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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

The Sendtel News BotUne
Jared T. Hill
Army Cpl. Jared T. hill has gradBrian S. Watts
uated from the U.S. Anny Primary
Marine PFC Brian S. Watts, son
Leadership Development Course at of Lois Johnson of Letan, W.Va.,
Fon Drum, Watenown, N.Y.
recently completed the Basic EngiStudents received training in neer Equipment Mechanic Course at
supervisory skills, leadership princi- Marine Corpl Detachment at Fon
ples, and small unil training tech- Leonard Wood, Mo.
niques essential to a first-line superWans received inslruction on the
visor in a technical or administrative inspection, maintenance and repairenvironment.
in£ of engineering equipment used
Hill, a military police team leader by the U.S. Marine Corps. whi ch
at Fon Drum, is the son of Nancy induded high·specd. high-mobility·
and Pat Hill of Pomeroy. He is a cranes used for loading ships and'
1995 graduate of Meigs High trucks and forklifts and tractors used
School.
·on airfields.

Thursday

Wednesday, Aprll15, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

FRED

indians·lose 5-3 Page 4
Bob Hoeflich's column, page 7
DAR holds celebration, Page 12

Today:Sho~a

High: 70; Low:80

992·2156

With an emphasis on safety, entering active duty for up 10 one
Watts was given training on the fun- year.
damentals of troubleshooting gasD- · The enlistment gives the .new solIine and diesel engines, and dier the option to learn a new skill,
hydraulic, clutch and brake systems. travel, and become eli1ible to
He is a 1997 graduate ofWahama receive as much as $40,000 toward a
High School and joined the Marine college education. After completion
Corps in July.
of basic training, soldiers receive
advanced individual training in their
Matthew W. Mardnku
career speciality.
Manhew W. Marcinko has joined · A student at Eastern High School,
the United States Army under the Marcinko will repon to Fort BenDelayed Entry Program at the U.S. · ning, Ga., on July I.
Army Recruiting Station in Athens.
He is the son of Jeffrey
The program gives young men Marcinko. Tuppers PlaifiS, and
and women the opponunity to delay Peggy Robinson of Long Bollom.

Tomorrow: Clou~f
High: 80; Low:40

RE·ELECT

Sports

Aprll11, 1898

Weather

Red a

defeat
Aatroa
PageS

Your
Meigs County Commissioner
WILL CONTINUE TO OPERATE COUNTY

ON BALANCED BUDGET BASIS
on1o

Prom, graduation party-goers beware

IPLE

By JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel News Staff
As school proms and gradualions
approach. the problem of teen·age
drinking becomes even more serious
than a1 any other time of year. At
after-prom parties and graduation,
some young people will be templed
to drink, often with tragic rtsults.
The Meigs County Sheritrs
Department and the Ohio Department .
of Public Safety's are making
enforcement of liquor laws relating 10
persons under age 21 their primary
enforcement goal.
The Department of Pub! ic Safety
is joined by 1~ Meigs .Counly Sheriff's Depanment anilthe Ohio Slate
Highway Patrol in the "None for
Under 21" campaign. Highway Patrol
troopers conduct special presentations, stage mock cm~h scenarios,

•

QUINLAN MANN

UP TO AID INCLUDiNG SSC LIMIT 6
PLUS

BIRTH ANNOUNCED Tobin and Jayne Mann, 3Bn
Oakmont . Lane, L1nc11ter,
announce the birth of a son,
Quinlan Maxfield Arthur, born on
Friday, Aprll3, 1998, at Unlv.aralty Hospital In Columbus.
The infant . weighed eight
pounds, four ounces, and was
. 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparent• are
Bob and Charlene Hoeflich,
Pomeroy, and paternal grandparents are Clarence Mann of
Westerville and ttl'e late . Edna
Mann.

DOUILE COUPONS 011 QHIIW loa·lrlple Co•po11

FOODLAND

Up To SOC

As a feature of the q~"rter century
observance of the M ··igs County
Senior Citizens Center, several special c' cnts have been planned.
Thursday a health clinic will be
held from 9:30 lo II :30, with blood
pressure checks and blood sugar
and/or cholesterol screening for
$1.00. Lenora Leifhci1, RNC, will
draw the blood . The clinic is being .
co-sponsored by Holzer Wellness.
The same tests will be offered also
from· 4 to 5:30 during the evening _
meal program.
Pomeroy attorney Jennifer Sbeets
will .speak Tuesday; April 21, at II
a. m. ahout writing a will and how an
estate is probated. That same day
Jennifer Keller. pharmacist, will do
a t&gt;rown bag review of medication
on an individual basis for seniors.
On April 22 at I p.m. a quilt show
t
'
and tea w1ll ·he held and anyone who
would like to display a quilt for the
show can call the Center, 992-2161.
fur further informalion.
A caregiver Seminar will be held
Thursday. April 23. from I in 3 p.m.
sponsored by the ADIRD Program
and Holzer Medical Center Wcllncss
Department and Holzer Rchabilitaliun Unit. Speakers will be Richard
Boone. MD. Holzer Medical Center. 1
Tim Amidon and Michael JarLabck. 1
Ohio Univcrsily medical sludcnts, '

an~

Broughton
Homestyle
lee Cream

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U.S.OAGRADEA

Hill gallon,- v.a1 F• F,.. "'

"Superbank"Se~ces

TY~YFAAMS

Chicken
. Thighs.

I
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BUY OIIE OR ONE

-Greeting Carda
•Floral Sales
•We accept credit cards

F EE

. ,.........

Betty Crocker Squeezit

lty Ott Itt Ott

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T'.._

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li~.£liliiiii.i~.biifi..i i,.,_if2id.i.i'i.t~!!i.J l.J£~~~~.J l.l~~i;~J l.J2~~~£;~.J L•.2.~~~]~~.J l_lj2~~~~~.J L1 F.=!!!".w~
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'":""'W"·

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...

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'
:Spring storms strike Ohjo
: By The AsiOCiated Pren

Bob Evans ' lb.
Sausage Patties

Heinen "35'" 16·oz loaf

Wheat• Whitl Bread ... 99&lt;
. BIG BEND, BUCKEYE,

tandy Scholars named
Eastern Local High' School senior
Kelli Bailey of Reedsville and
Wahama High School seniors Lori
Bumgarner and Stacy Weaver, both
of Mason, W.Va., were · named as
Tandy Technology Scholars for
being in the lop two percent of zraduating seniors in 1998.

·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO -VALLEY,
lWIN RIVERS

-

The
is believed 10 be the
la.'t time the five candidllltll will meet
· before the May 5 primary.

Voinovich c mpaign ·_adds to it.s millions·

.

Snyders
Polulo Chipd.9.~......2/$3

. about the abortion issue while in
Congress.
"I will give the vot~rs of the 6th
District rea..;on to believe again," lie
said.
Many political pundits have
labeled the 6th District race ha.~ been.
a political bellweather for the rest of
the c!lllntr and 1he standard GOP
issues - taxes. abonion and jobs iang forth.
Hollister. the on'ly pro-&lt;;hoice candidate in the primary. said ~e "wanl~
to get government oul of the personal lives of people"- a stark constm~l
10
c4'.fl!er

Cremeans piles on ~000 · ·

ct. plcg. Assorted Varieties

Mushrooms

twice a year, \\;Orking with stiljlcnts
in senior government class and teach- ·
Sentinel NIWS Staff
High drama. compelling witness- ing them some of the legal ropes. Pares and a surprise confession were the ticipating attorneys were l:.entes,
rule Wednesday.in the Meigs Coun- Charles Knight and Scott Powell.
ty Court of Common Pleas, but
Sometimes the lessons learned in
nobody went to jail afterwards ... at the program are pol to real u.o;e. For
least not for real. .
. · ,
instance, one ,fl)rmer student served
Seniors at Ea.~tem. Meigs and as the jury foreman in a recent real :
Southern local high schools got their criminal trial. Lcntes c~plllined .
day in co~it. through the Mock Trial · SHS senior Mike A.'lh uid the projxogram administered by the Meigs &amp;ram ~a., full and t.aught him a 101
,._CJlull\y . Prosecuting Attorney's a\10011~ le.f.a! vystem. "It w~ Jel!l·
,.,'f •~
,i
....,, . ,. · ,. 'It' .iineri:sling. he added . ..,...
Students portrayed defense attor'
Although 110mewhat frustrated by
~ prosec;utcn. whnt!ISC!I and even the surprise COI)fession' thai killed her
a~ailiff. presenting theircaliC before ca.o;e, MHS ·senior Conney Haley,
a real attorney or judge.
wh!l portrayed a prosecutor, said the
One !&lt;ession held early Wednesday - progranr wa.~ •pretty cool."
Students from Eastern High
afternoon found an SHS defense
team pitted against an MHS prose- School won top''honol'5. winning the
cution team. witli SHS senior Malt mock trial trophy. Named a.~ most
Rime poltraying a defendant named outstanding stQ4ent.attorneys in the
"Sloan Jack.son" accused of stealing Wednesday m~ing· sessions were By KATHERINE RIZZO
a shirt from · "Famous Fashions" Brandon Buck~ and Heather Nay- Auoclated Preis Wrltar
WASHINGTON - The RepubciOihing store.
on Pep 3
Prosecutors Amy See. Travis
::!~~l:t lican con1est to pick someone to challenge Rep. Ted Strickland, D-9hio,
Hallhill and Cnrtney Haley called on
"''
this fall for hi~ 6th Congress~&lt;mal
witnesses including a store clerk and
District seat has con1e down to a batsecurity gu;ard who connected Jacktle of numbers. dollars and ideoloson to the crime. until defense atttll'_neys Travis Ransom. Dertk Smith
gies.
.
. Lt. Gov. Nan~y Hollister ha.' the
. and Tyson Evans presented a surprise
numbers - a preponder.1nce of sup. witness. Pete Sisson who portmyed
pon and advice from the Ohio GOP's
: "Toby Patton". who admitted stealing ·
mainstream. .
· the shin.
Fonner Rep. Fr.mk Cremeans ha.•
Prosecutors then attacked "Mr.
the dollars - more than $300.000 of
· Patton's" credibility and reliability in
his own. borrowed money. piled into
an effort to se.;ure a conviction. but
his campaign account at a crucial
to no avai I.
time, a.~ mdio and television comJadge Patrick H. O'Brien. hearing
mercial times wa.• being locked in for
the c.ase. said he felt lhe pmsecution
the
final weeks before the May 5 pri·
had presented the l!euer argument
and would have won ... but for the
mary.
A newcomer 10 Ohio politics.
~st-minute confession. He then
Mike
Azinger. has been working
ordered th~ bailitT to arrest "Mr. Pathard
to
win the support of social and
ton" .
religious conservatives·who are disDefendants in the other contests
PROSECUTOR
MHS
enchanted with both Cremeans and
did not f~re as well. usually being
_.lor Aniy Set w.. a member
Hollister. He already ha.• been sucfound guilty by the presiding judge.
of
till
MHS
protKUtlon
team
cessful
al WCl&lt;liRg away some groL.SThis is the program's fourth year,
'during
mock
trial
action
moiS activists who had been panicusaid Prosecuting Auomey John R.
Wedlllldly attlt ttOorl In the
laily effective organizers in previous
• Lentes.
.
Mllgs County Court or.comCremeans
campaigns.
Attorneys go· into the schools
monPieaa.
Cremeans said Wednesday that he

-om.:.

FREE

'

'

li"ict seal from Strickland in 1994 whose campaign ha.~ focused OIJ
Chillicothe Omtte
only 10 lose it back in 1996, also ham· · "idea.~ rather than winning or losHILLSBORO- While the can- mered his nemesis.
'ing," had the kindest words for
didates for the Republican candidale5
"He's plea.wuand.affable, but we Strickland. calling him a "nice man."
for the 6th District nomiiUition did lit- can't affond his taK increa.'ieS and we but also calling him a "hig-govern- ·
tie to set themselves apart from their · can't stand his social engineering," ment liberal."
Hollister took a shOI at the recent
counlcrpans Wednesday, !hey did be said "He's a dD-nothing Condefine one big ob~tacle: Washington. gressman."
· ·
leadership of the 6th DistrictforlackMichael Azinger, G. Michael
Sharpe. a college professor from ing "strength of leadership" and
Browne, Frank Cremeans. Nancy Belpre. Ohio, directly linked Strick- failing to represent the full interests
Hollister. and Tom Sharpe went toe- land to President Bill Clinton. calling of southern Ohio · a statement a~
tMoc in a debate at Southern State the current 6th District legislative sit- much about Cremeans a.• it wa.•
Community College.
uation "BUI and Ted's not-so-excel- about Strickland.
The mantra of the evening was ., lent adventure."
As for delineating themselves
clearly spoken eilrly in the evening by · "My main motivation for getting from each other. Sharpe took tbe lead.
Az1lger, who hammered St!ickJai!!l~ - inl!lthis race was to ~~~Ted Slti~He ~~IXIMIC­
. for tieing ''a tiber81"ii1l&amp;enillliiwli0 larid oUi Of'Wb.~lflttlft. lle"'Allill. ~ ta03v:"tl~oinovich, say"moved 10 the center becau~ he had "He ha~ a terrible record of repre- ing the Washington Post labeled the
to."
·
sentation for the 6th District."
administration "'taxhlkers" and CreCremeans, who won the 6th Dis.Browne. a relative unknown means for n01 speaking up enough

By JIM FREEMAN

oOhlo Valley Bank

.., .........

.

property owned by American Electric
alcoholic-related cra.~h .
•
"In this law. the same responsibil- Power.
ity wa.~ placed on hotels. motels, . SOmetimes the youngstel'5' parentS
campground•, and other public places are the ones who make the call to the
so that lhey would not knowingly shefi.ffs depanment.
"We get calls on these from disallow under~ge drinking parties to
take place on their premises, subject gruntled parents who that know their
to criminal prosecution." Souls by child is out there and shouldn't be,''
Soulsby said.
said.
Adults at these parties are fOI!·
Soulsby said his depanment takes
the problem of underage drinking 1incly charged·with contributing to
very seriously, and added that the the delinquency of minors while the
courts take it seriously as well. He youths are charged with undel'age
.routinely speaks with youngsters. consumption, a charge that usually
telling them th!lt alcohol is the drug carries a line of about S150 plus
most heavily abused by Meigs Coun- costs, and includes 41l hours of com- .
munity· service, Soulsby said. ·
ty's youths.
·
. Any individual who observes vioLast year, deputies arrested several youths and adults partying at the lations of Ohio liquor laws can call
Meigs Motel following the Meigs the Meigs County Sherifrs DepartHigh School prom. More recently. ment at 992-3371 or the Ohio Departseveral people were arrested ncar ment of Public Safety's toll-free hoiRacine following an outdoor pany on line at 1-800-282-3477.

By MICHAEL THRONE

BU1 ONE CET ·oNE

Garden Salad

and work with local schools on other educlllional programs.
"We're taking this opportunity 10
remind everyone of the 1989 amendmcntiO the Ohio Revised Coad Section 4301.69. commonly known as
the 'keg law'," said Meig., County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The amendment holds individuals
responsible for underage drinking on
propeny under their control. If an
after-prom party i6 held at a private
home, for example. and the parents
·knowingly allow underage persons 1o
consume alcoholic beverages, both
the uilderage persons and the parents
are in violation of the law. ·
Violation of the keg law i~ a firtll·
degree misdemeanor, punishable with
up to six month6 in jail and/or up to
a S1.000 fine. Also, the parents may
be held liable in the event that an
underage person is involved in an

·Students get day in 6th. District foes face off in Chillicothe
court via mock trial ·

U.S. No.1
Wisconsin
Russet Potatoes

(except Bucktye)

Lenora Leifheil. RNC. Meigs
County Council on Aging.
. Ir
The public is invited to attend
any of the special programs. .
1

I

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DEFENSE CONFERENCE • SHS defenM lttCII'MY Derek
Smith, cent.r, takes • moment to confer with delwndant Matt Rlf·
tie. Defwlll attorney Travlt Ranton Is shown It left,

We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Film Developing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates .
Carpet Cleaner Rentals
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

Meigs seniors
plan events

Coin show slated

This wttk Ill Foodland MlnufactUrar's "Cents Off" Coupons up
to and Including 55C ara worth Triple Face Value.
Coupons valllld at more than 55C are reclltmable at IICI value
only. Umn one coupon for each product purchased. Umlt one
Coffee Coupon. No Beer, Wine or Cigarette Coupons will be
tripled. N!)t valid on free coupona, Foodland coupons, In-ad
coupona or retaU food lltore coupona. The amount redeemed
cannot exCMd the price of one Item. You must purchase product
In size epec:lflecl on the coupon. This o11ar applies only to
manufactured proclucta "Cenla 011" Coupons ior Items we carry.
To IIIUI'I product IVIIIablllty for all our customers, only one
coupon per shopping family will be tripled on any brand Item
during each store vllll
·

EASTMAN'S

'

Liquor laws will be enforced

· Heavy' overnight rain~- a.• much
: as six inches in some parts , closed
: roads and schools in central and
: ,;outhern Ohio ~nd forced the evacu- ·
·at ion of a trailer park.
About eight families were evacu: ated loday from a ·trailer park in the
·Columbus suburb of Whitehall
:because a nearby creek wa.• over~·
.!lowing. The families were taken io
a nearby school.
They were allowed liack after
:about three hours ..
. The storms were mbving off to the
·cast early today. bul an01her cold
front wa.~ eKpected thai could bring
more rain by this evening.
The heavy rain tlooded low-lying
roads in M~Ut~west Ohio and MK~Iheastern Indiana.
.
"You can see the high w111er flowing down the roacl." said C~n
Brown, a resident of Cincinnati's
We5t side. Wiler c.u;caded down the
i.tfiCCI, Ieavins logs and debris in its ·
·wake.
The storm brought 2.6 inches of

•

r.1in to Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky
International Airport by 7 a.m. But
more than twice that .wa.~ recorded in
snm~ nrea."'.
"We"ve had anywhere from two
to six inches of rainfall. with a lot of
places coming in at three and four
inches... said Allen Rundall. a Nalional Weather Servke metcon1logist in
Wilmington. Ohio.
:.
The Ohio River Forcca~l Center
issued a flood warning for the region
from Fr.1nklin County, Ind. 1~ Ointon
County in Ohio. and for Carroll
County in Kentucky.
'''
. The Great Miami River, jllst.west
of Cincinnati. was to crest near I!1~ 5
feet around I a.m. Friday. liS .flood
stage is 16 feet.
The Lillie Miami River Ill Milford· .
wa.~ expected to reach 20 feet three feet higher than il~ flood Ktage.
The 'storms also caused scllllered
power failures. At lea." 6.000 Cincin·
nali Ga.1 &amp; El«lric Co. customers
lost power in 5011thwest Ohio. By 3
a.m.. power had been restored to ·
most CIIRIDmen.

applied the proceed.• of a mortgagebacked line of credit and scpar.lte
pmmis..;ory note toward his campaign
because he felt he had become an
underdog "after the governor started
sending out fund-r.1ising letle,.. and
doing fund-r.1ising" for Hollister. .
"We're also feeling ·the heal of
some uf the (congressional) delegation ... he said. "We knew we haclto
step forward . to get the message
out."
In a co~~ressional district that
stretches along the Ohio River from
1he northeastern Cincinnati suburbs
in Warren County to Appalachian
Wa.,hington County. getting the me.~­
sage out means television and radio
advertisinJ! ..
The Hollister campaign. though.
professed tu be unimpressed by the
Cremeans campaign's instant buying
power.
"'Frank is a wal!ting. talking negative ad directed at himself and he
ha.' to spend a 101 of money to undo
all that." said spokesman Scoll Mil. bum.
,
Azinger's manager interp_reled
Cremeans' large focus on advertising
as evidenc'e of the inroads that camp
had made in what had been Cre-

means' core constituency.
"We're the only campaign that's
been working," said David Azinger,
the candidate's brOiher. "'Fmnk sits
and spends."
· The Azinger campaign had
$15.000 as the month began. far
behind the balances of Cremeans
($2M5.()(Ml) and Hollister ($75.(llXl). A
fourth candidate. Grant Michael
Browne. said he would not be filing
a repon because he did not spend or
r.1ise $5.&lt;KKl. the minimum amount
required to tile a disclosure repon:
Candidate Tom Sharpe did not
return telephone calls seeking a copy
of his repon.

· Statewide. the disclosure reports
showed that Ohio's most successful
fund-r.1iser had increa...:d his cam- .•
paign L"Ofl'ers, even though there ha.~
not been any rca..;on for him to campaign.
·
Gov. George Voinuvich. whu
wants the Senate seal being vacated
at'lhe en.d of the year by John Glenn.
began April with cash reserves topping $3 million. his campaign's
report shows. ,
His presumptive opponent in the
November gener.1i.elec1ion. Demnc.
rdl Mary Boyle. lhe monlh with ca•i'
reserves of just over S554.1KXl in her
campaign treasury.

~avy seeks destination

for unwanted napalm
WASHINGTON &lt;API- A train
carryin~ napalm that triggered
protests when it wa.• shipped halfway
across the country is apparenll y headed back to California while the Navy
looks for ways tu dispose of it.
The 12.(KKI gallons of jellied ga.'ioline- which authorities say is not an
e•plosive danger- wa~ being held

.....·---SHS prom court _ _ __

in Kansa.' City. Kan .. lotlay while the
Navy searches for a waste management company 10 handle it.
Assistant Navy Secretary Roben
Pirie, a.~ked today if the Navy would
send the tmin to the China Lake
Naval Weapons · T&lt;:sting Center,
responded: "We've·been working on
that alternative. yes." In any ·event.
Pirie said, "'We've gone out of our
way to see there is no danger to the
public."

Good Afternoon
'

Today's Sentine
2 Sections • 12 Pa11es
Vol. 411, No. ~S

Ca)encler
aas.•ifleds
Comk!i
F41tori1Js
Lofll
Sports
Wtalhrr

v:m:::n

One of the ...
sllown aboft
will lie named the 1tM
High SChool
Prom GullA s.tunlly night CJu.n ~
. _ ... from left: Trletl Holman, Hllllary Turley,~ llciCinMV, Cynllla Ctldwell, Alicia
llullonl and Jayme lllll.r. 11lef .. atloWft wllll
thtlr n ctwta, ltliidill 11...-, one ot wllom will

7

8-9-10
II
2
3

4-S
3

Lotteries
...
lllmld
Hlr,,~
'"""
ICing.
,..,1111
...Souihtm
from 11ft:
Williams,
llldlall Alii, Melt Rlllll, JtiDII WiiiUII, Pile
Sitton and Oten HHI. The prom' "Truuy, llltdly,
Dnp.'y" will lie hlld BalUnlly, I p.m. to midnight, at 8outlllm Hlgll SChooL

OHIO
Pldt 3: 220; Pldt 4: 427K
Super~: 4-6-22·23-42-44
Kli:ker: 699416

w.yA,DIIII)t 3: 462: Dlily 4: 4698
fi 199M lllliu

Volley"""'"""" c•.

�.,..2.

Commentary

I

Meigs ·announce~ents

OHIO Weatt1er
~,Aprill?

AceuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

The Daily Sentinel
'E.st®tufuti in 1948
111 Court Strett, Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp;14-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

TIM StnliMI • I 'I"D rfNIIl.,.,_ to tiN Hltor tram ,...,_ on •lwoefl ,_,. ol toplca.
Shotlltttoro (300- or-) hovolht 1»11 - - ot bolng ,..,.,...,, ~}'pod lot·
,.,. ,.. Pl.,.,., - . , ..., "' fdlfN, f.., ohoulrllnc""" • .....,,.,., lllldrou,
ond
numbor. Sp«lfy • &lt;Mrtlf ,.,.., • , . _ ro • ,.~~~oua a&lt;11c1a
01' Ioiiar. ...1110: Lallotw 10 lila Edit.,, Tho Sonllnol, 11'1 Court lt., ,.,...,.,,, Ohio
45711; or, FAX to 11,.._•2151.

'*'"',..,..

Letters to the.editor
It's time for a new school building.
Dear Editor,
In 1985, I was dehghted when our Southern Local School Board gave us
the opportunity to have a new school built, With the passage of a bond issue.
At that time. I had two children at Syracuse Elementary, a school built in
1929 It was a sturdy. brick, two-story structure that both of my parents
attended in the 1930's. They remember 11 as a new shtny building. complete
with gymnasium, stage, library, a coal furnace, and two out-houses.
This top-of-the-lme structure was a sight of beauty m the eyes of the
beholder as local restdents watched, wuh anllctpatlon, the construction of
th1s new school bu1lding. It was the largest building in town, built large
enough to school grades one through eight (with class size bcmg less than
20 students). This large, new, modern building·· for the '30's •• was an asset
10 the community, a bwldmg that the children, as well as the adults, were
proud of. Numerous trees were planted to provtde shade on the playground
A local Boy Scout troop, of whtch my dad was a part, set a small cannon '"
1hc school's front yard as a monument.
The children walked to and from their new school, and even home for
lunch, on a daily basis, With a new sense of pride for this modern faciluy of
the '30's. .
Now, almost 70 years later, we find all of the district's elementary build·
mgs deteriorating w1th age. Time and change have taken their toll on these
20th century butldings. The pride of the buildings has been lost through the
years. Attempts have been made four times in 13 years to approve a bond
tssue so that once again we can provide a new, safe, appropriate bwlding to
educate the future leaders of our area. Unfortunately, all previous attempts
have failed . Mea~ while, the childrell m our dtstnct contmue to attend crowded schools wtth inefficient heatmg. A school butlt m the 1930's IS a school
built before m-door restrooms, before man landed on the moon, and before
science labs, required handicapped facilities, special education classes, tape
recorders, televJston, video-tapes, computers. and the Internet.
Student$. as well as the community, have little pride in a building with
cracked ceilings and walls, and cluttered hallways filled with books and
boxes, due to lack of space. The needed space for updated.hbraries does not
exist in our current elementary buildings, even though the age of technology is upon us. We now need a school for the 21st century. Instead of busing
students across the district for SP"Ctal education classes, or to better balance
the size of a class, it only makes sense to concentrate on one, new, modem
factllty to accommodate all of the Southern Local elementary and junior
high students. These southern Ohio students deserve as ntce of a facility,
with adequate space, appropriate -wiring, and a comfortable learnmg-based
atmosphere, as the students in nonhtrn Ohio
Yes, my own two children have graduated from htgh school now, and
they mtsscd the thrill and opponunity to ever attend a new _elementary
school. However, thts does not keep me from voting "Yes". There must have
been adults in the 1920's and '30's with no children in public schools that felt
that a new school would not benefit them. However. their approval of the
building of a new school has benefited thousands ol our chtldren and grandchildren stnce 1930 Now I feel that IllS our turn to leave sumethmg that will
last lor the generations that follow us. let the children m the community
know we care for them. We have the opportunity to bnng hack pride in our
Southern Lucal area. Plca.'IC vote YES on May 5 for a new t;utlding for a new
century

Contest! The past vs. the present
By Ben Wonberg
It's been a while since reader5 of
this space have been offered an
opportumty to win a contest and
prires. Get ready. And be humble.
What we're hving through nght now
might not be quite as remarkable as
you think.
.
In preparation lor the end of the
20th century, I have been reading Volume One of Mark Sullivan's 1926
book about dtc bcg1nnmg of 11, titled
"Our Times. 19()().1925." In attempt·
ing to show the incredible changes
wrought in a mere quarter of a rcntury, Sullivan begms by scanmng the
newspapers and the d!cllonanes of
1900and 1925.
He wntes. ''In hiS newspapers of
Jan. I, 1900, the Amcncan found no
such word as 'rad1o.' for that was ycl
20 years from ·commg; nor 'movie'
for that too wa.&lt; still mainly of the
future; nor 'chauffeur.' for the automobile was only emerging and had
been called 'horseless carriage' when
treated seriously. hut rather more frc·
quently 'devil-wagon ' .. there was no
such word as ·avmtor' ... " (Sullivan
footnotes that nearly a thousand
words were used to adJUst the radto to
the language. hundreds more were
required ror the automobile, 1ts parts.

ft

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11

What is a militia?

•

•

•

KY•.

~-~-~c@.~~ ~ ~ c!2
Showers T-sloml6 Rsln

Flurries Snow

Ia.

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

Today's weather ·forecast
By The ASSIICiated Press
Southeastern Ohio
.
Tod~y... ~howers and thunderstorms likely from late rooming on.
Breezy. High~ in the mid and upper
10s: South wind I0 to 20 mph.
Chance or rain 70 pe.unl.
Tonight. .. Showers and thunder·
sk&gt;rms likely. Lows from the upper
5011 to the lower 60s. Southwest wind
10 to 15 mph . Cha~ec ofrain 70 per·
cent.
Friday...Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers. Highs m the mid

and upper 60s. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Extended rorecast
F.riday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 4&amp;.
Saturday... Panly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms
during the night. Highs in the mtd
60s.
Sunday... Mostly tloudy. A chance
of sho')'ers during the day. Lows in
the mid 40s and highs in the mid 60s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 4&amp; and tilghs in the mid 60s.

Rain still in forecast
By The Associated Preu
Showers are still in the picture
across the state.
A cold front will race across the
state this afternoon ·and evening.
marking the end oflhe heavier showers and thunderstorms. Scattered
showers. however, will threaten the
area tonight and Friday.
Mtld temperatures will continue
through the day with cooler air c~m­
ing in on·Friday.
Skies will be cloudy with showers
continumg on Friday. The mercury
will range from the mid-50s to
around the 60 degree mark.
Sunset tonight will be at8: I0 p.m.
Sunri.e Friday will be at 6:50 a.m.
Acrou the nation
East-central states braced today
for another round of .evere weather.
after heavy min, tornadoes and spring
snow ripped from Colorado to Illinois
on Wednesday.
The nasty weather was shifting
ea,t this morning.; bringing high
wind. hail, very heavy rain, flash
floods and tornadoes to the Mississippi, Tennes.'iee and Ohio valleys.
Tennessee. Kentucky. Ohio and
West Virginia were expeetcll to get
the brunt of the storms. while showers and thunderstorms also were

·Marriage
licenses
issued
The followmg couples were
issued marriage licen.es recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Jud!le R~rt Buck:
James Ra11&lt;.-e Hoskin Jr.• 2ti. Way·
nesville. Mo:. and Angela Kaye
Sloan. 27. Pomeroy: Chqrles Stanley
Allman II. Vinton. and Angela Marie
Yuung. 16. Pomeroy; Terry Wayne
Spen.:er. !3. and·Anty Marie Jones.
19. bot~ of Albany.

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1:

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IVSI'S liJ-MJ

•

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6 calls

Dortha M. Marrison

Today's livestock ·report

expected across Pennsylvania and
New York state.
Tornadoes and hail battered pans
of Illinois and Missouri on Wednes·
day. and a separate storm system
brought hail to coa.~tal Virginia.
More snow wa.&lt; forecast for the
Rocky Mountain states, where sev·
eral mehes accumulated Wednesday.
Light snow showers were foreca.&lt;l
for lhe mountains of Idaho. western
·Montana. nOrthern Utah, western
Wyoming anjl Colorado. a.&lt; wl!ll a.~ in
tile mountai n.• of Arizona and New
Mexico.
'
Scattered rain wa.&lt; expected in the
lower elevations or Idaho, Montana.
Wyoming and Utah. with a few thun·
derstorms and gusty winds pos.,ible
across the lower elevations pf Utah.
A spring snowstorm left Colorado
reeling Wedl)esday. causing .everJI
Producers livestock Market
multiple-car accidents and forcing the
Colbrado Rockies ba.'ieball team to report rrom Gallipolis ror sales conductejl on Wednesday, April 8
poslpone their game.
Feeder Cattle.
Fair and dry weather wa.~ toreca..t
200-30011
St. $82-$98. Hf. $74·
acro.s the Southea.&lt;t, the extreme
Nonheast and the mid-Atlantic $88, 3IJ0..400jl St. $84-$107. Hf.
$78-$88. 500-65011 St. $75-$87 Hf.•
coo.~tal area.&lt;.
$63-$84 650-!I()Ojj St. $65-$825: Hf.
$58-$72.
• . •
(Feeder Cattle sale is the second
Wednesday
of each month)
Am Ele Power ......... ~.............48'4
Steers.
Akzo ......................................96\
Aml'rech ••••.•.••.......•.••....•.•••. ;44'·
lleifers.
Ashland 011 ..........................53'Cull Cows
AT&amp;T ......................'.......,......65''1.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $35-$44
Bank One ..............................59\ Medium/Average $32-$36.
Bob Evans............................ 21l.
Thin/Light $28-$33, Bulls $41·
Borg-Warner ••••••.•••..•••••••••••••&amp;?\
$52
•
Brougllt011..............................1e\
Back To 'The Farms;
Champion .............................14\
Chinn Sltps ........................... 4%.
City Holdlng ..........................45\
Fedentl Mogul .......................56\
Holzer Medltal Center
Gafll1ett ...............:....................73
Goodr-t .............................71 ~.
Wednesday. April IS
Kmart ....................................18'D!Kharges
Krager..................................44')• · Richard Eggleton, Martha ChapLands End ...:........................3n.
Oak HIH Flnl ............................28 .man. Peggy Profitt. Joann Sowers,
ova .........................._.............481 Elisa Lawrence. Nora Busy, Megan
OM van.y-.............................39 "- · Cleland. Olivia Smith. Michael RusPeopiH ...................................51
.ell. Betty Tilley. Eleanor Ewing.
Prem Flnl ..............................23';.
Leland Walters: William Musser.
Aockweii ...............................Y't"
Carla Pope. Clyde Minnis, AliL-e
AOJSMI1 ................................56\
Whitley. James Dummitt and Rachel
Siers -········..-· ..•••••••..
Adkins.
~'1 .................................5\

Mabel G. Oliver

Gallipolis livestock auction results

Stocks

Hospital news

Cow/Calf Pairs $450-700: Bred
Cows $250-$650; Baby Calves $1385; Goats SJ0.$54.
Ffeeder cattle &amp; brood cow sale
Wednesday. April 29. 12 noon.
. For free on-farm visits, please
call 614-446-9696.

Students

•••

Continued rrom page I
lor. both or EHS. Outstanding wit·
nesses in the morning se.sions were
Robert Harri~ of EHS and Adam
Thoma.~ of MHS.
· In the first aftemLKIO .ession.
Tyson Evans and Amy See were
named outstanding attorneys while
Pete Sillson was nan~~:d &lt;JUtstandin!,!
witness. Res111ts from the other con.
test and participants were not available this mornm~ fmm the pmsccut·
ing attorney's'office.
Acting as judges were atturney
Doug little, Judge Fred W. Cruwlll.
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien and Judge
Rohen Buck.

RE·ELECT

FRED
'

Your
Meigs County Commissioner
WILL CONTINUE TO FINANCE AND
PROMOTE INDUSTRY FOR MEIGS COUNTY
Paid lot by !he can&lt;fidalo Freo Hoffman. 25&amp; So Fourth Avii , Moddleport, OhKJ 45760

·-·······58'1.

.Ytcqu-~itions ~ine Jewe{ry

.....,=r;.. ........................
.,.. .2115116
W08

lngtOA ....................:.17"-

-•-•-

Creal Selectlenl lewett Prices!

Stock reports Ire the 10:30
a.m. quotes provldtcl by AdvHI
of Galllpolla.

1OK • l4K GOLD

d;DOI!o p.IISI.ap: pilid 111 Pnmtnly, Olllil:l

U. - ....................- ................... .$J6NI
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~- a . k ••••••••••••••'!l!'••••••••••••oool4

The Daily Sentinel

The Puhlic Toilet Index ·(PTI ):
Surely you've heanl hy now ahout:
the $333.000. slate-roofed, cedarsided outhnuse that the Natmnal:
Park Service huilt for hikers in:
Dclaw:1re Water Gap, Pa. Well, the:
folks at Miami International Airport·
have gone the fcds nne better. They:
have instulled mntnrizcd tnilet scat&lt;;
that automallcally change covers.•
Pncc per seat: SK.211J:
:
·n..: Eum-Car Trunk Storage:
lndcx &lt;ECTSIJ: Cars made cm the'
continent have been the rage for:
som.: time and sales nf such vehicleS:
arc no hmger a giXxl economic indi· •
catur. ·The trunks of tbesc autos,:
however. are virtual crystal balls.
mean. these things arc not designed'.
to carry mulch. Go ahead, lift the lid
nn the hack end of a BMW 740il and
guess what you'll sec. A diagram,:
that's what. It will shnw you •• from:
an overhead angle and from a side'
angle·· how to store four golf bags:
without piling them up.
'
The ECTSI docs not lie. Boon
times have just bcsun, hahy.
•
Jc.ph Spear Ia a syncllcaled:
wr!Ur ror Newwpaper Eaterprile .

•

·c onnor C. Lyons

WVA

House interns, lying about it, and
getting others to do so.
The expeT!ence moved luntz to
dtstributc a memo adv1sing OOP
officeholder. that "for the sake of
our chtldren and lhe ncKI generation
of Americans we cannot ignore Mr.
Clinton's behavtor any longer. It's
time to speak nut."
In dnmg so, he advised, "tl is
important •• cT!Itcal .. that you set
aside partisanship and polit1cs. Do
nut talk ahout · 1111peachn~&lt;:nt ' and
'resignation.' Do n&lt;Jt even mention
these words.... If you appear to he
tryml! tn score pomts orr the prestdent 's unfortunate situatiOn. thc
reaction to your efforts will be quite
negruivc "
·
That's what's happening though.
Even whtle House Speaker Newt
Gingrich. R-Ga.. puhlicly withholds
judgment on Clinton. he conveys the
impression . he can't watt fur
impeachment t&lt;&gt; cummcnce and is
husy huilding £allows. Meantime.
Delay and Anncy are hurstin£ with
puhllc condcinnatnms.
Everything depends on what hard
evidence Starr actually pmduces. If
he'd g&lt;~ the goods showing that
Clinton broke the law, the polls indi· .
calc thillthe puhlic is not going !ole~
the President off the hook Rcpuhlicans can alford tn he circumspect till
then, and mdtcation.&lt; arc, 1t w1m' t be
lon11.
(Morton konclracke is execu·
tin ediiOr of Roll Call, tile newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Aaoc:latioa.

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c::1

Ecomomic index is spelled .N-U-T-T-Y

Deadline for·publication
of election letters April 29

~

'ttlungstown

•leotumbuslse• I

Clinton hurt, but GOP m·ust be wary

By M~rton Kondrac.k e
Wright's dis· showed that 61 percent of voters
While the . pubhc .· strongly
mtssal
of think Clinton will be rclll&lt;!mbcncd
approves or Prestdent Clinton's Job
Jones's
suit for his scandals, not h1s accnmplish·
performance, polls mdtcate a proand Clinton's mcnts.
grcsstve hollowmg-out of h1s supdemals,
the
11)c danger ror Republicans li~s
pon •• but one that Republicans sttll
public believes in the factt~t. while the GOP faith·
have to be cafCfUI not to seem pamby 42 to 21 ful want thetr leaders to attack Clin·
san ahout.
.
percent that he ton, polls and focus groups show
In _repon1ng on liS latest poll.the
·dtd makes an that Democrats and independent
~ashmgton Post on Sunday emp~a1m proper scxu- voters arc turned off by apparent disstzc~ that m the wa,ke of the dt~al
advance plays of partisanship such a.~ those
m1ssal of Paula Jones sexual harass·
toward
her, unleashed lately hy House GOP
mcnt su~t. the pubhc wants mdepenKondracke
according to the leaders Dick Armcy (Texa.&lt;) and
dent counsel Kenneth Starr to wrap
Post poll.
Tom DeLay (Texa.~)
up. h1s mvesttgat10n of Prcstdent
Asked. "arc you inclined In
"Clinton's ahjllty to dodge hulCllnHton.
believe that Chnton h&lt;L&lt; or has n&lt;~ lets IS dnvm(! . Republicans nuL~. "
. o~ever. the repon downplaycd engaged in a pattern of sexual mis- said one GOP pollster. "Thcy feel ·
the fa.ctthat only }5 percent nf U.S conduct'" hy 61 to 26 percent. the they 've got to say something. hut
:•~ults now hchevc that . Chntnn IS puhhc thinks that he hns.
almost anything they say IS a polling
honest and t_rustw~rthy ·- the lowWorse than that. hy 50 tn 37 per- loser.. AII of Clinton's tnhulatmns
est level of hiS prcstdcncy
.:cnt. the puhhc thmks Clmton has haven't added a single vote tn thc
Asked whcthc~ Chnton .has ·:.h•gh hrokcn the law hy lym!,! ur cncour· Rcpuhhcan . column this year"
mor·a·l
nnd ct~."ul stnnd.~rds. _29 aging others to lie. and hy 72 In 26 because &lt;&gt;nly GOP voters arc m&lt;tvcd
Barbara (Crooks) Lawn!nce
percent
satd yes. and 64 per&lt; en I smd percent. Ihe puhlic considers that by the scandals.
Syracuse
no -- JUst slightly better th'm hts "nnpnrtanl "
Such linding.&lt; ·· plus a dtsturhing
wurst showmg (2K-66) In Fch_ruary:
II Clinton lied under oath nr cmn- personal encounter with. young
. The poll showed that Chnton s mined nhstructnm ul JUstice. 37 per- aspirin£ puliticmns earlier this year .
Joh approval rcmnt.ns ht~h :· at 65 .:cnl nf voters want htm tn l.:a,·c • led GOP pollster Frank Lumr. to
per~cnl ·• a~d a solid majonty nf 55 office. 22 percent want hlfll ollicial- .tell Repuhlican &lt;&gt;fficehnlders to
Dear Edttur.
lung belilTe there was a Nau&lt;&gt;nal Guard and hclur~ there w.:rc Rcscn·c percent has an overall la\'llrahlc ly reprimanded hy Congress. and 21 att,tek " what the scandals and Clin·
percent want h1m to make an apolo- ton's failure u}come clean arc doing
fun:cs. each and C\'Cry slote liad a mil11ia This was especially true he fore the opmmn nf h1m
But
on
alltssucs
connected
to
the
gy.
Only 2 pcn:ent think nothmg to tbe mnral climate of America" hut
Civil War. In the southern states. the while populauon was afratd of a slave
scKu~l sca~dal~ do¥1!'~¥ h1m. the should happen.
avmd dnw:t. attacks nn htm.
upnsing. and the northern states all had nllhltas.
Other polls. to&lt;&gt;. sustain the
Luntz smd that at a Jumur States1llC federal guvernm.:nt at the l1111c. belure the start of the Ctvil War. was pu~hc ma.&lt;st~cly diSbelieves what
hc
s
hccn
clanmng.
and
37
per~cnl
impresSion
that
Clinton
has
been
men
of America 11athering m Wa.;Jtvery ~mall mdeed. The Army was out west ftghting agamstthe native Amer·
arc
prepare?
to
sec
h•m
ousted
l_r&lt;&gt;m
damaged
~y
scandal.
Newsweek's
ingtnn.
he wa.&lt; appalled when high
1i:ans and the Navy b.:fore the Civil War was one ol the smallest navtcs m
office
•f
It
s
proved
he
cmnnuu~d
p&lt;&gt;ll
showed
that
63
percent
of
vm&gt;L'hool
cla.~s
officers •• particularly
the world.
So allnonhem states had mllttia.&lt;. men who came to!!elher to tr.tin and be . perJury or tncd tn get others to he crs thmk his presidency will hc boys •• expressed ·admiration for
under oath.
judged a.' "average" or below The Clinton's ahility to thrive politically
prepared in case of an emergency. In ract. long before he was the 16th PresDcsp!lc
Judge
Susan
Wehhcr
Fox Ncws/Opmnm Dynamtcs Pull · while sexually expluilln!,! White
ident. Abraham Lincoln wa.&lt; a captam m the Illinois Millua whteh fought in
tho Blackhawk Indian War. and Confederate General John Hunt Morgan wa.&lt;
elected captain of hts Kentucky Horse M1litia unit. His second in command
1n ,the Kentucky Horse Militia was his second m command throughout the
Civil War. his brother-in-law Ba.&lt;il Duke
,!According to the National Ocfcnsc Act of 1919. there are two types of By Joseph Spear .
tion:
are forttfied with herbs and nutrient&lt;
militias in America: unorganu.cd and organlled.
As a general matter. most ecoThe Fnmand sljiJiulants.
.
'There are a lot of dtllercnt militias m America today including hate
nomic progno!'tu:ators arc no1 eager lous
Flutds
We are spcndmg a fortune nn
groups and anti-government groups. Tu find out the truth read Morris Dccs' to s!Jare wuh others the secrets of Index tfFI). It
nones.wntial liquids that arc poured
hpOk The Gathennjl St·•• m. That is what I did to be sure I was in the right
their divinations.
I&gt; my C&lt;&gt;n·
down gullets and dischnrlled via
ty{w: of militia when I J&lt; 'ned the United States Special Field Fnrccs.
Thcy arc hke cook.~ in thts regard. tcnt•·JR that
hodlly function a few hnur.. later. We
11lll ~SSF was created m 1973 under the National Pcfcnse Act of 1919.
Ask a cook how they made a cake any
society
arc clearly a populace that i~· in the
It iM clwifted as an organized militia and it is rcco!lntl.cd hy the Fcder.tl
and they say oh. they mtKcd up Oour, that cst.:hcws
pink.
gjwcrnment a.&lt; such In usc~ the U.S. Army's counter-terrorism manual as
water. eggs and sugar and spnnkled freely avatl·
The Second Home Index (SHil:
thf manual to tram hy
coconut on top and presto, there 's ahlc. gcKxl old
From mnuntam cabin&gt; tn sea.&lt;~dc vil; ;If you arc mtcrcstcd m funher information you can contacti!IC hy writ·
the cake
Amcncan
las. the types of sec&lt;&gt;nd homes pe&lt;&gt;inc to USSF; 100 Unton Avenue. Pomeroy OH 45769-1000. All letters will
Sam.: way with &lt;:&lt;:cmum1c sooth· water in favor
ple arc huying arc a go&lt;xl indication
he answered by me. I have be.:n in the USSF stocc 1993 and hold thc rank
sayers. Oh. they say. they pored over of bottled nunf hnw the economy is performing.
of hrigadter general.
pork-belly futures and thc bacon •ds from lorcign
Spear
The arrival on the scene of a cond•&gt;foretold what the economy would lands '"'a hust of
David Edw1rcls do. Even the celebrated economists other cxpenstvc " nonalcoholic mmium cru1sc sh1p foretells a primu
•
future.
Pomeroy
'•'
at the Federal Reserve Board arc a refreshment beverages" is a snctcty
For sums of $1.1:! million to
little circumspect. Sure. they'll say, that docs nut have to worry where $~ . 3K milli&lt;&gt;n. ;md annual maintc·
they study unemployment rates. fac- the next dime is cnming from.
nancc fc.:s uf $61.~1XI to $241.31KI.
tory orders. order backlogs, producYou have your bottled waters •• a )UlU cnn purchusc a rnnm. a lwntivity, commodities prices. vendor hundred or so imported labels. some story umt &lt;K a pentlurusc suite on the
deliveries. ~lock market pcrfor· 600 domestic hrand~ . There wa.&lt; a World of RestdenSca, currently
mance and bond market fluctuation time when only persp~ring hunks in under development. and enjoy a
and
so on. But that still doesn't gym shorts paraded around with a continu&lt;&gt;us cruise on the waters of
The o.lly Sentinel wekMJes !etten reprdllll tile May 5 primary
explain
how Alan Greenspan brews sweaty houle of Evian danglinl! oh the world. It's a little pricey, but hey,
. election. However,' In the itittmt of rai..-, 110 election lett en wiD be
the
tea
and
reads the leaves.
so casually. from their -fingers . Nnw think of the romance. You'll also he
acce~ after 11110011 011 Wednesday, April :zt.
I. Joseph. am not hke that. I. too, 11 has become patently uncool for able to enjoy seven restaurant•, a
IIIIIMiuals sllould addra~ i..allltd DGt pe..-.lilies.
study
tlic economy and oecastonally . anyone to druik Eau de Muntci- 300-seat theater, sw1mming pools,
Letttn purely n.dui I 1 candldalel wiD IIIII be IIHd.
predict
trends - and I am more than palite.
'I""· a full-si1.cd tennis court and a
Lelten •ust lie 300 wot;do and prel11 ably typed. A! I lellen art
happy to tell you about the tools I
You have your New Age bever- drivinr ranse. No matter whicb
•Jed to edltiq Mil !Hit be lipld wldl - . address and tele·
~an you ply, you'll be able to
usc
to
do
this.
Rtght
now,
t
sec
a
ages,
l,ike Snapplc and AriZona.
••••e •-ller. Telephone aamben wUJ 1101 be published. No
come
and 110 via helicopter fcny sercontinuing
booln,
and
here
arc
the
You
have
your
"
nutraceuticals''
laaedleaen will be ..lllilhed. Letten lllotlld lie in aood lasle.
vice.
mdices l •tudied to make' lhis projec- and "functional" beverages, whi~h

" ., IMansfield !sa• I•

'
IND.

Special mretln1 Rl
Gospel sin1 set
A special meeting of Rutland Vii·
A Bend area gospel sing will be •
lage Council wtll he held Monday at held Apnl 25 at 7 p.m. at the Old
7 p.m. :Uthe Civic Center. Purpose of Kyger Freewtll Baptist Church,
Paul E. Oark.' 69, Middleport, died on Wednesday. April 15. 1998, at the meeting wtll be discuss commit· Cheshire. Four groups are scheduled
tee U.&gt;t&lt;ignments and meetings, revi~ to sing There will be love offering to
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Plea.~ant, W.Va.
.
employee
policies, and handle other benefit the Bend Area Gospel Jubilee.
He wa., born on August 28, 1928 in Racine, son or the late John W: and
miscellaneous
items.
Alice M. Chutes Clark. He was a veterun of the U.S. Army during World
Immunization clink set
War II. He was employed a.~ a construction worker and wa.~ a lire member
Correction
The Meigs County Health Depart·
ol' the Tuppers Plains Post 9053. VFW. and the American legion Post 128
The overhead door at the Rutland ment will offer a free evening immuin Middleport:
Survivjng,are his wire. Mary T: Clark of Middlepon: a daughter and son- Civic Center was !~stalled by the nizauon clinic on Tuesday. 5to 7 p.m.
Meigs Local Emergency Planning at the Meogs Multipurpose Center.
in-law. Sue and Abe Grue~r. Rutland: a brother, Aoyd Clark. Portland, OreCommisston
(LEPC) and the Rutland Chi ldrcn are to be accumpamed by a
(!On: two sisters, Mabel Wickline• .Reno. Ohio and Mildred Milburn, MidEMS.
The
mformation
was incor- parent or legal guardian. Immunizadleport: three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
rectly
reported
in
the
Wednesday
tion record s are to be taken.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a grandchtld.
issue.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. on Friday. April 17, 1998 at the
Dance to be held
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. with Rev. Keith Rader offici·
Service
planned
A round and square dance will be '
ating. Burial will follow at Graham Station Cemetery in New Haven, W.Va.
Darren
Smith·
of
Welsh.
W.
Va.
held
Satunlay at the Tuppers Plains
Friends may call on Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
will speak at the Carpenter Baptist VFW. Saturday H to II p.m. True
Church. Carpenter. State Route 143, Country will pn vide the music and .
Sunday at I0:30a.m. John Elswick IS Guy Thoma wdl,lay fiddle, and Jnn :
pa.&lt;tor of the chur&lt;:h.
Brow.n will be the caller.
Connor Christopher Lyons, infant son of Chris and Cheryl Lyons, Point
Pleasant. W.Va. was stillborn on Wednesday, April 15, 1998 at Plenli:tnl Val·
ley Hospttal.
Also surviving are maternal grandparents, Connie and William Ca.~h.
leon, W.Va.; paternal gr.tndparents, Darlene and Rocky Bonecutter and Nes,
Units of the Meigs County Emer· RACINE
sa and John Lyons, al\ of Point Pleasant: a paternal great-grandmother, Ruby
4:16p.m
..
Yellow
Bush
Road.
Vel · ~
gency
Me\lical
Service
recorded
six
Newell. Point Pleasant: maternal great grandmother, Chrystal Ca.&lt;h. leon.
calls for assistance Wednesday Units rna Winland, treated at the S.::ene. • •
and maternal great grandmother, Irene Mills. Beckley, W.Va.
RUTLAND
GraveSide servtces will be held on Saturday. April 18. 1998 at II a.m. at responding mcluded:
3: 18 a.m.. McCumber Road. Beu• :
New Lone Oak Cemetery in Point Pleasant with Rev. Keith Thomas offici- CENTRAL DISPATCH
lah Collier, treated at the scene: •
2:55
p.m
..
Cave
Street.
Pomeroy.
ating.
.
12:59 p.m .. Beech Grove Road.
Arrangements are unlb' the direction of Deal and Brown Funeral Home Mary Durst. Veterans Memonal Hos·
Macy Priddy. Holrer Medical Center:
pi
tal:
in Point Plea.&lt;ant.
9:38 p.m.. Rutland F~re Station. '
· 5:18 p.m. Salem School Lot
Road. Pam Cheadle. O'Bieness Jennifer Durkin. HMC. Central Disl r
Memorial Hospital. Rutland squad patch squad a..sisted.
'
USMsled.
DonhaM. Martison. 81. Ashtabula. formerly of Meigs County. died Tue~­
'.'
day, April 14, 1998. in the Ashtabula County Medical Center.
Born Jan. 30, 1917. in Dorea.~. daughter of the late Perry and Jessie Harris Diddle, she had been :t' resident of Ashtabula since 1937 and wa.• employed
' I
by Ward Products until 1957.
COJ...UMBUS (AP) - lndtana- 500-600 lbs. 25.00-28.00.
She is survived by a daughter, laVonne Bradshaw of North Kmgville; Ohio direct hog pnces at selected
Boars: over 300 lbs. 14.50-17.00;
three grandchildren; four gn!at·grandchildren. and one stster. Naomi Lon· buying points Thursday as prov1ded under 300 lbs. 18.00-21.00.
don of Syracuse.
Estimated receipts: 34.000.
.r
by lhe U.S. Department of AgriculShe was preceded in death by, her husband. Rus.ell A. Marrison in 1990: ture Market News:
Prices rrom Producers Livestock
a son. John A. Marrisori: a daughter, Shirley Ann Marrison : a sister, Beat,.
BIII'Tilws and giltsl 50 cents to 1.00 Association
rice Lisle. and a brother. Lawrence Diddle.
Thursday's
trend&lt;:
lower; demand light to moderate on
Gruveside services.will be held Saturday at noon in the Greenwood Ceme- a moderate movement .
Hogs 1.00 lower; sows 1.00 low,-1
tery. Racine. under direction of the Cremeens Funeral Home. Racine. No
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country er; cattle steady.
,
calling hours will be ob.erved.
Summary of Wednesday's aucpoinls 33.50-35.00: plants 34.50·
tions at Gallipolis and Mt Vernon:
36.00. few 36.50.
Hogs:
1.
U.S. 2·3. 230-260 lbs. 28.50Market
hogs;
31.75-38.00:
light
·
33.00:
21
0-!30
lbs.
25.00-28.50.
Mabel G. Oliver. 95, of State Route 143 in Pomeroy, dted on Thursday,
sows 23.75-26.75; heavy sows 29.75- .
Sows:
1.00
to
2.00
lower,
April 16. IIJ98 at her home following an extended illness.
U.S. 1-3 30041Kilbs. 22.00-24.00. 30.25.
She was born on November 16. 1902 in Laurel Cliff. daughter ofthe late
Feeder pigs: 17.00-49.00 head.
few
21.00; 400-500 lbs. 23.00-25.00;
Dolph and Elizabeth Werner Hysell. She was a member of the Rutland
Church of Christ and a one-time technician at Hartman's in Mansfield.
SurviVIng are a daughter. Viiginia Avis Wyrut of Pomeroy. with. whom
she made her home: a son and daughter-in-law. Vernon and Kathy Avis or
Woodlands, TeKa.~ : five grandchildren; 10 great grandchildren and a nephew.
Besides her parents, she wa.&lt; preceded m death by her husband, Bruce
Oliver, a brother, Carl Hysel.l. and two nephews.
Funeml ser11ices will be held on Saturday at II a.m. at Birchfield Funer·
al Home in Rutland. with burial to follow in Wells Cemetery in Harrisonville.
Friends .may call,atthe funer.al home on Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.

Paul E. Clark .

MICH.

van takes note of the absence of horse-drawn vehicle among the auto" fururisl, It Hcubist,
direcl pri• mobiles of 1924. Nothing 1n history is
maries," or the direct election of sen· compamble to this rapid change in
ators. He recounts that in 1900, only transportation."
You get the point: Lots of change.
four sparse states allowed women to
vote: Wyommg, Idaho, Utah and Col- big time.
The question before the house.
orado, and that the very idea of a
woman congressman or a woman HAS THERE BEEN MORE
governor was in the realm or bur- CHANGE IN TiiE LAST QUAR·
TER OF TiiiS CENTIJR.Y OR IN
lesque humor, not political science.
tion or 'mcomc
The newspapers made no mentton TilE FIRST QUAIUER?
Write a good short essay and wm a
of smoking by women, nor jazz, nor
taK' ... doctors had Wattenberg
not heard of 606
femimsm. nor birth control. In addi· , prize, get mentioned in this column
(the magic bullet for syphilis) or tion, the following words wercn 't and on the PBS program "Think
msulin, farmers had not heard ortrac- around in 1900, but were by 1925: Tank.'' Entries must fit on one letter·
turs , nor bankers of the Federal Bolshevism. fundam~ntalism, hijack· size piece of paper, be wordReserve System . Merchants had not er. rum-runner, behaviorism, Freud!· proccs~ or typed in a font sizo no
heard of chain stores nor 'self-ser- an. brainstonn, Rotary, Kiwanis, cafe· less than ll poml, and be postmarked
~ ·ce.' nor seamen of oil-burning
teria and crossword puzzle. Military no .later than May 7, 1998, Entries
engines·"
men had not heard of "camouflage," should IJ!l mat led to Ben Wattenberg,
Sullivan. a former JOurnalist and "over the top" or "zero hour." Also c/o United Media, 200'Madison Ave.,
editor. mostly bubbles with enthust· missing; Boy Scouts. traffic cops. New York, NY 10016, ore-mailed to:
asm. He never dwells much on a cen· one-piece bathing suits and lipstick. · contestnrmedia.com.
Hints: You mtght want to mention
tral question about progress·
· Sullivan adorns his volume with
Dow
9000. men wearing earrings,
"Whcre's Murphy 1"
photographs. drawings. cartoons and
Recall. II IS " Murphy's L'1w" charts. On Page 375. the reader sees gigahytcs and megahertz. the rise of'
whtch proclaims, "If 11 can go wrong. two photographs of crowded street public homosexuality. the end of the
Cold War. cohabitallon, supply-side
11 w11l go wrong:· As Jtlumcd &lt;JUt, m scenes.
our century Mr. Murphy showed up
The caption reads: "Fifth Avenue L'Conomics. stagnnt1on, globalir.ation..
wnh a vengeance world wars. geno- in New York City as it wa.&lt; in 1900 cnmc wave. Northern Ireland. ending
Cide, totalilanamsm. depression. to and 1924. Examination w1ll reveal welfare as we know it, NAFI'A.
only bcgm a tough list.
one autom&lt;Jbile among the horse· GAlT. crack, soft money•. biotech ••
We continue and condense: Sulh- drawn vehicles of 1900. and one and so on. Pti7.cs will be awarded for
scvcr-JI categories: " More Cljangc
Then Than Now," "More Change
Now Than Then.'' "Most Humor·
ou.&lt;," "Best Slogan for Each Era,"
and "When and in,What Guise Will
Murphy Show Up Next'!" There Will
also he a prilC for the best entry
beginning with "ThiS is a stuptd contest because .., "
There 1s a lim1l of one entry per·
top1c. Each snatl-mml entry must :
enclose a copy of this column with the '
dateline of the newspaper in which it
appeared. E-mail entries must men·
tion the dote and newspaper.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior re11ow
at the American Enla'priR Institute, is the author of "Values Mat·
ter Most" and is the host or the
weekly public: television procram
"Think 'Illnk."

and associations;
yet more hundreds for the
popular
and
technical term•·
nology of avtatmn.}
'
Sullivan continues· " Nor was
there any men-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thurlday, Aprll16, 1998

Thul'ldey, Aprll11, 11M

I

.

WE NEVER
CoMPROMISE ON

AGE 55 OR OLDER
LOOKING .FOR A JOB

QUAUTY
BUT OCCASIONALlY

Gallia·Meigs Community Action Agency may be able to assist
you In the following ways:
Employment We're looking for drivari to perform delivery
dUlles in Oallia County. Daytime work on a regular schedul8,
Monday through Friday, $5.15 per hour, up to 20 hours per
week. We also have non-driving jobs avallable.
Trelnlng: Short or long term training In fields such aa
computers, nuraing as,eiatant, COL, and olhers at area ilchools.

Do Bolh: Work part-tilne, attend class part·ttme:

·

Sound interesting: Call 367.73!'2, 446·1 01 B, or 992-6629 to

request a JTPA Preappllcatlon.

Gallla-llelga'Communlty Action Agency
P.O. Box272
8010 North State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 45620-0271
Equal Opportunlly Employer

110(1NAD)

WE Do ON PiuCE.
SPRING SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS

I

NECKlACES - IUCELETS - CHARMS

Just Received -Large Shipment

DS!

.....,.t.ttl••• •.,.,. f•• ••,.,.•.,.
I

, , lrtlf StiH~Itl • WH4tiftl G••lltr

.fhtr'l 111.11

•llodler'l Day Iaiiey 10
.YIIII Order a.fore

TWO LOCAOONS:
-comer 2nd and Grape, Gallipolis

4412842
..1 Mill St., Mlddllport
IIZ.f250
Olt

•

"

.,
. ''
'

�Sports

I

.

,

The Daily Sentinel
.

'

..

Tomko's pitching propels Reds to 4-1 win over Astros.

Southern rolls past baseball Eagles 16·3

base set up a sacrifice ny from Cynthia Caldwell for a 4-0 tally.
In the Ia.,. round, Eastern scored
two on a Suzy Milhoan double, a
Jamie White walk, a Kim 'Mayle single and a Juli Hayman single. Val
Karr reached on passed ball strike out
to' load the bases with no oot and two
runs in. Chasatie Hollon hammered
a long ny ball to right f~eld, that Kara
King made a great catch on to save
the game. With the Eastern ruripers
advan.:ing King fired to first to get a
double play, doubling off Karr and
getting tow big outs. .Kelli Bailey
then arced a high pop fly to center to
end the game with Southern winning
4-2.

Southern hitters were McKinney
with two hits, Manuel and Holman
with one. . .
• Eastern hillers were Mayle 3-3.
Hayman. Evans and Milhoan with
one hit cadch and Kelli Bail~y with
two singles.
Evans allowed just four hits,
fanqed eight, walked four and gave
up four runs. Sayre gave up eight hit1,
lwo·runs,lhree walks and fanned six.
lnnln1 lllbll
Southern
020-001-1=4 4 I
Eastern
000-000-2=2 8 2
Batteries
Eastern: Evans (LP) and Bailey
Southern: Sayre (WP) and Davis

Meigs softballers beat Alexander 11·5
fered a hip injury and did an outand home to make it a 8· 3 contest.
standing
job.
~
Meigs added three more runs in
Kristy .King, the starter and loser
the sixth inning. Vining walked.
Wigal singled, Bethany Boyles for Alexander, ~rnick out two, walked
reached on a fielders choice, two 12 and gave up eight hits. Josie Carr
walks and Ashley Rupe followed had a double to lead the Spartans.
· Kristy King and Janette Starling
with.a two run single.
Amy Hysell, the winning pitcher. added singles.
struck out three, walked nine and loolal'*ll
002-513-0= 11-8-3
gave up three hits. Wigal and Laud- Meigs
Alexander
102..()()0..2=5-3-4
ermilt led the Marauders witb ~ pair
Batteries
of singles each. Boyles, Harris, Rupe
Meigs: Amy Hysell (WP) and
and Hysell each added singles.
Casey
Sanford
Boyles came in the game in the
Alexander:
Kristy King (LP) and
fourth inning for Laudcnnilt who surMary Blair

/

The Bingo for
tonight at
The-Pomer_
oy
Eagles Club
has been
cancelled.
The Bingo wiU
resume on
Thursday, April 23 •.

.

•

•

526 per month·

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the crowd and appeared to be trying
to get to Piniella or plate umpire Ed
Hicko,..
· "I went· out there to protect my
player," Alomar said.
Johnson was charged with one run
and one hit in 2 1/3 innings, walking
one and striking o~t five. The bullpen
blew leads in both his no-decision.~.
including a two-hit, 15-strikeout'perfonnance i~ ~is last stan against
Boston.
Lofton is one of the few left-handed batters in the American League
who stays in the lineup against Johnson. The two have a little hiSiory.
"It will be very interesting to !ICC
what happens when we come back
h~re." Seattle's Alex Rodriguez said.
Lofton has angered the Big Unit
a couple or times by uyingto bunt for
hits. Also, Lofton scored from !leeond
base on a passed ball on a Johnson
pitch in Game 6 of the 1995 AL
championship · series. The victory
sent the Indians to their first World
Series since 1954.
"They play golf in the otfsca&lt;OO,:'
ROI)riguez said.

•

• 6.()-hp engine
• Seven cutting heights
• Handlebars fold easily for storage

IS299 INEW! I

LT133 LIWII T111ctor
•13-hp engine

• 38-inch mowing deck
•IS-inch turning radius

IS1,999l NEW! I

S.br~~1431GS Lawn Tractor
•14-hp engine
• .38·inch mpwer deck ·
•18-inch turning radius

IF. Cttniu¥11 :2-0ial All:mt :t (Smull,_

0-0J. I: 10 p.in.

.

Milwnuki.'l' ii:IJrcJ 0-01 l'll Mttllll\':11 ({'. l\-1\'1'•
0-21. u~ r.m
t1•k-lli!" Cut. fl'o .ta~~i 2-1) :II N.Y. M~.-1 • IMik:·

ki 0- 1). I:-*II 1'-111.
UH: Atilun:a IMMn~•tt 0..1 :11k1 An.lktk.'J 1-1I
al !\1. t...1uis (Shtll km)'n: 1·0 f'~~ ()!!ftnJ~ O·OJ.

IS1 .3991-"1-=-oDl

(ltklljW Wbil..:- !\11\ 7, IJ&gt;•Itiln"n: b
Ka1~ Cit) 7. TnhtUIU .\
Tu;u; 7.llrL1mil ~
·

LX173 laWII Tractor

G1242 laWII &amp; Garden Tracior

• 15-hp engine
• 38, 4-4 or 48-inch mowing deck
• 20·inch turning radius ••.

tSduniill 2-1 J. 7 :0~ jUII.
N.Y. M1.-u tJm,~ s ().\):II (.'INCINNA'I'I iHo.:m·
lint!~' 1-21. 7:m 1•.m.
•
S:1n Fralll.'i~"tl (l~n.l' 0-2) ;II Milw:~ukec (W:lj!.ll·
\'1'0-ll, 7 :0~ p.nt.
Munnc:d ( tkrna:msun I· I l :11 H vu~IUI' tH:1I;un.a

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SAVE

S400 I

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l'llic;ap• Wl1i1~·
tMuuina

11-I L K:I~p. nl.

Phllutll'ltlhia (Sil'rthcnsun 0· 1tal S1 . l..uui~
IJ'uliu.: 1..01. H: 10 p.m.
Allantu tGiavhll!' 2-0• nl (.',•lt•ritllu t'll•umtllUII
1·1 1. 'J:IL-; p.m. .
.
.
Hvrid:~ 1Mcd111:a 1).1 I ;tl Arizun:~ I llcttc ~ 1-1),
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D

661 PIIECIISY DRIVE

o-n. IO:l~ p.m.

NL standings

·GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
(740) 446·2412

Iu11

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VB, 4x4, auto., tift, crulle, stereo. 3,500 mUes.

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AL standings

"I

buzzed one right by Lofton's head.
I.;Qfton and the 6-foot-11 Johnson
walked toward each other as the
tienches deared. with Sundy Alomar
the first to get between them. .
. T,hings calmed downunt~l Piniella started screaming and gomg after
Lofton.
"I was trying to tell the guy it was
a breaking ball," Piniella said. "He
was not throwing at him."
No one would reveal what Lofton
said to set Piniella off.
" I don' t know why Piniella was
doing what he was doing." Lofton
said. "Watch the tapes. Every time I
face him. he's thro" ing at my head."
With order finally restored, Johnson threw a second pitch in alt:nost
the same spot to stan another benchclearer..
"The second one, !think Randy
decided to throw at Kenny," Jtl\fians
manager Mike Hargrove ~
· "That's not right."
Both benches were warned after
·the first pitch. so Johnson knew he'd
be kicked out if he threw inside
- again. Alomar got in the middle of

Wnltm otwiskJn

•

Baseball

•

•
•

JSa W•lk-ll..illll

1-614-991-6614

Scoreboard

••
•

Rut«ry Tille r

•

take the lead and hold it," Mariners
manager Lou Piniella said.
The defending AL West champions have started 4-10 for the fa,~nh
lime, but avoided their firstl·ll start
by beating up on another team's
bullpen for a change. David Segui
doubled in the go-ahead run off Paul
Assenmacher ( 1-1) in the eighth.
Seattle relievers blew leads twice
in Boston last weekend and in the
first two games of this series. They
came in 0-4 with an 8.84 ERA.
Trouble sfaned stirring again
when Spoljatie issued a leadoff walk
to Brian Giles in the ninth. But Ayala
got Travis Fryman to fly to center.
struck out pinch-hitterlim Thotne on
three pitches and retired pinch-hiller
David Justice on a groundout.
Piniella let AyalaJ who is supposed
Ill' be the ,Seattle c:loser, face the lefthanded pinch-hitteB with Tony Fossas warming up in the bullpen.
"I'm going to be counting on him
there," said Piniella. who spent several hours talking one-on-one with
his pitchers before the game. .
With one out in the third. Johnson

•

Iull

..'

or

.

By KEN BERGER
.
• CLEVELAND (API - Randy
Johnson and Kenny Lofton have ·
bccn known to play golftogetherdur!ng the offseason,
• They will have plenty to talk
~bout the next time they tee off. ·
I Johnson's inside pilt:hes against .
l.ofton resulted in the eje!ction of both
All-Stars and set off two bench..clearlng altercations on Wednesday Right.
' But Seattle 'sr bullpen came
ihrnugh for the first time this season
" the Mariners snapped a seven&amp;arne losipg.&amp;l~aj( JNilh a ~-3. vicJCI-_
ry over the Cleveland Indians.
"Randy probably woke up the
team." said Paul Spoljaric ( 1-0),
who pitched 2 1/3 scoreless innings. .
''It boosts the club, it boosts the
morale, it takes the heat off the
bullpen."
Bobby Ayala retired three straight
in the ninth for the Mariners' first
save in five tries. Seattle got its firsJ
road viclory; beat the Indians for the
first time in live tries and avoided the
worst 51art in rrdnchise history.
"It wa.• nice to come from behind,

Cc~rt

•a

1·800-817-1194

Mariners beat Tribe 5~3, killlosing .skid

54 pt r month·

Fro nt Rl.tr le
S11 pr·r llllllltli ·

10-1

dohnson, Lofton ejected·after brawls

Time is money. We can save you both!
..

M~igs

single by Hawk a pair of walks and · enport to strike out eight, walk 12 and
single.
.
By DAVE HARRIS
scatter seven hits. Martin added a pair
·
Meigs dented the plate with a run a Meigs error. ·
Sentinel eorrespondent
of
singles to lead Meigs, Bentley
Ale~ander
ended
the
scoring
in
• Alexander jumped out to a 3-0 in the third inning. Nathan Halfhill
added
a double. Ryan Ramsburg uad
walked, Pat Martin singled and Jere- the sixth inning when D' Auguslino
~d and went on to defeat Meigs 10·
t in Tri-Valley Conference baseball. miah Bentley followed with a double reached on. a Meigs error and came Halfhill added a single each.
Meigs (5-4 overall and 4-4 in the
in to score on .a fielders c~oice to
ljction Wednesday evening at AleKan· to score Halfhill.
Ohio
Division) is scheduled host Galmake
ita
10-1
final
score.
Rolston led off the fourth inning
der High School.
Stewart was.the winning pitcher, li a Academy today.
: Joe D'Augustino led off the bot· with a solo home run, one out later
striking
out six, walking one and lnnln1 tlltilb
Hawk
singled.
Hawk
stole
second
rpm of the first inning with a walk.
001-000-0=1 -5-5
scaueri'ng
five hits. Hawk weritthree Meigs
tance Rolston. was ~it by a pitch. and third and came inco·score when
310-231-x=
I()..7-1
Alexander
•
for
three
to
lead
Alexander
with
three
Stewart ·then launched a home run to the throw to third 011 his steal allempt
Batleries
$Ingles. D' Augustino added.apair of
give the Spartans a 3-0 advantage.
went into left field.
Meigs: Jeremiah Bentley (LP).
: The Spartans increased the lead to
The Spartans scored three more singles, Rolston added his horne run.
Bentley was the starter and loser Brad Davenport (S) and Tony Dugan
'f-0 in the second innlng. 0' Augusti- runs in the fifth inning on singles by
Alexander: Stewart (WP) and
for
Meigs. he teamed with Brad Dav10 singled. Stewart walked and Jason . D' Augustino, a walk to Rolston, a
Jewell
ftawk followed with a run scoring

•

lltil 1ty

•

Baseball Spartans defeat

1

fielders choice and Amber Vining
By DAVE HARRIS
walked. BOih girls came into score on
Sentinel Correspondent
a
Tansy Laudennilt sinsle.
. Meigs scored live runs in the
The Spartans took a 3·21elld in the
fourth inning to era.&lt;e a 3-2 deficit
and go on to post an 11-5 .win over · bonom of the tllird inning
But Meigs took the icad for good
Alexander in TVC softball action
Wednesday at Aleunder Higl) in the fourth inning. Thnya Miller
School.
·
reached on an error. Abby Harris singled
in Miller. Shannon Price walked.
, Meigs with the win raises its
nK:ord to 4-6 overall and they own a Amy Hysell followed with ·an RBI
4l3 mark overall in the TVC and and single. Vining wllked and Stephanie
Wigal and Laudcrmilt added singles.
3•1 in the Ohio Division.
The maroon and gold added a sin'. Alexander held a 1-0 lead heading
in10 the third inning, 'but Meigs took gle run in the fifth inning. Miller was
·d!e lad. Kelly Gilkey reached on a hit by a pitch, and stole second third

::1

a

·Softball .Tornadoes down Eastern .4-2

•'

homer off Shane Reyaolds 0·2lto little more polish on his curve. If he son- as Reynolds fell to 1-7 career left hand. X-ra; • found no fracture without an error. The Astros have n01 '
help Cincinnati reach a benchmark.
keeps pitching like that. he ha.1 a against the Reds and 1-5 in eight and Gutierrt~ is expec:led to miss , made one in the last 46 innings....
only .a couple or days with a bruise. The Rods didn't get their seventh win
Last April. Cincinnati ~ a frun- chance to win 18 or 20 games this games in Cincinnati. .
·Nolet: Both starting pitthers got last season until April 26, when they .
chise record for losses in April by year."
With Tomko pitching so well,
going 7-18 under manager Ray
Tomko held the Astros' top five Reynold' had no room for error. He drenched as they warmed up to start were 7-15 .... Reggie Sanders. who .
Knight. The victory Wednesday. the hitters to 0-for-15 over his eight made two of tl!em that cost him the the game. A cloudburst forced the was out of the Reds' starting lineup '
grounds crew to cover the field tem- for all four games in Colorado. bat· '
Reds' fourth in five games. gave innings. And he did it without rely- game.
Cincinnati its seventh win in half the ing on his best pitch. •
Eddie Taubensee and Eduardo porarily. and the first pitch was ted second and went 0-for-3 with
time.
"I didn't have my best fastball." 'Perez ~pened the second inning with . delayed seven minutes .... Houst.on three strikeouts.... Stynes has four '
"It's given us a lot of confi- he said. "My slider was working well soft .smgles_ and Greene polled _a played its fifth consecutive game homers and four RBJs this season.
dence. ·· Greene said or the improved enough to get ·me first-pitch outs.
~ngmg spltt-linger fastball for has
stan.
.
"Thefre a good fastball-hitting_!ht~mer of the sea'IOII. Gn:ene has GSC's_Krawsczyn captures honors
The~eds also have gained conil-leam. They'd never faced me when I i:lnven m JO. runs over l~e last five
Adam Krawsczyn of Pomeroy the event by three shots.
dence in Tomko. who was on shaky had my slider. I threw a lot of first· games.
.
Fainnont State won team honors
recently won medalist honol'll at a
ground with rnanagerlack McK~n pitch slid~;-; and got a lot of easy ciuts
felt good. I _dad.~'t.~ttired at
with
a team total of 649, narrowly
after missing three .wcck'!l of sprtng that way.
all, Reynolds ~td. I JUSt made a West Virginia Conference golf tour-1 defeating runner-up Glenville State '
narncnt played at the Speidel Golf
training with a tender shoulder.
Houston's only run came in the couple of bad pttches. . .
. by one shot.
,.
Club
in Wheeling, W:Va.
Despite the spring setback, Tomko fifth. when Richarc.l Hidalgo singled.
. ''The ball Taubensee hit up the
Kraw!ICzyn is a 1995 Meigs High.
The two-day. 36-hote intercolle, has gone eight innings in two of his stole second and came around on middle was a cu':"e. Then Eduardo
graduate and a former Marauder·;
·three starts this season and lowered Tony Eusebio's single. The Astros gocabroken-batstngleonacurvc:off giate tournament featured nine con· golfer.
'I'
ference teams and 54 players.
his earned run average 10 2.45.
got only two other runners into !ICor- the end of the bat. ~made a bad patch
Krawsczyn.
playing
for
(Jlenville
"He's pitched great in every one ing position ,against Tomko. and Je~ to Gre::ne and that s pretty mu.:h l'he
State College. shot78-76-1 54 to win
of his games:" McKeon said. " He's Show pitched a perfect ninth for his game.
.
got a chance to be ·a dominating fourth save.
The Astros got a.sc~ tn the sevpitcher in a coupl~ of years. He just
The Astros lost their third in a row e~th. whe.n Tomko hat shortstop
needs a Jiule more experience and a -their only losing streak of the sea- Racky Guuerrez on the back pf the

By JOE KAY ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - Brett
Tomko had a surprise waiting for the
Houston AstroS.
The Cincinnati Reds' up-andcoming stoner took the mound
Wedne!lday night intent upon show·
ing them his slider, a pitch he ha!&gt;
refined since he faced them last Septembcr as a rookie.
It was impressive. Tomko held the
Astros to three singles over eight
innings. setting up a 4-1 victory thai
gave Hou,ston ·an idea of how much
he\ grown as a pitther.
"The clue to the whole game was
the other guy." Houston manager
Larry Dierker said. "There's not too
many times that we're.going to get
completely shut down. We wouldn't
have scored if we didn't steal base.
We didn't hitthalll)any balls hard."
The Reds hit two hard. and that
was all Tomko (2· 1) needed to get the
viclory. Willie Greene hit a three-run
homer and Chris Stynes addM il solo

An Adam Cumings grand &amp;lui loaded, but was unable to score.
Souther scored two more in the and Wes Crow wilkod and Jeremy·
horne run in the fifth inni111 opened
,Corey Williams and Benji Manuel top of the second when Pete Sisson Gillilan fon:ed home a run .with
broke open a 5·3 1amc and opened combined for the win. Williams gave doubled, Danny· Sayre walked and anod~er wllk. Williams was lifted for
the flood gates for a seven-run fifth, up all three runs on just one hit, three Adam Willi1ms singled in a run. Josh Manuel. who hit the first baner for
as Southern rolled to a 16-3 league strike outs and eight walks. while Ervin hit a sacrifice ny.
yet another run, tlien Josh Will
baseball Win over the Eutcm Eagles Manuel came in on relief 10 give up
The Tornadoes went ahead 4-0 in reached safely on an erTant throw at
Wednesday night in Racine.
no runs. one hit, three strikeouts and the third when Dill singled and first, but Gillilan wa.~ nailed at the
The game. played in a driving rain three walks.
. advanced on an error, Cumings and plate to end the drive.
and mud, was designated a.~ Eastern's ·
Both teams made·three errors.
Young sacrificed and Willimas came .
That's as close as it goc,' as Southhome game since the Eagles' field is
.Steve Durst started for Eastern holnc on an error.
em used the last three innings to
not yet complete,cl.
.
and werR,_ 4 213 innings. Jeremy
Eastern made It 4-1 when Wes romp the Eagles.
Cumings ended the night with five Coleman came on in relief to get out Crow walked, advanced on a wild
Southern goes to Wahama tonight
RBis in sparking the route, while of the fifth and pitched anocher two- pitch, advanced on an. error, then and Eastern visits South Gallia.
Matt Dill went 4-S and Michael Ash, thirds of an inning in the sixth before scored on a fielde~s choice by Josh
Corey Williams and Pete Sisson each Kin Spencer closed out the game.
Broderick.
lgnlal latals ·
had two hits apiece. Other hillers for
Eastern pitching gave up I~ runs,
Southern got a single run.back .in Southern
121·174-0=16-13-3
coach Mick Winebmlner's TOrnadoes 13 hits, three strikeouts and seven the top of the fourth.
Eastern
001-020-0=3-2-3 ·
were David Nance and Adam walks.
Eastern cut two more from the
Banerles
Williams. ·
Southern went up 1-0 in the first deficit in the bottom of the fourth and
Southern: C. Williams (WP).
Eastern's lone two 'hillers were when Corey Williams singled. stole perhaps could have had more had Manuel and Cumings
Josh Will with a double and Steve second and scored on an error at shabby baserunning not thwarted the
Eastern: Durst (LP). Coleman,
&lt;hort.
Durst a single.
drive. Joey Dillon walked, Coleman Spencer and Broderick.
· Eastern twice
. . left the bases

By SCOTT WoLFE
the third'and fourth as former league
Sentinel COtTHpOndent
MVP Kim Sayre hooked.up in a great
• Scoring four early runs and keep- pitching duel with Stephanie Evans.
iOg Eastern hilling at bay for most of Southern threatend with a Trish Holtile game, the Southern Tornado gals man singled and Trish Warner walk
.;scapod an Eastern last inning rally in the firth. but Evans fiUlnod the next
10 claim a dramatic 4·2 win over the two batters. In the bouom of the
£agles in ·girls' Hocking Division fraine, Kim Mayle singled, but was
~lay at Tuppers Plains.
left stranded on a 1-3 ground out and
; Eastern is 5-5 and Southern 12-1 pop .up to keep the score 2-0. ·
overall and 7-0 in the league.
Southern went ahead 3-0 in the
The first two innings. Eastern sent sixth when Sayre walked, Manuel
four batters to the plate. butlert one sacrificed her to second, McKinney
stranded. Southern scored two in the singled and Ashli Davis hit a sacrifice
Second when Regina Manuel and ny.
Ashley McKinney each singled and
In the la.11 inning. Southern scored
sconed.
again when Warner walked, Holman
Both dubs went down in order in sacrificed her to second and a stolen

.

.

.
.
Page4
Thu!'!d!y, Aprll18, 1898

The Dally Stn11nel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

rt

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314 ton, 4x4, 5 &amp;peed, air, 20,000 miles.

JH5 CHEVY S•JO .PJCI.UP uuuuaueucuaiauuun• SJQ,900
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VI, auto., 81t, Pw, P!,.-1111, cru!M.

Cl•••· ·

. l11y ....,
Tr••k• I• ltnk

·

U11. C.rt •••

�ThursdaY., Aprlt16, 1998

c .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

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THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT
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COMING UP: Goody~ 500

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grave. -=on:1. 94.129

"""'·Sept. 23. 1119-4
(Goody's ~00 roc:otd,
Kenny Wallace. Ford,
93.961 mph, April lB.

5:30 p.m. • Sllll.l&lt;ley • ESPN
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1 p.m. • Sundey'• E8PN

IAUMLUMIEI

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lntemltloniiRocewey. A -. Ariz.
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April18 .
DEI=IfjDfNG

oug11 won lhll...,. ~ 1 Me!OUiy
Cyclone fiokltd by 1ho Wood Blolhlro of
near!~)' St\Jit1, VI .... 1'Nenly yen ago,
tho winner wa Danoil Wollr1p In 1 Bill
Galdner·owlltd
Dele Eam-

hlldt drove 1 Richard Child--nod

IOCIMooroo,WUh.

--

3. OrtgBifllt; 31t.

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1. Joe~ . za1 .

1. FMcll CtaW!ord, 258.
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10. Aicll Bid!~~, 2o6&amp;

·---- - -~ --

•11

~JEFF

Peoraa1 drove a Holman·

llul&lt;:h Clrond Nollonll thin hltltorlc Hlci&lt;Ofy MoiOI
Speedway. ·l ltd lhll yw's

a.tuy 300 was hlatortc tor

WARNERU

Ed- · 38. drove hio FOld
TIUI\IO to Yictooy for tho
flrllllme In 208 tritl. In 42 BGN

,_,_

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-"'Hickory,--

M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

-~ ·

lhO f l r l l - - to~ 1
FOld 1o YictOiy - · In fact, the
llollime I Ford _, I mejOr
reee on the .3&amp;3-mill triCk

Pla:IU--1

w•

Moody Ford Torino to victory in
Sojltember, 19118. Thai was offi·
clally a Clrand NIIIONJ race, but
at that lime Grand Nlliof111 represen1«:1 wl"'et Is now knOwn u
the Winston Cup Series.

Alter atart&lt;&gt;Q On tho outside
of tho front row. Barrier pre·
· - lo a ,_.long duel wi111
poloolttor Rot&gt;on Prouley, who
faded lilt in the race, llld
Mike Dillon.

O..Ben, .
Jusl 1 wild gues!: Ford fan,

0... NASCAR Thit Week;
I've been wonderin&amp; this for a
lon&amp; lime: How many ean art

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1lilllkllo Mllttlnovllle

2.M-CII

Has never won anywhenl
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See above

Uklll Marlinlvllle
3. Rulty 'Wallet &amp;,1
LOvHMartlniVIII

•. Dele bt-.ftltl
Needs to rogoJn magic
10. B-, Laboote (101

4.' Dele-141
Hlenever-.thete
11. 1MY Lae omo Ill
Neltht&lt; hll he
.

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High llopOO

..., .....

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Summerfields
Restaurant

,

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J, Oofdon

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J.-

Chester
985-3857

---- --- ·---

UPI'\ IC \41:
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12 :30-6:30

J. Gordon
B. Llbantt
T. u.bortl

J. ~

Hln'lllton

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lctndtr

J. Gordon

T. Bodine

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The Daily
Sentinel

W..C:•

Elljot1

J. Gordon
Rudd
R. W...C.

--

FiliDCifiillliii"___

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R1nt1y ll.lolt ws. Ralrllt Prmlly
1Wo of raclng'o

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""*"'""' at tJOI
"on
- · laJollt and Plollloy.
- I n alllln1ng oequonct1
-In

111 Court St.

oiUmplng
dtopontloly
10 t.oJolo
bllCk
the lied lap Hlcltory.

IIMCNiliJia. A
Ill ..... Da-.

Pomeroy

there m:all?
Hunler Jenkins
Wc1umpka.AIL

II. ,., Bwlllilltl
wan 1n the r1111

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mJCh of • flud. To

- - · IIMI-rtOied !'ICing
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eport ltllltlboul.
L&amp;lalt'l
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tookk
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Pr-,. ono,
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fran ttw..•
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.... No.,_. "K roolty

O...Huol&lt;f.

Joltnnr ..._.. right.
t1r Monte Dlilton ·

NASCAR Thio This sec0nd-genlf8llon
driver is on the V8lll" of

maklng ~ big, IS many have

predicted ever since he first
received national anentlon
u champion of the Mid·
weot·baaed American Speed
Aaociati&amp;l dlitiiH.
AINedV Benoon hils been
narr*l rookie of the year in
both the Busch' Grand
·
National and Winston Cup
divisions ol NASCAR. He
also waa BGN charpl)iorl
in 1995.
AGE: 34

WIF.E: Debbie
HOMETOWN: Born and
ralaed In Grand Rapjds,
Mich.; lives In Charlotte, N.C..

CAll: No. 26 Cheerlos

Ford r..,..., owned by
Jack Roush.
CAIIEEA RECORD: 66
starts, 2 poleS,

· mMIIon In c.,.... earnings.
WHAT ARE THE MNAHTACIES OF JOINING
ROUSH RACING'S MWI·
CAR TEAM?· "The odvln· .
tage .of being wKh Roush
is basicidty unMmKed

,.,....,rcee. Anything you
need is ri9hl at your finger~·ps. YoU need ~ little bit
·or advantage you can get. K
cuis your tostir~~t time down
becausa If it didn't wor1&lt; for
your teammate, odds are tt'a
not going to wort&lt; for you.•
DO YOU THINK ,y ou
ARE ON THE VEIIGE Of
YOUR FIRST VICTORY'I
"I 11111 the last two years
we've hed opportunitiH to
maybe . . - oot a win, and
I feel even more llrongtr this
year we can win a rat;e. This
team has won In the past,
and I'm hoping we can
continue that. •
..

0 wins, 4 top
)¥HAT lilT UKE TO IE
5t, 19 loP 10s, over $2.5
ONE Of FIW TEAMS

I

~'
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'

WHO'S HOT:

whole horne state

,

i.

Wbo'SUO\

Mark Martin,

ll'

Eot:h WiniiOti Cup ,_ Jw. a
Sllrtin&amp; faekl of .fl . Thiny~sil
lllninl pooiliona . . dctmnined

....... IIIIIOgiiPh for ......

ra the swne •• the

~~ .

WHO'S Nor. Tho last time
Ken~ won, Geoove

OWNED IIY OHE MAN?
"I 01*8 K'l a drum come
INti to be with a team CIJll"
ble of winning I champiOl\lhlp. Now we need to
make the opporlt11KIH
lteppen. Aa far
being up

u

· In Uberty JN.C.), K'l been
great. Everyone has been

Matlin DIVIcl Robini&lt;WI-

. CONTEND FOR A CHAMP10NIHIP? "l don1 !IMW.
I'm 11~11eem1ng fltWY day
and probably will until I
~- I've got a lot to INm

about ~.-.

won 1 NASCAA ..ce. but
one could hltdV aav ho wa
~ . -known

.. Many Aol&gt;blnl.1ho Coun·
try lbic Hal ofF- IOvOd
to·r.ce stock ctra lnd was

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Power Tools &amp;

I

TRIVIA

Wl\et---

Rookie of tho 'lelr1
3. Whal-now-inlo&lt;lnStltion,N.C.?

.

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Chester

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COIIJIIIM,1M.,..._.. (N.C.) Ga:Mtl • DIILI&amp;ulldbr ~ PNII

GET

~Nude

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thtlr · Gltn and
.. dtMr nl mtdlalic, thin .
""' Colt
A.J. lo
Foylrd

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--.-yllnt.

llCliiG OllH£ WEI
TEAM ROUSH FANS

NEWS ARCHIVE
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Dave Harris Ext. 104
For More Information

has suffered emotional or physical
trauma. The last sentence in your
letter spoke volumes. Thank you.
Dear Anil Laaden: Not long
ago, I read a letter to the editor in the
Kansas City Star that made so much
sense, I thought you'd like to share it
with your readers. I know you don't
have the space to print the entire letter, but this is the gist of it.
Cynthia Smith, a fonner TV coanchor, wrote: "As a mother and a
broadcaster, I am saddened by the
number of hours children arc watching television. Children who are
watching TV arc not reading, play·
ing outside or relating to other people. ·

"When children watch TV alone,
no one is there to put the story in
perspective or to tell them certain
behaviors are inappropriate. When
you leave children alone to watch
television, you might as well tell
them to ao play in the street.
''All my 8-year-old son wanted
this Christmas was a Nintendo M. I
loved him enough to say no. I' m not
exactly his best friend this week, but
that's OK. I'm not supposed to be
his best friend. 1' m supposed to be
his mother. and saying no is pan of
my job."
Wouldn't it be wonderful if all
mothers had this attitude. plus the
determination to stick with their

of the Bend •••

(This article is provided to you as
a service of Meigs County Health
Department's Preventive Health
Services Grant, Jackie Starcher.
Coordinator and Sharon Smith.
Assistant Coordinator.)

added exercise and low-fat choices
Small bits or activity add u~
in other foods. Craving a fast food overtime. usc the stairs instead of
sandwich'/ Balance it out with a side the elevator when possihlc. take a
salad and low-fat dressing instead of hrisk walk on your lunch break. rake
French fries.
leaves or the grass. lry to get at least
Be Realistic:: Give yourself time 30 minutes of such activities each
to develop healthful eating habits. day.
Permanent changes do not happen
T•ke Control! Healthful eating
overnight.- Small steps work better along with regular exercise arc two
than a giant leap. do not attemjll to · of th9 most important steps you can
completely overhaul your diet in a take to promote good hcollth.
few days.
Be Sensi.ble: Moderation can
Fun with Fruits and· Vegetables
help you achieve your goal. Rather Recipes
than banning certain foods, control
Fruit and Juice Breakfast
portion sizes. Develop an eye for Shake
I
size, slice a slice of your favorite
I very ripe banana, peeled
cake instead of a large chunk.
314 Cup pineapple juice
Pace yourself and savor the na112 cup low-fat vanilla.yogurt
vor. It ta~es several minutes for your
112 Cup strawberries, rinsed with
. brain to get the message to your stems removed
stomach that you are full.
Break banana into small pieces
Have healthful foods ready to and put in a blender with other
grab in the refrigerator or on the ingredients lind blend until smooth.
counter ror when thoSe snack attacks Serve immediately. Makes 2 serv·
hit you. Fruits, veggies, and low-fat ings
Nutrient analysis: 168 caloyogurt are always good choices .
ries, 4 grams protein, I gram fat, 35
Be Active: Pursue fitness with · grams carbohydrates, 43 mg. sodiseveral enjoyable . activities that um, 3 mg. cholesterol. Health Note:
enhances your lifestyle and can be Bananas arc not just for monkeys.
done on a regular basis.
They are rich in vitamins and minerYou really do not need expensive als; 'llley will help you reach the
special equipment, just get moving goal of five a day from the fruit and
whenever and wherever you can. vegetable food aroups.
Think fun, forget "no pain no gain."
Exercise is more fun with a panncr. Broccoli Puta
Take a friend or family member with
10 oz. fro1.en or I small hunch
you when you walk, bike ride, in- fresh broccoli. chopped into very
line skate, etc.
· small pieces

..

•
I smull nninn. chopped fine
1/H tsp. ~urlk pnwt.kr
14 "'· chicken hmth. fat rcmm•ed
I cup water
Koz. unc&lt;•&gt;kcd spaghetti. hrnken
into thirds
114 cup ~kim oi low-fat milk
2 Thsp. ~rated Parmesan cheese
114 cup il•w-fnt or fat free S&lt;KJr
cream
In ck'Ctric skillet or 10 to 12 inch
skillet. stir together: Onions. garlic
powder. chicken hroth. and water.
Cover and cook over medium heat
until Milin~.
Add spaghetti and cook (uncovered) stirring often for seven minutes, addiiional broth or water can
lie added ~o keep spaghetti from
sticking if necessary.
Add broccoli, cover and cook
until broccoli is tender. about five
minutes. Remove pan from heat. Stir
in s011r cream. milk. and Pannesan
cheese. Makes 4 main-dish or 6
· ·side-dish servings.
Health Note: I cup of cooked
chicken breast may be added at the
same time as the broccoli if desired.
This would make the recipe a more
balanced main-. dish. Nutrition .
analysis: Serving size I 112 cups.
Calories 190, Fat 3 grams, Cholesterol 5 mg .• Sodium 310 mg.,
Dietary fiber 2 grams, Vitamin A
371 1. U., Vitamin C I Kmg .. Calcium70

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News Policy·

All cluh meetings and other news
aniclcs in the society section must
be submiued within 60 days of
occurrence. All hirthdays must be
submitted within 60 days of the
occurrence .
All material submitted for publication is subject 10 editing.

·TRUCK DRIVER
TRAINING
. .
.

If you are Interested In obtaining a Commercial Drivers Lk(et'lle
aa a truck driver and if you ara a. dislocated worker.
•
Galla-Meigs Community Ac:lion Agency may be able to assist
you with training, testing, and related costs.
(A dislocated worker Is ~ally a peraon who has .worked at
least 12 months at one occupation, is now unemployed or
· .under employed due to a bullness closing or cutback, and Is
unll~ely to return to their previous occupation. There are
additional quallficatlontr, however Income is not a factor)
To find out .If -You qualify pleaH call 387-7342, 448·1 018, or
892-&amp;e28 and requeet a JTPA Preapplc:a!lm.
Training period Is approximately four .weeki, training will Ill
conducted In Mat1ella, Ohio or Aehland, Kentucky.

Gellla-Melga Community Action Agency

P.O.Box272

United States

OIN
HOW
And

Cumency

Sunday 19th 9:30-4:00
GalllpoUs Holiday Inn
Upper·Route 7 Kanauga, Ohio

We honor most third party
prescription plans. Your Swisher g· Lohse Pharmacists, Chuck,
Ken &amp; Ron are here to fill your
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Equll Oppoi1unlty Emplo'f'er

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-----.,.--·· Fun, Food and Fitness--'-----

t

•

Send que&lt;tions to Ann L:inders, Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century
Blvd.. Suit• ?ex·,. Los Angeles: Calif.

Make Nutrltioa Come Alive: A
heaUhy lifestyle is key to looking
good, feeling great, and heing the
By the way, George'Hall, pop·
best you can be at work and play. It
I find il amazing about this
· all begins with what you put on your
time every year when graduates ular organist, will· be providing
of local high schools scurry entertainment preceding the ban·
plate.
'
A healthful eating plan helps you
about to plan alumni reunions. quct and will play for a dance
These people are certainly to be which follows the dinner and • get the most out of life. Designed
especially for you. it is easy to
admired for the effort they 'put business meeting. George \Viii
also
be
playing
at
the
Chester
improve your eating habits by using
into planning and staging the
Association
a personalized approach to nutrition.
events. Someone really put "yc High Alumni
Today's dietary guidelines point you
olde school spirit" in them at one reunion which is a little later in
May.
in the right direction, but making the
time or another.
daily food choices that fit your
And most of the alumni assoNoelle R. Pickens, daughter
lifestyle is up to you.
ciations do award scholarships
The Food Guide Pyramid is a
these days to children or grand· of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens of ·
near
Pomeroy,
was
one
of
sever'
.
great
road map for meals, consider it
children of graduates. There
a flexible guide outlining the kinds
secrns to be a lot of help out there al Capital University students
and amounts of foods you need.
for students who want to contin- pictured with the university president on the current edition of the
. After all. when it comes to nutrition
~e their education following
advice. one size docs not fit all.
graduation for high school. And university magazine.
In case you've lost track of
Be Flexible: Develop your pertha)'s good too!
sonal game plan of good nutrition by
The Pomeroy High School Noelle, a graduate of Eastern
making wise choices.
Alumni Association wi}l be High School, she's attending
Evaluate the many choices in all
awarding two scholarships· this Capital and is carrying a 3.8
the food groups of the pyramid.
·year and these include the Boll grade point average. She is
Realize all foods lit in a healthful
Robens Scholarship and the majoring public relations and
-·
minoring
in
marketing
and
is
eating
plan. One f&lt;•Jd, one meal, or
Charles Gibbs Scholarship. And
one day will not make or break your
of course, everyone knew and serving oii the university's stu·
health or waistline.
liked Bob and Charlie so the dent government public relations
Dessens are okay in small por·
scl)olarships are a nice tribute to staff so is pretty busy these
days-and
hasn't
she
always
tions
and can be balanced out with
them.
There i~ no official applica· been!
tion for the two Pomoroy schol----,.·•
You'll have a chance to help
arships so here · ~ how applicants .
handle that. To apply for the Bob some good c~uses o,n Monday, .
Roberts Scholarship applicants May 25. when the Burli11gh~m
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT Bosworth
CHESTER - Ohio Association
submit a trans~rlpt of ·their Modern Woodmen will be stagPOMEROY. AA and AI-Anon; Council 46, special meeting, Friday. of Garden Cuhs, Region II. hoard
grades, a plmiograph. and a cover ;,~ thejr annual· mat~hing fund
Thursday
at the Sacred Heart 7:30p.m. at the Middlcpon Mason- meeting. at Chester Mcthodi~t
7
p.m.
letter stating their goals and rela- raising event.
CathOliC
Church,
Pomeroy.
. ic Lodge. Work in the super excel' church. Saturday. carry-in dinner at
The Modem Wn&lt;Jdmcn OffiCe
tionship to a Pomeroy High grad.
lent ma.,ter degree.
non. Business I p.m. All garden duh
On the Charles Gihbs .Scholar- at Rock Island. II.. will match '
POMEROY - Rock Springs
presidents and, officers asked Ill
ship. a('plicants must plun to muncy raised during the event up
Better
Health
Club,
1
p.m.
Thursday
attend.
·
GALLIPOLIS
Parkinson's
attend the University of Rio to $2500. This year funds raised
at
the
home
of
Phyllis
Skinner.
Support
Group.
Friday.
2
p.m.
Grace
Grande or Ohio University. They will he 4sed tu help the Leroy
United Methodist Church. 60P Sec·
must he education majors and Saut.:rs family with health probPOMEROY - Workshop on ond Ave .. Galli('Oiis. Traci Sissnn. MONDAY
must he residents of Pm~cmy. lems and the Pnntcrny Fire
construction
of period costuming. speech therapist from Holzer tu
EAST MEIGS - Tri-State
They arc t&lt;•·~ul&gt;mit a tmnscripl of IXpanment with fiCW equipment
Thursday
7
p.m.
at
the
Meigs
Muses('Cak.
Regional
Blood Services. a division .
grades. a photog~aph. and a cover Proceeds will he di•·ided equally.
um
.
with
Becky
Bacr,
Meigf
Extcnof
the
American
Red Cross. 'himd·
And the event'' It will he a
leucr uutlininl! their ll"~ls and
' sinn Agent. in charge. Emphasis on
POMEROY - God's NET to 1nohile. Eastern High School Mnn·
re,lutinnship .tn a ~raduatc, nf smorgasbnnl dinn~r at the hall in
costumes
from
the
1870's.
Patterns
begin
Friday programs. 6 p.m. for day. 9:30 w I:30 p.m.
Burlingham from II :311 ;t.m. t,;
Pnmerny High.
and
samples
available.
Anyone
teenagers.
Refreshments. Those
Applicants arc l&lt;t, send Ilk: 6:30 p.m. and you c:m c;u in nr .
interested
invited.
No
charge.
having
April
hirthdays to he hon·
designated information tn the carry uut. There's no set fcc htn
•
Geared
for
Cumherland
Princess
orcd
.
Pumcruy High Schuol Alumni you arc requested 111 make a
passenger greeters. festival queen
Assn .. P.O. Box 202. Pomeroy. donation.
contestants.
and 4-H dub member
Ohio 45769 and the deadline for
taking
costume
project.
SATURDAY
And a hap('y thought. Yesterapplying is May 15 .
Chester - Shade River Lodge
The annual alumni reunion day. April 15. wa.' the deadline
POMEROYMiddleport
Child
453
F&amp;AM will hold annual ins('Cc·
will he held Saturday evening. fnr gctling your income lax
Conservation
League.
7
p.m.
Thurstion
Saturday hcginning with dinner
· May 23. at the Meigs High return in tiJC mail. If you made
day
at
the
Rock
Springs
Church.
at 6JO p.m. and lodge opening at
School cafeteria. Information nn deadline then you shtKJid he ahlc
Norma
Torres.
R.N.to
speak
on
Aids
7:30
p.m. lns('Cction will he in the
reservations and all that good to keep smiling.
and
children.
FC
Degree.
All Master Masons
stu II will come later.
invited. All lod~e mcmhers asked to
hring two homemade pies.

'
.;..&lt;..--~--__,

convictions'-· C.J. in Mission, Kan.
Dear C.J.: It would indeed, but
don 't hold your breath. TV has
become the electronic baby sitter in
too many homes, and the talk shows
have become so trashy it is beyond
belief. The only ones that arc safe
are Rosie o·Donnell and Oprah .
One show recently Oa&lt;hed on the
screen. "If you arc sleeping with
your husband's hrother, we want to
hear from you." Now. isn' t that
woncl:rfuP

•

In an effort to provide our reader·
ship with current news. the Sunday
limes-Sentinel will not accept wed·
dings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submitted after the 60day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

AITENTIONADVERTISERS!!

Ripley, Wo/26271

P•l'tfancl

'*

'*' M "'e tiOOt 2164TM • Por .......... of Alit 11

CALL TODAY FOR DETAIUI

........ .......... l..e•
Bus. Phone (304) 3~·381~
1-800-98-HORD

'WIY II

r-~.----------~------------------.

985-3308

.' ' '

, ··

of fiflll.

Corne See u, F~r Afl Vour

•

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·' .
.,' .

11182. Robblno modo 36
..... In the b i g - ·
wi1111 c -·bOIIIIMh

Rt. 21 at 111e fllptey..ralrplalfl ld 1132

~

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t'*"' bel... going

St. At. 248 .

.• "'.!

•

the-

as 1 meuns of squet:ziniJ e,;tn
ipCCd out of nra durin&amp; quali•
fyinJ. Such a practice m11kcs
the ctn&amp; more diiTiculllo han·
die, 10 mtn:h .., thai no team
u.oould dream of usin1 such
altol:k Mllinp In 1 ~ »eUtp.
NASCAR has 1Rcd team~ to

accord•A&amp;f' S;POkesman for
NASCAR. •.
'
·
GRUN TO HELP COP£:
Jeff Gr«t~l!.ll been named
as ahe rcpiQctmcM driwtt ror
Ocrrike Cope: at Manins~llle.
Cope aaaravakd 1 rib injury
in a qualifyinj c:tuh 11 Ttus
Moaor Specdwty on April ) .
AfltD IHIPHIRO FOil
SKINNER: Veteran Moraan
Shephtnl will n:portli:dly bl: on
head to relievl! injured Mike

commonly known 1!'1 a •!ltiascr'"
h)' professional fuothull and
htl£k4.')' plu,:n who t;Xfl'!ticm:~
\'it"ious hihl.
KENSETII GETS BIGTIM•: SIIOT: J~k Mou:dt
will r:ntcr a shlh t-'urd 'Tauru»
:al Talla~p fur llu~h Grand
Nut toruli dri\·cr M:.&amp;ll KL·rul&amp;:th .
A n~iv.c or ("ambridJC, Wis.,
the 26-)'t'ar·ofd Kcn!ll'lh •iancd
u p.:r11unal·~~erviccs l:nntract
bcf~ tht ~lUI of lhc ltiiSUft
with kuuJb, whu Will inatru·
mental in htlpi•J Kcft~~tlh and
C.llf OWIICf Roltbic RtiiM.... find
apuntoBhip fur their lluKh
Urud National Ch\.-.rolc:i
cffl)rl.

Supply

r ':' "

.
.

trlll!ionllty

althe~~­

ttifTne~ f~~if)ina run~.

'i
Ill.. - " ' lhllwho
ondolyWood'-_,odt,_,.IOc:tl-

*111\1. ...0 'I

SkiM\.'f ot Martin~vlllc:, lbt sile
of Shcph~rd'~~o firll Win!IIOn ( 'up
vicwry in 1"11 .
Skinner, the IPJ7 r~kie- ~r
the )'\:'olr. !IUit"ertf~rokcn
shoulder blade-~~OETIRMINED 10 8£
BACk: AllhouGh 0rt1 Sicks
rcmaintd hotpitali;oc,J at lblla•'
Partdatld Mcmorialll&lt;tlq'ital
lonpr than c:ithcr ('upc or Skin·
Mr, the dr'ivcr uf Cult Varbor·
ouJh\ No. 91 Furd still hofM:s
lo compe~e 11 M111insyilk:.
Sac:b uMcrwent a bauery of
tc~b to dcicnnine 1he CIUIC or
!int:,~rina p11in in hit neck and
~huuldel'5 ulkl passed each. lie
ap~arenlly suff'-"''.:d whll il

992-6611

I

an•'III•JIII Si:

. 2.
___ _
I . 1n _ _ _ Joll _"Pajlo?"

- - pmlclent.

make lheir own propos.als ewer
the next few days before a
ehlnat will be announced. The
new rule will almost surely
ellilblhih a minim~m shod

555 Park St.
M'ddleport

A hltll.ftoul'l- to 1ho-

Ridenour.

.. .

'

1---

Accessories

·1

ln teet, -

hil
Sloekl on.,..,....., nigltla

IIOblly wit1t the Lito -

on--ti66oi&gt;cl

·See us tor Your Stihl"
' ·,

--...-!viii

chanac in skoc:k abtorben for
qualifyina \lfalladep Super·
speedway on April2•.
What the aovernina body
hopes to prevc1111 islhe praclicc
of usinJ spons) shock .eninp

=~=::...~.
ing - - to """11

JjJJHL
www.11ibluN.,om

'I)

NASCAR This Week
NASC.I\R has informed Winston Cup 1eam11 of it!l inu~ntion
. to make an at-YCI·undctermincd

NWQUWgalaqe . Senora

Valley
Lumber&amp;
$upply.Co.

Fan Tips

lASCAR
plans change·in shock absorbers for .Talladega
Dutton

. 1,- Monte

seven provision~! positions an:
added for each race. ()ftC or which
- be: &lt;W:n b) ., rx-chlmpion
who docs ......... tltc rtcld on his
quolifyina speed. Otherwise, all
Km~ ~bleed on car..ownrrpoinl
otandinp. ·

I

992-2155
FROM THE ARCHIVES:
lite rklh-, ol N'ICAR

"' quttlil\&lt;iniJ. Ai or lllit .......

• irte*libly IUpPOJIIVe. K'a
001--= ~ NAICAR
Your '111m, o/O
kind of dlfflcuK to MY you've Thlt
got fiveteama; with Mark
Tho
o.otOn
-·
,.....lhd.,O
I 211011
A, E.
(Martin) and Jeff (Burton)
. ' N.C.in onit building (In Moores·
villa, N.C.), rnyoelf llld Ted
(MUIQI8VII) up in L.lbei1)',
Chad (UttlajiiCRJtllllhe
llnoel. There ·are five 1..,.,
but aadlteam Ia a I.., In
ltallf. •

ARE YOU READY TO

..

and adjust to this tremendous
change in our lives. It turned out to
be a·very wise and rewarding decision. The moral of this story is wonh
passing on. Ir you have a caring and
loving relationship, you can handle
whatever comes your way. •• Living
Proof in L.A.
Jnar Llvlaa Proof: As I have
said before in this space, the most
· important sex organ is the brain. An
accident need not mean the end of a
satisfying sex life. A lively imagination, creativity and a sense of humor
can he erionnously helpful.
·
A competent sex therapist can
instruct couples in ways to achieve
cnm('lctc satisfaction after a partner

By Bob Hoeflich

VInemont, Ala.

~ lrilngs by NASCAA This- writer Manto o..tton. List
Mlk'l ~ II In . . . .

paralyzed from the chest down. He
was only 30 at the time. I was 29
Ann
with two young daughters. While I
am extremely thankful he wasn't
Landers
killed, his injuries were severe. He
IW1. t.... Aa~~:t..... r""'"
Syadalt Mil Cr('lh~t~ '
has been impotent since that time.
SyNc.:.
We were a •er)' sexulllly active
and loving cou('le before the acciDear Aan Lallden: My leiter is dent, and we still are todlly. His doc·
'in response to "Frustrated in Mass." tors recommended implants and
He was .sexually im.potent and had other devices, but we opted for our
cqnvinced himself that nci woman own creativity. This was not an easy
would ever want hiin. I cannot.begin transition for me. I thought our marto understand the male psyche in riage was over if we coufdn't main·
regard to this problem. hut I would tain our sex life. My therapist, howlike to tell my story.
• ever. made me realize that the¥e was
My husband was involved in a more to our marriage than sex.
1 chose to stand by my hushand
ncar-fatal car accident that left him

B~at

ri&amp;ht?

'.

Page7

'•

Information

fire suits. I'll bctcha that will slow
them down. If il does nol woril,
remove the fM-point safety bell
I)'Siem from she fords. Then t11ke
1wo ·tua nuts off each wheel .
Maybe then the "'unCierac:hicvinaf
Chevy drivers can win all the: mces
tnd 5pend their lime "bell)'·
lauahina" at NASCAR's continu·
in&amp; llupidity instead of ronslant
..belly-aching!" •
Ben Mutphy

almost 30 y.., ago. David

IUICH ~ NA'IIOIIAL:
No lroci&lt; hU- .....

Dave Harris
Ext.104

O.ar NASCAR Thit Week,
I haVe a solution 10 offer lo
NASCAR for equalizing the
sU&lt;nJihS of the Fords and Chevys.
Simply make ila ndc thai the Ford
drivers cannot Wear hclmell and

- -=:=··----- - IIOiliAST wm

f 0 1 thl'll('OVJ I'f'fS
ln'jurJncc

Call992·2156

~:w•

-

Johnny Benson

5. 8oti~ . 2M.

ADVERTISE ON
THIS PAGE

-lied. owing.
_....,-om

c - . ...

~

For More

CHAMPION• .leek Spregue
NOTAIIU: ·Ritk C&lt;owlml, a Ql'llduelt of
the Slim Jim All P!o S«ioo. io coming oft
the blggetl yiCtO!y of No In the
truck ,.,. II
Ra. ... Thlo lo
the flnt of 1
with ....,_uenl otopa II Portilnd. 0.. ..

.

• . .-,suw,311.

m.

• . o.ll ~. 110.

•1se1 The Taro

"""'"

1. .Met SpNgul, :L10.
2. Ron ~-tcm~cSty. m .

1. D. Etrmltdl .k , I, 138.
%. MIIIIICenllel, 1.107 .
:1. mol Slda. I.e»:!!.
4. M. ~. 1,063.
a. "-'dy l.aJoie. . ..
.. ....,. s.tler, I7Q
r.ludllhat Jontt. ~ . ·
...... OIIoft.
.. ....,.; ~. 111 .
10. .... Chen, I07.

2. JMMiy Meyfllld. 1.012.
~. Terry L.lbclfM. 1.001 .
4. MMr. Mlrtin, IN.
5. ..... Gorden, 131.
a. .. biotl.l2:7.
., ' Dill JII'Ntl, 120.
.. ...... lkl10n. 175.

When,..MtloM rltM"'
www.m.com

1997).
RACE IIECOIID: JoK
Gordon, Chevrolet.
82.223 mph, Sopt.•22,
1996 (Goody's 500 roc:otd. Rusty Wallace.
Ford. 81 .410 mph, Aprll2t. 1996).
NOTA8U!: Thlt1y y. . . ago, Cale Yort&gt;or·

POiiifSUiiDiiiGs - --

COMINOUP:Chtvy
Deoorl Stor Claalc

-out""'

RECOAD: Ted Mua·

• ""-Cull.......,_

TIIUCKIIRIU

..-... _orat5-For al\'I)ICII s.npling or 1ho _ , .
"
-v.ana.
P'
ig
- Aoslanll. u.s. 220Oi&gt;cie
N.
_ _,

QUAliFYING

• ""-Cup Qo . . . .
3 p.m. • Frtdoy • E8PN2

--lx .·
CIW'TIMAII

In thoScMh.--... ill d•lolood
tradition. and it may chlriQe
'j
in llaYor, i yodioo ItS rod PNflned-

Aprll19

All--

Chevrolet to vlclo!y
tOv-roago.

ALMOST HOME COO«IIIG

WHERE: Mortln&amp;Yillo (Va.j Speedwey
WHEN: S.nday.

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

ByTheBend

lmpote.nt lovers can still find creative ways to satisfy partners

4ftoolEPOR'T •0"'

Starting at $79.95

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1·800-594-111

-

·· :.a.. ..~ ~ . _

..::::... tt1:\- ~llt.J,:

....:_

UKEA

992·21118

The Daily Sentinel

•

.

'

�9

The Dally Sentinel • Page
P~ 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll16,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio •

......~::::r,: =

County court cases resolved
111e following cases were resolved
last week in the Meigs County Court
of Judse Palrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Richlltd L. Wamsley,
Racine. seat belt. $25 plus costs; Jeremy Council. Rutland, speed, $30 plus
costs; Robert L. Ritchie Jr., Racine.
seat bell. $25 .plus costs; Scouie L.
Queen. Coolville. seal belt, $20 plus
com; Kenneth D. Gastin, Haydenville. seat belt. $25 plus costs:
Jackie M. Adams, Athens, s~. S45
pl~sc~sts: RObert G. Wallace. Chapmansvllle, W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus
costs: Andrew P. Nichols. Point
Plea.-&gt;nnl. W.Va., speed, $30 plus
costs; Rebecca A. McFall. Point
Pleasant. speed, $30 plus costs: Hazel
I. Dugan. Washington, W.Va.. speed.
$30 plus costs: Keith A. Kinzel. Syrn-

cuse. speed, $30 'plus cos!S; Ronald
D. Roberts. Portland, speed. $30
plus costs; Mark E. Bond, Tuppers
Plains. speed. $30 plus costs: Jeffery
R. Gilland, Syracuse. speed. $30
plus costs: Manhew B. Jones, Chesapeake. speed. $30 plus cosl•; Christ&lt;&gt;pher L. Gray. Frankfort. Ky., speed.
$30 plus costs; Delbert Mellon.
Franklin Furnace, speed. $30 plus
costs:
_ Shirley_S. Sa~_Bacinc , seaL
bell. $15 flu s COSIS; Phillip E.
Stevens, Pedro. no mud flaps. $20
plus cost•: Mary A. Wolfe. Mason.
W.Va.. seat belt. $25 plus costs: John
P. Levingood, Columbus. speed. SJO
plus costs: Eleanor J. Logan,
Pomeroy. stop sign, $20 plus costs:
Nancy L. Zeigler. Pomeroy, seat belt,

1998:.

60 Lost and Found

110

Found : camera, call to tO, 740-

a c. ~. ~"'Over 50 Looallonl 1n

LOST: Black l whKe lloslon Ter·
Lowor Flvo Milo Rd. 304-11.75·

"I" .ILIC
. YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
END..TO F;)SD

Compa11ionate Prof8111ona11
Wilh A Team Vis ion And A De'"' To Teach Personal And

Yard Sale

Daily Sentinel

In memory of our
dad and belt friend
"HANK" ARNOTT
who left us one year
ago today, April 16,
1997.
In person you
have gone away,
but In memorlea
you will always
remain. The things
you left with ua, we
atlll have except the
Red Blazer.
The · "Big Orange
Trucka" still travel
our county high·
waya, but we atilt
find
oura·elvea
thinking It should
be you driving one
of them.
Those memories
you left behind will
forever remain.
Sadly .milled by
Uzzle "Mom" Wood,
daughter Nellie,
Milford, Sherrl and

Litllt things
Rrt Worth A lot
in

tht CIRssifitJ Section!

Middleport, Presents

Poobah 'Wizard of Psic"
Saturday NightOnly

YOU'Ll• _ ,

DRIVE SAFELY

. •Ill( CUSSifDI

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
MJ. Yard Salta Must
Bo Poklln Advance.

110

Used Washer &amp;
Dryers, Refrigerators,
· Ranges,
(90 day warranty)

Qftl!l lf'E: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy bolont tho ""
1o to Nn. SUnday
adhlon • 2;00 p.m.
Flldoy. Monday odhlon

French City
· Maytag

..

OVC AUCTION ATAMVETS
. FRI., APRIL 17TH
HAS BEEN CANCELLED

,

'

Crowders Auction ·

,.

•

...'

',

KICKIN' COUNTRY
JAppea.ring Friday 8:00-1
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

.

Members and Guest Invited

E ual 0

rtunl

'S

Business Services
Ptl11

"We do11 '1

wa11t to 11mke mo11et'
wa111 to teU jlorflera.'

·•Septic Systems

.

we jscat

•Base,.,~nts

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Filla
Hanging Basketa $6.13
' "J~Ihmlng Ullea, Hoata, Peonlea, BINding HeiiiU,IIc.
Variety of Perennials ~
. Fruit A FloMrlng Tr-, Shrubs, Plnet AAzalt1l
· Morning Stir CA 30
Racine, Ohio
9411-2115

.

erences AMulli74C·379·9412.

Remodeling

Custom Homes

II

One Sllop
(;o•puter Shop"

•r•t•m

Give us a call for
repairs,
upgrad•• or consulting.
·INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
IPOIIIERC)Y, OH

1998 Martin Streit
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~Ct~£-~Ct£~~ft~~

CDIIftlniOI t.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
liA
fl..• Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ~:

11111.
Commtrelell Rlaklentlal
._
fii'!J 71 yrs. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured II."•

ilo
It!'~

---------5139
'----------5159

Phone 740-992-3987
FrH E.rfrNtll
Owner: John Dean

~

JoeWIIaon

'1.79

' ,.,

'1 ,'fl' ..... ~

' , ,..~

0\'f

.

&lt;\.»

.

.•.

II'!!

ftft~tp- ~f.7.rf)tf.Pft~~
'

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE.c STIMATES ·
......

614·992-7643 .

r

(No S~nday Calls)

1/1- ·

.

JILSIDING&amp;
INSULAnoN

'699
NOW

599
'699

1

'799

'999
11499

399

1

'299
'229
'699

....
.,.,

-LIMESTONE
Special Thru
March
· 8 ton Delivered ·
$120

NOW

'249
'269
1359
1539
'679

Mileage Limit ·
Cafl Randy ·

992·5050

41i

.1

$479
S46t

549
'699
'339
1329
1329

$509

1429

'

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
. Stop &amp; Compare
. FREE .
ESTIMATEES

985-4473

.

1

•
•

P/8 Contractors Inc.

7/22/tln

:

•
•

·Bobcat Sarvlce
.Concrete
'•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Aooildentlol
2tt Hr. Bobc:al Service
Avollablo
" - Eotlmotoo
No Job Too Sma"

Brian Morrloon

(740) 985· 311! .....

SPR~IIG

NOW IN STOCK A
NEW ECONOMIQl
29 GAUGE ROOfiNG
OR SIDIN6
Meta19" OC Rib,fWihite 11

3'X10' •512' 5Q .
3'X 12'·515.00

•

. SPECIAL
5~ Off .ILL

"ServitllJ 1he Area since 1950... Wilh many more yearalo come!!"

Mason, WV

OFF

Carpet A Upholattry
&gt; . .

Clnnlng
258PeariSL

Middleport, OH

•.ocrrr

·

NOWI

Smithat614-992-7440.

Ashiand.Kemuol&lt;i.

Must8e'18Vr'

.

CuaiiNnBuiR
Palt·lhm PICklgol

Toro WhHI Hortl TriCIOrl
Hal Sprlnga Spao

Open; 7;:10-5;00 WHkdaya
7;31).4;00 Salurct.y
48314SA

Ea•t•r Flowers,
P 1n1III, Cabbagl,
Brocc.oll, Caullftower,
Hanging Baaketa,
Phlox, Azaleaa,
Shrubs, Sprue'
1irHI
Open Dally t-5
Sunday 12-5

HUIIARDS
IRE INHOUSE
8.

ICUII

992-5776

'tf.

..

Gallla-MIIgsCommuniW
Action Agency
t~
~0. Box 272
IJ

Clean La1e Model Cars O•
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smich Buick Ponuac, 1900 East·
ern ...,...,a, Gallpoli~
J &amp; D Auto Pares. Buy ing
wrecked or salva9ed vehicles.

floor
covering
&amp; deCorating
plus, long
rime commilmonc
nee-a
assary, send resume 1o: Daily

Cheshire, Ohio .-5620.0272

crete Work Windows -Painting

WANTE 0 : Company 10 provide

Ar)d Windows, 814-444-2669.
INVENTORY IIANAOEAI
PURCHASING /MJENT

cy

AVON 1 All Areas 1' Shirley

Aulomo'tive, 2180 E111ern Ave-

·

WANTED : Parl·lime babysluer Jn
New Haven, Mason area1 For

~pecial ~~ Child, pfete( Ctvi~nan home. 304·882·3339.
, ,.· •

WILDLiFE JOBS TO s:ll.eOJIIA.

·Inc. B ene c·liS. G ame W ard en&amp;,
Security, t.Aainleoace, Park Rar'to:
ers. No Exp. Needed. Far App.-

nue, Galllpolie, Oil From 7:30 And Exam lnlo Call 1·800·8t3·
A.M. .. 1:00 ~M. Mon. - Fri. Ask 3Da585,1dsExt 647 ~ 6 A.M. - g ~M .. 7,

For Oix1e lnclustrial Supply At The

,._

~lean;ng lor olllce In Poirt
ply. t-888-495-6565.

Required. Reaumn And Will
Be Accepted At Brog Warner

books lrom Sibyl MnKnlght Spears.304-675-)429..
PLEASE relurn.
•~e ss OR OLDER

1 :

Pleasant., Individuals ~0 not ap•·

...
CEom~sny. PArndoviCous Purchla alng
1
Kpertence
omputer 181'1·

HeIp Wan Ied

8010 Norlh Scale Routo 7 · tt' ·i

Sentinel, P.O. Box 7zg.60, Forner·
oy, on. 457ll9.
Equal Opportmicy Emptdyer ,
Home Remodeling Rio o,.nde, 110TOf'Oi
(·
NHd Ellimatoo On Siding .c0n.

lmmed18te Openings For lnve~tory Manager Ar')d Purchasing
Agents At A Local UanufaCIUri""'

110

Serv·U (619) 645-8434
To •those who hiYI .borrowed

T'

;t

,
'!..

wo•k wllh pubUc, knowledge ol

ys

• lnt

'

You Can Find Your Special LOOKING FOR • JOB
.Lobby Desk. May Alio hx Ro· 180 Wanted lio Do
"'
sume To 740-441 -3255. Equa.l
Someone Nowlllll 1-900-370·
3305 En 9855, SU9 Per Mon. Gallia -Me,gs CommuMy Action Opporlunity Empltll'or.
ANY ODD JOBS
Must Be 18 Yrs. Serv-U6t9-33.2· Aganc:y May Be Able To ASS I!II
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch·
6212.

Local BUsinesa looking For Ma·
ture Individual To Work With lit·
lie Supervision As A Cleaning
Technician Call 740·245-0412,

You In The Following Ways;

You .' For Mo;e Information 1-888-

677-6561 .
40
Gtveawey
!966 Mobile hom• lr• acrap or
repair, musl remc~e everything.
55 78
304
:::..:.·.87
::.;..:.~&gt;.::.;
_:...·-~-~~
Border ' Collie/White

ties In Gaii•B County. Oaylime
Work, On A Regular Schedule,

Monday Through Friday,

$~

15

Per Hour,' IJP To 20 Houn Per
Week . We Also HaYe Non-Oriv·
rng Jobs Awailable.
Training : Shon Or Long Term
Training In Fields Such As Com·
pulers, Nursing Assistant, COL
And Others AI Area Scl!ool~

Husk-

Now hiring safe driwe;s1, good
pay, flexible houri. Apply in p41r·
son a1 Domino's in Pl. PSeesanl

,

Overbrook Canter has full lime I
pall time RN, LPN, &amp; STNA posJ·
tiona available for aU shifts, anyone inrerested please top by &amp;
fill our an appll~11ion, 740·9926472. Overbrook Center, 333
Page Street, Middleport, Oh

mixod, I malo, 1 femala: to good Oo Both; W01k Part· Time, AI· 45760. EOE
home. 304-182·2207.
tend Clan Pan-Time. .
OWNER OPERATORS

Female Rat Terrier Spaded, To Sound lntiH'esting : Call 740-387Good Homo Only, 7.00-448-35&amp;1.
7342, 748·446·t018, Or 740·992·

NOW' OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

CLIAII

,

EXT.12_99 Par Uln.

Be Entitled To Receive Your Ola·
betic Supplies At No C(ISI" To

GIEEIIHOUSE

40%

your last job lnten~lew, call St.ve

Announcements
Employmenl : w,·,f, Looking For
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You Ma1 Dr ivers To Perform Oeli~tery Ou· 740-245.0701 .

HUIIARDS

CHEVAliER'S
CARPEl CLEANING

SAiiBfacrlon ~elping families. For

rapid ad -

992-8578.

'I

b~~~~O~h~l~o=Jj 30

~!:~~;;~~~~~

IHCH GROYI ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., I:00 'pM

'

ITURE CO.
I

992-11215

AMERICAN LEGION

..

I
•

1.toQ..as-1217

.

.RUTlAND, OH.

•I

UEETYOUR
COMPANIONI

•Room Addltlona
•NewGaragea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lmerlor A Exterior
Painting .
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIM"A'TES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

profeasian,

quesl A JTPA Preapplic:auct9, .
Tra1ning Period Is Approxi~areb' ,
Four Weeks. Tra ining Wil l @:e '
Conducted In J..larietta. OhiO pr

income

Condi!lon, 740-446-9853.'

MuatBo

•~

I

Wanted To Buy :. Junk Auto's .r'"Y

18Yr&amp;
Serv-U610-845-8434

6

:;

·

--I

304·773-5033.

$2~L~I
·
n.

I

740-985-442~... ~

ROBERt BISSELL
CONStRUCtiON

•

3121/TFN .

.

-·

or

I

Computer Graphics
Daslg'ns
•
;J, All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Servlcea
•Commerc111
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheeter, Ohio

Open 24 H,., ADey
7 DayeAWttk
Hot Breekfalt
. Bl1cult Sandwich,
Hot6 Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Deluxo
All Topping• ·
Calli~,::;- Accepted
7
7·
··- ' .

Free Elltlmllt..
4/t/N 1 mo. pd.

159

.-.

~

full rime auelionoor.
- ally
(A OA
ialoco1ed
Wo•kor
Gon,r•
auction
service. complete
Licensed ~~~~-~~~~~~~~
Experienced
P&lt;&gt;rson Who
HQIIsWork•!
168.0hlo Wesl Virginia, 304· Furnishings, Carpel,
At Least 12 Months AI One Qct
7~~~~304~-173-~54~47::_
.
Treacmonto, Furnllure,
cupotion, Is Now Unemployed Pt
•
To: Tope Furniture, 151 Second Under Employed Duo To A81(111·
90 Wanted to Buy
""""'"· Galpolio, OH 45831.
ness Ciosing Or Cutbeck. And. II
b,;oluit;Tc;p[~:7A~t'ii;i:
Unlikely To Rs1urn To Their Pr..-:.
A
·FRUSTRATED? NO REAL ADious Occupation. There Are A&lt;£
!~~~~~~~~~ VANCEMENTPOTENTIAL?
ditional
GLASS CEILING?
Income IsOualification•.
Not AFac1or.) Howo~er
tl you ••• empfoted and '"' you
,•
are in a no goWI ~Illation, you CM8 To Find Out II \bu Ouallly Please
it to yourseflto consider joining Call 740·367·7342, 740·4~8·
""' L...,.n G10up. Thlr Is a high 1018, Or 740-992-6629 AndRe-

houaahold, 01by Martin, ,740·

THE FUN WAY
T00~Y-1__
- 3,..,._

•~
~·
If You Are Interested In Oblaiilt
ing A Commercial Dr ivers bt";
c::ense As A Truck Dmer And· If
You Ate A Oislotaled Worket.
:

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING

Aelaled cos11

4~53

Full or part lime, salt srarter, rmti·
vated to succ:eed, musl trave
sales experience and be able to

.

To 2 P.M, At The Willi am A~
Molel, Gallipoijs_
"" •'

Box 33, Galllpolia. OH 45831, 74D·

'Pe ' ' I
Antiques &amp; clean used turnitu're,
005
~;;iij~~~rs~o;;na;·~·~·~~~ will buy one pi.,ce or complete

PJ'ofessional Floor ~~~~~~~rrt~~:r·l
-"'
Covering
MEET
NEW PEOPLE

o A..f'f

Jessie, Fri., March 1lth, 1

botomlsl U-F, Early Uornings,
Company Car, Resume To: P.O.

vanntntnl potential, and sell·

FREE ESTIMATES

LAIDSCIPE
DElliII

_,.;7;,;;40-114.:.;;..;;";,1;;;0,;;12;..._~

·'

Jac::kson. Ohio 45640
1i --• us A
•
,_ · · · ·
Guys &amp; Gall With, That ·Just Oq
It Altituder Na Suit! No Ties! Ju.ll
Make Money ! Must Be Free T4'
leave AI Onc:t. we Provide TIW
Ride. No Exper.ence Needed . ~
Positive A.n itude A Musil Sett ·

Gallia -Meigs Community Acliol)
Agency May ~e Able To Assls.l
You With Training." Testing. And

Antiquea, top prices patd." River·
lne Anliques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
R uSe.' Moore oW~et, 740-992 2526

61 •·-"91 5716

614-992-5479

FOOD MfiRI'

a,_

Experienced Pr,ofeaalonal Phle·

Rick Peirson Auction Company,

Campgrounds
Bait 6 11 kl and
6
ac a,
Gen. Me.rchandl~e.
Now &amp; Ulld ltomt. Wt
Buy_ Sell·lir-'•· • 0011,
--. ''
ftthlng equip., . TV'I,
CB's,
atereos - lntto
bit
of everything.
Locllad
on Ohio River Compo
S AI 124
·· •
grounda, 1·
Racine, Ohio.

POMEROY, OH.

1-

CHESHIRE

(740) t85-4180.

0

1

.'

.....

.

389

'
'
PLUS

I

113 .W. 2ND ST.

Ohio River

,

CARPET

JEFF WARNER IHSUUNCE

Take thtl pain qut of .
painting; and let me
do lt'for you.
Interior
Before 6 p.m.
lnve meoaage.
After a p.m.

1

$649
5799

J304) 7,73~5592

·

.

'-...

LIIU'I
Plllftll

NOW

$179.

360° Communications

'

'1999
'2199

$329
$349
$469
$619

CELLULAR PHONES

• Vinyl Sidirig • Soffit
• Fascia • S.OmiHI
Guttlr • Roofing
• bplaaemMIIW'IIIdows
• Slatlanary Docks
• Blown Insulation
•Garoges•Dickt
24ll 24 Pole Building
starling at .$5995
740-092·2772

faciOIY ChOke Only

2nd Street

==::I

Aft 4 ~M
':=;::::e:r:;::·::·

'

.

s.,...,rar
....E

IIAIJ.EDAND
BURLAPPEDTAEES
Norw1y Spruce,
Whlto Pine and
Canadian
Htmloclt
Delivery Avalllbla
"
.,.
Hemlock urove noed
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
Ph. 740-1112·7211

Garages • Repla~ement Windows
Room Ad(lltlona • Roofing

.

0

45701, EOEIESP.

Edfrazierl930
Branda Frazier ,1315.

APRJ L t

NURSER~

· New Homes ~ Vinyl Siding New

94~2168

'999
599

LA·z.BOY ROO! RECL • Oalt Ant- . . tr 0°•alt••• __...;____'5549
LA·z.BOY ROCII RECL Tl'lllflllai.Gr111 or W.. Yllwf
5579.
LA·z.BOY ROCK·RECL Padtltd Ant- .... or GriiiPII Ott
$459
CATNAPPER RECLINER· M11nllll PMbt- Mane tr GMit
$379
IASSm ROOI·RECL 100% LIIIMr· lesltH !free lnw)
$999
lAYNE STATIONERY CHAIR-Mihl Plllt -·$399
lSIILEY WING CHAIRS, CIMrry Trllt- Mam .,·Grill
$329
ASHLEY SWIVEL ROCIEI· 11M Vtlftt
$329

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES
Near.Chtlter on St. Rt. r
740-885-3831
""'""-

#&gt;..

• .. .r

~...

, _ &amp; uoed merchandise.
Saturday 7pm. Ron Price
All MW merchtndlse.

•

102G ChiiiCOihe Pike

and three employer relet'enus by
April 27, 1998 to Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio, 396
Richland Avenue, Athen1. Ohio

MT.ALTOAUCTtON
AI. 2-33 ..CI'DIIrDadl"'
Frtday 7pm. Groceries.

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

II" lalllii ........................'B .OO
!how thldttn .....................17.30
· lhest "kts 01tlor 501 bag

12/18/lln-

Ann C~ipool. RN
SunPiuo Home Care

Community Health. emphasis on
Pl. Pleasant
human sexuality. Advocate fof' re A VIcinity
productive health l11u11. Con·
community . education
3 Family Yard Sale April 17&amp; 18 duel
through apeaklng engagements,
At 87 at Ctarenca Campbell resi·
workshops and developing col donco, Box 218. 9am-?
laboratNe tfklrts throughout eight
Auction
countie•.
Travel required. Even60
Ing and weekend hours-required.
and Flea Market
Send leller ollnterell, resume

."{0~

BISSELL BUILDERS, tNCe

Howard L WrHeeel

1

WAS

s......- "SSn•••

'

799

51099
51 5"
$2299
521"
$3999

.

I

Please Submil Res~me With Set,

ary History To:

EYE HILLS CAREER CENTER,
ADULT SERVICES TODAY AND
REGISTER . 740·245·5334 Ext.
209 ..coS! $&lt;5.00. Class Wilt Be
Hold On Our Rio Gnlnd&amp; ~a-L
Educator· full time lor mullt-county
prlvale non-profit baaed in
Athana, 0 hIo. B .S. or M.S. in

1

WAS
.E;I.I:S,Q_RQQM.~- ; "', ,
PROGRESSIVE 4 P&lt;. PINE DOOR DRESSER &amp; CHEST/WmM .....~---5199
DM14 P&lt;. a., FrncJ. SIJie
$999

ZENfiH19"R..teC.
ZENI'IH 2r R..te C.
.
ZENITH 25" Tallie ..W.Ster...R..te
ZENITH 25• C..... w/R..te-Gokt 3Slyles
ZENITH 27" C..... R..tl"¥q
SllltJ"!
GilSON 15.4 OJ. n. REF. 10 Yr. (a..rtsilr Wwn•r
FRIGIDAIRE 11.0 CU. n. REF.· -4illu SU&amp;Ii· *b '
GilSON 21.0 OJ. n. IEF.· T1t lilt Ills- Gills Ush• $30
Gll$0130• GAS RANGE· 2 Yltr hrts &amp; W.. .
GilSON 30" ELEmiC RAJIGE. 2-1• /2-6• lllwn-Wiilf•
FRIGIOliRE OR GilSON ELKTIIC DRYll· lllny hty
IAYlAG •PERfORMA• WASHER · 10 cydn· 2 s,-1 ,

.

GUtters
DownI pouts
· GUtter Cleaning
•
Painting ·
FREE ESnMATED

Problema ; And How To Do Varl·
oUs Wall Repairs. CALL BUCK·

992·55i3

.

'399
1499

·t. ,

LEHIGH 4 PC. WHm OIL DRESSBI·Min-or/4 Dr. Cltut/Hs•linnl
IASSm 4 PC MAPLE LAMINAR TOPS/TIIplt DrtsHr
VAIIGIIAN·IASSm 6 PC Pt.-Slid W... l• _ , W/St.A
WEII6 PC MEDIUM PINE· C.Yttl fl'llfs· lap Pllces ·W/Sfllll
RIVERSIDE 6 P&lt;. Oalt·Door Dr"Hr-TII-Yiew Mils• Mist •

(

CNA's Current LPN License &amp;
CNA Certificates Are Requlr~.

OuUets: Hand1inQ Basic Plumbing

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED &amp;
SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grove-Ad,
Rlclne, Ohio 45771.
740-949-2461
Pig Gr- .........................16.25
12% (.,....,. HGISI ...........15.60

(614) 992·3838

· Cheater, Ohio

!

'299

Houae • Trllller.Sites
Land Clarlng 6
Grading
Stptlc Sylltem •
Utilities
Estlm8188

985 4422

16/'20

oo•

·~

DUMP TRUCK .
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Llmastone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

1

,

..

HOWARD
I. L. HOLLON
(0.
TRUCKING EXCAVATING
Umntone Hauling

429
5129

PEDESTAL
Strlpl s.ts u . 1 - - - - - : &gt; i i M
5 PC. OAII36• X41• TAILE/4 S,..llck CWn------5469
5 PC. CHERRY 42• ROUND PED; TlllE/41ew lledt a.tn
5599
7 PC. GREEN OR WHm 36• X TAILE/61ew lledt CWn
5799
7 PC. "AJ142• X60• WITH I.W TIL/2 Ant-4 SW..IIIawy lllllt CWn
51299
7 PC. UR PINE 42• X64• X12•1L PO. TIL/611W CWn
51499
OAII TRESTLE TABLE 36• X60•/ltwtJA/41ew lledt a.tn
$799
7 P&lt;. GREEN/NlTIIIALlllF IIDDEN lll./6 Fw bue

(61

•FERTILIZER
e GARDEN SEED
• MULtO
• GRASS SEED

Casting - Movie Extras Produc·

740·991-455,

SI30f9ll 1 mo pes

-

5

---------5169
--------524/529

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10·6 Sal. 10-4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromacherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oit!
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Stuff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp;: ends ·
and we will fiiiJbem.
Rt. 124 Minersville; OH

742·210J " ..W622

Day &amp; Eveninil Hours

'99 .

·--$999
$399

"~our

ft

~------------------~·
-----...,--51500

•

cal Uanufactuung .Company.
Storeroom Experience Helpful
And Computer Uter!lCJ Requtr~. ·
Resumes And Applications W1ll
Be Ac:cepled At Borg W•rner
Automotive. 2160 Eaatern Ave· ·
nue , Gallipolis, OH From 7:30
A.M.- 1:00PM., Mon. - Fri . Ask
for Dixie lnduslrial Supply At The
Lobby Desk. May Alao Fs11 Resume To 740-441 ·3255. E(lual

llon Trainees. Uajor Film Studio
.
614-523-9500.
Pomeroy,
Cool Spot, Coolwitle, Ohio, now
Middleport
hiring for positions of cooks. wai··
treuea, disl'lwaahers and caah&amp; VlctnHy .
iers. Pick up applications 11 The
·e· Mile Yellow Flag yard oalo, Cool Spol
.
Pomeroy/ Middleport. May t·2.
Opporlunily EmpOjer.
DO-IT VOURSELF·ERSI
Aeglo•r. picl&lt; up your ltag today.
Just In Time For Those Spring
AU Yanl SaiH Must Bo Pold In Repairs ... Twelve Hours (Three SunPius Home Health Services,
Inc.
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm lhe Evenlngo) 01 BASIC HOME AE·
day btfore the ad 11 to run, PAIR -· Aptil 28, 29, &amp; 30 From
Sunday &amp; Monday· odhlon· 6:00 P.M. ·10 :00 P.M. Topics SunPha A Rap1dly Growing 01;,
1;OOpm F1111"1'.
Covered Will Be: Repairing Lamp versified Home Health Agenty
Plugs, Swilches, &amp; Electrical Wal Has Several Openings For LPN &amp;

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

SHOP

. l.i

Plan ahead. Call
today lor free estimate

740-992~79

19
130
'239
1789
179

- - - - - - - - - - - -- - -$45

... - . . .. ,.. .,. .

CARPET
Just off Bradbury Ad.
(Look for signs)
. Middleport, Oh

RADIATOR

COUII1RY CANDLE

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
Commercial!
e.Weedealing .
e Tree Trimning
e Shrubbery Moinlenance

TIM'S CUSTOM

1

s--------~-$49

l

75%0H

'

NOW

WAS

WAS
4/111/111 mo

UPGRU£1

t:r
•
11111.

499
'699
1749
1499
1399
111U
'899
1
399 . .
11399
'999
'12U
11199
11499

DADiliOiiiA12P&lt;.IIIt
-----5799
COUNm 2 PC Floral Prllt/Tiftld lledt--------51299
TRADITIONAL2 P&lt;. Fltxsteei/Mane Flenl
51499
COLONIAL2 PC T• Florai/Piew h
5799
CotmMPORARY 2 PC lroWI • I. a.dl
5599
RECLINER SEaJOMALiroR/IIte V1lftl
51999
RECUNER SOFAS Flmteei/Grtti/Cahlllal or Celt
51499
TRADITIONAL SLEEPER/FII Size/. . &amp; ...
5599
COUNTRY SOFA/lovtHGI Oalt Trill/Greet Pdtll
52799 .
COLONIAL3 PC Gr111 I• Yl Florai/Oalt Tllll
51199
CONTEMPORARY 3 PC llfg-IIM-Gr111 Strlpi/Cittrry""'
· 51999
TRADITIONAL3 PC 1...... FlontiStrlpl
51799
COLONIAL3 PC Grill Prllt/Wiod Trilt/R..... &lt;II*
52241
CONTEMPORARY 3 PC
M.lti-Prllt
51"'

CAll

1·740·949·2015

COMPliER
PIRFGRMANCI

at••·

Save Up lo
1

LARRV'S LAWN
CARE

lnvnodia:e Openings For 1st, 2nd.
3rd And ,o\'eekend Shift Storeroom tTooltoom lssuafl At A Lo-

Babysitter Needed Fat Afternoon
Shih, 2 Cnildfen Ages 1 &amp; 4, Rel-

Scrubo, Othw hamal

•Exc.-vating
_/

Someone to do general house· ,
work in my home, must haYe own.
transporta tion, send rellume ~
relerenc:es. tg ; Box Sf · 1B c1a:
Point Pleasanl Register 200
Main St. P!. Pleasant, WV ,

P.OIIo• 604
Jacklon, OH 45640
All Applications Must Be Poll·

ham School Ad Fridoy

~ECLIN E$RS/qi:;l~i.BS .

·BACKHOE AID
DOZER SERVICE

SUE'S .GREENHOUSE
V•rltty, G11llty ••• Llw

Em lo er

EEOIMFVH

25550.
Sweat Shirco and T" Shirll and marked B1 41211118. Equal OpporSTOREROOM ISSUER
Olher Odds and Ends 1535 Gra- tunll)' EmJlkll!er.

----------------~99

. 4/21198.

cep ted Until Position Is filled.

terest And Send Resama To:
l!uckB1o Corrmurily Servlcea

Inside Sa lt New Oaldfiy Sun
Gla11e1 Tomm1 Hill Figu re
Sweat Shirts ana Tee 5nitla, Nike

Help Wanted

B.C.S., with over 50 locations In South·
eastern Ohio, currently has 2 openlnga (live·
In) for a new program In Meigs County. Both
po'sltlons requlra siMp-over.
1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 . pm Mon. thru 8 am Sat.;
daytime houre off;
2) 32 hrs/wk: 8 am Sit. thr&amp;. 8 am Mon.;
We are 'searching for compaaalonate profea·
alonals with a team vlalon and a dealre to
teach peraonal and comiT!unlty skills to
lndlvlduala with mental ratardltlon/developmanhll dlaabllltles. The work environment Is
lnfQrmal and rewarding. The requirements
are: high school dlploma/GED, valid Ohio
driver's llcenae, three years good driving
experience and adequate automobile lnsur·
ance. B.C.S. o:fers comprehensive training In
the field of MR/DD. lnteraated appllcanta
need to apeclfy poaltlon of lritereat and send
reaumeto:
Buckeye Community Service
P.O. Box604
Jackson, OH 45640
All applications muat be postmarked by

Portsmoulh, OH 45682, Or FAX:
740-353-62116. Applicalioni Ac·

Ohio Driver's License, Three
Years Good Dri ving E•perience
And Adequate Automob ile In·
au•ance. B.C.S. Oflars Compra·
henlive' Training In The Field 01
URIOD. lnlerested Applicants
Need To Specify Position Of In·

•10;00 a.m. S.tuniiiY.

MmDMl•·:•::u~~======--f-am_u~Y~·

·NOTICE

Menial Healll&gt; Prindpleo And Crl·

sis Intervention. Competitive
Salary And E1c111ent Benefit '
Packag!l . Fuii·Time Pos lt1on o
Available Immediately. Please
Applj To SMHC, Inc.. Ann.: Per·.
sonnel Director, P.O. Box 1507,

opment.al D isabilities . The Wo•k
Environment Is Informal And Re-warding, The Requitemenls Are:
H1gh School Diploma tGEO, Valid

Thuraday, Friday, Saturday At
Centtnary On Herman Road,
Watch For Signs. Cloth ing ,

In Memory

Knowledge And Background In

Communiry Skills To Individuals

4117198, 8-4

Get the latest in sports news from the

quires A Bachelor Degree And

With Mental Retetdation t Oevel-

446-4759

,r

CounJV Clnlc

ADULT CASE MANAGER - ~
hiO LSW Or LPC, Mull Hav'
32 Hro IWk: a A.M. Sat Thru 8 .OK,_ledgo
Of Communlly SUppc!lt
A.M. lion; We Ate Sea•chlng For Syarem Components: Exten1ive

cinily, 74C-992·32111.

Free Ellimalea

MAY 1 .&amp; 2- ALL DAY

~

1

L01t : ltll point Siamese. one
eye, neulered, Spring Avenue Vl·

70

Ohio,

Pfogrem In Wtl\~ :.unty. Both
fl&gt;tlitlonl Roqulrw
-Over.
1) 4C Hrt /Wk: 3 P. . Mon. Thru
a A.M. Set; lloytlma H011r1 011; 2)

111137.

G1lllpolla, Ohio.45131
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances
20Vrs. Exp.
. Ins. Owner: Riel&lt; JohnsOn

ttelpWanted

tiH.II.WIIiE !ENTAL
HEAI.nt CEtm:A, INC.

CurrtniiY Has
2 Openings (llvo-lnl For ANow
Southletter~

tltl2·!587.
rlef WICotllr 1n Galtipolls Ferr'y on

$25 plus costs; James A. Reiner Jr..
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs;
Nudrat R. Malik, Zanesville, speed,
SJO plu.' cos!S: Andrew· J. Fizer.
Huntington, W.Va .. speed, $50 vlus
costs; Lonnie G. Cook, Jamestown,
Tenn., seat belt, $25 plus costs : Eric
R. Mitchell, Rutland. p&lt;issess Ohio
native endangered species without
wriuen permit. $100 plus costs;James M. Sciva. Pomeroy. seat belt.
$25 plus cosL~: Timothy S. Gambill,
New Marshfield. no fuel use tax
sti~ ker.,$20 plus costs: mud tlnp violation. $20 plus costs;
Randy A. Wheeler. Racine. seat
belt. $25 plus costs; Fr.mk R. Mamhout. Racine. seat belt. $25 plus
costs.

110

Help Wanted

F~r female German Shepherd

mill puppies, "'4()..742.0202.

6629 To RequeSI AJTPA Proopplicl!lon.

Fret .manu to for hauling, 140-;

OaiHI·,.,•Ig• Community

FrH To Good Horne: 6 Kinena, 11

8010 North Stale Route 7

992-7770.

Action Agoney
~a Box 272

Malo. (Farnafol, Ready To Go 41: CheBhire, Ohio 45620.0272
24/g&amp;, Come Pick Our Your Fs.'l
wrilo Nowl740-441-12tlll.
: Equal Opporwnity Employer
In Bradbury, ob week old smal lI
110 OWADI
lemale Chow puppy, _740·9g2·' :. _ _..;__......;,_ __
5328.
I
DRIVERS
1
Long Haired ~llttnl, Gra, &amp;
soow::r.:~

·

411 3584
atack. 74C!-4 ·
·

Ou•en atze watet btd, txcellent

condition, six monrha old, 740·
7 1705·
110 Loll and Found

*

.

-end.

Homo Every
HHIIh tnuance Provided

...,::::,~~:..,t
Plana. Flrscln Firlr Out

Dlitp18Ch. Latellodol Conv.
Tltll&gt;'&gt;rl W~latbl&lt;l Trailarl.
eompetl!iYa Aty
Ptr&lt;anl8gt 01 Gron
Contaet ·

. - iiiWARO
For return ol blaclllbrown German
Shephardta""' fram Edith Rag"" farm on Rod!TIIId Ridge. An· ~-:--':..;·800-8~::54.::.;'4,;.;1~57,;.;.~-::1wera 10 nama •chanc::t: No ~
quoltlon• oak. Cal JOhn Rogers Earn 11.000 w.. kly Stuffing En·
1-eoo-217-Q$78.
vtiOptl At Home. Start Now. No
·
E•perleMe. Fret Supplies, Info.
Found: 2 Small Young B.. glo No Obligolion. Send LSASE To:
Dogl, No Colora Or Taos. In Eu· Ace, Oepl: 1351, Do• 5137, Dia·
rtl&lt;a Area, Coli To ldtntlly. 740· monel lllr, CA QI78S.
256
::.:::t111;.,:7l;_
· --:--~-:-::::::-1 Earn 11 ,000 W-y. SNI!Ing trJ·
Loll' Wodntldll· lwo reddish vtlopoa. no prior •porlenco, lrH
dogl. 11111a ancf fllllllt. CR Cltralta. otnd SASE to: N.B. Dept
11 (~lngobury Ad.) vlcinlly, 740· t74·301 Ea11 Stll Avo. Sulto 112
81!2-4110.
Cortlcw, Ttnt 75110.

::
-

'

FLEET OWNERS
WAtm:Df '
Flotbl&lt;laOnly
Compe ~IMt Pay,

· Hoolth In• Available
'Coni8CI
1·1100-154-4157
Parts Manager Needed, Exp8ri·
enced Necesur y, No Phone
Calta. River Front Honda, Galipo·
li' Ohio.
Plea11nl Valley Hospital il looking lor a part -rime Phermac:ist.
Mull be licensed or eligible for
lictnsure In WV. Hospllal experi ·
ance a plus. compu1er slcltls a
must. Applicant should han

good c:ommunic.aU on 1ncl Iuper·
viaory stulll. Send rtsume to BUI
Barker, Aulstant Erecuriva 'Di·
· rector, Pleasant Valier Hoapl1al ,

lng, !lower beds. land leaping ,
sidewalks, edging, mowing .

etc .... Free Eslimates. Call Bill
304-67~ 71, 2.

ANY ODD JOBS
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmod. mulch-ing, flower beds. landscapmg; .
sidewalk
edging .
mowmg ,;
etc ... Free Est1mates. Call Bill

30&lt;-875-7112.

B&amp;B lawn Mowmg &amp; Land scapIng, Experienced Prolessronal :
Services, ComPetitivo Rates. Free.
Estimar•s . 740-388 -8060 , 740 ·

256-121g.

Dependable n,an will mow. !Ill '

small gardens, pain!, pyt up hay,
etc. Free EstimateS. 304·675·

3628.
Oustbuste•s Profess1onal CleaninQ, Commercial And. Aesidenu at:

CalloAhe&lt; 5:00 ~M .
Frae EsrimaHtS.

740·388-9422,

i
repa ir, refinish and re s· •
torahon, also custom ord&amp;fs. Ohio •
Val ley A.~finl sl'\l ng Shop, Larry ~

PhillipS, 74.0·992-6576.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don 'l

haul your !ogr to the mill just call

304-675-1957.

Jones Lawn I Care Sitfv"a, Free

Eslil'halel, 740-245--058e.

Lawn Servlc4, 740·4411-3103.
Shi'-r'l lawnCirt Service, Fre&amp;

Estiintttel, Caii74C-441-ll31l

•

2520 Valley D~" Pl. Pleaaanl, W111 Care FOr Elderly Or t-~andi­
wv 25550. AA/Eut;.
capptd Person In My Home, Roll .
POSTAL J08STO StUll lilA. erences. 740.44f.1536.
Inc. Bentlill. No Experttnce. For
App. lind E•am Info.. Coli 1·800·

113·3585, Ext 11474, B A.M. ·9
P.M.. 70.,. fda..ino.
R. .f E11111 s.tes Pefson Want..

W~l Mow lawns In Gallia Counly:'
7~0-446· 3.248.

. .

FINANCIAL

td, Gallla County Area. Full Or 210
Business
Part·Tlmt. Sond Ratumtt To
~0. Box 230, Jack..,, OH 41&amp;40 --Opport~_un_H.:.Y-.:..
AI Rlploo ~ ~llilf.
HOT NEW DIET EARN THOU·
Rolialllo btby alnor ,......, ,., SANDI While Losing Weigh\
tmo. ald. muat hi'M refMMtC:tt. New U.L .M. Opportunity, Call 1·
304-1175-73112.
888-817-998&amp;

•

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

320
IIOliCEf

OHIO VALLEY PIJBIJSHIIG CQ
recommends that you do buai- • wllh people you k,.,, and

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

350

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1878 Schultz

1t87 Schultz 14x70 exc. cond.

· mail until rau have invearJ-l&amp;d

new urpelthto'ughout, ctnlral
air, vented gaa htat.r, all electric. Asking $10,200. 304· 773·
5170.

~

II )OU llavo on ootablilhed bull·
ne11 and unused parking space,

f:.:Y. If quality
to be a U·Haul
inrarealitd cau 800-282117!1.
230

Professional

Services

1885 Clarion llabllo Homo 2
Bedrooma, 2 Batha, Gaa Flrao'-ce. Garden Tub On Rental Lo~

1, • Acr-

finonclng Avolloblo, 740·245-

1738l:-.Mf'twgt

e~peri ­

onco -875-2145.

111Timo Buy-, ·E·Z Arencing
2 or 3 Bed:oom. AnNnd 1200 pw
month. Call crHit line 1·800·

941-!1878.
DoubiiWide

l1.8850ownS218Porlnckldolllolivlfy And Sot Up
Calf t-800-251-5070
All real estate actveniSing In
this newspaper is sut&gt;jecl: to

1M Federal Fair Housing IV1
at 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertiH •any preference,
limitation or discrimination
ba50d on race, color, ""!lkln.

sex. famtllatatalus or natiOnal
ortgin, or any.lntennon to
make any SUCh preference.
lim~atlon or disctimination:

acMntaed ·In this newspapet'

are available on an equal
-'"nily basis.

Prices On Cuh Purchoesl
Centenarr Road. 1 Acre MIL

land Contr11c1 Possible 111,000
Approx 114 Ulle From New City
Schaollocalion, 740--1738.

Empry lol on Spring Avenue, Po·
meror, 13200 , 740·843-5283,
leave met.Ugt.

·Now taking application• for moblte home loti. all tlzea. Country

nancifliiU II "'e.304-7&amp;&amp;-711U.

Real Estate
Wanted

Caah Paid For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Realty, 7•0·

44Hl008.

Al10ndon -Homo OWnoro:

Arou La-! l,..,tory 011-·
therm &amp; Col1m11n Htat Pump1,
Air Conditioner~, Furnacea I
Pllll. Hugo Buying Powor Mea,.
TIHt Lowest lnorallad Price, Euy
Over TIHt Phono Bonk Financing.
Call flennon'o l.lolllle Homo HTG
I ClG 1·1100-872·51M17.

BUY IN AI'RI.

.No f'lll"'""" Unlll.lJiy 11198

RENTALS

410

Houses for Rent

Johnton'a uaed Furniture:
Waohor, Drroro, Hutchll, Dl·
nona's. RalriQorltoro. s-t. TalBYialona. Llvlngroom /Bedroom
SUIIOI, 740·448-4039, 740·418·
1001.

W1UJA11 ANN MOTEL·

I11SECONDAVEIIIIE
-

vn

WEEKLV RATES
SINOLEU110.00 WEEKLV

460 Space tor Rent

Junk, apprax. two rona of lunk
cheap; also l&gt;obr go11; 740-1148a.tobile home alta available bet· 30 12.
ween Alhena and Pomeroy, call I = = - - - - - - - 74Ch'l85-4387.
Kenmore H-y Dory 10 Woshor
1 And Drver. Almond, Wuhor
470 •·wanted to Rent
Neodo Ropalr, *'so OBO For
HELP WITH PROPERTY TAX· I;Bo=f1~740
:::_-44~!--.Q;_l.:.;3S~.- - - ES?
largo block enllrlairvt'ljlm coli You Hove 200 Or Mora Acrao $75. Fu-Ton 135. 304·875-~822
In Golllo Or Meigs Co., f Would afttr 5pm.
Be lnltrtslod In Loaolng The!=::..:.:;..::_ _ _ _ _ __
Hunllng .Rtghta To Your Property. Large couch, lika new, beige and
1 Am A Reaponlibte Sportsman·, "ay, Clll 7G-i85-31'1188.
And Con Plr 15.00 Or More P111
Acre Per Year. 11 lntereatad, Movie Cam Corder Model 127,
Please Call Collect Bob Mars. Used 3 Tin~to. Afmoll Uk1 B..nd
:JU-512.2249,
Newl All Allachmontl, $800, 740·
441-o387.
MERCHANDISE
Now Thai Spring Is Here It Is
Time To Srock· UP On Your Avon
Sklln·SI&gt;·St&gt;ft Uolature Suncare
Coli Pam AI 740510 Household
Goods
Pomeroy Tlvfft Shop now buying
Appliartces:
Recondllioned large outside toya and ba~y

2 bedro~m house
encea 1 deposit
304-67S-3ot24.

Waahera, Dryera, Ranges, Refri·
ara1o11, 90 Day Guarantee!

2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis,

7795. ·

- - - - - - - - - - 1 French Clly Maytog, 740·448·

WiD Hook·Up, CIA, No Smokera
Or Pets, Rel&lt;lrencoo &amp; Deposll, GOOD USED APPLIANCES
7&lt;40-256-,190 Between &amp;-9 P.M.
W.ahera. dryen, refrlgeratora,

E·Z Flnanclno

CoiF-Line
1·100 811 !1878
fnlo S.Hip &amp; llolivlfy

ranges. Skaggs Appllancaa, 78
3br House in' New Haven, V(V. VIne StrHt, Call 740·448·7398,

Now Ctay10n llobllo Horno Fow
Months Old,Gardon Tub, On
Largo Rantod Lol, Soli Cheapl
740-448~28.

$335/mo. • deposit. 304·773· 1·1100-41111-3-488.
561! ·
Ralrl~.,r $75: Cryer $95: Eloc-

Items, walketl, loddler car IHll,

ole. TuMdar through Friday, 740,
992·3725.
Pool Tabla 8FT Sla1o Top Brunowick CompleJo wilh Sllcf&lt;o, Bolls,
Rackl, cover, New Fell, Ughta.
Excolfonl Condldon. (740)4418217 Eveninga

2 Apanments In Rlo Grande lrlc Range $95; Nice Wuher
Are~ :

Acron From Collego. 1 $150; Nice Side By Slda Rolrlg·

Roorii;-1 Ba1h, Utllllitl Included, erator Waler &amp; Ice In Door, $350
1200/Mo. Cepoait Required;. 1 1 Year Warranty: G.E. Washer
Bedroom Aparrment, S2901Mo., $205 like New ·1 Year W•n•ntr.

REAL ESTATE

Ulililits Included, 1-888·810· Skaggs Applloncao 78 Vl~a
0521 .
SrHI, GaWpois, 740-446-7388. .
Two bedroom house, clean, re·
trlgerator, no stove, no inside
peta. deposit required, 740~992·
3090.
hous~a far renl in Pomeroy,
conlacl W~s ai74Q.882-!600.

Twa

420

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

We Moved! Und Furniture StOft
Below The Holida11M In Kfnau~

R I I Fumlfu,. ·

ga, Ohio. Btda, Ortaltt'l, Couch·

....,wv

a1, Manruau, Ect. Hrs M- T-W.

Bur. Sell. Tilde

10·4, (740)448-4782

520

Ulled I Antiquu

Furniture.
30&gt;1·773-5341.

Sponlng
Goods

Mower, Driven By
Motor &amp; Trai1amia-

Remington 870 Wing Master

-2 ·&amp; 3 btdroo'm mobile homtt

12Qa. lull choke. $250. 304-1753824.
.

Raor End. 740·245-

t280·S300. aewar, warer and
- - . 740·11112·2187.

2 Bf&lt;!room Booullful RIVer Vlow

Referencea, Depoall,

3 Ot 4 Bedroom ~h. Optional
Famllr Room, CA. 2 Balhl, In·
Ground Pool, Extrul $73,000
7~1173.

Large Hflclton or uted homes. 2
or 3 bodroomo. Slardng 11 $21185.
Quick delivery. CaH 740·985·
8121 .

3 or 4 Bedroom, IWO
tlylt manuhlclurM type
UOOoq. •fl. ShuaiOd on 0n0 acre Make 2 Payment• MOve In No
of ground, Rayburn Rd. 1(4 Milt Payrnenta After ' Year1, 304-7315olf Sondhlfl. Additional acreage 7285.
avolloblt. po~cofut, prlvott,
Now3BedraomHome
cou~1rr soiling. t82.soo. 304·
Only $189.00 Rot Monlh
1175-1286~.
1-800-251·5070
4 - m Homo On 2 City LOll,
2 Blocks From Now W.I·Mart. Now. 1998 11110 lhrM bedroom,
lncludn 8 months FREE lol rent.
f48,000- (740)4-48-1914
lncludel aklrtlng, delu•e 111p1
Charming counlry horM- in Wtlt 1nd aetup. Only $187. 08 per
Columbia, minu111 hom town, 8 momh 'with $1075 down. Call 1·
room1, concrele driveway, 800-337·3238:
t71,818, 304-773-5371,
NEW lANK REPO'S Onlr 3 lelll
lAg homo, 2 bedioomo, 2 baths, '$1111 under warranly, owner fl·
hllf l&gt;ooomanl, lillie appliances, nancing available. 304·755·
full porch on fronr, deck, MUing 711i11.
on 5 acrea, Wl3 car garage,
St20,000, 740·892·7788 all• 8 Now Doublewlde 3BR, 2 bath.
I 1,325 Down &amp; $205 oor mo. 1·
pm,
Middleport, beautiful_two oiOry, 3
br, 2 balh, largo .l.r. I fr., oak
doors I ~im. Srnilh'e cuotom 011t

cabinltl, Jenn-alr rano•. dilh·

_.,.,, detached ga,.go, br oppolt-~ 740-892:5243.

NO pexlt

Foslor"l MOI&gt;II&lt;I Homi Pork, 74044HI181.

2 Badrllom Mobile .Homo, Rofor·
encea Required, No Pets, Rent
Pluo llopooi~ 740·446-431 3, 740·
' LfllfTED OFFER
1Diil8 Ooublawlde 3br, 2 baths. :U8-o871.
$1.699/down $259/mo. Onlr al
or ro~dential. 487 1/
OakwOCR! Homos Nllro, WV 304· Conwnorcial
2 S. Rl. 1 H. 740-448-4263 altor
756-5615.
•

886-928-3426.

ipm.

530

3 bedroom HUD acceplad, dopolil required, $295/mo. ~-8757783.

Bur or sell. Riverine Antiquea,
1124 E. Main Steel, on Rl. 121,
Pomeroy. Hauu:· M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m. 10 e:oo p.m .. Sundar 1:00 10
8:00 p.m. 740·982·2526, Run
Mootl CJWIF*,

Small two bedroom moblll horno
larrtnlln Racine, 740-11112-50311.

440

Apanmenls
tor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta, fur·
niahed and unturniahed, security
deposit required, no pill, 7•0·

992·2218.
'
•
1 Bodfuom Aparrmant, S.,ve, Relri~lor Included, No Pots, 740·
446-2583.

tbr aparnnenr, private, qulel. De·
goal!. Rof8t'ence10 1250/mo. 304·
llrlo, hl9h 70's 2 Bedroom, 2 87'5-1550.
Bath, County Water, Euy Ac·
casal 7 Milea From Jackson, 13 2 Bedroom Aparlmtnt On Firal
Mllea From Rio Granda Call Awnue, GaMipoi&amp;, 740-448-8221.
(740)288-7200
2 Bedroom Apartmenl, Utilities
Paid, $425/Mo., $100 Oepooi~ No
OAKWOOQHO'U
Barbounvllle WV. largest Oou · Pel• . 740·448·1637. 740· 418·
blewlda Display In 26 Yoaro Sg99 3437.
Down, 304·l'38-340G.
2bdrm. apts., lotal eltotrlc, ap·
hqmas. Payment• •• lew

11

SilO. Coli now 30&gt;1·755-seB5.

3711 . EOH .

SPAINOIPECIALI
S4"Down
t.tFlled-

1 ...... 148.000. Pal Moyes Ra- · UffOm Rlalry /Bolter Homos
• Oor*1&amp; 304-733-7140. •

..-mall ... Pt. p,....... 4 Bed·

roem, 2 bath. grtll condllion.
011804-417'5-7121 - · gpm.
...., Yfow 3 Bedrooms, 2 Balhs,
' fii.Giaund Alai. 740-25e-83113.

. S1t11Mo. Plvn•U
l17,. . ooo11R.

BEAUTIFUL API.ATMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wellwood Drl,.
lrom $271 10 1358. Walk lo ohop

-Dofftreoy.
OnlJ AICW!woo•llomea

&amp; movies. Call 740-US-2568 .
Equal Housing ()pporluniiY.

- · W!l, 304-711f1.88111

Furni1hed Elficlency Aparunent,
Central Heat I Air Condlllonlng,
Cart&gt;ol Throughout Pnvall Park·
lng, All Ulilllitl Furnllhed E1cop1
Electric, Privati &amp; Quill, 740·

flol.up

TAX SPECIAL
Now 3br IG89/down l189imo.
Froo Sot-up &amp; Delivery. Onlr 3
Lefll Onlr II 0 . - Homes NItro wv. 304-755-SieS.

Viry Nlco, 18180 Fledmln 3 Bed·
raoma, ·2 FuH Baths, Garden Tub,
f&lt;ltchon Applloncoo, Contra! Air,
Deck, Already Sar Up On Lot,
-.ov VIIIQI II, 4 Bedroorno, Takl
Over Paymantl Of 12111 Par
.... Ronch Wllh 24&gt;24 Oelached
·
740 116 0571.
lnoulalld H••ed Garaeo: Family
floom Willi Flrlfllace lnllr~ Eat·
111 Kltchon Wld1 Oak Cablnolo,
Foncld In Back Yard Roady To
111 ....000, 740-245-5114e.

446-2802.

Furnished Efficiency All Ulllltltl
Paid, Sha,. Bath, $115/Mo .. 917
Second Alronuo, GilllpoKI, 740·

44&amp;-3848. .

-

..

Groclouo living. 1 and 2 bldroom
apattmlnlo 11 Vlllep M,onor and
Rlvarslda Aplrunonto In Mlddl•
pori. From 1241·1373. Coli 740·
992·5014. Equol Housing ~­
tunitiea. .

Two bedroom apartment In Po-

moror. ulillllll pokf, no pall,

892·!5858.

340

BualnHS and
Bulldlnga

RoUIII Fabric &amp; Nofion Shop for
sale. 304·175·8454 or 304·875·
7~.

740-

Now Taking Appllcallono- 35
Wtat 2 Bedroom Townhowll
Aporlmenlo $295/Mo., 710·111·
0006.

Sunquoll Wolf tanning bed, good
condldon, $1100, 740-742·1341.

4671.'

Ty Beani't Bablea Rtatonably

1 Pc. Bathtub l Shower Wllh
Matching Commode Vanity &amp;
Plumbing Ezcollaril Condlllon,
$300 740.:JII8.1f155. .

Washer &amp; Drver 1150, 740-4482003.

Pric:edl740-448·8051.

1985 Hondo 200 All Terrain 3
Wheeler, Automatic, New Tlrea,
Runl E&gt;callonl 740-245-5884.

1981 Cub Cada1, 18 hp. super
tractor, e&lt;r mowtf deck. excellent
condition, 13800, 740·992-2219
l\l6r'llngl.

Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI
$2t ,g5 Per 100: 1" 200 PSI
137.00 Per 100: Allllfo11 Coni,....... flllinalln SIOdt
RON EVAN) ENTERPRISES
JoclciiiH\ 01116, , -IIOQ.537-8528
Wadding Gown a·Vall For Sale
Size a!,to (White' $50 Coli 740.
448-1478.

1984 Murror Mower 11 HP 38"
Cui E•cellent Condition, 1400; 20
Gaga llouburg Combo 740-448~~5.
.

Wedding Gown·Beautlful ivory
aequiMd, re.embroldered lace,
olzo 10 wllh veil. Onlr 1225. 304·
875-8040.

740~241-

Whirlpool Washer, I Cryer G.~.
&amp;locrlc Rango, &amp; G.E. Wollter, &amp;
Gu Dryor All 11ems $75 Each-,
740-448-C118. .

1887 Honda 400 ATV

.

While Slnglo Bed With Nice Mal•
UOII A!o1 Springs, 1100;'5 P~
98 T~k Wood Dining Room .Dineuo Sot Like Now S85, 710·
Tobit, A· I Condlllonl 740·441· 4411-7885.
4817.
Building
Amazing Mllabollom erook
Supplies
Tlwougfl. Looo 10 to 200 ltto., Call
Far fra• con1u11at1on and Fr. .
Block, brick, loWer pipet, wind·
sa,.. (7401441-18112
owo, llnlalo. Ole. Cloude Winllrl,
Aro 1\lur Looking For Avon Pro- Rio Grande, OH Call 7'0·245·
ductl Bur Oonl Know Whirl To 5121.
Find Them? Also, If You Would
Llko To Soli Avon, Call Pam AI 560 Pets for Sele
740-2115-5443.
A Groom Shop .p01 Grooming.
Boulnat, playpen, orroUer, Featuring ':l.dro Bath. Don
~'
iwlno. woliter. high chair &amp; car Sh oola. 373 -ao• Croo k R•·
-L 875-4548
740-446-0ZI1 .
Mlnlllurt f&gt;lnchor 11moa.
Birch KIU:hon Coblnoll. Compiolo
10 soli duo 1o
Wllh Countor Top Lazy Suoan,
Oouble Slolnfuo Stool Sink, &amp;
Built .,
740-371-ttto.

s-.

a.,..

8ofons
Trac~or 11 HP. eri
Inch Mower Deck, 1 · Fl. No
Blades, Garden Dllk. Tlroo Wlllt
Chtlno. Nledo Minor Work, &amp;500
080,7411-371-2730.
Brand Now! Gr101 Glfll CDMdeo
olorap unit Block and clltrry.
N- out of box. $125. HofdoiiP
840 dlaao, a110 hOidl tapat,
740·112·1831 after 1 pm.
&amp; ..... '"".,._,

A Ptaco To Soli Your
lfomo 0 own _ _, C:..b7
~ -lotblo ar I-lion o1
buoy~ (U.S. 35) IOUiheall .
af Jlc'kaorl. Call ror detail•
(740)211-7200 r2pm epm

~ARr.1

SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

610 Farm Equipment
2 Farmall Cub With Culllvatoro.
Ford 800, Forcl641 , Ford M1,
I.I.F. 35 Dioaol ·2· 135 M.F.. 2000
Ford 01- P.S., ·2· 3000 Fordo,
3800 Ford 0i8111 P.S.. Posl Hofa
Oiggera, Grader Bladeo, Plows,
Oirt Scoopo, Bush Hogo, Finish
llowaro, 3 PT. Rololffloro, Hay
Tedders, N.H. 5e Hair RaitH, N.H.
"
I Spoaro, ""'"''e
Hay Bind • B11
Spreadar,
M.F. Disc,
Boom Fofao,
Side Or...., For Far . .ll Cub 0t
110, Parts For Ford l M.F. Koo·
ael'o TrKior l Equlpmen~ 1 Mite
Wet~ Holzer Hospllal, ~ackson
Pike, Gallipolis, OH , 740·448·
8908, ·740-448-7787.
·
110 Jo"" Deere Log Skidder, E•·
callanl Condlllon $10.000 (740)
379-2427
Baol The Spri'!Q Rush, gal your
mower• &amp; vlmmar• .tuned up

now. Sldo(s Equipment H~er·
.:;aon:;;;_,WV.=·.:;30«::.:..:~75-:..:.;74:::21;;.··---·I

.

~

.1885 Ford Thu-d VI, AulD,
Good Condition fiiQO. (740) 361o8310 .
1985 Otdo Rogencr 88 AoklnG
11,000 Golds,..Mic-IVO With
Turn Table UO; Couch I Chair
Indian Daolgn, 1150, 740·3111Be10.

HMMI Ford F!SO XI.T 414, loaded,
4800 miloo, $20,750. Mar enter· ·
rain
truck trade, 740·11$2!
8154
·
1ee8 Chevr . Cha..111 as,ooo
milto;..,c. cond, now drtoS700. · 81 Branoo 11'111, ucollonloonci- ·
30&gt;1-675-8728.
lion, 14,1100, 740-892-1036.

1968 Oldl O&amp;lla 88 aulq, llkt
-304-675-2358.
·
1G87 Pontiac Grand-Am 4cyl,
IUIO; AJC, now ti,.o, IIC. cond.
II •1100
-89·
•-7 ~· 89"
. ~~ ~ - · ~
3080. ·
1118FonfE.-"GT
Rod In Color, Ti,_.New, Loaded,
Suh Rool64,000 Mills
11,000
C30414M-1811
1989 Cavoller 2.0 1 Crllnder
Auto, Air, High llllu, St,500,
304-675-1310.
18110 Eagle Talon, red, 5 opeed,
looks and runa e~~ee..nt, teoi5,
740-892-oo53.
1992 Bulci&lt; ~bro SE, - · 4
Ooor Sodari. EIICeilenl Condhlon,
1 LOCII OWner, Call eP.I.I. 740-446-1543.
1882 Plymouth Lu• AulD, AC,
Crulst, Tlnled Wlndowo, New
Tlret, Greal Ga1 Mhaget 304~

._Hf'

740

foro,.,......

Eaat

.108743

St.blel

• 6 4 3
• Q J 10 1

6 Raecal

...

J 10 5 2
• 2
•• 7 5

A972

1891 -

Solo Ot T,.do: 1894 S·tO Pick·
Up, LS PIICioago, V-1, Sltlrpl 740Tobacco Plante For Sale, R•· _.
~4~.~:---~:-:::---.,.44!!6~81111
. urn For May Planting. Danny . _
AKC R... Mini Dachohundo 1 0-uret. 3o4•8n .1733 l ..vo 1115 Ford Rongor XLT 4011,
:~::: 51 -14 44 S2SO Etc!&gt;. "" p
•
5opd, loodtd, 11,000 mllu
Sled Fenlllzer
11.725. co11 atmr 1pn;. 1104-875-

850

1

11·8. Fish Tank &amp; P11 Shop, Dokolb Sood Corn. K11 Forma.
2413 Jacltaon ~vo. Point Pllll· Calf 304-875·1508-lf NO An-r
.... 304-175-2083.
Lioore M-gt.
;;.;.;;.;..;;.;IPI=UAI.:;_OC-K-1.1111=-&amp; FIRTIUZIII
I·1m fooltlng tor 1o0 forrttllf you
oro lhl poroon who bOu~hl 1hom Compltll Blinding &amp; SprHdlng,
from lilt Ark lboul onf .y10r ago Localld: Nw GIIIOI County Llno,
ptout call mtlf Fer,.to nomao 1 112 l.llle South Of Stale Route
B&lt;ondy,lnd THitit Pl!ono (740) 271, On Jlrnol E(hOry Road, 0o1t
441-1419
.Hill, 7401-.

12' Aluminum Y-b0!1111'11 Jon bOlt,
One awivel aut. carpeL oara I
!rolling otolor. 1250. 304-875·
5411.

ImP 1g 11211, dHp· v.
w1aand Interior, ecyl,

1888 Saa

1110hp. llorcrulser Inboard motor,
wllh uaiJer, llfJ pr11erven I
bumporo. 12.750. 814 441 3114.

..••

~::.:::"'• MAW--

v.otctno,

TRANS PORTA T!DrJ

1894 Borlinor 18.5 FL 4.3 V-8 Engino And Custom Trallor Wllh
flrlkoo Low Hours, 11,500, 740..
2!18·1130.
.
1898 18 Fl. Marada Wllh 4.3
llorcrul.. r And Tralllr, Llko Now:"
1G98 15 Ft. Aluminum Sta
Mymph But BoaUI Wllh 30 HP
Evonrudo &amp; Trollor Loaded
Ready to Fllh: 1895 20 Fr. Bay·
liner Cuddy Wllh 4.3 MtrcruiMr,
I TraKor Low Hours: 18110 18 Fl.
Pl~lymo Ski Boat Wflh IB HP
Evonrudo &amp; Trailer: 1880 11 Ft.
VlklnO Ooclt Boat Comt&gt;llloiY Rocondliloned lntorlor With tio HP
-.rser IT.-; 1 Used 5 11
2 HP Johnson 1 U11d 40 HP
Morcury; 1 UMII 50 HP Mtrcurw
1 Uood 110 HP MOfcury; Now
Morado Boatl Now Odyaotw
Pvnloon ..... J.. s. Marino 740~180.

K-..kl STS Jal aid, olllf uhdaf.
warr~nr,, lhrH BMter, 83 hDrM·
powor, bOughl ~ow Julr of '17,
lhreo n1111chlng Kawaaakl akl .
veata and lraller all go With It,
$5000, 140-M-2203 or 740-84G20•&amp;. will consider trade' tor .1

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

GI~'\JS
GL.Ovlf-1
l&gt;~PT.
•

• •

•
THE BORN LOSF.R

...

....

.
DO~I ~.De.lol.,

~C;.::i c.d'-Dl'!l, ~I-£(,{) .

I

lt-rrO 11li. MNL,.
1.-~01:1 ~ '{ltt 1'0

~'ffi"-1 ...

~f#Wt.

TIIUE~ ""
'ffi\t-11:0~ ~ ;
CAA'T OOYI

BIG NATE
TH-'T'~. ONL'( eECAUSE I
• HAIIEN'T PUUEP OUT .
TilE HE.'IV'I' ARTILL.ERV
.VET! &amp;U'l" ':&gt;T... RttNG
NOiol, I'M GOING Tl:l •
~H~NC.f. HER! I'M
GOING TO SWEEP HER
OI'F HE~ f'EET t

760 Auto ,.... &amp;

·Acceaaortn

'(UP, r'l1
GOtlof\!o TO
CONVINCE
HER WAAT
/lo.. GREAT

GUY I·
/lo..M!

24' i:•r trailer wllh 1oolbo1 and

•

,.,.,.. 140-742-2875.

·wA¥:..:..0
UncondiJianall\fetlmt ouaran....

lOCI I rtltrtnc:ta ft.nnlahed. £a.
llblllhed 1175. Ctll (740Fl.:.!~
0870 Ot 1-600·217-0178.
Wollr-'1ntl.
··
·

Fac10ry S-10 W - (740) 4411418

CIC Genoral Home Main·
renonca- Palndng, vinyl lldlng,
corponry, - .. windows. bafhl. • .
ho. . l'lflllr and ...... For : •
,.. olll. .to ..nCllll, 740-892· .

,..wf11i!·

a

olon, und,r WI r,.nly. U,OOO

080. 301-812.311f10.

5323.

840 'Eiectrlclllncl
Refrigeration

1815 Cllavy Btu. 4 WD Sifwtrtt. Rllicflnllal or wiring,
do Loaded, Am.Raclng Rim, , - llrVicl or r.palro. llultt l]. • '
31&gt;11115 Owl'ltloto 14,100 bBo conoid tloctrlclan. Ridenour •
Eleclrlt;t~l, WYOOOIIOI, 1104-175- • '
740-3117-1)157.
. 1786. ...

I

~~~~!~~--~

ca.. tor al!lafl

v

:::r...

t9 Cfrcue1111.._. ,

artie in

21

v.ry..ty

U~n=
c....

23

21 Honor 1
2~ COI'don-

•,

29~
~
by 4eoOoWn •

30 FOI!MIIy

,
•

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-

43 lt'a a lang
.
atoryt

;
•·

44 MoWdln

,.

SO\IND 50 MOURN FIJL..

47 COlombian
•
city
~
48 Clrcua 11111m11 ~
41 Engtlah
~

-poaw

50 lbp dllaclkM ~

52 Nahoor aMep ~
154 Baby'a _ , ~

•
~

'

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:•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

ctt'11100fiiT'I' ....
,.lAd
E...,_,.,.
__fromlo&lt;_..... r_..cA.oociiPIIIJPI,
...... V

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crtMid

QUCMikJM Dyflmoul

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v·o

8

T A J

VJGOSR,

IIINOOGVKL

COIKO

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ZR

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XACBKYJM . '

C~GOZNLGOM

CZIOGJO

y K

8 K· . 0 K I

K Z J

·PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "To lax and to pie-.
wiaa, Is not·given lo men .• - Edmund Burke

no

.

·=~"!'mb~'!..,:,

aAY

o(

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!•

POUAII _,....;_ _ __

:::

'

low to 1 - four oimplo wardt.

NK T ET

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H E L WI

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h:-tE__,;Rn-S.,o_sT·-1· ~

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4
.........,__.__......,__..._......, •

I
.

Sci erice can predict II n
~ciipse many years in advance but can not accuraleiy
~~e-d~c-1 _t~e weather ~~e~Jhe ,

I

EFNAX
.........IL:...::rl...;...;l~;.;~~6~~~7~
O
1

Complete the chuckle quoted
~y ftlling in the missing words

' ·

I

1

Friday. Aptil 17. 1998
ScverJI neW objective~ will be
established fo~ the year ahead which
may not. su~tain your intei'Clit very
long. Tins could cause you to go to
back to old endeavors and this time
finish them with o proud Ooulish.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Toda'y your rewards will be in proportion to the efforts expended. If
you're dedicated and 1enacious, suc·
ces.~ is probable. It you're indifferent,
you might nO! even get 10 bat. Oeta
jump·on life by understandins the
influences that'll govern you in the
)'eltl' alteud. Send for yOur ASiroOraph pR'IIictions by mallina $2 to
Astro-Onapll, c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box ,17SB. MuJTay Hill Station,
New Yott. NY 10156. Be san: to
state your zodiac sian.
TA= (April 20-May 20)
Major
plishmcniS an: indic:fll·
eil today If y0u an: left lo your own
devices. DOll 't let Olhen infrinae ·
upon your time and .lllcnts and tak.e

·'

\,
I

''

.'
,, .

'

APRIL 161

LI~KA (Sept. ·
••
the righltime to mllke a.few ~hange.
that you .feel could benefit your
household. Don't wait until you get
a vole •. use your initiative and move
ahClld.
SCORPIO ·c()(;t. 24..-iilov. 22)
Authorship isn 'tllll·importanltoday.
If you feel your companions' sug·
gestions are better than yours. don't
hesitate to use lheir ideu instead of
yours.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Take pride in your adlieveJ11e111S
today, both ltqe and small. If you do
a JOOCijoti you wiU be alllply JCWird.
. ed, tansibly and intangibly.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan. 19)1f
an arranaement in which yola're
involved isn 'I being managed properly by others, it'll make you feel
extremely uncomfortable. Don 'tllke
an aspirin, take action to riaht the ail·
uation.
·
AQUARIUS (lan. 20-Feb. 19)
Reprdless of your other needs today,
try to Bive domestic matters ~ pri- ·
ority.
.

•

•

SCIAM-LITS ANSWIRS

ITHURSDAY

you oil" in a dn:ect10n
promise of rew.ard.
GEMINI&lt;May 21-June 20) Two
serious impediments that have been
retarding your progres.~ might be
removed today. This could open new
vistas for you now and eliminate
more waiting.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
It's important in lhis cycle to
maintain a good relationship with an
enterprising friend. Your past
involvement with him/her worked out
well and now lhings could be even
better..
LEO (July -23-Aug. 22) Even
though there misht be some stiff
. requirements, an important career
objective can be achieved toclay.
You'll need the help of associates, 10
get a good team lined up to CIIIT)' this
oft'.
. VIROO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) You'll
do well in developments today· that
·contain eJemenrs of friendly competitlon. When you win. ind you
~ld, do 10 with arace and humil·
11y.

..

'.

, .• •r

'Typhus- Dryer· Natal· Drivel· TRULY in NEED
Wise Words To Live By: "There Is never a bad time
to come to the aid of those TRULY in NEED.·

. ASTRO·OR.APH

'

.
1,
more than to love and 10 be ' '

••••
-=~:.~' s~~.ll~-"'r..~s·
••••
lor
I.

- - - - - IWIIN

way aroutitl it,
Classified Ads

VER'&lt; LONELV..

:il'

41 Slaalara, e.g.

ALL I KNOW IS.

MADE ME FEEL

~

!

41 Cub
42 Sillily

L-.L.-.L.-..1.-.J.L....J.L.....J you devltJop trom step No. 3 below,

l HEARD TI-lE COVOTE51-10WLIN6
A.6AIN LMT NI61-1T.. TI-IEV ALWi~'f5/

r•

.

31....._
37 Of .., II'WY
38 fltumtnaiM

Openlng lead: • A

By Phillip Alder
Following the column about tr.ms·
fer bids three weeks ago, I received
a letter from a reader asking about
using them over a two-no-trump
opening (and afler 2 CLUBS·2 DIA·
.MONDS-2 NT. where two clubs is
strong, artificial and forcing). This is
an ~xcellent idea. In particular, it
allows the much stronger hand to
become the declarer, perhaps stopping an immediately lataf lead
through a tenuous holding·· as in this
deal.
Nole that if North started with a
throe-spade ~ponse and ended in si~ .
spades. the automatic opening lead of
the club queen would give the
defense the firsltwo tricks. After the
tninsfer bid, though. South jumped to
four spades to show a sood hand for
play in spades. (Remember, North
might have been transferring with a ·
YtllbOrough, planning to pass the
opener's three-spade rebid.) North
cue-bid to show his diamond ace and
siam interest. Knowing that the club
ace was missing (North would cue·
bid the first ace he came 10 as he
mounted the bidding ladder), South
settled for six.
Holding a possible trump trick,
WeSI started with the
and anolh·
er club.
The only polential problem was a·
4-{) trump split. South saw thai if East
held all four missing spades, he was
dead. But if Wesc had all four. they
could be picked up a.~ long as South
. stlll'led with the spade ace from hand.
And when East discarded a heart,
South continued with the spade nine,
fon:ing WestiO split his honors. Ba!:k
io hand with a heart. declarer finessed
West out ofh!s remainin&amp; trump hon·
or, drew the la.~ttrump, and claimed.

__j'.

24Fade
·
25 Tha CIOctQf

En&amp;
Pua
Pua·
Pan

PEANUTS

.

-.

11

Meuna-

ace

good fll!!ll!t!!n boot.

Appllanco Porro And Sorvlco: AI
No. . Brands O.ir 25 'IWoro Ex·
patlonco All Wor~ Guoron1ood, 1
Franch Cirr MoyMg, 740·441·
7715.
•
•

· rlll4 c~~avy ~~·o"iiiinr
drl~e. new englnt
lranamiJ·

12

toT.,.

Ata higher
Jevel too?

740-~

!GliB Mude 114 ~Cab. 5
Speed, Air, Exceii1H11 Contlnon,
..000 Mllll. Alllflof ~ ·fll.
' 1111 111,800, Reducad 113,000, ·
. 740-371-:lfllle.

vans • ..wos

1-ma._

.

De.ler: South

2NT

'

OL'BULLET

1gis 24 FL Pvnloon Boar, With
10 HP Motor I Trollor, 14,250;

414g,

730

I tt.waflan

Vulnerable: East-West

8oalll

BARNEY

,

7 Actren Tyeon

•AKQ
t K Q 10 9
• K3

250&gt; 4 -1.&lt;111 ''

·
18GS Nl~ay Dttvison flHT, Eloc· ·
1ro Glide Claoolc, Low Miles,•
Loaded, Llko Now (7~0) 448- '
1522
;
750 Bolts &amp; Motors
for Sell

·

a

• A 8 8 3

.

8411-231111.

4 ChlnHI
(comb. lonn)

lllluU.

Of Ell1rll'ol7~1-141t.

~~o•

.

t Ruealan
amparor
2 ThNI«arM
3 v-nl city

Motorcycles

~~~~~~~~~ Ear corn, $2.!10 ptr busltol, 740. · uc.oond.S8.200.304-175-2tet.
42,ooo mll•o. po, pt&gt;, ac, blaclt, 1----::::::;:::=--Improvements

Now Opon sUndays 1-1. Mon·Sal

• 54

rg53 Suzul!l ISO 11,.01 blko, .
,.,._LI400.304-576-11003.

Llvesloek

c-O..IIe_,.,_..,

EEK&amp;MEEK

1898 f · !SO 4a4 XLT Pact..go,
Short Bed, Loadtd, Low Uilel
Wllh E&gt;1raol 117,500, 740· 2415- '
11544.

=

'

r·

1914 Oldo C~duo Suprome
Brougham pw, tinted wlndowo,
Alpine otareo 11,500. 1104-175SOU alter ·Spm or teavt met·
- ·

o_m.=-=-='-:-P.
-!11-::
. =--~~
_
18M GMC 414 :105 au10, pw. dl~
cruiM, AIC, CD player, bed - Alklng $4,1500.301882 3141.
- ,
1882 Chovr Conversion '/on
Loodad With Roar Air 740·258·
1310.
~~:;;:;s;;;;d~iOCj"S;;
' ' " C.....,y S..o- 1500 Ser· ·
leo 111,, 305 engine, ext. cob,
IDaded. tapper, txtria. great
ohopo, high mlloogo St 2,800.
:lt4-773-5178. .
•

•KQ7&amp;4
• ;s 85
e...A- J- 2- - - - -1

c.._.

Smoll op1 3 rooms &amp; bolh, ullll·
rloo paid ••••PI •loclrlc. 304·
~~

1882 Cudau Su,.,.,.., ·2 D. 280
VI. Good Condlllon, $1,1100 Or
lltol Offor, 7~

Lltde Bit Of loch' Work Paint
tt ,OOO 080 740-258-12Sl
·m:;:=i:i:7.;~~~::::;;;;::;:'
1'815
S.10 4x4 GOOd Condition,
2.1 V-1,. 5 Sgoed, Now Tiroo;
Runs Good, 12,000, 740 - 441~

N• Oil tanka, 1 tan truck
2,040 Pound Tobacco Allotment 1888 Nluan S•nza. •u~ 2 llld- · IVIttolo &amp; rodloiOro. 0 &amp; A Auto,
For Lease, . 25~ A Pound 30-4· 1no doors for Hty acceu, OOOd Ripley, WY. 304·372·3833 or 1·'
675'5131.
oondilion, 11285.
800-273-83:!11.
11188 Cllavy Nova, 5 IPiod. SIIOO
251h Annual Bonllay PIQ Sole: Frl· 1887 Chrtoltr 'l'ork,or, auto, WANTED TO BUY: 1g8l
da\r April 24th, 7:30 P.l.l. Farone a1c, heater, plush 11111, dlglttl Through 1IJ72 Chevellt Or Elca·
County Fairgrounds, Whhln;r.on . dull, ru,. -lenl. h8l
mlno Conaol8, Can Alao Be A
Counhouae, Soiling 200 Hoa , Of 88 Bulc~ Skyhorlt, aulD, t&gt;cellenl 1g10 Through 1872 Monr. Carlo
Homps • Durocs, Croollbred Bor· goo mileage, nice dopandebfo ..r Consolo. "MUST BE HORBHO!
rowa &amp; Gilts, Conaignera Roger around, '750
SHIFTEII TYPE" Phone: 740· '
Banlloy, 937·584-2398: Leroy 1988 Hyundal, 5 opood. runs 441-1053.
La•ic:lt 937· 71f0.4802.
gooa, ltodfl good.$045
81 Goo Storm, porloct condition. 790
Campera &amp;
.... -~ .......111111
Motor Homes
M&amp;J Auto, 15153 SR 180
1078 Alc: .. rrow Mo1or Home,
Hours 12-1. cloyo vary
FuN!
Cohlalned, 57,000 Mlltt 21
c.~ lor ..... ln&amp;rnodon
fl. 15.500, OBO, ·740·448·8710,
" Horata 2 Yearling aruds, 2 , ~-~!;740-~381~118~113~~~ Ah&lt;tr 5.
.•
Yearling flllao. S350eo. 740-44'" Credll Prolllomo? Wo Can Holp.
11184 VtHow s35', 2
-:11-:71~·~:----'-:----:---·1 Eior, Bank Financing For Used ••pando'a,
full size bedroom ·
5 Bred Sowo-1 Nlmp. Boar. 304- Vah cleo. No Turn Downo. Coli (queen IIZI bed),
full lila living I
87t5tl06.
Vic:ltie, 740-441-2187.
kiiCiten, - fulllizo &amp; rol,
""A..;ng..;u~ll:::hl~,.-,.,-d-c-,.-.,-.-,8-mo_n_l_ha·l Upton UHd Cora AI. 12·3 MHoo new carptt, vinyl, all windows
old, nlco young bull, .700, 74CJ. South of Loon, WV: · Financln~ han custom Kiflh,bllndlllam·""
btrQiy. must ... 10 ..,.,tctate, :
11112· 7456.
•
Avllllblo. -..s&amp;-101111.
oarfouo calla onlr. snoo, 110,.
~..;,..;;.-----1
892-6173, 740·11112-2015.
'
Chlckana for ..,,. brown •r.oo, 720 ll'UCIIS lor 8ale
75f, 740-tlfl6.3858.
1G94 Co.mor Pop-Up Excolfonl
INICflftvlM*
Condition, S l - 5 ·1, Awning,
Jackson Co. Polled Hereford AI· eu.... 30, Blaclt fn Coler, LoedStove; Sink, &amp;2,800, 740·251·
ooc. 24.1h Annual Solo, Soturrtay
ed, Body In Real Good Shape,
8869L-Mao ago.
April 1a, ttt8, 7:30pm. al Tho
$&amp;.500. Fac1llry Bla 454,
Jack1an Co. llvearock t.tarke1.
IIO.OOOMiea
27 FL Sell Conlllned l.loiOr Homo
Folrploln E1lt on f-77 5 inlljlo s.
Phono(I04~t29,000 Mills, 310 Dodge Engine,
of Rlpfoy, l'fY. For Information
call Normo Purolor 304·115- 1187 GMC C-50 4apd 350, po, Auto T,.no., Lolo Of Elllreof Road ·
3614,
'
·
,_ paint, Navy Surplus, 21.500 Rttdr Priced To SoUl 740-387· '
'
'
:!
=.;.:::.-----~--I "Original mttea, no CDL required, 0&lt;441:
Riding Horou For Salt (740) 1211. llotbld w/ofdto. 17,400.
21 Fl. Solt-eon ..lnod Now•r A• • :
,'-18-'t,ro_~---...,..-·l 740·912·2471 Doyo 740·882· dono, 11,160, 740-245-e441,
:.
4111
Th'" au.rtor hor .... r_.ng, 2
Eveningo.
.
1814 Oodat Motor Homo Clau . , :
&amp; 3 J"r old marta, contaCI 'Kim, tll88 S-10 V·l, AuiO, ts,H5; .C· $3,11115,740-448·2445.
'
.
_304_·~73-~11111~5·~~~~
· _ _ 1888 GMC S15 'i·l, Au1o, ·AC,
1 $2,495; 111112 E - Cob 8-10,
SEfWIC~S
Two Roglololod block Anguo 13,885: Cook Mi&gt;loro, 740·441·
buftl13 &amp;15 monrho of ap. 304- .01 03.
).
8l5-20tl.
. 1912 Ford f·150 v-e, Slpd, 810
Home
640 Hay &amp; Grain •

Brown loalltor llko aofl plttpat,
malchlng roclfner, no 1moklng
One bedroom aP.rtmonlln Mid· environment 1300. 1885 Teuruo
dlopor~ al Ulllllea paid, 8210 pat 31.,-. :1104-4~.
monlh, 1100 dtpoolt, coli 740·
China Cabllttl S200 OBO 740·
11112·7808.
371-2311.
Lib Dog, 740 31U1t7.
flYER fiEND PLACI
Concr... &amp; Plolllfc Boplfc 1Mkl,
-NI-,WY
AKC L r .Hun11ro, Brea1
1 Badroom apro. for oldorly or 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron · Lobo
Poll, 1225 Black, •325 Cho·
dioobled, HUD lllllltd. EOH. Evono Enlorprl- Jacltaon, OH ooll.. 740-21H112.
1-800-!IS7304':882·3121.

fJ7S..I36S.

1t711.J82 Rod Corvtllo, 57,000
Original Milos Exohnl CondlliOn
(740)3117·5031

F 725 John Owe ,_,, 2 jMrl
old, 100 houro on 1~ 54" cu~ 20
hor..,......, englno, wilh 60" , _
blower, 17,300; 1817 Dodge 300,
_,_IDr\_;_l_r._roo-'-;7_40_-1111_2_-3_584_
. --I
Farman Cub tractor wlplowa
diskt, good garden tracror. .a.tl21, 740 3118887.
$1 ,500. 304-675-3821.
t&amp;g3 Ford Taurui good cond.
Farmall .Cub Tractor With Cultivt.· 11.100. 171-1881.
lora I 'New Side Dreutr, 740· !895 Chevy Luml,. 4 0oor1, V-1,
~256_--lla_so....,.._ _ _ _ _ _,- LOidedl 57,000 MIIM, EKc:ollenf
1
Ge.h iiS gilnder/mixer, hammer• ConcM1ion, 17,885. 740-28B-1111.
never turned, e~:c.. ient condidon. UID5 Dodge Avenger Blacl!c
304·27.1-4215.
Loaded. :tt,OOO Mlloo, 18,100
Need aomeone to work on larm, Neg. 740-:1-.
aalary, rent, utUIUea 'and extraa 1885 Plymouth Neon 1 Dooro,
phono (740) 448-1052
Groen With Spollor Au1on111tlc,
Air,· 55,800 Mlloo. u.aoo·PBO.
Now Holland 68 Har Baler, &amp; 3 740
258 8340,.740--7.
Point Hllch Rak~. $1,500, 7~0~540.
1888 . Dodge Straluo sr.ooo
Takl Over Payrnon11, 740Two Malley Fwrgeaan tracolora. lilies,
256-43111.
(1) T.0.35 gas. (2) SOIIF dlosol;
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Thur.clay, Aprll16, 1998

�~ 12. The Dally ~tlr,.l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday

Thursday, Aprll16, 1998

Weather

Descendant of charter · members
honored at anniversary celebration·
'

Today: Cloudy
High: 601; Low: 40s

.

Eleanor Ralston Smith of gate to the NSDAR Continental
Pomeroy, descendant of two charter Congress in Washington, D. C.
members of Return Jonathan Meigs when Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, a DAR
Chapter, Daughters of the American member. entertained DAR members
Revolution, was honored at the at the White House. Eleanor accomrccent Charter Day observance panied her mother to this event.
marking the chapter's 90th anniverIn re111iniscing. about the early
sary.
chapter activities, Miss Smith noted
Miss Smith i~ the daughter of some of the charter members she
Florence Russell Smith and the remembers.
granddaughter of Aorcnce Ralston
"Mrs. Mary Daniel Plantz, the
Russell who were both charier mem- rirsr Regent of Return Jonathan
h&lt;:rs of the Return Jonathan Meigs Meigs Chapter, lived on Main Street
Chapter. which was chartered on and was a close friend of the Smith
October II. 1908.
family. Her son was the president of
Other 1908 charter members of a local bank.
the chapter · were Helen Osborn
"Grace L. Horton a member of
Crissman. Pearl .Evens, Helen the Episcopal Church led the chilFeiger. Fanny Field. Lucy Boggess. drcn's choir and orchestrated the
EJecta Grant. Grace Horton. Helen Sunday School holiday panics.
Keiser Lydia Hugg. Mary Plantz. Martha Merydith Lust, a neighbor.
Maria Lasley. Laura Lewis. Martha always bought the violet bouquets
Lust. Emma McGuigg. Bertha "c picked in the spripg.
Osborn. Addie Roush. Kathleen
"Maria Montaquc Lasley later
Titus and Hortense Reed Watkins.
moved to Chauanooga and enterMiss Smith descended from Ben- taincd my grandmother. Florence
jamin Goodspeed of Massachuscus . Ralston Russell. each summer.
She relates that the ·home of her Maria's family were friends of
PRESENTED CERTIFICATE - Eleanor Smith, left, daughter of
great grandmother. Eleanor Good- William Randolph Hearst and visit- charter member, Florence Rus1111 Smith, was praaentad a cartlflspeed Ralston, for whom she is cd at San Simeon." she related.
cate of honor and appreciation for service to the DAR by Pauline
named. still stands on Cape, Cod
Miss Smith said she still has in Atklna, regent.
'
ncar the famous Cranberry Bogs. her grandmother's trunk some tea· nate place for planning meetings for
Also. still standing in Massachuscus hags she had received when the the DAR ; there were many
is the Goodspeed Opem House and Laseys were on Sir. Harry Lipton ·s state/national DAR officers located
the Goodspeed Bookstore in Boston. yacht. She noted that Kathleen Ran- there along with many celebrities
Eleanor is also a descendent of Rev- dall Titus was · a close girlhood who were pleased to speak at DAR
o!u(ionary Wa~ Patriot John Grant of friend of A ore nee Russell Smith and gatherings." commented Smith.
Maine, under whose Revolutionary that Emma McQuigg, a SwedcnborIn 1974 ·she moved back to
WI!i Service her aunt, Della Smith ginn, often invited the Smith family Pomeroy
and became a member o'f
Wicdsor, was admiued to the Return to visit her.
the local chapter, at tbe same time
Jpnathan Meigs Chapter.
"We children," Eleanor said, renewing dedication to her Grace
'The 21 charter members who "would sit at her feet near the fire· Episcopal Church where she has
fofll'led the Return Jonathan Meigs place, drinking hot cocoa while she · served as senior warden and presiChapter in 1908 were friends and taught us the Land's Prayer in Ara- dent of the Episcopal Church
a~qpaintances, acccirding to infor- maic. She said that we could greet Women .
marion give by Miss Smith who tbe Lord in his own tongue."
Regent Atkins commended Smith
noJed that prospective members
As a pan of the recognition pro- for her dedication in carrying out the
were invited to a meeting and were gram for Miss Smith, Regent objectives of the National Society
consequently voted on for member- Pauline Atkins commended her for Daughters of the American Revoluship by the members.
d~dicated service to the Chapter.
tion - to perpetuate the memory
Meetings, she said, were at mem- Regent Atkins noted that Eleanor and spirit of the men and women
ber's homes and promoted the his- has served the Chapter as Regent, who achieved American indepentorical, educational and patriotic Vice Regent, Chaplain, Public Rela- dence, to carry out the injunction of
goals of the society - the same tions and Media Comminee. DAR Washington in his farewell address
. s;oals of the Society today and pro- Service for Veterans-Patients Com- to· the American People, to promote,
mated with equal vigor today as mittee, DAR Magazine Comminee, as an object of primary importance,
then.
Program Committee, Ohio DAR institutions for the general diffusion
'Reflecting on earlier years, Miss · News, Membership Committee, of knowledge thus developing an
Smith described the . meetings as American History Monlh Chairman, enlightened public opinion .. "; and to
be·ing a time where the hostess Finance Committee, Public Rela- cherish, maintain and extend the
served "delicious refreshments on tions Committee.
institutions of American freedom,
her best china and linen and where
Miss Smith moved to New York and to foster true patriotism and love
CHARTER MEMBER - flo.
the children in the homes were invit- City in 194S where she became the of country and to aid in securing for
renee
.,!liMit Smith, the' mother
·ed in to greet the ladies."
manager of the Town and Country mankind all the blessings of liberty.
of Eleanor Smith, waa a charter
Miss Smith and her .sisters Restaurant on Park Avenue and in
In conclusion, Atkins saluted the member of Return Jonathan
belonged to the National. Society 19SS moved to the position of honoree as a true "Daughter of an Melge Chapter, Qaughtera of the
Children of the American Revolu- administrator at Bamand College.
, American Revolutiqn Patriot in con- American Revolution, chartered '
tion (CAR). As a nlfmllcr of CAR.'
During the time she was in New tinuing to carry out her family mem- on Oct. H, 1108. Eleanor waa'
Eleanor relates, her sister Mildred- _York City, she became a member of bers love and.commitment in foster- honored at the 90th anniver~~ry
won the Chapter's sesquicentennial the Ellen Hardin Woolworth Chap- · ing true patriotism and love of coun- ' celebration of the chartering or
contest and so was sent a.~ a dclellatc tcr. and served that Chapter as try and supponing the Constitution the chapter.
·
to visit Philadelphia. Her mother. Regent for two terms.
o( tbc United States of America."
Florence Russell Smith. was a dele"I found New York City a fonu-

Tomorrow: Rain
High: 50s; Low: 40s

Corn. called maize. was popular Garden Clubs meeting to .plan for '
with Indians nf the Western wurld. the spring regional meeting tu be
Knight said that thi: pilgrims would held in April althc Senior Citizens
have starved if not for com. that the Center. Pat Holter will du the afterIndians hoi led curs and 'husks which noon (lr&lt;&gt;gram on "Spring Rhapwere fermented for whiskey. that sody."
they also made com soup. Her rccIt was nntcd that Clarice K'ral!tter
mnmendation was to conk cnm as rrm·ided a rcme1nhra~ce filf Judy
soon as possihl~ after it is picked. Bunger who is rccupcnuing from
and only &lt;IS long a.• it takes to say surgery. A thank yuu w:ts read from
The Lord's Pmycr fast.
Bub Miller for lluwers sent tu mcm- .
Cucumbers arc a member of the h&lt;:r O.:hbic Miller. Church llnwcrs
gnund family and came from Pak- were done hy Judy Bunger · and
istan. she said. noting that Moses ate Denies Mora for the Chester United
them every meal soaked in salt Methodist Church.
water. As or 1.ucchini. it is an Italian
Plans fur the regional meting
fnod and means sweetest. is fille~ were discussed with Chester tu
with potassium and Vitamin A. and make six baskets for pansies for
keeps in the refrigerator in a bag for table decorations and lhrec do1.cn
Wealey Mintz, 10n of
a week.
cupcakes and to he in charge of the S..,._nnle Rought Mintz and
Edna Woods reponed that the coffee hour. Pat Holter told or tlic:, · Roy Mintz of LOng Beach, N.C.
tulip bulbS the school class planted progres.~ on the Chester Counhou!IC waa recommended 16 recelvaan
arc up and looking good. They will project. and asked.. for support on , honorary awarci and.to have hie
he mulched to keep away the frost fund raising projects.
biography published In "Who'a
The hint of the month jicnaincd Who Amorg American High
she said.
Maye Mora gave devotions on to acknowledgin~ God for sun and School Studenla, 1197-te.•
He Ia the grandiCifl of Garald
"Reflections." She said March in shower. Members answered roll call
·
the
'
f
·t
k
book
and
Ellen Rought, Pomeroy.
winter saying goodbye, that the by nammg
1r avon c coo
Wnley 11 1 . high school
robins come and arc an emblem of and brought a vegetable rec~pc .
Junior at South Brunswick H..,h
tcndcrncu, and that bluebinds say
Next meeting will he held at the Sc
lio~
,..,
Knight
home
with
the
topic
to
be
hool,
Boiling
opi"w'lgS
Litre,
happiness with their arrival.
· ..,•ontc.
·.
Southport, N.C. He Ia currently
P.at Holter, Betty Dean and Lula ·s prmg
ranlred alxth In hla claa.
Toban- aucndcd the Meigs County

By JOHN McCARTHY
Aaaoclated PreH Writer
COLUMBUS- Backel'll of Issue
2 used flawed figures in determining ·
that an opposing coalition's schoolfunding plan would cost Ohioans
about $4.S billion a year. the coalition's chief said.
Rep. E.J. Thomas. R-Columbus,
and former ·state budget Director
Gregory Browning acknowledged
that the overall cost of the Ohio
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding's plan cannol be
determined.
But at a news conference Thursday sponsored by Every Child
Counts. which is backing sales-lilx
increase on the May S ballot, they
llllid they had determined the cost of
some of the plan's mosl expensive
· programs. They set it at $4.489 billion.
William Phillis, executive director
of the coalition, said die plan has no
price tag because it is a lisl of
options for local districts, not a seJin-stone mandate.
"They did not talk to us about
these numbers. That would even be
lh~ courteous thing to do," Phillis
said. "If they were serious about this

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"hole business, they should have
been taking to us a year ago."
Passage of Issue 2 would increase
the sales tax by a penny per dollar
and raise $1 . I billion a year to be split
evenly between school funding and
property tax relief for homeowners.
The plan is a response to the Ohio
Supreme Coun·~ ruling la.~t year that
found the 'state's current fundinR
plan unconstitutional. The current ·
plan creates too many disparities
among Ohio's 611 school districts
and relies too heavily on local prop:
eny taxes, the court said.
Thomas and Browning said lhey
drew their figure from specific pans
or the coalition's plan.
Chief among those was an expansion of "inside millage" from I0
mills to 28.6 mills. Inside millage is
the amount of property tax that is
allowed to grow widi inflation - and
without voter approval.
Browning said· the cost of the
increase would be S1.4 billion a year.
Other programs in the coalition's
plan, such a.~ raisi~g state per-pupil
aid from about $3,800 Ia $4,600 and
elitcnding the school year by I0 da)IS;
would cosl hundreds of millions of ·

-

1190 I.IICOLI COiftllltAI.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri- lion reflecting n return to more nor:
ca'B 11111»-d.racit climbed·to an 9,ll· mal weather 1'8'1em~. Output at U.S.
time high of$12.1 billion In F'e~i'u- factories fell for a second month a.•
ary .a.• the ,~mbalance with Japan manufacturerS continued to cut back
~urged by 21 percent and u.s. mer- producJion in part because of Jhe
thandise exports fell to Jheir lowest ..: )l'eakne•s in expon demand.
.
level ir\ a year. ·
- - Tire Commerce Department said .
The new report today dramalical· thai the February deficit in._goods and
. ly underscored Jhe biggesl problem services wa~ 4.2 percent higher than
facing an otherwise stellar U.S. econ- a revised $11 .6 billion imbalance in
omy, a widening trade deficit that is January.
likely 4o grow much wo..e a.~ the year,
For the first two months of this
progn!sses. given the economic prob- year, the defacit is running at an annulcms in many Asian countries.
al rate of $142 billion, far surpas•ing
In a second report. the Federal 'last year's nine-ye;u: high of $113.7
Reserve said that output at the billion.
nation'• factories, mines and utilities
It is the.;c figures that has stirred
. rose 0.2 percent in March afler two alarm in lhe Clinllin administration,
· • conilecutive monthly declines.
where there is a concern that huge
.
However, all lhe •trength
lrade deficits will 'provide ammunifrom a bounceback in utility produc- tion to oppo(nents of the president's

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Mason County man held on
first-degree murder charge

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

PoiNT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A Flatrock man, charaed wilh first
desree murder, is being held wiJhoul bond in the Mason CounJy Jail,
according to Mason County l'ro!lecuting Altomey Diana Johnson.
Aaron Gray. 32, wa.• arraigned ThuBday morning by Magistrate Cheryl
Miller Rime around 10:30 a.m. He i• charged with the murder of Geo!J!e
Wooten Jr.. 39, of Leon. after a hit-and-run accidenl early, Wednesday.
Aeconding to Johnson. at the time of Wedne5day's.incideril, Giay wa.•
on $75.000 property bond for previous cha!J!es of sexual ~'lalllt in Jhe
first degree. ind malicious assault. A condition of his bond was Jhat he
wa• not to rclum Ia MD5011 County -excepl for court appeflfiiiCes.
The prosecutor •aid she !;liked with Deputy C.C. McConihuy Wednesday morning about revoking Gray's .bond on ·the previous charges so he
could be arrested. When Judge Clarence Watt carne in Wednesday aflernoon, he signed the order for bond revocaliO!l.
Johnson said a preliminary hearing on the ease againll Gray will be
held .within the next 10 days.
Services for Wooten will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. in lhe Crow-Husscll Funeral Home, Point Pleasant
'

.

Good Afternoon

•

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Ddy 3: 8-1-3; o.tJr 4: 7-8-4-4
0 1991 Olllo Wiry -~~~Co.
'

'

Sm gle Co p y - 35 Cent s

dollars a year, Thomas and Browning
said.
Television ads highlighting those
figures began airing on Thursday
night.
.
Thomas said he feared that the
Supreme Court would implement
the coalition's plan if voters defeated Issue 2.
"I want every laxpayer out there
to be aware lhal possibility exists,"
Thomas said.
In another development Thursday,
Secretary Bob Taft's office se11t a letter to the Ohio Boand of Regents,
which ove..ees Ohio's public universilies, spelling out what public
employees can and cannot do in promoJing Issue 2.
The lener wa.• a response to articles in alumni maJ~azines and elsewhere that discussed Issue 2.
John Bender. chief elections coun· .
sel, told the regents that any expenditure coondinated with Issue 2's
backers must be reported as an inkind campaign conlribution. Bender
senl a similar letter to Phillis' group
on Tuesday.
The colleges arc worried that if
Issue 2 tails, higher education will be
hit with big budget cuts.

I

.•

free trade policies.
Pw.lidem Gliutoii·WII8 (p to goto Santiago, Chile this week withouJ
congressional authorization for new
free lrade agreement~. His request for
so-called fast-track authority is
stalled in Congress by detennined
opposilion from labor groups.
In an effon to alleast trim Jhe size
of the deficit rise this year. Clinton
and othen in his administration have
been stepping up pressure on Japan
to do its jJart as the world's second
largest economy. They want Japan to
serve as an engine of growth of troubled Asian nations hard-hit by last.
year's currency crisis and to provide
a bigger market for U.S. exports.
Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin
won endorsement of this view at a
meeting this week with America's six
largesl economic allies. Japanese
officials. however. told the group that
they believe a new stimulus package
of tall cuts and increased spending,
the fifth such program since la't
October, will do lhe trick in reviving
Japan's moribund economy.
For February. the U.S. deficit
with Japan widened to SS.3 billion
from $4.4 billion the previous month.
It was the worst showing since a $S.9
billion deficit last Oclober, reflecting
the fact thai U.S. exJK1r!s to Japan
dipped to their lowest level in lhree
years.
· America's deficit wilh China narrowed by 11.5 percent to $3.S billion
in February, reflecting the fact that
the United States purcha.o;ed fewer
toys, office machines and telecommunicaJioos equipment.
However. unlike the overall fig. ures. ~ COUIIIIy·by-country,numbers
are not adju.~led for normal sea.'IOnal
variations.

~~: :::~ln~:the: wortcplace meana opportunity for everyone.
was
Career Day held at the Meigs Middle School on Wadnesday. Over 300
atudenta from Ealtern, Southern and Meigs Local School Districts were Introduced to IPProx·
lmately 30 career cholca1, Including both traditional and non-traditional careers for mln and
women. The program waa presented with a mini-grant from Washington County Career Center In Marietta. Above, Amy Wagner, an athletic trainer with Holzer Clinic, demonstrates a bleep
curl to Jultln Hoachar. The exercise Ia designed lo strengthen the upper arm. Wagner and Lorla81 Horner, a phyalc:allheraplat, conductad the program. Below, Gina Tillis, _
a local painter, talkad
to a group of alghth grad8f'l about llltetchea and olland acrylic painting. Career cluaters represented Included arts and communication, business and management, Industrial and engl·
nearing, -lronmantalancl agricultural aystems, health 11rvlcaaancl human resources.

sized In 1

ATM stolen following break-in
at Five Points service station
Thieves Jargeted a Five Points service station early this morning, slealing an automatic teller machine,
belonging to a local bank.
,
The thieves who broke into Taz's
Mamlhon, 34100 State Route 7. were ·
apparcnlly professionals who knew
exactly what they wanted. said Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Sometime between 2 and 4 a.m.,
the bu!J!Iars disabled the store's alarm
and telephone systems by cutting the
wires, and then pried open the front
door to gain access to.the bu•iness
before removing the ATM. Soulsby
said. The ATM is owned by Farmers

.
Bank &amp; Savings Co.. Pomeroy.
Nothing else was taken. Soulsby
said.
While convenience store burglaries occa.•ionally take place in Meigs
County. the thieves generally steal
things like beer and cigarettes. he
explained.
A ~beriffs deputy made a routine
check of the business around 2 a.m.
and found nothing out of the ondinary,
Soutsby said. The store's owner,
Mike Roberts, discovered the crime
around 5 a.m. and reported it to the
sheriffs depanmcnt . .
. An agent of the Ohio Bureau of

Criminal Investigation and Identification assisted deputies in processing
the crime scene. Soulsby said. The
department is checking with police
departments in other areas that have
had similar crimes, he added .
Soulsby said it is unlikely the burglary is connected with other breaking and enterings in the area.
"These guys are professionals," he
added.
.
Soulsby a.•ked that anyone who ·
may have noticed anything in the
Five Points area this morning to call
the Meigs County Sherifrs Department at 992-3371 .

Nashville left with 'substantial'. damage
after twister tears through downtown
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Tornadoes ripped acrms the Soulh for
the IICC:ond lime in eishl days, killins
alleasl II people in Jhree states and
leaving at leasJ 500 homes in
Nashville wilh 511bstaittial damage.
"The main issue downtowq is jusl
the dal!ger from panet of siass that
are 20 stories up on akysaapm. that
are 'hqins QUI lhere in 1he air,"
Mayor ~il Bredesen llid thJs momins on NBC's "Today" show.
The IOI'IIIdocl that ab'Uc:k all day
Thurwday were die Illes( in s llrinJ
of deadly SloriiiS aince Fcbl:uary that
have killed more than 100 people in
nine IOUihem lilieS. The 1a1eat systern churned eut early today, brinsina die potential for severe weather
to New ~nglancl and the Southeast.
In itt wake was a !Wilted Jrail of
deaJh and devuJation thai has
'*9rne painfully familiar IICroiS die
'

I

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Ballooning trade deficit
~ars stellar U.S. economy.

l Secliolls- l l ....n ·
Vol. 48, No. %56

I

Page 4

. -'Flawed' figures spur -Equity means successdebate over Issue 2

Today•s Sentinel

I

Astros post
3-run victory
over Reds

A Gannett Co. News paper

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Preview of the NFL draft, Page 5
Appearances by angels, Page 12
Thanks to blood donors, Page 12

Me.igs County's

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Sports

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Chester Garden Club hears program on vegetables·
A program nn vegetables by
Eleanor Knight highlighted the ·
recent Chester Garden Cluh meeting
held at the home of Clarice Krautter.
She said that potatoes have been '
raised li1r J.OOO years. that they arc
native of Peru and called the "apple
oflove."
A member of the night shade
family. they arc neither rom nor
.fruit, she said. noting .that the older
they get the starchier they get. They
are not fattening. she said. it's what
is put on them that is fattening.
. Tomatoes arc the third most pop11tar vegetable, although they were
first thought to be a week and very
poi110nous. Beans arc very popular
and it has been suageared thai beans
he broken in half to sec if they snap
which means they.are fresh.
' Onions came over on the
Mayflower, Knight said. and were
used since the 17th century and
rcmaill a most favored food the
comes from the sacred lily family.
1bcy c:amc from Asia and arc asymbol of eternity. Onion juice was used
to pow hair and Greek Olympians
ate a large onion before competing.
It i1 also said to cure snake bite,
worms. heart disease, diahetes and
rheumatism.

Aprl117, 1998

'South.

_ ._
began dyins before dawn
Thursday and the toll kepi ri~ins into
the eveninJ. By loday, six people had
been killed in Tennessee, three in
KenlUCky and two in Arkansu. All of
the deaths were in rural area.~.
Hundrals of homes wete damaged
or destroyed, and power and Jetephone servic:e was knocked oul for
thousands of cullomm. Dozens ot
people were injured, some critically,
as tornadoes IUUCk outJide Nas!Jvillt
lllle Thunday.
"I would have said, when I looked
uound, there would have Jo be
dozet11 of people (killed),'' Bredesen
said. "Providence wu looking after
us yeslerday."
Police said at leut VlO people
were injured in the city ilsclf, where
· a pair of tomildoes blew out hundreds
of windows and even ripped the sJale
~le

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seal out of the state flag atop the
Capitol. No one wa.• killed.
"lt.got really quiet, and you could
feel it coming." said Craig McKi~sak.
who watched from the Nashville
Arena as a Jomado approached.
"Everyone was running lind panickina."

The seveR: weather cropped up in
the Midwest late Wednesday, s~eep.
ing from Illinois into Artansa.• and
Tennessee, Twenty-four hours IIIIer,
tQr)ladoes had caused dunage from
Michiaan to Alabama; more than a ·
dozen tornado waminp were issued
in Alabama, where 33 were killed by
a IIIISsive !Wister April 8.
The viclims in Arkansas were two
young children, a 2-year-old boy and
his 5-year-ol~ sister. They were killed
in Manila. Ark.. 30 miles easJ of
Jone5boro.

SCREENIHO- As 1 part of~ qlllltlr ctntury obiarvance Of
the founding of Millar clllana progn~ma In Melga County, cholealilrol and blood sugar acraenlng tooll piKa It the Cfrlter on
Thuradly. n - co apDIIIOM by tl1e Malga County CoUnCil an
Agin9 and lha Hol:rer Wellnaae Clinic. Abcrva, L-. Leifheit,
R.N., ta1taa blood aampln tram IEalhar Waal'af Racine. She waa
0118 of 45 who pirtlclplted In the,.. )110911111 •

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