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                  <text>~ 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

came

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Mason County man held on
first-degree murder charge

•
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•
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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

•

'

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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••

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Sports

.,.hie

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

.

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 •

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page2
Saturday, Aprill8

Deadline for publication
of election letters April 29

What they are saying
elsewhere around Ohio
By The Associated Press

" As the pro·
gram darector
for the Tobacco
Prevention and
Control Pro·
gram , I would
hkc to encourage you to pre·
ve nt
your
neaghbors from
hemg exposed
to seco ndhand
Rusher
smoke that may
he commg from
your apattment You may consader
buyang a HEPA aar falter for your
apartment Pncc Costco an Rtch·
mond IS sclhng a mad-saze falter for
$99 Additionally, you may be able
to dctermane the route that your
smoke follows anto the other apart·
ments and take measures to block
thas route If the venulatlon system
IS connected to the other apart·
mcnts, perhaps you could block
your vent whale smokang Perhaps
you would consadcr smokang outdoors, away from other residences. I
trust !hat you wall be able to create a
workable solutaon to what could
hecomc~enous heahh problem for
your rtlCighbors Please call me if
you have any questions or would
ltkc to drscuss th1s maner I look
forwmd to speakmg w1th you."
I doubt she IS lookmg forward lo
11 any more Herewith arc selected
excerpls from Mr. Alexander's

The (Zanesville) Times Recorder, AprU 7
VJciJms of domcstt&lt; \ Jolcncc clearly have enough to worry aboul Without havmg a comphcalcd lcg.tl system lo make thmgs worse
That as why a rcccnl step hy the Ohto Supreme Court as so welcome
lnslead of beang rcquarcd 10 hare a lawyer and go through the somellmes
dafrtcull and lengthy process of getting a cavil protcctaon order agamst a bat·
terer, vtcttms have an caster umc now
• The keep an abuser away, vactams now may Simply obtam an anformallon
packet contaanang caval protection forms that they can fill out and stan the
p_roccss.
Prcvaously, vactams were expected lo hare an attorney before the process
could began.
. Vicums advocates say a person an an abuse SJtuauon usually loses self·
e~teem and sclf.control Thas new system as a Slgnafacant step to help them
taCcome empowered and an charge of thear own laves agam.

Letters to the editor
Appeal to Southern supporters

;:;~:::re,~:~~~r~~~':::.dh::"~~~~~~n';~~~;~~.~flt~~a~~?untry."

Today in history
By The Aaaaclatad Prna
Today as Friday,Ajllll17, the 1071hday of 1998. There are 258days left an 1he
year.
.
Today's Haghlaght an History·
On April 17, 1961, about I,500 CIA-traaned Cuban exiles launched the d1sas·
trOUS Bay of Pigs anvasion of Cuba in a failed anempt to overthrow the government of Fadel Castro
On this date·
In 1492; a conuact was sagned b)l Oaristopher Columbus and a tqJresenlative
of Spaan's King FeRia nand and Queen Isabella, giving Columbus a commissaon
to seek a westward ocean passage 10 Asia.
In 1524, Giovanni da Verrazano reached present-day New York harbor

•
IToledo I a1• I

Is there anything an lhc ball that
Mr. Oberstar doesn't support?
No, he's supportmg everythang an
there, Heymsfeld saad. That's
because Shuster, Obersaar, and the
top Democrat and Republican on the
transportataon subcommittee "have
an agreement to support the bill
unless all four agree on changmg at "
In other words I'll gave you
everythmg you want, af you promise
to give me everything I want.
Back we went to Oberstar's per·
sonal office, where chaef of staff Bill
Richards answered "Call Michelle
Johnson at Arrowhead Reg10nal
Development Commassaon She'd be
happy to telf you what a good proJect

d::l·
WVA

~
,,,,,

It IS ."

Fanally, we had lound the brains
behmd the Center for National
Sccnac Byways As Johnson cheer·
fully explaancd, the new center was
the brainchald of her organi7.allon. a
regional plannang outfi t that has
worked with local groups to get their
roads desagnated as state or nalaonal
SCC RIC

~,~,~4.~~ (f ~ ~
Showers T·storms Rain
VI«

byways

A l•lttle
.

k.ISS

Sy George R. Plt!genz
W~enever I hear of another
scho••l shooung, I start to wonder
how much kassang wenl on ah the
houses where the young shooters
grew up
Famtly hfe would be beltcr af we
did more k1ssing. OnJhe Christmas
card he would send us every year.
Sam Perdue, a crusty old newspaper
colleague of mine, would scrabble an
the margan, "Kiss a lot, laugh a lot "
Or Joyce Brothers' advace to husbands as "Kass your wafe every
morning when you leave for work
You don't have lo feel hke doang 11
Just do 11."
Not only 1s thas good for a mar·
nage, says the popular psychologist,
but "German researchers have dis·
covered 'thai the men who kiss their
waves every morning have fewer
accadents on lhe way lo work lhan
the men who omit the dnve-time
kiss."
My father's life is a testament
that thas can be true. He kissed my
mother every morning before he left
for the office. 'He drove until he was
well past 80 and never had an acci·

·

reply .
"As someone who chooses to
smoke. I rccognazc thai others do
not make that choacc, and I am more
than w1lltng to go out ol my way to
accommodate the1r Interests As
someone who believes very strong·
ly an bemg a good neoghbor, I Will
do · whalcvcr I reasonably can to
reduce any ampact on those who hve
around me I thank you for your
numerous helpful suggestaons on
how lo modtfy m~ hchavaor and
ahcr my hlcstyle. but I have already
bought and installed a vcnttlatmg
unll that moves the aar darectly from
my apartment mto the ouldoor
atmosphere My openang to the
buildmg's heaung system has also
hccn closed. That should he the end
of lhc matter for everyone.
" More Importantly, the matter
should not even have had a begtn·
ning as far as your agency is concerned. ' Secondhand smoke' ts
plamly the tngger term that as presumed to JUSIJfy bureaucratic
mvolvcmcnt in this situation. But
there is no ·'secondhand smoke'
assue here. and to usc lhe term as a
ftrst·rale smo~e screen. You must
know (though lhc complainant
probably doesn't know) that the
-much-publicazcd studaes on second·
hand smoke cpnccrn people who
passavely occupy an enclosed space
with acuve smokers. ... The com·
plaanant is not being subjected to

,

dent .. except
for
few
bumpe1
encounters or
fender scratchangs.
Perhaps
you thmk the
seat belt takes
the place of the
maratal
kJSs
today an pro·
Plagenz
lccting you on
the highway. ,If
that is your feeling, maybe another
stallsl•callinding by Joyce Brothers
will make a convert out of you. The
wafe-kassers. she found, cam from20 percent to 30 percent more
money and live live years longer
than husbands who are slangy w1th
thear k•sses
All this will seem trivial com·
pared to the story I am going to tell
you about a Lebanese professor who
came to the United States to lake a
posiuoo as a vtsiung professor of
sociology at Pnncelon.
He wrote a magaZine article tat led '
"The Amencanization of George,"

about the transformauon of his 12year-old son following the family's
aryival an this country.
Young George grew up an
Lebanon, an "a nurtunng atmosphcre of touchang, kissmg and hugging .. regardless of gender." In
America, 1he "tender encounter"
once Condly anlacipated by both
father and son when lhc father
would come home from work turned
inlo a cold handshake and a casual
" Ha, Dad "
"Ritualized as the em01ive
expressions of Lebanese famlly life
often are," wrote George's falher,
"they remaan nevertheless tokens of
goodwill and camaradcrae and serve
to allay many of the fears and an xielies of young people."
The same uprootedness and
"exale from the reassunng mlnna·
cies of family hfe" is tcanng away
the fabric of lhc Ameracan home,
100.
If we have outgrown family kassing an this country .. falhers kissmg
sons, cousins kissing cousins, grandparents kissing srandchildren •• perhaps we can "try a liule lender-

ness." Thai too is in short supply.
The closest we come to it inour better moments is polltene~s. hut polile· ·
ness is only a •dasta~l relative of ten- '
derness.
Someone once said: "Where
lhere is 1enderncss, nothing else
mauers. Where ther~ is no tender·
ness, nothing el!ic matters "
Some counlnes may know more
than we do about how to be emotionally nourashed. When a group of
young Ameracan singers went to
Romania, !hey found a nataon of
kissers. One of the nataonal dances is
the "pennata," or kJSsmg dance
One American garl said, "We got .
enough kissing on our arrival to
make us feel loved for the rest of our
stay."
There was little substantive com·
munication between hoSlS and
guests because of the language barrier but, saad one of the lour lenders,
"The language of affectaon br1dged
the gulf marvelously "
Gtorae P1a1t111 11 a syndicated
writer for NtW1J1811er Eaterprile
AIIIOCiatlon.

Sunny Ft. Cloudy Cloudy ·

GrlphaNII

.

Meigs announcements

Dinner/dance set
~
An alumni dmner/dance to com·
memorate the closing of Riverview
Elementary School in Reedsville will
be held on May 2. The ~mner will be
held frdm S to 7 p m., with enter·
tamment to follow unt•l I0 p.m. A
small admassabn fee will be charged
al the door.
Anyone interested in attending
should contact Tina Parker Ill 3786158.
Souvenar 1tems are also for sale to
commemorate the school. Those
items will be on dasplay at tlte school
and at the dinner/dance. Informalion
as available from Debbie Pratt al
Rivervaew School, 378·6287.

have goucn some tobacco odnr

.

Ice

By The Associated Presa
The saturated ground and swollen streams aero~' Ohio will get some rchef
und~r dry skt~s tomght and early Saturday.
But showers and thunderslorms are expected to return Saturday mght and
Sunday.
•
The Nat1onal Weather Servace sa1d lemperatures wall be cooler Will\ lows
t(might m the 30s and highs Salunlay an the 50s.
The record-hagh temperature for this date at the ColumbUs weath~r Sla·
tion wa.' 88 degrees in 189(). whale the record low was 25 an 1962. Sunset
tomght w1ll be at 8.11 p m ami sunme Saturday al 6·50 a.m
Weather forecasl: .
Tomght... Partly cloudy. Lows an the 40s. Northwest wand S to I0 mph,
shifting 10 the east late this evening.
Saturday... Becoming mostly cloudy wtth rain hkely an the afternoon Hoghs
an the mad 50s. Chance of ram 60 percent
Saturday mghl .Ram, heavy at t1mes. Lows in the mid 40s:
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Showers likely with a chance of thunderstorms. Highs an the mad
60s.
Monday.. Partly cloudy Lows m lhe upper 40s Haghs in the mad 60s.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy A chanc~ of showers in the afternoon. Lows 40
to 4~ and highs an the lower 60s.

secondhand smoke an any medacally
sagnaficant sense .... He may indeed

can go a ·lo
' ng way

s;;,;

Fl~,;les

Partly cloudy skies to"night
will yield to additional rainfall

"We thought wouldn't at he great
if (other sccnac hyways) had some·
one who could help them," Johnson
allowed So her group went to Ober·
star and ln the FHA for support.
Oherstar was sn enamored wllh the
adea that he wrote at mtu the hall Nat·
urally, nobody complaaned.
That sllll leaves one very impor·
tanl question What, exactly, wall the
new center dn wath tls $9 malhnn &gt;
Once agaan, Johnson knew the
answer The center, she satd, would
help scenic byways across the nauon
"talk" to one another.
"We would provadc plannmg ser·
vaccs to the national . scemc
byways," she saad. "(We' d) help
them develop marketing plans and
help lhcm develop orgamzalaons and
wnte grants "
There you have it Tucked deep
an to the federal highway bill is a proposal for the federal government to
spend $9 malhon to help resadents
along rural, historac roads get even
more federal moqey.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Foature
Syndicate, Inc.

lhrough the vcnula!Jon system . He
may mdecd regard the &lt;xlor atscl f as
olfcnsavc .. and I do nol dtsmass I hat
scnsnavity as unamportant
" But I do dasmiss the notJnn that
11 crcalcs a health threat rcquarang
Jhc attentJon of anyone other th;m
the partJcs them sci ves
It as nut
lhc proper funct11m ld your ollicc tu
macro-manage mdavadu.ol cnat.ens as
they work out the lrictanns ol thetr
daversc lifestyles
"Therefore I thank you 1ri
advance for your lulurc maucn11nn
to lhJS matter and I look forward to
hcarang nothing further lrom you
about 11."
So far, Berkeley ha.• ohhged
But, as Mr Alexander observed an
has letter to me, "At thas poant, my
posture is slill defcnsave .. I've sam·
ply told them where to get oft. But
afthcy don't get off, I'm ready to gel
aggressive, and haul their unconstl·
tuuonal rear ends anto court •
Enough as enough ThiS kmd ol
lyrannoad amballon needs to be pub·
hcly rebuked."
Amen, brother!
William A. Rusher is a Distln·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.

A$-,....

caller will be Arthqr Connutt.
Reunion planned
The Priddy f~maly will have a
reunaonJune I at the Bag Run Park,
Columbus. TOOse attending are 10
take a covered dish. The park is located on'Ciine Road between Demoresl
and ~eorgesville Roads.

Ethel M. Hysell, 77, Ashley, died Thursday, Apnl 16, 1998 in the Grady
Memorial Hospatol, Delaware.
A former employee of Robinson's Laundry an Delaware and food service
worker at Ohio Wesleyan Universily, she wa.~ born May 3. 1920 an Meigs
County, daughter of the late John and Maggie Hudson Wilson.
She was a member of the Westfield United Melhodast Church, and lhe
Gleaners Cla.~s of Westfield UMC.
She is survived by three sons und lWO daughters-in-law. Harold Hysell
and John and Barbara Hysell. all of Ashley, and Charles and Rheba Hysell
of Delaware; four daughters and a son-an-law, Barbara Wyatl ofCardmglon,
and Lydaa and George Cleland, Ethel Mae Hysell and Patncaa Shalt, all of
Ashley; and 19 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren and a greal-great-grand·
child.
·
Servaces wall be I I a.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Paul Voss officiating. Bunal wall be in the Rocksprmgs Ceme·
tery, Pomeroy Friends mat call at the Benneu-Brown Funeral Home, A•hley. from 5·8 p.m. Saturday, and al lhe Ewing Funeral Home from 5-8 p.m.
Sunday.
·
In heu of flowers, memorial cor.trabutaons may be made to lhe American
Heart Assocmtion, 100 Couswold Drave, Delaware. Ohio 43015, or the American Cancer Socaety, 253 E Church St., Manon, Ohao 43302.

•

most origanal, best dressed and ugh·
est pelS. Prazes will be $15.$10 and
S5 for the lop lhree pets an each cat·
egory Entry fee IS $5
A chacken barbecue wall be held
wuh serving bcgannang at II am
A flea market wall also be held and
10-by-10-foot spaces are available
for $10
Anyone wath questaons, or want•·
ng to enter the pamde or flea m~rket ,
can contact Eber Pickens Jr at 992·
5564 or Larry Lavender at 992·
60 12. In the event of ram. the parade :
will be held May 16

Obi~uary

_

Obllitut.. ,,. paid •nnouncam•nta arranged by local lunaral hom••·
Obl1uaiiM ,,. publlahad 11 r.qu.eted to aeeommodlle thoaa deolrlng mora
l!llonnltlon then Ia proVIdact In the ICOOmlienytng Dellh Notlc•e.

Dr. Rankin Ray Pickens

Dr. Rankin R. Pickens

.

Or Rankm Ray Packcns. 74, of Pomeroy, daed on Tuesday, Apnll4, 1998
:n Fort Myers, Florada. He was a long-ume physacaan an Meags County .
He was 11orn an Chflon, West Varganaa, on Apnl 2, 1924. son or the late
Ray Wanday and Mary Helena Natross P1ckens
He served m the Pac1fic as a
palot an the US Navy dunng
World War II and attaaned the rank
of Laeutcnant He rcceaved his
B A degree from the Unaverslly bf
Minnesota an 1948, and tau nht at
Wahama Hagh School an Mason.
West Vargmaa
He gradualed with a 0 0
degree from the Karksvalle College
of O'teopathy. and opened the
Jone, Mcmonal Cltnac an 1954 He
oblaaned Board Cc•lafac,mon an
General Practace m 1978
He served as physacaan for the
Dr. Rankin Ray !'lckena
Middleport Fare Department and
the Maddleport Hagh School lootball
team. He served as Meags County Coroner and was a chmcnl mslrur.:tor at
lhe Ohw State Unaversaty m Cdlumbus He was also a Chnacal Assocaatc
Professor of Famaly Med1cane on the Volunteer Chnacal Faculty of Ohao
Umverslty College of Ostcopathac Mcdacine an Athens.
He was Chtef of Staff at Veterans Memonal Hospllal from 1964 until
1975, and was V1ce Chtcf ol Staff from 1975 unlll 1978 He was a past member of the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the Amencan Legum m M1ddlepnrt
the MaddleporVPomcroy Rolary Club, the Pomeroy Gun Cluh, the Pomeroy
Golf Club, and ·th~ Aladdon Temple Shranc ol Columbus
He was a current member of the Masonic Lodge of Mason, West Varganaa.
32nd Degree. Pomeroy Masonac Lodge and the Clifton Unatcd Methodtst
Church.
'
Survavmg arc h1s Will!. Irena P1ckens ot Pomeroy, a son .md daugh1cr· mlaw, Ray Rankm and Patty Gocglcan P1ckcns ol Pomeroy, lnur grandclll l·
drcn. Ntchola and Anthony Moretti, Noelle Renee and Nancy Ann Ptckcns,
lour stepgrandchildrcn , Shawn .and Travas Bullum and Rachel .md Knsta,on
Downey, a brother-o n-law. Lloyd Hoffman of Pomeroy, two nephews.
Kenny and Johnnac Hollman ond a naece, lylary Holfman
BcSJdcs has parents, he was preceded an death hy two sasters. l)cssac Packens and Wanona Hoflman
Servaces wall he held at~ p m on Sunday, Apnl 19, 1998. at the Pomeroy
Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home.,with the .Rev. Terry Alv,orc' nlfaoa.atang
Bunal wall follow an the Gr.aham Statton Cemetery an Nc\1( Haven. West Vn -

Services for Or. Rankin Ray Pickens, 74. longlime Meigs County physi·
cian who died Tuesday, April 14. 1998 in Fort Myers, Fla.. will be 3 p.m.
Sunday an lhe Pomeroy Chapel of the Fasher Funeral Home
The Rev Ten)' Alvarez wall officmte, and bunal will be in the Graham
Station Cenelery, New Haven, W Va.
Friends may call at the funeral home tonight from 6-9 p.m .. and on Sat·
urday from 1·3 and 6-9 p.m.
In heu of nowers, lhe famaly has established an educational trust fund,
and contnbutaons may be sent to the Dr. Ray Packens Educational Trust Fund,
400 Raverview Onve. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Or. Pickens was born in Clifton, W.Va .. on April 2, 1924, son of 1he late
Ray Wanday and Mary Helena Natross Pickens. He served an the Pacat1c as
a pilot in the U S Navy dunng World War II, and attamed the rank of L•eu·
tenant. He receaved his B.A. degree from the Unaversity of Mannesota in 1948,
and taught at Wahama High School in Mason, W.Va.
He graduated with a D.O. degre'e from Kirksville College of Osteopalhy.
and opened lhe Jones Memonal Clinic in 1954. He oblaaned board certification an general practice an 1978.
He served as phys1c1an for the Middleport Fare Department and the Mtd·
dleport H1gh School football team. He served as Meags County coroner and
was a chnacal in.tructor at the Ohio State University in Columbus. He was
ai80 a clinacal associate professor of family medacine on the volunteer clin·
acal faculty of the Ohao Unaversity College of Osteopathic Medicine an Athens.
He wa.•ch1efofstaffat Veterans Memorial Hospilal from i964unti11975,
and was vace chaef of statT from 1975 until 1978. He was a pasl mem!Jer of
the Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of lhe American Legion in Middleport, the Mid·
dleport/Pomeroy Rotary Club, the Pomeroy Gun Club, lhe Pomeroy Golf
Club. and the Aladdin Temple Shrine of Columbus.
He was a current member of the Masonic Lodge of Ma.•on, W.Va., 32nd
Degree, Pomeroy Masonic Lodge, nnd the Chfton Unated Methodast Church.
Surviving are his wife, Irena Pickens; a son and daughter-in-law, Ray
~ankin and Patty Goeglein Pickens of Pomeroy; four grandchildren and four
slep-grandchildren; a brother-in-law, Lloyd Hoffman of Pomeroy: and two
nephews and a niece.
Besides his parents, he wa.' preceded in dealh by two sisters, Bessie Pickens and Winona Hoffman.
'

Lucille Withers Varnum

Lucalle Withers Varnum. 78, Bedford, Va., fonnerly of Apple Grove, W.Va.,
died Wednesday, April I5. 1998 in·the Communily Hospital of the Roanoke
Valley in Virginia.
Born May 12, 1919 in Mason County. WVa., daughter of the late John
Manon Roberts and Lilhe Jackson W11hers, ~he was a homemaker, and a
gmm
member of the Highlawn Methodist Church in Huntington. W.Va.
·Golf Assodptlon
Fncnds may call at,the Iuneral home on Fnday Apnl 17, 199X I rom 6-9
Sur~iving are her husband. Vernon N. Varnum; a son. Vernon M. (Daane
- T-he Meigs County Ladies Golf
p m. and on Saturday Arnl IH, 1998 I rom 1-3 and 6-9 r m
Association will have a meetmg at Ward) Varnum of Huntington: a daughter, Rosemary (Jeffrey) Sumner of Bed·
The fam1ly has cslabhshcd an educataonal trust fund , and conlnbulaons
'
lhe Pomeroy Golf Course,· 9 a m .ford. and a granddaughler
may be sent to th~ Dr F.ay Packens Educatwnal Trust Fund, '\00 R1 vorv acw
Services wall be 2 p m Sunday in lhe Beale Chapel United Methodist
Tuesday.
Dnve, Pomeroy. Ohto 45769.
Church, Apple Grove, wuh the Rev. Orville White officiating. Burial will be
an the Beale Chapel Cemetery. Priends may call at the Deal &amp; Brown FunerSpecial meeting set
, ,
al
Home. Point Plea.,ant, W Va., from 2-4 p.m. Salurday.
A' special meeting, of the govern·
ing board of lhe Me~gs County Edu·
•
'
POMEROY
Unils of lhe Meigs County Emer·
Spaghetti dinner
cational Service Center wall be held
p
m
.. Cave Street, Mary
4·54
gency Medacal Service recorded six
A spaghetti dinner will be held Monday, 7 p.m. at the officers of the
Durst,
HMC:
calls for assastance Thursday Units
Sunday, noon-2 p.m. at the Pomeroy Athens County Educational Service , Harold ChaFies Will, 84, ~omeroy. died Thursday, April 16, 1998 at his responding included:
II :36 p.m .. Hall Street, Harold
Una ted Methodist Church. $3 admis· Center. 507 Ric,hland Ave., Athens. resadence, fQIIowang an extended allness. ,
Will,
dead on amval, Central Oas.'
CENTRAL DISPATCH
"on Proceeds lo benefit Boy Seoul Purpose of the flleeting will be to
patch
squad assisted. '
Born Dec. 19, 1913 in Pomeroy, son of the late Clifford and Ethel Buck3:43 a.m .. State Route 124. Syra·
Troop 299.
·
interview caiadadales for the posauon sley Wall, he was employed as a hft operator at Steelworks.
cuse, Paul D01ley. H11lzer Medocal
of superinlendent of the Athens·
He is survived by his wife, Etta Romine Will of Pomeroy: sons and daugh· Center, Syracuse squad assJSted:
Spiritual renewal
Meigs Educational Servace Center. to ters-in-law, Robert and Barbara Wall of San Antonao, Texas. James Sr. and
8 am., SR 143, Pomeroy, Mabel
Sparitual renewal week will be discuss the merger of bolh centers · Carol Wall of Pomeroy. Paul and Dottie Will of Pomeroy, Harold Will and Oliver, dead on arrival:
held beganning Sunday through April and other busaness Th~ policy com- Fruncas Haggy ol Minersvalle, and James Jr. and Julie Wall or Minersville;
6:50 p.m., U S 33, Pomeroy,
25. 7 p.m. nightly at South Be1hel mtttee wall also meet at lhe Service a daughter and son-in-law. Patricia and Lawrence Klein of Minersville; motor veh1cle acc1dent. Robert
New Testament Church located two Center to daseuss policy development stepchildren. Harold and Ellie Lemley of Pomeroy. Stanley and Alice Lem- Delong, Wallaam Wmebrenner, Ora
males from Rt 7 on Silver Radge in conjunction with the merger of ley of Ravenna, Charles and Karen Lemley of Pomeroy, and Robert Lem· Ba.&lt;s, refused treatment, Pomeroy
Road across from ' Eastern High , both offices.
ley of Pomeroy; 29 grandchildren and 52 great-grandchildren. a brother. Aoyd Volunteer F•re Department assisted:
School. Special speaking and smgmg .'
Will of Akron; sasters, Edna Razoff of Clermont, Fla.. and Hazel and Ver·
7:40 p.m., Rock~pnngs Road.
nightly. All welcome. Childcare
non Longshore of Zanesville; and a sister-in-law, Betty M£Coy of Galhpo- Enid Cole, Veterans Memonal Hos·
1~
.
available for nursery through second
pilal.
grade.
He
was
preceded
an
dealh
by
his
firs!
wife,
Erma
Whole
Wall,
a
brother,
Two couples were issued marriage
licenses recently in the Meags Coon· Glen Will: and three great-grandchildren.
O.aca to be held
Privale services will be conducted at the convenience of lhe family.
t:ll,~ll
ty Probate Court or Judge Robert
A round and square dance will be Buck.
Arrangement~ are by lhe Fisher Funeral Home.
held Friday at the Long Bottom
Recel\'ing licenses were: Jerry
Community Building. Out of the Aleshire Jr.. 28. and Janna Wolfe, 30,
Blue will provade the musac and the bolh of Syracuse; and Jimmy William
A Pomeroy man was shghtly
Damage. to botto cars was moder·
Deem Jr., 26. Racme, and Tanya Sue
anJured following a two-car collision :a~te~·:ain:d~W~a~n~eb~re:n:n:e:i~w:as~c:•t:ed~fo:r_!::::::::::::
The
Sentinel Dill, 17, Pomeroy.
Thursday at the intersection of U.S. :oalure
33 and Salasbury Township Road 27
(USPS 113-NOI
IE· ELECT
(long Hollow), the Gallia-Meigs
Puhh\hi'J enry ;dkrnoon. M'111d11y lhiOUJh
Post of the Slate Haghway Putrol
Fmii'Y· Ill Cn•rl Sl. Pomerl))', OhM', by 1hc
Am
Ell
Power
...................
,
.•
48'reported
..
Oh1o Valley Pubhthin&amp; Company.IGMnMII C'l1 ,
Akzo .................................... 100&gt;.
Pnmtroy, Ohut 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Sttond
Rpbert M. De~ng, 38, 39676 Lee
L:IUti ('011¥ j)lld 11 Pomeroy, Ohio
Aml'rech ...............................48'Road, was trealed at the scene of the
Aatllertd 011 ........................ 54 if.
6:45 p.m. accident by the Meigs
MtM._n The A110e11kd Prcu. 1nd the Oh10
AT&amp;T .....................................18\
NfWIPr"pcr Anoeuuion
EMS. uccordang to the report.
M~igs
Blnk One............................. 58'~•
Troopers
sa•d
a
car
driven
by
POSTMASTER: Send 1ddn:11 c:orrccttnnl to
Bob Evana ............................20'1.
1 he Dally Sentinel. Ill (ourt .St , Pomeroy,
Borg-Wet'MI' .........................&amp;&amp;\
Wilham D. Winebrenner, 79, U21
Ohro45769.
BrCMJghlon .............................1&amp;~.
College Road, Syracuse. wa.~ nonh·
Champlort .............................14\
SUISCRtmON IIATES
bot111d on 33 when Winebrenner
Chllrm Shps ...........................4,.
BJ C1nirr or Metw ICHtc
tumed
left onto Long Hollow and
City Holdi11Q ..........................41,,
On&lt; - ·
•
• " " .. $2011
colhded
with Delong's car, which
One Month • • , • • •• ... .. • • ,JM 711
Federal Mogul .......................55'•
One Yetr • ,
S IIW Oil
wa.• southbound on 33.
GII"M*l .................................72,.
~r
.............................
13"•
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Km• .....................................11\
O.rly .. ... , .• • •
l' C'.cn111

Squads answer six calls

Harold C. Will

1

1

Marriage licenses

...........
,,,,
~~~

Driver iniured in 2-car crash .

Daily

Stocks·

HOFFMAN

Your
County Commissioner
WILL CONTINUE TO OBTAIN GRANT
FUNDS FOR RURAL WATER PROJECTS

r ..

Sublcrrbetl not Jcshinww pay 1h1 nrrk1 mty
remll In adv1ntc dncc:llo The D•lly Sentrncl
oo athru, 1111 01 12 mooth b.UII Credil will~
rJven c1rr1er each week

No ••b~erlpclon by mall permllled in 1rea.
where t1onw: carrttr ser.tce ilanlllb._.
PUIJiilher taeA'ftllhe ri&amp;fllto ldjult r"e' dlr·

lftl 1M a..blcr!plton Jllllod S11bK:riptron rate
chnp• may lie lmplcmcnerd by cltiiJIIII the
dltrtllofl (jf 11M: IMibacfiphOII

2~

w..u ....

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... " ' lll&gt;l56-

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ova .................................:.....41\

One V811ey ............................31},.
Ploplll ....................................,..
Pram Flnl....... :.......................23~
RD/Stlell ................................ &amp;1\

s..re ........ a....................... ~ ....an
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Llnd1 End .... . ,..........................38
Limited ...............................u31 ~.

Star B~r~k ............t ................a 'Ia

MAtLSUISCRlmONS
llllde:MelpCM•ty

13 \V,u , .. ..

Kroger """'"""""'"'"''""'"'"""43~.

su~.72

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

-·-·-

Worthlnglon •••••••••.••••••••••••.•• 17 '1.

Stock ntpor1i Ire the 111:30
a.m. quotaa provldld by Aclviat
ofoOiallpoUI.
.

Hospital news

Vetel'llns Memorial
Thursday admassions - Enid
Cole, Reedsville.
Thurs\lay diScharges - Mary
Laudermilt.
Holzer Medical Center
DIKiaaraes April 16 -Gregory
Carr, Betty Collins, Mrs. B"an Detty and son, Thoma.~ Allen, Diana
Campbell, Oakley Curry, Richard
Thomas, George Oiler, Sarah H!llley.
Carlyn Dunn. Naomi Briles, Michelle
Gilbert, Mehssa Smith.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Parker, son. Jackson.
(Publlshtd with pe~lsslon) ·

'

•

Syracuse wall k1ck off the opemng
of youth league ba.,~ball with a May
Day celebration to be held May 9 at
the park
A parade wall be held w1th any
church, organizallon or olhers welcome to panacipate. Aoats must be
youth summer league baseball on·
ented.
Line up wall be at 9 15 a.m . with
the pamde startang at 10 a.m. Games
will stan after the parade and introduction of teams and players
A pel dress-up contest wall be held
w11h pnzes awarded (or mosl the

Ethel M. Hysell

MICH.

Here they come ...enough ·is enough

The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Aprilll
A rece nt front-page story an the New York Times says recess as endangered by schools' struggle to squeeze more and more classroom actavlly into
the tradauonal SJX·hour day
As former chmbi:a:s aurselves, we arguc. Jt's faar to say those Jungle gyms
taught some key lesso ns about physacs, gravity and velocity (espccaally after
a m1ssed grap).
Beyond concrete academtc gaans. unstruciUrcd ume con trabutes to crcaUvJty, cooperation. leadcrsh op abahty and, sometames. connact·resolutaon
skills (of not, that grav1ty lesson may be repeated)
Even more Important al least to the test score crum:hers, breaks allow
students time to rest neural cells the bctlcr for them to concentrate on the
next subjeCt

.,. Well now, Southern rans, the call has gone out to "our" community to
come to the aod of "our" schools We are fortunate lhal lcgaslature has
changed so that we have another opportunlly to pass thas school levy
Yes, this wall cost us more m taxes but at least we can sec and proudly
s~y that "our" taxes llclped to pay for the new school.
: "Our" kads are lhe next leaders of thas nataon, shouldn't we do everyth'ang to properly prepare !hem to succeed in hfe and Be All They Can
Be?
,
Come on all you true Southern people and vote YES for lhc School
Levy on May 5th, We have the opportunny to excel for "our" k1ds and "our" communlly.
Bill Cornell
Syracuse

AccuWealher• forecet (or daytime conditions and high temperatures

Greasing the wheels on highway bill

ed And afthere's
he cwld make at beuer.
'Esta6fisMri in 1948
and Jan Moiler
one thang ShusBefore contacting Oberstar, we
We don 't have enough space to ter loves almost
called Scen1c Amenca, a preserva111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
detaal all the pork-barrel proJects thai as much as
tionist group that's balded the bill614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157
found thear way mto the $217 balhon asphalt, it's ballboard mdustry for years. By exlentransponauon ball passed by the boards
saon, the group has often locked
House just before its Easter vacation.
V.:e know this
horns with industry man Sh"ster. Nol
So we decided to concentrate on because the billthas t1me
~ ~roJ~ct, a uny droJl an the__b_oa rd
"Thas-ball as A-OK "'lth us;" a
A Gannett Co. New_spaper_ ~---- J~JUSl
laidoui::ket of constructiOn proposals has
given
Scenac Amcraea spokesm.;n said As
I
that are bemg delivered to every con· $250,000
to
Mollef &amp;
for the new byways center, lhe
ROBERT L. WINGm
gressional
dist~ct
in
the
land
JUSt
in
Shuster's
c.
a
m·
Anderaon
"
spokcsmari
siid he was lhrilled to see
Publl•her
ume for the madterrn elections.
paagns
stnce
it ancluded in lhc bill, but that his
This as the story of the Center for 1990, according to the anll·ballboard group hadn't asked for it
NatiOnal Scenac Byways an Duluth, group Scenic Amenca In return, the
So we 'called Oberstar's office,
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
Mann
,
whach
doesn't
yel
exast.
but
chaarman
has
happ1ly
done
the
wh1ch
promptly directed us to the
General Manager
Controller
nevertheless ts the proud owner of a mdustry's baddmg on Capnol Hall for transponation comminee. There we
$9 malhon authorazauon an the hagh· two decades
found David Heymsfeld, the slaff
•
j
way pill
That's not the case wnh Rep. Jim director for the minonly Democrats
1M Sentinel w-'com•• l•tl.,. to tiN Nltor from ,.ld•rt on •~HDH ,.,.,. of topic•.
ShOit ,,,.,. (300 wordl or,...) Nvt tM Nat cNnct of btlng publ.tltd f'tp«&lt; Itt·
We wanted to learn how such an Oberstar of Mannesota, the 'top
But even !hough Heymsfeld hkettll ,,.. pnftrtflland all m•y 1M tdltM EM:h .nould Include 1 Jlgn•ture, Mldre11,
atcm
fmds
Its
way
anto
a
large,
comDemocrat
on
the
Transportataon
ly
knows more about the h1ghway
•nd Uytlm• phon• number. Sp8Jfy • d.re H ,..,,., 1 rtflmJca to 1 pnvlou• 1rt~l•
placated
ball
..
-espec
aally
one
Commattec
By
sheer
happenstance,
ball
than as good for has health, he
or lttftr. M•ll to Letftn to "''Editor, TIN Stntlntl, 111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
0$71SB;. or. FAX to 814·992.ZI57.
authored by Rep Bud Shuster, R· Oberstar's d1stnca mCludes the c1ty professed agnorance on the subject of
Pa , the powerlul chaarman of the of Duluth, home of the aforemen- the byway$ ce nter. "I' m not an
Transponauon and Infrastructure uoned Center for National Scenac expert on that." he confessed, and
Commmce
Byways.
steered us back to Oberstar's personIt seemed strange that Shuster
Oberstar loves the government's al offace. "They know more about
would approve such an llem: Shuster scenic byways program, wh1ch as run that than I do "
as well-known as a lover of all thmgs by lhe Federal Haghway AdmantStra·
But Heymsfeld dod volunteer how
road-related .. except for sceme ta on and helps deSignated roads pre· supportave Oberstar was of the highThe Daily Sentinel "elcomes leller!iJregarding the May 5 primary
byways That's because roads destg· serve thear natural or hastonc sagnafi· way bill, because it ensures that mass
election. However, in the interest offairness, no ele.:tion leiters will be
nated
as scenac byways are prohtblt· cance Allhough the program has transit spending mcreases proporaccepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, April 29.
ed from havmg new ball boards erect· worked well so far, Oberstar thought • uonally wath spcndmg on haghways
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters must be 300 words and preferably typed. All letters are
subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and tele·
phone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste.

Dear Ed nor.

Syracuse plans May Day
celebration in village park

OHIO Weather

Frlchly; Aprll17, 1998

By Jack Anderson

Recent Ohao editorials of statewide and nauonal interest
The Lima News, April l1
Just weeks after lhe tragedy at a Jonesboro, Ark., school where two
youngsters are accused of gunnang down lour classmates and a teacher, an
Idaho studeni at The Alternative School held several sludents and teachers
hostage after he pulled a rifle and pastol on them The standoff ended peace·
fully, but 11 renewed nauonwade calls for more gun control
Many Amcncans, espcc1ally those on the pohtacal lefl, belaeve easy
access to guns and ammunmon as the pnme reason' there as so much cnme
and vaolence an America. To them. constitulional nghts are not as imponant
as nddang the nataon of weapons of death and destruction.
Therefore, any h1gh-proftle gun-relate~ crime wall bnng them out of the
woodwork clamorang for more contauls, even af lhe spccafic shootmg meadent would not have been stopped by whatever law they propose
If anythang. a foc us on con trollang gu:,; creates the idea that there is one
sample sol uta on to the problem of vaolen&lt;c. when an fact the assue as far more
complex
h's ume to stop lookang lor gun -control panaceas, and anstead support
melhods that genuanely reduce vaolence

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll17, 1998

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Friday, Aprll17, 1998

Sports

•

.The Daily Sentinel·
·

·

Page4

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) -;- Mike
Hampton doesn't know why 11 happens. He just hopes it keeps happenin g.
Hampton struggled wi'th his conlrol bul remained unbeate'h Thursday
night b&lt;:cause the Houston Astros
came through for him again. They
sent 10 baners to the plate for five
runs in the third innmg, then held on
for a 7-4 victory over the Cincinnati
Red s that ended a three-game losing
streak.
"The thing is, I'm in a good
spot," said Hampton (3-0), who has
won his last three ~tans . "The guys
have been playing great defense
' behmd me and sconng a lot of runs.
Every time I'm out there I get so x or
seven runs...
Houston has scored 33 runs in his
four stmts - an average of 8.25 per
game - and wun all four.
This tune. Hampton helped himself by drawing a walk. stealmg a
Qnse and geumg a leadoff smgle that

•

staned the five-run inmng off David and Carl E1•eren tripled over Young's
Weather&lt;( l-1 ), who has been giving head as the nght fielder froze on the
ball.
up too many hits.
"That's the way baseball goes,"
•
Weathers. who took Dave Burba's
Spiers
said. "You've got to take
place in the rotation after he was trad.
ed to Cleveland. has goven up 28 h ~s advantage of your breaks."
Young wasn't the only culprit.
and 12 runs in 16 innings for a 6.15
ERA. He lasted only 2 113 onnings on Catcher BrQOk Fordyce. playing for
Thursday. allowing eighl hits, two the first time in a week. made the secwalks and SIX runs as he struggled ond of his t~o throwing errors and
watched the Astros steal three bases
with his control.
"Sometimes when you get away in the innmg and sox overall.
" It was JUSt ene of those nights,".
with a~ple of pitches, you think
man
ager Jack McKeon said. "We .
that you moght be able to stay in long
didn't
do anything right, we didn 't
enough to find ot," Weathers said. "I
had the chance to get a couple of help oursel ves, and they beat us."
It dodn 't come easy. however. The
ground balls and get out of it, and I
Astros hit into three double plays and
didn 't do 11."
The Amos loaded the bases in the loaded the bases in the ninth without
thord and Boll Spiers doubled into the scoring.
"I thought II was going to be a litnght-field corner for a pmr of runs
and a 3 - ~ lead. The hit eluded right tle easier than it turned out to be."
fi elder Dmitri Young. who slid and manager Larry Dierker saod "We had
a lot of chances to open it up and'
reached for the ball but missed.
Moises Alou followed with a two- weren't able to.
NOT QUITE THERE- Cincinnati's Bret Boone
Hampton left in the seventh, when
(left) doesn't arrlve at the plate In time to avoid
run triple to nght - Young slipped
Doug Henry came on and struck out
the tag by Houston catcher Brad Ausmus In the
and fell whole trymg to cut 11 off '
Eduardo Perez with the bases loaded.
filth Inning ol Thursday night's National League

..
contast In Cincinnati, where the Astros won 7-4.
Boone was trying to score on a hit by brother
Aaron Boone. (AP)
.

·John Smoltz and Andy Benes
enjoyed different kinds of comebacks.
Just four months after· elbow
sur£ery. Smohz won in his return to
the major leagues. helping the Atlanta
Braves beat the Pollsburgh Porates 31 Thursday.
Benes went back to St. Louis, the
team he wanoed to re-sign with, and
led the Arozona Diamondbacks 10 an
8-2 vtctory over the Candinals for a
doubleheader split.
: "Yeah. I heard the boos," said
Benes, who pitched a seven-hiller for
liis first complete game since Aug. I,
1996 at Pholadelphoa. "Four or five
YC)Irs ago. I probably wouldn't have
been able to handle it. but it's not the
first time and it's not going to be the
Iaiit time."
Benes (2-1 ), who won 28 games
with St. LoUis from 1996-97. sogned
an $18 mollion. three-year contract
with Arizona after a $30 million. fiveyear deal with the Cardinals was nullified because it came after the deadline for teams to re-sign their fonner

players who became free agents
Arizona's losing streak had
stretched to seven following the Cardinals· 5-4 wrn m the opener at Busch
Stadium.
1
"A lot of people probably were
looking forward to seeing him fail,
and he handled it very professionally like the warrior he os," Arizona
manager Buck Showalter saod.
"We're lucky to have him."
In Atlanta. Smoltz (1-0) allowed
two hots on five shutout innings,
sinking out seven.
"I don 't want to say it's a miracle," he said. "But when I remember
where I was on Dec. 12. I cenaonly
didn't think I would be here on Apnl
16 wmning my first game."
AI St. Louis, the Cardinals got all
theor RBls on !he opener from
reserves Brian Hunter and Davod
Howard. Todd Stoulemyre (2·1)
allowed two runs and six hits in seven innings. Joel Adamson (0-2) was
the loser.
Donovan Osborne (0-1 ). makong
his first stan after begmning the season on the disabled list with a pulled

grom, lost the second game. giving
up five runs and six hits in five-plus
mnings.
In other games, Milwaukee beat
Montreal 5-3 in 14 onnings, LOs
Angeles beat Colorado 4-3 in '10
innings, Florida beat Philadelphia 124 and Chicago beat New York 4-3.
· Braves 3, Pirates l
Pittsburgh's 25-inning scoreless
streak finally ended with K~vin
Young's RBI double off Dennis Martinez in the seventh. Mark Wohlers
got three outs for his founh save.
Francisco Cordova (2-1) allowed
lwo earned runs and seven hits in 4
2-3 innings.
'Brewers 5, Expos 3
Marquis Grissom singled off
Shayne Benneu (0-1) in the 14th at
Olympic Stadium, and Fernando
Vona tied his career high w\!!1&gt; five
hits.
Doug Jones ( 1-0) pilched two hitless innings, helping the Brewers
1mprove to 7-2 on the road. Milwaukee IS ju~t 2-3 at home.
Dodgers 4, Rockies 3
Todd Hollandswonh 's third hit of

Ch1~ago Cubs II, N Y Mcts 4
Milw:mkt=t: 5, Mon1r~.11 ~ 041

standings
Ill

ROkJn\OtC

'OI!J1(l.IB.l)'

"7

• •

. ...

~•
Tdnt

611

I l f2

4

!ill

'

Dh· i~klll

Mi~ne101.1 . . .• , .
CIUCIIJO
. .
KWu Cuy
~ro.t

(!l6

I
I 112

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,

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C•ntral
Q..EYELAND . .

' &gt;.

•' &lt;&gt;I,.I

.1!' t. 1!&lt;1.

llo!1tnn , ,
N...1" Yurk
"1'~111111

· Tnday's ROmes

Ea.,.:l•m Divlslun

' .
nom

10

l

7
6
6
l

7

7
'1
10

Wrsttm Divt~ion
9 4
Analk.'1m
. 6 7
Saiull: • . .. .
. .. ~ 10
OUlMd ...
. J 10
1

. ] (,t.J

.~lXI
4h2
4lXI
2\ 1

l liZ

4
~

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61'2
462

~

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2\1

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Thursday's scores

•

:~
~

CU:VELAND CNa,_y 2-01 :11 Bn!o tt•n (M.Irtutez

2-pl. 6 . 0~ p Ill

a l T u r n 1 10

" NY V.ml«s (Pc11111c 1-JJ az l.&gt;ctrou tTI,nmpaddl·2l. 7 0~ rm.
; ~IIIIi! (f;u:~o O-Ol 0111 M1nftdoi:J (Mi lton 2·0)
11:05 p m
~. B.lltunorc (&amp;klw n l.(J ) ;11 Tnas tOh vcr 0-2),
M~pm

• tanl(ll8uy !Gora: kt 1- 1l 31 Anah&amp;: tm CFmky 2·
0). 10·0~ p n1
I j(:mw Cit y (Pi~h.an.lo 0.. 1) ,11 0 ,1k i;111J ((~lll ~ l
0-Q), IO;\~pm

..

S•turday's games

· Pur.:af!:Cl Wh11e So11 ~Nav ,arro I I J :u Toront o
(fkMJ.I!n I-I~ 1.05prn
CLEVELAND (WnJhl 1- 1) ,,, Bostnn (Wuk~ ·
rwWO.f). 1 .0~ p m
NY Yunktes (Cone 0.1 ) al Delmil (Keagle 02), 1:05 p /1)
kaftGS Clly ! Rusch 1-2) at O,aklund ( Ro~u 1-

11. 40"\r.n•

~all e (CkMJde 1· 1) ul Mmne!IOill (TewkdlllfY.
2-H. 805p.m
~
Balumore (Knmu:meck1 I 0) .11 Texas &lt;BurKn
M 1~ p n1
• IIITI(tll Bay (Aiv~~tez 2-1 l .111\nahc=im (Okk.son
0.2 1o . o.~ r m

o.lf.

••

Sunday's aamos

CLEVELAND at Bmllon. I oor; I" m
P.ca~~:o While So1101 Toronto, I O!i p m
• NV YAnkee~ at Oemm, I 0111 p.m
St!Ditlt nr Mtnnc:sotu. 2 ~ p m
Bnhimorr at Tuas 1 o.c; p.,m
~IIIISWI City al Oakland. 4:05 rm
Tamp;s Bay at Aooheim, 4 0~ p m

' standings
NJ.

r..
NeW York .. ...

Eultm Dtvlskln

.w
... 9

. ,
Allin&lt;• ................. 9
"-IJ.dtl~ta ............... .. 7

M011ttr11L

. .

4

Florida

I

I

4

I. £&lt;1.

Ill

600

112

~ .18

I lf2

l
6
6

10
II

Ctntrll Dl"l•kM\
MilWIMkee. . .
Clllcoao .... ..

'

9
9

5
6

64)

2H6

~

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llll

64.1
600

S1.J_o,;, .. .. ...... .. .... . .9 6 .1100
· Hou•on . ...... ...... .. 8 8 .lOO
CINCINN~TI ... .. . ... 7
8 .467
Pit11bur~h

. ... . .

"

~I&gt;··· ...

,. 7

. . ..

9

418

)
6

600

. .. ..

12
9

t.ooA.,.ta ............. .. .... 7

7

Colonldo .......... .. ..... 6 10
Arif""" ....., ... ..... ... .....1 1.1

: '

NY Mcts (Jones 0 I J :11 CINCINN/\Tl !Remlmgcri -2J. 705rm
S:m Fr, mci ~L O (E~tc~ 0.. 2) .11 M1lw.mkcc ~Mern'tks 0·0) 7 oor; ('1111
...
Monl rc.il (Herm:m5t'n 1- 1) .11 Hou ~ r n n cH.Liant:i

x-Mmmt
y-NcwYnrk
New Jersey
Orl.mtfu .

0- 1) MO'i r m

Ph t latfl.'lph i niSt~phcn ~o n 0 - 11 .11 S1 Lu u 1 ~

(Pnhth.'I.()J MIO p m .
Atl.nlta (Giav10c 2·0) tal Cu lor.1~11 fThnrmun 12) 905pm
f-"lnnd,t I Mc!.llll.i 0-1) .it A r wHL .I (IJiair 0-1),
.10 [):'i pIll

Saturday's games
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By TIM WHITMIRE
before the stan of a scheduled YanNEW YORK (AP) - Just days 'kees-Anahetm Angels game. and no
away from turning 75, Yankee Sta- 'one was mthe slands at the time.
dium is gelling an unexpected
Since then. a top-to-bottom examfacelift.
inatoon of the stadium, which opened '
Work began Thursday to repair April 19. 1923. has turned up damwater damage to the concrete facade age from seeping water in the facade,
of the Bronx stadoum, closed since a ·which dates from a 1974-75 remod500-pound steel-and-concrete joint eling.
fell and llauened seats in !he stadiThough officials have said the
um's middle deck on Monday.
(See STADIUM on PageS)
The accident happened ~ours

Gallla·Melg~ Community Action Agency

S•lurday's games

rIll
Jl nt
New York :11 Chtcago. R ~ r m
IJ~51 o n "' Wa~hm~IOO, 6
lm.hmw ul CLEVELAND, 7..\0

P.O. Box 272
801 O.North State Route 7
Cheshire, Ohio 4~20-0271
:

Mmnc~ol !l

nt Milwauket, 9 p m
Su r.:ramentu VI L A Clirpcu at 1\nahcnn.
Cnhf.• II p m.
Vnnco ut.~cr Ill Golt.ltn Struc. II ~ m

Equal Opponunlty EmpiOYQr
(10 OWAD)

Sundoy's regular-season nnoles
Dctmn :u New Jcr5ey I Jllll.

Phtladl!lphtn Ys Toronto m Hamtltma. Ontnrto

222 42 1n
IYM 44 112

'

5.BIIfa APR Up 1D 72 Montllsl**

llln.....

THANKS FOR ASUCCESSFUL
BASKETBALL SEASON &amp;BANQUET

·-

Krogers

LO(kar 219
Darrell &amp;Jon Norris
GreenhouseS -Perry &amp;Bobi Hill
· Graenh111.!5es
Koren's Greenhouse
Carbon School
Radne Optometric
Chancey's Exxon
James Fer1ell

8oo

J

lOO 41/l
J7l 61/l
188 91/l

land would get thai team's second- choose a player that will be successround pick in 'this weekend's drafl. ful for the Colts. I don't doubt that
along with a compensalory pick fol- whoever is not chosen by the Colts
lowing the completion of lhe first will go on to be succcs.~ful. ... I would
round.
not be surprised to see them both
The NA.did not make its decision playing in the championship game in
on !he extra pick until this week and the not too distant future."
Polian was· al ~o upset he learned
But, Polian ha.~ also said neother
about it from an ESPN reporter quanerback woll produce an immeralher than the league. The ruling diate turnaround.
means tlle"""Colts would--:-~tlecl32no-- ·,History has proven that rookies
rather than 31 S1 with their second struggle in the NA.. and I anticipate
that will be the case with Manning or
choice.
"I don 't believe ever before has Leaf," said Pol ian, hired in Decemlhe integrily of the drafl been com- ber on the same day ow"''r Jim lrsay
promised this way," he said. "To fired coach Lindy Infante and .direchave our preparation disrupted four tor of football operations Bill Tobin.
days before the draft is unheard of....
" No rookie is ready to step in the
It is ju~ttypical of people who don 't NA. and play with any degree of
know anything about football ge11ing confidence. II doesn't maller what
involved."
they've accomplished as a college
Whichever quanerback the Colts player, or how much they' re paid,"
selecl. lhe other should be taken by Polian said.
San Diego which paid a big price to
Also on Thursday. Polian denied
Arizona.to move from thind lo second repons he had staned negotiations
in !he draft order.
with Manning's agent
"There's no winner or loser in
"It was never true," Polian said of
this, they are I and IA." Polian said. the repon broadcasl Wednesday by
"We'll do the best that we can 10

Indianapolis radio station WIBC. " It
was a falsehood from the onset."
Polian decided months ago to use
the No. I pick on a quanerback, trad-

choose a player from Ohio over any backer Kevm 0 ' Neill; Akron fullother part of the country.
back Jamie Reader: Ohio University
"Maybe their family would buy cornerback Tevell Jones and comerseason tickels." he cracked.
back Sean Williams; Ohio State nose
Bob Hallen spent four years in rel- guard Jimmie Bell. defensive end
ative anonymity as an offensive line- John Day, defensive tackle Winfield
man at Kent, but now finds himself Gamen, center Eric Gohlstin. tight
a hot propeny. He's been weighed, end Tom Hoying. quanerbackldefentimed and measured by 20 pro scouts sive back Stanley Jackson and lin~­
in the last monlh.
backers Kevin Johnson and Marcel
"People would watch our games, Willis: former Central State offensive
but they didn' t notice the offensive tackle Tarren Crawford: Concinnalo
linemen," he said between newspa- tackles Jason Fabini and Pierre Brilper, radio and TV interviews. "It's . liant. linebackers Phillip Curry and
kind of funny."
Brad Jackson, cornerback Anrell
Toledo's Clarence LOve intercept- Hawkins, defensive end Derrick Raned just three passes. in his three sea- som and running backs Daryl Royal .
sons, but is slrong (lifting 1.000 and Landon Smith; and Youngslown
pounds on a hip sled), fast (a 4.29- State offensive linemen Todd Kollar
second 40) and alhletic (a 36-inch and Matt Hogg and defensive tackle
venical jump).
Harry Deligianis.
''I'm trying to remain as calm ·as
Of course, all bets are off.
possible," he said. "I' m going to
A year ago. the Dallas Cowboys
New York for !he draft and watching drafted Nicky Sualua oul of Ohio
it with a friend. I'll lei out a big sigh Slate. Sualua had 43 career carries
when my name is called."
and quit the spon afler 1wo seasons
Even,those who aren't drafted will because he said he didn'tlike football
likely get a free-agent tryout some- anymore ..
where.
After a year layoff. the Cowboys
Among those waiting and hoping took him in the fourth round, !he
alll: Miami tight end Damian Vaughn.
I29th player chosen. He played some
defensive back Jamie Taylor and la~t year and still is on their active
offensive tackle Mike Bird: Penn roster.
State- wide receiver Joe Jurevicius
from Chandan; Bowling Green line-

nod as Goody's 500 favorite

founh in the two previous fall events
at Martinsville.
His recond on NASCAR's shon
tracks is not exactly overwhelming.
Neither of his two career victories
have come on short ovals and. overall. Hamilton ha.~ notched just 16 topIQ finishes in 51 stans on tracks
shoner than one mile.
Still, when pmctice and qualifying
got underway today at Martinsville,
Haniihon's No. 4 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo could be a factor.
"I don't know that I like shon
tracks as much as I just like tlat
tracks," the 40-year-old Hamihon
said, "Maninsville is definitely a tlat
track. The first time you stand at
trackside. youthink,' 'lt's banked a lot
more than it looks like on lelevision.'
or even from the grandstands. But,

once you get up to speed. it tlanens ing _,o imponant." Hamilton said. "I
out a Jot really fast."
think it 's possible to win from the
The paper-clip shaped tmck puts backslrelch, but it's going to be one
a premium on taking care of your car of the hardest things you've ever
and keeping your cool.
done in your life."
Hamilton, who was with Petty
"Probably the two key word'
you'll hear associated woth Mar- Enterprises the la.•t lhree sea.,ons, has
tinsville more than any are brakes and gouen otT 1o a very slow stan wilh his
temper." Hamilton said. "The key is new team. But he has hopes for a
not ·using up either one of them too quick turnaround.
"This might sound like I'm just
early in the race.
"You stand on the brakes a lot in talking, but I'm happy with what
the lirst 100 laps and the last 100 laps we're doing right now," Hamilton
are gomg to be spent sitting in the said. "Sure, we'd rather be tinishing
transporter. You stan gelling mad at a whole lot beller, but we're headed
whatever os happening on !he race- in the right direction.
track !hose tirst 100 laps and you·re
"When I first came to this team:
gomg 10 spend the la.'t 100 either sit- Larry (McClure. co-owner and team
ling in the transponer with a torn up manager) told me there were some
race car or in the penalty box."
things we were going to have to work
Another very important ingredient through. So I came into this deal with
at Maninsville is qualifying among my eyes wide open.
"But nobody is complaining," !he
!he
top 21. That's lhe number of pil
&lt;Concin~ecJ from Page 4)
driver added. "Nobody is. throwing
stalls on the fronl straightaway. ·
Nobody ~as won at Maninsville their hands up on the air. Everybody
expires in 2002.
A renovaled Bronx ballpark, a while pining on the backstretch since is working as hard as we can tu get
thos team back where it was and
new stadium on Manhuttan's ,West Lee Peny in 1959.
"That's
what
makes
pole
qualifywhere it belono• "
Side or a move to New Jersey have
been among the options.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said HOOV6f
Wednesday 1hat continuing problems with Yankee Stadium make it
less likely that he will suppon a renSo Tisevich equaled the feat, hurlNORlll CANTON. Ohio (AP&gt;- '
ovation plan. while Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner said he expect- Nonh Canton Hoover High School. ing a perfect game or her own.
The back-to-back perfecl games
ed the ieam's future to, be seuled pitcher Jen Tisevich knew she couldmay
be a first in high school softball,
n
'I
top
teammate
Kate
Chain.
after
somelime !his year.
10 the National Fedemtion
according
The last detailed inspection of Chain threw a perfect game in the of Stale High School Associations.
Yankee Stadium's structure was in first half of a soil ball doubleheader.
1979. when cracks appeared in the
concrete. On Thursday. the Civil
Service Technical Guild, representing
city engineers, issued an angry stateIf you are interested In obtaining a Commercial Drivers Ucense
ment declaring that a properly main_as a truck driver and If you are a dislocated worker.
lained stadium would have.been safe
Gallia-Melgs Comniunlly Action Agency may be able to assist
for many decades.
you with training, testing. and related costs.
Instead, the group said, "we have
a facility that has been milked for
(A dislocated worker is generally. a person who has worked at
profils at public expense by an ownleast 12 months at one occupation, Is now unemployed or
er whose only interest is his bonom
under employed due to a businesa closing or cutbeck, and Is
line."
unlikely to return lo their previous occupation. There are
Under the Yankees' lease. the
additional qualifications, however Income Is not a factor)
team is in charge of maintaining the
To
find out If you qualify please call 387•7342, 448·1 018, or
sladium, wilh mainlenance cos1s
m -8629 and request a JTPA Preappllcatlon.
deducted from the rent the 1eam pays
the city.ln recent years. that sum has
Training period Ia approximately four weeks, training will be
lotaled between $3.5 million and $4
conducted In Marietta, Ohio or Ashland, Kentucky.
million annually. According lo !he
Gallla-MIIga Community Action Agency
Parks Depanmcnl, the city has spenl
an additional $13 million on capital
P.O. Box272
improvemcnls to !he stadium since
801 0 North State Routt 7
1989.
Cheshire, Ohio 45120-0271
Giuliani has said the city will
Equal Opportunity~
begin conducting de!ailed annual
(100WAD)
inspeclions of both Yankee Stadium
and Shea Stadium.

19,9so·
Bn••Mew

SJ0,95o·c•rvy

5

19!Jic•evy

BI'IIUfW 1!1!11

Alll'l CIIW~III VII

• Ati!Omale

Urrlrs IS Plr~IJ

• Air Contltloltlllg
• AM/FM Stot110
•4\'het
Anli·Lock Boakts
• Dull Altbags

• AI' ColndldtlkA-i&gt;liQ •
• Power Windows

• Fo"'r l.odll

•AINFIIea-

• CruiSe Colilltll

•AMIFMc.•~tl!ll

lnletlor
•AILrninllft MINis
• w.tt EC!Iilllldl

• Po""' Stsemg
•PowerBIIkes

• Tll~ltlg
• aoaJ Altllegl
• 4 Vtl1eol Ani-!IICl

from the·Syracuse
Basketball Committee

1'bllnda7'1 KOI'a
ll, PhlllddohiO 4

AI-~. Plnlllorih I
ptf; S1. Louit ·' ··Anwna o4, Arizona 8, S1. Louit
2
•

r II

I I k I I I : :r111 :: ' 1 11 II 1

', r 1 •: ',

I 1 1 1 ' 11 1 r,

•

damage is cosmetic and does no!
affect the stadium's structural smbility, they are worTied !hat concrete
could tlake oiT and hi! people below.
Sunny Mindel. speukong for the
mayor's Office of Emergency Management, said eight 32-foot scaffolds
had been buill on hydraulic lifls and
will be rolaled around !he stadium's
exterior. lnspeclors will tap·the wall
with hammers looking for places
where concre1e may have been loosened by seepage that froze and melted.
The workers will excavate loose
concrete, then return later to fill in the
wlller-damaged areas. Mindel ~aid.
Inspection of the rest of the s!adi um for structural damage and other
wear and tear is nearly complete and
inspectors have found no other significant problems. Mindel said.
"We anticipate that alllhe safety
issues a11he sladium will be fixed by
Tuesday." she said. "and !he cosmetic work. we hope, will be done by
Wednesday. wealher penniuing."
Monday and Tuesday games
ag1ins1 !he Angels were postponed
and the Wednesday game was played
a1 Shea Stadium, the New York
Mets' field in Queens. The Yankees
won 6-3.
The Yankees' weekend home
series with !he Detroit Tigers was
switched 1o Tiger S!adium.
Yankee S!adium is expected to
reopen April 24 for a three-game
series originally scheduled to be
played in Detroit
The stadium's woes have
incnea.'IC!d pressure lo resolve where
!he team will play after its lease
•

...

softball pitchers throw
consecutive perfect games

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING

•

ing veterans Jim Harbaugh to Balli-. ,
more..and Paul Justin to Cincinnati·.
and leaving the team without an
experiem:ed player at the position.

RYAN LEAF

PEYTON MANNING

1-810-857-1094

or
1-614-991-6614

1998 CHEVY MAUBU

1998 BUICK REGAL

Auto., air, cass., buckels
LS Pkg., PW, PL, CD, C8llll. Loaded.
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Dlacount••••.•.:................ 1,447.85 Placount..••••.•••••••.•••..••••1.885.CJCI
Deller Mlrkup ................... 10.00 Deller Markup ................... 10.CII

Your Prlce.......... $15,917.05 • ~-·..·Prtce.......... $20,912.00
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At Low At 1.8%
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wheels, tach., cass.

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va. 4&lt;4, s speed. 1111. cruise.

MSRP.........................124,358.00 MSRP .........................$22,197.00
Dlacount........................2J73.72 Dlacount........................2,721.75
lnvolce.........................22,084.28 lnvolce ......................... 19,467.25

GM Rebate ..••...•.•••••...••. 1,000.00 Dialer Markup ................... 10.00
Dealer Markup ................... 10.00

1998 OLDS CUTLASS GLS

Yankee Stadium ....

-

•

(row's Steak House
Middleport Trophies &amp;Tees
River Bed Tanning
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Bob's Market
Wendy's of Rovenswood
Taz's Marathon
Harmolf H~ng &amp; Cooling
Harris Construction
Coach Alon Crisp

all pick Orlando Pace by St. LoUis
and No. 3 Shawn Springs by Sealtle .
A dozen Buckeyes have gone io !he
first round over !he las! seven years.
Of that number, I0 were drafted who
still had eligibility remaining.
Yet \here are no guarantees that an
Ohio State player will be taken much less be taken in an early round.
"It's obviously not as big a year
as we've had in past years," said
Ohio State coach John Cooper,
thrilled to not lose anyone early this
year. "It's indicative that we didn't
have the talent last year that we've
had in past years."
Pepe Pearson, a smallish tailback
whose yardage dropped from I ,443
yands as a junior to 869last year, has
the best chance of any Buckeye of
bemg drafted.
The 5, 10. 200-pounder said his
yardage hasn't been a concern forlhe
scouts.
"Everybody is aware that we had
a younger line and the conches wanted 1o pass the ball a little more my
senior year," said Pearson, hopeful of
bemg taken in the first four rounds.
Jim Lippmcott. the Cincinnati
Bengals' director of pro/college personnel, listed a dozen players from
Ohio colleges that could be drafted.
But he said he diuld think of only 'one
tea•on why the Bengals would

g~_ts

By MIKE HARRIS
MARTINSVILLE. Va. (AP) Nobody ha.~ a bener record at Martinsville Speedway during the pasl 2
1/2 seasons than Bobby Hamilton.
Although nobody would call him
a shon track ace, the record dictates
that Hamilton be considered among
the favorites in Sunday's Goody 's
500 on the tlal .526-mole oval.
Hamilton. in his first season with
Morgan-McClure Racing. has tin·
ished outside the top five in only one
of the la.•t five races at Martinsville.
He wa' second in this race a year
ago, tmiling winner Jeff Gordon
across the finish line by less than
four-tenlhs of a second. In the fall. he
finished third behind winner Je,ff Burton and runner-up Dale Eamhtlrdt.
Hamihon also finished t~ind and

up

CLE VLI ANU at llllstnn. 7 p nt
Chumgu at Plul,uldphl.l. 7 .l () p m
New Jcn~y :11 Orl:mUu, 7:;\0 11 m
W:ashmgton ,u Mmnu 7 :\0 pnt
Chnrloltc at Atl.tnt.• 7 lil r m
MiiW,IIIk~~ ,11 Octn111, 1'1 11m
H 11U~I &lt;J11 at Mmm:~ot.t , Hpm
Torunro arlnduwu1 Mp m •
rortlantlnt Denver. '-) 11111
Utah ut Plwcm11 10 1• m
Sun Agtoniunt Sc.ntk-, 10 1i m
D.dlns ut LA L.nkeu, 10 lOp ~11

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
Ohioans will likely make up two
of !he top fiv~ picks m Saturday 's
opening day of the NFL draft.
For a change, however, Ohio State
will stay out of the headlines.
Two Mr. Football awand winners
who found fame and will eventually
find fortun~ out of state - Michigan's Charles Woodson and Penn
Stale's Cunos Enis- are expected to
be taken among the top handful of
picks in the two-day. seven-round
draft.
Woodson, who won the Heisman
Trophy la.•t December. is a Fremdnt
native who is a perfect fit as a press
cornerback in today's auacking pro
defenses. Then again, the 6-foot· l,
197-pounder can also return kicks
and till in at wide receiver. At halftime, he's available to hawk beer and
hot dogs.
Enis decided to pass up his senior
season after he was suspended for
accepting clothing from an agent.
Enis, who preceded Woodson as Mr.
Football in 1993, gained I ,363 yards
last sea.~on. AI 6-1 and· 242 pounds.
!he Union City nalive has !he size and
speed that makes scouts salivate.
A year ago. Ohio State had seven
players taken in the draft, including
two of the tirst three - No. I over-

Hamilton

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Phtl.ultlphm m St l.nut J, 2 IU 1' m
Los Angtlcs ul Ch~n~u Cub~ 2 20 r m
Mnntre,•l .11 Hnustnn, 2 ~5 p m
Atlanta ,11 Colomlk• J 0.~ ('1111
Flori~" at Amona , I' 0"1 p m.

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.1!' J.. 1'&lt;1.

Damage to Yankee Stadium's
concrete facade pro~pts repairs

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency may be able to assist
you in the following ways: ·
Employment: We're looking for drlvers to perform delivery
duties In Gallia County. Daytime work on a regular schedule,
to 20 hours per
Monday through Friday, $5.15 per hour,
week. We also have non-~rivlng jobs available. .
Training: Short or long term training in fields such as
computers, nursing assistant, COL, and others ai area schools.
Do Both: Work part-time, attend class part-time.
Sound interesting: Call 367-7342, 446-1018, or 992·6629 to
request a JTPA Preapplication.

Tonight's games

Albanli" Dlvlslun

Ium

Officials say structural stability not affected

Wmitml&gt;t"~

SaftfranciKO ... ..

-

1/l
Ill

EASTERN CONFERENt:E

~S dmud i2 - 1 ), 7 0~pm

( W,i~ncr U-0 ). 2 uor;

Toni~hl's games

.Cimng o Wh11c So- I Btrc 0-21
(~mtttl l - 1 ) 7 (t-ipm

Luli Angclc ~ (!',ark J -OJ al l'htt:il!!U Cubs (Ci:lfk
2-0, "'20 ,. Ill
Su n Otc~o IH ,umllon 2- 01 .11 P111~buri[h

11. l l 'i r m
San Frannu u

.('hlt;ol£0 White Sox I( B,.tllmorC' 2
• Seanlt ) , Mmnesol:&amp; J (10)
~ O;iklund 12. KanJ;u: Cil)' 7
• Tun'f\3 Ba)' b An:lh.-•m 'i

York lOR Toronto 79
Ut.lh Q9, Sacrumemu H6
Ponlruul99. LA ChliJ1CU 90
Sun Antonio 110. V.mcouvt'rY1
Gollkn St.atc NH, O,all.lli 1'12
N~w

NBA standings

man argued a called third strike.
York's four-game winning strong.
Phillies staner Tyler Green ( 1- 1)
Brant Brown tripled, doubled and
struggled through a 48-pitch first ·had a two-run single for the Cubs.
innmg, in which he gave up six ruqs Sandy Maninez tripled and do"bled,
and two hits and walked five.
Mickey Morandini hit a two-run sin·
Cutis 8, Mets 4
gle and Rodriguez added a double.
Henry Rodriguez hit a three-run
Kevog Tapani (3-1) stranded eight
homer and Jell' Blauser hit a solo shot · runners, -'even in sconng positoon,
as visihng Chicago broke a four- through five innings. Dave Mlicki (0game losing streak and stopped New 2) left after the fourth, !railing 5-2.

AGE 55 OR OLDER
LOOKING FOR A JOB

Thursday's .sl:ores

Basketball

Lo~ Angeles 4, Cl.)h1mdn l ( 10)
H uu~llm 7, CINCINNA TI4

the game drove home the go-ahead
run off Jerry DiPoto (0-1) in the lOth
at Coors Fteld after Jose Vizcaino
reached second when center fielder
Ellis Burks dropped a shallow lly ball
for an error.
Mike Lansing doubled leading off
the bollom half and advanced on a
grounder. But Jim Bruske retored
Dante Bicheue on a game-ending
popup, geuing his first save since
Oct. I, 1996.
Vinny Cash !Ia's lhind homer on as
many games. his soxth of the sea.,on,
lied the ·SCore in the ninth against'
Scou Radinsky (1-0).
·
_ - Marlins 12, Phillies 4
AI Miami, Craig Counsell capped
a six-run tirsl woth a grand slam, and
Charles Johnson also drove in four
runs as Florida won its third straight
following a 1-11 stan.
Livan Hernandez (2-1) allowed ·
four runs and nine ~its in seven
innings. stnkmg out eight and w~lk­
ing three.
·
Bobby 'Bonilla wa.' ejected along ·
with Marlins manager Jim Leyland in
the tirst inning after the third base-

Colts snub conflict stories, say Manning, Leaf 'are 1 and 1 A'

Ohio college grid stars expect to go early

Comebacks by Smoltz, Benes help Braves, Diamondbacks
By The Associated Press

NFL draft to start Saturday; Indianapolis, San Diego get nod to take top quarterbacks

By HANK LOWENKRON
to sit down and make it jointly
INDIANAPoLIS (AP) - No together and our opinions are going
decision. no difference of opinion, no to mesh."
negotialions and no recent tmde
Polian also expressed unhappiness
offers.
over the NA.'s awarding the Oakland
That was the word from Bill Raiders an extra draft pick, the 31 st
Polian on Thursday a~ the pres id~nt overall, as compensation for the loss
of the Indianapolis Colts 'discussed
of Pro Bowl defensove tackle Chester
the team's pending decision on how McGiockton through free agency.
to use the No. I pick in Saturday's
" I wish we had not had !he unfor- - - - - - -tunate and ridiculous-inlerference ...
"We still have questions to be which disrupted our (draft) preparaanswered," he said over decoding lion ... aside from the stupidity, in my
between quanerbacks Peylon Man- opinion of the decision," he said.
ning or Ryan Leaf. "This is a very
McGlockton etfeclively became a
imponant decision, one that will free agent this week when the Raiders
affect the future of this franchise for declined to guarantee the one-year, $4
a good long lime. We're going to million tender they malie to him.
leave no stone unlouched."
Under an amendment to the colPolian strongly denied repons he ·lective bargaining agreement, conand coach Jim Mora had a difference tracts tendered to a team's own free
of opinion on the selection.
agents must be guaranteed even if a
"That's absolutely. totally and player is released during the year.
unequivocally, calegorically, emphatThe NA. Management Council
ically untrue," he said. ·"I'm really r.uled if the six-year veterJn and foursick and !ired of people rumoring time Pro Bowler was offered a conthings that don't have any basis. ... tract by another NFI,. team before
We' ve never had a' disagreement. We midnight Thursday - and the
haven't made a decision. We're going Raiders dechne 10 malch it -Oak-

Astros get 7-4 win over Reds

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1997 DODGE STRATUS............- ....................511,700
Tilt, cruise, PS, PB, auto., air.

1993 CADILlAC SEDAN DEVILLE ...................- 514,900
35,000 mtles, lea!her, v-e.
1995 CHEVY CAPRKE ..;............- ..........- ......512,900
VB, auto., air, PW, PL. stereo.

1996 CHEVY CAVALIER Z-24-.................:......59,850

Auto., air, PS, PB. s1ereo. till, cruise.

1996 DODGE D1SO PKKUP.._ .._,..,,_.......516,900
VB, auto., air, cass., !ill. cruise, bedllner.

1996 CHM LUMINA.--...........- ..............58,500

V6, auto., air, PW, btt, cruise.

1997 FORD EXPLORER XLT....................- ......522,950

4X4, V6, loaded, 15,000 miles.

1994 CHM 5·10 PICKUP-·-....- ...- ....._ 56,850

5 speed, stereo, 58,000 miles.

1997 CHEVY 11500 PICKUP ...- ........... ___ 522,950
VB, 4x4, auto., tilt, aliise, stereo, 3,500 miles.

1995 CHM 12500 PICKUP .............._,_ 517,900
3/4 ton, 4x4, 5 speed, air, 20,000 miles .

1995 CHEVY 5·10 PICKUP-~...- ....,_.. 510,900

5 speed, air,tilt, cruise, nice!

1"2 lORD F150-.......:...--..........- ....--. 59,400
auto., air, PW, PL, 1111, cruise.

M1ny Other Clt1n, te~ed••lf. u... C1t1
Tr1tkt.l1 tt11k u4
fer

••4

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Apr1117, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Knicks get 108-79
win over Raptors,
ear·n playoff berth
By CHRIS .SHERIDAN
AP 881ketb811·Writer
Fifteen down, one to go.
Only one playoff spot remained
up for grnbs today after the New York
Knicks became the latest team to
clinch a postseason spot with a I0879 victory over the Toronto Raptors
on Thursday night.
The New Jersey Nets can clinch
the remaining spot by beating the
Orlando Magic tonight. Qtherwise.
they 'II need to beat the Detroit Pistons on Sunday unless Washington
· loses one of its remaining two games.
" We obviously don't want it to get
down to Sunday," Keith Van Hom
said.
Nets coach John Calipari held a
team meeting with his players Thursday to remind them how close they
are to fulfilling a goal almost no one
eKpected them to reach.
" We talked about the season,
about how much I appreciate what
they've done for the organization,"
Calipari said. " We tried to talk about
the big picture of what's happened for
us this season, how many players
have revived their careers."
1'he Nets not only can clinch a
playoff spot. they also can move into
the seventh spot by winning their
final two games and hoping the
Knicks lose .Saturday night against
Chicago.
In other games Thursday. it was
Utah 99. Sacramento 86; San Antonio II 0, Vancouver 97; Portland 99,
L.A. Clippers 90: and Golden State
88, Dallas 82.
As things currently. stand. the
Knicks hold the seventh spot and.
much to their delight, are in control
as far as securing the spot and the
accompanying first-round matchup
with the Miami Heat.
"No maller where we play in the
playoffs, I'm sure we'll be a prohibitive underdog:" coach Jeff Van
Gundy said.
Larry Johnson. one of several
Knicks with injuries big and small.
scored 26 points despite playing on
two sore ankles. Chris Mills added 21
• points. while Allan Houston had 14
ond Chris Childs 13.
It was only the second win in the
·la&lt;l seven games for the Knicks, wh•
·have stumbled through the final

Ma,riners top Twins
3-2; Devil Rays' win
gives them record

stretch of the season, losing 15 of 24
games as the wear and tear of playing without Ewing took its toll.·
"Major injuries are hard to overcome , and many teams don 't. But our
team has persevered well ," Van
Gundy said.
The Knicks maintained the fourth·
longest postseason appearance streok
in the league behind Portland (16 seasons), Utah (15) and Chicago (14),
. and will enter the first round , despite
their mediocre record. as one of the
most playoff-tested teams in the
league.
.
"When the injury happened, you
replan and retool and think of ways
you can try to get it done," said Van
Gundy, who was asked if he ever had
any doubts the Knicks would make
the playoffs. "I don' t know about
doubt. but concern. yeah. coaches
always have concern.
"We've had our ups and down
and looked good and bad. I'm real
happy with the guys. and now Saturday is about trying to go from eighth
to seventh."
The game against the Raptors
stayed close for only one quarter.
An awkward. back-tO-the-basket ·
lefty layup by Starks to end the first
half gave New York a 61-451ead that
grew to 77-49 midway through the
third quarter and 90-60 entering the
fourth.
Jazz 99, Kings 86
At Salt Luke City, Karl Malone
had 21 points and eight rebounds and
Utah's bench scored 47 points as the
Jazz improved the NBA's best record·
to 61-19.
"It's difficult to focus on playing
the Kings, because we know what's
coming up," said John Stockton, who
had 10 points and nine assists . ."We
know we needed a.win. but we have
to be completely ready for (road
games against) Phoenix and L.A."
With the victory. Vtah moved a
full game in front of Chicago and
Seattle (60-20) for homecourt advantage throughout the playoffs.
"We'd really like to finish with
the best record, because that's a
source of pride for us," Chris Morris
said. ·"The homecourt advantage
would also take away any excuses in
the playoffs."
·
Spurs 110, GrliZiies 97

SMACKED Reggie Slater Is smacked In the face by
New York's Allan Houston (20) during Thursday night'• NBA game
In New York's Madison Square Garden, where the Knlcks'1 08-79 vic·
tory secured for them an Eastern Conference playoff barth. (AP)
At Vancouver, Tim Duncan had 32 and the 43rd time in their last 46
points and 10 rebounds, shot 15-forinatchups in Portland.
28 from the field and had six assists
Rasheed Wallace scored 21 points,
and siK blocked shots as the Spurs Arvydas Sabonis had 20 points and
pulled within a game of Phoenix for
I 2 rebounds for his 36th double-doufourth place in the Western Confer- ble of the season and Damon
ence and homecourt advantage when Stoudamire scored 17 points.
the two square off in the playoffs next
week. Both clubs have two games
Warriors 88, Mavericks 82
remaining, but the Suns own the
AI Oakland. Calif., Jim Jackson
tiebreaker edge.
scored 25 points, including a game"Our main goal is to be healthy clinching layup with I8.8 seconds
for the playoffs," coach Gregg left as the Warriors used a game-endPopovich said. "We are trying to do ing I0-2 run to decide it.
everything we can to make people
Golden State ( 18-63) won conwho are ·injured whole by then, that secutive games for just the founh
is all that matters to me."
time this season and will go into Sat'Ifail Blazers 98, Clippers 90
. urday's game against Vancouver
At Portland. the Blazers beat Los looking for its first three-game winAngeles for the ei~hth straight time ning streak of the year.

Get the latest in sports news from .the

Daily·Sentinel
Flyers, Avalanche, Pen.g uins get NHL wins

· By KEN RAPPOPORT
"They spent the whole night in tied for tiflh'in the Ea~t. The Capitals
'AP Hockey Writer
our end." Sharks coach D~rryl Sutler and Sabres each have two games left ,
· Recently back from aconcussion__ said. "The only time Forsberg came and Montreal closes its season Sat• · Eric Lindros is starting to look more otT tile ice was when he got tired car· . urday against Buffalo.
j like himself. Peter ForstJerg has also rying the puck."
Andy Moog stopped 23 shots and
returned from injury with a
· Penguins 4, Hurricanes I
earned his third shutout of the season
vengeance, although it took him a lit·
Pittsburgh scored three power- ' and 28th of his career.'
tie longer to find his scoring touch.
play goals in a span of 2:52 without
Blackhawk&amp; I, Devils· I
Both superstars made their presNHL scoring leader Jaromir Jagr to
Sergei Brylin scored his second
ences felt Thursday night as Lindros. beat Carolina,
goal of the season in the .third period
led the Philadelphia Flyers over the
The Penguins, having already . and the De vi Is, resting several of thei~
Florida Panthers 7-3 and . Forsberg clinched the North~a.~t Division title top players, tied Chicago in the
• ~eyed Colorildo's 4-1 victory over and heading to the playoffs for the Blackhawks' home finale.
• San Jose.
eighth straight seao;on, . sat out the
Chicago's James Black scored his
: ''It looks like Eric is getting his team's top four goal scorers to try to I0111 goal at 14 minutes of the first
timing back." said Philadelphia coach g~t them heal~hy for the postseason. period.
Roger Neilson a~ter Lindros scored
, It sun d1dn 1 matter a~ Rob Brown
The disappointed Blackhawks are
two power-play goals in only his sec- scored twice and Alexei Morozov already ' out of the playoffs, missing
ond game since missing 18 with a once on consecutive power plays in the postseason for the first time in 28
concus.~ion. "At Urnes, he wa.• domthe second per1od to g1ve the Pen- years and ending the longest current
inllling. The power play was working guins a 3-1 lead. The Penguins run in the NHL
tonight. and Eric had a lot to do with extended their unbeaten streak
. Coyotes 3, Stan 2
it."!
against Carolina to 10 (8.().2).
Gerald Diduck scored two thirdForsberg, meanwhile, had two
Canadiens 2, Senators 0
period goals. including the gamegoals and two a.sist&lt; to help the
Brian Savage scored in the secc)nd winner with 6:30 remaining,.as host
Avalanche snap a seven-game win· period and Benoit Brunet added an PhoeniK beat Dallas to secure sixth
less streak (0-6-1) and clinch their empty-net goal in the final minute as place in the West.
fourth straight division title.
visiting Montreal beat Ollawa to
Nikolai Khabibulin made 2Jsaves
Forsbel'l!. in his third game back clinch at least seventh place in the and Oleg Tverdovsky also scored for
· ~ince missing seven with a pulled Eastern Conference.
the Coyotes, who won their founh
· groin. scored his tirst goals since·
Montreal moved five points ahead straight. Phoenix, which had won
March 7. ~ong with the seven games . of eighth-place Ottawa and both only one game it trailed after two
missed because of injury. he had gone teams have one game left. The Cana· periods in its first 79 games, has used
goal-less in eight others.
diens also moved within two points two-goal third-period rallies to win
· "We cenainly needed that," Fors- of Washington and Buffalo, who are consecutive games.
berg said. "We played much better.
It's a step in the right direc.tion, but
.. we· re not there yet."
STK1928
Elsewhere, it was Pittsburgh 4,
Carolina I: Montreal 2, Ouawo 0;
Chicago I. New Jersey I ; Phoeni• 3.
Dallas 2; St. Louis 7, Los Angeles 3;
and New York Islanders 4, Tampa
Bay 0.
·
.
Flyers 7, Panthers 3
Lindros' 29th and 30th goals also his first since March 7 - helped
•the Flytrs ruin Florida's final ga~
at Miami Arena.
.John LeClair scored his 51st goal
and added four assists for the Flyers,
MSAP
$24,830
ihe No. J playoff seed in the Eastern
OM Aeblte ·1,250
Conference.
DIICOUnt
·1,500
The Panthers. winding up their
·fifth sea&lt;10n, will move to a new facil·ity 35 miles north of Miami in west·
em
Lauderdale next year.
"ll's n to score, but I .fell better
dtatina an
ing the puck." Lin. .
*CD Pt.,.,/Equellzer
.
*Power Belt
dros said, "I'm seuina there."

-

EVILLE SE SEDAN

1998

21 '

1

Avalanche 4, Slw'kll
The Avalanche became the first
NHt"team to win four strai1ht division titles since the Edmonton Oilen;
.' - ln the mid-1980s. The Avalanche's
first title in the ilreak CIIIIC when they
: were the Quebec Nordiques.
' Fonbeta, wito once was lrlded for
Litldros, increased Ilia aeason point
. '.total to 90 10 trail only PittibuiJfl'l

• 1t" Aluminum Wheel•

·~··•l!nlry

• Power mii'I'OI'I

t. , r f rn J /\'/!

1 , /d ! 1~' ~ l l 1',

,, ·'·Jaromir Jqr (100).

Clowrdo ol Jnua Clorlst APootolk

VanZindland Wud Rd.
Pwor: James Miller
• 10:30 a.m.

By RON LESKO
. Indians to two runs over 6 213
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
The innings after starter Randy Johnson
game was on the line and the closer was ejected.
failed, a familiar scene for both the
Wells was put on the 15-day di~ ­
Seattle Mariners and the Minnesota . abled list before Thursday's game
Twins.
because of a strained abdominal
The only difference was that the muscle, put that didn't bother the
Mariners might have Sl&gt;lved their Mariners. Mike Timlin and Ayala
bullpen problems. The Twins have combined for three scoreless innings
not.
after Jamie Moyer left with a 2-2 tie
Alex Rodriguez hit Rick Aguil- after the seventh.
era's second pitch of the lOth inning
"It's a start." Moyer said. "You
for the go-ahead home run in Seat- take it one day at a time . A lot of
tle's 3-2 victory.Thursday night. the times you can see what you're made
second strnight successful outing for 1Jf when you go through something
the Mariners' beleaguered bullpen.
like this. The good teams get through
But Aguilera's third failure in a it. and we have a good team."
week was a crushing blow to the
In other American League games,
Twins, who are 7-7 even though their Tampa Bay edged Anaheim 6-5.
94 runs lead the AL and their 3.58 Oakland beat Kansas City 12-7, and
team ERA is second only to Balti- Chfcago defeated Baltimore 8-2.
more's 3.46.
Devil Rays 6, Angels S
"The pitch tilt guy hit was a hell
At Anaheim. Bobby Sm.ith
of a pitch," Twins manager Tom Kel- snapped a tie with an RBI double in
ly said. "You have to give Rodriguez the seventh inning as Tampa Bay beat
credit. ... Aggie's our man in the Anaheim to become the first expanbullpen until l see otherwise, but I sion team in major league hisiory to
don't see that in the near future."
win eight of its first 13 games. Smith
The Twins. who managed only put the Devil Rays up 5-4 with his
rookie David Ortiz's two-run double double off reliever Mike Holtz ( 1-1)
in the fourth, are 1-S in one-run in the seventh.
games this season, including 0-3 in
The Devils Rays' 8-5 start also is
extra innings. Aguilera has been the the best of any new team in the hisculprit in three of those losses: at tory of major professional sports,
Kansas City last Friday. at Tampo including the NFL. NBA or NHL.
Bay on Monday and Thursday.
John Flaherty had a leadoff homer
The 'Twins' career saves leader. in the siKih for Tampa Bay.
the 36-year-old Aguilera is a notoriTony Saunders ( 1- I) gave up four
ously slow starter. His 4.92 ERA in runs. three earned, on six hils in six
April entering this season was more innings. Roberto Hernandez pitched
than a full run higher than his next- the ninth for his second save.
wor.a month.
Athletics 12, Royals 7
Yet his struggles early this season
At Oakland, Matt Stairs hit o
are reminiscent of his performance in grand slam and Jason Giambi home- .
1997, when .he converted only 26 of red twice as Oakland beat Kansas
33 save opportunities and stranded City to b(eak a six-game losing
only 59 percent of the runners he streak.
inherited.
Stairs had five RBis, doubling in
"Last yeor I really wasn't throw- a run in the third and hilling his third
ing the ball well." Aguilera said. career slam in the fourth. Giambi
''I'm throwing the hall well now, but homered leading off tbe ~cond and .
the results haven't been there. obvi- added a two-run shot in the third.
ously. I feel fine. I'm not making Jason McDonald also homered for
enough quality pitches. I guess."
the A's.
The Mariners' boosted their major
Jeff King homered and had four
league-leading home run total to 28 RBis for the Royals. and Dean
with solo shots by Rodriguez and Palmer added a homer and .three
David Segui. and it was their reliev- RBis.
ers who threw the right pitches at the
Tom Candiotti (1-3) gave up five
right times.
runs in seven innings for the A's. Tim
Tha~ made~~ two niahts in .a row
Belcher.(l-3) allowed nine runs on
in which Seaule's buiiJIFn has come nine hits- including four homersthrough. a welcome chonge for a in 3 2-3 innings for the Royals.
team that ~lew its first four ~ave
White Sox 8, Orioles l
opportunities and siruggled through
At Baltimore. rookie Jeff Abbott
~ seven-game losing• streak before hofl~Cred twice and Mike Sirolka
winning 5-3 at Cleveland on Wednes-' pitched his first complete game in the
day night.
mojors as Chicago beat Baltimore for
"All the breaks the la•ttwo weeks the White Sox's first series ·victory of
have gone the other way," Rodriguez the season.
said. "Obviously. there's a Iot 'o f tools
Albert Belle and Ray Durham also
in the bullpen. It's a matter of getting homered for the White SoK, who cona couple of wins, getting a couple of . nected three times against Mike
saves and building some confi- Mussina (2·2). Abbott and Belle hit
dence."
successive 400-foot shots in the fifth
That started Wednesday night. inning to give Chicago a 5,0 lead.
when Bob Wells, Paul Spoljaric and '
Sirotka (2 -I) gave up seven hi is,
Bobby Ayala combined to limit the walked one and struck out three.

Pastor·Jeffrey Wallace

lsi and 3rd S~nday

Bearwatlow Rld&amp;t Chun:h "'Christ
Pastor:Terry Stewart

Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Won;hip · !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.
Sunday

.

Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Zion Chun:h of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.!43)

Fret Will Baptist Chun:h
Ash Sl!eel, Middleport

Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wo!Ship · II a.m.

5 p.m.

Pastor: Lcs Hayman
Sunday Service . 7:00p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Rutland Flnl Baplltt Church
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship . !0:45a.m.
Po~eroy Ftnl Bapllst
Easl Main Sl.
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southern BaP.IIst
41872 Pomeroy Poke
Pas1or: E. lamar O'Biyanl

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· !0:~5 a.m,, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Flnt iloptlst Ch•n:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow

61h and Palmer St, Middlepo11
Sunday School - 9:IS a.m.
Wo1Ship -10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service: 7:00p.m.
Roc..e Flnt Baptist
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
Sliver Run Baptlot
-Pastor: Bill Little

I

' MI. Union Boptlst
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday SChool-9:45a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday .Services· 6:30p.m, ·
llethlthem Baplltt C:hu...,
Oreal Bend, Roule 124, Racine, OH

Leading Creek Rd., Rulland
Pastor: lltiJ. Dewey KJng

Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship ·1 p.m.
Wednesday P"Y" meeling· 7 p.m.

Worship. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Hollaeu Chun:b
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
WoBhip • !0:45 a.m., 7p.m.
Thulsday Service · 7:30p.m.
Laurel Clift Free Methodist Church

Evangelisl Joseph B. Hoskins

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
WoBhip- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Servicts • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jerry Singer

Vktory Baptisllndeptftuot
525 N. 2nd St; Middtepon

Faith Baptist Chun:h

P~lor:

Worsh1p • 11a.m .• 6 p.m.
Wedne~ay Services· 7 p.m.

Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Fonst Ruo llaplht

Rutland Churdl of God
Pastor: Randy Ban
Sunday S&lt;:hoot · 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev, David Russell

Sunday Schoolond Worship· 10 a.m.
E\lcning Services· 6:30p.m.

Chur&lt;h or God or..:\.......,,
O.J. While Rd. off St'Rt 160
Pallor: P.J. Chaplilfln
Sunday School - IO•cm.
Worship · II a.m.
·wednesday Services . ·7 p.m.

Evening • 7 p.m. .

Co ng reg at1o na I

Ca tholi c

. Trlnlly Cllurdt.
·
Second &amp; Lynn, Ponlil'oy
PaSior: Rev. Roland Wit.lman
Sunday 5\'hool and woishlji !0:25

Pastor: Rev , Waller E. Heinz

Ep; sco pal

Chu rch o f Ct111 st

Gnct ~t Cllu~
· 326 E. Main Si., Pome~
Re&lt;1o1: Rev. D. A. duP[Infler
.Holy EuchasiS1111a
Sunday School 40:30 a.m.
Cotree
fvllowlna 1

Sal. Con. 4:45-S:!Sp.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. ·8:45-9: IS a.m.,
Sun. Mull · 9:30a.m.
Dailey M151 ·8:30a.m.

p

'"" ClotsrdloiCIIrlst

'

212 W. MainS!.

Ho i mess

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- .10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7p.m.

Danvlllt Hollo., Chn:ll
31057 Slole ~le 325, Langsvlle

Minister: Danny Biu

•

........, Watstde Cbun:h of Chrlol
33226 Children'• Home Rd.
Sunday School • II a.m.

Pn.tt~or: . Dr.

J.D. Young
Sunday school· 9:30a . m~·~
Sunday wollihip • 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7p.m.
Wcdnc:sday prayer service -1 p~ m.

l'aith Gospel Church
Long Bottom

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W01ship.• 10:45 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo15hip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Middleport Churclt or I he Nazorene
Pastor: G•esory A. Cundiff
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
·
Worship· 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service. 7 p.m.

Unlled FaHh Churth

Reeclivllle Fellowship
Cbun:h of lhe Nazarene

R!. 7 on Pomeroy ·By-J?ns.li

Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· i0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Ministry· Ravenswod Stalion
4-4:30 Salurday
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
WOIShip • tO a.m.

,' Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Cloester Cbun:h of tile No~Jrtnt

Tuesday Services . 7:30p.m.

Pastor ~ Rev. Herbert Orate
Sundi.y School· 9!30 a.m.
Wolllhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wtdnesi:lay Sc:vices- 7 p.m.

Asbury (Syn&lt;Ute}
Pas.tor: Chad Emrick

Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
W01ship . II a.m .
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Portland Flnt Cllun:h&lt;1fthe Nazarene
Pastor: Mark

Mal~n

· 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeiViceS • 7 p.m.

Flatwoods

PIISiot: Keilh Rader
Sunday'School • 10 a.m.

• 120 minutes talk time,
30 hours standby

Syracuse First United Pnsbyttrlan
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Sunday School - tO a.m.

Harrisoa.-Uie Presbyterian Church
Worship · 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School- 9 a.m.

Worship . 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry His. Rd., Pome10y
.

P_s,Jotor: Roy U,winsty .,.
Saturday Services: '

, Sabbalh Scbool · 2 p.m.
Worship.~

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon Unlled Brethren
In Christ Churth
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sander!i
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sef\liccs ·7:30p.m.

Eden Unhed Bmhren in Christ
2 1/2 miles north of J{eeds\lille
. on State Route 124
Pasror: Rev. Robert Markley

Sunday School - 11 a.m.

• Sunday Worship· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
•
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Youth Smice · 7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
C•rlelon Interdenominational Church
KingshUI)' Road
Pns10r: Jeff Smith
Sund&lt;ty School • 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pa!Oior: Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Sunday $ehoot - 9:30a.m.

Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Service • 7 p.m.

Wc~nj::sday

Worship. 1 ~ a.m.

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992-2121

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992·7075
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Soulh Bethel New Te!ilamenl
Silver Ridge
Paslor: Robert Barber

Church ·a rmowtcements
sponsored by these area
merchants.

• 75 name~and-number
memory

Presbyterian

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVie&lt;s · 7 p.m.
Wo~Ship

Wednesday SeiVites · 7:00p.m.

Pas1or: Rev. Roger.Willfdrd ·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7·p.m.

Pastor: Samuel Basye:

L

Third Ave.
Pastor: R""'. Clark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening . 6 p.m.

freedom Gospel Missio&amp;

Rulta..i Chun:h ol lhe Nazarene

" '~

Middleport Pentecostal

Tuesday &amp; Thu" daf · 7:30 p.ni.
·

Pomeroy Chun:h or the Nazarene
Pasto~: Rev. Lloyd 0 . Grimm,! I .
Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9:.30 a.m.
Wolllhip · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.

Paslor: Sharon Hausman

Pastor; William Hoback
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m .
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Ughthouse

Ra~io

Tuppen Plolns St. Paul

New Ufe Vi&lt;lory Cenler
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, QH
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday SeiVices · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.. &amp;. Youth 7 p.m.

33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
PaStor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.

Syncase C~urth of the Nnarene
PaslOr, Roben J. Coen

Won;hip · 9:30 u.m.
Sunday xhoot · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
Fi~&gt;t Sunday of Monlh · 7:30p.m. seivice

Clifton , W.Vn.
Sunday Sch.ool - lO.a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Wednesday SeiVIce · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

Reedsv!Be

Ente'l'rlse
Pallor: Kellh Rader
"unday School . 10 a:m.
Wo!Ship · 9-a.m.

ML Olive Community Chun:h

Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Loo·--

.

Moise Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worship. l J a.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Ton:h Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Won;hip . 10:30 a.m.

Cenlnl Clu1ter

.,...r

Dyesville Community Church
Sunday School • 9:30a.m. .,
Wo15hip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Grand Street
Sunday School • 10 a.m .
. Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9:30 a.m.
Wo15hip. 10:30 a.m.

Cllnon Tabernacle Church

Pent.costal Assembly
St Rl. 124, Racine

Pastor: Edsel Hart

Melp Coopentlve Parlth
Northeast Clu•ter
Allred

Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

, Friday· 7:00p.m.

Pentecostal

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo1&gt;hip · 10:)0 a.m.. 7:30p.m.

Hocki•Bport Chun:h

Joppa
Paslor: Bob Randolph
wo..hip. 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.

Hazel Community Chun:h
OffRI. 124

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

Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Apostolic Failh

1/4 mile past Fort Me ig.~ on New Lima Rd .
Pastor: William Van Meter

Worship · II a.m. .

. Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C

Chester

Church of Jesus Christ,

Wednesday • 7 p.m.

·
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgcmari St., Syracuse
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m. .

Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

• PaMor: Sharon Hausman
Worship· 9 a.m.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.

Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday E\lening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St
Sunday School · IU a.m.

Pasror: Sharon Hausman

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am

Faith Valley Tabemacle Church

Pastor: Helen Kline

"

Pastor: Lawrence fo reman

Wednesday SeiVice · 7:30p.m.

Brian Harkness

7 p.m.

Rejolcin~ Ule Church
SilO N. 2nd Me., Middlcporl

Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Schooi!O a.m.
Evening . 7:30p.m:

Coolville Uniled Methodist Parloh

Mt. Oll•e United Methodlot
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pasl01: Rev . Ralph Spi1es· .
Sunday School· 9130 a.m.
Wol!hip · !0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Thulsday Services· 7 p.m.

· Syrocute Flnt Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Sis.

Even i ng ~

Middleport Community Chun:h
515 Pcad St., Middlepon

Pastor: Brilin Harknes·s
Sunday School • tO a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Gnham Uolted Mtthodi1t
Wo,.hip · 9:30.a:r... {lSI &amp; 2nd Slrn),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp;: 41h Sun)' .

Worship· 11 a.~., 6 p.m.
Wednesday -Serv1ces • 1 p.m.

Pastor: David Dailey

Sunday School 9:30 a.m.

Endtime House Or Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship · 10 a.m. .
Wednesday servi\:e - 6:30p.m.

Rllcine

Un1ted Methodist

Sunday School , 9:4! a.m.

Harrison"Yille Community Church
Pastor:· Th~ron Durham.

orship • 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
WOIShip • II a.m.

Racirie

Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h

ML Morlih Chun:h of God

Railroad St., Mason

Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

Vibrating Mini-Handheld Cellular Phone

Sun ay School · 10 a.m.

Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Church of God
Pasror: Rtv. James Sanerficld

Sundar S&lt;:hool . 10 a.m.

CELLUU.R.
...
. , . .. . ..

St. Jolin Luthenn Chun:h
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirick

Pastor: James E. Keesee

W01ship. 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

l/liiTID ITAm

Lutheran

Sunday School· 11 a.m.
WOIShip · 10 a.m.
Eall Letart

SL Pout Lulhona Chon:h

Sunday .School· 11 a.m.
W01ship. 9:30a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

. Momlng Star

Old Belllel Fret Will Baptist Cbun:h
28601 Sl. Rl. 7, Middtepon
Sunday S&lt;:hoot • tO a.m.

Wednesday Servi~s -7 p.m.

The Believers' Fellowship Ministry

Pastor: Dcwayne Stutler

Sacramenl Service 9-10: 15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. r 7 p.m.

Pastor:Jim HugheS

Friday · fellowship service 7 p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
W01ship · 10:45 a.m.
Bible S1udy Wed. 7:00p.m.

The Chun:h of Jesus
Christ or Latter-Day Saints
St Rl. 160,446-6247 01446·7486
Sunday S&lt;:hool 10:20-11 a.m.
Relief Socie1y/P1ioslhood 11 :05-12:00 noon

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick

.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo15hip · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

Racine •.Ohio .
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Slivers•ltle Word or Fallh

Long Boatom
Pastor: Steve Reed

Cannti·Sunon

RffilsvHit Chun:h of Chrlll
Pa51ol: Philip Slurm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.

Hartford C - of Christ In
Chrit~a• Union
Hartfo1d, W.Va.

Sunday Schoo.! · 9:30 o.m.
Wo•lhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedfiesday Service · 7:30 p. m.

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h

· Cannel &amp; Dashari Rds.

Worship . 11 a.m.

· Sundar S&lt;:hoot • 10 a.m.
Wornhtp ·11a.m., 6 p.nr.

Sunday service. 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7&gt;1JO p.m.
· Wednesday scrvit:e•.7:00 p.m.

Worship --9 a.m .
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Worship· 9:30a.m.. 7 p.m.

Chri sti ;m Union

Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd ...
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood

HobJon Christian Fellowship Chun:h

Pastor: Oewayne Sluder.

Sunday S&lt;:hoot · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Wo~ShiP. · !0:30a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Sludy ·6:00p.m.

Hlllstdt Baptist Chun:h
S1. Rt 143 juSI off Rt 7

Christian Fellowship Center
Sale m St , Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser •
Su nday St:hool - JO a.m.
Worship · 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool · 10 a.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool . 9:30a.m.
wo,.hip. 10:30 a.m.

Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Pastor Michael Pangia
Sunday serviCI!, 10 a. m.
Thursday service, 7 p.m.

· Bethany

Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Faith Chapel Open Bible Church
923 S. Third St, Middlepon

Worship · 9 a.m.

or Latter Doy Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.

Thursday Service • 6:30 p.m.

Thu!Sday Services · 7:30

Pe•rt Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool· 9:15a.m.
WoiShip · 10:15 a.m.
Snow•ltte
Sunday School· tO a.m.

Reorpnlzed Cllurdl of Jesu• Christ

Dexter

Langsv!Ue Chrlotlan Chun:h
Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m ,, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Worship · 10 a.m.

SeNice time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Pastor: Ron Fierce

Latter -Day Saints

· Minister: Doug SMmblin

Hickory Hills Cbun:h of Chriot

Calvary Bible Chun:h

773-5017

Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wo!Ship · !0:30a.m.
Bible S1udy Tuesday· tO a.m.
RockSprlop
Pas1or: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 9:!5 a.m.
WoiShip • 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.
Rudoad
Sunday Sclooot ·9:30a.m.
WoBhip . 10:30 a.m.
Thulsday Services - 7 p.m.
SaltmCenter

Sunday Evening- 7 p.m.

Worship· 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

Pastors John &amp; Pany Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Pastor: Roben E. Robinson

Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.

Youlh MiniSiel: Bill Amberge1
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.

Fellowship Cnuad• for Chri&gt;l

Mtnen•Uie
Pastor: Chad Emrick

Pastor; Rev. John Neville
Children's service · 10 a.m.

Bradford C...n:h or Christ
of Sl. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Foil~

Pasror: Rev. Frankli n Dickens
Scr\·icc; Friday, 7 p.m.

We!leyoo Bible Hollso.,. Chun:h
75 Pe811.St, Middleport.

Come~

Paswr: John Hart

Sunday School · 9,30 a.m.
Worship· 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

Agape ure Center
"Full-Gospel Church"

Pomeroy

Worship· 10:30 a.m.

Fairview Blblt Chun:b
Letart, W.Va. Rt I

Sunday Sch&lt;lol · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m.

Pine c..,... Bible Holilfftl Chun:h
trz mite off Rt 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wol!hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rutload C0111munily Chun:h
Pas1or: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday S&lt;:hoot · 9:30 a.m.

.

H..t. (Middleport}

Putor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wt dne5day Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.

Bnulbury Chun:h ol Christ

Rutland Chun:h ol Christ
Sunday SchOol ·9:30a.m.
wo.. hip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Harvest Outreach Ministries
47439 Re ibel Rd .. Chester

Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan

Pastor: David DeWitt

S&lt;:hoot ·9:30a.m.

Worship · 9 a.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool · 10 a.m.

Rase ofSbmlo Hollo., Chun:b

Sunday School· !0:!5 a.IJ\.
Youlh· 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

~unday

Other Churches

Thursday Servic&lt;t . 6:30p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
WoiShip · !0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00p.m.

Pas1or: Tom Runyon

Foreat R•a
Pastor: Chad Emrick

Sunday S&lt;:bool 9:30 a.m.
Wo11ht;:l'
' . . tl a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wedne y Service · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.

R.ce/VI50 Loa/ 8Gnul lflnuMt I month lor 12111011fb
.,.,., rou lign up lor flfW UnlffiiShtln Ce/lullt s.rvice.t ·

=t¢*

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush

Heml&lt;&gt;&lt;k Grove Chun:h ·

Evening · 7:30p.m.·

600 Local Bonus Minutes

117·1110

Calvary Pllplta Cllopel

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell .

Pastor : Daniel Berdine

The Choice is Yours

oc Car Adaptor
(a U9.99 value! 117·611
lwltluctivllion of tl7·1l101

WorShip Service · 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.)ll.

PaSior: Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m..

Sll&lt;roil Hwt c.Jholk Churdl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898

l'ltl-:1·:

lnslrumental
Pastor: Soot Brown

WednesdaY Services-7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

(Reg. S19.99 w~h
activa1ion. S319.99 wilhool.)

Tuppen Plain Chun:h or Christ

Uberty Christian Chun:h

R•daod F"" Will Baptist
Salem St
Pallo~: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

• 2 hours
talk time,
30 hours
standby

Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · tOa.m.
Wo!Ship · II a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · t0:45 a.m.
Sunday Even ins· 6:00p.m.

999.

Pastor: Roger Watson

Wednesday Scrvice-7:00 p.m.

Aotlqvlty llaptlot

• 40-number speed dialing
'
• Data-capable

Putor: AI Hanson
Youlh Minister: Bill Frazier

Keno Chun:h of Christ
Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

We offer

Flip-style cellular with 40-number memory

Middleport Chun:h ol Chriot
51h ond Main
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
W01ship· 8:!5, 10:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

MI. Mllrillh Baptitl
Founh &amp; Main St, Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Crais, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . t0:45 a.m.

* Power Windows

~MilH ~UI(K •~ONJIA(
,· · f

Greg AdamJ and Pat Verbeek
scored for the Stars, who saw their
five-game winning streak snapped
and lost a chance to secure home ice
throughout ' the playoffs. The Stars.
with I 07 points, are tied with New
Jersey in the race for the Presidents'
Cup for the league's best record with
one game remaining.
Blues 7, Kinp 3
Darren Turcotte and Cr.aig Conroy
each seored twice as the . visitiilR
Blues beat' the Kings.

WoiShip • !Oa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Apostolic

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Frlday,Aprll17,1998

.,

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•

•

•

1998

Friday, Aprll17,

Business Services
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;:::'!"!':1::~~n~~:f!~~:~~

glvon -to-oil blnka In 11id
County end · ouch othor
llnonclallnatllutlona oa mty
bt noceaoory 11 provldod
b
All
II
h II
y I-.
opp conta 0 1
oubmlt, In writing, their
tnalltutlon'a policy con·
corning tht following ; (1)
Chtrgo lor chocko; (2)
Strvlco chorgo; (3) Minimum
btltnct requlrod; (4) Tho
amount of tho $3,000,000.00
quaillltd lor undor 30% ol
total · non-public ouota,
(10% Savlnga 1nd Loena,
non· public lattts) •. Slid
Board
.o r
county
Commlatlonort reurvoa
tho right lo reject eny or all
bldt. Awtrdo lor the Actlvt,
lnacllve,and
lntorlm
dopoalta ol public lunda
oubjoct to tho control ol
aatd Botrd will bo made on
April 27, 1898, lor a porlod
olllmo commencing on lht
Ill doy of May, 1998: Each
applicant ohan rurnlah •
copy of 111 moot recent
ototomtnt of condition
otgnod by 11, Cathlor or
other authorized olllcor.
Appllcallono ohould bt
..utlod
A 11 uand · dmorkod
lh
PP co on un or
•
Unllonn Dopoottory Act"
. Gtarli.~":C;;~=
Commtoetonero
(4) 17 , 24 21c
=.;..:..:~~~------Public Notice

ol aeld botrd to be Active
depoattlngalll tny one tlmt
during lht next two yttra In
Throe Million Dollar•
113,000 ,ooo.oo). The oatl·
milled lllgrtQott •mount of IN THE COMMON PLEAS
lneetlvo Iunde tor :JCHO.eo
COURT OF
deye, e months, or .l yotr Ia
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
TllrH Million Flvt Hundred J-...tl1111 s. Mllem
Thouund
Dollar•
(13,500,000.00). Tllllnttmat- 110 Help wanted

Notice
I·PIIIrilllff,
VI
WUIItm,Ire Mlltm,
Dlloncltnl
Caae No. 91-DR-007
NoUce by PubiiCIUOn ·
To William lrt Mlltm,
whollt 11111 known 1ddr111
wta: c/o Nsthtn and Pam
Milam, 11011 Strtwbtrry
Lint, Clevellnd, TN 37311;
you 111 hereby noUIItd that
you have bean named
dtlondtnt In 1 togtl tctlon
tntltled Jacqueline S .
Mlltm, Pltlmtff, v. Wllll•m
Ire Millin, Deltndtnt. Thlt
action hae ·blln tealgnod
Ca• No. 91-DR-007 ond It
pending In lht Common
Plolt Court ol Molgo
County, Pcimoroy, Ohio

1

Public Notice
45789:
The · object ol tho
complaint It e dtvorct and
the preyer 11 tht plllmlff be
grtnled 1 divorce !rom the
doltndent, temporery end
porme1111nt cuatody ol the
pllltloa' minor chlldron end
child 8Upport.
You tro roqulrod to
tnewor tho complaint whhln
28 d1y1 lor 1n1wer will
comiiNince o~ that dille.
In ct• of your ltllure to
snawer or otherwlet
respond 11 required by the
Ohio Ruloa of Civil
Procedure, judgment by
dtlault will be rtndered
agtlnat you lor the rtllel
demllldtd In the complaint.
(4) 10, 17, 24, (5) 1, 8, 15 81C

M

j

BINGO
MON.&amp; WED.

6:30P.M.•

RUTLAND
POST467
STAR BURST

$850.00
$50.00 OR MORE
PEl GAME

lEECH GROVE
ROAD

'

0

ortun

n
emOry
HILTON WOLFE SR.
W 1h
e W I to thank everyone who ahared
In our grltf In the paaalng of Hilton Wolfe Sr.
and who did so much to make It easler for
us. S pee Ia I th ank .s t o t h e R aclne E. M.S.,
h
h
t OH w o aent such lovely flowers, cards,
vlalted the funeral home, aent food, the
Hilltop nelghbora, those who offered their
kind word a of sympathy, Rev. Brian
Harkneaa t hi
11
d
or s coneo ng wor a, theladlea
of the United M.Jthodlat Church and othera
who sent food for the dinner. Also we thank
the wonderful peopla of Cremeens Funeral .
Home.
.

Career Opportunities

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

lim Pleasant VaUey
If&amp;I Hospital ·

Woodtn Angell,
Slulltd Albblta &amp; Btlrt

,

;I

0pon Tutt..fri. IM

)

Sot ICI-4; C - Stet &amp; lion.
.
AI. 124,111nomlllo,OH '• ,,

t/V1

French City
Maytag

..
I

- · .•..

..

•·

Special Thru
March
. 8 tort Delivered
$120

..
;

.,

'

'•·

OFF
NOW!

WICKS

HAULING
Dirt

How•rd L Wrlteul

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

. ·.

'
''

'

'
I.

.

-

740·985·4422

7/Wifn

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAL ·
50% OFF Ill.

·lANDSCAPE
NIJRSERY
IIAUEDAHD
IUALAPPED TREES
Norway Spruce,
Whitt Pine and
Ctlllldlln
Homtock
Delivery .Available
H•n11ock Grov• .Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 740-892·7285
Afttr4P.M.

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

992-oon

~iding

New

Room Additions • Roofing

SAYRE
:/TRUCKING

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEN.I IAL ,
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643

Hauling, ExcaVIUng
&amp;Trenching
Umeito;ne &amp; GI'IIVII
Septic ·syatama ·
Trelllr &amp; Houee Sltta

{No Sunday Calls) •

!•

,_,.,.Rifn

'

t

t

•

BICKBOE AID·
DOZER SERVICE

t

.

-· •"
«

1

Save Up To

75" OH

G~ere .

TIM'S CUSTOM

Downspouts

CARPET

Gutter Cle1ning

P1lntlng

Just off Bradbury Rd.
(Look tor signa)

FREE EBnMATED

Middleport, Oh

949-2188

740-882-53'11'
Da &amp; Evanln · Houra

211 -

'S

J

-Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138
'

Computer Graphjcs
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
. •Commercial
•Rnldentlal .
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohjo

CHESHIRE
FOOD MART

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•

'

LowRat"l

614-$92-34"r0

Pomeroy VFD
Chicken &amp; Rib
BBQ
Sun. April 19th ·
Serving starts
11:00 am

992-5050

'....-t

'

,

985-4473

mo.

Garages • Replacement Windows

(LimeStone-

'
'

''

.

LUDICIPB ·
DDIGII

•NiwHomes
•Garages
'
•Complete
Ramodellng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

New Homes • VInyl

•'

or .

614·691•7231

..

~DIWMIWfl'l«&lt;t.n

.

614-691·5716

ROBERT·BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"

40%

TQp .Soil,_Fill

••

FREE ESTIMATES

Call Randy

Gravel, Sand,

~

Rtbloomlng Uttes, Hoatt, Ptonlea, Blledlng Hltrta, etc,
Variety of Perennial• ~
Fruit &amp;Flowering Trtts, Shrubs, Pinta &amp;Aztleu
Morning Star CR 30
Raclnt, Ohio

Mileage Limit

Umestone,

AA/Eoe

Professional Floor
Covering

·Bo~at Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
CoiniiNircltl and
lltaldentlel
24 Hr. Bobcat Service
Avalltbte
Free Eeflmeree
No Job Too Smell
·Brion Morrt1on
(740) 985,3948

Cinelli•, Rtllla;
AMomllhtrapy,

74MIZ-4$H

·

a. Vegatable Fleta
Hanging Ba~kats $6.13

P/B Contractors lric.

.OII£III(j WIDI£ IIMIIIG SUPPliES.
2 Tllr Angel Blrdblth
Fou.n tlln" lnctudta pump,
lor $121.00

·-

ed, Gallia Count~ Area, Full Or
Pan-Time. Send Reaumu To
P.O. Box 230, .JacW.son, OH 456 .. 0

Due To Company Expansion . We
tve

Rick Pearton Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete

IUCtion 11rvice. Licensed
188,0hlo &amp; Well Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Ot ~-773-54&lt;17.-

'

~I

~Septic

Syst.ems.
•Basements

~

•••
••
•
'•'·
•''·

•Excav~tlng
. CALL

'•

•

1·740·949•2015

~

.

Furnilufa fepalr, refin11h and ''""

torat10n, also cu&amp;lom orderl OhiO

Valley Reliruah lng Shop, larr¥
Ptulhps, 740-992-6578.

304-675: 1957

•

Profess101'1BI Tree Servl,e, StumP
Removal , Free Etlimatet l In·
aurance, 81dwell, Ohio. 614 ·3881
9648, 614-367-7010.

Real Eatate Sates Pitrson Wa nt·

t-800-854-4157.

•

•

snarer's lawncare SerVICe, Free

Estimates. Caii74P·441 ·0318.

Will Care For Etderty Or 'Hand1•
All Rer&gt;ies ~ Conlidonlial.
capped Person In Mw Home, Ref!
Reliable baby siUer needed for •ences. -740-441-1536.
,
litmo. old, mual have reterencea. Will UDw lawns In Gatlia County1
30'-875-7392.
740~3248.
SHAWNEE MENTAL
FINANCIAL
HEALTH CENTER, INC,
Scioto County Clinic

ADULT CASE MANAGER - Ro ·
quires A Bachelor Deg ree And
Ohio LSW Or LPC, Must Have
Knowledge Of Community Support
Earn St ,000 Weekly Stuffing En· SYstem CDmponenll; Ell1tnSIV8
\lelopes At Home. Start NoW. No .Knowledge And Backgrou nd In
Experience. Free Supplies, In fo. Mental· Health Princlplea A.no Cri~o Obligation. Send LSAS E" To :. lil lnte r~r~entlon . Competitive
A&lt;o, Dept: 1351, Box 5137, Dia- Salary And hcellent Btnefll
Peckage. Fuii·Time Poslllon
mond Bar, CA 81 76~
Available Immediately. Please
Apply To SMHC, Inc., A11n.: Per·
sonnel Olrector, P.O. Bo• t50 7.
Portsmouth, OH •5662, Or FAX:
740-353·6206. Applications Accepted Until Position Ia Filled.
EEOIMFVH
.

210

Business •
Opportunity
INOTICE I

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
recomrr1ends that you do bu!i.i
ness wilr people you know. ana
NOT to eend money through the
mail until you have investigated
the offering.
•
HOT NEW DIET EARN THOU ;
SANDS While Lasing Weight
New M.L.M. Opportunity, Call l688-857-8968.

If you have an established busiJ
nesa and unused parking space,1
Someone to do general house- you may qualify to be a U·Haul
work in my home, must ha\le own Dealer. If' interested call 800·282 tranaponation, send resume &amp; 8575.
references to : Bo• SF. ,6 cJo
Point Pleasant Register 200 230 Professional
Main St. Pt. Pleasant. WV
Services
25550.

livingston's baument water.prooling, a}l basement repairs
frefi estimates, lileti me
Immediate Openings For 1St, 2nd, done,
guarantee. tOyr&amp; on job experi·
3rd And Weekend Shilt Store·
room /Toolroom Issuers At A Lo- ence. :1)4~75-2145.
cal Manufacturing Company. Need your house cleaned, yard,
Storeroom E•perience Helplu l garage, building', etc? Call Vicky,
And Computet' Literacy Required. 740.S.:l-5510.
Resumes And Applications Will
Be Accepted At Borg Warn-er
Automothti, 2180 Eastern 'A~r~e ­
nue , Gallipolis, OH From 7:30
A.M. - I :00 P.M , Mon . - Fri. Ask
For Dixie Industrial Supply At The
Lobby Desk. May Also Fax Re sume To 740·44t·3255 . Equal
OPportuniry Employer.

•

CARPET
PLUS

141=2115

CANDLE SHOP

•w-....-..
-.-.
-·1

. IM

•Roam Additions
•New Garegea
•Electrical &amp; Plul'(lblng
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Palnllng
Alao Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
et2-6215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio

Bedding

1-IEAT
MIRROR•

Assistant Executive Director of -Patient Care Services

WilHam A. Barker, Jr., ·
Assistant Executive Director or Admlnlstrath•e Services
·
Pleasant Valley Hospital
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleaaaat, WV 25550

Qu•llty •114 Lew Prlu

LIMESTONE

Competitive Salary &amp; Beneflls

Required:
~ Bachelor or Science In Nurslna
~ Five yean minimum experleace at a senior manaaement level
Preferred:
~Maslen degree In Nunlna or related field
Send resume and salllry requlremenls to:

V~tlety,

11MH prkes rn lor SOII!ag

"·----

P.M .. 7 Dayo lds,illc.

Conlact

360° Communications

, YOUNG'S
QRPENTER SEVICE

"We don't wanl to make moraey, we ju&amp;l
want to &amp;ell flower&amp;. "

Pit Gtlwlr ....................._16.25
In~ Hano ...........'S.60
IIX laltlil ...................... '8.00
Show Ckktn .................... 17.30

..

Competitive Pa.,.
1'8rtttn&amp;age Of Gross

180 wanted To Do

George!i Portable SawmilL don'l
haul your logs to the mill jutt eeM

POSTAL JOBS TO 118.35/HR.
Inc. Benehtl. No Ellperience. For
A.pp. And Exam Into., Call 1-800·
813· 3585 , Ext B•H4 , 8 A. M.• g

DiopiiCh. late Model COllY.
Tractors W!Flatbed T,.,iefs.

JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE

SIJE'S GREENHOUSE

SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grove Ad,
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2481

Members and Guest Invited

MayGodBieasallofyou.
' Ruth WoHe and Family

'

COUNTRY

NOTICE

"

INTERNET SIGN·IJP POINT
POMEROY, OH
740..992·1135
0/1:1/111 mo.

FARM FEED&amp;

• Vinyl Siding • Soffit
• Fascia • Snmleu
Gutllll' • Roofing
•lleplocamont Winclowa
• Slalianary Docks
• llawn Insulation
• Garagln • D.cks
24 • 24 I'Git Building
slarling ot $5995

014/TFN

74().245-()701.

9

STOREROOM ISSUER

Give us a cs/1 for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

PINE GROVE

740-992·2772

KICKIN' COUNTRY
~DI~atrina Friday 8:00·12:00
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

•

740·9"-·3006

J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
INSULATION

.,

992·5513

(814 992-42n

"'l'our One Stop
Computer Shop"

OHIO RIVER SERVICE

Altere p.m.
(740) 985-4180.
FrH Estimate•
4/lllt11mo.pot.

Em Ioyer

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Joe Wilson

_.. PERFORMANCE
~ UPGRADES

Rubbish
Pick Up for
Residential &amp;
Commll'clll
(No moaa loft behind)
Call

leavemeae~e.

Sotur4ay 7pm. Ron Price
~~~- morcrendi...
EdFrazioril930
8fenda Ftazler•1315.

Stick • ng • Aluminum Welding

COIIPnER

IRi

Garbage &amp;

Take the pain out of
painting, and lat· me
do It for you.
Interior
Before II p .m.

new &amp; used mtrehandilt.

Welding Supplies • Steel Sales

Techmcian Call 740-245·0-l 12,

NOW HIRING Ill'
l'&lt;ljAT WE OFFER:
Big 1111, April 11·18, furnilure,
bike~ dothing, bookl, loll Great Benelil Pkg., Rapid Ad·
ot everything, Joe Humphrey'&amp; vancement , Pleasant Working
Condltiona, FI1J1 ible Hours Sot!d
r•idence 2 mileo SR 143.11-?
38 Year Old Compoiny, No layoff&amp;
• S1,400 Per Month To Start
80
Auci!on
WllAT CAN YOU OFFER?
and Flea Market
CAUMONIJAY
ONLY 9 a.m. ·5 p.m
liT. AI.TO AUCTION
740-4411-0522
Rt. 2·U "'Crouroadl"
An Equal ()pporru!lry Employer
Flidly 7pm. Grocorio~

•Re-cores • New Radiators

tie Supervitlon AI A Cleaning

!

POMEROY, OH.

614-992·5479

For All Your

LINDI'I
PllllftiG .

4/21/98.
E ual

Mil

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive

113 W. 2ND ST. •

Q_uallty Service

Of

ollr=========~=========~~~~~~~=~

eel
1ggreg1te
tmount
lnltrlm
furidl for
a lime to .
bt dtalgntttd by tbo
County Trtlturtr during the
next two y11rl 11 One
Hundred ·Thouaan!f Dollars
jS100,000.00).
IE IT FURTHER RE·
IOLVEO, thai notice bo

B .C.S., with over 50 ·locations In South·
eaatern Ohio, currently has 2 openlnga (liveIn) for a new program In Meigs County. Both
positions require sleep-over.
1) 40 hrs/wk: 3 pm Mon. thru
am Sat.;
daytime houra off;
..
2) 32 hra/wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon.;
We are aearchlng lor compualonate protei·
slonals with a team vision and a desire to
teach personal and community skills to
Individual• with mental retardation/developmental disabilities. The work environment Is
lntermal and rewa{dlng. The requirements
are: high achool dlploma/GED, valid Ohio
drlver'a license, three years good driving
experience and actequate automobile Insurance. B.C.S. offers comprehensive training In
the field of MR/DD. lntereated applicants
need ·to specify position of Interest and send
resume to: •
Buckeye Community Service
P.O. Box 604
Jackson, OH 45640
All applications must be poatmarked by

a

Was $18,950
1!11 c~m s-18 414 Ell. ca~
St&lt;i!konbor8TI93B
• POwer Winltlws • Loaded!

Public Notice
·
NOTICE FOR APPUCATION
UNDER THE UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY ACT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Notlco Ia htroby given
that tppllcotlone will be
rectlvtd by tho undoratgntd
at tho offlco ol tho Board ol
Mtlga County Commlaalon·
ora, Court House, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45789, umll12:00 noon
on tho 27th day of April,
1-, ond oponod and road
a'oud 11 1 :0!1 p.m. on that
dtto !rom any financial
Institution logally eligible
which mty doolro lo oubmll
1 wrltttn appllcotlon to be I
Public Dopotltory ol the
Actlvt, lnactlvo, and Interim
dtpotlto ol public monoyo
ol aald Board I t provided
by t~• Uniform Dtpooltory
Act, Section 135 of lhe Ohio
llevlotd Code.
S•ld tppncallon ohtil ba
made In conformity wlih tht
tollowlog reoolutton adopt·
od 11 • regular meatlng ol
tho Mtlge County Botrd or
Commlltlonero held April'
13a' 1E"'rr·RES"' ·vED, thll
"'"
tho eatlmoted oggregtlt

Help Wanted

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

.RADII,.OR REPAIR

1

Phone 740·992·3987

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

992·5n6

E~p.

411111 mo.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling'
Iii:-,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding ) '.!!:
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrl. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

Ohio River
Campgrounds and·
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise.
.New &amp; used hems. We
Buy • Sell • Trade; Toots,
tithing equip., TV'a,
CB'a, atereoa · - llttlt bh
of everything. Loctltd
on Ohio River Campgroundt, . St. Rt. 124,
Recine, Ohio.
.
740-14.1012

20 Yrs.

Remodeling

1998 Martin Sttaet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"I" MILE

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

a

"Build Your Dream"

E.rinuJte•

OPENING APRIL 1

day a.etora the ad Ia to run,
Sundar
Monday edition·
1;OOplll Frldoy.

'•"

161&lt;~1446-4759

'WBs$11,950

1997 t•rn s-srrlrs

All Yor4 StiH lluot 8e Paid In
Advance. Doullno; 1;00pm tho

Oxy· Accet Regulator Repair

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding ·
Insurances
20 Yns. Exp.
- Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

NOWOPENFOR
SPRING SEASON

Svracuae

e

Help wanted

Local Buainett Loolclng for M1·
ture Individual To Work With lit·

Hllllllh lnouronco Ptovlded
1'11ih Fturlly Coi'O&lt;ge '
oiiiOJiable. 401K Aetiromont
Plant, Firs! In Firs! OUt

Pomtroy r Middleport May 1· 2.
Ragllllr, pi&lt;:k up your llag lllllty.

Rt. 7

110

Help wanted
DRIVERS
WANTED!
!00 Mila RediuL
Homo E""Y w.ot&lt;erd,

"I" IIIIo Yellow Flog yard oolo,

... '

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

SERVICE
Easter Flowers,
Pansies, Cabbage,
Agricultural Ume,
Broccoli, Cauliflower,
Limestone • Gravel ·
Hanging Baskets,
Dirt • Sand
·:
Phlox, Azaleas,
} 985-4422
Shrubs, Spruce
Chester, Ohio
I 10125196Mn
Trees
Open Dally 9·5
Sunday 12·5

Buy, Sell or l'ttde

SEEQ
-GRASS SEED

•

HUIBARDS
GREENHOUSE

(all992·215b

e GARDEN
e MUL~H

Custom Homes

3t'3DiH , mo pel

an ad

110

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

740.985·3831

CARE

Um. .tona Hauling
Houae &amp; Trailer J;ltea
Land Clearing
Grading
Septic Syatem &amp;
Utilities
Estlmatn

To plate

FERTILIZER
•

Near Chester on St.

LARRY'S LAWN

• Mowing !Residenliol &amp;
Commerdol)
• Weedealing
e Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Moinlenonle

70

:SHADE RIVE.RAG SERVICES

lrlfts &amp; Strll!l~~~: Mist« Stnkl T~tlllitlw ·
Ovtdoor " - r,u~••lll Asstdltlll: CtrtlfW 2 Cydt
State Route 338 • At VIM• Racine, Ohio
614 949-2804

74N854174

HOWARD ;
EXCAVATING CO. :

$

LOAD

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

·-

e

•Mowera •Cheln Slwa •Wnd..Wra •Authoriztld
Deeler For: •
•Brlgga &amp; Strltton •MTO •Murrey •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI

MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

.

Business Services

(all992 -215b

Psits snd Service!!

CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN

was $8,950

placp on ad

Rac111 MDWD CLIIIC

LIMESTONE DELIVERED
STARTING AT

To

The Daily Sentinel • Page

• Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Open 24 H.... A Dty
70tyaAWnk
HQt Breaktaat
Blacult Simdwlch,
Hot&amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Dtluxo
All Topplngt
Cali' In Ordtra Accepted

'7
.·
., L-...t.:

N

BAUM LUMBER
NOW IN srocla

NEW ECONOMICAL
29 GAuGE ROOFING
OR SIDING

a1llb

Metal 9:' OC Alb/White

3'110'·$12.50
3'112'·$15.80.
3'114'· 17.50 .

.

Luttelf. ttulldlnglflllrllll
CUIIOIII U Roof 'huMM

· Poll,llm P :hgu
TOIO Wltttl Horlo , _
Hoi ...........
~; 7;30-I:OO'IYHI!dlyo
7:30-4:00 e.turdly'

4UM8IIZ41•

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN LEGION
BEECH GROVE ROAD
GUNSHOOT .
SUN., I:OOPM

Experienced Salesperson- Home
Furnishings, Carpel, Window
Large galvanized dog kennel, 6' Treatments, Furnilure; Reaume Sun Plus Home"Heattn Services,
All real estate advertising in
high, 81110 or ,0110 with nice To: Tope Furniture, 151 Sflcond Inc.
!his newspaper Is subject to
la'lle clog box, call Gene or Sher· A"'""", GalljooU, OH 45631 .
Foctory Choke Only
the Federal Fai,r Hous1ng Act
·sunPius A Rapidly Growing Di·
ry Ha•is, 740-992·3086.
FRUSTRATED? NO REAl ADversified Home Health Agency · of 1968 which makes it illegal
VANCEMENT POTENTIAl?
Wanted To Buw: Junk Auufs Any
Has Sweral Opening&amp; Far LPN &amp;
to advertise "any preference.
h WiU 8t Mus« j, Your Eo11
OLASS CElUNG?
Condition, 740-4411-g&amp;SJ,
CNA's Current LPN License &amp;
limitation or discrimination
When roo T.... 1n To the 8ts1 a.,.
II you are employed and !eel you CNA Certificates Are Required .
based on race. color. religion.
are in a no gain situation, you owe .l;'lea:se Submit Resume With Sal"'the CJowflod•.
sex lamilial status or national
II to yourltlf to consider joining ary History To:
EMPLOYMENT
origin. or any intention to
lhe 'Loewen Group. Thts ia a high
Income
prolusion,
rapid
,
admake
any such preference ,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SERVICES
Ann Claypool. RN
vancemenl po1anlial, and selllimitation or discrimination."
SunPius Home Care
aatlsfacllon helping families . For
10249 Chillicqtho Pike
your last job Interview, call.StG\'e
005
Personals
This newspaper will not
Jackson, Ohfo 45640
'11 0 Help Wanted
Smith al 814-992-7..0.
. knowingly accept
Dally Checkol Proceulrig Mall
Trawl- U.S.A.
actvertisements tor real estate
From HamB. FrBB DataUa Write AVON I All Aroas I Shirley Full or pan time, sell srarter,· moti· Guys &amp; Gals Wilh Th8t •Just Do
which Is In ViOlation olthe
vated
to
succeed,
must
have
Spears,
304-875·1429.
To: Dally Checkt 1 271• Niagara
tales experience and be able to It Allitudet ~o Suit! No Ties! Just
.law. Our readers are hereby
Drive AI , Loxingllm, K~ 40517
AilE 55 OR.O~OER
work with public, knowledge ol Make Money! Muat Be Free To
informed that all dwemng;i
floor covering &amp; decorating a leave At Once. We Provide The
Lou Weight Fa11~ GuarantNdl
advertised
b'l thiS newspaper
plus, long time commitment nec- Ride. fio E•perience Needed . A
A safe natural fat bu'"lng cookie LOOKING FOR AJOB
are available on an eQual
Positive
Altitude
A
Mull!
S8e
to
:
Daily
enar)',
1end
retume
tevl up lhe bOd)''l metabo_tlsm
oppo(lunity' bhis.
Jessie, Fri., March 17th, 10 A.M.
and supprenll the urge to eat Gallia ·Meigs Community Action Sentinel, P.O. Boll 729-80, Pomer- To
2 P.\4. At The William Ann
FOr complttl informalion, piHie Agency May Be Able To Aniat oy, Ott.S780.
Uo181, Galhpolis.
·
ooncl $1 .00 to Cookit Dlo~ 30015 You In Tho Following Ways:
INVENTDRY IIIANAGERI
Neece Rd., Mldcliopor~ OH·457eo.
REAL ESTATE
TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
Employmonl; Wti'ra.looking For
PURCHASING AOENT
MEET
! Drivers To Parform Delivery Du·
ties In GaUia Counly. Daytime Immediate Opening• Fat lnven : If You Are tntereated In Obtain- 31 o Homes lor Sale
NEW PEOPLE
THE FUNWA~
Work, On A Regular Schedu~e. · tory Manager And Purchulng iT1g A Commercial Drivers li;
Monday Through Friday, $5 . 15 Agenls At.A Local Manufacturing _ cenn As A Truck Dri~r~er And II 3 Bedroom 1 112 bath, 314 baseTODAY
Per Hour, Up' To .20 Hours Per Company. Previous Purchasing Yow Ate ADl&amp;locatocl Worker. .
1·100-370.3301
mern. new roof, siding &amp; windows •
Week. We Also Have Non-Drlv- E•perlence And Computer llte,a. Ext. ll578
on 2.4 acres in Hartlord. $27,500. ,
l;laiUa
·Meigs
Communily
Acllon
lriQ ~obs Allait8ble.
cy Required. Resumea And Will
12.99 Per Min
304-882-3858.
Be Accepted At Brog Warner Agency May Ba Able To As&amp;ill
Must Be 18Yra.
You
W11h
Trainlng,
Testing,
.And
Serv-USti-845-~34
Training: St~ort Or LOng Term Automotive, 2180 Ehlern Ave·
3 Bedroom Home Completely Re·
Traininu ln Fields Su&lt;:h As Cam-. 'nu~. Gallipolis, OH From 7:30 ReatodCosts.
modeled 2 Car Garage With Sec.IIEET'VOUR
puler&amp;, Nurain&amp; AuistBnt, COL A.M. - -1:00 P.M. Mon. -' Fri. Ask
ond Floor Approx . 2·Acres. Yard,
COMPANION!
And Othoro At Area Schools.
FO&lt; Dixie lndus&amp;ial Supply AI Tho (A Dislocated Worker Is Ganer- Pond, Beautiful Landscaping 1 11
1·100-21111-1287
Lobbr Desk. May Also Fax Re· ally A Person Who Has Worked 4 Mikls Down 216, 740-446·9fi33.
EXT.IISA
Do loth; Work Part ·Time, AI· sumo To 740-441 ·3255. Equal At Least 12 Months At One Occupation, Is Now Unemployed Or 3 Bedrooms, , 112 Baths, Jay
12.1111 Per Min
tend Cla!S Pari-Time.
Opportunity Employer.
Under Employed Due To It Buai- Drive, 7-40-446-825, Aher 5 P.M.
Mull8ei8Yr&amp;
Serv-U (619) ~5-8434
Sound Interesting: cau 7•0·367· Now hiring safe dr ivers, good ness Clos~ng Or Cutback1 And Ia
7342, 740-448·1018, Or 740-992· pay, flexible hour&amp;. Apply .In Pill· ·Unlikely ·To Return To Their Prev- 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch, OptiDna.J
You Can Find · Your. Spt.&lt;:lal 6629
ious Occupation. There Are Ad· Family Room , CA, 2 Baths, lnTo Reque\t A JTPA Preap· aan at Domino's in Pt. P$easanL
Someone Nowillll 1-000-370ditional Qualifications, However Ground Poo l, Extras! .$73,000
·Opening For E•perienced Marine lnc~me Is Not AFactor.)
3305 Ext 9655, S2.98 Par Min. pliCa11on.
740--446-4173.
Mull Be 18 Yr&amp;. Serv-U 619-332Galllo ·Molgo Community
Techn ician, Applr At Big Boys
6212.
Wa1er Toys, Cheshire, Ohio, 7~0- To 'f ind Out UYou Quality Please 3 or 4 Bedroom, rwo bllth, ranch'
Acllon·Agoncy
367-7802.
•
can 740 ~3&amp;7~ 7342, 740--446· style manufactured type home;
· ~0. Box 272
1018, Or 740·992·6629 And Rt· f600sq . ft . Situated on one acre
30 Announcemat;tts
8010 North State Route 7
OPENING SOON
quest A JTPA Preapplicalion. of ground, Rayburn Ad. 114 Mile
Cheshire, Oh&lt;J 45620.0272
DIABETIC PATIENTS; You May
Help needed·Exper.. nced' cooks, Training Period Is Approximately · ott Sandhill. Additional acreagtt
. Be Entitled To Receive Your Diakitchen help, waters· &amp; waitreu- Four' Weeks , Ttaining Will Be avaHabl&amp;. Peacelul. private.
betic Supplies At No Coat To
' Equal Oppornmicy EIT'jlioyer
es, hosteSses, bar-lenders, ex· Conducted tn Marietta, Ohio Or country selling. $62,500. 304 ·
Vou . Far Mort Information 1 -888·
cttllent pay, flexible houra. Send Ashland. K&amp;ntucky.
675-1296 Anytime.
(IOOWAD)
677-6561.
resume 10: JW111tl'l Sportl OriA
• Bedroom Home On 2 City Lots,
107 Academy Or.i~r~e Ripley, WV
Galia
I -Mol i 1 Communi1Y
2 Blocks From New Wa i·M·art.
40
~lveaway
25271 .
Action Agoncv
$48,000 Pmne(740)446-t914
llC.S.. With OYer so·Loca~ons In
P.O.Bo.m
, male Norweglan 2 1/2yrt old. 3 Southeaste~n Ohio, Currandy Haa O...erbrook Cenler .has lull tim&amp; &amp;
8010 Nortn SIJI!e Roole 7
1 ·5 BEORQOII HOMES FROM
pupa part Norweuian 3moa old. 2 Openings (Live·ln) For A New part time RN, LPN , &amp; STNA pDsi·
Cheshir&amp;, Ohio 45620.0272
$4,000 local Gov·t. &amp; Ban jo,
304·075-5621. •
~agram In Meigs County~ Bi:un tions available for allahlfts , anPDsiliont Require Sleep .over.
yone interested please top b~ &amp;
EQuaiOpporii.IMyErf'4)k)yer
Repo's Call 1-800·522-2730, X
2 Flonr model TV'I. 2 smaller 1) •b Hrs fWk: 3 P.M. Uan. Thru lill QUI an application, 740·992·
1709.
.TV's. Twin size bo• aprings. 8 A.M. Sat; Daytime Hours Off; 2) 8472, Overbrook Center, 333
Charming country h,ome 1n West
304-882-3974,
32 Hrs JWk: 8 A.M. Sat Thru 8 Page Street Middleport, Oh (10 TOAD)
Columbia, mi nutes !rom town. 9
A.M. Mon; Wa lvo Searching FOt 45760. EOE
WANTED : Company to provide rooms, r:oncrele dr~ve way,
Border Collie/White Husky Compl,"uionate
Profellionalai--------.,.mhed, 1 male, 1 female, 10 good With A Team Vision And A De· Overbrook Center, a 100 bed cleaning lor office in Point $75,899, 30-4-773-5379.
Pleasant Individuals da not ap·
ttome. 304-882-2207.
sire To Taach Personal And long term care facility, in Middle- plw. 1-888-495-8565.
· log home, 2 bedroom s, 2 baths,
Frle manure for hauling, 740- Community SkiBa To lndivkluala port, Ohio Ia seeking applicants :.:..-'-;_;_____;_____ half basement, bas1c appliances,
With Mental Retardation 1D8vel~ lo fill the following nursing man- WANTED : Part· time babysitter in lull porch on !font, deck. selling
992-7770.
opmental Olaabitltles. The Work ag~l positions: Staff Develop· New Ha~en , Ltason area . FOr on 5 acres. wJ3 cat garage,
In Bradbury, six wee~ old small Environment 11 Informal And R• menl Drector, MOS Manager and sp&amp;&lt;:lal needs child, pr8fer Chris· $l20,000, 740-99 2-7788 after 6
fema·le Chow puppy, .740-992- warGing. The nequirementa ·Are: O~ality Aasuranc~ Manager. tian home. 304-882-3339.
pm. ·
5328. .
High School. Diploma /GEO, Valid , Prelerence will be .g1ven to .AN's
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $21.00 /HR.
Ohio Driver's licil'lst Three With ••perllae 1n the spec1f1c ar·
Game Wardens , Middlepor t, beautiful ~two story, 3
Queen size wa1erbed1 excellent Years Good Driving eaPerlenc:e eu. ~ camperiti_ve s.alary ana Inc . Benefits.
·N ..
Pa k R
br, 2 bath, large l.r. &amp; lr., oaf(
condition, six months old, 740- And Adequa11 Automobilp In· benef1ts package 11 be1ng offered Secur1.,,
MAin1enace, r ang - doors &amp; trim, Smilh's custom oak
742-8705.
1urance. B.C.S. Oilers Compre· ro the right c::andidate. Send your en. No Exp. Needed. For App. cabinets. Jenn -au range, dish heftslve Training In Tnt Fiald 01 resume to Administrator, Over· And ham Into Call 1-800-81 3· washer, detached garage, by ap60 Lost and Found
MRIDD. lnleretted· Appllca(111 brook Center, 333 Page Street, 3585, Ext. 6475. 8 A.M. · 9 ~M .. 7 pointmen~ 740·992-5243.
Need To Specify Potiticin Of In- Mlddleport, Oh 45760. No phone ~ Days Ids, inc
S300REWARD
toreot
And Send Ae""""' To :
calls please. E.O.E.
MODULAR HausE Au~noN
For teturn of bl1cklbrown German
180 Wanted To Do
A 26·x58' Ranch Stwle Modul.,
Bu&lt;l&lt;aye
Commurif1
Services
OWNER OPERATORS
Shophord taken l"'m.Edith Rog~O. Box804
A
ANY ODD JOBS
House Will Be AuctiJned To The ·
trl tarm on Aaclmud Aldg•. AnJoclcson, OH 45640
Shrubs &amp; weedl ~lmmed, mulch- High~st Bidder On May Ill, 1998
awera to name ·chance: No All Applications
Mull Bt Poll·
FLEET OWNERS
d
·
· 11
bd
At 12:00 Noon At The BuckeVe .
questiona ask. Call John Rogers marked 8y 4121198.
mg, ower e s, 1an leaping, Hills Cafeet Centar Located At
Equal OpporWANTED!
sidewalks,
edging,
mowing,
R
G
t-800-287.0576.
tunity Employer.
Flatboclo Only
etc .... Frae Estimates. Call Bill
io rande, Ohio. Public Viewing'
Monday Through Friday From
· COmpotitovo Pay,
Found: 2 Small Young Beagle Babyoluor Neo4td For Ahornoon
304 .675.7112·
0:00A.M. To 3:00P.M. Plene .
Health Ina. Available
Dogs,.No Colora Or Tags, In Eu· Shill, 2 Children Agee 1. &amp; 4, RalContact ·
ANY oDD JOBS
Coli 740·245-5334 For An Ap·
reka Area, Call To Identity. 740- orencao Alluot1740-3711-t412.
Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch- pointr'l'l8nt. Formal Vlewmg Of The
1·100-154-4157
258·6678.
ing, flow•, beda, ·landscaping, House It During The 'Buckeye'
- Movlt Ex1r11 Produc- Part time po1l1ion avaUable. Must sidewalk
Last Wednesday· two reddish Caslin&amp;
edging , mowing . Hill&amp; /Ohio Valley EXPO On Satbrawn &lt;logo, malo and lomalo, CR tion Traintel. Major Film Studio be artislicall)' inclined , hands-on etc ... Froe Estimateo. Call Bill urday, April18, And Sunday, April
work involved. Hill'o Dental lab, 304·675-7112.,
18 jKingobllry Rd:)"viclnlty, 740· 814-52:1-8!00.
18, tg98: 12:00 Noon -5;00 P.M.
Elelt Day.,
1192·411g,
Cool Spot Coolville, Ohio, now 7oiCHM9·22t7 - n ~m-•pm.
B&amp;B lawn Mowing &amp; Lanclacaptor potition• at cooks, wti· Parta Manager Needed, E•peri· ing,
LOST: e1oc11 &amp; wltlto BootOn Tar- hiring
E•perienced Pfolellional Mutt SM A~Frame, 3 8edrooma
trelltl, dlahwathtrl and Cllh··· en&lt;:ed Neceaaar)', No Phone Services,
Compet~vt Rata&amp;, Free 2 Baths, 148,000. Pat Mayeo Ro:
w/Colllr in Golllpollo flfry on lerl.
Pick
up
applications
11
The
Collo, River Front Honda, !Jolipo· Ellimates , 740·388·8080, 740· oliO&lt;, Ullom Realty /Better Homos
Lowtt Five Milo Rd . 304-875- Cool SpoL
H~ Ot.io.
256-1218.
&amp; Gardano. 304-733-7140.
8837.
P1.. 11nt V.ller Hospital is lookAnybmt In My Home, Now lloting- tltrH bodroom homo,
Loti:
poinl Sla.me1t. one 110-ITVOUAIELHASI
In Time For Those Spring ina lor • ptrt·tlmt Pharmacltt. 3Babyollbng
eye, neutered, Spring AvenYe vt· Just
Yeart Experlenc:e, Knowledge large garage, , 112 acr... na•t 10
Aopolr&amp;
...
Twtlvo
Houro
(Throe
Mu It be licensed or eUgUHe for
Salisbury elemenlary achool, Rll
clnlty, 740-992-3218.
EI(Onlngl) 01 IAIIIC HOllE AE· llcensurt In WV. Hosplral e•ptrl- Of CPA 740 · 441 · 1~7. '
Jim Corlelon, 740·992-8375 lor
PAIR --April 21. 28, &amp; 30 From tnct a •plul. compuler skills 1 Dependable man will mow, tUI morelntDrmarlon.
Yard Sale
70 .
8:oo P.ll. -1o:oo P.ll . Toplco mu11. Appllcanl should nave small .gardens.- painl , put up hay',
Covored Will Be; Ropolrlng Lamp good communk:ttlon and ouper· etc . Free EsllmaltS. 30-4 · 675~ Plrrllh All&amp; Pt. PleaunL 4 Bed·
Plugo, SwltchH, I Eltc•lcat Wll vl,ory skille. Send l'fllume to Bill 3628.
Gallipolis
•
croo,lm30, 2 bath, grtll condition·.
Oullt!l; Hondllng Balle Plumbing Barker, Asalstan1 E•ecutive Oi· :.;:;::_____________.:_ I Hl75-712llbalo,.lprn.
&amp; VlclnHy
Prollltmo; And How To Do Vari- rec1or, PIHaanr Valley Hospllal, Ouatbuaters Prottaaionat CleanOUI Will Ropelro. OALL lUCK· 2520 Valley Dr., Pt . Ploaunt, ing, Commerc1al And Realdenttal River View ·3 Bedrooms, 2 h1ha.
1~1 HILLI CARElli CENTIA, WV 2$5!10. MJEOE.
Call Alltr 5:00 P.M. 740-31!8-9422 ln-Grooncl Pool, ?eo.258-83113.
MIIOI
fillold In-...
ADULT SEAVICEITOOA~ AND
' · Rodney VUitlgo 11, 4 -~ 1
MIPLM: 1:00 '·""
REGISTER. 740-245-5334 Ell. Plteeanl Ylllty N·urslng I Reha· Free EstimaltS.
lht !loy lltloNiht ad
Joneo LIIWn 1 Co,. Servict F 01 Bath Ranch Wkh 24124 Dtoochtd
208
--Coot
$46.00.
Clan.
Will
8e
bllltatlon
Ctnllf
I1U
openlngo
111r
II to run. lluntloy
Eltlmalll, 740·245-05811 ' ' , lnouloted Hutod Gorog6, Family
Htki .On Oul RID- Co ....L
carHiiod ""'ling tlllollnto. Both _...;.=_:_:..:..::::::·
tiiMian . 2:oop.m.
: .___ 1 Room With Flrtploco lnHrt, En
lu!Himt
I
part-limo
poolliono.
friday. ......., edMian
Driver needed. Now accepting Mull bt lblf 10 work 12 hour L.wn S,V1ca, 740..43103.
1ln Kitchen With Oak Cablnttt.
·10:00 ..... Sol ....oy.
Fenced In Sac~ Yard Aeady Ta
tpplicoilona lor lmmtdllto open- ohlllo, holldtJI &amp; wookondo .
Ing. Null hiVO Cltll B llctnlo Mual bl Ctfllfitd nurelng lllil · Mowing. tnmming or odd ja~, bo- Movo lnllae,ooo, 740-245-511..,,
Friday. Sllurd•r Al ond good IIVR. Apply In peroon. lint. Contact Anglt Cleland, bySIUing, any shUt. O•ll ~im or
On Herm1n Rood , Gtnortl RtluM Soivfco.87 Hub- Aut Dlr•ctor ol Nuraing. 30•· Paul•. in Minersville, 740-002~ Small houaa run batt(l'lent,
o12811. ·
~OXI 50 lOt. $ 14,000. 304·S75Slgno. Clothing ,· bird ........ Galllpollo. OH.
&amp;75-5238. MIEOE.
7n1.
ttenw l

.

1.;.:;...,======-:-

----------------'

--------,

•••t

AU.--

.

,

'

•

l

•

�Friday, Aprll17, 1998
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

"'IIS, 'THAT'&amp; '1111.1&amp;,
evr u:: T\ltNGoS

WORJ&lt;.

Wll.l.

ovr,

'TW'T

CHH~GE. ....

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 In dretlmland
7 In front of t!w

-"
12 ~ OUM!Ionl

340 • Business and
Buildings

540

...,,..,,.,....,.,.,.,...::--,,-,=,1 Retail Fabuc &amp; Notion Shop for

-1-4
St1D PI(

mo.

ltr &amp; he skirt- sale

lng. 1·8811-9211-3&lt;428

2 Bedroom Apartmtn! On F1r11

304 -675 -6454 or 304 · 6 75-

Avet1.1e, GaJ~pol11, 7..0.448-8221

7765

14•70 Cameron 3 Bodroomo. 2 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Full S.lho, All New Carpo~ Tollll
Elecanc. Vinyl SkwMg, Contra! Air 2 2 Acres 4 m1ios out Jerry' s Run
&amp; Deck E.1cellent COnditiOn, 740· Road $12,500 304-ll7~1213
• 448·1806. 740.440·7787
3 Acres Rece ntly Landscaped
1••80 Holly Park 3br. 2 lull W11h W.tor Tap $8,000, 740·256·
baths. manv e.~e t ras 304 -675·

1789 S...ious lnqumes Only

2359

BRUNER LAND

1979 Schultz mob1le home
Ux70 2br, good cond 304-675·

740-441 -14i2

8256

Golllo Co.: Ga llipolis, Neighbor·

1981 Oakwood 14165.$12,500

Lots olleYel S19,000, 0r 22 Acr·

••c cond

wlheal pump. 113,900 Will de·

es Wlll'l Pond NOW $24,000
Fnendly Rtdge , Last 218 5 Acres

11ver local Call K &amp; K l.tob1le
Homes 304 · 675 3000 betwe•n

$7,500 Or 6 5 Aerei $6,000, Bolli
$15,000, County W.tor

hood Rd . 10 Acre Bu1ld1ng Site,
1988 Clayton 14x70

Bam·Sflm

tnc Ask1ng $10 ,200 304 · 773·
5176
19~5

Clayton Mob1le Home 2
Bedrooms. 2 Balha, Gu Fireplace, Garden Tub On Ren1at lot,
Fmancmg Available , 740 -245·
9738leave ~essage
1996 14x72 Uobile Home, Tota l
Electric , 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
Oak Cab1nets, With 2 112 Ton

Heat Pump. 740.245-9834.
1997 Clayton Mabile Hama C).;
reoted lot m Park lane $22,5m:l

can (3041 736-3116

1st Time Buyers, E·Z F;renong
2 or 3 Bedroom Around S200 per
month Call credit hne 1- 800 ·

948 5678
Double W1de
3 ~rooms, 2 Baths
S1 885 Down $269 Per Month

Includes DeiiVOr)' And Sol Up
Calll -800·251 ·5070
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay ·
ments, assume loan, owner fl nanc•rct avmlatie. 304-755-7191

Arutni!On Mobile Home OWners
Areas Largest lnventorv or lntertl'lerm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps,
Air ConditiOners, Furnaces &amp;
Parts, Huge Buy1ng Powet" Means
The Lowest Installed Pnce, Easy

Melga Co : Danville, N1ce 17
Acres $18 ,000 - $2,000 Down +
$212/Mo , Or 9 Acres $16 ,000,
Water DvesJII Ie Nice 11 + Acr
es $10.500 Very Prtval&amp;
Call Fot Free Maps + Owner Fl·
nancmg lnlo Take 10% Off L•sted
Pncas On Cash Purchsest
Empty lot on Sprmg Avenue Po-

meroy, $3200 740 843 5283,
leave message
J1m Walters Home Near Comptebon Wtlh 35x50 Ft Metal Garage
Buildi ng Insulated. Also Trailer
Pad Set Up. 2 + Acres , Rural
Water, Approx 7 Miles From
Galilpot~

740.256·1335

Now Tak1ng Apphcaflons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments S2951Mo , 740·446·

Several two acre lots lor sa le on
New Lima Ad , 74Q-742 2603

360

Rea I Estate
Wanted

BUY IN APRIL
No Pavments Until July 1998

E Z Financing

Call F1nance l1ne

1 800·948-5678
Free Set-up &amp; Oelrvery
New Clayton Mob1le Home Few
Monlhl Old,Garden Tub, On
Large Ranted lot, Sell Cheap!

740·448·9428

D•vorce Forces Sates· Take ower
payments 1 2br, '2 batti. fmanc:mg
JValla!H 304-755·5566
For Sale Or Rent 1987 Mob1 1e
Home 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths 740·
388-6872, 7~446 · 1004
Huge 28x80 3BR , 1 112 tiatl'l

Siarllng al ONLY 139,999 Many
apuons available

1-888-928·

3428
Large se1ec.t1on or used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms Start1ng at $2995

Ouiclt delivery. Call 740 385
9621
.
LIMITED OFFER
1098 Ooublew1de 3br, 2 baths

S1.8991down $259/mo Only al
Oakwood Homes N1tta, WV 304

755-5885
Make 2 Payments Move In No
Paymenls After 4 Years, 304· 736·

7295
New 3 Bedi'OOm Home

1169 00 Per Monlll
1·800·251 5070

New 1998 14.1170 three bedroom,
mctudes 6 months FREE lot rent
tnc:ludas slmt1ng, deluxe steps
and 1etup. Only $187 08 per
month With 11075 down Call 1

800·83 7·3238
NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 Ioiii
Still under warrant~. owner h
nancmg available
304 · 755·
7191
New Doublewide 3BA. 2 b:ith
$1,325 Down &amp; $205 permo 1·

8811-1128-3428 .
Home For Salo

lot 111e 112 acres ·cape Cod·
style, hiGh 70 's 2 Bedroom, 2
Bath, County Water, Easy Ac ceul 7 M1les From Jackson. 13
Miles From R1o Grande Colli

(740)288-7200
OAKWOOD HOMES
Barboursville WV. largest Dou -

blewld&amp; Display In 26 Years $999
Down. 304-738-3409.
Single Parenl Program. Spectal
flnanc•no on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Paymenle as low ••

S160 Call now 304 755,5685

Sptctal 16x80 39R , 2 bath
$1,325 Down, 1205 Mo Free a~r
&amp; rretslurtlng 1-SOO.B91·6777

SPRING SPECIALS
S4HDown
1.1 filed Ra!H
1111&amp;'Mo. Powmonla
$11,995 on 3BR.
Froo Delivery lo Sol-up
Only AI Ooltwood HotnH
Nhro, WV. 304-755-580

410 Houses for Rent

Repoa

304-882·3121
Small Apartment Upstair&amp;, Close
To Galhpohs &amp; Grocery, No Pets,
Relerences. 740-446·1 158
Small apr 3 rooms &amp; bath, ullh·
t1es paid e.w.cept elec triC 304·

675 1365
Furnished
Rooms

C1rc1e Motel Lowest Rates In
Town , Newly Remodeled, HBO,
C1nemax, Snowtlme &amp; D1sney
Weekly Rates, Or Monthly Rates,
Consuueuon Workers Welcome
740·441 · 5698, 740·441 5167
Sleepmg rooms With cookmg
Also tratler space on nver All
hook-ups Call alter 2 00 p m,
3&gt;4 773 56St MasonWV

WILLIAM ANN MOTEL
918 SECOND AVENUE
GAlliPOLIS
SPECIAL LOW
WEEKLY RATES
SINGLES $160.00WEEKLY

Mobile home s1te available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

2 bodroom house $300/mo relerences &amp; depoSJt Call alter 7pm

740 385-4367

304 6753424

470 Wanted to Rent

2 Bedroom House In Gallipolis,
WID Hook·Up, CIA, No Smokers
Or Pars, References &amp; Deposit,
740·256·9190 Between 6·9 PM

HELP WITH PROPERTY TAX·
ES?
If You Have 200 Or Mare Acret

In Gatha Or Me1ga Co , I Would
Be Interested In Leasing The
Hunung R1gh1s To Your Property.
I Am A ResponSible Sportsman,

3br House m New Haven, WV
$335fmo .,. deposit 30-' · 773·
5881
Apanments In R1o Grande
Ar!i'a Across From College, 1
Room, 1 Bath, Uulit1es Included,
$200/Mo Depos11 Requued, ,
Bedroom Apartment, $290/Uo ,
U11Ut1es Included , 1 888 840
0521

MERCHANDISE
51

Two bedroom house, clean, rh
ln9erator no stove, no 1n Side
pets, deposit reqUited 740-992·

3090

- _

Household
Goods

7795.

Mob lie Homes
for Refit

GOOD

USED APPLIANCES

Washers, dryerl, retr1gera1ors.
ranges Skaggs Apphanc:ea, 76
V'1ne Street, Call 740·448· 7398.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes
$260 -$300, sewer t~ater
trash 1ncluded, 740·992·2167

o

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers, Drvers, Ranges, Rettigrators, 90 Day Guarantee!
FrenCh C11y Maytag, 740·446-

Two houses for rent 1n Pomeroy
contact Wes at 740·992-5500

420

and

1-800-499-3499

Pam Ai740·24S.9635
Sohd maple din1ng room table, 4
c:ha1n, hut,h , exc cand 304 675-2915

Break

WARM UP: H1gl'l Efficiency Natu·
ral And lP GBS Furnaces, L1fe 11me Warranry On Heat Exchanger "H Vou Don't Call Us We Both
lose!• Free Es.t1mares1 Add-On
Heat Pumps Onlv Sl1ghty H1gher
Call Us Today 1998 Is Ou,r 28th
Year In The Healing &amp; Cooltng
Bus1ness! 740-446-6306 1-800

For free consultallan l'ld Free

Samples (740)44 1-1982
Are Your LOoking Far Avon Pro ducts But Don't Know Where To
F1nd Them? Also, II You Wou ld
L1ke To Sell Avon. Call Pam At

740·245-5443

291.()098

Baumer, playpen, stro ll er,
swmg, walker, h1gh cha1r &amp; car

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

seat 675·4548

Upr~gh t fion Evans Enterpnses,

Jackson, Ohio, 1·800.537·9528

Birch Kllchen Cabinets, Complete
With Counter Top lazv Susan,
Double Stainless Steel S1nk. &amp;
Built In Stove, 740-379·91 10

Sun Wave Spa 4 Person, Brown
To nes W1t h Redwood Extenor
$1 ,300 740 · 448 2829 leave
MessaQe

Botena G1 2Xl Madel lawn Trac ·
tor, 42• Oec:k, New Battery, Ga·

SunQuest Woll ta nnmg bed, gQod
condtoon, $1100, 740 7421348

rage Kept. S100, 740·25&amp;-1924
Bolens Garden Tractor 18 HP, 50
Inch Mower Deck, 4 Ft No
Blades, Garden D1sk, T1res W1th
Cha1n1, Needs Mmor Work, $500

Tv Bean1e 8ab1es Reasonably
Pr~ e edl 740·448-6051
Washer &amp; dryer pa1r wnh free va
cuum cleaner Only $19 down
deliVers to your door Call Home
Products @ 1·800· 779-0536

OBO 740-379·2730
Brand New I Great G1ltl C01V1deo
storage umt Btaek and cherry
Never out of box S125 Holds up
to 940 discs also holds rapes
Call 740 -992·6636 after 6 pm
COs &amp; lltpes nollnclude&lt;l

Rolngerator $75: Dryer $95. Elec·
Inc Range $95, N1ct Waaher

$150 N1ce s,de By S1de Raing·
era1or Water &amp; Ice In Door, $350
1 Year Warrant,-, G E. Waaher
1205 like New 1 Year Warrantv.
Skaggs Appl1anc:es 78 Vine
Street, Gallipolis. 7~U6· 7:WS.

Commerc1al or res1dent1al 467 11
2 S At 7 N 740 446 4263 after

lpm
po11t requ1red, $2951mo 30" 875
7783

We Moved! Used Furniture Stare
Betow The Holiday Inn In t&lt;anau·
ga, OhiO Beds, Oreu8ft, Couc:h·
ea. Mattrenes, Eel Hrs M· T-W.

Small two bedroom mob1le home
lor rent In Aac1ne, 740 992·50:19

10.4, (740)446-4782

Two bedroom mob1le home for
rent on New L1ma Ad , 740· 742

520

2803
Two bedroom 1ra1ler 1n country,
Racme-Ponland etea, call 740 -

Sporting
Goods

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
n1shed and unlurmshed, aec:unty
deposit 'equ1red, no pets, 740·

Wll.on'l Alfrrt 8urp1u1
Bnt pr1ces afl)'wher• lull lu,. of
Advantage Camo In rime lor
1u~ey season. Grea1 selection ol
new and used booll; lots ol new
and used eamo, sizes 2 monthl
to 4X : backpacking and camping
1tema, kad'a clothes, U S made
Smtth &amp; We11on llimvts and Iota
more Come and cheek us out

992·2218

We are open 8.30am·8 .00pm

992 7824 alter 5 OOpm
Apartments
for Rent

1 Bedroom Apartment Newelt
and Cleanest 1n the area, near

Deposit

and lease Aequtred (740)448-

21157

1 Bedroom Apdrtmon~ SIOVe. A•
lngera10r Included, No Pets, 740.
448-2583
1br apartment, priVata, qu1e1 0•
pos1L Relerences S250Jmo 304·

875·1550
2 Bedroom Apartment Utlhtlet

everyday. Call us at 740·SU~2·

7093 or HI00.340'81 n

530

Antiques

Waterlme Special ' 314 200 PSI

$21 95 Por tOO: 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com·
press1on Fuongs In Srock

38 spocutl. 304-875-4569.
China Cabinet $200 OBO 740·
379·2386
Complete hving room sune w1th
tree matching lampa . Only St9
down delivers to your door Call
H'ame Products @ 1- 800- 7?9-

3437

$310 74Q.388-8355.

2bdi'm apts , total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
lac1fit1U , close to school in town
Applications av.tilabte at VIllage
Green Apia 148 or call 740.gpz.

. 1985 Honda 200 All Terrain 3
Wheeler, Automatic:, New Tlraa,

Runo Excellon1740.24S.5884
1988 Cub Cadet, 18 hp super
eo• mower deck, excellent
condition, $3000, 740·9g2·2210

3711 EOH

traciOr,

3 Rooms Upltalrt, NO PETS,
Water Palct Out11de .Entrance, 81
Cedar, Galllpol1a,. 740·388-1100

-.lnga.
1994 Murray Mower 11 HP 38"
Cui Excellent Conj!IUon, S400; 20
Gogo Moaaburg Combo 740.,.48·
2115
.
1997 Honda 400 ATV 740·2459834 •
25 Inch Color TV. Console Un1C,

Furnlahed Elllclenc:y Apanmenl,

$75, 080 74o.44H247
New 61110 Ut1hty Traner Pte11ure
Treated, 2 Inch ~loor, Rod Pen
Whllt 14 Inch Tiro' 2 Inch Btll,

Full R- Loading Remp, 740-4411·

Furn11htd Elffc1ency An Util!lltl

1170

Paid, Slllrt Balli. 1185/Mo. g17
Second Avenue, Galllpol11, 740
446-3945

8X8 Heavy duty Ul(iily tralter,
rOad ready wfloadtng '?kmpa. 304·

675-6348

'

Two Wheel GraveJy Tracrar Wuh

old 12.51\p. llko ,_ 1600. Whool
hone rider 10hp 38 i nch cut,

good cond $700. Two push mow·
era both run &amp; mow good, make

oiler 304.e7S.3824.
Your Area John Deere Ot~ l er
For Residential And Commercial
lawn Equ1pmant Compact Utihty
Tractora From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes Or 4 WO And 2 WD Farm
Trac:ton, Hay Equipment , John
Deere Skid Steer loadert Check
W•th Us About Fmanctng As low
As 2 9% On Lawn Tractor~nd

Low Rtl\e Flnanc1ng On New-And
Used Equipment Carmichael's

Farm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740·
448·24121 ·800-594-1111

630

Livestock

256·6350
2,040 Pound Tobacco Allotment
For lease, 25' A Pound 304 675-5131

26th Annual Bendey Ptg Sale. Fn-

day April 24th, 7 30 PM. Fayette

Count~ Faltgrounds, Jh'ashmgiOn

Courlhouse, Selling 200 Heed, 01
Hampa- • Durocs, Crossbred Bar·
ro'fts &amp; Gilts, Camlgnera Roger
Bentley, 937·'584-2398, Leroy
Larr~k

4·H &amp; FFA Club Pigs For Gall1a ;I
l.tatgs County Faits, Call 740 ·
38811033

ChiCkens for sale· brown $1.00,
while 7k, 740·985 3956
Club p 1g 9 Excellent Bloodline,
Born February 1998, Call 740·

D1ne11e Sel L1ke New $85, 740·

446-4110

, ·BOO- n9.o538

Concrete &amp; Plasuc Se~uc Tanks ,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnaes, Jackson, OH

550

Building

Three Quarter horses- yearlmg, 2
&amp; 3 year old mares, coniAct Kim,

Supplies

304· n3-9585

1~~~~-.;..;.-.,.--..,...,.

Block, br l ~k , sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc:. Claude Wintera,

1-800-537·9528

bed. 5 pc pa1nted maple bed room tUlle 304·45&amp;18151

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming
Featut1ng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd
740 446·0231

Extra Good Om1ng Room Set,
Table Chatrs, 2 leaves, Hutch.
Dry Smk, Also Solid Oak Dresser

I c...:........:..c=.:....~----­

With 9 Drawers, Chest 01 Draw
ers With 7 Drawers Matching

~·~~~~h:a~v;e~to~•e~l~l
d~u:e~l:o
304-576-24441

e

N'ghl Stand, 740·379-2720 Aller

6 PM.

Free camcorder ·With purchase pi
S2- 1nch b1g screen TV Only $19
dawn delivers to your door Call
Home Products @ 1· 800 - 779
0536
Grubb's Plano · tunmg &amp; repa1rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

i&gt;l!OO Dr 740·448-4525

Two Registered black Angus
bulls 13 &amp;1s months of age 304·

675-2098.

640

'

H~y

&amp; Grain

Ear corn, S2 50 per bushel, 740
949·2369

650 5eed &amp; Fertilizer

t.hn•ature P1ncher 14mos

TRANSPORTATION

AKC Pembroke Welsh Corg1
Pupp1es Born 2f1198, 1 Tn-Color

IF'-•:.:"":::..:.'"·:.;7_4.:.0·.:.24'-5'-·9::2.:.89:.:.__ __

Autos for Sale

AKC Reg Ulm Dachahunds 4
Males. 7-40-2&amp;8·8444 $250 Each.
e Weel(a Old
I am too.k1ng for CWO ferrets 11 you
are the person who bought lhem
from the Ark about one year ago
pleast call mel! Ferrets names
Brandy and Teek1e Phone (7401
441-1410

1984 Chevy Impala 2 Door Hartt

Top 327 -300 HP 60,300 Original

Trucks. 4x4'S. Ete.

Nowl All Allllcllmonts. $600, 740·
441..0387

NOnCE •
Fnonch Cly Pel Grooming

Now That Sprmg Ia Here It 11 1
Now Open!
T1me To Stock-Up on Your Avon ' Proleuional Groqmtng by Ap ·
Sk 1n- So Soft Moisture Suncare pomtmentt. 650 Second Ave
Plui, To Order Call Pam AI 7-tO- Gallipolis, OH 740-446-1528
~ ..5·5443
Purebred S1bet~an Husky pup·
p1es, 3 males, 3 females. blue
Only $19 down del1vers a com ·
plate hv1ng room suite, bedroom ayes, masks, very cute, people
oriented, readw- now, $130, call
and dinette to your door·pl'-11 a
740·992·5144
lree 25 -mch TV Call Home Pro

ducts@ 1-80().779·0538

580

PAINT PLUS HARDWARE

1·800·522·2730, X 31!01
1982 Cullass Supreme, 2 D, 260
V8 Good Condition, $1.900 Or
ljesl Oiler, 740·992-4568.
1984 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Brougham pw, tinted wmdows,

Alp1ne 11ereo $1,500 304.675·
5019 alter 5pm or leave mas·

sage
1985 Ford Thundetb.rd V8, Auto,

Good Cond111on $900 (740) 388-

8390

•

1985 Olda Reoency 98 Asking

F.rults &amp;

$1 ,000 Goldltar M1crowave Wnh

Vegetables

Cypra11 Mulch- .. 3cult Bag :J for

S8 88 Top Solf ..·40LB Bag 3 lor Georgia red white and bush
S4 88 Ponong So,I .. ·•OLB BaQ 3 sweet potato plants, call 740·742·
lor S5.89 Peol Humus .. ·40LB 2773 or 740·142·2220.
Bag 3 lor S• 89 Cow Manure···

ete. Tuesday through Friday, 740·

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

610 Farm Equipment

Pool Table 8FT Siale Top Bruno·

w1c~ Campleta wnh SIICkl Balli • 2 Far mall Cub W1th Cultivators,
Racks, cov..-, New Felt, l.ghts: Ford 800, Ford 641 , Ford 861,
Excellent Condnlon (740)448... M F 35 Die111 ·2· 135M F, 2000
8217 E~~trtlngJ
Ford Oieoel ~S.. ·2 3000 Fords,

3800 Ford 01esel P S , Post Hole
Prh. .atar- SJ8_matallatlon with D1ggero, Grader Bladea. Plows.

ISO

tabate ftrsl month free with
fret movie channels, StarO~a
special, 141 lftatallatloft, 800·

263-2&amp;10.

Toddtr' N H. 56 Hay Ralt... N.H.
Hay B1nd, Ball Spears, Manure

Outen size hide-a-bed aora In

uory

Dirt Scoopa, Bush Hogs, F1nish
Mowera 1 3 PT Rotonllers , Hay

gooa condition. $250 or bell

reasonable offer. Call 304·875-

3447

Rl SfumRuro

MIIOR,WV

Buy, Sell, Tl!ltlo
Uooctl~n

Furnilure

304-773·5341.
Raclng Gp Can. 2 Motort, E~Cira

Sproodor, M F. Dloc, Boom Rolea,
Side Droner For Farmall Cub Or
11140 1 Parts For Ford &amp; M F t&lt;n·
HI's Tractor &amp; Equ1pment,' l Mile
Wilt, Holzer Hospital, Jac:kson

P1ko. Gaihpolll, OH. 740·448·
':1806::.::..;·7'-4.:.0._446...:..·7'-7.:;87;.:.__ _ _.,..
1440 John Deere Log Skltlder, E•·
cellent Condulon $10,000 (740)
379-2427
Farman Cub Tractor With Cultivators &amp; New Side Dresser, 740 ·

Plrll, Ready To Reco, 740·882- 251H350.
61122. Ewmngs
l=:..c:.:=----.,.-R&amp;fngeratatt-Only S1e down dt·
livers to your door Free ")I·
crowa\le Call Home Produc:ll 4JI
1·800·111-0538

Gehl g5 grlnderlmllcer, hammers
never turned, excellent condition
30 4·213-4215.
Need somtone to work on farm,
sataty, tent, utllltle1 and exrras

Riding lawn mower wilh your phone (7401448-1052 .
choice ol ·l lroo puah mowtr or 1:::.::;;;;.:.;...;.;._;_ _~--­
Only 119 &lt;leiv· New Holland 88 Hay Baler. &amp; 3

- ..,er

ers to your door.-Call Home Pro·

Pof'nl Hitch Ra~e. $1 ,500, 740·

dUC!I@ 1·1100·77Q.0538

446-2540

pol is, Qhk)

Bad Credit, No Credit, Bankrupt·
c:y1 We Can Help! Bank Fmanc·
.ng On Used Veh1cles , 740-441 -

g1ne And Custom Trailer With
Stakes low Hours, $8,500, 740 -

0607

256·1130.

1994 S.yliner 18.5 Ft 4 3 V·B En·

Come SH thl IOWISt prices bt·
lore their gone
1986 N1ssan Stanza, auto, 2 sbd
mg doors for easy access. good
C(lndiDon, $t295
1986 CheYY Nova 5 speed $500
1967 Chrysler New Yorker. auto
ale , heater plush s&amp;als, d1gJ1al
'
dash runs excellent $895
88 BUick Skvlark, auto. excellent
gas mileage, mce dependable 'Car
around $750
, 989 Hyundal, 5 speed. runs

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

•

1977 314 ton 4.114 Chevy Chasti, •
automauc, lock out hUbs, 410
gears, new rocker panels, cab
corners, cab mounl&amp; that go too,

THE BORN LOSER
~

24' car trall&amp;r with toolboJC and
•

ramps, 740-742·2675

WANTED

TO

BUY

0103

441 -1053

5039

790

1990 Ford F ISO Extended Cab,
XLT lanat 6 314 bed, automattc,
a1r, cru1se, amJfm cassene, two
tone paint Reese 1l1tch, VISOr,
bedhner, $4000, 740·949 · 2311
day&amp; or 740 9'19-2644 even1ngs.

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

I'vE I'OI.LOWEP HEll.
HOME EVER.'f Q"V
AUTOGRAPHED PHOTO~

OF

4

t978 Racoarrow Motor Home.
Fullv Contamed, 57,000 Miles 28

446-9664

sleeps 4, extras, exc:

1a1l $15,600. Reduced $13 ,000,
_74_0_·3_79_·_266_6_ _ _ _ _ _.
1
1 74 o1 441
F
S
0
Wh
ees
actorv .,

1973 Dodge 4x4 Truck 318 Motor
Little Bit Of Body Work Paint

1993 Dutchman Uke "ew, 30Ft.
Sleep• 8, Loaded! $10,000 740·
245·5616

S1.0000B0 740·256· 1233

1994 Comer Pop·Up E•cellent ·

1985 Chevy Blazer 4 WO S•tve1a·

Condition, Sleeps 5 ·6, Awning, •

WJ.IERE'O
I(OU 6ETTHE

61'M J40·44e-1543
1g92 Plymouth Lazar Auto, AC.
Cruise, Tinted Windowa, New
Tlrtl, Great Gu Mileage! 304·

458-1821,740-388-11997.
1gg2 Toyota Cololla, 92,000
mllta, maroon wrth way interior,
laut door, lrnllm cuaane, 5

IPHd, nice car, U400 OBO.
740·949·2311 daya or 740 -949·
2844~

1993 Ford Taurus good eond

$6,800 675.e988

THE'( WERE LEFT OVER

FROM M'f LUNCH ..

COOKIES?

I FRIDAY

:.
1
1

!

Auto Tran1., 'loll 01 E111a11 Roaci •
1992 Cl'levy Convers1an Van Ready Priced To StUI740·387- ~

Loaded Wllh Rear A1r 140· 256· 0447

28 Fl Soii.Contarned Now'y, A•· . :
1995 Chevy Silverado 1500 Ser· done, $1,1150, 740-245-11448
1074 Dodge Motor Harne Clast •

C· $3,995, 740·446·2«5.

SERVICES

Home

Improvements

1996 Ford F ISO XLT -'X4, loaded,
BASEMENT
4800 m1les, $20,750. May enter·
ta1n lesser ltuck trade, 740 -992·
, WATEAPAOOFIHQ
6154
Unc:ondnlonal lifetime guarantee.
:.:.::.:.:..-------:-lloc:al rererencet furnished Ea1997 Ford Ranger XlT 4
tabhahed ,D75 Call (740) 448·
$18,000 Will Consider For Trad- 0870 Or 1·800·287-0578 . Rogers

"

Wo.

Welerpraoling

''

88 Bronco II -414, e11cellent condi·l
, ,
too $4 900 740-992·7036
Appl1anc:e Pllr11 And Service· AU •
Name BrMdt Over 25
Ea·
740 Motorcycles
~erience AU Work Guaranlud ,

v..,.

rench City Maytag, 740·448 ·
1983 suzuki 850 atreel bike, 77115
runs great $400. 004·576·1100:i.
CIC Genefll Home Main·

•

.

.. '
.:
-

1992 Sutukt 750 GSXR, lm· tenence- Painting, vinyl 11ding,
mac:ulale cond Jet ktt, po11sl'led Cltpentry, doOrs, w1ndow1, baths.
mobile home repair and mora For
lramo. K&amp;N. 30&lt;·773-5825
free estimate call Chet, 7-40·902·
f995 Harley Davison FLHT. Elec: 6323.
'
tro Glide ClaSSIC law Mtlea,

Loaded, L' ke No., (740) 4461522

There's no
way around it,

Classified Ads

Short Bed. Loaded, law Mllu - : - : - : - - - - : - : - - - - -

Door Sedan, Excellent Conduion,
1 local OWner, Please Call After

840 • Electrical

and
Refrigeration

27 Siller

35=
floh
342or3 ·

39 Lacking

pigment
43Tobe-tobe
45 Knot
47 Got off
48 Joyful
exclemetion
49 -Canal•
50 Crude

dwelling

52 Chemical
ending

53 Compareltve
lncll!'!j

54 Driller 1 de(l.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~Cipher Cl'fPICJOfarns •re ei'HtH liM'! qootahons by lamou&amp; peop1t pu1 ana l)t'tsent
Each Jeftft' tn ltMI CIPher ltll'ldl fOI' another Todiry s cW. l' equafJ M

"J'ML

UNGUVZ

SWTZJALELA

XVZLNP

HWW

HW

LJHDLE

OL

JT· AJMJARUNJZHJS

..
...
.

WE

EJBDH·GJTB

NLPH·GJTB."
SNJTH
LUZHGWWA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All IS nolan end 1n tlsell, bul a means ol addresstng
humanity " - Modeste Mussorgsky

tAM I
'::~~~~' S~i.&lt;l\lA-.!&amp;~tfS"
ilouloN ___;;.___ __

WOlD

- - - - - WitH lry ClAY I.
Roorrange loners of 1he
0 four
ocnombled wordo be·
low 10 form four simple wordo

ROSYMT

_rr--~1 ·

1-r.N_ur-F--r.-o

I' I

1~

'

I.

CEEPN
5
6

I1I

..••,.''

1

Today's I1V1ng expenses are
like a one way escalator tha,t
constantly goes up with - • --

1:::',
.

.

I

.

19116 Suzuko Katana, GSX 800, Reoi4ential or cammorclal wiring.
600 m1les. (laid - 1 . blaclt ond ,_ ltrvlce or ropalra. Miller U· • • •
~urple , S3200 080, 740·849· cen11d alactriclan ' Rld•nour.
31 t days or 740- Q49· 28U Et.otrlcol, WV000308. 304-675evenings
1786
'

...

••

i:==:~AS~~T~R~O~-G~RA~~P~H~=~~~~. ~~(M:ay~21-June

20) You
might not acquire full knowledge of
il today. but a close friend is
unselfishly working on your behalf
BERNICE
trying to do something to make you
BE.E&gt;E OSOL look good.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A big
opportunity e~ists today in an
anangementm which you III'C work·
ing closely with another. There will
be ample room for both to take pride
ARIES (March 21-April 19) in this impressive accomplishment.
Someone close 10 your heart might
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you are
have some happy tidings for you in the employ of another, it's impor·
today. Seek a secluded place where Jant that you produce to the best of
the two .of you can relish the news your abilities today. · Rewards or
alone. Trying to patch up a broken penalties III'C in the offing.
romance1 The Astra-Graph MatchVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Lady
maker can help you underslaDd what Luck and pure chance could play
to do to make the relationship work. important roles in your affairs today.
Mail $2. 1S 10 Matchmaker, c/o this Something iutirringthat could bring
newspaper, P.O. Box 1738, Murray you happiness from an unexpected
Hill Slllioa, New York, NY 10136. quarter.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
LIBRA (Sept 23.()ct 23) Direct
Even thoush a considerable distance your creative urges toward the beaumight separa1e you, your.hopcs and tification of your surroundings today.
aspirations will be in tune with those Your deft touch could 1111a 10 lhe
of someone you love. Build upon artislry of ):OUr fiome or office.

,,

There could be a sustained buzz
conversation going on behind your
back today. You"d be highly pleased
if you could hear what was being said
about you.
SAGIITARIUS (Novr-23-Dec.
21) The financial ways and means
might present themselves today that
might enable you to gel something
quite expensive you fell you could
never afford.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A
short trip may be required today to
fulfill an obligation you've avoided.
Do it willingly, ~ause il could tum
out to be a labor of love.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) A
pleasant development might be in ,
store for you today. Someone who
you believed was ungratef!d may
prove in a tangible way that slhe did
1101 forget your thoughtfulness.
PISCES (feb. 20-Man:h 20) You
could be lucky in 111 amngemenl
today in which you bring two pals
together for a profitable purpose.
You'D also sh!U'C in what's to be
divided.

A

PRINT NUM!ERED

IQII' LETTERS IN SQUARES

''

. - - ·.
quoted

1--11..-..L-"'--''-...&amp;.--' you develop lrom slop No. 3 bel""

PEANUTS

ar Loa••

211,000 M~o1, 360 Oodge En111no

.

wtndlng

machine

mtssmg words

-

1989 Bronco II , XLT, V-6, auto, Mesa~.
'
MC loaded chrome wheels,
loo ks &amp; run rea l good, $2,800, 27 Ft Selr Con•lned MOIDr HorN

Wilh Ewas' $17,500, 740· 245· 810·

1992 Buick LeSallre SE , While, •

If you wish to be a winner at
bridge -- and who doesn' I"I •• you
must track losers, especially when
playing in a suit contract. After the
· dummy comes down, count all your
losers (and your winners, if you can
do so without taking a week or two).
If your loser count is not more than
you can afford, thai is a good indication lo dmw trumps as quickly as pos·
sible. Bul if you have 100 many
losers. you must do something about
the extras.
For example. consider this fourspade contract. West leads the heart
queen in answer lo his partner's opening bid. How would you proceed?
There is a temptation for North lo
push toward three no-trump, bul that
contract is always in danger when
you have several aces to dislodge.
Here. three no-trump goes two down.
In four spades, there are three aces
missing, 110 you"d better avoid losing _
a heart Irick. And you musllllke preventive measures now. Win lite first
Irick in hand and play a diamond, drivmg out the ace. Win the IICXI heart
in the dummy and diS(:ard your heart
loser on lite third diamond. If that has
passed off safely, lead a trump. With
this layout, you can ruff East's heart
return, dmw trumps, and concede a
trick •• your lltird loser-· to the, club
ace.
Note that if you win trick one in
the dummy, East can defeat you by
ducking the first diamond, taking the
second, and returning a htiart, strand·
ing you in hand.
To get rid of a loser, normally you
either ruff thai loser in the, shorter
trump hand (usually the dummy) or
diS(:ard it on a winner in the other

Awmng, 1972 Anstocrat 20' .
1985 Chrysler New Vorket 4 Cy·
hnder. Turbo, 1699 Bob MrCormlck, 740· ~6-1511, GallipoliS.

S4 .ooo. 740·«6·30&amp;3

25 Tllreed-

RUAARO
1---.,-.;,....,r.,a:-'
TI-..,Ir-ri--J
G Complete the chuckle
•
•
•
•
by ltllmg m the

17' Awning , 1975 Mallard 27'

1990 Eagle Talon, red, 5 1peed,
looks and runs excellent, $6095,

sg,295 080 740·3117·0157

Helen9 Uncle

4.

cond,

1984 Yellow Stone Camper, 35', 2 •
expando's, lull size bedroom •
(queen SIZe bed), full SIZe liVIng &amp;
kitchen, new lull s1ze stove &amp; ret,
new carpet, vmvl , all wmdows
have C\lStom Kush bllndsllam bergay, must see to apprectate,
sertous ca lls onlv, $6500 740
992-6 173 · 740 992 2015
t990 Edd1e 15' 1980 Fleetwmu

1996 GMC SOmona • 3 V-e Stan·
dard, 21,000 Miles, 19,500, 740·
388.0013
199S Mazda 4 •4 Extended Cab. 5
Speed, A1r, E•cellent Cond111on,
66,000 Miles, AMIFM Stereo, Re·

1ng For 112 Ton, 7•0.379-8381 .

PII!IS

r----:-:-~:-:--:-=1

$1,800 Call K&amp;K Mobile Homes
304 ·67~3000 8aln·5pm
_ _ _ _ _ _.;__ _ _ ,

amltm cass, bed hner, topper,
39 000 m1les 18,950 304· 576
2201 arter 6pm

9544

I.

1984 Coleman Jameston pop up,

5spd, NC,

1e1 4J4, 305 engme, e.lll cab,
loaded, topper, extras, grea1

Weal North

hand.

Fl $5,500. OBO. 740 446 6790
Aher 5

19g6 F·150 4&gt;4 .XLT Peck age,

Doora, loaded, 79,800 Mile!,

ti"''~E.LF ,

$3.600 304 675-6440
.:.C-'-------~--- .

1989 Dodge Daytona, 100,000

1992 Buick LeSobre L1m11ed 4

-'FTEP. SCHOOL ...
t'VE GIVEW tiER FI'IE

'

1976 Camper 32ft pull behind,
tully &amp;ell conta1ned , AC . Reese
l'lllch, very good c:ond Asktng

42 coo m11es. ps, pb, ac, black,
eJCc cand S8,200 304·675 2161

BIG NATE

~I

1972 Trotwood Camper 24 Ft
liuUv Self Contamed, Full Awn~na.
AC Very N1ce, 740 446·1 170

mtfts, runs good, needs mmor repaors, $2,000, 740·11112·55511

14200 dBO. 740·94g·23&lt; 1 doyo
or 740·948·2644 MniODS·

~(

[OW£!

"'"'-----~----1
MJ

3 1 '\i.e,

N'ID POTII~ IT Qt.l HoT

Console "IIIUST BE HORSHUE '
SHIFTER TYPE" Phono. 740· :

1990 Chc.-v v Silverado 350 en·
g1ne, long bed, auto, loaded
$4,500 304 773-5139 or 304-773-

shape, h1gh m1leage 112,800
304-77.1·5176

1991 Chevy Lumona,

~~ TN£.114&amp; ~&amp;0\£..00 ~0 T~

:ff.ED ~~ CJXK,::£. ::IJ I Q..t.!.

Through 1972 Chevelle Or Elca- ;
mma Console, Can Also Be A ,
1970 Through 1972 Monte Carlo •

$3,695, Cook Motors, 740 - 446·

1995 Siarcralr8' Si1d•ln. Poi&gt;'UP ·

Euro model, 83,000 m•lts. blue
wllh bluelnttriOt, l)lr, ctulse, automauc:, amlfm cauette, tMl door,

~I '((U. \00.. Of !ll'fLD f:'D.Ditll:.

1968 •

Truck Camper, 3 Way Rei., Ga1 Furflace, Gas Range, Sinko,
Sleeps 4, Excellent Condition,
Bought N•'1· Used On1 Time

140-992.()(153 •

....

~

I&gt;::&gt;OOTIO

1985 S-10 4X4 Goad Condit iOn,
2 8 V·6, 5 Speed, New Tires,
Run5 Good . $2 ,000, 740 4460223, After 6 PM
• •

304-675 1310

~

I'lo\ .)U')\"~~N&amp;!T 1 I OK£ 1'00K.~

=:..::.:.:...:.:::.:.;__ _ _ '

1989 S- 10 V·6, Auto , $3,295:
1988 GMC S15 V·6, Auto, AC,
$2,495: 1992 E"ended Cab S· 10

740·247 4292

P":

New gas tanks, t ton truck '
wheels &amp; rad1ator!f. 0 &amp; R Au•o, :
Rlptev, WV 304 ·372· 3933 or 1· •
BOO 273 9329.

740-367-0157.

1989 Cavalier 2 0 4 Cyl1nder
Auto, Air, H1gh Mtln. $1 ,500 ,

~

N1£. 'f'OU ~TilL fi:EI\\:4W, TMT ~
r~ava? c:J-.~.~'1 '(00 r£O.D F~~ -z

$600, 740.985-3828

1986 Olds Della 88 auto like
new 304 6 7.5-2359

$1,000
(304)458-1899

,

~NOvll

2045, w•ll cons1der trade lor a
good ponzon boat

720 ll'ucks for Sale

:.;;:..:.:;_::.:::..__"-----1

7 Nutriment

8 Actr•••

Winner or
loser?

FO!t TttAT
"fY, YOU

15000. 740 949 2303 or 740 949

8970

1988 Ford EacCH1 GT

CRAYONS??

viAITING

Kawasaki STS Jet ski, Still under
warranty, three sealer, 83 horse '
power, bought new July of '97,
three matchmg Kawasak i Ski ;
vests and tratler all go With 11 1

Upton Used Cars At 82·3 M1!8S
South or Leon, WV F• oanel ng
Available 304-458·1069

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

10 Picnic pelt
11 Meuureof
lime
13 Allee
181n-'
19 Eye perta
.
2D Railroad unlta
22 More indigent
23 Article of
"
apparel
,.
24 Give on
account of

coneumer
8 Fullneaa

32 Fre1hweter

Tttt~t'9
OTtlf~ P~OPLf

G'MON,

256-6160

Hours 12 8, ~s varv
Cal! lor mOre 1nt!rmatlon
740 388 9693

Cre&lt;J1t Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Fmancmg For Used
VehiC le s, No :rurn Oown!o , Call
V~tkle, 740..446-2897

730

n·.

Opening lead: • Q

Viklnjl Deck Boat Completely Re- •

M&amp;J Auto. 15153 SR 160

1419

~
44 Ending for
13 Fonner 1tudent
auction
14 Fllglltleso bird 45 Actor Sper1&lt;1
15 Four ICOre and 48 Blldnl pert
t.n
. 41' Not at HI
18 Decimal bue 51 Like 1ome
17 UK tlrM
decorative
18 Slnclwlch type
t.biH
(abbr.)
55 Wild lheep
21 Corn of India
56 Spread by
23
cold!
rumor
28 O.ln by l.tlor -57 Treveltr'l need
21 Pert of lhti dey 56 AqulliC
29 Grent'l lot
mammel•
30 Brother &lt;&gt;f
Jacob
DOWN
31 nny opening
1 Swiu river
33 Mora Hke •
2 Nahoor 1heep
moM!
3 Illuminated
311 l'Wofold
4 Tllr- off
37 Bernateln, for
(Mil)
ohort
5l'ood
311 uyerolt!w

By Phillip Alder

conditioned lnrer~ot W1th 170 HP •
Mercrulser &amp; Tratler: 1 Used 5 11 '
2 HP Johnson 1 Used 40 HP ~
Mercury: t Used 50 HP Mercury
1 Used 90 HP Mercury ~ NeW ,
Maiada Boats New Odyssey
Pontoon Boats, J S Marine 740·

good, body's good, $945

South

HAVE YOU TRIED

A THING !!

s

Stove, Sink, $2,800, 740·256·

Red 1n Color, T1res New, loaded.
Powor Sun Roof 64,000 M1lea

TATER'S LOST HIS
APPYTITE, PAW !!
HE WON'T EAT

199619 Ft Uarada W1th 43 ,
Mercru1ser And Tra1ter, l1ke New,.,
t996 • 1
Ft Alum1num Sea.
Mymph ~ss Boats With 30 HP •
Evenrude &amp; Tra iler Lo!Jd&amp;d :
Ready To F1sh 1995 20Ft Bay - •
liner Cuddy With 4 3 Mercru 1sar, ,
&amp; Trailer low Hours , 1990 16 Ft •
Plavtyme Sk1 Boat W11h 88 HP :
Evenrude &amp; Tra1ler, 1980 19Ft. .

6869leaveMesuge

$1,1100 304·895·32'.17 or 304·895·
3080

I

$24,500, 080, 304-67~3127

31x1 1x15 Owl Trles $4,500 OBO

Chop ... 50LB Bag $3 eg Yellow
buoy hoghwoy (US 35) ooulheall
On1on Seta · $ 69lb While On1on
of
Jackson Call for details
Sell .. ·$ 781bl We Carry Bulk (740)288-7200
12pm 6pm
Vegetable Seedo &amp; Bedding
Plan11"""304·67S.4084

BARNEY

New $8,000 740 446-4782, Galli-

Indian Design, $150 , 740 ·388 ·

1987 Pont1~c Grand-Am 4cyl ,
auto, AIC, new tires, e11c cand

Rock··~ 1 Bcuft Bag S5 99 Marble

1Q92 Cobia Runabout 11 112Ft
With Trailer, lots Of Extras! L1ke

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee Lar
ado, loaded, 12 000 t.t.les ,

r

42AciNM
'Tho!NII

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

740 245-9256

2666

4c~ .

family
41 Curly letter

1985 24 Ft Pontoon Boar, W11h

loaded, 33,000 M•les , /40·379 -

..

• 53
• Q J .9

do Loaded, Am Raelng Rim,

Turn Table S50: Couch &amp; 1:halr

40LB Btg 3 lor SUD. Red Lava N11d A Placa TG Sell Your

Hom•Grown Produce? Crafte'?
Spa~e ava~able at ini81Secfion ol

·.co HP Uotor &amp; Tra1let, $4,250 ,

•

1979 l/82 Red Corvette, 57,000
Ong1nal M1les Excellent Condition

Seo"led And Sl&gt;ld
Locally Tills Month

grounds

1996 Monte Carlo Black lealhel,

258-6381.

4849
1996 Chevy StO

$75 Fu -Ton $35 304·675-6822
Movie Cam Coraar Model 127,
Used 3 T1mes, Almost Uke Brand

•KQ976
• K4 2

7767

M1les, 740 -446 ·8906, 740-446·

Large black entertammem center
lambs lor show or pets Approx
2 112 m1les past Mason Co Fa1r

1996 Dodge Stratus 31 000
M11es, Take Over Payments, 740·

be1ge wlaand mtenor.. 6cyt ,
190hp Mercrulser 1nboard motor, .
w•th trailer, llle preservers I
bui'T'fMtrs. $2,750 814-448·3814.

1995 Ford Ranger KLT 4cyl,
5spd, loaded, 18,000 m1tes
$7,725 Call alter 4pm 304 ·675

1980 ·1990Trucks For $100111

•

South

Sa le Or Trade 1994 S 10 Pick
Up, LS Package, V'·6, Sharpl 740

(740)367·5039

alter 5pm

t969 Sea Imp 19 112ft dee,;,-V,

A1r, 55,600 Mlleo, $5,900 OBO,
740· ~0. 74Q.256.00C67

1992 FOrd F 150 V-6, 5spd,

710

• A4
9Jl0988
t A 7 6
• A 53

• Q 3
• 9 at 2
• 8 7 62

lrolllng mo1or. $250 304·675·
5451.
•

1 245 5672. Or 740·387-0583

Compurer system wirl'l tree pnnter On tv S 19 down delivers to
your .door Call Home Products @

East

• 53 2

one awl\lel seat, carpet, oars I

30 Angus And Chi· Angus BuHs
For Slle, Reasonably Priced, Ex·
cellent Breeding, Slate Run
Farms Jac:kson 740·286-5395

Weal- - - - -

t2' Alu'!l,lnum V-bonom Jon boat,

91 GeQ Statm, perleet condition,
runs excellent auto, $1505

937-78Q.4002.

• K 10 4

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for sale

Black

19g5 Plw-mouth Neon 4 Doors,
Green With Spoiler Automatic,

Wedd ing Gown-Beautiful 1vory
sequined re-embro •dered lace.
s1ze 10 w1th ved Onlv $225 304·

446·769~

Dodge Aveng er

Yard machine riding mower 1yr

Angus/hereford cross, 18 months
old, n•c,t young bull, 1700. 740
992· 7458

While Single Bed Willi N1ce Mat·

1905

Loaded , 31 ,000 Miles. se .ooo
Neg 740·379-8384

North
OHHI
• J 10 8
• A 75
, t K Q J 10

1991 Monda 250x 4 Wheet., Lott
Of Extta's' 140-441·1419

1995 CheYy lum1na 4 Doors, V'·8,
Loaded! 57 ,000 Miles, Exc:ellent

30" Mower, 8 HP 8 Spooda, 740·
448·31192, 740 u8 9B3U.

Weddmg Gown &amp; Veil Far Sale
S1ze 9110 (Whne) $50 Cal l 740 ·
446-1478

:67:.:5:..;·80::::.:.40:.:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _

1094 Dodge Spir1L 29,000 Actual
.,,,., ss.800. 740·44&amp;-3548

Cond,I!On, S7,99~ 740·256-11161

A1d1ng Horses For Sate (740)

992·3725

1 Pc Barhtub &amp; Shower With
Match1ng Commode Vanity &amp;
Plumbmo E •celjenr C'otldnion,

Pa1d, 1425/Mo, 1100 Oepo~l. No
Polo, 740 446 · 1837. 740· 448 ·

2675

tress 1Bo.11 Springs, $100, 5 P1ec:e

6.00 p.m 740·982·2528. Ru11
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

good tires on both; 740 742

0536

Pomeroy Thr~fl Shop now buymg
large outtlde toys and •baby
Items, w1 tkers, toddler c:ar seats,

540

(11 TD 35 gas, (2) 50MF d1estl,

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES 5 Bred Sowa-1 Hamp. Boar 304
67~5906
Jacl&lt;son. O~o 1·800-537-9528

Brown leathe' l1ke sofa !!leeper,
matchmg recliner, no smoking
environment $300 1985 Taurus

Buy or sell R1verlne Antlquu,
1124 E Ma.n Street, on Rt 124.
Pomeroy Houn · M T W 10 .00
am to 6 00 pm, Sunday 1 00 to
Moore owner

Two Massey Fu rgeson tracto rs

1 Registered l1mousln Bulls 7&lt;40·

Open 9.30 · 5:00 Mon Sal
304-675·SOFA (7632)

2 Bedroom Mobtle Home Reier
ences Requ1red , No Pets. Rent
Plus Deposit, 740·446·4313, 740·
448 0879

U~loUes,

6m1th Corona Word Processor
W1th Screen, Haa lotua 3,
Spread,heetl, Hard Drive And A
Olsc Drive , MOre Features. Call

olry $200. 00..576-2238

We now have Arrrrt Surpluslll
21 o1 Jetteraon Ave

References, Deposit, NO pETS!
Foster's Mobile Home Park. 740
441.018t

Holzer $279 Plua

wnh m1tch1ng end tablea . call
740·98~4306 before noon.

Alvca prom gown blue/coral beaded/sequined, 11ze 12 a'tered
to 10, m1t1:h1ng shoes 7-1f2, J9W

Poll(• New I UMd FumHure

2 Bedroom Beautiful R1ver V1ew

440

cha1rs, aohcl walnu t coif*' table

98 Teak Wood D1nmg Room
Table, A· I ConditiOn! 740 · U6·
4817.

Metabolism

matching rocker

S200 tor both . Healthrlder, ab
cha1r, d1nmg room latHe wilh four

JOCkola. 304.e7S.5052.

Amazmo

Wlth

R1o Qrande, OH Call 740·245·
5121. _ _ _ _ _...__ __
And Can Pay $5.00 Or More Per D1nng room table so·rounct or 70'" 1.:;:..;;
Acte Per Year If lntarea1ed,
Pets for sale
Pleaae Call Collect Bob Mayt, oval wllh leal-no chairs Book· 560
case tlyle super 11ngle water 1.,..,---,,.--,,.....,---,-304-562·2249

Dock, Already Sot Up On Lot, Central Heat &amp; Air Cendlt1oning,
Tau Over Paymonll 01 1298 Per · Carpel Throughout, Prlva[l Park·
Monlh, 740-4&lt;111·0571
1ng, All UliiiUtl Furmshod E1cep1
L11e Model Repo Sol Up Dn Lol Eltctrlc, Private &amp; Quiet. 740·
440-2602.
1-800-383-e8112. .

Ootollla Wldll And Slnglt Wides
• Won1 Lalllongl
Call' 1·888·738·3332

1 Bedroom apts lor elder lv or
dtsabled, HUD assiSted EOH

460 Space for Rent

TAX SPECIAL
Now 3br $908/down $18glmo. BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
Froo Stl· up &amp; Delivery Only 3 ·BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Loki Only 11 Oakwood ~ome1 N1· ESTATES, 52 WillWOOd Drive
"" wv.304· 755-58115
from 1279 lo 1356. Walk " ahop
V.y Nife. 18180 Redman 3 Bad· &amp; movlea Call 740·44~ · 2568
roorno, 2 Full Btthl, .Garden Tub, Equal Houaong ()pj&gt;ortunl!y.
Kitchen Appliances, Central Air.

New Haven, WV

RENTALS

3 bedroom HUO accepted, de·
On~

RIVER BEND PLACE

4~

:.;;:...:.;.:.,:.::;;:.;_______ 1 2
Ottc:ount ~ob•le Home Parts &amp;
Accenor~es Water Hearers, V1 nyl Sklftlng Kill $299 95, An chora, Wood &amp; Flbefglass Steps,
1
Root Coatmga, Doers, Windows,
Plumbmg &amp; Etectncal Supplies,
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedge&amp; And
Mofel Call Bennett's Mobile
Home Supply At1 -740·446·9416

992·7800

C~sh Pa1d For Land In Gallla
County, Blackburn Realty, 740 ·

.:&gt;ver The Phone Bank Flnanc1ng.
Call Sennetrs Mobile Home HTG
&amp; CtG 1·800·8n·5967.

One bedroom apartment 1n M1d·
dleporr, all ulllitlea pa~. $270 per
month. $100 deposit, call 740·

450

Now tak1ng applications lot ma
bile home lots. all s1zes Counlry
lane Mob1le Home Park Gallipo
l1s Ferry, WV ::K&gt;4 -67~5421

Sleeper sora

recll(ler love seal. good condiiiOn,

Through. Lose 10 10 200 lb•. Call

land sale· two acres, Bedford

Township, Go)d Ridge Ad . $6000,
740 992·1446

VCR Only S19 down deltverslo
your door Call Home Products @

7 plecea ol Amen&lt;;an tout~ttet
luggaae a 4 waltertwallrauea

992-5858.

s•on Tu-Axle Rear End, 740-2455984

46-lnch big screen TV w1th tree

IUmtiel

Two bedroom apartment 10 Po·
meroy, unllhes paid, no pet!l , 740·

250 Yamaha Motor &amp; Ttansmls-

080, 7-'0..W1·1595

1-800-779.0538

Laroe 3 bedroom ·apartment.
Thtrd Sr , Rae1ne, O tl , $300 a
momh plus depo111 &amp; utilities,
740-24 7-4292

Rld1ng Lawn Mower, Ortven By

3 Black Prom Ora.. Size I To 12

port From $24&amp;-$373 Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·

0006

1987 Schultz 14x70 exc cond
new nrpet throughout, c:entral
air vanted gas hea ter, all elec-

-

Gracaout llvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments in M1ddlt·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

40~n.llan

I'

,,
·~

'

'
,&lt;'
~

SCIIAM-lETS ANSWERS

Kitten - Wh1le • Dress- Flaxen - WEEKEND
Sc1ence can pred1ct an eclipse many years '" advance but can not accurately pred1ct the weather over
the WEEKEND

APRIL 171

�By The Bend

The ·Daily Sentinel \
·

Page12
Friday, Aprll17, 1998

Along the River

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911 sets
open.house

Reader sa s thanks to Red Cross volunteers and_those who donate blood
cell levels 40 times higher than nor- and nine platelet transfusions and plus in this battle. And think posimaL I was admitted to the hospital, will most likely need more in the tive. You ARE going to make it.
and the diagnosis was made several next several weeks. I have been · Please write again and let us know
days later after a bone marrow draw. informed that it takes six to 10 indi- how you are doing.
You can imagine my shock.
. vidual blood donations to make up
Dear Ann Landen: You recently
At age 36, I believe that I have a just one unit of platelets.
printed a leuer about an " unusual
very good chance of beating this
To anyone who has ever donated lawsuit" regarding a waitress who
life-threatening disease. My reason blood, I want to say thank you. It was fired for refusing to sing
for writing is to thank the real herO&lt;:; may be my life you are helping to " Happy Birthday" to restaurant
who are making my recovery poss:- save. To those who may be thinking patrons because it contlicted with
ble. These are the men and women about donating blood, please go for her religious beliefs as a Jehovah's
who take time out of their busy lives it. You are truly doing something Witness.
to donate blood and the Red. Cross generous and heroic beyond mea- I I am concerned that characterizvolunteers who man the blood dri- sure. -- R.D.. Coventry, Con.n.
ing this case as "unusual" might
ves and make them work. I
Dear R.D.: Thank y~u for a diminish its imporrance in ensuring
It is the goodness in these peo- beautiful lener. I am sure a great that individuals do not have to check
ple's hearts that has helped keep me many people will decide to be blood their religious beliefs at the workalive these last 14 days. I have donors because you wrote.
place door.
already received four whole-blood
As you said. your age is a big
It may not be commonly known,

Ann
' Landers
IW1 ,

~

Sy nd l( aU~

An,ck1 limc1
01.fi\J C rc ~ln"

Sy lldtU~

. Dear Ann Landers: I am writing
this as I starr my I Oth and final day
of chemotherapy as I banlc
leukemia. During the next several
weeks of hospitalization , I will be
playing a waiting game, hoping I
don't ~et any infections due to a
weakened immune system.
Fourreen days ago, while seeking
relief from a persistent sinus problem, headaches and fatigue, a blood
test showed that I had white blood

Sermonette

Warrant Officer Candidat~ School,
and then to Warrant Officer Basic
Co urse . After ,grad uating '"
November, 1997. he was reassigned to Fl. Sill. Okla.
Bissdl is also a graudate of the
Army 's Airborne School. the Air
Assault School. Air Force Air Lopd
Planner School . .Jungle Operations
Training Course. Survival. Escape.
Resistance and Evasion Course.
Air Crew Survival School. Primary
Leadership Development Course.
Basic' Non-Commissioned OITicer
Course. and the Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense Course.
He also graduated from Central
Texas College in December. 19':16.
with an associated degree in General Studies.
At Ft . Sill, he serves a' the
Batallion Maintenance Technician
in the Sixth Banalion. 32nd Field
Artillery (Multiple Launch Rocket
System).
.
He is married to the former
Anabel Baoulcs of Chiriqui. Panama.

Jonathan Bissell

who can become vtSiblc when neecssary.
The heavenlY appearance and
. message enabled Mother to stand in
the difficult days that lay ahead .
Angels arc agents from God to do
His wilL We du not worship angel s.
Al.ong with the rest of creation.
they worship and se rve God. Luke ·
22:43 (NASB) tells us, "'Now an
angel from heaven appeared to Him.
strengthening Him ."
In agony, Jesus knew He would
soon die on the cross bearing the sin
of the world- mine and yours. An
angel came to strengthen Him in His
darkest hour.
At any time Jesus could have __
called millions of angels to free ·
Him, but because of His great love,
He chose to die for us, and give us
the opporrunity to choose Him as
our Lord and Savinr.
Arc angels rc.tl? Absolutely! I
believe our fil'l't ·verse tells us thai
we have more t~an one "ministering
spirit" to help c; . Heavenly beings
constantly watch over us. Luke
I5: 10 (NIV) assures us. "There is
rejoicing in · the presence of the
angels of God over one sinner who
repents. "
Father, thank You for caring
about us so much. for angels who
• rush to our side at Your bidding.
Amen.

Racine Unitea Methoqist
Women hear Easter message
llte program "The Stones Cry the group voted to cnntribUic $ 100
Ou(· was led hy Alice Wolfe at the for paint 111 the Youth Ccntc• in
Pomeroy. .
rc~.;nt m~ctin g of the RacinC Uni1cc.J
Plans were rinalitcd f(&gt;r the
M.,:thodist Women.
lltc theme rtx:uscd on Jesus as he mother-daughter banq"ct 1&lt;&gt; be held
sea hiS. fm:c toWard Jerusalem facing on May ':1. litr scn ·ing the · Alpha
the [mliti.:al and religious oppres- Delta Kappa dinner on April 21 . and
sion or his day. His triumphant entry an election day dinner m May.
Easter tlowers were delivered to
int~ the city was heralded by throngs
or •disciples who saw hnn as the the ill and shut-ins.
Eighteen ABC blankets made by
anointed king or "'Messiah·· sent hy
UMW
members have been dcli,·crcd
God. Scripture was read from Luke
to the Athens District oflicc.
19:36-40.
Wolfe also reported on an article ' More rccn.iitmcnl ideas were read
concerning religion hcing a mching hy Lee. The 19':1H Prayer Calendar
pot where acceptance is a key ingre- was used and a card si£ned by memdient. She said it is no longer posso- bers was scnl to a missionary in
blc to avoid contact with other reli- Japan.
gions. Christianity is no longer a ' Marilyn Bogard reported on her
VJcstem religion as most Christians recent District nominations meeting.
~e non whites living in Asia, Africa · An Easter motif was carried out for
~nd South America. The Christian the · serving of refreshments by
segment growing most robustly ts ·Margie West and Lee Lee.
· Others ancnding were Judy Pape.
Pentecostalism : she noted.
The most recent valedictorian Ruth Frank. Chris Hill. Tara Norand salutatorian al Harvard Univer- man. Karen Walker. Cindy Winesity were Hindu and Buddhist-both brenner. Sharon Hall. Marilyn Bogborn in the United States, it was ard. /\lice Wolfe. Eua Mac Hill,
Clara Mac Sargent, Martha Dudnoted.
In opening the business meeting, ding. Margie West, Lois Bell and
Lee Lee gave a reading and the Lee Lee.
Next meeting will be April .27.
WMW Purpose was recited by mem7:30
at the church.
bers. Karen Walker and Clara_Mac
Sargent gave officers reports. and ·

Jonathan Bissell

Jonathan Bissell. son of Naomi R..
Bissell of Long Botto and Glen R.
Bissell of Racine. was recently
pr.omotcd to the rank of Warrant
Officer in the U.S. Army. ·
He is a 1990 graduate of Eastern
High School, and joined the Army
·in September of that year.
Jason Wickmann
After recently completing a
three-year overseas tour in PanaMarine Lance Cpl. Jason M.
ma. Bissell returned to Ft. .Bragg. Wickmal)n. son of Kurt Wickmann
N.C.. where as a staff sargeant. he of Osborne Road. Coolville,
served as a parrrooper in the posi- recently was promoted to his pretion of Platoon Sargeant/Motor sent rank while serving with SecSargeant in the 27th Combat .Engi- ond Baualion. Mth Marines, 2nd
neers (Airborne). After being Marin Division. Marine Corps
selected for promtion in April. Base. Camp Lejeune. N.C.
1997, he left Ft. Bragg lo auend
Wick mann was promoted based

The Comnlunity Calcmlar is pub- .speec h therapist from Holzer to
lished as a free scrvi.:c to non-protit speak.
groups wishing to an nounce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
POMEROY - God's NET to
not designed tn Jlromntc saiQs or' begin Friday programs. 6 p.m. for

meeting, at Chester MelhudiSI
church. Saturday. carry-in dinner at
non. Business I p.m. All garden club
presidents and ufliccrs asked to
ancnd.

haying April birthdays
&lt;ircd.

•

111

he hon-

her of days.
.FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT ~ Bosworth
Council 46. special meeting. Friday
7:30p.m. at lhe Middlcporr Masonit.: Lud~c . Wnrk in the sUper
lent masll"r degree .

excel~

GALLIPOLIS - Parkinson's
Support Group. Friday. 2 p.m. Grace
United Methodist Church. 600 Second Ave .. Gallipolis. Traci Sisson.

SATURDAY
• Chester - Shade Ri ver Lodge
45J F&amp;AM will ·hnld annual inspection Saturday beginning with dinner
at 6:30 p.m. and lodge opening at
7:30 p.1n. Inspection will he in the
FC Degree. All Master Masons
invited. Alllndgc members asked to
bring two homemade pies.
CHESTER - Ohio Association
of Garden Cuhs. Region II , hoard

Rio G.r~mde trust...s
endorse Issues 1&amp;2
. RIO GRANDE - Citing the
possibility of "cosdy solutions" to
Ohio's educational funding problems should slale issues 1 and 1.
fail al the . polls next month, the
·boards of 111111tees of lhe Unive11i·
1y of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community
College
have
approved a raolutiot;t of support
for both ballot questions.
"Because of Rio · Grande's
unique public-private Slatus, it is
&amp;flPi iljri iale for bcJ1!t bllanl5 1,0 support propoula 10 Improve c4ueit·
lion in Ohio,"· Rio Grande Presi· ·
dent Barry M. Do!ICy said follow- ·
log a joint meeting of the boards.
"I join board members In
eDCOuraalng soulbcm Ohio volel'l
10 vote for the fu1ure of Ohio education when Iiley cast their ballots
1111 May S," Doney added.
laue 1, a 8cllool ClOIIIIIntdion
bood proposal, woul4 amend the
Slate eonstitulion 10 lllow the Legislature 10' issue general obligation
boltds for school building programs.
Iuue 2 provides a 1-ccmt
increase in the state sales .tax, with
funding 10 be divided between
public schools and property tax
relief. II is Ihe Slate's response to
lite Ohio Supreme Court's support
o£ a lower court ruling declaring
lh~ current educational funding
system unconstitutional.
"Failure lo pass Issues 1 and 2
could lead to costly solutions to
educational funding .problems in
Ohio," Doney said. "We need to
look at this as a lola! system of
educating Ohio students.
"The interdependence between
eJeme.mary-suondary and higher·
edilc&amp;lion is iinpt&gt;rtanl ·to overall
quality cdu.calion from klndergark:n to college," he lidded. "Fail·
urt to pass these proposals would
bC a costly defeat to Ohio business
and industry who want and need ,
an educated workforce."

Trustees

Letart

mcctin~

Mun·
d;ly. 7 p.m. at the nnicc b~ildin~ .

SUNDAY
CARPENTER - Darren Smith·
RUTLAND - Rutland Vilhtgc
of Welsh. W. Va. to speak al the Car- Council. Munday.' 7 p.m. at the
penter Baptist Church. IIUO a.m. '
Civic Ccnlcr. spccial•iu~clin,g tu !..liscuss Clllpluycc policies. cnmmillcc

MIDDLEJ&gt;qRT - Rev. Clytie
Hcndcrslln tn preach at the Old
Bethel Free Will Bapiist Church.
Route 7. Story's Run Rnad. Sunday.
?p.m.
MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - Tri-State
Rc~innal Blond services. a division
nf the American Red Cross. blood.

assll,!llmcnts and routing miscellaneouS husincss.
·

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Free. inmiunizatinn clinic. Tuesday. 5 tn 7 p.m. at
the Meigs Multipurpose Center.
Children hl be accompanied by parent and take immuni7.atinn rccnrds.

I

Apri/24 slated as~ Bank .Day' for W~lkAmerica volunteers

Friday, April 24 has been desig- on Friday arc a.'kcd to brinj! them to only.
'
.
winner will be announced on Walk
natcd as "Bank Day" for the 1998 Peoples National Bank the follow Team CaptaiM arc reminded 10 Day and will be presented an award
Tri-County WalkAmcrica for the ing week, instead of bringing lhcm enter their team entry in the T-Shirt during the Award Ceremony on May
March of Dimes. '"Bank Day" is the to the walk site.
Contest. Bring a T-shirt on Friday, II .
day on which individuals and teams
Walkers raising $7~ or more will April 24, to Peoples National Bank
For questions contact Jane Orashould tum in the donations they also be able to pick up their pri1.cs at of Point Pleasant for judging. Cap- ham aJ (740) 446-1479. Tamara Zushavc collected.
the bank on Frid~y. Prizes will be
tains should have the T-shirt with p~n . (304) 773-5528, or Lori Wilson
Donations should be brought to available at the Point Plca.ant office them when lhe deposit is madc.lltc
al 1-800-313-2911.
Peoples National Bank . 2212 Jackson Avenue. Point Pleasant, W.Va.
from 9 - S p.m. where volunteers
will be on hand to ac ~cptthc donations.
For the con~cn;citcc of Bend
Area and Meigs C.'unly residents.
donations will also be accepted at
'Peoples Nalipnal Bank offices in
Mason and New Haven.
OFFICE HOURS
Those unable 10 turn in donations
Middleport Department Store or ·lhc
Ohio River Bear Co. in Middleport
9:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
or at Chapman Shoes or the Ohio Write an essay,
ranch
Valley Bulk Store in Pomeroy.
MONDAY-FRIDAY
SISTERS. Ore. (AP)- Where have
In addition to the individual all the cowboys gone? 1\nd can any of
sales. the Middleport Community them (lUI 10gether a •napt&gt;y essay'
As5ocia1ion will have a sale in the
Tom and Susie Acnniken knew it
CALL 740-992-3632 FOR APPOINTMENT
shohcr house' in Dil~s Park.
could lake as long as five years to sell
That sale will be held to accom- Iheir 60-acre horse ranch eas1 of Sisters.
WALK-INS WELCOME
m!ldatc fol~s who have things to dis- SO they dcddcd IO lty aft essay contest to
find
a
winner
instead.
"'
potiC ofbul don't want to have a yard
With a nine-•tall horse bam. a 1,700.
sali:.
j
Or. Rahman
square-foot
house and si"' wooden cor..
Dr. Chhabria
Item• for the community sale
rals. the ranch - appraised two yeaB
will be acc~pled at the park between ago at $600.000- is an ideal home for :
3 and 7 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday any lyrical cowboy,
Specializing in: Adult medicine- Diabetes, High Blood Pressure, Chronic
and Friday of next week. Those who
"I would love for tbe Cinderella
have items 111 be pii:ked up are lo call otory to work:' Acnniken .aid.
Lung Disease, Cholesterol, Cardiac PrOblems, Health Physicals and
Tho Fknnikrns .,. oskinJ for a SI~0 1
992-4197.
~ventative Medicine.
The proceeds from the sale a11he en1ry ftt and essays of SOO words or 1
•
Jess.
The
deadline
is
July
31.
Acnniken
·
park will be retained by the Middlesaid
he
needs
at
least
4,000
entries
for
pori C11mmuni1y Association for .
the scheme to break even. The couple
spctial project work in the village.
Income Based Sliding Fee Scale
wanrs to retire to Arizooa.
~

gera

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HI: 50s
Low: 40s
Details on
pageA2

.
ttdtttt
Vol. 33, No. 10

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Regional March unemployment rates
Marcll't7

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9.8 pc(cent, down one-teath; Scioto Coullly, 11.7 per;
cent, down lhree-tenths: and Vinton Coualy, 1S.6 percent, 'a110 down lhrcc-lenlhs. WuhiDJIOn County'• job-

less rate remained steady a1 7 percent .
The unemployment rate for Ohio was 4.3 percent in
Mardi, up from 4.2 percent the monlll .before.
.
The national jobless rate wu 4. 7 percent, up from 4.6
percent In February.
·
·
·
"The Ohio employment picture remai• fundamenIBUy unchanged from last monlh," said Debra Bowlaad,
administrator of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. l.osles and gains in employment balanced e.c:h
.
other oot, she said.
The nu111ber of Ohillllll5 Wilh jobs was about S.6 mil·
lion in Man:b, down by S,OOO from February. Tbe num·

ber of worken unemployed wu 247,000, tip from
241,000.
.
The jobless rate in March 1997 was 4.7 percent.
Durina lhe year, lbc number of Ohioans working
iacreaMd by 1S7,000 from about S.4 million. The. number of unemployed decreased by 20,000 from 267,000.
Among the 88 counliea, ratea lui m11nth ranged from

Floriculture.booms.in rural Meigs
By BRIAN J. REED

.

~.

'

'nmee 8enllnel811fl'.

POMEROY - Not so long
ago, springtime in Meigs County
meant it was time to plant: 10101·
toeS, sweet wm, cabbagt;, green
beans and peppers, all for shipping by truck lo faraway mar·
kets.
While Meigs County vegetables are still a popular commodi·
ly, they arc being replaced on
bUcks by impatiens, marigolds,
pansies and pelunlu. Bedding
plants from Meip. CotJ.U. haYc
become a mulli~ dolllr
Industry.
•
·
Truckloads of flali, ·pt&gt;ll and
hanging basketa are making !heir
way •.10 regional retail, oulleta
suc:h u Kmart, Walmart, Lowe's
and other prdio centera.•Unlike
the tomatoes. and ~rWeet corn,
wltich hit the RJIIbide -kels
and grocery oullell, the lw(cting
plant busiliCII is iJow al ill peak • and will begin 10 decline after
Mother's Day next month.·
Not only do the fumer1 provide wholesale stoc:k to rei8!Jen,

a low or 2.6 percent in Delaware and Franklin counties ·
10 a high of 18.S percent in Morgan County. Rates
dropped in more than half of the counties.
The wunty rates are not seasonally adjusted; the state
and national figures are.
.
Eleven wunties had jobless rates at or below 3.5 percent. Nine nad jobless rates·higher than 10 percent.

Meigs' sole surviving
WW I veteran set to
mark 102nd birthday
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
nmt..S.ntltlll Sid
· POMEROY - MFigs County has one living veteran
of World War I.
He is Gamer C. Griffin who will mark his 102nd
birthday on Saturday, April 2S.
The man who
lived alone in a•
small house in lbc
A}fred commu;:~

, . .arty.

=~~~!~==

bul
the relail
·endgrowing.
of the local
Elolll
LOICif end
lhiiiY
of
business
ii ilso
Dale
G,_hou111
amnge
tiateP.oollr.
of nowHill of Karea's GreenltouiCI,·said . 11
m glll8 undet wa,. . . for Niall lila.
thai 7S percent of their business
vegetable farmers have wnsistenlly relied on the age-old brois ft:tail·- not wholesale. ·
. kerage system; where 1 produce broker ananges sales Ill retail
Karen's Greenhouses operates greellhoules ani! I market in oullets.
,
Pordand, gieenhouses near RKine and a retail oollet.in PartenThe floriculture business in Meigs Counly has overtaken vegburg, W.Va.
.
.
etable farming by twice the volume since the early 1990s,
Why the decrease in vegetable farming?.Acamling 10 Hal aa:onling to Kneen, and Meigs County is "by far" lhe largest
Kneen, agriculture. extension agent with OSU Extension Ser- ·floriculture provider in Soulheaslem Ohio.
vices in Pomeroy, the floric:ulturc business brings in almost twice
Meigs County flowers are shipped to 12 Slates, and are estilbc.revenue for Meigs Counly ai v~lc farmiag. Wbile pow- llllled 10 be a ai~:-million !Iollar Industry annullly. Kneeo's offiiag flowers and bedding plllllll is hard !"'fk, ICD!- ·said lhal dal pnbouse lilt shllws,48,growers of 11ne size 11r another, Ill
finding labor 10 work in greenllouses is euitr lhan t,eplng labor of whom enpge in wltolesale and/or retail growing. The green·
in i:om and tomato fields.
•
·, ,. ! •· .,
bote= are scallered all over lhe counly: RcedsvillF, Rutland,
. Many of lbc. coua~y's vegellblc llfii,W'm ~ ~1110 liard Sy*'*, Pome(Oy, and Middleport, but are concentrated·in lbc
10 tum a profilm a difficult markellhallhey've I,I~)IPtiiCCCird- . ~Gmt JICfiCI area,• l.elarl, Racine and Ponland. · ·
ing 10 Kneen.
. ·
•· ·
· " ·t· !~f.
,.
The growlh of llle fioricultia'e busiliCII hu given a boost to
Kneen al10 noted that die Qlllllimer dem!ti4 for ftorlcUJbn . Melp Coualy's CCOIIODIY in .general. Burton Flower and Garden,
products hu increased dl'IJIIIIicJlly In lite,~ 10 yean or I!'·
whiCh aupplies fiats; buketa and Qlher planting materials lo
Possibly moat .important 10 lhe '""1"' ht die tlorfculture growen, DOW operates 1 local warehouse wbic:h supplies greenindustry, however, is an a&amp;&amp;rqlive marketin&amp; ampllp oa1be boule ownera in the area with their materials. Their warehouse is
pan of growen, ':"bo regularly deal direclly wilh rellilera, while located al Ponlaod.

century Is no\!v
residing al Arcadia Nursing Home
in Coolville. He
went .there in September after suf·
fcring injuries in a . SHARING MEMORIES _ Oerfall.
.,., Grtnln lltlga COUnty'a only
Last week sev- aurvlvlng World w. 1 veteran,
era! members of hrld rnemor111 o1 hie- ywn
lhe Meigs Coun- wiUt World War II veteran Joe
ly/Ohio Bicenten· Young during a ·vlall II Aroadla
nial Commiuee Nuralna Home. Gtttlln win ~
went to the ours- . bt'lll hTa 102nd blrlhdly Salu.rday.
ing home 10 interview Griffin.
He was the first of several veterans who will be
videotaped by the commiuee as a part of preserving a
century of military history for future generations. .
His excellent memory and keen sense of humor were
revealed early in the conversation although his hearing
impairment at times caused some difficulty in under·
standing questions from the interviewers.
His remarks on 'OCCIISion were almost poetic as he
.detailed not only his experience in the service of his
country, but aspects of his life as a family man and
farmer in rural Meigs Counly.
·
Griffin describes himself as "just an old World War I
veteran, no better 11r no less than any other veteran."
"I've gill lilts 11f friends, I served my wuntry and my
i:ommunity and 1 have been wngratulaled by many from · ·~ Methodist women al Alfred lo. lhe Mo4cm
.Woodmen of which I was seaetary for 43 years, !he Senate, the House of Representatives, lbe governor of Ohio,
and even Bill and Hilliary Ointun.
•And I'm just lillie 11ld me, • be commented in a quiet,,
modest way.
Griffin said he was born four miles out of Coolville
on lbc fruit farm of his grandfather, Chris Basham, on
·
Continued on ..,. M

Adjusted.computatlon
forces
Vinton
to
return
funds'to.F~MA
t. ""''

Good Morning

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
..
M·EDICAL CLINIC

Six mile yard sale planned for
Pomeroy and Middleport residents
April 22 has been set as the deadline for Pomeroy . and Mtddleport
,esidcnts to gel the1r sale ltstcd ()II a
locater map for usc by sltoppcrs for
tttC May 1 and '2 six-mile ycljow
nag yard sale event.
.
The sponsoring l!r11ups. the
Pomeroy Merchants As501:iation ~nd
the Middleport Community Ass~ia­
lion, ljdvisc, however. that the~ 1s
nn ~utoiT fnr registration and ~ag
plukun. just the listing on the locf_or
map which will he published in 1ne
Dally Sentinel nn April I 8.
1
·About 50 have already siincd up.
r«eivcd their yellow flai to mark
thFir locations, ~ shccl. of tips for
5uc:ccssful yard .,Jcs. and paid their
S4 fee which ~:overs all advcrtisincThe goal is 100 yard talca in lhc six
1n11es pf lbc two river town,.
Re idcnl~ may reJister at the

Refre shments . Thosl.!

LETART FALLS -

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oo

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mobile. Eastern High, Sch.-11 Mnn-,
day. 9::111 t11 I ::10 p.m;
Town~hip

.._.;..,...ce.

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· April19, 1998

GALUPOUS - Unemployment in southern Ohio
counties decreased slightly during March, wilh the
exception of Gallia and Lawrence counties, which saw
mi.nimallncrcases ov~r their February jobless rates. ·
The Ohio Bureau of Empl11ym~nt Services noted lhal
Gallia's rate incbed.up one-tenth of a per~nt, from 10.S .
in February 10 10.6 in March, while Lawrence rose fourtenlhs ora percent, from 6.8 percent 10 7.2.
By wnlrast, Meigs County saw a three-tenths of a
percent decrease, from 13.2 percent in February 10 12.9
in March, according lo figures released by OBES Friday.
. The downward trend, in varying degrees, was refleeted in most area wunlies, OBES reported. Athens County's unemployment was 5.8. percent in March, down
five-tenths of a percent from February; Jackson Counly, ·

While deployed. Hallltill's ship
participated in Opcmtion Southern
Watch. playing a signilicant role in
suppbrting the enforcement of
U.N . sanctions levied against Iraq
·after the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
They alsn parricipatcd in Operation
Bright Star. a multinational exercise designed tn improve unit
readiness and intcroperability with
coalition lorces.
During the deployment. Haltnill
had the opporrunity to visit France,
lsmcl and the United Arab Emirates. where crew members from
. Haltnill"s shiip participated in nut reach projects within the host cml'lmunitics.
He joined the Navy in March.
19':15. He is a graduate of the University of Rio Grande.

CalendaF;....__-~----

teenagers.

.

ington .

--....,.------Comunity
fund r;Jiscrs nf any type . .hems arc
printed a~ spa~.:c pcrmils and ~:annul
tk! guaranteed to run a spccilic nufn·

• l'tfell1 •

March jobless rate up
in Gallia, down in Meigs
.

a

toward an associate degree through

becoming more
animated

90045

Larry D. Halfbill
Navy Petty Oflicer Third Class
Larry D. Haltltill, a 19':12 graduate
of North Gallia High School· in
Vinton. has com~lctcd six-month
deployment to the Mediterranean
Sea and Amhian Gulf aboard the
aircraft carrier USS George Wash-

Air Force Airman James R.
Gecoma has graduated from basic
military training at La.:kland Air
Force Base in San Antonio, Texas.
During the six-weeks of training, the airman stu. tied the Air
Force mission. organi1.ation, and
customcs and received special
training in human relations.
In addition. ainncn who complete basic training earn credits

Its grab

•xmes

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

on sustained superi or job perfor- the Community College or the Air
mance imd proficience in his desig- Force.
nated specialty.
Gccnma is the son or Mike E.
A 1996 graduate of Nelsonville- . and Cathy l Ruchti of 45 U.S.
York High School. he joined the Hi£hway 33 in Shade.
Marine Corps in January. 1997.
The ainnan received associalc
degree in 1995 from St. Petersburg
James R. Gecoma
College. Clearwater. Fla.

James R. Gecoma

Networks

for players

.'

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

$1

NFL continues

• Fe~u~ on pqe C1

'}

A;gcls arc created spirit hcings

Angels arc mentioned 273 times
in .14 books of the Bible. Hebrews
1:14 (NIV) reveal s, "Arc not angels
ministering spirits sent to serve
those who will inherit salvation''''
In heaven on March 17. 1982.
Chnst Jesus called a particular angel
to His side "Nell is heartbroken . I
want to tenderly strengthen her
through My mcssa~c of peace. You
go speak to her on my hehalf."
. Mother opened her weary eyes.
The beautiful angel, with yellow
hair and a white robe with wide
draping sleeves. stood by her ·bed.
Turning her head away, she th9ugh1,
"I 'm imagining this - I didn't sec
an angel." When she looked back,
the angel spoke: "Peace," and then
disappeared.
.
Quite unexpectedly, my . father
had experienced a light heart allack
followed by a massive stroke. and
hat! gone home to be with the Lord
on !he 15th.
A couple of weeks before that.
Mother and Daddy had their 50th
wedding amiivcrsary pictures take
1 nd had planned a celebration ..
nnw this day. Mother had to stand
alone hy his casket to greet their
fric.nds. She was devastated.

insignificant job duty.
I thought your readers would like
to know that the.law protects a value
that Americans hold very deeply,
and obseryers of many different religions are grateful for its protections.
•• Ellen J. Vargyas, legal counsel,
EEOC, Washington, D.C.
Dear Ellen Vargyas: Thank you
for educating millions of readers
today -- me included. A lcncr such
as yours makes me especially thankfulthal my immigrant parents didn't
miss the boat.

...

But the Lord knew and He sent
His ministering angel to give her the
peace that on ly He could 'give.
Mother was acquainted with Jesus·
words i'n John 14:27. ''Peace I leave
with you: My peace I give to you ...
Let not your heart be troubled. nor
let it be fearful. "
Angels are real!
By Bonnie Shiveley

but Congress, the Supreme Court
and the Equal Employment Opportunity C11minission are quite serious
about keeping job policies from
l!nreasonably compromising one's
religious beliefs. The law that prohibits religious discrimination in
employment states simply that
employers must reasonably accommodate the religious practices of a
current or prospective employee
unless · doing so would cause an
undue burden on the employer's
business.
Accommodaiions can include
nexible scheduling to permit
employees to honor religious .observances or, as in this case. excusi ng
an employee from performing an

Inside

'"odlly't. ••
• lZ Sectloas • 1
Cliencbtn
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Comics

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Edl!arlall
A!ogl the R!rer

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VINJ'ON - Hit wllh an adj~nl on its
award for .labor provided by lbc Vinlon \blunleer Fire Department during lbe tdan:h 1997
flood ·the village wili be paying bat:t.$6 70110
the F~ral Emeraency Management
Meeting in special xssion Friday, Vinton
Village Council'approved a resolution IKXlCpt·
ing reimbunement frum lhe VFD 10 it can
retilm·thal portion of the IOial award 10 FEMA
before a May 8 deadline.
. The village! whidt JCCeived 7S . pen:cnl

Aicnc:y.

relmbunemenl on COlla it ltteurml in clcaaing ton for reimbursement
of lhe general ~nd and wtll be reimbursed br
up ~ lhe fiood, notified FEMA Illite lime
The amount paid for lbc VFD's ~~ons had 1~ VFD. A mouon to aa:epl the de~rtment_s
lhal it paid firefiahtel'l by the nin, accordingiO been placed in lbc department's building fund reimbursement was made by Council Prest·
lhe villa&amp;e'a fire protcc:lion contncl.
by vote of the firefighters. But Chief Harry deal Herb Moore and sewnded by Mary
But fEMA ·computed lbc original ·labor Smalbc11 explained 111 wuncil Jhat when the George, and ~ unani.mously.
.
oost by lhe hour and iuued lbe amoun110 lhe situation became known, the VFD was · • Althou&amp;h VIllage oflietals hoped the. flood·
village 10 cOIIIpellllle lbc VFP for its liine. informed lhal 1 portion of the money would tng that dam~ed S8 _homes and busm~
After lhe award wu received, FEMA have 10 be pai'd' bldt.
.
would not mse ap1n, most. agreed w11~
reviewed the ailllllicia, dilcovered dial lbc
"There's no way of gelling ar11und tl, Mayor DODJta DeWill's suageatton lhal a pohIIIIOUIII tbould have made on lhe IUD nlher 1IIhoup it's not 11ur mistake,• Smathers said.
cy or ordi~nce should be drafled to prevent
lhan bourly rate, and iaued 1 direclive 10 VinThe village will pay lhe amount owed out anolher adjustmetll by FEMA.

April19-25 deslg·nated as _'Week of the Young Child'
1.

By JENNIFER RICH 1ER
TlfnM.Sei111JIII Stall
GAWPOUS - The week front April 19
through 2S hu been designated lhe "Week of The
Yoilng Child," by a proclamation aiped·by 0.1lipt&gt;l!s City Manap John LeBlanc. This week's
theme is "The Early Year1 Are Learning
Years. .. M~e Them Count!"
.
In ·its 22nd ear as a nationaf campaip 10
focua allention ~n the imporlan~ of lhe early
yean of a child'~ learning, this 11 only the first
lime Glilia County orpnizalions have allempted
10 gome together to have one combined celebrafon
1
Rcpn:sc:ntalives fr~ Guiding Hand, A~
Head Start and other local daycares have been
working together 10 plan the oblervancc;
.
' A publii: 11Wareness com mince f~ ICVCf8l

If" 10 plan activities. 1'llole commlacc:
mcmbef1.lDClude: Shelley Bailey (Early latervenlion): VICki Aull (Guiding Hand): Rene J"lfley
(Guiding Hltlldj; Alice JICQR (Ace 1a Head
Stan); Kathy Whaley (Oallipolia Cily .Schoo~);
Kim DenniiOft (OalHa Counly Loc1i Sdlooll):
and v.Icrie Valenllne (Rio .Child ~lopmenl
Center Aazu Head Stan&gt;. · ·
.
'
The goal of lbc grOup 11 10 call alleltli!ln 10 lhe
~for quality .e~ly c:JU!dhood aervi~ for all
chtld~n and f~hes wtthth the ~mm~ly. · .
*I JUII feel hke the earl)' yean of 1 chikl'llife
are lbc liiOIIIJDportant years,• llid Alice Jacobi,
of Ac:cc~~~ Head Start. "If we don't begin ,.Jill
quality l':UI'ing expcrienc:ea in ~ early JAil,
we have neaJecled our respons!bllll)' 10 the dill·
dren in our communities. Children are ou.r
future,•
monilia

.

The mala celcbndon of lbc week is a carnival
lhil wiD lake pllcc on ~J,.April ~1, fl'llm 10
Lm.IO 2 p.JD. at 0..C. Umlcd ~Church.
1bll ce~ il opeD 10 dte publiC. Planned
ICiivllies Include 111!loon aalmall, ""'Y ~c.~­
t'f!*..:!"~ art_- ...S. c:raftl and ' - pmnung.
..
will be . - I aiona wllllluncll.
. "Hopefully lhia it somethiq ~ ~ JCI ~·
ed and COIIIinue year after year, said JKUIIL .I

11

have~lwa~wan't;diOICCua.dosomethlnaofthis

IIIIJ!UIUde 10 Gallia County.

,. .
I just feellhalln all ol our early chtl«;'bbOd
01p11izaliona we have.a fine lfOUP ~ dedtatled
=-dedicated lo lhe calla ol providing good
ily childc:are and learning experiences," said

of sof

PROCLAMATION- Chi.._ fnltn Guiding 1111:41 ancl Melli Hetad
1f1trt obnrn lhl
1 pro cis ttllllloo1
Apr111111ttrough
ac:obl.
.
·
21 11 "WMil thl
Child.• City f'lllllltr John Lei I - llgnad
~ I ~y 10 celcbnte IIIII week, the French lhl proclamatiOn wllh ch
hlllpera (L-A) Delild ......., 1&lt;-r11 Ho!fman,
·
C0n11nu111 on 111111 AI
. KIITit Olton, II litany caar-. Anlhoitf Ounltp ancl Nlcll Dunllp.
.

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