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                  <text>Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, May .4, 1998

Sentenci.ng to feature Kaczynski~.victltn confrontation
By RICHARD COLE
••eocl.a.d.Pfesa Wrttw
· SACRAMENTO. Calif. - The Unabomber's victims have one last chance
to confront the man who maimed their bodies and killed their loved ones when
Theodore Kaczynski goes before a judge to be sentenced 10 life behind bars.
The 55-year-old for:mer math professor was 10 be senfenced today to four
life terms in prison plus 30 years for killing three men and maiming two otllers. The sentence was part of a January plea bargain thai saved him from a
trial and possible death by lethal injection.
.
As pan of the plea bargain, Kaczynski ~~:knowledged responsibility for
a1116 Unabomber attacks between 1978 and 1995. He will be sent to highsecurity federal prison. possibly in J,.ompoc or in Colorado.
.
Whether Kaczynski will speak before U.S. District Judge Garland Burrell Jr., noc even his own attorneys can say.
"I don't know what he'll do," defense anomey Quin Denvir said. "I think
it's unlikely, but with him, you never know."
A half dozen of his victims or their families do have something to tell the
court, however.

a

Clinton backers
deny ex-assistant ·
got hush .money.
By PETE YOST
Auocleted Preas Writer
LI1TLE ROCK. Ark.- Cliiuon supporters and Webster Hubbell's lawyer
took the offensive Sunday in the prison tapes controversy, critiCizing Republican Rep. Dan Burton for deletipg Hubbell's assenions that Hillary Rod·
'ham Cli1110n is innocent and !hat Hubbell wasn't being paid hush money.
: In response, Bunon said his investigaton edited !he tapes to protect the
·Hubbell family's privacy and the congres.•man offered to relea,se all ISO hours
of tapes -· an idea that Hubbell lawyer John Nields quickly shot down.
"If. anyone believes" Bunon's explanation about protecting privacy, "I
have a bridge to sell them," former White House counsel Jack Quinn said
on NBC's "Meet the Press."
·
Ponions of Hubbell's prison tapes released to the news media had been
edited by Burton's committee "so as 10 change their meaning," Nicilds said
on ABC's "This Week With Sam Donaldson and Cokie Robens."
"None of this should be released. None ofit! Absolutely none of it." Nields
said when told of Burton's.offer. "I want none of it talked about .... This is
very, very wrong."
.
Bunon, chairman of the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee, began releasing portions of Hubbell's prison phone calls last Thursday when the former associate attorney general was indicced for conspiracy •
and tax evasion.
The committee's ranking Democrat. Henry Waxman, demanded an imme·
diate session of the panel to decide "how to remedy this unconscionable sit·
·uation. You have unilaterallY sllbpoenaed these tapes, unilaterally released
them, and apparently unilaterally altered the content to ·~it your purposes...
Nields rejected the suggestion that iii one prison phone call, the lawyer
and Hubbell were discussing a possible presidential ·pardon. Nields said that
.he and Hubbell were discussing a grant of immunity fi'OOlthe office of White·
water proSecUtor Kenneth Stair, which he received shonly after the 1996 pres.idential election.
.
·
·
: • Hubbell "has sat down with people in the Independent Coupsel's Office
·for over I00 hours and if they are trying to pressure him now, it is not to
cooperate. it's because they don'tlike.what he said and they want to make
'him say something different." Nields said.
On NBC's "Meet the Press," Burtori was confronted With two of Hubbell's
,taped calls with his wife about the Whitewater inVestigation. In one. Hubbell
tells Suzy Hubbell that Mrs. Clinton "ju!ll had no idea what was going on"
at the Rose Law Firm regarding 1111¥ billing inel!ularities by attorneys. In
another tape. Hubbell tells his'wife that despite suggestions in newspaper
anicles that friends of the Clintons are buying Hubbell's silence, "we know
that's not true."
Bunon left out those comments when he released excerpts of those two
conversations.
"The only reason we didn't release the.other 149 hour.~" of Hubbell's tapes
"wa.• not 10 hide ·anything but to protec~ the privacy of Mr. and Mrs. Hubbell."
said Bunon.
.
· ''I'll be very happy romorrow momina to release all of the tapes if the
White House wanL&lt; me to and if Mr. Hubbc;ll's a~torney wants me to," Bur·
ton added.
Bunon'• comments are "(rankly devastating," said Quinn.
"He talks about honor, talb about integrity. talks about&amp;ettins to the
truth," Quinn said of Burton. "He tells the American people ihat he left out
all this exculpatory information ... and that the exculpatory information waq
left out to protect Mr. Hubbell's privacy.... How he can possibly pretend to
conduct an impanial and fair set of hearings in this matter is beyond belief."
Nields objected to the editing of another prison call in which Nields and
• Hubbell discuss amending his tax return 10 include all his income.
Excised from the tape is Nields's comment that "this is an attorney-client
privileged conversation. Nob&lt;idy should listen any rurther."
. Nields and Hubbell both apparently knew that their conversations was .
being taped by prison authorities.
·
In that conversation, Nields explains to Hu):lbell about tiling a revised tax
return. Nields explai~ that the first return was tiled while Hubbell was in
jail and that Hubbell hadn't read it. Nields comment raised what could be a
defense for Hubbell's tax evasion case, which was filed against him Thursday. He is accused of not paying taxes on hundreds of thousands of dollars
in consulting payments arranged for him by friends of the Clintons.

Susan Mosser's husband, advenising executive Thomu Mosser, died in
• his New Jersey kitchen when one of Kaczynski's bombs shredded hi1 body
only a few feet from his wife and daughterJ. She wants 10 speU. today.
"No one !alb about the nails thai perforaled my husbllld's hean and shot
into his brain," she told The Star·Ledaer of Newark. "No one talks about
the chopped up pieces of ...- blade that ripped out his stomach. ... Does
anybody have any idea whal that horrible thina did 10 Tom? W1W it could
have done 10 my children?" .
Kaczynski's 18-year bombing campaign chansed the WI)' Americans mail
.packases and board airplanes, and at its heiJbt in July 1995, vinually shut ·
down air travel on the West Coast.
In his Unabomber manifesto, KaCzynski claimed a moral hiJb .ground.
justifying the attacks in the name bf preserving humanity and natun: from
the n:lentless onslaught of technology and exploitation.
The journals found by FBI investigaton in his Montana mountain cabin ·
instead revealed a cynical, apparently sexually .confused killer who deliaht·
ed in his bloody explosions and caned linle .for the outside world.

Hopes low
for meeting
on Mideast

1

.·

Weather

Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 50s

. Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

By FREDREICA SCHOuTEN

Gannett Newa llr:vlce

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newt Stltl

propeny. They damage it. They have
hot rod automobiles that scare
A place for youths to congregate some of the old folks."
·
was one topic of Tuesday night's
"We have tried it. I do know what
meeting of Pomeroy Village COWJCii. you are talking about," he added, say·
· Council met with East Main Street ing the youths fought and littered the
resident Kenny Klein, who asked the parking lot with trash and broken bot·
group toconsidergivingjuveniles a . ties.
ponion of the parking Jot and
"When you are dealing with
patrolling it Instead of letting them ~oung people, you don't treat them
I'Oilm all over town.
like tlley are a nobody," Klejn said.
Klein suggested allowing youths · "You can't treat !hem like that ... one
to congregate on a portion of the lot day they are going to take over.
until I I p.m. on Fridays and Satur·
"You've got to give these young
day$, and until 10 p.m. on other . people some leeway (or) they are
nights.
·
going to stan moving out. Who is
Klein's suggestion met with a going to take over when we're dead
cool response from Mayor Frank and gone7 You need 10 treat them like
Vaughan, who said the idea has been citizens." he added.
.
tried before with no success.
Police Chief Jeff Miller said some
"I sympathize with the young young people were ticketed r-eCently
people," Vaughan said. 'fbe problem for loitering in the Marathon parking
is they "have no.respect for public lot at the request of the service sta·

.•

of.._,..,

MARATHON UNDERWAYand De'- H0tt.r
.lfttOnglhe !III'IY 1111'"
tlolpante In the Blbla relldlng11111'8111on hillel In conjunction with Nlltlonal Day of Prayer ICtlvitiM tlllt blgan Sunday. The m11athcln will contlnu. through TlnnclaJ, wt.n • public pntyer
Mt'Vic8 will be hillel It the Meigl County CourthouH.
.
·
i t.

VOTE
Mick DAVENPORT
Lifetime MEIGS Resident
County Comnaissloner

By AARON~$tiALL
• Sentlnal
mbUt"eurnu .
•·

Observation ·.in Meigs underway
Local observance of the Nalion·
and until 10 a.m. on Thursday. The
Day of Prayer Committee, in addi·
tion to Hayman, are Steve Beha,
al Day of Prayer he)! an on Sunday
Meigs County Day ~Prayer Comwith a week-long Bible ;eading
mince, ~aded by Pastor Les Hay- Gladys Curningf, Bill Frazier,
Faith Hay81811, Cuni&amp; ·Kina•.Bob'
l.J!!!,~=::~~:
·
vistL
!Mil· of Middl~n, will host a
I
Day of Prayer
prayer breakfast o May 7for pub- Robinson, Martie Shoit anll Norma
was proclai
by the ~igs . lie officials at die Pomeroy Uniced Torres.
.
·
County Commissionen and area · Methodist Church, and tile annual
The National Dlty of Prayer was
mayors for May 7, in conjunction · Day of Prayer observance at the 'first initiated by. tlie Continental
with Nationul Day. of Prayer. ·
cdunhouse steps.
Congress in 1775, revived by ~s­
The. daily Bible reading - - ., AConcen or Prayer will' close
ident Truman in .19S2 iJI(I declared
marathon - on. the Pomeroy
the !ocal Day of Prayer at the Ash · by President Reapn in 1988. ·
Pavilion- and prayer vigib- at
~~ Freewill Blplist Church in
• The theme rorthis year'• obser·
the Pomeroy -United Methodist
Middleport at7 p.m. All events are
vance is •America, Return 10 God,"
Church - will take place from 8
open 10 the public. ·
based · on a ~ge of si:ripture
a.m. to 8 p.m. through Wednesday, • Members of the Meigs County from Joel.

5th

For

48

Meanwhile, s- Depanmel'lt
spokesman James P. Rubin said .
Sunday: ·"Sec;retary Albright is
entering this meeting wi.thout any
advance knowledge tl)at when it
comes to the key gaps thai tliey are
about to be ciO!Ied."

Your County CaiDmlaillanar
.
.

MONTH PROCLAIMED- The Melgl County Comilllulow..,., from ld, entwd. Jtlfilt
thornton, Janet Howard and Freel Holflllln,
1Jgnlld • prac:J.mltlon declllrlhg lilly 11 Com-

Groall in Melts Count,!

'

Com.mis_
sioners explore
new insura.nce
~ptions
oday's Sentinel ·
- -- .
-'

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentlnaf Nlwl Stitt

J Section • 10 Paces
Vol. 49, No. 1!

Lotteries

Yote for o eo,.WioFu!r who spendt whotner time it
takes to do the job with o comilJorJ:ICRfe opprooeh!
I

(.

Founll!ltle..

•

.

Good Afternoon

..r

approval at the polls today. Although
Issue 2 has tmiled in polling· done
COLUM US- After months of throughout this spring. the most
legislative debate ·over the best recent polls show the "no" vote gliinresponse to an Ohio Supreme Court ing inomentum arid grabbing more
decision .that tossed out the state's than 60 percent of the vote.
scl!ooJ funding formula. Ohio voten
Among the projected 31 percent
finally weigh in on the subject at of eligible Ohio voters who will vote
poiiJrlg place.. today.
· today, Issue 2 is projected to lose 67
Confronting voten on the May 10 34, accoriiing lo the most recent
lial101 is State Issue 2 - whic:h uka Ohio Poll re~ 0\'ef the weekend.
Ohioans 10 raise their ~ sales tax Another poll released in the past few
from five to six cents. The Sl.l·bil· · days, .The BuckeY,e State Poll, also
lion-a-year in revenue raised by the. shoWed Issue 2trniling badly with 61
proposed tax hike 'would be split pen:ent opposed and 39 percent in
between schools and JllopCJty tax favor of it.
n:lief for holneowners of 15 percent
"People still have to vote, but the
up 10 $215.
•
.
polls. are indicating .that we'111 doing
Topping statewide ballots is the . well," Vote No on Issue 2 spokesper·
less-c:onUpVenial Issue I, a pro- son Brian Rothenberg said. "We
posed constitutional amendment believe that people aren't paying
which would authorize the state of attention to TV commercials and thai
Ohio 10 issue bonds 10 pay the costs they an: listening 10 their school
of school: faciliiies throughout Ohio. superintendents saying thai this doesRecent pol!ina does not give the n't solve the pi:Oblem."
proposed penny hike in the state sales
Opposing the mea.'IUre ha.• been an
tax much chance to gain voter unlikely coalition of ci;mservatives

•

The possibility of opening Meiga
County's health insurance propam to
employees of the county's villaaes
and tO'l(nships was discussed when
the Meip County Commissioners
met in regular session on Monday.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton said
thal he fell thai local government
employees should have Kl:eu to the
iqsu.ance plan, which is op ! need as
a self·fllnded proaram. in which
employee and employer premiums
· . are paid into a fund 'Nhich is then
used to pay c:laima ~ putlcipalina
county employees.
The fund bu been 1 considerable
ti~~M~Cial hlnbhip on·the commis. iionen cblnJ the pu1 seVeral ye111,
who have supplentcntcd it With money from the county's general.fllnd on

..

.
mpre than one occasion so that
claims could be paid.
. Thornton did nOt indicate·if he felt
that addinc township and village
emplOyees would help the plan's sol·
• . veney, &amp;ut did say he relt lhat the
employees were in need of accq~to
a ~th insunnce program. ·
The plan will be up for rene'Nal in
August. and the commissioners have
discussed the po11ibility ~ tumins
employee hqllh insunnce over to a
private insunnce cornpllly in an
lltempt 10 allev.ille the financial
hanbhip placed on the boMI.
Commiuioaer Jllld tlo'Nanl said
she felt the county "lhould not be in
the i~~~Ur~~~C:e bu&amp;i-.• and said thai
the ~an~ WOIIId leek c:01t e111m11es
from privale carrlen prior to.renew·
in1 its conlllet With Medical Claima
' · (Canllnued on~
3)

P.-

•

A .recycling center under con·
struction in Wellston will meet the
demand.' or new markets requiring
recycled materials, officials with the
Gallia-Jaclcson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste Manasernent District said'fol·
lowing a groundbreaking ceremony
last week.
When oompreted, me ~late-of· .
the-1111 facility will' offer a secure out·
. let 10 process n:cyciable materials for
end~· explained Scott CopJey,
the dtslrict'a public relations coordi·
nator.
Rccenl marll'ds have been allowed
for facilities 10 recyc:le textiles such
as old clothing and rags. The solid
waste district looks to become a cen·
tral SCIVice point ror products like
used oil and paints, Copley said.
"The new center will also serve as
a strong educational 'tool· for area
scllools, clubs and organizations who
would ~ke 10 visit and ICim about the
recyclltis proeeu." he added.
Gallia County Commissioner
Harold Montsomery, a member of
the Solid Waste District board of
directon, presented a check for
$337-'00 received from bond sale5
by Gallia and Jackson counties ror
the center's constRICtion.
uwe are very exciced to reach this
poini with a recyclina racility," Mmt·
gomery said. "Cooitililiedcoopallive
elf~ can acc:omplish the care of the
environmental needl ~ the area,
while hopcfuUy beautifylns and ere· •
. riling a healthientandlld of Jiving for
. residents."
.
Commisaionen from Gallia, Jack·
son alld Vinton countiel were on
hand for the poundblakins. Mcip
CounJy Conuniuionm were Ullllble
: to llltCnd.
ContriCtot on the .ecyclina eeRier
is McCatty Construclion of Jac~.
Colistruction ia acheduled for 'com·
plelion by mid-OctOber, end the di.. .
trict loob to have the facilitY operationll by euty 1999.

siiCh as Scon Pullins, head of the anti·
tax Ohio Taxpayer's Union, and
scllool administrator groups such a.•
the Buckeye Association of Scljool
Administrators. and the Ohio School
Boards Association. Also against the
issue is the.Coalition for Equity .and
. Adequacy of School Funding, the
group of over 500 school districts that
successfully sued the state over it's
syllem·of sdtooll'qndinJ. •
Undeterred by the poll numbers,
proponents of Issue 2, including
Gov. George Voinovich, the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce and the Chilllren's Defense Fund, .continue to .
push their message that the money is
needed for education in a multi-mil·
lion dollar television ad campaign.
"We're going to pgsh through to
&lt;i•e finish line," said Cliff Treyens.
~pokesperson for Every Child Counts
- the pro-ls.•ue 2 camp. "We continue to advocate a yes vote and con·
vince e~ery undecided vote thatlhiy
need to do it ror education."

==~__...;..----:

Waste district
recycling unit
· to handle need

Dldieatlll to Provilliq Jo•s .
arullrulustrialarul BUsiness

lion's owner.
At first they ai towed them to congregate there. then they ran into problems. Miller explained.
'They got sick and tired of going
out every morning and cleaning trash
and broken bottles out of their parking lot," he said. "Peoples Bank
complained because people were
afraid 10 use the ATM machine."
The kids were squealing tires in
!he parking lot and the employei!S
Who closed the store for the night
were . afraid to leave without .the
police Iller)!. he said.
Earlier the police tried to let the
kids use the upper lot and there were
lights and litter. he said. Since then,
the youths have gone from lot to lot.
'We haven't had a mature
response . from the . kids," he
explained.
.
(Contlnulld on Page 3)

t~ese

..Buckeye State voter$ weigh in
to~ay with decision on Issue 2 ·

~

1

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Resident seeks place
for youths· to ga.ther

and gambli~g expert atttJ universi· number combination in Pennsyiva·
ty of Nevada in Las Ve~.,
nia's Daily Num!M;r game. you LONDON (AP) - A rigid
WASHINGTON - On a recent
"They're saying they want to ~be and everyone else who matched the
deadlock . confrontLS.ecretary of Tuesday afternoon, more than 4.500 )n the gambling. business," Thompnumber eKactly - get $500. So.
State Madeleine Albright in back· lottery machines Dm?SS Pennsylv~ia son sai4 pf state lottety offoci-!•· "but when a p&lt;ipular li~mber wins, the
to-back talks with ls111eli and Pales· suddenly stopped selling tickets on they don't WIIIIIIO be gaml!!Cf,· It just
state could be on the hook for big ·
tinian leaders on the future of the . ,number.~ 1010 and 1111. .
makes a sham Out of the w~Jq\e num· bucks.
contestad West Bank.
.Officials had no idea why so .bers game."
'·
"The lottery could end up pay~ng
At stake in today's di§!:ussions many people p!aying the lottery's Big
Thiny-seven states and the Dis· • out 20. 30 or even 100 times more
was momentum in Vasser Arafat's 4 game picked those numbers, but if lrict of Coiumbi~ openue !O'teries,
drive to lake control of virtually all one of them turned out a winner, the but not all offer numberS galiies.that than they actually took in for the
draw." Mishelof said.
of the territory for a state ~ the state could have paid out mon: than guarantee fixed pi;zes.
' i
Clint9n ildministration's ~:elation· $10 million in a game with sales of
The Nonh American As~iation
"It's a question of financial secuship with Israeli Prime Minister only about $660,000 a day. ·
of State and Provincial L.ottilries, a rity for states," said Chatles ClotfelBenjamin Nellinyahu.
Pennsylvania, like many other national lottery B.'l!l&lt;lCiation, could qo~· ter, a Duke University professor and·
If Albright is unable to persuade states · with lotteries, autoniaticaliy provide the list of states with num·
Netanyahu to relinquish about 13 stops selling popu,lar number combi· bers games. But .Executive Director co-author of "Selling Hope: State
lotteries in America."
percent, a figure far short of nations if the potential prize grows . David Gale said it is a stan"dllrd1.rac·
Arafat's goal but acceptable to him too large. lll.inois, New York, lice fut lotteries with these kiilcls of
"A lot of People bet on events and'
in the interim, the administration Delaware and Maryland also manip- games to build in a cutoff.
·· .
dates, and if the day of the week hit,
could suspend its mediation effons.. ulate the odds to ensure that big pay·
Numbers games, such a.• Penn- it would be bad news for a state that
That woilld deprive Israel oF its days for lottery playen do not cut too sylvania's Daily Number or ' New pays a fixed payout."
main link to the Arabs and the deeply into the state's profits and York's Win 4. were desisned to cash
Pennsylva.nia's largest payout world at large. PresidC:nt Clinton threaten popular · programs that ·in on the popularity of illegal 'num· $38.9 million -came in 1991 when
could order public disclosure of an depend on lottery receipts.
'bers rackets in Eastern cities.
777 hit and the cutoff on its Daily
American formula for settling West
"It's basically a prudent idea."
The games permit players 10 pick Number game was $40 million. .
Bank and Security issues, thereby
said Richard Misheiof, manager of combinations of three or four numin~tnsifying pressure on Israel.
game design for Automated Wager- bers. Bl\t. unlike lotto games in
·"That payout.took us four or five
At the outset, though, no threats ing International, who built the autO. which 'he prizes are determined by
weeks to recover from," said Sally
were voiced, only extreme pes·
malic safeguaRI into the Pennsylva- amount of money players iii vest, the · Danyluk, spok,eli.woman for the Penn·
simism. AtifSatieh, the Palestinian nia Lottery's computer system.
numben games usually guarantee a sylvania Lottery. ~ ~tate since has
representative in London, angrily
"The lottery's sole purpose for fixed payout.
cut the maximum payout in half for
denounced Netanyahu as "a pyro· existing is to provide extra revenue 10
If you bet $ I on a winning three- that game.
maniac on a powder keg ... .
provide services·," Mishelor said.
· Trying his own hand ~~ ending
"You have to protect that."
a 14-m&amp;th stalemate 1n direct
In New York, for instance, lottery
negotiations between Israel and the
mac)lines stop selling numben when
Palestinians. British Prime Minis·
the state could be on the hOok for $5
ter Tony Blair set up a parallel
million, said spokesman Rob Hayes. ·
schedule, inviting Netanyahu and
"We do !his to protect the tax~
then Arafat to 10 Downing Street
payer," Hayes said. "These aames
just!M;fore their appointments with . raise money for education. If we
Albright.
don'tlimilthe liability, we won't be
Blair, aided by Foreign Secreraising money foredU&lt;;ation; we'll be
tary Robin Cook, is doublinJ!: as
borrowing money from the treahost for the talks while Britain
sury.''
·
holds the chair now of the EuroBut the pnu:tice has critics, such
pean Union.
Before leaving for Britain on
as William Thompson, a p r o f e s ! I O r • ; ; ; ; i i i i i i i i i i i
Sunday, Arafat took a jab At
Netanyahu, saying "the success of.
the talks in London will depend on
Netanyahu's actions, because the
problem does not lie anywhere
else."

Ill',.,........, • eo.

•

•

·FRED.BO

""u

Reds captute
third straight,
beat Expos
Page&amp;

••

I •

States exercise self~protection
in limiting lottery ticket sales

"His policy is 10 try to gain
time," the Palestinian le;Jder told
London's Sunday Observer earlier.
Top Netanyahu aide David Bar·
Jllan predicted "some progress."
implying possible headwaY. toward .
eSiablishing a Palestinian airpon
and WfO!I in Gaza. "But anybody
who expecl~ a diamatij: break·
through will be disappointed," he
said.

Sports

•

Vote today! polls open ·until 7:30 p.m.
Sanies .thump Lakers, Page 4
.Time Out for Tips, Fage ~· 0

Today: Partly cloudy
High: 70s; Low: 40a

"I believe in nochins." Kaczynski wrote. "I don't even believe in the cuh
~ nllure-worshipen or wildemess-wonhipen. (I am perfectly ready to litter in parts ~the woods that are of no use IO.rne- I often throw can.. in
loued-ovet areas ...)"
"My motive for doing whall am &amp;Qing to .do is simply personal revense."
he wrote.
•
One journal encry spoke of Kaczynski's reaction when, in graduate school
at the Univenity of MichiP.J! in 1966. he visiced a psychiatrist to discuss
the possibility of a sex change operation.
·
Too ashamed to talk of his confused sex life, he left the meeting and wrote
in his diary: "Why not really kill that psychiatrist and anyone else whom I •
hate."
Since his brother David's tip led to Kaczynski's atTest in April 1996. the
family has claimed the writings were that of' a paranoid schizophrenic, not
a cold·b~ killer. In January a fedl:ral prison psychiatristasreed. open· inc the way for prosecutors to drop their demand for the death sentence and
allow the plea bargain. ·•

May 5, 1998

•
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ALUMNI GATHER- Tile COI..IIWIIIIIII of Raa dlvllllllcl Long
lloltDn• blcl'-•111 to tllllr Rlvlr'..,... llcMol on lllurday night.
Aclllw•IIICI cllt-for
sits" ol . . tlllf.WilwJ ldloolliaaUdbylhe..._wla•
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IICOidl, CII.IFDOIIt llllniWid ilpl!
piape fram ,_.pall. TW
ICIIool, Clplllld In, ... will. .. . , ... monll dulto . . oonll!lldlllpn of the •snem Looll elnmet lilY IChooll !neD. • new
building. Till ,.... of the clltilllcfa t11rw elan111uleiy IChooll
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.

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•

�Commentarr.

•

Page2 ·
Tuaadlly, lily 5, 11H

..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,May5,1998

OHIO Weather

•

Wednesday, May 6

,

AccuWeathc,a forecast for daytime conditions and

Past sarcasm and future profits

Tlie Daily Sentinel

By By Ian Sboales
Wall Street is going Las Vegas!
soon lo a trading desk
"Coming
111 Court Slrae,, Pomeroy, Ohio
near you ... , "claJms The New York
814-992·2156 • Fu 192·2157
Observer, "movie-backed funds."
That's right. You: Mr. or Ms. Investong Amencan•.--:•11 be a~le to buy a .
bond, representing a ptece of the
next
hit movie. Of course, you may
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
be buying a piece of the next
"Ho~ard the Puck" instead. That's
ROBERT L WINGETT
the nsk you take.
Publlahar
.. · Wall s.~el is, taking its cue from
Tilantc. That s Wall Street. the
.
metaphor
for American capitalism,
DIANE I;IILL
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
by the way, not ·:watt Street," the
Controller
GeMral,M111ager
awful Charlie Sheen movie. And it's
taki~g its cue from "Titanic" _the
movte, not Titanoc, the luxury hner
thal 'went down in icy waters.
When it comes to cues, capital·
ism -picks its cues very carefully,
even th~ugh 1ts metaphors are ·
always moxed. .
"Titanic" did not set the precedent for this wild behavior, however. It was David Bowie -- of all phe·
nomena -- who "sold $55 million of
bonds backed by reve_nues from
By 'PAUL SOUHRADA
future sales ofhts recordongs to Pru,
A..oclated Press Writer
dential
. Insurance Company of
COLUMBUS - A last-week blitz of anti-taK increase ads may help
opponents of state Issue 2 win the baule, but it might cost them the war.
The Vote No on Issue 2 campaign - backed by the United Auto Workers, the Ohio Federation of Teachers and 'other labor and education groups
- started running the television commercials in Cleveland and Columbus
last week.
·
Instead of focusing on the groups' own ideas about how to fiK Ohio's
school funding system, the ads attack the proposed penny increase in the
state sales t~K . They show a taK increase supponer gleefully 'ucking money
out of an average taKpayer's pocket with a vacuum cleaner.
That's despite ihe fact that some critics of lssu,e 2 have embraced tax
increases themselves.
·
The campaign plans to spend $200,000 or more on the ads through Tuesday's election.
·
Opponents of state Issue 2 say they 're not worried thas the ads might ruin
the chances of getting a heller deal for schools in 1~ Legislature if voters
reject the sales tax increase.
"Some coalition members have' backed tn increases in the past," conceded Brian Rothenberg, spokesman for the Vote No campaign.
"Our side is against this tax increase," Rothenberg' explained, emphasiz:

'LstufrsMI in 1948

Anti-tax ads may come back
to haunt Issue 2 opponents

inS ..this."

.. ••,..•..

·

Opponents say a vote against Issue 2 will he a signal thai Ohioans want
lawmakers to come up wi~ plan that provides more money for education.
Don 'I count on the same legislators who strusgled for the past year to
create anything resembling a funding solution to pick up the hint, though,
Senate President Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, has co1.sistendy warned
that the message lawmakers will take away from an Issue 2 defeat is that
voters are sick of tnes. The top Democrat negotiator in the crafting of Issue
2, Rep. Vernon Sykes, of Akron, has said the same thing.
Finan even sent a letter to the Cincinnati School Board to chastise it for
opposing Issue 2.
.
"The bottom line is that you have placed this legislator in an extremely
difficult political position," Finan wrote in the leiter daied Apnl 8. ·
.
"If you believe the failure of Issue 2 means more money from the stale,
forget it.''
,
.
Finan and other supporters say raising the tax frail) 5 percent to 6 percent
is necessary to pay for the Legislature's plan to meet an Ohio Supreme Coun
order to fix the way the state pays for public education.
·
The increase would generate abeut.S 1.1 billion annually. Half would go
for building repairs, technology, books and other school operating expenses.
The rest would go for a propeny tax break for homeowners.
Without the tax money, it's going to be awfully tough to convince lawmakers to come up with more money for education than what's already been
proposed, said Curt Steiner, campaign manager for the pro-Issue 2 Every
Child Counts committee.
·
Issue 2 opponents are just poisoning theit own well, Steiner said.
"One would have to infer that the position of the commiuee pulling out
this ad (against Issue 2) is against raising taxes for education," he added.
The Republicans supponing Issue 2 would spin that yam regardless of
what the labor and education groups did. Rothenberg sbot back.
Besides, Rothenberg said, Issue 2 is the only plan beiore the voters. And
if opponents arc 'going to make an impression on voters while being outspent
10- or 15-to-one, they had to come up with something memorable, something humorous.
.
..
·
"There is no way to address this issue ... and not tell the voters that this
is a tax increase," Rothenberg added.
Actually. there is.·
Of the six ads run so far by Every Child Counts, not one mentions the tax
increase.

Today i.n h:istory
By The ANOCJated Pre..

Dores Arnold

..:

•·

··:- ~~

America." An insurance company!
Taking the
hard-earned
money of its
fiscally conservative
customers
an!l · gambling it on
the future of
a fiftysomething Brit
pop star!
Thi$
should
Shoal..
require legislation, probably, but on the other
hand, maybe I should take my own
cue, and offer myself as an investmenl opportunity.
So what would an investor get
for his ·or·her buck"'!·
··A white '89 Ford Escort
-- Two 2-year-old computers. a
Mac and PC, along with an old dining room table, which I purchased at
a yard sale, on which they both rest
··A collection of UFO paraphernalia; including 83 plastic aliens,
many of which glow in the dark
-- 127 vintage LPs (no turntable)

-- An indeterminate number of
tapes, made of some of those LPs
recorded on a friend's turntable:
before it . broke down. I'll count
them if you need that number.
-- A semi-sizable consumer and
talt debt Who wouldn't want a
piece of that?
-- Various resentments, some. of
which have festered for 30 years
(Money in the bank!)
-- .827 used books
•• My resume
•• Two couches
.. Three really bad paintings, the
latest of which I purchased at a Salvation Army for $4.13, discounted
from $5.50. It's really, really bad.
So bad, in fact, it's almost good. It's
also an original, signed by the anist.
-- Three game systems, · a color
television and VCR (paid for!).
This includes a smattering of
games, and videotaped segments of
"Mr. ·Show," "South Park''. and
"Xena:. Warrior Princess."
·· ·My total sarcasm output to
date
•
-·Any future projects
I realize this last entry would
provide the most interest to a poten·

,.

tial wildcal entrepreneur out there.
But first I would rofer the careful
ponfolio collectorto the nexl-lo-lasl
item: my sarcasm output
Tbis has made me literally thousands of dollars over the years, and
there's no reason to expect it won't ·
make me several thousand· more in
the immediate future.
Now, as to my future projects, I
think the guy or gal who chooses to
throw his or her hard-earned money
at me could reasonably expect to
receive as much sarcasm as I can
muster.
I also have several screenplays,
one of which is the thinly disguised
story of my life (unfinished), my
. novel-in-progress about Los Angeles being taken over by aliens, my
sonnet sequence, my concept
album, Web site (in progress), video
game, implllence treatment pill. theory of life, opera, ballet ·scenario,
Broadway musical', off-Broadway
musical, hard-hilling expose of this
whole €linton nap, search engine, a
light beer with the full-bodied flavor of an ale, a low-cost vacation
package, my exclusive interviews
with J.D. Salinger and Thomas Pynchon. a 10-step program for fabulous sex with anybody you desire .-all this, and more, for just pennies a
day!_
I' II be fra~k.. I don 'I have the teen
appeal of a Leogardo DiCaprio, or
the mutant appeal of David Bowie
during his ''Spiders frorn Mars"
·. phase, but I do have sarcasm.
And you know, if you think
about it, phases and teen gods come
and go, but· sarcasm always
remains.
So, uin, like, invest now? This
concludes. my presentation.. Thank
you.
(ian Shoales' new book, "Not
Wet :Vet," is available from '2.13.61
Publications, PO Box 1910, Los
Angeles, CA 90078. The toll-free
number is 1-800-992-1361.)
Ian Shoales is syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprjse
AIISOCiatlon.

'·

.. ' '
..

• IColumbus176' I

W.VA.

Pt.

. .Another dry day slated
::~or . area on Wednesday
·By The Associated Press

.
· Most of Ohio will have another dry day on Wednesday, the National
' Weather Service said. The chance of widely scauered showers is limited IQ
southwest Ohio.
· ' But storms .are back in the forecast for Thursday and into the weekend.
Lows tonight will be near 50. Highs on Wednesday will be in the 70s.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather sta. ·tion was 92 degrees in 1952 while the record low was 32 in 1979. Sunset
tonight will be at 8:29 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 6:26 a.m.
Weather forecast:
" . Tonight...Becoming mostly clear. Areas of dense fog forming. Lows
.. •around 50. Light and variable wind.
WCdnesday... Fog until mid-morning, then panly cloudy. Highs in the upper
' .70s ..
, ' · · Wednesday. night. ..lncrensing cloudiness. Lows in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
'' .:· Thursday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
, ' Highs in the mid 70s.
...
Friday... Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
· .. in the mid. 50s and highs in the mid 70s.
· .
Saturday... Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
,, Lows in the mid 5Qs and highs in the mid 70s..

- southern Local's kindergarten
registration, screening slated

__

Screening for children who will
attend kindergarten in the Southern
Locai 'School District will be held
Thursday and Friday.
Children who will he five years
;'old on or before Sept. 30
eligible
• io auend kindergarten during the
. J998·99 school year. Parents should
call the kindergarten nl 949-2664 to
11rrnnge for an appointment for
kindergnnen registration.
Parents should bring their child's
binh cenificate, social security card;
. and immunization record to registra- tion. Child should have had four
·"OPT, three polio, one MMR, and one
1· ·(uberculosis skin test before entering

Payi~g 'or potency but not contrac~ption
By Sara Eckel

then why are
Before I say anything else, let me
'women
still
be clear: I am all in favor of male
paying for birth
.
potency. So I think the invention of
control?
wo~en
-the impotepce drug Viagra is' a fine
Why has '
and wonderful thing. And I agree
there
never
with the many men who say that
been a national
insurance companies should cover
outcry about
the medication.
the fact
. that so
However. I am a bit put off by
many women
the furor over this issue. Insurance
are ~helling out
$30 a month for position that an insurer is paying for
But for some reason, there has
companies a're coming under fire
the Pill~ Only . a man's ability to perform when it's been an underlying assumption ·that
because they want to limit their cov33 · percent of nlll paying for a woman's ability to · women are not entitled to this coverage of Viagra. Some have capped
Eckel
large
group conceive when she \¥&amp;nts to," says erage . . "I got a marvelous leucr
the number of doses ·they will cover
health
plans
cover
oral
contracepJeannie · Rosoff, president of 'the from one or the insurance compa-- six per month appears to be the
standard. Others say they will only tive&amp;, and the numbers for other Alan Guumacher Institute, which nies," says Rosoff. "It said that· to
cover contraception would be like
pay for 50 percent of the COS.l of the forms of prescription birth control studies.rcproductive health issues.
Janet Benshoof, president of the · subsidizing a. Florida vacation .
drug, as opposed to the usual 80 · are worse: Only 15 percent include
co.verage for diaphragms, 18 per- Center for Reproductive Law and · There's definitely a cultural lag .."
percent.
Hopefully, the Viagra c()ntroverI've been watching this story on cent cover IUDs and 24 percent Policy, was" more blunt: "You'd
the nightly news and reading about cover Norplant. This is panicularly thin~ the manhood of the nation was sy-will give insurers a long-overdue
it in the New York Times, and' appalling when ypu consider the · . at stake. The insurance companies reality check about birih control .
frankly I'm a little surprised by the· fact 'that 97 percent of these plans don't touch '!"Omen's health, but After all, considering lite expected
tone of the debate. Because it cover pres~ription drugs in general. when men can~t get it up, it's a glut in men who will be up and rar'ing to go, we're going to need it.
All of this adds up fast. In fact, national crisis."
appears to be a foregone conclusion
· What makes the situation even
Sara Ec!cel Is a syndicated
that men diagnosed with impotency it's major reason why women of
are entitled to the drug. The que·s- childbearing age pay 68 percent · more frustrating is the fact that GOo- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
tion is not, "Should Viagra he cov- more in out-of-pocket medical costs lraceptives, unlike impotency drugs, . Association.
Send cJHD-nll to the author
are cost-effective. They are cheaper
. ered?" It is " How MUCH Viagra .than their male counterparts do.
The irony of the Viagra debate than sterilization, ai!.Qrtion and binh In care of this neWspaper or stnd
should be covered?"
So here's MY question: If men's . was not lost on reproductive health •• all three of which are covered by her e.·mall at samumaol.com.
,../
erections are · going to he funded, advocates. "It's a wonderful juxta- '"ostlarse group plans.

.

Today is Tuesday, May 5, the 12Sth day of 1998. There are 240 days left
Today's Highlight in l;listory:
•
inthexcar.
On MayS, 1961, astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became America's first
space traveler as he made a IS-minute suborbital flight in a CBJIIule launched
from Cape Canaveral, Fla
On this date:
In 1818, political philosopher Karl Marx was born in Prussia.
In 1821, Napoleon Bon;IJI8rle died in exile on the island ofSt. Helena.
In 1·862, Mexican forces loyal to Benito Juarez defeated French troops
sent by. Napoleon Ill in the 8aule of Puebla.
In 1891. Carnegie Hall. then named Music Hall, had its opening night in
.
.New York City.
.
In 1925, John T. Seopes "'as arrested in Tennessee for 1eachi11g Darwin's
, theory
. of evolution.

are

All
of this adds up. fast. In fact, . it's 'a
.
maJOr reason why
ofchildbearing
age pay 68 percent more in out-of-pocket
medical costs than their male counterparts do.

.

·~.Actions

to end
"·,marriages filed

b

·

01ng ey·ond ·th·e numb·ers
.

.

.

·

,

.

.

.

. ·

, ·

·

By Dian Vujovlch

· able to get some fee breaks if a fund ~ rule.·
But never mind what TheStreei
After the perfonnance numbers didn't, say, beat its. benchmark. In ·
--Does the family have soft-dol· - thiJ!ks;most of the large fuild fam~
are tallied, do you ever wonder what fiiCI, only lhn:c of the 27 families Jar arrangements? A soft-dollar li~ queried havesuch ~~~&amp;ngements'
kinds of ~ management ~rks link their funds' fees to performance. arrangement is a way ,of paying bro- Eighteen of them said yes, they par:
fund families offer their sharehold- These are F1dehty, Vanguard and kerage firms for their services ticipate in soft-dollar arrangen-.:nts\
ers? One online service decided to IDS.
.
. · through commissions rather than . seven said they didn't; and tw6
find 0111.
·· Is "no 12(b)·l fee" an option? . through direct bill\ngs. . (Oirect . answered "no comment/' .
TheStreet.com, 11 financial Web
•• Has the family ever ci?sed i
site, decided to loot at some of
fund? There is more than one reasooi
America's largest equity fund rami- · In this sur.vey, each answer was given a to closC a fund, but the most talkedl
about reason revolves arouad assetS
In 1942, sales of sugar r~umed in the United States under a rationing
lies and their overall investins per, proJram.
j
.
sonalities. The soal was to find numerical weighting, with thtJ highest possible ·•• too many, or 100 few, can cause
problems. Of the fami:
In J'94S, in the only fatal auack·or its kind during W(jl'ld Warn, a Japlllanswers 10 some broader fund man- score being 11. The
families scoring the management
balloo bomb
laded
0 arhart
·
- agemenl questions itt-hopes that this
lies surveyed, 17 have closed fundC
esc
n .
exp
on e
Mount,ip in Oregon, killing the
information might help people make most w~re Fidelity, Janus and Vanguard; Each and 10 have not.
pn:pant wife of a minister and five children.
ltiser fund investment decisions.
. In this .survey,' each answer wai
In 19SS, West Germany became a sovereian ~le.
''There is 1 lot more to choosing scored·six points. Next in line, with a score of
given. a nulneri~al weighting, willi
In 1981, Irish Republican Army hunp,:r-tirikef Jlobby Slfds died at the
a fund manager and fund family than five, were four fund families: IDS, Kemper,
the highest possible score .being 11 ;
Maze Prison in Northern_Ireland in his fi6111 ... "h~llllf fq.
performance,.. says. Jamie Heller,
The
fund families scoring the most
Harris (Oakmark)'ar}d Scudder.
·
In 1987. the congress1onallran-t;:on~a~-""IS ope
.pef)ed '¥ilh former Air
executive' editor ofTheStreet.com.
were Fidelity; Janus and Vanguard:
Foree Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord as
o with~s~.
In the survey, five questions were
Each scored six points. Next in line·
with a score of five, ·were four fund
The 12(b)-r fee .is not the manage- billings are called hard-dollar fees.) . families: IDS, Kemper, H""'is (Oak"
,...
., Can fund maniiJCrs . trade ment fee that all shareholders pay An example of a soft-dollar arrange- mark) and Scudder.
annually; rather, it is 111 additional ment in the mutual fund arena misht
But don't let these .scores fool
annual
fee
that's
used
to
pay
for
.
be
a
brokerage
firm
that
supplies
a
you.
The value in this survey isn't
. . -::::.:
Dear Ed1tor,
.
·
·
faN!.
should not be think- things like advenising, marketing, fund family with company .research; centered on the number of points
Mayor, council and 4llfrli'lis~ion ofPom,roy, pi~~ an emeraency
I IJIIall!
ks for any rmon other and compensacio'n of third-party dis- instead of the fund family being scOred, but on the peek the results ·
billed for that research, the family give you into the way fund families :
, squad ride Jl S:JO a.tp.ii* ~ Mrd~ J'omeroy-M,son Bridseto \lrt·
fund's _performance. In tributors of funds.
TheStreet doesn 'I think all funds agrees to use that firm as one ofiis conduct business.
.
erans Memorial Hostii~ 1 hive a
ic put an N ..OOio in tile
,/Jill but one fund family -should
impose
12(b)-l
fees,
particub
roilers
when
buying
or
selling
secu'
Dilll
~
Is
•
tyadkaled
:
of your 111\ while lht sqp"' hju ~
potlt!ile a!Kitry 10 kOfP hi~ ~ ,
· ~low their fund JIIIUgCrS to
I.,Jy
funds
with
"!l'
shns
or
lrontrities.
.
.
writer for New~p~~per EMtrpr11e '
which was f'O' cas&gt;:, ~jliiiQ
on to, Alleds both ~ for ,
,
llocks for their own ICCOIIJib,
.
I
'
Because soli-dollar commitments· Awodadoa.
a little forward. backffll•loiitl.tt~de. ahhh, got it. I did.
•• Do fundi link fees to perfor- . end ·loads. Hcte, to fund familie~
1
r
Qll...,. u~"
mance? Here, TheStreet wis hopiha said 12(b)-l fees were an option. In till CRate some awkward relaliOJ)' -:-~ •
• .
to find that shareholders miaht~ be the remaining 17 families, thoy were ships, TheStrect isn't hoi' on them.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPUIJ.HI)

·rublistled ~very al'leraoon, Monday throuah
' Friday, Ill Co.UI St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ollio Valley Publishing CompanyfGannetl Cp.,
Pomeroy, Ohio ..5769, Ph. 992-2156. Second
c:IUI pottap paid II Pomeroy, Obio.
Ncwtpaper Association.

'
,POSTMAS'I'EAI Send addrns corn:ctlonJ lo
The Daily Se:nliMI, Ill Court St .. Pomeroy,

Letters

tq· 1 he. .,.dl.·tor

Pomeroy~"'-'~

I

1

·

-

=

=;:.~~~~estelplityfund

.,-rmr'T

~

. '. 1·1

•. .&gt;

·Activity planned ·at ,park

Hospital news

Stocks

investigate drug and other major
crimes through the prosecutor's
office. The program was formerly ·
operated by the Athens County Prosecuting Auomey.
The commissioners also:
• Signed a proclamation declaring
May as "Community Action Month;"
• Approved a transfer of funds
within the budget of the board of
elections in the amount of $300, and
$1 ,040. 71 in the county court budget;
• Approved payment of bills totaling $66.300.31, with 165 entries.
Preseill, in addition to Thornton
and Howard, were Commissioner
Fred Hoffman, Clerk Gloria Kloes
and · Prosecuting Auorney John
Lentes.

ment, will be·reduced.
On Saturday, nature hikes, a c~il­
dren's treasurer hunt, coloring contests, movies at the arnphitheatc;t and
door prize drawings will be held on
Saturday.
Park officials urge campers to
arrive early. since camplng at Ohio ·
state parks is offered on a first-come,
first-served basis. Reservations are
not accepted.
Funher information is available by
calling the park at 378-6206.

Announcements .
PTO to meet
The Letan Elementary PTO will
meet at 6 p.m. tonight (Tuesday) at
the school.
RACO yard sale
The Racine Area Community
Organization yard sale will be held
May 14-15 at Star Mill Park. with
proceed' to benefit the RACO Scholarship Fund for Southern High
School senior.;. Pickup for-donat!ons
is available, for pickup or for more
information call Frank Cleland at
949-2071. Dale Hart at 949-2656 or
David Zirkle at949-2031.
Modem Woodmen
Burlingham Modem Woodmen
will h:we a potluck dinner Saturday,
6:30p.m. at the hall. Mothers will be
recognized.

~~weoll.o

complele ~io ollile instirance

;WE NEVER
. CoMPROMISE ON

producls'and services 1o help keep
)W Rnancial~ secure today and in
'- yecn lo come. Coli ~s today lo
find oul more aboul ru many
dilltnnt life insunn:a pions.

WE Do ON PRICE. ·
SPRING SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

0.. -0..:.-............................................Slilll
0.. M.,o~ ......................,......................... $11.711
0.. Yett ..................................... ,......... SUN:CIO
SINGLE COPY PtiiCit

O.ily ··· ····· ············~······················· ··"'''35 Celli

1s.blaibers ftOI detlri"JIO pi)' IMCirritr ml)'

mnit ill ldvuce direct 10 The Dally Sentinel
'Oftilhrce,siaor 12 mpndlbalit:. CrtdiiWill be
aiven Clffief tacb wed:.

\

Paula K. Dillon
Associate Agent
Jim Rogers' &amp; Associates
3310S ....,IW, !uittll, Paooofroy, 0114S7"

No MJblc:rlptlol by 11'111 ptrmined i• •ru•

where home arrier acrvice ilavallllbl•,

~w·m~
tM

(Continued from Page 1)
Se" ices of Ravenswood, W.Va.,
which administers theself-insurance
plan for the county. . '
In other business. the board tabled
bids for a new computer system for
the county auditor. until prices for
computer hardware can be obtained.
Two bids were ope.ned.last week for
the new accounting system, but the
bids wers.. almost twice what the
county ha(f estimated for the system,
and did not include necessary hardware.
The commissioners also established a line-item fund' for the county prosecutor's major crimes ta.'k
force, the former SECO drug task
force, in the amount of $141 ,000.
Those state funds will be used to

BUT OCCASIONALLY

SUIISCRimON IIATES
81 Cllntn"er Moter Ro.te

r

Commissioners explore

QUALITY

·OIIio 45769.

fUnd

Emory Edwin Gordon, 82, Middleport, died 1\tesday, May 5, l9?8 in Vel·
erans Memorial Hospital.
. ·
· Born April 20, 1916 in Cheshire Township, Galli aCounty, son of the late
Baker and Mabel Hawley Gordon, he.retired as an anendant at the Gallipo.lis Developmental Center.
He was a 1934 graduate of Cheshire High School. and a U.S. Navy vel"
eran of World War II, servi ng as a motor machinist mate 3rd class.
Surviving are a a sister, and several nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by a broiher, Robert; and by two sister.;,
Belva and Janel.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Middlepon Chapel of the Fisher
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial will be in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the chapel from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Families can camp for free al
Forked R~ on Friday, and
enjoy special activities on Saturday.
Along with other state parks in
Ohio. Forked Run will celebrate
Gold Medal Appreciation Day on Friday, to celebrate the Ohio §late parks'
selection a.• the finest state park sys. tern in the world by the National
Recreation and Parks Association
and
the National Sp&lt;irting Goods
Holzer Medical Center
Association.
Discharges May 4 -· Kierstyn
Camping will he free of charge on
Sniathen, Clayton Miller. Nola Par-.
Friday.
and the regular fees for
sOils, Justin Kiser, Hoben Hill. Owen
camper
cabins
and Rent-a-Camps,
Cantrell, Anna Kerwood. Carolyn
which include tent' and other equipBrillhan. Sharon Frye, Donna Moles,
Trista Maynard.
(Published with permission)
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded seven calls for assistance Monday. Units '
Am Ele Power ......................47'1•
responding included:
Akzo ..............................:...... 1o~'M.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
AmrTech ..............................43 r.
3:36p.m., Bald Knob-Stiver.;ville
Ashland 011 ...........................52'1.
Road,
Pomeroy, Leota Birch, VeterAT&amp;T ....................................61'·
ans
Memorial
Hospital;
Bank One ..............................58'4
1
5:03
p.m.,
West Main Street,
Bob Evana ............................20 4
Borg-Warner ...........................61
Pomeroy. motor vehicle accident.
Broughlon ............................. 16'1.
Melody t,awrence and Marshall
Clutmplon ............................... 14
Riley refused treatment, Pomeroy
Clutnn Shpl ......................... .4"!..
squad
assisted:
City Ho1ding .............. ;••.•...•..44'h.
II :26 p.m.• North Second Avenue.
Federal Mogul .....................66"1.
Middleport. Francis Gould, Holzer
Gannett .................................67'A.
Goodyear..............,...••.........68'%, -Medical Center.
Kmart .............;................. . ....17Y.
MIDDLEPORT
Kroger ....................................42
II :05 p.m., volunteer fire depan~
Lands End ...........................36"1•
ment
and squad to Barefoot Hollow
Lld.........................................35Y.
Road.
storage building fire, Hugh
Oak Hill Flnl ............................28
'
Thompson
owner, Alicia McDaniel,
OVB ....................................... 48'k
VMH.
One Valley...............................39
Peoples ...................................31
POMEROY ·
Prem Flnl ............................... 21 '.\
II :39 a.m., Collins Road, Howard
Rockwell ................;.............. 57'&gt;
Searles, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
RO/Sheii .................... :..........57'Y.
REEDSVILLE
Sears .:...,............................... 511\
10:33
a.m.,
Stale Route 124, MarShoney'1 .................................5'A.
Star Bank ..............................62\
garet Nesselroad. St. Joseph's Hospi·
Wendy's ................................ 24'&gt;
tal.
Wosrthlnglon ........................ 17'.1
SYRACUSE
·
II
:35
a.m.,
College Road, John
Stock reports are the 1'0:30
Hunnell,
VMH.
a.m. quotes. provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

-·-·-

Mnab111 Ttte As50Ciated Preu, aad tlr!e Ohio

.

school. School nurses will be present
at registration to answer any or your
questions concerning your child's·
immuniza.tion requirements.
School personnel will ·assess the
beariqg, speech, physical, an!l language' abilities of children who are
being enrolled. Information about
each ~hild's performance will be provide&lt;! to parents at a later date.

Emory E. Gordon

Meigs EMS runs

· ' •. The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
·. .of Meigs County Clerk of Coons Lnr·
• ·I'Y Spencer:
'
', Dissolutions asked - Jason Lee
...Stewart. · Pomeroy. and Brandi Joy
. Stewart, Syracuse, April 29.
Divorces a.'ked- John W. Thule,
~ ,Racine, ·from Gaya D. Tuule. Albany.
.. _April 30; Sue Ellen Watson.
Pomeroy. from Stanley Nelson Wat·
, ,.wn. Rutland, April 29; Christina
. ·,Ann Teaford, Pomeroy, from Brian
Wayne -Teaford, Chester, April 29;
Frances A. Gould, Portland, ·from
Eric F. Gould, Millon, W.Va., April.
27.
·Dissolution granted - Diana Sue
Spaun and Ronald Alan Spaun, April
22; Jeffrey L. Counts and Kathy J.
Counts. April 27.

a

G •

IND .

Dores Arnold. 80, Pomeroy, died Monday, M~y 4, 199.8 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
A coal miner and former employee of the Ohio Pallet Co., he was born
Aug. 15, 1917 in Pomeroy, son ofthe late Raben and Mary Ellen Dill Arnold.
He wa.• a member of the Eagle Ridge Community Church.
He is survived by his wife. Mildred E. Singer Arnold; three daughters and
sons-in-law, Mary R. and Jimmie King of Long Bouom, Patricia and Norman E. Hysell of Pomeroy. and Janet and Roger Jeffer.; of Pomeroy ; a son
and daughter-in-law, Robert L. and Jean Arnold of Point Plea.,ant. W.Va.; several grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren: asist~r, Mary Rumfield of Pomeroy; and a brother, Dana W. Amold of Cali forma.
He was preceded in death by two sons. Jimmy Joe and Henry Goy Arnold;
five brothers, Harley. Del ben. ·Grover. Horton and Robert Arnold; a sister,
Rosella Boyd.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. John Neville officiating. Burial will be in the Rock Sprjngs
Cemetery. Friends may call at. the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.

'

ldJ•• "'"
do••al••

: P\lblilkr fCICf\'11 the riiiU to
dur·
l•stiM subKrlptioo period. Slaaiptloa rate
-&lt;b••aa may bi llft9lcmenteol tty
the
._dur•tioa of the ~ion.
MAlLSU-=t~tmONI

Olfo: 740.992-2311 181-445-9426 .

.AiNATIONWJDE ~

..

U!!iSJ!.~~~c~ ~

I-MolpC-

IlW..ta ........ - ......................................S27.30
'26 Weeta ............. , ..................................SUI\2
}1 Weeta ............................................... SI05.56
RllooOtthllltMotpc-,

tJ-a ................................................. t29,2$

26 \Veeta......................................... :.......$56.611
52\Yoob............................................. SI09.n .

•

520 W. Main St. - Pemeroy, 0

Ph_ ......
vinton ·188 8801
Gallipolill - ... 01181

II. I
I

Ol

,.

742·2211

�)

Tuesday, May 5,1998

Tuesday, May 5, 1~;

SuperSonics thump Lakers 106-92

JONES PICKED OFF • Seattle's Vln Baker
(i42) picks .off Eddie Jones (6) letting Ga,.Y Pay·

ton go around the block In third quarter action .
of Monday's game In Seattle. The SuperSonics
won, 1116-92. (AP)
·

Scoreboard
w
21
14
13
II
10

w
Houston
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Chicap
Cincinnati
Pittshurgh·

19
17
17
16
15
12

w

l

''

National League
East Division
L
Pet.
GB
10
.677
14
.500
112
16
.448 . 7
20
.355
10
19
.345
10
Central Division
L
Pet.
GB
II
.633
12
.586
I 1/2
13
.567 . 2
14
.533
3
4
15
.500
18
.400
7

s

West Division

L
9
14
15
17
23

Pet.
.700
.533
.5 16
.452
.258

GB

San Diego
21
5
Los Angeles
16
5 1/2
San Francisco
16
7 1/2
Colorado
14
13 1/2
Arizona
8
Monday's Games
Cincinnati 4, Montreal I
Colorado II. Philadelp hia 2
Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 2
San Francisco 8. Florida 0
San Diego 13. Milwnukee 5
Arizona 4, N.Y. Mcts 2. II inn1ngs
Only games sched uled
Tuesday's Games
Cindnnati (Harnisch 2-0) at Mon1rcal iBallsta 0-1 )._7 :05p.m .
Colorado (Kilc 3-3) at Philadelphia tGrac.e 1-3 ). 7:05p.m.
San Francisco (Hcrshiscr 0-3) al Flmida (Meadows 3-3). 7:05p .m.
S1. Louis (Mcrckcr 2-1) at Piltsburgh !Cordova 3-21. 7:05p.m .
Los Angeles (Valdes 2-3) at Allanl;l (Neagle 3- 1). 7:40p.m.
Arizona (Daal 0-1) al N.Y Mcts (Miick·i 0-3 ). 7:40p.m.
Houston (Lima 4-1) at Ch icago Cuhs (Clark 2-3 ). 8:05p.m.
San Diego (Smith 2-2) at Milwaukee (Wagner 1-2). 8:05p.m.
Wednesday's Games
...
San Diego (Brown 2-2) at Milwaukee (Karl -t-0). 1:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Dreifon 0-1) at Atlanta (Maddux 2-2). I: 10 p.m.
Housto n .(Reynolds 2-2) at Chicago Cubs (Wood
. 2-2),. 2:20p.m.
Cincinnati (Remlinger 2-3) at Montreal (Vl\Zqucz 1-2), 7:05 p.m.
Colorado (Thompson 1-2) at Philadelphia (Beech 0-2), 7:05p.m.
San Francisco (Reuter 3-2) at Florida (Hernandez 2-2), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Stottlemyre 3-2r at Pittsburgh (Schmidt 3-1 ), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (Anderson 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Jones 1-3). 7:40p.m.
American League
East Division
L
Pet.
GB
w
6
.769
20
New York
9
.690
I 1/2
20
Boston
.)6
14
.533
6
Baltimore
17
.414
9 1/2
Tampa Bay
IZ
12
18
.400
10
Toronto
Central Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
17
12
.586
-Cleveland
12
17
.414
5
Chicago
12
18
.400
5 1/2
i&lt;ansas City
18
.400
s ~112
Minnesota
12
7
20
.259
9
Detroit
West Division
w
L
Pet.
GB
Texas
19
10
.655
.567
Anaheim
17
13
2 1/2
16
.467
Oakland
14
5 112
.467
16
Seattle
14
5 112
Monday's Games
Chicago White Sox 6. Anaheim 5
Oakland 7. Toronto 4
Only games scheduled
Thesday 's Games
Baltimore (Key 4-1) at Cleveland (Wright 1·2), 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Tewksbury 3-3) at Boston (Wakefield 2-1), 7:05p.m.
Tampa Bay (Alvarez 3-3) at Kansa.~ City (Pichardo 1-2), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Cone 3-1) at Texas (Burkett 2-3\. 8:35p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Eyre 1-3) at Scllttle (Fasmo 2-1 ), I0:05p.m.
Dctroil (Keagle 0·5) at Oakland (Candioui 3·3), 10:05 p.m.
J:oronto (Guzman 1-4) at Ana~cim (Hill 5-1), 10:05 p.m. Wednesday's Games
.
Detroit (Moehler 2-2) at Oakland (Haynes 1-1), J i5 p.m.
Bal,timore (Erickson 3-2) at Cleveland (Burba 2-3), 7:05p.m.
Minnesota (Hawkins 0-3) at Boston (Checo 0-1), 7:30p.m.
Tampa Bay (Arrojo 3-2) al Kansas City (Rusch 3-3), 8:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Wells 3-1) at Texas (Wilt 3-1 ), 8:35 p.m.
Chicago While Sox (Baldwin 2-3) al Seallle (Cioude 3-1), 10:35
p.m.
Toronto (Hanson 0-1) at Anaheim (Olivares 1-0), ··10:35 p.m.
I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

The Daily Sentin~~j

Sports

Atlanta
New York
Philadelphia
· Florida
Montreal

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· -Sports .briefssBOXING
NEW YORK (AP) -- Boxer Julio
Cesar Chavez. the proseculion's star
witness in promoter Don King 's
insurance fraud trial, teslified !hal he
never signed an allegedly bogus con·
tract submitted to Lloyd's of London.
Chavez, 35, took the stand in U.S.
District Coun in Manhattan in a
rematch against King, who was tirst
tried two years ago on nine counts of
fraud for allegedly ripping off the
British insurance company.
Chavez's scheduled 1991 fight
with Harold Brazier was canceled
when Chavez was injured during a
sparring session. King later collected
$350,000 in supposedly non-refundable training expenses from Lloyd's.
To do so, King or his 'tompany. Don
King Produclions Inc .. had to submil
a contract that specified thai the
$350.000 could not be retrieved from
Cha,ez.
BASKETBALL
.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP),- Nazr
· Mohammed, whose shot blocking
and rebounding helped lead Kentucky to the NCAA championship.
said he will forgo his senior season to
enter the NBA draft,
·
Mohammed. a 6-foot-1 0 center.
said he would not hire an agent in
order to protect his college eligi~ili:
ty in case he changes his mind before
the June draft. He has until se'en
days prior 10 the draft to withdraw his
name and return for a fi nul year:
BYFIELD. Mass. (AP) -- Dan
Gadzuric. one of the nation's most ·
highly recruited prep cenlers, said he
will attend UCLA.

ByJIMCOUR
AP Sports Writer
SEATTLE -- The Los Angeles
Lakers' decision 10 let Jerome Kersey
get away might tum out to haunt
them.
Kersey. a key performer in the
Seattle SuperSonics' firsl·round
series victory o'er Minnesota, helped
beat his old team Monday night.
He was on lhe Hoor for the Sonics for II minules in the decisive
fourth quarter, when they pulled
away and beat the lakers 106-92 in
the opener of the Weslem Conference
semifinals.
.
"Jerome is the key right now,"
teammate Gary Payton said. "He's
playing super ball."
Playing in his 106th playoff game.
Kersey, 35, had 12 points and seven
rebounds in 23 minutes. In .the final'
period, he had si• points and four
rebounds.
"He comes out and gives us a hustle effon thai no one on their team
matched," the Sonics' Vin Baker said.
"And, really, no one on our team
malched it."
Two of lhe olher conference semifinal series begin lonight. In the East·
em Conference. New York is at lridi·
ana, while the Western Conference
has San Antonio at Utah.
The other Eastern Conference
series resumes Wednesday night with
Chicago. which holds a. 1-0 lead,
playing host to Charlolte.
. Kersey has a little e&lt;tra incentive
against the Lukers, who signed free
agent Rick Fox in AuguSI and send

Kersey on his way. He then signed
with Seattle as a free agent in September.
After being used as Seattle's slart·
ing cenler in its five-game series vic·
tory over the Timberwolves, Kersey
is a reserves against lhe Lakers
because the SoniCs want 10 use Jim
Mcilvaine against Shaquille O'Neal.
But Kersey, limited to 37 games
this season because of foot and
shoulder injuries. will get a lot of
minu1es.
E•perience wirs close .playoff
games, Kersey said. And the lakers
are the youngest team still alive in the
playoffs.
"We've been through a lot of
fires, and know what to expei:t," he
said. "Maybe we don't gel airattled
as some of the younger players."
After the Lukers led 82-80 with
2:56 gone in the tinal period, Seattle
outscored theni 26-10. Payton scored
nine of his 25 points in tile fourth
quarter. while Deller Schrempf had
six of his 19.
The Lakers won 25 of their pre vi·
ous 29 gaines, including a 3-1 tirst·
round victory over Portland, and
were lhe favoriles coniing into the
Seattle series because the Sonics
struggled the second half of lhe season.
Seattle coach George Karl said lhe
Sonics have an advantage against the .
Lakers because lhey had to suf\'ive
lhe scare of lheir li'es againsl Minnesota.
"I think the big thing is Game 4
and 5 got us to a demand menlality

-----.Sports briefs-BASEBALL
DALLAS (AP)-- Mickey Man·
lie's family was unaware the FBI kept
a dossier on lhe baseball great showing he was threatened by gamblers
and blackmailed for having an affair
with a woman.
·
"They were dumbfounded lhe
FBI wo.uld be looking inlo Mickey
back in the mid:l950s," familr
lawyer. Wayne Miller said. "They
knew no reason why the FBI should
be following them. Merlyn (Manlle's
wife) had no idea il was going on at
that lime."
The 28-page file. reponed Sunday
by New York's WCBS-TV, conta.ins
a report that in 1956 lhe New York
Yankees star was blackmailed for

$15,000 after being caught in .a
"compromising silualion" with a'
married woman.
A I%3 entry has a source Jelling
·the FBI that Mantle received anumber of telephone calls .from a known
gambler, the station said. The lile also
has a 1960 letter lo Mantle lhre.aten·
ing lo shool his knees.
Mantle died of .fiver cancer in
1995.
HOCKEY
ZURICH. Swilzerland (AP) -Herb Brooks pulled off another mir·
acle as France beat lhe United Slates
3-1 in the World Championships,
damaging the Americans' chances of
· advancing to the second round.
'

.

•
"

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

Evening meals

that the Lakers didn't get in their
series." Karl said.
Paylon played 43 minutes afler
playing the entire j!ame-- and scor·
ing 29 poinL•- in Game 5 against
Minnesota on Saturday. He's averaging 42 112 mi.nutes and 25.8 points in
si• playoff games.
And lhere·s still some petrol left ill
his tank, he said.
" I was on super," he saiQ. "Now,
rm 'trying 10 go 10 elhyl. I'm going
to get a lube job tomorrow."
.
And 1he Sonics. now 4-1 against
the Lukers this season. may ha'e !heir
Pacific.Division opponent's number.
" The~ sure· don't want to fall
behind 0-2." Karl said of Game 2.
The Lukers got 27 points and II
rebounds from O'Neal, but he was 5for-12 from the free-throw line.
Los Angeles was outscored 15-2
from the free-throw line in the final
period, and the Sonics had ·J I 3.·
pointers to lhe lakers' five.
"We have to play smaner and take
the high percentage shOI," O'Neal
said. "We can 'ttum the game into a
3-poinl shooting contest."
Nick Van E•el, 2-for-7 in the
founh quaner. had a difference of
opinion wilh his 7-foot-1, 315-pound .
teammate.
. 'They're going 1o double Shaq, s(&gt;
the perimeter guys are going to hav~
to hit shots for us to win this series,"
he said.
.,
Notes: Mcll,aine, who played seven
minutes in Seallle's first-round series
againsl Minnesota, staned at center
for lhe Sonics. He wa.• charged with
four fouls in the third quaner.... The
Sonics outrebounded Los Angeles
52-42 with · Baker and Hersey
Hawkins getting eighl each; ...
Hawkins, who scorel,( 20 points,
made lhe Sanies· first four-poinl
play of the sea.•on with 49 seconds
left in lhe second quarter. He co~­
nected on a 3-poinler and made a free
throw afler bei~g fouled by Van Exel.

TUESDAY

Scalloped Potatoes
and Ham Casserole
Mixed Vegetables
Colli Slaw
Roll • Beverage
: Hot Cinnamon
Peach Slices
Hungarian Pork Chop
· Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Broccoil
Roll • Beverage
Strawberries on
elfood Cake

BREAD

WI\I.DORF IWAO

CENTER CLOSED FOR
IIEIIORIAL DAY

28

Salisbury Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Spina'Ch
Roll - Beverage
Mandarin Orange
Cake

legal issues that
need answered?
; John Len1es, Meigs Couniy
Prosecuting Attorney, will be at the
~eigs Multipurpose Senior Center
on May 21,1998 and June 25, 1998
from 9:30 lo 12:00 p.m. John will
P!J!Vide individual assistance · to
seniors with legal' issues, answer
qqeslions, prepare wills, etc., at no
cost

''

Carol Folmer, Home Health
: If you would like an appoint· Aide, provides Respite Service
ll)ent to lalk wilh him, call Darla . ror Paul (Bill) Hudson enabling
Hawley at 740-992-2161.
his caregiver time ror shopping
and errands.

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners ha'e
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So il's
only fair to charge you less for
your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and sa'e
even more with our special

f

"

.,

Aulo-Oo.nen lru•rnnre
.l ife Home Car Business

n.w, 'f',..V.,. "·-•n•

I

HONEY BEE AMBROSIA

.

answer questions. Please call Darla
Hawley, 992-2161, lo sel up an
appointment lime.
Thursday, May 21, Sarah
McGrew, R.N., Ohio Universily,
will speak about Arthritis at II :00.
. TueSI!ay, May 26 • a lrip will
be laken by Cenler vans to Fragrant
Fields garden and shop owned by '
.Denise Arnold, Hemlock Grove,
lea,ing the Center at 10:00.
Thursday, May 28 • lhe month·
ly birthday party will be held with
seniors celebraling birthdays in
May honored . Joan Wildman and
Gav Perrin, members of Trinily ·
Congregalional &lt;;::hurch, wjll speak
at II :00 about their recent mission
trip to work at Mission Mazahua,
localed in the Sierra Madre
Mountains about two hours from
Mexico City.
Thursday, May 28 • the Caring
and Sharing Support Group will ,
meet from 1:00 to 2:30, with a dis· . :
cussion about cancer trealment and
caregi,ing with Lenora Leiq.eit,
R.N., Coordinator.
Friday, May 8 and 22 • a dance
will be held from 8 10 II p.m. with
music by Out of the Blue. There
will be square; rourid and ·line dane·
ing and clogging during the
evening. Art Conant will be caller.
Admission is $5 .00 for a couple
and $3.00 single. The public is
invited to aucnd.
The Senior Citizens Cenler is
pleased to have the Lark quarlel,
Ohio Universily, for an evening
perlforn1an~:e at 6:00 on Thursday,
II

Your Senior Center
Is Here For You!
.

'

off

DarleQ.e Newell, Home Heallh Aide, assists Leona R1111ch with
fixing her hair While doing Penonil Care/Homemaker Service.

·"
,,
•

.'
'.

-

'

DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS

WE HONOR
,I
•

STARS program_ .:s.:u.:c.:c.:e.:s:.sf~u:l___.!;:ro:M:ER:;o:;v.:o:H·==·9:92:·3;::7s:s==o:o;Lo:e:N::au:~:EYE::;c::AR::o;:s :

, The STARS Program began as
a : proposal from . Governor
VoJnovich as an intergenerational
inltialive
to involve senior volun' .
te~rs as reading tulors and menlors
to• Ohio's school children. The
Meigs County Council on Aging,
Int .• is working in cooperation with
e&lt;;&gt;AD, -the Ohi9 Departmenl of
AJing
and
the
Pomeroy
Elementary School.

..•

'

29
VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP
PIMENTO CHEESE
BREAD
BROWNIE

'•

,•o

like

BREAD
PEACH SLICES WITH
ORANGE SAUCE

..•

•'

to have an .
. Organizations who would
advertisement.in this special edition please

Call Dave Harris
992-2156 Ext. 104

BREAD
APPLESAUCE

SALISBURY STEAK
MASHED POTATOES
WITHGRAW
SP1NAC1i
BREAD
CARRIFRUIT IWAO

- 15o/o
: Pictured left to right: Madgle Smith, Debbl~ Haptoastall,
principal, Helen Fraak, Ellen Johasoq, Represtntallve John Carey,
Ietty Curfmla, Etbel Wolr, Margarel Wyatt, and J1111nna Council.
Other STARS volunteers not pictured are: Lorene Goggins, Lois
.,awley, and Dorothy Janey.

Any Professional, Business, ·Individual or Civic .

11112ar

SWEET POTATOES
CAULIFLOWER

•
•

I

On Friday, May !"5th, The Daily Sentinel
will have a special edition with photographs
pf high school seniors gr.~duating .this year.
Now through Friday, May 8th, Drop You~
Photo Off at The Daily Sentinel or At Your
High School Office to Be Included In This
SpeCial Edition, 'At No Charge.

MASHED POTATOES
PEAS &amp; CARROTS

Every Wednesrlay Storewide Savings

'
••

*************************

POMEROY

HAM LOAF

•

AREAHIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES .OF 1998

MEATlOAF

OVEN ROAST POTATOES
LIMA BEANS
ORANGESANOBANANAS

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

(Attach Your Name and High School to Photo)

214 EAST MAIN

21

••

.

GARLIC BREAD
FRUIT COCKTAIL IN
REO GELATIN

tW.18URGER ON B.UN

Sef\'ices 10 gel Meigs County's
supervision of a regislereil nurse.
elderly persons 10 remain in their
This service includes bathing,
own homes have been an important
grooming, social ·interaclion, and
pari of lhe Meigs County Council
meal preparation. In i997, 11,028
The Meigs ~ounty Senior
01\ Aging senior citizen program~
hours of Ibis lype of service were
Citizens
Cenler is open Monday
·for many years.
provided to the elderly population .
A chore Service Program to
Respile Sef\'ice is also included in through Friday from 8:0Q 10 4:30.
assisl senior cilizens with lighl
lhe hours of personal care. Respite Regularly scheduled acli,ilies are
housekeeping was staned in 1977,
means relief for the caregiver. This quilling, sewing, cards, games, and
wilh a laundry 'service added in
service is again pro,\ded by trained pool.
Weekly acti,ilies are Line
1978. There was one employee
Home Health Aides under the
Dancing
Team praclice, with
hired to begin the Chore Sef\'ice supervision of a registered nurse.
Paulette
Harrison,
instructor, on
Program and additional employees Personal Care and/or Respite
Mondays
from
I
:00
to 2:00, ·
hired as the need for lhe sef\'ice ,Sef"ice is available seven days a
Knitting Circle .on Wednesdays
increased.
week.
from
10 to. 12, Physical Filness
In 1997, MCCoA In-Home
The Long Term Care staff con·
Chair
Exercises on Tuesdays a1
sef\'ices of Chore/Homemaker sists of Lenora Leifheit, R.N.,
delivered 17,715 hours ofsef\'ice to Connie Hendricks, R.N.; Donna 11:00.
Wednesday, May 6 • trip to
assist the elderly population remain
Williamson, Chore/Home MainMansfield
will leave the Center at
at home and independent. This ser· . lenance/Homemaker Coordi'nator;
7:30a.m.
'ice is delivered by trained Hom.e Cindy Thontas, Schedulet; and Jeri
Wednesday, May 13 • the
Heallh Aides under the supef"ision
Faulkner, Assessor. At the present
of a regislered nurse. This sef\'ice
time, the MCCoA employes twen· Slroke Suf\'ivors Supporl Group
includes basic housekeeping, meal
ty-on.e very·qualified trained Home will meet form 10:30 lo II :30,,the
preparation, errands, and any light
Heallh Aides to provide lhe fronl public is invited.
Friday, May 15 • the Arthritis
housekeeping .lhat would help
line sef\'ices of Chore/Homemaker,
Support Group will meet from
maintain a safe and healthy enviPersonal Care and Respite.
10:00 to II :30, James Schmoll,
ronment for the elderly population.
Optometrisl, wili . talk about eye
The state program, Oplions for
The Meigs County Council on
emergencies.
Aging received funds to offer Elders, was funded in 1990 to assist
Tuesday, May 19 · the
Home.Aid/Respite Care Sef\'ice for petsons with a wide range of serstatewide
Senior Cilizens Day in
vices
to
help
them
stay
in
their
own
caregivers of elderly .persons in
·
Ohio
will
be celebrated. Jennifer
January, 1986. Personal Care is homes. This program was phased
Sheets,
Attorney,
will speak at
another sef\'ice provided by trained · out and the PASSPORT Program
11:00.
.
Home Health Aides under the was implemented in 1991.
Wednesday,
May
20
the
ll:"'l"':="''
monlhly Blood Pressure Clinic .will
be held from 9:30 lo 11 :00,
·
Wednesday, May 20 • the
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held rrom 9:~0 to 11:00.
·
Thursday, May 21 • John
Lenles; Prosecuting Auorney, will
be available from 9:30 10 12:00 to
assist seniors wilh legal issues and

•
•
•
•
••
•

'

. SPAGHETTI WITH
MEAT SAUCE
TOSSED SALAD

Meigs Senior
Center .Activities

•

ATTENTION!

1

27

•

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho•e
Owners and
Mobile Ho•e
Owners Special
Savings.

PEAS,
BREAD
APRICOTS

~=s

'

WEINER AND MEAT SAUCE
ON BUN
BAKED BEANS
TATORTOTS
APRICOTS

.

•·

GREEN BEANS
BREAD
l\PPLE.CHERRV CRISP

STRAWBERRIES/CAKE

SOUP BEANS ANO HAM
COLE SLAW
LVONNAISE POTATOES
CORNBREAD
PINEAPPLE ANO
COTTAGE CHEES~ .

BREAD

for the elderly
are a top priority

Do you have .

"

1

S~rvices

Meatloaf
Mashed Potatoes
wHh Gravy
Peas and Carrots.
Roll • Beverage
Peach Pie

Hamloif
· .Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
.Roll .• Beverage
.
.Pumpkin Pie

LEARN ABOUT
"GERMANY or one of 30
other countries, never
leave your home. Host a
high school foreign
exchange student
August arrival. Call AJSE
1-800-SIBLING or visit
web at www.slbling.org

Marie Ha•rris,
employee of the ME!igs County ·
Council on Aging Chore Service
Program is shown while she does
housekeeping chores.

21

26

PORK CHOP

BBQ CHICKEN FILLET
SCALLOPED POTAToES
MIXED IIEGETABLES

. COI.E sV.w

OVEN BAKED FISH
SKIN ON POTATOES

PARSLEY POTATOES
BIITlEREO BROCCOli
BREAD
PEARS

21

Spaghetti wHh
Meat Sauce
Tossed SaladGarlic Bread
Beverage
Earthqua!&lt;e Cake

Soup Beans &amp;Ham
l yonnaise Potatoes
ColeSlaw
Cornbread-Be-age
Pineappki Upside
Down
. .Cake

AUGRATIN POTATOES
BRUSSEL SPROI/TS
BREAD
PEACH SLICES

CREAMY FRUIT SALAD

14

19

HUNGARIAN STYI..E

MUSHROOM STEAK
MASHEQ POTATOES
WJTHGRAW
GREEN BEANS

-ovEN BAI&lt;EO CHIC~
SWEET POTATOES

MACARONI &amp;·CHEESE

11

1

CHICI&lt;EN PAm

11

Oven Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes ·
Buttered Peas
Roll • Beverage
Apple • Cherry Crisp

SCAlLOPED POTATOES
ANO HAM CASSEROlE
BREAD
MIXED VEGET-ES
HOT CINNAMON PEACHES

OiliER BISCUIT
HASH BROWN POTATO!'S
HOT APP\.ESAUCE
ORANGE JUICE

11

'

7

12

&amp;WSAGEGAAW

BEEF TIPS IN GRAV'I
MASHED POTATOES
CORN
BREAD
PINEAPPLE

THURSDAY

5

7

Enjoy A
Nutritious
Meal

The Senior Nulrilion Program e'ening meal will be sef\'ed on
Tuesday and Thursday with serving from 4:45 to 5:30.p.m. A suggest·
ed donation for lhe evening meal is $4.00. The e'ening meal is intend·
ed to provide a nutritional meal at a reasonable cost Dollars generated
will be used to support the existing lunch and home delivered meal program.
·
Junior and Rita Whi!e will be playing music on Thursday, May 7
at 5:30.
·

MAY MENUS

: STARS volunteers arc in lhe
cl~~Nrt10~ ror 15 hours per week
an~ receive mileage reimburSe·
mcrn, meals, and an hourly stipend
ail¥lunt or college tuition credit. ·
SIJ(Ic Reprcsentalivc' John Carey
visited the school to view first hand
lhibenefiiS ofthe program to both·
sedior volunteers, the school and
lhe:childrcn. The STARS Propam
provides meaningful volun1eer
Dpliortunitica ·to senio11, and pro- ·
viet&amp; the_'SChool witb increased
res{lllrces 10 allow more individual·
izccl attention to lhe students.

••

HOME MEDICAL 'EQUIPMENT
"Serving Southern. Ohio for over 20 years"

Lift Chairs
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

'

Everything
for the
Patient
at
.Home

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
.Tens Units &amp;
Supplies
Back ~upports
Kriee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
· Dre!iliings

THE MEDICAL s·H·OPPE
1480 Jadcsoia Pike
· Gallipolis, OH

Ioiii•••
t .:;0 11 - II.-, .:_J:_J (H,

llllmUT IJIITI

WMIIL OIIAIM

OJI'Ielll

COMnETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT A SUPPLif.S

SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET-UP
• HOSPITAL BEDS MBDICARE
• WHEEL CHAIRS MEDICAID
PRIVATE INSURANCE
• LIFI' CHAIRS
• BATHROOM AIDS
"We Treat Yo,u
• NEBULIZERS '
Like Family"
• STAIR GUDES

HOME
OXYGJ;N
UIIOUR
Dlt:IIGENCY
SEIVICI
lfSPiRATOIIY

11IIRAI'IIT

I
I

'· 11111'111 ,,
I II) ~ __' : : ',
711 I' I\ I , I

1111,-~1\

I t II I I I: I I
I : : ~ II I I ' . :

I'' :

II

~:

:1.

~,,-,I

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I.: I
If If\

.I
t

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'

�Tuesday, May 5,

Tuesday, May 5,1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Southern ~ins sectional opener 16·1 ~
By SCOTT WOLFE
a double and Kim Sayre, 3-for-5 with
a double. Ashley McKinney had two
Sentinel Corrupondent
, Host Southern took a 6-0 lead in singles, Trish Holman a double and
the first inning and ttansf~ ~t into single, · Trish Warner two sinales. .
a 16-1 slaughter M~y ntghttn the Kam King two singles, and asingle
first roun.d of the Sectional Touma- by Ashli Davis.
menl agamst. Oak Htll.
Cordle, Sbaw, and Donn had the
. Southern ts now 19·3 ove~l and lone Oak Hill hits.
s,tollrnnked~oneof~statesbest
In the firstinning,Southernsped
teams ~omg tnto the Sc,toonal Cbam· to a 6-0 offset when Caldwell reached
poonshop on Thursday.
.
on a bunt single to stan the game,
Thursday, Sou~rn ~ts ~ wo~· Kim Sayre reached on an error, Regi·
net of the Crooksvdle-Mtller game m na Manuel and Ashli Davis walked to
Racine at ~ P·~·
force home a run. McKinney single
GQOd ptlchmg, good defense. or home another, Kim Ihle walked home
good hitting-usually one or the other a run, followed by singles by Warnis capable of producing a win, how· er and King.
·
ever, Southern got all three lost
Meanwhile, Sayre was on a streak
ev~ng. The Tornadoes pounded out that ~hut out the Oaks over the ne&lt;t
IS·h'l\5 themselves, behind a three· five innings.
hit, one run pitching effort from ace
Sayre consumed seven Oak bat·
Kim Sayre.
·
. · tCrs on strike outs, walked just one,
The Tornado defense made JUSt hit one, and scattered three hilS in
one error.
picking up the win.
Southern hitting was led by Cyn·
Amy Newsome suffered the loss
thia Caldwell who went 3-for-4 with in giving up IS hits, six walks, strik-

STEAI,S SECOND· Cincinnati's Berry Larkin dlvee In with
1 stolen baM as Montreal's IIICOild beMmen F. P. Santangelo waits for lhtt bell during Monday night's action In MonJre,
el. The Reds won, 4-1. (AP)

.Reds trip Expos

~:Arizona

topples
:·New York Mets 4~2
'.

'· By BEN WALKER
unearned run, walked none 'and
AP Baseball Writer
struck out one. Cincinnati stopped
. Buck Showalter always knew how Montreal's longest winning streak of
·,o·win in New York.
the season at thre~.
Back in the Big Apple as a man· Dmitri Young and Barry Larkin, in
·ager for the tirst time since leaving a l·for-31 slump. had RBI doubles in
Jhe Yankees, Showalter enjoyed his the first inning. Brei Boone and
homecoming Monday night. His Ari- Eduardo Perez homered in the ninth.
zona Diamondbacks broke a six·
Pedro Martinez, who won the NL
:game losing streak, beating the New Cy Young Award last season with the
York Mets 4-2 in II innings.
Expos and then was traded to Mon"1 would have taken it in Montreal treal, sat in a front-row box nell! to
'yesterday or the day liefore," Showat- the Montreal dugout. With the Red
ter said. "I hope it's the start of some· SoK off, he visited his former team·
thing good for us. We 've been on the mates.
{&gt;ther end of these so many times. I Braves 4, Dodgen 2
· .h"tl!!!: we don't have to wail around
On a team full of Cy Young winJ or II innings every time we do, ners, 23-year-old Kevin Millwood
, iJtough."
tied for the team lead in victories by
~~ Showalter guided · the Yankees : pitching· Atlanta past visiting Los
'1rom 1992-95. then joined the Dia· Angeles.
mondbacks. Arizona won for only the
Millwood (4-1) matched Tom
.tighth time in 31 games.
Glavine for wins, giving up fopr hits
" It's always special to win," he in.eighl innings.
'said. "With our situiuion of late, you _ Keith Lockhart hit a leadoff homer
'take them anywhere. We've got to in the Braves eighth against Hideo
play two more games here. It was a Nomo, tying it at 2. Later in the
nice night tonight. a fast night."
inning, Javy Lopez hit a two-run sin·
. In other NL games~ San Francis· gle - il came right after Atlanta
eo beat Florida 8.(), Colorado defeat· manager Bobby Cox wa.~ ejected
ed Philadelphia 11·2. Cincinnati when he took up for Ryan Klesko,
downed Montreal 4-1. Atlanta topped who had just struck out.
Los Angeles 4-2 and San Diego beat Padres 13, B.-enS
;Milwaukee 13-5.
·
Andy SheeL~ ~nd Greg Vaughn
David Dellucci hit a two-run dou- homered and pitcher Sterling Hitch·
~le in the II th for the Diamondbacks.
c~k hit a pair of RBI singles as San
With two outs. Travis Lee doubled Doego roughed up Jose Mercedes at
off Brian Bohanon (0-1). Matt County Stadium.
.,:Williams was intentionally walked
Mercedes (2·2)
tagged for II
and Dellucci doubled.
runs and 12 hils in only 3 1·3
o
The Mets lost for the seventh time innings. It wa~ the worst outin11 bv a
jn eight games. They also lost ~atch· Milwaukee pitcher since Bill Travers
er !im Spehr. who fractured h!s left gave up 14 earned runs in 1 2·3
wnsl on a tag play at the plate tn the innings at Cleveland on Aug. 14,
1
lOth.
1977.
' "This one huns," Mets manager
'Bobby Valentine said. " I really hun
~utthis loss because ofSpehr. He's
'been working his butt off, and makes
the ga.me-saving play. Now this."
TENNIS
Before the game. the Mets said
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) third baseman Edgardo Alfonzo had Michael Chang, finally recovered
strained his right rotator cuff while from a knee injury, honed his game
·making a throw on Sunday and for the French Open by defeaiing
would be out for 3-6 weeks.
Germany's David Prinosil6-4. 3-6, 6Giants 8, Marlins 0
I in the first round of the German
The smallest crowd in Florida's Open.
sill-year history - 12.806 - saw · Spain's Albert Costa beat 1997
;shawn Estes pitch a four-hitter for winner Andrei Medvedev of Ukraine
·san Francisco.
6-3, 1-6,7-6 (7-3), and Britain's Tim
The stan of the game was delayed Henman edged Sweden's Jan Appel
by rain for I hour, 25 minutes. When 6-3. 6-2.
'the rain returned in the seventh
C~ile,'s Marcelo Rios, who
inning, there were fewer than 1..000 dropped from No. I to No. 3 in.the
·fans left. The Marlins' previous low world rnnkings after being sidelined
in attendance wa.~ 14,0S2 against for a mon!h by an elbow injury, had
Cincinnati on May 28, 1996.
a lirst-round bye and opens against
Bill Mueller and Bany Bonds hit Australia's Wayne Ferreira.
:consecutive home runs and Jeff Kent
ROME (AP) - Rain washed out
'later hit a three-run homer as the all 16 opening-day matches in ihe
Giants dropped the World Series Italian Open women's tournament. champions to 11-20.
·
·Rockies 11, Plalllies l
aJ
H
lin
I
Vinny Castilla homered for lhe r ..e w s
ot
e
'third straight game, giving him a aJe,...rs Bo*llne
·major leasue-leading 14th, and Col· !.. .,
;orado won at Veterans Stadium.
·
·
' Castilla had three hits and Ellis News H o t l i n e
:Burks also homered. Mike Lansins
drove in four runs and Todd Helton News H o t l i n e
drove in three for ba$eball's best hittins team.
News HotUne
John Thomsim (2·2) limited

ing out live, and giving up 16 runs
behind a live error Oak performance.
Southern added one in the second
on a big bit by Trish Holman. then
added two more in the third on sin·
gles by King, Caldwell, Davis and a
double by Sayre, the sc:Ore now 9.().
The Southern fourth was another
big inning for Coach Howie Caldwell's gals. Southern pushed across
four runs on hits by. Holman, Warn·
er, Sayre and a sacrifice by Caldwell

Southern tops
Eastern 13•3
Although Eastern cut the lead 10 4- · playground. Ash singled and scot'ed
3 at one point, the Southern Toma· on a sacrifice fly later in the frame for
does grabbed an early lead and nev- a 9·3 tally.
·
er looked back in spanking the EastKirt Spencer came on in relieffor
em Eagles 13·3 Monday night in a Ea.~tern in the ne&lt;t round. getting the
Tri-Valley Conference make-up game side in PRier before getting tagged for .
in Racine.
four runs in the fifth as Southern
Southern is now 10.11 overall and reached the dreaded mercy mark, the ·
Eastern is 2- i 3. .
score 13·3.
Southern scored in the first after
Southern hiners were Ash 2-4 with
Eastern left two runners stranded on tvio RBI's, Sayre 3-for-3 with two
base. Michael Ash drew a lead-off homers and four RBI's, a single by
walk, Pete Sisson laid down 8 sacri· Sisson, and a Cumings double. Cumflee bun~ Adam Williams was .hit ings had two RBI.
with a Steve Durst curve ball, Adam
Eastern hitters were Josh Will and
Cumings reached on an etror and Wes Crow.
Josh Ervin, and Josh Davis each
Pork Dill got the win with a two
walked to force home a run, the score hitter, six strike outs, seven walks,
2-0.
and three runs given up. Southern
Eastern went down 1·2·3 in the. had one error.
second inning, then Danny Sayre , Durst suffered the loss on a seven
ripped a lead-off home run, his first hiner, five walks. one strike out, and
of two poked out of the yard in near- two Ea~tern errors.
ly the identical spot. Ash reaehed on
Eastern is slated to go to Miller
an error, then after a sacrifice and Wednesday, while Southern has a
stolen base, Ash scored on an Adam make-up against Waterford some·
Williams sacrifice fly, the score 4.(). time on the make-up list.
Eastern was more patient (finally)
Inning totals
in the third inning, when with one out Eastenl 003 00=3 2 2
Josh Will, Josh Broderick, and Joey Southern 22S 04= 13 1 I
Dillon each walked before Steve . Batteries: Durst (LP) and Broderick
Durst reached on an error that Dill (WP) and Cumings
pushed home two ruOJ. Eric Smiih
and Dustin Huffman each walked to
You Don't Need To
force home another before Southern
got out of the inning on a ground out,
Be Rich To Start · ·
the score 4-3.
Southern rattled the Eagles nest in
Investing, But You .
the third, eventually knocking starter
Steve Durst out of the boll. Dill and
Need To Start
Ervin drew walks, then Davis wa~ hit
Investing ForA-_.,_
with a pitch. 'Dill scored on Jesse
Little sacrifice fly, then Sayre ham·
mered a three run homer out of the · . Chance To Be Rkb.

GallipoliS
&amp; VlclnHy

OPEIIIIIO APRIL t

TIMEX WATCHES

30%oFF

Philadelphia to three hits in seven
innings. The Rockies save him aa II0 lead in the fourth.
4, I:IJIGIII
·lleda
Rookie
Scolt Winchescer earned
. his fil'll major teaauc victory, sivinl
up 111m hill in sill inninsa It

9'&gt;::~"(i.o)
I

.uowed an

II!
.-u
99 2JI!!!
tO get 8

T.

~.....
cun:ent W~~JC~u
lVI
report, check the

Sentinel

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The~~ jumped oU! to a 2-0 lead
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two-run sinste. Henipa1 walked tlua:
In the innina.

LAST CHANCE

287th Roush Reunion at
Adamstown, Pa.
July 31-Aug. 1, 1998
(2 nighll lodging &amp; trip)
Prien per pei'IOII,
lingle $1114, double $130
S50 depoeit by May 111.
"""anoe due by July 1
Send~ end depoelt 10:
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New HMn. wv 25285

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Covering
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In Memory Of
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Mom dep~~rted IIIII
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8g0, todiiY
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Anw~ues, top

pnces paid, River·
•ne Anllques , Pomeroy, Oh1o,
Russ Moo re owner . 740·992 2526

985-4473

Ant•ques &amp; clean used furniture.
wil l buy"bn~ piece or ,._omplete
l'louseho td, Osby Martin, 740·

PINE GROVE
FARM f=EED&amp;
SUPPLY
33100 Pine Grove Rd,
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2481 .
Pig G!- .........................16.25
12X eom,lett a.,............15.60
IIX Rat.bit ............:.....-....SS.OO
Show Chidoen .., ................S'J.30
art

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auclion Company,
lu ll lime auct•oneer, comple te
auclion
service.
lh:ensed
186,0hlo &amp; West Vlrglnla, .30•·
773·5185 0. :J04. 773· 54~7. .

119~-6576.

Clean late ·Model Can Or
lrucks, 1990 Modets Or Newer,
Smilh Buick Ponriac. 1900 East-

em AveAJe, Gal1ipofis.

J &amp; 0 Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked o• salvaged vehicles.

304-773·5033. • .
Wanted Ta Buy : Used Mobile
Homes, 740·,.46 -0t 75, 304-e75-

5965.

for

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Howard L Wrtteul

ROOFING
NEW·IEPIIR

Help Wanted

110

ISS DANCERS WANTED $1$
E•ceiJent oppoJtunity lor the right

girl. S500(+)Pet· Week earning po· .

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

tenliat . No e•p necessary. must
be at 1eas1 18. Call 614·992·6387
~anytime) or 30•·875·5955 aher
llpm. Wed lhru Sao.

AVON ' AU Areas I Shirley
Spears, 304·675- 1429.

FREE ESTIMATED

Admln6strMive Secretary

949-2168 .

'
The Me1gs Local Sc:hool Oislnct
1!1 in need ol a dependable, cap-

OFF

NOWI

G8ILift . . . . . maaas
~~~~~

. .SIIWCAII'Clll Ill'"

minislractlve secretary in the Supetintendenl's Olfice. The peraQn
must be compu~er prolic~en~ have
superior organitalionat and sec· .
relarialslcills, be able 10 deal ettecttllely and efficiently w11h parents. SIUdents, and tne public And
have the ability to perform nu·
merous tasks Ill the same 11me.
Fast-paced office; good working
conditions : excellent benef•ls

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH TtiE

CUISSIFIEDSI
ANNOUNCEMENTS

pod&lt;llge avaiable.

Send resume and letter of int8flll

Personals

005

1n confidence ro:

--~~~~---~

Wtlham l. Buckley, Supennrend·
en1. We1gs local SchOOl Oistncl,
320 Easl Ma1n Street, Pomero~.
Oh 45789. Deadline lor appltea·
lion 11 May 11, 1998 with a pro·
j ecled ·starling date of June 1.

1·100-21!1-1217
EXT. 1654
$2,1)g Pe&lt; M;n.

. &amp;·110-4·:-"wee:kdlve.l
INC 9;00.12:110

'""'

I.LUUi

s..day 12·5

· Must 1111. aoo-m·7470 ext. 7320

LIIDSCAPE
IDIGIS

• FERTRIZER

THE CARD Box
I 1/2 mile. south of
· Tuppers Plains
Now-has Beanie
Babies- Still
. Baseball-Football·
Basketbaii-Star Track·
Video Games~
Rentals
740-667-6092

80

person to serve as an ad ·

JoeWIIaon

tARS $100 te $500
POLICE IMPOUNDS:

Plan ahead. Call
today for free estimate
742·2103 or 446·3622

,_

cttESHIRE
FOOD
MfiRT .
24

lllflllefKe

tverymuch.

614-742·2138

Signs I

FREE
ESTIMATEES

•

r-~~~=---.
. - ~==·:·:::::7:40-:::98~5-~383=:·1=="":111:-_;· L~..:...~-~;::o:::.,S::=u:::,:n~d~~..~~~;~l:;:~s!..)-~"'=.=fl:- .

. AI time go•• by we ;
. mlnyoumor..
·
Your loving smile, vour

10 At . 87 go 6 miles _ Follow

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Weedeating
·-- • . • Tree Trimming .
.....,. • Slrubbery Maintenance
,J·

Tuppers Plein•, Ohio 45783
740/tiS-3813 .
4" thru 48" plastic culvert In IIOck
Full line of water storege tanks •
: Septic &amp; Clstlrn Tanks
Weter line • 100' thru 1000' Rolls
I Sewer Pipe· 3" thru 8", Gee Pipe &amp; Rea1ulatoral

Near Chester on St. Rt. 7

LAWN

·~:~:!iilial'

St. Rt. 7

.SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

May 7th &amp; 8th . Qam -6pm. Gun ville Ridge Community Sale 5 11
2 m11es lo ng , 16 Muses, 3;-, !amilies, from Pt. Pleasant At. 2 N.

.•New Homes

3J3QIB8 1 mo pd

. ..... . -

.

In Memory

· No - can till or take
vourpt-.
You will alwaya beJn :
our thoughta lnd
hllrt
'
We lov• 'and min vou :

M·IJ

1998 Martin Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-1192·2772

.

LARRY's

POMEROY, OH,

-·-----·--

1:OOpm Friday.

ROBERT BISSEl~
.'C4!NSTRUCTION

412/1 - ·

Custom Homes

2A ll 2A Pole lluilding

I

1101'1

•

Brtan Morrl•o.n

(740) 985-3148

. CARE

. 614·992·5479

Call614·143·5426
'
.,.,..,,._

•Go. . . •O.Ciu

.-

No Job roo Small

• Vinyl Siding •·Garages
New Homes • Pole Buildings ·
• Room.Additions
()ver 20 yee,. experience,·
Free Eat/matea

• SlotiooiOry Docks ·.
.. Blown lnsulalion

e11h. The Hom• National!
a.nk ,..., ... tha right to'
bid lithe Hie or to ,.mo..
,ny or all Item• lrom lhe
Hlollanytlme,
·

hMrta -

IJ•~

• R.r"K iWd Wondowt

SerlloiNUIIIIMr
~
1PMCA11f3117'121217 '
The Tenna or lhe ..,. ,,.:

(4) 28, (5} 1, 5, I 4lc

.•
.'

JlLSIDINQl
INSULATION
• Vinyl Sieling • Saffit
• ·faKia • S.. mleu
- GutNr • Roofing

'

. •Bobcat Service
•Concrete
·Masonry
•General
· Commercial and
· Residential
24 Hr. Bobcat Service
Available
Fl'fll E•Umate•

•

1.13 W. 2ND ST.

Lona·s
COnSTRUCTIOn ·

FIJI Dirt
614-992·3470
. . .

P/B Contractors Inc.

JEFF.· WARNER INSURANCE

~

A

Owner: John Dean

(Lime SloneLowRales)

Gravel, Sand,

1111 Oldamabl1
.S.riiJN.......

'-...

~~"'C.t?!C!~~~f;t~~

Limestone,

•

740-992·3987

·. Free Eat/mate~

Ill!~

'

.Public Notice

Phone

.-..

c-

''
'
.

•Room Additions ·
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior ·
Painting
Al•o Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-11215
Ohio

361)" Communications

Commercial 8o Rllldentlal
1/A
iil~ 27 yrs. exp:
Ucensed &amp; Insured ii'.!i

AU Ysr41 Sataa Muat Be Paid In
Advance . Deadlln•: 1 :OOpm the
day bafora the ad 11 to run,
Sunday 6 Monday tdltl,n·

74M8&amp;4174

.
INTERNET SIGN.UP POINT
POMEROY,OH

448-4159
1·1191

1/A

Open Tuol.-fri, 104
• Set. 10o4;
Sun. 1 Mon.
, RL 124, lll...vlllt, OH
74HI2-45511

•

o..nty ••• Lew Prl••

UPGRADES

.({A
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
1/A
Ill": Garages, f'ole Buildings, Roofing, Siding fit!!:

: Fount11111, lneludft pump,

•'

t/&lt;1/TFN •

at CELLULAR PHONES

2 Tier Angel Blrdblllt

PRICE

&amp; VIcinity

~~~~~~~~~~~~
~ JD CONI'riUCftON

OlltllNG WIOJ.f MOG SUf!IIS.

I

· • House washed
• Deck cleaned &amp; treated
starting at $100
• Hedges trimmed • Gutters cleaned ·
Call now for a weekly lawn cere progra!".

"Your One Stop
c;o..puter Shop"
. Glv' us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consulting.

Eetinwte•
fR1.4\

COUITRY .
CANDLE SHOP

(Except Mother's Day)

992·$513

=

20Yrs. Exp.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Pt. Pleasant

~PIRNRMANCI

- Ins. Owner. Rick Johnson

Vacant Land : Nice Home S1tes,
Green Twp, 740·4•6·2885.

SPECIALS

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats
· Hanging Basket• $6.13
Rabloomlng Llllae, Ho111, P10nlol, Bleeding Haerle, etc.
Variety of Perennial• Me
.Fruit &amp; Flowering Trna, Shrubs, Pinta &amp; Azaleas
Morning Star CR 30
Racine, Ohio
949-2115 '

Gallipolis, Ohio 45831
~ Top • Trim ~ Removal
· • Stump Grinding
Insurances

ocllllon - 2;00 p.m.
Friday. Mond•y edhlon
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

TONY'S PORTABLE WEL.ING

COMPU'fiR

740·949-3006

.

Month of

l

the day betorethe ld
11 to run . Sunday

1·740·949·20 15

"We don't want to moke monel, we jwt
wont to seU fl.ouiers.'

h.

Bt Paid In Advance .

PEARLINE: 2:00p.m.

CLELAND'S OUTDOOR
MAINTENANCE

.

15 North Meln
RuUend, Ohio 45771 Den: lltt.trln!a I
Plants,
Amish
Trees &amp; .~ Chnaea, Soft
Serve Ice
Shrubs
Crnm
Open: Mon.-Fri. 9·9
(740) 742-7405
Sat. 9-5;.Sun. 12-4

AiJ, Yard Solos Mull

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

V~rlety,

Quality Service
For All Your
Garbage&amp;·
.Rubbish ·
Pick Up for
Residential &amp;
·Commercial
(No me11 left behlndl
.
Cell
: OHIO RIVER SERVICE

COLD POP .

CARPET
PLUS

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

SI'B'Ih, SlOth. "9--5, 12 lew11 Street,
Acros&amp; otd State HiQhwa~ Rt. 35,
Household, Carpet, M1sc.. O.E S.
1283 Sale,

CAll

SIJE'S GREENHOUSE

ICI/2-

.'

-Sports brl'efs -

4
,w•

Free Eatlmatea

. Top Soli,

Meigs/Southern High School
Mock Trial will be aired on
WJOS TV 27 'OIInteresf'
program Tuesdays at 7 P.M.

Roofs • Decks • Garages

R•.l·. HOLLON
:·1RUCKING

CANDY BARS

Business
Services

RADIA,.OR REPAIR

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding

Free Estimates

"~t/~~81

Investmcm and 1ix Consultul
740-992-7270

· OAKLAND, C~IJf...(APJ- Kenny Rogers won hts fourth Slraisht
start and the Oakland Athletics took
advantage of Pal Hentgen's wildne511
10 beat the Toronto Blue Jays 7-4
Monday nisht.
J&amp;liOII Oiambi and Scolt Spiezio
each drove in IWO runs in support of
Rogers (S-1). Rogers gave up four
runs and si~ hits in seven-plus
innings.
Hentsen &lt;3·3) walked seven batters in just three-plus inninss. He
allowed four hilll filii four run.,,
Hentgen had walked a total of
eiJhl battm in his previous si• Slartl
this sason, and had no1 walked
·~--th IliOn! u ... , ree m any game.

814 949-2804

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

(!40)985-4180.

•

Karl Kebler III, CPA

Addetia 7, Blue II!JI 4

State ~oute 338 • At VIne • Rl!)lne, Ohio

S1ze1 , Home Int .,

Mowen, Toys , Uuch

DOZER ·sERVICE
·•Septic Systems
•Baselllents
.
•Excavating

. Ott1door Power Eqtllp..t A.sodlt!IH: Certlfltd 2 Cycle

SUNSEYBOMI
CONS,RUC,.IIIf·

Take the pain out of
pelntlng, and let me
do It for you.
Interior
Before 8 p.m·.
leave rnena~e.
After&amp; p.m.

•

9am ·4:30pm
American Legion Annex
299 Mill St. Middleport, Ohio

Wllll~m Safranek,
Attorney AT Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio ·
4/30198 1 mo. pd.

LIIDI'I
PIIIYIIG

Call Me For.Details!

May 6, 7, 8, 1998

· For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

Wonnani Plu1

BACKBOEua

•Mowtl'l •Chlln SIWI •Wndelltel'l •Aulhorlztld
. Dialer For:
•Briggs &amp; Stratton :MTD •!ilfurray •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!
lrltP &amp; Stratt1111: Moder Strvkt TtcWdtta

Chapter 13

•

:

CRAFT &amp; FLEA MARKET

Parts and Servlcel/
Chapter 7

• Family: 7 M1ltl From Porter On
The Lett. e Uilel From Cheth1re,
On The R1ght On S.R. 554, M•y
· -e1h. Rain Dale: June •" ·6th,
Boys Cloll'ling 12 Mo. - 3T.

Jl 'S

Rlclll.• OWD CLIIIC

Ohio River
Campground• and
Bait &amp; Tackle, &amp;
Gen_ MerchandiM.
New lr used Items. We
Buy • S.U • Tred~~&lt; Tools,
fishing aqulp., lV's,
CB's, etereoa - little bit
of ... rythlng. Locllad
: on Ohio River Campgrounds, St. At'. 124,
. Rtcln~!':i..tot 2,

a

was

Yard Sale

70

for a 14.() tally. ·
;
The rest was a formality a~ South;
em sawed down the Oaks 16-1.
Southern pbiYs Thursday in the
sectional championship. It also h$
two league make-ups with Eastern
and Waterford.
Inning totals
Oak Hill 000 001=1 3 5
Southern 612 502= 16 15 I
Batteries: Sayre (WP)and Davis
A. Newsome (LP) and Sharp

•••· sse

7

Hou18 &amp; Tl'lller.$1111
Lind Cleerlng &amp;
Grldlng .
SeptlcSylllm&amp;
Utllltlll
EeUm11t11

(614) 992-3838

UltMfn

~

r1ai.;~;,;•ii•i.-1

r..Mow'ol'lll,
......
..,
Mulching,

Pruning
Cleen end lnltltll Gutter
Flowwra,
Srulh Removal,
lnlltall New Btlda

An,,.,.,..

F-EIItmatM
"Go
No fob too 1011111.
Mon.·SII. '

(740)eet8104

Must Be 18 Yrt.

Satv·U

1998.

84s.&amp;.43&lt;1

--=::.:...:~==:;:;:..-1 Avon $8 ·S20 IHr. No Door ·To ·
30 Announcements
Doo• . Easy casn. Fun • • •soo.
361.Q088 Wldi~SIIllt&gt;..

DIABETIC

You May ----~---

Be En1nled
Your D•a• COWUTEA IFREELANCE •
bet•c Suppl•es AI No Cost To Data Entry, Word Processmg,
You , For Uore tnformauon 1-888- Graph•c• And Web. Many levels
1· AM Pos.flan'!l' fle••bfe Hrs! Mo677·6561.
.
dem Req . Sian Now • Call : 800 No Hun11ng Or Tre1pas11ng On 336-44.13 18J0.621 .222l)
The Property Or John Loveday,
·
Without Wr itten PermissiOn. Vio· : CPA &amp; FIRST AID COURSES
lalors Wilt Be Ptusecutad.
For Those Ind iVIduals Worlung

I

W&lt;lh Tile Publot And lOr Ch&lt;ldren.
Two ClaiSos To Cnoose From •
7 Monnth Old Pup, 112 lab, 112 Saturda~. May 2, 1998 Or Salur·
English Sener, To A Good Home, day. May 16. 1998. 8o11'1 Claases

40

Gl Veaway

g:oo

?40-Z-45-S44o4.

Are From

Coon Puppies, 740-256·1318.

Con11c1 Bu«:keye H1lls Career
Center, Adult SerYIC·&amp;S To Reg iater. 740·245-5334 En 20St lui-

A.M. -5:00P.M.

Free Beagle Pupp.es. 2 Males. 1 =bO:...:n:..:.
$•.=0:...:
. ------

female 740.. &lt;18·7595.

..;...~...;.....;......;._ _ _ ,Earn 11 ,000 Weekly. StuH1ng .., .
Free lmtenri, 740·H2·7285.
. velopn, no pnor experience. free
dooaUs, Hod SASE 10: N.B. llep!
M•crowave. 1 Year Old , Needl 174·301 Easl 5th Ave. Suire 112
RepaM-1., 7o&amp;0·388--a.t40.'
.
Corsicana, TtJIII1S110.

Mtx9d Coonhound pups, 2 males,
8 lemates ; mtxed Gilman

HAIRSTYLIST /SALON,

.:.:::.=::....._____
60
·c.n,.,

Sheplle&lt;d, I male, I female, 740·
IIAN-R
742·0202.
Smln Soylo WM Soon Bo &lt;lponing
In The Ntw Wai·Ma•l. Super

Lost and Found

lAnd '' 0wn0&lt;1 By Regis

Corporabon) And Will Bo H;ri"G

Found: Female W~ita Oog, Near Sewtral Hair Sl)1ists, AI Well As

HollerHotPoal. 740-... 1-ollll

A· Wor~;ng

Salon Manager, No

Clientele Nnded. Just Have

·Lost Bionclt Coc:t.er Spomel, Vo· SiiMrl &amp; llconlo AI Hanel, 1 Wt
eontl'j : Cldmus. Rewaodl 740·319- ShoH Supply The Roll. Bonoftrs
21a1.
·
Atfo-:

:.70~-,..-Y-ard-S-._-le--·l

GaUJpolll
&amp; VlclnHy
10 Family : Clolh•• All S1ylaa,

Women ' " Girli To ,. Womtn),
. Mon. Childml Of All Aoo1. Misc.,
Item~ Localocl 112 Mile ,_., Bob
Evaos 01 Rio Gr1nda, On 1.111.
(Siar King ""10 Body), I :OG-5:00
Mar &amp;lh. 71!1.
Garege Sale; llay 4tn, I nou llh.
1.2 IAiles Our Rou10 211, - . ,
WHdlattrl, ~ooka, Houshold
hernt, Olhet Thinge.

1

• c;u.,.n_ ._., ~

VorloiCorrms-f'rogram
•Top Rollieoinn't.Wnttl'licoo '

• "-"' ..,,.,.. AvlilltN

• - v.c.oiono
• Soocll P u - Pltn
• ,..,_ II Eliglolo for

llotll1l! And-........
• • 8upploo F , -

• Mwclw

n

Oi8DDII'II:

• ' ltlaiCid '1i"'irq

'
1
·~For.1tdttuw••• )

Bill
Roo•••. • ·lll·ell-7771 Ell.

For lloro lnlofmatlon Coli

1173.

,

�Tuetday, May 5, 1998

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page e:~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

iMnn~~oo~.PP~-----------:.--------~-------======:====~======================~0:.
81UDCJK
NEA Crossword Puzzle
:;.

•

PHILLIP
ALDER

FI NANCIAL
-- - - -

540

Business
Opportunity

Th&lt;oo b-m mi&gt;bito llomo wHit
7 ICfl$, convenient lo,allon on

u~ 33. S49.900, 740-•333.

IHOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.

F

nlahings, Carpel, Window
Tr atmenrs. Furmture, Resume
Tcq Tope Fumhure. 151 Second
Gallipol:s. OH 45631 .

Ar·

230 ·

•

.

Installers Needed For Expahdlng Company For Installation• Of Heating &amp; CooiUlg Equip.
ment In Manu lactured &amp; Resi dential Housing
• 3 Yrt. E•l*i..-.ce Needed

"

Threa bedroom, twO bath home
w1th 70 &amp;crt• in Meiga County,
lree gas, above ground pool, detached garage, loll of exuaa,

$126,ooli, 740-88].()074 .

All WDrk Guaranteed
304·875-1724

320 Mobile Homes .
tor Sale

l t vin~ston't

basement waler proollng, all basement 'epain
done, free earimates, lifetime
guarantee. 1 Oyrs on job IIJUUi-

12x80 New wiring, Recently re modeled, mus t see appreciate.

lnterv1ew Appointmen ts Onlyl Call
Bennens Healing I Cooling AI

Nl)-446' 9416 Or 1·800 -872·
51187, Gall..,ris, OH 45631 .

Holly Parlli 3br, 2 full
many e•tral. 304 -875-

I Am Seeking A Self -Motivated
1868
All real estate adveftlslng in
th,is newspaper Is subject to
the federal Fair Hou~ng Ac1
of 1968 which makes" II~
to ~se •any preterence,

1972 Schullz 14•65 central alt,
located n&amp;ar town , must bee
1986 Commodore 14•05, two
bedroom, one bath, 110Ve and refrigeratot included, gas heat, cen tral a~r , two porches, ~er y good
condition, S1 0,000 nego111ble,

limitation or discrimination
58k familial sratus or Mtlonal
origin, or any 1ntentton to

740·892·7822.

make any such prefererice,
li~ltatlon or diterimtnatt~n.·

Gellll CouRty

Chombot01 Commorce

111 Time Buyers, E-Z finarlc:ing

2

law. Our readoro areherelly
informed thalalldwellngs

·"""-"'thisare
on an
REAL ESTATE

Need 4 Ladies Who Would Ulce

To SeN A110n, 740·44&amp;-3358.

2 Houses On 2 l" Ac:rtl W1th
River Fronlage c;iarfleltf AvenUe,

Now hi ring sale drivers, goOd
pay, 11ex1ble hours. Apply in per·
son at Damno's in Pl. Pleasant

Gallipolis, Main HQiule 2 ·3 Bed·
rooms, 1 112 Barh Full Basement.
AC. Gaa Furnace, Second Houae

Technician , Apply ~~ Big Soya
warer Toys. Cheshire. Ohio, 740367-7802.
·
OVerbrook Centif has lvll lime &amp;
part time STNA pos•tions available for au Shihs. anyone tnt8fest+
ed please top by &amp; fiU out an a~
plication, 740.992 -6472, Overbrook Center, 333 Page Street,
Mlddlepor~ Oh 45760. EOE
Overbrook Cefuer is currently accepring applications for OireCior
ol Socia! Services. The ideal 'and•date wiU ha\le a BSW and be li·
c:ensed. We orfer a competitive
utary and benefit package: Send
your reaume 10 Admm istralor.
Overbrooll Center, 333 Page
Street. Middleport Oh1o 45760.
No pnone caDs please. EOE .
Part·Timt Bartender Needed For
Weekends and Nignts, Piclli Up
·. Application AI 408 Second Ave·
f\Je, Gallipolis, OH Wed .. May &amp;lh

3 Becioom 1 112 belt'l, 314 base-

mem,' new roof, aiding &amp; w1ndows
on 2.• acres Ofl Sliding Hill
Creek Rd. in Hanfotd. Has been
appraiaed. $27,500. 30.ti-8B2 3 BedrDOm Ranch.· 1 Milo From

3 Bedroom wtruu tinisned bast·
ment, detached garage, prime lo·
cation. 2 Bedroom. b•••mem,
goodtt.-terhomt.304-075-5182.
3 Bedrooms. 1 Balh. LR. FR.
Kllcheli7 l"'undr,1 Room With 3
Acres, Bulavifle Pille, 740 -441 -

0036.
3 Or .a Bedroom Ranch, 0p!lonal

Fam11y Room. CA. 2 Ban". tn.
Ground Pool, _E wtratl $73,000
4 Bedroom 8f'1ck &amp; V1nyl Fenced
Yard, Fam1lr Room &amp; Laundry
Room &amp; Walk -Oul Basement

- - - - - - - - - -, 1 t6o.ooo. 740·245-982o.
Thotnton GreenhousellaokinQ leave Menage.

lor labOr worMers fDf greenhouse
work. E•perience not nece11arr.
$5.15 mur, 740-247·4331. •

160

o;

4 Bedr.,om 2 acres, 51mllts
north of Pt. Pleasant. Atkmg
high SO'a.

Radio, TV &amp;
CB Repair

Discount Mobile Home Pans &amp;
Acceuories Water f-lealtrl Vi·
nyl Slclrt1ng Kits $211.86, ' Anchors, Wood I Fiberglllt Steps,
Roof Coatings, Doors. Windows.
Plumbing &amp; Efecttical Supplies,
Blocking Wood , &amp; Wedge• And
Uore! Call Bennetra Mobile

ment, 7'0·41'1 · 052t, 7&lt;40-44e 0714. •

.,•2_·3_: _
Fn_
·..c..May....:..8_1h_t2_·3_.--..,.-I _740-_444
__,_73.;..
· ·- - - - - Rooler, must be nperienced &amp;
11now carpentry, call after 8pm,
7-40-378-8349

Lot, Belt Offto! 740-446-9428.

Gallipolil. Alfordablo, E~eellent
Neighborhood, Coli For Appoint·

304·773-5)87.

40 Acre1 Wltn 4 Bechooma, Tri -

Home Supply Atl-7411-446-9416.
01vorce Fotce1 Sales-Take over
paym&amp;nts. 2br, 2 batn, financ1ng

availalllo. 30H5s.s&amp;le.
Huge 28•80 38R, 1 tJ2 ball'!

St1&lt;M9 at ONLY

$3g, 9~9.

Many

opt1ons awa1lable. 1·888 -9 28·
3428.
.

460 Space for Renl

Of 3 bedfl)oma. Starbng II $2195.
Quick deliverr. Call 740-385•

9621.

1----------ll.-TED OFF.ER
1898 Ooublewida 3br, 2 baths.
$1 , 69~down S259Jmc;. Only al

Oakwood Hames Nitro. wv 304·
755-5885.

Loc--'d in Morgantown-1985
Skyline 14xe5 never movM. Iwo
owne,, neat pump, tike new con-

etences. Call Party 304-,.58-1755 7.00.386-8352
.
... Krilla 304.. 56-11102.
1 ·5 B£DI!OOM MOII~S FROM
S4,000 local Gov't. &amp; Bank
180 Wanted To Do
Reoo'o Call 1·800-522-2730, x
1109.
Andy'tl.olm - n g SorYico
fNIE ..ImiiM
FOJ Sale S, o.n.: Btr1avi1o Pee;
304-675-44:15
Mouan Building. 3.6 Acret;

dll.,n. 304-598-0520 01 304·8755025.

Ma"• 2 Paymen11

lloueh Ronlol

Willlccepl AUf). 304. 77.J.SD44.

eonabie. 304-175-3734.
'
-=-=-~--:----·&lt;
1988 Chevy 4 WD, Shorr Bed

MERCHANDISE
pets, $225
+ $225 deposit Call

51 o

Household

S7501Mo. 740-446-2957.
Dekalb Seed Corn . ICay Fatml.
Call 30'·875-1508 If No Answer

loeuellaslage.

Depoll~

740·

In New Haven, S250. mth. 1100.

deposit, plUs utilltlet. 304~64187170.

New rwo bedroom haute, Harri·
aonvilltt are1. total eleclric, 1326
per month plus utilltitl. deposits
required, no smoking, no para,

US£D ' APP~IANCES

Washers .•, ••,. ret.ia•rraro~l
ranges . Skaggs Af,~:::~~·•;.i~
Vine Streel, Call ~

Uprlghl, Ron Evans Enterprltel,
Jadlton, Ohio, 1-I00-537-e528.

1-800-499-3&lt;499.

Ty ·aeanie Sables Reatonabty

Retiremenr Sale Room S1ze Car pel 1/2 Ptice K11ehen Prinl SS.OO
Sq . Yd. 740· 448· 7444, Mollohan

· Man1h. Call
Pricedl7~-t051 .
Tr Prince11 Oi Beanie Babw', 4420.

We Mo11ed! Used furmrure Slota
Below The Hol1 Cia~ Inn In Kanau -

Nice 2 bedroom,,referencn, depooll.no p1111. 304-G7S.S182.

ga, Oho. Bedl. Does..,s. Couch·

es. Mauresses, Ect. Hrs M· l -W.
10.4, (740)44&amp;-4782 •

520

Uriliriea Included. 1-888-840·
0521 .

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Sporting

Goods

$200/llo. Deooolr Required; 2
Bedroom Aparrment. 1350/Mo.,

Remington 1100
Box! Vent Rib With Turkey Clloke,

$350, 7.tl()-4146-3tt7.

i-. 74Q.II92·2187.

2 Bedroom llaautiful Rivor Viow. Mo&gt;re """"'·
540 Miscellaneous •
Merchandise
44H)111 .

2 bedroom mobile home in Middlepor~

740-111:1-5030.

3 Bedroom MDbile Homa. You
Pay UtililiH, ' Depoll1,

11 Required,

-one·

POrter Arn 014·

t13 cat'al. round diamond

solit~1re.

IIZ8 6, pa1d $000. W1ll ,ake $550;
Mar~u11 weddmg set 112 cara1 •

11ze 1, paid $UOO, Will takE'
11250; wedd.ng goWn wnh ve11
t1ze 7, pa1d S100 wiN take, $300;

3116-t182.

7.00·387.02811er7411-D49·2481

Mitchell Road, ' $3151Mo. , ln ..
clude1 Water ISewet 1250 Deptllil, 7-2911 Aller 4 P.ll.

12· Wood Planer. 5 HP Planer
Motor, 2 HP, Feed Mctlor. 10·
Table Saw Sears Several Other
Wood Related Tools. 740-•41·

•w

304-755+

----·

llfttlo- Pr....nt.

SpeciOI
llnancing DO 2, 3 I 4 l»edrDOm
hOmes. P1yme1Ua 11 low ••

fiiO. Col- 304-75&amp;-58115..
Special !1180 3~A. 2 bath.
f1,325 Down, f205 Mo. Fooo air
&amp;frallltinng.1-IOCHII1 .. 777.

.,..,
......,__

3114-175-28470&lt; 304-f19S.30117.

ProiHiialtal Tree SorYico,

sa...,

RemO¥af. Fret E1tima1Hf In·

..,.,... llidwoll, Ohio. 814-:JU.
- · 114-3117·1010.
OualiiY SclriiO Cloening At ,._.
able Plico&amp;, No Job foo Big Or
SnraH froo Eltimoltl, 740-448·
2318.

--IG.
W•J:

11

s.

Ad~lkH-.

c.u

7411-245·rW30 Foo Mora

oon.

rr.,

wallttr,

dO•CIIOtl-. ~ op-

lll!"'"''"'~ 740-11112-5243:

Nice ! 5 room houH for tate in
Gallipolia F•rry, WV. 30'·875·~

5010.

-.wv.-'75AIIS .

O.IJ AI Oolt

TAXWLCIA'

C,'~::.;.\~~"':;;ao.,..

Double--

' lttpoo

.,.21'50, Alllr~~V~~~ '
Wiff C•t•

r e,..

For Ekllftr Ot Hand~

Solo 11r Own«: Hico 3 11ar1toom
Btrcll Rando Home 1 · I 112 !!aft

•

Sinlllo11'10r111.801 .......
Cd: 1-73f-3332

Vlow 3 llarltoomo, 2 llrlmo,

No JoD Too Big Or Too Small! 9303.

Cont•c• Joe Saundera At

. •-

Now 3br • - - n lrltrmo.
Free Sel·uP &amp; Deliv01r. Only 3
Lalli ~ • 0111! od Jli.
ooWV. 304-75&amp;-5115.

.

350 Lott l Acr. .
. (AIIEIITIONOiftLOPIIII,

IIW.I.-...

C•rpet, Nice Kitchen 1 O.ning

- " ""'- .,., Homo. f!ol. Room. C.,.rlll Alt. Geo Hoa~ Futl

CXIUIITIIY IITA11l
740-441-1538.
Ba10mor11 L - lot, Uiogo Cot· 83.85 Acres, Apsuoa. 1 A"•
Will dti bobrolaing In my homo. port located On 1110 Second Loka, llobrle Home With Largo
Add On Don, Gollio County,
ocrou t..., Middlopon ...._ ..,. S1roe\ Gelpolio, 7-·251:1
Countr Wa~e~ Anct Eleclrlc
lhill. 7-!1173.
SOIIOJ relocobng, 4 ltdom. 2 112 ~""'Aero. 740--11,
Wil .... junt Of . . . . · $351
WIWhirlpoOI IUb, 2·COr 01·
OidWP - . :114-175-!1135.
• 11(10, firoplaco, het- lloo&lt;t,
1 ·Acto Compliro Own 'lbur Own
tolid wood 6-penel - ·· queUIJ Boar Doclt, Golld fi~. Hunr·
WHI llooo &amp; Trim l.aorno, RH...,. l:r:~:~!·~-:•:ltd:n'"' 3.2 ICJOI ing, 1500 DOWII 1141/llo., 7411oble llolfl, Conracr Joo Seun- lin ne•
$148,500,
dlri.At740--2450.
31).1-87S.f308.
. 25e-1218.

t

0vwf110Wf1

Are Your lootung For Avon Pto-ducts Bur Don't K,_ Wheoo To
Fond Thom7 AIIO, H You Would

Park.

ol

·

00111 ~
•••rrm.nr
on II.O.
uiliNI
"""'· t270
per
month, 1100 9•PDIII, call 740 •
1112·-

0..0 ......,~

0..0 Bod!oom ....•-·..-•• u•tr• And
Paid, No .Pell, Reloroncoa
Deooair,.._, 740--1310_

Tfwoo . $300 per month
-·• ....._,. ond utili....
. ~d St
A;a,."7QH., 740-247·.m:• .,
Jilin - · TOWII, now OCCOPI•
•lltl opplico~onolor 1br. HUD
IUblidizod opt. IOJ Olderly Ond
handicoppod. EOH . 304-175·
fil!l9.·

Sale

D

wfsa.nd interior, &amp;crt • .
. M8f't'ruiser inboard motor,
I trailer, lite pres~rvtts &amp; '
ltumper•S2,750. 614·443i14:
n

-

•·18 TaylOr Crah 17h. open bow. ,

19881ladge
- , ar,
- ....
-. ICC.,

~~~~};~\;~~~760
!.988 Ford Tauruo

107,000 Mileo, Crurse c.,oor,
PS, Till, PW, Soa1s,

Befrena GT, V-G, auro, ate,

Slurrp Body! Clean Interior, Alii·
'"II $1,850, 080, 740-24~178
good condition. 740-9411-3420.

flll9 EacoJI t 1.000 740-3792405
1~ Plymouth Liter 1.8 4'yl.
whllt, loaded. ••· ce~nd. Uusl

SHJIUA . te.31U-937-2181 . ,
ljiUI Dodge Spin! ES, 4 Doors.

Filh Tanlli &amp; Pet Shop,
2•13 Jacuon Atlt. Point Pleat-

Good Condition. 740-ue 2300.

Cockatitii·Peatl I lutinos. 304~
175-4220.

199fAmtiac Grand Am. Au, Tilt,
Ctuiu,
Auromat1c,
Newer
WrKktd, Well Kepi , 83,000
Ortgtna! M11as. Greal ConCIJt,on.

1n1. 304-t7S.2013.

mell

Fftreta names

.,.,_,18

Boat,
GtearCondibon•7.a-~7.
1002 11 Ft Nirro Bass

Profe11ion11 Gtoom•ng Dy Appo•nrm.nll.
Second Ave •

eso

G llf llii, OH. 740-...., 1528.

Roady To. Go Alii&lt; 11ay ISih: Mi·

446-7111.

,.,.,.,, born

•
•

loaded. tt4,000 Miles, 12,185,

790 . Campers &amp;
, MOior Homes

..._,_
-1

lnlltrufnlnts

1V98 Spunaei 30' travel trllllf
liM new CondiDon, uNd 4 • •
all a"hSDries J 14, 750. 30•-

'

'I

•

.
.
ASftO-OilAPB
.
.

•

7.00.-7.

Duo! All Doge. 5upor: s.roo: N.,;
Coo, 15.000. 740-256-1561
•

CIC

'

--ropoirlnd,_, for •
frH tllfmate calf Chef. 740-012; • r
•

.
.I

~~::. ~riouo fnqulooo, 740·

a--,•••.

'

840 Eleetllcallnd
Refrlgntlon

Hammond O&lt;een ModelL. 304·
a75- 463Uftorllptl.

v-.7--1.

U
U·-~ C
Rt
piOII lfl . 12·311lioo
Sour~ of leon. WV. Financrng

--·~·458-10811,-

.

·-•.

A.I'J1nlill Df COIIIICciai.W..,
- NrVico or rapolro. " - ' (]: • •
cen1H -et.clrJdan~ Aldenout
Eloctrlcal, WV000308, 304 811- • 1'
1188.

.'

(

••••
lA II

•

a-range loltero of rho

'
·'

four· ocramblod wordo bolow 1o form lour llmplo wordo.

I

SOGIPS

.~"!":"',.......,......I -..,--r,~2

I

,,

OWYNI

rI I l I

-.-R_Ur::-Jr-R-,Or-11....=
',
~
•

•

•

•

...
'..

Wednesday, May 6, 19'JII..
In lhe year ahead you mi&amp;hl be
Showered wilh an abundance of
oppo1110nilia. bullhe bat ones aren't
likely 10 be long shou. Stick 10 lhe.
tnlditional kind of sure thing.
TAURUS .(April 20-May 20)
Today you might be inclined lo cater
lo your leiAit:acy 10 overindulge, ,.
physically and materially. Uncon·
• trolled appetites in lhese areas genm.e f'CJieiS. TauNS. treat younelf to
, a binhday gift. Send for your Astro- ·
· Gnph predictions for lhe year ahead
by mailinJ $2 and SASE 10 AllroGrlph. do lhi111CW1p111«. P.O. BoX
1758. Mlllllly Hill Stalion. New
Yort, NY 10156. Be sure 10 IItie
yow zodiac lign.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Do1101 MXIIIJb 10 yOIII" reslfaM I
IOdey by ...m, 10 lllllre impodaal
cfiMIII merely for c:Nnp'a .sake.
!)isutisfiCiion · oould malt in
- . . d I I llliiiJ.
C~I!R (J•ae 21-Juty 22)

.Refrain from allelllpCins 10e~lilh
your adlieYelllellll today. Your md·
ibilicy willsull'er if odlm catch you
telling tall tales.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Yuu're a·
penon who sekf!Jm counts biscflick·
ens befcn !hey hau:h. Today. however, you might bulk llllhcr heavily
011 something lfiii'IIIOI yet a Jalily.
·VIROO, (Aug. 23-Sepl. ' 22) A
clever ac:quaincance who i1 .ware lhal
you c:an be nw~ipulllled duuugfl flallery might lay it on a bitlhic:k today
,in onler_to subdue you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-()a. 23) Your
good looks IIIII charm won't gu~n~~~­
ea: your suc:cess today. If d1ae i1
somethi!lg important you . . . 10
-..nplish, be· pepa.al 10 roll up
your sleeves IIIII wort for iL
SCORPIO (01:1. 24-Nov. 22) h
mip be wite today 1101 10 subject
punelf' 10 I soc:ill f'unclioll widl leV•
ml ,__ whole &amp;:OII1JIIIIY )'011
don'l enjoy.,k yoa do aaend. have an
excuse reedy for 111 early eJdt.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc•.
21) Do 1101 lake bows pmlllllftly
,

I

today for somedling you have 1101 yet
ar:c:omjllished. A competilor who
would like to lrip you up might ask ·
10 see !he finished produc:l.
·
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Most or lhe time you like to play
lhings by ear, but today if you llon't
'have concise plans for each Slep or
!he way you may experienc:e.some
IUrbulence.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Joinl endeavors might be difficult
today, C3pCCially if your oounterpiut
is inell'ective in looking after your
collective interests. ~ close tal»
on ever)'lhing.
·
•PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirth 20) Be
very careful today if you have 10
negociate 1 delic:ale maner. You may
go in lhinlt;ing you have lhe edp, but
dill may 1101 be lhe cue.
·ARIES(Marcfi21-Apri119)Usually you're a reliable individual. bul
today you might pmend. you took
- or aomething for IIIOlher when,
in Jality. you didn'L The lllllh will
ouL

.

,

Irs U&lt;l that we will believe
evil on rumor and believe lruth

..,-""A-rl....,..E.,NT""P'f.,y:r-.., only when it is···-··.
1---..:15,.....r-~-~r.,-,r-"1,M1e Complehr lire cftiiCkle qua~od
by filling in 1ho miaing words
l._J.-..1.1.......1._J_:..._...L.~

..

,,

... '

you d...lop from lfep No. 3 below.

e Plll~$7':!i~sl!TTUS IN II II -1, r I' r I
I ~~·~;N~:f Lmus I .I I I I I I

~.

'

...
• •

...

.'

MAYs I .·;:.
'

(PAJ(CC)

-:':":"':':'"-~----1995 Neon 75,000 M11es , AC

83Zl.

E •

.-1

•
•

!

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

YSK

UOCITFK
.
~
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Give a bov a bat and a ball and a place to play and • '
you'll have a good citizen.• - (N.Y. \'a~kee caleher) Joe McCarthy
•,

S

G~ttal Home Maln·
renenee- Painting, rinyt siding,

LS

&gt;"

j

875-3823.

t'l

~~.!o:'::r::lllldt. _.....,.,Cti1--.zll.

UHFSCL

'*

lent Condilion. 7t0 -441 -2723.

P1f1W . . ... ,..... •Easr. a.nll FlMnCt"f For UIH
low "*"'tly PIII-I· 111 ...... . Voh c:IH, No Turn Downa. tall
tilt

D K.'

LTETFZT

KUTW

·1

111113 Plymoull Acdorm 4 Dooro Uncondnionaf liMr1me guatlntH. :
Auto. 4 Crlinrlor. LGw llotos 1.0. lotal teferencta furnished. Es..._2203.
•
•olt1Jihod 1975. Call (7~
1
1!1113 SAlOon SC2.- Sunroot. 0810 Or 1·800·287-11576.
L•rher .,.,..,101', 5 SpNcl, EK4tl- Wa .. Qtoofirtg.

POll IALI: COHIOLI PIAIIO, . C•odil Problornt7 W. Con Hotp.

M U T· Y

ITUESDAY

sii11io---H;;IOI;;;m;;;;.--l
1993 Ch•ylloo Concood, 76 000
lmpnwementl
I
Milt. l.Dicled~ Sl,500 090 '1.q.
;
258-6t111L
'

Bad Credit, No c~·
,_,. ~·~
cy? W. Con HOipt l!anll Frnonc ·
•nt0nU8odV-H.740·441 0807.

TENTPDHCCW

C S Z T,

,

• · - ..,,.

570

YTTL

'PUDCLFTY

HURT!"

·

1H2 Torota Ter~;el 5spd, suger
ftld. 304-G7S.S32S. ·

111111 Dodge Noon, 27,000 llltn,
2 Door EIP&lt;oiiO. 17,09t OBO
~·•ol!&lt;od (no , 740-2!!11-15311, 74Q.25f.1371.
'

by Luis Campos

CeWltfy Ciphtr CI=J WI$ ... cr-.d fnlm Ql
' 4 by~ people, Pllllnd"""""
Eactt
1n ... cipNr...,. tor enolhet-. rcxt.n c~w. N ~,

1994 Coleman Pop-Up E•....,. ~
Conclihon, Steepa 5 -6. Awning, l
Stovo. Srnk, $2,800, 740·256· j
li869Loauellosugo.

' '

CELEBRITY CIPHER

KII'M liTS ANSW11S
Paunch • Scout· Otter· Flunky~ NOT HURT
. Sign on back of bus: "Be Alert VVhen Driving Through
a School Zone. Children Should Be Seen and NOT

\

SER VIC ES

1995 Plymouth Neon 4 Doo11
OIHn Wnh Spoilo• Auromohc:
Air, 57,500 lliloa, $4,000 080,
7411251 11340, 740-256-1487.

.,

:740:::::·70;,.;:.2·,:21;:92.:::..._ _ _ _ _ _• ' ~

740-....,7993.

•

Shilf.tzu , . . _ 1 -·
Sholl I Wormed, 1100. 740~1311
~
.

SME SAIO VOIJ
60T AU. TJ.IE
AHSWERS
~N6 ..

N.c. flbefglatl topper 10 til tma11 ..:
l)tCkup, ICtHned and IIOIId Wlf'l4- .,
ows, bJonze 1n color. musliM l

-:c-:-::-...;.;;______

E•:tinoa: 7C-25e 8181.

As mentioned yesterday, when in
a no-trump contract, one cannOI stop
an opponent's torrenl of winners,
beCause there are no lrumps wilh
which to ruff. So, you must by to stop
an opponenl from running his suit!
The simplest countermeasure is' lhe
holdup play, wl)ich is highli&amp;hted in
today's deal.
As declarer. what is your initial
routine after the dummy appears?
How do you plan the play?
If you lise lhe 16-18 no-trump,
North should bid game immediately.
Whenever the minimum combined
· count is 25. ~o for glllllt. However~
if you use 1he modem IS-17 no.trump. North shoold raise 10 two notrump. Then Soulh i~ happy lo bid
lhree because he has a good five.card
soil and excellent comrols (aces and
kings).
•
Always start by counting your top
tricks. Here, lhere are five: two
spades. two beans IIIII one club. The
other foor tricks will come from lhe ,
diamonds. but West has struck at your
weakest spot: clubs. If you win the
firs&amp; trick. you will go down. East will
grab triclliWo wilh his diambnd ace
and flash back his remaining c:)ub.
West will overtake and run the resl of
lhe suit.
You must duck lhe firSt trick. win·
ning !he second wilh your club ace. ·
· Then play a diamond. If WC!!t wins
wilh !he ace and cashes lhree more
club tricks. you may console yourself
in 'knowing lhen: was nothins you
could do. AI leasl yoo weren '1 dou·
bled!
.
If Easl wins with the diamond ace
and has a club to return, presumably
the suil .has split +3. so you are slill
· safe. Here. though. Ea.'ll wins wilh the
ace and has no club left, so your con·
U8CI is home free.

R Auto. R1pley, WV. 30'· 3723933 or HIOI~27.J.9329.

pu""'M•rch2•tn.
"·
IUJO

:

I TOLO MV TfACHEit MOW
'iOIJ IIEU'£D ME WITM MV
HCt4EWORK LAST N16HT..

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Full 101 of 858
14Q.Qt2. liltr.
\LI, Facllly
PoNIItod
!~~~§~§~~~;I
1997 Pontiac
r .,ollird
Iliaci!Alu·
3a
4581. dO cal •-· ...._
ohah: - twrn
:::'::-::-:::-:-:--:::-:-----1 .,;..,,. Whooll, CD Ptorer
Of

PEANUI'S

a •,

IIASEIIEHT
WATEIIPAOOfiHG

F -c•r"-'--,
-Oponl

tta1ure ·Collie• Thotoughbled

C011RonE..,., 1.1J00.!107·K!t.

E.ol&amp;
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 8

New gao tanko I body IIOI'IL D &amp;

HOTICI

Blower. 14 Fr. Stolntila
7co.3116W7r .
Frootrno• $500 ; 2 Mallcliiiiiil
Couch'o 2 Ynro Old
Ror-.

Sale·

2045. w111 'ons1Get
trade lor
_....
boa
ltnJ condition. S1•&amp;5, 140·9912·1 .....- poniOOtl
t.
8824. •

AKC Gl)lden Reltlv.,l 7 WHkl

11-e.

· ....

SSOOO, 740·949·2203 or 740-941·

Radio Cassette Plarer, N•ce &amp;

AKC Regillered KeelhDnd f•male, tpade. nou,. brollien, 10
pod home only, 304 -675 -0167

5om Of

werranry, three sealer, 83 hotl8-

AKC Chlh uanua small male,
7moo. old, luH ~- S300 090.
304-1175-4488.

Co1tbu1n 1ng, Thttmosrar

JET

BIG NATE

..,P.

10 141,() discs. atso holda 1apea.

'""""' 1
G ,.~·,
·- ~
P•oN-7
T.~?
-"~
·~....,.o,
7......,.!125
:..::...:...:._;_.:.._..:.._=---1
Jally Mo611 1100- Cllair,
P ce ; S1 ,SOO, Comeordol 1100.
740-388-1322. 7.00.-10.

=

Sea Imp 10 112ft. dHP·V,

$125. 304-875-3101 .

"""!'_..___
P

, tor

power. bougn1 new Jury or '97,
three matching Kawulki s•i 1 •
ve••• and rrailet au "O
wr.th ''· ·
•

Poodle pu~ IUt;up lnd tin,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallon• Ron IOJI, AKC Rogoororod, 740-887·
Now Taking ~ppficadono- n Evano EntOJpriiOS ..~ .... Olt ·~·
Well 2 Bed,oom Townnouu t-800-537-9528. '
•
. -.
Apettmonll 12HIIIo., 740-448·
Ready mid· lloy-5 lomolo a 5
Olllle.·
·
ElrK.Urc Hoaprtalllod, LIM Now malo whito lob puppioo (rtgrsAera111 fot 11.100 Win SeN For lert41 11 ftllow) , High quali(y
OlD Ull YUJIOE
$500; Collap•ble E11ra Wide !lith local fa-. Heue boen hold
wrwr CIIOo.$150; llodoido corn- and ro..d doilf. Call 304 _, 75 .
A111'01air. -yii&lt;!Myon
.-st5, 741)..448.180D.
!!IIOtlorpoi:ireondlflll •• .,..

•

leaveme&amp;ug&amp;.

750 Boats &amp; Motors

1i88 Chevy Ccw11ca, 2.8 V-6,
lill, etuiN, new lites, runt
11415. 740-812-8824.

N..., our of boa. tr25. -

1Qirn.2pir&gt;Morr. ,..Fri. 304-182·
3711 HUO 1
•d

St.SOO Firm. Can be teen at
2405 Monroe Ave. Pr . Pleasanr,
WV. 304·875·5018 after Spm or

mileo,740-742-t803.

,..._:kt4-675-235D.

GtaeiouliM&lt;rg. 1 and

ell&gt;---eo.EQI,III Hclusrtg Oppgr.,...,,
""*'• \'rt"llir.

.

2 Aquariums 30gal, tanks w/dou1:118 reM irq.n lland, fullr tqu1pped
wtpowef lilltfl, hood1. lis#lll etc.

pte11e call

1

Motel, Alking .f10,700, 740·387-

88 Harley OaYtd.On 1011 rail 'u•·
10m. eicel'-"1 CO(\CjJion, ""' low

740-441 -tSJe. ••
•
•
Kawasaki .STS Jel tlu. tlill under

Btandy and To.. re Pnono (7AOJ

Frrepraoe tn11n Bronco, Wood

Mobile Homes. 81m-5pm 304· •

1981 Content Claltic, 50,000

Wl-lt-.T Dll&gt; 1'11£,CIQ:Dil"
c.Hf&gt; C£#II&gt;N.I'( DO 7

'OIA't ~ (J((fEC€0
lll£ a.ED\T Ult\lT !

175·3000.

24 Fool Ponroon Soar For

-

* ·- ...llr,lralh"'""'- V..,dNn. .._.._

t981 CB 650&lt;~ 4cyl. Honda road .
brlre, good cond. S900. Call K&amp;K

1980 Oklla Delta 88 aulo, like

Brand llowl Grea1 Gihl CDMcloo

R;,.OJsicfe Aperunonll In Midldlo· l Call 740,0t2·8831 aflor e pm.
porL from S248-1373. Call
CDef,)loeonolin&lt;ll-.
ID2·501oot. Equal Housing Oppor.
IUriHI.
lor n~ no reasonable
=:::::::::__
________ , Carport
-owflrMII.740-992-2358.

,

.leep$100. 304-5~2387.

Second Avenue. Glllipotis. 740-

ap~rlmiln11 11 Viltae-

$5200;cai Pemy, 7.00-949·2317.

1980 · 1900 Tnrc:l&lt;s for StOOl!!
Seized And Saki
Locally '{ljl Monlh.
TrucMt, '•''~ Etc.
1·800-522c2730, X3901 .

., _

&lt;:I..W6 ~~lr'U.I\ CN
OJ!Z:.NEW OOU&gt; em&gt; ~1' fiCM1'I\

conqilion, '

.:,15:,:8::•:.:•35:::..- - - - - - 560 Pets for Sate

..:1945.

up

ewcellent

Deep Vie. Open Sow 170 HP.
Me10ruisor. Garage Kepr, One
Qwner,$3.000C811740-388-81r44.

1.., loollirtg bt - ,.,..., rl you
Furftilhed EfficiMCJ All
l1U To Sell A.on, Call Pam AI ate lhe person who boughl lhlm
Poid, Shofo Bath, $1851Mo., 7. 40-::.:2:.:45-:£.54:.:4=3.------ tom tho At1&lt; abOut ono ,.., ego

-;;~~i;;;j:";";;;d";ib;;;;;;;;l"oragt unit Black and chtrrr.

e111ras,

$1 ,200. Hl86 Uereury Topaz
$100. F10111 drp 11184 Ford T....,
StOO. t988 Dodge Ariel auro
transmiuion 175. 1884 2.5
Sulek ,.,1._ $200. 1~751 , ,3 v-e
$150. 1870 AutD transfer c•••

- ~~~or~30~..~89~S.~31~D~ICI5~E~...
~-~'II"~I ~IJor~
-Open S41ndoyo 1·4. lion-Sat

Sa~(740)441-1112

For L•M:

t•OC¥):
rgB4 H.D. Sporrsrer'tOOO, many •

carb. , good c:ondilion,

1079 Gala.11y tiFt Ftberglass.

Old, Sholl, &amp; Wo•med , $225.
Musa See To Appreciate! 7'0·
25&amp;-1688.

Brea"

1·800~522·2130 Etn.

,.THE BORN LOSER

1979 H.D. Spon11er tOOO,'S&amp;S

1088 Ford Esco11 Sratidn Wagon

A Groom Shop · Pet Grooming.

UDCiern 1 Bedf'oom Apartment, ·
74().f .. 0380.
Concrete &amp; Plastic SeptH:: Ta'*t.

,,..DsleecJASII~

Tlo &amp; -.1 Flooro.car.Conarnr&lt;lion.
CA, 1(1-Ground J'Ool, 740·256·
-

1

117.116 ... - .

.,Jot.,..

MMidleporl, be•udlut 1W0 SlOt)'. 3
br, 2 blll't, large l. r. &amp;
oak
dOOrt 1 ·lttm, Smlth"a custom o.k
Clbinttl, Jenn-air range, drlh-

41

................ Is

C111 Vlrgtn1a l. Stn.~th Reali~ AI
74o-ue. eaoe Ot
Cara

Metaboli•m

1980 -1910 MONDA CARS FOil
1100 Stiztd &amp; Sold Locally Thi1

0219.

1

MOiorcycles

$800. 30ol·875·50t8 aher
leave mHSBQe.

Foorurin9 Hydoo Boih. Don
ShHI1. 373 Goorgoo Crook Rd.
740-448-0231 .

Tllruugh. l.ole 10 11 201111&gt;1., Cd

Drrw

IPM:IIPIM

Amazmg

l&gt;AY$ viiTtfOVT
A'fl.ffVNl&gt;-

1.~oso

.

blaoklgray i-iof•. t·topo, loadeU.
$2.500080. :1)4.87S..220.

Prnochoo puPP&lt;il, call 740-tt2·
7548 aher ...,....
~-

For Ilea consuU.tion and Frn

New Doubltwide 38R, 2 bllh.
S1.32S Down &amp; UOS por mo. t ·

PICk up rrallt oo l"nk. $35. toad.

movttt. Call 74D-U6 -25el.

'

698·1019.

OOhp. Chrysler motor wJrrailtr ~

3 AKC reg111ered m1n1eture

94011.

2NT
Pass

J

1885 Trana Am 305 1u1o "ans,

1ec1 open marketl, Huge profit
potential. Can Mr. Mooni•. 304-

References, Oepoall, ltQ P'DI
Foster's Mobile. Home Park, 740·

71 o Autos for Sate

1884 Otd Cuda11 305 V-8 pt. pb.

=
550

0 ;00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 ID
6:00 p.m 740 ·992-2528 , Rust

North

By Phillip Alder

m11es, $6800, call collec1 740 -

740

Wedding Gown-Beautiful IYO,.,
1equint~, re-embraider8d lace,
llze 10 wift well. Only $225.

:.87;:5-80::=..:40::.·-::~~:---­

a.m. 10

m~~ehlne

7 Oxyglllllor

at bay

1~92 Chevy Blazer S.tO, 414, V·
6. 4.3. air condi1ion1ng , Q4,000

175-5332 ... 814-992·8111.

tt84 Chevr, Clleboily 2.8 V·6,
110.00!1 Mi 01, 2 Do oro, t 1,000
OBO 740-24!&gt;4117.

•ille f'D11 Ollice. Fn. Sar. &amp; Sun.
Building
r2pm·SPm ather daya. 304·273SUpplle.s
5855.
•
1••80 Trailer 2 Bedrooms WtO .S30
Antiques
Block, "'ick, -e• pipeo. wind·
ReJrigetrtiiJ, SIOIIe, CA, fbrdr, fiL
owa. tintell, tiC. Claude Winters
·218 Oeposir Reltrenc;es. 740·
Rio Grande. OH Coli 740·245:
Buy or sell. Riverine Artriques, 512 1.
·
2511-1044.
112• E. Ma.n SIIHt, on Rt 124.
2· &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hom•• Pometoy. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00 Steel Building De-alerships in • ·
110111

38 No! odd •

8 WKky
9 Gum•
10 Spoil
11 French

wlndlng

opponent

1tD8 Chevy 4wd, 350 , Ssprl, aiJ, '

prHiion
Fillinga 'ENTIAPAISH
"RON EVANS
Jocklon. Ohio. 1·8011-537·9528

:ro.-

W•ld Turkey season. buy Army
woodla.nCI tree· b&amp;rll camoullage
at Sam Somerville' s by Sandt -

12xeo 2 . .. Loca!Od Slcid"""• Road, 740 446 3891.
.

lor lOIII in Rocinl. 7411-9112-5030.

nancing evailaa.te.
7181.

1200 1~
·
·
. Vielor VIctrola VV·XIV 204841,
walra~t, ftoor, modet, 4 c1oor1. watkl
verr, wn, 150 with teeords, 7'0.
1182-3301.
::,::.;:;:.;:...,..._ _ _ _ __
Warorline Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 1'8• 100: 1" 200 PSI
U7.00 Per 100; All llron Com·

=.!::::...__ _ _ _ _ _ _

740-742'3033.

2 Apart,.ntl In Rio Grandt
Area : Acrou From College, 1
Room, t Bath, Utitilioo Included,

STORACE TANKS 3,.000 Gallon

Ca•per.

38 Milky (IIIII
37 Earl Grey, e.g.

Keept~e

crui1e, lilt, am·fm CIINII,. 304- •:

TRAN SP ORTATI O N
COOD

ALL!!

1981 f -150 4 WD 90K $3,600,
7-t0-367-7727.

Executive Home. Near Goll
Course, Immediate. Occupancy

Grande, $350/Mo. ,
448·2801.

NOT AT

KITCHIN",
. DOC?

Celt AfteJ 5 P.M. 740·24!H8211.

Goods

HouM FCH lnse Or land Cantract To Qualified Buyer ·2 Bed·
roome, 1 112 Ballll. Nico Yard, Rio

YOU CAN SLEEP IN
TH' H9USE TONl.HTt l

NOPE II

HAS MAW GOT
ENNYTHING

Wlth Topper, 10,000 Mile1. 0n ~
Rebuilt Engine, Has lift I S1itt Kit,
Clean lns1de &amp; Out, $8,500 Fkm,

no

14• Enga- R.ng S t/2 $175;
Nriw 3 Bedroom Homo
440 Apartments
14k Wedd1ng Band 5 O.a1110nelt.
Orly $11111.00 " " ' 8,
$400 ; 10lc Clutier, 6 , 175;
35 Ferguson D•esel. 740 -448 tor Rent ·
1·800·251 -5010
llorher'o Rrng. 8 10k 140: Tannro
4286.
451 112 Second N"enue, Gallipg- Btacelel Ull $7~: Annelte ?40Now 1998 14~70 throe bedroom; lia, 2 -oomo, N;, Appll.,.... 446-7338.
includes e monfla FREE 101 rant
lntludtl lkffUno. deluxe 11ep1 . S42Wo., t225 Dopoli( Udlirlol t75,000 BTU lP Gp Hoa1t1, .For
and Nrup. Only S187.0I per ;.J'aid:;
':..':...4Q.446-.:...;;;_;21;,;:;211:;..-'-,--·I S..mmrng POol. Ulod, 740monlll IIIith 11075 - n. Cal 1· BEAUTIFUL APARTMEJilTS AT 245-5444.
11011-837·3Zl8.
BUDGET PRICES AT JN:-KSON 2s· Zannh •••eo-color-console
lANK IIEPO'I 0.., 3 10111 ESTATES. 52 Wellwood Orin TV S7S. 304-G7S.3804.
from 1219 10 $358. Walk 10 lhop
Still undet Wl"•nty, owner 11 ~

AIIM!Ipm.

1983 Full· SIZ8 cnevy van, good
warlc van, new exhausl, wery rea· .

11 accepting applicalions for rent.

5881 .

Move ln No ·
Parmen11 Aller t Years, t ·800- Sfretl rwo bedtoom f110billl home

383-88112.

304·875-8171.

740·385·4387.

3br House in New Haven , wv.
t3351mo. + depo1i1. 304 - 71'3-

4.,...

1983 Dodge Caravan low m 181,
run1 good, in good condnion . '

Mob1lt home 11!&amp; &amp;\lailable bet ·
ween Atnena and Pomeroy, call

In Pomero~. 3 br., garage, $250
per month plus depo1it &amp; references, 304-882-38ot2.

Wesl
Pass
Pass

3NT

1178 FOrd F·1SO 414 SBOO. 304- ·
882·3235.

In Porltr, 7-10·388-

1280·1300, 18Wif, Wltlf lnd

La;ge selec:lion or used homes. 2

level House With 48'&amp;388' Barn
$115,000 And 00 Acres Wilh
30•60 Barn yti~ Pond 155,000.

HOUN work gol you down1 Give
"' a c;aft, " can help. Have ref-

304·77.J.585t , llaoonWV

3 bedroom, full size basement, no pets, 7•0-982·5858.

740·992-3194.

available. ~ - 755:7191 .

New Cla~ton Mobile Home Garden Tub, Sk~IIQhl, CA, On Rented

3858.

Also 1ra1ler space on river. All
nook·u pa. Call aller 2:00 p.m ..

or

nanc~ng

EIUYINAPRL
No Pay~MJ~tl Unti July 1998 .
E-Zfnancmg
Call finance line
1-8009411-5618
Free Set-up &amp; Derlery

0639.

Steep1n~ rooms w11h cook1ng.

2539.

Four bedroom home in Middle·
pori, 1375 month plus depoai!,

&amp; CLG 1·800812·5967.

2 lledooomo, Geo Furnace. Good
Opening For Experienced Marine ReniBI Income, $55,000 7«1-446·

'76 Ford F-250 414 Hrgh Boy, 360 :
engine, au1oma1ic, new 33• t~res, •
new steel ftalbed. marrt new parts. •
$2000 000, 740-742·21~2.
•

menrs, auume loan, owner fi.
Anenlion Mobile Home OWners:
Areas Largest lnven~orr 01 lntertherm ~ Coleman Heat Pumps,
Air Conditioners, Furnaces &amp;
Pans, Huge Buying Power Means
The Lowest lntta4led Price•. Easy
Over Tne Phone Bank Financing.
Call Bennen's Mobilei Home HTG

310 Homes lor Sale

2 Bedroom House Burkhart Lane,
Gall1polis, $340/Ma., WID HOok·
Up, Deposit Requ ire~. 513-574-

..

1 Monlpulola
dllhonnlly
2 Hl'lhHI card
3 Recent (prel.)

tKJ!095

tNT

-----·
730
4·WDS
.

2&amp;
21 Lennon'• Jove

DOWN

•A2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South

2 bdr, unlurnilliled. countrr satling on Gallipolis, OH. $300. mth,
S250. depo~t364-87S.4833.

45Y'..U:

30 AtllhrMiic, etc.
5 lnclleel
• 31 On th. .hore
8 TllrMd. 33Mcnallae

• A 52

•

Vans. &amp;

• A6 2
• Q 10
• A 4 3'

Factory S.- 10 Wheolo (7401 441 - '
'

am".:=u
Neveclo city

• Q 10 9 2

South

0411 , Aft&amp;J 8:00 P.M.

Available For Lease: 2,000 Sq. Ft

ABANIJON HOUE Ma•e 2 pay·

•Qt0· 78

Exceltenr Condition, St8,000 740· ,
245·5618.

.

21 LtdQir entry
23 .C hlnne ·

• 9 8 4
• 7 4

~"""'~~

~~~~

441YDeolcurw

57 Decle
58 Wood-cutting
tool

voc.

Eall

•KJ985

Ton Charcoal Grey, New Tlf81,
Towing Package, Running Board,

1419

18 Paving llufl

Weet
• J 8 7

;18Q4 Ford XLT 73,000 Miln, •
:s,and New Tires, Tool ~~· New
Pa1nt Job, E•ua--ctean.~2. V·8 :
Engine, Automauc Tranimi1110n , ,
Call 740-446 · 7224 Or 740·441 · ,

3:14-875-4~ aher 6pm.

m&amp;llll,

•

1992 Chevrole! Sullurba'l 3/ 4, •
1

• K J 3

• Q8 3
• 7 6. 3

_____,

304
·882·2356.
_...:.:;:...::.:;.:::;.

Houses for Rent

momhl~

Save My Cridlt, Asuume Pa~ ·
304-738· 72115.

available
equal
opportunlly basis

1988 Chevy Sport S-10 tiel, !hO'! :
bed wii01JA8r, Sspel, ac, new tirn· '
&amp; brakes. 8JjC . cond . $2,200.1 :

e

4 Room house

Double Wide
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
S 1,885 Down $28~ f'eJ Month
lncbldeo O.W.y And Set Up
Caii1-IJ00.251 ·5010

Gallio County Chambe&lt;

All Repltes COnldential

3 llodroom, Around $200 per

month. Call credll line 1,~ 800 948·5878.

This newspaper wta not
knowingly accep1
advert~¥ments for real esune
which ls In violation of the

Secretary tAdmlnistrarive Assistant. Thil lt A Very V1slble · And
Challenging Poslrion, People
Skills Very lmportanr. Computer
E11pertise And Wri1in9 Ability A
Must. Some BookkeePif'IO Experi·
ence H~pful , Pa~ Is Competitive,
Based On Skills And E•perience.
Send Resume' By May 7, 1998
To:

OJ

1 Bedroom Aparrmen1, Srove &amp;
Rerrlgtralo' Furnished, All Utltltiea Paid, t1ahdicapptd Ace. ,

• K 6 5

GecldH
17 Dl....,llng

05-05-98

r·:••

=~-·

15 o.cototlve
18 Barbllro -

Norib

41 AclotllfMo
42 NORHs

51 Toaucf
55 Pletu'"
• Fit too
lniJHIIng

mogulne

EEK&amp;MEEK

992-2218.

4 Building Sites-2 Acres each,
convenienl yet private,
miles
from Paint Pleasant 1 114 mile oil
Bethel Rd. off Sandhill, no lingle
WidtJ. SH -18,000ea . .304-8751948 belooe 9pm.

410

i;

Ttucks tor Sale

t978 Chevy pick·UP !ruck, tuns
good. 304·675·31111r.
•

1 Bedroom Aperlment, Stove, A•
lrigerator Included, No Pall, 740446-2583.

7 Sky color
. 12 Olliclll epoch

13~=

1983 Ford Dump Truck F·OOO ,

Clean &amp; Oulet, 740-3811-9770.

4 Acres Ohio Ri\ler frontage, 13
Miles South Gallipolis, On At 7.

2

"""'""· 304·875-5025.

based on race, colOr. religion,

IMMEDIATE OPENING

Of Convnerce
Anen~ort A. V. Graham
~Q Box465,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

·KI,kwooCI rrailer. 304-

675-4534 after 6pm.

61264.

••w
740·441-1821 .

I

. .

40~-'

ACROSS
I Thl L.ane-

14 PolltiCII

Real Good Bod: 11173 Dodge 311., ·
380 Engine 740·446·31169. ·
, ~-

RENTALS

14 110 38R. S999 Down &amp; ONLY
St7Q per mo. free air &amp; trt8 1klrt·
rng. 1·888-928-3428.

• E•cellent Wages

Individual With A Working t&lt;nowledge 01 Bearings And Mechani·
cal Ana Elecutcal Aolltlng Equipment To Sell To Industrial And
Power Generaring Facilities In
Solltheut Ohio. Tl'le App licant
Will A'l AI An Agenl For A Fac tory Rep And. Income W1ll Be
Baud On 27% Commission.
Send Resume and References
To: Michael loehrer, trnpra /Seal
Co. P.O. Box 260, Milan. lllinois

able $3,500 : McCullogh ChamWllh Carrying Cau $60,

304-875-8149.

e...:e. 304-675-2145.

. 720

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1 1nc1 2 bedroom apar111'18nt1, fur·
nished and unfurnithed, uc:urlr.,
depoait required, no pttl, 740,

$25,000, 740·251H&gt;tl68.

Joe'a TV-VCR Service
Free Estimatn

• RSES Certified
• Paid M'edicallnStJrance
• Paid Vacations ·
• Pakt Holidays

$500 Bown S2t9111o., 740·258·
1216.

Middleport, call 740·992·3465 'ar- 3 Bedroom Mobile Home 1211 65
Fair ConCIIIIOn $3,000; 2.1 Acres
'" 5:0001anytlma-.
On Pacton Road, EhKtric A\lail ·

Professional
Services

H~AC

2 To 3 Aciea Mobile Home Wei·
come, Own '1bur Own Boll Dock,

Three bedroom, blth lnd half In

recommends that you do bulinen with people you know, and
NOT to send money th,ough the
mail until rou have lnv111igated
lire Ol1erlro:J.

Etrienced 5ale&amp;f)e(son- Home

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

---~--------------------------------------------~··
••
•••

�...
-

••

..·-·- . .

: ·"-:

0

: _

Wednesday .

By The Bend

The·Daily Sentinel

•

' '

•

those men in their ·late 40s and 50s ·
who are looking for young "trophies" are no barga\n. They are vain,
empty-headed fools. If you cannot
have ,a quality man, you are better
off alone. Trust me. Keep reading
for more on this subject:·
Dear Ann: I would like to
respond to the ' single woman who
recently wrote to explain how happy
she was with her lifestyle and how
some people have a hard time
believing that single life can be fu l·
filling.
I'm 42 and have be.en married
twice and divorced twice. Both of
my ex-husbands remarried within
months of our divorces, and one has
been married three times si nce. Both
remarried because they didn 't want

to be alone.
I have one girlfriend wlu&gt; is supporting her sweetie atid another who
is involved with an alcoholic
because she "needs somebody" in
her life. Two women in my social
circle are in loveless marriages with
husbands who ·cheat left and right,
but they tolerate the indignity
because the thought of being on
their own terrifies them.
After my last divorce, I cried for
months, thought about my ex all day
long and dreamed about him at
night.
When I couldn 't stand the pain of
the separation, I would go back to
him, like a heroi n addict returning to
get my fix . .
Of course, I W'!S returning to

what caused that pain in the first
plsce. I can't believe I was so stupid.
My second husband was controlling,
unfaithful and a congenital liar. I
must have been out of my mind ·to
think I could change him. The
divorce cost me plenty, but it was
worth it to be rid of him.
It took time, but I stayed strong,
held my head up and eventually got
through it. I am now living .a happier, healthier life alone. I.don't need a
map 10 make me happy and whole •.
thank you . ., OK Somewhere in the
U.S.A.'
.
Dear OK: You have found the ·
answer to thai well-known Ann Landers question, "Are you better ofl"
with him or without him?" and I
salute you for being wise enough

High: 70; Low:SO
Tomorrow: Rain
High: 70; Low:SO

ma~e~

and strong enough to face the trulh.
How I wish more females would fol·
low your example.
Too many wonderful ·women put
up with cheating, lying freeloaders
because they think "it's better than
nothing.'' I can tell them -- "nothing" is a lot better than a liar and a
cheat. There is no price tag on dignity and self-respect And while you
are putting up with the liar and the
cheat. you may be missing out on
some truly decent man who could
appreciillc your wonderful qualities
and make you very happy.

..

and make tapes so·their children will
know about them. The business
meeting was opened with prayer by
Rev. Sharon Hausman, and by the
group reading the pledge. Secretary
Poole and Nina Robinson. in the
absence of Treasurer Osie Mae Follrl)d. gave their repons. The group
reported 35 friendship calls.
Arrangements were made for
members to attend the district .
retreat Program Resources Chairman Sarah Caldwell discussed reading books for 1998 and showed the
tool assortment offer.
Thelma Henderson gave a missions report on the development program for women in Haiti. which
encourages better living conditions,
literacy; disease control and an aid in
improving income.
Charlotte Van Meier had the
prayer calendar, and chose Patricia
Patterson, laity worker in New York.
The society signed a birthday card
for her.
·
Caldwell served refreshments
during the social hour to those mentioned and to Aorence Ann Spencer
and Marjorie Guthrie.
The next meeting will be at the
church on May 19. Mrs. Robinson
will be the program leader ·and
Spencer will be hostess.

BY BECKY BAER
Melge County Exteneion
Agent
Femlly end Consumer · Sciencea/Communlty Develop~
ment
·

May is known as "Tourism
Month." .
Tourism is the third largest
industry in the United States. Over
3.25 billion dollars is spent each
year on ·tourism. While !raveling,
visitors spend more money on
shopping than anything else
except lodging and meals . Many
of their purchases are souvenirs.
Can you supply them with
mementos of their travels?
How can you know what
tourists will want to buy? First,
you have to consider the four different types of tourists. These are

D of A past couneUors meet
An Ellster theme was carried out
at the recent meeting of the Past
not "carved-in-stonen distinctions,
Councilors' Club of Chester Coun' Tales of departed to be told at
however,
because · people may
cil 323, Daughters of America, held cemetery
fluctuate
between
types depending
at the hall with Charlone Grant as
The Athens County Historical
on ..their travel destinations..
hostess.
,
Society and Museum's successful
After you decide what type pf
Erma Cleland presided at the Mother's Day program in the West
tourist
your area auracts, you can
meeting, and read scripture from State Street Cemetery last year will
work
towards
supplying the parMallhew. The Lord's Prayer ami- be~pealedthisyearonMay IOwith
ticular
souvenirs
that those
pledge to ·the American Aag were new stories.
·
given in unison.
Fifteen interpreters.· each stand·
For roll call members read an ing by a grave, will give a brief
Easter poem or displayed a cross. A account of ihe l.ifc of the person
Destincc Danae Blackwell cclccommi!tee of Esther Smith. Opal buried, there or some incident in that
htated
her first birthday with a party
Hollon and Elizabeth Hayes was person's life.
appointed to rewrite the by-laws.
. The free program will !&gt;egin at at McDonald's. hosted by her mothh was noted that Dorothy Myers the cemetery at 2 p.m. and tours will cr. Arica Blackwell.
Attending and presenting gif'ts
is to have eye surgery. Officers' begin approximately every I 0 minwere
her maternal grandparents.
reports were given by Charlollc utcs until4:30 p.m. The presentation
Steve
and
Shari Blackwell; maternal
·Qrant, secretary, and Mary lo Bar- lakes an hour and a half.
·
ringer, treasurer.
Marj Stone. program chair, great-grandparents, Jerry and Bar· ·
At the May meeting members arc woman, said the tales give bits of the bara Colmer; maternal great-great
to give Mother's Day poems.
history and ranging from the first g,randmother Mamie Stephenson;
Refreshments were served by the mayor of Athens to the mothers of Amber Blackwell and son, Austin
hostess. Games were conducted by sons killed in the Millfield Mine . Hendricks; Aja Blackwell : Ryan
Dill; Tainmy, David, Jeremy, Kim
Jean Welsh and Elizabeth Hayes. Disaster .to a runaway slave.
and -Megan Johnson, Joyce, Jamie
Door prizes were won by Laura Mae
Gail, Jeremy and Sheena Ash: ConNice, Opal Eichinger, Elizaheth Area Rnident Named Outstandnie, Shannon and Devan Soulsby;
Hayes and Opal Hollon. Others pre- inll Campus Lader at Ashland
Jim, Kim and Aaron Oliphant:
sent were Thelma White. Mary K. UniYenlty
Holter, .Marcia Keller and Margaret
Joshua Moles of Cheshire was Tammy, Brittany and Olivia Crenamed the outstanding campus means; Pauline, Erin, and Lindsey
Amberger.
leader at Ashland "Univcrsity during Paucrson; Timmy Yates; Savannah
the leadership and service recogni- · and Melinda Miller.
Alfml UMW meets
· Martha Poole and Nellie Parker lion ceremony held April 26.
led the program. "Finding Hope,
Moles, son of Terry and Sharon
Love, and Dignity," when the Alfred Moles of 2624 Lillie Kyger Road, i~
· UMW met ai the chulch on April 21 . a senior majoring in toxicology at
Due to family illness, Martha Elliou Ashland University. He is a 1994
was unable to be present to lead the River Valley High School graduate .
program.
The program told of the program On de110'1 lilt
Melissa Nicholson of Pomeroy
for abused and HIV-positive teens
by Tabcrman Settlement House. was inadvcnently omilled from the
· Inc .• in San Pedro. Calif. Teens who list of studenis named to the Winter
Refrteerators
won'tlive to sec their children grow Quarter Dean's List at Hocking Colup are encouraged to lteep diaries lege.

tourists will want to buy.
I . Ethnic, Arts, and People
Sty lc - These tourists really gel
into their travels. They become
· ~ng rossed with the culture, art's
and way of life for the peop!e of
the specific community. They
view the experience as ·not only
ed ucational, but also as a means of
personal development.
The visitprs become involved
in community festivals, aucnd
concerts and plays. visit art museums and galleries, and talk with
local residents.
These travelers like to buy ageless crafts such as folk art, design. er and ethnic crafts, as well as the
traditional crafts associated with
that panicular region.
They want crafts that can be
used in the home, jewelry, and
items that can· be added to their
·craft collections. They expect
good quality. an attractive color
and design, and work that has
been signed by the artist.
2. History and Parks Style These people appreciate the land·
scape and encapturing the "feel·
ing"·ofthe area's past and what it
means to them.
Many of today's vacationers
choose spots that .have historical
significance. They plan their trips
to include visits to historical sites
and homes, museums, recreated
villages and buildings, gardens,
and state and naiional parks.
Tourists to these areas like to
buy crafts that have historical,
regional, ethnic, nature. country.

Birthday celebrated

By JIM ~EEMAN
Sentinel New• Steff
A seated Meigs County collllnis- ·
sioner was narrowly defeated ·Tues·
· day in a close, three-way race,
according to unofficial primary election results from the Meigs County

90045

and western themes that correlate so many times they select package
with the locale. They are particu- tours that enable them to constantlarly interested in crafts that can ly be "on the go."
be displ'ayed in their homes. Other
This group is mostl y comprised
requirements include clever ideas, . of young men and women in their
superb workmanship, aesthetic twenties who greatly enjoy the
color and design, ease of packing city's night life.
and care. and insignias relevant to · Socializing is extremely
the site.
important to them. They love to
Postcards, historical books shop, attend professional sporting
abOU\ the area. local food products events. visit theme parks, arid
and collectibles arc also on the dance.
.
shopper's souvenir list ·
Most of these tourists want to
3. Active Outdoor Style - These buy items that depict the .location
vacationers enjoy hiking, camp- of their travels. T-shir~' and sweat,
ing, backpacking, fishing, sailint. shirts arc always popular. but -so
boating, hunting, swimming; ski· arc pens. bumper stickers. and key
ing, and playing tennis and golf. .chains.
Their main goal is to treasure the
They tend to select crafts with
great outdoors.
a contemporary or designs well as
T·shirts and sweatshirts with western handicrafts. They like to
names and·.logos for the area ·seein make an impressio~ with their disto be the holiest items. Crafts are plays of crafts and seasonal or hoi·
usually made from natural materi- iday items.
. .
als such as grasses, corn husks,
Clothes, accessories, or jewelry
pine cones, · dried flowers and play a significant role in their
stone.
vacation purchases.
Rural, western, recreational
Craft prOducers, retailers, and
and traditional themes are pre- businesses can become savvy in
dominant Folk art is also in supplying sduvenirs to sightseers.
demand. The visitors want craft · Which type of tourist do you think
items that can be displayed in their our .area will draw? Probably all
homes that have a whimsical but t.hc Urban Entertainment
accent. Names. of attractions and tourist, with the majority of the
corresponding designs are impilr- · visitors being In the .Active Outtanl, along with signed, marked or door category.
limited edition crafts made by
Once the community . deterwell-known artists and crafts peo- mines which tourist styl~ their
ple.
·
.: area attracts, they can then strive
4. Urban Entertainment Style - to furnish the appropriate memcnThese people want to do as much . los that those tourists will want to
as they can during their vacations. · buy.

UALITY..FU.RNITURE PLU
.

Announces
Wuben

JTAG

NTH!.

M•lleChef
Ranees

Dryers

Board of Elections.
Republican candidate Pa!ty Goe·
glein Pickens, Pomeroy, received
I,341 votes. Cunent Commissioner
F~ Hoffman, Middleport, ~ived
1,317 votes followed closely by a
thind candidate, E. Jim Sheets,

PAnY G. PICKENS
- ~

Voinovich :wins
Senate primarY

COLUMBUS (AP) - Oov. ·of other school issues in the CincinGeorse Voinovich didn't bother to nati81ashowsvoter.iareti~oftax. Camp&amp;ign Cor his U.S. Senate prima~
ry election. But then, he didn't need
"!think my message, l!(hen lt.wa,~
to.
able to get out, wli• a strong mesVoinovich ea,•ily won the Repub- sase," said McCollough, who spent
lican primary Tuesday. bea!ing a so little money that he did not have
Cincinnati suburban l;O(:ial studies to file federal pre-election campaign
teacher making hi~ lint run for pllil- di5&lt;;i0surcs. ,
.
ical office.
_ • McC&lt;?IIough said he decided to
With 99 pen:ent of the pm:incts - jet ill the race in early 1996 when
reporting. Voinovich received 72 per- Glenn had not decided whether he
cent of the vote to 28 pen:ent fot' was going to run for another tenn.
David McColloush. acconding to
f&gt;JcCollough said he thought about
unofficial results tabulated by 1be dropping out .when Voinovi~h
_ Associ•ted Press.
announced he was running, but
;
"We're pleased with the results of · decille!Jthat it wa,• important to firi- tonisht's election," said Caryn Can- ish. ,
disky, spokeswoman fo~ the
. '&lt;0\ltovich, constitutionally bamd
yoino•ich. c11mpaign. "Obvtou~Jy, from running fot' a thind consecutive
we'll be runnin&amp; a strong campatgn four·)'W term as sovemor. also used
lookinsto the November election.:· his time to focus .on one' of his
Voinoviah's opponent in Nove!ll- strcn&amp;t.hs- raising money.
ber, Mill}' Boyle, was unopposed in
~n Voinovich lost the Senate
Tuesday's Democratic primary for race in 1988, ~ and Democra1ic
the Senate seal held by Democrat opponent Howard Metzenbaum set a
· John Glenn.
.
state record by spendins more than
Ratherthan campaign for the pri- $16 million combined.
mary, Voinovich turned his attention
Voinovich h_as collected millions
to backing the penny-a-dollar sales more than Ms. Boyle, who lost to
tax incrca,'it that would have provid- Democriuic lawyer Joel Hyatt in the
ed more money for Ohio schools' 1994 primary for the Senate seat now
while providing prilperty lax relief for held by Republican Mike DeWine.
homeowners. The issui: was defeatMs. Boyle said the absence of a
ed Tuesday.
primary challense gave her the lux. McCollough· wa,~ pleased with the ury of spehding more lime becoming
support he received for his conserv· familiar with the problems she would
alive. anti·lax message. He said the be asked to solve if elected to the
failure of the sales taX and the defeat Senate.,

es.

I

Hometown Newspaper

Meigs
upsets
Wellston
Page 6

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.;. ,

Single Copy- 35 Cents

.

Pick~ns, ·Davenp~rt.

---Community Calendar'-----

DESTINEE BLACKWELL

Meigs County~s

For county commission seat

Scnll questions to Ann Landers, Cre·
ators Syndicate. 5777 W. Ce ntury
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.

TUESDAY
noon.
ALFRED - Ofl\ngc Township
Trustees. Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the ·
POMEROY - Meigs County ·
hoc nf the clerk. Osic Folltod.
Health Department. free i•mnunizatinn clinic. "Tuesday, 5to 7 p.m at the
POMEROY - Fraternal Order Meigs Multipurpose Center in
of the Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m Pomeroy. All children must he
Tuesday, at the hall . Elcetio~ of nfli- accompanied by a parent or
ccrs.
guardian with the child's shot
record.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at .
MIDDLEPORT - Department
township hall on Rocl&lt;.springs Road. of Veterans Affairs, health care ..
enrollment and preventative health
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport services event, American Legion
Maso~ic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, reguPost in Middleport, Tuesday, 10 . .
lar rilcting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at a.m. In 4 p.m.
temple.
REEDSVII,.LE - Olive Town. POMEROY - Free blood pres- ship Trustees, regular meeting,
sure screening by VMH nurses, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. township, buildFarmers Bank, Tucsdav, 9 a.m. to in~ .
·
·

.

•

A Gannett co . Newspaper

Society Scrapbook -'------1 ime Out For .l·i ps---1

Members' health talk of Daughters oC America
Several members were reported
ill at a recent meeting of Chester
· Council, Daughters of America. held
at the hall.
Ella Osborne, councilor, presided
at the meeting which opened with
pledges to the Christian Flag and the
American Flag. Erma Cleland ~ead
six verses from Matthew, Chapter
28.
Goldie Frederick was reported to
be home from the hospital , and .a
thank you card was read from Alta
Ballard for remembrances during
her recent hospitalization . Also
reported were {he deaths of Doris
Grueser's father, William Fields, Jr..
and Delores Wolfe's father-in-law,
Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
Wolfe was pianist for the meeting. The meeting time was changed
to 7:30 p.m . Erma Cleland, Shirley
Beegle, and Everett Grant conducted
a game after the meeting closed,
with winners being Ella Osborne
and Opal Eichinger. Others allending were Gary Holter, Julie Curtis,
Mary K. Holler, Marcia Keller,
Thelma White, and Laura Mae Nice.

Primary election results, Page 10
Beat of the Bend column, Page 11
Reds.lose, Indians win, Page 5

Today: Cloudy

Page10
Tuesday, May 5, 1998

Lots·of middle age single women would .be perfect
I am a divorced, well-educated,
self-supporting woman, not homely
Ann
or overweight, but I don't look like a
fashion model or a beauty queen.
Landers
1991, Lot AIIFkl TiMeS
I was dumped for a dizzy blonde
Sy.titalt alii! Crutur1
with no children and a part-time job.
S)lldiclle.
I keep busy with various community
activities and would feel uncomfortDear Ana Laaden: This is a able going into a bar unaccom paresponse 10 the. letter from "Glad to nied. Meanwhile, I am so lonely, I
Be Sexless in Canada." I am sorry don't know how much longer I can
she is so biller and turned off against stand it.
all males, but she does not speak for
All of you 4(). and SO-year-old
all women.
·
men out there, please don't overlook
I have always enjoyed sex and women your own · age. We have
long . desperately for a loving, learned how · to satisfy a man and
monogamous sexual relationship . how to he grateful for the opportuniThe problem is that I am in my late ty.: . Lonely in Memphis
40s and all the inen my age wanr 20Dear Memphis: Perhaps it will
year-old trophy wives or mistresses. be a comfort to be reminded that

.

Sports

Mliy 6, 1998

Weather

.

to s.quare off in. November

Reedsville, who received I,312 votes.
Pickens will compete against
Democratic primary wjnner Mick
Davenport, Middleport, in November
for the seal commencing Jail. I,
1999.
.
In the Detiiocralic primary, which
also fea!Ured a close, three-way race
for county commissioner, Davenport
received 629 votes while Charles E.
Williams, Rutland. received 610
votes foll.owed by Arthur Knight,
Racine, w.ho got S33 votes.
There wen: no other contested
county races and nobody filed as an
independent candidate before Mon- ·
day afternoon's deadline.
Appro~timately 40 percent of regiJ;te~ voten, or 6,374, reported to
the polls in Meigs County with 2,100
Democr.tl, 4,140 Republican, three
Reform party and 131 non-partisan
ballots cast for a total of 6,374 ballots.
Republican County Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell, Racine, received
3.34S complimentary votes.
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Meigs County Democrats gave
. uncontes~ gubernatorial candidates
Lee Fisher/Michael B. Coleman
I ,378 votes.
Attorney general candidate

Richand Condray received 1,277
votes while auditor of state hopeful
Louis N. Strike got I ,242 votes.
Meigs Democrats preferred
Charleta B. Tavares over Mark A.
Hanni 797 to S57 votes.
Uncontested Democratic U.S.
Senatorial candidate.Mary 0 . Boyle
received 1,390 votes while uncontested Sixth District Congressman
Ted Strickland, Lucasville, garnered ·
1,805 complimentary vQtes.
For Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court fullterm commencing Jan. I,
1999,GIII}'Tyackrec:eived 1,217. For
Justice of the Supreme Co!ln full
tenncommencingJan. I, 1999, Francis E. Sweeney received 1,316 votes.
Fllt' Justice of the Supreme Court full
term commencing Jan. 2, 1999.
Ronald Suster rtteived' l, Ill votes.
For Judge of the Coun of Appeals
(Fourth District), full term commencing Feb. 9, 1999, !.,. Alan Goldsberry receiv,ed 914 votes COillpared to
Lynn Grimshaw, 643 votes.
· Tim Barnhart for member of State
Central Committee, man, 17th District, received I, 117 votes while
Karen Matney Simmons, for member
of State Central Committee, woman,
17th District, received I, 139 votes.
Stale Senator Michael C. Shoe-

maker, Bourneville, received I ,356 ing Jan. I, 1999. Stephen W. Powell
complimentary votes while Bill Oil- got 2,408 vote~ for Justice of the
er, candidate for state representative, . Supreme Coun Commencing Jan. I,
94th District, got I ,235 votes.
1999. Paul E. Pfeifer received 2.3 13
REPUBLICAN PARTY
votes for Justice of ·the Supreme
For governor and lieutenant gov- Court full term commencing Jan. 2.
ernor, Meigs County Republicans 1999.
gave the uncontested Bob Taft/MauMeigs County Republicans
reen O'Connllt' ticket 2.731 compli- favored David T. Evans for Judge of
the Court of Appeals, Fourth District,
mentlll}'. votes.
Anomi!y General Betty D. Mont- with 1.834 votes over Mill Nuzum
gomery received 2.45 I votes while who received 893 local votes. Mar·Auditor of State Jim Petro samered shall Brown Douthett received 294
'
voles.
'2.368 votes.
For member of State Central
J. Kenneth Blackwell received
2,330 votes for secreiary of state Commillee, man, 17th District, Phil
while Joseph T. Deters gqt 2,237 A. Bowman received I,748 votes
while Shane E. Foe got 516 votes.
votes for treasurer (if state.
For
member of State Central ComGovernor George V. Voinovich,
seeking a seat on the U.S. Senate, millet, woman. 17th District, Kay
received 2,400 Meigs County votes Reynolds received I ,221 votes com·
over David McCollough's I ,032 pared to Beth Lear, 679, and Patty
Decheccolo, 306.
vote~.
In Meigs County, Nancy P. HolFor State Senator. 17th District,
lister easily beat formerCong'ressman
Frank Cremeans. I ,895 to I, 193 'Lee Thatcher got 2.122 votes while
votes. MichiiCI T. Azinger received Stale Representative JQhn A. Carey
693 votes while Tom Sharpe and Jr., Wellston, got 3,076 complimen·
Grant Michael Browne received 6J lary votes. ·
and 48 votes, respectively.
Reform Party candidates for gov·
Thomas J. Moyer received 2,468 emor and lieu~naill gQvemor John R.
votes for Chief Justice of the Mitchei/Lawrence Ande~n received
Supreme .Coun fUllterm commen'c- three votes.

Hollister to face Strickland·in November
BynMPUET

Auoclltld Preu Writ•
COLUMBUS -Afom~erconJftSS!Il&amp;n WhO' ,narrowly ' lost" ·a
, Repjiblicllll congrcssiottJI_pri!'!!I"Y in
soothea.•t Ohio to the li~utenanl governor said his conservati-. support
was split in o five-way race.
In· the Cleveland area, another
five-way primary Tuesday wa.' won
handily by Cuyahoga County Prose. cutor Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a
Democrat. Her victory in thl: heavi,
ly Democralij: lith Congressional
District makes it likely that Rep.
Louis Stokes, Ohio's first and only
black congressman, will be succeed,
ed after IS tenns by a tilack woman
he endorsed.
The Republican nomination fot'
the 6th Congressio'!al District seat
went to Lt Gov. Nancy Hollister of
Marietta.
Hollister, whose views were considered·the IIIO!it moderate among the
fi-. candidates. received 39 percent.
FOrmer Rep. Frank Cremeans, a mil·
lionaire busines.~man from Gallipolis,
had 3S pen:ent and political newcomer MichiiCI Azinger, a 1¥!arietta
insurance salesman. had'21 pen:ent in

-

· complete' but unoffil!ial returns tabu··
lated by The AsSociated Pn:ss,
Cn:mea,ns said· Azinger·s entry
into the ritce may have coot him his
p;uty's ngnijJUIIioq from the district,
which covers all or part of 14 southern Ohio counties .stretching from
Marietta in southeast Ohio to Warren
County near Cincinnati.
"Tiiere went my conservative
ba.'it," he said late T~y. "All four
of the conset'\'Diives runnil18 divided
that block of votol'!l. If I had 10 percent of Azinser's vote, I would.have
won. ·... Running in this race was as
difficult a.~ running in the last two
ge'neral elections."

Azinger said he planned 10 mn ·
again in 2000. "It's always tough
going against a challenger of that cal- iber." .he said of Hollister. "We did
.welt, we learned some things and
we'll be back."
·
Hollister was one of eight women
t&lt;J win party nominations Tuesday in
Ohio's ·19 congressional di~tt1cts.
Another wa.~ Tubbs Jones, who had
the backing of the Cuyahoga Coun· ty Democratic Party.
With 99 percent of precincts
reponing, Tubbs Jones had S I percent of the vote. The Rev. Marvin
McMickle, a Baptist minister, and
state Sen. Jeffrey Johnson, D-Cieveland, each had 20 percent. .
"I have said over and over again
· Cremeans defeated Democralic I dOn'l·intend to try to fill Congrel\sincu'rilbenl Ted . Strickland of man Stokes' shoes," Tubbs Jones told
Luca.~ville in 1994, but washeaten by · reportel'!l before !feclanng victory. "I
Strickland two years later; Hollister, can stand ·on his shoulders and conwho had the state Republican Pany's tinue his work."
endorsement, will face Strickland in
James D. Hereford. a radio talk
November.
show host and auto repair shop own"This wa.~ a toughie.'' Hollister er who was the endorsed Republican
said of t)le primary. which dn:w candidate, defeated three other cnnnational auention. "This wa• a real didaies 10 win his party's nomination
challenge. I knew that when we with 46 percent of the vote.
started this race." ·
Cincinna!i Mayor ~oxaline Qualls

won the Democratic nomination in
the I st District and will oppose
Republican incumbent Steve Chabot
of Cincinna!i in November.
Other. women winning contested
races were Democrat Susart Davenport Darrow in the 5th District in
nonhwest Ohio. Republican Grace
Dmke in the 13th District in nonhea.'l
Ohio and Democrat Elizabeth Kelley
in the 19th District, also in the northea.'!.
The slate's two congresswomen
-Toledo Democr.it Marcy Kaptur.in
the 9th District ant! Columbus
Republican Deborah Pryce in the
15th District - were unopposed for
renomination.
Incumbents who defeated primary challengel'!i were Republican Dave
Hobson of Springfield in the 7th Dis·
trict, Democrat Dennis Kucioich -of
Lakewood in the lOth District,
Republican John Ka,ich of Westerville in the 12th District and Republican Ralph Regula of Canton in the
16th District.
Stokes wa• the only one of Ohio's
II Republican and eight Democratic
membet'!i of Congress not running for
re-election.

Sales tax and bond issues so.undly defe~ted
COLUMBUS (AP) - With the . w~ losing by 80 percent to 20 per- 1997, Oh.io Supreme Court mling · today voted for the rea.,on that they
mounding defeat of a proposal to cent in unoffrcial retum;;;tabulated by that found Ohio'~ system of funding believe that our schools weren't
public schools was unconstitutional. doing enough· with the money they !
·
increase the state 511les tax to provide The As.wcioted Pn:ss.
Phillis said some state officials already had," a clearly agitated
Issue 2 would have generaled
. more money for schools. a key oppowill
assume that the defeat was Voinovich told supporters Tuesday!
$1.1
billion
a
year
to
be
split
between
nent says he hopes 'stale officials do
because
people do not want to pay night. "I can understand how some of:
what he did as II superintendent school~ and property tax reduction
more taxes for schools.
them feel."
when a levy lo!lt: find out what the fot' homeowners.
"II hud nothing to do.with the tax
He defended what the state has
Also rejectCd Tuesday was Issue
people want.
increase."
he
said.
"It
was
rejection
done
for public schools since the
I,
a
propcNithal
would
have
allowed
"We have a situation with sta~
of
the
state's
flawed
plan."
coalition
tiled the lawsuit iri 1991.
.officials who arc out of sync with the the Legislature to IXlrrow money for
. Scott Pullins, ~ampaign,di~orof
He said funding ha• increa.o;ed well
coon. they arc out of sync with the school project~ usin~ bonds bucked
people," said Willialn Phillis, head of by the stale. With 99 pen:ent of Ohioans Against a 20 Percent Tall above the inflation rate. more mon·the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Ade· · precinct\ reporting, it wa.\ opposed by lncrea.o;e, agreed that Issue 2 was "a ey is beiog spent _to build and renobad idea" but said: ."It wa.' a clear vale schools, and districts are being
quacy,the coalition of !IChool districts 61 percent to 39 pen:ent in Tavor.
anti·tax
vote,"
held more accountable'for how they
. The general obligation bond., 1111-.
that successfully sued the stale over
He ·said legislators ought to look spend money and educate children.
lower interest rates than the .bonds
its.school fundins formula,
at
ways
to save money from other
· With 99 percent of· the •precincts backec!:· sillely by money set aside
reporting, the proposal t*ked by every t'Wo years in the statt budget. stale operations that could be used to
Both proposal~ were part of the provide more money for schools. ·
Gov. George Voinovich to inc~,..
"A lot of ~pie who vOted no
. the tu ftom 3 pen:ent to 6 percent Legislature's restionse to a March 24.

Good Afternoon

,

Mare Powerful than the thunder
And more abundant than the rain,
Is the love a mother.

It's impossible 10 explain.
lt'sl!Cntler than the sea breeze
Tid litis the sea gull so high,
It'~ mac awesome than the lightuiug
Tid picn:cs a summer night's black
sky.
It's deeper than an 00:1111
And it's softer than the sand,
It's plainer than the daylight
Bta impossible to undcBtaid.
It's wanner than the sunshine
And e\'l!l'lasling as a star,
It itlddles fai1her than the shoreline .
Of the .81 ' I land afar.
It's ti'IIR continuous than 8fC11 rivas
And pm than falling snow,
k's migbier than the heroes
I

It's more prok:Ciivc than the fortress
That stands its grwnd so long.
-And more refreshing thai the mom- _
ing mist
· . 'J'hal cdloes the spowrow '~ song.

Counclt on ging levy, bond issue
fo.r Souther schools witi approval.

It's mac valuable than.ancient treasurr;s,

Yet. how ironic, it'~ free!
k Stops a1 no ~'tflain mcastRS
To give the world to you ond me.
And though this painful road has led
us far apmt,
I swear I'll never quit _
Becattse I'm still rnssed onwanl by
the love of your ' - '
And I'D never again forget:

That of all the m)'Sieries of time,
The su ' 1e111 be no other
Than tile ¥ - of a dJild
Thttl is the JXide, the joy nf the lo\e
of a mother.
t

..
4212Ut.lt, 7

.._""".._he .,. ....
!ill

. N,s.t.....

. "'

r.,p1n ....,

614·667
1•800•
I

, Dltltll1 At Store! '

Meigs CoUnty voters approved a
renewal levy for the Meigs County
Coilncil on AglJii bot rejected, again,
a proposed conlinuins levy for the
Meias County Board of Mental
Retandation and Developmental Disabilities.
The gne.mill, five-year senior citizens levy Jlll'llcd by a marain of 66
percent: 4,078 votes for the levy, and
2,M7 votes qainst. The &lt;MRIDD
levy failed by 58 percen! of the vote:
2,.546 votes in,favor, and 3,S 17 votes
.,ailllt.
.
. Voten In the Southern Local
School District ll'PO\'ecla 4.89-mill

bo!ld Issue and tu levy for the con· the real work begins."
struction of a new elementary school
Lawrence said the issue lii(ely
buildiiiJ and rcnoYalion of the South- pa.o;.'led this time due to the; shifting of
. em Hl1h. School.
· · students throughout tile district. a
That levy was approved by a vote new elementary school in the neighof 92S fot', and 804 IB•inst - pass- · boring Eastern Local district, and·
ing by S4 percent.
. pu~lic concefll over deteriorating
"II took five times. btit we finally buildings.
The new elementary school and
did it." said Southem Local Superinlelldent James Lawrence. ·~m 10 hlp- high school renovations shoUld be
py fpr thl: childlen of Southem Local completed by the besinning of the
having the oppoctunity 10 haVe a new 200().2001 PK:hool year. · Tellltltive
buildinJ and to comp:te with all of plans arc to construct the new buildOhio's children," he said.
ina on district-owned propeny on the
"It won't Je' 1ny ~ier ~~· but ' weRt side of the existing~igh school.
now we (lave a future, he said. Now . Offrcial.results will be tabulated
on May 19.

Today's

Sentinel

2 Sedions - IIi Pages
Vol. 49, No. 12
Calcpdar
Clas.dDeds

8
IH3·14

Co mig
Edi!orlals

15

Lual
Sports

Weal her

2
3
4-S·Ii :
3

Lotteries
QJIIO
Pk:k 3: 658; Pick 4: 7026
Budleye 5: 14 ~ 15-26-28-30

W.fA.
"Daily 3: 9S3; Daily 4: 8299
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publishih~ Co.

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