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·Kicker:
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·
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
: ' "Yo~ ·are young. and you ate old¢r. You represent all races. all back11rounds and all income groups. You
are the Democratic Party personified
and that's.why, you win elections;"
: That was fonner Cuyahoga County Commissioner Mary Boyle's
assessment of the Meigs County
Democratic Pany as . she gave the

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Administration mailed some 4 million financial reports to taxpayers, at
a cost of $5.23 each. Sabo SJIYS.
Delivering the same rcpon over the
Internet costs a fraction .of a penny.
But it's vinually impossible to
know if the on-line version of lhe
financial reports, called PEliES - ··
Personal Earnings and BeneQt Esti,
mate Suatcment - is hcing abused .
Il's also just about impossible lo track
down an abuser. ·
, The key to opening PEDES: a
Social Security Number, mother's
maid9n name and state in which ·ui
person was born.
Thill infonnation is not exactly a.
state secret.
·
"Social security numbers arc
easy" to gel, says Beth Givens, manContinued on pat~e 3

Mcd~

from the scene of the crash by
Flight. troopers said. His car was
severely damaged by the accident,
and moderatt damage was listed to
Codner's car. Codner was uninjured;
.according to Jhe ·rcport. . ·
·
In a release issued this morning,
Middleport Police said Lester was
el~ding a Middlepon officer from
Hobson Road onto 7 when the acci·
dent occurred.
·:After making contact with the
. vehucle he was passung on .the ru~ht,
Mr. Lester lost co9trol of hus vehuclc

and went off the lcfl side of the road·
way and was ejected from the vehiGie,'' according to lh&lt;l police release.
Thdatalily, Meigs County's fifth
for this year. remained under investigation today, troopers said•. Since ·
December 1996, the county has
recorded at least one traffic fatality .
each month .
Most recently. Roben Dale HcnsIcy. 44. Long B&lt;~ttom, was k1lled un
a head-on colhsuon on Eagl~ R1dge
Road ncar Chesu:r on March ll
.

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experienced anything this bad ...
Staiger said.
•
Some towns were wiuhout power
·for more than 24 hilurs as crews hattied huge snowdrifts 10 do their
work. Two-thirds of the city of Grand
Forks - ·population 49.000 ~was
without power Saturday nighu and
most of Sunday.
•
· "Some customers. unfortunately.
may be out for five or six days.·· said
Mel Nelson. a spokesman lllr the
MinnKota Po)Ver Cooperauivc. a
regional power supplier to a dozen
rural co-ops . in North Dakota and
. Minnesota. ·
Gov. Ed Schaf'e·r asked North
Dakotans to conserve power today
for fear that undamaged power lines
would not he able to handle the
'demand. Residents and businesses
were asked i10t to usc televisions.
washers. dryers. copiers or even cof·
fee pols.
Even Schalcr was snowed in Sunday.
"I spent two. hours shovclin~ out

.
from my front door:· ·schaf~r s~id.
" We' ve got the whole stale vunually
paralyled.''
·
In eastern Nonh Dakota~ almost
300 people were Jammed unto 'lhe.
Casselton school cafeteria as they .
·waited for power to he restored to
their tiny town, about 20 .miles west
of Fargo , where. floodwaters
.
. arc now
covered by snow.
.
"lbey'rc happy 10 he somewhere
where their hodies arc wann and thetr
bellies arc full," Superintendent Larry Nybladh said .
. Casselton and its .1.600 resident~
lost power Saturday mght. Those who
could not hear the falling tempera. turcs in their homes were taken in big
trucks to the .school. whuch has its·
own power generator.
"'lbcrc arc children playing on the ·
nnor. lbere ~re adults sleeping on the .
lloor. People arc listening to weath·
cr reports on the radio. It's kind of
a.l.must a .carnival-like atmosphere,"
Nybladh said.

Da.w·ntown fracas r·es·ul:t s .in 47 arrests .in Athens

At ieast three people were arrest- .
' . to brca k ut. up. .And no one was
The crowd broke up by about 4:30
ATHENS (AP) - A crowd of tryung
from the fight and three people ·
"ed
d
"
th'
11
h
b
1
.about 1.000 pe
· op
. Jcwho sp,illed out of even oung any ung pre !Y muc u . · a.m .
injured.
One of those . injur~ ·was
The fight between Pi Kappa Alpha
bars closin• early because of day - stand'ung there. A'.ew fire
u s were .start•
e
cd," Kulpa said.
and Phi \ Kappa · Tau members treated and released at O'Bieness
li•ht-saving lime Sunday ended up in
a ~onfrontation with police, and more
Police Communications Officer occurred about an hour t&gt;cfore the Hospital, police said.
All of thos'c arrested were released
J
than 40 arrests were made.
ames Mannh s~u'd o1ffiucers
uscd batons hars closed and within one block of
ba
k
later
Sunday m!Jrning. Coun dates .
the street disturbance, at the Cryslal
The 2 112-hour disturbance fol - on1Y to pus peop e c .
""'
· had not been set.
lowed a fight between about 30
nc d'd
• n't c1u,,a. any bod y, " he Casino Bar, police said.
'd
f1
·d
·
te
•as
wa
n
·ot
s
d
·
members of two fraternities of Ohio sau · c sau ar ~ . s
ue .
poI'ucc sau'd thc change·· to day 11~
· ht University, police said.
tn all. 47 people were arrested on saving time may have contributed to
charges of disorderly conduct, resist· the problem. Bars closed at 2 a.m .. a
DENVER (AP) -As jury sclc~· · after seei ng the evidence against . , ing arrest or assault. Of !hose, 34 half-hour early, hccausc dock' were
tion in thc· Okla~oma City bombing . McVeigh. ·
.
· flil 4 wc,rc OU students, police said. Scv- moved forward one hour. Officer
trial enterS a second week. more canThe 28-year-old Gulf War veteran e.nty :officers • fro_un several · law · Steve Clark said . .They would have
didatcs faced probing questions about faces.murdcr and consp,iracy charges wfO£ccment agcncucs_~rc called to ·t&gt;cen in violauinn of their liquor
their helicfs and personaflives - and · (or tho .April 19, 1995. bombing of this city 65 miles southeast of Colum- licenses if they continued serving
[tbout the fate of Timothy McVeigh. the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Build-. bus:
after the c(ncks changed to 3 a.m .. he
Could you impose the death ing. which'l&lt;i,Uad 168 people. No lriPolice said t!ottles, 'eggs: road said .
. penalty? Ever liad a disagree men\ al date has been set for co· defendant narcs and bot11e rockets,wcrc thrown
He saiJ rolicc .could n•&gt;l say that
with police'/ What bumpers stickers · Terry Nichols.
lroun th~ crowd , and from student .:auscd the c.onfronJation . But . he
do you have on your car'! What book
· The judge has scaled the qucs- rentals along the -downtown street. said. "That contributed tn 'a lot nt'
arc you reading'? •
tionnaircs · to. keep the . candidates' Fires were set in at leaSt three trash people being on Chc streets in a hur. Thirty-one candidates an.swcred identities secret. Details emerged' as cans.
, , ,
ry.''
those and other questions from U.S. the candidates read their answers in
. One Athens officer was hit by a
Police officers were sent downDistrict Judge ·Richard Matsch and open court.
whiskey ·boUle and was treated at a town to keep order and try to keep the
atlorneys in . the first week of
"There l!l'C no wrong answers," hospital and 'released. No olher seri- • do.wntown street open. police Chief
McVeigh's' trial, with more questions prosecutor Patrick Ryan IQid one ous injuries were reported.
• Richard Mayer said in a news .(clcasc.
tcheduled for,today:
prospec1ivejuror. " Actually, lhe only
One stude~t told WBNS·'fV in
By about 4 a.m., the crowd The candi&lt;latcs had already filled wrong answer is an answer that's Columbus thut he was clubbed. by estimated then at 500 to 700- had
out tWO lenglhy queslionnaires detail- untruthful."
,
police.
. set at ·least three !{aSh ¢ontauncr~ on
·tn11 their knowledge of the case.
"You can tell a lotwhllt a person
"After aboutan hour and 45 min- lire, police said. · .
.
l!Oiential hardships and views on the 1hinks by the bumper sticker on·their utcs they brought out !ear gas and
Officer.; - wearing helmets. and
DOWNTOWN DISTURBANCE ·An uroldlllltlllld petiCII'III WYW&lt;!eath penalty. 111e surveys pared the car" said Andrew Cohen, a Denver clubs.·· Ohio University seeior Jay . carrying batons - fired multuple·
tled to thl ground by four pollee offlcera In downtown Athln1
jury pool from nearly 1.000 to 3!50. 'lawyer whO is following the ca.o;e. Kulp1 told the slation. "I happened baton shells. or wooden pellets, to
Nrly Sundly•.Pollee 1rreat.d 47 people ~ two cttlturbllaa.
: From llw poup, 12 jurors and six · "li's a very quick way to find out to be one of the people w!w 101 help .disperse the crowd, Mann said.
Pollee Nld •rller cto.~nt~ of the bere th8t ct1ter to Ohio Uniwr~ltematcs . mus1 he found , {!Cople. about a person's political and social clubbed': Not !hat it's a big cbl.
~e pelleu are ~red &amp;I the street and
slty
IIUdlnll.,._ of the chlnglto cllytight-etMngtlml m.y
who can ~etuide biases. ianore peer beliefs."
·
"The only people who were vio- ncochet.
st~na when they hut but
h•YI
contrlbu11d to thl probllm. (AP)
·
pressure and vOle their cOn\ciences
lent were the police. ·and they were do 1101 CIIUSC seruous unJIIry. he saud .

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ilzKrtr'·pEiralyzes Pia;11s·ft.Ktes~ ·, ,.

Boyle stress.cd the importance of year.·
.
\
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teamwork .and commitmentto Dell]'; __ ".~n Meigl; Cou~ty. you are fightBISMARCK, ~:p, (AP) :_ Sand- turne.d to snow as the mercury plumcrallc . pruncuples un . next years . ers, Boyle saud. I thought of you baggers in three floOd-ravaged states meted.
~tatewude races. Boyle us expected to · often dunng the floodung l_ast month. battled suh·zcro wind chills and driVolunteers and National Guardsbe . a candudate for statewude. office and how hard the workmg ~,cn and ving snow 1&lt;1 fortif'y Je.vees against men wh!1last week filled sandbags in
next year. !"llhough she ha&lt; ·not women of Meugs Countr 11,ght 10 still rising rivers as a spring blizzard T-shirts and baseball caps switched to
lleclarcd y;huch office she wull see~. keep a root over your famuhes heads pummeled the Plains.
· . ski jackets and wool hats to brave the
11 us spec~lated that she. mughtbc a
and food on the table. Buu. you sec. ·
Volunteer· snowmobilers raced bitter cold. Sandbags were passed
Dcmoctaluc c~ndudate lor the U.S; that is the Democratic pnncuplc . l was around Bismarck on Sunday. dcliv: glove to glove to shore up straining
· nurses 1o 1evees.
Senate seat
my · cnng
. · med'ucme
. and 1.erryung
·
l bcmg vacated by Senator raised
. . to fight for what us nght tor M
G
100
lo~~ enn.
.
, ..
.
lamuly. and I know you ~ere
· . Y and rrum the hospitai.·The roads were
For weeks, the Upper Plains has
:rake the Stat~ Bun '9 8 ustdhc.. Tslho- father beheved Frankhn Rooseh·veil buried under 17 inches of snow. giv- . been bracing for floods that many
gSan .orfnexht. year. koy 1c sau . d .c was ·lookung out persona11 Y 1or kum. iu\g the city a record 101.4 inches predict will be worse than those in
tate O ,0. uo can .ta e yo~r 1ea 10 That's ~hy! am a Democrat ta 1 ung since fall .
1993, when nine Midwestern states
:1998. Rught here 10 Meugs CoUn)y.
Contmued on page 3
·
"It's kind of run to do it for once suffered at least $10. billion in damand not get a ticket." said one oft~e age and 48 peopie died .
.
.
,
"
·
snowmobilers. Dan Johnson.
The ·weekend stonn only made
SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) had been scheduled to come home
Thousands were without power such predictions that much more
·- Astronauls scrambled today to lin- April 20..
after heavy ice snapped power poles. dire. · ·
ish as many experiments as I hey·
" We're so busy trying to do as There was 2 feet of snow from South
" We've maybe had bigger blizcould before ,getting. ready' 10 return much as we can in those 2 1/2 days-, Dakota's Black Hills into southwest- zards with more snow involved, but
to Earth 12 days early because of we haven't stopped to· cry over
North Dakota, and nearly I 1/2 notthc m~nitude of the blizzard and
problems wit~ •a power generator on spilled milk yet. ". NASA mission sci- , feet into northwestern Minnesota.
the flooding iri the same place at the
The region had already been hit same time.'' said Ray Staiger; actun!l
space shuttle Columbia.
entisl Michael Robins.on said.'
Scientists · who spent more than
The researchers wull push to get, with twice as much snow as nonnal director of North Dakota's Emcrtheir
33 CX"erimcnts
- considered • thu's wu'nter. "'emperatures
in the 60s ' gency Management Division. .
three years coordinating the mission
~
"
precursors
for
the
future
internationlast
week
quickly
melted
what w
. a' ,
"I've been in this busine" since
.
hoped to get through 15 percent of
al
space
station'on
·
a
nother
shutleft,
and
rai.n
that
bcg'an
Friday
then
1963
. and 1 don't think we ' ve ever
lh e test~ by the time the seven astrotic
said the. crew
. The crew was supposed 10 study was in no 'immediate danger and
to bedon
fl.rc. met.als·. crystal's and plants dur- would return to Earth early
·d M
ng
a
16-d
.
ay
flu'g
ht.
but
NASA
can·
·
the
safe
side.
NASA
sau
a
on
·
.l
· ay
1
celed ·tho·.•·e plans. Sund.ay be··aus·e
the
landing
was
unnecessary,
part
'
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· · f 1 11Y
voltage in one of three electricity-pro- because I e two remaunung ue ce s
.
nonnally
ducing fuel cells continued to drop: were operaI mg
·
.
unu·t·had ·to
"This is r\01 .an cmer~·ency SltUaThe potcnll.ally e•plosu'vc·
'
,.
tion,'' shuttle program rna ager aom·
be turned Off.
'
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my H.olloway said .• " I1 s a ,Pru .en.1
· The decision left the asironauts
wu'th J·ust 2 1/2 days in the lab bef'ou·c
thing to do. and we re aII doung"11 un
o Iandin• Tuesday aflem
..oon. They
an·onjerly. methodical met hod ·
•
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with the new Social Security system
say, there is danger for abuse from
many directions: a·legal.adversary. an ·
employer seeking to learn about an
employee 's outside income. an exsrouse conucmplating'adjustments ip
support.
" I like to soc this sort of easy
access to·your own persona! infor·
mation.'' Hendricks says. "but we
need somet.hing to 4iscourage the
wolves.':
Social Security officials don 't sec
a problem .
·
"We have confidence that in the
huge maJority of cases, uhc people
requesting these things arc the right
people ... says John Sabo, the Social
Security Administration's director of .
the Elecuronic Servi'ces Sunil.

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·A..Dexier area man is dead from
police officer - and
injuries suffered in a traffic crash Sat·. passing traffic on the right. He came
urday night on State Route 7 near back onto the road and swerved
you win elections. It's not about how Middleport. the Gallia-Meigs Post of right again to pass a southbqund car
big your county is, or how many peo- the State Highway Patrol reported .
driven by Joshua T. Codner. 23.
pie live h~re. You have won a majorScott · E. Lester, 32, was pro- 28449 Sellers Ridge Road, Portland.
ity on lhe Board of County Commis- nounced dead at 12:30 p.m. Sunday
Lester's car stnlck Codner's.'caussioners. You carried Bill Clinton in at Ohio State Univcrs.ity Hospitals in ing Lester to lose control of his vchi1992 and 1996. You gave Ted Strick· Columbus. where he had been air- cle. His ear then overturned several
land back to the Sixth District and, in lifted following the accident, which · times, went off the left side of the
1994, you gave Mary Boyle 49 per- occurred around 7 p.m.
road and landed on its top. Lester was
cent .~r the vote in a three-person
Troopers said U;ster was traveljng . ejected from the·car, according to the
·race.
:·
.
southbo,.nd at a high l)lte of s~:t:"" , repPrt. , ,
. Boy I~ was ~. 1994 Prumary Cflndu- . . because he , w~s ~portedly eludi 9
Les,ter · was .transponcd to .OSU

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. h 1·ury sele.ction con. tinues .

c•EVRIIIE I • ....SMDBILE •lfiiUS •

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By SIMSON L. GARFINKEL
families would get now if they died.
Speelll for USA TODAY .
Nearly 28,000 people requested
The ~ocial Security Administra· the free infonnation on-line in March
tion, trying to speed service and ~ ut at http://www.ssa.gov.
,
cosis by using tl)e Internet, inadver"As soon as crooks start eKploit·
tently has compromised the financial • ing this service to get other people 's
privacy of tens of millions of Amer- information, Social Security is going
to have a real problem on its hands,''
icans.
Social Security's month-old on- warns Evan Hendricks. chainnan of
· line service is handy 'for taxpayers the U.S. Privacy Council, a Washlooking for instant access to their ington D.C.·based federation of prifinancial records. But it also gives vacy activists.
.
nosy neighbors, ex-spouses, prying
As use of the Internet expands. its
· relatives and just about anyone the lure of convenience is break.ing
abiliiy to view ihose same files if they promises of privacy. And as on-line
DEMOCRATS RALLY • Former Cuyahoga County Cornml:s,.
have some very basic infonnation.
exchanges become as accepted as
slo11er Miry Boyle, second from left, was the keynote speakll' at.
What could they see? How much faxes or Automatic Teller Machines,thl M1lga County Dttmocratic Party's Jefferson Jacl&lt;son Dlnnll'
on Saturday. Alao plctu~ are Congressman Ted Strlckland;sleft,
someone earned every year, going critics say, the drive to provide new'
Stlte Senator Michael Shoemaker and County Chairman Sua Mil·
.back to 1951. How much ·someone · serVices will continue to outpace
aon.
will get in Social Security benefits appropriate restraints.

.B oyle praises
o;;t~;
'Me,·g·s .Dem·o' c ra·ts .

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Officials don't see a problem

.

Clear

~ 301. TUIIday, f*1ly .

cloudy, high near 80•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday; Aprll7, 1997

01117, Ohio V.0.V Publlahlng Camp.ny

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,ConJmentary
The Daily Sentinel
'EsttiDfislrd i111948
111 Court Sblet, Pomlloy, Ohio
814-112·2151• Fa 1112-21 S1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publ1811tr
'

MARGARET LEHEW
Conboll•

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·

New child-care
budget may squeeze
out working p~or
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Atsoclated·Prets Writer
COLUMBUS - Poor Ohioans are better off being really pOQr under the
state's proposed new welfare rules. says the head of Children's Defense Fund·
Ohio
.
The reason: day care Ohmans collectong welfar&lt;&gt; benefits also are guar·
anteed chold-care payments, whole those maktng $9 or $10 an hour could
easily wrn over out 25 percent or more of their take-home pay to the babysitter.
"Every politician in the last decade has said we've got to change the incen·
11 ves so that people are better off worktng than collecttng welfare checks,"
Mark ~ek d1rector of the ch1ld advocacy group, sa1d in an interview last
week '
But that's not the case when food stamps, day-care subsidies and health
benefits are tossed into the mox, Real said.
His group recently released a study that showed a famtly of three Wllh
an annual tncome of $19,470 - 50 percent higher than the federal poverty level- would have monthly shonfall of $274 after rent, food, ch1ld care
and other expenses are pa1d out.
The same famoly, with an ann.ual income of$1,2,980, would be only $141
in the hole - but that likely ,.ould be erased by the ch1ld-care subsody.
· Ron Rhodes, Ohio Human Serv1ces Department spokesman, doesn't quarrel wnh Real's analysis
"You have to draw the line somewhere.·· Rhodes explained. "There are
a lot of people in this state who make $8 10 $10 an hour. There is no way
the program can handle them all •·
Ohoo's proposed new work-for-benefits welfare rules, laid-out in a detailed .
repnn released last week, would guarantee that every welfare recipient would
receive chold c~ benefits.
They also guaranlee benefits for a year after recipients leave the program
cnhcr because they got a decent-paymg JOb or theor eligibility has run out.
In eother case, child-care payments woul~ stop of family income exceeded
I 50 percent of poveny - or the $19,470 figure for a family of three.
A non-guaranteed program would provode day-care subsidies for the work·
ing poor - also up to ISO percent of poverty- as long as money is available.
All together, the proposed budgetfor the. two years begmning July I
oncludes more than $470 milhon for child care- about a 30 percent increase
over the current budget.
·
Real thinks that's commendable. The problem is the new welfl!fe rules
also hoost demand for day care. Under the old rules, women with children
under age three were exempt from work requirements. The new program
lowers 1hc age to one
"You nsk squcc;r.mg out the workm3 poor." he worroe~
Agaon. Rh&lt;xles doesn't disagree
" It's ohvmusly not a cure forthe wotkmg poor populatiOn," Rhodes sa1d
ot the new welfare plan. "It's dcsogned to rcfonn the wcltare system.
.. And it doesn't say that life is gomg to be any ea,icr lot them It just
nwans they'll be makmg their own money mstead ol relying on the government for that check.''
Realthonks that's shonsi.ghted.
.. Almost all of the conversation has hecn on welfare relorm. We sec Child
care as part of welfare prevention ...

..Today in history
" By The ASsociated Press
Today IS Monday, April 7. the 97th day of 1997. There arc 268 days left
· in the yc.ar.
Today's Hoghhght tn Htstory .
.
Folty years ago. on Aprtl7. 1947. auto pooncer Henry Ford died tn Dear·honi. Moch .. at age 83
On thts date:
In 1862. Union forces led ~Y Gen Ulys~cs S Grant defeated the Con·
federates at the battle ol Sh1loh m Tennes..;e
.
In 1927. an audoence tn New York saw an •mage of Commerce Sccre·
1ary Herbert Hoover in the first successful long-distance demonstration of
teJc~lSIOn

J

..

•

)~h-··
••

Tuttdly,AprU8
conditions 11(111 hi&amp;h lempenlures

If ·cuomo were in·the White House,
.

Mildred M. Carnahan
.

MICH.

Mildred M. Carnahan, 76, of Tyree Boolevard in. Racine, died on Monday, April 7. 1997.
Amn,ements will be 1111101111ced by Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.

I

I

Mario Cuomo treasured being in with the corpses of murderers.
public office. When I lirst.knew him,
Cuomo is back in privale practice
he was lieutenant governor to New and also lectures around the country.
York Gov. Hugh Carey. Like all lieu- In a recent appearance before the
lenantgovem.ors, Cuomo's job was to
stay out of the limelight reserved for
AI f
h•s boss. But Cuomo roamed over the
rwlJ
state, selling up new programs that
. involved actual people, not just pollti- American College of Trial Lawyers,
cians.
Cuomo ghowe4 that he had not lost
Later, I. interviewed hom one the confrontational eloquence that
morning when he was running for first made him a national figure at the \
governor against Ed Koch in the 1984 Democratic\Convention.
Democrauc primary. The polls scored
The speech was not mtended for
him a sure loser. He was morose. I the ages. Cuomo gave Anthony
asked Cuomo what he would do if he Lewis of the New York Times the
lost •• go into private pracuce, as he only copy, some of 11 handwrillen.
had before?
Woth Cuomo'~ permission, Lewis,
He looked even more morose. who had quoted from it, generously
''I'd hate to do that again," he said. sent me a copy of the entire text. .
"I don 't want to go back to making
Recause of fear of crime •• Cuoriel\ people richer. ··
mo said during the speech •· "on one
At last, he became the governor survey. 80 percent of the people say
(1982-1994). He was ultimately they would get nd of the constitudefeated by Repubhcan George Pata- toonal presumption of innocence.
k1 ·· in large part because Cuomo Poll-watching pollt1cians respond (to
remaoned steadfastly against the thos fear) woth Pavlovoan sureness ...
death penalty, and Patako conjured up they serve up a bonge of new death
vosions of a en me-free state paved penalty statutes as though there had

.---~------------------~~~------~,

suddenly been discovered proof that
the death penalty saves lives." (Cuomo never mentioned Bill Clinton by
name. but the presode!lt added more
thari 50 new death penalties in the
1994 crime b11l.)
'
Still charactenzed !ly friend and
foe as a liberal, Cuomo ~onlinued·
"Even so-called liberals sign onto
legislation cunaoling the rights of
immigrants to protect themselves
from false accusations; hmning the
wnt of habeas corpus: reducing the
protc,tion of pnsoners from barbaric mistreatment; or even threatening
to allow the chililren orthe poor to go
hupgry 1f their parent is not able to
wbtk." (~II of these are Clinton laws,
in collaboratton with the Republl·
~ans . )

These punishments are "offered
up to assuage the discomfort and
anger of an unhappy maJority "
.Cuomo spoke w11h anger and
apprehension about the mounting
attack on the framers' mandate of an
independent judiciary. "Last week,"
he said, "the House Republican
Whip (Tom DeLay, Texas) and some

colleagues began a drive to ompeach
some smmg judges because their
decisions were deemed to contradict
the congressman's view of sound
constitutional policy."
He mentioned Robert Bork's proposed constitutional amendment that
would allow a majority of each house
of Congress to overrule any federal
or state court decisiOn.
Cuomo asked· "Would the Congress of the ti10e · have overruled ·
Brown 1 . Board of Education, thereby restoring segregation? Almost
. cenaonly Would the survey showing
that 80 percent of the public wanted
to get nd of the presumption oflnnocence lead to ns repeal'?"
Reaching a crescendo or concern,
Cuomo said: "There is no hero, no
heroine. no great cause, no soaring
ideology. We arc demeaned with
pandering anempts to proJect toughness by vocllmizing the weakest and
most vulnerable Americans... , We'• ·
need something real to believe in, to
hold onto ... something larger than
ourselves. Something more noumhing to our economy and to our souls
than the satisfaction of knowing we
have kept poor people in their place."
(Somethmg more nourishmg than the
Chnton welfare reform.)
·
In late 1991 , a plane was 1dhng at
the Albany airport, waning to take
Gov Cuomo to New Hampshire,
where he would enter the race for the·
presodency. The plane never took off.
Cuomo said he couldn 'I leave with·
out first working out a state budget
with the Rcpul&gt;liran Senate. Yet a ;
short tunc away would not have ;
made that agrccmentompossiblc. No •
one except Cuomo knows why he :
stayed on the ground.
:
If the plane had taken off. Cuomo :
could have de(eated Clinton. Rather •
than be the mnkccper at the high- :
priced White House, Cuomo might :
well have g1vcn the cotozenry some' ;
thing real to behcve in, and he·would
not have jettisoned his principles at •
the latest rearrangement of the pnlls. :
Cuomo could have changed our
·course. This speec;h indicates he •
knows that.
:
Nat Hentof1 is a nationally ,
renowned authority on tl)e First •
Amendment and the rest of the Bill :
of Rights.
'

the memories started Ooodmg back.
and it really came home to me how
much I moss the guy.
L1kc I moss Sporo Agnew

Alan Simpson 1s gone now.
retired. and I gotta tell ya. I moss the
bog galoot. The Republican Senator
from Wyommg was a 6-foot· 7 tow·
er of droll humor. a hom-and-a-hall.
just. so darn down-home. always
ready With a quip or a cornpone
quote .
I honestly can't thmk of a better
1 here's a zllhon AI Sompson tilt!.;
Both men were moticompanson.
ries. but the one tha! probably stiCks
vated by personal pique; both were
m mosl people's mmds happened on
March 18. 1987. nght in the thick of sclf-nghteous blowhards; both were
the Iran-contra scandal. Simpson was hypocntcs who were blind to the fact
m the Whole House that day when a that they were guilty ofthc same sins
bunch ol audacoous reporters tossed they accused the press of
I will run through JUS! a few things
some embarrassmg and 1mper11nent
qucstoons at Ronald Reagan dunng a from "Roghl in the Old Gazoo" by
photo opportunity. On his way out. Funny AI Sompson to ollustrate what
Simpson confronted the presodGnt's I am say mg.
.. The press. AI says. is lhatcd on
media antagomsts and saod:
"You know very well that you're "dirt and sludge."
not askm£ hnn thongs so you can get
On thos subjCCI. the man clearly
answers You 're asking him thmgs knows whereof he speaks. Here ts a
because you know he's off balance small samphng of the adjectives that
and you'd hkc to stock 11 in his modofy the mcdoa on the pages 111
gawo ...
·'Ga1m ··. Jrratounal. obsessiVe. slant·
A-gazoo. Hllanous AI later said. os cd. deceptive, prosecutonal. lazy,
"the south end of a horse going complacent, sloppy. sell·servmg.
north ... He hkcd the word so much self-aggrandizmg. cymcal. arrogant,
that he wrote a book of media critl· boascd . inept, mdolfcrent. ognohle.
cism and called it. R;ght m the Old myopoc. oil-informed. vacuous. odiot·
Gawo.'' I tell y.a. I read that thing and • 1c. orrcsptmsiblc, hrmnkss, hystcncal.

·Joseph Spear

•

solly. As lor tha...product the mcdoa
produce. I counted a doz.cn rcferenc'Cs
1n "crap.'' and I wasn't even trying
to keep a comprehcnsovc list.
.. The · press. AI says, blindly
del ends Us own.
There arc five-dozen promment,
polltocoans mcntooncd m "Gazoo,"
and all arc portrayed as sterling of
motive and character. Fonner Sen.
Howard Baker, R-Tcnn. , IS a "loyal
and consistent friend " Sen . Ted
Stevens. R-Aiaska. os a "brigHt and
tough scrapper." Sen. Joseph Bidcn,
D-Dcl., is "solid and special." Sen.
Strom Thurmond. R-S.C.. IS an
"extraordinary, dosciplincd man of
the hoghcst mtegnty.'' Former Sen.
Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., was "brilliant
lmcf mspuaLional "Even a lawmaker
w1th wfiom S1mpson · fought, Sen.
Jesse Helms. R-N C , 1s "determined,
detlocated. wily" and , OK, "someumcs stubhorn ." ,

••0

'

•
•
•'

,.

.•

Today's weather forecast
By the Associated Prns
Ohio rorecast
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy north
with a chance of snow showers.
Mostly clear central and south . Lows
from the lower 20s northwest to the
upper 20s south.
Tuesday ... Snow showers hkely
' · extreme nonheast. Cloudy remamder
of north with scattered flurries.
lncreasm,g cloudiness central ,1nd

Todd C. Quillen, Jr• .

.....---Local briefs---. Social Security...
ager of the Privacy Roghts Clearinghouse in San Diego.
Information vendors used by
banks, credit agencies and privale
detectives can deliver a Social Secunty Number for a small fee. They
also frequently are known by coworkers or spouses.' And drivers
license numbers in many states are
the same as Social Security Numbers.
A mother's maiden name and
piace of birth can show up m court
papers, .marriage licenses or divorce
decrees
·~Many states have a vital statistics
department. You could get It that way
These documents are public record,"
she says.
Mark Welch , an engineer at
Netscape Commumcatoons in Cali·
fornia, makers of popular Internet
soQwa~e, s~ys h~.\ d1st~rbe~ . to ~~c
the information so readily available.
"I was just thmking of all the
ways that people could mosuse this
informauon." Welch says. "A pnten1131 employer could usc thos to deter·
mine my salary history. My co-workers could usc this to determine how

Pomeroy accident probed
No mjunes were reponed followmg a three-vehicle accident on East
Main Street in Pomeroy in front of the Rite Aid drugstore around II :50
a.m
Robert W Richmond, 25, Moddlepon, dnvmg a 1993 Ford, was
eastbound on East Main Street and stopped to tum left into the Rile
Aid parking lot, accordong to a police repnn.
A 1986 Pontiac dnven by Ryan Lee Glonch, 19, Pomeroy, failed
to stop and struck the rear of Richmond's vehicle, the report s!Jited. A
third vehicle, a 1995 Honda dnven by Tracy Lynn Hupp, 26, Mason,
W.Va., then struck the rear of Clonch's car.
Rochmond's and Hupp's vehicle each sustained light damage who((
Clonch's car receoved moderate damage, the report stated.
Clonch and Hupp were each Clled on charges of failing to mamtain assured clear distance.
.

'

Man a"aigned on·charge
A Morgan County man was arraigned )';londay morning on a charge
of molesting an eight year-old boy.
,
George Dunwoody, 24, of Malta, appeared before Meogs County
Court Judge Patrillk .H,.o!lllien: He was 11irres1ed on Friday on one
charge of gross seKual imposition, a th1rd-degree felony. If convict·
ed, Dunwoody could be sentenced to five years in prison and fined
$10,000.
.•
O'Brien set Dunwoody's bond at $1 oo:ooo, with ten percent cash
allowed Proseclitmg Attorney John Lentes requested a high bond
because of a prior conviction for gross sexualomposition when Dun·
woody was a juvenile.
Public Defender Patnck Story was appointed to represent Dunwoody. A preliminary hearing was set for April 14 at 10 a.m.
.
According to Lentes, the case will be taken before the Meigs County Grand Jury on Thursday, and further charges against Dunwoody are
anticipated.

'

Remember when CNN rcpnrter Peter
Arnell stayed in Baghdad during the
Gulf War'! AI thought that was unpatnotlc . So he started slinging crap
ahnut Arnett The Pulitzer Prizcwmnmg rcpnrtcr had covered the
Vietnam War and was mamed In a
Vtctnnmcse woman who had Com·
mumst t1cs. AI chal'!led. Arnell. the
senator saod. was a "sympathizer...
And where did AI get hts infonnatum'/ Well. !rom a "hoghly respected"
Anonymous Source.

Cemetery cleanup set
Wells Cemetery cleanup woll
begin later this month and the trustees
have requested that flowers be
removed by Apnl IS

One minor inJury was reponed after a minor fire at a Syracuse resodence early Sunday evening.
'
Firefighters of the Syracuse Volunteer Fore Department were sum·
moned to the Donnie Hendricks resodence on Water Street around 7:20
p.m. where a fire had started near a stove, according to fire chief Eber
Pickens. A juvenile resident, Davod Tiemyer, was transported to Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse squad o( the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service for treatm~nt of a bum to the arm. ·
Syracuse firefighters were assisted by firemen from Racine and
Pomeroy, Pockens said.
Only minor fire damage and smoke dama11e were reponed.

the press is pristine. or even rcmnlc-

.

. .

Fund raiser planned
Harrisonville Chapter, Order ot
Eastern Star, will host a cooking
workshop Saturday, 12:30 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Masonic hall. Open to
pubhc. Betty Lon~strcth , demonstra·
tor.

.

Barrows and gilt~ mostly steady:
demand moderate to good on a light
to moderate movement
U.S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs country
poonts 49.50-51.00. few at 51.50:
plants 50 50-52 00. few at :02 50
'
U.S. 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 44.5049.50; 210-230 lbs. 39.50-44.50
• Sows: steady to .firm.

: COLUMBUS (AP) - lndoana·
bhto direct hog pnces at selected
:buymg 'points Monday as provided
,_,y the U.S. Department of Agncul·
)ure Market News·
,

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11oe Daily Sentinel,

..

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'

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I ,

Units of the Meigs County Emeo
gency Medical Semce logged 12
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Unots responding included·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12: II a.m. SaiUrday, Arbaugh
Addotion, Tuppers Plains, Rose Peter·
man, St. Joseph's Hospital;
10:17 a.m Saturday, Condor
Street, Pomeroy, Betty Webster, St.
Joseph's Hospital;
1:14 p.m. Saturday, Eagle Ridge
Road, Chester. Bon me Walker. Holl·
er Medical Center,
6:06 p.m. Sunday, Hysell Run
Road, Chester, B1ll Clonch, Veterans
Memonal Hospotal;
1·24 p m Sunday, Pooler Road,
Chester. Delores Hoffman, St.
Joseph's Hospital, Tuppers Plains
squad assostmg .
MIDDLEPORT
6:46p.m Saturday, volunteer fire
department and squad woth Central
Dispatch squad assosung, motor-vehl·
cle acctdent on slate Route 7.at Hob-

'

son, Scott Lester transported to Ohio: ·
State University Hospital via Med-;
Flight helicopter ambulance.
•
POMEROY
:
7.22 p.m Saturday, VFDto Union;
Avenue, trash fire, no injuries report- :
ed.
,
RACINE
·:
11 :37 a.m. Sunday, Hoback Road,:
Clarence Wickline, VMH;
:
2·50 p.m Sunday, Stover Road,•
Bernard Neutzling, Pleasa~t Valley ;
Hosp1tal.
•
REEDSVILLE
2 36 p m Sunday, stale Roule 248, ;
Lethe McCain, VMH.
:
SCIPIO 1WP VFD
!
3 28 p.m. Saturday, auto fire .. l
state Route I43 and New Lima Road, •
no mjunes reponed.
•
SYRA~USE
.
7.20 p.m. Sunday, VFD 111d squad .
to Water Street, structure fire at Don- •
nie Hendricks residence, David :
Tiemyer, VMH
·
·

Boyle praises..
to you De~ocrats today."
Congressman Ted Stnckland, DLucasville, ' introduced Boyle. but
also discussed last week's ruhng by
the Ohoo Supreme Court on the ossue
of equity in school funding by the
Ohio Supreme Court. Stnckland
attacked comments made m several
Ohio newspapers about the ruling and
the Perry County judge who tnitoally
ruled on the case. According to
Strickland, an edotonal on the Cmcm·
nato Enquirer referred to the judge a•
a "rural flyspeck."
"We arc sick and llrcd of being
forgouen, tired of being treated like
a stepchild, tired of bemg taken for
granted, and tired of bemg seen as
'rural flyspecks,"' Stnckland saod.
"The people of Southern Ohio are.
omponant."
"Governor Votnovich is dealing
with this equity issue pitifully,"
Stricklll!ld said, in introducing Boyle.
"A year ago, I didn't think Mary
Boyle had a chance to be our senator. Now, George Voinovich os far
from untouchable, and Mary Boyle is
well-positioned to be elected."
State Senator Michael Shoemak·
er, D-Bourneville, also discussed the
equity in funding 1ssue.

·.

COIItinued

rrom p•ael

"This equity issue is probably the'
l&gt;iggest dofference between Democ.'
rats and ~epublicans : To encourage
state officials to find a solution to thC::
school funding problem as a once m
a llfeume chance for us."
'
Shenff James Soulsby, Commos. sooner Janet Howard and Prosccutmg
Anomey John Lentes were also mtroduced
Bob Ord, former Superintendent
of the Southern Local Schon! District
discussed the upeomingtown meet- •
ing on the issue of equity in school
fundmg. to be held April 14 at Meigs
Hogh School. The meeting is a bopartosan effort which will feature a panel discussion concerning school funding.
Chmnnan Sue Mwson recogmzed
county chairmen from surrounding
countoes: Mary Funk of Morgan
County) Charles Hametty from Perry County; Herman Zcrger of Mori-·
roc County. Enos Smger of Wa•h·
ington County; and Paul Caner of
Vinton County. Also recogni~ed were
other out-of-county guests and representatives from various labor organi7.ations.
Approximately 125 were in att.en-· ·
dance.

much I was makmg relative to them.
My landlord could usc this report to
decide if I'm makmg enough money
to be able to rent an apartment. I
could make a dccosion on whether or
not to sue someone based on how
much money I thought they had ....
Private invcsugators would love this
kmd of mfonnatton. "
" It would be a tremendous asset
to people who Know how to obtain
th1s information." says Paddy Calabrese, owner of Inter-tel Detective
Agency in Seattle. "If somebody
calls me up and says they wan1t to
know somebody's income, I just pop
into this thing, I charge them $2,000
and it costs me nothing."
There are supposed to be penalties
for snooping.
. A wammg appears when someone
enlers the PEIIES. website: · ~1 certi- •
fy that 'I am asking for information
A short-term Mobole D1sastcr provodc funding lor temporary hous·
about my own Socoal Security record
Recovery
Center operated by the mg and repaors to make homes safe :
... I understand that if I deliberately
request informauon under false pre· Federal Emergency Management and habotahlc.
• Low mtcrest loans from the SBA
tenses, I may be gu11ty of a federal Agency opened today on Vmton to
for
homeowners, rente"' and husincss . ,
assist
southern
Ohio
vocums
of
last
crime and could be lined and/or
owners
lor the repair. replacement or .
month's
llood.
omprisoned.
rcbuildlng\of
disa,tcr-damaged propThe ~enter woll remam m Vmton
until Saturday and will be open from ~~
l
•
Also, cconom!c injury disaster
9 a.m. unlll4 p.m. The center wdl be
located at the Vonton Volunfeer Fore loans provide workmg capital IQ
Eastern Local special meelina
The Eastern Local Board of Edu- Department on Clay Street, next to small businesses and small agricultural cooperatives.
cation will meet m· special sesston the vollage hall.
After they have applied. flood vicSeventeen Ohio counues, includ·
Fnday. 7 p.m. ~~ the high school to
discuss and review bids for new mg Gallia and Me1gs. were declared toms may VISll the nearest Disaster
eligible for federal disaster assistance Recovery Center with any queslmns
build mg.
during the llooding emergency of or to rece1ve more specific mforma- .
uon on federal and state recovery proFeb 28-March 17.
Columbia Township trustees
Potential applicants for FEMA gmms
The Columbia Township Board of
To check on the status of their
assistance
are to call the agency at I·
Trustees will meet tonight at 7.30
application,
they may call a specoal
800-462-9029
(TTY
1-800-462-7585
p.m. at the fire ho\lse.
for the speech and hearing impwred). toll-free Helpline number, 1-800After calhng, they may visit the ccn· 525-0321 (TTY I-8Q0..660-8005 for
Meip Local Board
The Meiss Local Board of Edu- tcr to meet face-to-face with recovery the speech and' hearing impaired).
The Helpline os available from 8
cation will meet in regular sessoon specoaltsts. Representatives frnm
a.m.
until 6 p.m., Monday through ··
FEMA,
the
U.S.
Small
Business
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the central office
Saturday,
and closed on Sundays and ·
Admmostratwn
and
the
state
Do;panin the Pomeroy Municipal Buildmg.
ment of Agmg will be on hand to pro- holidays.
vode program and servocc mformaModem Woodmen
Burlingham Modem Woodmen tJOn. Cnsos counselors will also he
will hold a potluck dmncr Friday, available.
FEMAand slate Emergency Man·
6:30 p.m. at the their hall.
agcment AgencY, officials based in
Chilhcothc advise that anyone who
suffered damage to their home or
business property should call the
FEMA pumbcr forst. 'The line is open
dally from 8 a.m. unul6 p.m
AMHERST- Shawn F. Layton.
"Phone-in appllcauon 1s a quock
35. of Elyria, motorcyclist in a two- and cffic 1enl way to get help to those
vehicle accident on a Lorain County who need it," saod Gary Pierson,
road.
FEMA ·coordmatmg officer. "That
FRIDAY NIGHT
one phone cal11s their application for
TOLEOO- William Machat.erre, the various types of federal and state
41, of Toledo, motorcyclist in a two· disaster assostancc."
·
vehicle accident on a Lucas County
Recovery specialists at the Vinton
road.
site will offer spec11ic assostancc on
MEDINA- Robert D. Shane, 35, the followmg programs:
of Seville, in a one-vehicle accident
• Disaster housing assistance,
on a Medina County r9ad.
admmislercd by FEMA, for ind1v1d·
uals and famihes whose homes were
al'lectcd hy the Hooding.
Veterans Memorial
The program provides funding for
Saturday admissions - none.
tcmp&lt;•rdry accomm~~!,ions or ehgi·
Saturday discharges - none.
blc rcpa•"' needed tor lhose whose
Sunday admossoons - Dorothy · homes were aflcctcd by the severe
Hysell, Pomeroy. Leland Clonch. storms or flooding. The programs
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - none .
Holzer Medical Center
Dbcllargea AprU 4 - Bradley
Colburn. Lake Duncan, Mrs. James
Ruggles and son, Gladys Caufman.
Reward for any Information leading to the
Brynda Faulk, Carribel Dmgess.
arrest and conviction of person(a) vandalizing
Heather Brooks.
• .
Dlscharaw April 5 - Tina Rif·
property 1508 Nye Ave., Pomeroy. Oh.
fle, June Johnson.
All Information kept confidential.
DiKJ1araeS April ·6 - Helen
McCain, Unda Pugh, N110ma
Call Pomeroy Pollee Dept.
Brinker, James Snead. Melissa Stew·

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Mobile disaster recovery_
center set .up in Vint~n

Dexter man one of Ohio's
10 weekend wreck victims
.

By The Asaociatld Presa
Traffic accidents claomed at least
I 0 lives in Ohio over the weekend.
accordmg to rppnns by the State
Highway Patrol and other • law
enforcement agencoes
The fatalities were ~ounted from
6 p.m. Friday through,Sunday
. The dead:

Borg-Warner .........................43'1.
Ch8?11plon .............................18'1.
Chlllllllng Shopl .................... 5~
=oldlng ..........................32~
1Mogul .............. ,........ 24'r.
Gannetl ..................................
GoOdyMr .............................. 51:4
Kmllt ...... :.............................. t2~
Linda lnc:l .............................28~
Ud................................,..........18
OVB .......................................37\

SUNDAY
.
.
PAINESVILLE - Rhonda Med·
aft', 32', of near PainesviHc. when her
car left a Lake County road and
slammed into a utility pole
BQWLING GREEN - Richard
Artm
34 f F d
.
. I
an, , o m lay, m a smg ecar crash o,n a Wood County road.
TIFFIN - Kevin Mathias, 32, of
Findlay, when his truck crashed on a
Seneca County roa,d.
GREENVILLE- Sean M. Ryan,
26, of Versailles, in a one--car accident

Pretn Flnl ............................... 14\
RockMII :..............................64'1.
RD-Shell ..............................169\
. Shouey'a ................................ 4'4
tn.r Blnk ..............................40\

on Ohio 571 in Darke County.
SAnJRDAY
COLUMBUS - Lisa A. Bates,
18, of Grove City, in a two-car accident on a Franklin County road.
POMEROY- Seoa Lester, 33,

Ban!! One .................., ...........4tr

OM Yalll:y .............................36'.4
Peo~ ............................,..,.2t,.

tty OMit pemtltlld In -

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Stocks

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IIIIGLI COPY nJCB

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Bob Evans ............................13 :t.

Olllo4S769.
SIJIIICIIIPTIOII RATES

Today's Birthdays: Silar player Ravi Shankar is 77. Actor James Garnet I
os 69. Movie director Alan J. Mula i• 69. Country singer Cal Smith is 6,.
Actor Wayne Ropn is64. Media commcnllltor Hoddin1 Caner i162. Country •ml'r Bobby Bn is 62. Ponner Califomia Oov. Jerry Brown is S9.
Movie dircctQI' Fr-is Ford Coppola is "· 'JCicvillion penonalitr. ~id ;
Fllllt ia ~. Rldl-icilll Bill KRUizmann (The Onlleful Dead)i15 . Si711* •
John Oltea is 48. Si11pr JMis fill is 46.
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Cheater cemetery cleanup
Cicaning of cemetenes woll gel
underway tn Chester Townshop soon
·and anyone wanting to preserve llowcrs or otlo&lt;r decorations are asked to
remove them from grailcs immediately.

rroday's
livestock·
report
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The Daily Sentinel

Continued rrom page 1

Meigs EMS logs
12 weekend calls

Meigs announcements

Syracusefire reported

I would not argue for a second that

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Franklin L. "Hank" Johnsol!, 69, of Mason, W.Va., died Sunday, April 6,
1997, at Holzer Medical Center of Qallipolis He was an electricoan, and a
•veteran of the U.S. Army during the Korean Confloct. He was a member of
the Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. Post 9926 in Mason, W.Va., and a member of
Smith-Capehart American Legion Post 140 of New Haven, W.Va.
W.VA.
He was born on September 15, 1927 m Mason, W.Va. He was the son of
the late Fred C. and Delilah Sue Tate Johnson.
He os survoved by his wife, Belly J Smith Johnson;_two daughters and
sons-in-law, Debby S. and Greg A. McKinney of Portland; Tammy L. and
Dennis Butcher of Middleport; and one son, Ronnie E. Jol)nson of Mason;
two sisters. Eulah M. Redman of Mason and Frances N. Gehring of Virgiuia
Beach, Va.; and a brother, Carl Donald "Bingo" Johnson of Mason; and four
grandchildren .
Besides hos parents, he was preceded on death by a daughter, Teresa Ann
Johnson; three brothers: Homer Ray "Duff" Johnson, Howard W. Johnson
and Robert Jacob "Jake" Johnson; and a sister, Catherine V. Ward.
Graveside services will be held 6n Wednesday at I p.m. at Suncrest Cemesouth. H1ghs from the upper 30s tery on Pomt Pleasant, W.Va, with Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Military gravesode servoces will be conducted by the mihtary. Burial woll folnonh to near SO extreme south .
low
Extended forecast
Fnends may call at the Fogelsong Funeral Home in Mason on Tuesday
Wednesday... Dry and · still cool.
from
6 to 9 p.m.
Lows in the 20s and highs in the 40s.
Thursday ...Dry. Lows in the 20s
and highs 45 to 55
Fnday... Achance of ram. Lows 25
Todd Chnstopher QUillen, Jr., 4, of Pomeroy, d1ed on Monday, April 7,
to 35. Hoghs from around 45 north1997,
at Ho,lzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
east to the mid 50s south.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home in Middlepon.

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Congress m.o ves slowly for a.good reaso~ .

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Franklin L. Johnson

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may he the undue inllucncc of mimcy and cenam spccoul interests in our
politics.'
· '
But. to somehow barhor the belief
that partisanship can .easily he put
usodc m favor fur that hogh·snunding
virtue we call "the cnf!lmun good,"
and that our legislative prnccs.' can
evolw;&lt;~nl• J;snme utopian .sy~,tem of
swcctn'Css and light ;s to deny its very
essence .
.
If Americans are truly free, then
they Will havcl'diiTcrent opinions on
everything from taxes to education,
from mofl!lity to mercantilism. And
they woll endeavor tn express those
difl'crnct opinmns through tltcir govcrnmcnt. a.' ontendcd.
~ There lore, to expect that govern&lt;~mok.
mcnt to accommodate those opinions
This is not meant' to excuse the fairly and openly and to expect
fact that there is sometime~ too much everything tn mnwe along woth.spccd
partisan bickcnng engaged in more to and cfliciency is an obvaous contra·
score political pomts than advance a dictiOil.
critical issue. .
·
And besides, what piece or legisAnd it os not a ruse to mask what lation wa.' so impnrtant thai ll had to
pass m the first three months'!

Helen G. Jeffers of 3200 Third Street in Syracuse, died on Monday, April
7, 1997. .
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. Arrangements will be 1111nounced by Ew!ng Funeral·Home in Ponpoy.

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ly so. My' trade. especially the clcctrnmc branch of it. swarms wnh
scoundrels. But Alan Sompson clcar' Jy lacks the ompanoality of a legoti·
mate ernie He is a consummate pnl
who behcvcs reporters ought to
reprmt his press releases and bmad·
cast hts photo ops and otherwise keep
thc~r mouths shut.
;
l:le 1s a funny dude, thnugh. I am •
·· The pathetoc press, Whomsical confodcnt he will apprecoatc it when •
AI says. routinely libels the poor pols I say he can ktss my gazoo.
hy reponing lies pa•scd on by Anonymous Sources.
Joseph Spear is a syndkated
The senator could give first-hand writer for Newspaper Enterprise
testimony on this trespass as well . Association.
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IND.

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majnnty vote ol its ninl members,
can rule a law null and vmd even of
passed hy Congress and stgncd hy the
prcsodcnt.
Govcn all those 1mpedomen1s, n's
clear that legislating in a country as
large and diverse as this nne, with all
olthe various interests such do versoty entails. can never be some smooth,
sw1ti and nc~l process in 'which
everyone is pleased.
Yet. aodcd by news media that
ortcn seem more bent on playmg up
the mcve1table conllicts that arc an
csscnllal mgredoent ol democratic
government, and abelled by too many
polltic1ans who are little more than
grandstanders and free agents, we
tend to believe the system has run

Helen G. Jeffers

lMenlf\eld 141· I•

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Funny AI Sirrtpson dis.h es. it out.. ...

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u:r-··Aprtt?, 1187

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Pilp2 ·

By RICHARD BENEDETTO
pic So they. created roadl&gt;locks at
Gennett News Service
overy turn:
WASHINGTON - Wnh Con·
-They created a Senate on which
gress ·~ recess tor the past two each state. large or small, had equal
weeks. and ready to return to work on vo1cc in the form of two reprcsentaTuesday. much has been made nf the uvcs, each wnh on vote. That means
lawmakmg hod~ ·, apparent lack of that uny Delaware has just a.' much
acuon in the lirst three months of the power and say on the Senate as
year.
g1gantic California.
-They created a House of RepCompared to the much-ballyhooed forst Jj)() days Of the 104th rescntatoves where rpemberhSlfl IS
Congress two years earlier, 11bcn basel! upon a states populauon .
rarin '-io-go Rcpubllcan~l'ound them· Therefore the more pnpulous the
selves in charge of the Capitol Hill state, the more votes 11 has
machinery for the forst 11me in 40
However. lor a boll to. pass. a
years. this 105th edition has appeared majority of l&gt;oth the Senate and the
absolutely lethargic
House have to vote in favor.
·'But to criticoze thos Congress. or
But even then. the prospective law
any .Congress, for movmg too slow- sui faces a high hurdle ·- the presi·
ly 1s akm to complaming that a per· dent. The chief executive has the
· son on crutches can't walk fast nghtto sogn 11 mto law or reject it in
enough
the form of a veto.
The fact os that the framers of the
The boll then goes. back to the
Constitution, in putting this govern- 'Congre~s. To make otlaw, despite the
ment together more than 208 years president's reJ~tion, the House and
ago. purposely designed a structure the Senate must each pass it with a
that makes it difficult for anything to two-thirds majority.
'et done easily.
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But even after that, there is one
With the new nation havmg been more level of review. If citizens think
born out of the rebellion against a a law on fringes upon' their ri&amp;ll\s •.or
' tyr111mcal English king, the archilects tl\e rights of some collec:tiw comof the new syslem of governance munity such as a state, a locality or a
wanted to be sure that no one person busmess, they can challenl' . the
or faction could take it over and run legality of the law In the fc:deral ·
roughshod over the. rights of the peo- courts. And the Supreme Court, by a

Berry's World

:!~~~~Y~·!Ap~~~~~7!•!118~7~----~------~------~~~~--~_!P~~~m~_,~o~y~·~M~h~~~~·P~~~~~Oh~~~--------------------~Tbi~DM~~~s~•~nd~~~:·~P~~~3

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en,O ·

£
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
o.n.r.lll8nllger

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Wendr'l ..................................~()
WOI'thlngton ............................tt
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Stock rlpo!U are the 10:34!1
1.m. qiiCMS pnMdld IIY
ol Gallipolis.
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of Dexter, in a two-car collllioll on
Oldo 7 1D Melp County.
FAIRFIELD- John Roberts, 26,
of Fairfield, passen1er in a one.gr
accident on staie Route 4 in Butler
County.

Hospl'tal news

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(Pulllllhed wldl .......ioll)

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Monday, Aprll7, 1117

The
Daily Sent~~f
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Sports
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HRs by GUes .&amp; Alomar help Tribe g.et 10-8 win over Angels

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• ANAHEIM. CaJif. (AP) Clevellnd manaaer Mike Hargrove
·wondered about Troy Percival's

Redskins owner
Cooke dies at 84

ran .his business."
For Cooke, image was nothin*,
WASHINGTON (AP) - His persuccess was everything. Durmg hts
sonal life was one long scandal sheet.
His abrasive nature spawned more 23 years as maJority ow11er ol the
Redskins, his success could be meathan his share of enemies. His keen
sured
by his vast financial holdmgs,
business "acumen netted him · such
hi
s
NFL
championships and the
crown jewels as Manhattan's landparade of celebrities that ca'"!le callmark Chrysler Building.
ing
to his stadium box.
· Yet. Jack Kent Cooke's most
The
box was a ·bipartisan and
acclaimed legacy spawned from his
favorite d1version : He made the . eclectic mix that once included Nancy "Just Say No" Reag~n siuing not
Washington Redskins great.
The cantankerous NFL owner far from Cooke's soon-to-be wofe,
who oversaw the Redskins glory Bolivian-born Marlena Remallo
years of three Super Bowl victories Chalmers, whom the Justice Departunder &lt;.:oach Joe Gibbs died Sunday ment is still trying to deport because
or c•nhac arrest after collapsing at of a 1980s conviction for importmg
his northwest Washington home. He cocaine'into the country. Once agam,
Cooke d1dn 't care about the image.
was 84.
"Nobody's going to write a book
"He was one of those rare people
who was a tough guy, a super-smart about fOe " 50 years from now,
guy, and he was always bette~. when Cooke said in 1995, "because
things were at 1he1r worst, saod nobody' s going to lind anything
Gibbs, who coached the Redskins worth writing a book about."
It was that no-nonsense mmdsel
from 1981 -1993.
Pres1den1 Clinton sa1d Cooke's that helped Cooke when it came to
"straight-shooting style and love of · earnmg h1s fortune .
"He was a tough negotiator," said
the fans earned him respect and
D.C.
Mayor 'Manon Barry, who .
admiratiOn throughout the sports
haggled
w1th Cooke for several
world." ,
Cooke was always reluctant to years over a new stadium. "He
confess f11s mortality, sometimes wouldn't have made all his money if
prefacing his sentences wolh the he had been a softie.... I regret that
words "If I d1e ... " Alter all , he was he didn 'tit ve long enough to see the
the man whose busy , life oncluded stadium completed. It was one of his
five marriages to four dofterent woves dreams. In fact, he was almost
- one of' the weddmgs was per· obsessed with it."
Born Oct. 25, 1912, on Hamilton,
formed by John Sirica of Watergate
Ontaroo,
Cooke sold encyclopedias
fame, and one of the divorces by
Joseph Wapner of The People 's during the Depression before making
Court. He was the man who once his fonune in radio and television
offended D.C . Mayor Sharon Pratt companies, real estate and newspaKelly by' patting her on the behmd; per publoshing.
His net worth when he died was
the man who buill the "Fabulous" .
Forum in Los Angeles on record lome esumated at $825 million, earning
and signed Magic Johnson to his forst him the !70th spot on the most
NBA contract; and the man who recent Forbes Magaline 's 400 Richbucked an NFL trend by buildmg a est American's List.
Cooke's first sports venture came
new Redskins stadium w1th h1s own
on 1951, when he purchased .basemoney.
ball's
Toronto Maple Leafs of the
Nevertheless, Cooke was preInternational
league. Next came Los
pared for the inevnable. As an
Angeles,
where
he purchased basuncommon silence sellled Sunday at
the usually bustlong Redskin Park ketball's Lakers and hock~y 's Kongs.
training facility, the team was prepar- In 1967 he built them the Forum, a
ing for an orderly transition of showplace atena favored by Hollyauthority to Cooke's son, Redskms wood stars.
Cooke became majority owner of
cxecutove voce president John Kent
the
Redskins in 1974, took over daiCooke.
The family was expected to ossue ly operation of the team from
its tirst statement later today, but Edward Benneu Williams in 1980
there's lottie doubt the construction of and began h1s dogged pursull of an
the $160 million stadium in suburban NFL t1tle.
The rise' began in 1981 wilh the
Maryland will continue.
-hifing
Qf Gibbs. He and general man"I really don 't see anylhong
ager
Bobby
Beat hard bui It a team
changing." saod Monte Coleman,
, who played more games for Cooke that played 'in four Super BOwls and
thag any other player until his retire- won three - in 1982, 1987 and
ment in 1995. "The loyalty, the con- 1991
Cooke had a meddle-free philossideration, all the. things Mr. Cooke
ophy
that remamed in place with curbrought to the Washmgton Redskins .. .. and luckily his son had the rent ~oach Norv Turner and general
ability to work under him, because manager· Charley Casserly. Both
with that he learned how Mr. Cooke recently received long contract

.·Pomeroy ·llldd~ Ohio

heallb 111.-' WlldliiiJI !he hlrd-lbrowin1 Alllhel_ril reliever give up two
ni!llh·innil!g homen.
'"l'l)c times I've beeouround him
- like at the All-Star Game last year
- he didn't strike me as a kid who
lillcks off fr9m anything," Hargrove
said: '' I hope he's hellthy. But he

By JOSEPH WHITI!

wasn't throwing with the ,arne
veloci!}' like I've seen from him in
the past'." ·
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extensions despite a four-year
absence from the playoffs. ·
"I almost invariably agree with
them," Cooke said of his coaches
and executives, "because they know
.these things belter than I do. "
In 1987, Cooke anhounced plans
to build a new stadium for his team,
launthing one of his toughest business baules and one he fell five
months from seeing to fruitiOI].
Despite oHering to pay for the building, he endured nearly a decade of·
rejection by citizens' groups and
local governments before reaching
agreement last year to build a
78.60Q:seat complex near Landover,
Md._II::!!Jscheduled to open in Sep·
tember.
·
,
Cooke even coined a postmark
for the venue - Raljon - after his
two sons, John Kent Cooke and the
late Ralph Kent Cooke. After The
Washington Post ridiculed the name,
Cooke blackballed the paper by
restricting its reporters' access to
interviews concerning the Redskins.
But such professional confrontations paled when compared 10 a personal life that smacked of scandal.
His first divorce, from the former
Jeannie Carnegie, made the Ouinness Book of World Records for the
largest settlement at that lime ($49
million on 1979). The pres1ding
judge was Wapner.
Sirica pronounced the vows for
Bride No. 2. Las Vegas socialite
Jeanne Ma·xwell Williams, in a marriage that lasted just I 0 n1onths. Then
came Suzanne Martin, who claimed
their 1987 marriage wa' contingent .
upon her aborting a fetus conceived"
by Cooke . After the wedding, she
decided to have the baby and the
marriage ~as dissolved after 73
days.
Years later, Cooke fought for
custody of the girl, Jacqueline Kent
Cooke. Though he lost, he won vis-·
itatlon privileges and would proudly drive her around Redskin Park in
a go I r can to watch practice.
Cooke then was married -twice
· - to Chalmers. who had served 3
112 months in tederal prison for her
cocaine conviction. The first union ,
wh1ch lasted 3 112 years, was
declared void because her divorce
from a previous husband was
invalid. They were' married again in
1995, and,jusl·lasl week, the Justice
Department was back in court arguing for Mrs. Cooke's deportation.

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Bri111 Oillil ud S!llldy Alomar Indians 1 9-8 lead, and one out latHargrove drew the lint ejection two-run double, run-scoring singles son hoi two-run homen in the frrst.
mede them«* of Pa'Civll's offerings er, Alomar hit his third hoiner of the of the season when he wu chased by · by Tony Fernandel and Omar David Justice hit his third homer
Sunday niabl, biUin&amp;soki hoalen to season.
.
plate umpire Dale ScOtt after the top Vizquel off Mark Oubicza, Thome's le.di11g off the second. but Anaheim
1ive the .lndillts a I().;8 victory.
" He throws so hard, you just try of the third. Jim Thome ended the · RBI single off Pep Harris and Matt added three runs in the bottom half
"I'm not hitti!lllhe spots I want,"
to ca~~:h· up to it," Giles said of Per- , inning by striking out - · swinging Willi8111s ' two-run single.
on Darin Erstad's RBI singll! and
said Pelcivll, ,J¥ho miued two weeks · cival. "I only want 10 get the ball in - bur Hargrove ye lled 11 Scott, ' Anaheim tied it in the fifth with ·Edmonds' sacrifice Hy and Aladurin&amp; spri111 training beQuse of play, because he bas the stuff to just apparendy ahout the called second an RBI single by Jim Leyritz, 9-for- mar's throwing error.
numbness i• his right f01'C111111 and throw the ball•by ·people."
slrike on the previous pitch.
18 against Cleveland starter Jack
Hargrove dre'w the first ejection
back pains. ,;'I don 't know what's
Percival (().;2) had 36 saves •lttst
Steven ~line (2-0) pitched two McDowell.
Qf the season when he was cbased by
. going on, but I've got to get it fixed .. y_ear, while piling up I 00 strikeouts innings of shutout relief, and Mike
McDowell allowed eight runs plate umpire Dale Scou after ihe top
I've got po ~n. It's obvious I'm not and holding hitters to'a .149 averase Jackson got the final out for his first
even eained - and II hits, struck of the lttird. Thome ended the inning
lhrolfing ~ball the way I should in 74 ianings. In 2 213 innings this save.
ut five and walked one. Gubicza by striking out - swinging - but
be."·
year, he has allowed six runs and six
Cleveland overcame a 7-1 deficit gave up seven runs and six hits in 3. Hargrove yelled at Scou. apparently
Giles' one-out home run gave the hits, walked four and hit a batter.
about the called second strike on the
with a seven-run fourth on Giles' 213 innings.
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Jim Edmonds and Garret Ander- previous pitch.

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Southern baseb.all team drops decisions.in last four contests

After clai~i~g its opening ~y a four-game skid, losing two tough
win over federal Hocking, the losses over the weekend to Fort Frye,
Southern baseball team
. has gone on . a league loss to Vinton County on

similar to last year when they came
alive to win the sectional and district
. crowns.
Coach Mick Winebrenner said,
"It's ,been a frustrating year. We get
in position to win, then we find a
way lo blow 11. These are good kids
though and it's still early. I think we'll
come around." ·
Southern 'led 2-0 early against
was credited with the win .
Tom McGrath went the distance
defending West Virginia' Class A
First baseman Randy "House" to pick up the win. he struck out
state champion Wahama. Corey
~istemaker was the hero of game .e1gh1 bauer and walked just two.
Williams got the stan and pitched
two; helping the Redmen rally from
Sunday saw the Redmen host
well, hurling three shut out innings
a 4,.3 deficit in the last of the seventh Georgetown College for one junior
as Southern raced to a 2-0 lead.
for a 5-4 win. Kistemaker's RBI sin- varsity contest and one varsity out- ·
After a scoreless first, Matt Dill
gle drove in,Green with th~ wi~ni~B ing. In the jayvee outing, George- \walked, Joe Kirby singled, and
run after Urbanahad scored twtce tn town prevailed 14-7.
Williams liel~er's choice brought
the fifth to take the lead.
The Tigers also took the varsily
home the run in the second inning.
· A throwing ei'I'Of by the Urbana game, winning 10-9. Rio Grande's In the third, Pete Sisson, who moved
first baseman earlier in the seventh Kistemaker again provided lateinto the second slo! in the balling
allowed SomQler to score with the inning dramatics for the Redmen . order, singled; Jesse Maynard'
tying run to help set up Kistemaker 's with a grand slain home run in the
reached on an' error, and Chad Blount
heroics.
bouom of the eighth. Rio Grande left· had an RBI single for a 2-0 lead. ·
two men on in the bottom of the
Williams surrendered ~run in the
fourth as Lane Young singled and
ninth to suffer its II th loss of the seascored on a Grant Huff single, Matt
son.
another wreck that knocl&lt;ed out
Dill came on in the fifth in relief of
The Redmen took a three-run lead
Williams. Southern threatened in
Ernie lrvan and ended Jeff Gordon's into the third inning, but Georgetown
chance ofwinniqg for the third time rallied woth three in the third and
the sixth, but came home scoreless,
this year.lrvan, the only injured dri- three more m both the fourth ~nd meanwhile Dave Mitchell singled,
ver on the day, took six stitches in his sixth 1nnings. A lone run ·in the top Young singled, one run scored on a
chin.
hall' of the eighth gave the Tigers a Scoll Yonker mishandled pall and tile
.
'
came on a squeeze
10-6 lead before Kistemaker's b1g _ game- wmner
"On that front straightaway, if
bunt by lR. Varian the winning
blast tightened the contest. .
there's a car blocking you. you're
The Reomen (6-11. MOC 2.. 2) pitcher of record. "
going to hit it ... It's one groove and
Varian gave up seven hils, two
travel to Cedarville for a double-.
it's a fasl racetracll ," Gordon saod.
header Tuesday at I p.m. That's the runs, twO'walks, and had six K's, as
Like everyone else, Burton saw
first of four straight road match-ups WHS had two error5. For· SHS,
the blemishes on NASCAR's newes1
for the Redmeft. Rio Grande,returns : Williams gave up one run, two hits,
face. The ditTerence was, he saw
home to 'face MOC powerhouse had five K's, and two walks. Dill
them as beauty marks.
Ohio Qominican College April 19.
gave up two
runs, two hits,
,.
. imd had
Friday and the first game or the skid
a 3-2 loss at Wahama.
Southern is now 1-4, off to a start

Rio diamondmen sweep Urbana
in ·oH and lose to Georg~town
The University of Rio 01.'8nde
baseball squad evened its Mid-Ohio
Conference record at two wins and
two losses after sweeping Urbana
University Satlirday: afternoon.
Rio Grande rail ied fmm a threerun third inning deficit to overtake
the Blue Knights 6-5 in the first
game. Adam Welsh went 2 7for-3
with an RBI and Kevin Green arid
Shawn Sommer each scored twice to
lead the !iedmen charge.
Blu Johnson pitched five innings
and recorded three strikeouts. He

d
)
I

'

DOESN'T MAKE IT ..,.. Despite appearance&amp;,
Florida's Edgar Renteria (left) doesn't reach the
plate as expected, as Cincinnati catcher Eddie
Taubensee waits lor the ball that gets_there In

time for him to tag out Renteria In the first lr:mlng ·•
of Sunday's National League game In Miami, Aa., ,,
where the Marlins won 3·2. (AP)

Marlins, Rockies (~·&amp; Dodgers
stand among NL · winners
.
'

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
One week 'into the 1997 season
and th&lt;!' Fler.ida Marlins and Colorado Rockies arc looking sharp.
'The NL Central champion St. Louis
Cardinals and t;:hicago Cubs, meanwhile. are still looking for a win.
The Cardinals sank to the worst
start in theit 106-ycar h!slory, dropping to().;() Sunday. St. Louis lost 32 at Houston on pinch-hiller Jeff
Bagwell's two-out, two-run double
in the eighth . mnong at the
Astrodome. ·
"It's just a week onto the season."
Cardinal. manager Tony La Rw sa
said. "I don't want to send the wrong
message to these guys. We have heen
comPStrtive in·all the games, so what
does that tell you'! It says we're close
to being a good team."
The Cardinals and the Cubs, also
0-6, are the only teams m the majors
wothoul a win. Chicago lost twice
Sunday - 4-0 at Athmta afte,r an 115 defeat in the completion of a sus·
pcndcd gaonc. '
The Rockies, like St. Louis and
ChicagQ, have not played a home
gaonc, yet they're 4-2. Not bad for a
team that went 2K-53 on the road last
year. t1cd w1th Florida lor the wnrst
record in the NL.
"We're pretty much the same
team we were last year," Rockies
manager Don Baylor said after a 62
win at Montreal. "We just have a
was me not communicating to the
By JAIME ARON
too high, it was OK.
different
·determination to win on the
FORT WORTH. Texas (AP) · "Today, every hole I saw I dove team what the car wru; domg.
"To win a Wmston Cup race. you rOOd. To start 0-2. then won four
Ask most NASCAR dr1vers if expe- into. When 1t's hard to pass someroence from a Busch Grand NatJon- where, you ' ve got to take advantage . can't be gmld. You've gnt 10 be per· straight is great. Last year, we prub·
al race can be carried over to a~in- ·· of ~ ve!'Y chance .you. get. If you don:~ · lcct. When the race ended t{)(lay. it ably would have been 0-6."
The Rockies' longest winning
was the best the car was all day long:
ston Cup event and they'll •a.~ ~ do 11 nghtthen, '.' mtght he 30 laps.
way. Jell' Burton would say yes.
Burton, driVIng a Ford, started Even when it was good, we kept streak uwuy !'rom Coors 'Field lust
season was throe games The cluh
And he proved it Sunday.
fifth, but fell a lap behmd early. ~e working on it." •
The win came in the \16th start lor record is six, set Aug. H- 13. 1993.
Burton used tops about the new regamed the lead lap when Martm,
Florida also expected to improve
Texas Motor Speedway that he who was out front at the time. blew the 29-year-old driver lrom South
picked up during Saturday's Coca- his engine on lap 143. Burton clawed Boston. Va. His previous bests were this season aft!:r spending nearly $90
milhon on free agents The Marlins .
Cola 300.to make hos way to Voctu- ahead for the 234th and 235th laps, two third-place finishes .
completed
a successful week With a
He picked a good 11mc liJr hos lirst
ry Lone on a Sunday for the first time then went in front for good wnh 58
3-2
victory
over Concinnllli.
on h1s career. winning the wrcek- laps to go. He averaged 125.105 wm; the victory paid $354,350, the
"We
had
a couple &lt;if chances to
sixth-biggest purse in stock car his- .
filled Interstate Baueries 500 going mph.
"Several till)es last year. we put tory. It al~o shot him from lith on brcuk the ga111c open, as we've had
away.
this whole homcstand," , new man"I learned a lot from yesterday," ourselves in position to win." Bur- the money list to third.
For team owner Jack Roush, ot
said Burton, who finished third to ton said. " When that last green tlag
was
the first Winston Cup victory
would
come
out,.
or
we.hacl
a
chance
Roush Racing teammate Mark Marsmce
Martm .won at Charlotte IK
to
make
a
run
at
it
toward
the
end
of
tin in the BON event. "You sure ,did·
months
ago. This is Burton 's second
n't wqot to get ou! of t!le (racing) those races: I would take myself out
groove. but as -long as you didn't get or position to win it. The problem year w1th the team.
Dale 'Jarrell 's two-race winning
.
streak ended when he fmished secThe Umvcrsily ~f , Rio Grande '
ond. Not bad considering he lost his
softball' team put the' brakes on a
clutch, then 1\is third gear.
Texas-born .brothers Bobby and four-game Ieising streak by sweeping
Terry Labonte finished third and Midway College in a non-cont'crem:e
lourth, followed by Ricky Rudd, doubleheader Sunday in Rio Grande.
Rio Grande ( 13-13, MOC 0-2)
D'ulc Earnhardt, the winner's older
way to a 9-4 win in game
brother Ward -Burton and Stcrhng eased
one
Sunday.
Freshman Brandy Van
Marlin, the last driver lin the lead
· Brimmer went2-fol'-4, had two RBI
lap.
This was the first feature event at and scored three runs. Bobbi
the $130 million facility built on !he McGhee was 2-for-4 with two runs
plains 20 miles north of downtown and tliree ·RBI. shelly Rheinfrank
'
Fort Worth, and it drew a crowd esti· also a pair of RBI.
Freshman, Jenny Murphy (3-7)
mated at 185,000 ·- exceeded in
NASCAR only by the turnouts of struck our two batters on her way to
just over 300,000 for each of the a complete game win.
In game rwo, Midway mounted a
three Bf!ekyard 400s at the lndoW
third inning lead before thC Redanapolis Motor Speedway.
women
'rebOunded wit~ 10 unanII was not a pretly nice, with 73
swered runs m the third and fourth.
laps run under 10 caution Hags and
J)obbi
McGhee and Shellie Weiner
a lot of single-file racing. The tone
each
drove
in two runs in a seven-run.
was set when Darrell Waltrip ignitinning
for the Redwomep.
seventh
ed a pileup on the first tum of the
McGhee linislied tlie dar 2-f~r-4
first lap around the I 112-inile oval.
·
with
four RBI and scored IWJce.
"It's so difficult td drive out
Weiner
was 1-for- with two RBhnd
there," said Rusty Wallace, whose
lOIS FOR THE WINNER-..., 811110n I'll a Idea from hla wife
also
scored
a run . Melisa SiNOO wu
Kiln lllcir1ty
hit vlclory In Sunclay'a lt*'llltil Bettlrlel 500 In doiy ended when he slammed the 2-for-3 and scored twice.
(See 500 on Page 5)
Fort Woilh, TeUI. (AP)
· Freshman Rebecca Evlfls (5-l)

Burton learns from BGN race·
to win Interstate ·eatteries 500

ager Jim ley land said . "We haven't · 474, pitched the ninth for Montreal.
been able to do that But you ' ve got
Braves II, Cubs S
to be pleased when you open by winBraves 4, Cubs 0
ning 11ve of six."
Arter Atlanta won the completion
The Marlins, who hoped to boost ·of Saturday mghl's suspension, Greg
auendance this year, drew a crowd of Maddux pitched the Braves lu vic,
36,146. Florida lopped 36,000 fans tory tn only I hour, 47 minutes, the
three times on the opening week after fastest major league game in live
doong it only three 11mes all of last years.
.
year.
Maddux ( 1· 1) gave up three hits
In other games, Los Angeles beat in eight innings, gi~ing the Braves a
Piusburgh 6-3, Philadelphia s[opped 3-0_mark in their new Turner ,Field.
,San Diego 3-2 and New York Jell .Blauser went 3-tor-3 w1th a
downed San Francisco 4-2.
home run. '
·
Astros 3, Cardinals 2,
It was the fastest nine-inning
A throwing error by shortstop game in 'the majors since Houston
Royce Clayton started Hquston 's· and Los, ~ncles _played in,..J,:,44.JJP
~\ .f'""
·~ 1~
.....
~
. '·~~
rally in the eighth. Bill Spie~ drew Oct . 4 • •' I
•
a two-out walk from John F111Scntorc
Earlier. the Braves wrapped up a
(0-1) and Bagwell doubled.
game they led 8-5 in the seventh
It was the second time in three
mning when umpires halted play at
games that Bagwell had dnven home 12:54 a.m. because of rain. An NL
the go-ahead run in the Astros' last rule calls l(~r an automatic suspcnsion when a game is dclayccl by
at-bat.
Marlins 3, Reds 2
weather conditions al'ter 12 : 4~ 11.m
Kevin Brown, who had the worst
run support in the majors last season.
Phillies 3, Padres l
helped himself with an RBI single
Curt Schilling made hi~ second
strong start as Pholadclphia won ut
and bases-loaded walk at Floroda.
Browri (2-0) led the majors with San Diego,
a I .H\1 ERA last season and won 17
Schilling (2-0) gave up a leadoff
games, though the Marlins averaged home run to Quilvio Veras, but little
only 3.5 runs per nine innings with else iti e1ght mnings. He ba~ the
him on the mound. He had a total of Phillies' only two victones thJS season.
three RBis in 1996. •
Cincinnati pitchers walked nine,
Schilhng pitched seven shutout
giving Florida a 3-21cad in .the sev- mnmgs of two-hit bull at Dodger Staenth when reliever Scoll Service dium in the opener, then signed a
walked Jeff Conine with two outs $15.45 million, three-year contract
extension the next day.
and the bases loaded.
Darren Dauhon, Derrick May
Roekles 6, Expos l
Vonny. Castilla homered for the and Wendell Magee homered fur the
second straight day. and Jell' Reed Phillies.
Mels 4, Giants 2
drove in two runs for the Rookies.
Colorado connected 10 times in
Brian Bohanon, pitching for ailthe three-game sencs, includmg a ing Pete Harnis~h. gave New York
team-record seven home runs Satllr· seven stmng innings at San Francistlay.
.
co.
Lee Smith appeared on his I.OOOth '
Bohanon ( 1-0), SJgned' u~ a sixmajor league game, joining Hoyt year minor league free agent, earned
Wilhelm (I ,070), Kent Tekulvc his" firsl NL.victory.
(I 050) and Goose Gossage·( 1,002') , Harnisch has been suffering from
• ; pitchers to reach the mark.
·. insomnia, and was sent hack to
Smith, the career saves leader at New York earlier in the day.

Interstate Batteries 500•••
(Continued from Page 4)
wall coming oft' the fourth tum midway through the · race. "I really
believe they are going to have to do
a total reconstruction to gel ii right,
and I'm sure they will . They really
want 10 make this place great.
"It's just unfortunate that it's tearing so many cars up. Turn four is just
terrible. Yoti can't hardly maneuver
through it at all. I don't think there's
no way in the world we will come
back here with the track in its C!Jrrent
condition."
Wallace's , mishap spawned-

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Phil lpllla 3 , SMllieJO l .
N. Y~ e11 '4, San Fr~1ico 2

Baseball

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Mmnesotu . . . . 4 · . 2 667
CLEVE~ANIJ . .. .. J• 2 .600
Mtlwuukec
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. .......... , . 2

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PhOfnb. 99, PordouuJ 90
Golden Smtt 120. Sun Amonill I03

.1 •.300
1 400

Saturday's scores

I
I

l):troh 1~. Ok:ago Whhc Sox 1::2

I

I

N Y Yuakc:es 10. OllklancU
Mtni'IC!IOLn 7.. Kanllllll Cll)' !i
Bullill\Ofe ~. Teu~ 1
Bmion K, Scuule C.
C~E~E~AND 1, 1\n~oeim ~

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NY . Yaokc:e11 tPeuiHe 1·0) nt

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tuesaay '• games

· ·

t;Boamn IWa!l;efiehl O·D 111 Oultlund
ll\dn"" 0.0~ 10:0.~ p.m.
' ,. , ·

CLEVELAND tHenhl*'r ~01 ol /i&lt;MI·
lie (ll Mw:u~ 0.0). 10: ~ p.m.
·
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hcim &lt;Dickson 1.01.

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2 .667
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2. .667
2 . 661

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Tuesday.' s games
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392
)60

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x-Piula!klphiu. , 44 22 12 100 2M 201
x-Fk.~r~du .. .. .... J3 2K 19 K~ 21 :l 197
x-N Y Rungtn. ~6 1J tO K2 147 222

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Tnmna Bny , .... JO ~'' " 61) 206 2.l7
Wushin11oo .. • J0 40 'Y M IY7 224
NY hd t~netc:n 2M JM 12 ftK 22 '.1 2:l'\

26':
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A·Bul!nlo ... . ) 1) 2712 l)l)
•-Pill~t~urJh .
:n ·:n K K2
Mu~tln.'UI . ,
29 ~ 5 14 72
Hun!unl ... , ... .10 .11 II 71
Onawa ....... .... 2K ~6 U 71
Bostun .......... ...l:t 44 '9 :W

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!a

. AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

2~ 9 l (!K
211 242

217 228
22~ llt7 .

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J. I fiL liE ll.1

· ,.L),~IWI .......... 4124 1 101 244 1~1

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To11m1n. . .. ... 29 "2 M 66 221 264

37J ' ~3 ~:
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Flt·'JOfCether
'
•1\EROBICS
'

NeatJ 7 Week Salion
. To Bepa ,(pril ·~

.

Tuea. &amp;Thuta.
.,

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7"' p.m.

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CAI.I.NOW •••

GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, ·wv

446-2342

675-1333

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992-2156

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TV TIMES

WESTERN CONFERENCE

4ft'..

. ~f il ::

.\•Purtland
.. . . .W .\2
PIM.w:11ix , • . • ..
.\6 )q
L.A. Ciipper11 .:.. ... J4 41
Sllcl'llll'ler\IU ....... ... )0 45
Ooa.J.m Stlllt1,,...... ltl 47
y-l:linched di viNun 111ft

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ADVERTISING IN THE

Atlanlk Dl'llion
~ J. I fb. liE ~
x-N~w Jcn;ey , . 4421 JJ Tfif 221 171

Iom

~ ~ ~

6..~

111 Toronto. 7 p.m

Miulm ut Nldw Jersey. 7:30p.m
CLEVELAND Ill NL"W York. 8 r m
Orhtndu al M1lwuukee. 8 :tO jtm
Punlund u1 Dallta. H · ~ O p m.
Oenv.:r m S~an Antonio, H:)O p.m.
MinnesoiU at Phoonhr•. 9 p.m.
Huu:;tun 111 L.A. Clippers. IOJO p m.
t A. Lnkcn nl Gollkn Stnte , 10 10 ,

EASTERN CONFERENCE

24 .6110
6',
MtMesoca .. ;~o .....,: ..n JK 493 ' 20'·
o.au,. .. .....u,...... n ll 2t~:l , ~!\ ·.
Deft... . ' .....~• . .:.. 20 ~ .210
J1
·Sun 1\ntonio...... ... 19 5~ .2n
Jtt
tl

HO ES WIT.H
YOUR ESSAGE!

Ponland al bcnver. 9 p m
San Antonio at Uin,h , 9 p m

)

Sallll:llay'• ~
Colaiodo 15, ~) 0
S . - 2.14YMob

_,_...,

CLEVELAND, 7 :le) p m.
Manm1 u1 Deuoil, 8 p.m
Phlla!klpluu &amp;U Chi~.:ngo. tt .lO p.m

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6K9
6MO
649
514

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Tonight's gam•.•

~hurloue 01

NHL standings

·'~

Mldwtlt Dl•lslon ,

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N'-1 slandlngs
Atlllldl,... ...t ....... .. . ..4
Monlftal ......... ........ ~
Plnladeif*;~ ... ,, . .. .. ·Ni,.-w York ....'. ....
,, ,...(.2

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LA Laktrt H7. Oallns HO '

Hockey

WESTERN ·CONFERENCE

'

p.m.

44

•

·rmunto (Cien'klnl' 1-0) 111 (.'hiCII!t"

Whil~ Soll.(l\h~z P·l). ~:0~

Pbiladelpluu . . . ..21 !\) .2H4
Bosron.' .. ,11. .... ..... 1.1 63 . 171

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Orlando .. : .. .... .' 41 W . ~1 ' lti1:
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•·lklhlll .. , .. ..... .51 2~
II·Ailula,. ... .. 51 :z.t '
•.charlotte .. ''" .. ~ 26
CLEVEL,.AND .... JM ~
lniliRtm .... :.. . .. .,..l7 .\K
Mllwuukeci ........,. ...~ , 4.."i
Toronto , .. . . . . 2'7 .ali

J0·05 p.m.

" (Sa:nderli0.1) , 10~05pm .

111-New Yprk ........ ~:1 22 .107

~.ChiciJIO :.......

Florid&lt;~

V;u1couvcr ul Su\:rumenlu, IO.JO11.m

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0,0), 2 :0.~ p.m.
,
'
· Bulloh (Gordon 0.0) at Oakland (Pri·
&lt;10 O,OJ,

Cln.,;agu I 10. Orlan® '.N
Ul:lh 114. Golden Slt~h: IOU
Sa~rumtnto II ), Se,lllle 101

pm

I. !&lt;1.

IK

Sunday's scores

·'

'j

Huu»tOII94. Voncoulo'cr ft~
lndumo. 94. Minlk."Som l'l)

; 4tllnddlt.ltion

Minnesota tROdrjauez 0.0) at lleti'UII
rThompcon lJ.OJ, I :05 p.m. .
.
Bullimorc (K.:y 1·0) at Kunsa• C11y
IAppier O,OJ, 2:0~ p.m
-r~'" (Hiiii·O) at M1lwaukec \Eldred

I

i1

EASTERN CONFERENCE

SUDCiay'sscon• ·

4.

(It~)

Plulndd\1hm 2. Ott~twa I
fl•111dn . . Wu~hin~ton 1 (Iii! I
C..'hil:.1gn J. Cul~ar~ I
Nt:w J~:rsey 2. St. Lmns 0
Cnlnmdu 2. POOema I

2
Ottaw11 2
T11n1pa Bay l N Y blandef!l I

120. Bos1on 114 ,
L A Ctiilptr! JO), N!!w Jm:cy%

, NBA Standings

M1lwaulwe 4. T'ii'Oftlo 2
~hicqo While.SOlll. 5. Delroil l
I&lt;JwiUll Ciry 12. Mlnne!iola2
Te~:as Y. Baltillltlft: 3
Oakhlnd l N.Y. YnnkceM 0
Seutlt~ K. Boston7 £10)
CLEVELAND 10. "~n1 ~

Dnllus li.AIS Angeles 1

Dufftllll .It H;lrtfur!.l. 7 r m
N Y lsland\.'1':' ill MumrcuJ. 7:.l0 p m
Pluludtlplua 111 NY Rangers . 7:10
I'·'"
•
Dallall ul Phucmx .11 9Jl 111
V ,uJ ~I ltiVCr Ul Spn JOlll.', J() J() p,m,

266

Pall~bursh ~.

Wnshin~ton

'Basketball
.

Milwaukl:e 5, TvrontO 2

Bo~ 1on

T1•night's gam••

HMford 4, Monlfelll I
llt.lm~it '4. Tormno 2
Votncoov~r 2. Ednmtt'IIJ 2 (lit· ~

Saturday's scores .

'
Sunday's scores

'Houslon (Hamplnn -0) al Atln.n111
(GiaYiROt).O), 7 ~40 p m
.
Mon~real (Juden I ·0) ul St. Louts
CAiun Beta 0.1 ). 8:0., p m
N. Y Me1s (Jones I~~ nt Lo" Anpll's
&lt;Valdc5 1..0). 10:0~ p.m. ,
Pll!sburah (Cook 0·(1 .11 Snn Ote1,,
(Valenz""ll o, 1), fo 0:0 ~.m
Philailelphi• (M U:iter 0· 1) ;II Sun
FnuiJ:iKo (Femwida: 8&gt;0), IO:O."i p.m.

..,

.~

2

AqaiM:tm .... ...... .. .2
Seuul~ .. .. .,. , 2

I

struck out three bauer.s in four .then hit the load lfliursday t~ f~i:c . ,
in11irigs of work. Murphy cu~e Ol!'in . ,CCdar:villc. _,
· ' '• '
the lil'th ,and picked up· her second '
Aller the Ccdurv,ille trip. · Rio
save.
"
Ora11de will ho81 four co9secutivc
Rio · Grande wi!C post J lrbiJJl.l!. · d~Jublehcad~r~At St~nlcY., L. E~ans
University Tucsduy, ID an MOC . Foeld. The honlcstand hegms Fnday
twinbill at3:30 p.mJI'be Redwomcn against Walsh' University at 3 p.m.

·

Flori~A (A. Lener l· ll 111 Chic11go
Cubs&lt;T~tO,JI. 2:20r.m

I'

WulemObWon
OnkluDiJ ... ... . ... ~ " 2 .600

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New York. 102. Atlmlta 97

Tuesday's pmes

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· Col.ary) ... ,... :.,., 32 ~ft ff
Vuncollvet .. 32 40 1
l.o~ Angdes
.26 42 II
San Ju~ .. .. · .. 26 44 ~
z-clino,:hed d1Yi~ion Ulle
K-chnL:hed pln~nO' htnh

• Seilllle 16~. DliliOJ•84
•
M1am1 98. Toronto 84
Charlotte II !li. Ph!IOOclph1a II~

CINf!INNATI (Burbtl I-01 Ill Cntoriklo
(Swirl · ~ I), J05p.m.
ti .Y.1Me1s (M. Clark 0.:0) ul ~Alla:ttes CNomo 1.0), 10:0~ p.m
'
Pmsbur1h (Lieber 0..01 at ~n Diegn
tAshbr lJ.OJ, 10 o~ p.m .
. ... Phllndtlphin (Madura 0·1) al S11n
Frunci51.:q (E.Ites 0.0). 10 O."i p m.

i

x·Edmotnon .... ..36 ~~ M

Saturday's'!ICOI'ts

LOs Ancell• 6, Pinsburah 3

AL standings

Rio Grande softball' team loses
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twice -to Midway in home twinbi/1 . . i
its

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no strikeouts and no walks.
tied in the si xth, but instead halted at
. Southern hitters were Sosson woth 13. Sisson singled, Lisle sinsled, ~
two singles. and singles each by Ash, · Maynard had a two-run triple, Kir· ·, •
Lisle, Maynard, Blount and Kirby.
by tripled, and Dill singled, but a 4- · •
Against Vinton County, Southern 6-3 double play took Southern ,out of r
had a great comeback and was in a ,the rally.
'
position to tie when they ran out of . Southern hillers were Ash, Pete
steam in losing 6-4. Blount suffered ,Sisson , Nate Sisson, Travis Lisle
the loss with tbree onnings of work, .i who went 4-for-4, Maynard a triple. ,
giving up nine hits, two strikeouts, and smgle, K;irby 3-for-3 with two
no walks, and four runs Dill gave up triples and a double: Tyson Buckley
two runs, had two k's, no walks, and a single and Dill a pair of singles.
five hits registered against him .
Southern was agiun clo~e . but no
After·Southern had tied it at 4-4 e1gar despite a 11 -3 linal score.·
in the top of the sixth , the eventual Going into the final innmg. Southern J
game winners came when Murphy was tied 3'-3. when Katie forgot to •
reached on an error, then came con- bar the door and the Cadets came
secutive ground outs to score the run. marching through. FF scored eight
and Marker reached on a fielder's , runs in the 8th innmg [o claim the '
choice. He came ho;.,e on a B. Cole- win.
.
man (tbree hits) single for the 6-4
Southern hillers were Lisle, Mayfinal.
nard, Joe Kirby DH'ing for Jaso~ '
Southern had tied it in the SJxlh Lawrence, 'Neigler. and Danny · 1
when Ash walked, Sisson singled, Sayre. Southern had two on in the ·
Lisle singled, and Maynard hit a sixth with no outs and the potential ! '
three-run home run. Nate Siss,on had winning runs on base, an opportuni- l
the other Southem hot and Maynard ty that would have kept the game out I
had another single.
of extra innings. Baserunning blun- \
Ward picked up the win for VC ders took SHS out of the innmg and '"
' with four strikeouts, five hits, and the game stood tied going into the I
one walk. VC had two errors and seventh.
J
Southern had three.
Fort Frye made seven errors and I ,
, Southern lost a dogfight in the · Southern made three. FF had II hits. '1•
opening g~me of Saturday's double- as SHS pitching had nine walks, two 'J
header against .Fort Frye, 14-13. hit batsman, and Of1C strikeout. Weiss 4
Leading 13-9 going into the fifth, posted the win with ftve h1L,, three 1
Fort picked up some insurance when strikeouts, one Walk and three runs "
Ross walked, Duskay reached on a allowed.
hit pitch, and Kasun and Warren · The South.ern softball team also • 1
walked 10 ,bring home the eventual lost two heartbreakers Saturday; thc ~·
winning run.
second an 11-inning affair. Southern •'
Without the run SHS would have goes to Trimble tonight.

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7.1117

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

S1ntlnel

Pomeroy ~ Middleport, Ohio

A woman's place is .in the·home?:
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'·~

i~ ::r ..._
·i;F : -' .~~~-,

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~-4-~------------~~~·i~~~·~~i-~rJ.
•
QUILT WINNERS -VIvian
Jones of Pomeroy, right, took the
first ;so gift certificate for her quilt In rose colors In the chlm·
.ney and corner stone pattern at The Fabric Shop. Here she Ia
presented a check by Becky Anderson, owner. Also pictured,
left, Is Mildred Hudson of Pomeroy who was the first winner
in the quilt block contest. Her prize was all the blocks entered ·
In the competition.

on tlie rest of your C*llinas.
two income 1ax deductions that · withhold their share (also 7.65 perYoo
may
not
welcome
dill
busireduce your !Ill liability. The deduc• cent)~ si!nd it to ~e gover.nment.
. ~· 8ecurlty llanagM In Athena
A woman's place is in the ness expense, especially if you are ti0111 are intended to make sure self- The ponton of Soctal Security IIIII .
home ...that is, if she's operating ll years a'way from retirement. But employed . people are treated in Medicare taxes you pay for YOUF
home-pased business. The number Social Security is a 101 more than · much the same way u employers employees is an imponenl plll1 of
' of women who own and operate a retirement income. It's imponant an4 employees fqr Sociai.Stcurity their employee benefi\ jlll:kqe•.
home-based business is n~rly 4 · that you realize the day-to-day value and i~ome w purposes. Fint, net You're tielping provide ~m ~ .
million and increasing rapidly. In of Social S~curity.inyciur life. 1be earnings from self-employmenl ,-e day-to-day long-term dtsabtlil)' covfact, researchers say home-based money you pay into Social Security reduced ~an arnoun' equal to half erage. and survivor insu~ance probusinesses is a growth industry to taxes is protecting you and yoitr . of the person's total self-employ- tection, as ' well as contnbl!llng .to
watch.
family from a loss of income if you ment ta.x. Second, self~mployed their retirement' program. '
, -Regardless of whether you're a ~hould become se\·orely disabled persons can d¢uct hatf of their self·
for more. information abou~
woman or a man who operates a and unable to work or if you die employment tax on lheir IRS Form Social ' Security and self-employ.
·
ment, call Social Security's toll-free
business in 'the home, there are before retirement age. At present, : 1040. .
records to be kept and taxes 'to be more than six million workers and · If you're operaling it home-based number, 1-800-712-.1213, a,d ask
paid. And Social Security and their family . members receive business you may have employees. for the f~ct sheer "Social Security: 'if
Medicare taxes are among those to monthly disability benefits. Another For exarn~tle, twc;&gt;-thirds of the'near- You're Self-Employed" (PublicBtiOI!.
be paid. The current rate. for · those 7.4 million receive survivors bene- ly four million home-based indus- No. Os:I0022). Our lines are busiest
tal&lt;es is' l5.3 percent on self-employ- fits.
tries owned by women employ· an early in the week and early in the
Although the 15.3 percent you estimated 14 million people. When month, so if you,'re calling for this
ment incqme up to $65,400. if yout
net earnings exceed $65 ,400, you pay for Social Security and you have employees, you pay 7 . 65 publication, it's best to call at other.
· ·~
continue to pay the Medicare por- Medicare taxes may sound steep, percent of their earnii)gs in Social times.
tion of the tax, which is 2.9 percent . when you're self-employed you get Security and Medicare taxes arid

Fashion Shop sponsors
two quilting contests
As a promotion for the art of quilting in the area, The Fabric Shop of
Pomeroy has two ,participate and display contests underway.
.
Every month abou~ 1.0 completed quilts are displayed at the store and ·
customers cast their vote for their.favorite. It's called a people's choice
and the owner ·ofthe quilt receiving the most votes is awarded a $50 gift
cenificate. The contest is call a "quilt showdown."
To enter a quilt in the contest, there is a $5 fee. Winner in the first
month's contest was Vivian Jones, Pomeroy.
The second contest is a quilt club where panicipants are provided 1/4
yard of material to be used in a quili block with a specific pattern. There
is no charge for the materials, but once the blocks are compl~red they arc
·to be returned to the store for display and judging by cus.tomers.
1be prize for rhe winner of the block selected is all the other panicipants' quilt bloeks --enough to make a quilt. ·
As explained by Becky Anderson the quilt club is a great way for a
beginner or advanced quilters to learn new quilt techniques and patterns. She said it also gives panicipants the opportunity to look at how
someone else coordinated the colors and arranged the pattern to come up
with attractive blocks. ·
· The first winner was announced .this "ieek -- Mildred Hudson of
. Pomeroy.

your hair like ti1,at'! Are you trying to could do-- sit there a~ get indigesadv.enise the fact thai you are anti- lion '! Why didn't you tell the jerk
Ann
establishment or what?"
that the kid's haircut was his own
.
The
boy
's
face
turned
a
bright
darned
business and he wlls out of
·Landers
red,
and
it
was
apparent
that
he
was
line'!
·
File
this one under "sins' of
1~5 . •Lus AnJdcJ
deeply
embarrassed
.
t
m
sure
it
took
omission,"
and the next time you ar~
'nrlh Syndk:ttc oJ Cre ·
lkln Syndinw:.
a lot ofs'elf-control fo the boy notto .in such a situation, don ' t jusi sit
lash out in anger. He eptlooking at there -- speak up.
his plate an~ did not respond. The
De11r Ann Landers: The daily
By ANN LANDERS
jerk yammered on for about 10 min- papers these days are full of stories
·Dear Ann Landers: Last night, we utes about the kid 's hair, and finally, about drive-by shootings, gang
had dinner in the home of some new the host changed the subject. By activities and . unsolved murders.
frlem;ls. Seated at the table were a then, I already had' indigestion. ... •' Depressing, to say the least. The
neighbor, ' our two teen-agers, the
How can we expect children to other day, I read a different kind of
host a~td hostess and the)r two chi!- respect their · elders in the face of story, and it lifted my hean. It exem. dren of comparable age.
such mean spiritc'dness~ Please plified the decency of the "common,
Halfway through the meal, the comment -on7 this. I'd ' like your ordinary man on the street. I hope
neighbor turned to the hosts ' teen- . views. --Aika Seltzer AJ
you will share it with your readers.
age son and said, "Why .do you wear
Dear AI : Was that. the best you -I'm sure it will give them a lift, too.

Turning your clock

--------.--·Community calendar· ~-._.;...-____;;:.
The Community Calendar is
published as a free servi~e to no.n ·
profit groups wishing to announce
meetina and special eveniS. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisen of any
type. Ite1115 are printed as space
· permiiS and"cannol be guaranleed·
10 run a specific· number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs High
School· Band Boosters, Monday, 7
p.m in band room.

day, 7 p.m. at the schooi..Parents and
teachers invited to attend.
·

Days planning session Monday, 7
.p.m. at the Chester firehouse.

sion, ~e~C~ay, 1 p.m. at the' township '
hall. · · ..
·
.

RACINE · -- Parent workshops.
POMEROY -- Friends of the
DARWIN -- ,Bedford Townshi~
Monday and Wednesday, 7 to 8:30 Library, Monday. 7 p.m. at the Mid· Trustees. Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Bedford
p.m Southern High School. Empha-. dlepon Library.
town hall.
. .
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sis on pre-school to grade 3. Chit·
dren welcome, Title I and Venture
EAST MEIGS -- Free basic WEDNESDAY
Capital sponsored. Call 949-2611 beginners classes on Windows 95, ·
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ladies
for more information. ·
Eastern High School on Mondays Auxiliary, Post 9053, Tuppers
through May 12 and on 1\Jcsdays Plains, Wednesday. 7:30 p.m at the
. SYRACUSE -- Sutton Township through May 13, 6:30-8 p.m. Enroll- hall. New officers, will be elected.
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the ment limited to first 25 people .
municipal building in Syracuse.
Begins this week.
FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS ~- Eastern Local
ROCK SPRINGS •· Salisbury TUESDAY
Board of Education, Friday, 7 p.m, .
Township · Trustees meeting MonSY~CUSE
Meigs County at the high school to discuss aqd
day, 6 p.m. ar the township hall .
Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday, review bids for new building.
noon, Carleton School, Syracuse,
RACINE-- Racine Village Coun- · Dianne corkerhan of Temporary
RUTLAND -- Return Jonathan
cil regular session Monday, 7 p.m. at Services to speak.
·
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Friday, I p.m.
the municipal building.
at Rutland United Methodist
CHESTER :. Chester Township Church.
CHESTER -- Chester 'Shade Trustees will meet in regular ses-

. LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
office building. ·
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SALEM CENTER -- Free skin
testing clinic by T. B. nurse Connie
Karschnik, R. N. 4:30 10 6:30 p.m.
Salem Grange hall .
CHESTER-- Chester PTO, Mon-

The Deily S1allnel• Pllge 7

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The dateline is New York: I am -Manny in Manhattan
Dear Manny : Thanks for a real
day-brightener. Here's the story: .
"Ten people leaped from their
cars Tuesday to lift a 3-ton truck off
a 15-year-old boy.
"Vitaly Donets .was pinned under
a moving van driven· by his stepfather. Aleksandr Zverev, '28, had
slammed ,on the brakes to stop for a
red light, crashed into a car and a
cab and flipped over.
•·
- .· ." Zverev screamed for help, and ·
people ·ran from their cars to free
Vitaly from the crushing' weight of
the van:· About 10 men -- from construction workers to busi.nessmen in
suits and ties-- lifted the van off the

and your body.clock

By LISA FAYE KAPLAN
who haS written about 19th century well says. For a week, our sleep may
Gannett Nawa Service
timekeeping.
be restless. And to top it off, we're
· When the sun rose seemicgly lat:
In 1966, sophisticated communi- getting less of it.
er on Sunday, we sprang forward one , cations and. transportation systems Tired drivers have more accidents,
hour- the annual ritual that switch- demanded that the ·co untry agree on goes the theory that may explain the
es most of the country from standard · the time. So Congress passed the increase of mo10r vehicle accidents
to daylight-saving Time, and sends us Uniform Time Act, which decreed by almost 8 percent in the week folrunning through the house changing when DST would begin and end for lowing the DST shift, Caldwell ·says.
!)le 'clocks.
all states that chose to adopt it.
" The idea. is those are sleepWhen we finally wind down, we
Today, all but Arizona, Ha)Vaii deprived drivers," he says. " Most
will ·have lost a litile sleep on one and pan of Indiana have adopted people are afraid to admit that sleep
end, and gained a little light on the OS'I';-which now begins the first is imponaot."
qther- no big whoop.
Sunday in April ·and ends the last End optional tri'in
• .But the hour difference has · a Sunday in October.
The elderly might feel the change
greater effect on our bodies and • Studies, however.. have shown even more, says Ralph Morris, prominds than we realize, sleep expens that shifting time a couple times a fessor of pharmacology at the Uni~ay. And some segments of the pop- · year. ~as more than just practical
versity of Illinois at Chicago who
ulation - ·the. elderly, babies and consequences; it has biological studies l:iiological rhythms.
tots, and even pets - have a more effects, as well.
·
"1be older you are, the less flex·
4ifficult'time adjusting.
Caldwell writes that most people ible you are," Morris says.
. "We have little respect for the need a week to adjust to the c~ange,
Morris says melatonin. ,.a chemi·
.biology'' of changing time, says Dr. which could have . "significant cal released by the brain, facilitates
:J. Paul Caldwell, a Cobourg, Ontario effecls on mood, performance and sleep. Anytliing that interferes with
·Jlhysicianand author of "Sleep: The accident rates."
.
lhat melatonin release- time, ternDST "doesn't make sense bio- perature, medicine- can alter sleep
:c;:omplete Guide to Sleep Disorders
and a Better Night's S)eep" (Firefly; logically," he sl\ys. "There's an . and change,a host of other biological
$14.95). "In much of. society, sleep underlying&lt; attitude that says we can functions, including kidney function
iS tal\en · as something disposable, fiddle however we want with our and circulation.
S,ome seniors could experience
spmething we can play with. But an biology."
)lour is a big deal, an important
The spring.time shift is a harder restlessness and incontinence for a
Qiange."
.
.
biological adjustment than fail's.
· day or two after the time shift, Morpay light-saving (DSTl time started · If there were no clocks or Jay Leno ris says .
in the United States as an effon .to · to tell us when to go ·io bed, the bm;ly
Babies and you~gsters also may
save . fuel during World War I and would naturally crave sleep a half- feel the change acutely, Caldwell
World War II. When the wars ended, hour later each day, Caldwell says. says.
so did DST as'lhe national standard, So when we push t.imc back an hour
"The poor infant has no underout states an11 even counties could in autumn,- prompting us to turn in standing biologically why we're
decide whether and when to fool later - we · are doing what comes changing the time. It just occurs," he
with the time each year.
·
naturally.
says. "The normal flow of sleep and
·· · ".We ended up with a crazy
But in spring, we head -to bed' ail wake is disrupted ... Some children
patchwork,'' says . Ian Bartky, a hour earlier, , whi~h "goes .~gains! can sleep through anything. But ~~r
retired .federal science administrator our natural h10logtcal ,gram, Cald- the ones whose sleep as fragile, 11 s

boy.
"'h was all done by human
hands,' said Officer ~avi Malhotra.
'New Yorkers do 1\elp each other in
a tight crunch. I saw it myself. '
"Vitaly was hospitalized with
pelvic and knee injuries. From his
hospital bed, he told the New York
Daily News he felt 'very lucky' and
added, 'I think God. was helping
·.me."'
'
Dear Ann Landers: I have a
cousin whom I love dearly. We grew
up together like sisters. She has a
beautiful ·face and figure and no
brains.
"Betty " has a 6-year-old and im
8-year-old . Both are .undisciplined
holy terrors . She admits ' she can't

an important change,. You end up
with an, irritable child impossible to
manage."
·
Is there are cure to the DST
blues?
In this case, timing heals all.
People who feel panicularly susceptible should ease into the change
over four or five nights, Caldwell
says, gradually going to sleep later
and rising earlier.
." If we did that," he says, "the
change would be much easier."
Even dogs show stress when their
eating and walking schedules
abruptly change.
"They have their own biological
clocks," says Barbara Burroughs, a
veterinarian in South Burlington, Vt.
"It takes them a few days to get
adjusted to a new schedule. It's
almost like somebody with jet lag."
Burroughs says dogs . may act
" confused" or "a little dlsoijknted"·
for a fe'W days following th~ shift to
DST.
·
"They'll pace around. They may
whimper, cry a little," she says. "It's
. more ol;lVious with dogs. Cats tend ·
to be more secretive with their emolions."
. '
Burroughs says sticking to the ·
same routine, albeit an hour later,
helps dogs eventually adjust to the
time change.
.
.
"We always put our dogs out and
say, 'Do your stuff,".' she says ~bout
her two mixed breed dogs, Hogan
and Ralph. "That's their cue it's
your last chance for'the night."
Eventually, Bilrr~ughs says, they·
. catch on and catch up to the cloc~.

, Fine-~Arts ~Festival td featlfrertnstrict ~ ·.elementary students'
places with three overall 'winn~rs.
The art iqstructors a~ Carin Taylor,
Bradbury; Donna Clark, Har-.
risonville, Pomer0 y, Rutland and
Salisbury, and Ralph Werry, Sruem
Center.
· '
·
The program wql begin at 7 p.m.
when about 130 fifth and sixth
graders from the six . elementary
sch9ol wil.l present vocal and instrumental music.
The studenis from Bnidbury and
Pomeroy .!:under the direction of

'!'he second annual Meigs, Local
.School District fiftp and sixth grade
fine artS festival will be held Tuesday in the Larry R. Morrison Gym·
nasium at Meigs High School.
The art display will open at 6:30
p.m. for public viewing. About 400
· pieces of work by the .students will
be exhibited around the auditorium.
The top three fifth and top three ·
sixth grade anists will be recogni~ed
during a program with ribbons to·be
awarded for first, second and third

. O.RATORY WINNER - Jessica Wright of Pomeroy, a juniclr at
Meigs High School, 'took first place in Meigs County in the N.__tlonal
Right to LHe Oratory Contest ataged Tuesday night at tl:le Melga
County Public Library, Pomeroy. She was presented a plaque by AI
Hartson, coordinator for the local Right to Life chapter. Second
place winner was Mellaaa Layne. Wright will compete In the atata
contest ApriJ.26, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Westin Hotel, Columbua;

1997 FORD ESCORT

1997 FORD TAURUS ;

$209~2

$299.2~

l

Shawn David Reeves cel~brated
hts second binhday Feb. 24 with a ·
party at the home of his mother,
Julie King. Pageville Road.
Attending besides his mother
were his father, Dave Reeve~; paternal grandparents. Eugene (Jake) and
Juanita Reeves; maternal grandmother. Joan King: Don and len- .
nifcr King Laudermilt; Amber Laudennilt: Jamie and JoAnna Jeffers\
. Jeff King; Charlie. Mandy and Josh
Ncuzling; Rkk Reeves: Teresa Harris: Da,cy and Zackary Young; Brit·
'tany. Summer and Ashley King ;
R1ndy. Angel. Rachel Jill, Brandi.
Randall James. and Jodi Reeves;
W. Hatfield: Chris Lamben: Darlene. Jim. Trav'is. Jake and Matt ·
.Older: and Tom, Jan and J. W. Lee. ' koolaid were sel'\lcd and gifts were
'
given to the honoree. Shawn is the
Cake. kc cream. chips, and grandson of the late Jack King, Sr.

Chris Rouse will present ·"Possibili· Haz Jazz.:•
ties", "Don't Ever Give Up, and "It's ·
The. sixth grade band students of
, My Journey", all written by Teresa , David Bowen w!ll pr.esent "Round
Jennings. .
·
and Round We go" by Feldstein· ·
O'Reilly; "Siighrly Misty" by OsterThe students of Ralph Werry from ling; "Pirates Parade" by Poloyhar,
Harrisonville; Rutland, Salem Cen- · and Tropical FluJes" by Selbesky. ·
ter and-Salisbury, will sing "We Haz
Jazz", "I'm Old Enough to Sing the
Blues", "Up the Mississippi", "Hobo
Swing" and "Reprise", words and
music by John Jacobson and Kirby
Shaw from the youth inusi~al, "We

In an effon lo provide our readership with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept ~ed­
dings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submitted after the 60day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and tqe
· Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must
m~~ "i!:.:'l • be submitted within 60 days of
occurrence. All birthdays · must be
submitted within 60 days of the

Brent and Beth Houdashelt, Marion, announce the birth of their first
child, .a daughter, Jenna Ann, March
12, at M~rion General Hospital.
' The infant weighed 9 pounds and
was 20 inches long.
Grandparents
are
Marcia
Houdashelt of Pomeroy and the late
Bob Houdashelt, and Bob and Ann
Carwile of Marion.
Greal;grandparents are Myrtle
Grover of Pomeroy and the late Dal·
ton Grover, the late Waller
Houdashelt and the late Gladys Taylor, and Mr. and Mrs. Delb:Crt Lichtenberger, Marion.

Second , birthday marked

· ·occurrence.

·

All •material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

le elfer 1tary

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· ; · 4'1VE GENERATION&amp;~THEA .:. The flva geneioatlon family
· of Lettie Connolly McCIIIn, Long Bottom, seatad left, gathaMd
recently for a pictured. Next to Mre. Mccain Ia her son, Not··
man McCain of Reedsville, behind her 11 her granddaughter,
Sherry Tysinger of Nesconset, N. Y. and In front, her grallt·
granddaughter, Tara Miller ol Johnson City, Tenn. lioldlng her
· son, Jerry Wayne Miller 111,· the great--great--grandson of Mra.
McCain.

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A SPECIAL SECTION

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ln The
.PLEASANT REGI$TEil
. . POINT
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GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE ..
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·~.POMEROY DAILY
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ADVERTISING DEAD_LINE:

THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1997 - 12 NOON
INSERTION DATE:

~DNESDA1APRIL 3~, 1997
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Call992-2155. '
For More Information
Dave Harris - Ext. 104
Bob Atwood - Ext 105

omitted.
EASTER VISIT
Residents o~ ]'he Maples were .
greeted by the Easter Bunny GQOd
Friday. Elaine Parsons, a home ·
Jlealth nurse, arrived costumed and
with 1 basket of colored eggs for the
resideiits.

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EGG HUNT WINNERS - Winners In the varloua age ca:a.y:tea at
the ll~dl1pD11 Fire DepartrMnt'a lEMier egg hunt held at rtlngar
Part!,
wllh the bunny Ginger Derst, wwe from the left,
Sam
of ............ Mel., .. to • 2;, Aaht.y lberBbHh of
Mlddll=l~ ... N; UCI Pl,ne of Gliplpolla, age11·12; Randy Lie,
...... "" A7 'alt, • • and
Aoblnaon
Middleport,
1iJe M Itt I .. - ohltcnn lttilndall the aftalr.

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BIRTHDAY PARTY
A 90th binhday ·party for ' M•·
Jlll'et "Peg" Douglu will be held on
1be Kentucky Derby hu been
s.aurday from I 10 4 p.m. at the
Meias County Senior Center in 1 rvn annually every spring since 1875
Pomeroy. It is uked that gifts be at Churchill [)pwns in Louisville.

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-,--Society scrapbook-

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JENNA HOUDASHELT

c:

. COLORING CONTEST
Winners in the Kroger Easter col- ,
orinr contest were Clarrisa Stanley.
a large chocolate bunny in the 6 to
IO age group. and Alaine Arnold, an
Easter basket in the 5 and under category.

handle them. When they fight, she
locks herself in her bednoom and
iurns on the TV so she won't hear
tile noise. Her major threat is, "Wait
'til your father gets home."
"Father" travels a lot on business, and when he comes home, he :
doesn't feel like di sciplining the·
kids. What do you suggest be done?
--' Frustraied in Uniontown, Pa.
Dear Pa.: Since Betty is brainless
and her husband travels a lot, check
with t~e school principal and get the
name of a good family counselor.
That group needs professional.help.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
CreeiOrs Syndicate., 577'1 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Lo. Angeles,
Calir. 90045

News polic.Y

Houdashelt
'birth announced

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r---Five generations----.

ahead

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W·a&gt;man should. put her money-where her mouth

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IV ED PETERSON

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Do~;ChUds,

Mullen, Muuer
,lll B. 5ecoad St., Poaloy

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SOUDVINYL
llEPLA(:EMENT WINDOWS

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio.

Meigs Senior Center
April Activities

_ll!e Meigs County· Council on
'Agiqg, Inc., is open - Monday
through Friday from 8 ;00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games,
pool. Weekly activities are Line .
Dancing on Monday at 1 :00,
th,prus Practice on Tuesday at ·
lf: OO, .Knitting Circle on
Wednesday from 10 to 12, ancf ,
Physical Fitness on TUesdays and
'fhursdays at II: 15 to keep
participants "fit and limber."
.: A representative from the
At~ens Social Security office will
lie at the Center on Wednesdays,
· ~pril9 and 23, from 10 to 11 a,m.
. Darla Hawley will be assisting
s.eniors with filing tax returns 11n
Wednesday and Friday through
April 11 . Please call Darla, . 992il61, to make an appointment or
fer .further information.
··
· Wednesday, April 9- The Stroke
Survivors Support . Group meets
from 1 to 2:30, with Lia Tipton,
COTA, Holzer Rehabilitation ,
Coordinator.
· Thursday, April 17- the monthly
. Blood Pressure .Clinic will be held.
from 9:30 to 11:00.
·:Thursday, April17 --the monthly
birthday party will be held. Seniors
having birthdays in the month will
be recognized. Bob Spencer,
Transplant Coordinator with
· LifeLine of Ohio, will speak at

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER
.

MONDAY

TUESDAY.

Baked Pork Steak
llasbed Potatoes
with Gravy
Carrots
Bread
Prunes

Hamburger
Broccoli - HDII
.Broccoli Soup-Site
Orange Juice
Bun
Bread Pudding

APRIL MENUS

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

Spaghetti with
lleat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
Grapes
Cookie

"FACI'ORY DIRECf

PRICES"

FRIDAY

.B eet and Noodles ·
Cole Slaw
.Buttered Peas
Bread
.Apple Slices
with Raisins

$195.00 INST&lt;ALL~
(up to 93 United locha)
(OpoloMA- 11 .• 1M ' ni'Cool)'

Turkey · aad
. Dressing Casse.r o
llasbed Potatoes
G:reen Beans
Bananas and Oranps ·

·Quanty Window .Systems .

11 :00 concerning tissue and organ
donation . Hal Kneen, Meigs
County HorticulturistiE?Itension
Agent, will present a program
about planting baskets and urns,
•
Chili
Chicken &amp; Noodles
Mushroom Steak
Hamloa:f
with a plant exchange .to be 'held · Chicken · Patty
Cole Slaw
Broccoli/Carrots
Mashed Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Augratin Potatoes
from noon to' J :00. This is. a good
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Crackers
Cauliflower
with
Grav:v.
Green·
Beans
Brussel
Sprouts
time to transplant perennials from
Bread
llixed Fruit
Bread
Buttered C.o rn
Bread
your flower garden and bring the
Apple Cberry ' Crisp
Brownie
Peach
Slices
with
Biscuit
Applesauce·
plants to the center and exchange
Orange
Sauce
Blushing
Peara
for some new and different flowers.
The public is invited to participate
21
22
23
24
211
in the plant exchange.
Oven Baked Fish
Meat Balls iri
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Navy Beans &amp; Ham
BBQ Chicken Fillet Baked ·steak ·
Friday, Apri) 18- The Arthritis
Oven Roast
Gravy on Noodles
Cole Slaw
Scalloped Potatoes Mashed Potatoes
Support Group meetsjfrom 10:30 to
Potatoes
Tossed Salad
Cornbread
Broccoli
with Gravy
noon.
.
Buttered Carrots
Bread
Apple ·
Bread
Buttered Peas
Wednesday, April 23 - there will
· Bread
Mandarian Oranges
Rocky Road Pud~ing
Pineapple
Bread
be a trip to Parkersburg, .for
Trop·ical Fruit.
in Gelatin
Peach Slices
shopping at Walmarts and Grand
Central Mall, the cost will be $5.00
28
29
30
for transportation' by Center vans.
Weiner
llacaroni &amp; Cheese
lleatloaf
Call 992-2161 to register for the
Sauerkraut
Creamed Tomatoes
Parslied Boiled
.
trip.
llasbed Potatoes
Green Beans
Potatoes
Thursday, April 24 - the monthly
Bread
\
Bread
Spinach
The Retired and Senior
AD/RD Support Group will have a
Fruit Cocktail
Pear Halves
Bread
Volunteer Program is recruiting
special meeting at 7:00 p.m. with .
Applesauce
i.nl;!ividuals 55 years and older to
Dr. Leopold Liss as guest speaker. ~------==-====±============================-' participate in two new programs. ·
Dr. Liss is founder .and directot of
S.E NIOR CONNECTION.S
the Cpgnitive .DiSorders Clinic at
Senior Connections will offer a
Ohio State l)niversity Hospitals,
daily phone call to check the health
and Medical Director of the
and wellbeing of an elderly person.
Columbus Alzheimer's . Care .
This program will allow those
center. Dr. Liss is nationally
without family nearby to feel
renown for his work with
secure knowing someone will
Alzheimer's; his topic for the
check on him or her everyday.
meeting will be ·~ Alzheimer's
1 REMEMBER WHEN ...:
Disease 1997".
·
Have yo~ Jived thru an interesting
event worth passing on to futur~.
generations? The Retired and
Senior Volunteer Program would
like to compile a Senior Speakers
The Senior Center is sponsoring evening · meals· each Tuesday and
Database to offer to schools in the
Thursday with se.rving fr9m 4:30- 5:15, A suggested donation for t~e
Meigs County School District.
evening meal is $4.00. The intent is to provide a nutritional evening
There
are no specific topics which
meal {or a very reasonable cost. Dollars generated will be used li&gt;
we
are
interested ins but some
_ support the existing .lunch and home delivmd meal programs. The
examples
could include; 'Floods of
•·public is invited to attend:
·
.
the
past,
·wars
in History, The Great
' Thursday, April 3, Junior and Rita Whiie will be playing old time
Depressio~
of
1929, Development
· favorite songs at 5:45 and Thursday, April 17, thF Rio Grande Chorale
of
Meigs
County
or any other tO)lic
·will sing at 6:00.
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in which you have a special
interest:
·
If you are interested in either of
Students rrom Carleton ~hool with their instnactors visited the ·center Ia Febnaary rar • tour and fteld
these two programs or would like
trip out In tile community. The students were Interested Ia quilt maklaa ror a ~11111 project as they
to find out more about The Re.tired
observed Gladys DWoa, ReedsvWe, (seated) as she worked at one or tbe quiiU made at the Center.
·
.. April 1
and Senior Volunteer Program call: ·
April 3
Diana Coale' or,,Mil:a-tlt~e&amp;, ,9\l2 ,.,
.· Scalloped Chicken
Baked Steak .
2161.
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Casserole •

110Courtl1.

Quality Work lit

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April 8

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· Spaghetti with
· · Meat Sauce
. Tossed Salad
· Garlic Bread
' Texas Sheet Cake
April 15

Chicken and Noodles
. Mashed Potatoes·
· Cole Slaw
Roll - Beverage
. Peachy Creamy
Pudding
, April 22

Navy Beans &amp; Ham
1 Lyonnaise Potatoes
tCornbread
!Beverage
•Rocky Road Pudding
April · 29
. Meatloaf ·
· Scalloped Potatoes
Tossed Salad
Roll - Bever~ge
-Bread Pudding
May 6

Ham and Scalloped
Potato Casserole "
Mixecf Vegetables
Cole Slaw
Roll' - Beverage
.. Hot Cinnamon

AprillO
Turkey and .
.Dressing Roll .
Kashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Green Beans
Roll - Beverage
April 17
Ha• Loaf
Sweet Potatoes
Kixftd Vegetables
IJOll - Beverage
~pple Cherry Crisp
· April 24

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Creamed Peas
Roll - Beverage .
Pineapple .qpside
Kay 1
Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
.with Gravy
Peas an~ Carrots
Roll - Beverage
Cherry Cheesecake
Kay 8
Roast Beef
Masbed Potatoes
with Gravy
Green Beans
Roll - Beve.rage
Bananas in Pudding

WE

OH.

·992-3785

The ~nior Center has scheduled the following one day motorcoach
·
trips this year.
. The first trip is Saturday, Aprill9,to the Spring Spectacular Show at ·.
· the restored .Palace Theater, Canton, with dinner at the Amish Door
restaurant and sloupping at the village. Cost is $60.00 per person. There
.·
.
are ~ats available for this trip
A trip to Cambridge is planned for Thursday, July \7, to see the
outdoor drama "The Living Word"; also included will be a tour of the
Cambridge .Glass .Museum, shopping at the downtown Arts &amp; ·Crafts
and Antiques stores and a behind the scenes tour of the outdoor drama
set . Cost ts $40.00, with meals at your own expense.
There will be a trip to the Singing Christmas Tree at the North
Parkersburg Baptist Church. scheduled for December. .U .interested
· please make a reservation so tickets can be ordered, cost will be
approximately $20.00.
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-~r Monthly shopping trips to ·area malls and stores using I~ Center
vehicles have been planned.
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Wednesday, May 21 to Athens to the Ames Plaza and University
Mall.
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Wednesday, June II to Gallipolis to K-Marts and the Hills Plaza.
Wednesday, July 9 to the retail shoe store' and River Valley Mall,·
Lancaster.
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. Wednesday, August 13 to Jackson, with stops at the Arts &amp; Crafts
an~ . Antique Malls, dinner at Lewis Restaurant, and shopping at
"'Walmarts. .
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Please call Center, 992-2161, to rese.rve a SJII!CC, ccist for the shoppiitg
.
trips is $5.00, payable the day of the trip.
· LUnch is at your own expense.
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. Wednesdays
Senipr Citisem Day ·
Storewide
· Save 1So/o off everything in our store.
. Sale .
Merclumdlla.
Not Included .

614-992-7643

12.111""
lln.lluata. .. v....
SIN-U .,.......,.

Umestone, ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992·3470

. 614-696-1376

ComPieta HoUle

Lswn Mowing &amp;
Lsndscaplng

IO%of1Any
Service to New
CUstomers

Alnltlon "Motoc.OS.IM - RIPIIIra

Clunlng 81pllc Sy111ims
Port·A.John • RMllals • 81~1cecl Weekly
No Extnt ctwge to,r Evenings or W•l-*
24 Hr. Prompt Sat;~r1Ce .
7
A Weak

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41111-

C.Uplele Machine Sbop Se~ Fabrlaltlon
Steel Saltl, Weldbta Supplle., IDcbtrlll Ga
Radiator Repelr lc ReplaceiDtllt
Monday-Friday · 8:00a.m.- 4:30.p.m.
Saturday-8:00a.m.- 12 noon·

LIWICUE·
ollowlng
·(A 11 aW&amp;C.UiattaQ

Public Notice

Public Notice

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r•tirdallon

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Said tax being:• An
•dclltlonal tiiX of 1.8 mUI•IIt
a rate not u~dlnL1.8
mUla for each ona:dol . of
vaiUIItion, which ~nta to
•lghteen nnta (10.11) tor
INICh' one hundred dolllr8 of
valuailon, tor 1 continuing

Notte. ofEtaotlon onTu
1 · IA¥y In EK; 11 of thll ,..,

clevel~l

and

diUIIIIIIIM.

MIH Llmlbdlan .
•New Homes
RaviMd Codll,.llealiona
•Garages
:;3501.11(0). 117011.18, 11705.2$
;· Notln Ia h. .b, given
•Complete
1that In purauanoe of a
Remodeling
• lheO!utlon of the 8a.cl of
~ Commlaalonar• on the
Stop.&amp; Compare
··-county of Malp, Pomeroy,
. FREE
: Ohio, Plllaed on the 18th perlcKI of time.
Th• Polla fllr aald
ESTIMATEES .
"'dQ of Fabruary, 11187 there
: wlft be aubmlttltd to a vote Election witt o~ at 8:30
985'-4473
•of the p•opt• of aald o'clock A.M. and , r•matn
.
Of*!
unt!l
7:30
o'clOCk
P.M.
7
' aubdlvl•ton · at a S(lllclal
of
aald
dlly.
,
' Election to be held In lha
By order of the Board of .
:.county of Malp, Ohio, at
Electlona,
of Melp County, _....;;.._ _ _ _ __
~thll ,.....,
of voting
Ohio.
. In Memory
: th.,.ln, on the lith day ol
~ Mlty, 1987, th• qullllon of
Henry L Hunltar
Cll*man
, levylnll 1 1811, In • • - of
•· the-tiin ·mtH-ttl'llllltton; · . · .. '·· 118tac1...,.1a,1111 In Loving·Mem!Hy
~the ba...tlt of Melp County
Rill o.
Smith of Bob Houdashelt
Director.
tor th• purpon of
6/4/34 - 4/7/96
Malnt•neno•, capilli (4)7,14, 21,28 4tc
coM!ructlon. and opel'llllon
of Cart•ton School and 90 . wanted ,,
NWf!!JS in ow
Melga lnduatr!M Worlanhop
for peraon• with m•ntal
1

50%·75%

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

TIM'S CUSTOM
CUPIT

;:;:::;:::::;:=;:;!::=::;

Willi.
Person to ,I Hr.
do... hone.
Call 992·2377

.Pft

OU

mitufs.
Sadly missed by
· wife and family

Public Slle &amp; Auction

PUQLIC AUCTION
Loving MemcH'YI

Satuntay, Aprll12, 1997
S.R. 684 ·In Harrisonville, Ohio

Will be offering the personal property of the late
·ot
Kathrine Weaver, located next to the Scipio Fire
Pat Clifford
House in HarrisonViHe, Ol)lo. .
:
DlrecJions from Pomeroy, Ohio: Take S.R. 143
;
who passed
west to Harriso"ville. Tum righl onto S.R. 684.
: away one year
Auction is approx. 1/8 mile from Intersection.
:
ago today..
Signs will be posted.
I
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTABLES
. : Sadly missed
Curved glass china cabinet, Serpentine 4 drawer
j
Troop
drasser, Oxford 1Q" broiler (cast iron), buttons,
,
omate mirror for washstand, Ginny. Lind 1/2 lied
:
head &amp; toot (no sld' ralls), Wexford &amp; McCoy
I : •
caret of ThMb
L.C. Cookie jars, Kaehler (Pomeroy, 0) bottle,
I• . .
· wicker baskets, old pictures &amp; frames, side table,
: rr""h-e--l:..a_m..l-ly.....o_t"' Hob nail milk gla$8 to Include Fenton, .Brass King
: Woodrow Hall would
wash board, Westmorland, &amp; Hazel Adas hen on
. llk!l ~0 expre&amp;s our
nest, Jots of inisc. blassware.
.
sincere ttlanks and
·
MODERN
appreplatlon to the
French Provincial -bedroom suite, hand made
stall at vatarans
cedar bed, wardrobe &amp; cedar chest, bookqase,
Memorial H.oapllal and
Maytilg H.D. larg• cap washer, .Crosley H.D.
our commun•·. for llll
eleCtric .dryer, portable TV, Boston slyle rocker,
"'
Christmas decorations, mitre box, mise lamps,
the klndna.a,s during
wood dini"J!able,
of m.lsc Items not listed.
our time of sadn811$.
·
._ a • .....,,
.
ecutrlx:.
Don,.
Cheadle
- :' ' Larry "1 ...... ~,
Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden Oh. 4318
Patterson Woodrow
, .· ·
Hall Jr.
814-742·2048
·
Lunch
·..Porta John
Pos. ID ·

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Porclla
CIIIU.,.,.A"-1 lha
814-742-30811
. 81+742-3324
814-742-3071

®MM,ED ROME MEDICAL EQ~ a SUPPUES

• Uti' C1WRS

PRIVA11! INSURANCE

• BATHROOM AII)S
• N~UIJZQS

"We treor You

·C

HOME
·oXYGEN
M-110111

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Introducing_

Harfwel

H,.,

FRIDAY FISH FRY
llil FLEA MARKET

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. FRIDAY, APRIL 11 I
10Aif.7PM

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wayne's Place
Pool Toumar:'larrt schedule
change Weds. canceled

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Tuaaclily new night
Start 111111 7

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&amp;VIcinity

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All Yard Satta lluat a. ,.ld tn•
AclvancL O.dllno: 1 :DOpm
day ·ltalore,.. ad Ia 11 n~n. SUn- ;
dar &amp; llanday oodlllon- 1:oopm.
Friday.
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PubllcSIIe
and Auction

l

Lomtey'l Aue!lan Senile., LHIIe:
Ltmloy, AucllonHr. Hou-.llold,&gt;
e•...., FMn Blnlft. caa .,........
8241,114411 IUS.

11

full 111M ·auclloAHr, campl•teO ·

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CHA"ER 7 • CHlml13
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Athens, Ohio

eRemodellng
-Garages

-Decks . ·

-No Job TQo Small
. •Any and All of Your
. Home Repair Needs
.tCall Today for Your
Free Estimates

992-5535

1

"-n Aclclilona

oNewa..g.

.

. 992-2753

CELLULAR PHONES

oEiilclllcal • Plumbing

oRoollflll

'~~••lor.

Aboolult Tap Dollar: All U.S. Sll-·
vor And Gold Calna, PIGofltll. •
Dlolf1101141. Arl•qu• - - , .
Ringo. Pro-1830 U.S. Curroncr•.

Gold:

s...a,., e~e. Acqultltlonl - . , ,

• II.T.&amp;. Coin Shop. 151 S.COnd ·

"""""'Galllpoln, 81 ..048-2142.

Antlqutl, furniture, .Oiall, chlr'lll, ;
· coin1, toyl, lamps, oun1, toola, ,
talatoa: alaa appraiiOII, Oaby •
llwlin, 114-llg2-7441.
•

hlnllng
Aleo Cattemt WOrk
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C, YOU~ Ill
982o4215
Pometoy, Ohio .

,..,.,

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE
. P.OMEROV, OH.

113 W. 2ND ST.

614-992-5479

•

Clean lal• lladtt Care Or;
Trucko, 1880 llocltll Or - . , ,
Smith Buick Ponllac. 1100 Eall· '
emAveM. GllllpoiiL

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J &amp; o·o Auto ""'''· Buying tal· :
vaga vehlciH. StlllnQ patiL 304- ,

~713-~~~-----------'
Wanttd Tlmbtr l Or .Timber •
Land, Proleaalonal S.rvlcee. •

lltod ,.per Woacll•ndo, 114- :

.

772-3838.

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

Wanted to buy chip wood. 304· •
773·5080
814·1182·1021 :
E~L
,

o., •.

Wanted To Buy: We Bu1 Junll :
Cart 114-4&lt;141-FI'RT. Or 114-311- ' .
11012.

3&amp;o• Communications

EXIII1or

:

2521.

~Homes

YOUNG'S
(ARPENid SERYIQ

Wlnlld to Buy . :

90
I

I

Arldquoo, top prlctt palcl, Rlvar· :
In• Anllqutl, Pomtfay, Ohio, ,
· Ru10 .Moore own or, 114·1112· .

"U..,NIUJ ,_,..,,

s.nrt"'IIIM for
-111yra
Mlkll W. Mln:um
CltliJMr, Ohio
91111-4141

J73.5785Qr31J4.J73.15o147.

Safra~ek ·
.
(614) 592·5025

..ntet1or • Exllrlor
RII1ICidellng
oANidMtlal 6
Colnmerclal
oQenentl ~rD...,tllrvJ

auction Mrvlct. llcenH«&lt;It
ne,Ohla l w~• Vf...,la. 304·'

Er11PL0Yr.1ENT
SERVICE S

Help Wanted

110

AVON I All Artll I ShlrlllY

Speoro, 30..a75-1429.

Abtt

Avon

RtprtHnlati'na

nooodtd. Earn monar lor Chrlll·

IIU·11358 or 304·882·2145. Ind .
:.
Rep.

'feHS.NIIts

Llmeatona

a Gnlval

Septic Sy1tema
1\'allar&amp;
HousaSitea
ffuaonMJie RftN
Joe N. Sayre.

.Sayre,.... Co.

FEENEY I-EII
P08T121
.
• AMERICAN l.EGION '
ANNIX
. . 8b lito Mlltldtdila)»llpcllllll
Ylttdlra .. ·I'TIIIie
CIIIRui~IIO

INSULATION

. ~~~·--·
1111111,
Grooming,

537 BRYAN P.LACE

MIDDLEPORT

Kennel Call

-m-zm

and Love
Mon., Tuell., Wed.,

planl8$8.5011at ..
• Bloontiug &amp; Folaae
~$5.75-$8.75

-4111- Aaaort Poll

211 North 2nd
Mlclllllepo,rt, Ohio

HOIMI. .Y~t
"ln!osrlly ollt. Alftr4n•llilf•

WILL IIULlll'r ... I.

Free Eatlmlltn

. . 388 8879

. . ...
.,
:.••

992·7074

.~
, '

· Gntval, Llmaatone,
Fill Dirt,

OlmR STORAGE

.

We hc&gt;nor Golden
'Buckeye Carda
()pin Dilly f.5 Slil12-5

417 ..

•

JB Roofing &amp;

sse- S1.25

oQNiblly

I

•Build Gar.s · ·
•Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
•R0011 Atltllliolts

efltmblr 11188 &amp; elepltanl

8111$5.50
oCIIWII $2.00 ...

' ·I

•R~I¥fild0ws

Thull., Fri. 11)-6;
· Sat. 12-8: Sun. 12~

1Vow Opern For SpriltfJ

• Pal sles $11.50 Jlat

I

s:ooa.m.-3:30 p.m.

Hz••• a Gru•••
syracuse" 99M178
s-rn

Babyalner neede'd In our home
for 1yr old, some dart. aomt
evanin,ga, Mt Allo area. Muar
have own tranaponatton. 304·
185-3081 or 304-2~11021 .

One Unit Now
Available
101121, • par mo.

812-3911

.

I

\
(

,.M.I

run. -IIY tdHtoa - 1:00
frlti!IJ.....dllY tdhlon • tO:O,O.

Pomeroy,
lllddliport

MIRCUM&amp;SON
IUILDIII

• AI vegalabi&amp;&amp; beddilg

'

.......

ALL Yard Balea lluat Ba .....
In Afyan·oo. DEADLtNI' 1:10

Joe Wllaon
'814) 182-4277

"Attorney

102E. MIIB -

14-4182-GS I - · I

;. I
t.lllll'llll-

~-7696

'molol' bJocltl;

Lilce Fomily"·

• STAIR GUDES

·.

menymet111 a .

~

YardSIIe

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

CHRISTY'S PETS

appl._, bett&amp;rt.,

••
•
I

tndS"o•ullt,.,..--. . .

mas tHMI II homWII work. 1..fl00.

Pickup~

I

1998
. Martin Street
PA-"""1Ohio 45789

•

IIIIGS'

FREE

••

Found: ....... :,; ....... a-. ..
ea1 vicini! be-n Pllg..,tlloi

1111/ITimo.

t
.
o t s

.~ j;

CuatomHomes

KIUP!CY

·992·7275 (Brenda)

Plllntlng, Genl(lll,

Found

Rick Pellreon Auction Cofftpanw~

~(Diane)

"-l..m•••••

Whon
1 L-

Found U2Jt7-· "'""' lillie
mallan typt, tndltury Sci-' vi'
c:lnily, 114 IIIU073. .
'

Remodeling

.... .OWner:--

Call ·

33111 tt.ppy HoiiDw Roood
Middleport, Olllo 4117110
New Homie, Aclclllona,
Rooting, Siding;
· Po'- Blmlt, Dulta,

'

o.&amp;

3117IWI'FN

a....... .
.

lilonol-

5-""

ISO Lost n

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

. FREE ESnMATES
949-2168

~

Blodi!Ab 111111. moll, _ ,
a Sl77.

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

Painting. ·

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

Glvaa.y

lr I ptopll31U

COMPUTER
HELP!

Gutters
."' Downepouts ...
Gutler CIHnlng

. a......

40

.....,.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

.,...

181-405 P.O. loa 41110 Luca.,

Vla,OtiD15aat.

....c.

Howard L Wrtt11ll

w. ... •~··

IJ

llbood
Bt lloodlu'" llzood

-·-

,,

Ftu.. Awl.....

Ful Grown 11 4-4&lt;141·

Middleport, OH
814-0112-5371
Day • Evening Hll.

lie4rts

f41Wfl!JS

• Aquatron Boats •
Cabins • Bow Riders • Bass
Boats • Sea Ark John Boats
• Johnson Outboard

Juat orr Bradbury Rd.
(look for ligna)

'*-

......-..

old,woman.
1'2, 210,
country
RLM
Hall

"Build Your Dream"

~~---··- ·

SAVE

He

70

·Pomel'()y, Ohio 45769
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc. ·
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773-5881

lorflw..um.t.•

.....·

~-~m

M&amp;.l

. 250 Condor Street

Plan AhHd, Cllll today

IIIITWIURCQ_...

Whit• Caulllry &lt;hnd•1111n 4C

·Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine &amp;Welding Shop ·

Shrubbery
Malntlnllnce

742-2803

-

915·3131

(614) 992-3838

'

ITIP;JL

IGRI SERVICE

eOeKalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds
•Small Seeds .Chemicals
· •lWin •Feed •Lime

LillY'S

111 1411134.

.__

efertlllzer (Bag or Bulk)

·Pel Trallar Site
We&gt;rlc, Bullclozlng,
Backhoe, Trlckhol.
Septic $yateml
lrmalled ·

U.l, Min. Mull a. II ......u

Roduce _____ ... ,,

y..,..,..,..,...,or~

Diiveway Umellone

11M! Now ~The Fun W.,

llo.Attll'

c

HOWARD

or446-3622

•

• WHEEJ. CIWRS . MEbiCAJD

DowNIOMI

. . . . t.IQ0-712-DIS Ell. 1114

EXCAVAnNG CO.

•

•

HOSPITAL BEDS : MEDICARE

15o/tJ off·

New Homtt • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.lTHIIS c
&amp;USS.IIISTIIS

••
•

i
•

FREE DELIVERY 4 SET-UP .

Every WedneS(fay Storewi~ Savings

WICKS"
HAULING

•Trea Tl'lmmlng

•j

.SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS

OOLDI!N

· POMI$ROY

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

oWeecllllling

ARE YOU PREPARED FOR
RETIRI;MENT7 WILL YOU BE
ABLE TO LIVE COMFORTABLY
ON YOUR INCOME WHEN
YOU RE'fJRE?
If you cannot answer YES to ,
these questions, plan to attend tht
PreRetirement Cl•sses sponsored
by RSVP and the Hockman Group.
These sessions will enable you to
gain valuable infommation on what
. you can do to prepare for your
future. The classes will' be held
May 6, 13, 20 and the 27th from
6:30 p.m .-9:00 p.m. in . the
conference room at the Meigs
Senior center. Cost fo( the classes, . .
which includes a learning manual,
will be $30 per person/couple: You
A class or nursing students rrom Hockin&amp; Collflt, with Instructor Aqle.Ronsh, R.N., vllited the Center
MUST pn:register for the: classes. :
recently as part or the class community observalloa. The studen.t s were told about the services offered to
So, call today for more information .: .
Meigs County elderly, talked with tbe persoas attending, joined Ia the Phylllcal FltDCSI activities ortbe · or 10 pre-register at 9924216 and ,
day a ad served the noon meal to those atteodlog. The studeats and lastnactor. are shown stllqdlna
ask for Dennis. .
·
·:
behind some ortb~ penoos attendloa tbe NuUitloo Prognm D C M i a l n e • u · r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , :

1997TRIPS ·

P~,Oh1Q

. 1-8011-281-51110

Your

••

.
.Mashed Potatoes

with Gravy
Lima .Beans &amp; Corn
- - RQll - Beverage
Peach Crisp

-

614-992-:3120 -

••

THURSDAY

\ Broccoli &amp; Cheese
,. Cole Sla!V
Roll - Beverage
, Bishop's Cake

• a Fair Prlcel
SSO'PigeSt.
Middleport, Oh. oU780
Home Ph.

• Don Geary, " :'-------=:=:~

Evening meals at Senior Center

TUESDAY

'

~

neede·d

The
Actl.Vl..tl"es·

.

.... ....

Vi0 }unt eers

Enjoy All

,

..
FREE ESTJIIATES ·
·u.c ...~··
1112-4110

(UmtStoniLowRIM)

I

�·-

Pille 10 e The Dilly $1ntlnel

IIOnclly, Aprtl71 1117

•

•

Pome~. Middleport, Ohio

'The Dally Slntlnele Page 11

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
PHU,t,JP
ALDER

450

R~ms

Room lor "'"'' Ideal lor conatruc·
tion worker1 .20 mlnutea from Pa·
moray, contact Peggy at 814-8883035.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
-Upright, Ron Ev1n1 Emorprllll,
Sltepfng rooma with cooking.
Also trailer apace on river. All Jadtaon, Ohio. I-101).53NI528.

hook-ups. Call alter 2:00 p.m.. Tror Built horae tiller, 8/tp, 1850.
304-773o585t,llaaonWV.
304-875-3812.

__

24~788 .

460 Space for Rent

.....,... .

County, Scipio Township. SA 1182
6ust oW SA t-13). awn. lnanc:lng.
Sl500 per acre: Call lor good
mop, 814-S!I:H545.

Real Estate
Wanted

360

Real Estare Land ·Wanted AP:

rerred.
once in
. r.ct 5. t,
Grlnt Fundir)g Sources Preferred.

prox . ACre, Etc. Route 7 North,
Old 35 Spring Valley Area, Rodney, At. 180 Before White Road,
Within Gallipolis City Limits, 814·
448-G833. 814·441·1095.

Send Resumes To; Manager 01
Human Ratourcea, Woodland

Contora, 3o88 State Route 180,
Gallipolis, 01\lo 45831 EOE /AA

Wanted One Acra or Sa. Pr8tar,-

ably Route 7 North, Old 35. 180
Before White Road, Within City
Llnita. 814-+48-8833 or 814-441-

E,.,..,_.

HELP WANTED Man/Women
Earn 1480 Wookly A11embllng

IM

Circuit Boarda/Eiectronlc Component&amp; At Home. Experience
Unnece111ry, Will Train. lmm•

dlato Openings_ Yaur Local Aroo.
Call-~7891 EXT. DIOG4

410 Houeesfor Rent

HOllE TYPIS11,

2 -3 Botlroun Houll Large Family Room, Largo Kitchen, I 112
Baths. Full Baument, Pool, Free
Gas. 114401Mo.• 814-367:5044.

1883
-

lmmadlata Oponlny
A Part Tim,, Fil In

c~.,;~4x70

3br, 2 bath,
·2817altor5pm.

Will haul junk or trash away. $351 1884 Commodore 14x70, Very
Practical Nurse. Must
pickup load. 304-675-5035.
Nice.~ 2 Bedrooms, Central Atr,
able All Shilts. Long Term
Appllanctl, 510,000 814-5~7Experience Preferred. Contact Will paint trailers and doubie 2803 Daytimes; 814-888·8583
The Aaalatant Direc:tor Of Nurs- wides. W_ill give estimate and Ev.-ngL
.
Ing. Lin Leo, At et•·448·7112 roferancel.304-895-3871 .
EOE.
•
.
1985 Pine Ridge mobile home,
Will Sit With Elderly In Their 3br, 2 porches, · $10,000 OBO.
NOW HIRING: Jakl'l Bar l Grill Home. Have References, 814· 304-675-1085.
Fh. 2 IINiwDod. Call for interview
.
304-273-8021 Aok lor RMndo. ~-- .
1993 14170, Olahwaahar•. Haat
lluMba'2t orokfoto.
Pump, Deck, Glamour Both, Sky
FINANCIAL
Light, _Walk-In Cloaeta, Excellent
OM HIU COIIMUNITY
Locailon114-44Hl.701
·
MEDICAL CENTER
210
Business
JD8 POS'I1NG
1996 Hx70 with Iota of extr•!ICall 304-875· 3087 or 304·875Opportunity
0no FuHime Clerical Poailion Ia
4872.
Available In The Home Health
Dopottmont 01 Oak .Hilt Communi-

ty lladlcal Contor. Shill · llay
Vary. Tho Qualified Candidate
Will Provide General Clerical
Function• Such Aa Typirig, Filing.
llonlhly Billing, And Anowerlng
Tho Telephone. Tho Candidate
Mull Be A High SChool Graduate Drastically Reduced Flood DamOr Equivalent And Po11e11 aged Ohio River Camp Grounda,
Compute• /Typing Skill a. Knowl- 11 Acraa, 20 . Full Hook-Upa,
edge Ollledlcal Termlnolgy Ia I.Mgo Brick Building Hu Aport·
Helpful. Ploaao Applr In Poraon monll And Rooma, Will Finance
Of Send Resume To : Oak 1'1111 175,000 814-949-2528 Also '2
Community Medical Center, At- -.om Houoo I Aero.
tention· Branda McKenzie, 350

Local Vend·. Ate. Fo.r Sale. Big

Charlotte Avenue, Oak Hill, OH
45858.

11.358 down, 122timo. Froo air,
aklrdng, &amp; delivery. Only at Ookwood Homo&amp; Niuo, WV. 304-7555885.

aewer and traah Included, 114·
1182-2187.

3 Trallorllo&lt; lllo. 304-875-1078.

National

c::ompany

awarding

Cltr Of Galllpollo, 518 Second
~ne. Gatlipolla. Ohio.

reptacamant home. Call 1-800-

dealership In open market. High 486-7871 lo Hleppolntmont lor
prallt potential conatructlan or details.
aaln. 303-758-3200 axt 7900.
Pool lion Avallabo: Anlotant
FACTORY DIRECT.

=·.

HouMmanager far Realdential
_... Serving and Childran. Hau;s Include Evening~.
and Weekends. High

Thriving Catering Buslnaaa &amp;

NO MIDDLE MAN.

equipment for aale. Priced upon

SAVE IllS.

inspec!ian. 304-e75-4281 or 304·
875-2168.

Diploml or Gad Required.
Appllcanto ahould be Maturo, Ro111H. and able ID Wor1&lt; wllh lllnimum Suporvlolon. Duties Include
Monitoring tho Facility, PrOYidlng
General Houaokooplng Dullea,
Maintaining Dally Log end' An·
owerlng Phono. lnlorostod Appllcanll 1hoUid RopiJ U&gt;: ~"'1nnol, P.O Bo• 454, Gallpolls. Ohio

230

I
Professlona
·

Services

HARTS MASONARY • Block,
brlci&lt; &amp; 1tone work, 30 yoara'oxporlence, roaoonablo rateo. 304895-3591 a~er 8:00pm, nc job to
small or to BIG. WV-021208

Oakwood Homes is lhe only
dealer In th,a ul-atate area that

builda ond 10111 their own
homoo. For tactMy direct pric.oo,
ahop OAKWOOD HOliES, HITFIJ, WV. 304-755-5885.

Pootal Joba Poaliont Available

IT'S .BIG. 1g87 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLE WIDE. $1,848 DOWN,
$318/MO. FREE DE(IVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT- OAKWOOD
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304-7551
Lean 1 Tr.te or
Reuphotatlf 5885. Umitad Oftar.
that ugly Chair. llpholltory Cieaa- .;.;...;...;.....----:-~-:-:---::
SOtring Soonl (614}--141.0777
Largo aaloction al uoad home. 2

Info Call t-800-g94· 2900 E&gt;t.

LlvlngatDn'a baument

iu•'

45831

-'-'-=-=--:---:-'---'-:-o--:-~1 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at $3485.

No Experience Necessar)' For

prooflng, all buement- ::=~~~~3238.
dane, free estimates,

1018.,

( Rotl Eltall Solospooplo wanted

guaranloo. IOyra on job

bY

1

Quick delivery. Call t-800-1137-

:-:--::--:-:::::-:-::::::--:--:;-:=-:;:Limited Ollorl 1897 doublowido,

almost avery company 1n ence.~75-2145. •
3br, 2bath, SUSI9 down, 12~9/
tDwn. complete educational re· 1Jlllitllllii'i' i.•. •' iiitlliiiiiiiiiillilil month. Free daliverr &amp; 1atup.
Onl~ at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
quiremanll In one month. Comrnlllion approved correspon- 11
WY. ~-756-5815.
~course. Complete at your
'New 19G7 14X70 lhrH -ba«oom,

. pace. Jock Kolloy'a Northo~tern
. College ol Real Eotate. C I for
troo brcdiU"'I-800-7118-44n.
Roaponolblo peraon tD watch two

CoU 114,446-•514 11-F. 'ReierAnd Reliable
I Ro-

a,•:a11 1

E.,..._

-~-·~·

• .....,
IO ~·"- any ,.-eronce,
limitation or clloctlrniMIIon
baaecl on race, color, rollgfort,'

This~wllnot
kn..&gt;1lngty accept
advertllemontalor realoalate
wttlchl,lnvlolationoftl101aw.

-OUr readers are hlf'lby
Info"'*' 111111 ct slnga

DeniJd tn lhilne ,......
a"'avo-onanequll

OIJPOriUI'IIY ba._.

Pro-.

Send - - · To: llonagor 01
- · Rooources. Woodland
- . , 3086 State Routo teo,
..,_..Ia, 01t1o 48631 EEO /AA
'

olt981iwhlchmakolll· ~l

makeony·auchpreforonce,l
llmltallonO&lt;-rlmfnatlon."

&amp;.upper! Sorvicu Worker - A
Community llortlll Agency
SOlVing A Threo County kH Ia
lotltlng Condldltel Foi Tho Po·
Ilion 01 Suppilrt S,Orvlc11 Work·
.,, Appilconll Should Have A
Hilh ·$ehool Diploma Or GED
Wfllt The Ability To l'Jpo At
L-1 :10 wpm. Appliconta With
Expor-lonco AI A R-pllonill, ·
...... CIM. Or Medical AICD . .
Clorll st.ould Apply. Wo)-lllcl
1.1, 1.0 An4 Elritrltnoo With

~

AH real utale advertising In
this n o - r Is &amp;Wioct to.
lho Ftdoral Fair Housing Act

sex familial atatuJ or natiOf)ll
origin, or any Intention to

Comml1aion. Qualified APP.IIcants

........., CornpuWo

'kMv•••
WI-

1..

Included, no lnoldo pets, deposit

and rafaranca1 required, 61-4 1182-3080.

lolgl.
2 S.droom Ver~ Clean Cfirport,
Heal Puq&gt;, No l'wtl, l'brlllr k.._

'
he'll~

2 mlln from

Rutland out New lima Rd .• .814·

742-2803 or 614-742-2421.
3 Bedroom, 2 Bat~l, CA, Or
Large Private Lot In Green
School Dlatrlcl$350, 814-928·
2488..
Three bedroom mollllo homo, out-

aide ol Pomeroy, 814-982-5030
baloreGpm.

Apartments
· for Rent

440
t aricl2 -

apartmanll, fur-

nished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pats, 114-

892-2218.

REAL ES1ATE

HomiS for Sate

ION Soctlonll 241152 2br - ·
2 full blthl, centr1t air, decks,

"~8822.~~;;~;;~E
to

510

Household

Applianc.,:

Recondllloned

7795.

'

GOOD

.

USED

APPLIANCES

macNIII.

330 Flll'miJor Sale
150 tCit loim, I 112 I!Ory , _ .
deled houat, new gar•ee. new

350

Lou &amp; Acreage

1 AC I 2 AC Iota lor nit In

Scenic

Vllley

Subdlvll~n.

Lot' 1001t48 On Lariat Drlvo,
,15,000 et•~l-1450 No_,,

...Pioolel

Adorable

.(KC

Roglattrtd

·Chineaa Pug Puppy 2 Females,

Sholl &amp; Wormed, Vet Checked,
Now Accepting Deposit, Alklng
ranges. Skagga _,ppllancoa, 78 $400, Bt•-38fl.a325.
Vine Street, Call 814-448-7398,
1-800-4G&amp;-3488.
Kltclton Carpet $8.50, Solo on AI
Room size Carpet and Vinyl llollohonCof1181S 814-44&amp;-7444

448-3228

Sofa Bad, Very Good Condition,
With C.W.: $300 814-44U-o&amp;57
Uoad Fumilllro 130 Bulavllo PIM.
eolar T.V., Dryer, Oeska, Bookcases, Beds. Mattreu••· Type-

White Waatinghoule washer, I
dry•, Iota than a y..r ald. Black

520

'Sponlng
Goods

700 Remington BDL 30-08. 304875-2458.

530
Buy

. Antiques

Ot aell. illv~rlne An11ques,

1124 E. llaln -~ on Fh. 124,
Pomeroy. 'Houra : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 11 B:DO p.m., Sl.lnday 1 :00 10
B:OO p·.m. 814-1102-2528, Run
Moore owner. ·
Kitchen

ca- .Oth Flower Bond,

Shararon Chaar Charry With Reeded Columna Fancy .Victorian

Wicker Rocker Aller 5 P.ll. 814·387-7871.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchan~lse
~.000

AKC Reglaterad ritlniahrre Pinch-

era, 6wks, 1 male, 2 remalea.

$250. 304-578-2444. '

AKC Rogloterad Sholtioo 2 Years
Old. I Mala; t Female, Not Rolatad, Mull Sool614-148-1457.

Pete Plua, Silver Bridge Plaza.

814-441.0770.
PuppNta- miniature Schnauzera,

'78 John Dooro 2840, 2WD with

·1 48 . end leader, 82 hp, 1687
houn, bucket. forks and blade;

so· projection TV, •380. -B14-892-

With Culllvators, Side Drauar;

25UB.

Baby bad &amp;. high chair. 304-1753252.
Babr bed, llrcillor, owing, ploy
pen,
304-ll75-4548.

car...._

Boola By Rodwlng, Chippewa,

Tonr Lama. Guaranteed

Lowoot Prlcea At Shoo Cafe, GaiNpoUa.

5784.

18U GIIC Luxury Van, look,_

ot-07·f7

aAQ2
If

t3.1100 lrrn. ~-­

:1~88=5~S-~1~0~~~.747V~-e~.~v.~ry~D:::~1

l MlJT OJT 1Q OIW£R

:

. Wf'IH MY

1g52 Ford 8N Sharp, Farmall Cub
Toro Wheolhoroe Lawn Tractor,
Seara 18 HP Lawn &amp; Garden
TractDr, Cub Cadet With 42 Mowor Dock Arlana CRTI4 Lawn &amp;
GartJan Tractor With 48 Uowar

Declt. 814-448-8227. '

For Rent Of lnao: oa_.. Skid
s- LDodora. .. Check Wllh Lowon c. Shinn TracfO!I 814•4481044.

Grublb'a Plano- tunine &amp; ropolro.
Problams? Neadl\tnad? Call thO
plano Dr. 814-448-4526

-

JET

AERATION IIOTORS
Repeirad, &amp; Ribult In Stoclt.
Call Ron EYIIIII, 1-800-537-8528.

Float Bad Pllllii.Bt•258 8504.
POUIIUILDINIJ SPECIAL
30'x40'xD'. Polritod Steal Sid II,
GaMittmo Sitol Roc~ 15'x8' Stool
Slidtr, 3' llan Door, $8,777.
ERECTEO. Iron Horaa Bulltlora 1800-352-1045. .

Livestock

630
Beautiful &amp; Talontad

7 Volt Old
•II
I
Mare AQHA are 2,500 01·~r
Top Quality Horooa Available,
814-378-2832.
H
R · t-• nd Non-Ro~
or••

UBi Plymouth Grand Furr
air, txc cond.-11.500. 304-875- .
3824·
1ge7 Plymou.lh Reliant PS, PB,
Air, Good Condition, 814-3877480.
1968 Chevy Aotro II ark Ill,
Loaded, Runo Looka Groatl
14,200 No Reuonablo"OIIor Ro-

tt

1988 Ford Taurus, oleculc wind·
ows. tilt. crui... power locks. loadad, low miloa, clean. Will con~dor
lrado.l2250 0110. 81 4-Ga2-5824.
1988 Ford Thunderbird Turbo
Coupe .. Wheela 18 inch Sot ol
Four S100 81 4-25!1-11832
-.

a

•·

19g3 DoOge Grand Caravan SE •
75,000 Milot. Excellent Condition, :

1988 ~do. 4dr., air, runa gr..~
exua Ctean, tour new tires, no

aluminum wheels, luggage rack, 1
bug detector, tinted Windows, ex- •

$11.00081.448 4606.

Rlvoralde Aparlmt(lta .ln lllddloport. From •238-$304 •
814882-!iOtlo. Equal Houolng
llnilll.
Ono
monta, two
houu: In lliddloport, 8
2178.

ltoma and large II&gt;JI- Call 114·
882-3725.
.

Roorri1 and Cozy
WOolt Of Month, Ulllllloa,
Ralrlgorall&gt;t, '1M! end CA
od. ConatrucUon Workoro Woi...... 1........2515

Lawnmowor Grtlvaly 8 HP Dual
Whools Snowblado Cultlvatoro
30• llo-. Lawn M-r SuikJ
1975, at4-31111•4t.

PR~··

-·-

§~~~~~~~~il Toll
Digital
Plqturt to
I Buy.
Digital
Sound.
No Equipment
Call
NoWI
Free 1--.531-4321. Dlawlt&gt;ulod by Timowarnor Satellite
•

For Solo NEC llultlmadla Compuler
W/14' SVGA Monitor
o1ong w11200-Roin aan... wartt
over tz.soo.oo Will aell lor
$1,500.00. (81~11112

~;::::~:::-.:.~~~-:-­

640

. Hiy &amp; Gnlln

"EorCorn"BI4-4411-IOIO.

3 333 Pd. Lawronce County To."

lticco Baae laue Anllable,

-

•f't,~J

.

•l,lt1T'.'r;

no ......,.

a Merchant
7 Slorecllodder
a Beer barrel
9 Givaa up
.
(ont'a rtgllto)
10 Sll-.y (jlott.)
11 M~lc pjec;e
16 Sault ~ Marte
20 WIIKy ·
atlbstanot .
lncork ·
23 Roatrum
25 S\Melol
dllortlet
29 Atlevlatea
30 Mix up
34 Exlllro (2

3 Me&lt;llclnal root
4 Cong. mem.,.r

1 Football cooch

1gg5 Ford Explorer XLT Spor;;

collont condition. aoklng $20,000, i
•lrttoreotad cal B14-84t-2528.
.:

111811 Covalior 2 Doors. RIS; 191111
Cavalor 2 Doo•: 19110 Eocort LX
Book Price: $3,400 Sa.ll Prlct
12,150; Cook Motors, 814-448-

'

I

XLT, ·white, very law mileage, all&lt;-

1

!

740 . Motorcycles

1873 Harley Da.ldaon $Qortllor, ij
s•Soo firm,
814-illl2-8520.
.

very clean, very last,

0103.

1880 Flroblrd, Auto Trana, TTops, AM9Y -11 &amp; All Options
Excolont' Condlllon, ...795, Cook
Mototl, 814-44&amp;0103.

I

lellt Kowaaaki 100 On IOfl ~ •
Original Tlru, Excellent Condl;
tion,AsiUng $800,814-378-2801 . t

7::::-::-7'-::-:-::::::-:::::-:::::::-1

1116 Honda Accorcl LXA, Auto,

i

~

IF T\-\1~ OffiC£ WEJ1:£. II.
YOU WOOl.D &amp;:.
T\-\E-1-\::U. !

1084 Harley Davlaon Spansrer

11

40-Derne '
This week I have what I hope you
41 Dog liSin.
will agree are half a dozen interesting
42' Paradlaea •
deals. Going tbroltllh some pa(lers lhe "lt,.l""'f-+-+....
45 Mil. rank·.
other day, I came upon four deals in a
48 Bandleader
·'
press· release from the 1995 Biarritz
Brown .
50 I think,
, festival &lt;so named for the picturesque
therelora
town in southwest 'France in which
the competition is held during the fi111t
two weeks ol July) .
Wouldn't you agree thai Easl was
on rock-solid ground in doubling four
by Lula Campos
.
spades? Well, just watch!
•
~ Cipher Cf'YPtoarema·•re c:reattcltrom QUOCtlione bV tamou11 peopte, peat and present
West led the heart, king. &lt;His tw!l·
•
Each letlei in the cipher standi for another. TocMy'a clul: V eQWII P
heart opening was a weak lwG.~bid,
showing a good six-cai'd suit and some
PCK
E C W P
W N. W ll F 8 D
' F P' 0
6·10 high-Card poJnts.l
•
'lbe unnamed declarer judged from
E C K8
YM
NWB
J Nw
/lt. MY. U
the dduble that Eael was looking at
the diamond
and lour or live powAFDOKT
C J N W B
AU
H C W O. K Y
erful trumps. After winning with dummy's heart aqe, South called for dumIW HG
my's diamond king , which was
~overed by East's ace and ruffed in
·h and. Now came lhe club ace, club
king and a club ruffed witb dummy's
~
·spade two. Declarer threw a heart on
~UT,
the diamond qu.e en: then he ruffed a
diamond in band . South continued
with .a I!IP club, d,i scal'ding a heart
WOlD
from ljte dummy: East ruffed and exitlAM I
ed with his remaining diamond. but
South ruffed and played another clull,
throWing dummy's last heart.. After
• ·
- ......words
ol betho
four-ocro!llbiod
ruffing, East had to lead away from
low
ro
form
·
fotir
•
lite spade king into dummy',s 8~e,,
'
~ - -'
"''
queen. .
THY CAT
South's 10 tricks were dummy's two
•
. trump honors, the heart ace, the dia.' l
mond queen, the ace-liing or clubs, a
. '
club riiff in the dummy and three diamond .ruffs jn ~and. He had lost just
SUE G T
three trump tricks. Mognifique'
EaSt couldn't make bricks even with
carbon:fiber straw.
·

.

Riders· -Baaa Boats· · Sea Ark'"'

range Financing Evan If 'You
Havo Been Turned Down Bolo&lt;e.
LOin. Available For No Credit,

StrMt. ..,._._,Ohio.

Bod Credit And Bonlttuptt:y Buyoro,Ca1Diano6t4-448-8172.

760

AUto Parts &amp;
AcciSIOrles

1

I"

J

'

ilr""-rl-1 0

.,~--

7
h-""T.,8;-T.I';...

1

-.

5

-

Complere ,lhe . chuckle quoted

by filling in the missing words

L.....I.-.L.-1'-...L.-'-:--' you drwolop Irom llep .No. 3 bel~.

0

CARS FOR $1001 Trucks. boa II, '5 5 .......:, ~-l•~·e Tr"ns Front &amp; :
4--lara, moll&gt;r Mmeo. furnl....- ~· w.. ••
111 ,., oioc:tronica,' computers etc. ~:; ~~g~~.r ~ ~=:.l,~h. ~~ :,
by FBI, 'IRS, DEA. Availablo your
area now. Call1-800· 513·4343 1815P.M.
·
""" •
Ell 5-8388
'
I

KEEPING
..._ ...... , AWAKE?

84

128 ~7~.~~~~~~~~

I

I

---1.,---~,--::---:--:::::-.:' John Boata ,Johnaqn Outboarc!--.l
Aulo Laan1: Auto Deater WiU Ar- MolorL llarlnt Sarvleee, Ktrl\\ .,
114-ft2.e5l~Q,

II

G'ranny told the ne-.yfly- _ _ . _ _ weds,"Yau only get the ull
;:::;=.~;:;-;;;:;~~~value of joy if you have some·
·.
T. W [ N H E - ~one to - • • it-· --."

1

. .\
__

. .

w

R YJ K E
_ 1-"""R'Is-rr-lr...,lrl~,
..

Boat Sltlo Going On Now -Aquat-, ,
ron Boell ·Cutty Cabins -Bow o

e.tQ

a

I

,i1 ;

01~Aftar8PM

. 35 Aclllr
Peler 31 Former
Soviet
leacler
31 Clou~ ••,.,.
39 Prlnto ·

ace

I

1881 Ho~da Accord, 82,000
Mlloo. Great Condition, 1 ownor,

K

c

191ia Yamaha YZ8o .Pirt Blkt ~
Bored Out Super Fall Good Con-, .
dillon, $500, OBO Bt4-4&lt;til-85B8. · '

1888 Plrmouth Sunclanca, • dOor,
automatic, air, good condition,
St500 nrrn. et4-D02-&amp;53t.
.

Pass
DbI.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I90S Ford Ranger 4x4 Super Cab :
ir)g 118,000. K intorootad caN 814N-2528.

.,.,..-+---t-----i-1

By Phillip
Alder
.
.

DOES NOT
6EC&lt;JM E '(OU, MA'AM

!

·~AMILE
ITERS
5

1
I

New nas
.tanka, 1 toil truck
•

I I I I I lnl I I I I

SCIAM-l!TS ANSWBS .
Darkly Yeast- Chump • Benzol··YOUR HEAD
An elderly genUeman told me that a goad rule for
friendship was to keep your heart softer than YOUR ·

HEAD.

wheela &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; A AutO, 1
15877
Ripley, WV. 304•372-3933 or 1- 1
1100-273-8328.
·
iJ
_
Rad llborglasa truck topper, tlnP"

.

.

·

APRIL 71

IMONDAY

ed wln~wl, fronl slider, fi~ Ford_;.

rl

long wid~ bed. I I 50, 304-8758884 ....mgL .
.
'
. 11I
Upton Uood Cora Fh. 82·3 11~01
· 11
South ol Leon, WV. Financing 790
Campera &amp;
.,..i
- 3 0 4 4511-tOOI.
Moto_
r ·Homes
~':

l

iJhlcks for Slle

19g8 Stroan:t.Lito Compor 25 Ft.•~ :
Like Naw, Awning, Air, Rofrlgora-·
180 lrtornalionol
Load1 112
~~- ......_
Tono,
l2' Flatbed With
Ra~ks.
V· tor lfr-e&lt;
' Bolh '~""""•-.,..
I, 4 ~ NOIJ Tna, Pairr, 8-1. Pull With V-B • .31 $7,800,
Low MiltLa, Aolti-I 5,BOO, &amp;14- Can See At Royal O.ka304-273··•
4882 ~flor 5.
.
-.,,.
44f.4, 814-379'2801.
'
...

720

tD74 ~ord Rongor XLT Trollor
Special,
F100 lo.odod,
Tonka, BodSida
Tool Bo&gt; Dual
and
Much ~ore, 3BOVI, Auto, All
Po-,.AII Oflglnal, R~na Good,
lluil Soli $800 OBO. 814·448·
11082
.
1ga4 GMC 314 Ton He

Y Out)'

A
"I

B10

lmplo~ements

W
._,:·.

• •
BASEIIENf
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltionallllotimo guor,ntot.

ASTRO-OIIAPB

Local ref•rtncei •fumlahed. £a-

Matchmaker can http you understand
whet to do to mrt1te lite ritlatlonehfp work.
BERNICE
Mill $2.7510 Mtltcllntlltet. c/o fltia - Bl!:DE OSOL "paper. P :O . Box 1758, Murray Hill
. St11ion, New Yor1t, NY 10158.
TAURUS (April 20 lily 20) Try 10 handle -~ mat1ers early in lite
day . You are more In tlarmany wilh
.-when your mind Ia tr.htr.
·
OI'IWtl (Mir 2Ntllll 20) MN11-dlllleull
to gamer euppor1 flam olhera for ' your
· • · ~ c 1111 • ~- llllpe up your praattllllion Ill Ill their .... .....
'
• CANCEJI (.-.. 21-,Niy II) l'iat aulng
projecta which have yet to produce
rewlrda couril 1M 111411&amp;allng todolj.
T..-,, Aprl 11117
Your expectallorta will 1M met, II you

·=

-

AppH.,co PortO And SeiviCo: All
Nome Branda O..or 25 Yeara Erporienco All Work Guaranteed,
French Cit(Maytag, 814-441 ·
7195.
·

-:7::-::--:-::----r:-:-

=::7-:--:-~::-:::-;--;-::-:;-:;:;;:-1 C&amp;C General Homo lolaln· Palniing, vinyl aiding,
, doors, .Ondows. bathl,
repair and ,..... For
COli CloO!, It 4-11112·

~

114-251-1748.

Taking .,.,. fDr •Lacco •••
bod planla. Call 304-HS·st..
teaVO IIIOOUQI, OtnnJ De·

28Actnoa
Ruby-

5 Singer Adami

Aockno
Z FllgllttHa blrtl

DOWN

· wda.)

4x4, loaded._ automatic, red , ex :~

IV86 TrJI Am t-lops. white, runo
great, loCks great, loaded. 304-

Dbl.

·Pass 4 •
Pass .. Pass
Opening lead:' •

collont condition, 30,000 mile¢!!
518,500,814-882-7574.
-

1988 lluatang GT, red/ gray,
llYIIrttge mileage, good condition,
aoklng $5500. 11' intoroatod call
81-.2529.

AIC, 'PSi PW, Pll, Caaaotta,
23,000 llj!ea, $14,500, 814-448-

Pass

.\

••

1081 Ninon 4x• ,2,500 080,
tD85 F-150 V-8 Automatic,
t2,750; 18114 Bronco; 1$111 Ran&amp;or 12,250: 1881 S-10 Automotic;
18 Fl Car Trallor $850, 114-318-

.t:':.J.~ &lt;IIJ-..., ..,.._
age ·
•10 t712. 10112
I1Cia~:~4114-IJHIN
tuae Prl• In·
Twin AMnT-, ,__.,... cWM
for Sale
applica-1or 1bt. HUD ~
fzad 1p1. lot olde;!l ::d hartcll· Nordic Ridge lly Hordle ~ck 1M1 U.... Plllt, JSI ¥-1. Meda
Clflllod, EOH :104-1
ll.
U1111. lt4-24H1k
fllirf, . . . . . . . . . . ., ..
.

-

.,

BARNEY

•

1g93 Rodeo iauzu 4 wheal drlw,
arc, po, pb, pdl, pw, oull&gt;, cruloo,

seao. 814-742-2370.

614-448-HM.

2•.

3a

•

lllo. Old l'tlldiillclt- Bul; 7
llo. Old Rod ~na~.-.. Sired 11u1
814•245-5030 Boloro g P.ll.

~~~~~~~~~~
Pomeroy Tltrlh
Shop- nowaummor
ltuylne
tl
living. I and 2 badtuom furniture,
ohlldren't
apartmanta at Village Manor and ·clothoa, maternity clo,thos, baby :::'=:~51":.=

Utnbllto-

Aweek of goodies

Fifth Wheel S~tup Pow r Wind- talllfahad 1875. Call (814) 448· - ·
OWO. AW Conditioning, T Whool, 0870 Or 1-800-287.0511. Rc
. -~
AMing $1,500 Of
Trade Watrlt[&gt;r&lt;IOing.
,
For Sn)llllorTNd&lt;, 81
0148,
.
•
. " , . f

ariJU

c-

· · Vulnerable: North-SOuth
Dealer: West
South . Weat Nortb East

1991 Chevy Van Fun Size Sh · :
Whoolbuo Ont Owner, 72 •
Loaded, Exi:ellont CO!Idition, Ro- I
crodo, 814-44&amp;-1444.
_:

I :::'":=lad7-:B~1~"':':4~1-o&amp;..:.:..3~1-·:-:-:-.:-=-::-

i0tarad814-388-B358
N- aduli' -•tern saddto. 304675-5040.

eQII

stewart
47 Hammer or
chleal
•
,.
4t
with 1ce
1t Purpoealul . 51 Rllgn
21 VIctory aymbol 52 1'/pe of atlclt?
22 Slorltflt
. !13 - - ol brtclca
b!tllding
54 SUIIHIItra, In
il4 Mercury or
Perla
n1c11to1
56 Noun lllfflx
'21 AuthOI'
·58 Femfnlnt11111

--·

1011 Ranger Ext Cob, 4x4, V.e,l
AulD, AC, PW, PL, Exc., Cond., •
Neg., 814-~fi8.8257.
' ,:
I Dgo Chouy S-1.0 Bluer •WD-~
..Collont conclllon, ooklng seoo:"'
814-11112-8548.
.
1881 Chevy Blazer ~-1 o •x~.:.,.
QOOd condldon, loaded, ,_ droa, 1
asking 110,500. If inte,.atad call o
.814-848-2401 .
·1 :

Budfiel f'rlce Tran,aml•sione,

No Till Com Planter, W.hlll- 5400
Plant /Airo Model With Eloclronic
Sood Monitor; International Wagon, lllrwino Gow 114-448-0103.
Now Taking Ofdoro For Tobacco

13 c..v ,_.
14 lltrft
15 K-end
forlut

V ua.t unuaual

.

Hydraulic Oil $10.95-Sgal pail.

NH-477 Hoyblno, NH-8-45 Round
Baler-Finger Whool Rake, NH
Spreader 814-379-2871 or Soo
Don Cox on Parlot Rd;

:~o::.c-

•AKJ63

1
lawn
Mower parta
repa"lr. ·
Sidoro EqulpmonL
304-875-7421.

Upright&amp; IIJ)Ifl1 ........2857.

aKJ!0 .93
• 6
'
·•AI087
• 'Q _IO ~

Smtth
a87654
• a· 1 4

. ~ao
'IQ.J EAT?

Concreto a Plootlc Septic Tanka,
300 Thru 2,(100 Gallons Ron

Good Uood Carpet IBXID Color
~ 1.-. 11-,3 HP Ettrlka

I,AST'

&lt;•·· -l

l

50,483 mlle1, 318 engine, aUto,

ruot,

KQJ953 .
J 53 2
9 8 7

t&lt;lALlY.• .

Cheap- wood picnic tablo, 2 11
2'18', frame good, IDp and Mill
noad roplaclng, 814-DG2·2304.

304-875-4875 5080 or 1·1100--7883. ·
:-:::.;*;;:-.ga.::;._______ l For Laasa; 143g lba. Tobacco
458 112 Second lwt. Galllpolil. 2 Booo .25 cents lba. Call 8t4-448BR., AC, ·Appllancoa. .. 50 Mort 082•
•225.00 depoalt. Utllitloa
For Solo Wolll tanning Bod. (814)(81•)-4-48-2128
245-5884
.

~

1g17 FOfd Taurus, 4 Doora, Au· 885 1258
I
toma~ 814-3'111·2720 AFTER I .
I
P.ll. "
'
1Dill Chivy Full Slzt Conuorllon
Van, Whito and Navy Exctllonl
U17; Mulla~o pa, pb, air, au- Contlldort, lew Mileage, Price Ra,.
I
tomiflc $80_0. OBO. 304-875- dUcod. 814-448-'1828,
150D.I

'

Eotat

pendable Many New Pana: v

12,1100080,,81431110301.

A 10 2

• 52 ,

rr I I d i -

17 Muaiciono'
· =m

tKQ964

SEK ol: MEEK

good, runs good. 128,000 mlteat

Credit Problema? Gourantoad Fi· Siamng at 1!18.00 and Up, Uaod 1
nanclng·., 10% Dawn, Parments Rebujlr, .All T~pea, Over 10,000 :
Siders Equipment, Henderson, Aa Low,('s t110 Per Month. NO Tflnlmisalons, Acc:es1 Transfer
wv. 304-875-7421'
Turn D.... al call Ruth 614-448- Cues &amp; Roar Endo, 814-245-

doposlt.

Thla Ia Tho 0nt You've Lottkln&amp; For. 0no a J liiWII; ENl,., Wolhor, Dryor, - .. Rolrlgorotor lncilllled, Wo Par Wo·
ttr &amp; Garbage. No Poll, No
Smallltl $100 Dopoolt, tiel Mo..
814 uns•. 11~

1
I

2; 0 0

$12,000 080, 814-992-7421 .

lbr apartmortt. Appliancoa, ""'"' bundle. 1120 a bundle, random

~

18113 S10 4x4 BIIJor. ptr"!
t2,:100otOBOS14-245-5158 '

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

Jlw

lllnte
43 " - ' • 44 Light 441 Sl~-

MCk

AKC chomplon bloodline, shots
Like New, Low Mileage Aoking..,
and, wormed; alao tiny loy Poo- 19g2 Buick LoSabre axe cond, Prlce$8,000Bt .. 441-0t55.
,
cleo; 814-887-3404.
g:;~• !!,~pt. 18,800. 304-773·
t
1
98
10
Purple Ribbon UKC Rag laterad
h 1• H,onda XkA
~· W t~~!; •:
Treeing Walker Pupa. DOB 1982 Oldsmobile $4,000; IUS ~_;.
_•proc at. • '
·
~~:
58
tttt7tDS Cfiampionlhip Blood- Full Size Ford van 82,000 lllloa
ineaColl814-258·9t34
13,500814-N-2528.
300 4X4 4-wheolot '
Start now to pftllont IieBI
1883 Chov-·6ovllo&lt;
now, 140011..1,_,.·94\!
doga &amp; e~~ts without inte~m,,~a,l_._~c.. 1 C~llnder, Air. Auto.
''
- .. Aolt R&amp;G FEED &amp;
Condition, •1,000 Mllea
750 Boats &amp; Motors \ :
8 u -D92-21B4 about
flrm814--.7t27
tor Sele
JACK TABLICKS. C'-ablo, nu- 1 ~ 4 Do-~ 0 lnfteeld ES, food""
~
trltioua. Rapols leoo nalllral~ ,
""
_,
1
82,000 m lea, .. lor Bob 304- 10118 s - t a r Pontoon wn •• -" '1
&amp;75-1812 alter a:oopm 304-l!75- or. 80hp Mercury, ,_ ..,ggy_10p,.:,l1
FARM SUPPL IES
7725.
;
15.000 neg. 304-773-5704. Goocl';'..,
condllon.
~
&amp; L IVESTOCK
1885 Dodge Neon 2 Doora Sport .;;......,,-~=~--::~-:---!· ' 1
Coupe, 7,500-lllloa: AuU&gt;matlc, 1080 TF IBOOTracker Boll Boot 1 1
AC, Cruiao, Til~ CD Player, Alk· 18' -Fiborglaaa "HP Johnson/. ,
Loaded, Very Good Conditio~
610 Farm Equipment . lng:I7,8500BO,BI4-2fi8.8ta&amp;.

PSI Hoi &amp; Coid Water Powor Woahor 18 HP Engine, Loll
E-1814-388-0413.

Rocky.

1o.. Monte Carlo 59 305 high
OUtput, call Iller 8pm, 304-$75-

675-5379.

writers, Collactablol, Chairs, TabiH, 81~-48-4'1112 Hra IG-4. Wo. Full Blooded AuotraMan Blue Rad
· Hoole&lt; Pupplea Blot-;178-2838
Buy Ulad Furnltuo.

down, only •190/mo. •Monster

your frM appUcation for p,.,..,_
provo~ • (~7.H1113. wno onawer tawe ftlme and n.tm.., an

Featuring Hydro Bath . Don

Washera, dryera, retrlgaratora,

l garbage lurniahod. $225/mo., length &amp; random width. 304-773-

now HUD approved homoa ready
for lnatant doiiYOry. Trade-In wei·
como. Your cholco: 2BR, $850
d0W11, onlr 1175/mo. 3BR tt,D$0

Size Spacial' t8x80-Your&amp; lor
only St,450 down 1235/mo. All
homoalnclude clelivory and ntup, t ;S,r. 'lmronty, trr. ol ownersln'auranca p1id In lull .
Plua if yctU coli now, your choice
ollroo oltlrdng "'8/mo. lr" lot
rent 0 .park ol your Choice. No
appllcotlon rolusodll Phontln

A Groom Shop -Pet Groomln8.

Washers, Dryera, Rangaa, Rafrl· Sheeto. 373 Goorgto Cre.ek Rd.
gratora, 80 Day Guaranletf 8 I 4-o44tHJ23 I.
French City Ma~tag , 614-·Utli-

-~~~~~~~~~~~
11-800-537-11528.
!
~Fa.:r::m~L=u~m.:b::e::r:.,ap-p-ro-x-.80:-:::071t-pjt"":'
,r
pluo

Plets for 5ale

560

Goods

755-7t0t.

~~~~~~~~~~~ oncr oulbuildlnga, 814-742-

3-lo

Equlpmont~75-7421 .

Evans Enterprlaea, Jackson, Ol-t

---~----:::-::~
OWn your own homo -Ill Brand

In
NIT, out llulldlng, 3 112 miloa Oul Wodgo Roalty, "Bioltor 304-4175...... 1 IIIIIL 1ono1 - T o: Slndhill Rd . • !1-1.000. ~4-175· 2122

an cw.,;

Two bedroom house, c;lean, atove

814-3811-1100.

Block, brick, oowtr pi pea, windowa, lintels, etc. Claude Winter&amp;,
Rio Gra~a. OH Call 81•·2455121·
(lravaktaa atwtr IMP•· Sider•

New Bank Aepo'el Only 3 left.
owner financ ing avallabl•. 304·

'

, ·1 100w
Main
II. Pl.
PileiI'Otlnt
Prooun1
.,.('11'#11110. DeHiino: April

Twa bedroom houae In countr~.

Tuppers Plalna water, dopooil .ro&lt;1141fod. 814-8112-7201 . '

.:.3238,....--,-,-~,---:-:~-:-:-7'"

814-8115-8847 .. .
WANlED:
IALEIPEASON
Mult B. E xe.:tr~nced In All
fii1UII of Aft
II Romodoling
And Roofing. Flvt ¥11 01 Soltl
EJpor-lonco Roquiled. Salary &amp;

•

Small 2br houoe, furnished, uUIItlol partially paid, d•pooit raq~~lrod. 304-li7H512.

include&amp; a montha FREE lot rent
Only $181 .86 per month with
11050 down. Call 1-800-837-

children, my home or youra,
Cheater. mull be dependable,

MERC HANDI SE

frl8orator, CA. Provided, 1100 ·&amp;.brasa gla" table &amp; chair. 304875-4488.
-Each, 814-4-411-2515

2 bedroom, gai

D-llollol Plogrom
8363.
We havo 11000 to Uooo por
home In disaster relief funds
Pre-Engineered Ileal buildings. available 11&gt;. help you purchaea a

Pool Maintenance Man Appl~ At:

Room For 3 lndvlduala. Homer
Environment Utilities, Stove, Re:.

t4x80 All El.. ulc, 2. Badrooma,
waD StcMt IRo~lgoraiDf, Country
Sonlng, 814·2511-.1044 Coli EV&lt;In-

Cash Weekly. Call t -800-350·

EOE

· 3 Bedroom, 2 baihl, 1425/mo, no
pota, rofotooncoa &amp; "-•it. 304875-274G.

420 MQblle Homes
,. ,for Rent ·

1QG7 uxoo 3' Dr 4 Bedroom,

up

AKC Roglatorod Collloa With
Kltclton Carpet $8.50 yd. Sale on Padlgrao &amp; Shots Trl &amp; Sables
aK Carpet, Ro!&gt;m Size Rtm'a 814- 814·532·37'111.

RENTA L S

PC uurs needed. 145,000 In·
como potential. Call l-800-513o13-13 Ell 8-8388.

ren~

Building
SupplieS

550 ·

10 18180'0. $90 per monlh, wa111r,

remota, beautiful land; Melg1

i

12::;..

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!

Conetruction Worktra Welcome
814--448-81122, 814-441-5187,

lDta For Sale: Cono MIM Road, 81·

18&amp;2 Ctvyllor llboren a Doora,
AulD. Till. CNiM. TlNo, \lory
qaod Cartotictn, Bl,..._tea

1079 Chauy ahon bad 380, 4101(
~"':.good be!&lt;~)\ 15.,

1US Ford Econollno 110 van( l
Rood Crall dlllgn, 302, runo !
good, loekl good, $2100, 814-l

King a · Motel Low'lt Ra1o1 In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemax, ShoWtlmo &amp; Dlanoy.
Wllkly Rltoa, Of MonilfJ Ra.._

Mobile home apoco1 lor

i

18878ulclt Cenllry 12.000: 18117
Qldt Caiola ID75; Honda ~0
1350:ftHIMIIDI

Furnished

1-~

I _l _ 111
Ultit

a llrlrlflon..

730 v.na&amp;.t-WDI

1115 Oldl Ra;aq 11,000 MI-..
lalidld,l1_4 4 •• 8227.

Two bedroom opartmont In llld·
dloporl. no poto, Bt4-DG2-5851.

t1 u.a. 11ldlm
31 Atolhor l'lemlnt
IINIMIDII.
34 DriWI out

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your
lllfl!yle lor lhe year 811ead, both
~ Md pr 11 1 111. Wllaltvtf t1111t

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1111 elite hiW c:anpllll Mnoty ot Pill'·
poee today, grNter tlentflta can . ba
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wll1l 1I illiCit ' " - llut 11M you.... a ktdt'$111 ......
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LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) II lhe terms
arsn't spelled out tar ·in_lll'vltnce. you
might not reap everything ypu shOuld
from a join\ endeaVOt' today. Startlrom .a
IOiid bale .
SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) Be certain
your mate Is In accord wllh your inten· ,
tiona today so lhal your needs ""' properly
IAQITTAIIIUS (Nov. aoto. 21) Guartl
lgMWI, inCiina1ion today 10 bluntly 181 It
a Mie. You mighlsay something dlllit:ult
10 ~
kw liter. '
CAFNCCIIIN (OM,
It) Be carelui Wilen 111applng today, ..,.....ly Kyou
make • lltljot putehue. 8e certain an
IIWichettdiN can.,.~­
MaU-NU8("'!"-..,.1'1TIIte~
Ill intpllmet II your Initial thoughta
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to bl ,..., bMI ona. Dllayllttt*.ict fndecillt:a 111
P11 ctll (M.IO P'l aUOI llie tn..,.
live thm Yll!l know ...,; to 110p Mlllng
todly. .,., your Pfllll*l ' - giVen you

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Rockies
humble··

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Pick 3:

808

.· Pick 4:
0190
Buckeye 5: ·
1-5-17-25-27

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' 47, NO. 237
~01M,
Ohio Vll!ey Publlelllng ComPIIIIY
,.
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Cloudy tonlaht, low In
the lo-r 30s. Wednesday,
pertly 'cloudy, high ln. mfd .

i

Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, AprilS, 1997

..

~yracuse to benefit

from $70J~oo grant

Section, 10 P8gM, 31 centa
.A O.nMit Co. New I; i II

.

.

Flood escape route improvement planned
Jl\l JIM FREEMAN .

' '

"

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Residents
feel road
conditions
~angerous

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:. .•. .
.,

S.ntinel News Staff
: Residents of.the village of Syracuse will be the beneficiaries of a
. $'70,000 granttp1repair a flood route
serving the Ohjo RiV&lt;11' community.
_ Governor George V. Voinovich
announced Monday afternoon thai
· the village will receive the grant from
the Small Cities Community Develi&gt;Jl!llent Block Grant Imminent Threat
Set-Aside Fund.
·
When the Ohio River comes up,
residents of the village of Syracuse
~tfa often isolated. Water covers state

~

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Route 124 -- both. upstream and of Syracuse to use during future
downstream of the village .. le'aving floods .
'
.
residents with only one way in or out,
"Through the CDBG Imminent
' Roy Jones Roaq,.connec ting the vii- . Thte~t Set-Aside program, we are
!age to other roads in the counly high- able to assist communiti~s in tlleir
way system.
.
efforts in alleviate .potentially life
The problem is the road receives threatening situations due to natural
more traffic than it can bear during- • effons," Voinovich said. "I want to
times of flooding_,according to c~un- encourage the counties affec1ed by
ty htgh":'ay offtctals.
,
the recent flooding in southern Ohio
Admmtsteredby the Oh1o Depan- to work with the Department of
ment of Development's Community Development to determine .if funds
Development Division, the funds from this program can assist in prewill be used to rebuild 11,510 feet of venting future devastation." ·
roadway to .provide an emergency
In 1996, many communities along
route for the residents_of the village the Ohio River experienced severe

I

Sentinel New• Staff
:.' :The condition of the road and,
9hches on Pleasant Ridge' were ·
bniught to the attention of Pomerqy
Yitlage Council' at their regular meel~'
!till Monday night.
· ·
- ... A delegation of seven residents of
the neighborhood, led 'by Oiane
b 'owles, say' that erosion and poor
have·caused the pavement in
to crack, making

5spd, V6, power steering, 4wheel anti.
lock brakes, As Low As•••

and ·
essary to' cur(l\il visits to the
two residents said that the fel.t their ·
horses and horse barns were in dan~r because of ROtential slips.
Councilman Bill Young said thathe, Mayor Vqughan and several otl!:!=r council members had inspected tli'i!
site, and .that he felt new drainage
pipe and culverts could alleviate
many ofthe probleni's. It was recomptende~ that the County Engineer be

Pleaaent weather has given workers an
· opportunity' to do more work on the Racine
branch of the Meigs County Public Library

~~~~~~~p:i~Inspectthe area and Minnesota flooding

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, The residents also r~quested water.
service through the village. Mayor
frank Vaughan indicated that water
servi~ in the Pleasant Ridge area
would be a prioriiy as soon as the
new water lsupply was in place.
: ·Clerk K;tthy Hys_ell reponed that
funding fot !load-related slips and
drainage problems due to Marclr.
f}Ooding is being· approved through
the 'Federal Emergency Management
Agency. FEMA's Damage Survey ·
Repairs program will provide fedei.'
.
.
al ~d state fundmg f~r mstallauo~ of
prlmg and r~tatmng walls on Wtlhs
HI Hand ·Legton Terrac_
M · e , sas well as da.
l •' f·t statton
on
'-' ·
k Matn
lb treet
A · an
.vramage wor \)n u erry venue.
'· • • C9uncil'apprpved the• pur~hase of
..aC new telep~oThne sys temh from G~L
. ontracung. e te 1ep one system,
· ' th · 1 h
t'
·11
stx te ep one sta 10ns, wt cost
"" 275 1 $600 f ·
11 ·
.., t,
, p us
or msta au on:
;{lt_e system, which will be installed
~
k 'II 11
h 'II
. ~~~xt wee , WI a ow t e vt age to
.
d 1·
'
h
I'
· a secon me 10r t e po tee
"'uc:partment.
, Gary Bates of Pomeroy, who will
~I and install the system;
said that
.
!he cost through him ts approximate- ·
ly .one-third to one-half of the cost of
.1!uying the sanie system through
(lTE North:
'
.
~: Bids were opened for a new truck
for ·the village water depanment. Bids
tor purc.hase and lease were received
!ftam Don Tate Motors of Pomeroy,
and a bid for purchase was received
fnlm Tri-County Ford in Middleport.
· •Council vo1ed to lease a truck for
S.414.67 per month, wilh Councilman
John Musser voting against the
)notion.
• No action was taken on estimates
~PF a new heating and air condition· · l111i system for the· fir~t tloor and a
· JIC)" fumaceforthe auditorium in~
m•nicipal building. Estimates were
'\-eceived from Warner Heating and
~ling of Chester and Foreman and
2'\bboll of Middleport. It · was sugjested th~tt a representative of the
~ies be invited to the next
t::Ottncil meeting to disc~ss their estipates.
. : ' ·Council members Oeri Wa.lton
s,ou Dillon inquired 'abput
:: , COIItiDIIed OD pap 3
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Funds begin to arrive
for county road repairs

.-------.pLibrary work-----.

Bj BRIAN J. REED

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IS Package, 5spd, }lQ\Vel' steering, abunimJOJ
wheek, air, AMIFM cassdte, As Low As...

has been working on th&lt;&gt; Roy Jones
flooding resul1ing in the declaration essary corrections.
Road improvement project since'the
Plans
call
for
the
county
highway
ot a Presidential Federal Disaster. It
Ohio
.River flood in January, 1996,
was determined that mitigation department to put about·two inches of
efforts should focus on Roy Jones hot mix on the road, accoroing ·w according to Spencer.
"The flood that took place in
Road to provide residents of Syracuse Meigs County Highway Department
March
is an example of what we iried ·
office
manager
Dave
.Spencer.
with an emerge~cy route during
The
pavement
will
likely
extend
to tell everyone about in January,
times of flooding , according to the
from Bridgeman Street in Syracuse to I996," he said.
Governor.
To date, the highway department
The CDBG Imminent Threat Set- Forest Run Road.
has
worked some on the road, stabiSpencer
said
·the
project
is
curAside is designed to alleviate threats
rently
in
the
environmental
phase
and
lizing
the base and making repairs to
to public health and safety that
require immedillle'resolution. Immi- that construction will likely take .make It suitable for the application of
·
nent threat grants are not meant to place between Jurie and 'the end of hot mix.
·
'.'This is going to make it a much
substantially upgrade the conditions August.
County Engineer Robert Eason better ~oad;" he said.
·
of an area, but are designed to mitigate an emergency situation with nee-

which Is currently under constructlo('l. Workers
with Home Creek Enterprises, Pomeroy, work
roof the library building.

· progresses.
/By BRIAN J. REED
Tho5e projects which have ·
Sentinel News Staff
Federal and state funding to repair received funding to date. are: $27,652
slips on county roads and other for a slip repair on County Road 40
tlood-related damage is beginning to . (Burlingham), including wearing surarrive in the county, according to face of roadway; $5,067 for repair of
David Spencer, Administrative_Assis- a si~khole on Cpunty Road 28 (Apple .
tant for the Meigs County Highway Grove-Dorcas); $.13,788 for slip
repair on County. Road 29 (Bowman's ·
·
Department. ·
'
Spen'cer announced the funding at Run); $26,124 for slip repair on
Monday's regular meeting of the County Road. 44 (Coolville Road);
Sil,790 for slip repair on County
Meigs Couiuy Commissioners.
Damage Survey Repairs are pro- . Road 14 (Wolfe l'en).
The county also received funds
jects funded at 75 percent by the F!lderal Emergency Management Agency through the D.S.R. program to recovand 25 percent by the Ohio Emer- er the costs of transporting and hous. gency Management Agency. The · ing prisoners from the Meigs Counfunds w.iU be .used mainly for sljp ty Jail'- at other facilities while 'the ; •
repairs on county roads. Road base · co~nty jail was closed.
' , ·.
· repair of roadways, ditch repair, and .
Ad.ministrative costs of,$ Z,482 on ·'
repair of bank failures will also get these projects will be paid, as w.ell.
underway now that funding has been
The commissioners approved bids ·
approved.
for
aggregate products for the year
Spencer said after the meeting that
.this is mily the beginning of D.S .R. from Richards and Sons of Racine
project funding in Meigs County. He and Jaymar, Inc., of Cheshire, and
estimates
that
approximately asphalt and concrete bids fro.m
$400,000 will be received for 50 Richards ·and So·ns.
Continued on p111e 3
. D.S.R. projects as the repair seasori

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sa,id worst in decad_es Town.
meeting_ on s.chool
d
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A I 14

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ADA, Minn. (AP) - On the, dry formed barren sheets of wh1te to the
end of town , restdcnts sJambered honz?n.
. . .. . .
aboard buses, personnel earners and
. Seve.re cold contmued brmgmg
Jeeps, headmg south ·t.o dryness .. Four m~sery to the rcgwn . overmght. In
blocks away, a souped-up . ptckup D1ckmson, N.D., the temperature
pl&lt;?ddm~ th~ollgh htp -de~p tee and fell to 7 be.'ow zero degree early
water Y.!e)dei:l at a stop sign - to a today, smashmg the ?ld record f~r t~e
rowsbo~t.
f
.
date of 3 above set m 1948, while m
aowll w.ent mu_ch o Monday ~~ · Mmneapohs-St. Paul, .11 was II
Ad . hose locatton at the ~on flu deg_rees, breaking the reading"'f 16
ence of_two swoll~n western Mm- set m 1923. Record lows_for the date
nesota nvers made II an mopportune alsb .were rec.orded m Btsmarck, and
place to be . With the Red River ris- .· Wtlhston, N.J?.; Aberde~n a_nd Stoux
ing to alarming levels today, there Falls, S.D., St. Cloud, Mmn., andEilu ·
will be more such communities soon. . Clatre, Wis.
.
" Blizzards
and
floods.
You
can
Ada,
one
of
the
hardest-hll
areas,
·
handle one or the other, but when is growing .increasingly desolate - ~ .
theY. both come at the same time, even staunch ~oldouts leave thts
what do you do? " said an exhausted. small town 35 miles northeast of FarArvid Ambuehl, an Ada farmer . go,_ N.D. On _Monday afterno_on, Pfc.
spending tl)e night at a school' turned- Kenh . Nordtck of. the Mm_nesota
shelter in Borup, eight miles south.
National Guard knocked hts . way
Across the high plains, rising down a hst of doors - Clltzens
rivers and blistering winds delivered who 'd gmie three days without elec,._
h
a one-two punc to emergency work' tricity, phone or runni_ng water.
b'
·
'd
be h
ers attling floodmg sat to
l e
. "You wonder what goes through
region's worst.in decades. Fields in p~ople 's minds. If t~e water was hipwestern Minnesota, locked in ice, . pmg·up my steps. -I d want to get out
·

as soon as I c~uld," said a windwhtpped Nordlck , a. 25 -year-old
. resemst. At one p.omt, even h1s
vchtcle got stuck.
.
.
..Along the north·fi(Jwtng Red Rtver, whtch separates Mmnesota Irom
North Dakota, even worse water
overflow from snowmelt was expected Thursday and Fnday.
. "Everythingpred_icted for theRe~
ts _a llood of h1stonc propomons,
said Mark Seele~, a chm~tologlst
wtth the Umversny of Mmnesota
Extensmn Serv!ce.
.
. In central Mmnesota, flood warnk
mgs were outf for the_n.ext twoh we~.
M s
along pans o . three_rivers - t e . m- ·
nesota, M1sstsstpp1 and St. CroiX.

fun 1ng

S

'...I
ateu
prl

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A. town meeting addressing the and John Costanzo. Supervisor for
issue of equity in school funding will the Meigs County Educational Serbe held . on Monday, Ap(il 14, at 7 vice Center (formerly the Meigs
p.m. at Meigs High School. The pur- County Board of Education).
pose of the non-partisan , open pubThe moderator will be Bob Ord,
lie ·meeting is.to discuss the equity in retired Superintendent of the So!'thfunding for all of Meigs County's ern Local School District in Meigs
schools
.
County.
Acc~rding 10 Jeanne Bowen, a
The committee has prepared quosmember of the meeting's steering lions about school finance in Ohio
committee, there are great differences arid the possiblities for change,.espein the ' level of funding per pupil cially in Meigs County, now· that the
among school districts, and this . Supreme Court has .macle its ruling,
l·neq ul'tY was the bast's of the recent Bowen said. The panelists will dislawsu1·1 'DeRolph vs Oht'o and the . cuss these questions; and members of·
ruling J~st week by th~ Ohio 'supreme the audience will be given an opporc~urt directing a change in school tunity 10 ask questions as well .
financing in the state .
·
"This is a high -profile panel,
·x
pe•ple
There was no quick way to gauge
s
have
agreed
st
'
t
on
·
10
1
·
· h b
v
mcluding the director of'the Equity
how bad the 11 oodmg mtg t ecome the panel ·. State Representatt' ve John
Oh'
·
oalition, two
to lawmakers, and
once the snow melts. Seeley satd 4 to Carey, R-Wellston ; State Senator the president of the State Board of
5 inches of heavy, late-season snow , Mt'chael Shoetnaker '"'-Boumevt' lle ·
•u
• Education," Bowen· said, "and the
could equal an inch of rain ..
Wt'III'am Pht' llis Execut1've Dt' rectorof E · c ,. ·
'II
k
bl' ·
Th
tl · d'
h
•
qutty oa Ilmn WI rna e pu tc ns
at year, oo mg across t e ·the Oh1·0 Coalt' lion for Equi·ly and
M·.d
bl
d f 48 d th
recol!lmendations for school funding
• west was arne or
ea s Adequacy ; JennNrt Sheets, Pomeroy the next day in Columbus."
and $10 billion in 'damage in nine· Attorney and President of the Ohio
The school boards of all three
states.
,
State Board ofEducat 1' on ·, Paul Reed local districts and the Educational
o( Farmers Bank, representing the s
· c
h
' ~eve
.Meigs County busine,ss community; erVICe enter ave endorsed the
I"
meetmg .
CLEVELAND (AP) - Finan-' Y&lt;iungstOWij district has borrowed Richard Jordan of the school man•
cially struggling urban school dis- $25 million f•9m the state in the past agement assistance office.
tricts could save millions of dollars if three years.
Susan Tavakolian, director of
they were eligible for the same lowTheir fiscal emergency status school finance with the state ,
Motorists sootr will be legally western corporation limit of Belpre
interest state loans that expanding means spending decisions must be acknowledged the . disparity in the .
entitled
to drive five miles per hour near the Farson Street intersection '
.businesses receive, teacher unions approved by a combined state-local interest rates but saill she could not
faster on portions of the Appalachi- just north of Coolville near the Hocksaid.
oversight board.
comment on the fairness of the issue
an Highway. according 10 the Ohio ing River crossing in Athens CounSchools in Cleveland and
· At the same time, the unions said, because the interest rates were a pol,
ty. The speed limit wiU remain at 55
Yqungstown _ both declared in a Ohio's public school distncts have - icy matter.
• Department of Transporthtion.
on
the Appalachian Highway from
ODOT
has
decided
to
increase
the
state \lf fiscal emergency last fall and paid up to 7 .33 percent for bank loans
Gov.
George
Voinovich
just
north of Coolville to \he western
55 mil~ per hour speed limit to 60 on
put under strict state financial. super- guaranteed ·by the state.
.
spokesman Mike Dawson said the
corporation
limit of the city of
nearly 137 miles of th' Appalachian
vision _ would save a combined $10
. The unions . cited state-backed programs are different.,
.
Highway . . The new 60 mph speed Athens. This section of roadway · is
million a y~ar in interest with d~vel- development and school loans from
· ''One is administered by the state
zone
will i'nclud~ portions of the currently un~er constru,ction. The 45
opment-t~pe interest rates, the unions i993-96 and a no-interest. $10 mil- and the other between local school
sald. .. ·
,
lion loan to Cleveland's Gateway dist~icts and local banks," bawson highway in Clermont, Brown, High- mph zone that extends · li:_om the
President John Senzarin of the sports complex this year. They said. "It would requi~;e changing !he land;·Adams, Pike, Jackson, Vinton, western Athens corporation limit to
Athens. Meigs and Was~ington coun- near Athens County Road 17, will he
Youngstown Education Association released .figures showing develop- Jaw, and I think legislators would
ties.
· increased to 55. ·
and Richard A. DeColibus, president mentloans with rates up to 4 percent have a lot of questions about how
ODOT officials cannot indicate at
The speed limit will be increased
of the Cleveland Teachers Union, or no interest at all, and school loans those school districts got themselves
thi
s
time when the speed limit
said M!lnday the sune routinely with interest rates from 5.75 percent into debt before they would be inter- Io 60 mph from Front Wheel Drive in
Clermont County · through Brown, increases will take place. In Adams,
makes low- ·and no-interest loans to IO 7.33 percent.
·
,
ested ill refinancing their,loans. " .
businesses.
The Ohio Department of'EducaThe state has approved $14 mtl- Highland, Adams , Pike, Jackson, Brown. Pike imd Jackson counties,
The 72,000-student Cleveland dis- tion said . the disparity, at least for lion in emergency school loans this Vinton and Meigs counties to near approximately 60 new speed limit
tdct has a 152 million.debt and was , !996 and 1997. wasn 't that large. year and has $240 million outstand- County Road 17 in Athens County. signs have been erected, but the new
put under state control by a judge ii\ This year's school loan rates range ing in loansmadc( to 37 districts since The speed limit will also increase to speed limit wi'l not go into effect
60 in Washington County .from the until the signs have.been uncovered.
1995 .
The
I2,QOO-studcnt · from 4.03 pcr,cnt to 6 percent. 'said ' 1991 , Jbrdan said .

Teach_ers reque.st.'loan,s af .,.,

,

'

c

Ionmen f ra ,es
•

Speed limit to be increased on
portions of Appa_lachian Highway

s

,,

•

' .

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