<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8473" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8473?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T21:03:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18891">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1e0f3f65d901ff968800c4bb539589d6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6a1fe7d2336abd4a73e40495889dcd6e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27373">
                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Aprll20, 1998

.Healing, progress urged on
third anniversary Of bOOlbing
By ROCHELLE HINES
Associated Press WrJ1er
,OKLAHOMA CITY - Chasity
Pope walked around the site of the
federal building bombing with two
living reminders of her slain mother
.:_ 2-year-old Brendonand 5-month·
old Brenda.
Both were named after their
grandmother, Brenda Daniels, one of
168 people killed in the April 19,
1995. blast.
.
"My children have never seen her,
but my son knows who ~he is," said
Ms. Pope, a Dallas resid?n t who was
among the hundreds of survivors and
victims' families who came Sunday
to mark the third anniversary of the
wor.a act of terrorism on U.S. soil.
A solemn 90-minute ceremony in
front of the chain-link fence that surrounds the site included prayers.
speeches from dignitaries and 168
seconds of silence for each person
who died.
Mementoes, wreaths and flowers
were then placed on the grass where
rubble stood three years ago. Some
lingered to hold hands and pray
under sunny skies.
It wa.s the first time the event has
fallen on a Sunday and a theme of
'~

spirituality was evident.
''I think lime helps with healing if
you use the time well," said Paul
Heath , a Veterans AdministrJtion
psychologist who was in the building
at the time of the blast.
President Clinton observed the
bombing anniversary by saluting the
"courage and resilience" of the people of Oklahoma City.
"Today. once agai n. our thoughts
are with the families of the 168 peo·
pie whose lives were tragically lost,"
Clinton said in a written stateme nt
from Santiago, Chile, where he was
attending a Western Hemisphere
summit.
It has been ~ard for Ms. Pope to
move on. but she said she is trying.
She still harbors anger toward Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols. the
two men convicted for their roles in
the bombing.
''I'm trying to get past th~ anger
because if I don't. it will eat me up."
Signs of progress were all around
Sunday. On a gra.'&lt;y field across from
the bomb site. siblings Rebecca and
Brandon Denny, who were in a second-floor day care center when the
blast occurred. rolled around with
boundless energy. Rebecca has facial
scars and Brandon suffered brain

Aprll21 , 1998

ing headaches.
Hyzy said doctors also wille&lt;amine Wang 's vis.ion. ''I don't think he's
seen a dentist in a while. I think he
could probably use it," he said.
Wang will soon speak publicl y.
according to Shen Tong. president of
the Democracy for China Fund in
New.ton. Mass:. and a former classmate ofWang at Beijing University.
·" He's doing great. I'm so happy
to see him doing so good." Shen said.
"He's in very good spirits. He's very
upbeat. I think all those prison years
made a difference, but it's,a positive .
difference."
The Clinton admin,stration
cheered Wang's safe arrival in
Detroit.
As a student. Wang Jed marches
and gave speeches during the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989: Arter
the army .violently crushed the
protests, Wang 's name iopped the
government must-wanted list.
.
Wang served 3- 1/2 year~ in prison
and emerged unrepentant in 1993. 1
Over 2,7 months - before he was
again taken away by police in May
1995 - Wang criticized the Communist Party in essays published
abroad, met with other activists and
petitioned for democracy.
In series of letters to Chinese
authorities, Wang sought rights
improvements. the release of pOlitical prisoners and a climate of ")iolit·
ical tolerance."

pon:

.

Mary Ellen Ball, Racine: Mark J.
Werry. Pomeroy: Eugene E. Haning,
Pomeroy: John D. Mullins. Albany:
. Shawn Eric Petrie, Pomeroy: MargaretA Ward. Pomeroy: Deborah K.
Peckham Woodyard. Pomeroy: Teresa J. Doughly, Albany; Barbara E.
James. Pomeroy; Mary L. Woods,
Middleport; Vicki L. ·A.~hton. Middleport: Steven Malthew Wood. Middlepon: Justin M. Seymour. Middle·
port: Dawain D. Dursl, Reedsville:·
James R. Cotterill. Rutland; DorQthy
G. Gore, Ru1land: Hallie L. Ridgway,
Pomeroy; Pau1ck D. Williams,
Pl&gt;meroy; Kenneth D. Mohler, Middleport: Elisabeth McKown, Racine;
James R. Ingels, Middleport; Charles
w:· Berry, Middleport: Shii(On A.
Thoma.~. Rudand; Roy Lee Johnson,
Middleport;
'Kelly C. Winebrenner, . Racine;
JOhn R. 1}'~ Middleport; Joe E.
Lantz, Reedsville; Mildred Marvine
Bowen. Pvmaoy; Clarinda S. Theiss,
Rtcine; Robinelle J. Gillispie, Long
Souom; Dell• Marie Shreve, Syracuse; Jonathan Scotl, Middlepon;

. ·Meigs County's

Comm~tss~oners
.

'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel N-• Staff
Using a new regionul jail in
Athens County for housing felons
sentenced in Meig's County was
approved by lhe Meigs County Com·
missioners when they m.:t in regular
session on Monday.
Sheriff James Soulsby met wilh
the boardlo propose 1he use of.1he
new jail in Nelsonville to house
those prisoners sen1enced on felony
charges, on those occasions .when
local jail space is needed to house
those awaiting court appearances
and those sentenced on lesser
charges.
COMFORTS WIFE • Calvin Moser comforts
his wife, VIrginia, during the third anniversary
memorial ceremonies tor the Oklahoma City

.

Kelly Rae Milam. Reedsville: Mary Erwin. Albany ; Eunice Jean Cooke.
K. Holter. Long Bottom: Joseph 0 . Middleport: Ronald Stacey Holley.
Fitch. Long Bouom: AJ!:nes Pauline Middleport;
Claude
Jackson
Widner. Reedsville: W1lbur H. Ord. Humphreys. Rutland;
Racine; Randall S. Russell. Pomeroy:
Terence Lee Johnson, MiddleRebecca Dawn· Evans. Syracuse: port; Belly Jean ·stafford, Rutland;
Donald D. Lchocz. Shade: Sally Karen Sue. Williams. Rutland;
Lynn Ervin, Racine: Ryan Lee Emmell E. Douglas. Albany; ChristoClonch. Pomeroy ; Norma Jean pher Tod Wolfe. Racine: Barbaro~ Ann
Cu~ter, Middleport ; Earle Edson
Hannum, Long Bottom; Don Bent.
Showalter, Long Bottom: Frederick Pomeroy; Ira Oscar McCoy.
M. Burton. Albany: Diane Kay Jones, Reedsvi)le; Paul W. lhle. Racine;
Reedsville: Wanda Louise Mullins, Beverly S. Roush, Racine; Don
· Dexter: Wesley Jerome Howard. Bmdley lillis. Rutland: Kenneth Lee .
Pomeroy;
.
Layne, Racine; Tammy Martin,
Margaret C. RiegeL Pomeroy: Pomeroy; Rulh Allean Ebersbach.
Charles K. Gard. Middlepon; AmyL. Middleport; Addie E. Petrel , Racine:
Stepp. Racine: Rodney Allen Klein. Lisa R. Graham, Pomeroy: Nancy E.
Pomeroy: Debra Ann Blake. Mid- Gilkey, Pomeroy; Charle~ E. Hayes
dleport: Carolyn S. Cuitis. Racine: Jr.. Pomeroy; Helene Forest Goe·
Susan A. Sheppard. Racine: Belle glein. Pomeroy; Ernie A. Greene,
Maxine Butcher. Pomeroy; Carol S. Racine; Thomas R. Roach. Racine:
Rockhold. Reedsville: Howard jacob L. Landis. Portland: George
EllswQrlh Minaret. Middleport: Cur· Bryanl Hudson. Pomeroy: Clayton
tis Lee Lambert. Langsville; Erin L. Levi Johnson, Reedsville:
Smith. Middleport; Patricia Jeane
Danny M. Barber, Reedsville;
Michael. . Racine: John Clarke. Denzil L. Pnx.1or. Middlepon; Cindy
Pomeroy; Ruby V. Burnside, T. Eblin. Pomeroy; Robin Lynn
Pomeroy : Janice Lee Danner, Racine; Wood .. Rutland; Virgil P. Phillips,
Gina R. Taylor•.Pomeroy: Clarence E. Pomeroy; David Lowell Rees. ·
Boyer. Middleport: Eva Sue Howard. Pomeroy ; Ruby Evelyn Congo. PortPomeroy: Wendy R. Carsey. land: Genevieve Lyons, Long Bot·
Pomeroy; Randall R. Carpenter. _tom: Heather Bess Hawley, MiddleMiddlepon; Roben Vic Laughery, port; Patrick Rae StOry, Middleport:
Reedsville; Barbara Kay Bunch. Wendy Ann Beegle. Racine: Henri·
Middleport; Joseph Rex Bailey. ella O'Brien, Shade; Kathleen Fink,
Chesler;
Rutland; Wilbur Ward. Langsville;
Rosemary Auharty, Reedsville; · Matthew Jerad Dailey, Middleport;
Philip Victor Hovalter, Middleport; Palrick Loren Aeiker, Pomeroy:
~?avid Paul Neville. Pomeroy: Carol
Ronald Lee Robinson, Reedsville:
L. Williams, POmeroy; Randall Z. Ma~ine Griffith, Pomeroy; Clyde R.
Wilson, Pomeroy: Debbie G. S1J1ilh, Morris, Long Bouom; Clinton
Reedsville: John W. Trou1, Rulland; Roscoe Pilzer, .LOng Bo11om: James
Bobby G. White, Dex1er; Louisa · William Bmnnon, Reedsville; Ron
Fr4nces Johnson. Middleport; Wanda Bruce Hill. Pomeroy; Paul E. Forbes,
M. Kimes, Reed.•ville; Janet Leone Racine: William J. Eblin. ·Pomeroy:
Williamson, Rutland; Andrea Marie
Aaron Lee Morris, Rutlahd; Jim·
McDonald, Langsville; Henry E. my K. Nelson. Pomeroy; David H.
Huggins, Rutland; Julia Dianne Rif- Mohler, ·Pomeroy; Larry L. Vanfle. Long .Bottom; Albert B. Cone, . Cooney. Rutland: Manha Ohlinger
Albany: Cleo M. Smith, E:hesler: . Vennari, Pomeroy: Greg Alan Huff·
Stephen Alan Norris, Portland; Don- man, Portland; Mark E. Rboncmus,
na Carol Griggs. Pomeroy: Geoffrey Shade.
Eugen~ Cogar, Pomeroy: Brian
Duane Knapp, Rutland; Philip Lee

Single Copy· 35 Cents

approve use of ·new regional jail
'

According to Soulsby, using the charged. with less serious offenders.
Soulsby also discussed th~ possi·
Nelsonville facility is less costly and
more convenienl for his department, bility of instituting a program lhrough
which has senl felony otTenders to · the county's communily corrections
grant which· would include a super·
Ch1lli~o1he when necessary.
So'!lsby said that the new jail vised work program so that less sericharge. $55 per da,y to house prison- ous offenders could work through
ers from Meigs County, but the cost their sentences providing communi· of transponiog prisoners and time ty service. ralher than jail lime.
In other business. the commis·
involved are less with the new facil·
ity than the ;.iii in Chillicothe, which sioners met with Susan Oliver, executive director of the Meig's County
charges a similar rate. .
The board approved the ~se of the Council on Aging, and endorsed the
Nelsonville jail, which opened last agency"s one-mill renewal levy,
week, in lhose cases when transport· which wi'll be decided nexl month.
ing a prisilileri~ neces.o;ary to open jail Oliver distributed 1-shirts' and camspace in Meigs County for those paign 'materials to the commissioners

to promote the levy. .
Jean Grueser. who has been active
in enc011raging the commissioners to
· keep 1he county home open. mel with
the board to discu~s policies and procedures which will govern the home's
operation as a temporary .emergency
·shelter.
Commissioner Fred Hoffman said
that no policies have been adopted to
date; staling that a committee
appointed 10 assist wilh the development of these procedures ha• yet to
present its recommendat,ions.
Grueser criticized· what she said
were "pressure tactics" on the part of
county home employees encouraging

.

.
residents to seek other housing out- stay at the home regardless of other
si~e of lhe county home. ·
options ava ilable.
· To date, half of the faci lity's 10
Howard said that she has received
permanent residents have voluntari· reports thanhose residents who have
ly left the home for accommodations · left the county home have adapted
at The Maples and other facilities . wei ho their new homes. and that the
Commissioner Janet Howard said commissioners r~ce. ive' regular
that all moving arrangements are reports on the residents who have ldi.
finalized by public agency caseThe commissioners als&lt;J approved
workers, and denied that any employ- a $200 tran sfer of funds within the
ees of the county home .. or these budget of the county treasurer and
caseworkers - have "pressured" approved payment of bills in the
county home residents t6 lenve. How- . amount of $372,65 1.56. with 368
ever. Howard said. she ha' received enlries.
reports that ·others• .not associated
Also present was Clerk Gloria
directly with the home or its resi - Kloes. Commissioner Jeff Thornton
d~nL,, have encour~ged resident.&lt; to
was not present due to county business ouL,ide of the oflice.

purchasing program. Council powered blowers for downtown Second Street near the Lutheran
Church. In addition. Councilwoman
in~lructed Hysel.lto proceed With the cleanup. Council President John
Musser
commented
1hat
he
used
his
·
Geri Walton commented lhat seveml
lowest
liank
quole
on
interest
rules.
Pomeroy
Villng~
Council
own
blower
10.
clean
up
the
parking
hou.ses on Old Route 7 are now unoc-In
addilion,
council
aulhorized
the
approved the purchase of equipmenl
lol
after
last
year's
Big
Bend
Stem·
cupied.
for the street departme.nt during its .purchase of three .heavy commercial
Mayor F~ank Vaughap said the
mowers. The lhree mowers will be wheel .Festival and that ·the blower
regular Monday night ~ling.
did
a
good
job
of
sweeping
up
small
s1reer
!lepartment has been busy
purchased
from
O'Dell
True
Value
Council authorized Clerk!Trea·
items
like.
cigarette
bullS.
mowing
and filling in a trench in lhe
· surer Kathy Hysell to borrow up to Lumber in l'omeroy for $355 apiece.
Council
approved
of
pulling
lhe
upper
parking
lol.
Council also considered, but look
$55,000 for five years to purchase u
Councilman David Ballard repeat·
new dump 1ruck through the state.· no action on the purchase of gas· village police department's repeater
system anlenna oil the Cellular One · ed his request that the street departtower located on the hill behind the mentclean out ditches throughoot the
downtown area.
.
village. He also a.•ked about obtain•
Police Chief Jeff Miller said 1he ing assistance for mowing the cemecompany approved of 1he village 1ery.
s.·
~·se
r- using iL• lower. Plans calllo pul the
Vaughan said lhe s1ree1 depart·
.
.
repeater anlenna approximately 150 ment ha.~ been authorized
hire
. The Meigs Counly Board of Elections has processed 212 request~
feet up on .the tower, he said. The three part-time workers for mowing.
for absenlee ballots for the May 2 primary.
repeater antenna is curtently set at a
Wehru~ reminded resident~ that
The board reported earlier lhis.month lhat applic~ti~s ~or absen·
lower height on the emergency ser· spring clean up will be held hegip·
tee ballots were significantly down from pas! years, andtcatmg a pos·
vices antenna, and does not ade· ning Monday lhrough May I, with
sible low turnout for lhe party.primary. ·
·
_quately cover lhe entire village • . workers largeting differenl parts of
Rita Smith. Director of 1he board,· ~U~id Tuesday lhat400 absentee
Miller added. . ·
1he village each day.
baiiOis were processed during tll£.!996 party primary.
•·
1--' Total ~t_of jnslallinlllhe.repeater
Workers wiU ~II!Il reJDQ.~ _large_
Vota'S Will nOIItlnate ihei.r pllni!S' cifniltlbites fOr gvvemor'illld lieu; .- anienna·On lhe tower will be $1,5Gq appliances, televisions. tires ana oth·
1enan1 governor• .S well as _the slale of stale officials: lreasurer, aud1to $2;1)00. compared to ~3;000 for er items that cannot be' placed in the
tor and secretary of slate.
.
using. the emergency serv~ces lo~er. limdfilt People requesling pickup can
State Representative. State Senaror: U.S, Senator on~ U.S. Re~- .
Miller said..
call the village, it wa.' noted:
senlalive candidates will also be nomtnated, as wtll county commas,
"Cellular One ha• .been really
Wrighl complained that American
sioner candidates.
· 1-"' •• ,.
·
cooperativ~." he added.
.
Elec1ric Power has n01 repaired or
Two Slate issues relaling 10 school fundmg ane also on the ~ay 5
.Council also approve&lt;! a $300 replaced defective slreetlighls. while
baiiOI.
.·
donation to the· Meigs Cou~ty Councilman Scott Dillon· updated
Absenlee baiiOI.• may he requested by registered vOiers who·are over
Humane Society to a.sist in paymg council on a sewer overflow near Nye
65 those who will he out of the counly on election day, those who
for an animal invesligator. Council- Avenue.
c..;oot vOle due 10 religious rea.o;ons and thosc.who are ~orking al polls.
man Larry Wehrung v01ed against the
Wrighl also commented on places
Reqilests must he received in lime for lhe board lo matl absentee _bal·
motion while Councilm~n George where old,. unlicensed vehicles are
lots on May 2, although ballots may he ca•t althe board of elec11ons
Wright abstained.
.
being kept in !he. village. Miller said
office on Mulberry Avenue through the close of busaness on May .4.
Open di"l!ussion focused on pol· he would lalk to residenls who are
hole repair. particularly lhe hole on keeping unlicensed cars..
·

·Work recognized

JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel
Staff
By

are eKpressirig interest in further reg- East Coast were also a large concern
ulating the hog industry, Circle Fou(s among residents . . ·
plans to become the world's largest
· But there were other worries: evihog farm- and produce 2.5 million dence that large amounts of nitrogen.
-slaughter hogs a year- appear,; to in the form of·ammonia drifting from ·
be moving apace.
the lagoons. was affecting plant life
"No question, we're overdriving and water quality; that the waste our headlights here." said Universi- including some disease-causing
ty of Iowa professor Kelly Donham. viruses and micmbes- mighl seep
director of the Iowa Center for Agri- into ground water; and that workers
cultural Safety and Health.
in the giant hog conlinements were
Three years ago. just as Circle showing increased respiratory ailFour was settling into the soulhwesl· ments.
. em Utah desen, north of Zion Nation·:Mostly. we learned thai we just
al Park, Donham helped organize a didn't know enough." Donham said.
symposium on the impact of gig~n - .
Now. he and fellow scientists tic hog factories.
along with beleaguered reg~lators in
Everybody knew about the odor other states - consider it the height'
problems posed by the reeking, open· of folly to.allow companies like Cirair sewage lagoons. And recent dis· cle Four to eKpand unchecked.
a.strous spills of hog waste along 1he

N-•

..Ab s.entee
ballo't
.
.
.
' t o·n .· th e •
reques

·Grand jury. venire posted for Meigs County
.

The following Meigs County cit·
izens were named as potential members of the May term. of the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court grand
jury:·
Kristin M. .Torres. Middleport:
Garry A. Huddleston, Portland; Paula
E. Huran-Moseley, Albany; Michael
E. Ash. Syracuse;· John H. Ord.
Pomeroy: Sharon Sue Cogar. Syra·
cuse; June Manha Jones. Middleport;
Edward Ramsburg. Pomeroy: Sealrice M. Davis. Middleport; Michelle
Renee Donovan, Coolville; Iva Pearl,
Upton. Reedsville;
Ruth Kathryn Moore. Pomeroy:
Gregory Browning. Pomeroy; Patri·

Hometown Newspaper

Council OKs street department purchases

bo!Jlblng victims Sunday. Moser was In the
building during the explosion that killed 168
people. (APJ

Hog farm.expansion raises _concerns
of environmental pig sty in Utah
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Anti·
hog farm activist True Ott croaks into
the telephone that'he 's sick and only
getting sicker. "It's probably the
swine llu." he says, only half,joking.
Pigs, and how to keep them out of
Iron County. consume Ott these days.
And Circle Four Farms. the giant hog
conglomerate pushing into a corner
of the countv. is his bane .
But Ott's efforts to stop the
nation 's largest factory farm from
getting even larger are mireqin trouble,; . • His grassroots organization,
Concerned Resident• for Sustained
Agriculture. just let go of its attorney
for lack·of funds - .jeopardizing its
legal challenge to Circle Four's most
recent waste water discharge permits.
· At a time when Congress and the
Environmental Protection Agency

Boston
Marathon
results
Page 4

Middleport • Pomeroy , Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'

Meigs .County petit jurors .selected
: The following Meigs Countians
were named as potential members of
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court petit jury:
Jeffrey S. Needs. Pomeroy:
Charles · William Bailey Jr..
Reedsville: Charles L · Mosi:ley,
Albany: Bruce W. Humphrey.
Racine: Sharon Ann Older. Middleport: Betty D. Milhoan. Pomeroy:
General H. Lamb. Tuppers Plains:
Srian Dwain Bowen. Cool vi lie:
Lucanis Mark Brooks •. Albany :
George Foster Morrison Sr., Long
Bottom: Mark A. Reitmire. Pomeroy:
Donna J. Williamson. Rutland: Dennis E; Sergenl. Dexter. Linda C. Sto·
bart. Middleport: Terri Lynn Hawley.
Pomeroy: V. Jane Abbott. Pomeroy:
Loree Jane Bank.,, Pomeroy; Jennie
R. Hayman. Portland; Charlene Edith
Hoetlich. Pomeroy: Robert G. Picltell Jr., Pomeroy; Eva Regene
Burnem. Vintop: Larry W. Rapp.
Racine: Tommy L Romine, Middlepan: Gregory A. Stewnn, Middle·

Tomortow: Cloudy
High: 60; Low:40

damage from the bombing.
Among the dignitaries on hand
were cast members •from the CBS
drama " Promised Land." who are in
Oklahoma City to film scenes for
several upcoming episodes and to
draw· attention to efforts to build a
permanent memorial.
"The people of Oklahoma demon·
strated to the world what the United
States stands for." actor Gerald
McRaney said. "People' of every col·
or, ethijicity and religion di ~played
compassion, sacrifice, courage and
love not for notoriety or credit but
si mply because it needed doing."
Officials with the Oklahoma City
National Memorial Foundation said
$11.8 million has been raised for the
memorial, which will cost about
$24.1 million. Groundbreaking is
sc heduled for the fall .
Sunday also marked the fifth
. anniversary of the fire that swept
through the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texa.~. ~illing about ·
80 people.
Prosecutors ' said the episode
became a rallying cry for anti-government militia groups across the
United States. including the truck
bomb attack on the Al/'red P. Murrah
. Federal Building.
·

Freed Chinese dissident
calls for more releases
DETROIT (AP) - A weary Wang malic atmosphere before high -level
Dan thanked the U.S. government for contacts. prompting human rights
lobbying to free him from a Chinese groups to accuse it of playing
jail as he pleaded from his 11\lspital "hostage politics."
bed for the relea.•e of more prisoner,;
Another prominent Chinese dissiof conscience.
dent said Sunday that Wang 's relea.' e
Wani;. a leader of the 1989 pro- was a " pawn" in a larger strategy to
democracy Tiananmen . Square ease criticis m of China's human
protests who has spent near!y 6 1/2 rights record.
years in prison. could be discharged
"I think the Chinese Communist
· as early as today from Henr}' Ford Party wants to diminish the ·pressure
Hospital, where he was listed in sla· that's being exerted on it." said Wei
ble condition.
Jingsheng. who spent 18 years in
Doctors planned an MRI and oth· prison before being released in
er neurological tests today for Wang, November. "That's why they are lib·
who was tired but in good spirits after crating us one by one."
his release Sunday from a Chinese
Such release~ suit China's recent
prison.
policy of encouraging dissidents to
In a stllement. Wang thanked the leave. in hopes they will lose their
U.S. government "for its efforts in political effectiveness in exile.
pressing for my release."
" It is good news for Wang Dan as
"At the same time I greatly hope an individual, exceplthat once again,
that those democracy activist• who it appears to he a release conditional
continue to be imprisoned in China on exile." said Catherine· Baber.
can soon obtain their freedom," he spokeswoman for Amnesty Intern asaid.
tional in Hong Kong.
The C,::hinese government has
The official Xinhua News Agency
acknowledged that several thousand said Wang was released on medical
political dissidents are imprisoned, parole but offered no details. Wang
though human righls groups say the· ~ for months has suffered from a throat
numbers are higher.
infection and headaches his family
Wang, 29. is the second major ·believes may indicale a brain tumor.
Chinese dis.,identtp be'relea..ed in silt
"He's in generally pretty good
months. The latesf release comes just shape." said Dr. Robert Hyzy. Hentwo months before President Clin- ry Ford's director of critical care. He
ion's planned visit to Beijing.
said Wang will undergo tests for a
China has tried to use such pris· chronic cough - perhapi; linked to
oner releases to improve the diplo- · ~llergies or bronchitis - and linger-

Local diamond action, Page 5
Cleveland loses again; Page 4
Ann Landers column, Page 10

Today: Cloudy
High: 60; Low:40

cia Ann Phillips. Albany: Mary D. Pomeroy; Michael B. May. Rutland: ·
King. Pomeroy; Larry Wayne Goble. Jeannu Kay Connolly, Portland: Julie
Vinlon: Terri L. Sturgeon. Racine; M. Runyon. Pomeroy:
Diana·Sue Bu.rke. Albany; Marcella .. Jim E..Weese. Syracuse; Wallace
G. Durst, Middlepon: Wanda Mada- J. Reuter. Pomeruy: Mary M.
line Blackburn, Long Bottom; Gelia Marcinko. Tuppers Plains: Dehra L
Ann Amos. Coolville; · Michael Mee~. Albany; Perry K. Hill. Racine:
Robert Duhl. Portland: Robert B. John H. Scckma~. Reedsville: Harley
Baker, Reedsville; Ronald Wayne · E. Boring. Albany; Marie B. Uauck.
Wilson. Racine;
Pomeroy ; Mike Dean Allman.
Larry ·A. Davis Jr., Albany; Ron- Albany; Dianne Hawley. Pomerny;
nie Ray Spencer, Long Bouom: Lisa Peggy Ann Bole. Pomeroy: Roherta
Diane &gt;Golden. Reedsville; Gladys Jean Smith, Racine: Phyllis M. Cline:· '
Faye Chaney. Pomeroy; Jerry L. Pomeroy; Phillip Henry Werry.
Large. Pomeroy: Jennifer Jane Sayre. Chester:,Donita Danielle McClintic,
Rlltland; Norma Jean Fortney. Pomeroy.
Reedsville; Joseph lie~ Struble.

Work to begin
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Auoc:latacl PNa Writer

to

on juvenile 'supermax'.

P•t Hol..r, project chaifman for the Chester Courthouse ren·
oYIItion project, w•s presented a plaque by the Meigs County
Comnil11ionan during a recent tundralsing dinner tor the project. Al10 recognized was the Chaster/Shade Historical Asaoclatlon, which Holter serves as treasurer. Prasentlng the. plaques·
_ . County Comml11loner Fred Hoffman, •nd Jeff Thornton,
w11o was not available tor the photo. The illnner raised nearly;
$2,500 kir the renov•tlon project, which has been pa~rtially fund·.
ed by tha commissioners.

Future of
icare
must·be determined
by today's lawmakers

a compelilive

basis. wilh counties 10 cover cosl overruns al Marion.
WASHINGTON !API - A new
. Planned with tighler sec~rity and
receiving money based on populaMedicare
commission will have to
COLUMaus (AP) - Parks and
lion.·
. high-tech surveillance equipme~t .
decide
what
· health coverage the
prisons topped the agenda at the slate
This year communities submilled lhe new prison is designed for the ·nalion can afford
:_ and what it can.,
·Conlrolling Board.
353 applications for proj~t~ totaling most vidlent ·juvenile offenders.
- for baby boomers in retirement.
The board. made up of six law·
· $24.8 . milli'on this year. ~e final Ahlborn said. · .
t\nd while Ohio's three 01her Federal Reserve Chairman · Alan
makers and a presidenl who reprep1cks w1ll be announced by mtd·May.
senl~ Gov. George Voinovich. voted
said Dave l'agnard, department maximum security youth facilities Greenspan says.
"Realily is invariably_ going to
. Monday to release $28.7 million for
spokesman:
.
. general . hou~e prisoners for six
create
a situation in which. gmnted
· .a maximum security youth prison in
The board approved the. request . months to a year, the new "Juvemle
lhe
1ype
of system we have. the
supermax" is intended for offenders
Marion and $11'.3 million for local
without comment
demand
for
medical service&lt; · is
jwk projects statewide.
Sen, Rhine McLin. D-Dayt.on. wbo will · spend live or stx years
· . almosl surely going to exceed the
With the money approved; work is
mean~hile, ~a.~ lhe lone _vote agatnsl · behind bars.
Largely. !hat's because mosl vio- basic available supply,'.' Greenspan
the pnson project. She objected~ ~he
511heduled to begih nex1 week on the
lold lawmakers and private-sector
Sll million facilily lhat will house
department's use . ~f $1.7 mtll~on lent criminals who are 15 years or
experts
gathered Monday _for the
240 of Ohio's 1oughest juvenile
planned for an addition at the lnd1an older are bein~ tried in adult coons.
second meeting of the National
offenders. said Fred .Ahlborn. a.'l.~is ·
River School for Boys in Massillon Alhborn said.
Bipartisan Commission on the Future
of Medicare.
·
" Political compromises are going
to have to be made.'' the Fed chair·
toleraled." Voinovich said.
retail clerks who sell tobacco to CUS· man said. aDd quipped at the end or
COLUMBUS (APJ - Gov. place fW liquor.
He and Attorney Gtncral Belly
1'hc idea i"!mediately drew fire . tomers ufl!ler 18. is inadequate to his testimony that "I much prefer to
Geot'ge Voinovich wanls IO creale a
~ontgomery
an"?unced
on
Monday
from
John.C. Mahaney Jr•. p~sidenl · slem the lide of tobacco use by leen· . he a witness than a member of the
licensing and pe~alty sys1em for
a
prog'ram·thal
ancludes
a
''lhreeof'
1he
Ofuo Coonc1l of Retotl Mer- agers, officials said. Sludies show commission."
,
tobacco sales· similar IQ· the one in
strikes·tilid·you're-out" provision for ; chanls. He called it a "lousy !'ropos· mosl adult toba&lt;:co use~ · sta';l as
By March, the 17-inember panel
retailers caught selling lobacco to al,"' which is· punilive to relatlers.
teens.
must recommend lo Congress and the
minors.
·
About 24.000 slores slatewide
Mont~omery said the proposal "is president some wa' to keep Medicare
A licensing fee paid by retailers • sell 1obacco producls. AI conve- one step in slopping children from from collapsing under the weighl of
would he used 10 fund enforcement niencc slores without ga.~ pumps, 28 smoking and preventing them from baby boomer retirements. Without
oflhe ban on tobaix'o sales 10 rniiiOI'!!. per cent of sales are from tobacco enduring a life of addiction and change, the health.care progmm for
the elderly is expected to run shqrt of
"ll's time 10 lake the next step in pmd~K:ts, accordi~g to~~ Herf. · deadly heallh habits."
$Cnding
a
message
to
tobacco
retail·
head
:
of
lhe
Ohto
Assoctallon
of
The
proposal
woul(j
require
aclion
cash
in 2010.
1 Section • 10 hies .
· Taking into account t~e aging of
en and yoong people lhat sales of Convenie~e S10res. . . .
by the stale Legislature.
Vol49,No.l
the population· alone, health care
tobacco prodiiCl~ to yOuth will 001 be ·.
Cu~Tent state law, whtch penalizes
•
10
'*ride•

This Weeks' Spvciol Selection

1998

tai\\' adminislrator of the stale Depart·
ni~nt of Youth Services. Compleljon
is e•pect in January 2000.
·.
Most of the construction mone~.
$15.2 million. will go to the Peterson
Con.o;Jruction Co. of Wapakoneta.
The board also approved the Ohio
DePP"ment of Natural Resources'
reque~l for $11 .) million for local
parks projecls funded lhrough the
· sllit~~ Nature Works bond program.
The money will cover the fourth
round of grmts since v01ers approved
the program in November 1993.
Since lhe program started,lhe Slate
.has financed $44.6 million wonh of
projects. The grant' are awarded on

A~·ministration

plan would license tobacco sales

Good Afternoon

TOday's Sentinel

Owl(lrh

. Cnelg

f4Moil
1/
Wgfbcr

9
3
3
3

Lotterres

OHIO

l'ldl3: 840: PlcU: 1976
hclleJt 5: 9-IG-12-28-36
W,YA.
.,.., 3: 617; Dally 4: 3184
0 1991 Olio Yllll)l Mtislll'l Co.

\

•

.Lead screening~,
· Free lead screenings for children

aged six months 10 sill years will be
otrmd by the Meip Counly Heallh
Depa11mentlhis week, • well • free.
immunizations f~JF preschoolers.
.
Leltd ~ni111s will be held the
remainder d lhis week in ~junttion
widi "Week of. lhe Youna Otild"
observuces.· On Wednesday, the
!aim deplltment will provide lhe
screeninp after WIC ciiiiCI from .
9:30 ulllil 11:30 .,m. and a1 the .
Pomeroy Libraey a1 1:30 p.m., after
story hour,

imm~ni~ations

The screeni111s will also be held
during a free Qtlli~Rn's Fair in Middleport on Wednesday livm I to 4
p.m., outaidc at the &lt;linp:rbte-.1
Preschool and Nursery in Middleport
and inside at the Rejoicin1 · l.;ife
Chun:h Hall.
On Thunday, the screenings will
he gi\'CII at lhe Giftlerbread
Preschool livm 9 to II :30 a.m., and
al Dee Dee's O.ytan: in Middll!port
from Ito 3:30p.m,
The screeninas will~ condllclcd
at Kroger in Pomeroy from Ito 3:30

p.m. on Friday.
According to Norma Torres, nursinl supervisor of the heallh depart·
tnenl. lad poisonin1 can ciU$C menIal rmniMion and developmenlal
disabilities, as well as Allenlion
Deficil Disorder, hyperaclivily and
other symptoms, which often mimic
lhe •ymptoms of Olherchildhood ill·
nc'"s. Leltd poisoning can also he
silenl. assumina no visible symptoms.
·
Torres said tlut1 le-.1 poisoning is
most often sustained lhrough e~po-

expe nses. The resull is !hal working

people increa.&lt;ingly face limits on the
health coverage they can get. for
example, for visits to highly paid
medical specialists.
~hile managed health care is a
choice for Medicare beneficiarie.s.

more than-XO percent of retirees still
send their medical bills direclly to the
government, getting virtually what•
ever care they want.
" Unless its disparities with. the_· ·
private sector are addressed, political
· support for Medicare may·well begin
to wane. especially if escalating
Medicare co.~ts force tax increa'ICS ot
reductions in other government pro·
grams." Greenspan said.

offered this. week

sure in .homes painted before 1978, advantage of thi's week's fiee screen- ·
when lead i:onlent became closely ings. Parents should bring medical
monilored in paint.
. cards and insurance information,
lnexpensi"e, imported 1oys paint.' when applicable, so that third parties
ed wilh leaded paint, inexpensive can be billed.
·
,
crayons. when ingested, and even ·
However, those families without
e~haust fume$ are also blamed for insurance qualify for free screening. ·
lead poisoning.
Those parent~ who wish to ha~
Polluted rain carries lead into th~ir child~n immunized agai~st
ground wlller and then to vegetable childhood dtsease du.ring the visits
and.fruit crops. ·
shoold bring lheir child's immunlzaBa:ause of the almost-unavoid' lion record.•. Parenlal permission is
.able exposures to ·lead, the health ~ui~'for both lead screeniqg and
department urges parenls to ·take tmmun1zat1on.
'~

(

spending in the United States is
expected to increase 20 percent over
the next three dec~des.
Meuicare. howc'ver. has faileu to
keep up with changes that have
helped coptrol costs in the private
health care marketplac~. Greenspan
said.
" Much nf the working-age popu·
latimi now belongs to health plans
that active ly manage care to hold
down costs." said Greenspan.
In the past uecade, companies
looking to cut their employee benetits bills have turned to health pl ans
that tightly control services anJ

�•

'

•

.•

Commentary

,

•

•

•

Page2

Officials arrest 10 at
Piketon Flea Market

OHIO Weather

T••ct,y, Aprll21

Wedneiday,.AprU 22
Acct&gt;Weather• forecast for

The Daily Sentinel
'E.staDfisfid in 1948

b~~get

The gremlin's. an old
.

By TONY SNOW
wouldn't
surplus. CBO director June O'Neill
Crea~ors Syndicate
· really balance
said yes: Rules are 111les. She lhen
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
WASHINGTON·· It wasn't long 1 until 2002.
reminded Domenici that her opinion
614·992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
ago that Republicans were every- They took the
'was "strictly advisory," and that the
where:promising tax cuts. It was as · word of the
While House actually controlled
if the pany, after'a long sltomber. 'Congressmnimplementation. of the law.
had ·decided to mount a R"'ganitc al
Budget
Think of what this means. If
revival.
Oflice. which
Congress were to get rid · of every
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Then' suddenly, the talk turned has become
stupid prol'ram in the budg~t. it
gauzy and theoretical. Gone were the Delphic
couldn' t cut taxes. If it were to shut
ROBERT L. WINGETT
vows to slash rates right away, and Oracle of feddown everything but the White
Publisher
abstract lectures replaced ftre- era! fqrecast·
House and the E&gt;entagon, it couldn't
breathing
attacks
on
the
status
quo.
ing.
cut' taxe~. The budget .rules provide
•
Republicans· changed their tone
But
the
no incentives to cut spending· --and
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
DIANE HILL
because they dtscovered that_ they CBO
was
every incentive tl) go wild when
General Manager
Controller
got outsmarted dunng last year 's wn;mg. We ' ll have a surplus this revenue pours in. This helps explain
· budget negottations. They agreed to year. The budget office has revtscd the $216 billion highway bill that
·a law that all but forbids a tax cut its revenue estimate upward once recently sailed through Con.gress.
T11e St&gt;ntinrl w.lcom., ,,,.,., to th• «Jitor from f'HCMra on 1 bra.d ,.ngt ol top/ct.
before the year 2006.
already this year. and congressional
When you get to taxes, however,
Short lttt•tw (300 wonh or len) ~Mvt tM H•t clune. Hlng publl1hed. Typfii let,,,.. are prlllrred and all may M edft«J. Each lhould lncltHH 1 t~g~Mtu,., addrta.,
The grem lin is an old budget rule sources say it wil l revise its guessti- it's a· different story. Politicians
and d•vtlme phiJIIfl numbtr. Specify • dale If ttwr.'• a !fferenee to 1 pravfou• artlc:'.. nicknamed "pay-go," short for mate later this month. Word on the don't want to touch Medicare. Mcd·
or lerter. .,., to: Lerte/"1 to the Edltot, Thl Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pometoy, OIJID .
•·pay-as-you-go" Pay-go decrees Hill has 1t that the CBO will predict 'icaid 'or Social Security. That'_s why
45769; or, FAX to 614-992-2157.
that Congress can't cut taxes unless a six-year surplus o($ 1.1 tnllion .
they appoint commi ~sions .
So they will content thel)lsclvcs
11. ratscs taxes elsewhere to recoup
You 'd thtnk this would provoke
" los t" . revenue, or slas hes tax-cut fever. especiall y since with biny cuts " paid for' ' hy such
Medicare . Medicnid and/or Socml Americans spend a full six months things as changes in the consumer
Secunty.
each year working JUS! to pay the pncc tndcx . Of the $1.1 tnllion \lr
In theory. the proviSIOn was sup- cost of covernment. But no Senate so in proJected • surpluses . . the
By JIM ABRAMS
posed to ensur~ a balanced budget Budget "c!Jmmittec Chairmap Pete Republican Congress sees ftt to
Associated Press Writer
and
create polit ical pressure to ham - Domenict asked CBO oflicials last rclurn only about $80 billion in the
WASHING10N -The Senate laces a de&lt;ision soon on whether Amcnca will
me•
away at enutl cments. Rcpubli - year whether the pay-go iulcs form of tax relief. In other words.
have its first openly gay amha"ador.
• .
Supponcrs of James Honncl arc dcmandmg he at lens! ~'CIa vole whrlc conserv- cans further hcltcved the budget applied even if the budget were in workers will get back only about 7.2
auvc opponcnl' msist !hat Rcpubhcans lake a &gt;land on a key hfcstyle tssue.
Honncl. Pn:&gt;~dent Chnton 's choice to be envoy to Luxembourg. was the only foretgn relations nommce not acted upon at the end of last year's session. Three Republican senators. expressing concern dlill he would usc the post to promote a gay agenda. put "holds" on the nomination, effectively freezing it
· Dcmocmt.l now arc dcmanaing action. Before lcavo~g for the Easter recess; 42
DcmocmL• sent Senate Majonty Leader Trent Lou. R-Mtss., a letter supporting the
nommallon and urgm_g a vote.
·
Dcmocmts also took to the Senate noor to express concern !hat confinnauon was
being held up only because Honnclts homosexual
,
.
''Pn:judtce ba&lt;;cd on sexual oncntaUon should have no pl'!"e m this debate, no
place in !he Senate and no·ploce m America," said Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Cahf.
Honnel. a 64-ycar-old Sail Fr!lflctsco businessman. philanthropist, Democratic
Pany contnbutor and heir to the Hormel Meat c;;o. fortune, received unanimous Senate confinnatton last May for another pos~ as an alternate to the U.S. aetegation to
1he U.N. Genera] Assombly.
.
i•
. He sailed through the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, winning approval on
a 16-2 vote last November, after Sccrctruy of State Madeleme Albright assured
Chainnan Jesse Helms, R-N.C., !hat Harmel was highly qualified and would not
promote his personal mterests. Helms voted against Honnel but let !he nomination
advance to tl1e Senate noor.
In a letter to Sen. Gordon Smtih, R-Ore .. a committee member. in February.
Hormcl said: "I will not usc, ilor do I think it is appropriate to usc. the office of the
ambassador to advO\'ate any pc.sonal views I may hold." ·
He pledged to resign from most of his boanl seats. hmit his charitable giving and
prohibn usc of his name in f~nd raismg
·
But !hat has not satosfied ;kpubhcan Scns. lim Hutchinson of Arkansas, Jom
lnhofe of Oklahoma and Bob Smith of New Hampshire, who put holds on thp nomonatoon. Conservative groups alsb continue to oppose J1ormel as a radical gay
acttvist.
· .
Gary Bauer's Family Research Cou.ncil cited Honncl's financial support for a
documcntruy aimed a1 educators that the group said promotes homosexual lifestyles
...
ft also pointed to a gay and lesbian riiatenals wing.in the San Franetsco public librdl)l
supported by and named for Honncl that contaons controvcrsoalltterature. ·

~

o'

Senate leaders face decision
on ambassadorial choice

mma:
T0£1; .

PINN6D!

Letters to-the editor
Buildings
do not
make
quality educatipn
.
'
Dear Edt tor.
1 rend the 1ctterto the editor in the April 16 edition of your paperfrom the
wife of the Southern Loenl sllpenntcndcnt of schools. I found her letter to be
quite llawed
. ·
·
If we accept the ptcnHse that any hutldmg b~ilt beforc .mdoor plumhmg
and moon rmssaons as the deciding factor. we need to 'gct rid of the M~igs
County Courthouse (built 1841), Independence Hall in Philadclpht~ . and
even the White House. whtch wM burned in the War of I~ 12. Age has much
less to do with a quality buildtng than upkeep and repair, which seems to he
more of the problem accnrdmg to Mrs. Lnwrence. I don't JUnk my car when
it needs repair: I ltx 11. I have n't heard of any huoldmg inspectors condemnme :my hu1ldmgs.

·Doesn't anyone else find 11 tronic that the old Racine Ekmcntary Buildmg wns "unlit'J for school. hut makes a marvel ous Rae me Vtllage Aall wuh
hcautifully polished wooden lloors ''
If handicapped facilities arc a problem. an elevator can solve that problem. Our counhousc pot on.c in
Buildings do not 'a quality educatoon make. It is the quality of the teaching stall and mntcrials like textbOoks that make the difference. If there is a
shortage ol classrooms. then the school board should have kept the Racme
Elementary. I tmd 11 dtfftcult to undcrst~nd that overcrowding is the problem ·
Mrs. Lawrence says 11 is since the district has so many homc-schpoled students and 'a declinmg population.
,
Bigge r ts not always better. If new buildi'llls arc really needed, then allow
each com mun1t y to have its own separate elementary. And if you feel higger
is better. the next step ts Meigs County consulidauon'
June Ashley

-

Toc!a&gt; os T~osday, April 21. the 'I lith day of 1998. There arc 2.'14 days left tn the

year. ·

.

•

Today's Highlight in History:
On April 21. 1918, Baron Manfred von Richtholcn. tbe Gcnnan ace known as
the "Red Baron:· was killed m action dWlng World War I.
On thts date.
In 1649. the Maryland Toleration Act. whi&lt;oh provided for freedom of wor.&gt;hip for
all Christians. WaS passed by the Maryland a&lt;scmbly.
In 1789. John Adams was sworn mas tile ilrst vice president pf the UnitcdSuucs.
In 1836. an anny of Texans led hy Sam Hmt&lt;lon defeated the Mexicans at San
Jocinto. a.-suring Texas mdepcndcncc.
·
In 19l 0. author Samue! Langhorne Clemens. better known as Mark Twain. died
on Redding, Conn.
.
.
In 1940. the quiz show that asked the "64-dollar question." "Take It or Leave It,"
prcmic!'OO on CBS liadio
·
.
.
In 1960. Bnizil inaugurnted its new capital. Brasilia, transfenoing the scat of
national government liom Rio de Janeiro.
In 1972, Apollo 16 astronauts John Young and Charles Duke explonxl the surfoce of the moon.
·
In 1975. South Vietnamese I'Tesidcnt.Nguyen Van Thieu restgned after 10 years
in office.
,
In 1977. the musical play "Annie" opened on Broadway.
In 1986. a vault in Chicago's Lexington Hotel !hat was linked to A1 Capone was
opened during a h~e 1V special hostcd by Geraldo Rivera. EXcept for a sign and a
few bottles, the vault was empty.
·
.
Ten years ago: Tennessee Sen. A1 Gore gave up his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, assuring iiiJlPOI1CrS that "there wiD be oi!Jer days for"": and for
the ctiuses that matter to us."

•

Richard E. Ours
•

ton.

'
•lcolumbusl61 '

'

•

Flurries

Snow

ICII

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Toda.y 's weather f~recast.
Sy Tha Associated Preaa
Southeastern Ohio
·
·. Today.. .lnereasin·g clouds. A
~:hance of shower.; by late afternoon.
Highs in the mid 60s. Light southeast
wind. Chance of rain 30 percent.
· ,. Tonight...&lt;;toudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid 40s. Light
soulhea.•t wind. Chance of rain 50
percent.
,,
Wednesday... Moslly cloudy with a
chance of showrm. Highs in tiKi mid
-60s. Chance of rain ·30 percent. ·

l

PIKETON lAP) - Authorities
arrested 10 people and seized about
$150,000 worth of counterfeit shtrts
and hats over the weekend. the Pike
County Sheriff's Department said
Monday.
Those arrested were charged with
trademark counterfeiting, the depart·
ment said in a news release.
The sheriff's department said the
·following people were arrested Sat·
urday at the Southbound Flea Markel
m South Ptketon :
David P. Pistole. 48. Ronald A.

Today's livestock report

Exte11ded forecast
Wednesday night...Mosily cloudy
with a chance of showers. Lows in
lhe ·rtijj1,40s.
· Thursday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in
the mi\160s.
·
·· Frid'ay... Partly cloudy. Lows in the
lower and mid '40s and highs in the
upper 60s.
Saturday... Mostly clear. Lows in
the mid 40s and highs in the lower
60s.

CPLUMBUS (AP) - Indi ana- ;ows 23.00-26.&amp;5: heavy sows 26.00Ohio direct hog prices at selected 30. 10. .
buymg points Tuesday a.• pmvtded by
Feeder pigs: 16.ql)-40.00 head;
Elizabeth Ann "Libby" Seben. 69, 2 Willow Drive. Gallipolis. died Tues- the U.S. Department of Agriculture 25.00-40.00 cwt.
.
day. April 21. 1998 at her residence.
Markel News:
All boars 16.00-22.00.
Born Nov. 29, 1928 in Oak Hill, W. Ya. daughter of the late Joseph V.
Barrows and gi Its: 50 cent~ to
Cattle:
and Annie C, Haynes Holliday. she was a retired licensed pmctical nurse from mostly .1.00 higher: demand mi&gt;derSlaughter steers: choice 60.0()- ·
the Jackson County General Hospital, Ripley. W.Va.
ate to good on moderate movement. 66.25: se lect 59.00-62 .00.
.
She was a member of the Fellowship Bapttst Church.
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
Slaughter heifers: choice 58.00Surviving are her husband. Charles C. Sebert. whom she married Aug. pqmts 35.50-36.50, few 35Jl0: plants 64.90: select 57.00-61.00.
18, 1946 in Lookout. W.Va.; a daughter. Sarydy (Dwight) Pearson of Chippe· 36.50-37.50. few 38.00.
.
Feeder cattle
wa Falls, Wts. : a son, Gary M. (Debra) Sebert of Gallipolis: live grandchol·
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 30.()().
Yearhngs steers 54.00-82.00:
dren: two sisters. Aurelia HQiiiday and Syble (Hilbert) McClung, both of 34.50: 210-230 lbs. 26.50-30.00.
heifers 51 .00-73.00.
Rai· •lie, W.Va .. and two brothers, Maynard (Hattie) Holliday of Ravenswood.
Sows: mostly steady early.
Calves steers 54 .00-111.00:
W. \Ia .. and Carroll (Kathy) Holliday of Champagne. N.Y.
·
U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs. 22.00-24.00. heifer.&lt;41 .00-87 .00.
She was also preceded in death by four brothers. John Holliday, Lee Hol- few 21 .00:·400-500·Ibs. 23.00-25.00;
Cows:
liday, Orby Holliday and Joe Holliday.
· · 500-600 lbs. 25.00-28.00. few over
Commerci al and utility 34.00. Services will be II a.m. Thurljday in the Fellowship Baptist Church. with 600 lbs 29.00-30.00.
·
45.&lt;Ml: canter and culler 36.()(~ and
the Rev. Joseph Godwin nnd the Rev, Ken Leedy officiating. Entombment
Boars: over 300 lbs. 14.00-17 .00; down.
will be in the mausoleum of the Jackson County Memory Gardens, Cot- under 300 lbs. 18.00-2 1.00.
All bulls: 36.50-50.50.
Sheep &amp; lambs · · feeder lambs
tageville, W.Va., where the committal servicl! will be held at I p.m. ThursEstimated receipts: 34,000.
.
~y. Friends may call·at the Fellowship Baptist Church from 6-9 p.m. Wednes- Prices from Producers Livestock 87.00 and down; aged sheep 33.00
day.
Association
and down.
The body will lie in state in the church one half-hour prior to the service.
Tuesday's trends:
In lieu of flowers. memorial contributions can be made to the Fellowship
Hogs 1.00 higher: sows steady:
Lillie things
Baptist Church. 600 McCormick Road. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
cattle steady to 50 cents-lower.
.
art Worth A lot
Arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
Summary of Monday's auctions nt
In
Creston and· Hillsboro:
Hogs:
the Cl~tssifitd Section!
Market hogs ; 33'.00-38 .10: li ght
Aaron A. Siders, 67, pf Radcliff. died Tuesday April 21, 1998 at his residence.
.
Students, teachers protest decision
Born March 16. 1931, in Elmwood, W.Va., son of the late Leonard Nel son and Sarah Stover Siders Sr., he was a retired truck driver for Anderson SPRINGFIELD(AP)- A group of · campus that are either allergic lo dogs
students and teachers at Wittenberg or afraod o[ dogs," she said.
Concrete of Columbus after 33-112 years service.
·
Prest dent Batrd Tipson said there
· A member and deacon at Rutland Freewill Baptist Chprch, he was a for- University are protesting the school's
are
good arguments on both sides and
banning
of
a
dog
from
an
office
mer Sunday school Superintendent.at Williams Road Freewill Baptist Church'
t~at
he welcomed the group .voicing •
in Columbus for I0 years. He was also a U.S. Army Veteran of the Korean where a math workshop os he! d.
Demonstrators said Monday the its opinion .
Contlict.
''That's part of the academic conpresen~e
of the workshop instructor's
Surviving are his wife, Mona B. Shawver Siders, wh~m he ma!"ied Jan.
·
version
that occurs. I hope, on all ,
dog.
a
3-year-old
golden
relriev~r
15, 1955 at Bancrolf, W.Va.; two sons, William (Kathy) Stders ofCm:levtlle.
he said.
·
campuses."
and Richard (April) Siders of Columbus: four daughters. Chery~ I Sherman) named Max . had helped ease mathFields, Paula (James) Blake and Regina (Larry) Wtlhams, all of Columbus, related sires.' and anxiety suffered by
and JoAnn (Rodney) Uhlig of Kennedy, N.Y.: lhrec brothers, Lenoard (Don- many students.
"He really does serve a purpose in
na) Siders Jr. of London. Robert (Jean) Siders of Gahanna. and Do!'ald Stders
of Columbus: two sisters. Bonnie (Okey) Simpkins of Gallipolis, a~d Nor- the math workshop;" said student
Drew Zeltner. "He helps students
ma (Dan) Iones of Patalaska: and II grandchildren.
relax."
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a grandson, Joshua
Tonight thru Thurldlr 4-23
But Dawn Henseler, associate
Aaron Fields; a 11 randel)ild in infancy; and two sJsters. Lona Mae Adktns
dean of students. said some students
1IWE ~q
~1:11
and Hattie Bell Chandler.
'
·
Services are 1 p.m. ":hursday at the Rutland ~~ewill Ba~ti~t Churc~. with had complamed about the dog. sayIBIIIY
A1:11,-. 7SI
Revs. Rodney Uhlig. James Blake and Larry Wtlhams offictaung. Bunal wtll ing they were unable to use the workshop
because
of
the
animaL
. . . . . ~.
1:10,7:11
. be at Vinlon Memorial Park. Friends may call at Willis Fun~ral Home on
"We
have
a
number
of
students
on
· · Wednesday from 6-9 p.m. .
.
~
4:11
His body will lie in·state one hour prior to the servrces at the church.
- CIJIIIlf Ill'~ 1:11,. 7:11
In lieu' of flowers. contribu\ions can be made to Holzer Hosptce. 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
l.aT . . . . ,.~ 1!, 415, 711

.

.

Aaron A. Siders
Meig·
s
announ.
c
·
e
ments
.
.

'
.
·RACO scholarships
Board tQ meet
The Racine Area Community
The Board of Directors of Ohio
,Orj!anizati,on. will .be giving away .State Legal Services Association and
fpur $5~ spho.~arsh)Jl-• to Southern . Snutheastet:Jl Ohio Legal Services,
l;l,tgh Se~oo\ se,ntors. J\pplications are which provide! free representation in
~vailabje at the Khool and lhe deadcivil matters to those unable to afford
· Ji'ne f~r ~~~lic?tions ;s April27. For adjattoniey; will meet on May 16 at
ll)Ore mtonratton co~Jact .the !Chool
l( a.m.'lli OSLSA. 861 Nonh High
guidance counselor for more infor- S~, Columbus. S~rviccs through
tr\ation.
'.
t~boanl are provided to residents of
Athens,
Gallin, Meigs, Vinton, Ross,
I
qpen Door 5e55lon
!liRe. Jackson. Washington, Monroe,
· , Stat~l Rep. lp,l)n Carey, R-Well- M6rgan, Noble, Tuscarawa'l, Holmes,
qlrn?ll, Coshocton. Harrison. Scioto.
~1fin, wo ~hoi~ an .open door session
of constituents on April 30 at the
Adams. Lawrence. Jefferson. BelC~esler Volunteer Fire Dcpwtment
mont, Musklngum, Perry and
from 3 to 4 p.m. Those with questions
Guem~y counties. Tbe meetings are
·open~o' tlll! ' pfiblic:'~
'
~~I&gt;.Y!. , st~te •.&amp;ijY,erqiJl~llt · wjlk·be
ajl\lwered o~ a one-tO&lt;one b~is.
Spring revival ·
~
•
1
A spring revival, "Prophetic Bible
.Prophecies" by William Pitt, will be
• held beginning Sunday and I0 a.m.,
Am Ele Pdwer ........:..............~
anit at 7:30 p.m. nightly · through
·~·t-'"
~etlnesday, at the Eden United
,..~ ····~···········4. .......... !"" - ·
AmrTec~ .. .,•.• :..!:... 1 ........ ,~ ••41~
'iltlhren Church oil state Route 124
Atthland Oil '......~.........'.......
above Reed.wille. Special singing.
AT&amp;T •••••.••.•.•••,. ........................85
All welcome.
Blink One.............................59"•
·BQb Evans ...........................
Republican meeting
Borg-Warner .......~ ...••.•••••.•••••••.88
The Meigs County Republican
8roughton ........ u ...................18~.
Committee will meet Thursday. 7:30
.,Champl011 ...............................14
Charm Shpl. ........................~••4'ta
p.m. at Carleton $chool in Syracuse.
City Holdlng ........................1.45,,
'
Federal Mogll1 .......................57\
!lt8Sion
Gannett ..................................72}. Caregiver
"Caring
for the Caregiver" will be
.Goodyear ................................70
the
topic
of
.a program at the Meigs
Kmart ................. ~ ..................18'Multipurpose
Senior Center Thurs.'Kroger ........, .................,•••••••
·t.ands End.............................37\
day from I to 3 p.m. Among the feaOak Hill Flnl ............................28
tured speakers wi II be Lenora
·OVB .....................~....,...........41\
Leifheit from the Meigs County
.Grw Valier :..........,.•• ~ ............81111•
Council on Agmg, Dr. Richanl Boone
Peoples ..;2. ............................41\
of Holzer Clinic, and Tim Amidon
Prem Flnl.t.............................23\
Rockwell ,.~ ............................54'· and Michael Jarzabek of Ohio Unif:ID/Shell ................................~.
versity. Other topics will include
'Searl ...:.........................:.......sa\
home and medication safety. The
Shoney'a ..............., .................5\
event
is sponsored by Meigs Cou~ty
t11r Bank ..............:.. ~........:.:.12'M
Council
on Aging, Holier Medical
.Wenc:IY'• ... ,.;,:.. J. :.(~ ......... J....
Center
Wellness
Department and
Wosrlhlngton ...............)........~17\
Hotze~ Medical Center Rehab Unit.
., Stock report•.' ara fha 10:30 .The program is free and open to the
a.m. quotes provided by A~ve~
public. For more infonnation. resiof Gelllpolls.
.
dents m11y call Leifheit, 992-2161 or
B'o'nnie McFarland, 446-5311.

no

·'·

Write Tony Stiow, Creato~·
Syndicate; 5777 West Century
Blvd., Suite 7110• ~os Angeles1
Calir. 901145.

,

j

,

Stocks

. ,. "4.'

:.54"-

tions (,f&lt;our own carrut-chasing. It'!(
not that getting that l'!'"motion ot;
;ow;ord isn't wonderful .. it is .. hut
spcndmg a life in pursuit of sue~
things dncsn 't get us very far in th.:(
long run.
.
•
U11fm:mnatcly. old hahits djJ
hard: Most 'Americans aren't verY.
gimd at simply kicking hue~ a~
enjoying the fruits of ti!cir lahors.1•
It's somehow much easier tn gear~~
for the next trophy.
.
;
And it takes a long time to fully;
realize that success is not the piling•
up of achievements but ro~ther tOO:
simple act of living well .
· ;;
Yt(cll, it takes some of us a.1,11ig;
time. Others manage to figure it oiJt•
at I5.
. · ::
Sara Eckel is a S)'ndicate..:
writer for Newspaper Enterprlil;;
Association
:
.
· '.l
Send comments to tJte author in j
care ofth!s !ICWspapcror send bcr .~; .
mail at saracumaol.com.
.•
ux
••
. J·
,
_.

f-'•

43'-

a,.

-·-·--

old~·~~.-~~'!!-~~~~,

•nr;;•

B:IIIY-

PAill Ill
I :41, 4:41,.7'.41
I idiiJIIIY ca. A

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded five
calls for assistance Momluy. Uqits
respondihg included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
10:57 a.m ..' Powell Street. Mid-'
die port; Beechel Breeding. treated at
the scene:
' 6:12p.m: , Fisher Street, Pomeroy.
William Stivers, Veterans Memorial
Hospital:
·
7:46p.m., Powell Street, Middle-

Fire Investigated
Officials of the Tuppers Plains
Volunteer Fire Department remained
at the scene of a house fire on the
Bobo property on State Route 681
near Reedsville on Tuesday morning.
Reports of an entrapment at the
fire scene were, uncomfirmed at
presstime. The lire · is still under
investigation. and a report is expect·
ed later today.

port. Aha Reed. Holzer Medical
Center. Middleport squad assisted:
II :22 p.m .. Bowles Road. Rutland
Naomi Sroufe, Pleasant Valley Hospital, Rutland squad a~sisted.
RACINE
.
7:20 p.m., Star Mill Park, James,
Eakins, treated at the scene.

. . Ill

-ua•~,,

m If

theevening, rushedolfsragc,and~
to our rcnutl cat;$. feeling Ousltcd lu harried. As I sc..ned, I notiocd a sign m the

ticket-booth window, urging ll'i to enjoy

'

The_,, ()8U)'
"
.. -Sen~l
,. ...
..~.~

_tU~ ~1,.1

plcascbequieuiswek:ft,ipcatsi&lt;b1tlicil•
of the neighbor.;'? And aiU:r th!: eve~ :
could we piCasc get in our cars and "lcai!C '!
the area immodiatclyT
'
Well, it lite okldays; thaiJ\lquest w..; ~
always llllSpClkcn - implicit, flit unsaid. ~
You went to LA.• pitched yow idea '
(casually, of wunc; yoo couldn't display ~
de!ipcnitioo in lillY way), then left titC ..:a ;
immodiafcly. Nowadays. I guess, LA ·
has to spell it out.
'
I thought ahcU linf!Crillg anyway. 1 ;
had 110 idea to remake th!: old '70. series, ;
"Get Owistic .Uwc.". as "Get _qutncy j
Love." Th: Umc rrnght he npc for a l
remake of. "The Love Bug" as well; aill l
it "lierbi!:1 m&gt;" ! How abooi a cop l
sho,v for kids: "Sc!iamc Street Blues"? · i
· Sec, you can go home apin. Bul only
long enough to reanwttltl lilt: fimilm: )
•slightly. Give ll'i the srllie lhina. only
fcrent: Th:n get out.
' 1
(Jan Shoalcs' new book, "Net ~
· Yet," is available from 2.13.61 l'llblit:alions, PO Box 1910, Los Anfldes. CA .
900711. The toll-me runber is 1-aro:
992-1361.)
•
,
· ... Sh I It a IJ'I* t 1
rar Ntw I F I ..... 4 e 1&amp;,8. j
'•
·'

l
dif-l

l

ra

....- j

I

'
•

·••·

•.

Pubhshd ever~ aflcrnoo•, Monda~ lhroujh
Friday. 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishina CompanyiOannen Co•.
.f.amoroy, Ohio 4l769, Ph. 992-21S4. Second
~;~ pottale Pljd 11 POmeroy. Ohio.
,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - none.
Monday discharges - Linda
Grimm.
Holzer Medical Ce,nler
Discharwes April 20 - ,Homer
Saxton, Mrs. Charles Hineman and
daughter, Autumn Williams. Kevin
Rollins. Geraldine Sexton, Dorothy
Saunders, Deborah Carter.
(Published with pennissio~)

A, Nationwide•, we go

-

.

~ VETERANS

'

SUIICRIImON RATIS

1

MoO•-

11J Carrier.,.
'One W..k ....................................... ·····-· S2 011
ctne Mont• ....................~ .........:...........!.. SK.7n
One Ye• ............................................... SIIM.UU
81NGLI! COPY PRICE
Daily ............................................... J ... 35 Cc•tl'
'
.
SUburlbel'l no1 d,tirlft110 PlY tlli Clllkr nuy
JC"ntit i• adnnc:c d1red' lo 'ne Dilily Stnl\~1
paattne.a\1 or ll mDIIIh b.i1. Credit wiU bt
~ c:~r uch week.

No
&gt;I

Jubtctipllon by mail permitted

MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
MEDICAL CLINIC

Dr.:Rilhmait

..

where home carrier Mrvke iaav,llable.

1•1 Jilt IMblcr1plion period. Subacrlption r11e
clitlii""'MJ''be iritpkmenled by chan&amp;ina the
d•rltion ,a f lhe tllbacripdOft.

..

.'

I\IA.ILstltiSCRimOiil

,,
. 1 - Mlflll c• ..,.
t!l w..u..........:................... -................527.30
»- JSJJQ
l} Weou ...............•.............................. SIIIBfi
..... -MotpCwol7

-11. . . . . ... . . . ... . ..,. . . . . . .

lll_'lieelll ...................... ~ .~. .......... ~'-'""''129.25

2lfw..u......................... -....................Sl6.611
- -....................c.!l.... .............. ,:••• llOII.'n

•

Bur OCCASIONALLY
Do ON PRICE.
SPRING SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

Dr. Chhabria

Associate Agent
Jim Rogers &amp; Associetl$
33105.., td, lultt#l,,...., OIIW6t

Specializing in: Adult medicine- Diabetes, High Blood Pressure, Chfonic
Lung Disease, Cholesterol, Cardiac Problems, Health Physicals and
Preventative Medicine. ·
·
Inc:Ome Based Sliding Fee Scale

·more. Call us ond start
sav.ing money lodoy. .

Q.UALI1Y

CALL 7 40-992-3632 FOR APPOINTMENT
WALK-INS WELCOME

in areas

"·
hbiiltwfiRiei"CIIhe: riJIIIIO tdjullllllel dur·

oulo premium di scounb, irduding
our muhi:car discount, our sale .
driver discount, oirbag discount and

CoMPROMISE ON •

OFFICE HOURS
9:00A.M. TO 5:00P.M.
MONDAY-FRIDAY

POSTMASTER: Stnd tddreu corrtdion• ta
-nc Dilly Sentllel. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
0Mo457ffl 1
.,

the exlro mile lo save yOAJ money.
lhoi•s why we offer a variety of

'

WE NEVER

·Mfll'lbtn The 1\ssoclared Pre11, alld the Ohio
Newspaper Atsociltion.

_..,.q

4:411
1:11.4:11,7:11
1:11,4:11. 1:11

ALL AGES, ALL Tl..l $4.00

1

t;njoyod. The experience just madl: .mc
uncomf01,13hlc. At the roccnt Workl Summit on Television forOiildren in London,
· one delegate·said the "Tclelubbies" wen:.
"vaguely evil." That's how I felt abola
"Sesame Street," vaguely. But then
· agam, it wasnhlcsigned for my infootinment. was it'?
Speaking of old times coming ID:k in
new forms. a few weeks ID:k, I spent a
weekend in LA., reuniting willt my old
corncdy group .. Duck's Breath Mystery
Theatre - to pcrfunn at a benefit. It was
rather fu,~ . Obviw;ly, I wa' just anot1tt:r
fogey trymg to rcc~ Itt&lt; youlh.lu, tt
wortcd pretty well, for the length of the.
benefit anyway. My knees acted .., 1he
next day, but, hey, it was wOrth it. .
Anyway, the vcnoo wa~ a splendid old
l.'oncell hall that hid fallen m hard times,
to which the venue had responded by
'overbooking. \\\: had to get the benefit
over by IOp.m. to make room for al..alina lesbian disco evenL
So we fOfllwcnt the "I kM: you.
man!" reminiscm:elnostalgia portion of

Colley, 50, and Kathy Colley. 40, all
of Portsmouth: Leonard N. Oiler, 54,
of West Portsmouth : Joseph A.
Smith. 39. Carol G. Smith. 39, and
James R. Waugh, 19. of Jackson:
Emanuel Jenkins. 67, of lroAton:
Laverne \t~ms. 67. of Dayton: and
Robert D\ Whitaker. 64. of Bain·
bridge.
Authorities also searched three
residences and found about $200.000
in equipment used to make counterfeit shins and hats, the department
said.

El~abeth A. 'Libby' Sebert

W.VA.

Via Associated Prtlss Graphics Net

Lipinski has -nl'ore· sense than most .;

Thcothcrdaylsuddcnlyreali7.cdthat keeping· with
Courtney Love is the Angela Bowie of the Mil lenni.ttl:: '90s. If you don't !"'llCfllber who urn, "TclctubAngela Bowte was, come back in 10 . bies" ts just
year.; and we'll try to rcnlcmbcr who hkc "Sesame
Counncy Love was. My point wtll have Street," only
been made. assuming we can remember dumber.
I
what the pomt was.
•
· haven't seen
- Yes.,everything old ls-R!\V again. The the show y.e~
VW Beetle has returned. for tnstancc. hut apparently
This time around, the sweet little car is not it fcatw-cs cute
an emblem of a SO&lt;alled countercultw-c little critters
(i c. those who listened to U;d Zeppelin with tclcviattd couldn't affool a Cadillac); but of sion screens in
'Shoele•
·those who can itffool to appear to be their stomachs;
members of a so-called counterculture - they teach toddlers how to, urn, watch
movie stars, in otlier words, Movie stars tclcvtsion, (guess. lt's:Cducational, any'
are snatching .., the lion's shan: of the way. With the l)elp o( a doobie,l'm sure
new \blkswagcns, creating a severe Bee- it's vastly entertaining to hippies as well.
tiC shortage. Beetles may become collcc- It has a loi of cOlors. It repeats evcl)'thing
tor's items, in foct .. the Beanie Babies of to the ·point of idiocy. It's bi1.arrc. What
the aut&lt;l'll«ivc tndustry.
more do hiwies and toddlers want?
lflhosoccurs,how arehiwiq;.going to
I can relate to the new Beetle mania
llavel? Th:y can't hitchhike any more. When I was in college, I had a black '65
Bicycles.J!avc become way too complt· . VW bug. I strll miss !hat ell'. Th: back
cated Clearly, America needs minibuses, scat caught on rrre once, for no awan:nt
Hippies are going to be·stuck ill the reason. My EScort has neycr exhibited
·~" for a while anyway. They might as this kind of stran~ely endearing behavior.
well lay back and enjoy the latest incar·
On the other hand, I could never get
nation of "Sesame Street" : "Telclul&gt;- stoned and watch "Sesame Street," an

a

.l
KY.

, Shower$ T-srorms Rain

Now. as surpluses soar. Republicans again ·stand between Americans and a tax cut. Their own balanced-budget law forces workers iQ
accept the economic equivalent of
Medieval medicine .. lots of blcellings and leeches.
This is the sort of thing that happens when a political pany bases ib
fate on fonnulas rather than ide's
and chooses to follow' the whims of
public-opinion pollsters rather tha~
the di~tates of finn ideals. As ·a
result of pay-~o and other bungle~:
no GOP congressio:malleader stand~
a · chance. of wmning the party's
presidential nomination in 2000. ,
After all, who' wants a candidal~
who not only hcl'ped re-elect Clinton , but also pulled off a SlUAl
. Democrat would dare try --outla_,;-'
mg serious tax relief until 2006'' , .'

sonic of our natton·~ deepest beliefs:
work hard. persevere, never say die.
We learn when we · arc thtldrcn tn
vtcw·Ofymptc athletes as mndi:ls of
pcrfcctio~. It is not simply that they
arc the hest at hurli'ng their bodies
into the air or swatting foreign
ohjccts mtn space. They arc simply
The Bejt.
ObVHJUsly. a lot nf good comes
lrnm inspiring kids to work hat'd and
delay gratification.
·. The problem is, we tend tocher·ish the Olympic work ethic so much
that we neglect the llip stde of the
story. There .is an unqucstionmg .
acceptance that the w~itc-hot flash
of glory is WORTH all the sacrifices
.. the friendships forgone, the holidays missed. the family mcmhers
neglected.
• ·
. As adults, we start to get it a little
more. We sec our heroes interviewed
aher thctr victories and realize what
a ltle,timc spcnt.rn a gym or icc rink .
can sometimes do to a ·person's
social skills. We also sec the limita·

' ' ' '

I

·(f . ~ - ~.

"

By Sara Eck~l
al
myth
When Olymptc ltgurc skater Tara
about
the
Lipinski announced that she would
Olympios. ·
give up her amateur status and turn
We )llant our
pmfcssion;ol. she received a lot of
Olympic
cntii:tsm Jrom lans and reporters.
athletes to
who expressed dtsappomtmcnt that
be . hcrn~s .
the l5-ycar-old. gold-medalist was
rcprcscnta·
lcavi'ng the highly competitive
tivcs ol all
world of Olympic sknting in f&lt;tv&lt;&gt;r of
that is great
icc shows like Sbtc. Rattle 'n · Roll
ahout our
"Ltptnskt is hvmg the Amcncan
Eckel
country. It is
sports dream. mea 1'1'18," si&gt;orissimply not
writer Christine Brennan wrote m enough to be " gtgghng teen-ager·
USA Today. "Take the money and . who skates really, really well .
run. Get out while you can. Don't Olympi~n s arc supp&lt;1scd to he hftcd
tarnish that gold medal ."
above the rest of us. They arc sup·
Well. what's wronc witli thar.• posed to be gods.
,
Ltpmskt spent an cnti~e ~ hildhood
This myth has many bencr,t·s. For
prcpanng lor one !'our-minute p~o- o·ne, itonakcs the games more fun to
gram. and she naolcd it. Why should watch. How else can we really get
we cxpeq her to do it agam if she interested rn , say, speed ~kating
believes she'll be happier as a pro·• unl~ss we know the story of how the
Where do we get thi s idea that she top U.S. contender wa~ born with
somehow owes it to the country to one leg or lived in a hOmeless shcl""o for 11 " aaain·•
tcr or w:os abducted by altcns?
e I think it ~omes from our nationThe Olymptcs also reinforce

Richard E. Ours, 76, Elm Street, Racine. died Monday. April 20, 1998.
at his residence .
He wa.• born June 28, 1921, in Meigs County. son of the late Theodore
and Melvina McKenzie Ours. He was a retired fanner and truck driver.
He is survived by one daughter, Elizabeth Ours Adkins of Racine; three
SOM, Richard E. Ours Jr. of Tulsa. Ok .. Robert Ours of Egypt. and Roger
Ours of Zillah. Wash.: seven grandchildren and seven great-grandcbildren.
Also surviving are two brothers. Kenneth Ours of Columbiana and Willard
Ours of East Liverpool.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Virgie Sarson Ours on March 4.
1994: a daughter, Jacqualine Sue Ours and four sisters. Theodora "Dora"
Brown, Virginia Coohran, Helen Neville and Lida Mae Ours.
Services wtll be held Thursday, ll a.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home.
Racine, with the Rev. Brian·Harkness officiating. Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday. 6-8 p.m.

IMansfield ls1 • J•

XXX

TOday in histo;y ~~eryth~·~.g
By The Associated Press

rule

cents of every surplus dollar, Lawmakers will take care of the rest.
This works fine for the White
House, which has no intention of
letting Republicans ride the tax
issue back to victory in 2000. The ·
law lets Clinton depict tax cuts as a
betrayal not only of fiscal discopline, but of a solemn Repvbhcan
. promise.
In retrospect, this was predictable. The Contract With Amcr!ca, despite all its revolutionary pre· tensions. ento~bed Reag.antsm a~d
the conservative revolutt~n. It dtd
· so by focusing. on defictiS rather
than tax cuts, and by linking party
policy and f•&gt;rtuncs not to hig ideas.
but to mathematical guesses produccd by the cao.
This choice o( pnontics led to
Newt Gingrich's prccipilous plunge ·
in popularitY.. Republicans proposed
a slowdown in Medicare growth
three .years ago ,,because they
thought. on ·thc basts of CBO pm·
jections. that they needed more
money to balance the Jludget .
.. Wrong : The GOP didn 't need lb
do anything. The CBO · goofed ..
although in fairness, the best ceo.
nomic projection is no more rcliahlc
than the best long-term weather
forecast. In any event. Republicans
dtdn 't get• the joke until after Clin.
ton massacred them on the
Medicare issue and lured them into
a highly unpopular government
shutdown. In other words, the Con·
tract With Amenca saved Bill Clilf·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aprll21, 1998

..

Ollkl: 740-992-7311

520 W. Main St. - Polllml); 0.
Phonellll-1188
·Vinton - 188 111103
Gllllipolill - 448 0811

'

~s.Ha

.

�·Sports

The Daily Sel1tinel
·

By MIKE HARRIS
MARTINSVILLE. Va. (AP)
Fa.,ter osn 't always the answer in
stock car racmg
Bobby Hamilton has been around
long enough to know that mashong
the pedal to the floor doesn't always
get the job done, especially at a place
Joke Maninsvi lle Speedway.
Hamolton used hi s head, as well as
hos foot, to run away wnh Monday's
ram-delayed Goody's 500 on the
.526-mole oval Hos Morgan-McClure
Chevrolet led 378 of the 500 laps,
oncludmg the final 63
"Thos os probably the one mce that
I never got uphght about," the 40- "
year-old dnver from Nashvolle. Tenn ,
said. "I never was an~Ny about the situation
I actually took my time I
let the car roll, and when you letot roll
he.e, the motor runs free and everythmg. II JUst worked good hke that all
day "
The only real shp Hamohon's
team made came on the pits on lap
311 when two of his crewmen col11ded whole changmg the rear tores
That cost hom precoous seconds and
he slopped from first goong onto the
p11s to eoghth comong out
It took llamtlton from the restart
on lap 319tolap 344to sla.'h through
traffic and regain tNe lead from Dale
Earnhardt, who had taken the lead by
remaonong on the tmck when the ojher leaders potted.
Hamilton fell back agaon on lap
389, droppong all the way to lOth,

.

Tanui, Roba, Sauvage, Nietlispach win
By JIMMY GOLEN
BOSTON (APl - Cos mas Nd~­
to , who ha.' the conlidenc~ of a three·
tome Boston Marathon wonner, predocted thai he would won 1hos ye.or's
race He dropped out at the 16-omle
mark wllh slomac h pam
Joseph Chebet pushed the pace for
26 moles. but dodn ' t have enough lett
tor a li nal spront Last year's cham·
p10n. LameLk Aguta 1s recovenng
from a beaung on Naorobo and cou ld
not defend hos lllle
No matler, because there IS always
another Kenyan to pock up the country 's marathon mantle
'I thonk Amencans should come
to Kenya to see how we traon, to learn
our tacucs... saod Moses Tanuo. whose
Boston Mamthon voctory on Monday
was hos homeland 's eoghth consecutove voctory here "When we traon, we
dqn't mox 11 wnh anylhong else We
JUSt traon and relax "
' Tanuo out1pnnoed Chebet over the
final 300 yards to won on 2 hours. 7
mmutcs and 34 seconds Ethoopoa s
Fatuma Roba captured the women s
mce tor 1he second straog ht year, lin·
oshong on 2 23 21
Both umes were the thord-lastesl
on the event's I02-year ho story It wa'
also the laslesl marathon by more

than a mmute lor TanUI, who won
here on IY96 and overcame broncho '" to lin"h lollh last year
Tanuo " one of lour do ffere nl
Kenyanr.: to wt n the race ~ tnce
lbr.o hom Hu.swo t\IUbl "hed a
nauonal stranglehold w11h h ~&gt; sec"nd
won on j991 Onl y lhe Umted St~tes.
whoch won omc slraoghtlrom 191625, h,, won more consecutiVe Boston
races
Bofiton t ~ J special r~tce h's a bt g
race We have all our top runners
here." Tanuo saoJ dunng the week
whole deuocaung hos elton to lhe
recuperaltn.2 AAula
' It :-a uur lhmkmg We huve the
advantage ofhogh alutude We eat the
nght foods And we also ha'e a lot ol
doscoplme ..
J'l y chooce, T.muo was not among
a pack ol II that leu the race early.
lalhng as much as 4~ seconds behonll
He was 12th at the hallway poont
nmth at 15 5 mob and lilth ,\1 Hearl·
break Holl's 20-mole mark i&gt;eh'&gt;re
gom,g after the lcadl!rs wuh tour m1les
Iel l
Tanuo was soJe-hy-sode w11h Che·
bel and South Alncan Gert Thys on
Brook lone s Coohdge Comer. the ~4 mole mark, before Thys fell from the
lead rack The 32-year·old Kenyan

began hos spront less than 300 yards
trom the tinosh to beat Chebet by
three seconds and earn the $80.000
lirst proze
Thys tinoshed on 2 07 52. an ISsecond gap I hat was the closest threeway limsh 111 race hostory
' I was contidenll cou ld catch lhe
leaders because they were oimnmg
too last I caught them and I stoll had
energy 'Tanqo saod "I walled until
200 meters and I tested ot we could
spnnt together
' I spnnted. and he dodn 't have
energy So I won the race "
Chebet, who won ho s debut
marathon on 1996 at Amsterd. m and
tinoshed second m New York la.'l
year saod he was dosappoonted on hos
loss But he also gogg led wuh hos
countryman on lhe podoum dunng the
postrace news (.:Onference
" I pushed ot very much . to the
lomu Bu1 at the last I had no kock.'
he ,,ud " When Moses went on
lnml of me, I knew he would won lhe
ral:e

Roba won Boston last year and
benefited I rom a held that was mo ss·
ong Elena Meyer. who pulled out dur·
on g the Yoeekend woth a back onJUT)',
and three tune wmner Uta Poppog
The Eohoopoan linoshed on 2 23 21 -

nearly lour monutes ahead of secondplace Renata Paradowska of Poland.
who beat Romania's Anu1a Catuna by
17 seconds
Roba, 27, dropped out of lhe
1997 World Champoonshops woth a
roght leg '"Jury that also slowed her
to a fourth-place tinosh at thiS year's
Tokyo Marathon Although she broke
away from Colleen de Reuck at the
16-mtle mark. and Ponugal's
Manuela Machado earher. Roba saod
the InJUry kept her trom gmng even
faster
"I had expected to make a record
today. but unfortunately I had the
paon, so my nme wasn't what I
exp~cted," saod Roba, who also
earned $80.000. "There was compeloloon woth then three of us. but I
found out that the other two were
weak and I stal'led pulling away ..
Joseph McVeogh, ot Summll. N J .
was the top Amencan tinosher, com·
mg on 17th on 2.16 48. Mary-Lynn
Curroer, of Plymouth. Ma." . was the
top Amencan woman. runmng lith
on235 · 18
A mght of raon gave way to
cloudy skoes by modmornong. wnh
woods approachong II mph. a temperature of 59 degrees and 85 percent
hunnduy greeung the field of 11.499

''

o

I

'
'1:

•

'

~ ..r'

...;,.... l ... ..'

~·

FIRST TO FINISH - Kenya's Moses Tanul and Ethopla's Fatum•
Roba appear together wnh their trophies at a news conference 111
recognition of their being thd first man and woman, respectively, to
finish In the 102nd Boston Marathon Monday. (AP)
.
runner!&lt; - second on soze unly to the race overcomong a halt-mole deticoL
to pass seven-tome wonner Jean
race s rna.'" ve centenmal edotoon
Soxty-sox wheekhaor athletes pre· Droscoll at the tape and won by less
ceded the runners over the startong than a chaor's length in 1·41 19
Dnscoll , ol Champuogn. Ill , had
lone m Hopkonton Loke the open uovo·
Slons. the wheelchaor races provoded won seven consecultve races before
llmshing s~cont.l 10 Savauge last
one blowout and one thnlhng duel
year when she gnt her wheel caughl
Lourse Sauvage won her set:ond
consecutove women's wheei~Haor on a trolley tmck and flopped over

t

Vaughn's clutch single helps BoSox .top Tribe 6-5 in 11 frame.s
BOSTON lAP) - lmmedo.ttely
after Boston reliever Derek Lowe
retored Cleveland on the nonth onnong,
the crowd came toots Ieel, roanng t&lt;Jr
one more 1=0meback on an omproha·
ble homestand
The Red Sox responded agatn
when Jom Leyntz led ofl the bottom
of !he no nth woth a game-lyong homer
Two mnongs later. Mo Vaughn. lhe
player who s1aned the late-game
heroocs woth a game-endmg grand

siam 1&gt;11 Apnl 10. del overed,, gamewtnnang stngle lo carry Boston pasl
the lndoans 6-5 on Monday
'We teel. woth ou r olfense. of
we're two or three runs down we sttll
have a shol." saod Leyntz, who hot hos
game-tyong homer mlo the centerfield bleachers oil reloever Moke
Jackson
· Cenaonly havong been hoi at the
stan has created a great almosphere
lor us. · Leyntz saod

The \lctory closed Boston's onotoal
homestand at 9-1. sox of the wms
comong on ots last at·bal
It certaonly turned out to be an
exc otong homestand lor us" Boston
manager Jomy Wolhams saod
Woth two out on the lith, Leyntz
songled and Damon Buford walked
on lour potches agaonst reliever Enc
Plunk ( 1-1)
Vaughn who weakly fouled olf
the torsi 1wo potches." then dehvered
hos thord hot of the ~arne for lhe won-

Yankees get by Blue jays 3·2;
Mariners, Angels, A's also win
~ Bll!N WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Neother Randy Myers nor Tony
Fernandez saved the Toronto Blue
Jays thos ume
Myers blew a save chance lor the
first tome on almost a year and Fernandel brought back memoroes of hos
key error on last season's World
Senes as the New York Yankees
defeuted Toromo 3-2 on II mn•~l;S •
Monday mght
Myers. successful on 45 of 46
save opportumtoes last year ;ond 37
stmoght overall. took over on the mnth
woth a 2-0 lead But the Yankees
quockly toed ot. handong Myers hos
first blown save sonce May 3
"I had three on a row thos year."
· Myers s.ud "Last year os last year
and doesn'l help us thos year...
In the lith. Chuck Knoblauch
tropled woth two outs and Derek Jeter
hot a roulone grounder to second boose
The ball gl.onced off Fernandez's
glove, however, I or an error that
scored the ~o-ahead run

Last Odober. F~rnandez \ error to get guys out one at a lome "
on an easy grounder enabled the
The Yankees won ol on the lith.
Flonda Marhns to beat Cleveland on helped by Fernandez's error
Game 7 of the World Senes - also
"If Tony Fernandez got a thouby a 3-2 score and also on II onnongs sand more of those balls. he probaThe Yankees won for the nonth bly wouldn't moss another," Jeter
tome m 10 games .md stopped the sa td .. He s one or 1he gfeatesl
Blue Jays three-g.ome wonnmg onlicldeo' ol all tome but e' erynne
streak
m,akes errors. everyone makes rms~
Shut oul on lour hots by Woody t.okes'
Wolh.oms and Dan Plesac for eoght
In other AL games. Seattle defeatonnongs al SkyDome, New York ed K.m-.ts C11y 8-7. Anaheom beat
broke through m the i11nth agamsl B.ohomnre 4-1 .md Oakland •beat
Myers
Monnestlla 1-}
Chad Curios opened woth an
Manners 8, Royals 7
onlicld songle and Jorge Pos.od.t folKen Gnffey Jr hrt hos league-leadlowed wuhan RBI double. Scou Bro- ong eoghth home run and h.od a sacnsous Singled. and Knoblauch's force- lice lly on the SIXth onmng th.ot broke
out dro\'e 1n :J run and lied 11 at 2
.o 7-7 ue .n the Kongdome a&lt; Seattle
RnJ Betk hold' the recnru With 41 won 11s saxlh slr.ught game
conseulllve ~aves Myers h~td not
R.ondy Johnson struggled .ogaon,
allow~d .1 run on four appe.orances
t.ulmg 10 get through the fourth
sp.annmg 4 2/3 mnmgs 1hn.; ~o;e.Json
onnong and le.ovong hom woth a 7 46
'I'm ohonkong about tryong to get ERA Bmohe Manners overcame an
guys out." Myers saod 'If you're e•rly 7 I deticll. helped by Alex
thonkong about any kmd of st.ols, Rodn£uet's fuur hns
you' re goong to be a failure IJu•ttry
(See AL on Page S)

Scoreboard
Baseball

MIIW,Iul..,•c
.St ltK11S
Ch tUI)!tl
Ht•USIIftl
CINCINNATI

AL standings
(a!ltcrn Jli.,..,..,m

1!: L e.J.

- ll

h

'

10
II

,,7

on

Ill

'

1&gt;1&gt;7
067

litl

bll

01&lt;

K.m!i.,, C11y

b

ou~ •11.•1
lklrtHI

r~

Wr!lilfrn

...

.....

421

J

\KI)

''
,,.

, Ill'

Sc.111k

'' •

An.lhL"'m

n&lt;
1~ 1

.,

-,.

m

'.
••

HI
1'1~

ll

(}o~kl :lhd

'

Culunkn
Ar11nn,1

II
II
Ill
I'

II

Tontdot's games

p n~ ht~ ftJil Whnc So• (Baldwin 2 I J ,11 U ~ VI
lANO (Ogca 0-0) 7 05 p m
N y Yanl.:ect (Mendoza 0-0) :11 furunt u IH 111
ton {)-0) 1 O'i p m
T~n&lt;fn Bay tSrnngn 1· 1) at Tua~ l~k- l 01
K
Knlllas C11y (Belcher 1· 1) :N Scanle IMIJyer I

,,pm

21 IO:Otli r m
M1ane101a (MOIJIM'I ().0) al Odland (Catw..ho111

Balurnore (Joltru

().0) at

Anahtirn I Md&gt;nwtll'

Ill IOOlpm
M•nnrSOia a1 O:IWand ' I 'i p m
8011nn 31 0ttr011 7 0$ p m

llicJIO Whue Soa at CLEVElAND 7 0~ P m
N Y Yankee~ at T oronro 1 0~ p m

T....,.s., .. r.... SHpm

K:lf'IW City at ~1k!:, 10 1, p m
BahuntW at: Annhdm 10:1~ p m

r..

-

ll_L
II ' 6
12 7
. 7 9

-Alilou
y""'

Plliladeitlllla.

.'
~

Florida

..

12

14

..... ,.'
'

\

~24

'}

'}

~Oi l

/(

IJ

471

1

Il
14

I~J

'00

',,
.,.'

Munday'~ Mort's

Jt.amts

LINCINNATI ( l nm ko ! I I al f'h ll ldt: lf1ht 1
\ Sdull 111 ~ 2 11 711~ I' 111
San 1 r tn~u~.:o tG. 1rdn,r 1 1) 11 Jlnt~burv.h
t l l~r0- 2 1 7 0~ Jl 111
Lm AIIF-..:k~ IM tnt~.l 2 II II Mtl w ml.,-c l)u
tk ., 1) 1 Oli
•

l ou1s

~~;,•,::lt•my~211l

H.u u.lt~

I OS ANGEl L.f.i Cl II'PERS llr1o'1l IJdl llldl
l lloM:h

F•••thall

Natmnal

fouth~o~lll.ra~:ltt'

UAI IIMOIU ki\VI NS S1~11ul WR Jl ry ,w
K1 ' h
( AW.OIJN ,\ PANTHI RS St )! rt t:tl ()II
IJti!IC")IIflt (rill'! WN. rhlhttl U.t V I ~ ( )I KutIJuiiW}!I: f I U Dc ruk U .1rk S k.1y JliL:btlfl C)J

P;~uiJ•m•~ 1 n Spcn~.:~....- Rt: td 11 s~th l11m1.:b .m.t

(II S.....m Wtl h un•

CIN CINNI\11 UEN(iAL'i Ternnn.11~'lJ the t..un

11.11: 1~ uf S IJ u Orlandu md FB S~.: nm\! GniM!II
W:u v~ d CR Ttttl Plml S1J;~d RH Or mtlt111 Bt:nH.
RL1l WH. 1\luflln Cta.vtnn nr Mtkl." llnu~lu y w
I) mtun (.,,h,,lll WR 0 1lylc H~:~ddhur8 . (lT IA·rl'k

u Y
g ~&gt;r
( M INNF.SOI A VIKINGS Stg:n~J rt H.y 111
1
1
II 7 .Ul 111
n 1ft!
p
SAN DIEGO C IIARGI RS Attr,.cJ 111 It rim
S 1n 01r.'j1.tl 18rt•wn ]. OJ .11 Cht~ag'' Cutl5 ( rm
wtlb ()8 kif R •kc• S M.trl u~ Ura..lky G' Jm1 Rul
~ h!oel 2 I ~ MO'il'ln.
z ml, 18 Jt.lfl Conky. TE Wcnildl 01vu (
l 1.1trh:k Uuwn~y WR lt:remy E.ul) WR llan
Wednesday's games
Gmdin 1 IA:Mmg~t Gr.th tm C Kcndyl J,..: n,; I 0
S m Dtl"f!:U 11 Cht~ 1p,n CuM 2 20 pm
- I ~·Jhun J o~ 1 S Uny11 L.'(. l.B Hr.mtlun M1"lh"
St ltlUI!l .u M n ntn:;~ l 7 (t.1i p m
DT Mth- Moten DB J~ 1 n Sun~ TE l:.rt ~ Smtih
CINCIN NATI tl Ptulldelpht ~ 7 Otli r m
H.B rrcm:~yM S1cphcns DT Hen ry Tay lor WR
( ulnrad•l at Annd.• 7 05 Jl m
ryr'* Taylor TE Chnmr 1r.t)'1tlf :~nd RD Ju 511n
S m Fr.lrM:IKil tt Pt115burJh 7 0'\ f1 m
Watson
I o lw~tu kt"t" 7 0'1 p m
SAN FRANliSCO 41Jw; A!rcetllo lenm wuh
Uou~ltln a1 N Y Pwk'll 1 40 r m
OB 100d Busby fD Ed S.:tuum. RB Brock Ol1vo
Arno na al All:tnla 1 .ul p m
R8 PeJMi Pet~uon G Dun Ann TE Br&lt;X'k Bla..:h
lnrd WA: K:arl l.Lrum WR Kev1n Ml Kt:nLK' WR
Sh.lW• Scale1 K Steve L!'llbcy DE CnuJ O.arb
DT 81ll Duff OT Cun.s Eason L8 Andy Cldmft
LB J1m Nelson DB Pit-t Alkms 08 Ton y 81tvm~
DB Dw•Jht Henry DB Kelly Malvcau,; DO Hur
811Hbllll
ky T:ner irK! PTuckt.'f Philhps

Transactions

Johns from Roc"httrn of the lntcmauon,.J IA!a~
Placed OF Brody Ander100 on the 1.5-dty cfi~o•bla.l

hM

"

S'EATTLE MARINERS Acltvatc~ Of Rob
Ducey rrom the 1.5·da)' d•s.ablftf lut Opt1oncd OF
Ryan RadrnartOYu.:h lo Tacoma of 1hc P1Kiftc Co.ut
N•tiunal u •• ut'

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS S!Jn•d LHP

litl

rd.

647
632
438

26'

111 NVI R NUG(ol TS lth:d Ball

•

nong run He also had three RBis
spoke on the wet gra.'&gt; chasong Troy seventh before JuS~oce 's run-scoring!
"Thos os not a mono-slump The O'Leary's tnple on the seventh He double brought home go-ahead run ·
Red Sox played lour very good has ,, strao ned left Acholle' 'tendon
Henry. makong hts second start;.
games agaonsl us, .. Cleveland man- and was scheduled lor an MRltoday alter openong the year on the DL wot~
ager Moke Hargrove saod. "They've
"I don 't know what happened," · a straoned lelt hamstnng. left the
been gettong key hots and takong Lofton saod : All ol a sudden I tell g,ame in the lifth woth doscomfon,
advantage of every mostake Those down The whole area hurts ..
behind his left knee He woll underare the elements of a hot club That's
The lnd,ians took the lead on the go an MRI to look lnr possoble carwhat they are nght now..
seventh when Davod Justoce, who ulage or tendon dama~e. accurdmg to'
The Red Sox captured three ot homered earher, broke a loe' woth an team physocoan Dr Anhur Pappas. •
four games on the senes.
RBI double.
Nomar Garcoaparra, who estab"I JUSt go out there and take care ' The Red Sox JUmped on front ear- hshed anAL rookoe record woth a 30of thongs." saod Vaughn. who os on the ly agaonst Cleveland starter Bartolo gume hottmg streak last season, went
final year ofhos contract and was cnt- Colon Darren Bragg, who had four ll-for-6 and had hos hottmg streak halt-,
ocal of Red Sox management during hots nn Sunday, hot a two-run homer ed at 16 games
spnng traonong
on the second onmng, and Vaughn
Noles: Shawon Dunston made hos
"The rest woll take care olnsell." added a 452-foot shol. hos soxth first -career appearance on center liel&lt;l
he saod.
'
homer, on the third for a J-0 lead
alter Lofton's InJury Boston's last
Tom Gordon (.1·1) potched the
Manny Ramirez hit a two:run none-won homestand wa.' when 11 won
lith for the won
homer for the lndoans on the fourth
10 July 16-25 on 19&lt;JJ .... Gen CulThe Indians threatened in the agaonst Boston starter Butch Henry, m Powell was part of the first-potch
lOth. but Sandy Alomar mored on a makong ot 3-2 Then Vaughn delivered ceremonoes. . The Red Sox loot 10
2-for-34 slump, grounded out woth l••n RBI double on the filth
of theor prevoous 14 Patriots Day
runners at first and thord to end the
Trdtlong 4-2.the lndoans mlhed to games . Cleveland shortstop Omat
innong.
grab the lead agamsl Boston's Vozquel played hos 51st consecutive
A bogger concern for the lndoans bullpen Justoce homered off John errorleso game, equaling hos careeros the health of center lielder Kenny Wasdon, cuuong otto 4-3 on the soxth
hogh. The maJor-league record os 75
Lotion, who apparently caught a Jom Thome's RBI songle toed11 in the set by Cal Ripken on 1990

.

WILL BE HERE WEDNESDAY, MAY 20

~~
~

6

7

John A:osrn~n to a mtnor lt3£ut= ~.:oo tr.w::r .:and Ill·
t1pcd h1m to Tucson or the Poc tfi..: Coail l.ctl{;ue
COLORADO ROCkiES Placed INF h1on

Biton 1~e I ~ day dt 5abled lisl Recalled INF
N
Unall(l from CoJorado Sponp of the Poc•rIC

tl.eagut

ST LOlliS Ro\t-fS S1gnt&lt;1 WR1 T)'foro 1,00&lt;1
sn• Tony Horne and Ruuell Shaw Ol h'.oJ.:r

Chr.JOOIJle Jncmy Md(lnney and JU¥ti Frnl J\,1
J;:w:k S Bdly Aumn I 8 L\trryl Rush CR Onqn
Morpa and DE Glen Yoona
T:AMPA liAY HUCCft.N EEA:S StJal"d HH
R.1bh1 ft.bdullatJ 0T f_r•~ AndeuoR LR C.~rl1 u n
H ~U tt L1mon1 Hnll DE Ralph Hu.11he• P O!ad
Kr:t.Jicr nnd 0T M1kc Rwhl
TENNESSEE OILERS AJI'tcd rn rcrnu. With
08 ROn Powlus WA: MOillru;c Rryunl TE l•llh
BrOOy. G Loome G1lbm TE Str\len Norman. OT
Jason 1\u:: hards S Pnry PhenuL DE M1ke Suuon,
LD Mtkc Parker and CO Derrick Uw1s

Hockey
NIIIDNI HocktJ ..._

CAROLlNA HURRICANES "'"&amp;oed LW
8ara 8anqllm. D Steve Halko and 0 Mtke Roclrt&amp;
• ski 10 New Hil"en of 1he Amencan Hockey Liaa•

I

LaJoie, subbong for inJured Ricky
Craven, finished third through fifth
despote the dolllllivantage of havong to
pit on the back straoghtaway.
Rusty Wallace. a six-tome Martinsville winner who staned on the
outside of the front row. finished
soxth, the lust driver on the lead lap.
He increased his senes lead over
Penske teammate Jeremy Mayfield,
who wa• a lap down on !jeventh, from
24 to 33 poonls. ·
Andre111. tryong to finesse a Win.
stayed on the same left-side tires for
the final 189 laps and 1roed to make
it to the end after makmg a la~t p11
stop on lap 345 for ga' and right-Side
to res. But the stralel!y failed as he ran
out of gas on lap 495 and wound up
18th
Hamolton's third career vietocy on
208 Wmston Cup events. was hos first
on a track shorter lhUJl one mole and
hos first for hos new team He replaced
Sterhng Marlin at Morgan-McClure
rucong at the beginnong of this season.
·This wa.' Hamilton's fifth top-five
finish at Maninsville on his last siK
staf'ls
. Hamilton started from the pdle in
the 43-car lineup, so the wm wa.•
worth an eKira S106.400 from the 76
Racong Challenge, whoch builds at
$7.600 unul a driver wons from the
pole Hos total payoff was $227.025.
Here are the results of the Goody's
500 NASCAR Wonston Cup race at
Manonsvolle Speedway. woth staf'long
positiOn i11 parentheses. driver, hometown. make of car, laps completed.
reason out if any and money won:

I Ill Bobby Hwn1km. N;i51w11~. Tenn . (1trvrn.

let.

sm. S227 0:!!1 l~ndWe!ti l iOb.UIO 76 Ch:t.llcngc

Bnnu.~J

11 C251 Hut Strtd.hn CJI...:r;a Ala

('~vrnkt

41'15 $19 hiM I

2 1 12)TatMu~ooJrJvoe Frunkhn

56.&lt;.,

W 1!1.

Ford 3(11

:\ 12] J O;r,tc Jmtll. Htd:oty N C • Fr.rd

~II

S~M!iB

-' OIJ D~te £;~rnhatdt K..nn~pnll~ N C
("h(vrokt
~9 "7~
~ l:l6J R01ndy lu.Jnu:. Suuth Nurwalk Cnnn

sno

Chevmll.'l )UO. S.W.32S
It 121 Ru!Oify w.. u:.:e St Luo1"' FuN ~10
$-1.1 J2.5
7 II '\J Jeremy M~yfidll Owcn~111l Ky Fnrd.

.aw s1s .a~s

II 111 Jdf Conlon Pmsbnru lnd. Chtvn•ltl
-'99 S..a?IOJ
IJ t~21 Ermc lrviUI S;ahnw. C;thf Punu ;a: ~~
SUt(WI
10 161 Ken Schr.uicr Feotun Mu Chevrolet
~99 s..&amp; I 1(Xl
II flO) Mnrran Shephttd Cnnuver N C
Chevn,Jet .J.IN, S27,JMS,
12 17 1Bill Ell1uU Ouw~onv1lk Go!. Fnn.t .&amp;W
S'\17~

I 1 t I'~ I Brttt Boll me. Ct.: mung N Y Furd 4q.,

SlHUI
1.&amp; I-ll Rldy RudJ Ci'K!~pe;al;t Voa Fur\! -llW
\11JJ541
I'I f 10) Bt.t&gt;by L;abuntc Curpu~ Chn~u . Tc11.01.~
Ponua~ 4'N S \7 OOU
I~ tliUChadl•Uk Spol:JO( W..,h Furtl JW
"2''~0

"YQ

S~b 7~0

.

!"I 14 IJJeft Grun

\l2

WhJh!h\}U~

Te'ln Punt1a..:

1~1

IH !~J JnhnAnJn:m lnd loai\Up&amp;lh' Ponllat.: -I N
1

B.al~"i

IIJ IJ"il Kenny lrwm,

lrMhan;ap~•h~

funJ, .llll't

12 ll'i) J.:ll Burtun Snulh Bn~1 11n Va Furd
470, $) \ 1175
H 12Kl R1d. Mo~'t L.:\111.1Hrt \01 Gw\.1 ~~
$1K liSt I
~ II I'll Kyltl Pttly R:~nUicmoan. N C PunUJ(
ol32 $21:!2.5

;JS t4t)J Gcntl But!me Chemung N V hwd

.. H h:&lt;~rcrW $2\ 11•1
1(t (21) Stcrhng M.1rlm C•1lumbt.a TL"nn

Chtvrnkt 432 1 16)).!5
17 ( 1'11 D1d.: Trtdole W1 ...:mNn Rapu.h Wh
Fon.J H I S2 2 '.1011
l8 t 111 .ltlhftny Bcn ..un Gro~nd Rap11h Mt~:h

Ftwll .am SIS 750
11,1 1'"' Tndd Bil!.lmc Chcmun~,: N Y Ponlta~
1ttll C h~ln e ratiUrL" i Ih h.511
-'II ti~)O;arrd iWalt np Fr-Jnkl~n Tt:nn Cht111t•
kt 271\ hoandlm10 S I 'i !ISII
~I II II R1 ~h 81L:Io: k Ed ~t: rtlln W1, FurJ !74
tngme l;aJiure $2~ ~51)
~:! !H) Ktv1n L:p;~'t! Shelburne Vt Chtvw
lei U2 ~:nyme foulure ~1'1 no
4~ 1~ 1 Dot\ 1d Grttn, Qv..tn,bnrn K) Cht.•'o'ru
let 71 aa'h 1115 ~511

Statistics
Wmn&amp;:r ' ;av~raa;&lt; ~t:d 70 10'1 mrh
lime ,1f rao.:.: 1 -11 10
Moargm uf IIM:tmy It \76-!o.ei.Wtds ta~IUI
th1rd tlf a l:tp )
Coauunn tl;a~~ l.l fnr % l.ap;
Ltall~:hoan~a: s

j~JX ~

.

BOBBY HAMILTON
R Wall;~~,.-c !61 Ham•hun 2MI-110 E:lmhanh \II
lH H;anultnn '-'4-l"'S Eo.imltu\Jt \~fl Andn:ttll'7
\{of, HJmtltun 'h7 ll't !&lt; AndreU1 \Hil "\7 H umhnr1
"ll( 50fl
S"a ~ lh I'MmJh le.xkn. R Wiill.a:t I I'll M•)
ltdd I I 'i~ T Litxmle I Oll(l tllcl G.wUun .anJ Jar
rdl I UK~ Martm I U~'\ tillluu I U~ Eamh:.tnfl
I O~"i Si. hrJo.kr 1Hl.l J Bul1un lJ-l1 H Uihnnt~ 'Mel
M Waltnp IJ 'H Ham1ltun Y15 Spcn~:~r ~N Mus

t'flt!

15 iltnltn\: 1'1 dti\'CN

Lap le&lt;Jtl~,. Halmh11fl tplla:t I 7.1 K WJII.w.;e
1, K2 Hi111Uitun K:\o.IIH R Watl:~~.: c 1112 I(H Hamil
Inn HI-I-lK? G•1rdnn IKK ~,.. Hanultt tn 2 11~ ~ftf'l

~,... ..,~

'XIh

\~"iiMI

211

1~.11

~~1 'i~)

L1lo:t: Spo.."&lt;d Jat:kstiA Mllll"' f11n!

"'~"

21 1271 M1~:h~l \\altr1p Ow.:n~ho.wo Ky
f-~&gt; HI

.N7 ~2Y 7fl0
22 t l7t Kt.'nny

Woallac~

St

LtiWt~

fun! 4117

\:!2 \541
'
" 21 f~ 1JI R11h.:rt Pn:"-~h:y A~~vtll\! N C' Ford
.l'/1 SIK qiO
24 (II\ Jnc Nt:nle\:hclt Lakclarn.J Flo~ Cht-vru
kl 497 $27 9311
2~ tl21 Steve Gn,.)OIIm Gou.I.,Jen Ab Chcvru
ld ~'17 127 700
26 14\J Tt.'rt')' L.abnntc Cnrpo~ Chn~lt Te-o"

Chevndd 4%

$)) 15()

27 (411 J(f'l')' N;M)c~u. Doanbury Cnnn· fnrd
4'M \17 21Kl
2K 120) WanJ Bunun ~•uth Btto.lun v.. Pun
lion: "WI $27 I~~
N II HI Mark Mat1m. 8alnY1IIi: AR: fnn1.4~'\
$l1 700
:WI 12r,1 Jnnmy Spcn..:.:r Bcrwu.:l.: Pa F~trd -1m

------Sports briefs------,
Ten (lis
MONTE CARL,O. Monaco (API
- Germ.m star Boros Becker. lookong rusty on hos semo-retorement. bea1·
Jan Soemeronk of the NethcrJands S·
7. 6-3, 6· 1 m 1he first round of the
Monte Carlo Open
Germany's Nocolas Koefer beat
no nih-seeded FehK M.mtoll.o of Spmn,
6-1. 6-4. ,md 13th-seeded Mark
Phohppousos of Australia defellled'
Sp.un\ Juhan Alonso 7-6 ( 11-9). 46.6-4

Basketball
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
Knocks center Palnck Ewmg. Sidelined sonce Dec 20 by a fr.tctured
roght wrist. was .1dded to the playoff
roster. even though he is not expected to be avaolable uhtol the second
round
New York, whoch begons ots lirstround senes Froday noghl .11 Moami.
also included center Chn• Dudley on
the roster He broke hos roght foot
Feb 24

Meigs rolls to 18-5 win over Wellston
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs scored' 12 runs in a bog
SIXth mnong. as the Marauders went
on to post an 18-S won-over Wellston
on Tn- Valley Conference softball
actoon Monday evenmg ai Wellston.
Tonya Mtller led .Metgs wilh a fourfor-four. sox-RBI performance
The game was to have been
played at Meogs. but was moved to
Wellston due to field condiuons
Meigs Jumped on top in the first
onmng when J(elly Golkey reached on
a Roc~et error, Tonya Moiler songled
to score Gilkey. · But the Golden

longest homestand of the season
wtth a 3- 10 record.
" II was JUSt a brutal homestand,"
LanSing saod. " We dodn't puch when
we needed 10. we didn't get bog hots
when we needed to. You can 'I poonl
your finger at one specolic thtog.
Maybe goong on the road woll help."
Jones' two-run homer in the second gave the Braves a 2-0 lead. Eddie
Perez songled with two outs and
Jones, who came into the game hittong only 169, belted ·a 410-foot
homer JUSI onstde !be left-field foul
pole
Atlanta. whoch won three of the
four games on the scnes. got another
run on the third when Chipper Jones
doubled and scored on Michael Tuck- By DAVE HARRIS
er'uonglc
Sentinel Correspondent
The Rockoes countered on theor
It wa.' a good old-fa.qbioned pitchhalf when Jeff Reed songled. wa.&lt; sac- ong duel Monday evemng at Wellston
nficed to second by Kolc and scored a.' the Golden Rockets' Chad Kuhn
on l:.ansong's single.
came out on top beating the Maraud- 1'he .Braves made it 4-1 with an ers ~nd Jeremoah Benlley 3-1.
unearned run rn the founh Andruw
Kuhn fired a four honer on le-.Wong
Jones reached on third baseman Von- Wellston to theor mnth win Without a
ny Ca,tilla's throwing enor, went to loss over•ll and g1vlng the Rocket' a
second on Maddux's groundout and 7-0 mark mthe TVC. Bentley pocked
scored on Walt Weoss ' stogie.
up the loss despite potching a 1wo hotAndruw Jones led otl' the soxth ter. Meogs drops to 6-5 overall and 4wnh another homer that curled onside 5 m theTVC
the left-field foul pole The Braves
The game was changed from
added two more runs as Weiss and Meogs to Wellston on Monday afterKeith Lockhart singled and Chipper noon due to wet playong condolions at
Jonell lined a two-run ~ouble to the Meogs.
gap on nght-center
Wellston Jumped out on top with
The Rockoes rallied on the sev~nth three runs on the first inmng. Mall
son
•
.. Kerry pitched greal." Cox satd · wtth a hot bauer. an error. Reed's RBI Hatten walked and Mercer followed
"He potched Greg Colbrunn pretty stogie and Vander War • homer.
In the only other NL game. the
tough before Colbrunn worked him
for a walk. Then he got two popups. Anzona Diamondbacks routed the
That's clutch pitchong at ots best."
• Floroda Marlins 15-4
Andruw Jones drqve on three runs
DiamondbHks 15, MarliJU 4
with his second and thord homers of
Devon Whote drove in three runs mce, ihat os, except for 1he last one
the season for Atlanta. •
agamsl hos former club a.~ expanston as Waterford came back on the la.•t
"I started bad thts season ... Jones Anzona won a senes for lhe lin;t onnong to claom a 7-6 Hockong Dovisaod. "I had a streak where I was 1- ttrne
siorl"baseball won nver the Southern
for-26 But now I'm starting to tum
The host Doamondbacb defeated Tornadoes Monday at Walerford m
it around"
Livan Hernandez (2-2) in wonning for Tro-Valley Conference play.
Rockoes manager Don Baylor said the third time in four games against
Soulhem is now 6-6 and 4-3 in the
ot wa.• "veT); unchar.octerostoc of Mad- Aonda
league •
Relief potcher Gregg Olson hot a
dqx to giv~ up five runs. We JUSt
Ben Hoener picked up the win for
c'!"ldn't contam Andruw' Jones. He , two-ru,n homer to An zona's hoghesl- Waterford wnh a six-run, sox-hit perhtttwo fa.,tballs about neck hogh for scoring game of the seao;on. The Dta· formance, backed by four stnkeouts
IKime runs. He was pretty much the mondbacks have won four of live and three walks, Waterford made two
overall.
dofference on-the game."
errors behind theor pitcher on pockong
Colorndo &lt;taner Darryl Kile ( 1-3).
White. trnded to the Diamond- up the won.
who allowed seven runs on sox backs by Florida in November. had a
onnongs. saod he let his team down
sacnfice l'ly on !be thord inning and
"It's trustralong." he saod. "If keyed a live-run fouf'lh with a two•
Greg Maddux goveJ• up live runs. run songle.
Hernandez. last year's World
you've got to win. lf'l hold them
After genmg upset by Ea.'tern a
down. we won. I have a JOb to do and Senes MVP. allowed seven runs on week ago on softball aclit;m, the
I dido 't do it. I wa.' just up in the zone five hot• and four walks to J 1-J Waterford Wildcats had to play
for the most part. I fell behind on onnings. Chnt Sodowsky (1·1) gill bridesmaid to the Southern Torna,
Jones a couple of tomes and he hot the two outs for the victory
does
ball ha{d...
But o11ly for a wee!&lt;. as the WoldThe Rockoes concluded their
cats rose to !be occasion '"a bog way
Monday mghl a• they d&lt;;,feated the
Southern Tornadoes 6-0 in Tri· Valley
(Conunued from Page 4l
Conference Hocking Division softRodnt!UCZ had a home run and Replays showed lhe ball would 1101 ball play.
two doubles. He is 11-for-14 woth have cleared the 18-foot fence.
Both teams are now 7 -I and
eight extra-base hits m hts lastlhree
The Orioles also lost an BI'J!~ment locked into the lead for the divosoongames. Rich Amaml also homered later when Kosc ruled a fan dod not altitle. while Waterford rides a 13-2
for Seattle.
,
otlterfere on Garrel Andcrson"s tropic overall mark and Southern is 12-2.
Dean Palmer and Mike Sweeney down the nght-tield line ..
Southern's only losses have come
homered for Kansas City.
After the game, Balltmore put in . !p(tball's equivalenl to "Hell's
Anaels 4, Orioln 3
c~nter fielder Brady Ander!toli on the half acre" on the Muskingum River.
Baltimore did not get any good dosabled hsl because of neck. and as its onlY. previops loss was a loss to
news from the umpones or doctors at shoulder trouble.
FOrt Frye just across the river from
Waterford..
Anaheim.
At~ldlcs 3, TwiDil .
,
Cas.&lt;ic Harra ptcked up the win for
In a play that reminded many of a
Ben &lt;:Jn~v~. one of baseball_s
12-year-old boy reachinll over the best !OOk•~· ~~~a lwo:run homer on Walerford woth a two-htl shut-out
wall during the 1996 AL playoffs the etg~th 1nnong thai lofted Oakland efforl. She fanned sox Southern baibetween the Orioles and Yankees. a over Mmnesota at the Coliseum.
ters. walked JUSt two, and save up no
fan grabbed B.J. Surholf"s drive in
Jason_Giambi sinafed with one out runs in 111 errorless Wildcat perforthe li!"l inning.
and Gneve coon«led off Gre_1 mance.
SolrhotT corcled the bases whe• Swindell (O-Il woth two outs for h11
Kim Sayre. 'the Southern ace was
firsl base umpire Greg Kosc rvlcd a first home run of the sea.wn.
1101 as s1wp as usual as Waterford
home run, but the call wu reversed.
The Twins los! their fifth in a row. pounded out 12 hits bolstered by four
By JOHN MOSSMAN
' DENVER (API - The Colorado
Rockoes scored live runs ott Atlanta
ace Greg Maddux and ch:osed closer
Mark Wohlers from the game on the
ninth.
And stollthey lost
Andruw Jones homered twoce.
Chopper Jones had a two-run double
and Maddux survoved a rocky se~­
enlh onmng as the Braves beat the
~ocktes 7-5 Monday mght.
Maddux. who yoelded only two
earned runs on hts first 32 onnings thos
season lor a ghuerong 0 56 ERA that
led the Nauonal League. was roughed
up for five runs (four earned) on eoght
mnmgs Hos ERA ruse to I 35, but
Maddux (2-1) stoll got the won.
He also had eoght assosts and
staned two double P,lays.
• "I thought Maddux wa$ excellent," Braves manager Bobby Cox
saod. "He had tl)e one bad mnong. but
tltat happens You saw why he's won
lip many Gold Gloves."
· After allowong only one run
through six mntogs. Maddux gave up
!Pur in the seventh, including poochhitter John Vander Wal's three-run
homer that cui Atlanta's lead to 7-5.
. The Rockoes loaded the bases on
l~e nonth on three walks. two by
Wohlers. But Kerry Logtenberg - the
Braves'third pitcher of the innongottored Mike Lansong and Netli Perez
on popops for his first save of the sea-

'

Rockets calfle back on the bottom of
the onnong and scored three runs 10
take a 3-1 lead
.Metgs toed the game on the second
onmng when Bethany Boyles was hot
by a potch Golkey , song led before
Moller drove on both runners woth a
double. But the Golden Rockets
came back on the bottom of the onning
by scorong two more runs und took a
5-3 lead.
That ts the way the score stood
unul the SIXth onmng for Meogs
Moller had a double and a songle on
the onnong. Brooke Wolliams added
two songles Stephanoe Wogal. Mehs-

sa R:omsburg and Lau~ermoh e.och
song led
Meogs dosed out the sconng woth
three more runs on the seventh onnong
o nfour walks and a songle by Casey
Sanford
Moller led the way wtth two songles .md lwo doubles and SIX RBis
Wolhams three Singles, and Laudermolt and Ramsburg added a paor of
songlcs Sanford and Wog.ol each SIO·
gled. Wtlhams was seeong her first
acuon on a couple of weeks ~ue to a
back onJury
Laudermolt pocked up the won on
reliel of Hysell, the two coonboned to

stroke nul lhrec walk lhree and gove
up five hots Marton was the starten
and loser lor Wdlston woth help Irom
Le.tch. Marton h:od ,, double to lead,
Wellston
Meogs woll travel to Waterford on
We~nesd.ty. the Marauders .ore 5-6 1
overall .md 5-4 on the TVC
~
lnnjn~

ll!biJl;

Meogs
120-00( 12)-4= 18-1~-0,
Wellston
320-()(}()-0=0-S-2
Hysell. Laudernult (W&amp;3) and
Laudermoh. Sanlord (J)
Marton I L). Leach (7) and Mahafo
f.my

Wellston diamondmen down Meigs 3-1
woth a smgle Breot Ewong hot a come
backer to the mound. but Bentley
throw to third for the force wa.' wild
and Hatten scored the games first run.
Mercer scored on a balk to make n a
2-0 game and the thord run score on
a Matt Phtllips sacnlice fly.
Meogs scored theor only run ill the
thord onning. Brad Davenpol'lled off
the onnong with a walk. a ground out
and a passed ball on a stnke out out
moved Davenpol'l to . third and he
scored on a ba..e hn by Tony Dugan.
Kuhn pocked up the won, stnkmg
out seven. walkong one and scanenng
the four hots. Mercer and Dcmck
Sockles had the Wellston hots, both
songles.
Bentley pocked up the loss, striking out six, walking live and givong

up the two hots Jeremoah had a dou- songle. J T Humphreys added two
ble for Meogs. Davenport. Dugan and songles. Nathan Haltl11ll and Pat MarRyan Ramsburg had the other Meogs ton each a songle
htts. all singles.
Marcum and Robens each had
In a non-conference game Satur- home runs l'or Poont Pleasant
day. the Marauders sent I0 men to the
Dugan was the wonnong pitcher
plate on a seven rut&gt; fourth mnong to woth Davenport comong on to pock up
post a 19-13 come trom behond won the save. The Cwo gave up 12 hots,
over Poont Pleasant.
walk three and stnke out three. WatMeogs wa.' behind 7-3 headong terson was the staner and loser for
into the onnong but took the 10-71ead Point Pleasant.
after their big inn mg. The Mamuders
Meogs will travel to Waterford on
added four more on the tilth mnong. Wednesday.
one on the soxth and closed out theor lnnin&amp;ll!llllll
!Xll -000-ll= 1-4· J
M.'onng woth four more on tbe seventh. ;,Meogs
3()().000-x=J-2-3
Tony Dugan. Rusty Stewart and · Wellston
Balle lies
Ryan Ramsb~rg led Meogs wtth three
hots each, all songles except for a ·' Meogs Jeremiah Bentley (LP)
Ramsburg double Davenport and and J T Humphreys
Wellston C. Kuhn (WP) and
Bentley each added a double and a
Stevens

~~~~~~2.~~ r~~~~!~ .~?..,~~~~~!.,,~~~!h~~~.?.:~ ......l

In onnation on
Health Care ·
or lverJOne!

I '

•I

'

• THE DAILY SENTINEL
• GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRlBUNE
• POINT PLEASANT REGISTER

AL games ...

••

IF YOUR BUSINESS IS INTERESTED
IN PARTICIPATING IN
SPECIAL SECTION CALL:

I'

•

992·2156
DAVE HARRIS, ElT. I 04
....__ _ _B_E_FO_R~E._MI.._J_Il..-,_19_9_1_......_
-- .
•

rehe(. while givong up two runs on
three hots agaonst no walks and no
stnkeouls. Bcnjo Manuel got lhe
startong nod wolh five onnongs of
work. tssutng two walks und five
strikeouts in a five-run effort. Manuel
gave up none hots .
Josh f'r\ln relieved on the sixth.
givong up no runs on one hit and one
stnke out a~aonsl no walks
Southern had taken u 6-5 lead on
the top of the se\enth ll'hen Manuel
walked and Billy Young. ponch hit-

run home run over the fence lo toe the
game at 5-5
Mochael Ash tnllowed woth a son·
gle. Corey Wolhloms sacnficed hom to
second. Pork Doll reached on an error
and Adam Cumongs hit a sacnfice ny .
to gove Southern the 6-5 lead.
Alter Waterford collected 1wo son·
gles (Crook and Crook). Davos got
the first out, then a mstly error loaded
the bases for a Josh Wagner songle
that won the game
Luke Lang and Thud Skinner lmd

two-hot games, whole Hoener doubled
and songleu
'
Southern honers were Ash, Corey
Wolliams, Doll, Cumongs. LoUie and
Young.
lnnin11 !.l!llll!l
Southern
000-120· 3=6-6- 2 l
102-020-2=7-13-2
Waterford
•
I
Ballr...,.
Southern Manuel. Ervon, Davos
(LP) and f'umongs
Waterford: Uoener and Luke ·
Crook

j

Waterford cruises past Southern 6-0

'

,11 Mumn ,1l ! MIIttrt.'- :~~~n~~dJ O~~nt:u ..tcr 'bR Rrl M.tlhr.tl' lllil

LCoJue

:!94

ll••k&lt;tball
Nwllun;al Ba!ilr.ethall A.l-'IIOCUdinn
~ ~~ l~h

1\llan l 1 1 ( nlur •dn 'i
1\111.111101 I ~ I Iundt 4
Tom~ht's

l~rn IIIHIIII I..C,IJIIl

' !IIJ

Amtrk•n Lt•l•
BALTIMORE ORIO~ES Recalled LHP Doug

w..r.....ray'•aames

NL standings
-.;..Ill......

I

&lt;Jo

Brave$ beat Rockies.7-5;
Diamondbacks roll past
Marlins 15-4

r

Hnmlnn CHunpton 1 U) ,tt N y Mt·l~ IRctd I•

INuk 0.1) aJ O.:tnlll (Wnrn II I 21 7 OCi

ili.IOO~pm

7tH,
l.JJ1
hll

I.J

6

llt 7 Uiil'm

OaklmJ l Mm.fiCll•lla 2
An tl ~ttm -1 Baltnlli\ON l
8 o~!Ufl

1(1

'

l-&lt;l~ ""f."'"'~

'S;

Mond;~y's scores
011~1tM'l6 CLEVEI ANlJ, I I tnru n~ ~
NY Y ,mh~ 1 Tt1r011ltt]., ll1mu~ ~
Se 1llk K K.&amp;mtas Cuy 7

. ,

,,

10

7 II

S:m Dl~o:J!Il
S,m I r,llk:l"' u

n.l7

'
'
[)jvNCm
1

Mtnrk:!Mll I

'7

h

II

Pm ~bur~h

I
I

b

II

ll

II ORII&gt;A MI\RIINS l'l.k:\:d INI Knm ~111
lu nn Ilk.' I, .J •Y th"•hlollhl l'url h ocollhc l tt11
1r ••• &lt;I I C Ill Jnhtt lol.t " l.. ''~ llutn C'h trl1o11~ t•flhc lu

Wt'!i lrrn Uttllllon 1

(A'ntr-.. IIJhUIIHl

CLI VELAND

Crn tnl J•hi!Jun
12

when several drivers, mcludmg John
Andretu, remamed on the truck and
several others beat Han\olton off pit
road by opting for two new tores
onstead of four.
Agaon, Hamilton's powerful No 4
Monte Carlo was equal to the ta.•k
He moved steadoly toward the fru"t
followong the green flag on lap 394,
finally movong around the outNode of
Andretu 's Petty Enterpnscs Pontiac
- the car he drove the past three
years - comong off the founh tum
on lap 438.
"I lost the rhythm when I got pa.•t
the 43 (Andretto)," Huriulton
explaoned " I thought I should have
been pulhng away from them and I
wasn't. I caught myself droving a lottie hard. because I looked at the
scoreboard and didn 't have a lot of
laps left. I slowed down a loUie bot
and got my rhythm back."
He ea."IY led the rest of the way.
beatong the Ford of runner-up Ted
Musgrave to the finosh lone by 6.376
seconds, about one-thord of a lap.
It was also Hamilton's decision to
put on four new tires on each of the
late stops, rather than tryong to hold
track posotoon.
"They said, 'Let's take on two
(ttres) and gas,' " Hamolton
explaoned. "~ saod, 'How many cars
on the lead lap'?' h wasn't that many
!;o I saod, 'Let's take on four (to res).
Thos car's handhng too good to take
a chance on ot "
Dale Jarrell, Earnhardt and Randy

Dally Sentinel• Page 5

•

Hamilton wins Goody's t:te·adache .Powders 500

Pagef

Tuesday, .April 21, 1998

Boston Marathon sees Kenyans win men's title again

~e

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aprll21, 1998

••

_..'1:

Southern e,rrors. Overall, Sayre
fanned eight and walked three
Waterford look a 1·0 lead on ' the
first when lead off bauer J. Starkey
smgled, Lori Mtlnt'r singled, then followtng two Sayre stnkeouts, Neill
and Parks walked to force home a
run
SHS went down 1-2·3 on the first
two mnongs then threatened on the
thord when Tnsh Warner walked, btn
was left stranded. Southern again
threatened m the stxth when with two
out. Cynthta Caldwell songled and
Kim Ihie' walked, but were also left
aboard.

Waterford had added one on the
founh , then udded four on the SIXth to
break open the game two songles by
Burns and Neoll were Inned around
lnples from Starkey and Katnna
Greene to account for the nlns.
Southern honer• were Caldwell
and Regina Manuel .
!gnin&amp;ll!:llb
000-000-0=0-2-4
Southern
Waterford
I()(). I04-x =6-12 -0
Ballt-ries
Waterrord· Harra CWP) and
Greene
Southern: Sayre (LP) and Davts

I

You Don't Need 1b
Be Rich To Start
Investing, But You
Need To Start
In~esting

For A
Chance To Be Kith.
Call Me For Details!
'

Karl Kebler Ill, CPA
•

Investment and 1\x Consulllnl.
.
740-992-72'10

Your
Mel11 Cou•ty Conanalsslo••r

WILL CONTINUE TO ASSIST
TOWNSHIPS WITH ROAD IMPROVEMENTS

Scalriliu otrc,.d lh'"""' H.D ~
tnvesuneno Scalnueslnc Adll_,
SeMCH otrc ..d throuaJ! H D ~
Advl!oly Services, lnc.-63J3 S....
Hipway 161, Founb Floor,lrvlooa TX
75038-(972) ~

'

..._

_____...
•

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

FelloV\{ship works on quilt project
The qurh project was drscussed
dunng the recent meeting of the
Mergs County Women s Fellowshrp
held at i,he Zron Church
h was noted that blocks are commg m a~d 11 appears there may be
enough block~ for two qurhs
Lrnda Bates. prestdent, gave the
welcome and the group "I d Rather
Have Jesus", followed w1th prayer
hy Dons Carden Officers reports
were g1ven by Ann Lambert and
Marte Snyder The ftfth Sunday
l•y mn sang was announced for the
Bradford church
The Mens Fellowship have
dskcd the women to he lp tn setting
up the la11 booth Members from all
churches wtll be asked to f1ll the
lime slots to ~crvc a t the fa1r

Joan May of the Rutland Church
used for her devotiOns "L1fe m the
Day of Mary ' She told of the
lt festyle tn Brbhcal umes and the
d1fficuhy of survtvang. of the food
and how 11 was prepared and the
dat ly muals thar were mamtamed bv
the family
The members brought ttem s of
food for the food baskets whtch
Snyder and Charldene Alk11e were
to prepare
For the program, Lee Hyse ll had
a read1 ng li tled "Renecuons On
Heaven Spec tal mut)C was presented by Landa and Ltndsey McKtnney, Carolyn Kest.rson Bonme
Arno ld, Pat Arnold. and Sandy
Scott
Ida Murphy had an Easter read

mg and Pat Arnold had the closmg
praye r followed by refreshme nts
served m the dmmg room
Kathryn Russell gave a program
on new~papers She told of many
newspaper firsts , and the many
Items that can be made from the
recycling of them She showed a
bell a hat. a ha11 b~nd bra1ded w1th
nbbon, a door stop, an mrptane, gtft
wrap, and fire starters made from the
newspapers be mg wrapped very
tightly
The next meelmg Will be held at
the Bradbury chu rch wnh Hal
Kneen to do a program on trees
Zton church Will have devotions and
everyone present w1ll be g1ve n a tree
to plant and a book from The
National Arbor Day Fo undatio n

Watch out for impostors, AEP says
Amcnc.m Elcctnc Power as ks
customers to watc h out for 1mpos·
tors 'w\hn pusc as utiiHy employees
AEP advPocs c usto mers to always

ln&lt;Jk for 1hc AE P tdc ntt ficauon
An AEP meter reader wtll be
dre&gt;Scd on company colors - red
gr.oy and whttc In add1tto n the
. rc.tdcl wtll carry tdcnll licattOn lcaLU nng the AEP l:OHtpany name and
logo the rcgmn m wh1ch the pc r~mn
work&gt; and a photograph Some AEP
cmployt.::cs may not wc.u a um lorm,
but they Wi ll always carry the tde ntllymg hadgc
ll customers cvt.:r ha\c .t con-

cern about w ho~ at thc11 door they
shoul d call one of AE ~ s I BOO num
bcrs and vcnfy the perso n s tdenut y
AE P employees understand such
precautt ons and Will gladly wa ll nut
stdc satd Mary Ke nt diStnct man
agcr lor AE P m Pt Pleasan t
Former Co lumbus So uthct n
P&lt;Jwer custorpers may call AE P '
toll-t ree number. 1-800-277 2 177
fonner Oh10 Power customc" may
call 1-800 67·2- 223 1 and lm mer
Appa lac ht an Power cuswmcn; may

call 1-800-982•4237 to conf11m
whether someone IS an AEP employee However, any s usptclous a(;li\ 11 y

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrtuo of on Order of
Sole loaued out of •the
Common Pleat Court or
Melga County, Ohio, tn the
coto or the Lorry Mlchaol
Bloooll, et al., Plalnttffo, va.
Janet K. Groeneveld ,
Detendont, upon a Judg-

and 30 mlnutoo East 110
teet, thonco North 9 degrees
and 30 minutes Eoat 130
teet, thence North 11
dogrooo Wool 184 foot;
thence north 50 dagrooa
West 150 foot; thence oouth
610 faet to I he ploca of
beginning, containing 1.24
acres, more or leu
Containing In all 77.32
acres, mora or Ieos, oubloct
to oil legal hlghwayo
EXCEfTING roal eotote
convoyed by Joooph and
Ado Blo11tl to Chooter and
Dorothy., Well a by deed
dated October 23, 11158, and
recorded In Volume 286,
Page 917, Mtlgo County
Dood Recorda
DEED REFERENCE. Book
115, Molgo County

ment therein

rendered,

being Cooe No. 97-CV-123 In
aald Court, I will offer for
oate at tho front door of tho
Courthouee 111 Pomeroy,

Motga Countf, Ohio, on tho
15th dey of May, 1998, at
1o·oo .o m.. the following
l•nda

•nd

tenementa,

locoted at 52309 State Route
248, Long Bottom, OH
45743. A complete
dtocrlption or the rool
Is 11 follows
Real aatate situated In the

Townehlp of Oliva, County
of Meigs end Sllte of Ohio,
deocrlbed as lollowo:
A pari of 70 acre Lot 1121,
Towns 3 and 4, Range 11,
beginning 504 ftot Wool and
t 80 feet South from a alone
cornor In the North Una of
100 acre lot 1139, which
point Ia tho • Northoaot
corner

of 70

acre Lot 1121 ,

thence Wool 1850 foot to a
pall In tile Northwoot comer
of 70 acre Lot 1121 , thence
Soutll 825 feat to the lind of
Myrtle Rooe; thence Eaot
1855 teet to tho Wool line of
100 acr• Lot 1139, thence

North 825 foot to the place
of beginning, containing
35.08 ocroo, more or loos.
/lito, a port ol 100 ocro lot
1139, Town1 3 and 4, Range

11, beginning at a otone
earner In the North tina of
100 ocro lot 1131, thonco
Wool 504 loot to the
Northwoot corner of 100
ocro lot 11 :JV; which point to
teO teet North of tho
Norttteaat

corner of

70

acre

tat 1121; thence oauth 20
foot; thence south 28
d19rool &amp;ot 30 loot, thence
oouth 45 dogreeo Eaot 137
foot; thence South 68
dogroel EIOI 137 loot ,
thence South 81 degreeo
Wool 112 toot; thence Weot
20 foot; thenco South 3415
foot to tho cornor of the
former Boooto Lerklno
tendo; thence Eost 372 foot
to the Iormor Mro. A M
Connolly's lend; thonco
North 118 foot to tho
Northooot cornor of the Hid
Iormor Mre. A. M. Connotty'o
land; thence Eoot 132 toot;
thence North 3486 foet to
the ploco of beginning,
containing 41 acrea, more or

•••••
1 l.a,

part of tho mlddto
part of 100 ocro lot 1131,
Towns 3 end 4, Rongo 11,
beginning South 1536 loot
from

1

a aton1 corner

In

th•

North Uno ol 100 ocro lot
1139; thenco North 26
dograu Eaot 130 t..t;
thence North 35 degrooo

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AUDITOR'S
NO
09-011131.000, 01·00140.000,
09-011141.000.
PROPERTY ADDRESS·
52309 State Route 248, Long
Bonom, OH 45743
REAL ESTATE APPRAIS.
ED AT,.$42,500 oo The real
eotate cannof be aold tor
lou then two·thlrdo the
approiHd value
TERMS OF SALE· Cuh
on dollvory ol deed. Sold
subject to accrued real
estolo llxea
Jomoo M. Souloby, Shariff
(4) 14, 21, 28 3tc
PubliC Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
CO
URT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
CASE
NO. 87 CV 1177
THE FARMERS BANK 6
SAVINGS COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
~~AGIE FETTY,
COMMISSIONER OF THE
ESTATE OF HAROLD W
FETTY, DECEASED, ET AL,
Defondanto
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL Es••:rE
tM
Ao Shorlff of Molga
County, Ohto, I hereby offtr
for alo It t0:30 o.m. on May
15, 11t8, A.D • on tho front
otapo of tho Molge County
Courthou 11 , Pomo-roy,
0
hto, the following
described rnl11blt•:
PARCEL ONE . Th I
following doecrt- promle00 oftuotod In the Vlllf!IO of
Pomeroy, County of Molgo
ond Stato of Ohio:
fiRST TRACT: A parcel 01
lend Forty (40) tnt wldo on
Pleeunt Ridge Avonuo tn
Lot No. Fifty (50) In the
Vlllogo of Pomeroy, Molge
County, Ohio, end running
beck 11 that width ono Hundrad end Fifty (110~ toot,
bolng tho ea111e place
excepted and reeerved by
Thomos llackloy end wlfo In
• conveyonco of port of oald
lot to Wondol Joachim end

stli I should be reported to the polt cc
AEP a global cnetgy company 1s
one of the Unti ed States largest
m vcstor owned uuhucs, p rov1 dm g
energy to 2 9 mtllton customers m
Oh to Indtana, Mt ch1gan West V~r­
gmm V1rg:mm Tennessee and Ken·
tucky AEP has h~ldm gs 111 the Unncd States. the Untted Ktngdom and
Chtnn Wh oll y owned substd1anes
p tov 1dc p owc1 c ng ~ncc nn g,

t.:onsult-

mg an d man.tgcmcnt se rvices
around 1hc word The company 1s
hascd m Columbus

Public Notice

Public Notice

to 1 vote of tho people of day ot llay, ,.., tilt q - 45771.
11ld oubdlvleton at 1 uon ol tavytng • tax, In (4) 7, 14, 21 3tc
Prl11111ry Election to be hold exc- of lhe ton mlllllmllllIn the County of Melge, tlon, lor the benoiH of
Public Notice
Ohio, at the rogulor pllclo POllltrOy VIllage lor lht pur·
Notice of Election on Tox
of voting th.,.ln, on the 5th pou of curront expen-.
Sold tax being: • 111-1 Lovy In Exceee or tho Ton
day of Moy, 11t8, the q111•
Mill Umltatlon
lion of levying a tax, In of o tax of U mlllo It 1 mo
RoviHCI COde, Soctlono
exceee of the ten mttt limita- not exceeding 1.1 milia tor
3501.11(g), 57011.19,
tion, for the benoiH of IICh one dotlor of vlllll57011.25
.
RuUand Townohtp for the llon, which .,,ounta to
ntnotnn centa ($0.18) for
NOTICE lo hereby glvon
purpo11 of flro proloctlon.
Sold tax being: an addl· tach one hundrld dollaro of that In pursuance of 1
Ilona! tax of 1.0 mill at 1 rate valuation for live (5~ ytttfl. R"*olutton of tho Vllloge
Tho Polio lor aid Eloctlon Council of the Vlllegt of
not exceeding 1.0 mlllo for
will
open 11 8:30 o'clock Pomoroy, Pomoroy, Ohio,
uch one dollar of value•
lion, which omounto to ten 1.m. and romoln open until pallid on tho 16th day ol
c:ente J$0.10) lor each one 7:30 o'clock p.m. of oltd Fobruary, 1 - there wilt be
oubmtned to a vote of tho
hundred dolloro at valul· day.
By order of tho Board r"'ot ppt•,,~ary""':t,:::~·~:':
lion lor flvt{5) ,..,•.
1
of Elocttone,
The Polio for Hid Eloctlon
ol Motgo County, Ohio held In tho County of Melge,
will opon at 8:30 o'clock
Honry L. Hunter, Ohio, 11 tho regular ptacoo
o.m. end remain open until
Ctwlrman of voting therein, on the 5th
7:30 o'clock p m. of uld
Rita D. Smltll, day ol May, 11t8, the qu...
day.
Director lion at levying • tax, In
By order of the Board
Datld Morch 10, 11198 txceoaolthotenmlllllmlta·
of Etoctlone,
lion, for tho benefit of
ol Mllge County, Ohio (4) 7, 14, 21 , 28 . 4.TC
Henry L Hunter,
PoiiMiroy Vlllagt forthe pur·
pall of fire protactton.
Chairmen
Public Notice
Said tax being: o ronowal
Rite D. Smith,
of
a tax of 1 mill II • rato not
Director
PUBUO NOTICE
Oiled March 10, 1 Sooted bids wilt bo oxcoldtng1 .0 milia for ·~·~
ch
dollar of vetuatt n,
(4) 7, 14, 21, 28 4TC
I recetvod by tho VIllage of one
which amounto to ten con
Syrac~•• unltl 12 poon on
Public NDtlce
Thuroday, May 7, 19118, J$0.10) far uch one hun·
_ _ .:....;;==;.:.;:.;.:.;:,;___ 1 when they wilt ba opened dred dollars ol vatultlon tor
Nottco of Eloctlon on Tax
and read aloud, for tho five (5) yearo.
Lovy In Exc- of tho Ten
following:
Milt Umttallon
1983 paneled von , 16 ft.,
Rovlold Code, Sectlono
all aluminum body. 1'/, ton
The family of
3501.11jg), 5705.19,
chaoots Minimum bid
Harold A. Rainer
5705 25
S1,500.
NOTICE Ia hereby glvol)
15 11 Aluminum boot, 6
wishes to thank
that In pureuonce ol a HP . Evlnrudo motor.
Rnolutlon of tho Vlllf!ll Minimum btd $400.
all who helped In
Council of the Vlllf!lt of
To view, call 992-716t or
any way during
Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Ohio, ~-5564
paeood on the 181h day of
Tho vttlogo rooorveo the
his Illness and
FebNery, 11t8 there wiU be right to reject any arid ell
death. May God
aubmltttd to I vote of the bldo Further, tho above will
people of oald oubdlvlllon be ootd In the condition It 11
bless each of y,ou.
II 1 PriiiMtry Eloctlon to be In, with no expreu . or
Wife, children &amp;
held In lht County at Meigs, Implied werronly glvon.
OhiO, II the regullr pta~•
Wrltton oeolod bldo are to
step-children
of voting thtrtln, on tile 5th be eubmlttod to Janice
1

Bocktoy to Gottlieb
Wildermuth by deed detod
November 17!h, 1873,
recorded In Vol 41, Page
503, Molgo County Recorda.
SECOND TRACT: Situated
In tho VIllage, County end
Stile oloreoeld, and bound·
ad and deoerlbod 11
tollowo: lo·wlt Bolng 1 port
of Lot No Seventy-oaven
1ji,,,;,,,,;;'n,~. the Village of
11
Molgo Countf,
Ohio, and deocrtbed 11 lot·
Iowa· Beginning ot the North
comor of tho Broware Coltor
lend oold to Kothorlnt
Shoffor, thonce South 49
dog . Eut One Hundred and
torty·two (142) teat to Wylllo
Public Notice
Hill Avenue; the nco Eoot Notlco! of Election on Tax
wHh aold Avenua to otako; Lovy In Exc- of tho Ttn
thence North 42 deg Weot
Mill Umlwton '
Throe Hundred end eightyRevlood Code, Soctlono
oevon fee to Leonard
3501.11jg), 5705.11,
Worry'• corner; thonco
5705.25
aoulh 48 dog Weot forty' NO.TICE Ia horaby given
(40) toot to Werry 1 corner; thot In purauanca ol 1
thenco North 42 deg. Wool Reoolutlon of tho Board of
43 loti, thonco South 48 TOWIIIhlp Truatooo ol tho
dtg. Woof IItty lett to tho Townohlp
of
Scipio,
line of the Brower Cetlor'o Portll(roy, Ohio, poaood on
land, thence 42 dog. Eaot 50 the 17th day of Febn~ary,
toot&gt; thonce South 48 df!l 11t8 there will be oubmiHid
Wool 75 fool to the ploco of to I vote of the poopla of
beginning, containing One told . oubdlvlolon at a
end 33/1000 of an ocro, Primary Eloctlan to be hold
EXCEPTING the mlnorolo In tho County of Malgo,
lhorotn and oubjoct to the Ohio, II tho rf!lular placet
right of way In end through of voting therlln, on the 5th
the tend below the ourface day ot May, 1-, lila q....
reoorvad by Samual Wytlyo
of levying a tax, In
Pomoroy In tho deed to oxcuo of tile ten milt tlmt•
Gottlieb Wildermuth dated
lor the benefit of
Auguot a, 1871, and
Townahlp for the
recorded In Vol. 38, Pa•o lo.,;,.,.. of fire protection.
•
belng: a repI
363, MetQo County Rocordo,
EXCEPTING olao 36/100 of
ol 2.0 mill II lrlle
en aero ootd 1o Chorlea A.
2.0 milia for
Wllllomoon out of the
one
of valueSouthoost comer of oold Lot
which amounta to
Number (77), the lend heroin l::~i::c:~~~~·!:!..':~
deacrtbed contains 673/tooo
olen acre.
for llw 15) yearo.
THIRD TRACT: Also, tho
Palla for uld Election
lotlowlng dtacrlbed roal
open It 8:30 o'clock
end reiiMtln open until
eotato olluetld In tho village,
o'clock p.m. of Uld
County, and Stoto aforooald
and boundod end doscl'lbed
By
order of tile Board
•• 1o11 owo, to·wll : Lot
of ElectiOIII,
Number Fifty (SO~ In tho
of Molge County, Ohio
VIllage of Pomeroy, Ohio,
Henry L. Hunhlr,
fronting on Pleooant Ridge
Chall'llllln
Avonuo oeventy-ltve 175)
RU. D S 1111
foot and running bock ot
· m •
thot width Two Hundred
11t8
(200) foot to 1 lot Number
Sevonty·oeven (77), EXCEPT ~:;::.;.:,~Liiifc~~i"-•
therolrom a otrlp Forty (40) I
fool wldo by One Hundred
'l'ho Molge Motropolltan
end Fifty If 50) foot ol the Houelng Authority Board of
North Wool corner of aald Dlreclore wilt hold the
Lot
Annual Meeting of the
PARCEL TWO : The Boord on Thuredoy, Ap~l
lallowlng root ootate oltuote 23, 11t8 In tht offlcn of ttw
In tht County' of Molgo, Authority II 31350 Union
Stell ot Ohio, end In the Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio at
Ville go of Pomeroy, In 7:30P.M.
Frectlon Mo. 10, Soctlon No.
All lntereetld peroone are
14.,Town 1 and Range 13 Invited to -nd.
and deecrtbed •• tollowo: Jun TruHoll
• og Inn Ing
t h • ExocuUvo Director
et
Southoollllrly comer ol 1 tot .lf1:f!1~21J.1~1illbi~~----~convoyed to Honnon Werry Notice of Ellctlon an Tax
by deed of even dato Lovy In Excou of the Ten
herowlth; thence .auth 43'1•
Milt Umllllllon
dog. Eoet Forty·ti!foo j43~
Ravtood COde, Soctlona
loot thonc• .auth 41'/• df!l.
3501 .1f(8)1 57011.11,
Woot Forty
foot; 1111nce
57011.25
North 43'1•
Weet
Nonce 1e hereby giVen
thrn
that In pureuanct of a
41'/• df!l.
RIIOiutlon of 111e Board of
to the pllce
T-Ip " " - of tho
Reltrence
Townohlp of"' Rutland,
323, Page 441,
Rutlltnd, Ohio, pao,ld on
County Dood R-rdo.
tho 30th day of ~enuary,
The above d-rlliad roe! 1•11tera wttl be oubmm.t

.
Our S1ncere Thanks

The Don Battrell Family,
The W..yne &amp; Jamce
Banrell Famdy and the
Dale &amp; Joann Kautz Family

;

Zwilling, clork·tr ..ourer,
Vlll'ago ol Syrocuoe, P.O.
Box 266, Syracu11, OH

The family of Wtlltam

Don Battrell w1sh to
express ou~ 11rattrude for
the prayers, flor ers,
food , cards, donations
and support so
generously gtyen dunng
th1s ttme
Our special thanks to
the pallbears , Rev
W1llard Love, Walter &amp;
Kathy Jbrdan of the
Btgony Jordon Funeral
Home, SEOMS and the
Columbia Townshtp Fire
Dept

·

Gravel, Sand,
Limestone, Dirt, Top
Soli, Anything you
need to haul.

No fob too .,.,,
Som• too big.

740-949 4802
740-949 4803

.

..., ...

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DtJMPTRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

1-

, 985 4422
Cheeter, Ohlo

Ohio River
Campgrounds end
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen. Merchandise • .
New 6 uoed llama. We
Buy • Sell • Trade: Toolo,
ftohlng equip., TV'•,
CB'e, otoreoe - IIHie bit
of everytlllng. Locatld
•on Ohio Rher Compgroundo, St Rt. 124,
Racine, Ohio.
740.9411-1012
J&amp;L SIDING &amp; .
INSULATION

• Vinyl Sieling • Soffit
• faKia • Saomlass
Gulhtr • Roofing
• Replaeemant Windaws
• Stationary Doclr$.

• BloWn Insulation
0 Garagtt I Decb
2.4 X 2.4 Pole ..ilding
ltarting at $5995
740.992-2n2 •

!ltew Otid!lll

7.30

.. • • 1

111111 prtcos arolor SOl Me

LIMESJQNE DELIVERED
STARTING AT $65 A LOAD
CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

74N.4174

YOUR MESSAGE

CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL"OF''

4" thru 48" pl11tlc culvert In stock
Full line of water etorage tanka •
Septic • Cistern Tanka
Water line - 100' thru 1000' Rolle
Sewer Pipe • 3" thru 8", Oaa Pipe a flegulltOra

Open:

$7.00 PER DAY.

ADVANt:IO -·GI•rm•INC.

11:110-4:30 Wllkdlya
11:oo-12:oo Saturday

~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ JD CONS,RUCTIOI ~

»:&gt;.

992·5583

9/4/TFN

INDA'I
PAINftN&amp;

COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP

ii••·

,~1 C

INTERNET SIGN·UP POINT
POMEROY, OH
740.992·1135
4/13/H 1 mo.

SUE'S GREENIIOlJSE
Variety, Quellty ... lew Price
"We don't want to make money, we just
want to sell flowers. "
Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats

$6.13

Hanging Baaketa
Robloamlng Utloo, Hol!lo, Poanllo, Blooding Hoarto, etc
Variety of Perennials 94¢
Fruit &amp; Flowering Trea1, Shrubs, Pinta &amp; Azaleas
Morning Star CR 30
Racine, Ohio
•
9411-2115

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•Bobcat Service

•Concrete
•Maaonry .
•General
Commercial' and
R"ldentitll
24 Hr. Bobcat Servlco
Avo liable
"'" rllttm•r.•
Irion Morrloon
(740) 985·3948

Hanging Basketa,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Shrubs, Spruce
Trees
Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 12·5

''' "-

• •New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compara
FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473
7/221tfn

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING

Special Thru
March
•
B ton Delivered

HUB BARDS
-GREENHOUSE

SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAL
50% OFF ALL

$120

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning I
258 Pearl ~t.
Middleport, OH

• • Mileage Llml'
Call Randy

992~5050

992.()0n

-

JEFf. WARNER INSUUNCE

:BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

POMEROY, OH.

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

614·992-5479

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

CO~MERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

,

FREE ESTIMATES

Parts anti Servlcett

61 4-992· 7643

•Mowell •Chlln Slwa •Weedeatal'l •Authorized
0.1ler For;
•Briggs &amp; Strllton •MTD •Murrey •McCollough
. •Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rilly •Hydro Gear
ANDOTHERSI

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

{No Sunday Calls)

2/l,_, ,

1

I '

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
AIIRI Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATESl
V.C. YOUNG Ill

Um11tone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer .Sites
Land CJearlnll &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Eatlmatea
(614) 992·3838

992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

CALL

1·740·949·2015

om AYOI1Ut, Ga~pol~

J &amp; 0 Auto P1rts Buymg
wrecked or salvaged 11eh•c1es

30• 77J·5033
Old wooden phone booth old
barber c:half peda l cars &amp; juke
box 304-576·2106

••e

Wan led Used Adulf 26" Tn Cy

FREE ESTIMATES

614·698·5716
or
614·6.98·7231

MustBe18Yrs

Dober man/ German shepherd
m1x good- waiChdog w1!1 earn h1s

keep 740 742-1080

Molher cat &amp; 3--Bwlt old kttrens 2
female/ 1 male Uuer 1ra1ned :104

458-2218

S1k month old Husky· Shephe rd
m1x, 10 good home mala 740

949·2510

Three German Shepherd m • ~
pups one male IWO females 740

742 0202

60 Lost and Found
,

1300 REWARD

For re turn of black/brown Ger.. tan

Shephard Jaken trom Ed•th Roo
ers farm on Redmud Rtdge An

Gravel, Sand,

swe rs 1o name "Chance · No

questtons ask Call John Rogers

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

, soo-2e1 o576

614 992 3470 Found black &amp; tan lemale Coon
....;;..;.,~";..;..;_".;_..;..-J. hound P&lt;OPPV. B•oadwav Si M•d
dlepcm,

BAlLED AND
BURWPED TREES
Norway Spruco,
White Plno end
Conadtan
Homlock
Delivery Available
Hemlock Grove Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ph. 740-992·7285
Afler4 P.M.

7~0

70

Yard Sale

TIM'S CUSTOM

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

CARPET
Just off Bradbury Rd.
(Look for signsI
Mtddleport, Oh

ALL Yard Sales Must

Dav &amp; Evenlna Hours

Be P1id In Adwance
QEAQL!NE 2 00 p m
the day btlore the ad
ielo run Sundly
edltton • 2 00 p m
Friday Mand•y edition
·10 00 1m Salurda~.

·
Howard L Wrlteael

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity .

740.992·5379

CHESHIRE
FOODMfiRT

992 :.l91S

lost 7 Mos. Ba&amp;seu Beagl e An
swers To Lucy, Ch1ids Pet Ae
ward l lost Aro und 141 740 446
6764

Save Up To
75% Off

I..ANDS(;APE
NURSERV

740-387-7838

Giveaway

40

Umestone,

L

ROOFING
NEW•REPAIR
tters

'"6" Mt le Ye llow Fl ag ya rd sal~ ,
Pomeroy! Utddlepon Uay 1 ·2.
RegiSter, pck up your flag 1oday

All Yord Sollo Muol Bo Pold In
Advanco Doadllno 1 OOpm lho

Gu ~·
Downspouts

d1y before lhe 1d It to run ,

Sundov a Mondor odlllon·
1:0opm Frldar
I'· Gutter Cleaning
Garage sa te Apr" 23 24 25&amp;
Painting
I ~lam Street Rutland K&lt;i's cloth·
.... ED mg. stze 10 16, large women s
FREE ESTIM""'
roJI!op desk , stereo lOts ol nn e

949•2168

L.;...~.;,;;;..;;;..;..;;,;;.._..l

IThursday 23rd

behind grade

sc hoo l Rutland Oh 1o lra11er I
38 1 l arge dresses, shoes s•ze
10 purses yard ma 1er1al lois
mTsc

80

Auction
and Flea Market

R1ck P:~ •on Auctton Company .
lu ll time auct•onaar, complete
aucllo'fl
serv•ce • qcensed
teG,Ohio &amp; West Vtrg•nta 304

773·5785 Ot 304 773 5-447

90

40%
.;) •N•-II.,A~
IDfl=.... "llfl
==:::..~~

.........
_

..

. . ....... , loii iTI'Ul(D
~,

_,

OFF

NOWI

APPALACHIAN COMMUNIT Y
VISITING NU RSES ASSOC IA
TION HO SPICE AND HEALTH
SE RVIC ES, IN C Now hH ng
Ho me Ct~r e A•des for pari 1 me
and full ume posmons E•perlence

Immediate Openmga for ln ven
tory Ma,,n agtr And P urc has ing
Agen!a At A Local Manutactunng
Company Prevtous Purc:haalng
Expenence And Compu ter lttara
r.y Requt red Resumes And Wtl l
Be Accepted At Br og Warner
•n home care prefe rred Must Automotiv e 2t 60 Easlern Ave
ha11e rehable lransporlatlon Ben
elt s available w lh opporluntty lor nue Galhpolla, OH From 7 30
advancemem For mlormat•gn call A M - l 00 PM Mon - Frt Ask
Barb ara Allen 74 0 59 4 822S For Dnue lndustnal Supply At The
EOE
lobbw De sk May Al ao Fax Re
sume To 7,. 0· 44 1 3255 Equal
Avon $8 $20 IHr No Door To j:O~JlPO:::::'::'":::nl:!ty.:E;;:m:::pl:;!oy_:er::__ ___
D oor, Easy C ash Fun 1 800 local Bu smess Loo ki ng ForMa·
36 1 0 466 lndtsiSirep.
lure tnd•v•d ual To Work Wtth L1t
Avon $8 S20 rHr No Door To tie SuperwtSton As A Cleamnu
D oor Easy C ash! 1 800 296 Tech nician" C al! 740· 2•5 0412.
01 39 lnd/SISirep
740 245 0701

&amp;

FIRST AID COURSES

DO·ITYOURSELF·ERS•

Ju s I In T1me For Those S pr~ ng
R ep a ~rs
Twelve Hours (T hree

Even•ngs) 0 1 BASIC HOME RE ·

PAIR

Apni 28 29 &amp; 30 From

8 00 PM

wanted to Buy.....-

AbsoMe Top Dollar All U S Sll ·
ver And Gold Co int, Proolstll
O•amMd l, Ant•que Jewelr~. Gold
Rlngt, PteJ:1Q30 U S Currency
Slerltng EIC Acqursitiont Jewelry
M T Co.n ShOp, , 51 Second
Avenue Ga thpoMs 740 446-2842

s

Ant ique• top pnces ~ltd. R•toter·
me Anuques Pomeroy, Ohio
~~~ Mo ore own er(40 992

fu~t":e

Ant lquea &amp; cleen used
wtll buy one ptece or com~le11
household, Osby Marlin 740

I 992-11576

10 00 PM Top•cs

'Covered W•l l Be Repa• nng Lamp
Plugs Sw1tches &amp; Et ec 1r~ca1 Wall
O utlets Handling Bas.c Plumb•no
Pr obl ems And Haw To Do Van
ous Wall Repa 1r1 CALL BUCK·

EYE HILLS CAREER CENTER,
ADULT SERVICES TODAY AND
REGISTER 740 245 5334 Ex!

209 · ·Cost $45 00 Class W111 Be
Held On Our R1o Grande Campus

DRIVERS
WANTED'

367-7802

Overbrook Center has fullume &amp;
part time RN LPN &amp; STNA pos•·
t1ons available lor all shtlta, an
yone Interested please top by &amp;
1111 oul an appli c&amp;t •o n 1•o. g92
6 4 72 Over brook Center, 333
Page Street Mtddleport, Oh

45760 EOE

OWNER OPERATORS

D1sptach late Model Conv
Tractors W fFtatbed Trailers.
Competitive Pay
Percentage Of Gross
Contact
1 60Q-854oo41 S7
Earn $1 000 Weekly Stulfmg En
velo~es AI Home Star t Now No
Elcpet'lence Free Supplies Info
No Obhga11on Send LSASE To
Ace De~t 1351 So• 51:37, Dta·
mond Bar, CA 91765.
Ear n $1 000 Weeki ~ Stufhng en·
ve lopes no pnor e•penence, tree
dera•lt . send SASE to N B Dept
174·301 East 5th Ave Suue 112
C o rs~cana , Texas 75110
Ed~ lor

lull t.me lor multi -county
pr •vate non proln based 1n
Athens, Ohio B S or M S tn
Communny Health. emphas •s on
human se•uahty Advocate lor re
product•ve health Issues Con
duct
communlly
educat1on
through apeaktng engagemen1~
workshoPs and developing col
laboralt\le ertor1s 1hroughout etgh t
counues Trav&amp;l requtred Ewen
.ng and weekend hours requ ired
Send te nar al Interest 1es um e
and three e mp(o~er reterences by
Apr~! 27 Hl98 to P la nned Par
enlhOod at 'S outheast Oh•o 396
R1chtond Atotenue Athens 0 ~ 10

45701 EOEIESP ,

E• peJ• enced Legal Secr e1ary re
good compu ler sk1lls rn
clu dmg WP "5 0 knowledge of
pleadmg s and oth er legal docu
ments proper telephone eti
quene and general off1ce sk•lls
Send resume to Bow CW· 18 c1o
Po•nt Pleasan t Reg•s1er 200
Matn $1 P1 Pleasant. WV

q u ~re

25550
FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AD·
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
OLASS CEI.ING?
II you are employed and lee! you
are •n a no ga1n, 51tua110n, yo u owe
11 10 yourself to cons•de r JO•n•ng
the Loewen Group Th1 s ts a h1g ~
1nc ome pro fess•on rap•d ad
vancemen t potential and sell
sausfacuon help1n9 fam11 1es For
your lasl Job m1erv1ew, call Steve
Smtth at61 .... 992 7440
Full or part 11me, self s1ar1m mo t1
vated to auc ceed mus t have
sales ewperlence and be able to
wOrk w11h public knowledge ol
floor covermg &amp; decoratmg a
plus long 11me comm•tment nee
euary, send resum&amp; to Da ll y
Se n~me l PO Box 729 60 Pomer

ov Oh 45769
HAIRSTYLIST /SALON
MANAGER
Smart Sryle W1l1 Soon Be Open1ng
I n Tile New Wal Ma rt Super
Cenler (And Is Owned By Reg 1s
CorporatiOn) And W111 Be H1nng
Several Ha fr St~ li iiS As Well As
A Workmg S1lon Manager, No
Cl! enrele N•eded, Just Have
Sheers &amp; License At Hand &amp; We
Shall Suppl~ The Re11 Benthls

AI FOllOwed

• Guaranleed Hourly wage
Verses Comnus10n Program
• Top Reral Comnls11on
W1th Pt'ICel
• tiaalth Insurance Ava•labte
• Patd Vac:atiOns
t StocM Purct'lased Plan

• Mar41ger toEligible For
Monlhly And Annual Bonuses
• Suppltes Furn1shed
• Merchand•se Discount

• ,AdvanCed Tr11rong
' • Opportunity For Ad'iancoment

For Mort tnlormatlon Coi l Btll
Rooker, 1-688·888 77 78 E-on
1873

FLEET OWNERS
WANTED!
Flatbeds Only
Compentlve Pay

Healm tn• Ava•table
Contact

1·f100.854..157
Pari ume postuon ava•labfe Must
be arllst~eaUy InClined, hands-on
work invol11ed Hill a Qental Lab,
740 949 2217 between Bam..•pm
Pleas ant 1/alle~ Nursmg &amp; Reha·
bl\11al10n Center has open 1ngs lor
cer1111et1 nurs ing ass1stan1s Bath
lull ume &amp; pa rt 11me poStllons
Must be able to work 12 hour
sh•fts. hol 1day 9 &amp; weekends
Uusl be ceruf•ed nurs•ng assis
tant Contact Ang1e Cleland,
Ant Duec tor ot Nurs111g 304·

675-5236

AAI'EOE

Po sulon Available For Secretar~.
Recepttomst Dut•es Include
Transcnbmg Oteta110n From OIC·
1aphone Typmg Fili ng Answer
1ng Telephone s, Scheduling Ap
pomlm en ts Ma1ntammg Olf1ce
Books And Preparing Monthly
Reporrs To Vanous Governmen
1al Age nc1n Must Be Able To
Handle Ofhce Without Super
vts•on And To Twpe Neatly And
~\ cc ur a 1al~ Send Resume Wllh
Salary Reqwements To GallipoliS
Oa•ly Tr~ bune CLA 433, Cio Gall!
polls Da ll y Tr~bune, 825 Thud
Avenue Gallipolis, OH 45631

POSITION AVAILABLE Send
resume

P:O

PART· TillE SERVICE REPRE·
SENTATIVE In Tho Gall •~lla; OH
Area
Responslblituea Include SJock•ng
Shelve• Rattling Merchand 11
To Ensurt Freshntll And B• ld
,ng O•aplays To Promote Our Pro
(!IJCtl •
Ouahfled Can d•dates Mus1 Pos
sess Excellem Customer SeP 1ce
Skills, Reltable Transportation A
Vahd Onver's L•cense And Prool
Of Au to Insurance Coverage
Prevtous Gr ocery E • penence
Pr eferred Must Be Wlltmg To
Worii. Wn\wnds
Plene Forward Resume To Na

t&gt;sco Inc . Dept SDIPTSR, 8750

Park Central Or, Richmond VA

23227

Fax

80• 553 6578 AI

firmawe Ac110n !Equal Opportum

Ef!'4l\oyor MrFrOIV
NABISCO

-----···--· --···· ····-···- ..
RETAtL.LENDtNG OFFICER
A Southeaster n Oh•o Ba nk Ia
Seek •n ~ ,,_n E xperl,8nc ed An d
auahl1ed lndivtdual Fo r A Full
l 1me RDIB II lending Pot ii!On f o
Quahly For T t1ia Pos•hon The l.p
pltcant W•ll Need To Have

• Sell Motrva11on
• EJcellenl CommumcatiQn Sk•'ls
• Bankmg Background Preleffed
• 1 2 Years Lend•ng E•partenr.e
TJ'us Posnlon Oilers A Generous
Benetus Pa ckage lnclud1ng ..01K
Re tlrement/ OpPQrluR!Iy For Cl·
ree r Advanceme nt, And Mern
Bonua Op~onuniues Salary
Commeosuralt Upon Exper~enee.

Expertenced And Quahfled Per·
sons Should Sub mit A Re~~o~me
To P.O Box 240, Gal11pot11, OhiO
45631

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
SHAWNEE MENTAL
HEALTH CENTER, INC
Scioto County Clu11c

ADULT CASE MANAGER - Re

A Bache lor Deg ree And
Oh10 LSW Or LPC Must Have
Knowledge Of Community &amp;ippon
Swstem Componenll. ExtensiVe
Knowledge And Background In
Mental Heallh Pm1C tplea ADd Cn liS lnterve n11 on Compelltlve
Salary And Excellent Btn•llt
Paekagt Full l1me POSitiOn
Available Immediately Please

Applr To SMHC In c

An~

Per

sonnet O ~r ect or PO Bo• 1507
Ponsmouth OH 45662, Or FAX
740 353 6206 Apphcaltons Ac
cep1ed Unt il PoSIIIOn Is F1lled

EEOIMFVH

STORE~

ISSUER

Immediate Open•ngs For 1 at 2nd, 1
3rd And Weekend Shill Sl ore·
room !Toolroom lsauera A1 A lo
cal Manulactuong Com~anw
Storeroom E xper1tnce Helpful
And Computer Ltteracy Requtred 1
Resumes And Applications W1ll
Be Accepted At Borg War ner
Automolllo'8 2160 Eaetern Ave J

&amp;

Home E11ery Weekend
Heal th InSurance Prcwleled
Wtfh Fam tly Coverge
Ava•!able 401K Re1~remen 1
Plane F.rst In F~r!lt Out

Get A r..ra 01 The Good l•ft
Nabiaco Bltcult Co Thl World's
Lt ad•ng Cookie And Crli!A•r
ManufiCIIJrtt, II Seekmg A

qu~res

Overbrook Center a 100 bed
long 1erm care lac1hty, 1n Utddfe
port Oh•o 15 seektng applicants
10 1111 the fo ll owing nurslng man·
agement poSitiOns Slaff Develop
mont D~rector MOS Manager and
Ouahty Assu rance Manager
Preference Will be giVen to RN s
w•th expertis e 1n the spectfl&amp; ar
eas A comptflllve salary and
benehts pa ckage Is being olfered
to the ugtn candtdata Send your
resume to Admm111rator Over
brook C&amp;nter 333 Page Street,
Middleport Oh -t5760 No phone
cans plea$&amp; E 0 E

500 M11e Rad•us

Wll&gt;u',. Hungor
For A Chllt&lt;IQI

1y

PURCHASING AGENT

Spe01a, 304 e75 1429

DIABETIC PATIENTS You May

WICKS
HAULING

740.985-4422

Open 24 ""· A Da~
7 Doyo AWon
Hot Breakfast
Biscuit Sandwich,
Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including Pizza
12" $7.49 Doluxe
All Topptn1111
Call In Ordore Acceptld

8434

Be Entitled To Rece~lo'e Your Oi a
beuc Supphe1 A t No Cost To
You For More.J.nformalton 1·888
677 6561

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

INVENTORY MANAGER/

AVON ' All Areas '• Sh 1rley

30 . Announcements

3130188 1 mo pd

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Reeldentlal
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chaster, Ohio

• Pa•d Holiday a
ExceUem opporturit~ for the r~ght
• Excellent WaQH
g1rl S500(+)per week earnmiiJ po lmermM A~mtmentl Only ! Call
tenllal N o &amp;Mp necessa"fy must Bennetll Hutmg &amp; Coolmg AI
be atleas1 18 Call 61o4 992 6387 740 446·9416 Or 1·800· 872
jan~ lime) Or 304 e75 5955 alter 5967 GaJitpoNs 0H 45631
Bpm Wed thru Sat
I ::::::..==::::.::;.:..;=~--

For Those Indi vid ua ls Work ing
W1th The Public And lOr Ch ldren
Two Cl a sse s To Choose From I
Saturday May 2 1998 Or Satur
dav May 16 1998 Both Clas ses
Ar ij Fr om 9 QO A M 5 00 PM
C onl act B uc k e ~e Hills Care er
C enter Ad ul t Serv 1ces To Reg
tS tEi r 740 245 5334 Ext 20 9 TUI
tton S40

Soov-U (6191645

742·2103 or 446·36ill2

LAIDSCAPI
DDIINS

Help Wantea
ISS DANCERS WANTED $$1

Mall From Home Prea Oeta11s
Wrne To Oa1ly Checks, 3825 N1a
gara Onve A1 L&amp;k lngto n Ky

Nee&lt;o Ad, Middle~r\ OH 45700
MEET YOUR
COMPANION!
1·9CJ0.2BS.9287
EXT 8654
$2 99 Per M•n

Plar. .ahead:Ca\1
today for free esttmate

• Paid Nedical lnsurance
• Paid Vacabont

110

Opentng For Expeuen«;ed Manne
Techn1c1an. Apply At B•g Boys
Water To~s. Cheature Oh•o. 7-tO·

Losa Weight Fill· GuarlniHdl
A aate natural tar burmng cookie
revs up th e body' e metaboh sm
1 and suppresses the urge to eat
For complete tnlormanon please
send $1 00 10 Cook1e D1e1 30915

• Mowing (Residential &amp;
(ommenial)
e Weedeoling
• Tres Trimming
• Shrubbery Maintenance

Professional Floor
Covering

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

CPR

Persona Is

I~G~al~h~~~~
~'~OH~4~~~1~-----­

CARE

7~· ..6-0836

HVAC Insta llers Needed For Ex·
pand ng Company For lnstaha
11ons Of Healing &amp; Cooltng Equtpmena In Manufactured &amp; Au •
dent•al Hous•ng
• 3 Vrs Expenence Needed
• RSES Cer11fted

500 Da•ly Checks! p,Qcessmg

LARRY'S LAWN

CARPET
PLUS

E•PGftenced Saluperaon- Home
Furn11hmgs Carpet W1ndOW
Treatments Furn •ture, Reaume
To Tope Furn.ture, 151 Second
Avenue Galltpohs OH 45631

Wanted To Buy Used Mob•le
Homtl 7o40
0175 304 675

5965

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED Rootora, Cor
pen..-rt And Carpent&amp;f'l Helpe-rs
Rtlerenc:ts. Tral"'apor!lldon, Vahd
Ortv•rt Ltunse And Tools At·
qutred Chns111n s Conalruc:llon
Ire 8 ·5 P.M 74CH4e-451'

Now htrtng aate dnven, good
pa~, lte x•ble houfi Appl~ 1n per·
son at Dom no s •n Pt Pl eesant

Gentleman Seekmg Compans1on
ship From N1ce Female For Talks
Walks &amp; fr iendShip Sen d Re
plies To CLA 309, ao Gall1polts
Da•l~ Tribune, 825 T!)~rd Avenue

12/18/lfn

BACIIOIAID
BOlli IIBVICI
•Septic Systems
•Basemen1s
•Excavating

Clun lat• Uodal Cart Or
Trucks, 1~1)0 Models Or Newer.
Sm•th B\.IICk Pontiac 1900 East

11 0

Help W111ted

110

Baby smer Needed For Afternoon
Shift 2 Children Ages 1 &amp; 4 Rei
erences A Must I 740 379 94,2

005

HOWARD I;~
EXCAVATING CO.

'S

Mls11r 5enkt W hlaa
Outdttor "•-1••"•••1 Allllilllltt: CII1IIW 2(ydt
Stata ,Route 331 • At VIne • R•clne, Ohio
lrlw• &amp; Stratt•:

ANNOUNCEMENTS

40517

..

LIMESTONE

-·

E1timate•
448-4759

TONY'S• PORTABLE WELDING

OFFERING C.ANOll MAKING IUPPUEI
Take the pain out of
2 Tler Angel Birdbath
painting, and let me
Fountains, Includes pump,
lor St29 oo
do it lor you.
Candles, Refills,
Interior
Aeromatherapy,
Before 6 p.in.
Phone 740·992·3987
~
Wooden Angels,
leave message.
Free Estimates
Stufted Robblll &amp; Bear~
Alter 6 p.m
/fllOponTu11
-Frt
10-6
(740)985-4180
(lil~
Sot 10-6; Cloald Sun &amp; Mon
·
Owner John Dean
iJp..
~-., ~ ,M:,.. ~ ~ ~ 1:.
RL 124, Mlnorovttto, OH
Free Estimates
~~·~ ~ ttl,€~ rfi!!; 11!.•'!.1lji_!tl ~·!r tJJtj rtd!l !J!.t~l , L.--.:.74::fl.:;:99:::2::;;-4;::!::;59:..,_...1 '-----411;:::198.::;:.1:,;m::;o::;,::P;:;d..

No JOb Too Sm111

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

740·949-3006 .

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lVI\
IIi!• Garages, Pole Butldrngs. Roolrng, Stdtng ll!!~
' 1
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Ltcensed &amp; Insured

Eeeter Flowers,
Panalfa, Cabbage,

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

OHIO RIVER SERVICE

Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

•

/1 Contractors Inc.

CLIIIC

.

•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy- Accet Regulator Repair

1

' 360• Communications

113·W. 2ND ST.

Quality Service
For All Your
Garbage &amp;
Rubbish
Pick Up for
Realdentlal &amp;
Commercial
(No moos left behind)
Colt

RADIA,.OR -REPAIR

(614) 992-4277

,Pomeroy, Ohio 45169

Wanted to Buy

cte Phono

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive

Joe Wilson

N. Sayre

614-742·2138 ·

01/1 &amp;/1 mo

Remodeling

1998 Martin Street

CELLULAR PHONES
.....__

Joe

20 Yrs Exp • Ins Owner Ronnte :Jon.es

"Build Your
Dream"
•

'

G8111polll, Ohio 48831
• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances
•
20 YJII. Exp
- 1.-.. Owner Riel&lt; Jollnaon

7

M&amp;J

•

Tuppere Plaine, Ohio 45713

7401181-31,3

Custom Homes

•

CLELAND'S OUTDOOR
MAINTENANCE

RU80111i* Retn

74()..985-3831

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRINC SEASON

740-9411-2481
Pig &amp;r- ..... ..... .... ...'6.25
I~ Campleto Hw • . 15.60
II" RaWIIt .... .... .... ..'8.00

Umeltoue I Gravel
Sepllc Syatarna
Tral~r &amp; HOUle Sltn

Near Chester on St. Rt.

HUIIIIDS
GREENHOUSE

PINE GROVE
FARM FEED&amp;
SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grewe Ad,
Racine, Ohio 45n1

G..uiDEN SEED
eMULm
• GRASS SEED

'SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

William A. Barker, Jr.,
Assistant Executive Director of Administrative Services
Pleasant Valley Hospital
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

OPENING APRIL I

~TRUCKING

e

Compe~$1ve Salary &amp; Benents

li1l'l Pleasant Valley
If&amp;I Hospital

SAYRE

on od Call992·2156

&amp; Tl'lfiChlng

"'l'oar One Stop
Co10puter Shop~~
Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

Required:
rrr Bachelol;' of Science in Nursing
rrr Five years minimum experience at a senior management level
Preferred:
,.. Masters degree In Nursing or related field
Send resume an~ salary requirements to:

place

Heullng, Excavating

COMPirriR
PERFORMANCE
~~ UPGRADES

Assistant Executive Director of
Patient Care Services

To

90

FEftTIJ.jJZER

e

Career Opportunities

G&amp;W PWIICS AND SUPPLY
St. At. 7

Business Services

Help Wanted

110

Business Services
PICKENS
HAULING

CARD OF THANKS
W
ld like to
e wou
express our alncere
appreciation to all who ,
aulated In any way
during the llln111 end 1
death of our mother,
th
eat
grandma er, gr 1.grandmother and
great • great -grandmother, Talitha Jane
Casto. Thanks to the
ataff and emptoye11 of
overbrook Center Dr.
'
.
Chhabria and ataff,.
' Ewing Funeral Home
arid staff, Rev. Duane
Stutlsr, pallbnrera ;
D9nald Casto, Mark
Rarey, Jolin · W:
H111deraon, John A.,
Hendereon, Darrell
Henderaon and Larrx
Baker. Thanka to
friends and neighbor
lor floral arrange·
menta and carda.
,.
Dwaln and Wilma
Caetc;.
Katherine and Larry'
Chrysler and Family

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

'

Public Notice
••
_..:..:::::::..:.:::~:-:-:"'!l
The Potle for uld Elactl~
wilt open 11 8:3!l o'cloc}c
a.m. end romaln open ·~!~
7:30 o'clock p.m. a1 ur.
day.
By ordtr of the Baanli
of Elections~
of Molllll eaunty, Ohlei
tlonry L Hunter~
Chill,.,.,
Rita D. Smith,
Dlrec:tof,
Dlttd Morch 10, 1t8&amp;
(4) 7, 14, 21, 28 4TC
'

1

Card of Thanks
Public Notice
eolate hao been aoilgntd
tho following Audllor'o
Parcel Numbero: 11-01885,
11-01886 and 16-01887.
Seld real ootate woo
appralood et $12,000.00.
Sale' of uld real oolate to
be lor not le01 than twothlrda (2/3) the aforooald
velue. Caoh In
on dote ofoole.
Sold oalo lo oubjoct to
approval by the Common ·
Plooo court, Melgo County,
Ohio.
Jomoo M. Souloby
Sheriff, Melga County, Ohio
141 14. 21.28 3tc

Public Notice

Public Notice

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aprll21 , 1998

Tuesday, Aprll21 , 1998

10 Metgs lndulltnes Inc
307. Syracu ... OH

8011

&lt;5779 MOWING CREW LEAD

EA superviae cr~ ot 5 9 adutts
wnh monlal recardat..n and devel
opmental d•tabtht•es tn mow•no
60• acres H•ghwa~ Rest areas
General equ1pmen1 mamtenance
&amp; handhng sktll s a ph.1 t , exceQ ent
organ~zahon &amp; dr1v1ng skills need
ed FT seasonal wlother work op
portui'IUes Must be w• ll1ng &amp; able
to ob1a1n ODMAOO cer til•caho n

740·992-e881

Pos111on Opemng - Apar tm ent
Managtr(s) For Carr Street
Aparrments Jackson Ohto Mus1
Be Able To l:. lve In The Apart
ment Complex • Couple Preferred
Bu~ Not Requ •red L•Ohl Main
tenance And Hosekeepmg Du
ties H1gh School Gradual&amp; 1
Equ•vtent, Val id Oriver'l license
Res•denual Managemen1 E:.pen
ence Prelerred A~a r tment And
Uhhl1es Paid As Part 01 Ben e!•I
Package Send Resumes To
Sherrw Gordon Human Resource
Manger. Woodland Center. 3086
Stale Route 160 Ga llipol iS Ohio
·~1

:u~ ~~~~~~~· ~/~o~, 'A~e ~
FDf OtXID lnduslnal Supply Ar The
Lobby Desk May Also Fu Re
sume To 740· 441 32 55 Equal l

Opporlunrr Employer

Su nPius Home Health Services '

Inc

SunPius A Raptd l~ Grow1ng 0 1
vers1fled Home Health Agency :
Has Sev~Wal Openmgs For LPN &amp;
CNA s C'u rren1 LPN L1cense &amp;
CNA Cer11f1Catss Are Requlfed
Please Subrn~t Resume Wnt1 Sal
ary HISiory To

Ann C..,.poc; AN
SunPius Horne Care
10249 ChilliCOthe Pike
Jackson Ohto 45640
Truck dr~ve,. needed 10 del •ver
lloW&amp;fs 1n 24 Ryder truck COL &amp;
med1cal card requ~red call 740 1
247 2664

WANNA
TRAVEL
?

HAVE AIRLINE
STEWARDESS AmTUDE?
Establlshod Company Hu Open
.ngs For 5 Youhg Mmded G ~rls &amp;
Gu~s WhtJ Would l 1 ~t An Op '
po t tunl!y To Attend Co ncerrs
Sprottmg Evenrs And Go Tan t
n• ng On Cahlorn 1a Beaches lf
Tt'IIS Sound s Like Fun, Then Th1s
Is The Job For You Complete 2 1
Week Tra•nmg Provtded, We
Furmth All Transportation B•g 1
Bucka And Bonuses O•scusSid '
At lmerv1ew Only Those Who
Ca n Start lmmed•alely Need Ap
ply For lflverv•ew Today And A
Job To morrow Call 8 1!1 Dunn At
7-40 446 3373 E•1 2411 10 00 .

A M 5 00 PM Mondav And

Tuesday Only
WANTE D Compa nw 10 pr ovtde
cleamng for olhce .n Potnt 1
Pleasant lnd1v1d uals do not ap •

ptr 1-888 495 8565
WILDLIFE JOBS TO S:U eo ilfR

3585, Ext 8475 8 AM 9 ~M 7

Days fda.

u·1e

1

t

180 Wanted To Do

POSTAL JOBS TO 118 3!/lfR

Inc Benefits No E•per tence For
ANY 000 JOBS
App And Eum Into Call 1 800 Shrubs &amp; weed s trlnvne(! mulcl't
813 3585 Ell 6474 8 AM
1ng flower beds land scap •ng
P.M 7 Days tds,lf'K
s•d ewalk s edg +n ~
mowmg
:.::::::..:..:::R:!Iti:.,_::...,::::;;,N_u_,_.
- - -1
Esuma te s Call Bill

r

;6~~ :;~~

Lt..nll&lt;l Ptoctlcol Nurooo
Cortttlod Nulling AMIIIOnll

'

Inc Benelns Game Wa rdens
Sec unty Ma•nrena.ce Park Ran~ ,
era No b p Needed For App
And Exam lnlo Cali 1 800 813

7

2
ANY ODD JOBS

'
•
t

;

Fresh Challenges Lead1ng 10 ,
~
ProfesSional Growth a1 Hentage Shrubs &amp; !Hida tl'llnmtd, mulch- •
Manor \ Seeking AN a LPNs and lng, llower~s, landsnplnl). l
CNAI full and pAr111m&amp; lor -w ar.
sldtwllk r,:
glng.
mowing.
ou a ah1ft1 Rttpona•bllrt••s tn
etc Free
llmates Cell Bill
,tude duect cart, admin111rahon 304-t7&amp;-71t2
1
and documeRIIUon med•ca110ns
t
and treatmenls Must be.lteeneed 8&amp;8 Lawn Mowmg I Landtc:BP· I
and cert•lled in WV Tulllon rtlm lng Experienced Profeaslontl t
bur...,.nt t'lllllh dental vision
S...vtcn, Compedtve Rate~. , _
t'IHrlng, ul.\and 401(k~ with em
Ea tlmetea, 740 ·388 8010, 740 · 1

!

ploror con\nbullon otlorod Glon 256·I21D
l
mark·Gtnuta mtono quall tr •n llobrllitring Anrlimo tn Mr Homo •
all ohlnga Call 1304) 525 7622 or 3 Yoort Exportonco Knowtodp';
c:on•c:t

Horltltll Minor •

Of CPR 7.0·.W1 · 1~7

j

101Uih StrMI
,.
PO. Box 311
Hunun,ton, WV 25101 '

Depondobto man will mow, tltl
small gordon&amp;, poln\ pul up hay l
ole Frto Eollmaloo. 304-175: l
A Gtonrrtrk-Gontii~F'o&lt;:•iiY
31211
.
E~
'
------,;.;:~----1 Duttbulltrl Profoutanat Cioan· '
Rtllabla baft l lltlf needed lor tt'lg , Commercial And Rtalden•ll -:
9mo old, mull have reio&lt;onctl Col Allor 5:00 P.U 740·311-1422 :
:304:.;,;·B::,I5:..;;
7392
~-----'- I FrooEadrrt~

•

�Page 8 • The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday,April21,1998

The Dally Sentinel • Page

BRIDOJ:

NEA Crossword.Puzzle
37 Compaao pt.
at Ancltnt chartol
40 AMorb
42 IIMnlpracloue

ACRQSS

PH ILL~

1 PM1a of

ALDER

tnvelopea
• Oil grp.
1o Climb the

.ron.

mounlaln

Furn1tur1 repair, refirnh and resIOI'ItiOM, also custom orders.. onto
Valle~

Refmi sh•ng Shop, larry

PhillipS, 740-992-6578.
(ieorgea Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the m•ll JUSt call
384-1175-1957
~awn Mow1ng, No Lawn

One plus acres, 4 bedroom
house, 3 year old siding, imme-

diate possession, $15,000 cuh

Sunday Calls PleaH.

or nego tiate land contract. 517
East Main ~n Rutland, 740-9924514.

2.2 Acre• 4 miles ou•Jerry'l Run'
Road . • 12,SDO 304-075-1213.

Rodney Village II , " Bedrooms, 1
Bath Ranch Woth 241124 ll&lt;tlached

Too · Insulated Heated Garage, Family
Smalll 740· 379- 2502. For Estl· Room With Fireplace ln&amp;ert, Eat·

matu

llowing, trtmmlf'\0 or odd tobt , ba·
' byalnlng, any sh1 ft. Call Jim or
Paula •n Minersville, 740·992-

4286.
Need your hou5e t;leaned? Clillrrt·
patent, honest. C husuan house
cleaners, non -smok 1ng , non·
d1'1nk1ng Call 304 -675·6099 or
304-1175-5257
Prolesatonal Tree Sttfv1ce, Stump
Removal , Free Est1ma1est In surant;&amp;, Bidwell, Oh1o. 614·388·
9648, 614-367·7010.·
Shafer's Lawricare serviCe,
Esdmote~ Call740.,.41·03t8.
Will haul junk or trash away. $351
pickup load 304-675-5035.
W1ll Mow lawni In
741).44&amp;-3248

Gallia Counry,

210

Business
Opponunlty

tNOnCEI
CIHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends tl'lat you do buSI·
ness w1th people wou know, and
NOT to send money through the
ruail unlit you have 1nves11gated
'the ol!erlng.
HOT NEW DIET EARN THOU·
SANDS While losmg Weight
New M l.M Opportunity, CaJI 1·
888·857·9968

230

Professional
Services

Livingston's basement water·
proofing, all basement repa~rs
done , free estimates, llletim.e
guaranwe. 10yra on JOb expen·
ence :ll4..U75-2145

Wnh Water Tap $8.000, .740-258·
1789 Seroous lnqumes On!)'
Acr"ge - Pnme Bu11&lt;1ng Sltel Wooded , Flate To Rol ling . City
Schools 74D-44B-2885

320

Centenary Road, 1 Acre MI L
land Contract Poss1ble 114,000 1
M1le From Proposed School, 740·

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

10d0 mobile home, mostly fur·
nlshed, with addition and AC,
must move 1mmed1ately, 1500
080, 740·992·6115.
14 x70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONLY
$179 permo Free 11r &amp; free sk~rt·
1"0 1-888-928-3426
1981 Oakwood 14X65 $12,5a0
exc c:oncl 1988 Clayton 1"x70
wtheat pump $13,900. Will de·
liver local Call I&lt; &amp; I&lt; Mobile
Homes 304 -875· 3000 between
Bam-5pm

1987 Schultz 14x70 axe. cond .

new carpet throughout, central
tr~c .

Ask1ng $10,200

304 ~ 773 ·

5176

'

3 Acres Recent ly landscaped

In Kitchen Wilh Oak Cabinttl,
Fenced In Back Yard Read~ To
MtMtlnl $68,000, 740-24S.5048.

au, vented gaa heater, all elec·

FINANCIAL

lnqur~es Only, 740-245-5064, No

1989 14X72, 2 Bedroom•, 2
Baths, 3110 Acre lot, Heat Pump,
Air, Carport, Back Port;h, Porter
7&lt;0·388-8234

71

Several two acre lots for aate on
New L1ma Ad , 740-742·2803

360 •

Real Estate
wanted

Modern 1 Bedroom Apanmant ,
740-44&amp;-0390.

Cash Pa•d For Land In Gallla
Counly, Blackburn Realty, 740 ·
446-0008

,,2

·Tori~·i: ~~~::·o7~';:;J Doberman Pups, AKC, Female,
'.'

~~--~--~~-----1-·4~1--1~·-19----------~--

~ Hobart confection oven,
· round tables &amp; cha~rs.
each ; 11r hockey table,
t;&amp;ndy vending
I ,
mise restaurant items,
451&lt;4 ask for Christine or
·massage

labs AKC Great Hunters, Great

Pets, S225 Black, $325 Cho ·
colate. 74()..258.0172.

NOJICE
French City

Ptt Grooming

.ET

c.J.

AERATION MOTOI'III
Repa~red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Cal Ron Evana. HI00-537-9528

Tara Townhouse Apartmanrs,
Very Spac1ous, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Floors, .CA, 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, I
Pauo, Start $3501Mo . No Pets, !'
Lease Plus Secunty Deposit Riqulr&amp;d, 814·,.48·3481, Even1ngs.l
740...46-0101
•
I

:_-::--"-::--:--:::--....,--J
' Lazy Boy Recliner Bladwin
.&amp; 13 Window Shutter&amp;', 68
&amp; 62 Inches long , 740·2455064, No Sunday Calls Ptease.

Movie Cam Corder Model127,
Used 3 nmas, Almaat loke Brand
Newl AU AttaChments, $600, 74044HI387.

Furnished
Rooms

MTO Sr"lp rear tang 11t1er 12hp
39• cut MTO lawn mower ladder
rack tor rullslze p1c1c'-up rruck
·89._5-..;.30;...53...;...-:------1
-304-

Now Oponl

pomtments. 650 Second Ave
Ganopolos, OH 7&lt;0·446·1528.

Purebred Siberian Husky pup ·
p1es, 3 males, 3 females, blue
eye s, onad sks.dvery cut e;:f eopl ~
or 1ente ' rea Y now,
'ca
7 0 992 5144
" · ·
·
wanted to buy - sohd gray lemale
cat, shorlhair, 74 1). 992 36

1 0

570

-6°

Musical

580

FruitS

V ·1

&amp;

-

1st Time Buyers, E·Z Financing
2 or 3 Bedroom Around $.200 per
month. Call credit line 1· 800·
948-5878.

PAINT PLUS HARDWARE

Cypress Mulch···3cuft Bag 3
ISB.BG
. Top Soii-.. 40LB Bag 3

1~.:.:..~.::...------­

' sug . Ponong Sooi···40LB Bsg
lor $5.89. Peat Humus .. ·40lB
1

garage, buildmg, etc? Call Vicky,
740-843-5510

All real estate advenas1ng 1n
this newspaper is sub]KI to
the Federal Fair HOUSifiQ Act
ol 1968 which makes~ ollegal
to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or diSCnmlnat•on
based on raoo, cotor1 religion.
sex lamUial Status or national
origin, or any 1ntent1on to
make any such pnJference.

263-21!411

25 hp 4X4 d•esel Shenniu vactor
With end loader, has blade, plow,d1ac,' cultivator, poll hole dlgg•r
and bru1h hOg, $7000, 740·9854222 days or 740 ·985·3&lt;12
8Yenlngs
Farmall Cub Tractor With Cultiva·
tota &amp; New S•de Oreaaer, 740·
258-«150.

limllaHon or dlscnmlnatlon •

Farmall Super M W1de FronJ
Power Steering John Ooare 1.1
S3,5PQ Each, 740-3111-8381.

This newspaper wiD not
knowingly accept
actvernsements for real estate
which is In VIOlation o1 the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings

Get~'

85 grinder/mixer, hammers
never a.uned, a~~:catlanl condition
304·273-4215.
'
John Deere l1 2 traclor w/48.
blada $1,000 OBO 304· 173·
5965

advertised In this newspaper
arll available on an equal
opportunity basis

Massie Ferguson 1010 4 WO
Woth Belly Mower, $5,999 080,
740·258-1539, 740·258-1371 .

REAL ESTATE

t982 Cutlass Supreme, 2 0, 280
V8 Good Condition, $1,900 Or
BeotOtfO!, 740-992... 568.

1984 Olds Cutlaas Supreme
Brougham p$1, tinted windows.
Alpine stereo S 1,500 304·675·
5019 af1er Spm or leave mea·
sage
.

t

1985 Dodge Diplomat 318 IUIO,

o4dr, no tult, runs oood, driven
elm!)'. 304-117....821 .
1987 POntiac Grand·Am "cyl,
auto, AIC, new tlret, e~~:c. cond .
$1,900. 304·895-3Zl7 or 304·8953080

' ' 2Ft.

1995 Polans Sl 750 Water Crall
W1th Tra1ler, 740 ·446· Z496 ~her
41'1.1

I'OPUI.ATI0/'1 IS .fTtAI&gt;ILY pfCirfASIItiG. OU, 01'11-Y 140Pt
IS $0Mt .fOICT Of tfEAt..Ttf NAIItiTEitiANCt
OlriSAI'IIZATt0/'1.

\

Two Ma11ey Furgeson uactora,
(1)
gao, (2) SOMF doeael,
on both : 740 · 742·
Your .l.rea John Deere Dealer
'For Residential And Commercial
lawn Equipment. Compact Ulilitw
Tractors From 20 To 38 HP All
Sizo1 Of 4 WO And 2 WD farm
Traclora, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skid s - Loade&lt;s.
With U1 About Flnonclng AI Low
As 2 8% On lawn Tractors And
low Rate Fmancing On New And
Used Equipment. Carmteh'ael's
Fatm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740·
448·2412t.aaq.594·1111 .

C-

630

Livestock

THE BORN LOSER

1g97 Jeep Grand Charok•• lar·
ado. Loaded , 12 1ooo .,,,.,,
$24,500, 080, 304-875-3!27.
Bad Credit, No Credit. Bankrupt·
cy? W&amp; Can Helpl Bank Finane·
1ng On Uted Vehillel, 740-4410607

Credit Probl&amp;"lll? Wt Can Help.
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Veh•cles, No Turn Downs, Call
Vod&lt;ie, 740-446-:1187. •
Upton Used Cars Rt 82·3 Ultet
South ol Leon, WV. Financing
Avaola~e. 30...,51, t089.

\511-\f Tl\I~D
Tit#£ Tf\15 lo'OOTI-\ IT'5
rdli ~5511-16! '

tl'E:~ ~TIOtfr

1970 Chevy TtUCk, Runl Good
$400,080740-.0020.

WANTED TO BUY:
1988 •
Through 1972 Cnevetle Or Elca..l
mlno ' Console, Can Also Bt A
1970 Through 1972 Uonte Carlo
Console "MUST BE HORSHUE
SHIFTfR TYPE" Phone· 740r
4 1...;·1.:;!6::3::..- - - - - - ' - .;.4:.;
Campers &amp; ·
. Motor Homes

0100

U90 Chevy Silverado 360 engine, long bed, auto, loaded
$4,!500 304-713-5139 or 304-713·

5039
Sale Or Trade 1994 S 10 PickUp, LS Packaga, V-11, Sharp' 740·

4-..

-.

COULl:! WE

H~IIE A ~E Nr'lr1E?
•cHICKEN" 1'\ENIS

ARE .111NOII.

LE,O.G.uE"' TE"I'\S ..

LoAMI ! H- 1'\EAIIS.
COWMOI.Y! WW\T

THUE ARE "BUSH

LEI'IG.uE"' TEAMS ...

WE 'RE 1'1
'ROTIS.5EIUE
L.EI\t;UE•
TEAl"\ .

SORT OF lt&gt;ENTITY

tS TH ..T!

1g13 23ft Dodge Concord motof
home, 4.0 Ona generator. ne~. .
tnt&amp;, gas &amp; electric heal, m•· •
crowave, double-door retrigera10r, .

•

•leeps a •. walled sweeper, runs
good. •4.000 . 30&lt;-682·3237. AltarSpm.

30 Wllct . . . .

4 Stroke

nege)lve

• 4 2• J 8 75

~ woman

"' 7 6 52

34 Muolcol

Sou Ill

35

a.

4NT

n

20 Opere rolt •·
21 Sprue. up •

Romen

atateam1n

23= :·

22 Shoota from· ·
• hidden
.:

11 -Scott
12 Sllncllon
13 Blrd'e beek
18 C.l. abbr.

In hHH

(2-.)
8 Actor Jannlnge

24 Cruyaee-.
25 Femelt
no11111ve
27 Hila lightly
. 28 S-ehapld

'·

molding

•·

29 Driven
":
elenltnaly ~
31 Hung dOim, .,
33 Slngtr . Dlaftll- •

.ooCn

Being optimislic and happy
should be one's appro~h to life, I
feel. However. lhere are always some
pessimists arou~d. Yel ro~rely have I
read anything so depressing as this
comment by Eric lleme: "Human life
is mainly a process of filling lime
unit I lhe arrival ol1death; or Sanla
Claus, wilh very lillie choice, if any.
of whal kind of busmess one is going
to lransacl during the long wait. "
After today'&lt; deal, though. I
expecl the declarer, New aulander
Malcolm Sims, woold have agreed lo
a beer or lhree wilh Berne.·
Afler a brisk auclion lo seven
· hearts. Sims had II top lricks: one"
spade. ·four "hellf!s. one diamond and
live clubs. So, he needed two dta. mond ruffS in llie dummy. On. say. a
spade lead. declarer might adopt one
of lhese basic approaches (slight
varialians are possible). First. spade
ace. diamond ace. 1rump lo hand. ruff
• a diamond.lrunip 10 hand. ruff a diamond, club 10 hand. and draw lhe
missing lrump. This requires beans 10
split 3-2. Altemalively. spade ace•.
diamond ace, club lo hand, diamond
ruff. trump to hand, diamond ruff,
dummy's last trump. club to hand,
and draw (rumps. This line needs the
clu~ to be 3-2 (or one defender short
in bolh clubs and heans) bul can handle trumps 4 0 I.
However. Wesl led -a lrump,
destroying lhe communications for
lhe fonner approach. Now Sims had
to adopt I he second plan: As you can
see, lhough, Wes1 ruffed lbe second
round of clqbs 10 defeat 1he conlract.
Unlucky. especially as lhe Kiwis•
oppdnems at lhe 1977 Far Eas1
Championships had stopped in six .•

,;

41 Fumbltr'e ·

42

exc18m11101\"'
w..tem · •'
llemlephere"'

•

aun.
43~:

.

;

44 ntlt lor
Alhaftll
4&amp; Pari of RSVP
47 Dlmlnullva '
aulflx
."·
48 EXIIII
''
50 Actor

Spa'*

52 Aulhor

_

Umbtrlo- .

53 0ver there '

.·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

'

r

Luis Campos

C~ Cipher eryptovrams are crt~ai.O from quotahons by ratnou1 pt0pt1t pt~st and preaen~
Each tlttet lfl h c't)her Slands 101' another TCJCMti'J dUll K equett: S

. .

.

' I U U

XLR

UL IG R
YBLA
YN,

PL .JNGL

IGL
IRO

KVGH'CL

KBJ&gt;!FUO

VBLA

GFRRHRD

SBA .- '

0 H L

VN

J G N X,

WIXLK

s a.r v

I

I R 0

•

VBFGPLG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm not buddy-buddy wtth the plllyers. lllhey
buddy, lei them buy a dog·.- Wholey Herzog . baseball manager

need a .

,r..

=~:~~, S@\\Q\llA- ~ £~s·
lor
Ofour
Rearrange letters of the scrambled words be1

WOII
IAMI
CIAT I . POllAN -~.:..·--~

- - - - - - lolllotl

low

10 form four simple wordo

SLEHUB

I II I I I

I

~

••

t:

f.'·

L I NE T

:~:

0-.:-P_H..-;I• .._
t--rS_C10
3

f

I 1
I
'--...J_.__.__..,__..._--'

3

If I .could reach the weight
I never thought I'd be, I would
only have to lose thirty .m ore

~==~~~~=u~r~M=~Is:=.~~~~=N=~I=-~~- ~-i:~;:~~= ~~~h:h~~~~~~ "==~~
V

PRINT NUM8EIEO lETTERS IN

THESE SQUARES

oft UNSCIAMILE AIOVE UTTUS

V

t'

10 GEl ANSWER ,

I• I• I•

SCI•MLm ANSWERS

Choice - Frown - Haunt- Misfit - WITH IT
il high school teacher telling the

I remember

•

~~20:.98

class

that an education should also tnclude 'the knQWiedge of
what -to do

ITUESDAY

ROBOTMAN

1993 35 Fl. lnnsbrook Travel
T1p Out Llv•ng Room, 2
Bedrooms, Full Bath, CA. Self.
Contained , Awn1ng &amp; Deck.
Owned . Bw Non-Smokers, Like
New, Must So&amp; I Call Aller 5 I'M
740·&gt;146-1758.
.

Home

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaramee.
;Local references furnithed Ea .tol&gt;lllhed 1975. Call (740) 4&lt;6 ·
0870 Or ' ·800·287·0578 Roger1
Wal8'proofing.

.

1195,

'

.

CIC GeMnll Homo Molnl.ntnc•- Painting, vinrl aiding,

Clfp&amp;ntry, doota, wlfiiJ:bbi. ......
- rlpOir
MelFor
~.. Htimate
call Cho~
740·1102·
11323.

840

ElectriCal and

Rlfrlgtrltlon
Anldlrtllll or OOmrnerc:ill wtrWla.

""' HrYa or ropoQ. Muw (1:

c:enaed electrlc:lan. ' Ridenour
Etectricol, WV000308, 34U..7f.

!718.

10 make you _reel ~ secure about 21) Be hopeful regarding the outyour fulure. Be mindful of today's come of evenls today and don't lei
~
. ABTRO·OBAPH
need•. bul also keep one e)!e foc:u.'!ed outward aP.Jlearances shatter your
-wed~y. Aprit22. 1m
- on IOIIIOrfOW,
failh. lady Luck L'OUid come through
Interesting developments cduld
LEO (July 23•Aug. 22) Favors for you when you need her the most
be in the offing for yoo in lite year · you - k today will be tmaled wilh
CAPRICORN (Del:. 22-Jan. 19) II
· ahead. Your imaginalion, creativity compassionide consideration. How- IQOks like you might receive some
and resourcefulness will blehd. ever, don't reqap~ something from good news that could put you in a
. allowina outstanding thinss to hap- 111101ber for whicll yoo do not have an very happy fnune of mind. II will also
. pen.
.
immcdillte need.
inake you an easier person for Olhers
'TAURUS (April 20.May .20)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) to get along wilh most of 1111, week.
Things could work aut ntlhcr SIOOO!h- .There's a speeial friend with whom
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
- ly today when you functio_n as a go- yoo always -m to have luck when This is a good time to analyze your
. betWeen for two groups w1th a com- yoo do 1hings together. This combi- linancial posilion in delail. lr you're
mon cause. Taurus. treat yoo15Cif 10 . nalioo has 1015 of good vibes. iq it, swtil;tg to accumulllle small surplu$a birthday gift. Send for your Aslro- - proving that il'1 llill worthwhile. . et, lry' lo devise ways to put your
.Orlp'h pm!iclions for lhe year ahead
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Today money to work for you.
·bY tMilina 52 and SASE ~ ASiro- you'll find co-workers are ilill will- · PISC~ (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) Yoo
Oriph. do this newspaper. P.O. Box irig to do lhings for you to make lif.e- could be a bil more fonunarc than .
·I 758. Murray Hill Slation, New . easier. Be sure to say thank you, and usual loday in sihUIIions where you ,
Yort. NY 101~. Be SIR 10 SlaiC don't fO!Jct lo repay killllnesses lal- · are the person in cttarse. Don't be
·your rodill: sian. ·
·
· er.
·
reiiiCiallt to !ISSUmc a leadership, role
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your . SCORPIO (Ocf. 24-Nov. 22) A if lhings·are not being done ~rc1t1nces of 1Chievif111 sevml impor- positive llllitud!: can make il a beuer ly.
"rant objecli- ..e quire JOOd today. wortci for youklday. Visualize your- I AR~ (Martfi21-Aprill9) Some
Tab advanllfC of lhis bY foculina on • self as a winner in sihUIIions where confic!en~al inf0111111ion yoo've been
lhe pjcmlf with meaninafut effort.
you seldom do well -and you'll usimtllllng can be psed advanraC-'NCER (June 21-July 22)Con- whlll mea11.
.
aeously today. However, do not lip
tftl can be liken IC;IdaY
SAGrtTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc. your hand prematurely.
. .

'

-.o Par11 And &amp;anrl..: All
Nome llnlnd1 &lt;lYtt 25 YMnr E•J*Itnc• All Work Guonontoad,
Franch Cltr l.tartog, 740·448·

•r

9

.,..+~~+-1~+---l

Tr~1ler,

1

'•

curwd
plenltlng
kind of

WITH IT.

\

Improvements

I

VIIHI'I

Pass
All pass

Classified Ads

1990 Eddie 15' 4 880 Flettwing
t 7' .l.wning; 1i75 Mallard 27'
Awn ing ; 1972 Arisrocrat 20' ;
1985 Chrysler New Yorker 4 Cy·
IInder, Turbo, ti9G Bob McCor ·
rmcJo, 740-446-1511, Gollipolls.

1810

'

meaaurt

Pass

There's no
way around it,

~WHO LEFT TilE DOOR OPEN'?''
TAAT~ Nl'f NEW PIIILOSOf'll'{..

1984 Yellow Stone Camper, 35', 2

1_ _ _- : - : - - ' - -

Doktlb Sttd Corn. Kor Farm1.
Call 304·875-t508 II.No AnM61
LHvoMtlllgt.

Farm

moron?

7

(abbr.)

A
1

••tru.

SERVICES

111N Ford 1=,1150 Xlt 4.,, IOided,
&lt;1800 rt)lle1, 120.7150. May ontor·
•In te&amp;Mt tfUCk trade, 740·GD2·
8154.

exam

L--l.L-....L---.1.--'L--'---' you develop lrorn Slap No. 3 below.

sleeps 4,
ext;. conct
S1 ,800. Call K&amp;K Uoblle Ho~l
304-1115-3000 8am-5pm.

· 1974 Dodge Motor Home Class •
,c . $3,995, 740-446·2445.

650 SHd &amp; Fertilizer

6

axpfoolve

1994 Cbmer Pop-Up EM ..IIenl
,l::ondlllon, SleeP, 5 ·8, Awning,
Stovo, Slnk . $2,800, 740 · 256 ·
i886tl-Message.

1g95 Dodge Diesel· 4WD, loaded,
03.000 IC:tUII miltl. tiCellent
condiloon, 122,000 form, call 740·
992-tDSO.

compoolllon
Epic poem

36 Powerful

1893 Outt:hmen loko N.W, 30 FL
Sleopl e. Loodtdl StO,OOO 740·
24S.5t)8.
•
•

After

5

32 Quarnolaome

1818 Ract~aHOft Motor Home,
Fully Con18lned, 57,000 lilies 28
Ft. S5,500, OBO, ·740· 4&lt;6•8790
Aher 5.

(queen size bed). full size living &amp;
k1tchen, new full size stowt &amp; ref.,
new c., pel. vinyl, an Windows
have custom Kirsh bllrtdsllam ·
'bergay, must see to apprec•ale,
seroous calli only, $6500, 740·
992-11113, 740·992-2015. '

1989" S·tO V·8, Auto, $3,205;
1981 GMC St5 V-8, Auto, AC ,
$2,495: 1992 Ext.nded Cob 5-10,
S3.U5; Cook Motoro. 140-446·

1: 1'\I:AN,

790 ·

1974 Ford Ton truck 1211 treared
With 11det, runa good. $300.
304-882-3237. After 5pm

saso.

BIG NATE

1

1expando's, full size . bedroorT\

1886 Ford Ranoer. 'cylinder 5
speed,
740-992·6559.

PN'EJt~I~S TIP!

=..:·:;.'~:..::=:....
· ----- ,

.:.;;:.::;.,;..:,;~.;....--::....::::..____

bed

,.l 1"0LD '10U OOT TO SI(J P 11\€ "''

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radlarors~ 0 &amp; R Auto,
R1pley, wv 304·372·3933 or,. ,
800 2~9329

198ot ~Coleman Jameston pop-up,

720 lhlckllor Sale

~

TH\~

(:I.;NJ'(S, 1-111."1/E.'«).) :£01

1996 Chrysler Concord 2g,300 760
Auto Parts &amp;
mo les, laarher onterlor, loaded.
Accessories
asking pay off price Days 304- 1----,.--,,.-,.-,.--~
675·1932 or evenings 304· 885- 24 ' nr tra 1ier with too lbox and
3615
ramps, 740 -742·2675

,996 Monte C8rlo,. Black, leathlf',
loaded, 33.000 Miles, 740-3792666

3

By Phillip Alder

o

4P,

27 YOUI)llller

K 3 2

anta Claus
was out to lunch

New, $8,000 740-446-4782, Galh·
polls, Ohio

00 1

1gga Monte Carlo LS Like New,
PW, POL, CD Plaiar, Tinted
Windows, Cellular Phqne Hook$12,500, 740·256-6:347

•

318efora, to a ~

REPORT
ll

1989 Dodge Daytona, lOO,OOO
t Ft. Uarada With .
4 3
1996 9
mo!es, runs QOod, naedo minor ra, Mercruoser And Traoter, Like Now,
2 000 740 99
~"'"· 1 • • • 2-SS59.
1996 15 Ft. "•tumlnum Sea
1990 Dodge Oartona t27,268 l.tymph Baos Boats Wolh 30 HP 1
j
"lies,
Blua
With
Grau
lntetior,
'Evenrude
&amp;
Trailer.
,
loaded
M
,
Two Doors, $4,000, 740-446·8358 Reod1 To F11h, 1995 20Ft Bay-o
Evenmgs 8-9 P.U Weekends
liner Cuddy Wuh •.3 Utrcruiser, !
&amp; Traller low Hours: 19gO 18 F1
1
1992 Buick leSabra limited 4 Playtyme Sk1 Boat With 88 HP,
Doors, loaded, 79,800 Milas, Evenrude &amp; Traiter: 1980 19 Ftt
$9,295 080 740-36HI157
Vokong Deck Boat Compleltll Re·•
conditiOned lnter~or With 170 HP!
1992 Plymouth lazar Auto, AC, M•cru•ter &amp; Tralltr, t Used 5 11,
Cru1se. Ttnte~ Wmdows, New 2 HP ':lohnson , Used 40 HPt
T~res , Great Gas Mileage I 304· Mercury, 1 Used 50 HP Mercuryt
458-1621,740-388-8997
HP Mercury. NeW:
1 Used
1..
d 90
B 1 •ew Odyase•
1993 Ford Thunderbird 43,900 Pontoon
Mara a Boal5,
oa ' J ''S Manne 740·•
"
U11as, Excellent Co!"dlllon, Load-6
.
256 160
od, 740--2117.
1=:::.:..:.:::...,......,.~---~
Kawaoalti STS Jef ako, still unde~
~::~ed~o:,~~ A: ~::.' ,:,':g~ warranty, three seater, 83 hofl&amp;·
power, bought new July or ·g71
Neg 740 · 379-83&amp;4.
thtee matt;hing Kaw81aki 1kl
1995 Plwmouth Neon 4 00 ; 1, ves11 and trailer all go wtth it,
Green Woth Spoiler Automatic, SSOOO. 740·94H203 or 740-949t
Air, 55,800 Mile a, 15,300 080, 2045, will constder trade for a
goodportoonboat
740 .~. 74 0..256~67.

1996 Dodge Neon,' 27,000 Miles,
2 Door Sport Coup, S7,099 OBO,
740·256-1539, 740-258·1371 .

• 10 9 6 4
• 9 8 7

23 Ototreu elgnel

Opening lead: • 9

LE'rS SEE TH'

Wuh Tra1ler, lois Ql Extras I. like

1989 Camara RS. must sell,
$2000, 740·742-21120.

1 Repulallon ·
2 Future ettya.'

Pass
Pass

FIRST II

1991 Yamaha Wavarunner Ill
740·446-1751j, Atter 5 P.M .
1992 Cobia RIJ"nabout 17

DOWN

28 Fnonch

Pass

.BARNEY

196g Sea Imp 19 11211. deep·V.
Datge w/sand Interior, 6cyl,
l90hp. Marcrw~n~&amp;rd motor,
w1th tra11er. Hle~ers &amp;
bu ......... $2,750. 614·446·3814.

1988 Plymouth Sundant;t New
Brakes, ,New Tlfes. Good Car,
740-245-5697

57 Sllrl

Vulnerable: Bath
Dealer: South
Wesl North East

&amp; Motors

Boats

5t RtlmburHd

East

• Q ir 5
9AJ63t Q9 3
rr. A Q 10

1996 Yamaha Kod1ac 4~.., Exr..el1
lent Condition, 54,500, 740·2561
1993
;

54 Appunod
55 Talent 19enta

West

"' 4

1991 Honda.2SO. • Wheeler Lot(
OfExtra'sl740·441 -1419

750

A

o ' KI0642

1983 Suzuki 650 street bike •
runo groaL $400 304E6·9003
'

foro cauH
15 Fool'a gold
16 Ptrlalan
HUOn

Ruler (abbr.)
19 Untidy peraon
20 Sign 11 check)

rt.K· J983

610
Farm ,Equlpment
-_;~___..:..,..:.,...:.,.______-J-__...;________

Bag 3 tor 14.89 Cow Manure·.. •
40LB Bag 3 tor
lava 2 Farmall Cub W1th Cultivatora 1
Ford BOO, Ford 6&lt;1, Ford 861,
Rock··· 18cuft. Bag
Chop···50LB Bag $3 89. Yellow M F 35 Ooeaal ·2· 135 M.F., 2000
. On1on Seus .. ·$.691b. Whue On1on Ford 0!8&amp;el P.S.. ·2· 3000 Fords,
Sets···$.791b/ We Carry Bulk 3600 Ford 01ese1 P.S., Post Hole
Vegetable Seeds &amp; Bedd1ng 01ggers, Grader Blades, Plows,
Plants" ..~4-87S.4084
Dirt Scoops, Bush Hogs, Flmsh
--~;;_...;.__ _ _ _ _ _ JMowora, 3 PT. Rototlllora, Hay
Pomeroy Thr1lt Shop now buy1ng Teddarl, N.H 56 Hay Rakes, N H
large outstde tova and baby Hay B1nd, B9Ae Spears, Manure
1tems, walkers, toddler car seats, Spreader, Lt.F. D11c, Boom Poles,
etc . Tuesday through Fnday, 740· Side Dresser For Farmall Cub Or
992·3725
140, Parts For &lt;ord &amp; M.F KasPrlmeatar· SG9 mstaHation wtth sel't Tractor &amp; Eqylpmenl, 1 Mile
$50 rebate Fuat month free wilh Wttt. Moizer Ho1pltal, Jackson
Pike, G•llipoha, OH , 740-446tree mov1e channels, StarOne IIQOe, 740-446·1787.
spec1al, S41 Installation, 800 -

Need your house cleaned, yard,

1980 · 1990 Truckl Fot StDOIII
Seized And SOld
Locely This Month.
Trucks, 4JC4'' EIC.
1-800·522·27:rl, X 31101.

EEK&amp;MEEK

4t Acifeea Dahl
51 Mexican cactua

17

• K Q 10 5

1982 Goldw•no Gl Motorcycle:
High Mll~l!''• Ex~lent Condll•on,
7&lt;10·446-9T.sl Aftolr 5:00 P.l.t.
•

1989 c ... u~r 2.0 • Cylinder
Auto, Aor, Hogh Miles, $1 ,500,
Xl-4·675--1310 ,

Instruments

Now Traolers In Stock 5x8 Tolt
bl
5x10 Till 76'116, 76""8 Ft.
ege a es
•• ~
1). •• 1 8
4----·~:.:..:.:.:·_74....;._4_-..;.·--.1:..7------l
Georgia red. while and bush
Now That Sprmg Is Here It
sweet potato plants, call 740 ' 742'
T1me To Stock-Up On Your Avon 2?7Jor 7"0.. 7" 2· 2220
Skin-So-Soft Mo111ure Suncare
Plus, To Order Call Pam At 740·
245-5443.

Houses lor Rent

2 46Bedrooms. Remodeled, 740·
4
2470

condlllon , $995 740-

1978 HD Sportsler LIM Mllftge:
Very Sharp, Runs Good, Ne.._
T1re 1, Batterl8t, Chrome. Pnmarw•
cover, New
Chain,
:::_:..:::;_
__
.....:;.740-441-16!12.
_ _ _ _ ••

OHt -118

• A J 7

lor Sale

--=----:=------1 Protess1onal Groom1ng by Ap·

Small apt 3 rooms &amp; bath,
11es paid except electric
07S.1385.

'--'---,------1

;;,;i~ ~~~~~~hi~g J Blua/Rust, 740-397-2t2e.
I am looking b; two '-rre11 11 you
the person who bought them
the Ark about one wear ago
please call me !I Ferrets names
Brandw and Tetkle Phone {740)

RENTALS

410

;:;~3l2od

North

~~\~=··
, . . a--"'.. _

·ae Suzuki 50 four wheeler, new

1879 LJ82 Red Corvtne, ~7.000
Original
Mllel ExceAentCondiUon
(740)31!1-50311

Now Takmg Application•- 35
We11 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartm.nto $2g51Mo .. 740-446·
0008.

450

ex~l·

lent shape, rod&amp; one time, $9GS,

Autos for Sale

$1600 firm, 7C)..QG2·6430.

meroy, $3200, 740-843-5283,
leuve message.

Now ~lltng appliCa tions ro·r mo bile liorr'le lots. all aizes Countrw
Lane Mobile Home Park Galhpo .
los Feroy, WV 304-675-5421

50 motorcycle,

door, runt good, good condition,

Empty ku On Sprmg Avenue, Pa·

I wal!ers. Home Near Comple-tion With Mx50 Ft Metal Garage
Bu1ldmg Insulated, Also Trallef
Pad Set·Up, 2 + Acres, Rura l
Water, Approx. 7 M1l11 From
Galllpo~s, 740-256· 1335

o

'83 Cadillac sedan DeVIlle, faur

446·1736

,991 Redmal') Breezewood 3
Bedrooms, 1
Baths, 1·4x70
$12,000 F~rm, 740-367-7094
1995 Clayton Mobile Home 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Gas Fire·
plac;e, Garden Tub On Rental Lot,
F1nancing Available, 740 -245·
9738Leeve Message

·~Yamaha

Large 3 bedroom apartmen!,
Thtrd St. , Rac1ne, Oh , $300 I
month plus depostt &amp; ulllllies,
740·247·4292.

•

12 Woodchopper
14 One who diu

TRANSPORTAT ION
2 &amp; 71 10ths Acre lo1 On Blnclc
Top Road. Counry Water, Senous

45Lton'ename
4&amp;Dogdoc

I

••
---·--- - -------·- - - - ·- -

APRIL 21 1:

�I

'

Page 10 " Tht Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesd

·· . Tuesday, April :21 , 1998

----------------~----~-------------

Weather
•

Dear Tom: That car-splitting
racke t yo u hear is . resounding
applause.
Thanks for a letter that most
Landers
1'1'}7, 1..1,_ AnfdU TirntS
assuredly pleased a lot of readers
• SY"'iiu~.e ~114 Crellun
today. But let us not lose sight of the
Syr"hu c
fact that th~ world is sllrmking and
students who can speak Japanese,
Dearl\nn Landen: When I saw Russian. German or Span ish are
the letter from. "John in Grand June - going tu have a distinct advantage.
tion, Colo.," I knew I had to write.
Dear Ann Landers: My mother
He asked you to print an essay by is 90 and has been a widow for 15
C harles Osgood called " Pretty years. She is bright, energe tic and a
Good." That essay was more than · wonderful person.
"pretty good." It was excellent.
A few years ·ago, Mom was totalWe are turning out students who ly bamboozled by someo"" who told
can't balance a checkbook. can't her she had won a sweepstakes but
make. c~ange frQ!n a . cash .reg ister had to pay taxes or lawyers• fees or
and can I understand d ~rcc tl on s from some such. Over the course of the
·a manu al. The private and religious.. next two years, she serit this man
schools consiStently beat the pubhc ·thousands of dollars. ·
schools in test scores.
. .
When I discovered what was hapWe need to get bac k to baSJcs m pening, I e~ pl ai ncd to her th at thi s
math. Enghsh, science and ·geogra- was a scam, but she insisted she.
phy. We need to drop the bilingual ' knew what she was doi ng. I called ,
course'S .When my grand father c.a~c the FBI, and the man is now in jail.
toAmenca from Italy. the hrstthm g convicted of bilking Mom out pf
he did was learn English. He didn' t $70.000.
demand that everyone else speak
Now, I've discove red she's at it
'Italian. .
· ag~in . Mom gets t()ns of junk mail
The attitude today is if you don't and responds to all of it. She admitwa nt to do something or you don't .ted yesterday that site sent someone
meet the require ments for a job. yqu money but refuses to di scuss it fursue and claim "unfair business prac- ther. I telllier these thi ngs arc generticcs" or "discrimination...
ally fraudul ent and clip every article
It's time we turned America I can find on the subject. but Mom
around. If you want a good job. stay just smiles and does what she waills.
in scho(ll. If you choose to drop out, I've had her lawyer, financial advi's·
OK, hut don't cxpecllhc rest of us II&gt; er and doctor, as well as the local
support .you. -·-Tom in Mesa, Ariz.
police and the FBI; talk to her, but to

Ann

-----'-Time Out

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family · and C~msumer Scl!tncell Commqnlty DeveloP.·

.ment
• Olestra is the generic name for a
new caloric-free fat replacer. It was
recently approved by the Food and
Drug Administration for use in
snack foods such as potato chips,
corn chips, crackers and tortilln
chips. Some food products may have
the brand name Olean indicated 01)
the label. Olestra has the same lexturc: tastes, acts, and looks like the
regular fat thai the snacks arc usual ly fried in.
.
Oicstra is, made from table su~ar
and vegetable oil. Its molecule" i£
much larger than normal molecules.
Because of its size. .it is unable to he

no avail. I've written three times to
that junk mail ad~ress you've pri nted and asked that her name be
removed, but Mom still gets leuers
and phone calls. She seems deter.mined to be a v,ictim. and if she continues with this, she may end up Je stitute.
The rest of the family is pushing
me to have Mom declared incumpe:
tent. I am very reluctant to do this
since it would crush her, and except
fo r this one weak spot, she seems to
be full y lucid and quite capable. But
I can' t sit idly by and let her ruin the
last remai ning days of her life. What
should I do'' --. Distressed Daughter
in Newport News. Va.
Dear Daughter: Seek the advice
of an attorney. ·and find out if your
mother will agree either to put her
money in trust or give you power of
attorney over her fin ances.
If she re fuses, yo'u shoutd then
consult with your mother's phys ician and a d crgyperson. L am reasonabl y certain th ey will agree that
your mot her should be declared
mcntall y incompetent.
This will ease your conscience.
and' in the long run. it woul~ be ~n
act of kindness. Your mother needs
thi s protcctiOJ.l, and it is up to you to
provtde it.
.'it; ---

.

Send questions to Apn Landers, Crc - .
ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Cal if.
90045

For Ti_p s--

absorbed by the body. Since it is not
absorbed, it adds no fatur calories to
the food s that are matte with it.
Fat Contains nine calories per
gram. This equals about 45 calories
per teaspoon. But olestra . has no
calories. For instance, a regular oneounce serving of potato 'chips contains 150 calories and has I 0 grams
of fat. Tbe same amount of potato
chips made with olestra has 70 calories and Qgrams of fat.
There will be .some calories
because the. potatoes have calories.
Reme111ber that just because a food
is fat-free , does not' necessarily
mean that it is caloric-free - read the
label to be sure. SQme people have
actually gained weight by eating fattree foods, because they did not take
into account the calories that arc still
present in the food.
In the case of olcstra-fricd com
tortilla chips. there will be some fat
- about I gram per serving. That is
because corn naturally has a small
amount of fat in it.
Are there any problems associatcd with eating foods fried ir olcscra·•·
• Most people will not notice any
digestive changes; however. some
individuals may cxpCifiencc gas-

trointestinal discomfort. It may be in
the form of abdominal cramping and
loose stools, especially . if large
amounts of the snacks have been
eaten . 'This may also be true if one
eats large quantities of regular high
fiber foods like beans and c•bbage
or fried items.
Vitamins Band C. carbo~ydrates,
proteins, fats, 'and minerals are not
affected by ihe olestra. They are still
absorbed by the body. .But the fatsoluble vitamins of A, D, E, and K
may not be absorbed as much from
other foods that arc eaten along with
the snacks; as they would have been
if the olestra was not present. It doc~ ·
not affect the vitatril ns that are
already in the body,
does it affect
'those that were previously eaten or
will be eaten at a following meal . To
ofl'sct the potential fat -soluble vita•
min losses, some food companies
arc enriching their olestra-fricd
snack foods with these nutri cots.
lbcfe are no restriclions as to G
who should or should not cat foods
made with olcstra. The only exception would be cfi1Tdrcn two and
under who need .fat for proper
growth. so it would not be suitable
for them.

not

·~~~:~.~:s!~::.~~bB~:· r~~:e~:~.=i~y ~!a~~~e~~~n~fnt:~:!s~~~~ns

Brewster provtded the startmg pmnt mystery for a 11~ . she reported, hut in Russia to give the remains a proplor Gay Pcrnn 1n her rcvtcw at the after the exccuuons were made pub- cr Christian burial and t&lt;i lctlhe last
recent meeting of the Middleport lie. rumors hegan that not all had of the Romanovs rest with their
Literary Club held at the Middleport rcrishcd.
ancestors in a cathedral in St. PetersLibrary.
During the l'l20's and l'lWs a hurg.
The fate of Anastasia. youngest woman who claimed to he Anastasia
In unfolding the' truth about two
daughter of the last c1.ar of Russia. surprised many by her apparent great mysteries of this century, Perhas been one of the real mysteries of knowledge of 'things that only the rin also revealed a wealth of detail
the last e.ighty years, said Perrin. Did real princess would know. Some sur•. about the times ·and personalities
she survtvc the s.raughtcr of tbe.· rcst v1vm~ relatives. however..were sure involved in this segment of the hisof the royal lamtly by tl)c Commu- she was an 1mpostor. sai.d Perrin.
tory of Russia.
·
nists?
TlJe mystery·of Anastasia. real or
President
Martha
Hoover
Perrin · held .the attcn,tion of the impostor, has been joined in the last presided and welcomed guest
group as she dtsplaycd the ptctures decade by another mystery ilivolv- Emmaline Pratt. Jeanne Bowen
?f Anasta~ia and h~~ family in ing the Romanovs Pc.rrin disclosed. . announced plans for the end of year
Anastas•.• s Album . She also
Bones have been discovered near luncheon •• the Holiday Inn in Galshowed ptctures she had taken on a .the place of their execution that have lipolis at 1:00 on May 20. Guest
tour of Russia and described some been almost certainly identified as . speaker will . be Elizabeth. Wetzel
of tlie fabulous royal palaces that those of the murdered royal family. who will speak about her cxJieriwcre homes of the czar.
Pc111n went on to tell that DNA ences in· writing a mystery and. getRcfemng to other sources she testing which was used in this ideo- ling it published.
had used in her research, Perrin tification was also used to determine
Hoover · and Bowen served as
described .the fairy-tale life Russia's whether l~c . woman who claimed to hostesses. The meeting concluded .
royal famtly ~nJoyed unttl the t1me be Anastas1a for so many years with members commenting upon the
of the revolutiOn. She then outlined could have been a member of the review or on unsolved mysteries.
some of the reasons for .the arrest family. Experts arc now sure she both past and present.
and ullim;.te execution of . the was not.
Romanov family.
The reviewer concluded by

~---'---"---

Community

The Community Calendar is pub_ _ Jished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raise~ of any type. Items are
prinTed as space pennils and cannot
be l,lUnrantecd to ru'! a specific number of days. ·
TUESDAY '
POMEROY -'- Free immuniza.
'
tion clime. Tuesday. 5 to 7 p.m. at
the Meigs Multipurpose Center.
Children to be accompanied by parent and take immunization records.

Calendar~-":-.,---

Topic. "Relay for Life"
POMEROY - FOE Ladies Auxiliary. Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Officers tu
he nomi.nated.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Ladies Golf Association. 9 a.m .
Tuesday, Pomeroy Golf Course.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND -

Rutland Townspecial meeting.
Wed .. 6 p.m., at fire station, to hire
cemetery workers for the summer.
~h i p

Tru stee ~.

RU'Il..AND - :Revival. Rutland
SOUTH BETHEL - Spiritual
Nazarene Church Wednesday renewal week underway, South
through Sunday, evenings, 7 p.m; · Bethel New Tesiament Church, SilSunday. 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. ver Ridge. 7 p.m. each nigh!. special
with Rev. Mervin Smith, evangelist. singe..S and music through Sarurday.
Special sinring by Steve Balengce. _
RUTLAND - Rutland TownPOMEROY - American Call(er ship Trustees, special session, 6 p.m
Society, board mcering. Tuesday, 5 Wednesday, Rutland Fire ·station for
p.m. a1 the VMH conference room. purpose of hiring summer cemetery

workers.

High: 60; Low:40
To~~torrow:

High:

•

POMEROY - AA and Al-Anon,
7 p.m. Thursday, Sacred. -Hc.an
Catholic Church. · Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Post VF\V 9053.. meeting,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m.• nomination
and election of officers.

•

I

'

Newspaper
.Hometown
.
'

I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Single Copy · 35 Cents
.

Gov. ·voinovich shows off
new district. report ·cards
499
699
?49
5499
'399

' 5

Gm------·-·---·-..•- -·-;. .

. 1))81

'899
5399
51399
'999

•

51281
51199
51499

NOW

WAS

1)9

REPORT CARD ISSUED - Ohio Superintendent qf Public ln.uuctlon John Goff, right,
hiStured during . a newa conference that.
unveiled tocelachool dtat'rlct repoit cards at the

30

5

5239'

789
•179
'99
1429 .
1129
5
16/'20
5

HOWARD MILLER· Cllt!ry· GrGIIdfathtr Clock.".........- .............._ ............... $1500
BAR STOOlS· Swivel- Gal or cl.rry -·-···-·-·~.........- ...-.~••••••~ ......... $139
VANITY TABLE w/l~~~:lt-lrass-••·....~...-·-··-·-"--.,.............- ..................$1 59
GUN WINO· Oak- I Gin·.l.o4/iJsllt ......- •.'.......~...- ................. _... ~........... $699
ROLL·AWAY'BED- 39w. 5w Nt Mattress ..,_,_,.,..- ...........___....,... $169
Ill STOOLS· UIIIW.W. 24w or 30"
·"--·,_;,..... $24/$29

""1_. .. ,., .. • .

......

·. ··- .

•. ". ,,
,~
:; ·~,, ~·
· ~.· ~
.
,.....,.
-.:. ·K.ll! .,
·~-= .·, · ~ ~
~- ' ~.m ,,~ ~11!,";~-t,- .,,.,~· , ,.,_,_,_,-.1·~~ ~ ~•. ;, ..

r~

-1

c

• ,.·

NOW
. ' 1179
5299
5399
5499
5799
'999
1599 5699

WA S

•• :.

3 PC..WHIR METAL PEDESTAL Tll/2 Slrlpt Stats CWrs...,;.........-:........-$269
5 PC. OAK 36w X41" TAILE/4 Spear lacl' Clrairs, ____,_, __,;,............ $469
5 PC.
CHEIRY 42w ROUND
.
. PED. TAILE/41ow laclt Galn......- .............- ~..-.$599 .
7 PC. GREEN OR.WHIR 36w 160w TAILE/61ow ladt CJralrs_,,_..,,.._ .... $799
7 PC. OAK 42" X60" WITH LEAF nL/2 Ann-4 Sltlt- Htavy hilt Galrs............. $1299
7 PC. UTE PINE'42" 164" X82"1L PED. TIL/6 Hlladt Cllairs ...... _:...........$1499
OAK TRESnE TAILE 36" X60" /ltrA/41ow laclt aalrs.,__,.. __,_,_$799
7 PC. GREEN/NATURAL
-$1099
.
. LEAF
.. HIDDEN TIL/6 Jc111tlt11st
. CWr•-·---·-.....
.
.
•'

'

'~JEDBi2;~N!$: ·. ·

.
PROGRESSIVE 4 PC. PIN( IIOfHI DRESSER ' CHEST/Weast Htatl---'---$1"

DM14 PC. Cllt!ry Fr..t. Slylt,

....

.

.

,,____,_..,,... _ ... $'"
~HIGH 4 PC. WHIR .Dil DRESSER ·llllr•/4 Dr. Clltst/H••tll!•n-..--.-;$10"
· IASSM 4 PC MAPLE LAMINATE TOPS/Triple Drtsstr
· _ .._ ..- ...$1599
VAUGHAN·IAS5m
. 6 PC Pllt-Sald
. w.d (lo ¥tiM) W/St------522"
WEll 6 PC MEDIUM PI~E- Carvl4 F1011ts·Ltwp Pltcts ·W/s.t.-...... $28"
RIVERSIDE 6 PC. Oalt·IIDor Drtsstr-Tri-VItw Mirror-Mist '"--------539"
· ~

. fiE&lt;;? I;jt(~'ffiJ!\t%:_.~·~~~~~~.

+•--..--·-·

'

2899

NOW
5389
1399
1299

·...

lA·HOY ROCK IECL • Oalt Aral-1... w0
$549
LA"Z-IOY ROCK RECL Tr~ w W.. Vt!vit_ _ _ :..:..__$5J9
LA·Z-IOY ROCK-RKL PatltW Ani· I... or Gr- Pll hi __.;...,___ $459
GTIIAPPER RE9JNER· Mag dw Pacltt· Mane or GrtL.-·...$379
ussm IOCt-RKL 100% l.llflrlr;. Resstn (FrH TIKow)-...........,-5999
IAYIIE STATIOIIEIY CHAIR-MIIIIII'rllt
..._..
$399
.ASHLEY WING OWlS, Clltrry Ttlrl- M.wt • ~_.,.;;..._.._,,...;....... $329
ASHLEY SWIVH. ROCKER· . . Vtlvtt
..
_,_;...,5329

229

1

1699
1159

.

181
S199

1

Ctllr------

iENIIH 20" R..rt
ZENITH 25" TtWt Maclti-St.,...RIIiolt
.- - · -..
. -$469
ZENITH 2,5" C.Solt w/R-.ta:&lt;J!okt 3_Stylls
--·--·$6J9
ZINITH 21• c.s.t. Rlllalt:-VCR Stonp- ~~~~· s-1•.., ___ $179
GilSON 15.4 CU. n. REF. '10 y,; c...,...., W.r•lf...........- ....:.;.,.$649
FRIGIDAIRE 18.0 CU. n. REF.· .""-s SWvn· A••••- ....:.......__ $799
GilSON 21.0CU. n. REF.-111 o.t Ills· Glass Mts- 530 RIH!t-.....:$999
GilSON 30" GAS RANGE· 2 V.. Pwls' L+or
GilSON 30" ILEaRK RAIIGI· 2-1"/2-6" a-s·WWtt
--$479
FRIGIDAIRE OR GilSON ILECTRK DRYER· Htavy Dlly -;_,.-·..- - $469
MAnAG -.ERFORMA" WASHEI· 10 cydts· 2~~-·
$509 .

·-·-·-.:....$3"

'249
'269
1359

'•79
5481

549
5
. 699
5

5339

. 1329

S329

.•

1429

.•

~.

.•

I'

"Servi~ the Area since 1950.. . With .mally more years to come!!"

(304) 773~5592

,

, 1

1

,

,

J

I

'-

I

Mason, WV

.,.

"'
'I

.

...
.
~

,,

.

-.

U

'

1

1

,;.
~

.

e~iLD ~

1

WEE!&lt; OF Ti1E YOUNG
Rutland ··
Mayor JoAnn ,Eads Tues!lay morning eleele~
this~ the Week of the Yo11ng Child In Rut·.
land. She 1e ahown here signing a proclama·tton a'urroundecl by children attending a HISd ,
Shirt cleaa et Rutlend Elemenllry. Shown ere, ·
from left, Misty
. Morrison; Danlellci Colwell, .

t

,

•

j

r .

I

'i'

f

'

I

lj

Kelaey Butcher, Andres Robl; Elida, Joae '!Vhlt·
latch, Bredley Wllltlitch, Justin Hod~, Kayla
Lemaster, Stephanie Lemclster, Colten McKin· .
ney and MattheW Eblin. In addition to being the
Wee~ of thl Young Child, this Is also Child
Abuae Prevention Waelt
.

r

•

1

I

1

:

Clinton has !~'lid , he )I'OUid veto
the saving$ bill,' already passed by ·
tlie House,' mostly because it wo~!d
aiosrly benetlt families sending
their children to priv~te I'Chool; But
boll) parties are usitlg the legislation to ,parade their · differences
over education, a top Issue among
voters during this congressio11al
eledion year.

.

Raci~e Council ,est~blishes clean up days
.

.

yard sale signs.
. Council is considering passing an
ordinance requiring permits for yard
sale signs. These sigps are seldom
removed,' except by the wind, it was
noted.
Jim Lucas met with council and
said he was jloing to sell a riverfront
lot he owns, but the prospective owners need to know if they could bring ·
their mobile! home anct place it on the.
lot for the summer.
The vil.lage hus an ordinance
against the placing of addiiional
mobile homes within the corpordtion.
Council advised Lucas that it' the

mobile home was going to be driven home and wanted to know if council
off at the end of the season there . .could assist.
.
should be no problem.
· Council members said they would
Mayor Scott Hill reported to coun. need costs and other information
cil that American Elec\ric power's before decisions could be made.
Hydro Plant recently donated misIn other business, council :
cellaneous hardware supJ&gt;Iies to the
-- Approved a ihird reading and
village ..Council extended its thanks adopted an ordinance authori ~ i rig
to the hydro plant.·
.
the clerk to sign a contract with the
Hill also advised council that he Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensahas received information and an ti on;
application form to apply for
--Approved the purchase of variAppalachian Regional Commission ous items requested by Street Commoney. \he tiling date is May 29.
missioner Gknn Rizer;
· It was reported that Dick Warns-- Noted complaints of speeding
ley, Tyree Bouleva'rd, was wanting to on Yellowbush Road and various othwork on the sidewalk in front of his er areas.
Present were Hill. Clerk Karen
Lyons, council members Robert Beegle,. Henry Bentz, John Dudding, Joe ·
ultrasounds and cervical cancer review of the project and guidelines Evans ~nd Henry Lyons.
screenings for income-eligible for referral for the. Southeast Ohio
women residents of Meigs County, Breast and Cervical Cancer Program
who are referred by the Meigs Coun- ·provided by Le Ano Matvey, Time
ty Health Department. It has been will also be allowed for a question
responsil;&gt;le for the detection, diag- and answer period.
nosis and treatment ofbrea~t and cerThe program has been supported ..
vical cancer in many 'o f the women · in Part. by . ~n education grant from
who h~ve had the free services. · the Ohio Department of · Health,
2 Sections - I 2 Pages
Tbe agenda for the May· 4 pro- · Bureau of 'Health Promotion and
. Vol. 49,.No. 3
gram includes a 4iscussion of breast · Risk Reduction, Breast and CerVical
cancer treatment options by Dr. Got- Cancer Project. and the Center.i for
Calendar
liien, a professor of surgery atthe OU Disease Control and Prevention, as
· . Classifieds ·
9-10
.COM,. who specializes ·in cancer we'll as-ACCESS -- Agencies in Col· Comics
II
surgery. Also, informa!ion will .be . laboration for Gancer Education and
Editorials
3
provided by Tammie Jone~. RN, an Suppol't Services.
Local
3
11ncotogy nur.ie at the Charleston
Nurses who are interested in par-.
Area Medical Center in Charleslon.- ticipating in this local workshbp
Sports
4-5
W.Va. She will diseuss epidemi!)logy sh.ould contact the Meigs County
Weather
3
· and risk factor.i for cervical cancer Health Department for a registration
and pap srneurs, includins recom- brochure. The deadline for registraLotteries
. mendtitions and inrerpretation of ihe tion lind fees to be received at the .
.Bethesda Reponing System, ·ubnor- OU/AHEC offices is April30 for the
OHIO
mal pap smear follow-up and newer May 4prosram. lnfonnation is.avail·
••
'
types of ce.rvical cancer. screening able through. the health department, at .. . Pick 3: 427; .Pick 4: 79M3
Bjlckeye 5: 2"7-11 -33-35
tests. · There will also .be a short 992-6626.
' ,
w.yA.
• •
•
••
O.lly 3: 457; Daily 4: 1454

:~~·:c~i~~~~ls.~~~E~~~~~~~:~~: . Health department plans worksh(;p on·May.4

• COLUMBUS (AP) - . A pro- before ftjf(her penillizing the seller§.
)Xlsed stiffer penalty for selling tobac- Ohio· is line of 10 states ·where the
co to minors is unfair to retailer.i, the pur,cha.~ is not outlawed, . he said,.
president of a state induslry group. Bills tq inake it illegal· for minor.i to
said. ·
h~ve ci~arettes have.beet! proposed in
· Oov. George Voinovich and Allor' · t~e state.
.
·
ney General B~ty Montgomery on
"It \! ·punitive against retailel'$·
Monday proposed that retailers with withoui~alancing the scales a bit.''
a third offenSe of undemge sales lose Mahaney ;Sllid of the propo$al. "The
their licenses· to sell tobacco.
whole thing is on us.'
, Stores also would have to be . State Qfticials said current law,
licensed by the state to sell tobacco. · which peoalizc::~ retail clerks who sell
Only Minnesora and Taxas are tobacco to customeFS under age IB•.is
belie&lt;Ved to have licensing programs not enougll. to stop teen-agers from
for selling tobacco, the Ohio Depart- . smoking. " :
ment of Health ~id.
· Under the proposal, which would
· · "ll's time to take rhC ne~t step in have to approved by the J...esislature;
sending a inessqe to tobacco,retail- aretailer would be fined ssoo for a
ers and young people !hilt .sales of firlit offense of selling to a minor and
· tobacco products to youth wtll nlll be $1 ,000 for ·a seCilnd offen~: Thirdtolemtcd." Voinovich ~id.
time .offender.i would lose thetr tobacJohn C. Mohaney Jr., presidel!t of co sales license;
the Ohio COI)Il(i( . of Retail Mer,
Tbe law nqw allo.ws clerks lo ·be
t:flants, said the state should make it fined S:ZSO on lhe first offensci and
illegal for minors .to buy tobacco· SSOO on the secorid.

,,

.

points," he said. "We don't hav~ to
have'll great big monstrous bill to·do
that.
Their comments came two weeks
after the tobacco industry · fiercely
rejected McCai.n's bill, which would .
have signilicantly toughened the
$36~ billion settlement the industry
reached in June with 40 states suing
Racine Village Council . met in
it. McCain has acknowledged that re~ssed session Monday evening at
without the industry's .participation, tbe Racine Municipal Building.
th~ bill was meaningless.
Clean Up Dilys wer.e set for May
· GOP leader.i o:fused to declare 1~. 14 and 15 with free pickup. ResMcCain's bill dead. But neither · idents are to Set items out at the curb
wo,uld they voice optimism for its for Yillage workers to pick up with
chances, even though it passed the the exception of batteries. oil ortires
Senate Commerce Committee on ·a whtch cannot be picked up. Residents ·
birartisan 19-1 vote. Lott has said are also asked to clean up their lots
vast areas of dispute between and · . and yards.
among members'ofbQth parties must . It ~as noted that some of the politbe bridged and the bill passed ~y 1cal ~tgns that a~ nat made of poster
Memorial Day 'if ii has any chance board are blowmg off poles when
this'year.
·
·
they become wet are causing a litter
McCain nonetheless arrived ut problem. The same .applies to the
the White House to push his bill dur·

~

-'

expe~~s..

I

l

Retailers object to proposed
stricter penalty on to_
bacco sa.l~s

1539

• I

2nd Street

I·

WASHINGTON (AP) - The .
Senate defeated a plan to subsidize
school construction with federal .
dollars Thesday, despite President
Cllnton'!i call for Congress In give
·school buildings the same kind of
financial support it gives high· ·
ways.
The defeat, 56-42, was expeded.
The measure; introduced . by Sen,
Carol Moseley-Braun, D·Ill., was
the Democrats' chief substitute for
a Rel'"blican bill to let tax·free sav·
ings accounts be used , for sch~l

department, firefighters from
Coolville and Olive Township were
also on the scene. Carpenter said that
25 .fireflghter.i responded.
/,. The fire department is now col. , lecling clothing for the family. Mr.
· Bobo wears large-sized shirts, 38130 ···
slacks and 10-10 112 shoes.
Mr5. BobO wears a size f4-16
slacks. medium (16) blouses, and 6
112 to 7 shqes. Clolhing for the Bobos
$19' be dropped off at the ho!lle of
··Shirley fones, adjacent to the Tuppers
Plains post office.
.· , 1
;
. ',

WASHINGTON(('l\.1&gt;) - Senate
GOP leaders are thro'Wing their SUJI-'
port behind a narrowly focused bill
aimed at reducing teen smoking and
drug use, dimming prospects· for a .
comprehensive national tobacco policy being offered by Sen. John
McCain.
McCain's proposed $516 billion
package of taxes and tighter controls
on tobacco has created .major rifts
among his Republican colleagues,
and Assistant Majority Leader Don
Nickles of Oklahoma said Tuesday
he preferred putting teen smoking
and anti-drug legislation together in
order to get something pa.ssed this
election year. ·
. ..
·
"I'm golng to try to link it," Nickles' said. " You don't have to have
hundreds of billions of dollars switcb
hands to try to combat youth tobacco and drug use."
.
Asked by rePQners whether he
agreed, Senate Majority Leader Trent
L,ott, R-Miss .. ,.OOded:
"I P..t a ,lot of credence in the
. tlirectioo · that Senator Nickles

1

WAS

Senate rejects school
construetion propo$al

GOP backing for McCain
tobacco legislation · fa~es

NOW
5
599
5
699
5799
'999
51499
51999

WAS

RHfe Center In Columbus cin Tueaday. At left
are Gov. George Volnovlch and Stall Board of
Ed11catlon Prealdent.Jennlfer Sheets. (AP)

.Family loses home
No injuries were reported as the
resl!ll of a fire wMch destroyed the
.• hoine of a Tupper.i Plains family .on
· Tuesday morning.
: · According. to Greg Carpenter,
assistant fire chief ,for the Tuppers
Pl;¥ns Mllunteer Fire Department; the
home of Bernard Bobo, on Stale
Route681 East,wastotallydestroyC!!
by yesterday's fire.
.
Tbe cause of the blaze has not
been determined, according to Carpent~r. Nobody was horne at the time
· of the fire.
·•
. In addition to the Tupptr.i Plains

'

types of'the report cards that will ,be schools or. di stricts to do better.
By PAUL SOUHRADA
sent out to all611 school di stric l~ this Voinovich said.
Altoclated Pren Writer
COLUMBUS - When students June. Most districts will get just a
But a spokesman for a group
get their report cards this June; so will handful of the reports, but 109 dis- opposed to the tax increase says he
their schools. .
tricts have voluntl:!!red to distribute doubts the report cards will have
Ohio's schools will be graded on them to every parent.
· much impact.
Beginning next year, though.
"If you can't provide the funds to
how well their students measure up
against a standardized criteria. to give every district will be required to dis-. fix the problem. there ·s no sense is.suparents and taxpayersan idea of how tribute the reP&lt;&gt;rts to each parent, suid ing these report cards," said Brian
well districts and individual schools John Goff. state schools superint~ n- Rothenberg, spokesman for the Vote
are performing.
No on Issue 2 Coalition. ·
dent.
.
Rb'thenberg's group recommends
"It's all about accountability,"
Tbe report cards are required by
Gov. George Voinovich said at a an academic accQuntability law · th.at voters reject t!Je tax increase and
news conference Tuesday. "People enacted last summer as lawmakers force lawma~ers to start the school
want,to know how·their schools are debated ways to change school 'fund- funding debate over.
'eng..
· dOing."
"They should issue report cards
That's.p!lrlicularly important now,
The grading wil! rate student per- on legislators." he added.'
as.Ohioans are weighing whether to formance in the proficiency tests givThe state department of educati on
vote on May S for or against a pro- en in the foorth •.sixth, ninth and 12th will pay the $1 million for this year's
posed penny increase in the state grades. Other comparisons wi 11 · test. The department wi.ll have to ask
sales tax, Voiitovich said.
··
inClude attendance figures for teach-. the Legislature to approve more
"They want to know where their ers ·and students, dropout rates and money to pay for future years.'
· tax dollars are going) '
class sizes.
. reports. Goff said.
Tbe $1.1 billion raised ann!Jally
They also will report per-student
The report going out in June will
by the. tall increase, to be split spending on administration, building include statistics from last " hool
between education •spending and a operations, staff support, student sup- year. Future reports will be released
property tax break fo~ boll)eowner.i, · port' and instruction.
. in January and .cover 'performance
· is par,t of the state's response to the
Schools that don't meet certain during the previous school year,,GoiT
Ohio's Supreme Coun's order to fix standards would have to . develop said.
the way public education is funded. · plans to improve, Goff sa.id.
. Voinovich showed pff the proto- .
The goal is to put pressure on local · ---- - - - --"-- - - - - -

5

TIADITIONAl2 PC.
COUNTRY 2 PC Floral Prllt/Tiftltllaclt-...._ ..,_,_,,_____,.... $12"
· ~DITIONAL 2 PC. Fl111tttl/~• Floral __,....;...__............. _ .....$14" ·
COLONIAl 2 Pi b FloraliPII'ow Ar11 ·--~--....;.._.......:...........,___... $7"
COimMPORARY 2 PC lraWI·IIicl
$5"
RECLINER SEpiONAL BraWl/. . Vllvtt.;...;.........
· · _ ............ _ ..._ .....$1'"
RECLINEJ SOFAS Flmttti/Gr-/c.lolllal• Conl..--·--·--·-......-.$14"
·TRADITIONAL SLHPER/Ful Slzt/lln ., l•g ..- .................__, ........:... _ ..,$599 ·
COUNTRY SOFA/Lovesiirt Oalt Trlln/Gntt Prllt ...._ .._ .... _.:..........,_,_.. $27"
COUiNIAl3 PC GrHa Mant Floral/Oak TriL.-....- ....,_,_ ....._ .._ ........$1899
CONTEMPORARY 3 PC lwg·Bhlt-Gr- Shlpt/Cirtrry lrlm..............,___ ,.......$1999
TRADITIONAL 3 PC lltt-81rJ Floral Slftt---·-·-....- ..- .......$1799
COLONIAL 3 fC Gr- Prllt/Wootl Triii/RecMIII•g Cllair-....- .....- ...- ..$224.
CONTEMPORARY 3 PC
Multi·Prlat..
..-.:..-......:..$1699

...,'·

.,

a1
· Meigs County's

""'

'

eo; Low:40

'

REEDSVILLE ...:.. Rivcrvic;;.
Garden Clilb. Thur~day, 6 p.m. meet
_at Whitehead home, go to Karen •s
Greenhouse for tour, 6:30 p.m.
retutn to ' Delores Frank's home for
business meeti~g .
I'OMEROY - Retirement and
investment seminar for au · active .
teachers and adminisrrators, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs High
School cafeteria. ·

Cloudy

Reds
edge
Ph Hiles
Page4

•

.

THURSDAY

Sports

Be.at of the.~en~, Page 6
lndians · thu~p . Chicago, Page 4
Local -diamond results, Page 5

Today: Showers

I

.

Aprll-22, 1998

.'

..

The Meigs County Health Depanment tlur.i(ng staff and Jhe staff of the
Ohio University College of ()steopalhic Med(cine .collabomted to present the second part of a professionnl education olfering 3! the Meigs
Cou•y Public Lib,rary on May 4'
from 8:30 until noon.
•
The workshops arc underwritten
·and planned by .the ·Oire(lor of the
Consortium for Health Education in
Ru'tal .Ohio, Margo Marazon, RN,
BSN; MSEd., under the auspices of
. the OU Area·Heald) Education Center. The Nursing Director of the
Meigs Cqunty Health, Dcjlartment,
Nonna Torres,&lt; IN. BSN, 1\.tSEd:, has
assisted with the :toea! coordination.
The cost.of the .workshop "''ill be
$10, which will· ioolilde a cllntinental breakfast, ~ii 3.2 Ohio NunesAssociation .credits will be warded.
The geneml putillc may also attend
for the same fee.
• The B,CCP llrnS'nlm · funds have
been used 10 pay for screening and
diagnostic · mammography, breast

, Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

.
•
•

'

0 1998 Ohio Valley Publi~hing Co

.

'

•

.

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="412">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9834">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27375">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27374">
              <text>April 21, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1076">
      <name>holliday</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5950">
      <name>sebert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1136">
      <name>siders</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
