents a big victory for
1llo- aulc-lo!WW to lllo odltOI" fromof..,....
those of us who believe the governryp..tlol·
: ment's classification system is
- . . ,.olu11ud ljlld uii""'Y l&gt;u udllod. Euch ullould lncludo u u/jJMlllrfl, _ , , .,
_ _ _ ,_n-.Specllr•-"tMru"uu ,.-.to•provlouuurfl&lt;h
. ridiculously overbearing.
· -· lo: Lulllnlto,. EdltOI", 1bu SUnttnul, "' CotHt Sl., ,.,...roy, Ohio
: · Unfortunately, there's another
L~«~~M~;.,:tw.::,.~FAX~to~lf~,._~-:;;-z~t;,!l7~-==.,.,~-~-~~~'""'!''!""!=md.J. piker that 's become adept at papering over embarrassing information.
The American Association of
Retired . Per.sons, the country's
largest lobbying group, prides itself
as a grassroots organi?ation that" s

on.--

__ poo_,_,,....._,._&lt;_of_flpu/&gt;1/uhftl.

Keep old .military planes
flying or junk all of them?

ByTOMRAUM
Alaoclated Prell WrHer
WASHINGTON- Republicans like to accuse the Clinton administration
of giving,short shrift to national defense and allowing the Pentagon ·s equipment to age and deteriorate. But the assertion has seldom hit so close to
home as on a congressional overseas trip last week.
Four GOP lawmakers - Sen. William R01" of Delaware and Reps. Gerald Solomon of New York, ()oug Bcrcuter of Nebraska and Tom Blilcy of
Virginia- were on a small Air Force jet that was forced to land in the
Azores because of mechanical difficulties. . .
.
Solomon used the episode as an example of why the Pentagon needs ·
more- after 14 yeats of declining defense budgets.
·
But it also highlights a political irony. While complaining about the condition of military aircraft, Congress continues to resist cost-saving steps recommended by the Pentagon such as base closings, while voting for equipment the Pentagon doesn't request. ·
.
"The plane we were flying in h~d t.~e door burst h s_ seals o~ two sep~rate
occasions and we had 10 return IWICC, Solomon satd m descnbmg the lOCI · .
dent.
The C-20 jet- {lart of a fleet_of passenger jets keiJt at Andrews Air Force
Base near Washington for VIP tnps, mcludmg congress tOnal travel- had to
retum.to Lajes air base, the Air Force installation in the Azores where earlier it had maile a refueling stop.
· ·
··
Being stranded for 10 hours in the Azores - an Atlantic archipelago
about 900 miles froni the Portuguese mainland - might not sound like so
bad a deal.
··
.
But the four lawmakers and two aides - who had been to Portugal for a
NATO-related weekend meeting - wound up hitching an uncomfortable
ride op a big C-141 transport plane and came close to missing key congressional votes during one of Congress' busiest week!;.
Solomon, who is chainna:. llf the House Rules Committee, misscd·a critical Monday night committee sesston on an emergency spending bill for military operations and disaster relief.
.
.
. .
Roth. chainnan of the Senate Finance Commtttee, made II home JUSt rn .
· time for his panel's work on a showpiece GOP tax overhaul bill. And Bliley,
chainnan ofthe-House CommerceCommtuee, came close to mtsstn~ House
debate on an important financi~l services bill.
.
..
'
"I tried to sleep on the floor of that cargo plane, but it did not work," a
tired. Solomon told colleagues the next day as the House debated the $3 billion military-disaster relief bill. .
·
Solomon also cited last week 's...grounding of 900 Vietnam-era UH-1 .
Huey military helicopters for po'sible gearllox _problem.• to ~olst~~ his _contention that "this admmlstrauon has been robbmg tomorrow s mthtary preparedness .to pay for ... overseas adventures" like Bosnia and Somalia. . .
The"emergency spending bill . which includes $1.8 bilhon for the cmes m
Bosnia and Iraq, is now before a l;louse-Scnatc conference committee.
where the biggest fight will be over how to pay for II ." The House wants to
take the money from domestic programs, "the Senate does not. Neuhcr chamber wants to squeeze the funds out of other military programs.
.
While complaining about military readiness, Congress l]as been pum~mg
money into"projects not sought by the Pentagon, tncludmgmoncy for C-1JO
tranliJlOrt planes to be buth .tn Manella, Ga., where House Speaker Newt .
Gingrich lives; and for hmldmg an Aegts:class destroyer tn the hometown ol
Senate Majority Leader Treql Loti. R-Mtss.

accessible to
That's kept confidential -- even
its members.
from the association's members,
And
that's
whose
dues are paying f9r the
1
often true.
grandeur.
•
But. when
Secrecy has· been good for the
it comes to
AARP. In the 1980s, the association
revealing the
was being pursued by the Intemal
niuy -griuy
Re venue Service for back taxes that
details of its
the government claimed it owed
own financial
· (even though the AARP is a nonsituaiion, the
profit corporation). After almost a
organization
decade of dickering, the AARP set·Moller 6
is as secretive
tled with Uncle Sam by paying
Andet"IOn
as they come.
$135 million "in lieu of taxes."
Take, for example, the lease on -Just try to get a copy of that settleits magnificent, 11-Hoor headquar- ment.
ters in downtown ·Washington .
The AARP is a private group and
Dubbed the "Taj Mahal'' by its crit- has every right to keep whatever
ics, the headquarters costs the secrets it wants. But with 32 milAARP $16.75 million a year in lion members, the second-largest
rent. Bedecked in marble and circulation magazine in the world
guarded by 20 security officers, the and its fingers in numerous outside
edifice is a sight to behold, with 12 business ventures, ihe AARP is bigelevators and state-of-the-art fur- ger ,than .some governments. We
nishings.
think it owes its members not just
But don'ttry to learn more about · the services they already get -- but
the building by reading its lease. the kind of openness we're now

EVER 9fi I'WI6
ABCN, rYE WANltD .

tl Q) 10 N=R1CA ...

•

Starr .investigation drawi.ng tQ a c.l. ose ~
By Wlllltim A. Rusher
think Starr 's meantime to diminish .Mr. Clinton's
Is there anybody out there who
inquiry
is approval rating. the Republicans
still doesn' t realize that the last
politically
will be lucky, next January, to fill a
thing 6n earth the Republicans want
motivated,
tabtc· for four in the House cafe!C·
to do is impeach President Clinton'? .
and it is rca- na.
By all accounts the Starr invcstisonable to
Of course, that last "if" is a big
gation is drawing to a close. and we
assume that one. Mr. Starr's report to the House
can therefore shorily expect some
they · would i,s quite likely tu he the political
he at least equivalent of a hydrogen bomb, and
dramatic developments. Probably
there will be some more ·indictequally sus- it may well result in drastic changes
mcnts in connection with Whitcwaptcious of · in puhlic opinion. It will _contain.
tcr, and others involvin~· Webb
Speaker Gin- for one thing, the entire transcript
Hubbell. and possibly some in conRusher ·
grich"s
of those 20 hours of tapes in which
House. At Ms. Lewinsky described her affair
nection with Travclgate and File- ·
gate as well. There arc those who "the same time. while convinced that with President· Clinton to. Linda
eKpccl Monica Lewinsky to be Mr. Clinton has, as the saying goes. Tripp "in Technicolor. · And Ms.
indicted too, for suborning perjury a· ""zipper problem:· most Amcri- "Lewinsky may also havo gone into
and obstructing justice.
cans approve of the joh he is doing highly inconvenient de.tail about
But Mr. Starr is vinually obliged as president. How likely is it. then. what Mr.· Clinton and his friend
to suhmit a report to the Judiciary that the Repuhlican members of the · Vernon Jordan told her to say under
Cummiuee of the House of Reprc- Hoose -- all· of whom will have Ill oath about it.
sentatives. calling attention to any face the voters this ~otning NovcmEven if the Republicans arc dis·
evidence of possible ""high crimes · ber -- will he eager to impeach the inclined to investigate these matand misdemeanors" on the part of president"!
lcrs, they will have lirtle choice.
the president of the United States.
If the question i~still before the Proof of presidential hanky-panky
And the House will have no -choice House when Election Day rolls with :i 21 -year-old intern is hardly
But to conduct a bipartisan inquiry around, the elections arc likely to .grounds for impeachment, but presinto that evidence, to determine be seen as a straight up-or-down ldcntial perjury. subOrnation of perwhether ihe president ough\ to be referendum on whether he should jury. and obstruction of justice most
impeached. (If the House votes to be impeached, with a vote fur a· ceriainly would be. (It was obslrucimpeach him. it will then be up tq Republican being interpreted as a lion of justice, remember, that
thc Senate to try him, and if neces- " Yes." and a vote fur his Democra- brought down Richar.d Nixon.)
sary, remove him from office.)
tic opponent representing a "Nu."
It seems likely, therefore, that
Poll.s indicate that most people If nothing has happened in the the second half of 1"998 will be

There are so~~ good lies,

Today in history -:BJ The AIIOCIIted Prell

·
· Today is Good Friday, Aptil 10, the _IOOth day o( 1998. There arc 265
dllys left in the year. The Jewish holiday Passover begins at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
()n April 10. 1912. the luxury liner R.M.S. Titanic set satl• from
Soutllllnplon, Entzland, on its ill-fated maiden voyage.
On this date:
. ..
I• 1847. American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer was born in Mako,

IPt J•Y· .

. ·

.

.

I• 1866, the American Society for the l'rcvcnlton of Cruelty to Ammals
Willi inc:orjK&gt;ratcd.
.
J
In J92S. the novel "'The Grtat Gatsby," by F. Scou FitzseraiiJ. was first
published by Scribners of New York City.
,
I• 1932. German president Paul von Hindenburg was re-elected, with
Adolf Hitler finishing second.
In 1947. Brooklyn Dodgers president Branch. Rickey announced he had
pun;hascd the contract of Jackie Robinson from the Montreal Royals . .
In I9S9, Japan's Crown Prince kkihito married a commoner, Michiko
. Shoda. '
In 1963.the n~~~:lear-pciwered submarine U.S.S..Thresher failed1o surface
ofT 01pc Cod, Mass .• in a disaster that claimed 1_29 l_i~cs .
.,
In 1972, the Uniled States and the Sovtet Unton JOined some 10 nauons
in liJiii~f 4R JIPCCDle.lll banning biological warfare.
In "l"f'4, (lolda Meir announced her t:esignation as prime IJiinister of

llrllet.

;

'

.

.

•

By George R. Plagenz
.. Lying can lake . many ·forms.
Some arc worse than others.
. Miss Holden told my seventh
grade social ~studics class that Ty"
Cobb's full name was Tyrus
Tristram Cobb . .That was untrue
but hardly what we think of as a
lie . She .was n·nt trying to mislead us. That would have hecn
-wrong. She had simply been the
recipient of erroneous informa·
tion. Cobb's full name was Tyrus
Raymond Cobb, The Tristr.am
moniker belonged io another
baseball immortal, Tristram
(Tris) Speaker. ·
The problem with many of us.
like Miss Holden in this lillie
tale out of school, is not that we
are liars but that we haven ' t
cho:cked our fact~.
Most untruthfulness is not the
deliberate telling of a falsehood.
aS George Tyrr~ll said. It is passing something Off as true that we
niay think is true but isn't,
To tell the truth, what Miss
Holden had done wasn ' t half as
bad as what I did. Ait obnoxious
know-i t-all, I raised my hand
and, in front of the entire clltss,
corrected her mistake . What I

taken up with a detailed and highly
· p~blic congressional investigation
of Mr. Starr's evidence. At some
point, presumably, Mr. Clinl&lt;in
himself will be forced to. break his
long silence. on these matters and
testify. or at least talk, about them.
It will he interesting to sce'whatthc
· polls say in September and October.
· But suppusc the fa.:ts give i:onscientiuus members uf the House -Demncnus as well as Republicans- no choice hut to vote to impeach.
And suppose that the Senate duly
· tries Mr. Clinton, convicts and
removes him -- or (more -likely)
that, like Richard Nixon, he rcsi~ns
rather than endure the unendurable.
Politically. which rany is the winncr'! With President Gore in the
White House -- a hit nf a bore, pcr. haps, hut untainted by any hint ill"
sexual scanllal --and assured of his
party 's ·norilinalion for a fullterm i"n
the year 2000, · the Democrats
would be justified in thanking ~~c
Republicans for getting them out of
an unholy mess.
William A. Rusher Is a Dlsti6·
guisbed Fellow of the Claremo~:~t
lnst.ilute for the Study of s·tatesmanship and folitical Phlloso. phy.
'

IND.

•lcolumbuslso·

64'

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.··· --

-·· ·- . -~· ·-·-

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De.atl:l Not1ce.s

Edison Maxwell Pptney

~-

WINNING ORATOR • B.J. Smith, left, dat~ghter of Greg and VIc- ,
kl Smith of Pomeroy, was the first place winner In the Meigs
County Right to Life Oratory Contest held March 31 at the
Pomeroy Library. She Is shown here being presented a plaque
by AI Hartson of the Middleport Church of Christ' Smith will com- ·
pete at Jhe state level on May 2 In Columbus with the winner of
that event competing at the national contest in Orlando, Fla. A
Meigs High School junior, Smith read a speech entitled "Prollfe .
Is the Only Choice" addressing "When does life begin?", the
effects of abortion on the mother, and that abortion is not the
answer. "The Biblical view of children Is that they are a blessing ,
and a gift from the Lord. Society Is treating children more and ,
more as liabilities," she said.
'

.Today's-weather forecast

Storm's death toll -c limbs

RE·ELECT

'.

FRED HOFFMAN.
Your
Meigs County Commissioner

ABU TO MAKf THf HARD DfCI~ION~!
Paid tor by the candiclate, Fred Hoffman, 256 So . Fourth Ave., Middleport, Ohio 45760

Baby found alive.in
demolished·h.ouse

Local briefs--· ----

Burglary probed

· 1PG1J1
7:20.9:20 OAIL't'
MA.TtNEES SAT/SUN

1

1:l0,3:20

...

Blood drive schedult/d

Articles of Incorporation filed

.

Meigs announcements

Show planned
Methodist Services
The fourth annual Ohio Valley
Sunrise Service at Asbury United
V~terans Memorial
lleanie llaby and Collectabl'es Show Methodist Chutth in Syracuse will
to be held Sunday. April 19. 10 a.m. begin at6 p.J71:The church choir will
Thurs~ay admissions - Robert
to 3 p.m. atlhe.American Le~ion hall, perform, "Beautiful Savior." Break• Mahr. Pomeroy:
Thursday discharges - none .
•Eighth and Wooster Street, Mariena. . fast will follow the cantata.
Holzer Mediul Center
There will be a special section for
Discharges April 9 - Tabitha
children with prizes to be awarded to Literary Club to meet
them. Tickets will be available on the
The Mil(dleport Litemry Club will Allbright. Mrs. Michael King and
original nine beanie babies, MeDon- . meet at.2 p.m. at the Middleport Pub- daughter, Betty Gay, Mrs. Jeremiah
.aid's teenie beanie collection, Erin li·c Libmry. Wednesday. Gay Perrin Johnson and son, Beuy Williams.
(Published with permission)
and Princess. Lunch will be served by will review "Anastasia's Album."
ihe Auxiliary: Special feature will a
oisplay and sale of selling clothing, Trustees to meet ·
jewelry and artifacts from Russia.
The B~dford Township Trustees
All proceeds from the event the Ted- will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
dy Bear Fund.
Darwin town hall.

·Hospital news .

Sunrise sel'\'lce set
Club sels ses.~ion
· A sunrise service will be held at
The Catholic Women's Club· will
6:30 ~. m . at the Carpenter BaptisJ meeJ Tuesday at the church. Mass at
·Church located on State Route 143, 7 p.m. will precede the meeting.
.~chool Loi/Ceme.tery· Road.

Girl mistaken ·for
dead found alive

The Daily Sentinel
iUSI'S 113-960)
Puhli'h~J l'¥crv ~ncrnonn, ~t1nd:1 y lhmutch
Friday. Ill roUn Sl .. Pomc:wy, Ohifl. hy the
QhW Valley Publishin~ CClmpanyf(j~mncn Cu ..
l'nn&gt;my. Ohin 45769, Ph. 911l-ll5ft. ~cdnd
class pnstage paitl al Pomtroy, Ohio.

Mntbtr: The A150Ci:Ucd Pwn. and the Oh1n
Ncwap;1pe:1 Auoc::iatinn .

' POSTMI\STER: Send atldrr:ss comet inns 111
The Daily SI:JU\nel, Ill Court St., p ,,~r·' Y ·
, ' Ohio 4:'17M.

. SUBSCRIPTION IIATES
By Curkr nr l'dftfor Rout~

. On.: W~ek .................................................. $2.1111
On.! Monlh .................... ........................... $1'1.711
One Y.:ar ............... ,............................... Sitl-4.1111

SINGLE COPY PRiCE

D.:lily .................................................... 3~ ('cntli
Su~r1bl:rs

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nat deairina 10 p11y tlw carrie. may
temit in ~~~ana direcl lo The Daily Senlincl
''"a th~l!. si" llt' 1:! month bub. Credit will b: ·
ttivl'n carrier uc:h wce;k .
No subscriPtion hy mail permined in arca.s
where !tome c1trricr sen-Ice is IIIAilllble.
Publilihtr Jell.'tvel I he riJhlto adjusl rt'llel dur·
IIIIJ the suhiCf'ip(ion period. SJ!bKtiption rah!
ctlan~es may he implenlf:nted by ctlanj:lnK the

duratioli ordte IUbKtiption.

MAILSUIISCRimONS
•

I11Wr MtiCt CMII)'

13 W..b ............ ,..................... :.............. l27.l&lt;l
26 Wecu .................... ............................. SSJ.H2
- ~2 Wtt:kl ... :........................: ................ :.$10~ .~1
Ro... O.IIIoleMelpCoooly
13 - b .•.............................................•. l:t9-l~
liiW..b .................... .............................SShJ\11

~2 -···················································119.72

NEW , YORK (AP) - A girl
whose family ihought she wa.• dead
walked into a police precinct two
days after authorities rushed to a
wake· to tell her relatives they were
abOut to bury a different girl.
· Chante Smalls turned up Thursday. Her godmother, Lorella Cun- ·
ningham. said the 16-year-old run.away decided to turn herself in after ·
''learning that Ms. Cunningham had
been searching for her since Tuesday. ·
··She gave me a big hug and kiss
and said "I love you, I want to go .
home,"' Ms. Cumiingham said of
iheir' reunion in Family Court.
Chanle, in good health, did not
sp:ak to reporters.
·
"I don't know where she has been
staying and I didn't a.•k," Ms. Cunningham said.· "I just thanked Gnd
she was all right."
·
Ms. Cunningham has been battling Chante's mother. Lyneue Pouncie: for custody. She has asked a
ju\lge to let the girl live with "her in
Baltimore.
.
Judge Sam P. Scheeler ordered
Chante to remain in the custody of
the Adminstralion for Children's Services, agtncy spokeswoman Jennifer
Falk said.
Chante was, placed in foster c~
Dec. 18 after she showed up at a hospital
. with bruis~s.
.

Peoples
N io I
H sL
s
ToGo!
... .

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:?6 ,ft..
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NORRIS-NORTHUP DODGE
252 Upper River Road ~ Gallipolis ·
------------------------------------------SATURDAY. APRIL 11
9:00 am to 12·noon
• Saturday Only • Special Low-Rate
Bank Flnanc:lng On New And Used Vehicles
With On The Spot Approval!
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'

• Balloonsl • Refreshments! • Prizes!
• Plua -A Live Broadcaat By Magic .1 011

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A Division 01 City Nation-' Bank • Member FDIC

,.

Point Pltallnt

674·1"00o

'
•

.. -- - -- -- . · · ·- -·1

'

Edison Maxwell Putney, 73, Point Pleasant. W.Va., died Tuesday, April
7; 1998 in St. Mary's H!Jspital, Huntington, W.Va.
.
W.VA .
Born Feb. 2, 1925 in Ambrosi.t, W.Va., son of the late Kenneth and Ida
Bateman Putney, he was a retired federal police officer.
AU .S. Army veteran of World War II, where he received the Purple Heart,
he was a member of the Elmwood United Methodist Church in Leon. W.Va.
Surviving are his wife, Maxine Hayes Putney; four daughters. Sharon ·
!Ientz and David Brown of Point Pleasant, Linda (Richie) Friend of•Syrac~se , and Margaret Durst and Brenda (Larryl Bonice, lioth of Leon: three
Rain Flurries
sons, Edison Eugene (April) Putney of Letart, W.Va., Roger Putney of Point
Pleasant, and James "Matt" (Renee) Putney of Mason, W.Va.; 24 grand'
VIa Associated Pross GraphicsNet
children and nine great-grandchildren; and a brother, Gilbert Putney of Point
Plea.•ant.
He was also preceded in death by a sister. Ruby Richardson; a daughter.
Barbara Jean Putney: and a brother. Charlie Putney.
SerVices were held at I p.m. today, Friday. April 10, 1998 in the WilcoxExtended forecast
· . By The A1soclated Pre11
Saturday night... Clear. Lows in the en Funeral Home, Point Plea.•ant, with Minister Johnny Hayman officiating.
Southeastern Ohio·
Burial was in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation was held in the
•Today...Cioudy with a chance of mid 30s.
Sunday... Partl)' cloudy. A chance f~neral home on Thursday.
light rain or drizzle this morning .
Gradual clearing this afternoon. of showers during the night. Highs in
Much cooler with highs in the lower the 'upper 60s.
Monday ... Pardy cloudy with . a
SOs. NOrthwest wind 10 to IS mph .
chance of s!Jowers and thunderChance of precipitation 40 percent.
Tonight...Cieur. Lows ·around 30. storms. LoWll in the mid 40s and
Northwest wind 5 to 10 mph becom- highs in the rower 70s.
Tuesday..."Mostly clear. Lows in
ing light.
Saturday... Suony. Highs around the mid 40s and highs in the mid 70s.
60.
PLEASANT GROVE, Ala. {AP) Mrs. Mathis said. "Then he started
-Amid devastation and death, there talking about someone trying to take
was one · story of survival - a 9- his ball away. I knew then he was
month·old baby found alive after OK. He was being Cody."
The tornado and related storms
spending all night in a demolished
house after a twister tore through xilled 32 people in Alabama on
Edward J. Rinehard. Buck Run Road, Lang~ville , reponed Thurstown .
·
~~~:~:.at ~e;v~;e:~n~itn~g, most &lt;if them in
day that his home was broken into and several hQitsehold items stolen,
near
· The baby was found Thursday, It
according to a Meigs County Sherifrs Department report.
Jefferson County sheriff's Sgt. Mike
Time of the burglary was unknown, it was reported.
Ozley said. ·
Rescuers had been looking for the .
·infant all day, he said. He had few
details but did con finn the baby "wa.~
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
The Red Cross Bloodmollile will visitth_e, Meigs County Senior
all right"
ue 0823
· Citizens Center in Pomeroy on Wednesday, t'6 p.m. The goal of the
.It was not immediately clear
visit is 60 donors. To be a blood donor, individuals must be at lel)St
where the baby was taken. Ozley did
17 years old, weigh 110 pi:iunds or more, ~_;in gOO&lt;j health and not
not know the child's name or gender,
have donated within the past 56 days.
"-··
or the names. or fate of family members.
The family of 4-year-old Dakota
"Cndy"
Harding also had good news.
The following articles of incorporation were filed recently in the
The
liule
boy had been lefi with
office of SeGretary of State Bob Taft:
neighbors after the storm went
R&amp;K Auto Glass Inc., Long Bottom, in'j9tpOratcd by agent James
·
through,
and amid the confusion. the
K. Dailey, Long Bottom. and Richard"L. Dailey.
.
·
rwo
families
had lost touch for much
Jeff Warner lnsunince Agency Co .• Pomeroy, incorporated by agent
of
Thursday.
The neighbors finally
Jeff Warner, Pomeroy.
·- _
got through to Cody's mother, MelisBill Netzley Roofing Inc., West Millon, incorporated by agent Garr
sa
Mathi·s. late in the day, she said
L. Weaks, Troy. ·
. -.
today. .
"When he got on the phone, he
said. 'Mama." and I said, ' I love
you," and h~ ~aid, "I love you. too.""

aod-some b~d lies

said was true
lca_rn today that I had not told" that we arc being _lied to left and
-- but it was
him on what day the breakfast right.
also unk-ind .
was _going to be held! .
We have to learn new words
It
embarI suppose you could say I had like "suborning perjury, " which .
. caught this person in a lie . But most of us had ·never hcatd
rassed some·
·he probably figured I would he hefnr'e. ·It means inducing .others
one .
What
hurt if he told me ~c wouldn ' t be to lie. ·
.
'
·
should
be
caught ·dead at a prayer break,
It was. no minor mauer in Old
the intention
fast . So hc' invcnted an excuse to Testament times to he ~aught
of · what we
spare my feelings .
lying under oath. If ynu accused
say"! Should
Kindness is sometimes bcuer somebody of a crime and it
. ihan honesty.
turned out you y&lt;erc not telling
it always be
to tell the
If only he had waited until I the " truth, you would have to
lrath"!
Plau-nz
said wllcn the breakfast was serve the sentence normally
Let's say
going In he, he would have hccn meted out for the crime yc;u had
tried !O pin on the inhncent
you arc leav.ing church on Sun- home free.
day. You didn ' t get much out of
But ·lying and deception -- the p_urty.
.
the ·sc~mon but , as. you shake harmful kind -- arc ~ell in~ nul
If ynu were called as a withands with the minister at the of hand today. ' It is so. bad that · ness ifl a murder case and it was
door you say; "Fine sermon, .the Harvard · Business Schuol discovered ynu were lying in
pastor. " Did it make any di ffcr - ·instituted a cours.c on lying. It is your testimony, you would then
encc that what you said fell not to teach students how to lie be charged with murder under
but how to know when they are .the Code of Hammurabi.
short of being the whole truth"'
" A lillie hypocrisy in the being lied to in the business
This cut down considerably
form of simulated kindne ss is a · world.
.
the itum~er of people willing to
wonderful thing, " says one
"I thi"iill; the course makes lie for a friend in court. ·
writer.
them much more aware and lqss
Maybe we need a liulc more
I once invited a friend of naive," s.aid the ·professor wHo Old Testament in our laws today.
mine to auenll a prayer break- taught the class.
.It isn't. only the widespread
fast. " I'd lo1te to. come," "he
Georce Placena Is a syndi·
replied, . "but I'll be O!JI of tow.n scandal in government that has cated ·writer for -Newap•per
that day."
eroded "the public's confidence Enterprise· Auodatlon.
He would be chagrined I&lt;) in its leaders. It is our suspicion

1.

Donald Gilbert Gibbs, 71, of Los Angeles, Calif., died Saturday, April
4, 1998, in California.
.
Born in Hartford. W.Va .• he was ason of the late Harry and Beulah Embleton Gibbs. He was a graduate of Wahama High School and Bliss Commu·
nity College in Parkersburg. W.Va. He wa.~ worked at the Mason County
Bank and the Liverpool·Salt and Coal Company of ~artford before going
to .California to work for the Triangle Publishing Company from which he
retired.
He is survived by a brother and sister-in-law. Lee and Mildred Gibbs of
. Hartford, W.Va.; a sister and brother-in-law, Leota and Jack F.ry of Chester,
W.Va., and numerous cousins in this ·area. ,
Memorial services will be held at a later date.

s~ing from the CIA.

HOLLYWOOD SOUTH?
Louisianans like their food -- and
thei r public figures -- .to lie a bit
spicy an.d outra_geous. But some
residents are gellmg more than they
bargained for..
Our associate Kathryn Wallace
was touring the state. capital of
Baton Rouge recently when she
came across the Country Club
neighborhood -- ~n excl~sive, gated
community of the type that normally offers sanctuary to corporate
tycoons and wealthy doctors. Rut
this ne ighborhood might_be ·better
suited to an Aaron Spelling televtsion pilot.
·
The newest residents of Country
Club arc gangsta rappers Sno.op
Doggy Dogg. Master ·p, C-Murder
and their .assorted entourage. Percy
Miller, a ·record executive betler
known , as '"Master P," plunked
down $2.6 million for five homes in
the n~ighborhood a few weeks ago.
Calvin ··snoop'" Broadus, signed to
Millers label, lives in one of the
homes. while C-Murder, Mystikal
·and other rappers will inhabit the
others.
If the gangs Ia rappers were .trying to . gel ' away frpl'! ' !he '111can
streets, ~hey may havc" chw,;on .the
· wrong. neighborhood. I.:onglime
residents of Country Club ind.udc
· former Louisiana Gov. Edwin
Edwards, twice indicted but never
convicted, who is affectionately
referred to as "the Crook" by many
Louisianans. Edwards is currently a
target of an ongoing federal investigation into gambling corruption. • .
·Also residing nearby is televaitg_elisl Jimmy Swaggert, who gain4d
notoriety some years ago for hjs
tearful , televised apology after the
· disclosure of liis cKtramarital dal liance with a prostitute: Jodging lly
the size of Swf11!gert's home, t~c
episode didn't hurt his bouom line
nearly as hadly as it hurt his reputation.
:
Gated communities like Country
Club are usua11y ·designed to ke~p
bad clements out. In this case, we
llope the gates are keeping the 1!4d
elements in.
. Jack ~n~.,on and J1111 Moller
are writers for Unlttcl ·Feature
Syndlute, Inc •

),'- :r

Donald Gilbert Gibbs

AARP more secretive than .- CIA·

The Daily Sentinel ·

•

I'

I

t

The Daily Sentfnel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mason
na-5514

New Haven

882-2135

Loan Hotlln•

1 675-ASAP

�Sports

Th.e Daily Sentinel
,
·

Padres down Reds 6-2 to sweep

'

By BERNIE WILSON
. SAN DIEGO (AP) - Tony
Gwynn said Ken Caminiti's moon
shot home run was nice, but all that
really mattered was that it helped the
San Diego Padres beat the Cincinnati
Reds.
" Now the fan answer is. 'Whoah.
geez. he crushed it, wow!" Gwynn
said.
·
It was ·hard not to get excited after.
Caminiti launched a three-run homer
that was estimated at 457 feet. just the
16th to reach the second deck at .
Qualcomm Stadium. It capped a sixrun seventh inning. propelling the
Padres to a 6-2 victory Thursday, and
a three-game sweep.
To Caminiti. it was the pertect
homer.
"There's no other feeling like it in
the world," said Caminiti, who as a
three-lime Gold Glove third baseman
has made some preity amazing field:
lng plays. "It's the best feeling you
can get. You can get a good feeling

diving to get the ball, getting up and
throwing him out. There's no feeling.
to me, like hilling the ball like that. "
Balling right-handed, Caminiti
fouled off five pitches with two
strikes against lefl-hanllt" Ricardo
Jordan. and kept checking his bat
because he thought it might be bro~en. Then he drove a full-count .fast·
ball that was right over the middle of
the plate.
"When you take a full swing and
have everything behind it, you hit it
and you go. 'Wow.' "Caminiti said.
"He leaned on that one," Gwynn
said. '' Really. all he did wa.• put a real
good swing on it, and that thing just
took ofT."
Until Caminiti's homer, the Padres
had scraped together three runs
thanks in large pan to poor Reds'
pitching.
Starter Brell Tomko (1-1) hit
pinch-hitter Mark Sweeney with the
bases loaded, then Jordan came on
and walked Quilvio Vera.• to force in

another run. With one out, Gwynn hit
a sacrifice fly.
·
"You can't give them that many
chances like we did in the seventh,"
Reds shonstop Barry Larkin said.
" You gel a guy .like Camfniti in that
situation and he can crush you; we
saw that."
Gwynn had a third-inning double
and has hit in all nine games this year.
Wally Joyner was 3-for-4.
• San Diego has won four Mraighl
and live of six from the Red' this sea·'on. At 7-2. the Padres are off to the
second-best start in franchise history.
The best wa.• 10-2 in 1984, the year
they went to the World Series
Left-hander Mark Langston and
four relievers combined on an eighthitter. with the victory going to
reliever Brian Boehringer ( 1-0).
Lapgston allowed three hits in 6
1/J scoreless innings in hi• home
debut. He walked Eduardo Perez with
one out in the seventh and was

Friday, Aprll10, 1998

,
Page 4
Friday, April 10, 1998

Waterford shuts out Eagles 8-0

series~

chased when he lost Reggie Sanders'
chopper in the sun for an infield single.
·
Boehringer worked two-thirds of
an inning arid earned hls first NL win
by helping to douse a Reds' threat in
the seventh. He came on with one out
and runners on first and second and
struck out Bret Boone-. First baseman .
Joyner then ended the threat·when he
dove to his right to snare a grounder
by .pincb-hitter Willie Greene and
threw from his knees. __,. .
.
The Padres had a scary moment in
the third when Langston was hit on
the outside of his left hand by
Larkin's throw as he slid into second
to break up a double play.
Langston lay on the ground briefly
in obvious pain, bringing manager
Bruce Bochy, pitching coach Dave
Stewart and a trainer out of th.e
dugout. Bur Langston got up and ran
off the field without even talking to
them.

•

MARCUS ALLEN

.

Allen
retires
.
after16
seasons
.

Eastern softball crew blanks Waterford 1-0
A great pitcher's duel ended in a team ppsed a major threat until Kim
mild upset when the local Eastern Mayle slammed a triple in the EastEagles rallied in the top of the sev- ern fifth, but did not score.
enth inning to knock Waterford·OUI of
In the Waterford sixth inning,
the unbeaten ranks in a well-played with two outs Loti Milner doubled
1-0 game Thursday night at Water- but was left' stranded at second.
ford.
In the Ea.~tem half of the seventh,
Waterford fell to 1-8 overall and senior catcher Kelli Bailey led off
5-l in the league. Eastern is now 5- with a single, Suzy Milhoan walked,
3 overall.
Jamie White reached·when she wa.~
Eastern's . Stephanie Evans, a · hit with a pitch, then Tammy Huck
junior right hander. pitched the · struck out an Eastern batter. Juli Haybiggest game of her career as she man stepped into the box, poised and
struck out seven. walked just two. ready to hit. With the bases loaded,
and hurled a complete game shut out Hayman lined a grounder in the hole
in an errorless defensive effon by the to the first ba.o;e side of second base.
~les.
·
The second ba.•eman ·momentarily
Although both teams intermit- bobbled, then her hurried throw was
tcntly put runners on base, neither dropped at first to allow Bailey in

with what proved to be the winning
run.
Waterford threatened in the bottom half the inning when with one
out Tonya Forshey singled; Evans
struck out the next bauer and the last
batter popped out to third to end the
game.
Waterford had previously been in
·a deadlock with Southern for the .
Hocking Division lead.
'
Huck fanned eleven EHS bauers,
walked three, and gave up two hits.
. Eastern hitt~rs were Kim Mayle a
In pie and Kelh Bailey a single.
Waterford hitters were Amy Huck
and Forshey with singles and Lor.
Milner had a double.
Earlier, Eastern had defeated Fed-

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pitch that wasn't the best pitch to
wing at. We inade some mental miS·
dkes-Qn the base paths. too. That
we11 need to correct. It's just a mat·
ler of 1ime".
Senior Steve Durst pitched anolh·
. er great game, but came up short.
Durst fanned four. walked three. and
gave up just one hit until the rocky
sixth inning. when the Wildcats got
four more hits.
· Sophomore Josh Will came on in
a great relief effort to strike out three
of the five bailers he faced. He
walked none and gave up no hits.
Thad Skinner picked up the win
11

•

----~sports
•

briefs-----

Tennis
HONG KONG (AP) - Oscar
Burrieza; a Spaniard ranked I44th in
the world. beat sixth-seeded Martin

4 in the second round of the Salem

Damm of the Czech Republi c 6-4. 6' ·
Open.-

.(.

...

f~

SPUTS DEFENSE - The Chicago Bulla' Scottie Pippen (center)
By DOUG TUCKER
spiHs the defen11 ollered ~Y Cleveland's Vltaly Potapenko and Cedric
KANSAS CITY•. Mo. (AP)
Graceful and quick, he dipped, dan- Henderson In the final m1nut11 of Thur.day nlghl'a NBA contnt In
.
ed and glided across football fields Cleveland, where 'th.. Cavaliere won 91-85. (AP) .
like a catamaran skipping across the
waves.
He ileemed to liave eyes in the
back of his head. His amal!ing peri ph·
eral vision provided a unique wide·
scm:n perspective of every11nfolding
play.
·
Because he could see almost every
oncoming tackler. and because he
was so nimble. rarely in his illustri- .
ous 16-year NFL career did Marcus
Pistons 102, Wizards 83.
Allen take a savage hi1. That's why By The Associated Preal
It
was
a
noteworthy
night
for
the
At
Washington,' the beleaguered
he never suffered a serious injury.
·
NBA's
best
and
worst
teams.
Wizards
were booed by their own
But anybody's luck can run out.
The
Denver
Nuggets
avoided
any
fans
during
a lopsided loss to Detroit.
nnd t~e sight of half-crippled Hall-ofThe defeat dropped the Wizards 2
Famers helped' persuade Allen to chance of finishing with the worst
record
in
league
history
by
beating
·112
games behind the New Jersey
retire Thursday at the age of 38.
the
·
Sacramento
Kings
128·1
03
Nets,
'who hold the eighth and final
'' I clearly thought about that,''
1 playoff spot in the East. The Pistons.
Thursday
for
their
lOth
victory.
of
the
Allen said during a tearful news conalready eliminated from playoff con·
ference. "One thing I always envi- season.
With
five
games
remaining,
the
tent ion. snapped a seven-game losing
sioned was to ~alk away. It evokes
Nuggets
(
10-67)
are
assured
of
fin·
streak.
il!lnges of Dick Butkus and Joe
ishing
with
at
least
one
more
victory
The distraction caused by a sexuNamath. who can barely walk. Yes.
they. great players. But can they than the 1'972-73 Philadelphia 76ers. al assault complaint filed this week
:
against Washington stars Chris Webreally enjoy their lives like they'.d who went 9-73.
.
"It
hasn'i
sunk
in
yet,
but'l'm
sure
ber and Juwan Howard. combined·
like to? That's something I thought
it's
a
relief,"
said
Denver
coach
Bill
with the loss of NBA assists leader
about." •
Hanzlik.
"With
the
way
this
season
Rod
Strickland. left the Wizards with
Pausing several times to wipe
away tears and regain his composure. ha.• been1 we'll probably be called for little fight for a game they needed to
Allen said he will join CBS as a foot- running an illegal play and have to win to maintain realistic hope for a
playoff berth.
.ball analyst. ending one of the most forfeit the game."
While the Nuggets got a rare win,
Pacen 185,.Hawks 102 (0'0
:hOnored careers in football nistory.
AI Atlanta, Reggie Miller hit an
"I played with love and courage tbe Chicago Bulls went down to a
off-balance three-pointer with 1.3
:and tenacity. That's all I wanted to rare defeat.
The Bulls had their 13-game win- seconds left to foice ovenime and the
·.:do." said i\IJrn, a league and Super
. :Bowl MVP who appeare&lt;! in more ning streak snapped by the Cleveland Pac~rs never trailed in the extrn peri"
,
games (222). rusbed for more touch- Cavaliers. 91-85. Chicago. which od. .
has
an
NBA-best59-18
record.
blew
Miller,
who
finished
with
19
'downs (123) and caught more pass••• (587) than any other running a chance' to clinch the' top record in points: opened the oveninie with
another three-pointer, _giving Indiana
·back. His total of )2.243 yards rush· l!te Eastern Conference.
' 'Cleveland was. the aggressor." a lead it held until Dikembe
ing is No. 6 in NFL history.
"I don't mind crying. because· I Bulls coacll Phil Jackson said. "They Mutornbo hit a shon hook to tie it at
feel I'm hapPy." he said afterChiefs' played well. Those young kids took HlO with 2:25 left.
ialcn Rose then made a widC open ·
president Carl Peterson passed him a it to us."
Elsewhere in the NBA~ it wa.• three-pointer from the right corner to
handkerchief.
Allen. the first running back in Detroit 102. Washington 83: Indiana put Indiana ahead to 'Stay,
Chris Mullin and A,ntonio Davis
NFL history to rush for more than 105, Atlanta 102ln ovenirne; Seattle
10.000 yards and catch pas.&lt;es for 103. Dallas 101; Portland 99. the Los each scored 19 points for the Pacers.
more than 5.000. told Chief8 coach Angeles Clippers 95; and Houston · Mutombo led the Hawks with 20
puints and~ sea'IOn-high 24 rebounds
Murty Schottenheimer just la.•t week 93, Golden Stale 89. ·
Canlien 91, Bulls 85 ·
-hi~ sixth career 20-~0 game.
·
he would play ~nother season.
At Ch;vetand. Brevin Knight had
SuperSoalcs 103
· "But the one constant I've had
Mavericks 101 •
since I came into this league was 1. a .career-high 22 points. five stepls
and
four
assists.
At
Dallas,
Gary Payton scored •
could visualize and see plays unfold~1chael J~n. whose buzzer- . seven of his 28 points during a key
'ing. and be a pan of that. And frankly,
:a.• hard as I tried to create that. the beatmg·shots ~nocked Cleveland out · fourth-quarter run as Seattle edged
;vision wasQ't as strong as it needed of the playotTs m 198~. a.nd 1993. the Mavericks to give coach (leorge ·
·to be." he said. choking back tears. scored 29 pomts. but d1dn I make a Karl his 500th career ·victory. ·
Detlef Schrempf added five of his
· Among professional athletes r~eld goal in the founh period.
Shawn Kemp had 19 po~nts and 22 points during the 15-6 fourth. ·e•erywhere. Allen is one of the lllOlil
:recognized and admired men in 10 rebounds for the Cavs, I;Yhile Den- quaner spun to.help the Sonics move
ms Rodman grJhbed 20 re~nds for within a half-game of Utah for the
' sports.
.
best . record in the Western Confer· "You may eventually replace his the Bulls.
Nuggets 128, Kings 103
ence .
· :athletic ~bility. But .you can't replace
AI Denver. Johnny Newman
Michael Finley scored 27 tioints
.his presence. his work ethic. his perscored
35
points
as
the
Nuggets
for
Dallas, but missed a three-point ·
·sonality.'' said Baltimore outfielder
attempt at the bo~r that could have
:Eric Davis. an old friend from l,.os avoided NBA infamy.
LaPhonso Ellis had 26 points and won the game.
:Angeles days who was in Kansas
Rockets 93, Walrriors 89
City for the Orioles' game with the . 15 rebounds. and Cory · Alexander
added
23
points
and
II
assists
for
At
()o~kland. Mario Elie scored 22
Royals. "He played good every ye;or,
Denver.
which
got
a
standing
ovation
points
and Clyde Drexler added 19 as
but he got o~mhailowed because
Houston tool control in the third
there we~ Jc!UYS who had great years . from the crowd of 10.959.
Corliss
Williamson
scored
19
·
quaner
to defeat Golden State.
He was a·model 'of con.•istency."
poin~~
for
the
Kings.
who
played
their
.
Drexler
had nine points a• the
Opponents re;odily recognized his
third.
straighl
game
without
injured
Rockets
outscored
the Warriors 29-18
skill.
star Mitcli Richmond.
in the third.penoo
"fie's like Jim Brown, always getting five or s'ix yards a l'llP·" said
Atlanta Falrons linebacker Cornelius
Bennett. "What makes him dongerous is hiscutback ability." .
"He is 'The Man.'". said former
Former basketball player Kenneth
CHICAGO (AP)- Foimer Notre
'Denver safety Dennis Smith. "You Dame kicker Kevin Pendergast has Dion Lee is cooperating with invesi:an see it in his eyes. He does the admitted his role in a paint-shaving tigators. He has 1101 yet entered a plea
lntimidating:·
·.
scheme at Northwestern and will tes- and is due i n coun APril 20.
_ Only a tiny circle of elite individ-· tify against others in the case.
Pendergast pleaded gu!!Jy to one
uals in any sport or era did a.• many
f!endergast pleaded guilty Thurs· count uf conspiring to influence
tbings as well for as long as Marcus day to sp&lt;ins bribery charges. admit· sporting events through bribery. Oth- .
4'11en. · .
·
.
ting he conspired to fix th~ Big Ten et charg_es of using .interState com- ·
• After winning the .Heisman Tro- baok~tball games in the wiritc~ or merce to facilitate t~ betting were
phy a1 Southern California iq 1981. 1995 by bribing playeN. ·.He also dropped.
' .
..
he joined the Los Angele!i Raiders a.• admitted recruiting gamblers to bet
Pendergast agreed to . cooperate
$ first-round draft choice. Allen
with
FBl investigators aftd to work
on the fixed games and ·!laid the
guickly established himself as a amount he and Olhen bel or tried to with the NCAA to educate sttlfjents,
superlalive runner. blocker and . bet on the three games exceeded athletes and othen about the risks of
teeeiver as well al a powerful lock- $40,000.
gambling.
·
er rootn presence. with uncommon .
He faces a niaximum sentence of
.No sentencing date was set. Penleadersh.ip skills.
derga.•t. 27. of 1m Olives. Calif.. was five years in prison wtd a $250.000
"Marcus Alleti i~ the emboldiment released without bond.
fine. but federal sentencing guide· of the con511Dlmate proi'C!I.Iional foot·
Former Nonhwestem basketball lines call for 15' to. 21 'months in
ball player," said Peterson, who player Dewey Williams has pleaded prison. said .Randall Sambom. a
signed Allen as an unrellricted free innocent, as has former f001ball play- .spokesman for the U.S. Attomey:s
aacnt in·l993 after Allen lanJUished er l;lrian Ballarini, who was charged office.
for his last· two yean with the separately with running a bookmak·
The government plans to recomRaiderS. "EvCI')'Ihina that MlmiS, ing operation on No,rlhwcstem's mend a shorter sentence but will 1101
did. both on and ofT the r~eld, ...... put campus. Brian Irving, also charged decide on a specirlc. recommendation
forth in JftP!lration for aivinl! a win- with sports bribery, has plcldcd inno- until the other cues ,are disposed of,
'ning perfortllllll:e each wee~.''
.Sambom said.,
cent as well.

Ex-Notre Dame kicker pleads .
guUty in point-shaving scandal

•FUif~

..
sggso .s9,950

Sunday's a:t~mrs
1-ILII'Iol:~

W'- Oof100I

·1.6· Al..blllic.,.,., Wi'mn
....... Oooo Lacks. A.Wfll &lt;:-..

:tl l _.r.o A11~d•'~ . h p.m

TOMONTU RLUI: JAYS: ltt.'l·:.ll'\1 kHP t'arlus Almanlaf frum Syr~ u ~ nf 1tk• lllll'llti•tumal

Mimk'wta. Kp.m.

L.A.. I...aktn al Goldtn Slak. 10::\0(1

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B•selloll

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New Y01k Iiiii Miami. I p.m.
0\i:lrkll t~. I p.m.
Houston :u ~all~. JJO p nt.
Atlnnllllll WMhi n~ton, L\0 p n 1

1\Bs $14,9!0

141'0
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A.nwridln ( .. ,~...

Orlanlln;ll 81~011 . 7 p.m.
Atl~mt;a a t Charlottl'. Kr m.
Mi:nlh ;II Tt,.-unlu, tl p.m.

Ddroi1 at

12,950

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lkn\er 12K San:m~~.: nm 10.1
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Sunday's pmes

SJ3,950

h-1 .!ell ! l-1
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St I AJttt \ a1 n :,llas. ~ 1• m

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"

~1(1

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I.. A. l'hJljii:U a! Ul:th. II p .m .
I&gt;JMII.'m" at LA i:-'1~l..,, 10:,\0 p.m

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Thunday'• scores

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Muntrt:otl .... .. ... ...... .-..... .16 .10 ·J I K.\ 2!~ I'J--1
[hllfalu. .. . . .. .
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Otc ;n,•:. . .... ......... .. ......11 .\2 14 76 IKI IKIJ
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r -l•w.lmn:•

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l'lm·:tJt" ..

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1\nalk.'llll :11 ('I .EVI.J .•\NI &gt;. 1 .0~ 1' 111
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.. .. . .N "'' 12 (l(l IKM ~.lh

. ......

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Sunday's .:amt'~
ll ahu• ~t•r..: :~tl k·tr"'' · I ·05 r m

rum
1\llomt;t .

1--lr.lfttl:~ .

,,Hio.' lll ll

standing.~

Nl'w kr"'-' \

Saturday's ~ames
t:u.~

lf::aU J!&lt;' r~

NY

1-l&gt;.:1w11 ....

F.ASTF.RN CONFF.RF.NCF..

NL' I'I

~an k'CM'I)l'f

x- l1'hil;"lcl1thi01 ................ ..10 26 I I
W : t\hintt~uu ..................... ,.\fi 29 12
NY. hlanlk!rs ................... :!M J'J 10

:r.w
.\-I&gt;:)II:L\ .

Basketball

U-0 ) :n l"ilh."af!-11 Wlnl1'

Sm. iSm~L:. IJ..! ). !4 II.~ p 111.
TPft•lll•• ! William~ 1·01 ;11
K :.l~ p.m

.1!: L I lb. li.t li4

xyz-l"k-w kr~y ..............46 :!~ It 101 :!l,fl 1:'12

A-SI

1-m. :to.~ 1' m

Ta mp:&gt;1\ay

Allanlir l)i\·ision

Iwa

witlt.seven strike out,, three walk;.
and two Easlern hits.
Erron Aldridge and freshman Wes
Crow were the lone Eastern hillers.
Waterford was led by Jones with
a home run and a double.
Eastern goes to Wellston Monday .
lnpin• ll!IJib
000-000-0=0-2-4 .
Eastern
10 1-060-x=S-5-1
Waterford
Batteries
Eastern : Durst (lPJ. Will and
Broderick
Waterford : Skinner (WP) and
Jones
'

~

DO ,A,E·
POMEROY, OHIO

(614) 992·6614. (800) 837·1094
Mon.·frl. 9 atn·8 p11; Sat. 9 atn·S ptn

POIAC.·=-@

re

F.ASTERN CONFF.RF.NCE

Tul't•IIH! ...

Mhllll.'.'!l&gt;tai Mnl}!an ().(]) ''' K:tt}-~••~ ( 'il}' (1-t:nk..'}'

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) ~ A Hockey L~ague thai is to begin play
federai judge has ruled that a dispute in October 2000 wanted the dispute
over ownership of the Columbus senled locally to bring a timely rulBlue Jackets hot·key team be heard in ing.
saale court. .
.
But Lamar Hunt, a Dallas-based
The decision Thursday by u:s. spurts enlrepre~eur involved with a
District Judge Edmund A. Sargus Jr. previous group that wan led the team,
is expected·to clear the way for a tri- sought lo have the dispute senled in
al on the ownership issue beginning feder•l court. His attorneys argued
April 20 in FraRklin County Com- the federal coun had jurisdiction
mon Pleas Court .
bec;iuse the dispute involves compaHowever. that equid be delayed by nies ;.md businesses rrom several
an appeal to the 6th U.S. Circuit st;,1tes.
Coun of Appeals in Cincinnati.
The NHL awarded the franchise in
The partnership awarded the June to COLHOC. a partnership led
expansion fmnchi~ by the Nation:ll by John H. McConnell.

· Crnlral llhi!oiun

•

{l&gt;r'a h.:l.: 1·01 at l&gt;...•lrni l {Worwll ().1 ).

Fed,e.ral judge says ownership
dispute belongs in state court

WESTF.RN CONFF.RF.NCF.

V;mk~'l:~ CC'PI IO,:

St•auk t l t&gt;hu ~•ll 0 · 11 al Bn5lun1Ru~· O· I J. ' : O~

TOUGH DAY- Cincinnati pitcher Ricardo Jord!ln hands his head
after hitting San Oligo's Mark Sweeney with a pl!ch with the btlsea
loaded In the seventh' Inning of Thursday's game In San Olego. The
Padres went on to score six runs In the inning en route to a 6-2 vic·
lory. (AP)

-·-

/\ll;utm aJ l'l ulaJdJiimJ. l ..':'i I' m
l·k ll'tdu :tl l"illshurt!ll. I .l 5Jl.lll.
N V Mcb 011 Milwaut.;..,•, :!_(J.'j Jl.tn.
t'INCINNATI ;11 ( '"l•.~r.ldu, \ :U.~ p.m
1\nwn:• :11 San l)jc~u . -HJ5 I' 111.
St . Lmu' 111 S:m Fmn~· tJit'll. 4 U5 1' m
H ou ~l••n a rl.n~ ''"1-'l.'ln. M:U'i p m.

0-11. I :lt'i p.m

r 111.

o-

"

•
t•.

The Eastern ba.«eball team came in
Sec:ond Thursday night at Waterford.
That's one -positive way coach Dan
Thomas has of looking at his young ·
team's performance. which dropped
an 8-0 tally to Wate rford at Waterford, ·
The score was again somewhat
deceiv ing, but never-the-less anolh·
er loss.
· Eastern went into the sixth inning.
trailing 2-0. but then the flood gate
opened and Waterford rallied for six
runs in the frame . :
Two errors and a "hit 'em where
they ain't" philosophy or four bloopers in the gap allowed' Waterford to
take command and the eventual win.
Thomas · said, "We''&gt;/'e improved
every game and we're still learning.
We've still got to be more patient at
the plate. A couple times. we were
ahead in the count 2-0. and swung at

Nuggets.·win 1O~h ·
game ·of sea~on;
Cavs· defeat -Bull.s

I

NHL standings

().

'

Thursday's scores

1-0) al N y

(Y• •~I ni ' I ·OI ;11 M1lwonth·~·ll:IUn·d

Ill. 10.05 jl.llt.

Tamr:tllay :at l.ktr1111. r 11d . r:un
T.- 11n~ II . ( 'htl'li)!.U Wlut~ Sm. U
llalltllklfC l . K oms.a~ l 'ity I
MimM.'MMa 1.1. Tt•wutu 2

O ;~ klanJ cH:.yu~.·~

NY Mcb

01.2 o~ r m
t1lic:11=11 Cuhs (Clark ~- 0) al M untrc&lt;~ l IPL'f\'Z

'
2

Hockey

2-01 . l ·.l;'i I' Ill.

21. 2 : 0 ~ I'm .

.:'171
..115
..lU

.a

.2

Saturday's ~ames
IHcrn:.ndt.•L I · I 1 ill Pill s bur~h ICnnJuva

flnnd:~

·'

17~

Ct"nlralnll'lskm
CLEVELAND ....................Jt
1 .M:'l7
.J 500
MiiUII.'!OI)Iil. .
"' ............ 4
(111 l'i11'1t . ...
. . . . . . .l
4
.&amp;111
KiiiJS: IJI City
J
~ J 1:'l
l.&gt;ctmit .
_
... ,,2 -' .2Hfl

Oaklatkl

lmll:ma 111 llu!ih•u. 7 jt.m.
Phll&lt;l'llix :al V;u...:nuYL'f. \1 p.m.

11.111

Amull:t (/\nUy Rcfll.") J.. I) :ll Soan lli~'J!tl (l!mwn
1·0/. IO:O:'i JI. Ul
Sl. Luui ll C.liihtt tlcmyrc 1-U) 111 San Fr:m.:l.~.; n
ilJafv.·m 1·11). HH5 p m

AL standings
Ea~ltrn

New k'f:K:Y !II Tummu, b p.nt

. JJ nuswn tR~ytwiJs 1-01 at Lu:; l\11~d~~ I R.

eral Hocking .9-5 a.~ Evans · again
picked up·the big win. Evans fanned
six, walked eight. and gave up three
earned runs of the total five. Ea.•tem
had three en'ors . .
Highland suffered the lo~s for
Feder~! Hocking. She fanned eight
and walked four.
Eastern hitters were Kelli Bailey
with a single, Angi Wolfe a single,
Stephanie Evans two singles,
Chasatie Hollon a three RBI triple.
and Ann Wiggins a single. Wolfe and
Evans both had two RBI'.s apiece.
A big six-run second inning iced
the game for Ea.•tern. Four Federal
errors combined with Hollon's triple
and two RBI singles from Evans and
Wiggins accounted for the runs.
Eastern plays Monday at Tuppers
Plains against Wellston.
Jnninll tl!lllb
Eastern
000-000-1 = I 2 0
()()()..()()().~ 3 4
Waterford
Batteries
Eastern: Evans (WP) and ~ailey
Waterford: T. Huck (LP) and
Greene

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.

'

.-·----·---- ----

1998 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Lciw miles, loaded!

Loaded· VB!

23,

8

21,180

8

1997 CHEVY

(tiONTE CARLO

v~i~~iiid'

1996
CHEVY CORSICA
. 1996 Auto.,a
air. cass
CUTUSS SUPREME
V6, auto., air, PW, PL. till,
cruise, cass.

11,990

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94 OlDS CUTWS SUPREME V6, auto., air, PW, PL, tih, cruise ..................'.....18,300
95 cilm CAPRICE V8, aulo., air. tih, cruise, PW, Pl.. .......... ~ ...................-...... 113,500
96 CHm CAVALIER Z·24 Auto., air, cass., tilt, Cf!Jise ................:................. '1 0,650
96 CHEVY LUMINA Z•34 Auto., air, stereo,@, cruise ..........:....................:......:•9,800
96 DODGE D·150 PICKUP va, auto., air, cass., tilt, ciuise ............................. 11'7,500
97 CHEVY J•1 0 PICKUP Ext. Cab. V6, 5speed, air, 17,000 miles................... 113,995
96 CHEVY lWEI V6, 4x4, air, aulo., @, cruise ...............................................118,750
96 CHEVY C1500 PICKUP Ext. cab, auto., air, PW, ti~. cruise .......,.............. '18,500
95 CHm 5·10 PICKUP.vs, air, stereo, tih, cruise, 4x4....:. ..........................:•1·0,900
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95 CHEVY. K15.00 PICKUP 4x4, PS, .PB, air, 35,000 miles ............,............... $15,600
.
95 CHEVY K1500 PICKUP vs. auto., air, stereo, tiit, crulse ............... . .:......... 22,500.
91 CHm S·IO PICKUP V6, Ext. ·cab, auto CD player, tih, cruise ................ 117,900
97 FOlD EIPLOREI4x4, va, auto, air, tih, cruise.........:............:.............:....... '23,500
1

........,

~~"--·

_...;.

__ -- · ..

�•.

•

By The Bend

'

The· Daily

Sent~el

IM. L111 Anf'C"I.:' TlmCI
Sya..b~.: •tc 11M Cteulun
S)lftlllK:IIC

Dear Ann Landers: I want to
dispute the theory that overworked
interns make hetter doctors. If producing better professionals ihrough
sleep deprivation is a valid idea,
logic would dictate that it should
have much broader practical application.

Working while exhausted due to
· lack of sleep should also improve
the skills of the trucker hauling hazardous cargo in the lane next to you
on the freeway, the :wo~ker installing

and connecting gas lines in your but thank heavens, the, exhausted
new home, the fireman you will surgeon invariably has able assisdepend on if you are trapped in a tants and colleagues at his or her
burning building, the crossing guard elbow to give some relief. The same
who'll determine when it's safe for applies to firemen. police officers,
your preschooler to cross the street, airline pilots and others who have
and the mechanics and pilots of the high:pressure, tension-producing
747s who transpon our families and jobs. I just hope these people are
soar over our neighborhoods.
paid whm they are worth.
Please tell me why the concept of
Dear Ann Landers: My wife
sleep deprivation seems perfectly and I help support our ~on, age 27.
acceptable when applied to doctors - because he doesn 't make much
- yet utterly ludicrous when applied money whetf he works. We buy
to everyone else. -- G.S. in Sacra- " Tony " some of the luxuries that he
mento, Cali f.
could not 01hcrwise afford.
Dear G.S.: The l'otion that
Last year. we bought him a new
d~priving doctors~sleep is perfect- car. We also pay for the insurance.
ly acceptable is at ory I have never He is a wonderful son, has never
endorsed. Some su ical procedures been in trouble of any kind and has
take six or seven hours (or longer). been a gr~at joy to us. We love him

dearly.
Dar Minneapolis: Why do you
1-lere's the problem: Whenever ·tell him what you plan to buy? Go
we mention buying sotnething for ahead and buy whatever you want.
ourselves, Tony says, " It's too It's not his money -- or his business.
expensive. " For example, we told
You ask what I think Tony has in
him recenlly that vie. were consider- mind. 'Dte only thing I can come up
ing buying a 27-inch TV, and Tony with is the possibility tha! he wants
immediately pointed out that ;t 25- to make sure you don't spend it all
inch set would be chc;,aper. I wanted so there will be plenty left for him. ·
to buy a state-of-the-a'rt computer to
Dar Ann Landers: TJ!is is for
handle our stock ponfolio. and Tony the .woman who signed herself
said; "It costs too much. Look for "Childless and Glad oflt." Fifteen
something more economical. ··
years ago, I was where she is now at
Ann, money is not a problem. age 21. I did not want children and ·
There is more than enough for any was sure I would never change my
purchase we choose to make.
mind. By the time I was 2'9 . I had
What should I tell Tony when he seen the joy that so many of my
says these things? What do yo~ friends were experiencing . and I
think he has in mind7 -- Question made a complete ahout-face.
Marks in Minneapolis
You were .so right when you told

---Sermonette ---..---'--

The agony of the cross
By Bonnie Shiveley
Excitement soared on this bright
Sunday as a jubilant crowd followed
Jesus on the dusty road to celebrate
Passover. Believing he was their
long-·awaitcd King. many enthusiastically shouted. "Hosanna! Blessed
is he who comes in the name of the
Lord. Blessed is the King of Israel 1"
Jesus quietly accepted .their
praise as He rode the borrowed don:
key acro•"S the hastily laid palm
branches. jljo doubt he pondered ihe
days ahead.
Throughout the week He taught
the people many parables, and · on
Thursday evening, he at a meal with
his disciples.
They sang a son!' and walked to
the garden of Gethsemane where He
left them and went ahead to pray.

Jesus knew He had come to the hate mongers ferociously yelled,
end of His eanhly life. His loving "Crucify Him! Crucify Him!" \lenFather sent an angel to strengthen . omous men. who helieved they had
Him to bear what was to happen.
won a great victory io Jesus death.
In .the approaching hours. His jeered Him. ·
. hetraycr, Judas, would hring Roman
. But Christ Jesus is God. On the
soldiers to arrest Him. respected following Sunday an angel stood hy
leaders would falsely accuse Him.
His grave and announced lhc ~ost
Through three illegal .trials. He fantastic news: "He is not here. for
would he flogged, spit upon and He h&lt;!-&lt; risen. just a.&lt; He said.'' The
mocked. Stripped naked. ·rejected tllmh was empty! JESUS. THE
ancj humiliated, Jesus would hang in RESURRECTED LIVING ONE.
shame on .a cross c_ndurlng the most WAS THE VICTOR!
agonizing death cruel ·people could
The question comes back. "Why
devise.
did He endure the ag&lt;iny of the
Men w.ith heavy hammers would cross'!"'
pound nails through His hands and
Because He wa.&lt; willing to suffer
feet.
horrendous conditions to bare the
He would he lifted high for all to weight of sin for the whole worldsee and would he left hanging in mine and yours included. Indeed.
agony with insufferahle thirst and Jesus iinishcd His work of redempexcruciating convuisions of pain. tion.
Finally. a military officer would
Through His death and resurret .
thrust a spear into His side.
tion, we can have everlasting life if
After prayer, He returned to the we choose to accept Him as our Sav. .,.,
disciples and heard the clamor of ior. .
hundreds of men coming to arrest
Father, thank 'You for our victoriHim.
ous Christ Jesus, our King ,who ·died
Willingly He went with them - all for everyone; the vilest men at the
the way to the cross. After sjx hours, foot of. the cross, and the sweetest
He cried, "It is finished." And He ones· who .loved Him from afar.
died. Joseph and Nicodemus Amen.
claimed His body and buried Him.
I'll be glad to send a booklet to
What had happened'! Sunday, a help you know Jesus. Write Bonnie.
huj!e CrOWd had burst forth With P.O. Box 951. Xenia. Ohio 45385.
praises - Friday, m.any grief strick- Scriptures John 12 :12-13 NIV:
en. stood .back from the cross while Matthew 28:6 NASB.
'·

that woman, " In 10 years. you wtll
not be the same person you arc
today."
At age · 30, I became pregnant
with our first child. We . had two
more daughters within the next two
years. Easy? Of course not. but they
have made our lives worthwhile. ··
Windsor, Ont.
Dear Ontario: What a beautiful
testimony to parenthood. Thanks for
saying il so well. I'm sure millions
of readers arc nodding their heads in
joyful agreement.

Apostoltc
c~.... of J - cw ".f:"'oolc

r-roy Weatsldo Clau... ofChrjst .
33226 Otild,.n'l Home Rd.
Sundaf Sc:hool - II a.m.
Wonhtp - IOa.m., 6 p.m,
Wedneoday_Se'rvices • 7 p.m.

Vanlandtlftd Ward d.
Putor: James Miller
Sunday Sc:hool- 10:30 a.m.
Evtnlaa - 7:30p.m.
Servicu - 7:30
.

Mlddteporl Cllurch afCbrlsl
· 5th and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Yooih Minister. Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:U, t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es , 7 p.m. .

Assembly of God

.

P.O. Box 467, " ' .
Muon, W.Va.
Pulor: Neil Tennant
·Sunday Scrviooa- 10:00 o.m. and 7 p.m.

Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles. Calif.

B&lt;lptist
,.._.,..,....,
it_

"

K- C1oorc11 of Chrtll
W-ip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Putor-JeffJey Wall~
. Ill and 3rd Sunday

.

&lt; I

· ~70 Oranl St.,
Sunday acbool · 9:30a.m.
Wdrship - 11 a.m. and ~ p.m.
Wednesday Service : 7 p.m.
0 I

90045

Find Peeps' trivia and
recipes on the Web
blue and otherwise

Ol

~.,......,. Rldee Cllurch or Clut11

PutOJ:Terry Stewart
Sunday Sc:hool -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 1.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• ·6:30p.m.

Fret Will Baptltt Church
Ash Strut, Middleport
Pastor: Les Haymlft
Sunday Scrvi&lt;e • 7:00 p.m.
· Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Zlal Clno... oiCJuill
· Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt14.3)
Pastor: Roa&lt;r Wa11011
Sunday Sd!ool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wodnnday Services· 7 p.m.

.Picasso hud one.' why L'an 'l Peeps'!

of
Center, Middleport, were crowned king and queen at the annual
Valentine'• Day party held Feb. 14 at the Center. They have been
married lor 61 yeare and lutve alx children. Family members attendIng the party were Opal Holl9f1, Mary King, Betty Baroni~k, Jo Ellen
Wolle, and Norman, Patricia, Raven and Jackline Hysell.

Rosalie Story presented with golden sheaf award
The golden sheaf award for 50
years continuous membership was
presented to Rosalie Story at a
recent ' meeting of the Hemlock .
Grange held at the h~ll.
Muriel Bradford gave a repon on
past improvements made to !he .
grange hall ·hy the quilting group.
and approval was given· to them to
proceed with rcstoning the parking
area and l;•ndscaping around the
hall.

The annual grange . banquet was
a~nounced for April 24 at _the Senior
CJuzens Center. Helen Qu1~cy noted
that cookbooks are still for sale.
Scott Dillon, financial officer for
the Meigs County Council on Aging;
spoke on the one mill five-year
renewal levy for the program and
the grange endorsed it.
~
A potl~ck was planned for . the
May meeting with each member !o
take one covered dish.

Rull11d Flnl BIIJIIII Cllnrch
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 a.m•.
· Worship - 10:45 a.m.
I'G!IIOI'OJ Pint Boptltl
East Main St.
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
· Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Tvppen .PIIIo CllarcbofCiuilt '
•
!Jatnlmental
P-: Sc:ol Brown
. W0&lt;1111t&gt; Service - 9 a.m. ,
Colril!iunlon·• tO a.m.
Sunday School· 10:15 a.m.
Youlh· 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Srudy Wednesday 7 pm

Flnt Soulher11 BIP.IJII ·
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m. •
Wednesday Servicoti- 7:00p.m.
Ftnt Boptill Cburch
Pastor: Marl&lt; Morrow.
· 6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wol1hlp . 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Senice- 7:00.p.m.

.

P-r: Tom Runyon
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Bndtord Clla,.. orChrltl
Comer of Sr. Rt. 12-1 It: Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Miniller: Bill Amberaor
Sunday ScllooJ - 9:30a.m.
.
Wonhjp- 8:00 a.m.,l0:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
. Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.
Hlckor)' Hills Charm of Chrlat ·
· Evanaelist Joseph B. Hoskins
·sunday Sc:~. 9 a.m.
Worship- tO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

ML Valool Boptltt
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday'Sc:hool-9:45 a.m.
EvonlnJ- 6:30 p.m. .
Wednesday !ierviccs -.6:30p.m.

Uberty Cllrtlllu Ckerch

'

.

We've just reduced our green fees.

HOilladc Gran Church
Pastor: Oene Zopp
Sunday 1&lt;hoot • tO::lela.m.
Wonhip. 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Botlllit Clluidt

.

--

Cllnst t:tn Un ton
Hartford a.rcts of Cbrtlllo
Cllrlldu Vllotr

JS&amp;OWalk·Bthind Mower

-

• 6.0-hp engine
. • Seven cuning heights .
• Handlebars f.old easily for storage

LT133 Lawn Tractor

• 13-hp engine
·
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 15:inch turning radius

5alire1438GS

Sl r999

. •14-hp lmgine
· • 38'inch mower deck
•18-inch turning radius

.

. . u•= .
•

.

••
.•

Rullllld Free WW Bopllal ·
• Salem St.
P-: Rev. Paul Taylor •
Sunday ScllooJ- tO a.m.
Evenina- 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.M.

Cit lll o ltc

345 Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor

•14-hp engine
• 38 or 48-inch mower deck
• 20-inch turning radius ·

•17-hp 11ngine
• 38 or 4a:inch mower deck
• 7 1/2-inch turning radius

RACINE PLANING MILL
Mill Work
Syracuse

992-3978

(740) 446·2412

.'

SL Jolla Lutbtroa Church·
Pine Gro-we
Rev. Oeorp Weirick
Worship - 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

SI.I'IIIIIAtllont•Chu....
Comer Sy&lt;amore 4 ·Se&lt;:ond Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. &lt;korge Weirick
Sunday Sd!ool - 9:~5 a.m.
·Wollhlp • I! o.m.

Tri•IIY Chrlrch

.

--3785

_

·· Sentiael
' 992-2156

.• '•

Mt Olwt C. .irlorolry Ch1i'dl
Pastor: Lawrorico Bush
Sunday SdtooJ • 9:30a.m.
Evenlns - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

•

Sunda~~30a.m .
~wHie

s1..... CJoorn attlle N111...,

FaH C.,.l upthotao .
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
· Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday Sc:hool· 10 a.m.
Eveni"'l 7:30p.m.
• Tuesday 4 :Thursday , 7:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pnte&lt;oolll Autmbt7
St Rt 12-1, Racine
Pastor: William Hob11&lt;k
Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m.
Evening ~ 7 p.m.
Wedne!lday Scrvicos • 7 p.m.
Mk!dltport Pt~locootal

• Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
'Wednesday ·Services ·7:00p.m.

Presbyterian
Syncuoe Flnt Vnlted Prtsbytorltn
Pastor. Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday Sc:hool • 10 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip-lla.m.
HarriaOiwille Prtsbyltrlan Cll.,...
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:45 a.m.
Mlddteporl Pmllyterlao
Sunday Sdlool · 9 a.m.
Worship • tO a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventtsl
Se-th-Day Ad&gt;tllllll
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath Sd!ool - 2 p.m .
Wonhip - 3 p.m.

Untied Brethren
ML H..- Urollld llrelbreo
Ira Cluiol Churdo
Texas Community off CR 82

Pa.'ltor: Raben S.ndcrs
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service!- 7:30p.m.
Eden U - Bmhrtllo Chrltt
2 If.!' miles nonh of Reedsville
Of1 State Route 124
Pastor: Rtv. Rober! Markley
• Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worsllip • 10:00 a.m. It: 7:00p.m.
. Wednesday Service.• · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Yooth Service . 7:30p.m.

•

Puror, Robert J. Coen· .
Radio Minittty· Ravenswod Stalioo ·
4~:30 Saturday
·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
. Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m ..
Wedneoday Kids for Otrill-.7 p.m.

these·area merchants

. ,..
... , _ . _

--lllln=

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
.•
.

St. At. 248, Ch11ter, Oh.
985'3308

..
Brogan-Warner

SAVE TIME
WITH A
CLASSIFIED ADI

ute Commoally Chun:h'
Sunday Sd!ool - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

lleednlllo FtllowsWp ·
Cllorn of tile Nuamoe
Plllor: Teresa Wakltd&lt;
Sunday Scboo) • 9:30a.m.
W-ip -10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wed,.....y Services· 7 p.m .

992·51~

Ntw Ute VIctory Center ·
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, 0!1
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services - tO a.m. It: 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. A Youth 7 p.m.

Faltlr Goopel Church
Long llottom
Sunday School • 9:30 a:m.
Worship - 10:•s a.m., 7:30p.m.
. Wedae&amp;day 7:30 p.m.

Pastor: o.eaory A. Condiff
Sundoy Sc:hool • 9:30a.m.
.worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

K&amp;C JEWELERS .J:t•~;::~:,~_:.-,:c!nc.
'
.
212 E. Main
•••r~•
. .Street
.,.._\ O H ~ Pomeroy

Clifton Tabtmodo Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday Sc:hool · tO a.m..
Wonhip • 7 p.m .
Wednesday .Service : 7 p.m.

' Sunday school- tO a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Mlddltport Cburdl at doe N111_.

Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m. ·
Fi!!r Sunday of Month - 7:30 p.m. service )

Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd .
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00 p.m.
Wednesday-7:00 p.m.
Friday -7:00p.m.

Dy...

Uolled Faith Cllu...
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
P11111or: Rev. Raben E. Smith, s•.
Suncla~ School • 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servk:e · 7 p.m.

Con g 1(, q" t 1on a I
Second .t (ynn, Pomeroy
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday odlooland wonhip 10:25 .'

Olf Rt. t:i4
'
Pastor: EdKI Hort
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 Lm., 7:30 p,m.

N3zarene

l'aslor: Bob Randolph
Worship • 9:30a.m. •
Sun~y Sehool- 10:30 a.m.

.mile~

M- c ...pot c~urch

Joppo

Clnorch of Gad of Pruphoq
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. t60
Plllor: PJ . Otapman
· Sunday Sdlool- 10 a.m.
. · W~lla.m.
Wedne!lday :&gt;.trvicca· 7 p.m.

'

To,..Cllron:ll
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Sdlool· 9:31l0:m.
Wonhip -10:30 •m.

PasiOr: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip. 9 a.m. ·
·Suitday School • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services.· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Russe!l .
Sunday Sd!ooland Wonhlp· 10 a.m.
Evtnlna Servioos- 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvica • 6:30p.m.

a.... c-••hr Cllurdl

Grand Street
Sunday School· tO a.m.
Wol1hip- .JI a.m.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Cbtoter

Allllle and Second Sts.

.~Faltb

114

Fillh Valley Tabtn- Church
Bailey Run Road
·
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evenins 7 p.m.
Thursday ServiCIO • 7 p.m.

H•"'l prt ctuorn

M-..coapJraUvePirtllll
N.,..._Ctwm'
Altnd
P.-: Sharon H11115111an
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
W.onhip. II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Cburch or J.... 'Christ,

P..tOr: Sam Andc;rson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp;- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

CooiYUie Uallld Motllorllolhrilh
·
Pastor: Holen Kline
Goohllle C~urdl
Main 4 Fifth St.
Sunday Sc:hool· tO a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday !!ervii:es • 7 p.m.
Bathtt Charch
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Sc:hool ' 9 a.m.
•
Wonhip .to a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

ML ~. Valled Mtlhedlal
Off 12-1 behind Wilkesville
~astor: 'Rev. Ralph Splru
Sunday Sehool- 9:30' a....
Wol1hip • t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

~d•a Ute Chun:b
SOO 1'1. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday Sc:hool -9:30a.m.
Worship- t0:30 am
Wednesday.S&lt;:rvices- 7 p.m .

- 515 Pearl St., Middiepon

Sy.-·MiiaJoro
1411 Bridgeman St., Sytseuse'
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

'

SllnnvHio Word ofFallh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Sc:hool9:30 a.m.
Evening ··7 p.m. ·

Mldd~ Com•u•IIJ Church

East Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkncsa
. Spnda~ School • 10 a.m.
Wollhip-9a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Radnt
Pasror. Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m,
Wol1hip • II a.m.

c....

Calnry Bible ,C lio,..
Po11&gt;eroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pasror: Rev . Bla&lt;:kwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship t0:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc"'ic:c - 7:30p.m.

Elldtlmt House ofPnyor.
(at Burlinpam churoh off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert VanCIO
Sunday worship. 10 a.m.
· Wednesday service -'6:30 p.m.

Worship- 10 a.m.

Our Sa•lour Lulbei'lla
Walnut and Henry Sts., RavtnsWooil, W.Va.
· Pastor: David Russell
,
Sunday School - 10:00 Lm. ·
Wonhip • tl ,.m.

214 E. Main .

ClaRified•

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE
•

MorolaaSt.or
Pastor: Dcwaync Studer
Sunday School • II a.m.

Gfllsam Uollld Methodist
W011hip- 9:30a.m. (1&amp;1 It: 2ad Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday ServiCIO · 7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Ofler ends July 6, 11198. Prices of products and avallabiHty may vary by dealership. See dealer for dekllla..

com

Lulhcran

·INSURANCE
SERVICES
·

*SoAijor:lta 41 ,;ltl...,.ooJaiWI 01n ~ JIWI. PIJn•c _oo_lll_wlll! llqiMitl i~ _pay.,.. •.r-. ~. IIIUII~ dohtrt"'**lll.oould hoor ro moittllly paynierM.
Mon1111y Prrin•C Mjlella -.gtllllll&lt;M nctlol. Llrger rnontl'ill' ...n•IIO moy blllqiMitlln Collcmio. - - kOUt - l o r - 11ra1ce opllcnl lncludltltiiiiiiiCIIIQ lor petiOftll-· A-M
,_,.~ IIIQcllltJM.OIIor· -~t,1-.I'JtoMolprodt.ctllndooaiiMIIOIY..,.IIJ I I lllttp.a.._lor_.

ril'l'lt'

Canriei-Saltoa
Cannel It: Buhan Rdo.
Racine, OhiO
Puior: Dewayne Srutla
Sunl!ay Sc:hool- 9:30 a.m.
Worahip.- t0:45 a.m. ·
·Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m. · ·

Fallh Followslllp c......&lt;Ie for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
SeNicc : Friday, 7 p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinoon
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

· Hanilonwllle Commualty Chu,..
Puror: Theron Durham
Sunday-9:30a.m. ani17 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

·1

Falnlow Bible Church
Lelan, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: John Han
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Tho lltlltvon' Ftlowahlp Mloiii"Y

-.ay
Pastor: pewayitc Stuller
Sunday Sc:hool - 10 a.m.
Wo!Ship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services.-10 a.m.

The C...n:b of Jnul
Christ or Lottir-Day Saints
St Rr. 160, 446·6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Sc:hool 10:20- tl a.m.
, ·
Relief Society/Priellhood t1 :05·12:00 noon
Sacrarftent Servlco 9-tO:IS a.m.
Homemakina meelina, lsi Thm. - 7 p.m.

Sunday Sc:hool - II a.m.
Wol1hip - 9:30 •m.; 7:30p.m.
Wedlle!lday Services- 7:30 p.m.

nttb Full Goopel Cbun:b
Lons Bottom
Pastor: Sieve Reed
Sunday Sdtool - 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip • 9:30·a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday - fellow'!hlp service 7 p.m.

Salt•C..ter
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sd!ool· 9:1~ a.m.
Worship - IO:tS a.m.
SMW&gt;IIIe
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
. Wol1hlp- 9a.m.

Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastcn: Jerry Singer
Sunday S.:hool •.9:30 a.m.
Worship. tO:JO a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

~-

White's Chapel Wesley18
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday ServiCIO- 7 p.m.

Habool Christian folll&gt;wahlp Cllun:lo
Sunday oervice, tO:OO a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serviCIO, 7:00p.m.

Thursday Servica - 7 p.m.

ot Lallor Dar Saints

Untied Methodtsl

'SFAR
661 PIIECREST DRIVE

RockS~r1op

Reorprol.,.l Church or JtiUI Christ

Pas&lt;or: Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday Sdtool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Chrldlori fotlowahlp c..ttr
Salem St., Rulland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday SdtooJ - 10 a.m.
Wo11hip- tl:l5 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedneSday Service : 7 p.m.

Pastor. Kenh Rader .
•
· Sunday School ·9:15a.m.
.
Worship- 10 a.m.
You&lt;lrfellowoh•p, Sunday - 6 p.m.
Rulllnd
Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30 a.m.
Wol1hip • 10:30 a.m.

Latter-Day Satnls

Freed.., Gospel Mlsalon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Patlh·Cisapel Opcro Bible Churdl
923 S. Third St., Middleport
Pastor MiGIIael Pangia
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday service, 7 p.m.

.

•

Hartford, W.Va.

Appc Ufo·Conter
"Full-Oospel Otwch"
Pulon Joha It: Pany Wade ·
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor. Rober! E. Robinson
Sundoy Sd!ool - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday· 10 a.m.

Rutlud c ...•ullhy Church
Pastor. Rev. Roy McCarty
· Sunday S.:hool ·9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services.· 7 p.m.

Carltl01 lalerdtrlolllilatloul Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smith
Sunda1 Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worshrp Service 10:30 a.m.
· l'lo Sunday or Wednesday Nigh! Servicos

H.,.... Oubeoeh Mlolalrlea
47439 Reibel Rd., Otester
Putor. Rtv. Mary MeDanlet
·sund.IJ' Se"'ices: 10 a.m. It: 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

P11r1CbarMI
Sunday Sd!ool· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

Laurel CUff Fne Mtlbodlst Chun:h
Pastor: David DeWin
Sunday School-9:30a.m. ·
Worship- 10:30 a.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Sii'Wtr Ridat

Pastor: Robtn Barber
Sunday Sc:hool • 9 a.m.
Wonh::f.
' • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne y ServiCIO • 7 p.m.

Other Churches

(Middltport)

Church aluiouncements

f525 Front Mo•w'

• 18-hp ti11gine
• 48 or 54-inch mower deck
• Hydrostatic drive

Cabinet Making

wtn\.o

. ..

Saorlb lletbtl....,. Tnii-

Pastor. Mark MallOn
Wonhlp -10:30 p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Miaen•llle
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday Sc:hool- 9 o.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Wollhip- 10:30 a.m.

!lo&lt;nd Hart Coli aile Clowdl •
. 161 Mulbcrty Ave .. Pomeroy, 992·58911
, _ , Rev. Walter E. Helaz
Sat. O&gt;n. 4:45-5 : l~p.m.; M111- 5:30p.m..
Sun. O&gt;n. -8:4~·9: 15 a.m ..
' Sun. Mlll- 9:30a.m. •
Dailey Mlll.· 8:30a.m.

GT242 Lawn &amp; Garden Tractor

c;,.., Bible lloU1eu Church

s,...... flnt Cll•rn or God

,

r.trlllad Flnt Church artbt Nuanae

Hat~

Wlllt711 Bible Holt.... Church
. 1S Pearl Sl., Middleport. .
· Pastor: Rev. !ohn Neville
Children's se'rvice • 10 a.m.
Worship. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servico · 7:30 p.m.
'Hysell Run Hollneu Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 1.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Rollarld Cll•,.. of God
...._, Randy Birr
Sunday Sd!ool-tOa.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wcdneaday ScrviCIOo • 7 p.in.

I

Sunday Sdlool • .30 Lm. •
Wonlllp - t~45a.m.
Sunday EvenlnJ • 6:00p.m. ·

Flltwoodl

Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday Sd!ool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

112 mile off Rt 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- IO:W a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servico · 7:30p.m.

. Racine
Pulor: Rev. James Sanerf&lt;eld
Sundaf Sd!ool · 9:45 o.m.
Evenlna-7p.m.
Wodnnclay Se"'ices • 7 p.m.

Moriolo BoJIIIot

Puror: Samuel Basye
Sunday Sc:hool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Forest Rroo
Pastor. Otad Emrick
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsliip - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Rooeofs.- HollaeuChurdl
· uading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sun&amp;y scbool; 9:30a.m.
. Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday pRyer meetina· 7 p.m.

Cllurcll of God

Fourth 4 Main St., Middleport
P.-: Rev. Oilbcn Cral.. Jr.
Sunday Sc:hool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.

Sl ,399

Sunday Sc:hool9:30 • .m.
11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wed
y Servioc • 7:30p.m.

M~ Mlrtolt Clle... of God

Forest Rroil Bollllrtl ·
Pastor : Ariuollun
Sunday School· 10 1.m.
Wol1hip • II a.m.

· Putor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sc:hool · 10 a.m.
Wol1hip • 9 a.m.
Putor: Keith Ra&lt;l&lt;:r
Sunday Sc:il&lt;!ol': 10 a.m.
Worship - ll ·a.m.

wo:~-

Putor:Jim Huahel

Ftlllh Bollllrtl Cllorch
Railroad Sr., Muon
Sunday sChool· 10 o.m.
Wonhlp - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
·Wednesday strviCIOs- 7 p.m.

-

Reodarillo Cllu,.. ofChrlat
Pasior: Philip Srurm
• Sonday Sd!ool: 9:30a.m.
Wollhlp Servlco: 10:30 un.
Bible Srudy, Wednnday, 6:30p.m.

Rllload Cll- oflht NaW'tllt

Ea~

c.t&gt;lt)' PIJ&amp;rim Choptl
Harrisonville Road
Pa.s1or: Rev. Victor Roush

Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.in.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Vldory'Bopllsllllllet rodaol
. 525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pillar: laO&gt;OSE. ~
• Worship - ttla,m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvicoti • 7 p.m.

M~

Da••llle Hall..., Cllurch
. 31057 State Route 325, Longsvlle
Pastor: Dr. j .D. Young
Sunday IIChool • 9:30a.m.
Sunday iv&lt;&gt;nhip · t0:30 ~. m. It: 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service · 7 p.m. ·

Pine

Clooaler Clovdr of doe N . . Pulor: Rtv. Htrt.:n Gllte
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Calnl~

Aoboory (Sy.-)
Pastor. Chad Emrick
Sunday Sd!ool- 9:•5 a.m.
Wol1hlp - 11 a.m.
·
W.ednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Holiness

LororJIIt Cbrlsllu Claurcll

lllllllde Bopllot Cllrorclo
St. Rt. 143 just off Rl. 7
P-: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sundaf Sd!ool- 10 a.m.
Wonlnp - Ua.m., 6 p.M.
'Wednesday Scrvice_s •7 p.m.

• .

Dexlcr

Pastor: Woody Call
.Sunday Evtni"J- 6:30p.m.
Thursday Sctvice • 6:30 p.m.

· llethlehe• Bopllot Cllrorcll
OJeat Bend, Route 12-1, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine ·
Sunday School -.9:30a.m.
Sunday Wonhle • 10:30a.m. 4 6.P,"!·
Wednesday Bible Srudy • 6:()Q'p.m.
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evcni"'l- 7:30p.m.
TlJursday Servi&lt;es • 7:30

32.6 E.
Sr., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPIIfttier
Holy Eucbarilt and
Sunday Sdtool J0:30 1.m.
Colreo hour fotlowi,J-

Rrollllld C...... of Christ
Sunday School • 9:30a.m. ·
Wollhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

$11¥tr Rua Bl,!ll.ill
Putor: Bill Uttle
Sunday Sc:hool • IOa.m.
·
Wonhlp • I h .m., 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday Servi&lt;es. 7:30p.m.

Old Bllhtl Fret WID

....

lra'"*r c ...,.. ofChrltl

~- Ftnt BIPiill
Sunday Sdtool•9:'10a.m.
Wotsllip. 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicoti • 7:00 p.m.

..

c.- 3: lfllll en,..

Minister: Danay Bill
Sunday Sdlool ' 9:30a.m.
W-ip-t0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi'cos · 7 p.m.

•

Well. they c~n . In iitct. it lm&lt; heen
in full swing since Valentine's Day, · .
Peeps. the g&lt;KlCY m:trshmallnw
candy indigcnc,us ltl Easter haskcts usually 'with nniikiul gnL« stuck 111
their underhcllic' - used tn he only
yellow. lbcy mutated in 'the '90s:
pink. White. pul]lle aud nnw hluc. in
keeping with the pm:e set hy the newly
true hlue M-and-Ms and Jell-0 .
Peeps have come a long wny sinc'C
1953 when Just Born t•••k nver manufacturing the things. Buck then. it I&lt;Ktk
27 hours: tn make nne Peep squc'Czed frmn a pnstry tuhe. band
painted. su~arcd mid left to sit
overnight. Today Cllnveyor hclts_rnll
out 2 million n day.
And thut's a good thing. because
people love their Peeps. a product
. almost no one cats while fresh. PreJ ferred state s~ms to he stal.e tn the
! pomt ni rctritc~uon .
·
i Sn why blue·
"We wanted to intmduce a new
color to h•~?.or the 75th anmversnry nl .
Just Born. market~ng vtce prostdent
Greg B~rratt .~ays . 'We selected hluc
m kecptng wtth the cut;,entc-onsut~~r
;trend toward ,'hat col&lt;~..
.
. A,,nd hn~ s that snung wnh Peep .
ians ·
.
.
Just fine. Just Born cummumcntions manager Rose Crai¥ says:
· "Sales arc at an all-time high. ·

o, CIMm:ll or t'1lrllt
212 W. Main St.

r

Po ""Cllrorclloftlotl'l_,_
Pillar: Rev. Uoyd D. &lt;Jrimm)r.
Sunday Sd!ool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedneoday Services· 7 p.m.

Tvppon l'lllu 5I. Polll
Pastor: Sharon Hallsmlft
Sunday Sdtpol - 9 a.m. •
Wol1hip - 10 a.rq.
Tuesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

Eptscop;tl

Cllurcll of Ct11tsl

The Cincinnati Enquirer
Call it their hlue pcrind. OK'

•.

.

-

Page&amp;
Friday, Aprll10, 1998

If sleep de rivation is a good idea for ·docto.rs - why not f9r other professionals?
Ann
Landers

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
.

.

~

.

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228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

TIME FOR SPRING
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C~n out your basement or
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PHARMACY

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�•

Page 1 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy e Mlddl~port, Ohio

Friday, Aprll10, 1998

90

Friday, Aprll10, 1998

Pome;oy • Middleport, Ohio

Aboolult

Panel affirms imp()rtance of teaching evolution
WASHINGTON (AP) Calling evolution " the , most.
important concept in modern
biology," a team of scientists
is urging public schools to educale students about the theory.
" There is no debate within
the scientific communi)y over
whether
evolution
has
occurred, and there is no ev idence that evolution has not
occurred," the National Academy of Sciences said Thursday
•.in a guidebook intended for
teachers,
parents,
sc hool

ers .

God created the universe.
question this year,
"~any students 'receive lit- · Some un iversity scholars
tie or no expos11re to the most have published books and artiimportant concept in modem ·cl~s chall enging evolution .
biology," said the guidebook.
They suggest that life, from
An indication the subject's cells on up, is too complex to
sensitivity : The Arizona Board have evolved .
.
of Education kept the word
"Our conlenti.on is that
"evolution" out of its 1996 there is reasonable evidence of
science standards, although , intell igent design;" said Raythey specify that students learn mond G. Bohlin, who holds a
· " how o;ganisms c hange over doctorate in molecular biology
time in terms ' of biologica l and heads the Probe Minadaptation and genetics." Sci- istries, based in Richardson,
enlists protested the omission, Texas.

It says that understanding .
evo'lutionary change is essential to understanding vital
pr&lt;icesses, such ~s how bacteria become resistant to antibiotics.
Evolution still causes trouble for teachers and . sc hool
officials more than 70 years
after John Scopes was convicted of violating a Tennessee la w
agai nst teachi ng it and more
than a decade after th e
Supreme Court ruled that pub-

guidebook:
-People slili can believe in
God and .accept evolution,
because "religion and scien'ce
answer different questions
about the world.'·'
-Less than one-half of
American
adults
believe
humans evolved from earlier
species, and more than half
want · creationism · taught,
according tp surveys.
-Citikftn shoul1l be graded on
their Wlderstanding of evolution but
nexJBilllizlldforrefusingtobelievein.

Thel!liHokalr&gt;.,..asta "fm.

Rlclll MDII CLIIIC

ty"lnte:ci:difi:!lml-aieqinD::u
ht ~ bcaa ~ - is
different from the evecyday expla-

surplus posted in the second half of
fiscal 1997, then the surplus for all of
1998 would amount to the .$18 billion
projected by the Congressional Budgel Office.
But if revenue continues 1\l grow
in the second half of the fiscal year, as
occurred during the first half, the 'surlati\'c 'deficit for the six months was plus fvr 1998 could reach $75 billion.
Gene Sperling, chainnan of Presi$71 billion.
dent
Clinton's Nalional Economic
But tax revenues from the April 15
tax deadline will boost government Council. noted the uncertainty of budrevenues and bring the budget hac~ · get projections.
"Until you get the key months like
into the black for the year. If the surplus for April and the rest of tl~~; bud- April. I don't think. anybody knows
get year arc equal to the $89 billion for sure," he said . .

wcs.
Earlier this .week. the Congressional Budget Office rniscd its surplus
prediction from $8 billion to $1 R billion. Some private economists arc
predicting it could hit $80 billion.

~ess

PUBUC NOTICE
Notice II h•raby. given
that the onnuot mntlng o1
tho ahoreholdere ol
For11111r1 loncahar••· Inc.
will b• hlld 11 the Pomeroy
Ubrary, 21&amp; Weal Main
Street, Pomeroy, Dhlo,
according to Ita bylaws, on
lht lhlrd Wedn.. dey ol
April, 11188, II 4:00 p.m. lor
the purpo11 of electing
directors and lht
treneactlon ol euch othtr
bualntll II may properly
come bllorelllcllllftllng.
Paul II. Rlld, BtcNI'Iry
(3) 22; (4) 3, 10, 11; 4TC

nation - a guess or hunch .. .
That helps gel teachers and
lawmakers off the hook.
· "Just this year a parent
asked me if I was teaching .
evolution as a theory or as a
fact," said Elizabelh·Carvellas,
·a biology teacher in Essex
Junction , Vt. " I ellplained that
I taught it as theory. That
seemed to se ttle that prob-

Public Notice

than a week to tax time,
IRS ·reports smQoth filing season
WASHINGTON (AP) - With
the tax deadline loo'ming, some tax
preparers who are dealing with more
and more procrastinators cite capital
gains changes as the culprit.
·"I have never seen people being
this late," said Carol Thompson. an
enrolled agent in Monterey, Calif. "I
think part of it is there is a new tax
law, and everyone has been hearing
about Schedule D and what a mon-·
stcr it is."
The Internal Revenue Service
said that as of April 3, 67.4 million
taxpayers had filed their federal
retums, slightly more than half the
124 million individual income tax
returns upec,ted this year. The numbcr of retams filed was about 0.8
percenl ahead of last year's pace, the
IRS Skod.
"The overall impression is that
the filing season is running very
smoothly," said Joseph F. Lane of
the National Association of Enrolled
Agents, tax preparcrs licensed to
rracticc hefore the IRS. Lane. who
addressed a House Ways and Means
suhcommiuee last week, credited
thc IRS with improved responsiveness 10 taxpayer complaints.
~
The 1997 tax bill reduced the
maximum capital gains rate frum 2K
percent to 20 percent. The complex
transition rules "catcd hy Congrcs~

caused the Schedule D capital gains
worksheet to doubled in size to 54
lines from the year before.
Todd Ransom, H&amp;R Block
spokesman, said the company is
expecting many taxpayers to pull
out their tax paperwork for the first
time after Easter dinner this Sunday.
"Thcy'lllook at the ScheduleD and
say, 'Oh my God, what is it?"' Ransom ~id .
·
·
IRS spokesman Don RobCrts said
more than I million lax returns have
been incorrectly filed without a
Schedule D. even though the taxpaycrs reported capital gains on line 13
of their Forin 1040s. The IRS will
send the incomplete returns back to
filers, 'l,&lt;kinglhem to add a Sd1edule
D, which can further delay ·refunds.
Rohen s said many of l~cse cases
appear to involve mutual fund
iiwestors who may not realize they
have to file· the paperwork to reflect
capital gain• distributions.
... nuther problem concerns errors
hy mutual funds and brokerage
ftnns 0 n Fonns 1099, which pro-.
vides taxpayers the a~unt of divi dendS: interest and cajl'ital gains to
-he ln.cluded in a person's income lax
return. Wall Street fi(llls complained
the variqus pliase-in dates to obtain
lower capital gains taxes made it diflicuh to calculate data for Form

I .£ibrt;~rfJ
·~

~

I

I

MEIGS COUNTY, 0110
IN THE llAmA 01'
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Account• and voucher•
ol the loll owing name
ftduclarlta ..,. blln llltd
In the Problle Court, llllp
County, OhiO, lor approve!

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

Purt111nl to Section
1111.02 ollhl Ohio RIYtHCI
Coda, notice 11 hereby
given thll TM Dhlo Vlllly
Benk Coftlpeny, 420 Third
Avenue, Galllpolia, Oallla
County, Ohio, 4M3t, 1111
llltd an eppiiCIIIon wltlllltl
Ohio Department of
Commerce, Buperlnllndanl
o1 Fhu1nclol lnatltlltlona; 77
South High Strut,
Coltlntbtla, Dhlo, 432N0141, for permlaalon to
tlllbllah a eupermarkll
branch olllclto be 1oc-.c1
within the Foodland
Suptrmlrkll 11 700 Will
Main Street, PQ/rieroy,
Metge County, Dhlo 407H.
lnt•l'llltd poraan1 may
aubmll commo,ta or
oblocllono ragordlng the
opplloallon to : the

1:00pm

Linda's
Custom Cakes
ALL OCCASIONS
Blrthdaya, Holld1ya,
Weddings, Showtrl,
Annlvtl'lllrlll,
Graduation•, Etc.
Home Bokery Llcenattl
ond lnapecttd
Plee and Cookies
. (740) 843-5544
Porlltnd, OhiO

t4ges 2-11

ea.. No:•o~

PtNon.

J/12111 , mo. pel.

.Nollcl by Publlelllon
To William Ira Milam,
whoM 1111 known .adclreH

•BobcatSei'VIce ·
-concrete
•Masonry
•General
Camrnerctal end
Relklentlal
24 Hr. Bobc_. Service
· Available

thereto, llkl acoounll will The · ablecl of lh~
be lor hllrlng blfore Hid I CCIIiiFIIal111 Ia 1 dlv- and
Court on Monclly, Mey 11,
prayer ltlhl plllntlllbe
11188, 11 wlllch lime Hid granlld I dl-ct lrom the
-'-will Ill~ dafend8nl, temporary end
and conttnuad lrom dey 10 perJnanent cualody of '"'
day unlllllnaftr dllpoHCI ol. partln' minor clllklrtn IIIII
Any peraon lntoraeltd Child IUpporL
may n1e wr111an
You are required to
to uld accounll or
- l h l complaint within
moll.,. pertaining to
21 tllya for anewer wl'l
ex.C\111011 o1 lhl II'UII.
commence on IMtdlle.
lllalllln
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In Clll Of your !allure 10
the dale 111
anewar or othorwltt
retp01111 11 raqulrtd by the
Ohio . Rulli of Clvl.l
Procedure, ludgment by
dtiiUII will 111 rendetttl
for' the rellet

'

YOUNG'S
•Room AddHiono
•New Garegee
•EIKtrlcel &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
P1lntlng
Aleo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
912-6215

Your 1111111ory 11¥11 In
our hlarta•~ry d8y.
I em lhlftllful we ..,.
together your .
yeer.
.
I wlft chlrlllh
mamlflta tormr.
'SICily miiMCI a
much•ld,IU
Your

740-985-4422

JUSTINTYME

EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

-'.!!~!!~-

992-5050 ·

SJ8,950*
. lriUIRB
• A4UIIIIt:
•AtOui....,

1·

lJ.I-

(7.).-4111

n

• 4 1'111111 KlDdl

OfrJIImr

8ltM

..... Whbll

• - - Whbll

• .()lullleon.t

• ,.....,.....,

• ...... .... .
' 4Clllltinllllllll
• Aim! co &amp; Cillllt . •'llltr8olt i.tt

.Dtill....
•lll!illllilg

...

••= 1.- r •a. • . 111 IIIII ••-

•laltlld

SJ7' 950*
.

II Call Melt
: "1 Buy Acctimullllon..

.

lnllllrwiB
PIIIIK CI'IIUriiSE ·

lfouMholtla, ate.•
. JtanWhlll
740-245 11448

•Alibi...
•Ill Cardon

E•timate•
11!.1.41

..... Windoll .
•l'alllri.Odll
•l'alllrllnall

'

IUIUIDS
HEEIIOISE
,NOW O~EN FOR
SPRING SE..tSON
Eaeter Flowere,
Panalea, Cabbage,
Broccoli, Cauliflower,
Hanging Buktts,
Phlox, Azaleae,
Shrubs, Spruce
TrHI
Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 12·5

GREENHOUSE

s racuae ·992·577&amp;

Lawn Setvice, 740·446-3103.

Mowing, tr\mming or odd jobs, ba·
bysining, anw shilt. located in Ulnersville. Call Jim or Paula, 740-

OrrversiOTR
Free Puppies-Black l ab &amp; Hu 1ky
mixed, 4wkl old, wor med, mother
grfat dog, loves kids. 30 4-8823292.
Free To Good Home: 1 Year Old
Brlnany Spaniel Puppy, Call After
4:30P.M. 7~6-2660 .

60 Lost and Fou!ld
$300 REWARD .

For return at blacklbruwn German
Shephard taken from Edith Rag·

CALL NOW TO' SE"F UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

..

R.le HOLLON
·TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

. 985-4422

'

Chester, Ohio
111/2!19M1n

~chance . "

HO!IEMOSr

WEEKENDS!

All Conventional Foleet
CDl.·A &amp; 1 Vr. OTR Req.
CaH Ken 800-~5-1045
Eveoings (7:30 -10:301 &amp;
Weekends tJ00.893·6792

-dOI$100.
lost Black And Gray Siberian
Husky Puppy, Answers To"lce"

laat Seen On Hamilton Road On
4/S/98 Reward OUerod, Please
Cal l 740·379-2145
740· 256·
1014
Pet

70

Yard Sale

Changing Table. Boy'$ Clo1heL
~Yard

Sales Must
Bt Paid ,In AdvaniC4t.

PEAQL•NE: 2:00 p.m.

tho cloy boloroth. .d

11 lo run. SundiY

ociHion - 2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday ociHion
• 10:00 a.m. Sltunlar.

-

SAYRE
JIUCKING Hauling, Excavating
• Trenching
UmHtone &amp; Grevtl
Seplle Syatems
Trlller &amp; HuuH Sites
RIIIJOnllbM Rllfl

Joe N: Sayre
614-742~2138

•. ~-IMIHFiniC...f

.... Eutwtw,...,...

PINEGRO.VE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY
33100 PIM Grove Rd,
Rrtelne, Ohki 45771
740-949-2461
... Gr- ._....................'6.25
1~ eom,1t11 lloni...........1S.60
' 1ft lalolif _._,_, ___,_'8.00

Sltaw Bicbtt ___... _ ...'7.30
n.i ...... r.~-.
..•

~EAT

MIRROR'

BAUM LUMBER

' I

Professional Trco Ser vice, Stump
Remova l,, Free Estimates! In ·
surance , Bidwell. Ohio·. 6H-3489648, 614·367-7010.

Want to mow grass 1n lower Mid·
dleport area . Call 740-992-291(1,
ask lor Chris.

· DRIVERS
WANTED!
500 M~e Radiua.

Will Care For Eld erly Or HanOicapped Person In My Home, Apt·
erences, 7.40·441-1536.

Home Every W -.

Will haul junk or !rash away. $3~
pickup load. 304-675-5035.

'

awers To Name: Oscar, If Found
Please Contacl. 7&lt;t0·•446-1soo.

992-4286.

Drivers Needed For 300 To ao0
Mile Rad1 u s Must Have Class B
License And Good MVR. Experience Also Required , Weekly Pay
&amp; Health Ins. Available, For More
lnlorma110n Caii8Q0.437-8764.

No

colate lab, In Rodney Area. An·

•·

Health Insurance Provided
Wi th-Family CoYilfge
Atlailab'e. 401K Retirement
Plane, First In First Out
[);sp&lt;ach. late Model CCWIII.
TrackHI W 1Aa1bed Trailers.

Competitive Pay

Shafer's Lawncare Service, Free
Estimates, Call 740·441-0318.

Wiil Mow

~·

&amp; Trim Your Lawn

per~enced

Reaso nable Rates,
References, For free- Eslimares.
740-388-804, .
. ·t.

Percenlage Of Gross

Yard Work. Mow ing, Tr·lmmirlg, .
Ughl Tree Trimm1ng, Clean Or
1·tJ00.854·4157.
Repair Flower Beds 25 Years Ex·
patience, $30 Min. Free Est. 740·
Qtly,• · Introducing Th• 30 446-7, 39.
I
Truck Tech, The
Leader In Owner .t()peralar Tec:hFINANCIAL
nology Is tnhlatlng lUI New leas·
ing Pfogram. We Slilr Ofler·: Fi·
nancing, No Money Down, Credit
Business
Rebu ilding Even With Bad Credit 210
Or Bankruptcies And Job Plac•
Opportunity
-•
m•nt. Cla$1 •A•, 1 Vr. OTR &amp;
HazMat Required. CAll "Truck ·ausiness For Sale· Smafl Ra's·
Tech 800·377·310110 Oual;ty.
taurant /Grocery On Approx . 3
Acres With A1ver View, Serious
Eam $1 ,000 Weekly. ·SlUffing an· lnqwr~es Only Prk:ed To Sellt Call
vetopea. no prior experience, free 740· 256·6100 Ask For Owner. t'
deoails, send SASE lo: N.B. Dept
174-301 East Sttl Ave. Suite 112
!NOTICEI
Corsicana, Texas 75110.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that vou do bu1i·
FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AD·
ness With people you know, and
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
NOT to send money through t/1.e
GLASS ~ElLING?
mail until vou have in\lestlgat\tij
11 you are employed and lee\ you the offering.
Con~aet

W••• L••••·

•.

Big Garage Sale Rain Or &gt;noroe .. r
922 Jericho Road, Cheshire.
are In 8 no gain lituatian, you owe

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity
·e· Mile Yellow Flag yard sate,
Pomeroy/ Middleport May 1·2.
Register, pict. up bgs ntNt.

All Yard Sale• Must 81 Paid In
Adwanu. Oudlina: 1:OOpm the
day btfDrl the ad i• to run .
Sundl}l &amp; Monday edition ·
1:00pm Frida ~.
Apr il 13· H , Roger Rou'sh J8SI ·
denc:t, Racine , SA 124 past
Southern High School at Rac1ne
lodge. wa1cn tor 51g115, Bam·?
Ttwee fam ily, t3th - 14th, 400 Ru·
tland Street. M1ddle pon . 'Men.
Women &amp; chltdfen's clodl8s, toys,
t'Gu~ loiS ol mis&lt;.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sa1e·3 Miles oui ,Jericno
Rd. Fn.&amp; Sat 9-? Dehumidifier.
VHS moYif..S, Christmas tfee, roll·
a-away bad, .portable TV. kero sene heater, encyclopedia, 1ra1ter
htleh &amp; much more.

eo ·

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearsan Auction Company.
full lime auclicmeer, 'omplela
auclion
service.
linnsed
•ee.Ohio &amp; West Virgin1a, 304·
713-5785 Or 304·173-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

11 to you uelf to consider joining
the Loewen Group. This is a high
income profus ion, . rap~d ad·
vancement porenli al, and self·
sali5fac1ion helpin~ tamille5. For
your last joa lntllfV ew. call SIIMI
Smilh 818 14-992·74..0.

Full "' pari lime. sell soaner. mol·
valed to aucceeel, must have
sale5 e~eperience and be a~8 to
work wllh publ1c, knowledge of
IJoor covering &amp; dec ora ting a
plus, long time commitmant nec.
e11ar y, send resume 10 : Daily
Sen~nel,. f&gt;O. Box 729-1!0,
oy, Oh. 45768.

Po,.,,.

Home Remodeling Rio Grande.
Need Eslirnatea On Siding ·Concftile Work Windows -Painting
And Windows, 61'4-4144· 2669.
Immediate openings fat house·
keeplngllaundry aide. Par1 -11me.
rotating shuts. Poinl Pleasant
Nursing &amp; Rehabililanon Cen1er.
State Route 62, Rou te 1, Bo~e
328. Point Pleasant. wv 25550.
(A Ghmmark· Genesis Afhhate).

II you have an established bu!iness and unused parking spaQ;(I,
you may qual ify to be a U·Haut
Dealer. If interested ca ll 800 -282;

8575.

;

j

Tired 01 Being Broke I Ea(n
$3.000.00 • Weeklv. Trainiflg
Provided. SEWious lnquirin Only.

HI00-995.0796 Exo 0593

230

Professional
Services ·

Livingston·s banmenl wat~.r ­
prooling, all basement repatfs
done, free e11imatn, lifelime
guarantee. 1Oy-s on JOb e11p~ r,1·
ence. 304·675-2t&lt;45.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for sale ':

EOE .
Local automotive parts stOf'e now
h1rlng for the loliO¥ilnQ poailions~
Full lime Srore Uan.._, and
Counttrper~on and • • l ime
Counterperson. Send resume 10
t.IAW, P.O. Box 568, Marie&lt;ta, OH
45750. Atm: I'IIP OepL or pic:l&lt; up
applkation at Pomeroy Aulo
Pam, 1 J8 Wast Second Street,
RomerO!. OH.
local tr uck dnver, Class A COL
required. log hauling, 740 +992·
5163.

~

-oom Home

Complete~

Re-

modeled 2 Car Garage With Sec-

ond Floor Appro![. 2 Ac:res, Var'd,
Pond. Beautiful Lanoac:aping r 11

4 Miles Down 218. 740-4411-9633.
3 Bedrooms, I 112 Balhs, Jay
[)rive. 140·446-8251 Alter 5 P. M.

3 Bedrooms, 1 Balh, Full BaS.O•
ment Anachec:l Garage. large
Back Y.afd. New Cenltal Heat fAir
3229 State Route 141. S89.500
(C.,tenary) Can ifoniOn 740·5l2·

5147. Or 740-532-8308.

Med•,al Transcnption Servicu

3 or 4 Bedroom.

wanled for total othce . 1·888·
49H565.

strle manufactured type home .
1.600sq. fl. Sltl.lated on one en:re

twO

bath, ranch

of ground. Rayburn Rd. 1/4 Mile
ott Sandhill. Addi1ional acreage
available. Peacelul, private,
counory sonlng . S62 .500 .• 3e4 ·

6JS. 1296 Anytime. '

Bedding .. ~e Fl.lt8
Haflllng Bakm $6.13
AtUIImll!ll Ullae, HoiW. "-1111, lll ..lng "-Ill, etc.
.
.
Variety of Ptrenn1811 94f
..
Fruit l Flawtflng Trwl, Sltn*a, Plnla a Azll,l II
Morning 1tar CR 30
Recine, Ohio
. . .2115

·'

Jones Lawn &amp; Care Service,. FrM
Estimates. 740·245-0589.
1··

MIIIHIAICI

'IJI]J'41f..Dtl

"We don 'I 11111nt to tiuJre fJWnel, we JU.SI
wont to •eU flou!fl'l.'

5«. 1-4, Oosld Wtd.&amp; San.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don·t
haul your logs to the mill just call
304-675-1957.
n

CLELIID'S OUTDOOR

HUIB~RDS

Y1rlety, ct•ellly ••• Lew Prill ·.

I

Gardens plowed near Rooa ...lt
Grade School area. 304·6f5·
2991 .

9lh. 10th, 111h.
Giant Yard Sale: Saturday Only
3663 Bulav1ue Pike.

LIMESTONE .DELIVERED
STARTING AT $65 A LOAD

·· '

Furniture repair, reUnilh....ndi·
tOfation. atso cus tom orders.
lo
Valley Refinishing Shop, .L 'J
Phillips. 740·992·6576.

161 Green Terrace Top 01 Hill

4 Badroom·houllt on Rt. 62 on 2
ac:.re1 ot ground. S Miles ~orlt) ol
Pt Pteasant on Potier Creek Rd.

SIJE'S GBEEMIOUSE

•Mifll ....

446-4759

Ahe• 5:00 P.M. 740·388-9422

Fre&amp;Estlmates.

-'pril 10tr'l. 11th. 8-4, Baby Uems,

TIM'S CUSTOM
'CARPET ·

180 Wanted To Do

Call

Gallipolis
&amp; VR:InHy

•'

1iouG: Mtin, '"'· Thll.&amp; Fri. lH

)

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

SPECIALS ON SPRING CL~NUP

"Colllctlblll. Anltquet,
III.ICIIItlneOUI,

•••r•IWI!I' ·
'fltddc Ileal rwn,s llltt, r.t lllls.l'

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

11198 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9 ·

.......

·

G111lpullt, Ohio 45631

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

.

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $21,60 Mit
Inc . Benefit&amp;. Game Wardens,
Security, Malntenace, Park Rangers. No Exp. Needed. For A~p .
And Exam lnlo Catl 1· 800-813·
3565, Ext 6475. 8 A.M. - g P.M., 7
Days leis, inc .

Ouslbustcrs Professional CleJQ· ·
ing, Commerc:1al And Residenlipt

Loti: 7 112 Month Old Male Cho-

614-992-3470

WANTED: Part·time babysitter in
New Haven, Mason area . For
special needs child, prefer Chris·
tian home. 304-882-33)9.

3628.

HI00·28NI576,

1

POSTAL &gt;lOBS TO f1 8.35 MR.

Inc . Benefits. No Experience. 'or
App. And Exam lnlo., Call 1·8QO·

Dependable man will maW,
small gardentl, paint, put up hay,
etc . Free Est1mates. 304·675-

que11ions ask. Call John Rogers

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top SoJI, Fill Dirt

75%0H

"Build Your Dre•m"

U11 .• 72 Ma•iltBI**-

Personals

swert 10 name

.YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

Save Up To

'

Spflclal Thru
Illarch
8 ton Delivered
$120
Mileage Umlt
Call Randy

Norway Spruce,
Whlll Pint end
Canadian
Homlock ·
Delivery Avellabll
Hemlock Grove ROIId
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
· Ph. 740-1112·7285
Afllr 4 P.M • ...., -

1Z/11/1fn

~-

ROAD

~ 5.BIIf• APR

ii'J 111F Ia .. ~~~~~~~~ 0111M1dittg your 01111 hotne•.
Just ll!il lite ll1ngtn mocW haml !lllllllllld hilh1
T..W•'-JYaboutyour•hamlplanslodar.

• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we will fill them.
Rt. 124 Minersville, OH

WICKS
·HAULING

Remodeling

a1

005

e•• •

ED AND
BURLAPPED TREES

-__;,.,;:,___..;........,.
· (Ume !$tune·
t:ow Rates)

Call 614·843·5426

LIMESTONE

-.a *'-'

..

~

Over 20 years eKperlence.
Free Estimates

· ~6)~-61--·6&gt;---t·

Tidr~ Atlwutt11g~ ofTodfiYS LDw l1111rnt Rllln 1111d
Clloou from ()JJ~r I SO Dl/f~NIII Floor Pla11s.

.

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

Custom Homes

ANNOUNCEMENTS

LANDSCAPE

(614) 992·3838

CO"STROCTIOW...

POMEROY

Ap plications For Pool Manager
And Ule Guard Positions At Lon·
don Pool For The 1998 SwimmiM_9.
Season Are Being Accepted Un til
May 7. Subm it In Wnting, Wllh
Traming And E~e perivnce, To Ja·
nice Zwilling, Clerk -Treasu·rar. AI
The Syracuse Mt.micipal Building
Or Malt To P.O. Box 266, Syra·
CUlt&amp;, OH 4,5779.

Factory Choke Only

BARR'S

740-992-4559

U"'"tone Hauling
Hoult &amp; Trailer..Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy1tem &amp;
Utilities
Elllmatel

Owner,Mickle Hollon
Chester, Olllo

LO"G•s

IAPJ:~earing Friday 8:00-12:00

8/4ffFN

HOWARD
lXCAVATING CO.

All Landsca~lng &amp;
•Complete
• Lawn Services.
Remodeling
•
•Commercial
StoP. &amp; Compare •' · ~ •RHidentlal
FREE :

ESTIMATEES '

. GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

~

lis, Ohio.

Someone to· till garden on CJN!
Ho ll ow in Tuppers Plains, 740 352·8283.
:

3Q Inventory Posilions To Work
4117-18 In Gallipo liS, At $5.50
Per Hour, Call 304-485-5200, For
Detail a.

IEEOf GROVE ROAD

Parts Manager Needed. EJipel'i·
enced Necessary, No Phone
Calls, River Front Honda, Ga~ i ~ -·

AVON I All Areas ! Shirley

Speara, 304-675·1429.

era tarm on Redmud Ridge. An·

Design'~

,..

8 t 3 · 3585, E" 6474, 8 A.U. ·9 ·
P.M., 7 Days fds,lnc.
,.

Ohio River
Campgrounds and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Geri. Merchandise.
Ntw • uttd Heme. We
Buy - Sell - 'rrtde; Toolt,
flthlng equip., TV'I,
CB'I, llereot - 111111 bH
Of IVtrylhlng, Loclltd
on Ohio ·River Clmpgrounda, Sl Rl 124,
Racine, Ohio.
. 740-8411-1012

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon

. starting ~ $5995
·740-992-2n2

FlEET OWNERS
WANTED!
Flatbeds Only

(any time) or 304·675· 5955 aller
Spm. wed thru SaL

OPENING APRIL t

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

• SlatiOnary Doclcs
• llown lnaulalion
• Goragea • Declcs
24 X 24 Pole Building

,

&amp;

htt

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULATION
• Vinyl Siding • Soffit .
• fOJCia • Seamless .
Gutter • Roofing
·ll~Pac-• Windows

Plan ahead. Call
today for free eslimate
742•21~J 1r 446·JU2
3t.KW8 1 mo pd

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

Computer Graphics

•Garages

' Now- Taking Applicatons for
Assistant Managers at
Domino's Pizza
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis Locations
Experience preferred.

I

'

DDIID

•New Homes

In Loving Memory of
my mother,
MARY G. DURST,

. POMEROY, OH.

992·5583

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN LEGION

• Shrubbery Maintenance

LIIIIICIP£

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTRUCnOII

In Memory

w. 2ND ST. ·

e Tree Trimming

·

RADIATOR REPAIR

Take the pain out,ot
painting, and let me
do It for you. '
Interior ·
Before II p.m.
laav• meaaaga.
After&amp; p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
Free Eatlma111
4/1/N 1 mo. pet.

· ·~·=:Pom~~lo

• Weedeoting

-

.. 614-992-5479
-· ... --··---..

Lilli'S '
PAlHill

CARPENTER SEVICE

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
Commerdall

360° Communications

Open 24 Hrt. ADoy
7DaytAWHk
Hot Breakfaat
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot&amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich 1 '
Including Pizza .. w
12" $7.49 Deluxe ·
AU Topplnga
•
Collin Drdara Accepted
740-3117-7838 ,

7/22/lln

mor•,

BEECH GROVE

4.'1/IIM.

985-4473

1 year ago today,
Aprll10, 1997•
Tho you ,,. with Ul no

PIIGAME

roo Sm111

Brien Morrteon
(740) 985-3948

·

whopua~away

$750.00 .
$50.00 01 MORE

JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE

LARRY'.S LAWN
CARE

'

CHESHIRE
FOOD MART

F-Elt/mar••

No Job

be a&lt; leaSI 18. Call 814·992-6387

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning
258 Pearl St.
Middleport, OH
. 992..()()77

..

$$1 DANCERS WANTED$$$
Excellent opportunity for the right
girt. SSOO(+)per week earning po-.
u~ntia L No tJCP necessary, must

20 Yrs. Exp: • Ins. Owner:· Ronnie Jones

CELLULAR PHONES
113

OWNER OPERATORS
•

· Compet1~ve Pa~.
Health Ins. Available
Contact

1 1o Help Wanted

•

'

Company Car, Raaume To : P:O.
Box 33, Gallipolis, OH 45631 , 740446.0353.

1-800·154-4157

•

'-... .

'

botomtll U-F. Early Mornln gt ,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
SPRING ·c,EAH
SPECIAL
50%0fFALL

P/8 Contradors Inc.

wae: C/o Nathan and Pill!
Mllem, 1105 Strewberry
Lane, Cleveland, TN 37311;
you.,. hlrtlly notllled IIIII
you have been named
tllllndlnt In 1 ltg~l ICIIIIIJ
antlllld Jacqueline S.
Milam, Plelntlll, v. Wlllllnt
lnt 11111111, o.ftntlll)t. Thla
tlctton hll bltn IIIIDned
Call No. ti-Dfl-007 end 14
pending In tha Common ,
Pl111 Co11rt of Melg~ ·
County, Pomeroy, Dhla

Unlele exc:ep11on are ftltd 407H.

.I

Help Wanted

E~eper lenced Profttllonal Phi•

Wanted To Buy : U&amp;ed ~obile
Homtl, 7&gt;40·448·0175, 30,. ·875·
5965.

(No Sunday

..

COURT 01' ' .
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Jecqutllne S. lllllm
Plllntlll,
va
William Ira Milam.
Dllendent

ESTATE ND. :Mt38- Thl
seventh Acco11nt al
Jennllll . L. Shalla,
Guardlen o1 the peraon lftCI
111111, o1 Lallie YOUIIII, 111
Jncamp•- Peraon.
ESTAT!' ND. 27777· Till
Third Accottnl ol Alblfll
H1w11, Guardian ol the
peraon and ntata o1 OMnna
Rummel, . en Incompetent

'614-992-7643 .

614 949-2804

lntlltullono. Such remarlcs
mull be In writing and Will
bo eccepttd by the
Superintendant until April
:ze, 1818. All comi!Mnll and
tlblnUo..,. dlltciama pert
ollhl public oppllolllon lilt
lftCI will be dloclalld to 11t1
opplicant bank; Juno tO,
11188
(4110 1 1c

STAR.BURST

I

lftCI Nllltlllllnl:

Outdoor P.o- E..-,llllnt Anoclotlott: Ctrtlllttl2 Cydt

Buperlnllndertl o1 Flnanclll

RUTLAND
POST 467

Kids floutll

Hunt at Racine £if!rarfJ
!'~ 11prl111, at

I

ol tho application 1111 Ia
eva liable for lnaptctlon
within one day following the
,......It lor IUCII file, It may
'be lnapoctad In the
Corporation'•
Roglonel
Office during regular
b u al n • u
h o u ro.
Pholocoplea ollnformatlon
In Ihe .nonconlldentlal
portion olthl application
file will be mede available
uponreqUIILAICIIIduleol
cherg11 for euch capl11
can be obtained lrom the
R!!!on•l office. June 10,
1._
(4) 10, 1818

•llowera •Ch1ln S.wa •WHdellera •Authorized
Dt1ler For:
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murrey •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rilly •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS I
lrJss &amp; Stnttton: Maslll' Strvlct Tedlttidatt

New Homes ."VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
•
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
. FREE ESTIMATES

State Route 338 • AI VIne • Racine, Ohio

IN THE CDIIIION PLEAS

TM IIOIICORfldentllll portion COURT, PROUT! DM810N

MON.&amp; WED.
6:30P.M.

-61---6&gt;-.Easter·Egg ttant

The following rand transfers were

IN THE CDIIIION PLEAS

BINGO

••

Land transfers
recorded recently io the office of
Mcil!s County Recorder Emmnl,!cne
Hamill&lt;lO:
Deed. Virginia Hope Wolfe to
David Gene Wolfe. Lchnnnn
parcels:
Deed. Paul Bush In American
General Finance. Pomeroy:
Deed, John T. and Marilyn J.
Wolfe to Sarah Neigler. Racine;
Deed. Ernest Wingell In Village
of Racine, Suuon;
Deed, Village of Racine to Ernest
Wingeu, Suuon;
. ·
·
Right of way. Ernest Wingeu to
Village of Racine. Suuon parcels:
Deed. William P. and Jacquclynn
B. · Spencer to Ralph D. Spencer.
Rutland;
Deed. Southern Ohio Coal Company lei Dolphus and Wanda C.
Burke. Columbia parcels;
Deed, Terry Laudennilt. Tammy
Ball, Troy McDaniel, Robert E. Ball
to Mark A. and Caroline S. Still.
Middleport;
·
Deed, Charles H. and Sharon M.
Knight . to Moon Goons Inc..
Pomeroy parcels;'
Deed. Paul Black to Alhen L.
·Proffiu. Sutton parcels;
·
l)ecd, Paul Black to Alben L.
Proffiu. Suuon parcels;
Deed. Lawrence W. Stewart.
Larry W, Stewart, Tcrc:sa L. Stewart
to ~erA. and Geraldine Se~ton.
Rlllland:
Deed. Chester A. and Geraldine
Sexton to Yvonne Jane Sexton. Rutland parcels;
· Deed. Robert R. and Kay A. Gray
to Oavid. Eugene and Jacqueline
Lute. Orange Jlllrcels;
Deed, Richard A. Bqwcn to Barbara E. Bowen. Salisbury:
·
Right of way, Virgil W. and Linda
Watson to Buckeye Rural Electric
Coopcr;ativc. Rutland parcel:
.
RiJhl of way, Bobby and Geraldine Smallwood to B~. Salem:
Deed, Ronald L. and Nancy D.
Wa,ner to Reynold L. and Jennifer
I. Lagore, Lebanon-; Deed, Burl Leon Putman Jr. to
Mary Whitlock, Olive;
,
Deed, Robert N. Annentrout and
VtOicl M. Rii1lcman to Jtidy Batey.
Putlletoy lOIS;
·

PUBUC NOTICE
PurauantiO llec:tton 303.$
(li (1) (II) and llec:tton 303, 6
(II (4) ollhl Ftdltal Dlpoelt
lnaurenca Corporetlon'a
Ruloe ond R•gulotlone,
notice Ia har•by given.thll
1099 by the Jan. 31 deadline.
Th• Ohio Veli•y .Benk
The Securities Industry Associa- Compeny, 420 Third
tion said the error rate on Forms Avenue, ,GelllpOIII, 011111
County, Ohio, 4H31, hat
I 099 tripled to 17 percent for the
llltd an appllcllllon with lhl
1997 tax year.
Ftderal Dlpoalt lnaurtnct
Charles Bish, an accountant with Corporation lor permllllon
the ~lexandria, Ya., firm Bish &amp; to tlllbllah 1 aupermerlcll
Haffey PC, said Thursday he had to brlneh offiCII to Ill - . c l
within tho Foodlond
,amend returns for some clients who l'!permerkat II 700 Will
received corrected I099 fonns after lloln Sir•••· .Pom•r,oy,
the Jan. 31 deadline. "It's very frus- Metga County, OhiO, 457&amp;1.
Any pereon wlehlng to
trating," he said. considering that his
common! on
lhlt
clients gen~rally have been filing eppllcatlon may llle hla ot
earlier.
her comment• ·In writing
Despite earlier reponed problems .with the Atglonol Dlractor
with bar codes on some IRS lax ol lhl Fed•rtl D•poell
fonns, the " IRS appears to he head- lntu-Coi'JIOI'8Ifonlllll
Regional Olttf• (500 W.
ed toward another generally suc- Monroo, Suite 31100,
cessful ftling season," the General Chlcogo, lllinolt 8088l)
belore ·proc•••lng of !he
Accounting Office said last week.
appllctllotl
hea bten
Its review of 'the first 2 112 compllltd. PrOCIIIIng
will
months of 1998 showed "conJinuing bt compllltd no oirlier
improvement" in. electronic filing than lhl 11111 day follOWing
and the ability of taxpayers to reach tither thl dati ol thll
publication or tht dill o1
the IRS via telephone.
.-tpt ollht application by
The GAO reported ''a significant lhl FDIC, llihlchtvlr II llllr.
drop in the number of calls receiving The period may b•
busy. signals," with 9! percent of eldon dad .by the Regional
callers gening into the IRS teleAN NOUNCEME NTS
phone system, versus a 68. percent
access rate in thC same time la't
' year. This rate measures whether
people were routed to a live person
or to a voice mt..-ssaging system . .

Director lor good CIUH,

OoUar: All U.S. Sol·

Rings. Pre·1G30 U.S Currtncy,
Sterling, Eoc. A&lt;:quosltiont Jtwolry
- t.1 T.S. Coin Shop, ·t51 Second
GalhpoUo. 740..,....21142.

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(.

Parts and Servlcel/

...

Any government surplus would be
the first since 1969.
· Official ligures are available ot
October through February; the first
fLvc months of the fiscal year. and the
budget office has made public its estimate of the size .of the March delicit.
According to those fi gures. the cumu -

Top

110

Vet' And GDid Coins, Prooftets,
Olamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold

s~;;;i~;li~~~ldsc;;~;;h te$5o .biiii~~e•pl~~he ~5P~u~b1~1c~N~ott~~~a=ise=d1in=t~he}P~u~:~~~c5.Notl~~ceE~J:5~·~~~~~em~=lE.:!P~ub~ltc~N~ott!ce~~.~·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
economy continues to perfonn so
strongly that the government could
enjoy a SSO billion-plus surplus for
riSCal 1998 if current spe nding and
revenue trends. keep pace, The Washington Post reponed today. citing an
internal Federal Reserve document.
A Fed spokcsma11 said Thursday
night he had no knowledge of the tig-

Wanted to Buy

304-n3·5787.

40%
OFF
NO WI

$4,- 1' ·5
lldrm.. Local Gov'l. &amp; Bo,.. Repo·s

BUY HOMES FAOII

c.tl 1-IIJO.S22-2730. X 171111.

;t,t

Chatming country home in
\Columbia. mtnutes from town. g
-..ooms, · concrete driwe'flf,ly.
~75,899, 304-713-5.'179.

For SOlo By OWner: Ni..ty Ooco,.tod, Well Malnlllrtod 2 Bodroom
Home located In Cheshire, "'"
su,..blo Loan, 74D-38J.7117 AI·
tor SP.M.

�Page 10 ••The Dally Sentinel

Friday, April10, 1998

Friday, Aprll1 0, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

BIUDOE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHJTJ.tP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 :....
(ueed.
_ up
__
,

'

'S7....,..T_

MFnd

...
40"-

.

7 C11111tc-" 4't 8 . ~.
13 Ol8clill epoch
country
(2 wds.)
43 1..,.-,., .......

14c-

c..._

730
1210 David Brown
2 S.droom S.autlfuf
Rofrigerall&gt;r $75, Dryer $95: Elec- Palatable 8FT Slale Top Br(ln•· diesel, lronl end
manure lork, bale spoor and
tric Range $95; N1ce Washer wick CompleiO '"'h Sdcka. Ball1, bale
Rtferencaa, Oepoalr.
loader, • good condHion,
Foster·• Mobile Home
$150; Nice Side By Side Relrlg- Racks. cover, New Fait, and SSOOO : 154 John Deere manure
,;.«,;,1,;.-o:.;1,;,8.::1·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 erator Wattf &amp; Ice In Door, $350 lights. Excellent Condition. spreader, high llotat1on tires, 220
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Rt,.rw 1 Year Wirranty ; G.E. Washer (740)448-8217 Evenings
bushel, new chain, $500: golf can.
All real estate advertising In
eneea Requ~red, No Peta, Rent S205 like New 1 Year Warranty, Prlmeatar~ SQ9 installation with
this newspaper Is subject to
$1000; 740-742·3064 or 740-742·
tne Federal Fair Hous1nqAct
Clayton Mobile Home Few Ptua Oepolit,•3 Bedroama, Rent+ Skaggs Appliances 76 V1ne $50 rebate. First month free wnh
tree movie channels, StarOna
of 1968 which makes it Illegal
Monthi Old, Like New On large Uliltl81 + Oeposll, 70().7g7-4345, S~ee( Gallpoil' 740-446·7398
t976 Cab Over International
Rented lot. Sell Cheep! 7&lt;10·«6· 740-440-0879.
to actvert1se ·any preference,
Super Capa~Sity Whirlpool Wu h· special , t4f lnttallaUon, 800· Trans
Slar Tractor 350 Cum263-2640.
9428
llmitatoo Of d1scnm1nauon
Small , Bedroom Mobile Homt In .,. &amp; Dfyer $100, 740-258-1170
mings Engine, Good Tires, Good
baSad on race color religion,
Shape! $4,300 080 740·44,.
DISCount Mobile Home Parts I Kanauga Utllili.. Furniahed we Moved! uaest Furniture Store 0uaen litO WOIOrbacl, $150, bo)''l
sex famlhal status or nat1onal
Accessones Wa ter Heaters, Vi· $180/Mo. , Ptua Oepo ..t, l40-&lt;W6· Below The Holiday Inn In Kanau- Levi't, almost new, husky 11zes 2415. "
ongln, or any Intention to
ny l Skir ting Kits 1299.95, An· 7o406 ·
pa, OhiO Beda, Drtsaeis, Couch· 32x28: 740·992~5BB.
make any such preference,
chora, Wood &amp; F1berglass Steps, Small two bedroom mobilt home tl, Manrenea, Ect Hra M· T·W.
AC 2 row no till corn planter.
A &amp; S Furnllura
Aool Coatings, Doors. W1nc:lows, lor renr"' Racine, 7.oQ.11112·5038
l1mltati0n or diSCrimination •
John Deere 711. hay blno. Ford
!G-4, (740).-782
Muon,WV
Plumbmg &amp; Electncal Supplles,
1011. rransporr disk, all in good
• Buy, Sell, Trade
Blocking
Wood
&amp;
Wedges
And
520
Sporting
concllion 304-273-&lt;1215.
Th1s newspaper Will not
440
Apartments
Uoed &amp; llnli"'es
Uorel Call Bennett's Mobile
knowingly accepl
Goods
Furnirure
for
Rent
Home Sui&gt;!*l AI 1- 74~4&amp;-11416.
Beat Tha Sprint Ruah, gaE your
adllerfiSements for real estate
304-773-534, .
mowers &amp; trimme11 tuned up
Nf!W
Remingron
1100
LT
20
wh1ch Is In VIOlation of the
Divorce Force• Sales· Take over 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, rurnow Sider's Equipment Henderlaw. Our readers are hereby
paymentt, 2br, 2 bath, f1nanclng mshed and unrurnlahed, secu"ty· gauge, tSOO , 740·992-&amp;154 alter Rainbow vacuum cleaner , Acer oon, WV. 304-0757421 .
5pm
computir, 31r5t aluminum shutava1lable. 304·755-5566
deposit required, no pars, 740- :::.:...
mformed that at! dwelltng$
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,,.,., 304·882·3121 8am·12pm.
992-2218.
actvert1sed m this newspaper
WHson•a Army SUrplut
X)4-882-3274 after 12pm
For sale· 1970, t2x50 mobile
F 725 JoM Deere mower, 2 years
are ava1lable on an equal
home, new furnace &amp; watUf heat- 1 Bedroom Apar1men1 Newest
old, 100 houro.on rl, 54" cut. 20
opportunity basis
Best
prices
~heretuM
line
of
Royal
Oak
camping
membership
er, washer &amp; dryer and a1r condi· and Cleanest In the area, near
horae- llnglne, '"111 60' mow
11oner, $3,000 or make an oiler, Holzer $279 ptua Utilities. Deposit Advantage ,Camo ·in time lor for IIIII, rea.aonable priced, call bl-r. $7,300: 1g67 Dodge 300,
turkey
uaton.
Great
selection
of
,
-419-888-~905
alter
epm
or
call
&amp;
740-992-5698.
and Lease Required (740)446new and used boots; loll ol new leave message &amp; I w1li return , lln, $1,100, 7&lt;10-992·3564
310 Homes for Sale
and used camo, elzes 2 months ,yo::u::.r=
ce=ll:..- - - - - - - - John Deere 2010 diesel tractor,
QAKWOOQ HQMf!l
1 Bedroom Apartment Stove, Re- to 4X:; backpacking and camping -42hp., wide rront. good rubber,
PDmarov. 3 bedroom home, newer Barboursville WV. largest Dou- frigera1or lnduded, N'o Pets. 740- llama; kid's clothes, U.S. made Seart l1fe1ty:ler 2608 Treadmill $4100:
20 hp. Noma lawn traciOr,
roof, newer furnace &amp; hot water blewide Display Ever Otrec:t Fac~ 446-2583.
Smith 1 Wenan knives and lots Paid SOOO Less Than 2 Hours two yeara okl, 46. cut. $900, 74011nk, "hand~ man spec1ar .
I"\. .a~- ~ .. 3).4 738-340&amp;
Do
To
illneu,
1350
,
740
Use
moie. Come and check us ou t.
1
742-2387
$10,000,814-237.0125
lOry """"'
lbr aparrmon~ priVaiO, quiet De· We are open 8:30am-8.00pm 388 9080.
everyday
Call'
ocated
In
Mason,
wV.
Older
12x50
mobile
home
wnh
I'ND
polll
References
S250tmo.
304us
at
_740·992·
9
l
Smuh Corona Word Procenor ,Maule Ferguson 1010 4 WO
big lors. and all urilily hookup•
67S-1550.
7093or 1.8JI0.348-6178
Rooms, 2 Balhl, Baaemeru. 2 Car Rulland. out or high wa1er, as
Wirh Screen, Has loEua 3, Wllh Bon, llower, S5.Q9g 740·
Carport On 1 Acre 01 Land, 2 $8000, cal 740- 742_2070 _
2 Bedroom Apartment, Utllltle1 530
Spreedsheell. Hard Drive And A 256-1539, 74G-258-1371 .
Antiques
POrches, 304-773-5615.
::.::.:.::.::.::;.;.::,;..:::..:::.;,;,_~-1 Paid, $425/llo. , $100 Depo~r. No
Disc Dr1ve, Mora Fea1ures, Call New Holland 68 Hay Balet, &amp; 3
Or Rani: 2 Btdrooms, May
Pet.s. 7.tl0 ·448-t637 , 740·448- Buy or sell R1venne Antiques, Pam AI 740-245-9035.
Poinr Hirch Rake. $1,500, 740.,.iddleporl, beauuful two story. 3 0 L
c
c
B
3437
1124 E. llarn Srree~ on Rt 124,
br, 2 bath, large l.r. &amp; lr ' oak
n and onuact, an e
.
448-2540.
WARM
UP:
High
Efficiency
Naru·
Lo( 7~448 · 18 1 0.
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
doar&amp; &amp; 111m, Snnth"!l cuatom oak
2bdrm . apta ., total elect11c, ap- am.
10 o·oo p.m, Sunday 100 10 ral And lP Gas Furnaces, Ufe- Shennlu Tractor 25 HP 4 i 4 like
cabmets, Jenn·&amp;lf range, d1sh· Single Parent Program. Speaal pliances furnished, laundry room 6:00p.m. 740-992-21128. Ru11 dme warranty On Heel E~ehang· New, 74G-«8-2445.
v.tasher, deiBched QBt'BQe, by ap- financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom facilities, close to school 1n town. Moore owner.
er ·n You Oon't Call Us We Both
pointment, 740;992·5243.
homes. Payment• 11 low 11 Applications available at: Village
lose!· Free Estimates I Add ~ Ofl Your Area John
Heel Pump• Only Shghry Higher
MODULAR HOUSE AUCTION
$180 call now304-755-5885.
~;~fne~"· 149 or call 740·992· 540 Miscellaneous
Call U1 Today. 1998 Is Our 28th For
lawnRealdentill
Equlpmenl
A 26'x58' Ranch Style t.todular Spec1al 16X80 3BR, 2 bath.
Merchandise
Year In The Heating &amp; Cooling Tractou From 20 To
House Will Be Auctioned To The $1,325 Down, $205 Mo. Free air 3 Rooms &amp; Bath Upsta1r1, No
12x20 carport, can be seen Bl BusineSS I 740-446-6306, 1-800- SillS 01 4 WD And 2
H1gh&amp;!ll B1dder On May 9, 1998 &amp; free skirting. 1·800-691-t7n
Pets, Water Pa1d In Gallipolis,
291-0Q98
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
609 Pearl Sr, Middleport, 740 AI 12.00 Noon At The Buckeye
740-388-1100.
Deere Skid Steer Loaders. Check
992-2358.
Htlts Career Center Located At
SPRING SPECIALS
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon W/lh Us About Flnanculg As Low
Rro Grande, Qhro Publrc Vrewmg
$-199 Down
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Upright,
Ron Evans Enterpnaea, f.s 2 9'% On Lawn Tractors A.nd
Monday Through Frrday From
U Filed Ratn .
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 18tt AbOve ground pool With as- Jacklon, OhiO, 1·800·537-9528
low Rate Fmanclng On New And
sessonesJaprox
30•40
prtvac:y
9 00 A.ll To 3:00 PM Please
$118/Mo. Peymanll
ESTATES, 52 WoSiwood Or iva
Call 7-40-245-5334 For An Ap117,H5 on 38R.
from $279 to $358. WalK to shop !ence11n e•cellent cond1110n 304- Used Clirpetl For Two Rooms, Used Equipment. Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lalliln Gallipolis, OH 740·
773-5693.
.
po1ntment Formal VieWing 01 The
F,..D..Iveryl.s.t•up
&amp; m1mes. Call 740-440-2568.
740-«8-2386.
448·2412 , ·800·594·1111
Houae Ia Dunng The Buckeye
Onfr AI Oakwood Hon-..
Equal HouSing OpporhJnity.
22 112 x36 Inch Dog Ca~e $45, Washer &amp; Dryer $150, 740-446H1Ns IOh10 Valley EXPO On SatNitro, WV. 304-755-S885
630
LiveStock
urday, Apr1l 18, And Sunday. APf:ll
FurniShed Elfic1ency Apartment, Brand New Heavy Swag lamp, 2003
19, 1998; 12:00 Noon ·5:00 P.l.l
TAX SPECIAL
Cenllal Hear &amp; Air Condlllonlng, Glau Wilh Teardrop Bulbi, S80.
Each Day.
New 3br S909tdown 1189/mo. Carpet Throughout, Pnvate Park· 740-441-9865, Alter 5 P.M Or Warerllne Specrai· 314 200 PSI 2 regiatered yearling a.tlort=:,;.:;,::::_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 Free Set-up &amp; Delivery. Only 3 1ng, AU Unlitiea Furnlahed Exc;epl AnydmoWookenda
$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI horned bulls, 740-949-2053
New ltsdng- three bedroom home, Leftl Only at Oa:kwood Homes Ni- Electric, Pnv~tte &amp; Quiet, 740·
$37 .00 Per 100: All Brass Com· .30 Angus And Chi·Angus Bulls
380 IBM Computer Wrlh Wind · presStOn Fillings in Stock
large garage, 1 112 acres, nexr 10 rJoWV 304-755-5885
446-2602.
For Sale, Reasonably Priced, Exaws
3.1
$300,
740-256-1558.
Salisbury elementary sc:hool. call
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES cellent Breeding. Slate Run
Jim Carleton, 740-992-6375 for Late Model Repo Set Up On Lot Graceous liveng. 1 and 2 bedroom 48x72 Oak Dmmg Table, With 4 Jackson, Ohio, 1·000·537-9528
Farms, Jackson 740-286·53g5.
motemlormauon.
1-800-383-8862.
apartments at Village Manor and E11tra leaves &amp; 6 Malching
Riverside Apartments en Micldle- Chaara, Excellent Condltlonl Paid Wedding dress, few prom dress- 800• Holstein/Hereford steers.
Rrver v,... 3 Bedrooma, 'I! Balhs, 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
parr. Ftom $2411·$373. Call 740· $1,200 Will Sell For $000. 740· ea. wide assortment ol other serious callers only, call 740·985dresses &amp; more See at Flea 444 7 be lore Sam or after 8pm.
~ln-G;;;roj,u~nd;;Poo~I,~7;;40-;;;;;258~·9;;393",;;.J;;;~ ~ ·, 20 h. long, 80 It long by 75 11 ~u9~;:64 Equal Housing Oppor- 38S--9824
Market 1n Henderlon.
5 Horse Tiller E~~;cellent CondibOn, Weddmg· Gown-Beauuful 1vorv Angus bull. 14 months old , apT
wide, level lot 1n Middleport, re·
prox 750 lbs , $600 OBO, 740Sl25: 1991 Murray 12 Horae Rid·
duced740-1192·2290
rrom l23.ooo To s11.ooo
sequined, re·embroldered lace, 742·2133.
080,
"
rng $275, 740·3111-Zl60.
size 10 With v&amp;il Only $225. 304SPECIAL SPRING
6X8 Heavy duty utility tra1ler, 875-8040.
FEEDER CALF SALE
road ready Wlloading ramps. 3o4·
Whrrlpool Waaher, &amp; Dryer G.E.
. Alho~ollvo•oclt Salu
675-6348.
Electric Range, &amp; G.E. Washer, &amp; SaiJrdal, Apt! 1llh I P.IA All •
Amazmg Metabolism Break Gas Dryer All llems $75 Eech, ConsiQrMntl Watcoma. Hau11ng
Through Lose 10 to 200 lbl., Call 740·441Hl11g
Available ca111e Accepled Aller
For free consultallon and Free
4 P.ll. Friday. 740-582·2322 Or
740-698-3531
5an'!rl81 (740)441-1982
BUY IN IIARCH
No Paymonro Uri* July 1998
E·Z Frnancrng
Call Finance Lino
I·IJ00.9&gt;18-5878
FnM Sat-up &amp; DeiiYifY

1986 FOf'd Tempo, auto. air, good
c:ondftlon, tow miles, run1 &amp; looks
good, $950, 740·092·6824.

1 US Chevw Van clean. good
tires, ac, good cond 12.000 firm.
304-773-9181.

1987 Caviler Stationwagon 4 eyl.,
Aura, 66,000 Miles, S1 ,000 O.B.O.
(740) 245-9045
1g 87 Chevrolet Z·-24 740· 448·

~s se ChiYY A stro~ cargo van ,
good condition, $2,150, 740-9926154 aher 51&gt;'!1. •

Nort•
• 9 8 3
•A87&amp;3
t K
4 A 9 8 &amp;

Welt
• 6 5
.. J 9
• 10 9 8 7 4 3
4 Q 53 .
Soulll
• -K 7
• K2
t A 6
4 K J

1986 GMC 4•4 305 auro, pw, Hll,
Cruise, AJC, CD prayer, bed liner.
. Asl&lt;ing $4,500 304·882-3541.
1987 CorYelte convertible, white.
304 '-875-5843.
1989 Bronco II XLT. V-6 au ·
tomatlc, alt. loaded, 175,000
1g87 Ponuac Fiero SE 4 Spead, m11es, loaks and runs good,
V-fS Engn"l&amp;, 74~46-2445.
$2800, 740·247-4292.
.1988 Calico 1·2 Ft Slack Tra11 er 1990 F-250 4 WD, 5 Speed, Or•
$1 ,350, 74G-24550B7 .
.... $7,800, 7&lt;10-448-9317
1988 Chevy Clval1e1 , Tinted
19Q3 Ford Aero1tar van, blue
W1ndows, Sterto Sys1em New En- wuh blue lnlertor, 70,000 m1lt1,
gine Run• Good S2500 O.B.O. XlT Limtted, Sp8aal Edition, new
(740) 446-3584
nres, V8lY clean! $8550. 740·g49·
2311 days or 740-949·2644
11188 Ford Eocort GT
•
.......ng.
Rec:lm Color. Tires New. loaded.
Power Sun Rool64,000 IIIIas
111g5 GIIC Truck 112 Ton 4x4,
11 .000
Loaded, lrko New 111,000 l.llle1
(304)458·1691
$18,500 (740) 379-2427

=~~·~--~~--~~ 1=24~4=5------------~

::o-::.:::.._____,...._

~~~---------1~~=7~------~~

n-.. - '

on

Ai~~:,f·~~~j:~;

~·~~~~~~~~~:

~

;;r~:~?n~~u:~~;~~~~'~:~~~J:1

Now Taktng App11ta11ona- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
AparlmoniS $2115/Mo., 740· 448·
0006.
bedroom apartment In Mld740-9112·2178.
One bedroom apartmanr 10 Mld&lt;lepor~ an ullllliel paid, $270 por
month. 1100 depos11, call 74011112· 7806.

011111 Co.: Gallipolis, Nerghbor·
hood Rd., tO Acre BuOd1ng Sitf,
lois OJ LM 1111,000, Or 22 Au·
1873 121185 Cameron tratler 2bl es Wllh Pond NOW $24,000.
wt1 room add-on. $4,500 304Fnendly Ridge last 21 8.5 Acres
882-31112.
$7,500 Or 8.5 Acres $8,000 Bolh
1976 14x70 Mobile Home Mtnor $15,000, Counry Warer.
Repair $8,000 Includes AC &amp;
Awnings, 740· 448·6830 After 6 Uelge Co.: Danv111e, Nice 17
Acres $18,000 -$2,000 Oown +
P.U
$212/Uo : Or 9 Acres $16,000,
11181 Oakwood 14x65. $12,500. Water. Oyesv11le, N1ce 11+ Acres
e11c. cond. 1888 Clayton 141170 $10,500 Very, Prrvare
wlhaal pump. S13,900. Wrll do·
liver local Call K &amp; K Mobile Call For Free Maps + Owner Ft·
Homea 304-875-3000 between nanc1ng lnro Take 10% Off l1sted
Prices On Calh Purchases!
8an&gt;!ipm
1884 1h80 Indies, Excellent 360
Real Estate
COndition 314 Aete land. Loc:ated
Wanted
on HiHIOP l&gt;riYe oft Neighbothood
Rood S«.OOO (740)«Hl811
Cash Pa1d For Land In Gallia
1995 Clayton Mobde Home 2 County, Blackburn Realty, 740Bedrooml, 2 Baths. Gas Ftre- 448-0008.
,..... Garden Tub On Renral Lo~
RENTALS
Financ1ng Available . 740-245·
9738 Laavo llnsafll!.

o

111Tme8uyars. E-ZFinancing
41 Houses for Renl
2 Of 3 Bedloom. Aroond $200 per
month Call credil line 1-800- Small 2br house, s1ove &amp; fling·
941-5871.
ereror 11 129 George Sl New Haven, Wv S2f$51mo. 304-773-9171
ABANDON HOllE llake 2 pay· Leevelleuege.
ments, 111ume loan, owner fi ninclng
304- 755-71t1 .
39 CNIIicolhe Road, 3 Bedtooms,
Central A1r, Heat, Garage, 740Atl8t'OiOn- Home Owners.
448-2583
,.,... largett lrwentOry 01 lntertherm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps, 3br House 1n N.w Haven, WV
Air Conditioners, Furnace• &amp; $335/mo. -+ depOsit 304-773Parll. HuD\1 Buying ~~-· 5881
The Lowesl Installed Pnca, Easy
Over The Phone Bank F~nancmg. Like New Duplex, Large Living
Call Bomelfl Mobile Home HTG Room , Full1 E~u lpped Kirchen,
&amp; CLG 1·800-872·51187.
flirlrng Aroe, 2 Bedroom' /88Eh, WI D Hook -Up, Anachad
For sale· Park ll'Odollraier 10 uve Ganlge. N;, Fully Carpoled, 2 ll2
'"· e.u ra nice, JUII move in. rhe Ulias Wesl on 588, 7410-448rurn iture goes w11h tt, call 304· 2B02
213--:D»1 1f you would ~118 ra see
N1ce clean, 2br, references &amp; deHugo 21&gt;80 3BR, 1 112 barh po•~ no pell 304-1175-5182.
St~rong ar ONLY S38,98D. Uany
option• avatlable 1·888-928- 2 Aparlm•n•• In Ala Orinda
•34211Area: Acroat from Colleoe, 1
..
I Room, 1 Bolh, U11Uiiel Included,
0f 3 -oonlt. Srarling 81 S21111S. 1200/Mo. Dopoail Aaqul(ed: 1
Ouick delivery. Call 740-385- Bedroom Aporlmenr, $280/llo.,
N2l .
rll 1llea Included, 1·188·840·
0521
.
LJIIITED OFfER
1gg8 Doublowrde 3br, 2 balhs Single HouiO 2 Bod._ Oule(
h. e9gldow~ S25glmo. Only ar Hlllorlc, Ralldontlal Aroa, Do·
Oal&lt;wood Homes Nr110, WV 30~ - poll! Required, 740· 440·2287,
755-51115.
740-4&gt;18-«74.
Two
bedroom houoo, &lt;lean, ,..
Melle 2 Payment• Move In Na
Payn10t"" Ahor 4 Voar1. 304-738· rrlgereror, no IIOVO, no ln1ide
JlOII, dapoail raqulred, 740-992·
72115
'
3080.
Homel
Now IHI 14x70 lhrat bedroom, 4
20
jncludol 1 mon1111 FREE lot rant
lncludoa lkirllng, doruxo llopo
for Renl
7
end
mD~WSl'38.
wn. a •
lOt!
•
NIW lANK IIEPO'S Only 3 Ioiii
81111 undor warranrr. Ol'nar li 2 S.droom Mobllo Homo,
304 755
Par Ulllltlet, I Dopo1i1, &amp;
I
I'·"'
none
ng ••• ~'"•·
· · Roferencoo Raqulrad, In f'Drlor
7111•
An1o 81-1112. ·
N- OaubiiiWido 38R. 2 INI1h.
t1.325 Down f205 par mo. 1· 24 Riol Pentoon Boor For Sell: 2
-828-3428.
Bedroom Trtiler 740-441· 1538.

-blo.

l

~IMII8.=.:...-Ie-c-oon--of:-u-led--ho-moa.-~

u

Mobile

thet;~-~~~~ !!' -~ ~ r~r ~~~~;~;~~~::

a

,.

Forni Pleetanl WV. N1C8 5 !Wom
Unfurnished Apatrmarn, 304-87&gt;1115, AllOt o P.ll.
RIVER BEND PUCE

- -... wv

1 Bedroom apts. ror elderly or
disabled, HUD aulsred EOH

304·882·3121 .
Small Apanmenl Uparalr1, Close
To Ga111pol11 &amp; Grocery, No Pets,
Relorente~ 74G-44e·1151.
Three bedroom apartmani , $300
plus depolll and ulililles, Thud
Street, Racine, Oh1o, 740-2474292.
Upltatrs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Furniahed, Clean. No Pem, Relorence
&amp; Oepo111 Required, 740-448·
151g,

450

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO.
Cinemu. Showllme I Disney,
Week1Y RaiOI, Or llonlhly Ralel,
Construction Workers Welcome
740-44.1-5898, 74()..M1 ·5167
Slaep1ng rooms With cookmg.

Also traUer tpace on river. All
hook-ups. Call alter 2 00 p m.,
:ICW-773-5851,11aoonWV.
WILUAII ANN IIOI'EL
IIISECOIIDAYNIE
OAWPOUS
SPECIAL LOW
WEEKLY RATES
BINOLEBS110.00WEEKLY

460 Space for Rent
Llrga mobile hOrne 101 for ron! on
5andh111Road. 304-875-7G71.
Mobile home ana available bet ween Alhen1 and Pomeroy, call

Are Your Look1ng For Avon Prpducta But Don't Know Where To
Find Them? Also, II You Would
Lrko To Soil Avon. Call Pam AI
740-245-5443.
BID SCREEN TV FOR SALE :
Respon11ble Party To Take On
Small Monthly Payments Good
Credll A Must Call 1·800· 718 1657
BIG SCREEN TV FOR SALE, R•
sponlible party to lake on small
monthly payments. Good cred1t a
must Can 1·800-718-1857,
Brand Newl Great G1f1! CDIYideo
storage umt. Black and cherry.
Never out ol box. $125. Holds up
to 940 discs, also holdt tapee.
Call 740-992-8638 ailer 6 pm
CDs &amp; tape1 not 1ncluded.
CemenT Morter M1Jt8r 8 HP Honda Motor Asking $1,200 Hardly
Been Used, 740·245-9033.
Concrete &amp; PlastiC Sep11c Tanka,
300 T.hru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enlerpti&amp;es, Jachaon, OH
1-800-537-9528.
England 1Corsa1r Couch &amp; Chair,
Good Condmon, Asking : S3SO ,
740-446-!1373.
For sa• large bam ful ol dishe1,
baU1es. books Taktng best offer.
0pon unlil 151h.
SR 338 going
toward RavenswoOd bridge, 740·
843-5327.

on

Go karl and e11U8I, $500, • 7401149·2388 aile&lt; 5pm.

Golds Gym $125, like Now. 74G-

24H405

Grubb·s P1ano- tun1nQ &amp; repaurs
Probleme? NI)Od Tuned? Call lho
piano Or. 740-«11-4525
Hand l'lekl eel phone &amp; ac:c.eno·
riOI, $75, 740-1192·5000.

For LHII

FOJ L•H MobiM Home. Sila On
While Road Wl!h Eloelrlc Cill
Wa,.,, Soprrc Tank, N,.r Holzar
Ho•P'"'' $125 "'r llonrh, 740445-438D.

510

HoUIIhold

GoodS
Appllancol:
Rocondillonad
Wa-.. Drrtrl, Rongaa, Relri·
grators, 90 Day Guaranteef
French C111 M1111g, 740·448·
7115
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washau. dryer•. refrigera1ors,
rengea. Skaggs Appliances, 715
Vlna Srroal, CaH 740·~48-73111,
1.8JI0.4N-341111.
~Fumi!UN
Wa ,_haYti Ar"" Surplu111i
2101 Jefforaon Aw.
0pon g:30 · 5:00 Mon-Sat
304-175-SOfA (7832)

,..,.•Nee&amp;

CHAMPION DRIVE '
CLUB PIG SALE
Frrday, April 10, 1998 7 Pll
Fayette
Co .
Fairgrounds .
Block, brick, sewer
wind - WaShington, C t1 Ohto, Sellmg
ows, lintels, ate Clau e Winters,
200 Head Free Buying Servtce
Rio Granda, OH Call 740·245· Sate
Oay Phone· 614 ·335·912(r,
5121 .
Gener Gene1ica, 61-4 -871 -7697 ,
6t4-875·6692; Jady, Swtne Farm
560 Pets for Sale
614-884 -4647 . A1ck Sta11
2 AKC Reg Boston Terriers 1- 998·5347, 614·998·2515 ,
male 1-female over 1yr old, Galli&amp; Co. Champion Was Pur houR broken, ,buy one get one chased From rhis Sale, 4 Ye1rs
Out0/6, Comtt Tli'keA Look/
,,.. 30-4-67&gt;2215,

pi:r.••·

Club Plg1 Excellen\ Bloodlrne,
Born January 24th To February
281h, Call 740·245-5672, Or 74()387·0583.

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.
Faatur~ng Hydro Ba1h. Don
Shtota. 373 George I Creek Rd.
740-448.0231 .
.
AKC Collie pupa, sable 1 white.
1250 each: AKC Shollle pup1,
uble &amp; lllhlre, bl·blaclt, ~~. $250·
$350: AKC Pomeranian pupa,
malaa. beaurlful colora, f350
each: all vel chocked and lhoJS,
r a - cell 740-6881085
AKC Miniature Schnauzer pup·
plel, , 2wk• old, aholl &amp;
wormed. SlOOoa. 304-1195-31151 .

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

Euter rabbits, 4· H rabbit&amp; &amp;

c:h1ckena. Pine Grove Fa1m,
Racine, Roger 1)1llon, 740-949·
2988.
Palomino Quarter Horse. gDod
trail horl8. 304~755040 .

-c-

Ridmg Horses For Sale (740)
:;441::6-4:::.;1:,;.10:,__ _ _ _~-•

640

Hay &amp; Grain

AKC Reg. Mml Dachshunds 4 Straw for aale, $2.00 per bale.
lilies, 740·256·64« $250 Each, 740-992-3853.
·

.:.o..:.wee~~=•..:.Oid..:.·_ _ _ _ _ _ 650 ~

AKC Siberian Husky Pups 8 1 Dekalb Seed Corn. Kay farma
Weeki, Ill Sholl. Wormed, 74(). Call 304-675· ! 506 11 No An1wor
379·23!13 Callrf.
Lave lleaaege
Baby BunniH·JUII In Tl- For ::=:::_:.BPU=:RL~OC-K-L-IIE
____
E - . 304-173-1241.
French Lop Bunnies, 4 Wnks
Old SS.OO 1740) oM6-4880

&amp; FERTI.IZER
•'
Complete Blenct1ng &amp; Spreading,
Located Near GaUnr Count)' llllB,
~..:..:...:..:.:;_..:...,;.,;.,;.,;..:..._~.1 1 112 IIIII' Sourh Of Srare Route
Full Blooded Coll10 PupprH, S75; 279, On Jimes Emory Road, Oek
No Papera &amp; S150, Wilh " - " · HI, 740·882-9040

740-.,_, _,083

NQIICE
F..nch CIJr Pot &lt;lo8omlng
-Oponl

TRANSPORTATION

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Roburl1 Jn Sloc:k.
Call Ron Ewno, 1·800-537·g528.
Johnaan'a Used Furniture:
Dryara, Hurchol, Dl·
nollt'1, Rofrlgera.,,., s-t. Tal·
avlslons. Livlngtoom fBeclroom
Suiln, 740--4ll-403t, 740t 448_1004
_·---:-----:-..,-"'IIMimoro H.avy Duly 70 -Wuhor
And D'.{!r. Almond, WOihar
Naada
polr, 1
oao For
lloJh 7-1.01:15.

Ronnllar pufli&gt;iol, 5 mala, 3 fa·
malo, $150 ..ch, 111 1ho11.
wormed &amp; vel checlced, rMdi·IO
!go.:.:304-::.;882
:::-311.::2:.;1;_·-----1
UKC 10 llonrh Old Rog111orod
Treeing Walker FeiNill Sire Bell
ttrckOf)' Not Harr1 $300; UKC 10
Month Old Registered Black &amp;
Tan Male Fiddlti Bread t200,
S 8
E I 2 L. • t225
un ural 19
rg .. r
•
740-3118-8530

=:::::::..::.:::..=.:..::.:..:::::::...__

P.M.

s so

Lllflll c:auch, like ,_, balga llftd
-cal 740-98531181.
•
Mart•r Waahor &amp; Drror Work•

Oood, 150, 740 4111 9417• .
Now Thai Spring II Hlfo II II
Time To Sraclt·Up On Yllur Avon
Skln·So~Soh Uolllurt Suncare
Pl111, To Ordor Call Pom AI 740·
:24;;;5;.;5;.;1,;;43::,.- - - - - - Oak lingle caplilln'l bed·2 dfawera

a stor~ge underneath, book

Clrt headbolrd &amp; manress

1300 GE Dryer 1 112yr. old, "c
cond. ''50 Car rima oH of 1g97
Cor11110. 304-675742hftlf 3pm.
Fvmerll)' Thrlh Sllop now buyif!g
largo oullldo 1011 and baby
ilom1, walltttt, Mill, tl&lt;.
Tuo1dar rhrough Frldar. 740·
=
119::2-3.::.:725
:::..._ _ _ _ _ __

•

°

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE:STOCK

1989 Cavalier 2.0 4 Cylinder
Auro , Air, Hrgh lilies, $1,500,
304-675-1310
1989 Dodge Omni 5 Speed,
Cru1se. $1,400 NegoE1abte, Oay.
740-446-0855, Evenmga 740·
245--5252
1990 Beretta 2.2 Four Cylinder
Auro Wllh Air, $3,500, 740-379·
91 OS E\1801'!Qt.
t990 Cadillac S8v1lle high m1le·
age, like new. $4,300 304·675·
1651 or304·675~197
lumina car, 3.1 Euro
m1las. blue
I

1992 BuKk LeSabre SE, While, 4
Door Sedan, Excellent Condition.
t Local Owner, Please Call After
6 P.M. 74G-«8-1543.

1941 Chevroler 112 ran uuck, r101
good bq,dy. $2,400 304 ·67~ ·
4975
t9!1 Pontiac ChMtlta1n Sedan In
Good Conclilion, $2,500 740·448·
k3o Ahor 6 P.ll.
11UO Cheval(a Malibu 355, Mu·
nc6e • S~d. Body Good, Run1
Good, 1518 RallrH Lo1 lloro Ac·
C111orlo1 To Go Wllh II S6,000
74G-446-8883.
1D71 Chevy Caprloo

..00 on gino,

good condilion. 304-175-57«.

JJARNEY

1995 Dodge Avenger Black
loaded. 31.000 Miles, $8,600
Neg 740-379-9384
1995 Plymoulh Neon 4 Doors,
Green With Spo iler Autemalic,
Atr, 55,600 Mtles. t5,900 080.
740·256-8'IAI\, 74.,0·216-6487.
:..;..:.=-.:.=:s::...::....r.
~:......_ _ ,
19g5 Dodge Srrarua 31,QOO
Mtles, Take Over Payments, 7..0258-e38r
,
1g80 ·1990Cara For$100111
'
SeiledAndSold
l,ocalyThi1 Month.
Trucks, 4x4's, Etc
1-eoo-522-2130, X 390t.
CredlE Problems? We Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Vehicles. No Tprn Dawns, Call
Vld!re, 740-446-28117.

Pass

JUGHAIO'S NOT GOIN' TO
~I-IOOL TODAY, JAMEY-HE'S GOT A

SPRAINT
ANKU
I!

l-IE USES THAT.ANKLE
EVER' TIME WE
A TEST
CQMIN' UP!!

Motorcycles

1982 Honda Motorcycle 850
Nlghlhawk SDOO Or Trade For A
Riding Mower Of Equal Value,
740-448-4428.

•

1984 Honda V65 Sabre, 110~'
,
Waler Cooled, Shall Drlvo, Ll e
New, 740-441-0443.

IANr.

1988 Kawasaki EX500, 11,000
miles, excellenl condidon. SISO!l.
740·742-3104 evenlngl

Gtt~Ct:IN~

ANI&gt;
SAVII'I_GS

Loll

1991 Honda 250x 4 -

•

-&gt;
TQ:E BORN LO~ER

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

'84 170 Batsmlller baas boat,
r35 hp. Evirwude. ,_ ouc ..,~
'"o motor. two liw Wills, Pro PM.
estal aeal, lots of storage, rides
and runs prea1, $3500, 7..a-885~13
~

.

6 A Q J 10
• q 10 5 4
• Q J 2
4 7 4

23Guy

seOa-

24 Denleh
25 Drop heavily

editing
57Tomfnlo
ahrede

27,.,....
211 Big - (fiSt·
foOd illlm)
31 Sun. llpMCh

DOWN

zero ·

1
2 -CIIeli

,.......

32 Be siCk
33-Paulo

42
•

.

16 Fl Frborglai1 Boal Johnson
85 MoiOI', New Serna. New Carpet.
Good Trailer, $1,500, 740·3889354.

Dbl.
26
3t

3NT

West

·1 t ·
2t
Pass
Pass
.Pass

· BIG NATE

18 fl Ttl-Haul Boat &amp; Trailer Ntw
lloiOr, 740·388--11824.
196g Sea Imp 19 11211. deep-V,
be1ge w/sand interior, Gcyl,
190hp. Mercrulse( Inboard motor,
w1th 1ra1ler, life preservers &amp;
buFf'118'11. $2,750 614-446-3814

1994 Bayfiner 18 HI. 4 3 V·O E1&gt;
;ine And Custom Trailer With
Oh10 Valley Bank Wfll OUer For Brakes low Hours. $8,600, 740·
Sale A 1981 Ford Escon Pony • 250· 1130.
1260587, A 1987 Yamaha
YFZ350JB ATV 1118928, II 1D88 Kawasaki STS Jet aki, still undet'
Olds OaUa 88 1830695, A 1991 warranty, three sn1er, 83 horse·
Oida Cullan I04gl60, And A power, bought new July of '97,
1988 Geo Tracker 11148205. Pub- three matching Kawasaki lki
l11c 1\uclion Will Bo Held AI The vests and trailer all go With (r.
AnneJt, 143 Third AYI., Gal· $5000, 740·g4g·2203 or 740·949·
........,OH On -4125198 At 10,00 2045, Wtll cons1der trade for a
Will Be Sold To good pomoon boar
'As Ia- Where
Or lmpNed llusrSall Due To llovei
Soon 81 11' Stare rail Tr~ · Hull 140hp. In~otir1aon AI 740 - out, tratler, au equ1pl, A· 1 cond.
Restrves The $3,900 firm Call 304 -6 75-3485
Right
Or Rej&amp;CI Any ahe&lt;Spm.
Anij All Bid&amp;, And Wirhdraw
Properly From Sale Prior To Sale
760 AUIO Parts &amp;
Terms or Sale: CASH OR CEA·
Accessories
'ti~IED CHECK.

3 Wrlllngtpot
4 !.live • !&gt;ad

review

to

5 Conceit

e .......

mllenel

5

7 Sllllnna

10 2

8 IndignatiOn '

Nortll

Pass
2•
34
3•
Pass

aarment

•

1t Smoother '

12 $howtld...,
111 Tul
.
22 Some ttalf24 Skillful
:
25 Ache
• ,
28 Tide ly~ I

14

t•

Pass · ·
Pass
Past ·
Pass

30 Most unaoii!H!

34 Iron grotlng

35 Gel rid of
36 Dr. - of riP,

Opening lead: • 9

38 Viewing

·.The g'o od on
the Good ·

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

,1

II'P· I
...-+--+--1--4--l---l . ,o9 Gun
unct.r· :

EMI

By Phl.lllp Alder
As lhis is Good Friday, let's feature a deal containing good deciiii'Crplay. II comes from the 12th Cap
Gemini invitational pair event. held
last January in the Netherlands. The
winner.; were Tony Forrester,
Britain's top player. and Zia Mahmood, the colorful Pakistani who
divides his time primarily between
England and the United States.
The opening one-club bid was pan
ofthe Polish Club system, which usually hides a minimum balariced hand,
but sometimes a much stronger collection. The one-diamond response
&gt;ignaled a bust, and one heart
described a minimum with four
hearts. Then Forrester (South)
entered the auction with a takeout
double. After that, many murky
moves resulleq in a final contract of
three no-trump.
West led the diamond nine.
promising !he 10 as well . Eas!
unblocked his queen under dummy's
king. Understandably, . Forrester
cashed dummy"s Club ace, then took
the losing finesse of his jack. West
continued with a low diamond.
de,clarer discarding a heart from the
dummy and felling E.a~t's jack hold
the trick. Now a hean switch defeats
the contract, but East led the spade ,
queen.
After winning·with his king, Forrester cashed the diamond ace (discarding a second hean from the
dummy), followed by hi$ two club
winners. ' East, forced to keep three
heans. had to discard one spade.
Declarer exited with a spade, won the
henn return with dummy's nee, and
played another spade. Back in hand
wilh the heart king, Forrester took lhe
last •• and his ninth •• trick with the
artistically preserved s ade tWo.
•

1g80 125 CR Olrtbli&lt;e Many Ex·
irall $200, 740-258-1631.

1996 Honda Shadow Amerldn
Cla11ic Edition 1100cc Excell.t,l
1g93 Dodge Shadow ES, V-6, 5 Condibon, lots Of Extta•sl $7,000
Speed, loaded , $2,100 OBO: Firm, 7&lt;10·441·0963 Da11 Aller 5
1990 Dodge Sprm ES, V·6, Auro, P.ll. &amp; Weekends 740-«8-7371. :
Loaded, S1,200 OBO. 740·2501998 KawaJkl Bayou A Wheeler
1233.
E•cellent Condition, 2 Year Fac· 1994 Chevy Camara, 3.4, V-6 5 1011 Warranty $2,500, 740·256·
speed, PW, POL. amlfm canette, 6869 leevo Message.
alarm system w1th remote keyless
entry, headlighl and taillight 1997 XL883 Sporra10r, Black
blackout covers, new tires. hunter With 1200 Kil, Too Many Extras
green, 83,000 miles. Immaculate To Lilli Forward Con~la 19,800,
cond111on. aak1ng $8800, call 740- 740·379·9105 Evenrnge.
992-7551, ask lor David.

1Q72 Chevy Good Cond1t1on W1th
New Tires, Exhaust, Alot 01 Exrrasi74G-256-6574
l984 GIIC 112 orr bed, srralghl
6cyl, auto, 78,000 orig1nal miles.
S1 ,500 740 ·9g2·2478 Da11 or
740-1192-411 1 EY8t'ings.

1886 Ctrooy Truc:ll
CullOm 30, Black fn Color, Loaded. Body ., Real Good Shapo,
$5,500, fact&gt;ry Big Block'454,
110,000 llilos
Pllono (304)4511-1111
1987 OIIC C-50 4spd 350. p1.
21,500
anginal m1les, no COL required,
1211 llarbed wllldea 17.400.
740·992·2..78 o.,. 740·992·
4111 Evtninps.
•
·

new paint. Navy Surplua,

:

39 AIHrl

wHhout pi'Ol)f

40 Browfl

pigment

42 Cioc'e
rellllve

,..,...-1-++-4-l--1

·.... uac~e pubHc

49 Type of lizard

so·
llrY. •• winti
52 A Gerehwtn:
53 Actlfke 1

ahrew

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·by Luis Campos

c...triy Cipher ~&amp; art CI'Ntl&lt;llroni ~tions by IIM'IOUI I)IMlfMe put lnd I)I'Ment
EO ....,.-In tM ciphtt' ltlndllof lnothlt' Todly'.S Clue l 9QUIIS U

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"Twa

PREVIOUS SOLUJlON:
things a chrld will share wrllingly. communrcable
diseases and his 'molhel''s age."- Dr. Benjamin Spock
•
.

·::~:~' s~~J.\M-l£~trs·
_..;.,;,~:..._..:;_....;:
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Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

f'OUAN

WOlD

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· my.
After a night w1th h1s pals
husband Sighed, "I'll never be
short of friends because I'm a
constant loser at • ·· • • ·."

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1 I I 1 I 'I e
5

Complelo lhe chuckle quoled
bv f1i11ng tn the m1U1ng wotds
L....I-...L-.I-....1'-..J...--l you· develap frOftl Slep No 3 below.
•

•

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8 .PRINT
NUMBERED LUTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
A IQ'SCRAMBL~ ABOVE LETTERS
W
TO GET ANSWER

SCIIAMoi.ITS ANSWERS
Frisky· Gouge • Humus -Invoke • MONEY
· Sympathy is what you give someone when you don't
want to lend them MONEY.

.:..:.:=====---___

APRIL 10 ·I
WANTED TO BUY: 196&amp;
Through 1972 Chevelle Or Elcamino Console. Cao Alsq Be A
1970 Through 1972 Monle Carlo
Conaolo. "IIIUST BE HORSHUE
SNIFTER TYP,f." Phone : 740·
«1-1053.

790 . campers &amp;
Motor Hollies
1964 Yallow Stone Camper, 35', 2 •
expando's, full size bedroom
(queen size bed), luU lize livrng &amp;
kirchon, now lull 1lze ,,.,. &amp; raf •
new carpet, vtnyl, all w1ndows
have cuslom Kirsh bllndallamberga~. must tlee 10 appreciate,
aerloua calla only, $0500, 740·
9112·8173,740.992-2015.

·~~~~~~~~~ ..~~Clz=~~

81 0

1989 Chevr S.1o, 4 cyl. 5 ap.,
ladder rack
tool bo11, runs &amp;
look~ good, $2,200 OBO, 304·
882-3021 .
1981 S-10 Tr!4ck &amp;1,000 Miles, 5
..._. 740-..,..73! 8,
.,.......
1g93 Jnp Wrangler wlh~rd rop,
low nileege. 304-875-3478.

a

lmprovemenls
BASEMENT
WATIRPAOoFINO
Unconditional lifetime puarantee.
Local taferencea furmat'led. Earabllllhed 1g75 Call (740J 446·
0870 dr f.B00-287-0576. Rogers
Warerproofinp
Appliance Par10 And Sarvlco: All
Name Brandl Over 25 Years ~··
perlencej A.II Work Guaranteed,..
French fill llaylag, 740·440·
7115.
CIC Gonaral Home • llaln·
tenenct· Paintmg, vinyl s1d1ng,
carpentry, daara, windOws, balt}s,
mobile home repair and more For
lree estimate call Chet, 740-9112·
6323.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Rttklemial or commercial w1nng,
new tervice or repairs. Mester u.
can11d tlectnolan. Aiidf'nour
Elocrrical. WV000308, 304-075·

1788.

.

tintable spot and have to take a side.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Prob' ARIEs(March 21 -April 19) Per·· lems within your immediate househaps lhe reason you're not getting hold' tOday should be resolved by the
adequate cooperation from o1hers at family members involvJ:(I. Input from
present is because you're not p~­ in- laws. outsiders or relatives could
viding an example they wanl to 1m1- · make a bad situation worse.
tale. The ball is in your coun. Trying
LEO (July -23-AUIJ.' 22J There is a
_to patch up a brOken romance'l The chance you·might gctliO envelopo:d in
Astro-Graph Matchmaker c;m help your own ideas today that you'll fail
you.understand whal 10 d~ to make to hear the constructive suggdtions
the relationship work. Marl $2.75 to of another who is trying to be helpMatchmaker, c/o thi~ newspupcr. ful. Be qn open-minded listener.
P.O. Box 1758. MurrJy Hill Station,
VIRGO (AuiJ. 23-Scpt. 22) For
New York. NY 10156.
the next couple of days strive to be
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In prudent and cautious in the manageorder tQ feel ·your best at t~is time. lll!'nl of your rel!Ources. If you arc
devote a lillie more atlenuon than . indifferent or ciii'Ciess. you might ere·
usual to common-sense habils. ,Get ate avoidable problems for yourself.
adequate rest, as wen· as su!Ticient
· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If
exercise.
. development~ over which you have
GEMINI · (May 21-June 20) no,conlml have you stymied, keep a
There's a possibility compli~~ions cool head. Be positive. expectant and
miaht develop today among tnends hopeful. This too shall pass.
with 'tllhom you mix socially. You
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
· could get squeezed .into an uncom· You· re now in a difficult cycle whicll
requires pntienc:e and tenacity on
your pan if you:wi~h 10 su~. Be

ASTRO·ORAPR

198g S-10 V·6, Auro, 13,295;
SERVICES
1988 GIIC 515 V·6, Aulo, AC,
S2,4g5; 1992 Exrendecl Cab 5-10,
$3,695 ; Cook llorora, 740·448· 1------..;,_--~:.._,;.;
o1o3
Home

1975 Lincoln llark IV Good 480 111114 Fool F-350 c- Cob Duel·
Engine And Auro Trani, $600 11 P U. 7.3 lbrbo Dionl, Aulo
740·44&amp;-2384 .
• Trans, 3 Dilleram HiK:hll, 12,000
llrlel. $25,000 74().«8·23114.
1gao P9n1ia&lt; Loman1, V-8 aut2' TraniPQrl disc, lnternalion~~l, tometic, good running, no rusL 1995 Chevy 1 ton, auto, air, pa
am.lm, 12ft 1111 bed WIIIIOIIIdl
good bladal, llold, road,,
7&lt;10-892·1302-'noa
racks, 1 owner, 54.000 origln•l
080, 740-11112·7302 Mning.
.:::::.:.::..:.;;:.,;,:;:;..::.:;;::.:::;___ ,1982 Culaoa Supreme, 2 0, 250 miloa. tr5,500. 740·992·24711
3 PI Hllch Dllk, 3 P I - IFif· V8. Good Condlrion, $1,goo Or Days 74G-1192-4111 Ewning~
rllzer · Spreader. 2 Hortedr•wn Bill Oftlr, 740-992-4568.
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
Turning Plows, llulch Hey, 740·
4411--=..:'=3::":..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1998 l ·24 C.vallel, All Power,
1Sunroof, 5 Spoed, Keyless En~,.
580 Club Cadet 10 HP Wllh 441 CD Pla1tr, Now TirOl, $13.000,
Oac:k &amp; Front Blade, 7•0·••- 080, 741()-..oW1.0235.
2«s.
I~:::.:.=...::.::.;:::::::.
1g114 Cl10vy S·10 Blaztt • · Bad C.... t. No Credll, Bankrupt.
7' Sickle bar mower, terapor Cl? W. CAn Holpl Bank Financ- drive, new engine &amp; tran1ml1·
btode I rord rlkl. ••oo. 304· lng On U1od Vehicles. 740·441- sion, under wtrranty. S3,000
080. 304-882·31150.
075-29 I 7.
0607

----------1
.610
Fann'Equtpmenl
seso

Soul•

1996 Ford f · 150, 4X4, Xll, With
loti of e111ras, only 4500 milts,
$20,900, may consider other
lruck on partial trade, 740·882~
6154

OJ E•ua'sl740-441 ·1419

Etil

v•

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

19116 Chevy 4wd, 350, 5apd, air,
cru1se, tilt, am·fm caueltt.
$15,500. 304-675-5332.
'

740

concern

411 T-ttent· Ofll.
47
atuc1ant
411 women·o.
clothing 11ntc1e
51 Smeller
54 U.lcee lulppy
55 Juicy fruit .

&amp; Fertilizer

Prole1110nal Groommg by Ap - 710 AUIOS for Sale
polntmenll. 850 Second Ave. ,89 Trium"'h TR 6 Road•ter, good
Ga. poi I, 011. 304.075-4858.
"'.
1 top, urea, mtenor, Calitorma car,
Purebred Siberian Husky pup- no rust ~Yer, $5750 , 740 2815ples, 5 malu, 3 temalea, blue 5444.
eyes, masks, very cure, people
oriented, ready now, $130, cell '88 Grand Am, loaded, '91 motor,
740-1192·5144.
$2000. 740-992·6215.

1:;740-::::;31::;:5-4;:31:=;7;,..------1 W01har,
490

Building
SuRJ)IIes

550

1989 Sulek laSabre, loadad, lots
ql new parts, good condition ,
$1900, call 740-949-2203 or 7401149·20415.

45Wn-

15 Ono'a lev.
11
17 New 0..1 prag.
18 HeN, In P8rle
20 Genetic inlllete
21 lleaullc'-n'o

I

,,

..

optimistic and positive', and don't
look for easy outs...
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you are involved wilh a club or
social organization, you might get
tapped .for an assignm!inJ nnfully
dodged by other members. Be pre·
pared. .
·
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jnn. 19)
A'n objective of importance to you is
·achievable today, but you must be
.careful not to use methods that could
·cost you respect or suppon from oth·
ers.
,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Don'J soond oq on ideas or plans
today about which you're excited to
a person with a limited perspective.
This' individual CQUid etlect your
thinking and dull the edge of your
enthusiasm. ·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Someone with· whom you are· quite
chummy who is always running out
of lhings slhe ~ds might want to
bonow something toda~ -or tomorrow
that you'll be reluctant to lend. Say
no and mean it

(CC)
I

'

�Page 12 • The Dally SenUnel

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll10, 1998

Tammy Wynette remembered by stars of country ·.music
By JIM PAlTERSON

As.oc:iated Press Writer
NASHVJLLE, Tenn. (AP)
Tammy Wynene was remembered
as a role model by Naomi Judd and
a sister by Dolly Parton at an cmC&gt;tional memorial that concluded with
Wynette's signature song, " Stand
. By Your Man."
A crowd of l .SOO jumped to its
feet at the concl usion of the country
music standard. It was sung Thursday at the Ryman Auditorium by
Lorrie Morgan, who called Wynelle
her idol.
.
Wyneue died suddenly Monday
nt her home of a blood clot to the
lungs. A funeral service and burial
were held in Nashville before ·the
75-minute public memorial at the
former home of the !]rand Old Opry,
a hall where Wyneue had performed

9,ogof
Easter. .

many stars added anecdotes ·about
Wynelle.
Judd. a former nurse, said she
sham! a running joke with fonner
hairdresser Wynette about the uncertainties of show business.
Wynelle would greet her with:
"I've still got my beauty parlor
license...

Fashion: A new breed of synthetic
threads meets the demands of living

•P~ge84•

• FNtured on pa~ C1

.

Judd wouid respond : " I've still
got my nursing license."
Born Virginia Wynene Pugh in
llawamba County, Miss., just over
the line from Alabama, Wynene
picked cotton as a child and earned a
living as a hairdresser before making it as a singer in Nashville.
With a robust voice that could
deliver entire songs seemingly on
the ·verge of tears, Wynette scored
39 Top 10 hits from 1967-88 and
sold more than 30 million albums.
many times.
Her first of 20 No. I songs was
"We had th{ee queens in country "My Elusive Dreams.'' a duet with
music and one of them 's gone noW.,, . David flouston that topped the
Judd said, referring to Wyneue. Par- charts in 1967. "Stand by Your
ton and Lorena Lynn.
Man" was No. I in 1968.
Although she was on the bill,
Wynette was married five times,
Ly nn did not attend because she was but found lasting happiness with
overcome by her friend's death, Par- George Richey. They were married
ton said.
"
in 1978 and they stayed together .
Randy Travis, Wynonna, Parton, until her death.
The Oak Ridge Boys and Rudy
He.appeared stunned and wiped
Gatlin performed. while Merle Hag- away tears when he took the stage at
gard appeared on video.
the memorial service and thanked
George Jones, Wynellc's husband Wynette's friends and fans.
from 1969-75 and former duct partHe said for the last four or five
ner, attended but did not speak or years, he never spent more 30 minperform.
utes away from Wynette.
Gospel songs including " Peace ·
"What I wanted was to look after
in the Valley" and . "How Great her. She was my buddy," he said, his
Thou Art" were performed. and voice filled with emotion.

Tiger Woods
·lurking at
Augusta

tmes
G~mnett

Co. Newspaper

Couple' returns
to theaters

Details on

pageA2

• Entertolnmtnt on Pogo Cl •

•

A

HI: 70s
Low: 40s

•

entint

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· April12, 1998

Vol. 33, No.9

By AARON MARSHALL·
Columbus Buraau
COLUMBUS -The. average home-ownil!g !Upay·
er in Gallia and Meip counties would pay less In state
and local taxes if 1141e Issue 2 is approved on the May
ballot, according to an analysis released by the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council oit Friday. .
The nOn-paniuti Council ' determined thai a Gallla
County home.:owncr earning an income of $29,410
W\)uld pay $99.99 more in state sales tax under slate
Issue 2, but would receive property tax relief of $105.05.
on a home valued at $64,755.
The average home-owning taxpayer in Mei~ Cou~ty
would pay $10.90 less in state and local taxes if state Issue
lis approved on the May ballot, according to the analysis.
The Council detemdned that a Meigs home-owner
n~T~M"Sinllnel

CQUntry music star George Jonea, tippeere outalde Ryman Audl·
torlum, at the memorial servlc~t for his one .time wife and elnglng
partner, Tammy Wynette. Jonee did not sing It the eervlce.
.In 1992, .her name and best- alleged infidelities by saying: "I' m
known song entered the presidential not sitting here like some little
campaign when . Hillary Rodham woman standi,ng by my man like
Chnton answered an interviewer's Tammy Wynettc."
quostion about her husband's
Wynette demanded an apology.

George Richey appeared on stage, at the memorial service, to
thank Tammy Wynette's friends and fans for eharlng in the tribute
to hle ·wHe.
Mrs. Clinton said she dldn 't mean to issued a statement call ing Wynct1e a
hurt Wyncuc's · feelings. and legend .
Wynettc later performed at a Clinton
Wynette was huricd at WoodHiwn
fund-raiscr.
Memorial Park in Na~hvillc .
When she died. the Clintons

------Community
Calendar-'-------.
.

The Detroit News
The collection, which includes · The Community Calendar is pub- My Son?", Good Fiiday drama at SUNDAY
breakfast to follow at 8 a.m.
POMEROY - Youih of MI. HerAs the millennium creeps closer, everything from wide-leg pants to a lished as a free service to non-profit Chester UMC, 7:30 p,m. .
fashion goes futuristi c. But don't sleeveless dress to eveningwear, groups wishing to announce meeting
mon United Brethren in Chri.st
MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
Church to present EAster sunrise ser- Church, Middleport, sunrise service
expect a jarring change championed looks like top-shelf designer mer- and special ev.ents. The calendar is SATURDAY
by plastic space suits.
chandise; but it doesn't come with not designed to promote ·sales or . POMEROY - Return Jonathan vic~ 6:30 a.rn. Sunday. Breakfast to at 6:30a.m. All welcome.
fund raisers of any t~pe . Items are Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the · follow in fellowship hall . Sunday .
The revolution is subtly tucked the high dry-cleaning bill.
inside the very fabric of contempo"The nice thing about it is you prtnted as space permtts and cannot Ameri~an Revolution, Saturday, 10 school, 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise serrary clothes. Adva,nces in fabrication throw the pieces ·in the washer and be guaranteed to rim a specific num- .a.m. at the Pomeroy Library. 10:30 a.m.
vice, Ash .Street Free Will Baptist
Michael Struble to talk on architechave birthed a litter of everyday th~n just hang them up to dry,' ' says ber of days.
Church, Middleport, 6 a.m. Sunday;
ture of the lock houses in Meigs
clothes that wear as well as they Teng.
SYRACUSE - Sunrise services other regular service. IO ·a.m. and 7
County.
look. '
For fall, Teng plans .for her col- FRIDAY
at Asbury United Methodist Church. p.m.
POMEROY - Good Friday serPerry Ellis does men's slacks in a lection to incorporate a stretch knit
6 a.m. with breakfast to follow.
.SYRACUSE- Easter egg hunt
Dacron microfiber polyester. The that looks like sheepskin. And vice, "The Stations of the Cross"
MONDAY
sponsored
by
1he
Meigs
Ministerial
Saturday, I p.m. on the grounds of
polyester has ''memory" that !•eeps • thanks to the folks at Wellman Inc.
RACINE- Carmel-Sutton UnitPOMEROY - Right to Life
the pants from wrinkling. No r.1atter in New York City, the designer may Associ.aiion, noon Friday, Sacred the Syracuse Chtlrch of the ed Mcthodi ~t Church sunrise ser- meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Nazarene. Sunrise services, 6:30 vices. 7 a.m. at Carmel Church with Pomeroy ~ibrary.
how the pants arc folded or creased, · use a fleecelike fabric made of fiber Heart Catholi~ Church.
a.m.
Sunday.
Ihey snap back in shape. The from recycled plastic bottles.
'
CHESTER
"Have
You
Seen
•
microfiber. a weave that is finer than
"I think that in all disciplines
silk. makes the polyester s01·1 to the your material helps you innovate,"
touch.
says Teng. "If you want to bri~g
Women's silk suits, blouses and newness to what you do, you should
dresses by Leslie Fay and Misty bring in new fabrics."
Jared T. Hm
Waus was given training on the funHarbor arc coated ·with DuPont
Fabric hybrids also have given
Army Cpl.' Jared T. hill has grad- damentals of irouhlcshooting gasoTeflon. The coatmg makes them rise to entire clothing lines.
uated from the U.S. Army Primary line and . diesel engines, and
. stain-resistant; spills just bead up
Consider Theory, a ii~e of strctc~ Leadership Development Course. at · hydraulic , clutch and brake systems.
and roll olf.
- "JX'rtswear. The collection, which Fot't Drum. Watertown. N.Y.
He i~a 1997 graduate ofWahama
It's a sign of the times. Oscar de debuted last spring. features pants,
Studc~ts received training i.n High School and joined the Marine
Ia Renta said it best:·"Fashion trends skirts and tops. All garments· arc supervisory skills. leadership princi - Corps in July.
arc grcm if they fit into a !ifestylc." hased with fabrics like cotton, nylon ples, and small unit training tech. Acuve hvcs - cspe.ctally those and wo'!l that arc laced with any- niques essential to a first-line superMatthew W••Mardnko
of women who arc bustncsswomcn where lrom 5 to 15 percent Lycra visor in a technical or administrative
Matthew W. Marcinko has joined
by day, soccer moms by late after- spandex.
cnvironmcm.
the
United States Army under the
noon. and caregivers at , night "Everyone ·thinks that clothing
Hill, a military police team leader
demand funcltonal clothes. And the with Lycra has to be skintight," says at Fort Drum, is the son 'of Nancy . Delayed Entry Program at the U.S.
tunctoonahty of a garment IS often Andrew Rosen, co-founder of Thea- and Pat Hill of Pomeroy. He is a Army Rccrui,ing Station in Athens.
dictated by the fabric.
ry. "It is not about that at all. Most 1995 graduate of Meigs High
3rd St
Racine
,---:---~-------_;.
.
The program gives young men
A few years ago in an effon to of the clothes we make arc.n't tight. s~hool.
and women the .opponunity to delay
ke~p up w1th the modern woman.
"Because the cloth has memory.
entering
active du.ty for up to one
who de Ia Rcnta says ts the most the shape of the clothes is much
Brian S. Walts
" liberated " since Eve, the fashion more nattcrilig and coinfortablc,"
Marine PFC Brian S. Watts. son year.
desogncr put Lycra brand spandc~. says Rosen. former president of of Lois Johnson of Letart. W.Va., · The enlistment gives the new solDuPont's man' madc clastic. to Anne Klein and. helore that, Calvin recently completed the Basic Engi- dier the option to learn a new skill,
work. The company combined it Klein Sport.
neer Equipment Mechanic Course at travel . and hecomc eligible to
I
·
I
with other fabrics.
Not so· long ago, natural fabrics Marine Corps Detachment at Fort receive ~s much as $40.000 toward~
college education. After completion
" Lye~~ gives you . that added were h()t. Consumers - probably Leonard Wood. Mo.
of
basic training, soldiers receive
eomtort, . says Patncoa Clyne. a prompted ~y memories or that godWatts received instruction on the
advanced
individual training in their
dcstgn dorector woth OSCAR hy awful '70s polyester - shunned inspecfion. maintenance and repairOscar de Ia Rcnta. "Your jacket can . anything man-made.
ing or engineering equipment used career speciality.
have more shape at the waist. The
"I am a person who always want- hy the U.S. Marine Corps, which
pant can he a flat-front trouser ed natural fibers ... says Toby Haher- included high-speed. high-mobility
A student.at Ea.~tcm High School
instead of having pleats. You can get man. co-owner of Habennan Fabrics cranes used for loading ships and Marcinko will report to Fon Ben:
a cleaner design...
of ~oyal Oak. Mich. "I . still have frucks and forklifts and trac1ors used ning, Ga., on July 1.
The fabrics that emerge when difliculty wearing 'all polyester. 1 on airfields.
ijc . is the · son of Jcfrrey ' ·
fi~rs like Lycra arc mi~ed with cot- don't think anything they have done
Wiih an emphasis on safety, Marcmko, Tuppers Plains, and
'HAPPY EASTER
ton or wool enhance the art of fash- to it makes it breathe as nice as other
Peggy Robinson of Long Bouom.
ion design. says Clyne.
fabrics.' ... You can't kill poly with a . Bell keeps softened butter
"Fashion is very much a gene . stick."
pool," she says. "It is an evolution.
But Haberman. a self-professed fresh and ready' IO spread
Designers will figure ways to use "fabric snob," ~ays fabric blends,arc
The Detroit Newl
• •
(fabrics) to create newness."
becoming more visible. "When 1
If you love butter but find it
Am~nda Turner, fashion manager look at the fiber content of some of tough to keep it at il spreadable ternof The Somerset Collection of Troy, these ncw.fabries . there is a list of at perature•. we 've found the thing for
Most people quickly respond "l.know that."
Mich .• agrees. "The trend is really least 'a half a dozen things. " she you.
Bu~ the quatioa we would like to ask is this:
going to Ia~.: ofT this spring," she says.
Its called a butter bell. Based on
adds.
Haberman Fabrics, known for . centuries-old French design, the
"If Easter is 10 much more tllan colored egp, ~by not make a concentrated efFon .
"You arc going 1o be wearing tra- stocking quality natural fabrics, now porcelain crock has two'Parts.
.
. to wonhip.tbe ONE whom Euter is all about- Jesus Christ?"
ditionally winter fabrics like cash- offers designer material that incor- • To usc it, you.'pack a stick of softmere in the summer. You wouldn 't · porates a touch of syilthctic. Those encd 'butter into the cone-shaped
We'd I~ to invite yo• to join us tbis Easter for ~n inipirational time .of worship
be able to do that without the future types of fabrics and the versatility pan of the top. Youpo~r a couple of
u we celebrate the risen Christ.
fibers. Adding synthetic fibers often they afford arc bringing the granola tn~hcs of water · mto . the ·crockmakes the natural fabrics more light- fabric movement 10 a gradual end. · shaped bottom part. Then you upweight."
"Nothing is natural anymore." . -end ·the butter tnto tltc water. The
lightening up a heavy material says Ccdrick Johnson. a Detroit water keeps the butter fresh for up to
isn'l the only thing a linlc fashion designer who's in the a month by preventing air contact
:fabric/fiber mi~ing can do.
process of buying fabrics for his and k~eps the butter 'cQOl (bu1 not
The spring/summer Ellen Tracy spring line.
~old) . tn even the hottest weather. •o
•line by Linda Allard includes a twill
"All of the changes in fabrics arc us always ready to usc.
blazer and wrap short combo made cool for a designer because some of
When you want to serve the but.from rayon and triacetate (a new the newer 'fabrics arc easier to work tcr. th~ top part rests securely on ihe
breed of polyester). Rayon is usual- with," he says. "As far as the con- table. The lip of lhe top also prC&gt;.
.
Iy . limp. bul the triacetate makes it sumcr goes. I'm sure many people vtdes a c.onvcnicnt place to rc.stthe
more hefty. The collection .also like the fabric blends because some butter kmfe.
,
·
includes a reversible "gauze " of them are easier (o care for "
Once you have used a butter bell.
made · of
a
The ~act th~t something ;.,as all you will want . to give one to just
kimono
cotton/linen/rayon blend. The fabric natural u~ed to ·signify quality, adds ~out everyone YOI! know - espeis ligh!~eight and crisp and has a Sharon Graubard, creative direclor · c~ally folks who 'love . their bread
dynam~c shtmmer.
of TobeNext, the forecasting divi- machines and hav.e a steady supply
Futl11e fibers helped Yeohlee sion of the Tobe Report, a publica-' of superb bread fresh from the oven.
Teng introduce a machine-washable lion for rctai&amp;ers. "But now conThe Butter Bell' is SI7.9S plus j
i'e~n collection for spting. The sumen don't1'are what a garment is s~ipping and handling from th~ •
stretch gabardine used ·itJ the line made of as lo,~g as il feels and looks K1ng Arthur Flour Co. of Norwich /
looks and drapes like heavy silk,
good."
VT. 1.(800) 827-6836.
·

·The Sentinel News DotUne

992-2156~:~~~=~~~

.Easter Special

Hart's · Koun~ry Kitc~en

______ _______,

1 Present This Ad and Receive 1

! FREE·D.ESSERT!

.

"EASTER is MORE

1 With r:»urchase of Any Meal 1
L---------------------~-~-~~

us

All of at
Hart's Kountry Kitchen
wish you a .

." than colored eggsl

Sunrise Service-6:00am
A}tJY/111 celebratjon ofRtsllrrectlon Life Easter cantata·

Lm We .Forget

j

Breakfast - 7:00 am
Wonhip 1- 8:15am
Suoday School - 9:30 am
Worihip.ll- Uh30 am ·

Midd.lepori Cburela of Christ
Fifth at Main
992-2914

.

:News Watch'
'

'

~

·1,ooo-gallon spill

A jump on the job market:

not expected to
have major Impact

Elementary school students
explore employment options

By .JIM FREEMAN
nme•Bantlnel Staff
PORTLAND
BIDWl;LL-The last year of grade school may seem like an The Civil War Battle
unlikely time for students to begin planning for a career, but chi!- of Buffin~o~ Isl~nd at
dren at Bidwell-Porter Elementary are already exploring their ~ortland ts htghh.ghted
oplioliS.
·
.
tn the recent ed1tton of
The career/math fair staged Thursday by B-P's seventh and
Blue &amp; Gray magaeighth graders has some thinking aboul pursuing the careers they zinc •. an. intematio_n~
presented to fellow students, parents and the community.
pubhcatton for Ctvtl
The eif!th graders were directed to choOse a career, research War buffs. ,
their.choice and role play in that field for a day, be it ~ surseon,
The a.,rtlir.lclll-e ·entitki~~
8 101
attorney or'NASCA!t driver. And while some may yet be unde"Morgan's
Luck Runs
cided about what they will do as adults, the fair gives them an
Out"
rovers
Confederiadication of where to look.
.
Brandl'!! Pyles, who chose veterinary science and used ani - ate Brigadier General
mals gathered from friends and others in the school in the display John Hunt Morgan's
2,460-man raid through
he opeialed with Ashley Myers, said he might become a veteriKentucky, Indiana and
narian.
Ohio,
aad tlic July 191
"I've been thinking about it a lot in following it as a career, ·
1863 Battle.ofBuffingbecause we have a farm with horses, ducks and other animals,"
ton Island which ended
he said.
'
the raid. Morgan was
_
B-P teacher Joan Esgleton, who organized the career/math
captured a week later Civil w... Battle or Buffington
fair for its second c:onseclitive year, said the event expands upon
leland whiCh took ~ in
the learning process, allowing children to discover the working in northeast Ohio.
The
article
is
biliCcl
Fiortis:.C., MeigS County, on
world on their own. •
as
the
"fint-ever
.luly1V,
1813,.-thefocueof
"l~s fascinating for them," she said. 'Some kids just went all
detailed
account
of
the
•
t . _ of lllue ' I
out wilb their projects. aad we had a fe'!N who shadowed their
Rebel
Gen.
John
Hunt
Gray
magezJne
whiCh dldatchoice of careen by going to the places of business and observMorgan's
Battle
at
lid
the._
to
pt 111rvtng the
ing what Is done there. •
Buffington
Island
ford
threeteniJI
alta.
Me'::~..
Pyles said the lasting impression he got from researching his
.
Ri
•
Parker,
diNctor
of
the
1
· field wss "how much you have to lmow and learn aboul. •
on the Oh
. to ~cr. . County MUH!Im, le 8hown
The 1ssue ~~ ded1- here rwv1ew1ng the llllgiiZine.
Eighth graders are required to have an individual career plan,
cated to preservmg the
or ICP, in place before moving on lo high school. Mrs. Eggleton
Buffington Island Battlefreld and consists largely of
said the career/math fair helps reinf(lrce some of lhe goals stuinformation c:oncc;ming the battle, including detailed
dents present to the secondary level guidance c:ounselor.'And at
maps, pictures, and an order of battle outlining Confedthe . same time, students find
it a break from regular classroom
I
erate
and Union units and their commanders.
asstgnments.
·
•
The
banleficld is 1he subject of new fi&amp;ht between a
"l(a a different kind of thing to do in ihe early spring and il
oompany
which owns a large portion of the bautefield
helps to alleviate some of the cabin fever they have after.winter
and seeks permits to mine gravel .there and people who
ends/ Mn. Eggleton said.
.
.
wish to preserve the site.
.
Seventh graders were entrusted to develop projectll involving
Amlnling1o
D;lvidE.
Roth,
edi1oripubli1her,eadl
issue of
math, and their presentations, while wide-ranging, all included
the
bimonthly
magazine
has
up
1o
6S,(Ol
readm.
some ~ of the subject.
·
Roth said the magazine is known for its preservation
. Sixth graders served as guides for students ·in th~ K-5 level
who toufed the events, viewing 1he mock murder trial and tele- ' alertS, and that since the magazine is published in
Columbus, having a preservation alert for 1he Buffington
.vision talk show the stlldents arranged, or were treated to an
Island battlefield is a ' hometown thing. •
•
iostruciional scieooe sllow by Mike Jaf=Qbs, a teacher at Buckeye
"This
is
the
only
pitched
Civil
War
battle
fou&amp;ht
in
Continued en page A8
Continued on p8IJe A8 ·
·

SYRACUS~ (AP) - A tug. boat moving buges ran aground
ncar this rural southeastern Ohio
community and spilled an ctSii·
mated.1,000 gallons of diesel fuel
· mto the Ohio River, the Coast
Guard said Friday.
·· . · The accident occurred late
Wednesday ni&amp;ht and the Coast
Guard ·wu notified early Thurs- .
day, said Lt. Cmdr. William
Brewer, with the Coast Guard's
El&amp;hlb Dlstrlc:t lieadquar,ter$ _in
New Orleans.
The strickCn tug, the Elizabeth
M., Is owned and operated by
Campbell 1iansportation Co. of
Charleroi, Pa., Brewer said.
The impac:t pundured the luiboat's starboard fuel .tank. It
leaked about· 1,000 pllons of
fuel until river water rushing into
the tank equalized the pressure at
the wa1er line and prevented
more fuel from IUShing out,
Brewer said.
· The 1,000-pllon spill is not
considered to have major environmental Impact on the river,
Brewer said.
"We pol this in our medium
capacity," he ssid. "Most of it
will likely dissipate or evaporate.
In general, when you bave a
diesel spill on the river, there's
not much you ca11 do to clean up
It up before it dissipates, and a lot
of the product will evaporate."
. - The company dispatched
cleanup crews to transfer the
remaining fuel from that tank
in)o tbe ve-l's other holds,
Brewer said. Crews alao bepn
work to refloat the tugboat,
which was expectCd to take ICYera! days, the Coast Guard wu .
told. ·
The Ohio River channel
remained open to other marine.
traffic.

Good Morning

tJ

Today'a Wflf• 1
uRal
u Sectillial - 1 Pages '

c...dan
Clglftede
Comlg
141terfel•

AkiJI&amp; dM: River

9Ntp•rlrt .

CZ.\6

DH

lDHrt
A4
Cl
At

Local Civil War ·
battl.efield gets
. national exposure

By KEVIN KELLY
n_.Bantlnel Staff

I

,

New licensin.g law for teen .drivers takes ·e ffect in J·uty
By BRIAN .J. REED
Thlbll 81 ilhtll 8tlltl

"The law is designed·to phaae in young drivers 10 ·full driving privileges as they gain

POMEROY- Big changes are in st= for
a teenage rite of passage: the driver's license.
Beginning in July, driving privileges will
be .given gradually to new drive11, althou$h
younptera wj.Il be allowed to drive with a
learner's permit before the ~Je of 16.
·
.The graduated Iicensi"' Jaw wu .signed
into law by Governor GCOlJC Voinovlch last
fall, and goes into efl'ect in July.

Hill named OVP controller
GALUPOUS - Diane K. Hill has been appointed
controller of the Ohio Valley Pu~ishing Co., Publisher
Roben L Wingett announced today.
Mrs. Hill, who has been IISSDCiated with the OVP siooe
June 1993 as accounting manaaer, IIICCeedS Margiret
Lehew of Pomeroy· u wnlroller, a p111ition Mrs. Lehew
had ·held since May 1993:
.
Mrs. l.ebew'a retirement became effective Friday after
more than 40 yea~~ wilb OVP.
.
M!l- Hill ~lved her degree in aa:ounting 1hrough th~
Kanaas State University Colleae of Business Administration, and willaoon obtain a regents Mcltelor's depce in businea admiaistralionfrom Maraltaii-Uaivcllity.·
•
Prior to joining OVP, M11. Hill wu a staff accoulltanl for Kenneth R. Uti,
CPA, and Hemlock Pipeline.
.
· Mrs. Hill resides in Letart Falls; near Racine, with her husband, Heath,
anchwo lOllS, Kyle, 8, and Dillon, 2.
OVP publishes The Daily Sentinel, Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point PleuanrRegiater ud the Sundly Times-Sentinel.
· ·

drivers,
·
·
Some of the reasons for tbe high crash .
experience bebind the wheel." said MiiCbell rates, according to Brown, are driving inexpeBrown, director of the Ohio Department of rience, Jack of adequate drivina skills, poor .
Public Safety.
driving judgment and decision making, and
Brown · cited statisties from the National risky behavior.
Highway 1iaflic Safety Administration, that
In Ohio last year, over 1,900 people were
indicate approximately 35 percent of all involved in fatal Crt~Shcs - and 290 were
deaths of yoiln&amp; people, aged lS to 20, are between the ages of 15 and 20.
from motor vehicle crashes. Young drivers are
Under the new law, effective July 1, teens
twice u likely to be in a fatal crub as adult age 15 years and six months may obtain a tern-

porary permit, valid for one year. Under current slate law, new drivers must be at least 16
yean old before they apply for a temporary
driving permit.
Holders of the new penilits or those under
16 will be prohibited from driving between I
and 5 a.m., unless they are accompanied by
their parent or legal guardian, who must hold
a valid driver license or commercial driver
license, and occupy the seal beside them.
Continued on page A8

GOP. event brings national party leader to Gallia
.

'96 cspdldste for vice president Jack Kemp
to add,., annual RIPubl/csn dinner April 21
GALUPOUS -Jaclt: Kemp, the Republican
Party's 1!196 c:udidtite for vice _president; will be
the featured lpCiker a1 the annual Unc:oln Day
Dinner IIOited by the Gaiiia Counly GOP on
Tuelday, April 21 at 7 p.m; ia lite UnivtiSity of
Rio Grande Student AnneL
Kemp, a consre-n from New York for 18
years and the former u.s. aemtsry of ollouaina
and Urbao Development, is a co-director of
Empower America, a public policy ind advocacy
orpnixation he co-founded in 1993 with William
Bennett, Jeane Kirlqiatrick and Vin Weber.
During his run u Bob Dole's running mate,
Kemp wu placed by Dole and . House Speaker

Newt Gingrich at the center
of the campaign's !IX and
taJnomic debete when lhey
named bim chairman of the
National Commission on
Economic Growth and Tax
Reform.
The commission ·Was
directed to study how a
restructuring of the tax c:ode
would help the economy and create opportunities
for people to escape JMli!CrtY.
•.
AccordinJ to an Empower America relew,
Kemp as HUD's chief was "the first and strongest

advocate of enterprise zones to encourage entre•
preneurship and job creation in urban America,
and of expanding home ownership among the
poor throu&amp;h resident management and ' owneraltip of public housing."
Kemp, wbo spent 13. years as a professional
football quarterbad prior to his election to Congress, servql for seven years as chairman of the
Houle Republican Leadership Conference.
Since the '96 election, Kemp a~~~tinues to
work wilh Empower America, which looks to
promote the cxpansion.of frec:dom.and capilalism,
policies expanding economic growth . and the
advancement of social policies giving more
power to the people.
· Kemp is a frequen t guest on national public
policy programs, such "Meet the Press" and
"Face tlic Nation."
.

,

•

•

.

.
.

'
·

.
.

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