<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8816" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8816?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T09:16:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19239">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/136f75b5df0cb157d0eafcf7709a22f9.pdf</src>
      <authentication>57011a85e298703025fac880ff39a33d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="28407">
                  <text>. •..•-

••
/

Ohio Lottery

•

•

Bird hired
.for Pacers
coach's job

....
...

Pick 3:
4-0-1
Pick 4:

0..9-7-8

Cloudy with • dwlce of .

Buckeye 5:
1-11-15-24-36

Sports on Page 5

• ·•hower tonight, low• In

the 4h . s.turd•y. cloudy
Wid blu•t.ry, high• In the

so..

~

..Jill

•:

...,. .

·e ··.

·=
•.
••
.
•

-·i

''

"'..

!..

llbi.41,N0. 17

...•
..••..
.."
..."•

Opponents cal/ legislation 'predatory' .
By AARON MARSHALL
Sentlne.l Columbus Bureau
COLUMBUS - Originally launched in the wake of the deadly Scotiown
fireworks slore bllll.C, more stringent fireworks safety requirements finally
cleared a Ohio House committee following several months of finetunmg .
· "If this bill had been in effect when that deadly fire star1ed in Scottown
last July 3, less people would have died because it would have been easier
to get out," said Stale Rep. Jolfn Carey, R-Wellston, the bill's sponsor.
His comments followed the House's·State and 'Local Government Committee's 7-2 approval of the legislation. The bill now moves _to the House
floor for consideration.
_
The Scoltown fireworks explosion eventually killed a total of nine.people. The fire started when a mentally incapacitated man, TQdd Hall, lit a fi~e­
cracker and tossed it into ,the middle of a crowded' firewpd&lt;s store on July
3, 1996. Laler, Hall was found unable to stand trial because of his mental

~

"'
••
~

.•

...•..
•

.....
••
~

..~
....•~ .
ll

~
~

~

•
~

~

~

•
••

~

..."•
...

•••
•
"•••

I,

:
•..

..•• .

-..•
••

••
•

.......
~

••

~

...•

...

'V "'

'"'t

" :f

~·
.~

' (\11

' A-

' j. :tlit

'"'
~

\ "

I ( ) \\

\ -.. :

~

•

~

·~

•

1
11

•1
...•
...
.~ =

..
j-1.,
[

'

•'

'

.

••"
••

•."
'

I

....
•
•.••
••
•

i..•

••
·•••

•••

••

"'

I••
••
•
••

i,.

•

' •"•
••

:••
.•
•
•
••

0

i:HEVRDifl • OlDSMOBilE •I.EIIUS • lOYD Ill

:•

·:•

•

~

I

.b '

"This is the most difficult bill I've ever carried ," said Carey. "Those on .
condition and is.currently in a Columbus-area psychiatric hru;pital .
Along with increasing the number of exits in a·store, Carey said his leg- the left wanted to ban fireworks altogether while those on the far right want·
islation's key provisions include .increased safety training for fireworks indus- . ed every!'ody to be able to do anything."
, Still, not everyone was pleased with the bill. One of two committee memtry employees and more secure packaging of fireworks that are displayed in
public showrooms.
·
.
· . bers voting against t~e bill, State kep. Ron Hood, R-Canfield, blasted the
"Somebody Who takes their children or therilselv~s into a fireworks store legislat!on as "predatory in nature" and saia it "puts up high wall s for those
who want to join the business."
shouldn' t have to. worry about safety," he said.
Stripped from the bill in committee was language requiring fire suppresThe bill includes several safety provisions that are grandfathered to only
sion systems in fireworJcs stores.
address new fireworks stores such as a 5,000 square foot showroom size lim C~y said the language came out afler "conflicting testimony" on the
it and a requirement for fire detection systems, smoke exhaust systems and
effectivenes~ of such systems. However, inserted into the bill is a provision
smoke evacuation systems.
·
setting up a !!-member Fireworks •Fire Suppression Systems Taskforce to
Because of an emergency clause in.the bill, if it clears both houses of the
Stlldy that issue. The taskforce must report to legislative leaders no later than lep;islature and gains the signature of Gov. George Voinovich. then it would
Nov. I', 1998 on the matter.
become law immediately. The goal is to get the bill in place for this year's
Originally in1rod4ced last August, Catey ~s p~oposal has undergone sev- ; July 4 fireworks sales season , according. to Carey.
.
eral rewnles as the fireworks industry, fire safecy otncials anti the. state's
depar1rilent of
reque.sted numerpus changes to the bill.

.Greenspan-'warning
hints at an ·additional ·
interest rate increase ;.·

Chemical
plant blast
kills three
WEST HELENA, Ark. (AP) Noxious fumes continued to drift out
.of a chemical plant early today,
hours .after heat from a smold~ring
'bag of pesticide triggered an explosion that killed three firefighters.
The plant's owner said the pesticides in the chemical-filled warehouse were not supposed to be explo'sive. The blast blew out a cinderblock wall that crushed the firemen,
'w.ho had been sent to the plant to
'assess the danger of the smoking bag.
' "They were just going to take a
look at what was happening." said
'Allen Bardo, owner of BPS Inc.,
·wllich pl!Ckage'- dl)', chemi~als for use
on ·(~s. '.'Soflletbi9JI.ble.W4i.P and
ve~ g;; 'iatll"' wlfa11luisea'1h .
explosiQn."
A.second evacuation was ordered _
today for homes within a half-mile of
the plant. Residents had been allowed
to return home te.mporarily Thursday
after being kept away for about seven hours.
·
. Firefighters, including some
peratlng outside HeleM's Phillips COmmunity
AFTERSHOCK - BPS Inc. quality COI)Irol
1rained to handle hanlrdous m~leri~s,
Coll.ge,
where emergency offlclllls •vacuat.d
coordinator
Debra
Kemp,
left,
helped
her
cowere summoned to the plant Thursall
pmlents
from the HeleM R~lonlil MediCIII ·
workers
get
to
ufety
after
a
cheml~l
fire
broke
day after a 27-cubic-foot bag of
Cen~ 111111r the thrwt of toxic •moo; (AP)
out
at
a
factory
In
West
Helen.,
Ark.,
that
pt~ek·
azinphosmethyl, a pesticide, was
ages agricultural peatlcldea. Kemp was rtteu·
found smoldering, fire officials said.
The explosion came quickly.
. . "It was just yellowish- and white- to do their job," said Tim Snyder, the cal exposure - headaches, tuimel. Chemical. "The fumes would burn
,looking dust coiJling out of it at first, " assistant fire chief in neighboring . vision and chills, said Wayne Bryan your nose, lt smelled bad, like ammosaid.Calvin Smith, who was installing Hel'ena, whos~ units also responded. oflhe local Office of Emergency Ser- nia."
a fence at a neighbo.ring plant. "And · The three men whose bodies were vices in Helena .
The e,xplosion . involved fungithen, all of a sudden, it explodes .... polled from the rubble late Thursday:
Doctors g~ve l'iretighters and. cides and other insecticides. The
And all the tin was blowing off the Capt. · Stewart Warren, 47; ·U . Ed
Hudson, 53; and Reginald Robinson, some local residents an antidote to chemicals at the plant ·are packaged
buildings."
State police said 17 people were a volunteer who was in his early to ward off the effects of the poisons, in different combinations to banle
said Dr. David Bourne of the state farm pests, said Doug Szenher of the
mid-20s.
injured, including 16 firefighters .
.
"These are the folks who got right Health Department.
state Pollution Control and Ecology
TWo of the dead were full -time
•,
An
employee
at
a
neighboring Department.
employees of the 13-member West in the iniddle and go where angels
A federal Department of TransHelena Fire Depar1ment and the third fear to tread," said Gov. Mike Huck- plant said aerid smoke carne pouring
.
ppnat1on gu•de say~ twnphosmethyl
was a volunteer. A fourth firefighter abee, who traveled· to West Helena from the plant arter the blast.
"The flames were so high - !50 can be po1sonous 1f mhaled, sw~might be missing, Mayor Riley Porter after the explosion .
feet
- then the smoke turned black, lowed or absorbed through the skm
More than 50 people sought med'said.
and
it was ·dark from then," said and that fumes from a fire can also
. "They were dedicated to their job. ical help at a makeshift hospital
of symptoms of chemi- Vickie Bolden, who works at Helena . kill.
They wouldn't-hesitate in a heartbeat complaining
.
'

'welia

~-

'

2 S.CUona, i 2 Peges, 35 ctnta
AGennett Co. Newape,.,.·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frlclay, May 9, 1997· .

Carey's fireworks safety bill clears committee

•

".,.

\-..:

,

C1W7, ONo Yllley Publlllllng Com~ny

••

\ '·, I()\\
••

•

By DAVE SKIDMORE .
Associated Pres• Writer
WASHINGTON- Preparing for
the possibility of more interest-rate
increases, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan is starkly
describing the costs of permitting
"insidious inflationary pressur~s " to
build .
"Inflation ... destroys jobs," he
said Thursday night in New York .
"You cannot have a vibrant growing
economy withounound money. History is unequivocal on this."
As usual, Greenspan refrained
[rom saying explicitly what·Fed policy-makers would do when they meet
next on May 20. But the unusual clar-.
ity and 'fot«if41 tone of his remarks
suggesteil they probably would add to
.the quarter-point interest rate increase
engineered on March 25.
"For .the Federal Reserve to
remain inactive against a possible
buildup of insidio~s inflationary pressures would be to sanction a threat to
the job security and standards of living of too niany Americans," he told
an audience at New York University's
Stern School ·of Business.
Factory owners, labor unions and
lawmakers have criticized t!te March
increase as unnecessary because

inflation is at a 30-year low. But
Greenspan said it was " eminently
sensible. "
' " It would have been folly .not to
take this small, prudent step," he s8id.. ·
The speech appears to be another
of Greenspan's efforts to prepare
financial markets for higher inlere$t
rates. dating back to early December
when he pilsed his now-famous question about "irrational exuberance."
As he repeated his caution in
stronger terms and then oversaw the
· first rate increase in two years, the
Dow Jones average of industrial
stocks lost nearly' 10 percent of it9
value between March II and April

McVeigh attorney tries .t shake up witness
it was blocking the door of another
guest at the Dreamland Motel in
Junction City, Kan.
.
"He was really polite about it and
said, 'yes.' and moved it right away.'' .
said McGown, who runs the motel
with his mother.
Thursday's combative crossexamination centered on exactly
when McGown saw McVeigh in the
truck. Marife Nichols, the wife of
Mc Veigh's · co-defendant · Terry
Nichols, was elpected to testify
sometime today.
De[ense attorney Stephen Jones
confronted McGown with a summary of his first statement to FBI

agents in which the agent said
M
wn 1epprted seeing McVeigh
with the truck on Easter Sunday,
April 16, 1995.
But other witnesses have testified
· that the truck used in the bombing
was not rented until Apnl 17, two
days before the bombing. On Tuesday, McGown's voice wavered as he
insisted he always said he only
believed it was on Suhday or Mon!!ay, ~nd never was sure.
"I was ·under e•trcme stress that
week," McGown ·said, refening to his
car troubles and the pressures ofbalancing school and his work at the
mole!. "I don't know exact times or

dates. I know incidents." •
Jones ridiculed McGown's indecision and suggesled the testimony
was tailored to the prosecution's
case.
"You know there's a $2 million
reward out .on this case, don't yo11?"
Jones asked.
Also on Thursday, prosecutors
showed jurors a letter they said
MeVeigh wrote months before the
bombing in which he spoke of h1s
darkening mOod.
·
· "My whole min'd-set has shifted
from intellectual to animal," the let-

tcrreads.

Greenspan made no reference to
the stock market in his speech Thursday. This time he ~ferrcd 10 the dangers of "excessive credit creation ,"
strain on the ability of fa ctories to
meet the demand for goods and
"growing tightness in labor m'arkets."
A Fed survey released Wednesday
found "fierce competition " among
business lenders and "credit standards being lowered."
Greenspan said, " It is clear from
our history that surges in growth ·
financed by excessive credit creation'
... threaten the underlying stability of
o~r economy."
· He sai.d ari increase in market- se t
interest rates - such as long-temi·
bond rates and mortgage rates .......; can
brake an overheating economy. ·

'

DENVER (AP) - Timothy
McVeigh's auorney fired question
after derisive queslion in harsh, sar·castic tones. The 19-ycar-old witness
·turned shaky,.stammering ~nd defensive under the trial 's toughest crossexamination yet .
But Eric McGown stuck to his story - that }Je saw Me Veigh behind the
wheel of a Ryder rental truck just
days before a truck bomb ripped
through the Oklahoma City federal
building.
·
.
"He was backing up a Ryder truck
ne•t to our . pool, " McGown said
Thursday, adding that he told
McVeigh to move the truck because

II ·
However, with recent government
data suggesting the economy is starting to cool, traders had begun belling
the Fed might postpone another rate
increase until midsummer, and the
Dow average climbed to a new high
this week.
·
·

Southern
thespians
on stage
tonight
HARD MEMORY ;_ Jacque
Walker dt.played a photo pin Of
her niece, Carrie Lynz, Who died
In the Ok..hama City bombing,
atw vt.wlng the teltiCIIst of Timothy McValgh's trl•l Thursdlly.

The Southern High School drama class will present "Operation
Wait" at the high school toni ght at
7p.m.
'
·
This year's play was written by
the drama class in three segments,
and was joined together to make
one play.
·
Participating in the senior play
are
Brian Allen, Tyson Buckley, ·
east Ohio's high utility rates put his
Tracy
Card, Angie Carleton, Philip
company behind industries in other
Hamm
, Kri sten Hensler, Trudy
parts or Ohio and outside the state .
Justis,
Mark Lewis, Greg McKin. "We experience a cQmpetitive
ney, Amy Northup, Josh .Roush,
disadvantage due solely 10 the cost of
Jennie:
Scarberry, Vanessa Shulen
electric ,power, " Arkwright said .·
:Amber
Thomas and Larry Willis: •
"Competiti&lt;?n, however~ will remedy
·The
stage
manager is Jessica Sayre.
this·situation."
·
··
·
The
pl,ay
is
under ·the direct ton of
The committee; chaired by Sen .
Donald Dudding.
.
Bruce Johnson,· R-Westerville, and
Performances
ror
studenls
in
the
Rep. Priscilla Mead, R-Upper Arlingdistrict
were
held
on
Thursday
and
ton, is heiring testimony on how .to
Friday. Admission for tonight's
dcregulale Ohio's monopoly utilities.
pcrfot'mance is SI.

Utilities, customers face·off on deregulation decisions
COLUMBUS (AP) - The utility rules set by the Legi1l81ure and were . · The PUCO has allowed the utilities to cover the cost of multibillionindustry and its commercial cus- approved by stale regulators ..
do
IIIII' nuclear power plants by
tomers 'squared off before a JegislaThe Public Utilities Commission
spreading
the cost to ratepayers over
tive committee over who should pay · of Ohio was scheduled to qnnounce
for losses the utilities will incur . new proposals govemmg such loss- years or decades, said Marie Wallach, ·
ode dere lated com~tion .
es, known as stnnded costs ..Butmost a lawyer representing the Ohio.
u Ar
ThursdB:Y iha't was·. House members: of the Irunt Com- Allieni:C for Affonlable PoWer. The .
1
t 1 nakg 15 but packed with min~ ·on Electric, Utility ~gula- gr'OUp represents IWO northern Ohio
short onawm
e
· ·
ndi
11
•
. 'lobbyists, proponents .of coinpetition theuonPWCJ!:UCOattcpostponJineda ~ts•~u~lon, so utilities uid sever.! unions.
Forcing the utilities alone to
. said CUilOillers shollld not have to pay
:..
. • .... mon~.
.
absorb
SU'IIIded COlts would amount
.fi Mil ·
· • decisions by utilUuhlles ~ worned that they will
.or . lllvelll'ftOII1
aet stuck wtlh costs they have qot to u unconatitational llkiiiJ of prop1ty illinaazme~t
laed that been allowed to pus aJon1 to cus- erty, Wallacluaid.
a• the utilities coun
· - under regulatory ov•Bi""t.
."Public Pl¥ty should not be
lhoie decisions wae made under ':""- •
.. .. •

.!:; ·

:

taken without just compensation,"
Wallach Sai4.
But Kenneth ~ose. u economist
by the National Regulatory Research
.Institute, said the PUCO should
review utilities' claims about strand~
ed costi on 8 case-by~ase basis.
"You want to see Jl(:tual costs by
a compuy up front before you Rive
recovery," Rose said.
Jim ArkwriiJht, utilities muaaer
for WCI Steel Inc. of WtUTeri, said
dereplatiolt is needed because north-

I

. ...

•

.

.

i

.

�.

••
•

--

.: Frlday,llay I, 1117

-

.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'£sta6fishd i11l!J48
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

_,or

-

... .• - ' · . . ....... -··.

kA d

I

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

n. Stllltlael nllcOrdNIII,.,.,.. ro 11M Mlttor ft'alt NldltW on • broltd,.,. of toplce.
Shott- (3(10
-1 ,... ' " " - - t11 be/llfl publfolr«i. T1r-d ,.,_
-• ... -oil ""'Y lit edlt..t Each -lnt:lutle • olfl,..,_, , - .
- · dlyllliM,.,..,..
.......
•
to
-•lid
numlllt. Spaclty. do•.. " ~·
or - - - 111: U1NN to t1Ho Edlltlr, I'M $wotlnol, 111 Coul1 Sl, " " ' - • Ohio

u-··. ,_. ,.,. .,.

..

L-!":!:171:::•~•·:.:·"":i·:!·F.U;:!,::to~'::':-.n::!~=:.·.....-·-....,--r--:-~~-;----•

D.··s·a.s ter r·ell.ef b.I. II·.
·. loaded with ad d-ons

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON -Congress once considered staying its own hand so
that emergency disaster relief bills wouldn' t be saddled- or stalled- by
issues thai have nothing to do with aiding the victims of floods, humcanes
or earthquakes.
·
· ..
.
.
, The mood passed·quickly. The habit perststs, on dtsplay now as the Senate acts on an $8.4 billion bill including funds to help the flood-ravaged
regions of the upper Midwest like Grand Forks, N:D. .
·.
.
It includes a lot more. Emergency money .btlls mevttably become vehtcles for add-on measures, including in this case a major change in the way
the government is financed when Congress and an administration can't set•
tie on appropriations bills by the Oct. I deadhne.
.
.
That would end the threat of government shutdowns hke those two wmters ago, which happen when appropriations lag and there are disputes over
the tenns of resolutions to temporarily continue spending aulhonly.
The Republican measure would automatically extend spending authori- .
ty at the same levels into the new budget year. That ~ould gtve _aust~nty­
bent Republicans the !~(~vantage in any future bud~et ompasse. smce maction would cut spending, by not adjusting for inflalton.
.
President Clinton has threatened a N.eto, and there probably wtll be a settlement before the bill goes to the White House. The House hasn't acted.
There are other disputed provisions, one already compromised to ease a
GOP-backed prohibition against Census Bureau spending to use statistical
sampling to cover the 10 percent of ·households likely to be mtssed when
Americans are counted in 2000.
.
That's politically sensitive because sampling could add to th~ c~un! of.
inner-city residents and minorities, benefiting largely Democrattc dtstrtcts
in the apportionment of federal aid. Republicans contend that tl could nsk
. census-rigging.
..
There are disputed environmental provts1ons, one, narrowly affinned by
the Senate on Wednesday, to limit government control over road,building
in park a'nd wilde11_1ess areas. P.u~hed by Wes~ern Re,publicans.
·.
The.disaster asststance provtslons of the b1ll aren tan ossue. That IS $5.5
billion, for more than two dozen states. The Senate voted 100-0 to end debate
and ~tan· voting on the bill Wednesday. lt also provides $1.8 billion for military operations in Bosnia and elsewhere.
It will pass, relatively quickly, driven by the images and accounts offlood
devastation in the Dakotas and Minnewta. That's why such measures mv1te
· unrelated amendments and legislation thitt would be blocked by filibuster,
or veto, or both, were it standing alone.
• . ·
· " What justifiable reason can there be to hold this dis.asler assistance bill
hostage to such .riders that have nothing to do with the basic purposes of
this bill?" asked Sen. Roben C. Byrd, D-W.Va., as action began.
The question was rhetorical. He knows the answer. H doesn't have to be
justified, and it is the way. things often are done.
. Byrd said he's not much for -vetoes, and, "of course•. I am adamantly
opposed to the line-item veto." But he satd he hoped Clmt~n would veto
the bill if it included the Republican plan for automatiC spendm~ extensoons.
He took the lead in the court challenge that led to a dectst~n bla«kmg
the line-item veto as unconstitutional. It took.effect Jan. I, enabhng the president to block specific appropriations without rejecting an entire bill, but was
·overturned before it was used. Clinton has appeal~d to the Supreme Court.
But the line-item veto would have done the Whtte House no g~ m thts
case. It could be used only to block specific. spendmg otems·or hmtted tax
breaks. The disputed provisions arc instructions, 1n some cases forb1ddmg
spending for a specific purpose.
.
That's not always so. A 1994 appropriation bill for Los Angeles-area.earth'
quake relief included extras like $10 million for work on Pennsylvama Sta- ·
tio·n in New York Coty.
.

Letters to the .editor
Hopes for speedy recovery
I'm sure I speak for the entire vil- cleaning, and doing his best to make
lage of Pomeroy when I wish George our town a better place to I ive in.
·George. we miss you!
Wright a speedy, and complete recovBarbanRigis
ery.
.
·.
Pomeroy,
George is constantly swceptng,

Berry•s World .

••

I

HE WASA
PRES'IIIENT

WHO SIIOWED

STRENGTH... .

to protect every year. Why not· put
them to work in the inner cities, ilr at
least make them trim the greens .at
their country clubs?
11lE MOUTII11iAT ROARS -Our nomination for hypocrite of the
month (if not the year): Ed Rollins .
dThe chubbrboykerpo;hti~ :;•::~!net
· an power
•
'
•
vision blabbermouth, was ' heard
recently on CNBC opining on the
never-ending series of White H:ouse
scaridals and the failure of Attorney
General ianet Reno to appoint a special prosecutor.
.
,
"I'm convinced before this thing
is over she'll be back to wrestling, or
she'll name a speCial prosecutor,"
Rollins offered. "I think when Janel
Reno leaves office, she's going lobe
unemployable. I think she:s ~~aged
any integrity ~?d ~redtb1hty she
might have had.
Let's consider the source of'lllis
lecture on "integrity"'and ''credibiiity." Rollins is the ·same man who
boasted that he helped secure thC:
1993 election victory of New Jersey
Gov. Ciu1stine Todd Whitman by.
spending $500,000 in ,"walking:
around money" to bribe black rriin:
isters into keeping their flocks awaY.
from the polls (he later apologized,
. EXCEPT
and claimed he "fabricated" those.
accounts). He's also the same man·
IN ADMITTII6
who abandoned his Republican roots
HIS
in favor of Ross Perot in 1992-- only
DISABILITY
lo savage the tiny Texan when· the.
relationship soured after a few \!'Cells ..
Of course, Rollins' elhical transgressions rendered him far from
unemployable. Months after th~
Whitman debacle, Rollins was earn-·
ing fat fees as a consultant for sever-~ .
al GOP politicians, including dim, .
witted California millionaire Michael
Huffington, who spent $28 million of .
,his own money in . a ·losing effor\
against Democratic senator Dianne.
Feinstein.
.
,
All of which goes to prove thin in .
the ethical swamp that is Wa5hinglon;
there is no such thing as "unemployable" -- a fact Rollins knows bel· .
ter than most.
.
i""''••55&lt;""'""'"
Jack Andel'50ti and Jan Mollet', '
are writers lor United Featu~
Syodicate, Inc.
'
.

C.hatterintJ

,.eeth

•

•••
•••
•

There has been a lot of hysteria
over people who presume to
doubt that nicotine (and more generally the \obacco in which it is found)
·is "addictive."
We are forever being reminded, ·
ominously, of the half-dozen tobacco executives who a couple of years
ago S\I'Ore under oath that they didn't believe cigarettes were addictive. ,
And just last year Republican presideiuial candidate Bob Dole dropped
another few notches in the opinion
polls when he dared to admit, during
a television interview, that lle didn't
know whether cigarettes were addictive or not.
. The question is crucial for the
smokers (or their heirs) who developed lung cancer or other ailments
supposedly rclauid to smoking, and
who arc now asking juries to award
them millions of dollars in damages,
even though every pack of cigarettes
for the last quaner of a century has
carried a warning by the surgeon general against the health risks of smoking. The plaintiffs' explanation is that
they couldn't help themselves -- they
rec~nt!y

were hopelessly "addicted. " ·
In addilion, the attorneys general
of a score of slates are lining up to sue
the tobaccn companies (or hundreds

William A. Rusher
of billions of dollars as compensation
for the cost of medical care for smoking's alleged victims; on the ground
that the companies knew their product was "addictive."
But what, ex·actly, is an "addiction"? Webster's New World Dictionary defines it as an "habitual inclination." Thus defined. it can be used
to describe a whole spectrum of levels of desire, from a mild preference
to an uncontrollable passion. But
where on the scale does nicotine (or
tobacco, or cigarettes --. I am using
these lenns interchangeably) belong?
Common sense tells us that there
is no (jne answer: It depends 'on the
individual. We all know plenty of
people who can take a cigarette or
leave it, and others who certamly
seem "addicted" in the sense that
tbey say they "can't quir." But how

·

Glass

••

••
••
•
•
••
••
•• •

•

••

Plastic
6arf

..

etc..

to decidt! request .
ito drop Sheppatd's suit ·

!

Are we turning into · a nation of read "Thou shalt not steal -- ondi- lake pleasure in telling unpleasant tion to "defend our neighbor, s~k . ·
narily. " Fletcher would alter the oth- truths about others that could be dam- well of him and put the best con- .
thieves? Some people fear we are.
er
commandments in the same way. . aging to 'them fall under lht cori- struction on everything." A hymn
1 They say if another big depression
There is no commandment against demnation of this commandment.
comes it will not be. accompanied by
exhorts, "Each shall his brother's .
people ·selling apples on street corners
The "false witnesses" at Jesus' tri- . failings hide."
or standing patiently in soup lines. George R. Plagenz al may have been Jelling the truth
Gossip oftep takes the form of gra-. ·
Angry mobs will stonn the stores and
when they testified that he had said,. tuitous truth-telling. While what is
lying amon)l the Ten Command- "twill pull down this temple ... and said may be true, the purpose often is •
take what they feel is theirs.
'
Even in these prosperous times, ments, but one comes close: ."Thou in three days I will build another."
to undennine Party X -- the one who :
shoplifters are ripping off goods shalt not bear false witness against
But even if it was true, what made isn'tthere.
.,
· ;
equal in value to 25 percent of a thy neighbor." It forbids lying in it sin was that they were trying to
Georae Plagenz is a syndicated l
store's profits in some cases. To most court.
entrap him in blasphemy.
writer for Newspaper Enterprise \
people, shop!ifting' (known as "the
The Living Bible does not per!Japs
Luther said we are under obliga- Assodatioa.
five -fi·nger discount") is a sin against go too far, however, in rendering this
the commandment "Thou shalt not commandment: "Yo11 must not tell
steal. "
lies." While this is a paraphrase rather
_ ButRev. John (Robin Hood) Pap- !han a literal translation. it catches the j By The Associated Press
·
worth disagrees. The Bntish cleric spirit of the commandment.
·
Today is Friday, May 9, the I 29th day of 1997. There are 236 days left ••
shook up a lot of people this spring
It was no minor matter in ancient 1 in the year..
·
·
.
· :
by saying oyer the BBC that it is no times to be caught lying under oath. ( · Today's Highlight in History:
,
::
sin to steal from a rich supermarket One ancient code of laws-- the Code
On May 9, 1754, the first American newspaper canoon was published.
chain or big depanment stores run by . of Hammurabi -- specified that if you · The illustration in Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette showed a snake
executives who "sit around board- accused somebody else of a crime cut into·sections, each pan representing an American colony; the caption read, :
·rooms plotting how to take the max- and it turned out you were ly)ng, you
"Join or die."
•
.
·, •
imum out of people's pockets for a yourself would have to serve the sen·On this date:
.
·
·:
minimum in rety.m." ,
tence nonnally meted out· for such a
In 1502, Christopher Columbus left Cadiz, Spain, on his fourth and final •' '
While most Britons called the · crime.
' trip to the Western Henljsphere.
.
·,
cleric's statements "disgraceful, " a
If you were called as a witness in
In 1926, Americans Richard Byn! 1nd floyd Bennett became the first men
:1
minority, who noted that one out of . defense of somebody accused of\ to make an airplane flight over the North Pole.
. •'
every four shoplifters is a senior cit~ murder, for example, and it was disIn 1936, Italy annexed Et~iopia as Benito Mussolini 'celebrated in Rome. '
izen, said the average British pen- · covered that you had lied in your te~. In I 945, U.S. officials announced that the midni&amp;ht entenainment cur·
'
. !.
sioner doesn't collect enough to live timony, you yourself would be sen- I few was being lifted immediately.
.
'
'
on and so mu.sl resort to petty steal· tenced for the murder.
In 1961, in a speech to1the Nationll Association of Broadcasters, Federt
ing .
This cut dpwn coosiderably on the al Communications Commission chairman Newton N. Minow condemned
~
Is the commandment againstsleal- number of people who would be will- television Jll'OP"1llming as a "vast wasteland."
'•
'
ing an absolute one or does it depend ing to lie filr a friend in coun!
In 1974, the House Judiciary Committee oponcidliearinp on whether to ' . II
on the situation'r Rev. Joseph fletch.
.
.
But if lyina is bed. 1elling the IIIIth recommend the impeachment of President Nixon.
'
er, ID Episcopal priest and the father can often be bad, too. Martin Luther,
· In 1978, the bullet-riddled body of fonner ltali1n prime miniater Aklo .' '
of Silllllion Elhica, sugested that the in his commenlley on this com· Moro, who'd been alxlucmd by the Red Bripdes, was found in an -.nobile ' I
COIIIIIIIIIdment should be unentled to mandment; .indicates that thole who in the center of Rome.

.
..
.

....

SOME ITEMS BANNED BY THE
COMICAL WEAPONS. TREATY

.

,'
'•

:, :

\

•

'l'rultees to meet

~i'o~ Township Trustees will
meet 1\tesday at 7 p.lri at Darwin.

Lod1e Htll session
. Middleport Lodge 363, F &amp; AM,
will meet in special session Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. for '!York in ·the master
mason degree. Refreshments.
Announce meelina
Chester Township Trustees will
meet in regular session,, Saturday. 8
a.m. at town hall.
Class reunion planned
The Southern Class of '77 will
hold a pl;mning ·session for its
reunion on 1\tesday, 6:30 p.m. in the
SHS cafeteria. More information ·
may be obtained by·calling 992-7410.
Coin Club to meet
, The OH KAN Coin Club will
meet May 19 at Riverbend Ans
Council in Middlepon. 8 p.m. Open
to nc.w members.

Meigs court news

PUblished every afternoon. Mond1y thrOuah
, Friday, II t Coun So .. Pol11m0)', Ohlo; by lbo
Ohio Valley Pullll!bina Co-/Oannett Co..
Pomeroy. Obio 457119, I'll. 992-2.156. Second
' .... ...,..... paid .. Pomeroy, Ohio.

Marino said the slate shouldn't be
pressured into starting a irial before
it is ready.

Membtn Tho Allt&lt;ICialed Pre" and the Ohio
-~-•ion.

Sheppard's legal team believes
evidence uncovered in DNA te.sts ~n
bloOd from the crime scen.e wtll ,ptn
tbe slaying .on the family's former
handyman ~nd window "~Vasher,
Richard Eberling, 67, who ts ~n
prison for munderi~g a .w~man m
1984. Eberling demes kilhng Mrs.
Sheppard·.

; POSTMASTI!R: Send llddmo oorrecttO.o to
'thl:.Dolly Sentinel, Ill Coun St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.

. SVIIIICRtPTION RATIS

,
By Carrier o r - One w..t&lt; ................................................. $2.00
' OntMonth ......................................,......... $8.70

.o.e v....................,............................ $104.00
SINGLB COPY I'IIICB

I

Doliy......................................... :"'' '""''3.1 C&lt;nb .

-·
___ ,.....-.

S· t' itlcrs noc delirina 10 pay the C11rier may
ieitttlo lllvlnce direct 10 1lle Dolly S..Uool
' an 1 eiRe. Ail or ll month tlllis. Credit wi!l be

......'

.....

.......

' Nci od!oeripdon by molt permiaed lo .,...
I

:- . . . _ . . . lbo ri... IOodj&lt;lll , _ ....
~"'! 11e l&lt;lboorlpd011 period. Subotrlpllon 'clliltoa rrrj ................, loY - ........
....... "'die ..biCiipdon.

...,.,
!

1

' 13 -

MAILSUIIIICRIPTIONS
.... Mt(foC..,

.

...................,............................ $27.30

..,.c.-,

'211!Moolao . .............................................. U3.12

J2 . . . ._ .. _ ....:................,.............. SI05.!6
•
j
__
2S

..,.,.

!t, .............. ....-.................- ...-.m.

............ ......... ..... . ..
.-

.-

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

--··-"""""'"'""'"" ,••72

.

t

,.

Bake sale set
A hake sale will be held Saturday
at Powell's Super Valu Saturday 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. by the Four Comers 4H Club.

Hospital news

' .

..

singing is planned for Saturday by ·
Russell Spencer and the Gospel
·Tones .
Eastem Board
The Eastern .Board of Education ·
will met in regular session Wednesday, 6:30 p.m, at the high school
library.

homa City bombing in April 1995
and later became a paid informant for
•
WHEELING, W.Va. - An FBI the government.
.
. infonnant planted lhe seeds of crim- . . Ric hands,. a . Clarksburg Rativ~,
ina! activity and goaded defendants to JOtned the m~htoa, . became Looker s
action, even offering money to ensure trusted secunty chtef.and made hunacts were carried out, said the lawyer dre_ds of ~pe recordmgs. of conver· Council meets
for Mountaineer Militia leader Floyd sauons wtlh the defendants.
.
'
Pomeroy Village Council will
"Ray," Looker.
·
Ci~ani contends ll'!'nscripts indi: By The Auoclated Prell ·
WeJ&amp;her forecast:
meet
in special session on Monday at
Lawyer Bill Cipriani cited nine cate Rtchards planted tdeas, encourTonight, ..Cioudy ~ith a ch~ce of
; More scattered showers are like6:30 p.m. to discuss !he Stemj¥hcel
: ly across the upper two-thirds of Ohio a shower. Blustery w1th a low m the examples of all.eged misc.onduct by aged defendants to ~t and to move
Festival.
: tonight. forecasters said. Cloudy skies lower 40s. West winds 10 to 20 mph. the informant as he focl!.sed Thursday · faster, and e_ven prov1ded mone~ f~r
on government tai:tics in its it\vesti· the transacttons because the mtltba
.are expected across southern Ohio.
Chance of rajn 30 percent.
.
. Barbecue planned
Temperatures will be chilly
Satunday...Cioudy. Blustery wtth a galion into an alleged plot to destroy had none. .
The Thppers Plains Fire Departthe FBI fingerprint complex in
It was Rtchards who suggested on
:tonight, with lows of 40-4S most high in the low~r 50s.
the la~s that the militi~ make explo- ment will have a chicken barbecue on
places, the National Weather Service
Saturday ntght ... Partly cloudy. Clarksburg.
Looker and six other people from · stv~s Into fragmenlatto~ . well!"lns Sunday, beginning · at II a.m. A
isald.
· -Lows in the upper 30s.
West Virginia, Ohio .and Pennsylva· des1gned to bcf more effec~ve.anb~r­ choice of ribs or chicken, baked
; ' An approaching high pressure
Exteoded lo~tut: .
.
beans, cole slaw, roll, tea and coffee
system should start io push the clouds
Sunday... Partly cloudy. H1ghs m nia with militia ties face charges sonnel devtces, Ctprtan•. S~ld . will be served. The price is $4.50.
including conspiracy to manufacture ~tchard_s later sugges~ addmg.umout of Ohio on Satunday. But even the mid 60s.
.
with sunny skies, the mercury probMonday...Partly. cloudy. Lows m explosives, bringing explosives . mg dev~ces to explostves, .he sa1d:
Board to meet
ably won't climb out of the 50s.
the m!d 40s and hoghs on the lower across state lines and,providing sup. . Ct~nam. also noted a c~versatlon
The Racine Board of Public
port for a terrorist auack.
t~ wh1ch Rtchards.complatned about
The record-high temperature for 70s.
.
Affairs
will meet on Monday at
Cipriani wants U.S. Magistrate · the pace of ~~~o~~ to Clarksb~r~
•this date at the Columbus weather
'1\tesday...Mostly cloudy w1th a
I
0:30a.m.
at the Municipal Building.
; siation was 93 degrees il) 1896 while chance of sh?wers • and thunder- James E. Seibert to dismiss all the F1re Lt.James Rich Rogers, a milt. .the record low was 28 in 1947. Sun- stonns. Lows on the lower 50s and charges on grounds of "outrageous·· . tia co!'lmander .wh? olliaiqed the Chamber to meet
government conduct.
bluepnnts. Also, Richards. begged
set tonight will be· at 8:33 ,p.m. and highs in the mid 70s.
The Meigs County Chamber of
But
a
prosecutor
said
th.e
FBI
act~~er
10 make ~o~t~t ~1th otber
, sunrise Satunday at6:21 a.m.
Commerce
will hold its regular
ed appropriately in controlling the m1h1ta leaders, Ctpnant satd. ·
' '
luncheon on
monthly
membership
investigation and the infonnant. Okey . ' "What better evtdence.~an .I offer
Marshall Richards Jr., has been of outrageous c;onduc1? Ctpnant 1\tesd~y at noon at Trinity .Church.
Kay Rowe 11f ACCESS/Head Start
·
unfairly maligned . by defense said.
will be the speaker. Reservations can
lawyers.
~ipriani said courts ~onsidering
"He has provided a valuable ser- ·!he .tssue o.f outrageous conduct have be made by calling 992-5055.
By JOHN AFFLECK
The prosecutor ·s otltce asked vice to the community: Thank good- tndtcated n ts worse when the: gov- Revival scheduled
: Associated Press Writer
Suster to dismiss the case, arguong ness he was loyal to the government ernment preys on so!'leone wnh no
The Mount Olive Community
: CLEVELAND - A judge has that only a former inmate can sue for· and not the antigovernment, para- money. Looker washvm~ on a $90- Church in Long Bottom . will hold
; scheduled a hearing next month to unlawful imprisonment under stale military forces of ~y Looker," said a-month Anny pens10n, dtd notha~e revival services May 18to May 24 at
• consider prosecutors' request that he law. Dr. ShepPard died in 1970 at age. Assistant U.S . Auorney David God- &amp;Job and was tn debt, the lawyer said. 7 p.m. nightly. John E'lswick of
·
Godwin told the judge there is not
WID.
: dlsmiss Sam Reese Sheppard's law- 46.
Seibert
did
not
rule
Thursday
.
even
enough evidence to suppoo a Shade and Paul Goodwin of Mariet: suit 10 clear his father in' the 1954
"What an insult from my point of
whether ·he would grant a separate judge instructing jurors on the defin- ta will be the evangelists. Special
- rifurder of his mother. .
.
. view," lhe yo"nger Sheppard said.
: , . Common Pleas Judge Ron Suster
Gilbert, who wants a trial to stan evidenliary hearing on Cipriani's ilion of entrapment, much less dismiss the .charges. And, he said,
• set the June 2 meeting at the end of by October, said the prosecutor's motion.
FBI agents arrested the suspects "Entrapment is an issue for the jury
- officeltas been increasingly uncoop: a 70-minuie hearing Thursday.
on
OCt.
II after Looker attempted 10 to decide."
: The younger Sheppard's attorney erative about sharing.evidence such
Holzer Medici! Center
The prosccuior also said the FBI
: immediately branded the motion an as trialtl'3nscripts and pollee repons. sell copies of FBI center blueprints to
Discheraes
May 8 - Judy Har: attempt 10 delay the start of a triat
Carmen Marino, an . assistant an agent posing as the IJiiddleman for controlled the investigation but only vey, Tammy Jones, James Starkey,
to the extent of keeping the informant
: "There's got to be a time when the county prosecutor, denied the accu- a fictitious terrorist group. .
Looker,
of
Stonewood,
was
quiet
in line and keeping explosives out of Ralph Robbins, Tonya Morris, Mrs.
' truth prevails over these kind of tac- sation. "He (Gilben) has never been
Bradley Pittenger and daughter. Mrs.
: tics," Teriy Gilbert said. \
excluded from getting anything and during the hearing. In previous bear- the hands-of the militia.
"I think the FBI has done an Harold Run and son, Patricia Criner,
;
The 43-year-old case- in which . everything he wants. They have com- ings be verbally sparred with the
excellent job of protecting the public Margaret Pasquale, Fred Hayes, Lau: Dr. Sam Sh~ppard claimed that a plelc access to whatever they want." magistrate.
Cipriani, Looker's thind lawyer; from dangerous explosives," he said. ra Arnold, Donald Tolbert, Sheri .
:. 6ushy-haired intruder beat his wife, he said.
Pendleton, Freeman Williams, Jo
: l'«arilyn. to death aitd knocked him.
Suster said he will hear arguments said there was no evidence of cnm1- "These are not .firecrackers." ·
Rose.
·
until ltichards
Seibe.rt also did not immediately
:...Uiiconscious - helped inspired the on the dismissal· in June and get an nal activity
Birth
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rex Hentelevision series "The Fugitive."
update on how much evidence the ap proached the .FBI after the Okla- rule on separate motions by Cipriani dricks, daughter, Point Pleasant,
to
dismiss
the
tape
recordings
made
;--;,;The younger Sheppard wants two sides still need to examine before
by the infonnant or to dismiss one of W.Va.
: S4ister to declare his father innocent. trial.
· four indictments.against Rogers and
(Published with permission)
: Dr. .Sheppard was convicted and
Gilbert argued the state should not
Divorce lnD,ted ,
Looker on First Amendment grounds.
: imprisoned for 10 years.before being take long to prepare because proseDivorces have been granted in
On another is~ue, Seibert ruled as ·
' acquitted at a second trial in 1966.
cutors have had all of the evidence . Meigs County Common'Pl.eas Court
he had in theca~ of two defendants
: Sam Reese Sheppard, 50, of Oak- for 43 years, inclu(ling a police report to Bonita S. Hersltqtan from Kerry
from Ohio !hat tl)e ¥0vernment must
: land, Calif., flew in for the hearing he recently found about a damaged M. Hershman, and to Karen lnherst
produce tbe infonnint for a facc~to: and sat with Gilbert but did not speak. flashlight.
from Russell Inherst. ··
face meetipg :Wi'ih,~fense lawyers.
: .;;; "It's difficult to be here," he told
The .munder weapon was never
Mlll'l'illge license
The gov!'ltlmenl sllid it would appeal,
: .icporters· afterward. "I have some found, But according to the report, a
Amarriage license has been issued
the same as it did in t~ original case.
: ..tllllgh memories of this town. But I'm damaged flashlight was found behind in Meigs County Probate Court to ·
The Ohio defendants are Imam
• g.lJicl'there's a new generation around the house of a neighbor about a year William John Ernst, 39, Tuppers Lewis of cleveland and Jame.s John: tO ' look at the infonnation in the after the killing. six months after Plains, and Kenda Kay Osborn, 32,
son of tbC aeveland suburb of Maple
:...aiute."
Sheppard was convicted.
Tuppers Plains.. ·
·
·
.... _ lf he wins the lawsuit, Sheppard
The flashlight was about a foot
:-Qm.ld ask the Ohio Court of Claims long, with pieces. of its red paint
: ':~D': pay $250;000 for his father's ' chipped off. the housing case dented
:'#tlprisonmenl plus compe~sation for and the gl_ass broken. Chips of red
Ani Ele Power
'1l\lincial losses.
·
enamel paml had been found on the
Akzo
: _,
floor beneath Mrs. Sheppard 's bed.
:.... ' '
The flashlight should have been
10 determine if it was the
·The Daily Sentinel tested
weapon but was eventually thrown
(USPS 213-9111)
out instead, Gilbert said.

Associated Press Writer

; ~udge

.. .
..

•

•

By DAVID SHARP

.;in 50s slated Saturday

Are all the commandments absolute?

I

1

.. planned
.
The Mount Moriah Church of God
on Mile Hill Road in Racine will
have revi.,.al services beginning Sijnday, through Wednesday, May 14, at
7 p.m, Evangelist Donald Stacy will
be the speaker. Rev. Jim Satterfield
welcomes the public.

~ Blustery weather, highs

many smokers are truly unable to every alcoholic who dies of cirrhoSis'
quit?
"·
of the!iver, delirium tremens or sof11e.,
Like many Americans, I have other alcohol-related disease? For ·
some personal experience in this that matter, why aren't the various . :
matter. I smoked two packs of ciga- · ·state attorneys general suing to rccov- .
rettes a.day from the time I was 18 er from lhes.e companies the enor- • ·
qntil I was }0. Then I quit, cold · mous social costs of alcoholism, .
turkey -- not because of the surgeon from medical care to the expense of.
general's warning (t'bis was long picking up drunks in the street?
before he said a word), but because
Nobody; surely, will deny tha\ ,
common sense told me the habit was ~lcohol can sometimes be feroCiousbad for me. It was hard to qtiit -- I ly addictive. and in such cases is
failed once. and succeeded only on · often fatal. It would take an uncom- •
the second try. But I never took monty brazen distiller• .vintner or
refuge in the excuse that I was brewer 10 argue that he ·didn'l know,·
"hopelessly addicted." Some things this.
are just harder to do than otl\ci:S.
The only reason we aren't going
. No doubt there are smokers who aft~r the alcohol-producers right now
Slmplycan'tgencratcthcwolltostop is that too many Americans like an
smokong, much as they m1ght (on lhe- occasional drink to make it safe for
. ory) like to. But I don't see why the politicians and trial lawyers to
tobacco compames should be forced pick on them. We are in the grip of a . .
to pay m1lhons of dollars to every national hysteria aga.insl smoking,
wtdow who os lucky enou~h to have and quacks like California congress- .
had an es~tally wcak-w1llcd bus- man Henry Waxman know an easy.
band. . ·
.
. .
target when they see one.
And tf such smts are JUslified, why
William A. Rusher is a Distin·
aren 'tthe wine, beer and liquor com- guished Fellow. of the Claremont
panies compelled .to compensate 'Instltbte ior the Study, ol Slates·
equally handsomely the estate of manship and Political Philosophy.

Toda.y in ·history

Indictments were filed on Tuellday apinsc six men, following a session
of the Meigs County grand jury on May 2.
An indictment was filed againstlbomaS Rush Hysell , Albany, alleging
one count of receiving stolen property and having a weapon under a disability.
both fifth-degree felonies .
,
The indictment against Hysell llso contained a specification of a previous drug conviction.
·
David Eric Bush, Middleport, was charged with felonious assaul t, a second-degree felony, and aggi-avated robbery,' a first-degree felony.
An eight-count indictment .for passing bad checks. all fifth-degree felonies,
was filed ·against Jeffrey Davidson, Columbus.
Michael Dupre, Radliff, was charged with receiving stolen property, a
felony of the fifth-degree, with the specification that the value of the prop-,
eny stolen was more than $500 and less than $5,000.
David Neutzling of Orient was charged wilh theft of service, with the specification that the service was more than $5,000 in value .
Rick Marshall of Middleport was charged with theft of service, a fourth degree'Felony.
As reported on Tuesday, Dupre has pled guilty to the charge against him,
and his sentencing has been scheduled (or June 23.
·
·

Militia leader's defense Meigs announcements
raps 'i nformant's actions R~viv
·VIa

.

.

· W.VA.

•
'

Another target ·for the tri~llawyers
.

Anna Elizabeth Turner, 81, of Rutland, died Thursday, May 8, 1997 at
the Rocksprinp Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
·
She was born in Carpenter, the daughter of the late Carl H. and~~ Caster Ogdin. She was a retired teacher in the Meigs Local School D1stnct. She
was a member of the Wilkesville Order of Eastern Star 2ffl, Star Grange 778,
Columbia Chapel Christian Church, Delta Kappa Gamma:, Rutland Garden
Club, Star 'Garden Club and the Retired Teachers. Association.
. She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Lanna and Robert
Goode of Sistersville, W.Va., and Sherrie and Bernard Might of Pomeroy; a
brother and sister-in-law, Wesl')' and Pearl Ogdi11 of Carlisle; two grandchildren; and several nieces and .nephews.
,
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Ralph
' 1\trner: a daughter, Sharon '!Urner; and a brother, William Ogd.in.
·
Services will be 3 p.m. Sunday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral ,Home,
Albany, with the Rev. Eugene Underwood officiating. Burial will be in the
Standish Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from'5-9 p.m. Saturday.
The Order of Eastern Star will conduct services at 5 p.m.

• IColumbus ls2• I

l

1tte Dribble
•

AceuW~ l'orecast for daytime conditions and

•••
••

a

1tae Whoopee Cushion .

S.a.. .y,MIIylO

·Anna E. Turner

WASHINGTON .. It's not often They pay rent. ... (yet it) requires the government dole can hardly be
that one finds. liberal Rep. Jesse . mandatory volunteerism in ways that considered poor. Uncle SIIJI,l subsiJackson Jr.• o..m.. aligned wilhrisht· we don 'I require of anyone else who dizes everything from fanners in
wing talkmeister Oliver Norlh. But receives a federal subsidy."
Iowa'lo McDonlld'.s exe&lt;:utives who
GOP leaders have managed to do just
want to peddle hamburgers overseas.
that with a housing bill that perverts
Peanut fanners, for example, have·
aC n erSOn feasted· at the public's expense for
the spirit of volunteerism that echoed
from Pbiladelphia last week.
and.
decades. In a cartel system that
The bill, which is being debated
would make any mafioso green with
Jan Moller
envy. the ·government grants a
·this week, indudes. a provision to
force residents of public housing to _ _....;:.:::..;;..:.;..:..:..:..;.~,..;__~ domestic monopoly to a lucky few
Rep. Rick Lazio, ,R-N.Y., the "quota" holders, who are the'n
''.volunteer" at least eight hours per
moderate,
third-term Republican allowed to sell their peanuts in Amer·
month in return for their rent subsiwho
's
managing
'the bill, says it's . ica at a guaranteed price that is.more
dies or else face eviction.
This provoked outrage from some hardly a burden to require able-bod- than twice the world market rate.
Sllould these fanners fail to find
Democrats, including Jackson, who ied residents of public housing to
wonders why the poorest of the poor giv~ acouple.~f ho~rs each week to buyers, the government buys the
are the only ones being forced to thetrcommurubes. It~ hardly slavery, peanuts, again at twice the market
work for free in exchange
after. all •. when rec1p~ents ~e.t a ~nl •price. Not surprisingly, more than
C for their
·
government handouts. omparmg substdy '." return: Wtth wa1t1ng hsts : two-thirds of the quota holders have
the provision to "slavery," Jackson for pubhc housmg gettmg longer opted out of lhe actual peanut busitried in vain to get it eliminated from every year, surely !here are thousands ness choosing instead to sell their
of. people o~l there ~~ wouldn't quo~ to fanners at a steep markup.
the "I
billwant
.
to clear up a couple of mtnd scrubbtng graffiti tn exchange . Thus, America is left with hun· dreds of idle "peanut farmers," whO
assumptions, " Jackson later told us. for an affordable place to hve.
" First, public housing is not free
We agree. But why stop there? sit at home reaping the benefits of a
housing, but affordable housing. After all, most of those who are on ·federal subsidy they work diligently

8y J

.!1
General ~·ger

,

Six indicted in recent
session of grand jury

OHIO WPztlhcr

Odd bedfellows oppose 'volunteer' .bill

•

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

.. ...

·-•

.••

Aslri Cnnnlll VII

Bra•• Nrw 1~7

c•rvy 11azrr

• Powe! Door Locks
· ~MStereo

Rockwell .................................18

•Cuslom Cl&gt;th

RD-S11ell ..........;................... 186\
Shoney'a ................................ 5\
Star Bank ............_..................42\
Wlltdy's ................................22\

Interior '
• Styled Wheels
• Well Equi!lpeel

-·-·-

Worthlngton ..;.......................18\

Meigs EMS runs
Unill of the Meigs Councy Emer:
gency Services responded to th!CC .
calls on Thursday.
· CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:43 a.m.• to Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Esta Reese to Veterans Memorial ,Hospital .

Tom Peden·

Country

POMEROY
. 8;46 p.m., to State Route 143, for · .
a SIIIICture fire, call cancelled.

REID8VILLI j

MIMI,.......r. 9 • ·I,_ •Stl_.r. 9• • 7 ,_
s.tl): I ,_ • 7 ,_

•

1:08 p.m., to SR 124, Lona
CheValier
. to St. J010ph Hospital.

.

•

'

'

.

Br••• Mrw 111 c•rvy .

I

"'

"""'

..
I

�•

The Daily ·s entinel •--....•

•

Sports

••

.

Plige4

II

. Frldly, May 8, 1887

Bi1S€b.:111
•

c -................ 21

Saturday's ...CLEVELAND (Colon 0-l) at Dttroil

Eu&amp;emtMvlMn

»:

L lsi.

(Otivares 1-2). I:OS p.m.
TellS (Aiberro 0-0) II Boslon (Ham·

liJI

8altimore ...............22 9 .710
New York .............. l9 I~ .SS9
TOfonlo .................. l6 IS ,,16
Boston ......... ,.......... 1S 17 .469
Dctroit.. ................... l :l 20 .394

mond 1- 1).

4~,

Mlnnesoca .............. l4 20 .412
:\ ~
Olicaa~ ..... ._ .. ,........ l 1 19 .367 · · 4~

w-..DJ.-

Sundar'• pmes

6

7~

tO

.$17

CLEVELAND ....... I6 IS ,,.6
Kansa1 City ........... 16 U .-'16

seanie ....................19
Teus ...... .............. .16
Anaheim ................ l4
Oaklllond ................. 1~

1J

.594

CLEVELAND at Detroit , I :0~ p.m.
Te~~oas 01 Boston. l:OS p.m.
·
Kansas City at N.Y. Yankees . I:JS

:z
4

14 .533
16 .467
19 .441

~

p.m.

Seaule al Ballimore. I :35 p.m.
Anaheim at Mllwaukrle, 2:05 p.m.

Thursday's scores

Oakland 111 Olicaao White So11 , 2 :0~

Kansu:s Ci1y 4, Ol:troi1 0
Toronto 4, CLEVELAND :\
.N.Y. Ylll1kees ~ . Texu4
Minnesota 10, Boston 1
, Bahimore 13, Seattle 3

p.m .

TO'I'onto 111 Minnes01a. 8:05 p. ~

. Tonight's games

Idm

CLEVELAND (Nagy 4-2) al De1roi1
(Sager 2-1). 7:05p.m.
· ·

kee (Eldred 3·3). 8:05p.m.

Eastern Division

l!' I. f&lt;l.

NcwYork .............. l6

18

.471

Philadclphia ........... IO 22 .313
Ctlllnl Diviidon
Houston ....... ,......... 19 IS .559
PittsburJ,h ..... .,, ...... IK ,IS .S4!i
St. Louis ................ l6 11 .48!i

.

liJI
.'i

l
7',;

12'~

~
2~

Adwa 100. Cbicaao 95: .des Tied

1· 1

LA. La1oon 104, U!ahll4: U1ahlead•
series 2· 1

·Somday'sc-

,,

2~
I.

"

Montmal at Los

Sl. Lools 6, Philadclphi; l

Pin1"""h 10. C - 1
O.icqo Cubt ~· San Oiefo 2
Atlmua.5. Aonda I

Toal&amp;ht's pma

Houtlonll- J : l~p. m.
CoIondo 11 Philodelphia, I : 3~ p.m.
Ari:IIMa at Pituburah: I :3!1 p.m.
N.Y. Melt llf St. Louis. 2: I~ p.m.

1

New York a1 Miami, 8 p.m.
Houston at Snnle, 10:30 p.m.

A•artea. 4:0~ p.m.

Sunday's Plll.es .

Hockey

Tonight's games
CoiOOldo (Bailey 4-lla! Philadelphio
CMadllro l-3). 7:0~ p.m.
.·
Houilon (l(jJe 2·2) 81 Rorida (Brown
)-2), 7 ,~ p.m.
.
Arlunta (Wade 1-1) at Pinsburah
(ConlovaJ.J). 7:0S p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Clark 3· 2) at St. louis
(Stortlemyre 1·1). 8:0Sp.m.
Montreul (Hermanson 1· 2) 11los An· .
geles (VakXs 1-4), 10~ p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 2 · ~) at San
DieJo {)Wonel12-3). IO:Ol p.m. .
Chicaao Cubs (Trachsel l.. ) at San
Fran~isco (Vanl.andinahBm 1·2). 10 :0~
p.m.
.

Miumi nt New York, 12:30 p,m.
Hoos1on at s.,.ttle, 3 p.m.
O.icaao Bl Atl&amp;nln. 5:10p.m.
'

NHL playoffs

..

Ran~],

.......... _. ........
NFL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION:

BOSTON RED SOX, Sisned RHP
Ru11y Meacham nnd assiJned him to ·
Pawtucket of the lntmut~ionall..eague.
· CHICAGO WHITE SOXo Promo1ed
assistllftl dim.10r of pwblic ~laaions Scbct
Reiren 1o clil'tl.1or of public relatioos.

Philadelpl)ia. 7:l0 p.m.
ColOrado a1 Edmonton. 8:30p.m.

CLEVE~AND INDIANS' Claimed
LHP·Juon Jnccme off waiver~ from 1~
Koops City Royals.

Sunday's.pmes

N.Y. Ruam., New Jeney,l p.m.
Phihuhlpbia 111 Burralo. 2 p.m.. H

·

·

neuu~

MINNESOTA TWINS : AnignetJ

INF ~ott · Slohriviak to Sail Luke. ol'
PCL on a ~Mbililalion nssicnmtnl.

tfle

,,

Brlsketball

·

COLORADQ ROCKIES : Plar.:ed

RHP Mart Thomp10n on t~ I ~ay di!.·.
abled li&amp;l. ltecalltd RHP ll'lhn Thnmson
from Colorad9 Sprinp oft~ PC't..

NBA playoffs

.

· Thunda)"s
letond·rouncl sc-

¢*

1

Su1peodod
J.,.l Sq.l from ,.PI".
scntin1 NFL playcn ror a year and lined
him $,,000, ror ptovidia' money under
llJIIIISUnwd fll1'l'le" to a Aorida Sb* player
in 1993 anct (ailina 10 register as a c:enifted ¥nf in Aorida.
CHICAGO BEARS, Named Mark
Ha~lcy vice JXO!ide'" of pllljer peno-1.
, KANSAS CITY CIIIEFS: Signed QB
Put BQIIIel tO a dJrec..ycar collllll:t.
NE.W ORLEANS S..,INTS : Re ligned RB Derek Brown 1o a one-year
ccintra;:t . Releued 0 O!uck Belin.
OAKLAND RAIDERS: Rc-sig"'d S
Lorenzo Lyrich IIIJd sianed TE Kevin ·

.

WR Eric htrtcnli 10 oae--,ew- COIIfl'a!:l,

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:

Named Reui~ Robens c:ommunj~1ion1'
nnd Otorge·Woods morlet.ng director.
·
'

di~IClf

Basketball '
-

(With activation.
· S300.01 without.)

Cellularwith "-.._
all-day battery ·

.......... "-clollon

· UNITED STATES

(With activation.
$300.01 without)

I

CELLULAR.

A $300° Value! .
1

Dial 20 frequently called numbers by
a simple 2·digit code. Hit anr, button
to answer a call. Call timers et you
keep track of your phone use for
billing. 2 hours talk time, 26 hours
standby. #17 ·106SII165

..

'

Smith.

RadioShack is 'America's #1 cellular retailer. While
this might surprise some, it really comes as no shock to us.
After all, RadioShack has been helping people understand
and enjoy electronics for years. It's only natural that so
many people would come to us for that same help to buy
and activate a cellular phone and for cellular accessories.
So activate today! Cellular service. is provided by:

A $30001
Value!

Pace~s hire Bird; Auerbach yields presidency; Blazers ax Carlesimo

AUTHORrZED

· : Red Auerbll:h's front-office shift
*n't even the biggest news in
BJlston.
.
' The largest of ThursdaY's three
NfiA coaching . moves involved
dJtics great Larry Bird. Bird, who
his no coaching experience at any
l~el, accepted the job as coach of
his hometown Indiana Pacers and.
\\()Is given a contract wonb a repone~ $4.5.million a year.
. ; Rick Pitino's move to Boston sent

!• COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

SAN DIEG!&gt; CHARGERS: Si1111ed

N•lionallAas•e

.

. Bird back to Indiana and shifted
AuerbaCh, the man who built a
dynll!lty as Celtics cOidl, out of his
president's chair.
More than Boston's front office
changed Thursday as the NBA
coaching carousel switched into full
gear.
P.J. Carlesimo was 'pushed out of
Ponland and Eddie Jordan was kept
on in Sacramento.
Next to take a ride might be
Detroit's Doug Collins, who, despite
a 54-win season, reP,onedly is ready

to leave the Pistons after just two
seasons.
Bird is from French Lick, Ind.,
and was a sw player at 111Cliana SWe
before his stellar NBA career with
Boston.
'Tm very excited about this
opponunity to go back home and
coach the Indiana Pacers," Bird said .
in a statement. ,
Bird, who led the Celtics to three
NBA championships and had been
an adviser for the franchise since
retiring in 1992, will return to 'his

· home stale for a news conference on
Monday, the club said.
.
Despite Bird's lack of COIIChina
experience, Pacers president Donnie
Walsh has. no doubts about his abil·
ity.
"He looks .at the gatne from
more of a coach's mind than a plaver's mind," Walsh said. "He's a very
bright guy and a very honest guy, as
well as a very tough guy. All those
·qualities add up. He'd be very successful anywhere he went"
· Auerbll!;h. who won nine cham·

pionships as COIICh and who has been
president since 1984, yielded the
team presidency to Pitino and will
become a vice chairman
The Trail Blazers, meanwhile,
fired Carlcsimo after three seasons,
though their · general manager
thougtlt the coach did a "good job."
Ponland won,49 games this season and Carlesimo was 137-109 as
.coach, bu.t the Blazers were eliminated in the first round all three
years.
"I think P.J. did a good job this

year, This COIIChina chanac is not

llbout wins and losses, as many today

are," general manuer Bob Whitsitt
said.
Whitsitt said the team needed •
change, and that Ponland wanted to
utilize its younger players more.
Carlesimo said he was disappointed. and that he would prefer to
stay in the NBA. He has been men·
tioned as a possible successor to Pilino at Kentucky, but repons said that
job was going t~ Georgia coach Tu!r
by Smith . .

·E.x-basketball.coaches must sue OSU to get severanc·e settlements

•

FOotbaU

A.mc.nLeopo

•

on: Detroit

Toalght's pmes

tAl.Benes 3-3), 8:0.5 p.m.
Montreal (Bullinaer 2~) a1 Los An-:

"

"""""'Y

Bu~alo Dl

'Chicago Cubs (Telemaco c;t-1) 111 San
Fnw:iaco (8,uecer 1·0), 4:0S p.m.
,
Colorado .(Ritz ,J-4) al Philadelphia
(M.L.eiler J-3), 7:m p.m.
Houston (Holt 3-l) at f lorida
(Hellin&amp; 1· 0. 7:05p.m.
Atlan1o (Neask S-0) at Pi1t1burah .
(Lieber 1·]). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (B.'Jones S-2) llt Sl. Louis

..

.

· ,

BalobaU '

New Jersey 0:. New

York leadlscnr.s 3- 1 I
Detroit 3. A.nnhtim 2 12
wiu aeries 4-0

'I

Transactions

' Thunday'J
second-round scores
N.Y.

•

..

•o

INDIANA PACERS: Named Lorry
Bitdt.:OKh.
'
.
PHILADELPHIA 76ERS : Nam&lt;d
Lenny Cerriet heod.tminer.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS :
FiNd P.J. CUrleaimo, c:OICh.
SACRAMENTO KINGS: Promoled .
Edj,Jje JordAn l'rom imerim Coac:h IO ,heiUJ
coach ADd slaned him ro a rwo-year L'Uiltrutt.
.
'

C'llicqo a1 Allnntll. I~. m.
U1nh 111 L.A. ·Luken . . ::\0 p.nt

p....

• NIA: •Filttd lhe CIUCIJO llulls

S25,000 (ot failiAJ make ill player&amp;
oVIillble 10 tile media fol._l pnclice
ooMayl. ·
·
IIOSTOif canes: A.....-cdlhe
tetlaurio• of Red Autrbach; president.
wtlo wm retnliR wirb the teaM u a vice

dloirman.

Salurday's&amp;ames

CINCINNATI al San Oieao .. 4:05
p.m. .
.
.aucaa~ Cubs as s~ Franc•sco. 4:0~

Saturday's pmes

Allttntm ..... .. ...... 2J 10 '. 697
Montrenl :.... ,........ 17 14 . ~8
·Fio•id• .................. 18 I~ .l4l

Texas (Witt ~-0) .at 8os1oa (Wasdjn 0..
0), 7:0l p.m. ·
·
Knn511S Ci1y (Rusdl2·2) at N.Y. Van·
keek (Rosen 2·1). 7 : ~5 p.m.
Sebule (Moyer 1-0) at Baltimore (Coppinger 1·0), 7:35p.m.
·
Anaheim (HilSegawa 1·1) Ill Milwou·

9

'Houtton4. N .Y. MdJ 2

NL standings

Chit: ago While Sox I 0. OakiiUld 6

.M6

. . . (-2-1~ I&amp;.O!Ip.lll.
CINCINNATI (MotJU ()..3} 11 SAD
llitJo CHIICkoct. 2-ll. 10:0~ p.m.

8

Thunday'o IICOI'H

kca

CtnlraiDi..-W.
14

•

11

SaftFIIIICiiCO ........ I9 12 .613
tAO Anaelel ...........ll 13 .~SI
. San D1e10 .............. 12 19 .387

I:O~p . m .

Kansas City (Appief 4-lllt N.Y. Yan(Mudoza I-I). I : J~ p.m.
Seaule (Fauero 4-1) at Balli more
(Kamieniecki 2· 1), I:J~ p.m.
Anoheim (Dickson 5-ll at Mitwnuk.et
rKDrii - ~J.l : O~ p.m.
.
011kland (TeiJheder 0-2) ai Chu:t~so
Wtlitc So" (Onabtk 2&lt;~).7:0S p.m.
Toronto (Clemens S-0) Ill Ninneso1u
!Aldred 1-4), 8 :~ p.m.

Mi1waukce .......... ~ .. IS

w_...,.._

Sox (NavlfTO 3-1), 8:0-' p.lll

AL standings
Iua

• ..... JO 22 .ll 3
CCNCJNNATL
Chic1J0 .................... 9 23 .281

· Toronlo (Heatae• l-1) at Miru:tesoh:l

The Dally S1 1t1MI• ,._.15

Pomeroy.•lllcldllpart, Ohio

NBA 'coaching carousel' begins
By VINCENT CINISOMO
. MIOCI.-.cl PNu Wrtt.r ·

Scoreboard
CRodriaoez 1·2), Rom p.m.
Oakland (Prieto l·l) at Oicqo While

Friday, llliy I, 1117 .

·

.

~red

Ohio State basketball coac~s
Randy Ayers and Nancy Darsch w1ll
tiave to go tocoun to receive the sevetance settlements the university
lijlreed to.
.
i But it will be a friendly lawsuit.
The university's attorneys even will
Qll out the paperwork for the law-

suits and tum .it over~¢0 the coaches'
attorneys to s1gn.
The state auditor.'s office, which
announced last week that it would
.review Ayers' $637,353 buyou.t and
Datsch's $165,000 settlement,
changed course this week, The
Columbus Dispatch reported in
today's editions.

. Camby agrees to repay agent

. .

Instead of making uuling,Audi· ments. he risked ~gering OSU. If he
tor Jim Petro will let the case move approved them, he risked the appearance of selectively targeting some·
through the Ohio Coun of Claims.
"We're not going to make a for- schools that offer contract buyouts
·
mal resolution at this point," audi- while ignoring others.
Petro's dilemma stems from a
tor's spokesmlll) Tom Prendergast
told the Disparch. "The process is · March · repon in which he said
not yet completed by which they get trustees at Centtal State University .
tina! approval for the agreements." acted illegally in 1995 when they
approved a $325,000 contraCt buyout
If Petro ruled against the agree-

for Anhur E. Thomas. the school's
president
'
Petro said Thomas and the former
trustees should pay .back nearly
$300,000 because the settlement
exceeded the terms of the employment contraCt Thomas had signed.
Last week, Larry James, attorney
for four of the fonner Central State ·
trustees, pointed out that OSU also

had exceeded the employment contracts Ayers and Darsch signed. The
next day, Petro's office· opened its
review of the coaches' contracts.
· . Ayers' contract as men's basket- ·
ball coach, signed in 1992, calls for
a severance package of $287,010. ,
Dan;ch 's 1994 contract as women's
basketball coach calls for $114,750 '
m severance. pay.

"'CAA strips Massachusetts of 1996 Final Fout appearance
·~·
JEFF DONN
{ AMHERST, Mass.

(AP) ·J?"nd guilty of NCAA violations,
Marcus Camby says he'll pay back
the money. What he can't do is give
the University &lt;if Massachusetts back
i~ Final Four appearance.
~ The NCAA on Thursday stripped
~sachusetts of its 1996 touma~J~ent record because Camby accept!@ gift$ from a spons agent as_an
amateur p'ayer.
·
: The NCCA's .executive committee, meeting in Pebble Beach, Calif.,
ll'!so ordered that Massachusetts
.;:tum $151,000 in tournament money from 1996.
: The 6-foot-11 C81nby, now playing with the Toronto Raptors, led a
team coached by John Cali pari to a
3'5-2 record in 1995-96. It ended with
loss to Kentucky in the national
semifinals. .
: The team's title as the school's
ljest ever will be now show . in the
record books with an asterisk.
; Camby apologized to his former

a

teammates, · coach and school in a not challenge the decision.
telephone interview with journalists
AccOrding to NCAA rules, an athThursday from Los Angeles, where lete may not accept money, gifts or
he was watching !.he NBA playoffs any oiher benefit for his services.
between the Lakers and the Jazz.
"I'm really sorry," he said. "l fully intend to pay back all the money
- donate the money back to the
school."
.
. "People make mistakes, and I
made mistillres.': he added.
He also said he Was ."a good person" who committed no crime. He
~aid the NCAA should consider providing some form ofpaymentto col·
lege athletes to help stem the temp- ·
tation to take gifts.
''The NCAA has to loosen up the
rules a little bit," he said.
UMass chancellor David Scott
said he felt a "great sense of loss for
f
the university and.its supponers."
Added athletic director Bob Marcum: "It's a shame SO·many ·people
who were not involved in any
wrongdoing have to share in the
loss." But he said the university will

gifts. He was quo!ed. as saying he
took jewelry wonh $5,300 from
agent Wesley Spears.
The player reportedly said Spears

Several weeks after the 1996
Final Four, Camby set off a scandal
when he told The HQrtford Courtlllt
of being wooed by spans agents with

first provided him with money,
women and other favors and then
threatened to disclose all if Camby .
refused his services as an . agent.

...
'

RETAILER

Car phone provides better ·reception &amp; ·
. ·includes kitfor hands-free calling

Full legal power for clear reception, even in fringe areas! Plug into cigarette light~r or
use uanery power while away from your car. SO·number memory speed -dialing. #17 ·1007

RadioShack.

*Adveno.d p1M:e 1equi10S a new activalioo and minin&gt;.Jm servi:e cc&gt;mmllmenl (usual~. I, 1 01 l years), upon aed•l appr:l.al, with lhe ~a&lt;loShad&lt; auiholized """' setvinq your irea. AA aaivalion fee mav be leQUiled.
ti&lt;e ~r home pllooe a month~ 5el'lice fee.long·distance fee~, and dlarges f01 airtime you aaual~ use·"'" be made.AIIIh"" fees VOl'/ del)ending on lhe poo yw ~ele&lt;t.lf )QU 1e1ml1.ne sef'lice bef01e r:cmp~liilt of vour
minimum ~ervice canvritmen~ lhe carrie&lt; !MY impose a II at 01 p101ated oenrinailon fee. ~ yw le&lt;minaoe ""'' wi1hm 120 days of activaiK&gt;n, 10 awoo a 1300 marge by RacioSiladc, yw must •etum lhe cellula&lt; pllone. ·
Prices
participating RadioSha&lt;k stOI'Ol and dealers. Independent Radio Shack dealers and f&lt;anchisees may hoc be partidpating ln· tn~ ad'or stock &lt;i
~em
·

a.m.

·You've got questions..We've got answers.!"

ee~~
·
'

•

1ngs.

T.... e ·terri e twos.
\

J

ers
'

Wi/feng
£.-ove, Missy,
ik.ey, and 'Betfi .

'Effie[
Lambert

CR_eeves

Love,
Your :Kids

·. Love, Jack &amp;
rr'rina .Jlannan

erty.

s~unday,
May II, I997

Reward Mom this Mother'i

!:-!:a~.;; I!~

.":&lt;! ,.

I
.... 1"

Day.

With so much responsibility, she

· deserves the most dependable wireless service around. Sign Mom up with
Cellular One and get 250 free local .,:p!CI!k minutes a month for ·

.....S.

3 months. It's her day, so give her a gift that will make her life easierher own cellular phone for staying in touch, jug9lin.g schedules and
. handling life's liHie emergencies. Stop by yc;M Cellular One location for
a Mother's Doy 'gift she'll appreciate the year 'round. We have . a rate

Jvfary Yfnn
Myers

Jennie 'R.
Jfayman

Love, L'eigfi,
!Andy and Carrie

Love,
rTerri Lynn and
angela rnawn

.Judy

gloria
Oiler

:Nelson
,·

Love, Lorena
&amp;Jay

Love, (]Tad,
. Monte, :Angela~
'.
1Jarwin,
•
anffiony, Cindy_
'

plan to fit your gift budget. Expires May 25, 19,97.

'tfielma
White .
Love,
Jennie Jfaym~n

SL7IO

SIX

$5099
$5699

CELLULA . . . .

$10!10 .
$1000

______
_
----____
____,_...,...

GallpDIIs

1502 Eastern Avenue 614/441.0547 ~ 204 West 2nd Street 614/992-7070

·

'

Jackson 384 Main Street 614/286-6073
!'

.

''•
I

.

•I

!

·•

I
j

Rlverjrorlt Bontla/YabaMa/Poiarls
Galllpolll, ()H

..

•

AIIG, ollooo Politi• oono..t "''""h IOI4oh ttl! roilin loto rlon - · ·
lm -lilly ,.,_,, loti lotoro•lllotoclot t.. M Mil olio• '"' ,..,..,,
.lot ,,., "'"'""'"' Pol.l&lt; hiler f11 4oltlh
. •.

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

our retail.
locations on
Mother's D~y.
Sunday, May 11,
and call your
mom. It's a FREE
call, compliments
of Cellular One. •

•C.,tain r•lllrictibnl apply. Ne" ~MI of wvic•.1'2~ COftllllltrHnt oiWI ctedit opp"CNOirtq~~lr.d. UnuMCI !l'lirtUMI 0o ftOf to"r o..,,
Not ..olid wilt! any ott.... promotiofi.HI .tore lor detaill,

UJIPer Bf. 7

•

Stop by any of

�Frldlly, M•y 8, 1887

Pomeroy • MICidleport, Ohio
'

·Beat
of the

Time out for tips on .plan-ning for
By BECKY .BAER

Bend

prior to lhe person's deal!\. It is

. , 111111 County lb1lnllDII Agent important that lhe owner make his or
• F1mlly and C011•umer Sci· , her wishes known before deal!\ so
. encnl Community Develop· · that lhe family can make the transiment
tion smoothly.
_,

By BOB

HOEFUCH

What would happen if suddenly
· Too many times people spend all
the s1a1e had to ~ttle your eslate of lheir lives accumulating material
because you did nQI pltm ahead? goods, but won't take a few hours to
UQIY. Middleport High
Would
your family be able to main- plan what will happen to their
Alurnm-·· now hear lhls.
tain
their
standard of living? Would belongings when .they die. There are
True, your annual banquet will be
your
children
be . able to co.ntinue many options available to help in
served at 6:30 p.m., Saturday, May
their
education?
Who would receive estate planning. Wills, trusts, insur·
24, in lhe former Middleport High.
ance' and retirement pensions can
School now lhe Meigs Junior Hi•h your property?
School.
.
..
Every estate, farm. or property help secure your family's future.
However, festivities will start at will be transferred . someday, Research shows that of married cou5:30 p.m., in front of lhe building. whether lhe owner plans it or not. pies who are both sixty years old,
June Kloes •.who is active in staging 1be transfer could occur in an order- one of them will probably live to lhe .
lhis year's reunion, tells me there ly fashion based . upon the owner's age of 93.
Once you llave reached retire-.
will be games held atlhat hour and a wishes, or according to the laws ·of
the
slate
·if
no
plans
had
been
made
ment
age, the remaining life
graduate from dear old M,H.S.,
Myron Duffield will be on hand to
entertain you on the calliope from ·
his big red circus wagon. Myron and
his wife. lhe former June Seines,
who've been away from Meigs
County for years on end, .have
·retired to Middleport and the talentThe Community Calendar Is
ed Myron will be bringing you some published as a free service to DOD·
..toe· tapping music during the open· profit groups wishing to announce
ing activities.
meeting and specw events. The
Proceeds from the games will be calendar Is not c!eslgned to proused to purchase a new trophy case mote· sales or fUnd ralsen of any
to be located at the Meigs Junior type. Items are printed as space
High School. There are a couple of permits and cannot be.guaranteed
trophy cases on hand in the building to run a specific number of days.
now but there just isn't room for all
.of lhose Middleport High School FRIDAY
trophies, which .should be prese?,ed,
CHESTER .. Grief support
·and the trOphies won by junior nigh group, 7 p.m. Friday at Chesler
:students. If funds permit the present United Melhodisl Church: Six week
;two cases will also be refurbished.
session. Rev. Sharon A Housman,
And speaking of the Middleport . 985-4312 for information.
:High Alumni Reunion, it's THAT
:time again.
·
LONG B01TOM -- Hymn sing
. Tom Dooley is ready to stan at Faith Full Gospel Church, Fiiday,
·preparing the store windows at the 7 p.m. The Deliverance will be
:Middleport Department Store with singing. ·
:alllhe memorabilia that you have on
:hand from your days under the
POMEROY
BookShelfers
•Orange and lhe Black.
.
Writing Club, friday, 7 p.m. at the
: Haste sometimes makes waste, Pomeroy Public Library.
:but lhis is an exception to the rule.
·Tom is planning a week's trip to SATURDAY
V6, 4X4, air, stereo, more.
:t-ondon before the reunion and conwaa$23,705
&lt;;HESTER -- Return Jonathan
:sequently asks you to bring your Meigs· Chapter, DAR, 10:30 a.m.
. 'NOWONLY .
'contributions to the store imriledi- meeting at . the · Chester Courthouse
:ately so lhe windows can be done. will\ a picnic luncheon at noon.
:There's no theme for the windows
.
I
:lhis year so anything goes. Old uniMIDDLEPORT -- Squire Par:;fonns, photos, yearbooks whatever sons, in concert Saturday, at Meigs
··you have on hand will be good. Tom Junior High School, Middleport.
&lt;does ask lhat your mark your items Doors open at 6 p.m. Local talent
·'with your name and phone number will perfonn from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
.so that after the reunion everylhing . Free will offering will be received.
:-can be returned to its rightful owner.
. Alumni coming into town for· the
BVRLINGHAM -- Burlingham
reunion love looking at all of the old Modem Woodmen potl\lck 6:30 at
"good stuff'', so Tom is counting on hall, Saturday. Each mother to
you.
receive a flower.
Loaded. 4 Door.
That was really an unusual cir-

expectancy is much higher than lhe
life expectancy for lhe 1eneral publie. Those people who reti'te in JIOOd
health, generally have 30-40 years
of retirement. How will they live on
their reduced incomes? Social Security was not designed to be the only'
source of income for lhe retirement
years • it was intended as a suppleJllCnt. Therefore, it is necessary to
begin establishing..a "safe" investrnent portfolio at an early age to pro.vide adequately for ·lhe "golden"
years.
If you would like more informstiori on h!Jw to develop an estate
plan, conlacl Dr. Jim Skeeles, Extensian Agent in Lorain County. He has
developed and is conducting letter
study course on estate planning. The

310 EAST MAIN ST...

"'"'
199 PICKUP
K1500

Was $11,582
'
'
NOWONLY

Was$26,759
NOW ONLY

s2o 960 nen $1 0, 118

cumstance at the Meigs County AcaLONG BOTTOM -- Red Brush
dell!ic Ex~ellence Banquet this week _ Churi:h of Christ, Long Bottom, Satand cenarnly a proud moment for urday,7 p.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6
Jtm and .Pam h'ld
Crow,
peaker.,
.
p.m. De nver H'll
1 , s
AII Ihreec 1 reno fp amand 1rm
·
were among the honorees of the
evening. The. entire Eastern .Local
School District had I 3 top students
who were honored and three of lhem
were ttie Crow children who include
Carrie, a sixth grader at Chester Elementary; James Wesley, an eighth
· grader at ·Eastern Junior High, and
Meredith, a senior at Eastern High
School. Arid Meredilh was also winner of the Franklin B; Walter State
·Award as the top senior in the Meigs
County Schools.
On hand to share in the moment
of pride at the dinner were grandparents, Bob and Katie Crow of Syracuse. ~r grandparents are the late
Dorothy and Dick Neutzling who
lived in Pomeroy.
Congratulations to the family . .
Frankly, I felt a little good
because Issue One in Columbus
went down to defeat in TueSday's
election. It dealt will\ an additional
sales tax which would have helped
build a sports and show arena in the
city. II seemed to me that the media
tried to cram the issue down the
11\roats of voters and I hale that
approach. Incidentally, those
oppo~ to the issue spent $5,000 in
lheir program to fight its passage
while promoters spent 1.2 million
dollaR to try to gel voter support ·on .
· lhe measure. I'm with the city voters.
The money for the arena ·should
come from
other than

•

1997 PONT.
GUNDAM

SUnr Rtta Baptist
Pasror: Bill Uule
Sunday School - IOa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:30·p.m.

4X4

ML Union Baptist
~aslor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening • 6:30 p.m.
We~nesday Services , 6:30p.m.
.
'
Btthlthtm Boptlll Churoh
6rcal Bend, Route 124, Racinc 1 OH
Pastor: Daniel Berdine
Sunday School .. 9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP.. 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Boble Sludy - 6:00 p.m. .
Old Btthtl Fne Wll Baptist Cloun:h
28601 Sr. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - iO a.m.·
. , Evening - 7:30 p.m. .
, · Tllu"""'y Se"'lces • 7:30

$23i914

139114

. 13991

RKfnt Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rev. Lawrence T . Hale)t
.Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship -. 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
We~nesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

'""' 1997 GEO
TUCKER

Hltltlde lioo;tlst C!ll•roh
St. Rt. 143 jusr off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev, James R. Acree, Sr.
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship ; lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

!-"Of"

Was $18,105 ..
NOW ONLY

ONLY

$16,10 l 13979$13 995

$3 502

13181

13911

Vlctoey Bapllot .lndtl'""dant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport ~
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship- 1oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

SUNDAY
·MIDDLEPORT -- Evangelist ·
John Elswick preaching Hobson
Ch · · f 11
h' Ch h 7
nsuan e ows 'P urc ' p.m.
Sunday. Special singing.
·
· LONG B01TOM -- Revival serviqes, Faith full Gospel Church, .
May 11 -16, Dave Dailey, evangelist,
7 p.m. each evening.
POMEROY -- Big . Bend Farm
Antiques Club, Meigs High School
Library, 7:30p.m. Monday.

Miller wins
scholarship
· Middiepon resident Michelle L
Miller has ·received a trustees scholarship from the University of Rio
Grande. Miller is a senior .at Meigs'
High School. She plans to major in
education. She is the daughter of
Dave~ J. and Shirley Miller. The
scholarship covers partial tuition 'for
qualified applicants.

ll£W1 199~ CHEVY
MALIBU .

4 or., auto., air, stereo. M1.1s1 See!
3 TO CHOOSE FROMI .

Was$17,091

·

"'"' 1997 CHEV.
CAVALIER

•'"' 1997
OLDS 88
Luxury &amp; style.
Wa•$23,100
NOW ONLY

IW•••$13,492

. ~15966 13838$1

NOW ONLY

767

13848

$19,988

t..........;.................................................... $

Auto., 4 cyl., PS, PB, 42,000 miles. Purple.

·

.

.

·

. ·

:,

V6, air, auto., PS, PB, ti.lt wheel, C(uise control, AM/FM cass., sharp, only 13,000 milef . Blue.
·
· .
83 GEO PRIZU ..........................................~.................. ~................................................t...............~..·.......................................... $7,101)

~~==:::.
9vlotlier's f})ay Specia[
FREE PWIT TO-ILL MOMS
Bring Mom to

\

MDM'IIMOBIIIBDID '
At 1;18 Waahlngton Sl, Raven.wdOCI, WV 26164
Phone273-1038

For·S11day B•H•t

:SO~o~~i
:fF:'::i:~~~:.:..~:~
~~~~~-~~~:·.~i!~.~~~~:.:~~-~~~-~·
. ~.~~~~-i!~:.J.I..............
:......~............................~.....·.s12,eoo
.•
.
.
.
,

V6, tilt, Cl'\ll&amp;e, PS, PB, atr, AMIFM cass., 27,000 miles. Red.

.

.

·.·

.

·

-:S~~:~~~~ai~:-Pw:·FiL:·P"s:·ii·s:·;~;;-~~~·iiit;·~~;;:·A:MiFM·~;::·;;;;i:i·;·a:ooot;;;;~~;:·a~;;:..................~ .................. $1o,aoo

18 BUICK PARK AYENUE ..............................................................................................~......................................................... $21,8CM)
Loaded, 27,000 miles. Beige.
.
i
·
_. CAMAR0 .....!.!.........................., ...........................~ ................................ .... ...........; ......, .......! ..~~ ............. ~ ........................... .... $12~1CJCJ
V6. 5 speed, PS, PB, air, AM/FM cass.; tilt, cruise, alum. wheels; T-tops, 23,000 miles. ·
.
·
·

$1.-.:»

815 CAVAUER LS...............~.............................................................................................. t...........................~..............................

4 cyl .. auto., PS, PB. PW, AM/FM cass., tilt, cruise, 38,000 miles. Red.
.
.
II OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 LS .................................................................................... ~....................................................... 117,. .
Loaded, 31,000.miles. White
.
·
i · ·
· .
·
88 GIIC K·1500 PICKUP.4X4, VB, auto., air ·
'
85 GMC SIERRA PICKUP VB, auto., PS, PB, air,111t, .?rulse.....,.............................. ,.......... ;............................................................!~ 3,.13
85 TOYOT. TACOMA PICKUP
EKI.

cr •arc CAl saowr

I'IOP BY SVNDAr na·ova SPJUNO

All fN (U f•f .,.99

•\ · .

Christian Union
Hlrrtfonl Chun:h or Christ In
Cbritllan Vnlon
Hanfor4, W.Va.
.
PasiOI: Rev. DJvid McManis
Sun~y School • II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:30p.m.
,.

Chur ch of God

Chun:bor~ orProphO&lt;)'
O.J. Whole(\d.;off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: PJ. Chapman
Sunday Sc~dol - 10 a.m.

Worship' 11 a.m.

Wednesday ~rvices - ? p.~.

Trinlly Church
SecOnd&amp;: Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday sChool and worship 10:2S

Episcopal
Gracel!pl~&lt;opal

Chun:h
3:!6 E. Moin St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy Eucharist and .
Sunday Schooll0:30 a.m.
Cuff~

Pomeroy Churoh or Clrrbt
212 W. Main St.
PaStor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

hour following

Holiness
Don•lllt Hollnost Chun:h
31057 Slale Route 325, Langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday ochool - 9:~ a.m.

Church announcements'
'
sponsored by these area
merchants.
.

,'

IIISUUIICI
•ACROSS FRC»&gt; 1HE COURJHOUSf'"

Menu lncludH: Rout BMf, Biked Stalk,
Fried Chicken, Chlck•n Uv.,.., AaaOi'ted

,_,, ,.,.,., ,,.,. ,.,...,.., •.,,.,

All Uaed ca,. II ~ka Muat Go. •

'10.99

All payments subject to credit approval

TIME FOR SPRING

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
.

· IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

TN8Wtik'•

· Cl&amp;ANING?

,..,.~10~~-·

' CINn

CHit,.,..,. INie.,., at:

IIHii: """ ,.. help of lhe

CLUSIFIED SECTIONl
'

Pasror: Bob Randolph
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· i0:30 a.m.

Rtedsvllle
'Pallor: Rev. Charles Mash
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. service

•

•

.,

S y - Chun:b of tho N... nao
Putor: Bill Slim
Sunday School • 9I30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Tuppcn I'Was St. Paul
Pastor~ .Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - Jlh.m.
TueMiuy Services - 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy Ch'o,.. ol'tht Nouroile
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McCiuns
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Coalral Cl•tor.
Albuey (Sy....,.,.)
Pastor: Chlirlea Neville
Sunday School - 9:4~ a.m.
Worship " II a.m. ·
We~hesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Chattr C~rin:h or the N...n:ne
Pastor: Rev. Herbeit Orale
Sunday Schoql -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

l!nl•'l'riH
Kctlh R;tdc r
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WOiihip - 9 a,m.
Pa~to_r;

RAWLINGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
264 South 2nd

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

9112-2955

CLASSIFIED ADS P.J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide .Ins. Co.
a supermark et
otColumbus,oh .
~· 1 11
fOr 8V8rythfng
' S04 W. Main
,_J'
·

992:2318 Pomeroy

.

Pomeroy

(M\\

'!25i
.

Veterans
Memorial
Hospital

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
. 992-2104

"Dignity and Service Always"
Established 1913
1108 EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO
992·2258

,,

In Christ Chun:b ·
Texas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service~- 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Chrill
2 l/2 miles north of Reedsville·
on State RoU1e 124
P:aslor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship· 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ·Services · 7:30p.m.
• Wednesday Youth Service.- 7:30p.m.

Fnedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd: 3 I .
Paslor. Rev . Roger Willrold
School -9:30a.m.
?p.m.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

11

Mt. Hennon United Bnthren

Carleton lnltnltnomlnalloul Ch.,.h
Kingsbury Road
. Pasror: Jeff Smllh .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshop Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Nichr Services

992-5432

SWISHER 8t LOHSE
PHARMACY~

United Brethren

South Btthel New Totqmenl
Silver Ridae
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wednesday Service· 7 p.IJ\.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried ChiCken"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

. 214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

992·5141

Sevuth·Day Ad.......
Mulberry H11. Rd., Pomeroy
Putor: Roy l.awinsky
$alurday Services:
Sabbarh School - 2 p.m .
wo.. hip - 3 p.m.

Full G01ptl Uglalbouse
33045 Hiland Roa.d, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Eveninc 7:30p.m.
. Tuesday .t Thursday - 7:30p.m.

Craw's.Family
Restaura.,t

BrQgan-Warner
INS4RANCE
SERVICES

Seventh-Oily Adventist

United Faith Chan:h
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-PaiS
· Pastor: Rev. Roben E. Srilith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo11hip - i0:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WeCinesday Service • 7 p.m.

Rulland Clottn:lr of t•e N...,....
Pastor: Samuel Buye
Sundar School - 9:30 1.m.

'

•

· Rnilsvlllt Ftltow1hlp
Chun:h ottht Naun:nt
PISior: Mark A Dupler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedaeaday Services - 7 p.m-

LonaBottom
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • I 0:30a.m.

Sunday Sdiool ~ 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 e.m.

ML Olive Co..,unlty Clntn:h
Pull'r: Lowren&lt;e Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
. Evcnin1 ~ 7 p.m.
Wedneday Se.Vice . 7 p.m.

.,r

Mlddltport Chotroh of lht Naureno ·
Pa.•ror: o..
A. cundlff
· Sunday Schoo - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hlp • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
WedfiCSday Services - 7 p.m.

Joppi '

Mldd"port f..Oobyterlu , .

F.Jih Gospel Chun:h
LonsBottom
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

· RKIH Pint Clltln:~ ol'lht Naaa,....
'
Pasror: Sc:ou Rose
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Chtstor
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
WOIShip - 9 a.m.
Sunday School - iO a.m.
Tllur.&lt;day Services - 7 p.m.

Hanioonvllle Pn:sbytfrion Churoh
Worship • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 9:45 a:m.

Mono Chapel Chun:h ·
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.
.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

185-3308

Taxes and title fee not Included.

V.Ottll'laa, SOUp, S.led 6 ·o.aaart Blr

Allred

Pulor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· II a.m ...6:30 p.m.

SyracuR Flnt United Presbytor!on ·. ~
Pistor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
.~
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 ~. m .

Dyotrllle Community Chu,..
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Torch Cltun:h
Co. Rd. 63
Suoday School - 9:30 a.m.
WOfiiiiP · 10:30 a.m.

filora •• ue......

Presbyterian

Hazel CO.munlly Church
OffRI. 124
Paslor: Edsel Hart
S.un!"'y School. • 9:30a.m.
Worslnp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Hor:ldni(IOrt C-uroh ..
Orand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 1l a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

992-2121

.

•

Middloport PcntfCOIIqJ ·,
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
•
W1dnesdny Services - 7:00p.m. ~

SyrHII!Ie Mission
1411 Bridgeman St. , Syracuse
· Sunday School - tO a.m.
... Evening ~ 6 P·fll·
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

lledlel Ch•roh
Townlhip Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship , io a.m.
Wednetday Services • 10 a.m.

Mtlll CC!O(Imlllrt Parlalr

Ptntecootal Aste.bty .
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hobnck
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

.

'

Coolrllle United Mtlhodill Parith
Pastor: Helen Kline
Cool•lll• Cllun:h •
Main I( Fifth St.
· Sunday ll&lt;bo&lt;ll • 10 a.m.'
;'\ .. ~;,;
.
Worsh'~9a:m. .
,• •
Tu esday Serv
- 7 p.m.

ML Oil•• United Melhodltt
Off 124 bebfnd Wilkesville
Pasror: Rev. Ralph Spinis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services • 7 p.m.

Pentecostal

Follh Vollty Tohtmaete Churoh
Bailey Run Road
•
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 1 p.m.

Raclat
Pa.liltOr: Brian Harkness
Sunday School · IU a.m .
Worthip - II ri.m.

-

•

Ntw Ule VIctory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH •
Pastor: Bill Slaten
...
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7, p.m. •
Wednesday - 7 p.m..&amp; Youth 7 p.m. •

Middleport Community Churoh
57$ Pea~ St., Middleport
Paslor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evtnlng - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p. ~ .

l!asl Ldort
Pastor: Bri~n Harkness .
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesd~y ~ 7 p.m.

Graham Ualted Mfthodlot
Worship- 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
·
7:30p.m. (Jrd &amp; 41h Sun)
Wedneoday Service • 7:30 p.m.

.CIIftOft Tahtnradt Churdr
Cllhon, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m.

l!ndlimo Houst of Prayer
·
(at Burlingham cburch offRoule 33)
Pastor: Robert Vanc;e
Sunday worship- 10 a.m.
Wednellday service. 6:30 p..m.

.
P"ror: Kennelh Baker ·
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m. (lsi&amp; 3rd Sun)

Unit ed Methodi st

.Fnday-7:00 p.m.

Honisoavlllo Community Chur&lt;h
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
·
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

' Sut1011

St. Paal Lulhtran Churoh
Corner Sycamore &amp; second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Oeorge Weirick
·Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
, • · ,Jo'!~It! ·. II II&gt;"!· ,

Wed~esday· 7:00p.m.

Tholletleren' Ftllowshlp Mlnl•lry
New Lime Rd., Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Margarel J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.
·

MornlDIStar
Pastor. Kennelh Baker
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7:30 p.m.

""

Church or Jesus Chr.lst,
. Apostolic Faith
1!4 mile past Fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
l'astur: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.

faith Full G01pel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
·
Wednesday - T p.m.
Friday · fellowshtp service 7 p.m.

Carmtl
Pallor. Kenneth Baker
. Sunday School - 9:30 t .in.
Worship - 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t 41h Sun)

Our s..Jour Luthtraa C~un:h
Walnurand Henry SIS., 1!-avenswood, W.Va.
. lnrrlm pastors: Rev. Robe~ Hupp
Sunday School • iO:OO a.m.
Worship • II a.m.

R~olclng Ulr Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence F9reman
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 P..m,

Hobson Christian Ftllo,oblp Chun:h
Rev. Clyde Henderson
Sunday Mrvice, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.

Btlluoay
Paslor: Kenneth B•ker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

St. At. ·248, Cheater, Oh.

BILL QUICKEL

'

SaltmC..t~

St. Jolm Lutheran Churoh
Pine Grove
· Rev . George Weiri&lt;k
· Worship· 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Stlvenvlllo Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.

Chriollon Fellowship Ctnler
Salem St., Rolland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - H: 1S a.m., 7 p:m.
Wednesday Se,.,.ice - 7 p.m . .

Pastor: Ron Fietce
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
· Wo11hip • 10:15 a.m . .
Snowrltlt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshlp-9a.m.

The Cburdl or JfiUI
Chrbt of Lllle,...Day s.lall ·
St. Rt. 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School 10::ZO.ll a.m.
Relief ~ety/Prleslhood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Servi&lt;e 9-IO:IS a.m.
Homemaking meeting, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

· Calraey Bible Chun:h
Pome roy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev .. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday' Service · 7:30p.m.

Faith Chapel Open Blblt Clllln:b
923 S. Third St., Middlepo!l
SeniOr Pastor.M ichael ,fangio '
Resident Pastor Richard Vermillion
Sunday service, 10 •. m.
Wednesday service, 1 p.m.

RoekSfriDp
Pastor: Kenh Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wo ~hlp - 10 a.m.
•
Youth Fellowship, Sunday • 6 p.m.

Reorpnized Cllllroh olJotul Chritl
or Liller Day Salnto
Po~land-Racine Rd.
Bunch President • Michael Duhl
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m .

Faith Fellowohlp Crusade lor Christ
Pastor; Re v. Franklin Dickens
Service: Frl4ay, 7 p.m.

Appe Ure c ..ttr . .
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pa.srors John .t.Pany Wade
603 Serond Ave. Mason
773,5017
Se.... ict time: Sunday 6:00p.m.

Pastor: Rol!ert E. Robl~son
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday • 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

RIDENOUR
·suPPLY

DAVIS-QUICKEL
AGENCY INC.

f

·

Congregational

Church of Chri st

•

ROodovllle Churi:h ol Christ
Pas101: Phijip Srurm ·
Sunday School: 9:30a.m. . ·
Wo,.hip Servioc: 10:30 a.m~ .
Bible Srudy, Wednesday, 6:30p.m..

Syneust Flnt Church ofGnd
· Apple and Second SIS.
· Paslot: Rev.iDavid Russell
Sunday School and Wo,.hip- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 7:30p.m.
Wed~esday Ser:VIces - 7:30 p.m.

Soen:d H..rt Colholle Cbun:b
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898 '
l'aslor: Rev. )¥alter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4 :45-S : tS~.m.; Moos-5:30p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45·9.15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass· 8:30a.m.

II PONTIAC.GRAND AM ....................................................·........................................ J.................................. ....... ................. $12,400
V6, air, tilt, cru)se, PW, PS, pow. windows, 4 door, 32,000 miles. Red.
~ .. 1
.
.
15 MUSTANG ..............................................................................'........;...................................................................................$13,D

Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school · 10:30 a.m.
Worship ~ 9:.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

. ML Moriah Baptist
fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pa!itor: Rev. Ollbe~ Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30.o.m.
Wor11hlp - 10:45 a.m.

Ciltholic

·

Hemlock Grot't Chun:h

Rutland Churoh or God
Pastor: Randy Bur
.
~pnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . 1t a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdncs,day Se~las - 7 p.m.

18 BUICK PARK AVENUE .....,..................................................................................~ •• ~ ...........................~ ............................... $21 ,80C)
Loaded, extra clean, 32,000 miles. Maroon.

Llngsollle ,Christian Chun:h
. Sunday School.- 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

"'ilY

,_.,,

Lutheran

Forest Run Bapdst
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - il a.m.

R..land Fret Will Baptlol
Salem St.
Pastor; Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
· Eve.nin&amp; · 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

MCH~CAVAUER2DOC~R ....... ~ .................;.....................................,................

Uberty Chrlstlaa Chun:h
_ .
De~tcr
. Paslor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening·· 6:30p.m.
Thur.&lt;day Service - 6:30p.m.

Faith Bapllllt Chun:h
Railroad Sr., Mnson.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worshop - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.,m.

Allllqully Bapdsl
Sunday Schpol - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
. Tllu"""'y Servlt01- 7:30p.m.

88·MONTE CARLO LS, Red,

Hlekory lllllo t:hun:h or Chrbl
Evangelillllgoeph B. Ho$ins
Sunday *hool - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday ~rvia:s- 7 p.m:

Karval Oulradl Mlnlllrla
47439 Reibel Rd., Cheller
Pastor: Rev.
McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a.m . .t 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

. ....... Cioopol

· Rullud
Scnday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Foirvltw Blbtt Chun:h
Letart, W.Va. Rl. I
Palitor: John Hart
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Soudy - 7:00p.m.

Ottwr Ct1Urciles

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Rutland Com..ually Churdl
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCa~y
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

· Bradronl Ch•n:h or Chrbt
Comei of St. Rl. J24 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister; Bill Amberger
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a.m:, 10:30 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~ices · 7:00p.m.

Su=
- 6p.m.
Wed
y Services - 7 p.m.

Mlotrsrlllt
Pastor: Charles Neville
Sunday Sehool - 9 A.m.
·w.,.hip - 10 a.m.

Llarot c11rr Fne Mttbodltt Cllurdr
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h or Chrlll
Pnstor: Eugene E. UnderwOod
Sunday Schooi · 9:30 a. m.
·. Worship - 10'.30 a,m., 7 p.m.

PUior : Norlt ~ .

Wonhi~~30 p.m.

· Htolh (Middleport)
PISior: Vemtpye Sulllvan
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
wo ..hip - 10:30 a.m.

Hyttll Run Holln111 Chun:b
· Pastor: Robert Man ley
Sunday School - 9:30 , ,m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Tllur.&lt;dty Service -7:30p.m.

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Jake C&lt;&gt;pley
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a. m.

...

Whlte'o Choptl Waltyaa
Conlvltle Road
Pascor: R~v. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School . 9:30a .m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wcdnesd;By Service- 1 p.m.

Purtlud Flnt Cloor... ., ... - . . .

Pastor: OurrleJ Nev ille
Sunday School - IO o.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Tllur.&lt;dny Services - 6;30 p.m.

W11leyea Blblt HollatU Chu...
7S Pearl Sr., Middleport. .
PISior: Rcv. John Nevllle
' Children's service - 10 a,m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m. ·

Tuppen Plain Chun:h or Clnill
Instrumental
Pasror: Scor Brown
Worship Service . 9 a.m.
Communi!!!! - IOa .m.
Sunday School - iO:I5 a.m.

ML Moriah Chun:b or GGd
·Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Saucrfield
Sunday ~hool • 9:4~ a.m. ·
Evening·- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m. .

You deserve this car.

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE

,_

Pint Grove lllblt lfoiiMN 'CIIurdr .
' 1/2 mile off Rr. 325
l'ootor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. .
Worship- 10:30 t .m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Service - 7:30p.m.

Zion Chur&lt;h. or Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonvltle Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pas1or: Roger Watson
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

. Worshlp • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wed....Uy Services ·•7 p.m.

Worship • I t A.m.

R011 or.._ Holt- C1roon:t1
Leadina Creek Rd!, RuUand ·
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m,
Wedneoday prayer .....ring· 7 p.m.

Btarwallow Rldp Churoh or Chrtll
Pastor: Jack Col~grove
Sunday School ·9.30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv\ce! · 6:30p.m.

ARE DOWN

n.twnJ

Puror: Keith Rader
Sunday School • I0 t.m.

Cal•lf')' ...,_ Cloapol
Hanltooville Road
Pastoo: Rev. Vlclor·Routlr
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship • II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednetday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Ktno Chu,.. oi'CIIrlll
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Pa!itor·Jeffrey Wallace
lsi and 31d Sunday

Rulllond Flnt Baptist Chur&lt;h
Sund&amp;y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomtroy Flnt Bapdtt
Pastor: Paul Slinson
Eaot Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Flnt Southern Bav.tlst
41872 Pomeroy Poke
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
W~dnesday. Services • 7:00p.m.
Flnt Baptlll Churoh
PaStor: Mark Morrow
6rh and Palmer St., Middlepo~
Sunday School· 9: IS a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

1997 CHEVY
5·10 PICKUP

Suaday wollhlp • 10:30 a.m. a 7 p.m.
Wedftesday prayer tervice - 7 p.m.

· Mldllepw1 Chun:b orCiorlal
51h and Main
Pa!itor: AI Hanoon
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School -.9:30a.m.
Worship· 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesdty Ser.doc!- 7 p.m.

Fm WID Bapdst Churoh
Ash Strte~ Middlepo~
. PastOr: Les Hayman
Sunday Service · 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

,.A,.E ·

'"'i
w-c~-.rCIIritt
33 26 O.ildren's Home Rd.
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 1Ga.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnetdoy Service!- 7 p.m.

......

THE TENT IS UP AND THE

"'"' 1997 BUICK
SKYLARK

Pr

ApostoliC

Community
calendar

1997 CHEVY
8WER

The ~ly Sentinel• Page 7

will, retirement _

course. has llwelve le11on topics the previous lesson. If you have,:l
which will' tie lllliled to your home concern ttbout how your e11a1c WOJ:
Cll:h week. lrhere lepons include: be passed on to lhe next JCIIIIllliqC
Estate Plannlna - what it is: Impor- you may wanu o enroll in Ibis le"'f:
lance of perspnal objective for your study course. The
plan; Costs lof settling an estate; lessons will be
Property trarisfer, Property owner- useful for both
ship; Wills al)d what happens will\- farm and non.out one, Power of Attorney, Living farm estates.
Wills; Letter of Instruction; Life
To enroll. seDd
Insurance; T:rlrsts; Deferr~l and you
name,
Exclusion of gain on home, Reverse address and a
Mortgage and.life Estate for home; clreck for ·Sl5 'tti·:
Nursing Hom~ Dilemma; Medicare OSU Extension and Medigap;i and Charitable Oiv- Lorain County, ' - - -....;.;..;;....;,.;:A.
ing.
_ ·j .
•
421 10 Russia Road, 'Elyria, Oliia:
,
44035. The deadline to enroll is Mli!C
Each lessor) contai.ns a 2-8 page 16. 1997, so if you are interestClJ::
study guide, ~-2 pages pf review contact Dr. Skeeles soon.
.:;
questions and ,an answer sheet for
·-

a

Pom aroy • MlcklltpOrt, Ohio

NG
CLEANING?
Clean out your basement or
attic with the help of the

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
'

'

FLORIST
Meiga Counly ~ Oldea1 Floris I

EAST MAIN POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614/992-2644
614/992-6298 .
s,nJ four Tho..Pt• With Special "- - -• •

fiRE &amp; SAFETY
SALE$ &amp; SERVICE
992·7075
112 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh

�SOUDVINYL ·
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

SERVICE
HUPI"S
I want to think my

BINGO

family: my relatlvae,

frlancla, nelghbora,

. thole who brought
glfta &amp; Cll'dl. Tlloee
who Mnt Clrdl by
niall, the phone cane,
or juat thinking ebout
Ilia, or helping in any
way, to make my 90th

"I'm going to (jellver a boring speech. 1believe you
should start your 11vee with a good nap I"

Perry HHI Far1n

&amp;Greenhouse
•Hanging Baskets ·
•Bedding Plants .
•Vegetables
.· Plants
Just above Racine
Locks on right.
PH. 614-247-4681

Business
Services

MON.&amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
STAR BURST

TU~lpers

Plains Fire Dept.
CHICKEN BARBEECUE
Sunday, May 1l at
T.P. Firehouse

$1500.00

...

$50.00or~

,.
BEECH GROVE

· with each of you.
Thank You.

Love You All,

Mergarlt "Peg"
Do las

.;t,aWtt £tJs¢rs

·-Tr~~ RiHSS

.Free Eatlmatea

DRIBILl

·' LARRY'S

.

UWN CARE
-Mowing

. (Rtlldlollllt ac-lal)

.:

Shrubbery
Melntenailce

FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHT
MOOSE LODGE 731
9:00 P.M. til1:00 AM
Band: SOUTHERN DIXIE

.

..

742·2803
or446·3622

'' -.

, Trucking Co.

.Farm Buildings
REPAIR OR NEW
CONSTRUCTION
Loafing thedi to horn arenas.
Roof repair and paint to structural repair• .
, Steal buildings ea loW as $4.00 sq. ft.
' delivered. Free e.Umatea, proml)l end
. · profelalon•l service. Cllllocay

(614) 742·3800

'

·

; ' 250 Condor Street
Ppmeroy, Ohio 45769
• • ··
A Division on Nichols Metal, INc.
: :, poone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-n3-586t

• Umestone
• Gravel
• Refuse • Etc.
Will h1ul- juft call.
Reaeonable Rates
•

'

.

.

Unieatona ; Grtvel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422 , Cheater, Ohio

.

:;:.a
·
.........

CRUrD .AGRJ SBRVICB
r.......... , ......

DaRy Horo~&lt;opt,
up-to·date s.,..
results. Calnowl

·. ·• • Fertilizer (Bag or.Bulk}
• DeKalb &amp; Pioneer Seeds
• Small Seeds e Chemicals
eTwine•fBed•Lime ·

1-900.263-2700
m.692S.
$2.99 , . -•.
Must be 18 yrs.

S.v·U

(619). 645·8434
...../1 ....

CELLULAR PHONES
•

I

..

Day Ph. 992-3671
Eve•.Ph. 949-2534

PC uotro noodod. •45,000 Incomo potandal. Call 1-100-51 :S.
&lt;1343 En &amp;83118.

IN IEAklk WOOD

c-.

PROOUCTS

T.V., Rolrigara.,,
lOther IIams, 1 112 lllloa Ou1 211 Eotimotorllla.Utlng Ropreoonta•
wa, 1111. 1Ddt
~vo' lor !he Interior Wood Prit·

P'ointroy,

· . Middleport
&amp; VICinity
AU Yaol 8aleo lluil . . ........
An-. DHdUno: t:D11pm 1ho
day hloro tho ad Ia to run,
Iunday a ljlonday adlllon•
1:CIOpnl Frldi!J.

Pt. Pllaunt
&amp; VICinity

in

ducta diVIalon of an ettllblltMd

aroa company, Quallflod lndlvld- .

ual mutt be

exptr!tnced 'in the

~

It'll of wood PfQCiucta mtaiUr•

manta and ulet. Candidate

..,,, be a Mll·otartM arid highlr

dependable. Salarr pluo com·
mloolon, llulblo work schedule.
Stnd rHUme with compenaation
hlllory 111: 2124 US Rt 35 S,
-WV25187.
.
Ullaadon Patal...l. 0ov- and
t•porloroc• P&lt;OI.,.d, oomt trt&gt;lng, Wonl Perlocl 1.0, Mlcroooft
Word and Wlnclo"' 85. S.rid ro·
au me to Baa Q. 3Q c/o . Polnl
Plouanl Reglttor 200 Main St.
Pt. p
~ wv 25&amp;1i0.

tltt Ct.lsifitrl Stdiolll

•

"

•laternet Seflp 1t.1p

800-51~2273

Lifllt lhi"gs
Arr W&lt;lrlh Allll

360' Communications

tMIIorRepalrs

r

~d

~TYPISII,

985·3831
'

efladwe/Stfhvn

Clrc:ulr Boatdt !Eitctranic Com-

pontnlo AI Homo. E•ptrltnco
SaJo,
Balow Tho Bowling Lan11, Ka- Unneeeosary, Will Train. lmm•
dlate Oplnlngo Your ·Local Aroa.
--Roia7Notfl.
Cali 1-52HI0;711111 EXT. 010114
Gatagt Salt: 5 Famn,, 822 Jor·
rlcho Road, Choohlro. Thurt, Frl, Home Health AWa ne.cled for
adult caaol in Gallipotlo·a,.., Pt.
&amp;Sal
ollil!l available. Ploooo Call : 1Frl, Sa~ I:OQ..I,

AWWUfJCEt.lEtJ IS

LPN knmedl•u• home health ••

ote-t In l'llmtloJ ..... 20 10

JEFF WARNEIINSUUNCE

005

30 houra ~ - . oatary I ~·
ftta diile~•aed at lnllrVilw at Mar·
Iotta. Ctlmlnal background llw. .
dgadon required, call Anita all·
800-2111·1· a o • --E.O.E.

Plrsonale ·

Brian Anderson
Overbrook Corotor, Mlddlopo.!l:
hlo port time and fuN ~mo L..,
poold0111 ..... _ IDr 7·3 • 3·11
lhllta. E•parienco prot.rod. lllntorooltd pleoot como In ond 1111
out application. No phone callo,

Sunttt Heme
Centtruotlen

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

HAULING

JoeN. Sayre

Radiator Repair &amp; Repllll!ement ..
Monday-Filctay ·8:00a.m.- -4:30p.m. ·
Saturday - 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon ·

I L

SERVICE

Quality Window Systems

COMPUTER
.. HELPJ .

HELP WANTED ' Mon/Womoro
E·arn 1480 Wotktr Auornbll ng

DUMP TRUCK

PBI~ES"

110Courtst.

"lr •.,..•

Carport ..._, Ft14av, ...,.....,
WantH Aeiii'1Hr
.... 10II.Io1. 1Zt --~~~~­ Own ........ Or . . . 1111 ....11
nua, A••o. Furnlwro, Bodo, An Hour, CaH Carat Kl"l, 114·
Cllllnoii,MK
4411112

3117184/TFN

Complete MIIChine
Shop Service Fabrication
·•
Steel Sala, WeldiiiJI Supplies, Industrial Gas

'.

lor fnle·ellllmata.

R811sonable Rates

' . s.rv.u (111) 845 8434

h'

Plan Alteld, Cllltodtly

Llmeat•l)ne &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp;
•. HoueSitea

949-2168

MUI!be18yra.

~-

'

T.K.

KERRY'S KARAOKE
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nite
9 Til?

FREE ESllMATES

..

•Weecleltlng .

742·2925
"w.s..r..

Howard L. WrlteHI
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Guttera
Downspouts
·r
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

' ,.,

•Tree Trimming

"FACfOBY
DIBECI'
.

eCiilplter TraW.g

.

·:·. 1-900-(484)-1 020
Ext. 1412
.
'' t~.• fill' min.
,

•Roofing
. : Skiing

Gravel, Um~atone,
Topeoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand, No Minimum.

LIVElli

"

H V&amp;lRS·IN 8USIC\10t

9t2·7074

· ., s..satlolal Resllts

M·S 9-5

•Small Engines
. •Lawn Mowers
•Ctlaln Saws
•Weed Eaters
2 mi. off Rt. 7,
L:eading Creak Rd.

IIILI.IIUL•
lOft' CALL.

GIFTED
", PSYCHICSII

Presents

Come •ee our tteW prob14at ""b low pricesII!
Howff:
M-f ·7 ""' to +pm Attb Sat
7Am to HOOt\.
Phone: 992·2067
.
.
.

• • Golf l.eaona
;· Golf Sales, Club
= Repair, CuStom
, , Orders, Awards,
-;
Engraving
JohnlHtord
Chester, Ohio .
r

COURT STREET GRILL

SteppiHS StOHes 18" X 18"
. ~1~ $4-.00

.,

SR 33 Pomeroy, Oh.
992·1330

· 61~ MainSt. ,
Point Pleasant
Call for Reservations
675-2200

Gr-''t or Ddse

Kountr;y Klu

304 &amp;82-3541

24 HR. TOWING

THE,IRON GATE

-wa11stOH~s

QUAUll ROOFING

oOtcka

•Garages
"Stop pulling o/1 those. much needed
home improtJementl. !' Call Today!
992·2753 Free Eltllnltn

~The

33 AUTO CLINIC &amp;

WE'RE OPEN
MOTHER'S DAY ·
SUNDAY, MAY 11
11 A.M.-4 P.M.

StoH~s

GQODNm'S

llred of paying high
cost labor rates?
Hook-up chargsa?
We'll match or beat
any other
.competitor'• price?

Serving Starts at 11 am
112 chicken or ribs,
baked beans, cole slaw,
dinner roll, tea or coffee.
Pie er cake, 50 cents.
Price $4.50

ROAD

-SteppittS

'New! II

•R~modelfng

949·2647

'.

POST 467

calibration 10 epaciel.
1hid 1 wonderful Umli.
Sorry I' diet not have
more Unia to vlllt

Look
What'•

•New Homes ·
•Additions

ANIJOUIJCr l.lEIJTS

card of Thanks

L IOUOI
TRUCKING

•.,...... .

New Conatructlon &amp;
Remodeling
Kitchen Cabinets
VInyl Siding • Roof•
Decks.· Garages

pltaH.

F'" Estimate•
614-742·3411
111/t7 I
. I

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

(UmeStone-

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

Low Ratel)

·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

WICKS

FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

..

,,

(No Sunday Calls)

Postal Jobo 3 Poalllono Available, No Ex,..rltnco NtcOIII'J',
For Information, Call 1·818·71411018 Ell. 5020.

Glvaaway

40

Wtnlod: 38 People Looo t I ·25
Pounda In Tht Noll 30 Daro.
Natural, Guaranttodl 1·100-190-

a - k old pupploa mtHd
Ttrrt. ond Btllgle, at• I, old klaono uw tralna!l. cag
a/lor lpm (814)441-42112

HAULING .

22K. .

110 Wanted To Do

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,

All"l' OOD oiOBS: E•torlor paint·
ahruba &amp; weeds trimmed,
londtcaplng, oldtwalkl td8td,
lawn car•, etc. Call 8111 304·8757112•

·' ~•a.

Top Soli, Fill Dirt .

rom..

614·992·3470

E.,..,..ncad carpentty and
doling. lnoldo ond oullldt,

• • · vinyl aiding, add-on ~ddi·

Licensed • Bonded
Insured

MASON DENTAL

.......
A.,.,.,

Ba, B. Bou.ston, J).D.S.

7.WI' .

MGA Construction·Services
. Electrical Plumbing · Carpentry

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822

N

Repairs

N .

N

Conversions

N

Remode's

992·2483

Rt. 1' BoJC 44-C
Maeon,WV
252tll)

14PZ Walk-Behind Mower

5-hp, 21 -inch .cutting width

1349

$1.,89
·f i/1

GX85 Riding Mower
13-hp, 30-inch cutting width

STX38 Lawn Tractor
13-hp engine , 5-Speed', gear

11899

:ro.......JOIIIIRIICI

.~

""

,,'
,'

7.1"

614-992·7119

~

Rn•*f

Ar. . JUtl

,T~ .
•'

I

&lt;

•'
•

345 Lawn &amp;

14-hp, 38· or 48-inch cutting width

AILDWU$2999

AIUIW¥13999--

'

AIUIWAI''7295

AlLOW

AI$BB95

. Deere Season is the perfect time to see your Johri Deere dealer for big savings until June 30, 1997 on our tractors and mowers with speciaf fmancing
options available. Plus; come see our full-line.of attachments and hand-held products. So visit your John
Nothing Runs Like A Deere•
Deere dealer and save on all your lawn care needs.

• •

J

•. '
. ''

...·-,
'
''
'

.•
..
.. '
i

I

CARMICHAEl'S FA:RM AND LAWN
.

'

•

668 PINECREST DRIVE

t

GACUPOLIS

614 446-2412

0

• Ina. Owner: Ronnie lonoa

""-"'••·

,.,or
I.....
mwr1
Befora 6 ·p.m.
leave metaage.
After e p.m.

EVENING MEAL

· FREE ESTMIATES

AT .
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CENTER

D.Gc•~'s

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
1\Jesdays and .Tbuncl(lys

•

~-

j

'

·• ••• I,

l.

&lt;!

U8l Martin ~treat
f.pmeroy, Ohio 457418

.

(4114) 192-4277
. -- . ......

~·~
Ouellty Work It ·.

Serving from 4:30 -.5:15
Donation $4.00 for mol

a Fair Prlcel
550PasieSt.
Middleport, Oh: 45780

. rpublic is invited

Home .Ph~

Joe Wilson

••.•,.••

II(IWillll

DU'I

Auto, Truoll. Allldtntllt,

IIDILift

llldtlllpUI, Ott.
114-742-2707

CoiMiW'flll

-

814-992-3120

Don Geary, a -

nEE .
. Pick up ciiCIII dill

1pplllrian, ~.
many - • I l

.

.

(,

..

waniH: Indian llotoreyclt Anr
·
Concllion, NHd Not Run Dr MpFuii·Bioadod F.,.le Chow, 114- tor SCOolor, Motor 81 ... 81 .....
~210.
3373No.238.
GIYOIWiy : 1 Froo S~a, and 1 I;Won~!acl=
: U-iaci-~~-~Fioor~lna­
Froa Noulor For cata Or 0oao In
Candido ca• 81 245.Hanar 01 Bo Kind To Anlmal In Good
n. • ""
51117
Goad on, flam .... 101 ·
•
15111. Sonc1 N - Addrou, .,_._
phone Number To: Gallla C...ntr
cr.lPLOYr.ll 'Jl
. Animal Weiloro Loaguo, P.O. Bo1
c'f.RVIU S
211. Galllpollo,.OH 45131.

-it.

Male cat, 10maa ald. neutered. 1 - - - - - - - -

Only.-

I'

Help wanted

~:_..:..,.,.;..,..._....,..."'"'",....
AVON I All Arooa I Shirley
Spttro. 304475-14211.
Alllt Avon Rtprountadvoa
ritodod. Eam monlf lot Chrlll•
. ., blllo at homallt Mrlt. 1.ev~·&amp;S&amp;e ., 304 •812•2145, Incl.

Soaro Automatic Weiher, 814•·rnN256-1313..
~
'""" Ropo. Uke
Fonnll' Qu!lldt
Saito
60 Loat
. and Found
Cabli Concepti OArNKQIErbyi ESIC.
TIMEI HAVE CH
D m. .
Found:'Boagto; SR 103 Ylclnltr, S.ltiNIO Dlohoo Art
Stlloro.
caUI4-1112-fl185.
Groot~.£~! Alnll You In

81,

Found: -

a- Dog, Vicinity:

-='::::..:•..:::...:.:..;.:~;;.7k;;.c_aii_Ro_n_Tol

Clark Chopol Road, Call Alter &amp; P.M. 81......1.:1
Babrotnor ..odtd, lull or ,..,,
time. mutt be lbll ID IIIU U11
Loot Ctllut.Bag Phone Viclnil!l: 1.3.:::..::••::.;.7:.:,1.;_14...;;111.;.;;2-.;.730=2.-S.R. 180 Bt-n Kerr I Pltrtar, PIHoa Colll14 418 3845 Reward Comotorr S.loo, ovorr body
0111roct1
-Ut4ol02·'1+40.
Chrlotmao Around Tho World
Ytrd Sele
70
Oemonltrltora No lrw11tmen1.
Grut lncomo, Bell HollO• Pan
1 Buo., wo Malia 11 Eaor Call
O.lllpolla
Now &amp;P.ll. To 1 P.M. llorr 814·

&amp; VICinity

4oiiHI210.

177 Hlldl DriM. FrldiY. S.tu...,, Computer Uooro Notdacl. Work
1-S. ~0. Gioia Clothao, T.V., Gol own houro. l20k to SSOI!Iyr 1Ciuba, Llttro Mermaid Btclclng. · 800-347118a1501.
Sail. T.,a
Caomotologiota Noodod FuM And
Pari-Time Ouarantood Waoea
Paid \lacltionl, 81----72117.

ProleooloniJ Trtt S.rYtct, SlUmp
Removal_. Free Eatlmataal In·

........
- · · Ohio. 814-388. 814-317-'1010.
Will Do: Landocaplng &amp; Grau
Mowing, Vorr Reaoonal&gt;lo. Call
304·875-11 15.
Will houl .)unk or lnllh a...,. 1351
plclwp load. 304-1175-5035.
Would Like To Watch Your Child
Far Summer, Gallipolis, 17.00

Good Rtftttnc11. Nice Yard,
111

ue oees

Would Like To Watch An Older
Poro~ri Each Dar Ao Needed In
Tho Crown Cllr Or Galllpollo
- . 814-25&amp;-to:IS.

FINANCIAL

Business

210

Opportunity ·
INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PIJIIliSHING CO.
recommends that you do bualnooo lrilh poaplo you k._, ond
NOT to Mrid Ulrauah tho
mil undl you have lnvearfglltd
lho ollorlng: ,
Ortlttically Reduced Ohio River

Campground, 11 Acrta, Brick

Bulldtno With Apartment• 1
ROOf!'ll, . 24 HOOk·Upl, Flood
Damooe. Wlll Flnanca 17&amp;,000,

eu o•wae .
230 ProfiUional .
· Servlcel .

·"'"*

HARTS MASONARY - Block,
1 ..,,. worlt. 30 , ..,. ••-

.. reiiOnl.btt IIIII. ~..

'*~

1115-3501 oft• 8:0Gpm. no Jab "'
- o r to BIG, WV-021lll8
Llvlngaton•a' blaemant wa ttrpraaflng , all baatment repair•

done, tr.. tt tlmattl, liletlme

.._.3Q4.875-214S.

motor bloakl. ·

FH:Al fSTATE

IDDI;III

I

FreeEatl..._

614/99.2·7274
.Roofing- G..-.
Siding

i:

. t:

I

1112-30111.

G-gta Por!lblo S.wmlll, don't
haul ,...., logo 10 lho mll)ull call
304-875-1157.

ouaramH. 1Drra on jab oxperi-

."
I

Free·ldnanl, litter W.ln11d, 11•-

,.,.,. cw-;r

614~180

;· . · "Bun.t Yo•r DN••"

·20-hp; 48· , 54- or 60-inch mower deck

18-hp, 48- or 54-inch mower deck

20 Yrs.

'

425 LaWn &amp;(JaTden Tractor

Garden Tractor

Remodeling

MIJ

•

t•
Garden Tractor

Aeration Motor oSelt!s &amp; Repairs
Cleaning Septic Systema
Port·A.John • Rentals • Serviced Weakly
Extra Charge for Evenings or Waelf8ftds
Hr. Prompt Service
7 Dlyl A Week

Oustom Homes

~

GT242 Lawn &amp;

• Top • Trim • Rembval
• Stump Grinding

Flvo prottr pupploo to good

homo. 814-018-21111. .

-------.;,
· 304-IJ'S.3422.
·
.&amp;~ ·
Malo Slam••• Cot Hao Boin
.-!. . . .t1[ i:::!ll · Ntutorod 1 Daclowod, To Good
Homo
s.,_,. wtlll
.
No Children, 814·.W1 · 1073 Altar
A pod pGinl job on
5 P.ll.
,_ __ .. _._
·
·
auy, . ·
o525.uoen Size llonraoo, 814·2450
ltKike• il oeem

•

••

LX173 Lawn Tractor
15-hp, 38-, 44· or 4B·inch cutting width

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

POPJ!EROY, OHIO

:. :

·985 4473

' L.-.r&amp;
PAINTING

'

i

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
.. · Stop It Compare
·
.FREE
ESTIMATEES
7/22/lln

.I

It\ :' ~
.
'l

'ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON

Iiana, cabinet reficing or newtr
rebuilt. Raterencaa ·Fr" Eatl ·
malll. Jim Slwi304-8J'S.1272.

.'

-

�-.

.

..

'· .

.·

.

.

.

·110nw01• M!chtepait;·Ohlq ·.. · ·..

P-ee 10. The Ddy Sentinel

~~--~·
·'..· ~·...~·~~:N-;IA;;.C;r~o:•·~·~-o~·~~d=P=~=·J:a:l•=·~·~···-.
~

PHILLIP ·

•· &amp;r ,;,._ •·
·nw~DA

ACIIQIS

• .1 111111\1...
4'1Frs:tar

. ....... ...

lll Teoii . . IIUI
· 4111*111 ~
41 W " 4 · ·1
... · '
41 ..... _

1 1 - - - ..
.......
11 ...
ally
14 C: t
1

.for Sale

Ilimitation
O -or"siiY
"'""''"""'·
dlocdtnlnatlon

boNd on roc:e. c:dor. religion.
sex ramMial staruS or national
origin, Of any Intention 1o

·make eny such preference,
-ordllalminatiDn.'

• lllawd ....

llldlaftll

11 a.t1811ir
11 .G
IIIJIIttiiiO
, • . _ .... _ .
(2Wdl.\

11 R

..

1881. Ookwood Trailer. U,SODI 2 Bidloom Mobile HolM, U2SI GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Walharo, drytra. refrlgtratora.
down and aotu,.. PlY"""""· ~ + Do!IDIII, 81-7.oe32.
Clii:IOW'/5-3131.
.
randfl. Skaggo Appilonctto, .7t
Vlni 'SirWII.
CaM 114-&lt;W8·'131M1,
..
Now 11187 14x70 vvee
lndudeo 1.FREE iDI ,.,L
Only. I111.H per month with S·ltdroomt. 2 8alhl. V., Nice, Three PI- Lll. ... ~ wltll 5 r•
11050 - n. Cell 1·100·137- 81o.., lltiJivoreiDr, Weter a. cUriari. \ 111 montho old, coot
T,..a. Pilei, •300/llo., Pluo De- 12000.... 11100, 814-111241181.
3231.
poilt, Allo: 1 Bodloom v.r, Now Bonk llfpo'ol DillY 3 loll, an~.. PIUI 0epo11~ 814-311- UIOII Fuml... 1:10 BuiiYIII Pille,
owner llnanclnt avollllllo. 304- 1371.
Drttooro, ' Couchet. Tobit /Floor
7SS.718t. .
~ - . . .... Bod, llool&lt;l!oiDrn; DrhM . - . . Inducing
IIUcll MoNI
One 2 Bodroom lotobllo Homo &amp; water. For APJ&gt;ilcadort B14-448- 114-448-41112 HnL 10-4. Wo Buy
One 3 Bedroom Mobllt .Home. 38AO.I1t Ul!l OD57.
UIOIIF..,...,,._
.
Flood Damaged $1,000 Each,
Apel1mantl
440
614·MI-l!520.
520
Spoltlng

-m.

crao

.I K
• Q. 6
Welt

• J.

11112-;121&amp; . .

Oun1111dets are hereby
lnlonnod that all dwellings
adv8ttised In this newspaper

Aulll Loano: AulD Deolor Will Alrano• Flnonclnt Even If You
H... _ , 'lllrnod Down S.lort.
Loon a A..ilablo For No Crodlt,
Bad Crtdll And -ruptey •rero, Clll Oilnd14-448-8172.

u-

am avalable on an equal

304-875-3853. Depoolt I rolor·
onct0 ".'~".Ired. NO POt&amp;

OflllOIIunlty bosls.

broke mare; horet buggy, on•
-~ oood ~ 81-7244.

Very Raotorablo, Prlco: 12,200
ForBolh,814-44G-17;:4.

Black Angua Bull 3 Ynro Old,
1500 Pllundo, Cau Allar 8 P.M.

1 Bod""'m Fumilhtd Apartrnon~
218 Condor Srree~ Pllmoroy, No
Pall, Dopoolt Roquired, HUD •
........._,,. 448 llG58

814-251 8310

t

18a5 Yamaha
Condldon, U,200

Soulll
1 NT

''

4•

AKC Golden Retriever Puppito,
Mateo $200, Ftmeltl $250, Plus
Stud Sarvli:e Available, 114·371128311.
AKC Golden llatrlevero Puppleo
.1200 tach. Vet CheCked. Sholl.
Wormed 61 ..3N-211111
AKC nit Shollle mlrialll,. Collie,
oablo I whhe, all ohoto, $250,
814-982-5013.
•

.'

AKC Reg Rothliolloro, ohoti &amp;
wormed, parant1 very gentle.
good WICI'ildrorl 304-675-5488.

ror Sale

• KJ 32

41 Chllrch_.

After .
dtdUCIIIana

11 Qr...t rlclga
OOIInlet'patrl
23 ClniMcry
3 Ftah
t Strong-- ox 2!i Genua ol
4C,..._
10 -·bltay
rodtnte
511omanbrona 11 Pry
21 AI hand
S Clip
27 Stew
· 1'1' Alrlcan

21 Polar

West
Pass

Pass

Nonh
4•

a

Item
32 r&gt;o.itool

-

prll...

6 NT · All pass

33 CllmNII

t 9

36Borew~

40TIMIIMII
43 Nervoua44 Com-pt.
41 Gllldo'a
hlllh ncda

Tt¥ CLOy/N IIJ51N~S.r
IS TOUGtt, ICil&gt;; ..
.......:.....

I

Hay &amp; Grain

Round Bales Ha~ For Sale 614446-24128A.II.-5P.Iot.

TRAN SPORTATION

710 Autos for Salt

41Acll
IIIII • .

......

-

IP.r+-+-i-

41 Flnntah llrot

50 Slt'l ~lnga
Ernie: Why don't yo11 wash your
52 Singer
face.? I can see what yo~ had for break· .
.· Croaby
fall Ibis morning!
. ··
·
54 Halfalyta
' Eric: Oh, yeah? What did I have?
SACINtl
Potrtela• 1 Ernie: Bacon and eggs and tomato
.SCI Monopoly
,sauce &lt;ketchupl.
· orct ...
. Eric: Wrong! That was yesterday
. SCI-Jimo
morning!
' 59 Mlelrlel lott'll.
.....l t4Al&gt; TO 5TfP· ON
How far back do you remember
bridge deals? One minute, one hour,
A LOT Of TOfS TO
.one day. one month. one year, one
decade, Qne lifetime?Piay some deals,
/
&lt;itT vii¥~ % AM
CELEBRITY CIPHER
then take a break and see how well
·you
can
remember
the
locations
of
the
by Luis campos
TOl&gt;AY!
Cetebfily Ciphef ~~ ar,e c:I'Nted from QUotillonf bW ramoua people . PMI ano pre~en~
· key cards: If you can recall Ji1Gsl or all
Each
1ft the q,t1llf standi for II'IOIMtf. Tcxt.y) due: C 1tqC.1111$ M
of them, )'011 wefl! concentrating properly.
'p V J X
JNZATSO
JXO
NBJ
South needed·to remember how of·. 'J X 0
.........-~~-.;...;:::
ten Welt followed in three sUits in to·
J XB J
DEOK
VII
M Z A·
VG
day's deal. That told him how to plliy · NBFO
. the fouf\h. sjlades.
M Z A' NO.
GJVSS
B
N B J . ' .North's four clubs was tbe Gerber P V K,
convention, asking· for aces . This
~ ·
~
JZCSVK.
·should ~e used .only when partner's SVSM
~Y.T YEn. L'~.TNt:l~ N.L. 11\Y
last bid was either one no-trump or PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My piCtures always lll&amp;n\ lo be filmlel in places thai I
VW\T\ON
'ffi"'\
can~ pronounce.•- Roger MOore.
·
.
two AO-trurrip.
fa.IOD!
After winning the diamond lead in
tbe dummy, Souib played a club to his
ldrig and West's ace. Back came anoth·
er diamond. Correctly leaving spades
ldl10d ~y CLAY I. POlLAN_;__ _ __
to last, declarer cubed his remaining
· Q Rearrange letters· of the
winners In hearts, diamonds and
four scrambled words be·
clubs. He teamed that Wat had start·
· low to form four Jimple words.
ed witb two hearts, five diaii1Gnda and
two club~ . ')'his meant he had exactly
' .
DERBBA . ,
four spades . The way home had be·
come clear. Instead .or taking the a pri2 .
f---1,~.1;...;.;,1,:;....:;1-;.;.,1--1
~---:-,::==::;:::'1 ori percentage play for four tricks of
playing out the tbree top honors, .South
cubed bls ace and queen before lead· .
lng a apade to dummy's 10, knowing ..
3
!he fineue would work.

~

j

r

~~~:~' S~l~.4{l~-L£t.~s·

'88 Cornaro drag cor1 355 Cl,
tubbed •71100, 614-241-4881 attarllpm.

li'

· ~~-.,~B--iY,.,..:.,E,.:.;.N_,o--ll .
. 1 1~ I I _

It mce.

MU L p E
5 I I
. _ . _

j' !••

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

8

If you don't. have anything
to say about a famous per·
son, you can usually gel a
pretty good·--- ....

1-1-TIK~.N~, . :O:.,.Isr..;:E~~R:.:.;I.-jl 0

loca-

1

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words

1.-.L.-.L.-.1.-.J.'---·L.....J you de~elop from- srep No. 3 below.

llon. Ownor - . . . Soon, Sorloul
lncJIIrfol Onlyl 814-446-7507.
Sliver Brldgo Plola.

.

.

WHAT I&lt;IND OF FAITHI=UL
MECHANICS ARE '{OU ?!

1DD7 14»1:70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$885 down. $195/mo. Onl~ at
~d

Homet. Nitro, WV. 304-

Wt.IAT DO
'{OU HAVE
TO S/111( FOR

-·

....

755-5885.

--~· .

1187 14x80 3 or • Bedroom,
$1,359 down, $229/mo. fnHt air,
oklrtin8. &amp; deliver~. Only at O&amp;k·

·'

'

#,;,#.~;;~e..?..-

wood Homes Nitro, WI/. 304-755-

111'114180 38RI2Ba
Wooher/Dryer, l)lohwoeher
Frot Dotlvtry &amp; Sai·UP
11110 Dcrwn-U17Mo 372-3400

'SCI!AM·LETS ANSWERS

•

.

Loafer.· Staff· Broke - Invent- AFTERNOON
One d4mmy to another, "It's nice to sleep imlilnoon,.
but it interferes with my AFTERNOON nap!" ·

5885.

~

:.1FRlDAY

. 111 Tlmo Burero Eaoy Financing
2 &amp; 3 Bedroomo Around $2001
· Mo., Fr,. Delivery &amp; Set·Up, Call .
HI00-2~1-5070.

3 Badnrom Mobile Home Bath &amp;
112. To~ Eloclric: On 5 Acrn, On
Addloo Plko, Very Nics, Priced
To Soil CoU ·Afttr 4:30. &amp;1•·4468822.
Banlc llapo'o Doubfewlde'o l Sln·g - 1 Free Dotlvary ·' Sat·Up,
Call Tho Finance Lint, 1-800251·50'i10.
Buy In Mayl No I"'~""'"" till Au·
gull of 87. Free O&amp;llvor~ &amp; Setup. Wo.twood Hpmos 1·i00·25150111.

~~
.. =~~= per
n dlllller
fllilf lunda

We
home

10 help )'OU putd\aU I
replac'l.monl home. Call 1·800·

avaU.

Prime Acreage 3-1 acre parciall,
excellent building shea in . Mli·
ton. Seuous inquires only. 3041·

882·3772.

f7.100---~·

rtmotl, beautiful land; Melgt
County, Scipio Townohip. SR 11112

!iust on SR 1!13). owner tnenctng.
Call lor~ map. .8j4-5QIJ.8545.

.360

· Real Estate

Wanted
15-150 acret with or withoul

bUilding a, GaUlt or Mtlga coundes, 614-DG2-8737or 814·tl2·
3041.

408·70f1 Ia HI appolnrmenr tor
dolaliL
.

FACTORY Dt1ECT.
NO MIDDLE MAN.
5,\VE $$$,.
Oalcw119d Hom,. lo tho only
deal« In the trl·atatt arta that

410 Houaes fOr Rent

460 S,.Ce for Rent

JB Kll~, kiln d~ad hard woodo
compotltlvo prlcoo, St Rt 82,
Down.......
- -·
air concltlonod.
N""carpel.
Ctll Well Columbia WV. 304·173·
(81•l 411 • • 8 Lm.-5fl,m. mon- 50410 or t.«JJ.M-7883. ·
dly...,fridoy.
.
MTD Riding 14 Horot llowor
Mobile ' - ' opar• fllr J.Onl, ~p Front Blade &amp; Cart Paid 1881,
.. ...... 1180 ..... month. ..lor. 8 1 - -. -tewer and ·* '•lh includH, 11 •~
11112-2187.
. •.
.

F tdll.1 SLIP PI If 'i
~ I I'JE S lOCK

In-- ·--.- ..........

2 Bodroom houH In Now $250/mo. Conllct Ho,..ote~d

""' lor -In ..,_
- · river ioN, 100110, llmliy

bUilda and · 11111 lhelr own

Rtolty. 304-112-2-

hamll. Fot IICIQIY direct prlceo.
ohop QAKWO&lt;\D HOMES, NITRO,
304-1SHIIS.

2 l i d - houH
Ufilllmo. 104411-1117 Cell aflor hOokup, 114 -

w

~

...

Flrll Tlinl ·~••Y Flnonclngl 2 C 3 Bo--rn around 1200
"" montll·. Fru delivery I ott• - - Home• 1-800·201IOlll.

CIC General Homo lotajnttnonce- PalnHng, vinyl ol~

-

llatlll flomel
far Rent

LlmiMOI Olltrl 11t7...,llluldt, J
.111r, a.t~t. Stm
tZ711 2 1 3 bedroom moll! .. hollltl
. menlll. Fr" 11111\oerJ I setup_ ....lng II
Ui'O, - · • ·
lncl lnt:ludotl, 114-112Onlr at On' 11~ Homtt. ftitro
W\! . . .711-. .

IIIII* -

•zr

a.bl

_., and - . . '

.... - - 0111 Chat, .,.._

Couch. - · . . ., ........ .
Iampo. 1

hunto;_r;.:"'-•u'""
..._.....
Pt.
'"' or

lAIII -"""
2
IIIII
~ . . . ..,
. ......
. . .homL
...

-n.

..

cw~ttoora.Wt

IT'I BIQ. 1117 4l!fl, 28ATH _.1 houM In CllfiDn. - n .
DOUBI.EWIDE. $1,848 DOWN, . 'l"t.l.. ,. pe11, $271/mo. 1200
• 31MIO. FREE DELIVERY I . . . . . . . .71H1a
lETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOO
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304-758. . llmilld Ollor.

O•olclt ....,,. Call f-t00-111-.

:::

:.I

·

\·I: 1
~~~ tl'et Shop For Sa.lo: Gr"t

:::I::

31 SmOklr'l

East
Pass

Here 11 a joke from tile ,llntllll com:
edy d11o ol Erie Morecambe and Ernie
. Wise.
.
•

'611 Camaro Z·20, original 302 DZ,
AKC Rogilltrod 5 Month Old $14;000, 814-241-4861 alt8r llpm.
La""' Apoo $250, 814-288-0007. ''78 Dodge ototion !Nigon. clean,
ikll ,_ rublror, 318 onglna, $800,
814-11411-28011.

320 Mobile Homes

na-"

ifllm..

7 Truthful
S Guy'o

By Pllllllp Alder

Yoa~lng Shorthorn bull and - lng Anguo buill. Slt!vo llllhono,
814-448-2018, Aolng Rldgo Farm.

dng, Mlxad $2.00 Bale 814·68231156, Centerpoint,.,...

;:::.ton

Which day was that? ·

...!

Rug Umoulln Buill ·Rod. Black:
l'llllod, 1 To 2 - . Old "+31171100, 814-3117.0S07.

Haw SQuare Bales Second Cut·

DOWN
1 lb1to1Me

31 Paellc time

Riding Horoto For Silt Child
Brokll, tlabr Quortor Horse 814- .
44&amp;-4110.

Featuring •Hydro S.th. Don
Sheet,. .3~·.Goorgoo Crtok Rd.
814-448-0ZI1. .

:r::~

31 CIMn • ...,. 2
awerd
• 0111 of the way

• Q 10.
• A J 2.

Opening lead:

·'

12 Ft SW Craft V-Banom, Fllllj
finder, All The Extraol Trailer In,
cludod, 814-245-.DI$1 Altarl
P.M.
..
.,/ •

A1•Groom Shop 4 Pel Grooming.

u ..._,,
~

Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer: Soutb

Credit Probl-? QouraniHd FI- l&lt;awalld 150 Spocfla Shoh ~
nancing, 1 0"' Down, Pay mente Oroly 72110 AGIIt Driven ~ ·J!I
Ao Low AI 1110 Par Month. No Go $1 ,275, 080 814-4411-8:!1 0. ' ":'.
. '
Turn Downol Call Rut/1 614·448·
2llll7.
.
750 Bo8ll &amp; Motors .. :.

for Sale .

640

S4
llndlii•XI*I
·
~

8 4

aAQ5 ·

CARS FOR .10011\'uckl, ba11o,
4-whetloro. molor homao, furniHlrley
1200 Sport·
ture. tlecrrontco, COIJipuloro ore. 88
llor,
burgondy
&amp;
block,
1Ok, •
by FBI, ~S. DEA. Aliollll&gt;lo your
•1,500 ex11at. ltMiof clwomo. only
oroo
now.
Coli
1-100-513-43&lt;13
80" bll)' troll horH; 54" gentle
1111100.814-8112-5174.
.
EILS.0311

1 Btdroorn ap~
IOMI, fully
lurnllhed, In Plllnt Pleuanl 304- 1853 Chry...r 4 D&lt;!or And 1aaa
875-2141 bolora 4pm-ahor 4pm Uncoln Comlnantll 4 ~ llof1

• .to.

Saoo&amp;ll

4te 1101.

Antiques

....

ill Onol- I 111M

sa

• 1

.• A 7 .

0107.

Goods

530

•• ••••7 • • z

7.

a
• • a 7 e 4.

d

2UMdtofblul
M Tot81
.
21 TO!II "m'lan, 11 llllllltht,._.

~

• 5

I ond 2 btdooorn __,,.. fur·
nllhed and unlurnlohecl, MCUrlty 8110 toni and-·~
dtpoalt required, M pttl, 81 4· """"' S50 FIRII, 114-112-50$1.

knowltngly accept
advertisements for real estate
wNct1 Is ln.vtolottoil ollhe law.

: t'=":.o'
~-

• A K J··

,., ..,,

tor Rent

aI

• 'K 10

...... Col-._

This newspaper wll not

·

....... . .
flU.-. ·

='· :=-=*·

320 11011111 HoiNI

All reel .HIIte adller!lsing In
tNt _ , lpipe' Is sullje&lt;:t 10
1118. -Fa~Houslng Act
ol1t1118 wNct1 mokes llllegal

••4

_......_
Ana t tllfllqtt11M~

nFu.-., 1101 Jolto- M .

H'*aulkl 01

llldMEIIll'-'·
W*f1-Y421.

liS .. 10, 4114, .......... . .

droo, al .....lll ........ It ODD
080. 814•742-7100. 114·J41·

21111.

lUw)(CC)

.. ",..,

..

..._

. .... ..
~

�.

n1...i

-·

..

....

•
AI

•IHJ

1flSI·d e

the Ri ·;er

$1 ''''

. SatiudiiJ'S
·}Major UCifU«

.-4_potter's ·
~

passion
• F•tured

B•IHIII

on,_,. C1

resllltS '
~

•

"""'"'

HI: 70s
Low:308
•
Sunny. wan•
lor lloll1er'l Oty

Details on
pageA2

•

tnttS

••

....
.,.

.

.......

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

.,.

I

-~·

'
•

..••

••

......
~

,.,'

~

~

~

.

~

~

"

I

It's

GALLIPOLIS -:too soon after the state
decision .rul~ng Ohio's form o~ funding
pubhc,education unconstitutional to start worrymg about
mcreascd taxes, an area legislator said.
.
"Firat .we must d~terr,?ine whai constitutes .a thorou~h
and effic.en' education, State Rep. John A. Carey sa1d.
. Carey,_ a :Wellston ~epubli~n representing_t~e 9~th
House Dtstnct of Gall,lll, Me1gs and Jackson counties,
and eastern' Lawrence County, said numerous ideas on
better funding for schools arc floating around, including
. eamarklng the stale personal income tax or sales tax for
primary and ~condary education.
"Many people are speculating that this will result in a
tax increase," Carey sai4. "I believe it is too early to
address. the lax component of the question."
Supr~me Co~rt

a.

....

•

•

,

'•
•
J

,."'

'

'

Saturday's action

~

• Pag• Sf •

Gallipolis commission
continues search for
new city manager
GALLIPQLIS - Gallipolis
City Commissioners met _in a
closed-door session
with a

4WD, air, AMIFM, 4 door,
Asl.oWAs...

.

..•

....••"

.· 1991
S101S,.

••·'••

..

....
.....
'

.

'.

'

...."
-~

,.,.,

.....•
....
.,.
."'"••

.

I

,

·' ~dll,~~·
and ;om lilore! As tow AS... ··

'tt:
",.

...."

..•.

no action .
they returned to public session.
' ill~ can(lidat~ met with the
commissioners for nearl'y an hour
in the city manager's office during
a special meeting. To date, the
commission has conducted four
in-i&gt;erson interviews with possible
replacements for th~ post and several telephone conversations with
other candidates.
Since City Manager Matthew
W. Coppler departed Gallipolis.on
Jan. 31 to assume a similar position in the Canton area suburb of
Louisville, the commission has
received more than 70 applic;a·
lions for the job - down si~nifi·
cantfy from the reported 300
received when the position last
became vacant.
In a previous interview, Com·
· mission President Carol O'Rourke
. · said the commission was "closer
· than we were before" on selecting
a replacement for Coppler. Of the
three, candidates personally interviewed by the commissioners
before Friday, two are from Ohio
and one hails from Nebraska. ·
After Coppler announced his
· resignation last December, the
city advertised in state and nation,
. al publications for a replacement,
· as it did when ·Glenn..A. Smith
resigned as city manager in July
1994. O'Rourke said the applica"
lions received in the latest search
have ranged froiD around the
country.

Good Morning
Today'• CU..~
1l Sections • 1 Pages

...••....
.,

•· 1'&lt;

"

+
•

•

•

11197 Ohio Volley

'

.

,

• DlDSMOBIQ·• I.EilUS .

..
•'

•

'

'

.

By .KEVIN KELLY
. Tlmea-Sentlnel Steff
GAWPOUS -A concentrated
effort to win national accreditation
for the Gallia County Local School
District's two high schools has paid
off.
. River Valley aft\! South Galli~
high schools were awarded recogni·
·
tion · by the
North · Central
Assilciation of
SchQols
and
Colleges during
· its annual meeting
month in Chica·
' is for one year,
liS.
. ,asq he
their status.
"We're
with what we have
now,•· River 'Vallley Principal Pat
Stout explliined.
work is really
.only beginning."
While North Central . accredita·tion· 'i~ ccinsidered impot1ant when
graduating 5eniors begin applying to
~liege, it actually demonstrates that
the schools have held themselves to
a higher '·educational standatd, 5ald

control:
Local agencies team up
to .combat illegal dumping

~~~~==

~~~~~~~~~5~~~~

lum director.
computer''
aerCharla
Evans, the district's curricu· on
Tllylor
w.orkiMI
.
one qt the
Oallla High School
"lt's a voluntary participation, vlcae for
and as .educators and professionals, In their ll'lorta
.ye1r to wli1
the North Central Allaocletlon pf
it shows you're taking the extra step Sohcibla IHid Colleg...
to provide a higher !eve(' of programming for stuhents,• she said.
"The committee acknowledged the fact transportation has
The push to achieve accreditation began al few years ·ago been a problem, one o~er which we had no control, and they felt
when the district launched a curriculum upgrade' in such areas as It shouldn't be an Insurmountable barrier beeause everything else
new textbook acquisition and more access to computer inslruc· met their standards," Evans said .
tion and usage.
··
·
. Evans said tbat South Gallia's accrel!itation is "very ·com· ·
.On the basis of those requirements, River Valley could have mendable that they achieved that goal in such a short amount of
qualified for accreditation at any time since it opened in '1992, time.".
.
Evans said. ·
"For a new high school to receive accreljll,tion js unheard
The •goal was stymied by three factorS'~ t~nsportatlon, the · of, • Princ:ipill.nm Scarberry said._"We~· pa_~~~~~Y, pr~~d of
instructional day being 30 minutes shorter tha~ North Central's thaL •
standard, and the amount of long-distance learning students got · . Self-evaluation, resource inventory, filling out reports and
at, area universities through the postscqondary ~ducation option. . application was started last fall at the buildings in the h()pc of .
But due to the district's improved curriculum, the Ohio North getting accreditation this year. Stout and home economics
Central committee took those conditions into consideration, teacher Connie Bradbury were the team supervising the wor~ at
Evans eXplained. The opening of South Gallia as Gallia County ·River Va.llcy, wbile Scarberry a~d guidance' counselor f;ody
·Loc:_al's seeond. hi~h school last fall al&amp;o spurred lhe drive to Boothe d1d the same at ·~outh Galha. · ·· ·
· ,'
ach1eve ~ccredJtahon for the 1996.97 School year.
. ·
Continued on page A2

. POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment arid the Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Vinton Solid
Waste Management District
have teamed up, forming an
· alliance to combat illegal
dumping and
issues. ·
·.-This·
.!he
District and'
Department allows (or
agencies to provide
more effective en1'orcem&lt;ent'
operations, according to
Scott Copley of the district. .
In their cooperative
efforts, the distri~t provides
$10,000 in funding, and the
Sheriff's Department dedi·
cates more than 16 hours
weekly toward investigation Deputy Ben Devldeon
of each illegal dumping or lit·
ter complaint. Deputy Ben Davidson is the litter/dump•
ing investigator for the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment.
·
Enforcement/Health Information Coordinator for the
Solid ·waste District, Jim (3cckner; said "this relation·
ship with the Sheriff's Department allows the District to
have a more intense, investigative process against illegal
· dumping and littering."
"We are pleased with our ag~eemcnt,:•. Beckner said,
"and 'Deputy Davidson is doing art excellent job in
Meigs County."
'
Beckner said thai illegal dumpin11 is a serious crime,
anq violators will be proseculed. Residents wishing to
file a complaint about illegal dumping or littering · ·
should contact the sheriff's department.
The GJMV Solid Waste Management District is a
multi-county agency, governed by the boards Qf county
commissioners of Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties, and is dedicated to recycling/waste reduction,
enforcement against illegal dumping and public educa- ,
tion/awarcness of solid waste issues.

Coalition sees 1building assistance proposal as .'retaliation'
By AARON.MARSHALL

j

\
. ·
T-8 CQiurnbua Bureau
.
, .
COLUfiU3US - ~e Oh1~ ,Coalit~on for J!!q!Jity and A~equacy' of Sdlool Fundmg had 11 s day m court in ~arch gch1ng
the Ohio Stipr.eme Court to toss out Ohio's schodl funding systern.
,
·
.'
·!
Now, it ~pears they will gel their tum in front of a guber·
n~torial tllirfton:e formed lo recommend the ne+ system that
w11l be piil'Tn place.
.
. .
.
Coalition execitlive ditector Bill Phillis confirmed Friday
that he and other coalition officials will _appear Tuesday in front
of the Ohio School Funding Taskfoi:ce. Phillis said the group
will ~sentially .present the coalition's solutio~, which w-.
unveiJed.on Apr1l 15.
·
· ,. ·
"Our feeling hasn't.changed," he said."We .are about the
concept that all children in Ohio have the right to 1a quality edu. cation." 1'
·

: WASHINGTON - At first glance, helping regions
f,Ccover from natural disasters would appear to be an
.issue safe from controversy in Congress.
; : Think again.
·
.
·'
: : As the cu.mulative price tag,for the suffering nature
.ball brought m the 1990s grows, questions mount about
~!"hether the money is beina spent wisely.
·
•• A strin&amp; of flboda, tornldoes, hurricanes, earthquakes
' and other calamities has hammered the nation with Jn
. ·unprecedented ID!ount Qf property damage, u well u
considerable human tragedy.
..
· This year the atory baa been the devutatina floods in
the Upper Midwest and along the Ohio River, u well u

•

~

. .

against the measure in the Senate, said he is
concerned the provisions will result in the
forced consolidation of smaller rural .districts.
"I'm afraid they are going to turn around
and say it's not practical to have a school (listrict less than· wilh 700 or 800 students ... "
During floor debate on the bill, Watts
defended the clause saying thai il provides
"accountability" for taxpayers. He said the
commission study of alternatives is aimed
Shoemaker
more at urban districts that should be forced 10
consider sharing buildings with neighboring districts.
Under the legislation, the Ohio School 'Facilities Commission would consist of the Director of Budget and Management,
director of Administrative Services, Superintendent of Public
ln.struction, and four nonvoting legislative members to ad minister the prosram instead of the State Board of Education
.
.
'

;· $5.5 billion relief bill stalled in Senate

toma!loes in Arkansas and other s.tates.
· Year after year, the di. .ers have
resulted In a continual demand in Con·
, gress for special spending ~ills to deal .
with them.
Frolll 1986-1996,the Federal Emergcncy Management Agency, the main
source of federal disuk.r aulatanoe, dla·
Jiensed more tlian .$18.5 billion in disu- len. O.Winl
ter assistance.
I ,
,
. This year, a $5.S billion !lisaster-relief bill remaiDI
stalled In the Senate. ·
FinaiiiCiion on tbil year billltu beea held up uniil
· next week, when the Ho ,Is 011pected to pus. Its ver·
sion.
~
• '•

:j

•

Meanwhile, on another school funding front, Phillis blasted
a portion of Senate Bill102, a propqsal aimed at "fast-track·
ing" $300 milliOI! in state school building assistance money .
that passed the Ohio Senate 21-12last week. .
·
His comments were directed at an amendment inserted into
the bill in committee by State Sen. Gene Watts, R-Columbus.
It requires the Ohio School Facilities Commission to evaluate ·
the practibility of meeting a ·school district's classroom facility ·
· needs through such m¢ans as split sesaions, year~round classes
and the joint usc of school facilities with one or more school ·
districts.
·
"I think what this ill about is retaliation for the court's deci·
sion," Phillis said. He added,that if hypothetically "the subut·
ban ciunmunities were in need of stale building assistance .for
their school buildings, 1 guarantee you those hurdles wouldn't
be in place."
· State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, D·Boumevillc, who voted
.

~awmake~s split ,over dlsastet.fundi
By PAUL BARTON
Qaroi'lelt Nlwa Strvlcl

•

The court has given the ·state a year to draw up a bet·
ter funding formula. The issue is currently being tackled
by a task force under Gov. George .Voinovich .
The court deciding against the state's appeal in the
1994 Perry·County school funding case, noted that the
funding system should not rely on property taxes alon~.
Carey sai~ the decision won't necessarily mean a
reduction in property taxes. , .
.
··
"It does mean that if you are in a low-income district, .
your children will not be denied a thorough and efficient
education in a safe and healthy environment," he said.
Because the justices found the School Building
Assistance Program' underfunded, It waa also deter·
mined to be unconstitutional. Carey countered that "nlil·
lions of dollars" have been appropriated for building

Gallia schools win accreditation -L itter

••
•

5spd, v6, power steering, 4wl1fel intiJoCk brakes, As IDw.As...

in school building assistance to Ohio's
poorest school districts," he added.
Carey noted that the Legislature has
worked for the past several years to
eliminate disparities in funding between
urban, suburban and rural school systems·. The current two-year budget pro·
posal earmarks $213 million for low·
asaistance by the
wealth ,systems. .
.
Legislature, but
, 1'We need to c;Ontinue to build on our
has been held up
·prior measures," said Carey, now servfor "bureaucratic ~ ~~~f~i;j,~'fi.r
i!lg his second term in the House. "The
reasons."
I'
public has placed high expectations on
When Ho~
the Legislature to properly answer this
members found
.question so the state can do a better job
out the funds
ldi'I,I'J: · o( providing our children with a quality
were- not being
'ectiJ;~
education .
utilized in a
"These expectations, however, are
speedily or effi· .a;,:;_;.....;;...;.;.,;....;;:t.....:.;...;ti=""-'-'-.:_..::.......:::.:....-'--,.:l.:J not limited to legislators ... ·Our state's
cicntly, a propos· ·
, . Cj(ucation problems ~ only bq fixed if
al was designed to expedite the releaSe of the funds and there is a cooperative effort that includes the communi· ·
get needed repaira done, Carey said. . ,
ty, educatoq;1 and most importantly, the parco~ an4 stu.
"It is safe to say that you willsce ~ significant increaSe dents," he a~ded.

'It's too early to address tax component of question,' says Carey

6

...,.

' ..,..
. .."
..

It.

Vol. 32, No. 13

·Se:hool•funding options:

-..

·'

•

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 11 , 1997

' bill got boged down as the Republican majori·
The
ty, lnsleld of dealin&amp; with disaster relief as a separate
,i..UC, soupt 1o combine it with controversial measures
to prevent future government shutdowns and chan11e
Census Bureau sampling techniques for the yeai 2000.
Some think Congress should do a better job Qf plannlng so that' it doesn't have to draft a special bill each
lime a dlaajer occurs.
"It ought to be bucJaeted,'' Jaid Rep. John Boehner of
Obio, the cbaifll\lll of the House Republican Caucus.
"Every year there 1~ going to be a natur•l disaster
soinewbcrc in the country and we 0111ht tOo budget for
them."
'
·
Meanwhile, a growina n~mber in dingresa question
the way FEMA diatributes lid from lllte to stale.
·

Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., contends that FEMA expendi·
turcs are "out of control." Bond is the chairman of the
Senate subcommittee that oversees FEMA's budget.
Some in Congress, including Sen. Mike DeWine, R·
Ohio, also question whether FEMA applies the same
rules for assistance in every state, especially when· local
matc~ln11 funds are required. "It's a little bit too subjec·
tive," he said of disaster assistance.
Similarly, a 1996 General Accounting Office study
found ''decisions made in determining eligibility followin11 one disaster are not ... ·codified or disseminated
10 FEMA personnel to serve as a precedent in sul)se·
quent disasters."
But Bun.ting insisted the qency does apply assistance eligibility criteria consistently.

•

•·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="400">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9782">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28409">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28408">
              <text>May 9, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1015">
      <name>ogdin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="789">
      <name>turner</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
