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                  <text>Obi~

.Volunteer
women · In
NCAA title

Lottery
Plok 3:

311
Pick 4:
7478
. Super Lotto:

4-11·21-34-37-46 •

lporta, Page 4.

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NO.D4
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Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohlo, Monday, Aprll1, 1996

'

A Gannett Co. New1p"*

-Democrats . il .findings
iA Ohio J)residential pOll
CINCINNATI (AP) -About half
"Look, it's early in the process by the newspaper, WLWT-TV and
·of the respondents to a statewide poll and tllese polls really .don't mean that the University of Cincinnati.
~aid they favored President Clinton in much right now. To say that G~rge
· The university's ·institute for fuba head-to.hea!J race against Se0 ate ·Voi~~~c!Jt. isn't going to have an lic Policy Research interviewed a
'Majority Leader Bob Dole.
. effec~hio when he has a 71 per- random sample of 623 registered VOl·
Adding Republican Gov. George cent approval rating is ridiculous," ers by telephone from March· IS-27.
·Voinovich as Dole's running mate Whatmarr said Sunday.
Th!= margin of error was 4 percentage
:made little difference in the support
However, Ohio Democratic Party pomts.
When asked about a Dolefor Dole, jiCCording to the Ohio Poll. Chair David Leland said the results
Voinovich
ticket versus a Clinton-AI
· The Democratic president was were signficant.
Gore
ticket,
39 percent of the responfavored .by SS percent of the respon''In one of the more dramatic revdents, while 36 pereent said they sup- elations of this poll, George dents said they would vote for the
. ported•Dole. The remainlng8 percent . ~the incumbent Republican Republicans, and 54 percent would
, · · favored other candi!lates ~governor; iJt!.ts virtually nothing to a support the Democrats.
When asked to consider a ticket of
undecided. .
Dole ticket here in the state of Ohio,"
Dole and retired Gen. Colin Powell,
· · Ohio Republican Party Executive he said.
: ~&gt;irector Tom Whatman downplayed
The poll, published Sunday in The 41 percent Sjlid they would support
the 'results.
Cincinnati Enquirer, was sponsored the Republicans, while 52 percent
favored the Democrats.

: Pomeroy man Ch~f

justice advocates
more judicial discipline·

.goes to trial

::on Thursday

. · A 27-year-old Pomeroy man
, COLUMBUS (AP) - Twelve them, according to an article pub- '
, ' acf;used of . robbing two . elderly
Ohio judges have been investigated lished Sunday in The Columbus Dis·
:women at the Meigs County Salin the p~
· x years ·and five other patch.
Of the 17 judges investigated
: , vation Anny house in Pomeroy in
cases are
ding, which has
· January will 'face trial in the Meigs., Supreme Co n hief JUstice Thomas since 1990, five resigned from the
. County Court of Common Pleas
Moyer conce ed about the di5cipl1ne . bench: Only two of those five also
were ·disciplined.
, . Thursday.
· .
system for judg~s .
"I thil$.olwe need to find a way to
··
Br~ Robinson is accused of
&lt; . "The court beli~ves the rules of
., brcak.D\g into the house at liS Butconduct should be appli~ to judges expCdite the proceedings. We ought
•ternut Ave. during the evening of
as vigorously as they are to lawyers," 'to be abl~ to identify that judge and
get him or her out of the· office,"
Jan. IS and robbing the women
Moyer said.
the~. He and' a "juvenile accom:
,
The Supreme Coun has the final 'Moyer said.
·plice allegedly ransacked the buildHe is a!Jvocating the merit selecsay in all discipline of lawyers. and
. ing, ~tealing ·an undetermined
tion of j\Jig~ to replace elections.
the more than 600 j11dges in Ohio.
· amount of cash.
· The court:s disciplinary coljllsel · The appointment system by bipartiHe was indicted in February on· ·~ investigates most of the complaints san committees is practiced in some
two charges each of robbery, kidagainst judges and lawyers and issues form in 29 states. Ohio voters rejectnapping and one count of aggra- · its report and recommendations to the ed such a system 2-to-1 in 1987.
Moyer also hopes to promote legvated burglary.
Board of Commissioners on Griev1lle juvenile, Joshua Paul Creislation
this year that will make disances and Discipline.
me~tns -of Middleport, pleaded
Upon reviewing the reports and barment automatic for judges conguilty earlier to similar charges and , recommen,dations, the Supreme victed of a felony.
was sentenced to a youth facility · Court can diJmiss charges or issue
Justice Evelyn Stratton, a new
until his 21st birtl)day.
one of four ~tiQDs. It n ·ssue a member of the coun, isn't concerned
• Judge Fred W. Crow · III last
public rep~· and, a su
sion wi.th- about the current form of patrolling
week rejected ·a request by public
out pay fo ix months to• two years, the judges.
· "We're finally policing our own
d~fender William H. Safranek to
a suspensio of t least two years
postpone the trial. The trial will
without pay or permanent disbar- and I think that's good," Stratton said.
commence at 9 a.m. with jury
"Nobody ever touched them before.
ment.
selection.
However, many judges resign Judges sh9uld he told they are a pubbefore action can be taken against lic servant - you're not God."

PULP MILL OPPOSITION 7 Opponents of the proposed Mason County pulp mill gathered
outllde the West VIrginia governor's mansion Saturday to protest the project (AP)
~

'

Pulp mill _
opponents gather
to_pledge they_will fight on
CHARLESTON, -W.Va. (AP) have been held outside the mansion
- Opponents of a proposed before.
"I didn't expect the governor to
:Mason County pulp mill say they
be
here. ll would have been..good
refuse to ~ive up thtfiight to keep
the $1 .1 btllion project from tieing . if he was. We could have educated
built along the Ohio River in Apple him," Fout said. "(Capenon) has
only heard one side of the issiJe. I
Grove.
"We're not a group of•extrem- don ' 1 think he wants to hear the
ists. We're citizens who are out to truth."
The governor was in Washingdefend our homes against poison
and greed ... We' re going .to stop . ton, D.C., on Saturday for Demothe pulp mill. They might as well cratic National Committee Execugo away now," said J\lnet Fput, a tive meetings, said Jill Wilson,
spokeswoman for the Ohi o Valley Caperton~ s spokeswoman.
·Capen on is a major booster of
Environmental Coalition.
The group sponsore&lt;) a r ·otest the project proposed by Parsons &amp;
Saturday outside the Governor's Whittemore Inc. of Rye Brook,
Mansion, where-hundreds gathered N.Y. He says the$ 1.1 billion pulp
although Gov. Gaston Capenon · mill would create 600 jobs. Opponents say it would pollute the rivwas 01~t of town.
·
Organizers say they have er with dioxin, a toxic byproduct of .
always invited Caperton to i~eir bleaching.
,
"The powe~s that be may not
protests to no avail. Similar rallies

care ifth~sehemicals cause breast
cancer an uterine cancer, but
maybe i .ill catch their.attention
· that they can mali:.e men impotent
and smaller and less effective as a
reproductive syst~·~ said Seil.
Pon MacNaughtan, -Wetzel.
Also, state d
ents shpw
that Parsons &amp; Whittemere ~ould
get millions of dollars io tax 'breaks
and incentives. ··
Bobbie Hill of Pu.tnam County
says she Jiles just 17.miles from
the proposed mill.
· "I'm just concerned about every
aspect of it: the issue of dioxin, the
issue of trees being cut, the issue of
the smell and the secref;y and the
negotiations to bring · this 'plant
here. I think it's totally wrong for
· West Virginia," she said. "The
powers that be need to really pay
attention."
·

Labor-'s. p-olitic~l drive prompts vexation in GOP circle~
'
.
$y KEVIN GALVIN

political war chest with a temporary dues increase for member unions.
the Senate, the presidency, the federal judiciary, and so they' re standing up,.
The
fight
is
intensifying.
·
getting
involved early: We welcome their suppon," Sen. 'Christopher Dodd
Asaoclltld Press Writer
As
unions
formalized
plans
for
the
political
action
program,
the
Federal
of
Connecticut,
general ch'airman of the Democratic National Committee said
WASHINGTON- Organized .labor may not be on its deathbed after all,
.
.
'
jl!dging by the heated reaction of Republicans and business leaders to the Election Commission already was weighing a complaint filed by Republi- Sunday on NBC's " Meet the P[ess. "
cans, accusing the AFL~CIO of illegally supporting Democrats.
But to Republican National ChairmailHliiey Barbour,'the pol.itical action
mpvement's planned political drive this election year.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich called labor's campaign "the most blatant, drive is the decision of union chiefs, not their rank and file. · - Republicans call the AFL-CIO's plan to spend $35 million on political
oven
attempt to intimidate and buy Congress."
·
"They're going to-spend $35 million just to buy back control of the House ',
action an ~.overt attempt to intimidate" Congress, and the U.S. Chamber of
of R~pre sentatives for the Democrats, and almost all of it is from compulCommerce vows to fight labor district by district in the fall.
1 "I do not know of any time in American history that a single group has
.~ To John Sweeney, who won the AFL-CIO presidency last faiJ promising anno~nced the s~ale of eff?n that. Sweeney ts now announcmg at the AFL- . sory union dues paid for.by union members, including the 40 percent of union
.
-~ _ . _
members who voted Republican in 1994," Barbour said on NRC.
to revitalize the 13-million-member fe&lt;leratiorrafter years of decline in union CIO, the Ge~rgta. Repubhcan satd.
The
federation
ts
targetmg
75
Ho~s~
race~
Jbisye-ar,
pn.~artly
seats
.held
--L.(ke_f_
orporations, unions may educate voters about issues or urge them
ranks, the tone of that response indicates labor is undc;r attack by-"the Repubby ~eshman Repubhcans. The $35 mtlh()n ~Lfulld adventsmg about work· to vote.But they-ca ' id or oppose speci~c candidates except through polit- •.
lican Party and its big business and billionair~ backers."
:
. ''Over the next few months, as. our grass-roots legislative and political e~s tssu~s, .and an effotlto create a ba,s&amp;·'Ol I00 acttvlsts-tn every congres- teal actton, commtltees, w ose . ndmg~~ctly regulatj:d.
.. .
Repubhcans charge that durmg congressiOnal breaks in. 1995-the-Ai"f:;-'--program grows and begins to take •hold, you are going to witness the bigge$t s10nal dtstnct.
. ~e~FL-CI&lt;? has cnttctzed GOPeffo~s to ba~ance the.federal budget by CIO engaged in "active electioneering," violating_campaign Jaw with tcle- ·
smear camp!lign, the biggest disinformation campaign in the history of Amerremmg m spend.mg on Medtcare, ~edtcrud: ~octal Secunty, educatiOn and vision ads critical of Republican GOP lawmakers and policies in coo raican politics," Sweeney said.
tion with Democrats.
pe
He spoke at a special convention in Washington last week at which union other programs tt says.benefit workmg famthes.
·"They don't want to see Mr. Gingrich and his crowd control the House;
leaders endorsed President Clintop for re-election and approved funding a
·to····

. ~·"\,

Freemen backers keep their distance
but still voice suppo~ for the cause .

b

' · JORDAN, Mont. (AP) - : As 'the
Freemen standoff with federal agents
moved into a second week, sympathizers of the militant anti-government group were rallying support from a distance;
: Heeding. the advice of ft:deral
authorities and militia leaders to SillY
away from the wheat fann where.the
F~men are 1\oled up, the IdahOba~ed Frec!me,n ' Patriots . instead
plalmed to rally today in Lewistown,
a town rouahly 120 miles to the west.
• "We want to let evj:l)'body know .
these people aren't alone," .said orga·
nizerChad ErickSon of Kamiah, Idah(l. "Many people think like they

stopped a pair of sympathizers trying
to reach the .compou,nd.
.
The Washington Post reported
Sunday that the FBI was considering
an offer from white separatist Randy
Weaver to mediate an end . to the
standoff. Weaver's wife·and son were
killed by federal agents In a 1992
shootout at Ruby ~idge, Idaho.
But Sen. Max Baucus, a Montana
Democrat, urged Weaver and Outside
militia groups to stay home and let
officials here try to resolve the situation peacefully.
Pe.spfe like Weaver tend to create
divisiOn and ."probably ate going to
create more problems than they are
~o.''
· , going to solve," Baucus said on
LewistOwn wu selected, EriCkson CBS's "Face the Nation."
slid; because it is far enouah away
The Freemen, who lulve named
from the standoff that law enforce. their 960-acre compound "Justus
ment officiill won't be unduly con- . Township," deny the ~egitimacy of
cerned., FBI agent.s haye twice the government and have set up their
. I.

own .laws and their own courts.
Neighbors said the group has built
bunkers and openly stockpiled food,
fuel and weapons - possibly including military armaments.
•.
· The compound has been surrounded by more than 100 FBI agen~
since March 25, when LeRoy
Schweitzer and Daniel Petersen Jt., .
two Freemen leaders; were arrested.
A third member of the gtoup, Richard
E. Clark, surrendered Saturday.
Authorities won't say how many
people aie still at the farm.
•
"The key thing heJ:C is !hat wp
need a peaceful solution to this problem. Th~y ne«ito come out and face .
their forum in a court of law and state
"
their problems in a court of'law under
TU~N BACK - F!ill ...... 1nd Montana
a system that is just," Parsons said Hlghwlry Patrol~ lnatructedTed Sllnlla,
Sunday on ABC's "This Week With'· left, to get In hlltruck •net leave the.,.. •long
'David Brinkley."
1 country fOIId thet lledl to where the F.....,._

:

·-

'
..
•

.,. holed up, some 30 mllel outalde Jordln
Mont Sllzeinlllnd • companion trled to .,...;
the·F~ corilpound latelaat wee~~. (AP) ••

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Deputies a"est Ravenswood man

:ct~aring skies will bring
:c old temperature.&amp; tonight

;Poverty world's greatest hazard

me

Meig$ announc~!7'1ents

"INTERNET

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EMS .units record 12 calls' ·~:

First Amendment ICiwY~r punished

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PAUL SOtJHRADA
Aasoclated Pre•• Writer
, COLUMBUS - The state's hunters, anglers and fur trappers have their
eyes on their biggest trophy yet - the Ohio Department of" Natural
By Nat Hentoff
The News, which is published by Garbus has been censu for his role tiff."
I first became aware of Manin Mort Zuckerman, has expressed full '" the
Resources.
by an org n ization of
Leon Friedman. a law professor
State Rep. Lynn Wachtmann, R-Napolcon, is preparing legislation that Garbus, a First Amendment special- faith in McAiary's credtbihty. One some of the most distin uished First who has won a number of significan't
lSI,' •when he assisted in Lenny headline on his column read "Rape
would spin off the state Division of Wildlife and elevate it to a eabinet
Amendment lawyers in the nation .
li.bel cases for defendants: tells m~
'stature.
'
Bruce's defense some 30 years ,ago.
The Libel Resource Defense Cen- that Garbus' punishment "should not
:
,
Backers, including the League of Ohio Sponsmen and other wildlife Bruce was on trial in New York for
ter, headquartered in New York, have happened." Friedman has
NatHentoff
groups, say the move woulchnsulate the division against political maneubeing obscene. He was convicted, but .
des~ribes itself as dedicated to proworked both sides of the First
vering and free up money to buy more hunting and fishing lands.
moting "ljrst Amendment rights in Amendment in copyright law, he
eventually an '~Jpellate coun reversed Hoa~ the Real Crime."
· "We don't like the constant raid on wildlife money," said Bill Kirkpatrick, the verdict-- too late for Bruce who
However, ·in a rriost unusual10ter- the libel, privacy and related law notes. "Should I be drummed out of
treasurer of the sponsmcn league, which represents 250 spons clubs with had died.
nal rebellion, more than 30 staff fields." Its Defense Counsel Section that company of specialists?"
250,000 members statewtde.
Garbus went on to defend civil members-at the Daily News signed a is composed of more than 180 law
Another widely known First
As a separate entity, the wildlife dtvision would be self-governing and rights protesters 10 Mississippi and petition to the editors. It recalled that finns across the country specializing Amendment lawyer, James Goodale:
&lt;JlClf-fullded, Kirkpatnck said. Now, some of the money raised through the various writers and newspapers being the News had recently publiShed a in libel defense litigation and legis- whose defense work has includoo
~le of hunting and fishing licenses is siphoned off to cover ODNR oversued for libel. And he helped write . four-pan series urging "hundreds, lation. .
representation · of the · New Yprk
Garbus' law firm has been sus- Times, found it hard to stop laughin~
f!ead.
·
the constitutions of postcommunist • maybe thousands" of rape victims to
• Tho division does not receive any state tax money ..
Czechoslovakia and Hungary.
come forward. McAlary.'s indignant pended from LRDC "until it has when I told him Garbus had been
: Kirkpatnck promised a blitz to get the~ill sed once it is introduced.
In 35 years, Garbus had never rep- collea_gues added that pol ice com- ceased representing any plaintiffs in punished by the LRDC. "I doo '1
~!ready, the league has amassed a mailing list f 650,000 Ohio sponsmen
resented a plaintiff in a libel suit. But missioner William Bratton had said a libel action against a media defen- think he should have done it," sai~
·'Who will be asked to lobby their legislato
in 1994, hemadeanexception.A27- that "physical evidence ofrajle had dant or JOUrnalist." Those are the Goodale, "but suspending him is
: ODNR Director D6nald Anderson opposes the defection of the division, year-old black woman had been been found. " McAlary's columns, the rules and -- Executive Director San- really silly. What about the LRDC's
;....hich has 472 employees and an annual budget of $33.5 million.
. raped in Brookl.yn's Prospect Park. In petition continued, and "the News' dra Baron tells me -- there are no respect for lbe right to speak out on
• "We're all very supportive of what the division is trying to accomphsh,"
three columns 10 the New York Dai- hypocritical performance are a dis- exceptions . Garbus should .have such centraltssues as this case pre~nderson said . ''If they were a separate entity, 11 would be much more dif- ly News, however, columnist Mike grace."
,_
sents."
,
shown that woman the door.
licult to work togeth~r on our coml)lon o*ctives."
McAiary charged that slie had not
Meanwhile, in New York magaInsurance companies play a large
But Garbus would not have been
: Wachtmann said his is not an anti-OD
bill.
been raped. He ctted unnamed zine Roben I. Friedman a veteran pan in financing the defense of many punished if he had just spoken out..
• "It is designed to give more stature d presence .to the Division of sourc~s ins.i.de the Police Department repo'rter and editor, wrote ihat during costly libel suits and, as Robert Sack, ~ did sqmething much worse. He
~ildlifc, " he ~cL ~ ·
as saymg:. The wor:nan, who proba- a deposition in a case charging him a prominent defense libel lawyer, aclually followed his conscience to '
: The bill probably would nofaffect the day-to-day activities, Wachtmann bly ~111 wmd up bemg ~~ested her- with having broken his. contract with says, " Insurance companies frown on help someone he believed had been
lidded. Nor would he favor weakening the division's wildlife enforcement self, mvented the cnme.
the New York Post, McAiary had said defense lawyers taking plaintiffs' terribly wronged by a columnist and
~nd rule-making powers.
·
.Feehng-she had _now been raped he 59metimes used "writing devices" cases." Furthermdre, he adds, poten- his newspaper.
, He said a key to gelling the bill passea is ensuring that it does not raise twtce, the woman went to several · in his columns to "illustrate a story.", tial clients being sued for libel mtght ·
Let this be a lesson to law school '
)he costs of running-the a~ncy.
' o;· .
lawyers and they recomm~nded Gar- . Accordingly, he continued, not every treat a lawyer who ch~nged sides students. An act of conscience may ~
Still waiting in the wings is t,_he Columbus-based_.\Vildljfe Legislative bus. He has sued McAiary and the_ one of his columns is intended to be "like an apostate priest."
tarn1sh your professional status.
Fund of America - headed by former Ohio Dtvision of WJ!dlife Chief News for libel. Garbus has taken the "read as factually, word for word."
Floyd Abrams, on~ of the counNat Benioff is a nationally
Richarp Pierce.
.
case pro bono. There have already
As the depositions of McAlary try's best known First Amendment reno\rned authority on the First .
Pierce was out of town last week, but spokesman J.R. Absher said his been a number of Pl"\'tnal heanngs continued .. one of them sent across _lawyers, says, "I would feel it was a Amendment•nd the rest of the Bill ·
group - whtch provides pubhc ~elations, lobbying and legal serv'ices for and depositions.
the country by Coun ~ -- Martin ~_trayal for me to represent a plam- of Rights. ·
·
huntin~,trapping and wildbfe causes- has only be~un exammine the issu~.
/
"We haven 't really made a decision,' ' Absher satd.
Waclltmann said he expected to introduce the bill when the House returns'
from itshbliday break in mid-April. Given that the legislative session is nearly qver, he was realistic that the bill has little chance of success this year.
"Hopefully, we ·u have a couple of hearings on it this year and reintroer rbom or in .hallways, or actually '\ofpatrioti~m. His Denvercollea'".
"'s ' p1ayer. Abdu1· Rauf' s protests must be· ••
By Joseph Spear
" ..~duce it next sesswn," he said.
As a columnist, it is my solemn turning his back to tl/e flag when the generally Sllppol'ted him for stan&lt;!ing personal •.they say, because their reli-;
.duty 1o point out bushwa when I anthem was p!ayed. His detailed up for his beliefs. The American Civ- gion does. not forbid allegiance to a.;
detect it, and I thus call your attention explanation: The American flag 1~a il Libenies Union allowed that, even nat10n or tts symbols.
. ·,
to the vast clouds of gaseous hooey "symbol of oppres.sion, of tyrann)\ if there wasn't a First Amendment
--This i~ not a First Amendment ; ·
still swirhng around Mahmoud This is my belief, and I won't com- case to be made, there probably was issue. By definition, there cannot be ;
By T... AssocliirecfPresa
Abdul-Rauf's shon-Ii-ted refusal to ~romisc my ~liefs." He added: a violatio~ of ~ivil rights laws..Three a violation of. constitutional rights •
TodfY is Monday, April I, the 92nd day of 1996. There are 274 days left
stand for the national apthem. ·
Yo~ ca9no!· be for ~od an~ for Denver dtsc Joc.key.~ barged .mto.a unless a government is somehow f
.. in the year. This is April Fool's Day.
· In case you m1ssed it, what hap- oppresSIOn. I m a Mushrv. first ~d a mosque and played The Star-Span- involved. It is not even a free speecij 1
Today's Highlight,in History:
pened is that Denver Nuggets bas- Muslim last. 1\_iY d~tY. is. to my \:~- gled Banne_r."
·
• issue:~No"one has denied Abdui-Rauf ;
On Ap(il I, 1945. t:I.S. forces la~tnched the inyasion of Okinawa during
ketball playe( Abdul-ltauf, who was ator, not to na~onahs~tc 1deology.
Columm~t Nat H~ntoff de!,enlied' .. the pnv!leg; of saying anything, and :
World 'far IIi
· ·
·
Chris 1ackson when he left Louisiana
-The league 1mmed1ately suspend- Abdul-Rauf s behavtor as an act of my guess is that most people •don'( ,
·on tJiis date:
State University in I990 to seek for- ed Abdui-Rauf, who is. ~aking an co.nscience." A Balti~ore ~~n writer care what he does while the nationat :
In I 789, the U.S. House of Representatives held its first full meeting, inI . tune on the hardwood, had been defy• annual salary of $2.6 mtlhon. Each sa1d that Abdul·RIIUf s cnhcs wefC anthem is being played as long as he· ·
New Yi1rk City. Frederick Muhlenberg of Pennsylvania was elected the first
ing a National Basketball Association ~arne he,did noi play set him back the . full ?,f "puffed up self-righteous- ·doesn't act with disre,~t. The prob- ,;
House _peaker.
·
rule that all players, coaches and ttdy sum of $3 I,707. Two days later. ness.
Iem is, some of the things he has cho,
In I 53. Cincinnati, Ohio, became the first U.S. c~ay its firefighttrainers must stand "in a dignified he had !ound a "better ~h." He
.There . are a few fundamental. sen to say .. particularly the
ers a regUlar salary.
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posture ... during the playing of the would stan
s1de h1s teammates .pomts bemg overlooked here:
about the United States be'n
.
Thi.
I"
.
•ga
In 187-3; composer Sergei Rachmaninoff WIS born in Novgorod
be
the
th
be
national anthem."
w n. an e "':as mg played,
•• . s. IS not .a re •g.ous tssue. tyranny .. are stupid. In pointing this.
Province, Russia.
Abdul-Raufconverted to Islam in he toll! ESPJII. but· .would be pray- Evenftn thood1s oppre~ ldanthad,feAwbdpeo-l out, his critics '·are exercising their'
In 1918, the Royal Air Force was establislled in Britllin.
1991. In mid-March of this year, he mg.
p1e o J
sense mm
t
u - .own free speech ri hts
.
In 1933, Nazi Germany began iis pe~ution of Jew~ with a boycott of
What the situation criCd-out-for -RIIuf chooses to worship as a Mus•
g ·
· ·
proclaim.ed thai his religio~U princi··
.·
'
Iewish-owned businesses.
pies prohibited devotion to llaJs and was a dash of ~ommmi sebse, but it lim. ~eed, ,WO~t of 'the M~lim l•
J-pb Spear Ia ·• ~~
· ·:
In 19;19~ the United' States recognized the Franco govemJilCnt in Spain
anthems. All season long, in tlitt, he didn't get much. SpotU fabs gener· alithonues I .saw quoted were ,not j \rrlter for NeWipllper Eilte!p
,
following the end of the Spanish civil war. . ,
.
had.been hanging behind in the look- ally censured Abdt~I·Rauf for a Jack very suppontve of the basketball .Aaoc..tloa. '
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No injuries reported in crash

Charles F. Hilt Jr.

ANOT-HER

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;Letters to the editor

Bill would elevate
Wildlife division(to
· abinet .status

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Auditor reports in-crease in bil value

bo-

--·lnfl ,..u...

Local
News
in
Brief:
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' Denver V. Weber, 67, lteedsville, t!ied Salurllay, MlrCh 30;'l996 at St.
Joseph's Hospital, Plrlcersburg, W.Va.
Born Nov. I. 1928 iq Long Bollom, son of Oscar and Zelda KoeniJ
u
Weber of Lonj Jt!ltiom. he was an affiliate of the Reedsville MelbodiSI
Church and a member of the Coolville
Masonii: Lodge. 337.
IND.
•
·-· He o wned the D.V. Weber
,,
1
Construction Co. for the past 40 yean
as well as Weber Sand &amp; Gravel for 2S
,.
years. For the past two years be was
Following the Ohio Tax Comntissioner's hearing on oilaod gas valaffiliated
with
the
Olen
.
Corp:
of
uation
for the tax year 1996, values for oil have increased 1.13 perColumbus.
cent fronJ $1,770 per barrel to $1 ,790;.according to Meigs County Audi"'J,n addition to his parents, he is
tor N~cy Parker Campbell. Gas valuation remained at.$.225 per 1,00()
cubic. feet. ·
survived by his wife, Grace Weber of
Reedsville; two sons and a d&amp;I!Jhter-in·
Campbell said there are smaller values~orells that produce less
'••
law, David and Debbie Weber, and . than olie barrel of oil and less than 8,000 cu c feet of gas. The tiling ·
Mark Weber, all , of Reedsville; two
deadUne for oil and gas producers wa~ ext
to May 24 by the tax
granddaughters; two sisters and broth- · commissioners.
ers-in·law, Maxine and Ernie. White•
head of Reedsville, and Bill and Gladys
A Ravenswood, W.Va., man was arrested on charges of obstrUcting
Meredith of Beverly; a sister-in-law,
offici
al business and resisting arrest in Portland Su~day night.
Lillian Ptckens of Reedsville; and sevAcc'ording to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, a deputy
eral nieces and nephews .
responding to a complaint encountered J,.arry B. Nelson, 26. Nelson
He was preceded in death by
all~j!Cdly did not cooperate with the deputy and resisted arrest when
an infant brother; a sister and brother~en into custody.
DENVER WEBER
in-law, Harold and Fay Sauer; and by a
Nelson 'is free on bond pending a hearing in Meigs County Coun.
· /
,:.T"
brother-in-law, Warren Pickens.
Services wilfi I a.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral l{ome. ~iddlepon.
· with Phil Sturm and Charles Mash officiating. Burial will follow in the
No injuries were reported following a two-vebicle accident on SR
Reedsville,Ceme.tery. Friends"inay call'at the funeral ·home from 2-4 and 7124 in Salem Township Thursday around 5:40 p.m. .
9 p.m. TUesday.
·
Daniel J. Demar, 74, Pomerpy was westbound when be lost conIn
lieu
of
flowers
the
family
i$
requestinV'&lt;&gt;nations
be
made
io
Clirleton
·'
trol in a curve and shd across the center line, striking the fender of a
The record-ltigh te)itperature for SchooVMeigs Industries Syracuse.
By Tht AHOCiitiCI Preas
1991 Ford semi-lractordriven by EverettT. Coy, 38, Hamden, accord·' It wa5 noAprii.Fool'sjoke. It was this date at the Columbus weather
ing to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment repon.
snowing, across much 'Of Ohio this stationwassodegreesinl963while
Demar's car then slid off the road before striking a tree, 1he repon
morning.
,
the. record low was IS in 1923. ,Sunstated.
·
' The persistent rain turned to snow set tonight Will be at 6:56 p.m. and
Charles F. HJ!t'Jr., 82, Columbus, died Saturday, March 30, 1996 in CtllumDamage to Demar's 1987 AMC. Eagle was listed as heavy and dis- ,
:was colder air filtered into the state sunrise Tuesday at 6:13a.m.
bus.
.
abling while Coy's truck sustained moderate damage. No cil;ltions were
overnight. The trend was 'to continue
Weather forecast:
He was' a retired PennsylvaniaN &amp; W Railroad engineer and a lifetime
li~ted on the repon.
dunng the day, the Nauonal WeathTonight. ..Clear and cold. Lows in member of the UTU 1634. He was a U.S. Anny veteran of World War II.
er Servic.e said.
the 20s exrept around 30 -extreme
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Cathleen N. Hilt; two grandThe state remained under a flash south.
children; and a sister, Ruth Wilson.
fl ood watch with rainfall measureTuesday...Mostly cloudy nonhSurviving are a son, Bruce (Michelene) Hilt of Lima; two daughters, Sanments of as much as 2 inches in pans west wtlh. ·Ill few sprinkles. Panty dra K. Lamm of Georgia, and Kathy (Eric) Johnson of Lima; a grandson; Craft rair slated
. Speakers will be the Rev. Kenn)'
of Ohio during the mght and today. · cloudy nonheast. Mostly sunny cen- and two brothers, James W. Hilt of Aorida, and Warren H. Hilt of ~ut\1 DakoThe Chester Volunteer Fire ·,. Baker, Monday, the Rev. Les Hay,
High pressure win bring clear tral and south. Highs middle '40s ta.
Depar!rRent is sponsoring a crafts fair man, Tuesday, the Rev. Sharon Haus"
skies to !II• state tonight, forecasters nonh to the middle 50s south.
Services will be II :30 a.m. Tuesday in the Lon&amp;. Funeral Home, 5528 at tbe fire house on April 27 from 9 , man, Wednesday. and the Rev. Bob
said. Some clouds may move into the
Extended forecast:
Cleveland Ave., Columbus. Burial will be in the Nonhlawn Memorial Gar- a.m. to 5 p.m. Tables can be reserved ,Robinson, Thursday.
northwest by daybreak. Lows tonight
Wednesday ... Panly cloudy. Lows dens, Westerville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. for $10 each. For more information,
'Will in the 20s to around 30. · ,
PTO to meet
25 to 35. Highs 45 t_o 50 nonh and 50 , today.
I .
call Roger Smith a1992-2502.
• The high will be the main weathThe' Pomeroy PTO will meet
ennaker into Tuesday. Some clouds 10 60·50\llh.
' PER' 111 meet
Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Thursday... Achanceofrain.Lows
and perhaps a few iprinkles may
' A IUJ1cheon meeting w"ill be held Elemtntary School.
to 35. Highs in too 40s except 50 '
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occur in the northwest with the rest 25 55
south
Dal~ K. Roush. 73, ·Of Apple Creek, Ohio, died Friday, March 29, 1996 Thursday at !IO'?n at the Senior Citi10
gf the state remaining dry with &amp;orne
zens Center. Speakers will be Aetna Arthritis program
Fnday... Panly cloudy"and cooler. ~~his residence, following an e~tended illness.
_
· · sunshine. Htghs will range from the Lows in the 20s. Highs 35 to 45.
Born Oct. 27, 1922 ln Mason Cou~ty. W.Va., he was the son of the late add Blue Cross and Blue Shield repThe Anhritis Aquatic Program at
mid-40s in the nonh to the mid-50s
Dorsey and Lilhan·Kaylor Roush. He was a 1942 graduate of Wahama High resentati ves.
Royal Oak Resort staned a new sesin ·the south·;
School, and a graduate of the Ohio State University. He served with the Ninth "4 Nlpts 4 God" set
sion today. The program is a series or
Air·Force
.dunng
World
War
II,
as
a
link
trainer
instructor
for
two
years
in
Holy
Week
services
wtll
be
held
gentle
recreational exercises in a
' •
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EIJgland, "France, Belgium anc! Germany.
.
Monday through Thursday at the heated pool held Mondays, WednesHe became farm manager at Apple Creek Devel 0pmental Center in 1949, . Pomeroy United Methodist Church. days, and Fridays, from 10 to II a.m:
where he Tater became personnel manager. working at the center until 1979. Bible study will be held at 6:'30 p.m., For more information, call 614-593The following land transfers were K. and Cindy A. Little and'Theresa
He 1s ~urvived by his wife of 52 years, J~net Turner Roush; two sons and and worship servic~ .at 7:30 p,m. 2518.
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posted recently in the office of '. L. Ridger, Middleport parcels;
daughters-m-law: Ketth and Connie Roush of Durango, Colo., and Stephen
.
Meigs County RecOrder Emmogime
Affidayit, Herschel Edison and Debra Ro~sh of Hyausvtlle, Md.; one daughter and son-in-law, KathHamiltol):
Roush, deceased, to Eileen B. Roush, lepn Roush and Michael Fitch of Massillon; a sister-in' law, Sara RolJsh; two
Sheriffs deed, Gary A, Jones to Lotan' par¢ts;' 1
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haJf.si~tqrs anq brother-in-law, Agnes anq Edwiil Sl~aros, and Nellie EmoUnits of the Meigs County Emer- Web McLain, Vl\&lt;IH;
··armcrs Bank &amp; Savings .Co.• Salis- - - Deed, Dale C., and Mary Belle gene Roush; two half-brothers and sister-in-Jaw: Bill and Madeline Roush. gency Medical Service recorded,J2
8:33 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
bury;
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Warner to Lenora A. Robenson, ,and Richard Roush. ,
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calls for assistance Saturday and depanment and squad, structure fire
. ~ight of way, Timothy L. and Connie E, Saunders, Jill M. Pugh and
He was also preceded In death by a brother, Milton Roush.
Sunday. Units responding included: on Pme Grove Road, no injuries.
i"flirsha K~3fns tq Columbus South- Mary A. Findley, Sutton; 1-1/5 acres; _ Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Mcintire, Davis &amp; Greene FunerTUPPERS PLAINS
POMEROY
~rn Powe~•.~he~\f,r:
,
Deed, Randy K. and Rodney L. al Home, Wooster, with the Rev. Roy V. Wagner officiating. Burial will fol 8:05p.m.
Saturday, SR681, Mer7:14a.m. Saturday, Rocksprings
• Rtght of way, Nora A,. an'd Roben Keller, Jennifer E. and Russell D. low in Apple Creek Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7- Rehabilitation Center, Suzie Lemas- · le Griffith, Camden-Clark Memortal
f.i. Eason to ~SP, Chester; ,
Keller to Ronald E. Jr. and and Deb- 9 tomght.
Hospital ;
ter, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Right Qf way, Paul J. Pauley to. orah J. Snyder, Chester parcels;
' In heu of flowers. the family requests that memorial contributions be made
6:40 a.m. Sunday, Keller Street,
3&lt;58 ·p.m. Saturday. Overbrook
CSP, Chester; .
.
CertifiFate, Donna L. Gtbbs: to St. Peter's United Church of Chnst, Box 205, Apple Creek, Ohio, 44606, Nursing Center, Cecil Teaford, Holz- Sterra Tucker, CCMH;
, t&gt;eed, Charles W. Jr. and, Be~Iah deceased, to Gary L. Gibbs, Sulton · in his memory.
5:16p.m. Sunday, Sumner Road,
, er Medical Center;
Cornell to Rand,all G. and Holly D. parcels;
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4:23 p.m. Sunday, State Route Greg Carpenter. St. Joseph's Hospital.
~.tump, SuttOil, 74.7~.&lt;Jacres; · ·
Deed, Thomas L. and Belly H.
143, April Large, VMH.
, Dec~ • .Dolores Hanlon, Delores Boggs to @MEGA' JV5, Olive
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RACINE
!fanion, Doi\)~CS HartiJ~SS and John- P¥Cels; . ',
' . Ejrma A. 'Fumbull; 76, Mason, w.v~ .• died t.fonday. April I, 1996 in Pleas- 'I
5:28 p.m. Saturday, Third Street,
ny P· Hartness lo Dolores A. and
Easement ' American Pre!Jiier ant Valley Hospital.
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Hilton Wolfe Sr., treated at the scene.
Ii&gt;h,nny E. Hanness, Chester;
Underwriters' to OMEGAJV5, RutBorn April, 24, 1919 in Mason, daughter of the late Emmell and Rosa
.RUTLAND
, Deed. Ralph and Gladys Hutton land, .26 acre;
Lewis Nease, she was a homemaker.
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6:46 a.m. Saturday, Willnick
l~ Ralph Hulton Jr., ·Le.tan, .22 acre;/
Deed, Benha Eileen Hatfield to
She was also preceded in death by her husband, William A. Thrnbull, m Road, Norman and Elegra Will,
Deed. Joseph R. WJison to Mtd- Richard L. Jr: and Beverly E. Feuy. 1980; and by two siSters and a brother.
,
VMH.
&lt;tlepon Ch~n:h ofc;hrist, Middlepo~ Pomeroy parcel;
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Carolyn R. and Randall Davis
SYRACUSE
ll~cel;
,.
Deed, R. V and Sharoq Pierce to of Middlepbn; two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; and three sis- ·
5:44 a.m. Saturday, Dailey Road,
." Deed, Rtchard J. and Joyce K. David Anthony and Margaret Rosea ters. Rosalee Clarke of New Haven, W.Va., Naomi Riley of Mason, Kath'(~lcs to , Jphn I. and Deborah V. Markewicz, Letan;
Jeen Trapp of Marion .
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Nonhup, C~ester par,~el;
Deed, 'Daniel and Jill Gheen to
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
0
Deed, Gary L. and Patricia L. Michael and Janine Gheen, Lebanon Mason, wtth Pastor Damon Rhodes and Pastor Mark Morrow officiating. BurWolf tp George K. Mora, Chester;
parcel ·
tal will be 1n t~e Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at th~ funeral home
·: Deed, Dorotby ~nd Wilovene Bai- _
De~d. Lawrence B. Va~ce to from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.
The following actions to end marII(Yto Ro~?&lt;:n c;. -!3atley S.r., Sahsbury;. Holl)e National Bank, Letart P!'rcel;
'
riage were filed recently in the office
1: 01 acres; "
.
Affidavit, Faye Elaine Quillen to
s.
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts LarJudgment, en,try, qary Gibbs to Charl~s , Lang and Anna Maud,e'
ry Spencer:
~ate of,6hlo, S~;
'·
Spires; ,
,
Dimrces asked -'-- Tma Louise
Deed, Ma&gt;:g~eriie. 'rignor, .MarDeed, Mary L. Robinson to.
~OLUMBUS (AP) - · Indiana- 46 ·00 ·
Faulkner, Ponland, from Michael
guerite ,Tignor .Bishop, Asl\ley Q.
Ronald L. Robinson. Orange parcel ; Ohto dtr~~t hog pnces at selected
Sows: unevenly steady.
David Faulkner. Sardinia, March 27;
Sishop to, Jeffrey Blaine Tignor,
Deed; Thomas E.· and linda A. - buymg pomts Monday by the ~.S.
U.S. l-3,.,. 300-500 lbs. 32·00· Jacqueline L. Bobo, Shade. from
Orange;
, .
Briggle to L. Scott and Kristi A. Depanment of Agnc~lture Mark~l 35.00;)00-650 lbs. 35.00-41.00.
James F. Bobo, Athens, March 26 ;
00
28
30
. Oced,-.Sidney E. Little to Ronda Powell, Chester.
News:
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Boars: -'lQ- · ·
Carol D. Parker, Gallipolis, from
•
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Barrows and gtlts: mo.stly 50·~nts
. ~timated receipts: 39,000.
Thomas M. Parker, Pomeroy, March
higher, demand moderate on a hght
Prices . rrom The Producers 25 ; Shelba JeAn Wickline, Racine,
to
moder
te
run.,
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"-Livestock
Association:
from James Dana Wickline, Racine.
:Tlie
Sentinel.
U.
1-:i 220-260 lbs. 46.5~ Cattle: uneven, 1.50 lower to . March 22 .
(USPS 213-96G)
48.50, ew, 46.00 and 49.00; plan
stronger.
D" 1 ·
d
J
L
Slaugliter ~leers: choice 57 00- ·
tsso ullons grante - erry ·
48.00-50.25.
.
Published every o.flel'floon, Mondo.l 'hrouiJh
U.S 2-3 , 230-260 lbs . 41.50- 64.50; select SO.OO
, -60.00,,
. . Six and Hazel Six, March 25; Nancy•
Friday, II I CQ.!.!rt St., Pomaioy, Ohio, by the: ·~ ·Am Ela
~ ::.~
,~
· R, Cole and H3tner E. Cole, March
Ohio Valley Publllhit;~~ CompanyKianneu Co.,'
heife..S:
choice
.
55.00'
Slaughter
Akzo ...............:.....••:.......1. .....55\
·.
.
00
~9' 00
25; Ronald L. Robinson and Mary L.
Pomeroy; Ohio 45769, PJo 992·21 56. Second
A•hland 011 ...........................311~
63.00; select 50. · J . .
R b"
M h 26
clm~s poslqe paid II Pomeroy, Ohio.
AT&amp;T~.- .......... :......................111'1.
Cows: uneven, 1.00 lower to 2:00
mson, arc
·
Mmbtr: The Aa!Kdated Pren, and lhe Ohio
Bank One ..........................:••. 36\
higher;
all
cows
43.75
and
down.
Divorce
granted
- Carla M.
Veterans.
~emorial
~lp89tt AISocillllion.
·
·
Bob Ev~'a ............................157.1
Bulls: steady to 75 cents higher; Deweese from Thomas~. Deweese,
Saturday admissions - none.
•
Bora,-Warnet ..................... ;.. ~32'1..
28 ·
'f.osntASTBR: Send addrtsa ~ona co
all
bulls
47.00
and
down.
March
none.
Saturday
discharges
Champion Ind.................. ,.... 16'!.
1bc OaiJ)' Sentiael, I II Court St.. Pomeroy,
Sunday admissio~s ,- none.
• Relieves your family of
Channing·Shop .....................5'Phio4l769.
Sunday discharges - none.
City Holding ....... ,.......,........;.23'h
DO YOU WANT.AN OPPORTpNITY TO:
emotional burden
SlJJscRIPTION RATIS
Federll Mogul.......................11\
Holzer Medical Center
• ~presses your own wishes
*Retire:?
01nnett .................................6&amp;'.4.
. Discllarc~ ~arch 29 - Roben
()no W..k... .................... .......................... $2.00 '
in yotir plans
GoodyNr
T&amp;R
...
,
.....
:
............
51~
One Month ................. - ....... ,................. $8 70
Crow, James Parsons, Priscilla
LQwer
your
TI!Xes?
K·mart
.....................................
&amp;~~
One Year .......!................................... 1104.00
Thomas, Mrll. ,Mil1e Spillman and
• Protects funeral cost from
t.anda End ....~•••••i ............... ~.~.1
Pul"IGds
or
Grandkids
thru
College?
daughter,
Mrs.
·William
Hupp
and
inflation ·
Umtted Inc ................: ... ,.........11
"
' ' Peoples Bencorp.................;.23 , daughter, Mrs. Brian Conley and 'son,
• Metes it easier for those ypu
Ohio Vllley 'Banll: ....:..............!40
Mrs. Richard·Manin and son, ,Mah
'l'lmN
SEE
MEt!!
love'
O.,e ~Vallly ...........,...................J1f ' cella Com, Cora Marr, Mrs. Dwayne ,
Rockwell ..............................58:t.
.'
Karl Kehler
C~A
Callfur lkt4ifs torlay...
Houck and daughter, James Casto,
Robbin• 6Myera ..................33~
.
Harlqnd Little, Richard Eggleton,
wflik you're tlil~rre a&amp;mt it.
614-992-7270 .
Royal DutchiS!Iell ..............141 \
o oubacripjlllil by moll permlnecJ.ln .,..
Jei'Bdl·
Meacham,
Alison
Wagner.
Jlh~n41Y'alnc
•••
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....
r
.......
.
..........
~l\
Wbetehome&lt;lllloriOMce ,...........
Investment and Tax Consultant .
Births ...:. Mr. and Mrs. James Jar·Stir Biwtk ..............................64\
CIEMEE~S
'
MAILSUII!ICRIPTIONS
rell, siln, Scottown; Mr. and Mrs.
Wahdy li1t'l ............................18\
. Representative of HD Vest Financial Services •
•i
WOrthlngton Ind...~.........~ .....19'4
David MoQaniel, son, Leon, W.Va. ·
'13 Weeb ...f~'""'l''t""''''""'''''''''"'-"""''''$27130
- ~ t:'oonlr
FUNEUL~OME-.
.
-•-,•·:16 Wi&lt;ka,...............................................IS3.12
' Db&lt;"~ M•n:h 30 - Mrs.
Securitiet otllf8d tlwOugll HD VIII lrMIItment Services, Inc.
Stoek raporta 11n1 the 10:30
849-3210
............... ....... :...... "...............$1~.56
Dt~vltl
Daniel and son. ·
'
~
S8Mcililolleted
t1w0ug11 HO Vest~~. tne,
by
Adw•t
a.m.
quotea
provided
• i,
--~c.ono,
Qllcbarps Mardi 31 - William
RACINE.
I) .............................................. $29.:15'
433 E. Las Collnas Bt\ld., 3ld Floor, IMI1g, Te- 75039
qf
O.lllpoll~.
'
2t Vtleebl".,........
-Ro ..., ................ ,.$.56.61 !
Zinn.
' ·,
·
,.
1(2t4)-~1851 I t.Wnber. SIPC
' •
~
l2Weob,..,...:.....,.... :....:...................·...st09.n
•.
(Publilh~ with~)
t
I ~
~~, 1
' l
' ,
,
. !
•
I •
,, ,I
I
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, '\1'' • .,
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J
"I "':i.·.r

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WASHINGTON -- As chUnnan gears of govemmeRt:
•
l'j'ational Forest, Young and'Babbitt intended to g_ut laws ~g ri~ •
of the House Resources Committee,
"~mand doc~nts, draft tough are at sword's point.
lakes and parks, Babbitt was pawmg
••
Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, someA bearded fonner riverboat cap- the ground for a fight. He
•
times
sounds
like
the
Joseph
J'•ck-Ande-on
lain,
-'foung can be as earthy as Bab-· Republicans of ~smantling
••
McCarthy of the anti-environmental
u
•.,.
bitt is erudite. He has earned a repu- Natio~al Park Semce '1broug star••
movement.
and ·,
·. tation for 'rabble-rousing, and even vation" and watering down fi hand
~
He has alleged that the federal
'
raunchy, behavior. When one ofBab- wildlife protection laws.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
••
government has been "infillrated by
M/ChSel
Bfriste/n
.bitt's deputies defended the--Marine-With~teriot.allbut idled, Babbitt
'
the preservationists. " He luls intonc.:l
Mammal Protection Aet at a 1994 fled Republican-occupied WashingROBERT L. WINGETT ·
darkly
of
a
"socialist
·movement"
letters.
and
recall
(Democrats)
...
who
hearing, Young erupted in anger and ton, whipping up a grass roots guerPublisher
backing them, and he has protested forced Republican administrations brandished a walrus oosik . (penis rilla movement outside the Beltway.
mining reform by reading from tbe to spend a lot of time on their bone) during her testimony. Back in "Tilis 11_1onth marks the one-year
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
"CommJtnist Manifesto" to col- requests," the memo reads. "Philos- 1988, then-New York Democratic , anniversary of what has . become
General Manager
COntroller
leagues.
·
. ophy -- the more time employees of Rep. Raben Mrazek sponsored a bill known as the National Heritage Van
There are many echoes of the Red the administration have (to take) to to protect the Thngass, only tn watch Tour, which hit 24 slates and 67 cities
·~enace in Young's rhetoric, down to respond to legitimate congressional in horror as Young pulled out his last year.
L«&lt;.,. 10,. edllot lte -.,,.._ TMy lhould
-100 - · AH ,.,_
the witch-hunt()( a government offi- r~uests, the le~s time they have to Buck knife on the House floor and
Babbitt's stump speech is inter.,. •llbJM:t to Hltln~=nHII1 I» IJgtted Mid l~,._lldd,... .nd 61!¥1MM~ numcia!.
Interior
Secretary
Bruce
Babbitt
carry
out
their
agenda."
threatened
political
retribution.
woven
with science and scriptwe -- · Ho Urtllflwf/1 M puiJ//1111«1• ........ 1/tou/d M /n good nof , . , . , . _ .
and his staff are currently reeling
A Young spokesman said that his
Babbitt is adept at playing to the - linking anti-cancer llrugs to the
from dubious and voluminous office has never seen the memo. "It's sometimes primitive n~ture of his Endangered Species Act during 'visrequests for documents. Under llle·" -npt harassment at all," he said. "It's n~mes1s. After Young . summo~d its to hospital wards, and invoking
guise of congressional oversight, oversi~ht."
.
h1m before the comm1ttee followmg - "God's injunction to Noab in GellCYoung is lrying to muzzle the Clin·
Young's agenda is to neulralizc the Reppblican. sweep in the · 1994 §is tosavetheEaith'soreatures"dur. ton administration's chief environ- Bapbitt, whose outspoken opposition electt!Jns, Babbttt bowed:
ing church dinners.
•
mental
advocate
by
strangling
his
to
opening
up
federal
lands
for
min"Mr.
Chairman,
I
have
no
doubt
The current struggle facing Dab"
staff With paperwork.
,
ing, logging, drilling and develop,. about who the alpha-wolf Js in this bitt is whether he will be forced to
Young's tactics may have been ment has been a constant irritant for room."
submittotheinjunctionofideologues
from
a
guidance
memo
that
.
the
Alaskan.
Whether
it
is
Arctic
It
didn't
take
Babbitt
long
to
sbed
on
Capitol Hill. A testy exchange of
gleaned
: There has been much con1roversy ORGANIZATION has determiped
_ci_rc_u_Ja_ted.....,_a_m_o_n_g_Re_p_u_b_li_can_s_I_a_st
__
N_a_ti_o_nai_W_il_d_Ii_fe_R_e_fu-=g'
e_
-_w_h_i_ch
__
h_is_s_u_bm_is_si_v_e..:.po_se_
.
_B.
.
:
.
y
...
the_s,.:.p_ri,...n::.g-,of
letters
between the )INO men last
' about the risk of a pulp plant being that the greatest health h3Z!U"d in the r
montll indtcates an escalation of ten:;built in·Mason County, W.. Va.
world is POVERTY. The increase in
SIOns. After Young-wrote demandi11g
; I. It turns out.that the total amount the overall wealth in the economy of
even more documents ~nd tedious
::tJf timber used would be less than half the communi!)' and area would far '
details, Babbitt was bristling.
·:of the increase that occurs in West offset any risk due to the building of '
,. "The level of detail requested cer:;virginia every year, still leaving a this plant.
•
tainly seems to be, shall we say,' a bit
:·major surplus and no depletion of ·
It has been my experience
much," Babbit wrote. "For example,
that 20 or 30 years ago the paper
iresources.
·
your letter requests 'photographs iak~· 2. It is logical to assume that in
plant in Chillicothe had a terrible roten
of tile secretary during any trips in
~bUIIding a plant of this size, there will
ten cabbage smell. At the present
1994, 1995 and thus far m .1996.' .I
"-be' somebQdy injured or killed, time, it is difficult to tell that there is
·IrS
can assure you that I have aged norwhether the plant is chlorine-free or any odor when driving by Chillimally during that period ... and if .
not.
cothe. So therefore odor should not
•
there
were any truly titillating photos,
3. There will also be people who be a problem, dioxin nsk should not
we both know they would have been
would be injured or killed working in be ra problem, wiJether the plant 1s
published long before this."
a plant, driving on the highway going chlorine-free or ~~uld not be a
Desptte the harassment, some
back and fonh to work, cutting ~nd , problem, and the eve~esent probInterior
officials feel that Young~s
lransponing lumber and logs. How- !em in this area of the country of high
bullying is about to boomerang.
ever, it would be beyond any slretch unemployment, poveny, high welfare
..
"We' ve got I00 people to produce
of the wildest imagination to think roles is a major problem arid should
••
and screen documents for eve one
that anybody would die of the diox- be addressed."
that they have to review the , " )IIi
in_produced from this plant due to the
Sincerely,
incredibly small amounts and
one high-level official. "They w nt
G)ne H. Abels,
all the !ravel documents. We ill
extreme dilution.
-'CGiilllpolls. '
The WORLD HEALTH
comply at least ,times two wi the
request, and dump all that aper) '
over there and say, 'That's nother
' hour that they're doing something
that has no pay-off at all.'"
]jlck Aqderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
•' Feature Syndicate, Inc.

111 Court Sl, Pomttoy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 892·2157

The ~ly Slntfnel•l»&gt;lgg3

An IUIOCCupied Sutton Township dwellinc on Pine Grove Road nell'
Stale Route 124 was desu"yed in a fire SlltUrct.y.
Firefighters of the Syracuse Voluntur Fire De~nt responded
to·the Rebecca Durban res~nce around 8:30p.m.
·
According to SyniCuse Fire Olief Eber Pickens, Dlllflan.bachecen"-ly purchased the house wllich was undergoing renovation. The fami·
ly had not moved ·in yet, he explained.
,
.
The house was a Iota! loss. Cause of the blaze is ilndeleimined.
Seven trucks and 28 firefighters, including members of the Racine
VFD 'and the SyfliCUSC squad of the Meigs County Emergency )ledical Serv~ responded to the scene. No injuries were reponed.

Denver V. Weber

year. It reads Ute a "bow-to"III&amp;IIU· Young wants io re~ the "An:tic , 1995, when it bee.- alartn!n~ly
at for d!rowin' a wrcnetnnto the Oil Reserve" •• or Alaska's Tongass apparent th•t the new GOP maJonty

By-JIICk Andel aon
al'ld MlchMI Blnnaln.

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Unoccupied.dwelling de~troytd by ftn

Young'$ tactics .with Babbitt may backfire

;• The Daily ·Sentinel

•

OHIC 1/'l!·ather

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·r-~~----~~--~--~~~----~------~

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. Pomeroy • Mlddlapatt, Ohio

P92
Mondlly, ~11, 1118

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.Mondlry. . . . 1,1896
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·sports

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P9fMroy,•,Middleport, Ohio

The DallY Sendnel • hge 5

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TheD
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In th~ NCAA women's basketball final~

Tennessee be.ats ·Georgia
83.-ss·to captu-re crown ·
By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
CHARLOT'I'E, NC (AP) ~
Tennessee's Lady Vols were not a
good basketbaiHeam on that February day they lost to-Mississippi. and
Pat Summitt admitted she wasn' t a
very good coach..
The season was entering its
stretch run and something had to be
done. Summitt let her players decide
what that would be.
"They set the goals. I let them do
their thing," she said. "I told them
quite honestly I wasn't ·sure they
could reach them, but I'd do what I
could to help them."
Aod so began a remarkable ·run
for the Lady Vols, who topped it off
Sunday night by beating Southeastern Conference rival Georgia 83-65
to give the school and Summitt their
fourth NCAP1 championship.
It was the 15th straight victory for
Tennessee (32-4) and came against a
team that had bea:ten the Lady. Vols
77-71 in early January, a team that
had been ranked No. I for three
weeks this season and was loadi.d
with quick, talented players.
' But Tennessee defused that quick• ness by stopping All-America guard
Saudia Roundtree and controlled

'

game w,ith dominating play
inside'from Tiffani Johnson, Pashen
Thompson and fresllmlitr Chamique
Holdsclaw. ·
"I told the players in the locker
room, 'We're getting ready to take
our last eKam of the year. Do you
feel prepared?'" Summitt said.
"They said yes, so I said, "There's no
way you can fail this course. ' that
'You have what it takes to ace this
exam .' I'll just say they went.out and
aced the exam."
Did they ever. Tennessee, erasing
the sting of a loss to Connecticurin
last year's championship game, outrebounded Geqrgia 54-39. Five players scored in double figures. ·The
Lady Vols held Georgia to 27 percent
shooting in the second half.
Plus, there was Latina Davis'
splendid defense on .Roundtree, the
flashy 5-foot· 7 senior who had
promised Georgia coach Andy Landers a national championship when
she signed out of junior college two
years ago.
Instead, the Lady Bulldogs (28-5)
got their second runner-up finish
after Roundtree made only 3 of 14
shots and sc.ored just eight pointsnon.e in the second half.

~ the

"I thought · all of Tennessee's
defense did a very good job," Landers said. "Liiiina on Saudi a, site did
a good :iob. I .would have liked to
have seen a little more driving, but
we didn 't get that, and I think one of
the reasons we didn 't get that w&lt;is
because of their help and suppOrt."
Georgia trailed only 42-37 after
shooting 53 percent in the first half, '
and forward La'Keshia Frett was on
fire, seoring 18 points on 8-for-10
shooting. But Frett went 2-for-8 in
the second half and Georgia was 11for-41 as a team.
·
"They were taking jump shots,"
said Summit!." who told her team at
halftime, "If you' ll take away
layups, take away their in ~ide game
and let them keep shooting· jump
shots, the percentages are in our
favor."

As it turned out, those shots did
stop falling and Tennessee took control. The Lady Vols began,the second
half with a 15-4 iun that included
two three-pointers by Abby Conklin
to open a 57-41 lead.
Georgia got the lead down to
nine, but then Tennessee held the
Lady ·Bulldogs scoreless for almost
(See
.. TENNESSEE on Page 5)

In the NCAA men's Final Four,

Kentu~ky
.

STOLEN - Tennesaee's Michelle Marciniak
(111ft) steals lhll basketllaU from Georgia's Sa"dla
Ro"ndtree d"rlng Sunday's NCAA women's

"

championship game in Charlotte, N.C., where·the
Vol"nteers won 83-65. (AP)
·
.

· GIRL~' BASKETBALl,. HONOREES- Basketball players . Becky ·Moore, Bea Lisle, Jonna
Manue~ and Brla,pne Proffitt were honored S"n- •

'

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and Syracuse to battle for national title
tonight
.
By JIM O'CONNELL
NEW YORK (AP)- Rick Pitino likes to preach to his Kentucky
basketball team aboul·living in the
" precious present." No looking
.ahead or back .. Just --:orry about
. today. ·
·
Well, almost no looking back.
When Kentucky faces Syracuse
in the NCAA championship game
Monday night as a 14-point favorite,
its toughest job will be solving the
Orangemen's 2-3 zone. The zone has
been a much-discussed topic among
the Wildcats ever since it was used
by North C¥olina to beat them in
last·year's Southeas.t Re~ional final.
"The North Carolina loss is the
only thing we look back on from the
past, " Kentucky point guard Anthony Epps said Sunday. "We go
against that zone every day in practice."
,.,.After a season in which it didn 'I
really seem to 'matter what defense
was used against them, the Wildcats
, (~3- 2) will fi~ally get to go against
t!U: zone in a game. They won hy an
PLAY KEEP-AWAY :._ Kentucky's Antoine Walker (24) arid
..telifllniate Mark Pope (left) play
keep-away from Massachusetts
center . Marcus Camby. c!urlng
Sattlrday's NCAA semifinal conlast In East · Rutherford, ·N.J.,
where the Wildcats wori 81-74 to
advance to tonight's championship game against Syracuse.
(AP)

average of 23 points this Season, and
Kentucky doesli 't want to make
Saturday night's 81-74 semifinal the same mistake.
victory over top-ranked Massachu·
"You have to keep attacking the
seus was their first NCAA tourna- zone," Pitinp said. "You can't rely ·
ment win by fewer than 20 points.
on fool's gold if you make three or
· Still, last season's 74-61 loss to four long jump shots aod you think
North Carolina one step , from the you've discovered a way to beat it.
Final Four has been a tough one to ' Patience, dribble .penetration and
torget. The Wildcats sh.ot just28 per- offensive rebounding are what's·
cent and were 7-for-36 fr-om three· needed to beat a great defense like
point range.
that. ' '
"After las[ year when we played
· Syracuse ·coach Jim Boeheim,
North, Carolina, we have played who went to.the zone because of his
agl!inst a 2-3 zone for anywhere from team's lack of depth and speed,
15 to 30 minutes every day," Pitino knows what his team is up against in
said. "We' ve been good at attacking .Kentucky, the preseason No. I and a ·
it and we have t(/ be, Qecause Syra- team that was considered the favorite
cuse plays the best 2-3 zone in the to win. it all all se'ason.
country."
"They have tremertdous depth
Syracuse (29-8), which reache~ and are good at every position, and
the title game with a 77-69 victory they are able to inside-outside at
over Mississippi .State, has won revery position . That's ivhy they've
praise - not ridicule - for the zone, been they way they've been all
especially during its improbable year," said Boeheim, who hired PiliNCAA tournament run. The defense no as an assistant in his first season
received the credit for the regional at Syracuse. "They present a lot of
problems, and we have to come up
final win over Kansas when the Jaywith
some solutions."
hawks became the fourth straight
Just like Kentucky has to ·solve
team to shot under 39 percent and
that.zone.
were 4-for-25 from beyond the arc .
"The way we play, we encourage
people to take ihree-)loint shots,"
The zone was shaping up to be the
.wrong way to go early in Saturday . Boeheim -said. '.'But it's not just
night's game when Mississippi Sllite shopting, it's how you attack it. We
hit three·threes in as many attempts have to be . prepared for that and
adjust to whatever they Jlo."
·
in the opening four.minutes. But the
rest of tlw way, the Orangemen's
Whatev.er Kentucky does, it will
zone forced 'the · Bulldogs into be .with a lot of players. Pitino uses
turnovers and negated their inside a I O-man roiation to keep the presgame.
s~re defense intense and fresh. Syra-

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By SCOTT WOLFE
• Sentinel Correspondent
Members of the various Southern
winter sports :teams .were honored
Sunday afternoon in Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium with a fine
awards fete and buffet. High School
principal Gordon Fisher served as
l'Y!a,.tel' of Ceremonies for the event.
: Barbara ·Lawrence, cheerleading
a,dvisor, was first on the _agenda to ·
make presentations. Lawrence stated, "Part of cheer leading is showing
enthusiasm and spirit about your
school...but it is also much.more than
that. Cheerleaders work together as
team themselves." Honored were
Tassica Cummins, Angie Carleton,
Kim Roush, Alicia Mulford, Janey
Hill,. Regina Manuel ; Jennifer
awrence, Amy Northup, Tara
Michael, Julia Hensler and Jody
(1upp. Tassica unimins and Jennifer
uawr'ence were honored as senior
cheerleaders.
·
·
: Coach Jeremy Hill then introduced members of his freshman
lNlsketball club, then Scott Wickline
iiltroduce&lt;;l members of his 1995-96
rtserve club. The freshmen g01 double duty as they played both reserve

a

••

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" If they tuin it over five times
against us, it -.IiiII be a nice runner~
up.trophy we receive," Pitino sajd. ,

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·AL standings
All8nii~: Dhi~ion

n

fum

1. ru.

Rl'liTimorc ................0 • 0 ,000
Uo.tl\m ................... 0 O. 000
De-troit ..
. ... 0 0 000

New 'Vllfk ...

.. .. 0

0

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Tl\fCllliO·..........

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••

l.liddleport 992-3'16

·Tennessee ...
~

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W~cmDh·lllon

Sc;~tde ............... ....... l

0

Cnlifomi a..·..... .... ...... o
Onkland ...................0

o

Texas.. 1......... ....... ..0

0

'

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.000

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Detroit (U rn 9- 1.\ ) 111 M1nnc:snla (Rai:l~c

11- I.S ), 4:0:'i !f.m.
Boston (CI~n.: n s 10-5) Ql Te~:1s (Hill
4- 1). 4 :0~ p. m.
l'orunl o (Hanso n l :'i · :'iJ' vs Oatland
( Rc y~5 4-6} &lt;II La~ Veta-~ . II;O:'i p m.

. ;_----'·--""'----~?
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MUwnu~e&lt; ., ........... ll

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21
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1.-San Anlonio ....... SJ

Today's openers

·

x-Utah .................... ~ 21
x-Hous10n ............ :.42 29

IS

.746

-

,704
.592

3
II

Denver.. ................. JO 41
'Minne$0111 .............. 24 . 47
Dallas .........&lt; ........... 22 j()
Varn.:ouver•..... ,. ... ;.. ll 59 _

.4'2 J

23

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. PMilt IN.WWon
•·Seoltle ................. l6 IS .789
•· L- ~. Lotera ........4l

Phoeni~ , ......... :....... l6
.Pon~nd ............. ,.. .36

11

3~
3~ .

3~

.306 . · 1
. 157 'I 1r

:64~-

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,507

NUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Aitantlc Divlslofi

Ium

W J. I I'lL lJf !iA.

Philadelphia ..... 40 22 J]
N.Y. Rangcn .... .39 21 14
Frorida ............ .)8 28 9
Wo3hington........ :l6 29 II
New1mey ........ 342912
To1 mpu Bay ........ J4 29 12
N.Y. lslanders .... 20 47 8

Nort•cas~ Division
x-Piusbur&amp;h ....... 46 26 4 %
Muntreul ............ 39 29 8 tl6
Boston ................ 36 :lO 9 RI
HanfonJ ............. :ll 34 9 71
ButlaJo ............... 2M 40 1 63
Ottawa ... :........... !5 56 4 )4

340
248
261
219
224
170

261

226
l:n
2J!i
242
270

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

.It J. I I'lL lJf !iA.

y-Detroil.. ........ .58 12 ~ 121 299 164 ·
x-Chicago .......... 38 26 12 83 2S4 202

Sc t.oo;, ............ )!)I r4 16 20S 2.'10

Toronto ..............JI 34 12 74 229 237
Winnipeg .......... ~'\ 3 38 5 71 2.H 2? ~
Dallas .............. ... 24 J8 1:\ 61 210 2."i!l

l'ldlic Dhillon
y·Colorndo ....... ..4J 23 10 96 300 m
Vanc.:N v~r ......... 30 32 15
7~ 264 264
CaiJury ., ............ JI .}4 II 7J 222 -...222·
A-im ............ '10 )8 1 67 2lt 2.'10

Edmonton .......... 29 J9 8 66 223 28J
Lo• Ansele!i ....... 22 38 17 61· 238 28~
SunJole! ........ ..... l8 Sl 7 43 235 329
y-clinched diVIJion title
x-clinched pluyoff spot

I

:, (Continued from Page 4)
slx minutes while building its lead to
!f-52 with 6:331eft. The margin was
n~ver below 12 after that .
p "I think tiKire were at least three
tilnes in the game where we went six
J&gt;llssessions without scoring," Ldnd~rs said. "Unless you 're ')!laying
tremendous defense, you're going to
~~ b . d ..
U5 urre . ·~
"'
' Holdschiw
.
. led Tennessee with 16
Jl9ints and 14 .rebounds and was
much more of a factor than she had
b8en while scoring 13 in an overtime
vll;tory over Connecticut in the semifipals.
'
' "I definitely picked up my defenswe intensity and went out there and
pfaye~ like a Tennessee · player
~ause I wanted a national cham,
pl!lnship," Holdsclaw sard.
~ Johnson also scored 16 points.
Cimklin had 14 and Thompson
a4ded 12 to go with II rebounds:
r4ichelle Marciniak was named the
mitstanding player in the Final Four
aOer getting. 10 points, five assists
add two steiils. She joined Summitt
' taking a.congratulatory _call from ·
sident Clinton.
.
"I had a few people pinch me
er the game and I still can't feel
atthirrg," saio 'M,arcirriak, wh~
w re one. of the nets .aroumf ·her
n ~
.
,
.
"I'm in some kind of zone right
n . I think everybody is. Ever si.nce
I -1-as a little girl, I had that dream of
catting down the nets and being out
oq the·floor with a national champiori&amp;hip team. I can't believe it's come

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WESI'ERN CONFERF;NCE

Colomdo at Philillklphi ilo- ppd., w~h- .

.,

~8

Tqron1 o.................. l8 53

NL slate

!Mudd•• rH I. r : ~0 p.m.

«

y-Chicago . . .. ... 62 8 886
tud;,.,, ................114 28 . .6r r
CLEVELAND ....... 41 .1 r' .569.
Atl:mm ................... 40 Jl ..'i6J

,' :Wednesday's games

San Froncilco (Leiter 10-12) at Atlanca

18 .7!10
29 · .586
) 4 .52 1
)9 .4!18
43 .)94

L.A. Clippen a1 Toronto. 7 p.m.
Olicago al Miami, 7:JO p.m. .
Bmton :11 Acl:wun, 7::\0 p.tn.
New York at Indiana. 7:JO p.m.
Lh. Lakcts or C'hilrloue. 8 p.m.
Detroit nt Milw::mkee. 8:30p.m.StKramento ai•Oallas, 8:30p.m.
Minnesota 111 Denver. 9 p.m.
Sc:allle ol Utah, 9 p.m.
San Antonio at Phoe:ni11, 9 p.m.
Vuncouver ;at Portland, I0 p.m.
Hou aton 31 Golden Suue, 10 : ~ p.m.

Central Divlsioo

Detroit nt Minnesma, 1:15 p.m
'Chkngo at Sea n!~! . 10:0!1 p.m.
Mil~! Ca. hfomia. 10:]5 p.nl.

~

W L r.J.

Phil:uklphh.t., ......... l4

Tue."ida)' 's games

·

.

)'-Orlando ............. .:'i4
New YOfk.. :... :......41
Mlami.. ................. J 7
Washington ............ll
N•w. l""'Y ............2g
Boston .
..211

LAND (Den nis Man inez 12-:'i ), I :O.'i p.m.
Kt~ n sus City (Appier l:'i -10) m Balli·
more: (Mus5in.1 19-9). 3:0S p.m. ,

~

Tuesday's games

Atlantic: Division

Hockey

Cenlnl Dlvklon

• No games tonight

IEAS'l'ERN CONFERENCE

N~w York (C(Ine 111-iil at CLEVE·

•

ton

NBA standings

Today's openers ·

· · t:ktroil 111_r.itnnesot~ 1;1!1 p.m:
Chi cago ut Seanlc. 6:J.S p.m. ·
New 'York at CLEVELAND. 7 : ~ p.m.
Kansru Ci1y 31 Bodtimo«':, 7 ~.1 5 p.m.
Boston nt TexaJ, 8 : ~ ~ p.m.
Milwuukee 111 Califoi'niu. _10:3S p.m.
Toronto v11. Oukland ot Las Vea ns.
IO:J5 p.m.

Orlando 9R. New York 79
Atlnllla 93, Boston 92
Indian.'\ II R, New Jersey I00
L.A. Laken Ill, Toronto 106
LA. Clippen 110, Minnoola 101
· Cbittloue 121, Vancouver88
San Antonio '11. Pttoeni'x 8J
~land II~. Dallas 100
Sncro.mento 105, CLEVELAND 100

Basketball

1.00
.om

SL"Illtle .l Chicago 2 (12 inn.)

•

Sunday's scores

Colomdu ut Philmlclphh1. 7 : J~ p.t;n.
Momrealm CINCINNATI, 7:]5 p.m.
Sun Fr:mcisco at Allunla. 7:40p.m.

'

109, Hoost(ll\94

Denver 9R. Milwuuk'ee 8!i
S!:01Uic I00, Utah 98
CLEVELAND 90. Golden Slate 64 ·

Wednesday's games

Sunday's opener ·

cr

Pu rtl:~nd

St. Louis at N~w York. f40 p.m.
San O i~go a1 Chi, ago . 2 :20 p,m.
Los Ang~ll'5 at Houston. 2 : J ~ p.m.

.It J. &amp;1.

IllUD

Saturday's scores

LV!i Angdes ill HOQston. 8:05p.m.

CI.EVELAND .........O 0 .OOJ
Ka!l.~:tJ Ch y ............. 0 ~
·
Mllwaukcc ............... O 0 .
Minnesota ............... 0
.
. Chicago . . .. .........0
I .000

2:\ ~

2!1h •
29'.- :

Chh:ogu 106, L.A. Clippers ItS
Washington 107. Philadtlphi1111k
Miami 9.5. Detroit !1!1

Tuesday'~ games
Piusburgh·at Aorida. 7:0:'i p.m..
Cohm1do :11 Phil adelphia, 7:05p.m.

Central Di¥ision

'Iwn

Sacmmt!nlo ............32 :lH .457
GoldenState .......... JI 41 -.431
L.A. Clippcrs ......... 27 45 .J75
x - cli~~~,:h{d playofl' spot
y-clinched division

Serving Meigs_County Since 1868 .,.,

DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
. MUSSER'INSUUNCE Pomeroy

'

·Ohio Caa"-'ty Clroup ·
Companieo .

and freshmen ball . Honored were numbers up enough to have a reserve
Matthew Dill, Jas m Writsel, Jason team and a very good junior high
Neigler, Jason Allen, Scptt Brinager, club.
EiTon Aldridge, Benjie~Manuel , Pete
"In losing these three seniors, we
Sisson, Michael Ash, Jerrod Mills, are losing a very big part, of the proTroy Hoback, Mitchell Walker, S"ve gram ," Roush said in honor of
Boso and Adam Williams.
seniors Becky Moore, Bea Lisle and
Wickline said, "We were just 2- Jonna Manuel. For the juniors and
18, but this year was a good learn - underclassmen, Roush said , "This
ing year. These kids reillize they year was· great experien ce for n~~~ ­
must work all year long to turn year. I hope the juniors lead us to a
things arou!Jd. I hope you've already fine season."
Reserve girls honored were Darstarted oil getting ready for next
year's season ." Next Jenni Roush lena' Flowers, Erica Amott, Jenni
presented both varsity and reserve Friend, Ashli Davis, Jenny Roush,
girls basketball awards.
' Lindsay Smith, Kim-Sayre and PatRoush made reserve, pre&gt;enta· ti LawreJl(:e. Varsity playerj honored
tions for assistant coach John were Becky Moore, Bea Lisle, JonManuel, who was absent. Ro~sh Qa Manuel , Brianne Proffitt, Kim
said, "This club learned they ·could Sayre, Jenny Friend, Renee Turley,
be a very good ball club. Hopefully, Cynthia Caldwell. Erica Arnott and.
·-they will Wl,lrk hand in the summer Ashli Davis.
Manuel was recognized for earnand prove themselves worthy of a
varsity spot next season." Roush then ing ~he OHSAA sportsmanship
presented awards to members of her award and for winning the District
13 three-point shooting contest.
11-JO club, saying, "I'm very proud
of them. Even when they were Manuel was second team all-district
down, they never gave up. I'm real- 13, and Renee Turley was first team .
ly proud of our seniors because when . Turley was additionally, named first
I first came there were only about six team AP all-Southeast District and
on the team. Now, we've got the Special Mention all-state. Special

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A crowd -of 57,467 saw Randy
the calendar, when the kid from Miami walks into the Kingdome these Johnson, last year's AI Cy Youn g
days h.e doesn't think of himself as Award winner, give up a two -run
homer to Frank Thomas in the lirst
a rookie.
"You don 't have to be a 10-year inning. It was a lead the White Sox
veteran in this game to be a winner, " held until the Mariners sent the game
into extra innings with a run in the
Alex Rodriguez said.
On Sunday night, in major league . ninth .
"You've.got to win these one-run
baseball 's eatliest season start, the
Seattle Mariners beat the Chicago games," Johnson said. "At the end
White Sox 3-2 on Rodriguez's 12th- of the year, these l-0, 2- 1, 3-2
games really add up."
in'ning single.
Johnson pitched the first s~ ven
" I felt this game could go on forever," the Mariners' new starting innings and struck out 14. The
Mariners' bullpen came in and struck
shortstop said.
II almost did
before out seven more , tying a club record
Ro\lriguez's hit off Bill Simas, the with 21 strikeouts.
seventh White Sox pitcher, ended the · "I was hapry with the way I
marathon after 4 hours, 7'minutes..
pitched ," Johnson said.
Simas struck out Jay Buhner to
Johnson and the Mariners thought
open the 12th, but second baseman they were going to be one-run losers
Ray Durham committed the first until the ninth.
error of 1996 on Doug Strange's
.Then Edgar Martinez, the 1995
grounder. Then Russ Davis doubled AL balling champion, tied the score
'StJ1!nge to third and Simas walked with a double off Roberto HernanDan Wilson intentionally . to face dez, who had 32 saves as Chicago 's
Rodriguez.
closer last season,
'
·After going hitless in his fir~ t fi.ve .
So the detcndi'ng AL West chamat bats, Rodriguez wasn't about to be pions - who thrilled thelf fans with
0-for-6.
their c omeback division victory last
"I told myself I could win the season - did it again f&lt;.&gt; r Piniella.
"It was loud in he'l-e, wasn't it'!"
game, " he said. "It was nice to come ·
Piniella said with a smile. "These are ·
through."
·
Rodriguez, 20. was the first play- good baseball people here in. Seattle.
er picked in the 'drn(t .three years ago. · They apprec iate you ."
.. He has a lot to be contident about.
The White Sox, who finished 32
"Ale~ had a good sprilJg," mangames behind Cleveland jn the AL
ager Lou Piniella said. "We feel Central last s e~son.. . knew they
good about what he can do."
, . missed a great chance to beat the

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD
.

anie."

:Frett led Georgia with 2S poi,nts
and 16 rebou6ds. Tracy He~derson
added 16 poirits for the .LaQy 8ull.4Qss, who shollld be strong a$ain
ncQtt seal!On,. because every starter ·
~oundtree returns. .
.

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Foster Homes are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
. Call992-2117 for infor1111tlon and
to be part of the effort• . ..

.,

awards went to Best Free Throw
shooting (106-177=60%). Turley;
·coach's Award, Brianne Proffitt and
Bea Lisle; Most Improved, Becky
Moore; Most Rebounds, 184, 8.4 ,
attg, lonna Manuel; 1)0% Award,
Cynthia Caldwell; nd Scorin~ Leader
and Most Assists, (450 points, 97
assists, 4.6 avg.) Renee Turley.
First team all-TVC members
were Turley and Manuel with Turley
winning Co-Most Valuable Player.
Next, the Southern varsity was
honored by veteran mentor ~
Caldwell. Caldwell began, "Last
year,'! wasn't sure what direction this
program was headed. But with the
kids we have we can say we ran a
Clean program and we play a difficult
schedule."
Caldwell noted that although the
Tornadoes were 9-)3, they iost to
fourth-rimked Chesapeake in overtime by just one point and lost by just
II to North Adams, who had an
· undefeated regular season and a trip
to the final four.
Offensively, Southern scored 64
points a game and gave up 68 and
was in every game. Caldwell noted
that his team shot around 30 percent

left-haniler that is acknowledged as
the best power pitcher in baseball.
"These guys arc making it a tradition now to come back in the late
i11nings," Thomas said of the
Mariners. "They have a great attitude. But we should have won this
one."
Chicago manager Terry Bevington tried to see the good with the llad.
... "We had a couple chances late

' individ- .
for the season and provided
ual statistics, Five years ago the team
shot 4 7 percent and eight years ago
they shat 51 percent for the season .
Caldwell said, "That adds up to
one thing. We've got to learn to shoot
the basketball and there's only one
way to do that... practice. We didn't
shoot well this ear, but defensively
we played very, very well overall."
"We've got a nice nucleus coming
back. We have the potential to be a
great Club, but unless you do something about it, those words are just
· idle chatter. It's all up to you," he
challenged." ·
Caldwell said, "Basketball is just
a game, but it's what you take from
the game that's·important. I feel that
Southern basketball -teaches you dis- .
cipline, hard work and to be prepared." He also noted, "We have one
boy geuing up at 5 o'clock in the
morning to go through a workout.
Why? Because he wants to be a player. What are the rest of you doing?"
John ·Harmon (Honorable Men·
tion) and Jesse Maynand (first team)
were honored for making the TriValley Conference team. Jamie
Evans was recogni zed for second

...·
,·

team all-District 13. Spike Rizer was •:
AP all-Southeast District special ;:
mention. The Coach's Award went to!•
senior Jay McKelvey; Ryan Norris::
won . the Free Throw Percentage•!
award (45-63=71.4%); John Harmon :•
won the Kenny Turley Rebounding;: ·
award with an average of 8.4; and-:
BillySheppard was Most_Improved.:·
Senior honorees were McKelvey,:
Rizer and Harmon. Team members::
are McKelvey, Rizer, Maynaiil, Har-•,
mon, Evans, Norris, Greg Me Kin-;.
ney, Billy Sheppard, Adam Roush,':
Josh Roush and '!Yson Buckley. :
Managers were Kay Ia Lonas, Ashley ::
McKinney, Peggy hawrence · aftd :"
Kara King. Scorekeepers were Keri :
Caldwell; Linda Friend and Jyl •
Mathews, while Statistians were :
Amber Thomas, Robert Reiber and !
RanettaWheeler. J'imer were Chuck;'
Roberts and James Ray Lawrence.
Earning all-academic TVC bon· ·
ors were senior cheerleader Jennifer .
Lawrence and sophomore baskttball :
player Cynthia Caldwell with perfect ~
4.0 tJPAs, while senior basketball ;
player Jay McKelvey bad a 3.849,
and Greg McKinney had a 3.68.
,
Stephanie Ash gave the benedic- .:
tion.

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and· dido 't ,cash in," he said. "Over
12 innings, we only gave up three
runs, so both teams must have

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pitched pretty well." ·
Edwin Hurtado, t!J£.frfth Seattle
pitcher, was the winneF.

...,
'

Findlay nine
beat. Red men
in doubleheader
In Mid-Ohio Conference baseball
action, Findlay defeated visiting Rio
Grande 6-1 and 3-2 in a double.
header Saturday.
No other information on the contests w ~s available .

NERV&lt;llJS
\BOlT 1111·
B0:\1&gt; \1 .\R h.l -: 1''.'

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Call for Information:

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• Motorola Bag
Phone for
$19.95_

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Phone $39.95.

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SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698-4011 (coiled)
32ll Swart Rd.
.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• AMuities ""' issued' by IllS'•JruK:e I
and ·• have sutmiiftlal
I.I ~~~~=:
· for early
withdrawals.

'·

'f j•

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ba~quet

,

QyJIM ~OUR
,
t SEATil..E (AP) - Contrary to

Scoreboard
St. Loui 1 ( Andy Bene. 4· 7 ) at New
y,,rk(B. Jont:s 10· l0), l;40p.m.
' ·•
· Munueul (P.J. Manifu:z 1 4·1~ ut
CINCINNATI {Schourek 18-7). 2:0!i p.m.
Snn DiegO (Ashby 12- 10) at Chicago
(N.avarro 14-6), 2:20 Jl.m.
·.
l.ui Angi:'le5 (R. M:minn 17-7) ut
Houston &lt;Rc:.ynokls 10· 11 ), 2 : ~!i p.m.
Pmsburgh (Wagrter ~ - 16) nt Florida
(K.Bruwn 0-0). 4 : )~ p.m. •

ly Shepperd and Greg McKinney. Behind them
are Jesee Maynard, John Harmon, Jay McKelvey
and Spike Rizer.

flo_
driguez's · 12th-inning single h~lps. Mariners top Chi Sox 3-2

.

Middleport Dept. Store
"On tl·.e T

.

.

cuse· plays seven players, and the
starters log most of the minutes. Tha~ .
makes point guard Lazarus Sims the;
key man in the Orangemen's offense.
When Kentucky beat Syracuse·
77-71 last season, the Wildcats wer~
ab.le to (orce 33 turnovers and rattle
point guard Michael Lloyd, who has
since left the program.
'
,
. "No · offense intended to th~
' young man, but they had a 2-guard
playing as a point guard that game,".
Pitino said. "Now they have Sims . ·~
Sims has 274 assists and II!&gt;
iurnovers, and -his numbers again.si.
Mississippi State were II points,
nine assists and no turnover~. ThG
Orangemen fini shed with just fiye
turnovers.

BOYS' BASKETBALL AW~~ese basday at the Southern winter tipo,rts banquet.
· Absent from photo were Cynthia Caldwell and . ketball pl!lyers were honored with Nllrious special awards· at the Southern winter sports banRenee Turley.
quet
Sunday. In front are (L·R) Ryan Norris, Bll· .
.

Southern athletes receive honors. a-t winter

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Baseball

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1-800-44-CELL-1
tft·JGS

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Aprtl1, ~-

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Pomii"QY • Middleport, Ohio

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HEY BOYS AND GIRLS;·ENTER THE,l996
..
. »ASTER .COLORING CONTEST AND
.'
HAVE A LOT OF FUN AND
EXCITEMENT. YOU
MAY WIN UP
$15
..:
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.. AND IT'S SO.EASY TO ENTER~
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CONTEST ·RULES
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1. Just color one or more of the drawings on thes~ pages,
fill in the blanks and take your entry ~o, the spo.!ll!loring
store before 12 Noon, April 6.
· i'.
2. Entries will be judged in two different categories: ages
'
4-8 and 9-12.
3. Children may enter as many pictures a8 they like but
can win only one prize.
,
4: Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

FIRST PRIZE•••••••••s15.00
.$ECOND PRIZE ••••• s10.00
~HIRD PRIZE ...........•s.OO

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POMEROY~ OHIO

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: Name,______________~e._.......__:

:Phone

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POMEROY, OHIO

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ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY :

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POMEROY. OHIO

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GENERAL: HARTiftGER 8LD.

MIDDLEPORT

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Farmers Bank · ,._
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CROW'S AEST~URANT
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1 Phone'-:-:-::-:-:-::-:-:-::-:-::-::--::-~:-::~:-----• ,
HOME
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BANK
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Otllo

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No new active cases
()f ra -reported· in '95
I

•

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Newa Staff
While there have been no new
cases of active tuberculosis in Meigs
County during the past year, it
remains a threat to the health of residents, says Connie Karschnik, R.N.,
executive. director of the ·Meigs .
County Tuberculosis and Health
.
,
. Clinic.
Karschnik reported that the clinic's
caseload continues to,increase, with
39 new patients being identified in
1995. Sixteen· of those were prescribed preventive treatment and
medication.
· .·
As explained by the.nurse, those
39 new patients are "inactive cases .
situations where the tubercular germ
is in the body, but not active nor contagious."
"Thberculosis is preventable and Roy L. Donnerberg, M.D.
treatable," •aid Karschnik, who Chesi Clinician
stressed the importance of a tuberculin skin test to detect the disease.
As explained by Karschnik, tuberculosis is diagnos~d by a positive
tuberculin skin test, positive sputum
culture and abnormal chest X-rays.
The Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Health Clinic has been able to _provide these se.rvices, free of charge. to
residents . of Meigs County since
1952 due to funds generated by a
levy. she noted.
.
Thberculosis poses a real treatmeni challenge, said Karschnik, who
said ihat once an individual is infect- ·
ed, the tuberculosis germ can lie dormant in the body fi&gt;r life, causing
active disease .any time the immune
system-is impaired.
Prev~ntion of the disease saves
money as it is much clieaper than
treatment However, she said, tuberFritz Goebel
culosis is a curable disease.
· Treatment coqsists of specific Board President
antibiotic therapy to cmitrol active or
do111lant tuberculosis and . prevent prevent the spread of the disease must
transmission. Preventive treatment is continue, said Karschnik, who said
therefore a major pan of disease man- that the increasi ng ~umber of homeagement, stressed the nurse, noting less indivipuals and of individuals
·that the expense for preventive treat- who have acquired immuno-defi:
tnent of numerous il]active cases is ciency syndrome (AIDS) present
minimal ~~mpared to the treatment new challenges to ·the control and
for only one active case of tubercu- eradication of the disea~e .
losis.
Because the untreated individual
She said that failure to complete is likely. to infect others, ·public
the ~scribed appropriate anti-tuber- health professionals can prevenrthe
culosis drug therapy is a serious bar- spread by locating and treating tho.se
rier to the control of the disease, and who carry the germ, said Karschnik,
to see that this is done re&lt;Juires close who pointed ou't that task as the
monitoring and patient education .
responsibility of the TB and Health
A hundred years ago, tuberculosis Clinic.
was the leading cause of death in the
Last year proved to be busy or the
U.S. and Europe and still remains a Karschnik and he~ staff. During the
serious worldwide problem. Contin- J 995, 47 skin testing clinics were
uous assessment and intervention to held around the county, 418. contacts

were made in hospitals and extended
care facilities, 4,025 office contacts
were made, 3,560 skin tests administered, 596 home visits and outsj,de f
office contacts and 160 school visits
and contacts were made.
' Roy L. Donnerberg, M.D., chest
clinician from ColUJ;:nbus, conducied
four chest clinics in Meigs County in
1995: A total t&gt;f 361 chest X-rays
were 'Obtained and interpreted. resulting i'n 53 conferences and clinic visits with recommendations for treatment by the clinician.
While there were no new cases of
tuberculosis in Meigs County, there
were 2 73 new cases reponed in Ohio
and nationally, the number of new
cases reported was more than 19,000.
. Funding to the Meigs TB and
.....
ADVISORY BOARD __:Activities of the Meigs .
Health Clinic to carry out the pre·
resentative ol illlsubdlvisions In the county. In ;_,. ;
vention and treatment program came County Tuberculosis Office and Health Clinic,
that group are, from lett, front, Ida Diehl, , "
from the five-year .-5&lt;J (one-half of which provides free luberculln skin testing,
·vvonne Young, Melanie Weese and Joanl)e ;·::::.
one mill) levy passed' in 1991.
· other diagnostic services, and treatment as
Williams; and back, Edna Wood, Don Ander· ~---:
son, ·sue McGuire and Bruce May.
That levy will expire this year and Indicated are guided i)y an advisory bol!rd rep.
"'' .
a renewal will be on the ballot in the
November general election.
.
For the past 45 years, Meigs
countians have approved every five
·years a levy for operation of the local
TB and Health Clinic , located in the
Meigs Multipurpose Building, Mul.. berry Heights, Pomeroy.
Funds genemted by the levy make
it possible for the TB and Health
Clinic to keep its doors open and
work toward the.protection of Meigs
County families from a highly contagious disease, according to
Karschnik.
She stressed that the levy on the
fall ballot will be a renewal ruid will
not create an incre-,r in taxes for res- .
idents.
·
·
.
.She went on to note that all services provided by the agency are free
to Meigs County residents and funded solely by levy funds, without supplemental federal or s,tate monies.
The clinic is guided by an advisory board consisting of J-3 memtrers
appointed by the Meigs County Commissioners.
The mem.bers and the areas they
represent are Jean Alkire, Sutton,
OFFICE STAFF - Connie Karsctmlk, R.N.;
staff, Kathy Cumings, deputy director, and Ruth:{:':'~
Letart and Lebanon townships; center, Is director ol the Meigs· County -Tuber·
Ann Boyer, clerk.
·, • ,
Jeanne Bowen, Syracuse Village; culosls and Heahh Clinic Flanking her are her
......
James Birchfield, Salisbury, Salem
and Rutland townships; Eldred Par·•
sons, Mi'ddlepon Village; Yvonne Olive and Orange townships; Ida
Evening t~berculosis testing clin- · Those havi~g a tuberculin skin test ,"n,'
Young, Bedford, Scipio and Colum- Diehl, Pomeroy Villake; Edna Wood, ics are conducte\1 around the county are asked to return in 48 \J..7~ hours".';:' ·
bia townships; Don Anderson, Chester, Olive ·and Orange town- . on a regular basis as a convenience to determine the results df ~he test;4·.:" : · ·
Pomeroy Village; Sue McGuire, Sal- ships; and Mary J. Mora, board con- to residents. Skin testing is available said Karschnik.
':.)
isbury, Salem and Rutland townships; sultant.
· at the office of the Meigs County
In conclusion, she encouraged-""
Bruce May, Rutland Village; Melanie ·
In addition to Karschnik, other. Tuberculosis and Health &lt;:Jinic Mon· residents to take advantage of the ser- .. ' ·
Weese, · Racine Village; Joanne staff members are Kathy Cumings, day, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday vices offered by the agency, whicli is." '
Williams. Sutton, Letart and Lebanon deputy director, and Ruth Ann Boy-- ' from 8 a.m. to noon and I-to 4 p.m.
funded local tax dollars.
· "h~•
~ d; _· .
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townships; . Fritz Goebel, Chester, ~cl~.
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·protein: reductiQn can Mutant gene Conflicting infor,mation clouds
help kidney patients uncovered health _ben·e fits of drinking -wine

'ut."

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in research

By 'JEFFREY BRODEUR
' .
By ED BLONZ, Ph.D.
bioflavonoids in grapes, but they tend · grape juice question as they 're both :.'~
A11oclated Press Writer
DEAR
.DR.
BLONZ:
ofsn'
t
it
the
to
be found in the pips (seeds) of the "red-" grapes, and ·J am unaware of· '
· PHILADELPHIA- Kidney disease patients can slo.w progression of their
DALLAS (AP)- Researchers
'
. values for the two~··;,; ••.
bioflavonoids
in
the
wine
that
profruit.
··
illness,·and· perhaps.extend the time before they arc forced to go on dialyany dtffcrcnttal
have found a gene that for the first
vide
protection
for
the
heart
and
not
sis, by reducing protein in their diet, rcsearc_hers report.
As regards wine and health, one types:
., . 1
til]le can be directly linked ·to
,,.,
the alcoho.l? Cart't people derive the school ofthought states that while all
"We're not curing (the disease), but slowing. the 'process down. That 's · coronary artery disease and adult
DEAR DR BLONZ: 1 am plan- · • •
same benefit by drinking grape juice red grapes contain the beneficial ing my ideal healthy diet, and I real- '1 ' .:.
about the best we can do right now," said Dr. Ping H. Wang, an author of diabetes.
or consuming other foods high .in compounds, the food or beverage has ly want to keep my fat to an ~bsolule ~.'.\';:
the analysis.
·
·
The gene targeted by the
bioflavonoids? If so, why not rec- to be fermented in order for the t?ody minimum. I feel like egg whites will ·,: ;A detailed analysis of five earlier studies involving diabetics and five studresearch is a mutant or changed
ommend
a glass of grape juice a day to really -make good usc of them. This be an e.cellent source of low-fat pro- ;.;ies-of nondiabetics suffering from chronic kidney disease shows a 30 perform of one that tells the body how
vs. a glass of wine? Or is there some- would mean that grape juice cent reduction in complications with a low-protein diet, he said .
tein. ·can you tell me how many ;,,;.,_
to make an enzyme that turns fats
thing
beneficial in the akohol itself! which is unfenncnted - would not grams of protein are found in one , ,,:,;,,
The findings are "statistically highly significant," said Wan.g, an assisin the bloodstream into a source of
- D.A., San Diego
·
be as good a source of the phenolics large egg white? I have found info on ,,.,.:
tant professor of medicine at the University of California at Irvine.
energy.
DEAR
DR.
B(ONZ:
Someone
as
would wine.
For nondiabetics, the analysis re10ommends a protein intake of 0 .6 grams
In a study of 475 m'en and
.grams per ounce, etc. I just want to , .
rccendy
told
me
that
drinking
a
glass
In theory, then, nonalcoholic red know how many grams of protein I ','; '
per kilogram of body weight per day, or about 1.5_ounces a day for a 160women, people carrying the mutant
of red grape juice at lunch and din- wine should be OK, but there is even
. pound person, significantly Ie!i6 than the average amount of protein,intake,
gene were 1.73 times more likely
am inlaking when I cat one egg ~ ~~ ·
ner would provide the same health some research that nonalcohol wine
Wang satd.
·
.
to have coronary aneries blocked
benefits-as drinking red wine (heart is not as good as vino with the aJco: white. Also, what other great sources ·;,"'.:'
"Basically you' re talking about three slices of turkey breast a day, der.endby fatty deposits, Dr. Xing Li
of low-fat proteins arc out there? - J. , '
disea$e prevention). They say the hoi.
ing on the size of the slice," Wang said.
·
Wang·and Drs. D.E.L. Wilcken and
D.l ., Kenosha, Wis.
.
,,, , 1
anti-artery clogging benefits come
A clear understanding or. the top. More than 20 million Americ;ms suffer 'diseases of the kidney and uriR.M, McCredia reponed. .
DEAR D.l.: The white of an aver- " •.. :1
from the pectin of the grape skins and ic is also confounded by the fact that
nary tract and· more than 90,000 die each year. About 200,000 suffer from.
Carriers of the gene also were
age large egg contains about 3.5 , .
not the alcohol . Is there any truth to aicohol, itself. has positive health
chronic kidney failure and need an artificial kidn•y machine to live.
three times more likely to develop
grams of protein. Other sources of .'.'. ·:••
·this,
and if so why is red grape juice effects when consumed in madera·
The findings, published in the April I issue of the Annals of Internal Meddiabetes as adults.
low-fat protein include certain types ;-:''.,
beitcr than concord?- B.B., Indi- !ton:
icine, are important to patients and·doctors. commented Dr. Garabed Eknoy· The degree of coe&lt;istence of the
of
fish and other seafood, and poul- ; ·:'
anapolis
This, however. is one ol the prob- try with skin removed.
an, vice president of the National Kidney Foundation and a medical profesgene with the two diseases "was
..,....I ' ,1•
DEAR
D.A.
and
B.B.:
Discussor at Baylor' University in Texas.
'
lems we face when trying to make . The backbone for your healthy ·.;:..,
far more than that by, chance
about
the
health-promoting
sions
conclusions
about emerging scientif- dJet needs more than low fat as its , .
"'fhis type of analysis son of confirms that protein restriction is effecalone," the authors wrote in today's
'Vine
can
be
somewhat
qualities
of
ic
topics.
Experimental
methodolo- focus. In fact, I am less concerned ".: ,
tive and why doctors should not be let~ing kidney patients running around
edition of the journal Circulation,
.,,..,.,
confusing.
Aside
frpm
its
alcohol
gies
difler,
as
do
the
measurements
eating anything what they want," he said.
published by the Dallas-based
about
fat
than
I
am
about
the
other
. ·.
content,- wine is a col)lplex beverage used to calculate antioxidant abi'lity.
Telling someone to stick to their diet doesn't always.work, but being able
American Hean Association .
containing many compounds. One At present, th~ data simply are no( all healthful ingredients that need to be ; ,'~ ;~
to.cite specific data may help, Eknoyan said.
The study "opens wider the
represented, such as a good intake of , · --~­
ty)'¥;!, however, that's received a lot of · in.
·
"It does slow it down significantly," he said. " It not only helps Jhe indipossibility of genetic testing to
fresh fruits, vegetables and whole -:-":1
attention
is
the
family
of
antioxidants
If
I
had
to
give
an
answer,
I
would
vidual, but in the long-term it keeps patients off dialysis ... saving money. "
assess a person's risk profile more
grain foods .•And •always remember ' • !.?
known as phenolics (fccn-AWL-ix). say the following: Although red
The authors surveyed studies involving I ,413 nondiabetics and 108
specifically," Wang and his col- .•,_.Pectins
that you have to enjoy tlle'fr."ids you .::' J
are structural components · grape juice is a source of phenolic eat.
' "'~· """i
insulin-dependent diabetics.
·
leagues s'aid.
.
.
found
in
many
plants
that
are
often
antioxidants,
present
research
seems
'·"'
'\
.
Results for nondiabetic kidney patients - a significantly reduced risk for .
Sen d questions to: "On NutriHowever, Wang said . further
used
as
binders.
The
navonoids
are
a
to
indicate
that
it
offers
significantly
kidney failure or death - justify rec.ommcnding they restricJ dietary prOstudy is needed.
tion, " . Ed Blonz, c/o Newspaper •·' ..
tein, the authors said.
'
The findings. while "not a group of healthful substances found Jess of these health-promoting com- Enterprise Association, 200 Madison : ·: ~
in 1/te skin and rind Of many fruits pounds than dol!s red wine. with
Findings for diabetics were not strong enough to routinely justify simibreakthrough," do provide a startAve., New York, NY 10016. . ;·;; ~
and
vegetables. Bioflavonoids, alCohol. ·
lar restrictions. mostly because of the small sample of patient and variations
ing point for further exploration of
. (E!I Blonz, Ph.D., is lb, author :;: · ,'
though, are mainly found in citrus
I don't, by the way, have an of the "Your Personal NutritiOnist" •· • ... ,.
in th~ studies analy.zed_tbe.authors said. But limiting protein should be recthe li nJc between genetics and he an
fruits . There are some antioxidant answer to; the red grape vs. coricord book series' (Signet, 1996)..
ommended for selected cases, Wang said.
.·
disease and adult-onset diabetes,
•: ·'· ! .,.
"J
Theauthors warned patieQIS and physicians to take precautions against
said Dr. Abhimanyu Garg. He is a
malnutrition, but Wang said the amount of protein suggested is fairly safe
professor of internal medicine at
for people with kidney disease·.
. ·
·
.
the University of Jexas Southwestern Medical Center at Dalllllf.
They also recommended consultation with skilled dietitians and careful
follow-lip care.
·
Garg emphasized that increas:
/,/,},It
By 'I'IM FRIEND
. Some F billion a year is spent in the United States for dialysis treatmeiu. ·ing evidence of a genetic link
,bum. ·
ical
Center,
Thcson,
saii:l
.until
now
,&lt;.!
:l.'l
USAToday _ .
makes it important thal'carriers of
l)iabetes is the leading cause of chronic kidney failure, accounting for about
In general, 10 JJ&lt;rcent of people · the only thing to do for . Barrett's ~:·~~~
SAN FRANCISCO -;- A precan- have heartburn, 10 percent of people
suspect' genes control known risk
a third of nc:ow cases each year, according to the National Kidney Foundacerous disease of the es9phagus with heanburn will develop Barrett's esophagus. ;.vas monitor a· patient ·;~!':~
tion.
·
· ·
·
factors such as,a high-cholesterol
developed·cancer.
''' ·•·i,j
.Dr. Frank Vinicor, president of the American Diabete; Association and diet, obesity arid physical inactiv- linked to heartburn can be reversed esophagus, and 10 percent with -Bar- untdButhe Garewal
has
developed
a"'""~
.forthe first time, possibly preventing rel\ 's esophagus will develop
:"' official at the Centers fo~ Disease Cont~ol in Atlanta, called the report
ity. '
-treatment that involves taking the : ,, : •
throat cancer, researchers say. •
"We can't take an approach:
tmportanl for people-with extstmg ktdney dtsease, rut said there's no cliniesophageal cancer.
drug
OmepraZ\)Je'to stop acids from •,,:,b·
Barrett's esophagus is a condition
'Well,' it .is all in t~e genes, what
cal evidence that cutting protein will help prevent kidney failure.
Of the 12,000 eases ofesojlhageal inflaming the esophagus and a pro- ·'r &gt;;~J
in which the esophageal .lining is cancer reported each year, 3,000 are
• Eknoyari praised the authors, saying the analysis was "much more ciire- • can we do?'" Garg said.
iriHamed
and chronically exposed to due to BiuTett's esophagus. Of.those. cedure to bum away abnonnal tissue: i"·l·~'
'fhe
study
was
conducted
in
the
ful" than any previous look .into the topic, which has lleen a subject of much
Studies of II men reported at an 1 ~:;'1-i
stomach acids. The tissue eventually 2,600 are in white men. There are ·
Cardiovascular Genetics Labotade•..JI:'!O"i doctors speci~lizing in-kidney dis~asc. ·
·
.American·
~r Society meet,ing 1 •C: '•
thicke~s and becomes abnorinal. It is
tory of Prince Henry Hos!lital in
11,000 llcaths from esophageal can- ·show the tissue heals normally, and :.. ,
· He s,ttd one of the authors, Dr. Thomas C. Chalmers, who recently died,
llnk~d to smoking and drinking alco- . cer annually. .
Sydney, At,lstralia.
..
was amo.ng ~ foremost practitioners of statistical "meta-analysis," the type
follow-up t~sts with&gt; cancer tnarkers
hol.
common
causes
of
serious
heartresearch done in_ this case.
.
· Dr, Hari.nder Garewill, VA Med- suggest' the tissue remlli9s nonnill,

....

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t

Do~tt;Jrs target link between heartburn,
coi)1Jitio~s leading to esophag~s .,~ancer ·

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Meigs -sen.ior

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. MQNDAY

..

Center ~prU Activiti~s
The Meigs County Council on participate. Anyo~e wishing to play
Aging, l.nc., is open Monday can CJII the Center, 992-2161 , to
'hrough Friday from 8:00 to 4:30. register for the pool tournament.
Regularly sch~uled activities are
Wedaesdlty, · April 17- The
quilting, sewing, cards, . games, Alzheimer.'S&gt; Supj&gt;ott Group will
pool. Weekly activities are Chorus ., meet from 1 io 3 p. ~.
_
.. Practice on Tuesday at ll:45,
Thunday, April 18- The
Knitting Circle oil Wednesday from monthly atood.Piessure Qinic wit(
10 to 12, and Ceramics Class .on be held fiom 9:30 to 11 :30.
•
Thursday from 9:30 to noon. Cost
Thunday, April ·18- Je'an
f&lt;!r the Ceramics aass is $1.25 plus Trussell, M~igs County Fair
the cost of greenware. Phsical Housing Coordinator, will speak at
Fitness is held onT~esdays and II :00 concerning Fair Housing
Thursdays at 11:15 to . keep ' !..aws, such as s.enior citizen rights
participants ''fit ant! limber".
· under the Jaw, housing
A representative from the Athens discrimination, etc.
Social Security Office will be at the
Friday, April. 19- The Arthritis
· Center on Wednesdays, April 10 Support Group meets from I 0:30 to
and"2~;"frotn 10 to 11 a.m.
noon.
Darla Hawley and Leafy
Chasteen will be assisting seniors :· Friday, April 19~ There will be a
with filing tax returns on trip to Ripley, W.Va., for shopping
·. Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday at Walmarts and the flea market,
through April' 12. Please call Darla, wlth lunch ·at Shoney's, and a stov
992-2161, to make an appointment at Hill's Greenhouse, .Apple Grove,
odor further information.
the cost will. be $5.00 for
Thursday, April 4- The annual transportation tiy Center vans. Call
Easter dinner will be held with ihe 992:2161 ~o register for the .trip. ,
meal served at noon. Jan Lavendar
Thursday, April 25- The
and Kathy McDaniel will present a niontht'y birthday party will be
program at 11:15. ·
held. Seniors having birthdays in
Wednesday, April . t 0- The the month will'be recognized.
Stroke Survivors Support Group
May is National Older Americans
meets from ·1 to 2:30, with Lia Month . Speci~l activities scheduled
Tipton,
c ·oTA,
Holzer include Senior Citizens Day on
Rehabilitation, Coordinator.
--May ~I and a tri-county Senior
. Thursday, Aprllll- Hal Kneen, Olympics during the week of May
Meigs County Horticulturist/ 20-24;· more information will be
Extensio,.\ Agent, will speak at available on the Senior Olympics in
. '·-1.1:00 about Perennials for Specific late April. ·
Sites and' Uses, and a plant
The annual
Governor's
. exchange will be held from 11 :30 Conference on Aging will be held .
· to I :00. This is a good time to Thursday, May 2, at the Aladdin
transplant perennials and bulbs Shrine Temple, Columbus. There
from your flower garden and bring will be displays, exhibits,
ti)e .Jllants t6 the Center and giveways, . health checks,
exchange for some new and entertainment throughout the day;
diffefent .flowers. The public is with Art Linkletter as guest speaker
invited to participate in the plant in ihe afternoon. The Center will be
exchange. ·
.
using the vans to go to the
. Thursday, ·April II· The Conference on Aging, with a. cost
evening dinner will be· held with of $15.00, which includes lunch .
serving from 5:00 to 6:15. Cost for Call 992-2161 for further
the meal will be $4.00 per person, information or to sign up for the
with a menu of spaghetti, tossed trip.
,
.. . ·
s~lad, garlic bread, dessert, and
Tuesday, April 23- At 1I:00
beverage. The public is invited to Lenora Leifheit, RN. will present
attend. There will.be entertainment an informativ·e workshop to help
following th~ dinrier.
older adu Its understand . the
. 'I)tesday,
A,p rll Hi and . importance of sleep, educate them
Wednesday, April 17 - The Senior about sleep problems, . and help
Center poo! players plan to. have a them discover how to manage sleep
pool tournament beginning at 10:00 difficulties, which may improve
. and are looking for more persons to their quality of life .

·APRIL 'MENUS

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.

TUESDAY

.

WEDNESDAY

2
Turkey and
Dressing Roll
s-et Potatoes
Green Beane
Pe&amp;cb Cbbbler
..
!

L
Baked _Porkette.
ll~shed Potatoes
and Gravy
Carrots •
Brea4
Pl'unes
'·

.

Cbickeli Patty
Augrat1D Potatoes
Brussel Sprouts '
Bread
Pineapple

/
Sweet Potatoes
Caul1flo-r
Bread
'
Applesauce
./

'

15
Baked Steak
llasbed Potatoes
and Gravy
But-t ered Peas
.
Bread
Peach Slices

16 ~:
.
.
llacar ni &amp; Cheese
Crea.me Tolll&amp;toes
Green \ Beans
·
Muffin
Apricots

'
22
Turkey Weiner

23.
Spa1hett1 witb ·
lleat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garl'ic Braad
Mandarin Oranges
in· Gelatin

10
·llusbroom Steak
Mashed Potatees
and Gruy·
G;reen Beans
Biscuit ·
Bluabinc Peare
17
Navy Beans
and Bam Soup
Cole Slaw
cornbrea4Apple Slices with
Raiains
.

•

Sauerkra·~t

llasbed Pota~oes
Bread
Fruit Cocktail

29
Sca.Hoped 'Chicken
Broccoli I Cheese
Sweet Potato~s
B_reu.d
Apricots

3
Jobllny lla.rzett 1 .
Tossed Salad
grapes
Cook:t:e

.

24
Vacatable Beef Sou
Pi-nto Cjleese
Sandwich
Crackera
Peachy Creamy.
Pudding

30
Salisbury Steak
Scalloped Potatoes
Lilli&amp; Beans
Brea&lt;l
Pears in Red
Gelatin .

FRIDAY
•

4

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5

Baked Ham Slice
Scalloped Poj:ato.e ll
Cali.fornia lli~ted ·
Vegetables
Roll
Easter Eitr
Cake
llixed Fruit 11
Chicken &amp; Noodles
lli~ted Vegetables
Bread
Apple Cherry Crisp

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9
Bill Loaf

8

THURSDA,Y

CENTER
CLOSED

GOOD FRIDAY .

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12
Chili
Cole Slaw
Crackers
lli~ted Frui:t
Texas Sheet Cake

'

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111

• 19

Oven Baked Fisb
Oven' Roast Potatoes
Carrots
'
Br&lt;~a6t

Tropical Mixed Frui

BBQ Cbicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bree.d
Pineapple
,
.

•
25 .
Oven Baked Chicken
llasbe&lt;l Potatoes
with Gravy
Harvard Beets
lire ad
Pears

.,

-

I' l

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"lllii·

lleat af
Parsl ed Boiled
Pota es
Butters .Corn
Bread
.
.
Applesauce

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--TRIPS-~
The Meigs County Senior musical in Parkersburg in
Citizens Center has planned the December. If there is enough
interest, an overnight trip in
following trips. in 1996.
October
will be planned for Brown
June 5 ' to th!airy Barn;
County,
Indiana, to Little
Athens, tO view .th ontemporary
Nashville.
. .
quilt show- cost $5. .
Hal K.neen,
l\.gricttltuLral Agent/Horticulturalist,
Thursday, AprU 11, at 11:00 about Perennials for Spedfic Slles,and
l&gt;
Ca1I the Center, 992-2161, to
. July 10 to th~ . omestead ·Quilt
(seated) is
wllh
some
the
Senior
Citizens
at
the
plant
Uses,
with
a
plant
exchange
bdd
lroni
11:~
to
1:00.
.
·
.
il
Show at Bob Evans Far'm, Rio reserve a seat on the bus for trips or
.'
exchange day in 1995. Hal will be-speakliitl at the Center on
Grande, and dinner at the restaurant further information.
- cost $5.00.
1Uesday, June 11 a trip to
WEHON.9R
Steubenville to view the City of
.Murals of historical events in Ohio,
visit the creegan Compan~
"Animation Factory", tour the
·992-3785 .
reconstructed Old Fort-.Steuben- ·
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARI)S
The Home Maintenance , POMEROY, OH.
cost $48.00 with travel by
Program, funded .throUgb the Meigs
motorcoach and including dinner.
The Meigs Senior Center Home . weather prohibits the delivery of a • County , Cou.ncil on Aging, can
,,,
. August 8 to the Ohio State Fair, Delivered Meal
has noon meal.
provide minor home · repairs . to
Columbus- cost $25.00 with travel received a $450.00
under the
,,,
These extra dollars are helping us home ow11ers age 60 and older. We
by 'motorcoach and fair admission Reynolds/National
ion of . to meet the nutritional needs of can provide roof and eaves spout
,,I ;
Every Wednesday Storewitle S~vings
mcluded.
· .
Meal Programs
Winter older adults in Meigs. County. We repairs, roof painting, minor
_Augusl23 to Man~ua for a tour · .Meals ·Program.
Metals are· grate[ul i o Reynolds and to plumbing, :. !, ~~
ha~dicap
'
of ~be castle Mar.ston and the Company of Ric:htTtond; '\,(;.a;.
NAMP for their efforts on .out modifications. The owner is
matmee performan,. on the.Becky donated $150,000.00 to
responsible for purchasing the
behalf.
Thatc~er Showboat, co~t $20.00, The company donated
The Meigs Home Delivered Meal materials. An assessment must be
wtth dmner on your own..
every time a designated ReJI~olds Program currently serves 160 completl!d prior to service delivery.
~ursday,_ Seplem~er 19 to product w~s purchased
food individuals per day. For more
Donations are encouraged for the
~tlmot! OhiO tn Ailush _Country, stores across t,he county.
·Meigs information about the Meigs Home Home Maintenance . service. For
w,tth -dtnner at t~e Amtsh Door funds are being
for shelf Delive red Meal Program, call Alice
more information, call Dorina
DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS
Res~aur~~t. shoppmg ~t the shops . stable meals for
by , Home Wamsley, Program DireCtor, at
Williamson at 9.92-2161.
'there, vtsrt to .Lehman s Hardw~re, Delivered Meal
ents when the 6 I4-992-2'161.
and a stop at the cheese factorycost . $43.00 with trave I by
,,
·motorcoach and including an
Amish family dinner.
·
.
.October 11 to the Bob Evans
"Serving
Southern
Oh1io
over
17
years"
SEE US FOR DISCOUNT TO ALL
"'
'F~rm Festival, Rio Gr~nde- cost
$5.00 .
SENIOR CITIZENS
Lift .Chairs
Mastectom¥ Supplies
November 15 10 Parkersburg for
'
,
.
Wheelchairs
~lfat1cheta • Diamonds • Jewelry
,
cervical Pillows
shopping at Walm-rts and Grand
Hospital Beds
Central Mall - cost $5.00 with
Canr~erl.- • Photo Finishing,• Old Photos Copied
YCi't-""
~or·
Traction Equipment:
. Shower Stools ·
lunch on your own. ,. ...•
11
Tens
Units &amp; Supplies
.Grab Bars
'
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'
Thursday, December S to
:11.,
Back Supports
Wheeling for 'the Oglcbay Festival
Commode Chairs
•,
Knee, Ankle Braces
of Lialits, 'with a stop at !he St.
Wal~ing Aids •
Clairsville Mall ·for lunch · and
Nursing Supplies
~~
Diapers &amp;. Chu~
shopping, a tour of the OglelJay
..;....--..,SupPQ_rt Hosiery~ lk,-:n- ·
Supplies
Park mansion, the Winter Fantasy
1
Supplies
Laser Light 'ShowL!_hOpping.!t,thJ; ·
garden shop and gift center, and a·
Dressings
'suided iour of the lights· cost
$3S.OO with mca.ls on your own.
·
. Othet trips being planned, with
Sale
dates iilid cost'to be announccc!, are
Merchandlea
i(le Ohio Valley Summer Theater,
1480 JaciOOn Pike
. Not tnduded
loll ln·t·
Athens, pioductions of "flarvey" ill
.
Gallipolis, OH
iune and thC MMusic Man" in July, ·
l-SOO --t-t:'-22111t
"Just·Minutes From Holzer"
and the Living Chritilma \ Tree

·Meigs home delivered meals program
--

and Reynolds Metals work.together

.Home
maintenance_,
program

(i5)

SENIO

15o/o off

EY JEWELE

&amp; STUDIO

HOME MEDICA EQUIPMENT
:'· Everything
tb.e·
• t
P3 tJeD

l~~!!·~~4~4~6~-1~6~1~~~~~0~h~lo~..
'

Wedne,days
', Senior Citi:.ens Day ·
- -Sto-rewide · ·
·Save 15% off everything in our store .

at. e__

Hom
THE -a..;:.M~E~DI~C~- -L~
- S~HOPPE

446-2206

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P.ioge 10 • The Oily S•nllnet

'

etters, not phone calls parrot family history
6; ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: A while ago;
you printed a letter from a woman
whose grandson was in lite service.
He kept making expensive long-distance calls home, and she wanted him
to '!"rite instead. You said, "Letters
written while in the. service become
. pan of the f(llllily history. Your grandson will be awfully glad he wrote
them.''

Your answer was right on target,
Ann. Let me tell you about our fam ily. In 1924, my mother and her sev:
en siblings began a round-robin fam ily letter in which everyone wrote
about the week's happenings, added
their letter to the others and sent them
on to the next person. Every month,
Mother would get a letter from all of
her siblings. When the mail arrived,
everything stopped while Mother
had~ "visit" with her family.

With my four brothers in the military during World War II, it wlis only
naturll that my family stan 'our own
letter. After 72 ·years, our family slill
has a rou~~n letter going. My •
· parents are gone now, and lhRc of my
brothers bave died, but the letter continues with my surviving brother, me,
the widows of mY three brothers and
two very special cousins. It is a joy
and a delight to us all.
In the mid-: 70s, I sraned a third
letter with our' own six children.
'There . has even bee.n talk among
some of our 18 grandchildren of starting their own. I wouldn't be surprised
rif they did since they come from a
long line of.persistent communicators . Perhaps you would like to pass
this idea to your younger readers. ••
Virginia in Cedar Hill, Texas
Dear Virginia: What a splendid

idea. How I wish someone had sug- had lost his wife the -previf!US sumgested it lo me when 1 was much mer. 1 knew hqll only by reputation,
younger. Such leu'*'"duld have which was stellar. He had seen my
beCJI priceless today. So much fami - p!Joto in the newspaper. A mutual
Jfhistory is lost if no· one takes \lJe friend had informed him that I
lime and trouble to write it down. walked every day, and he !15ked irhe
How sad.
could join me. I accepted immediDear Ann Landers: You asked ately. Although we had worked with·
your readers to tell yciu how they met in a block of each other for the past
their spouses. I'd like to tell you 17 years, we had never met.
.. Well, we did meet •• and fell 'in
aoout my "fairy-tale " courtship.

Ann
Landers

top Pflc11 Paid: Old u.s. c-. !I
Sil¥11', Goold, O!amondo. AU Old
.
Cott..dblu, ~~to, E1c. • •

love llmost immediately, We have
•1• Lll .....
· been IIIIIITied almost four years and
~!!~::!~'::'~:--~-=,~1-~·:._!
are still sailing along on a cloUd - liv- ,
.,
ing the very good life.' But my bus- ·
•
bandstilltellspeoplethal"itpaysto amhappytogiveitalinlefreeadver· · :
advertise," arid be's sure glad I did. tising.
•
-' Bernice Lessman in Gering, Neb.
Send que,stlons to Ann I,.aaden, '
Dear Bernice: So am I. What a
Creators
S)'Ddlc:ate, 5777 W. Cen·
heanwarming story. I did a little
research and found out that the paper tury Blvd., Suite 700, Lol Aliples,. •
- .
yl&gt;u worked for is the Star-Herlld. l . Calif. 90045

_,

.._.
...
.,..
llimadaUng
Kltllhen • ...,

Downspouta

" - Addltklne
Siding, Roallng, Pllloa

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

A•eon•ble

I
I

I

ao

Selena's home tourist attraction

use is. not kids' stuff

Gutten

Rcllladllng

lneurara • E&gt;epa,...nCed
Crrll w.yn. IMff
1$2-44011
, For Flft Eatlm~•

94.2168
511694TFN

L,.....;._ _ _ _ _:.:;:-:..,,
...
.__ _ _ _ _ _....J

(lima StoneLowRatel)

j·

Celebrates 2nd birthday

ROOFING" ~· .·
N_EW-REPAIR

Gravel, Sand,

Fill Dirt

61~2-3470

1-IJ00-988.8600

1·900· 776-0700
Ext. 3685

Ext.1277
S3,89 Pe. MlnUIJI
Must be 18.yra.
Touch·T&lt;&gt;ne Required
Serv-u (819) 645 8434

$2.99 per min. Must be
· 18 yrs. Serv-U •

...

. 1611il

Lessoas for
LONE OAK FARM
Pla1o, Dr•••
30391 Roy J01111 Rd.,
&amp; Guitar
P.O. Box 539
S:~JKUea, Ohio 45779
. Gultari 179 &amp; Up
temca,..Y
. fio Acctssorlts
(614) 992-2800
Horwe 6 Tack Sa~ ....
1/H/tma.

.
t~WLun~~~;;~~d,;h;~~~b;~~~~::~~~M~•I;II~~P~D~II;a:31:~15/96

-·.
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ease,

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614-367..0302

UIIIWI

J&amp;LINSULATION

.•Tree Trimming
•Mowing (R..Identlal
and commercl81)
•Shrubbery
Maintenance
•Odd Joba per request
·No LMm Too (.4rge
or Too BINI/
Plan Ahead, Call Toctayl

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
· Office Houra: Mon.-Fri.
·a:oo a.m.• 3:30 p.m.
VInyl a Alum. Siding,
VInyl Rapl-ent,
Wlndowe, Blown ·
lnaulidlon, Storm
Doora, Storm.
Windows, Olragta.
Fn111 e.tlmatae

·LID CUB

742-2803 3/111 ....

1i1Mfn

H&amp;H

DOWIIUIIDER
CERAMI($
QID GIFIS

SAWMILL

Greenware Sale!

Port1ble

25-50%0Hi

• · 32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Srickles
614-742~2193

. off Rt. 7
Check It Dutil _, .,.,

TFN

A5bab~n~·~
~liver Bridge Plaza ,

614.446 4462

· Prom:
DreSSeS
· Lev•I'S
~,ton.-Sat. 1().6

110 _Help Want,d

Money Available: Small
.Businesses, Farmers and
Loggers Need Workiog
Capital? Refinance Yow Fixed
Assets. Contact Riverside .
Brokers, Box 211, .MiC:Idleport,
.Ohio 45760. 614~992-7214

J

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Wanltd 10 Buy Used t.tobilt
HQmK cat e1•--o115

Nova, 87 ·70 Camara,' 81.t·~1 · •

~10~~=-----~--------"· ~­

Wanted To BU'v: Junk AUIOI With I '
Or Without Uotors. Call l,aHy •:'i
Uw/y. 81 .. 388-0303.

·2122fm1

ANNOUNCEMENTS

-pizza
Monday through W~esday
w/coupon

---· 6.. , ·

Water
~-A..t; 1.../f-.Tr•atment
~'LZ~ WV Equipment

20 Years Experience "' Insured

ROBERT BISSELL · ·
CONSTRUCTION .
'

•New Homes
•Garages
' •C.omplete
Reinodellflg
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

•

L&amp;E.
ADVEmSING
THE HAT MAN

·TRI·STATE WATER SYST&amp;MS, INC.

Adorable s Chow /Shepherd Pui&gt;'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
~ew Homes • Vlny! Siding New
G~rages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions· Roo'fing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
A "rES
FREE ESTIMII"\
I

Your favorite artist
.. on Tape or CD

•Ball Uniforms
3rd St., Racine, Oh.

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825
1131flfn

:r.l111 mo.

TRUCKING

Jr 1::&lt;~.1ranc'~

Any Dnvc:r

Manress &amp; box springs. 304 ·675·
Old ~r tires, 614-742·2532.

Part Bassen &amp; Part Beagle, 614 ·

367·1202.

Part Rot/SOxer puppies, born Feb.
19th, to. good home only,-' 33056

Happy Hollow Rd.. Middleport

'Chester, Ohio
31111

mo.

puppies, wormed, 5 males, 2 fe-

12 Sessions For .

$20.00 .
16 Saasi!II')S For

.$25.00 '
Open 9:00 to 3;00

4;30 to 10:00 P.M.
' Owners: Pete lo Diane
Hendricks
Phone: 614-992·2487

31111 mo. !)d . .

Howard Excavatin
Trucking.
Umastone
B~lldozlng and
Backhoe
Servicea
Hause Sites and
Utllllle1

All Kinds of Earth Work
992-3838

Sta mped · EnVelope: EJipress
Oept . 131. 100 East Wl'liresrone
Blvd ., SuHe 14'8-345, Cedar Park
TX ~8613.
.

111

•

•

J~ckhammer, Available

24 Hrs.

We dig basements, put In septic
_systems, lay lineS, UndergrOUnd boreS.

'

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. For Free estimate call

~L___

9

49·2512

Washer &amp; dryer. 304-862·21 w.
60 · Lost and Found
los t 2 Black &amp; Tan Doberman
Pups In Kyger Ar ea. One Has
Bright Pink Coller, Childs Pe~ R•
ward l61 4·367· 7528. ·

-llmeston•, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp;. Water-

~

••

AVON I All Areas t Shirley ~ t

Spears, 304-675-1429.

••

~--~~~~------- ~
Able Awoh Representatives ..:
needed. Earn money lor 'Chriat- ·~
mas billa at homelat work. 1-Boo. '~

9g2·6350 Of 304-882-2845, Ind.

,,
"~

Rep.

.

ATTENTION

UNEMPLOYED ' •

PEOPlE! Are you tired of scan· "'
nihg the classlfieds to find the
same dead end jobs? Well look
no further. Growing company has
poai iiOns open ·to travel the
U.S.A. WHh an enthUS iaStic 'and ,\
energetic group: No e•perienc8
necessary. You must be at least 1,
18 af'\d able to starl· loday. Fqr a
personal interv iew see Julie at :.;

The Lowe Hotel. Thurs. April 41h. •
1Oam-2pm. No '*"""calls.
AVON · $8 -$15 IHr. No Door To
Door. No Minimum Order. Bonuo-. - ·
es 1-BOQ-827-4640 lnOISis!Rep.

Cosmotologist Wanted, Guar. ·~
anteed Wages, Paid Vacations, ,!J i
Full &amp; Part-time Positions 614·

,....

~

nt

Earn up to ' ,000 weekly stuffing:
eQVelopes a me. S.tarl nOw. No
exp ·
. Free suppl ies, infor·
matlon. No obl igation. Send self
addressed stamped envelope ' to
Express Dept 36, 100 Eas t
Whitestone Blwd., Suite 1~-345,

'l-~

~~ ;
. o"'!
· &lt;~;·'·

l ost: Addison Pike Vicinity, Small Cedar Park, H 78613.
Schnauzer Mix, Female Dog. An·
swers To Treasure, Red Collar, · Earn .up to S1,000's Weekly stult- •.,.(11
614-367-0674.
ing envelopes at home. Start now. ·'
No experience. Free supp.lie,., in- •w
l ost: bl ack male Chinese Sharpe1,· formation. No obligation . Send " "'!l
SJrs. old, muscular build, Bashan- self-addressed stamped envel· 'l.
R ., Long Botto m vicinity, rB¥Vard. - ope 10 Bucl&lt;s Dep1 112. 320S.C E.
Do not approach , call 6t4-949· Colonial Dt.. No. 308, Orlando, FL
2503.
32803.
1HZ

Sa le ~

Must Be Paid In

::y

:~?~·- ;goog~.;ri~r:
2

Every Thursday, Friday. 'Salurday,
1699 McCormick Road,' Inside,
Be1ween 180 1588. Open· 9•30
A.M.·5'00 f&gt;M. 6~ vanety.
Garage Sale: 935 Neighborhood,

April 1st -sit&gt;. come Ear~ r .
Large Garage Sale; To Sollie Es·
tale, 2 Homelite Chainsaws, Sera. ene Welding Oulfil . Homelil e
Weedeater, lawnmower, 2 Motor

41 1, 4/2, 4/3196. 76 Vlno Street
Gallipolis.
.
'

Pomeroy,

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

:;

EARN $1,000 Week~ Stuffing En&gt; '1: •
velopes At Home. Start Now. ·No
E•perience . Free Supplies, Info. 1&gt;1 •
No ObligaliQ n. Send SASE To.: - ~ · •
Fairway, Dept : 135t, Box 4399, ""1~
West CCNina CA .91791 .
.

Bikes. Two 5 Speed Bicycli!S, 30
_;B~I&amp;4~~U~~C,!'.,~:A~B~I~!~·~
,.~,'l~:ES~--!1/Wn=::_JI 1Boxes
01 Work
Clolhes.
WillItems!
Sell
••·
- ..,.
Box Or
Alii Many
Other

POMEROY, OHIO
~ Trash Removal-- Commerclall&gt;rResldentlal
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Rented.
Dally, weekly 6 montl\ly rental rates.

~ ·
~

Two Border Collie/Pomeranian
mi x puppies, female CoUiit, to
good homes in country, 614-742·
3:117.

the day before the ad is to run .

Rilclne.; Oh. 45771
,
· '
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, 13ackhoe, Dump Truck,

,

.ooo

Oriv!&amp;rs tO transport cars to and ~~~~
from auctions, c:all614·992-2808.
· ~::.·

SUMMER IMAGES
TANNING

Help Wanted, : · ~
$-WANTED-$
. 10
to. people who .need to IOet\ ,..
we.ghl &amp; malto money, "' If)' Mil -&lt;il
patented we ight-loss product '1f
304-113-5083 241't1/day.
•;;
t1
Weekly Ptocouing Uol( ~
Free Info. Send Soii · Addreao~ &lt;;

Terrier/bu lldog mi• puppies. 614 -

Adva nce. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.

··- ...

P.O: Box 587

Services • Steel Sales &amp;,Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamantal
.' Ste'ps .stairs, Railing$, Patio Furniture. Fireplace
Hems, Planter Jwngers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff! I
"No Jqb Too Large or Too Small"
We will work within your budget
Ph. m-9173
FAX 773-5861
lOB Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV

(619) 645•8434

'

J.D.• Drilling Company ·

.

.

goOd

992·5240 .

All Yard

,
Authorized AGA Distributor
•Willding·Supplles •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop

'

Australian

4 / 1, 4 / 2 , 3 Family : Hou sehOld
Goods, Womens Childrens Cloth ·
ing, Toys, Furniture, Belmonr On ·
~~ee Off Vine Street.

!VteM~
ilfetalr
.

L1v. Psychics
., 1 on 1
-900:255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
ouch· tone phone
equJrecf.
• . Serv-U

·t&lt;

Shephard. 304-8g5-3472 or 304· Ba~ys in8r Needed In Gallipolis -~··
Jll
882·2744.
City Limlta. For 3- S Days Per
Week, Mostly Evenings, 614· 1r,
Sir week old co me/Beagle m;r 446-7139.

2 112 East of Portor on S t. At
554. Tuesday ·Thursday. 9-?

985-4422:
·

H2

Puppies,

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

,...._ _......;_,.__.;....!"'
, _ _......,_ ___

-

-·Old, 614-446-9442.

Male Beagle Hu nti ng Dog , 3

Yard Sale

. SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
. Dirt • Sand

DUI &amp; SR 2?
·. 0 SCOU' liS'
Cor11 puter 011otes
(1)1-1) CJCJ? /040
Pn•l'•!i&lt;JY

.

614;256-«l88.

DUMP TRUCK

/\ny Cc11

614-596-5504 .

.I~_____.J~~S~u~n~d~a~~C~.~a~ll~si___;~=:ll disposition.
good wiehildren. good 446-7287.
home only. 304·1375--4650.

.
All Ohio R. L HOLLON
·'

Crafted ·~

•:

ladle lhaeli Dealer

•Shirts •Hats
•Sportswear

C&lt;1sy f'ny ArltJ

pies, 6 Weeks Old , Wormed ,
Ready To Go To A Good Home \

males, 614 -~85-4316.

New At Ingles Eleetronies

Imprinting

949-3321

1

r .

112 Beagle, 112 Springer Male 5
Months Old, 81 4-446·9442.

Sma ll Beagle, 'mos.,· male,

985-4473

' l:?un. Nights
Lucky Ball.$300.00
· with 21 ·players or more
Ralses $50.00 ea.
·week. Pay according to
the Number of players
949·2044 or 949-2038

VINI'l SIDING
ANY 1 STORY HOME, S2.9g5;
ANY 2 STORY HOME $3,995,
100% FINANCING I
PHONE lOOAY 01 ..265·7694.
40
Giveaway

Distributed by

61,4_992_7643

.__ _ _ _.,.....;·~:~;TJUJ;:,::M:.I

Legion #602
. , Bingo

Spor1s fansnow up·IO ·
dale scoresta preads and much
more. 1-900-7715·0700 eJit. 9300,
$2.99 per minu10. mu~1 be 18 y11.

5 Puppies, 6 Weeks Old, Mixed
Chow &amp; Collie. 814-446-9442.

The water treatment company cordially invites ypu to
participate in a free, no obligation. ,comprehensive water
analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:
.
TDS, Mineral Hardneea, Iron, PH.
Pltoe• call R11inSof1 et992-4472 ,or 1-800-606-3313
to aot
free water

Owner: Ronnie Jones
Cheshire, Oh

Racine
. .American
'

"

11 o

•1.00 off any X-large 18"

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

992-5042

.,

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

JONES'
TREE SERVICE
.

Care for
Elcler·ly and
Handicapped
in Family Care
Horne
Middleport. Oh

•r.
.,,• · ·

Wanted To Buy : 8.2 Tan Bolt Po· ·
litrlck Urut To F11 A tteB Cht ~ til
ve fle Can U1e Any Of Th• Following Cauiers, 65· 70 CheYro ltt. ~ ·
S.· 72 Ch41Yello. 8&lt;-72 CheYy II i •:

614·~·0586.

Ser1flna S.E. Ohio 6 Wast VIrginia
Toll Free
446 9416

.

~

"

· Wanted: Quality Hand
Items For Seuona ! Gift Shop, ..;..

Mobile Home H~atlng &amp; Cooling
wflh the palfa a ar-Actt to.lllll:k It up

tut")

415198.

9Sit2·7.W1 .

House, 814·245-5887

BENNETTS

WANTED: EMERGENCY . RELIEF COM·
MUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR$' (S~bstl·
needed to teach community and
personal. skills to adults wHh learning
llmltaUona In Gallla and Melga Countl"•.
High aehool t;legree, vaild di1ver's
license;
yura licensed driving
_experhince,. ~ 'driving · record and
adequate automolllle lnat,~rance cover-:
age nquhd. Hours: M acbedu~88
. nee did; mu8t be able to atay oyernlghta.
Salary: ....75/hour, to start. Training
provided. Sen;ct reeume to: P.O. Box .8().4,
Jackaon, OH 45840; , ATTN: ·Cecilia.
~ applicants. ·
Equal
Oppqrtunlty Employer.
,.

Q*•
or complete ..tllft; 1110 ' ,
do appralsalo, Ollly llatln, e to-

Wanted To Buy: Lilde Tlkes Toys. J J
Sand Box , Picnic T•ble , Play _..

.

~·

o..a1n. . .

992-3894

•NewHomn
•Addition• '
•New Garage•
•Remoctell"'
·Sidlnv
•Roofing
·P•lntlng
FREE ESTIMATES
992o5535

Air Condltlonera, Heat Pulilpl,
Fum-. AH equipment.In atock
' for ImtMdlate lnatailatlon.
Free EstlmataiIWV010212

..

"'rae·

from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lb1. af aluminum cans to
ragllller tor Bunn Coffilamak~ to ba given aw-.y.
Drawing will be held on Jl1l~rch 29th.

. '

.BtmJsawMI

Allo some palnlland
.
biUshas.
Sat., Ma.rch 30, April 6
Noon-5:00 P.M.
3m... north of C.,._

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
' . (Spectal Price on Aluminum Citns

(614) 367..()266
FrH E.tlfJUit"

'

·

MolbUe and Manufactured Housing

645-s434

SIAR
GUIIAR

• Trail Rides
• Training
•Boarding
'Leaaons ·

.

OFFICE 992-2259

ATTENTION SPOQTS
FANS
let your fingers do the
walking to the sports
line ..Finance·Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope.

CUllom lllllfdlne lllan a4 I 111

-· • ..11114~· ·--• :, -~

.ltr AI • 'le
rv&amp; vw..
llip«&lt;IM AralaA.
. , _ (364} 615-1651

Need Direction?
Love
Blislnel8
Family Matters
.Allow Your
Peraonal Paychlc to
, AlslstYou

SMITH'S
CONniUCIIOI

-·"•h:ll.114"'*21-12. "'
U1ed furnlturt• antiques, ant H

~-=--=-------

a. IJStnirt
,.,. .... w.

Limestone,

·• -"'" MAIIlEY•S 11:Atte,
•"''t RECYCLING CENTER ,,,,,

Announce, Customer Appreciation
DayJ during \he Month of March
Do your part for our envllonmtnt. Bring. 111 your
llum. _ . and Other ~cab._ and tWglsllr.to
win a hanclcaalted solid walnut and cedllr lined
bianlcat chHt valued at S800 to ba given away
Man:h 30th. Trt. Co. Recycling open 7 dayl•a weak.
to..veyou.
.
9-8 Mon.-Fri; 9-3 Sat. a eun. Located ~mer of
St. At. 143 a 7, Po~ne~oy, 614-11112-5114.

IHII'tSttnr
IW&amp;I Dralt
"'''""'

'

Top Soli,

IIIICI • IliA
• IIIICI
.

1RI·STATI SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

WICKS
HAULING

11.T. S. Coin Shop, 151 S.eonol '"

.

Howwd L. Wrft ..ll ..

NEFf IEMODEUNG
SERVICE

When
I retired from my
job of 17
years
as administrative
assistant
to r=========t-:;::;::=======r:========:r=========
Public Notice •
Public Notice
Public-Notice
Public Notice
~publisher, of the daily newspaper
m Scottsbluff, Neb., the paper ran a
Routt 7 end ¥1rloua, by
19, 199&amp;.
The Si'IP two box cui-.
PUBLIC NOTICE
full-page photo of me with a write·
ldentlflw
1M
trenaportatlon
The Ohio Department of H~Th•IdSpr•t•-vi"ll1e·t for :. ,
The Vlllal8 of Poln•roy
up about my retirement. I had been dllirtl to -lve llalad Improvement proj- lhll Tra n•portatlon h•raby
not ill•• all pre-qualified completion · ol thla work, • ,
widowed for almost four years, and blda to; the following will bt Implemented blddera that dla•dvllligged ahell be •• aat forth In the ,
throughout
the
State
owhich the Village
the prospects around this area were vehicle
bual-1 anterprl- will be bidding propoaaJ.• Plana
wllhaa to diiiJIHM. A tWO lhe next 4 'fNI'S. Tile ODOT afforded
fuA opportunity to and Speclflcat!ano are on
pretty limited.
District,
Oil
ice
serving
your
boclga Polarlt.
submit
bids
In ra•pon" to Ill• In the Department. of
I was ple'¥'antly surpri sed when I
area
Ia
located
at
3'8
All llal•d blda ahell be
Invitation and will nat Tran.portatlon.
received a call. from a gentleman who rtcalved In the Clerk't Muaklngum Drive, Marlella, thla
JERRY WRAY l
office at 320 Eaat Main Ohio (614-37;1-0212) . . To be dl•crlmlneted agalnel·of
DIIII!CTOR OF 1
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio an or laciii!Jite the STIP review, grounda of race, color, or
origin
In · •
TRANSPORTATION •
before April 10, 111te at ·the Dlatrlct Offlca wilt be natlan•l
.11:00 a.m. The Pomaroy ~oldlng an open hou.. on consideration for on award. llarch 25, 111111
Minimum wage rete• for April I, 1IIINI
Council rea•rvea the right WednHclay, April 10, 1996 thla
prol•et h•ve been 1.;.;:.;.;.;.;...;.;....:..:.:_____
from
3:30
p.m.
to
7:30
p.m.
to accept or reject any or all
predetitrmlned
aa required
Public Nottce
at the Waahlngton County
blda.
·
Savanna Lynn Capehart celebratby
law
and
are
let
forth
In
c NOTICE To 1 ,
Kilby HyMN, Clark Public Library, 615 5th the bid propotlal. "The date
PUBU
StiHI,
Mllrlei!JI,
Ohio.
The
·
ed her second binhday recently with
VIII... of Pomeroy
CONTRACTORS ' . ,
MPO
aervlng •the aet I or comp Iet Ian oI t hi •
131 25: (4) 1: 2TC
Sealed propotlalt for tho '
a pany at the home of her parents,
ahaU be u let forth In
Wethington County, Ohio -rkbidding
propoul."
Middleport Volunteer Fire . J
Linda Harris'tln and Ron Capehart.
area II the Waod- thePlan•
and
opeefflcetlon•
Department Renovationa,
A clown theme and cookout was
Publlc Notice
wa..,lngton-Wirt lnt•re!Jite
are
on
file
at
the
1995
wiH be iec,lved by the· · •
held. Aitending were her brother,
PUBLIC NOTiCE
Pl8nnlng Commlulon (304- D
1
Melga
County !
1 P a 1 m e·n t
0 1
422-4993) IDellted at . 1200
Commlaaloner• at their ,
Ron D, a half-brother, Justin HarriThe Board ol Dlrectore of Grand Avenue, Vlennt, Transportation.
olflee, c. ourthouae,
son, and half-sister, Jill ian Harrison;
ihe Matga Metropollta~ Wett Virginia.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF Pomeroy, Ohla 45769 until
Houalng Authority Ia
An 'I
co Iii men 11
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
.
TRANSPORTATION
10:0(! A.M.,. April 15,1198
conalderlng
the
adoption
of
concerning
thit
Statewide
Rollem-'l!nd Joe, Mrs. Ruby Cape(4) 1, a 2TC
end then att:OO P.M., April ,
suspending
the
current
Traneportat!Qn
hart, · Mrs. Lisa Ellis, Justin and
:....--------115, 1996 at aald office•; •
Federal Prefereneaa Improvement Program
opened and noed aloud.
•
~asie: Mrs. Norma Lyons, Josh,
required
for
obtaining
ahould
ba
In
·written
form
Public Notlce
EMPLOYEE OF MONTH ~
Plana,
SpeclfiCitlona,
and
Alisha }{eather, Dave and Heather
Section 8 Rental Aulatance and trantmltted to: Mr.
bid forma may btt aecured
Mary Hudson of Pomeroy has
(I.e. Subatandard houalng; Larry F. Sutherland, Acting
Capehan, Wayne Capehan, Lisa LilPUBUC
NOTICE
•t
the oHJce of the Melg• ,
been
named
employee
of
the
Dlaplacament; and paylnv Aclmlnlatrator, Office of :Saturday, April 20, ttiiNI, County
ly and Priscilla, Jessie, Valerie and
ccimriil•alonere, .•
month at Pinecrest Care Cen50% or more for Planning, Ohio Department at 10:00 .•.m. the Home: Courthouse,
.Pomeroy,
Bill Speakman, and Mrs. Ma~y
rentluttlltlea). The Houalnv of Tranaportallon, 25 South ~etlonal flenk will after fOr Ohio.
. ter. She has been employed
Bradley.
Authority wilt retain the Front Street, Columbut, ule at pubHc •uctlon on the
atthe Center since June 1993
E!!Ch bid muat be .
Veteran Statue preference Ohio 432t5
Sending gifts were the youngster's
In medical records; Certified
Bank
Parking
lat
·
the
accompanied
by either a bid • •
and the Working Ranking
Written commenta mutt
great-grandmothers, Mrs. Dorothy
16ttowlng:
·
bond
.In
an
amount
wltll a
In dlversllied medical cic:cupreference for tho" eligible be received by the clo" of
Roberts and M..S. Dessie Boggess.
SAVANNA CAPEHART
• 1113 Chavralat Camaro aur•ty ••tlilfactory Ia the· - •
patlona and medical Informaappllcenta. Dl.cuulon of butln- on April19, 1996
the propoaal will be held
JERRY WRAY Serial
a1oreaa1d Melg• County · .
tion processing, she Ia also a
1API750DN 14SOI3
during the Quanerly Board
DEPARTMENT OF . 1988 Ford Tamp GL Serial ;,ortmllml ldsalohnekra orhl by .
l18t8 tested .nursing assls·
·· Names in the news:
IIHtlng
on
April
tO,
1!11l6
at·
.
TRANSPORTATION
1..2fiapp~XOJ8t37249
ee ' ol
c..critdlt
era
tent.
cheek,e or c letter
" ...,
7:30. p.m. In the Melge (4) 1 1TC
1988 Mercury. · Cougar 'upon a solvent bank In the
Ho u a I n g
Authority l - - - - - - - - - Serial
amount of not lea• than
conlarence room located at
Public Notice
10% of the bid amount In ( '
50 Union Avenue, 1.:-:-::-.:..:=::.:..:..:::.:;;:;;___ 1111EBMII048JII811UI
The-ttrma of the aalt are favor ofiM atoreeald Meigs •
Pomeroy, Ohio. The Public
Ill Invited to aaend or can· • NOTICE TO BIDDERS
ceall. Home National Bank . County Commlulonera. Bld '
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas (,bJ&gt;) or of the 15th anniversary of their ordec and it really comes in handy for f!18il cominenbl to tha Melga
STATE OF OHIO
• hell
be
r..erv•• ,the right to bid 11 b o n d •
Houalng Authority. at the
DEPARTMENT OF .
the
aala
tncl
or
to
ramov•
aecompa1111d
by
Proal
of ;
- On the first anniversary of Sele- film, "Anhur."
this kind of thing," she said.
TRANSPORTATION
any or all ltamt from .the Authority of the oftlcl81 or
na:s death, the chain-link fence surabove
eddrtll.
Columbua,
Ohio
The stars• of the 1981 comedY.
"We want to have something new
eate at •ny lima.
agency algnlnglhe bond.
Jean Truuell
rounding her home was dotted with about a love affair between a soused and more ... urn, less. ... college fraExecutive Director, MMHA
Office of Contraeta
(3) 211, 28;
Bids ahatt be Haled and
Legal Copy Number 96-aGO (4) 1, 4, 1, 11, 15, 11; 8'rc
flowers and signs.
millionaire and a working-class ternity humor. guy humor - a lot (4) 1 8 2Tc
marked as Bid for :
'
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Middleport Valunt"r Fire
"Selena- You will never be for- woman will kick off a 12· to 14-date less guy hu.mor," she told.K1TV-TV
Melling Date 3122196
Public
Notice
Department Ranovatlona," · •
gonencYou're always in our hearts," tour this summer, backed by a 55- during a recent interview from the
Pulinc Notice
BR0-92D(e)
1995
and matted · or . •.
one read.
Sealed· propoaala will be
piece orchestra.
set.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
delivered to: Mtlgt County
OF AVAILABIUTY
accepted .from all pre·
The house has become a tourist
· They will perforin separately, with
STATE OF OHIO
CommiHionera,
Fox executives say they plan to . NOTICE
.
TO
THE
PUBLIC
qualified . bidders at the
. DEPARTMENT OF
Courthouta, Pomero,y, Ohio
.attraction for fans of the slain Tejano Minnelli singing from "Gently," her alternate Roseanne's show with the
STATE OF OHIO
office of Contreell, Room
TRANSPORTATION
45769.
;
singer, who was shot to death March new album, and Moore doing jazz comedy program " MAD TV," which
DEPARTMENT OF
118 of the Ohio Department
Columbua,
Ohio
Attention
of
bidders
Ia
·
•
•
3 I, 1995, by her former fan club pres- and classical standards mixed with competes head-to-head with NBC's
TRANSPORTATION
oI
T raneportatlon,
Olllca
of
Contract•
celled
to
all
of
the·r·
:
.
ident.
·
Columbuo, Ohio
Columbus, Ohio, unlll 10:00 Legal Capy Number 96-247 requirements contained In, •
boozy banter. Together, they will per- . "Saturday Night·Live.;,
Th• Ohio Department of a.m. WednHdaf, April 24,
"We saved our spring break for form Christopher Cross' "Arthur's
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
this bid paebt, partlcul8rly , !
Traneportatlon
(ODOT) 1996 for Improvements In:
Mailing Data 3/15/96
to the Federal Labor ~ ,
this," said Sandra -DeLeon of Lub-. Theme .~~
BD.LINGS, Mont. (AP) - Ted hereby notlflae all
P.-t 1: Melga County, lor
propo1111
wilt
be
Standards Provl•lon• and · •
Sealed
bock, who made the trek with her sis"They had the magic that still Nugent singing campfire songs?
lnterealld pereont that the Improving section MEG· ac.ceptad from •II pre- Davla-Bacon W11Q81,' · :
ter and their three cllildren.
.
·..speaks to people. And not just baby
inluranca ·,
The tunes are part of th~ enter· ~ropQaed FY 1997-2000 143-11.29·Part - 1, State qualified blddtra at the varloua
The house was one stop on a p.il- boomers." Ed Kasses, who is coor- tainment the. rocker has planned Statewide Tranaportatlon Route · 143 In Scipio Office of Contrecta, Room requlrementa, verloua equal .
grimage for devotees visiting here dinating the tour, said in the April 5 1 when he speaks April 13 at a fund Improvement Program Townahlp, by eonatructlng .118 of the Ohio Department opponunlty provlalone, end .. , ·
(STIP) will be available lor bridge no. MEG-143-1131, a
T ranaportatlan, the requirement for a ·
this weekend. Many also spent the issue of Entertainment Weekly. "It's raising banquet for the Montana review and comment In the three span continuous o f
night at the Days Inn mojel where the got the same appeal as Tony Bennett chapter of Safari Oub Jnternational Planning and Programming reinforced concrete alab Columbu•, Ohio, untll10:00 payment bond and
performance bond for 100% • 1 Admlnlatrlllor'e Office In with capped pile abutments a.m.
23-year-old rising star was killed.
'Unplugged."
Wednoadey, Aprll1.0, 1 - of the contract price. ·
"I ' ve got some exciting musical each of the twelve ODOT and piers (apana· 20', 25'.
"We love her. we miss her," said
No bidder may withdraw "•
piec.es, literally from the Nugent Dlatrlct Olllcee, the ODOT 20' Ill abutment.), roadway for Improvement• In: ·
Mencha Amador of Phoenix, Ariz.
Guerno•y,
hla
within thirty (30)
Athertt,
Glllia,
LO~ ANGELES
(AP)
fam1ly can;tpfire," he said. "The Central-Office of Planning 32' Ill guardrail over Mud Hocking, Melga, Monroe, day,bidafter
date of the
"We do have her music, and that is RoSeanne's "Saturday Night Spe- song 'Fred Bear,' 'My · Bow and located In 'columbuo, Ohio Fork Cree~.
'Morgan,
Noble,
,
Perry,
opening
thereof.
Meigs
great. She left something for all of us.
Part 2! For Improving Vinton and Waahlngton Count.'/ Commlnlonen
cial" is gunning for something new Arrow,' some stirring campfire and each of the alrt"n
Ohio Metrepolitan Planning aectlona MEG-143·(11:76) Countl••· · Ohio for re..rvll the right to waive
That is our joy."
in TV sketch comedy: a lot less guy music."
Organlutlona
(MPO) during (13.77) • Pan 2, State Route _Improving a.etlona ATH-33- anylilforrnallll.. or to reject
In cities across the state, radio sta- humor.
,.
Nugent, an avid outdoorsman
normal butlneaa houre 143 In Columbia and Sclr,lo 0.00 and varloua, U.S. Raute eny or all bids.
tions played Selena's music and tesThe actress is executive producer will also include a healthy dose of hi~ from April 8, 1996 to April Townehlpa, by conetruct ng
33 and VIIIOUI, In varlout
Fred Hoffman, PrHident ' \
timonials from fans, and there were of her new late-night Saturday show, efforts to support hunting.
Melga County
vlllagea by · •pplylrlg fall
· candlelight vigils in her honor.
wl)ich will premiereAprill3 on Fox.
drying
pavam•nt
ma~lng.
Commlatlonera
.•
"Every day, I promote hunting,
Real Estate General
She will serve as emcee of the first Second Amendment gun rights, fam"Th• · d•to .. t for (3) 38; (4) 1,10; 3TC
'' '
completion of thlt work
NEW YORK (Ai&gt;) - Dudley episode and make occasional guest Ily and wildlife conservation,''
ahall
b• aa aet forth In tho
i• •
Moore and Liza Minnelli are getting appearances.
Nugent said. "Hunting needs an
bidding propaaal. • Plana . ;:::::::ln=M=et=m=o=ry==:;
together again to raise a glass in hon"I have multiple personalities dis- image upgmde in the worst of ways.:·
and Spaclflciltlont are on
Ilia In the Department of
In Memory of
' :.
,
TranaportaUonJERRYWRAY
NEVA M. GRIM.M
t .jll _.'
DIRECTOR OF
on her 81 Sl birthday
'
TRANSPORTATION
A ·1 1 tl ·
(3) 25; (4) 1; 2TC
pn S ·
Unquestionably, if authorities had and .-those dangers may tie· permaBy Peter H. GoH, M.D.
We send our hugs
DEAR DR. GOTT: My 19-year- had the slightest inkling of how dan· nent. Again, it is a question of
Public Nollca
kisses ,on angels
old daughter recently returned from 'gerous smoking is, state and federal
degree: how much marijuana is
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
nd [et God's
STATE OF OHIO
I WinK! a
/ :
college to inform me she has been governments would bave behaved in smoked. All active addicts deny that
they have a problem. Thi s attitude is
DEPARTMENT OF
lrll&gt;ni&lt; Happy Birthday :
using marijuana regularly. She's very an entirely different manner and
TRANSPORTATION
cavalier about this -- it's no big deal would have saved millions of lives · pan of the addiction. Without knowColumbuo, Ohio
i·
n
g
the
extent
of
your
daughter
's
.
and everyone does it. I'm very by stri.cter regulation of tobacco
Olfl~ of Contraeta
But in our hearts our
involvement, ·I can 'I comment on
opposed to her actions, yet she feels products.
Legal Copy Number ~&amp;-256
"'w" does stay no
whether she is harming herself. But ·
sne has everything under control :
..
Similarly, the situation with alcoUNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Please write about this drug. Perhaps, hol is further proof that all mind- I wotry, as do you. Also, marijuana
I~Uno~lnl of distance,
will ba
. " .
since •she won't listen to me, she altering drugs have a serious down- ·is illegal, so she is running risk of
with 2-3 bedrooms,
all pre·
make it go away
Jlrosecution if caught.
1 112 baths, F.A.N.G.
ntaste1 walls with Mrpet, vinyl
blddero •t the
needs to see an objective viewpoint side. While inqst drinkers consume
In Heaven we know
and
pine
flooting.
Garage
lnciiUd11d
ASKING
$19,000
n1t•1,..
of
Contractt,
Room
On
one
hand,
I'm
glad
she
was
in print for herself.
alcohol responsibly and don 't.threatis lulppy As we go
of the Ohio Department
DEAA READER: Nothing you or \cn their health, alcohol abuse is a able to share her experiences with,
o
I
T
rantportatlon,
ymf
Is
she
just
experimenting
with
I say, or do, will stop your daughter major public health menace, leading
~ach year; Lord,
Columbue, Ohio, untN 10:00
,
new-found adolescent indepenfrom using marijuana, which -- as to death and incalculable misery.
1.m.
lpl1~ase tell her Happy
·
you may have read •• is becoming
'Scientific knowledge tells us that dence? I hope so.
Wednatd•y, April 1'0, IB1irthdo.v Mother dear. . .. • . '\l
increasingly popular on college cam- marijuana is not without hazard ••
~-lor lmprovemantaln:
Gallla, Hocking, Malg•,
LQved &amp; Misse(l
puse~.- She will have to take responMonroe,
1!4organ,
Noble,
sibility for her actions; when and if
Children;
VInton . •nd Waahlngton
--she chooses to slop smoking the
Grandchildren;
·c ountli•, Ohio . for
/
weed, she will do so.
Improving aaetlona ·GAL-7·
Great-Grandchildren
~.205 •nd
S.tate
Several medical st udies h.ave 1
shown that occasional use of mariJuana is not a hazard. to health. Yet
many of us were shocked and disI AI'FOIRD,ABILEII Great location on level tot on Quiet Stteet In
turbed by the rec~n1 reports in the
Syracuse. Featuring' this~ one owner 1970 t2'X60' Pat!oolOill l
' '
media, showing that regular use of
Mobile Home. Includes 2 bedrooms, patio, bOnds, eppllanees.
marijuana pnequivocally leads to
UtilitY room, outbuilding, cable hOok·up. Paved street! Owner
relocatingll Haa REDUCED PRICE ON THIS HOME TO
measurable alterations in cognitive
i
$15,000 COME CHECK THIS ONE DUTil
functf6n: rpemory, problem-solving,
•
emotional control, and judgment. I
MIDDLEPORT· Wonderful Rental Investment• or possible
'
hope that thi s information gives
Wlth...a
~
other home Is a story block
your daughter pause. .
· both gas heat, ll lola· 3 Iota
. When
were first mar·
j l$ : ~
rented
OFFER. ASKING $75,000 FOR
idea of
·i i~f ...
ALLI Owner 11111y divide propetllesl
I
how dangerous they were.
I
WE HAVE OUT OF TOWN BUYERS WANTJNO MEIOS
became fashionable, the "in" thing
'.
COUNTY PROPERTIES. IF YOU WANt TO SELL..NOW JS
to do. In retrospect, we can now
JUKEBOX PIZZA- The a'"'• ne~ restaurant, offering plz·
THE TIME TO USTII. WE HAVE THE CONNECTIOJt$.
YOUR MESSAGE
appreciate that our nu!t'bing i~no­
za, subs, salads, llld dinners, Is now open. Jukebox Pizza, locatHOOK.UP WITH CLELo\ND REALTY INC. TO BELL YOUR
rance .spawned generauons of nocoed at the Intersection of State Routes 7 and 33 In Pomeroy, offers
H~ETODAYI
QA~ BE SEEN HERE
tine-addicted young people who
. .
eat-In, carry-out, and delivery service to Pomtroy, Mlddlepoit,
FOR A TOTAL OF .
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.......................................- - - .
Racine, and Syracuse. Grand opanlng•pacJal•- baing offwecl
have developed strokes, het111 dis·
IHERRI L' HART•.:.~ ..~........;.......................- .. """~742 I II t'
lung cancer and frightful pulthja week. Their l'loun- Sunday through Thul'ldly, 4 to 10 p.m.,
$7.00 PER DAY.
KATHY ftlll. CLELA.ND.......... _,••• ,.,_.......,...,... _.,.,.,.
.....,.;'
and Friday and $Sturdily, 4 p.m. to -12 a.m. Pictured are owntr1
monary disorden as they grew ol~OFFJCE.............- ...............- ............................_111-18
.J
Rae_Lynn and Ron Clampatt.
·
er.
,
•
I:
,,
.,
. I
•
'•
.
·,.

Marij~ana·

•

Middleport
.&amp; VIcinity

' ! SSOO
No Experien ce Necessary
To $900 Weekly /Potential Pro .
cesaing Mortgage Re funds, Own
Hou rs. Call (909) 715·2300, Ext.
1351, (24 Hours).
Po1nr Pleas'anr area business ac·
cepting applications for fu ll lime
fron t desk ~?lfice po,sition having
varied clencal respons ibilities.
Qualified applicants will _possess
plea~ant personaliry, have good
communication, keyboard , and
phone skllls. Good benefits. If in·
reresled submit resume to Box M'31, %Pt Pleasant Reg iste r, 200
Main St., Pt Pleasant. WV 25550.
An Equa l EmployrMnt Opportunily Company dedicated to diversity.
Pos tal &amp; Gov't Jobs S21 /Hr ..
Benefits, No E~ep. Will Tra1 n, For

Appt And lnlo 1·000·536·3040.

Po sial Jobs 3 Positions Av ai l·
able, No Experience Necessary
Fo r I nforma tion, Call 818 -764 :
9016 Ex L4007.

POSTAL JOBS

Starting S 12.68+rhr . .. Benefits .
For Enm and A. ppli catiori Info .
Call 1-:l34-470- 7227 ext. 352
Bam ~9pm, 7 days:

1.
e£
·if.
•' ')

~ "'
~ ll&lt;.J

•j u

1

ii:
l"l a

1t"'l

'"
,.,,
,.
I

Red Hot Fat loss Product, Dyna - , ~'~
mic Marketing Plan. lose Weigh t
&amp; Make Money ! 614 - 4'~1-Q167 , ''!. ~

614 -446· 1236.

.

·C'

Sales P.erso n Commissj(m •Agen1• ··";!
Wtth leads Ben efi ts, Apply At \ · · ~
French _Ciry Pr~~s . 423 Se,on_d . 1 ~;.
Avenue. Galtipolis.
·
Screen Pnnter, Experience N&amp;C·
ess ar y, Serious Inquiries Only,
61 4·4-46-2388,AskforChriS.

Big lnside· sale- 307 Spring Ave nue, Pomeroy. April 1· 2·, lOam ·
4pm. Refrigerator, lurniture, misc.

Social Workers, Now Hiring S23 1
Hr • Benefjts, On The Job Training To AP.ply In Your Area, 1·800.

$1 .00 bores.

1 ~j

t

"

Yard- Sa18s ~M J'"it Be--Paid ·tn
Advance . Deadline : 1:0Jpnl the
day before the ad Is 10 run, Sun ·
day edition- 1:Oopm Friday, Mon·
day edition 10:00a.m.Sewrday.

All

•'1-l, :)

..;;

339·6150.

The BOa rd Of Trustees Of The
lillian E. Jones Museum Is SeekIng A Creariwe, Self-Motivated
Energetic And Depe ndable Per:
son To Serve As A Part·l'ltne Oi·
rector tor The Museum..

,• ~ .
t....

......

.~
::""1

.,,

·1u .

Reponing To The Seven Member · -~' Y{
Boatd, This Perso n Will Be Responsible For Administrative Du ~
ties Inclu ding Setting Up ~n Office, Ca-ordinatin~ And Assls1ing
Volunteer Commmees And Do -

l

With ErhibiiS
Salaty Ia

~:

:J!l

Appli.. ntl Should Sond·Reoumo ., 11
/Cove lenerTo:·lloard Of Truo.- ·
E. Jonoa llu-m, 7S '.1!1
Broadway
!• Jockoon, Ohio ""~
45840 No Lll Than April 15
Has.
• 1 .itt

..
. ''
•

'

.

,,_,
. '

•

,,

�. , . 12.,..,. Dal,l y ~

•

M0i'M18y, Aprtl1, 1 -

'

.

Pomel f1'l ~ Mldc:lleport, Ohio

•
•

•

NEA Cro..word P:uzzle

ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Llrr)' Wr!Pt

•

Home TJ~. PC unrs nee@d.
$4$.000 lncop~o P!&gt;tonllal. Co~ 11100-513-4343 Ell. 8-G388.

\

no

Ll&gt;cai Aootoil SIOro· Needs Ful-dme
Salesperson, Send Resume TCS:
PJO Bor 141 , Galtipol l1, OH
4!5831 .
.

814-992-6858..

Av....... Ga~polis, 814-4411-822 1.

2bdrm. apts., total tlectric, ap·
pllancis furnished, llundry room
facltitiu, close 10 ac~ol in ~~W~n .
Applications availabl'e at: Village
Green Apts. 149 or call 81 4·992·
3711 . EOH.

r&amp;lared work , call 61 4-992·2800

k&gt;t appli&lt;;abon.
Need 5 People To Sell Avon

' •

WANTED: EMERGENC'I' RELIEF
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTORS (Subllilu!") Needed To
Teach Community And P::~~r,~
Sk•lls To Adults With l~
Limitations In Gallla
Counties. High School 0~~~~:1
Valid Driv•r'a L1cenae~
Years Licensed Driving Experi·
once, Good Drivi ng Record And
Adequate Automobile ln, ura•nce•
Coverage Required.
:

Beach St., Middleport, 2bedroom,

w:fllt

lurniohed, u~lities patd. Deposit a
relerences. 3Q4·882-2568.

I
.
"We need direcliOj'IS
~·f.;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;1~;:~~~~~===~
lrom
$244 to $315. Walk to shop
Scheduled
lAoOVernights.
Needed; lluSI
Able
To Stay
Sala~:
·· -- ~&amp; moviu. Call 614- 446-2 588.
320

$4 .75 1Hour, To Start. Training
Provided. Send Reaume To: ·P.O.
Box 604 , Ja~;kaon, OH •se•o ;
ATTN: Cecilia, Deadline For Ap·
plicahta. 415196. Equal OpPonuni·
'Y E,..,toytw.
WE NEED YOU
All mal estate adVe11lslngln
this newspaper Is sub18ct to
lho Federal Fair Housing Act
ot 1968 wltlch maims ! Illegal
10 advertise "any preference,
llmllatlon or diScr1mlnation
basad. on race, ootor, n;;glon,
sex familial 6fatu&amp;: or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such pralerence,
llmilalion or dlscrlmlnallon.·

Tired Of Sttting At Home Waiting

For Opportunity To

Knock?

Warkino Hard For Pennies?
Change 83 Vear Old Electrical
Appliance Company Need11 10
People Due To Recent Expansion. It You Are:

• 180r01der

• looking For Career Adwncement

• WiiQng To Enjoy A l'erjMnen~

Full Time Position.
No ·s•ikes, No Layoffs, No .E/&lt;perience Necessary II
Call For Appointment At 614-441 1970

1$0 .

Wanted To

Do

24 Hour Care For Elderly Or
·Handicapped Person In Pri11ate
Home, 6~4-441...0000.

Check this out First save $$.
Mike's interior/exterior painting,
rool painting, hand wash down
houses, mobile homas. Near wotk
9-'JBranteed. tS~r!l expenence.
References. Free estimates. 304·
675-6921 .
.
Eileen's Personal Care. SpecializIng 1n Alzheimer's care giv1ng.
Call us · We can help. 304· 762·
2544.
General Maintenance, Painling,
Yard Work Windows Washed
'GUtters Cleaned light Hauling,
Commerical, ~es1dential , Steve.
614·388.0429.
Portable Sawmill, don't
haul 'J&lt;.
1ogs to the mill just call
304·675- .957.
George ~

Home &amp; oHice cleaning, ask for
A!lcia, 6~ 4-742-3504.
Mow lawns &amp; Tr im, Schedule
Now for Sumrr-erl 6 t4-4&lt;t6-0026.
Professional Tree Serv1ce, Complete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Service -50 Ft. Reach, Stump Re- ·
moval, Free Esti'mates! In·
surance, 24 Hr. Emergency Serv·
1ce -Call And Save! No Tree Too
B1g Or Too Small! Bidwell. Ohia.
614·388·9648. 614-367·7010
Su n Valley Nursery . School.
Childcare M-F 6am·5:30pm Ages
2-K, YouQg School Age During
Summer. 3 Cays per Week Mini mum 614·446·3557.
'
W1ll care for elderly in my home,
15 years experience, 304 -8822634.
Will Do Interior Or Exterior Pa1nt·
mg, Reasonable Rates 1 E•penenced References, For Free Esti·
mates: 614-245-5755.
'

FINANC IAL

210

310

Homes for Sale

1995 t·h70 Clayton 3 Bedrooms.
2 Baihs, CA, All Elaclric, Underprnnlng, Skirting, Ex1ended Warranty, Oiher Ex-.sl $19,500, Aher
P.M. 814-446-8415.

e

Business

"lu{llber Pnce Up?• Steel Build:
ings Dealer Profits Are UPIII Cost
As Low As $3.00 Sq Fool. National Manufacturer Awardmg Lo·
cal DEALERSHIF! 303-759-3200
E111. 2200.
INOfiCEI
OHIO VALLEY .PUBLISHING CO.
recommend• that you do bu&amp; i·
ness wlrh people you know, and
NOT 10 send money through the
mail unt1l you have lnvestigaled
lheolfefing.
Small One Man Prea&amp;ure Wash . :
mg Businesa, Up And Grow1ng,
Fully Equipped, Name And All, Be
Your Own Boss &amp; Make Your
Own Hours, Can Pay For Itself In
One Season, Great Investment!
614-367-7755.
VENDING : Won't Get Rich Ourck.
W1ll Get A Steady, Cash Income,
Pnce To Selll1-800-1120-6782.
ProfessiOnal

Services
Personal lawn care at Sun Crest
cemetery. ·Your loved ones de·
serve' apecial atten~on . Call 61.41·
992-7552 aher 811f!1 for more ink!.

EquaiHouSingOpportunity.
For lease: 2 Bedroom Apartment
Partially Furnished Or You Furn·
ish Yourself, Very Nice Room• In
Nice Area, Galli poliO; Contra! Air
In Every Room, 61 ,._11!6_7174_

8'x16 ' Till Geo Tra iler
Brakes, Sides, $700,
7640.
Baby bed, car seat, swrng, Slroll-

Bank Repo 's Only 3 Left! 304·
736-1295.

Furniahed 2 Rooma &amp; Ba1h,
Oownstalrl, Ulllltlea Furnlahed,
Clean, No Pets, Reference, De·
posit Required, 814-446--151g_

First dme buyers. E·Z financing '
&amp; 2 bedrooms. AroUnd S200JmoJ
Call Russ Murdock t -800· 251 5070

Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
$2251Mo., U1tli!ie, Pa id, 701
Fourth Ave., Galnpolla, Share
88111, 614-446-3844 Aftet 7 P.M. .

L'imned Offer ! 1996 doubtew•de,
3br, 2bath, $1799 -down , ,$2751
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwoo'd Homes, N11ro
wv. 304 -755-5885.

Furnished Elftciency 2 RQOma,
Share Balh, $1951Mo. Utlllttes
Paid, 607 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-448-4416 Aher 7 P.M .

New 14x80, 2 or 3bedroom. Only
make 2 paymenta .to move in. No
payments afror 4vears. 304 -755·

Furnished Efficiency All Utilities
Paid, Shere Balh, $145/Mo., 919
Second Avenue, Galliponf. 61•·
'1,411-31145.
•

5566.
New Bank Repos. Only 4 left Still
in warranty. 304-755-7191.
Pnce Buslerl New 14K70. 2 or
3br. Only $995 down, $19!ilmonth
Free delivEtry &amp; stitup. Only
Oakwood Homes. N11ro WV 304·
755-5685.

33o

Fanns for Sale

In Rac ine- two bedrooms, $250!
mo. plus utilities, one bedroom
wilh garage, · $250/mo. plus utili·
tJes, 61+992-65-42.
One bedro·om apartment In Pt.
Pleasam, no pem, 614-992-5858. ·

4 bedroom house 10 Pt Pleasant.
good loca110n. 304-675-?0QO,
78 acres mil wllh three bedroom,
bath brick .home, three ponds,
pole barri building, two car ga rage, 614-742·1902.
!WO

Bi·level 3·4 Bedrooms, 1·1 r2
Baths, Liv1ngro9m Wllh Fireplace.
Full F1n1shed Basement, large
Family Room, Garage, laundry
Room •. 2 Miles From Gallipolis 1
Holzer.-8 14-446-2324 After 5 PM
ing Will house small business,
also a one car garage, fenced
yard, oul of flood area, ask1ng
$47,000 814-949-2804.
Price reduced on this niCe 3bed·
room, 1 1t2balh&amp;, new kitchen,
basement &amp; much more. ~all
Somerville Reali~ 304·675;,Cl030
or 304-675-3431 .
FOR SAlE . Rental Property,
House With 2 Apartments locat ·
ed At 517 f;ourth Avenue, Galh·
polis, 614-446-3963.

320

41 o Ho!JSes for Rent
15-t/2 VIne Street, Gallipolis, 2
Bed rom Upstairs Duplex , Near
R1ver, S3351Mo. Water Paid, De·
.
posil614-446·2419.

for sale
Double Wide Repo·a. Save Thou·
sandal 304-736-7295.
1974 12x70,
three$1900
,bedroom,
needs
some work,
: two
bedroom 12x50, r'econditlon8d,
·ready to.l1ve in, must be moved,
$2700; self-contained camper,
Saod: 614·949-2526 .
1974 RIChardson 12x65, very
good cond ., 16 ·800 · 304 . 675 ·
4689
·
1980 Windsor, 14.x70, 3 Bedroom,
2 Balhs, Electric &amp; Gas, CA, Well
&amp; County Water, Building,

, Pasture.
1I·:~r~~~!JI- InGarden
Back Porch &amp; BUilt·
Hannan Trace Eie·

z

REAL ESTATE

•&gt;&lt;"" tl·,No 1.and
Very Good
COn-

tract

o

1984 Schultz 3 Bedrooms. Gas
31 Homes for Sale
Heat, Underpinning , &amp; Blocks,
2 bedroom home, 5 acres. 2 car 614-388-9075.
ga11ape with apartment. other :.
19
._8:...9:.:..:C:...Ia:._y_1o:...n_N_e_w_p_
or_1_M_o_b_H__;e
Home, National Bank, IHc!me 14x63 Two ~edroom , Ex·
814-9&lt;49·2210.
Condition, $13,000 614 ·

510

Household
Goods

8' Sofa. 2 Chairs, Coloc Green
And Gold, Very Good Condition,
S3JO
14-441 _0813.

osoa

2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, S3'oOIMo.,
Deposit, Relerences, No Pets,
614-441-1917 Aller 9 F!M.
2bedroom house in Pt Pleasant
$290/mo. 3bedroom In New Ha·
ven $300/mo. lease, tete'rences
&amp; security deposit required. 3048&amp;2-2221 .

Pomer~y. two bedroom, large LR
and kitchen, WID hookup, $300!
mo rent, call 614·992·6886 a{Jer
5:30pm

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

_179_5_.- - - - - - - : - - China cabinet, bar, day bed, new
carpet, entertainment center, col·
fee ta ble, 2 end tables, 3 ptece
seclional with large onoman, all in
excellent conditiOn, 614· 992·
40 11 ·

.o

Cou ntry Furniture. 304 15•6820 .
Rt 2 N, &amp;miles, Pt Pl&amp;asant, WV.
Tues-Sat9.S. Sun 11·5 - GOOD USED
PPLIANCES
Washers, dryer , refrtgerators,
range~. Skaggs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 614·446· 7398,
1-800-499-3499.
Harves1 Gold, lrostlree. 18 cu. It
refngerator. $, 00. :1l4-675-1695.
Hlde·a-bed Queen Size , $75 ;
Tw1n Bed Complete, 'Full Bed
Complete Both S25 Each, 6U·

s
~,
·
Concrete Plast1c
eptic ,anks,
G II
300 Th
ru 2 ,000
a ona Ron
Evans Enterprises. Jackson. OH
1-1100'537-95211

2 Bedroom Futnished, On Clay
Chapel Rosd, $250/Mo. $250 Deposl~ 614·256-e718, After4 P.M.

M

May tag washer. Wa tar
wt40' copper pipe. 2 wooden
rocking cha~rs. 3 bar chairs. Gas
range. Old couch table. 304· 875·
5086.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home ·s25or
Mo. Deposit &amp; Reference Re quireiJ, 614-367-0632.

Moving ·must sell. Bassett dining
room set, bedroom suite, end Ia·
bles, refr igerator &amp; misc . 304 ·
675-4803.

2t2 Bedrooms, 1· Bath, Gas Heat,
$285/Mo. Includes Water. Garbage, No Pets, Deposit, 614·441·

,PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Used
304·675-1450

0000.
2 Bedrooms, 8 Miles Out SR 218,
$2-10/Mo., Plus Deposit, References,, 614· 446· 8 172, 61 4-~566251 .

Save Big On Carpel &amp; VInyl In
Stock $6.00 Cash ICarry Mollohan Carpels, RI7N. 814~446 ·
7444 _ .

Couch And Chair Good Condioon, $100, 614-367-11318

To bedroom mob1le home, all
elecrric, central air, $27Simo: pfus
deposit, 614 -992·3-194 or 614·
992·50Xl._
Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes. starting at $240-$300,
sewer, water and trash 1ncluded,
~14-992-2167 .

440

·cA~~-G~rJ~s~
osh
,_ry
- 1\ndl.ayawayAisollvoilable.
Freellolivllr)'Wi1hln25MIIea.

/a';h;;,iDr;;tR;i;;;;;;;:&amp;;;i;;;
Waaher, Dryer, Refrlgara
r
tV. 6 14-256- 1238.

520

Apart"*'ts

tor Rent
.1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, fur·
nllhed and ,_.nfurniahed, security
deposit required, no pets, 614·
992-2218. .
1 Bedroom Super Nicel Near '
Holzer's $266/WD. Plul Utilities, ·
Leaae IDepoait Required, 81-4 ·
448-2957.

Musical

570

Couch, Cha1r S100·, loveseal
Chair $100; Box Sprtngs, Mat11ess $35 Set, Sitars Washer
$135, 614-44&amp;-3224.

I,-------------------Instruments

SportI
Goods

Turkey, Archery, Guna Ammo,
Reloading &amp; Frohlng uppllaa,
Uve Bait &amp; Llcanae. ;awlord'·s•

1989 Flr,blrd, T-lopo, V-a, auto,
loaded, $3995. 614-742-2357.

Alvarez,
paid $600,
&lt;1498.

aoats

&amp;

'·

By Phillip

•

Wett

North

1•

a•

'·

East
t•!
Allpass

Alder

··.

Although this is April Fools' Day, today ' s deal really happened as described. It occurred duting the 1953
world championship match between
the United States and Sweden. ·
However. in the spirit of the day,
please read this repqrt with a sense of
humor.
East was Johnny Crawford . He
started the auction with a bizarre
psych. Nonnally if you psych,
do it
on a two- or three-ca.V major suit in
. the hope of stealing the opponents'
_
by.Luls Campos
suit. And there is little sense in psychCtlft)ri(y Cipher eryr:nograma n CNa1.ci from quotstiOM by famous people, p.alt and pt'tllnl'
Eactl'lettet&gt;ln the ~r stands kK another Todoly's clue· 8aqu•Ls D
• ing one club because it takes up no
· bidding space.
· ;XNtfZDYHZX
NIZ
JYGZX
VNNJYXE
Soutll, Nils-Oiof Lilliehook, joined in
by overcalling in his strong three-card
V NT
,DEZYT
VNJJS,
FZNFJZ
heart suil.
Not guessing what was happening,
KYXZ
FZNFJZ
VNT
WZDDZT
DE ,R I
West; Howard Schenken, made a nor!llal response . And North , Gunnar
KYXBNH •
Z~VURWZDE
DE Z Y. T
Anulf, bid what he expected his partner to make. Surprisingly, the conARXGZJJ.
tract wasn't doubled.
Six hearts should always fail, but
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "II ~ou want lo recapture your youth , cut off his
allowance.·- AI_Bemslein.
Schenken found the worst start for the
' defense when he led the club ace.
Declarer ruffed in the dummy, played
a heart to his ace and sneall;ed the
WOlD
_ club jack past West, till dummy's dialAM I
mond king disappeared.
Next came the heart jack to dummy's queen and a low spade to South's
queen, with Crawford correctly discarding. Now Lllliehook led
spade
10 and let Schenken win the trick with
his jack. After this bri!liant play,
LiUiehook was home. He ruffed West's
club-king exit in the dummy, l')llfed a
low spade with his heart king, reSU T 0
turned to dummy with a diamond ruff,
drew Crawford's last trump and ran
the establistlect spades for 12 tricks.
Despite losing their way several
. times on this deal, the United States
· won the _match comfortably.
S H•Y
UK
=,'
~
~
An old timer once told me
that money really does talk . He

Motors

· 6RAMPA WENT -TO THE
UM 'fESTERDA'f ..

for Sale
140hp inboardloulboard MFG ·
boat, good cond., open bOw, wi
co!T1)1ete covers &amp; trailer. S•.ooo. ,
304-882-2326 al1ar Spm.

HE 60T
WITH

IN

A

YoU

WJ.lAT DID

lllAT MEAN'?

SENIOR

TICKET..

1983 Sears~ SRV210 21Ft Cud··'
•
dy Cabin, 350 Motar, All Equip- '
mont included, 61•·446·1783, AI· ,
1er 7 P.M .
·
•

...
FRANK
&amp; EARNEST.·

-

Vifvci 'I
. • I,.,VfNTJON$ ..

· .~ J,~N/I.fPO M

.
-

~

' -.

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER

the

..
~

-

~Hro,T

m YOO t.ClOKI~ ~T ~

II

550

·

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sawer prpes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc: Claude Winters.
R10 Grande , OH Call 6H ·245·
5121.
Mera l Roo li ng And S,~ ding Gal·
vamzed, Galvalume Arid Painted,
614·24§.5193.

1

630

G roqm Shop -Pet Grooming. Featuring Hydro Bath . Julie Webb.
Call614·446.0231
6 Weeks Old Amencan Esk1mo
Spiu Puppies, Call After s. 614245-9033.

AKC .German Shephard, male,
emos old, hOuse broken, exc
pedigree, great temperament
304-875·7071.
1s1

AKC RegtSiered female Cho -

1994 Mercury Couga~R7, va,
32,000tTII., loaded, exc. nd 30•·
_
895-:-32-:-:8-7._ _:-::---:--,--GT 21 000 . 8 11
199• M
ustang
• ·
mt,
power, e•c. cond., $1(1.,200. 304·
_773_·_
54_7_'-_ _ _ _ _ __
1995 Cadillac Seville SLS Dla,
mond White 12.000 Miles, Excellent Condition, Alter 5 P.M. &amp;U.J
_446...;..;
·6;:56.:,5:...·____________

Tobacco Quota . Top P.ric.e, 614 .
24 5- 5419 _
Ll eStOCk
V

93 Plymoulh Sun Dance, 4 cylinder,AutC, Air. 8t.400 milage,
$• 700 obo 614 256 6340 o
61"· 256 •••7.
.
•
r
4·
"''J'9U

Registered Black Angus bull, 3
yrs ., old, son of Cenlury Touch·
stone, 614·698-6561.

640

Pets for Sale

AKC Gold en Retrievers
ahota &amp; wormed, l225ea
458-2574.

620 Want ed !9 B Uy

•

Auto Loans. Deater Will arrange fl..

Hay &amp; Grain

nancing even il you have been
turned down elsewhere. Upton
Equrpment 'used Cars·. 30•·&lt;468069

Square bales of alfalfa hay. l1rst
and s&amp;cond cutting, never wei,
Tuppers Plains, 614-667·6653.

~

ltucks for Sale

Square bales of hay $1. 75Jbale
Round bal~ silage $3!ilbale 304 675-4308.

Home

Improvements

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Au tOS f Or

,.BI.Yf ~T BECJoif.£ I'M. NOT
. ~OlD OOC::iNT JJ£.m

5GP~DI

::ot&lt;\EONE.'!)

purm
C£T ME.'

19890o.D250P' kU V
•
:,
rc - ~8 ,
14

~~Au:IO,::-GIC::',=4,_G7-.:5:=-,6~1::4~4:.;46~=:.._
19g1 Chevy C· 15f;l-Q, V·8 IU·
tomatic,. 85,000 m)lea, sharp
$7500, 614-99.2-4111 .
'

'69 Thunderbird !\C, IWO door, 3.8
litre, v.6 , elite model turbo, PS,
p•es, Champion Bloodline, S~re PB. AC , 5 speed, power seats 1911 Ford Ranger 81 ,000. Milea,
~~- C~tlllod, $250 , e\4-2 45-o- and locks, "Greal Car." -$5200 Elcallent Condition, 15,000, 614...,..,.,....--:-------.,,-.,.--- tl"-!:ll;.·· 614-992-?478 or 614-949· 446-2056.
AKC Rogi,Oiorod Tri-Colored
1994 Ford F150 XLT package,
Cocker Spenle1 .1 Year Old, Fe- 11165 Chevy Impala. $4,000 080. llandard, 8cyl, low milea, good
male, Housebrqktn $ 1 50, 614· 3J 4-8 75- 2158 •• 5
C:Ond. 304-6J&amp;.15Q5.
446-3737.
a.~r P"'
1982 Monle Carlo $1 ,000. 304 882-~ 44 .
L

1994

Ford~ XLT. loW miles,

bad cover, 18,spo.

I

I._

L

I_ I_

I

..1-,r,-.,1,-.,lr--rl-1 Q

,,._

..

.' '
~·'

Complete 1he chuckle quoted

. by filling in the milling words

you develop from Slop No. 3 below.

~

THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS

0H, 1'\ji,N! THAT AWI&gt;N&gt;

V

IS ·fOR NII'\I'ODS!

TO GET

THE. ONLY PEOPLE WIO
E.IIER WIN ME N'I'LE •

LONbRAT\J·

SCRAM-lETS

POUSHIW(:,1• T~t1EI(~

PET GEI!"'S. OH. 1:10
I FEEL~~ FOR '(00!

LATIONS
FOR WHAT~

ANSWER

ANSWERS

Market - Serge - Thief- Detect· GETS to THEM.
My husband always sees the dark s1de of everything He seems to burn his bridges before he GETS
to THEM .

The,Treosure
·sovlncs You'll Find In 11te
. Ckis~(ltd Se&lt;llon.

APRIL 1 I

------~~~~~----·
· ·:
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1tional1ifalime guarantee. ,
Local references furniahed. Call,
(614) 448-0870 Or (814) 237-.
0488 Angers Watarprooling. Es"'.
tat;t!lhed 1975.
: '

'
Appliance Parts
d Service: A11'
Name Brands Ov 25 Yeara Experience All Work Guaranteed
French City May1ag, e14•446:

lncidenl ICC)
Ta~s in

779S.

'.

Asian Ari(CC)

to protect your poshion .
can help you underLIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) TfY !O avoid
stand what to do to make lhe relationship
attempting a complex do-il-yourse~ task
wor1&lt;. Mail $2.75 lo Matchmaker, cJo fhis
today il ~ou haven't tried il before . This
newspaper, P .O .. Box 1758, Murray Hill
will not be the righllime to experiment.
Station, New York, NY 10156.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·N8v. 22) Someone
TAURUS (April 20·M~y 20) Give an
you know will have access to a contact ·•
acqualnlance a chance Ia redeem him or
you need, Even !hough you fllay not like
herself in your eyes today instead of
this individual.' yOu must have her-support
penaliZing lhls person for one lndiscreto make the connection.
lion.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· 0ec. 21) A
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Do nol
domestic problem c;an be !'liSOived inside
demean yourse6 by lhinking that othera
your home today. If ln.taws or relatives
are b.etter than you alJ! today. However,
~into the picture; \he crisis could tum
mi....
~OU alSO ShOUld nol behave as though
1nto a soap opera ,
--.... .... . . . . ,
you Were superior to everyone .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) Try to
CANCER (June 21·Juty 22) You_1)1&amp;Y
associate with people who share your
,
Tuesday Apr!! 2 1996
have a negative aMude early in lhe day __.1ntereats and opinions 1odey. You wilf not
't.
'
and this will cause ever~lhlhg-yolf' feel comfortable at a social ~hel'lng ~ ·
In the year ahead, ·you may be_more will- _ allempU
m.dHllcull FortunalllfY: lhla you haw lo deleiifyourwell.
· AQUARIUS (Jan, »feb, 111 Use cau·
lng 10 aq:ept , ambHious chanenges lhan · outlOOk
you ~vel!een 111 the pest Two especial- LEO (July
lion today yoo,haVf! lo do business with
.

ASTRO-ORAPH

•

!

Pal's Home
nt· ram
doling, roofing, siding, cal181 '4!•
992-3186.
-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron's TV Service, specializing in
Zenith also servicing ·most olher
branda. House calla. 1·8:00· 797·
0015. wv 304-578-2398, .

®

Con1tructlon work, an phases
Addliono. oklino. plultfing, a~.
CO, &amp;yhi~IICI, finllh drywoll, r"'1! '
repolro, Installing, wlndowa. 30oiJ
87!&gt;8!102.
'

840 Electrical and

614-~-6308.

wvooa.s.

· ;.

~

R~tl:;ld~ltl:::;:1ia:;I-::O&lt;:-:-co:-:m::-.m-te..:r_c:....:•I:-:Jt:,-n-g..4f• ~"

new urvlce or

~Ira.

u,, , ·.

cenaed electrician. Rld•nour' ' ':
Eloctrlcsl, WV000308, 30H7s! ' • "

1781.

'

.. .. · ;

'l

I

,.

~ PRINT NUMBERED lETfERS IN

.' .

lAWRENCEENTE~PRISES ' ' ' "
Hoot Pumpa,~ ~ir Conditioning, 11 • ' 1
You Don'! Call Uo We Bo!lt Looel ' "
f&lt;te Ellimatoa, 1-800-2111 -0098- - ·-

Buy or aell. Rivlfine ntiquta,
1124 E . Main Strati, on Rt 124,
Pomaro;. Houro : II.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 e:oo p.m., Sundly 1:00
e:oo ...m. 814-992-25211.

., -'

1-.

IMONDAY

-;:;:RSE;:::oS,~CE;:;RTif:;;:::E::::D::::D~EALE~R,..- ,, ' '

Ailtlqu

...

I I fI

., ROTERM
~.-.
1.-.1---L-~-:--.JL-...L---J

..

• Refrigeration

1984 Audi 4000 F~r Parts $500·
1978 Porche 924, Runs, To Re:
• .,. $1,000, 814-258-67110.

.,

r--=-=~'"":--::-"':':"-.., also said it never made any

-'""-''

1~ae Chavy 112 Ton V-6, PS, PS,
All, Auto, $6,495, 614-448-4225
Call Alter • P.M.

Sale

79 Ford LTI&gt; II, runs good, roomy, great work carl $1200, 61&lt;742·2497
"'

··'

I FI

Wanted To Buy . Large Round
Bales 01 Hay &amp; Square. Bates,
614-448-1052.

At&lt;C Registered Ron Weller Pup-

AKC Reg1s1ered, Show Quality
Male Cocker Spaniel Puppy,
Good Bloodline, Excetlent' Marktngs, Black !White &amp; Tan In Color,
Date 01 Birth. 8131195, Houssbroken, 614-379-2728.

$10

'

J

....

OffiiKD 'f!JJ..T CU1JI&gt;JK?YOO fo1C.

Campground Uembarshlp In·
eludes All Major Affiliations,
Nearly 500 ResOfts, S•.oo !Night,
USA &amp; Canada, Sacrifice. $42$," •
1-800·236-«!28.
.

SERVICES

.

NA C C L E

.

$13,000. 304·675-2219.

.....

t...--+--+-

·'

, ,,

_'1i)ur

)..:I_..

w

inltmentwhlch Involves your ma e
· ily thai you will pick a lemon WiN be high.
ARIES (March 21 ' Aprll 111 You may tlrsl gelling hiS or her approval.
· • ASCES (t'ell. :zo.March 20)' foday you
lecl aavaral ~our responslbii~VIRG~(Au
."23· 8ept: 21) Do not be
may
to •
a peraon who
Y,limpty ~II
. ~ ~ ~ to
nge _your mind today W after_ • negative lind dlftlc:ult to pleue. Do not
be Inconvenienced. ¥ upay ave ·to ~ing ~anu,ation, you feel you've
181 hla or htlr moodiness dempen your
alruggle to regain lo8t g und.
ing to
a
dellillion. It will be important ljllriiS.
'

deitce 011er aN the others.

have

.
•
'

7 6 4
7

.·?".

B1 H
R
T 'il
,roy 11 orse oto· 1 er,
E•c•ll¥nt COndiljon, $500; Staral
Lime Spreader, Drag Harrow,
Planter SSO Each; Horse Drawn
•A• Frame Drag .Harrow $50 ;
Sears Brush Whacker With Saw
Blade Trimmer 5125 , 304 _525 _
5165, 304-523-01!60.

to Milllllry abbr.

'

.

T

lhltnutlvlnt
( 2 -.)

38Y-..Nimon

This is true

1

Three 10 speed bicycles, good
condition : 5100 lor all, 614 -992·
5053
·
While tubulat steel bunk beds, full
&amp; tw1n, bought at Ingels, $275.
614·992·6833.

7 BlbUc:.t prdlll1

a Marall plant .
t Comp181nint ·

8 Hymnot

Opening lead: • A

-----------1

Hendetaon, WV.

530

$ARNEY

614-98!5-'1 -:-:-:::--'-:--::----::~-,:...,...-.I
1991 Dodge Daytona 2.5 .4 Cylin1989 Criss Cralt Cuddy Cabin; •
der, AC, PL, AMIFM cueette,
19', 305 V-8, 200hp, outboard, '
Black Ibanez RGSSO wlfloyd Good Condition, High Mileage, sharp, ,7900 obo, coU Ron Coaci :
EleCtric
Scooters
And Rose tremolo. $250 . 304 -875- 814.38a.B 159.
.
-'-6::1•::·99~2-.;;2290.;..:.;.;:·'::-:::::-~':':""7:"'"-'
Wheelchairs, New /Used, Van J 502-7.
--:Car Lil!lnstallacf, S!airglides, Li11
1991 Gran Prix, '7,'100. 304-8751995 Polaris SL7SO 2 Life Vesll,.
Chairs. Call For Brochure. 614· Bundy Clarinet Good condU1or,, 5375.
&amp; Trailer, Still Under Warranry,
446-7263
$275, 61~·448-7273.
814·448·7518.
'
1991 Mustang GT with aunrool,
Console Ptano, Responsible Party Ti!anium frostWi111 blatk ir&lt;orlora 25 HP Sea Kmg And 7.5 HP
Exerc:ise equipJmtll. stair stepper Wanted To ~ake · ~ow Monthly speed, PB. PW, P$, PM. POL. air,
Sears Motors Both Run Good, 1
$4ll. Body by Jake $75 . ExerciSe Payments On P1ano. See locally. lots or extras. 58,000 rnles, excef.
614·446·1881 .
b1ke $15 Se.ars Alpine Tracker 1·800·268-6218.
lenl cond111Dn , $9800, 61•·g49·
$80. 304-875-6787.
760 Auto Parts &amp;
'
221 7 anylime .CONSOLE PIANO
j
Accessories
free Sp~rit Bike 10 Speed. 27.
responsible party wanted to
1991 Olds , Cutlass Calais,
Inch For Sao, 614-4.6-4385.
rnak&amp; to~ montNy J:ayrftentl on
128,000n11. , 5spd, 4cyl, sunroof,
New gas lanka,· one lon lruck
pi,no,
eeolocally.
Caii1-80Q.268air,
am-1m
caseelle,
$4,000.
304_.s,
radiators. floor mall, etc.
Hardwood mulch, potting soil, i'&lt;J6218.
675-2949 after 5:!0.
D &amp; R Auto; Ripley, WV. 304.372, ,
mus, 3 bOllsi$5. Cypress mulch,
pine bark mulch, 2 bagsl$5 Sale Export Series Pearl drum kit, 1991 Oldsmobile Silhouette, air,
3933ot 1·800-273-9331.
,
ends · April 13 . .Paint Plus 304 .~ $550,014-742-3513.
au10matic, PS, PB. IIery nice but
·-'
!
needs some minor repairs, must TransmiSIJOn will Fit 1981 · 19~1- '
675-4084 .
see to ;ppreciale, too many ex·
Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Or Buitk ~ ~
JET '
FARM SUPPLIES
vas ro "st. W1ll sacrirlc~ for S6000
614-446-2781.
'
AERATION MOTORS
&amp; LIVESTOCK
080. Call -814 -992-8822. 614Used Auto PariS: Don't Be Swe~&gt; :'
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
-:-992:-::-64-::38::-:,-::81_4-::-7-42--2259-:-::-·-"
j ----::::-· .I Away By High Prices, Call Dray;a•
Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537-9528.
1988 Butck Regal Sporty Cor,
Todaj,614-446-4924.
610 Farm Equipment
1988 s -10 Pick-Up, 1990 s -10
790 Campers &amp;
Phonics reading game. never
P1ck-Up, Trades Welcome, .cook
used, $200. 304-675-4075.
Ford 9N Tractor .With 5' Finish Motors, 614-446-0103.
Motor Homes
Mower, W1ll Sell Separate, 614·
Portable sOwing machine, Hobart 446·1881 .
1992 Chevy lumina, tow miles,
14' Sunline Loaded. Good Condi ..
e•c cond., $8,000. 304·576·2825
meat saw, Gravely SJckle bar, Me·
tion, $2.200; Or Trade Misc. 614- •
Cullough leal blower, 614·992· Gehl Round Balers, Mower Con· or 304·576·2972.
448-3334 Aher 5 F!M.
'
3079, 614·985~4'!9 morn1ngs.
diti oners, Disc Mowers, Disc: ---------~------~
Mower Conditioners, Forage 1992 convertible, Chrysler le
1W'77 Prowler 20' , 1977 WllderRefrigerators, Stoves. Washers Equ ipmenl Salis And Servlc~o ..l Baron, exc. cond .. $10,000. 304·
n~ss 24', 1973 Holiday Rambler
And Dryers, All Recondt!loned Allizor Farm , Sup ply, 614-245- _67_5-_6_7_87_-:-:--....C..~- 23', 1973 Ple,etwOod 17', 1982
,And Gauranteed! $100 And Up, 5193
Jaycee· Pop-Up 18· 1f2' Pontoon
Will Deliver. 614-1169-11441.
.;...;...:...
· ...,...,.....,,-------'----'- 1992 Ltncoln Continental Lealher
24' N•ce, 1899 McCormick Road,
MassJ ie~gusoR Late Model Moon Roof Key less Entry 614· 614-446- 151 't
SPRIN'G SPECIAL : Central Ai r 2t65 Trac1or With Loader , 441·0738.
Conditioners 2 Ton $1,195; 2 112 S7 ,995; 65 Massey · Ferguson _..:._:.;_:____________
1918 Tarks 22' travel tra11ef ' :
Ton 11,295; 3 Ton $1 ,395; 3 112 New MD tor $3,995; 35 Massey 1993 Ford Mustang LX, 2 door,
13000,
614·992-5641 .
.
Ton $1,595; 4 Ton $1 ,695; Prices Fecguson$3,695;.614·~522.
hatchback, very low miles, 4 qt.
1993 Du1chman 32 Ft. 51h Wheel 0
Above Include Normal Instal Ia·
automatic , will sell for loan, 814Travel Tratler Used Once, Load:
tlon. Full 5 Year Warranty, Free MF 35 ctieseJ •deluxe 3cyl, ps, 2 992-4H1
Estimates, 1·800-291 -0098 : 614:_.J-;;jif.';i.';;;,;· live power, spin out ::---:---:-:-:-::-'-::--- ed, Serious lnqutries ontv. After 3'
·
&amp; palnl $4,500. For Sale :t993 Ford Tempo Gl, F!M.614 441-1358,
,
446 _6308
loaded. 36,000 mi., AMIFM cat·
1994 lnns~rook. lully loaded, loll'
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
sene. Ca11 aller 2:00 . 814-?45of ex!l'as, 18ft Serious inquiries •
Upnght, Ron Evans En1erprises, New Holland 56 Ha~rake: EXcel· 5321,
Ja~son, Ohio, .1·800-537-9528
~t8 ~ondillon. $15~0 . 814·379- -1-99_3.._N_r.s-sa_n_2_4_0_S_X_,-34-,-00_0_m_l_
.. only. 304-875-6903.
Diamond aluminUm truck toolbo•.
$-12_5:...,6_1_4-_7_42:...·3_5_1_3.______ .

co1a1e Lab, $200 : AKC Registero~ lemale Chihuahua, $300:
Solid oak china cabinet, S10Q firm. Visa, Maat&amp;i'Card accepted, 614·
304-675-2747.'
· 992-11244 ·
·
vrRA FURNITURE
814·446-3158
QuaHty Household Furrlo"e &amp;nd

South

1991 350 Warrror S3,000 080:
· 1!Q.? 250 TimbetWDII $2,300 DBO
Call After 4 P.M. 61,.:.379-2114.

750

: ~=J':r-

34 Bonglllie

31 Chant
:JT Effect

. Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

1985 But&lt;k, $1800: 1988 Pontlac
Bonneville, $3200; riding mower,
$400; 614-11411-2526.
1986 Fordlaurua GL, pw, c;ruiM,
1994 Honda • '""' 4--r
air, low miles, $ 2,600 . 3o 4.a 7s.
1 lOW roora, $3,800. 304-773-5112' .:
11!65.
'
1995 Yamiha 350 ·Big Betlr, ...:
like New, 25 MileS. f,t,SOO, 61.,
1987 ChCI\Iy Celebrll)', Good Cond1tion, 614-48-3523.
387-7540.
' •
1987 Porache 9•45 , black with
1 · 1 · "8k mil
1 ;sn •n enor, u
es, m nor "'"
front damage, 18 valve molar,
$6500
11 61 .. 949 2311 d
' ca
aya,
614-949-2644 eweningl.
1988 Mercury Cougar Xl,Joaded,
Ps, PB. AC, PW, 302 , new !ires,
automatic, $3'iOO, 614 ' 949 · 2045
or&amp;14-949-2&amp;79.

3~

21 - maclllne

32 CoiiiiYPI

• J 10 5 2
•1098853

•Q 9
•Q J

1991 Harley Davidson 1200 CD
Sporlller 7,000 Milos, Like Now,
Blue $7,800. 814-448·9355 After
• P.M .
•

Schnauzer pupptes,
.,
Champion Grand Sire ·, also
dies, lr'!tle toys, AKC . shols
wormed, 614-667-34ll4.

1 c.tnll.&amp;l bur
2 Dance costume

•A K J

saoo.

1968 Camero, nice shape, 327 2
sp transmission, garaged last 12
~5~~ 14• 1&lt;42· 3 ~90 or 814 · 742·

·-u73

•Q 10

MotOI'CJ!'dea
Honda 200 Big Rod 3whtefer, altctric atar~ ~1-iow now
tlreo.
304-875-2074.

71 0 Autos for Sale

24 BtmUII27 Slngt With
c~IIPI

South

740

Pets for

:rc:r·

Vonnegut
58 . . ,
110 Non-p.21 C"~ anlm11t II S.. ,.,_...,.
23 - C .. l,., Wlt.
DOWN

Eut

•A IS
•A K 4 2

t985 ford 150 Van, Futl Size, '4
CIQtllna Chairs !Bed, Good Con•
dillon, $1 ' 500 OBO, e 14-44"
1975.
'

560

AUIII e
.
Golllcoiw
RamM 102

,. H8loe
111 Swallow

.

·---

••

t l f 5 p m l -.

I

!;;~~~;~:;;~~::
446~-o;;;78;-1;.-;;;;;,~~:7,;,;;;;;. 560
14x60 2
No Pets, 1 Mil e
References, 614·256-6089.

West
•J 9 7 4 3

1982 Chevy Astro Converalon
Von, 41,000 mifea, 4.3 V-8, auto.
loaded, 4 o:aplain 10111 l bench;
new llres, oerage kept, mull ....
uking $10,900, 8,.·DMI-248t af. .......______

"'· &amp; ..,.lker. 004-875-4S48.
'" Good Home Only: 3 Year
Baseball Card Collection For Male Black &amp; Wh ite Coc:ke'r
Sale, 614·2•5· 5599 leave Ues· Spaniel, AKC Registered,
sage
Sire, 614-379-2728.
·
Booll By Relfwing, Chippewa, Pup111 Palace Kennels, Boarding.
Tony lama. Guaranteed lowest Stud Service Puppies, Grooming,
l'ficeo AI Shoe Call&gt;, Gallipolrs.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, A11 B•eeds .
Payments
We lcome . 614-:3881 - l
8 rass F1re Extinguisher 614 - 0429.
448--0026.
.Registered
Carpet &amp; Vin 1-stliO: Mo ohan 01a, 2 Blue
Carpet~ 61
-7444 Rt 7 N.
Male · shots: Worme~d·i:.·s-,4 : 446:-1
ttl
7490.

=

•K

,

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

Appliances :
Recondition8d
2 Bedroom ~.O!.fSG, 2 Bedroom washers. Dr.yers, Ranges, Refri·
Trartler In Galllpolls, 8 14· 446·8849 · graters, 90 Day Guarantee!
Fo lnformahon.
French City Maytag, 614 _446 .

Two bedroom hOme in Pomeroy,
HUO approved, $300 With deposit,
no pets, Will sell on contract, 61 4·
698-7244.

Mobile Homes

MERCHANDISE

RENTALS

EEK&amp;MEEK

61~4·-~- 4;;4::6-t;;:;::::::;;:::::=::::;:::==:f"'::======:;:::::=:'f1983

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bEtdroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middleport From $232-$355 . Call 614992.-5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunUies.

149 acre farm , Rutland area, 614- One bedroom efficienc:y aparted half .........
men~ 614-992-2178.
742·1326.
SR 124, 8
Pt Pleasanl, n1ce location, unfurbridge. Available for occupancy 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
nished 2bedroom, ground floor,
May 1. can 614·843·51 80 afler
7pm.
108.5 acres in Me1gs County, le· stove &amp; refrigerator. Lease, de·
posit &amp; referanns. 304 ·615·
Moving out of lhe area, musl sell I . banon Twp. Call Gordon at 614 ·
6902.
596
255
2 story, 3bedroom, 1 112baths
·
1.
$25,000 ..304-675-39~.
-20-ac-re-s-.-,9-~-3-m_o_b-::ile-:-h-om-e-.-:-,,.-e Twin Rivers Tower. now accepting
res1dent1a l gas , gas producing application&amp; lor 1br. HUD subsid 3 Bedroom Home ~ 8 Island Ave· well, Home Nabonal BaJlk. Rac1ne, ized apr. lor elderl~ and hand•·
capped. EOH 304-675-6679.
nue, Kaf&gt;auga, Fenced Yard, Sell ,Oh. 614-949-2210.
As Is. Needs Minor Repair, No
Upstairs Apar1ment 'In Gallipolis,
Land Contract $22;000 61'4-446- Bu1ld1n9 sites with road lrontage, $200 Deposit, S2251Mo., 814-448bac~ of Naw Haven, rural water,
1207 9 A.M. -5 P.M.
.
and financmg available. 304 -882· 71:i&lt;l, 614-446-2130.
3 Bedroom Ranch, 1 8a. Garage, 2686
450 · Furnished
New Windc'I'Ei. 121t16 Deck,
aerator, near
10JC16 Storage Build1ng, Green F1we acres,
Rooms
Racihe,$16,000· can finance with
Twp. 614-446·8695
hal~down, 614-949-2025
Rooms for rent - week' or month.
3 ~room, 2 Bath Ranch, ~am1IV
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hotel.
Room, 112 Mile Off R1.7, Georgas Lot For Sale : 2 Acres, 2 Trailer 614·446-9580.
Creek Road, $52,900 814-446- Hook-Ups, Between Bidwell. Porter &amp; Cheshire, 614·367-7010.
Sleeping rooms With cooking.
7881 .
Also trailer space on river. All
3-Cbr., corner lot, close 10 school, Scen1c Valle~. · Appl e Grove, hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m..
Syracuse. 24x40 block garage, beautifu l 2ac lors~publi c wate r, 304· 773·5651, Mason WV
C~de Bowen Jr.. 30•'~6-2336 .
heal pump 614-992-5315.

Nice home in Racine, large build· 2~oorn ho~sa 304-875-t:t\1~

OpportunHy

230

This newspaper wll not
. knowllngly accept
·actvenlsements for real estate
wltlolt " In vlolallon of lho law.
Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that allrtwell"98
adVenised in !his newspaper
are available on an equal
owcrtunlly basis.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1979 Cadillac, new tires, needs
some work. Two used mobile
homes. 304·675·5050 or 304~
675-2445.

Gowrn

F..---z
D1~ a td (an)

mTTIU,..

N
M-01-M
•A K I 8 52
•Q10t542

1tG1 Ford Expio!Wf Spofl 4x4, 4.0
V-a, two door, atanderd, air,
ctuisa, sun roof, loaded, mu11
IH, 6,4·9·49·2481 after spm I '
u nllnda.

1e Ft. x8 Ft. Flatbed Tilt Trailer,
1e Ft. Cor Hauling Trailer $700
Eacn, 614-.US.9575.

pr AUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
uUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

· Ateaa to P10uh • Jllualll

llldlr!ft.
IOUnde
15 FIMI1111 ~- ··57 Holclln cMck
17 Prfnter'a
58 AUIIIOr

1880 ilodgo Ram Van 8-2!50,
72.000 Mlloa, S8,000 , Can Bo
s.tn AI: GaHipofla Doll~ Trlbun'O,
825 Third Avenue, Gollipolla

.

·

u=:ncan. ::::=... .

12

oeo,

Ohio.

u

44
•
41
53

• c.n. ,.....

1889 Full SIN XLT 414 Bronco,
Tow Pac~. 302, 88,000 Mlleo;
Mint Condition. $9,500,
814,
387-7755.

15 Inch Fallago1as $peakero &amp;
Box 1150: •oo Wotl Hollhot
Amp. Wllh RCA Cablu, $80 ;
Sherwood CD Plo~e r $150 '
Winc:heater 12 Ga. 1300
Dofander llodel 8 Shot, $150 ;
Wlnchlltar 12 Ga. 37P Model
Singleai'OL SilO, 814-'171H!B39. '

Aparrmenr 1 Bedroom,
Ulililles Pa1d, 920
Gallipolis, 614·

a;m;

t

1QxB5 Mobile Home Gttet For
S!onlge, Shop, Or Office, $1 ,500.
614-440'-205&amp;.

3 Room Apartment. Trash Paid,
NO PETS. On 554 Near PollOI,
614·38&amp;1100.

1 ~--

1t11 Ford Ranger STX 4
E x - Cab. Auta. Ill;, L-.:
Excollont Condilion, 17,5110, Noo.•
Attw 5 F!M. 81 ...2!11-11257.
,

noco, 110:000 BTu•a, Upflow
t250: 3 Ustd Eltctric Furnac11
I 5KW. :!OKW, 25KW. 1 Ulld 3
Ton Rheem tieat Pump, 1-800·
217-e301, 814-448-6308, 1-800281-&lt;tON,

2 Bedroom Apartment On Firat

L.,., OH Form, Syracuse, wfl be
~cepring: applicattona for horae-

614-446-3358. .

'*'·

0WDa .t

Anolr

41 Wa dan tuti

, I loo Itt nun
1
IIIICIO,.

wr"

1 UIOd Coltman Dawn Flow Goa
Fumoco, 71),000 BTU'S. Compfola
USO; 1 Ustd Johnson Gao Fur·

2 bedroom -tment in l'omerOI',

730 Yin&amp; &amp;

~ 11

ACROSS

PHILLIP
I

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By·The Bend

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-Th:e D.aily Sentinel
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P8ge 1~

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~lert

Beat of the
Bend .. ~
.

ttS women: .Watch ·y0ur Social $ecurity

f

~·

·By Ed Peterson
Social Security
by Bob Hoeflic~
Manilger, Athene
.
Women need to be es~cially alert
to their Social s~urity rights and
responsibilities
to get the most ou1 of
As it turns ovt, only .ffco~~u~rf;!~~~ Ambler, PA, 19002.
In her communication, Mrs. Reit- their Social Security protection.
are planning the annual r.
man
comments that .she graduated Although Social s~urity is the same
Hiah School Aluinni reunion which
from Pomeroy High School in 1941 . for men and women, difference in
has been set for Saturd~y, May 25.
. The happy four who meet regu- and returned to Pomeroy for the 50th lifestyles and work patterns that charlarly to lay pl,ans Vfr the reunion anniversary reunion of her class in -acterize the genders can mean difinclude Diane VanCooney ,Lynch, 1991. At that reunion, she says she ferent Patterns of Social Security ben·
Marilyn Swan Anderson, Charlene , heard that classes hold reunions ~ efits and coverage.
For
eKarnple,
women
are
more
Davis Batey and Marilyn Stumbo every five years and if so, this year
likely
to
qualify
for
benefits
on
the
Meier. Knowing all four of them, I will be the 55th reunion. However,
feel confident they'll get it all togeth- she states that"she has no way or basis of their h11sband's earnings
knowing any details so that she can than men are. to qualify for benefits
er--and will do it well .
There are scholarships involved at plan to attend this year's -reunion. on their wife's earnings. Women may
Middleport and I'll let you know - Therefore , I hope Mrs. Reitman can qualify for spouse's benefits, mother's
about them and how you go about be sent the proper communi&gt;alions benefits, widow's benefits or a
making applications as soon as I so that she can amble in from di vorced spouse benefit. This means
that women need to be aware of how
Ambler for the 55th reunion. ·
receive the information.
Meantime, the "committee" wants '
G. Harold Martin, 94-year-old
alumni members 10' know that there retired attorney, writes that he, too,
are places to stay overnight in Meigs would like information on this year's
\
County these days for alumni trav- reunion. Martin states that he has an
eling a distance to attend the reunion. announcement to make during the ·· By JACK GARNER
The committee suggest the . Meigs banquet which will be "big news for
Gannett News Se.r vlce
Pomeroy". It will be interesting to
Motel or Holly Hill Inn.
lames Earl Jones's deep, rumsee
what
that
announcement
is.
He
The comrnittee also would like
bling voice is probably the most
the public to know that the alumni would like to get in touch with the
famous set of pipes on the planet.
assqciation is open to all Meigs High . president of the Pomeroy Alumni
Who elsli co'uld make "This is
School graduates who would actual- Association so that he can arrange
CI':/N" souti.d so good or Darth Vad· ly have graduated from Middleport for live minutes on the program the
er sound so evil?
High School had it not been for con· evening of the banquet, which is also
But did you know Jones has
solidation of which the Middleport May .25. He would also like other
fought a life-long battle against stutschools were a part. If you're' inter- pertinent information pertaining to
tering? He hasn '·t let it be part of a
ested, just contact one of the four this year's all-school reunion.
character he's played until he acting
committee members for any inforIncidentally, I have a $10 c h~ck . in his latest film, "A Family Affair."
from Martin made out to the
mation.
"I stuttered a bit in the script readPomeroy .Alumni Association. He
through. " Jones says, "And the
Meantime, I've··tost track of, the has noted that the check is for
director (Richard Pearce) thought it
Pomeroy ·High School Alumni Asso- "dues". I will be h'appy to~orward it . would be a gbod way to show vulciation for the time being. I've inher- to .whomever if the designated pernerability in a guy who's a tough cop
ited a couple of problems and I am son will give me a call. Thanks.
. and a former marine."
at a loss as to whom I should contact ·
Jones talked about it during inter- ·
about them. So--I'll lay them out here .
!=harlene says spring is about to · views on a recen.t Sunday ·ii\ Manhattan.
and hope that the p~oper persons really happen because the bug count
respond to the 'requests.
is increasing. And some of you
In "A Family Thing," Jones plays
A letter arrived from Ruth Thorn- thought that robins were the key.
Ray Murdock, the black brother that
ton Reitman, 513 Loch Alsh Ave., Shame. But do keep smiling.
Robert Duvall's'character is shocked

Social s~urity trCats them as workers, wives, widows, divorced wives,
and mothers.
·
'
rr you chose to be a homemaker.
. y_ou are covered under Soci,al Secunty lhr9ugh ~ou~ husblll!d s work.,..
When the f~ly Income IS reduced
~ca~~ of his retirement, death :or
dtsabtllly, you may quahfy for Soctal
Secunty benefi~ at_age_ 62, at any age
tf you h~v~ mmor children m your
care r~etvtng ,benefits, or as early as
age 60 -~ a wtdow, or from age 511:
59 as ~ dtsabled wtdow. However, .af
you d1vorce after less than ten years
of marriage, this prot~tion is not
avatlable to you.· ,
.
If you chose a career outside the
home--about60 percent o(all women
do--you earn Social S~urity protecUOIJ&gt; of your own for yourself and
yoor family. If you die or become dis-

•

abled, yqur children get . benefits, ull~r age 24. .
· . ,
•
until they're 18, or l'i if still in schoo).
·n you qualify for benefits both ¥
Your husband eould also qualify for a spouse an~ as a worker, you aet tlie
benefits on your earning!.
higher Of the 'IWO. That is, you &amp;i t
If you alternate between a career , your own benefit plus tl1e' differenci:'
and homemaking, you_need· to be between the two. Whether to tak~ J
aware that you can maintain your full benefit on your own earnings or a
Social Security protection with a lit- spouse's benefit may he more calli- ,
tie auention. Any Social Security plicated than that, however. Ftir
widow';
credits you earn remain on your example, if you take a
record, !lfld after te!l yeais of work in benefit at the earliest possible ag~• .
which you have earned the maximum age 60, il.is reduced to 71.5 percerit
of four credits e'\Ch year, you are ful - of the worker's l)enefit. But if yop
Jy insured for retirement, disability, take it at age 65, yo11 gel I00 percent
and survivois benefits. But for dis- of the deceased worker's benefit. ·
The important thing· is tl:!at you
ability benefits, yoo also need to' have
r~ognize
the need to stay on top of
recent work. For eKample. if you're
your
Social
Security protection. For
.
over 30, you , ne"!! the maximum
amount of credits for five out of the more information, call Social Seculast .10 years (20 credits). Younger rity at its toll-free humber, 1-8@.
workers need less, as little as six 77N213.
credits for a year and a half of work

Jones uses .adifferentpart of his voice in 'Family Affair'

-Community

calendar~

'

He says it ~tarted in South Africi. .
to learn he has.
• and " A.Family Thing" provide ,the
Jones says . Murdock carries actor with his largest and most rich' Where protests were organized on ~
painful memories within himSelf, ly textured roles since 1970's "The theory that the casting of Jones and
"so they crop oot once in a while." ~ Great White Hope," .
Richard }iarris "took work away
"Cry, the Beloved Country" has from South Africans." In r~ality, it
Thus, Murdock stutters, at least a
little.
drawn small audiences in its limited got the film made and created a lot
")thought it was.a gOOd idea, as. runs. Al~otigh he contributed the . of jobs in supporting roles and on me
'
·
· long as we wouldn 'I make fun of a most moving portrayal of his life as crew.
stutterer," Jones says.
the SoutH African priest at the cenJones says he was ·attracted nex.J
"lt's one .of the most agonizing ter of Alan Paton's classic tale, to "A Family Thing" "liecause it
· things for a child," he says. "And it Jones.received no Oscar nomination. .was a good .script. It's not about race,
The oversight is among those cit- it's about family."
usually surfaces jus! at the point
when they 'ro trying to express thein- ·ed by protesters who argued thallhe
And, he says, to the extent that it
selves ." ·
.
Academy of Motion Picture ArtS and
addresses
race, "it does it ip a very
. Jones can re1J1ember childhood Sciences too often igno~s the work
gentle
way.
" H,e liked the way the
bible classes, back in Arkabutla, ·of black talent; of course, the film's
Miss. "I'd say som~thing, and the lack of commercial impact might film follow,s each of the two brothers "as tliey explore who they realother 1\ids would laugh."
also have been a factor.
Of course, nobody 's laughing
Jones was nominated, though, ly are."
today, not when Jones is recognized for a Screen Actors Guild award.
Jones' two most recent films
as one of the most powerful characHe doesn 'I know why "Cry, the focus on brotherhood and racial to!- '
ter actors on stage and .screen.
Beloved Country" has faHed lo get erance; does that mean the actor
Jones, 65, is in the midst of a the attention it deserves. "Some ill believes movies can make a change
fruitful period. His two most recent ..wind just carne along with that pro- in society?
·
films, "Cry, the Beloved Couri!ry" ject."

THE OSCAR
NOMINATED...

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SUOAFED
30 lAG Tablets-24's

EMPLOYEE HONORED • Minch Employee of the Month Debbie Beegle, RN, CCRN, of the lntem~lve Care Unit, ls_congratulat-.
ed by Chirle1 I. Adkins, Jr., preslderlt and CEO.

or 12 Hour CapletS·

o·s. Bonus Size

1

~~
t~&amp;

1.

ACTIVE STRIPS

Assorted Types
&amp; Sizes, 10 io 45

ORALB

I FOR

INDICATOR

p

Count

SO'il More Freel

TOOTHBRUSH
Assorted Types

I!!

Beegle named HMC .
'Employee of Month'
),

Deborah Kay Wood Beegle, RN, .
CCRN, of the Intensive Care Unit,
has been named Holzer Medical
Center's March Employ~e of the ·
Month. .
.
.
~
A graduate of Eastern High\
School, Beegle joined the hospital as
a staff nurse Sept. 9, 1972, later graduating from the Holzer School of
Nursing in 1974. From 1978 to 1982,
she served · as nurse manager on ·2
East, a float nurse and staff nurse on
2 West-from 1982to 85. She has been
a full time Intensive Care illlrse since
1985.
As one of the first nurses at HMC
to qualify for the Career Ladder as a
Clinical Nurse 4, Beegle is a preceptor fot new JCU staff members.
In 1989, she ~arne certil'id as a
critical care nuise
recei vcd her
rei:ertificatiO'nin 1 and 199S. She
served as staff n

•

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the Holzer Hospital Fo.undation
Board i&gt;f Trustees from September
ALMAY ·
L'OREAL
MENTADENT
TOOTHPASTE,
CASTING ·
1990 to Mareh 1991.
AMAZING
EYE
HAIR
COLLECTION
I
Her other activities include
,
M~WASH
COLORANT
Allot1ed 'IYI&gt;ts "
tilt"
·
ORTOOTH·
ingthe Women's Health Month
Assorted Shades
BRUSH
.
off Committee in 1992 and ca··Ch:atr-1
.
Auofted Types
ing the month-long celebration
'
...
1993 ..She h.as also served as Nurse
----------------~
RITE AID PHOTO FINISHING COUPON
flope and board m!Anber for the
lia COiiiifyt:Jnit of theAmerican
YOUR
I
cer Society.
.
r.t\n.INT
1
Debbie and her husband, Bill, '
have 'three children, Bruce, 15, Brent,
[;"a '
14 and Becky, 12.
~- I
As March Employee of the
~-:£-I
!i
I
Month, she received a$100 U.S. Sav- :
ings Bond, a special parking place
I
designated in her name, a complimenhtary meal in the hospital cndafete- . L _...
__ .J
na, . er, pacture in the lobby a her
·1:1
.or the._Rl"*e
A
. ld·Cr
0 'harm'""'Y ....;u.r·
name engraved on the 1996 plaque,
r.r
•·
...., • ..,...
also displayed in the hospital's main . you, calll-800-21-t-RITE.
lobby.
,
L,;;;.....;..__________.__'!"-.,..~~-~-'!"'"'!..;..·;...·_

e

r

2 FOB

~'¥~-·
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Vol. 48, NO. 231

Clouely tonight, low In

30a. Waclnetday, aunny •
High ln70..

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35A BlnMtt Co. New•prpw

PomerQy-Middleport, ~hlo, Tuesday, Ap;ll2, 1996

1. aacllol~ 10 ,..._

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Southern ponders new try at bond·issue ·
The jloard received offers from community members to help pay the
B,y
. FREEMAN
·
.
·
· Senti I News Staff
$3,600 cost of a special et~tion, Lawrence said. The board wiD have to decide
Vo
in the Southern School Districl may get a feeling of deja vu by by May 21 if·it wants to put the issue before voters again.
no .
·
·
If the bond levy is put on a special ballot, it will represent the fourth attempt
It now appears likely that a·proposed ·6.1-mill bond levy issue will be to lake advantage of the state building program.
lh recent history, building issues have not fared too well in the district.
placed before voters on a special ballot on Aug. 6, following a special meet~
mg of the Southern Local Board of Education at the high school Monday · In November 1985 and in November 1992, building issues failed l)y 2-to-1
night.
margin·s. March's defeat was by a narrower margin, I 04 votes.
·
Lawrence also presented the district's financial conditiQn and explained
District citizens rejected ari identical issue on March 19 that would fund
construction of a new, district-wide K-8 elementary school and additions and some of the problems facing the district.
A program that removed asbestos from the high school will cost $12,000
renov11tio.ns to the existing high school.
.
The measure failed by slightly more than I00 votes, while a similar issue . each year for ,the next20 years. Also,' switching to gas furnaces at the schools,
an action Lawrence said was urged by Ohio · Environmental Protection
· in the Eastern Local School District passed by a slim margin.
Although the school board took no action•on the matter, the consensus, Agency, will cost about $60,000 a year for the next 10 years.
Heating costs at the high school have about doubled, Lawrence said, part· according to Superintendent James Lawrence, was it be put back on the bal·. ·
·
. lot to take advantage of state building construction funds. set to expire this ly due to the removal of the asbestos insulation .
· year.
. "The only thing between the second floor classrooms and the roof is the

.
.
dropped ceiling," he noted.
Other problems are insurance inc"rea'sej , textbook·replacement, bus replacement, a bad roof at the junior high building and payments to the state loan
(und program. ·•
•&gt;
.
This year the district owes $242,000 from an earlier loan and $93,500 for
the next two years, Lawrence said.
.
The hope is that a new. efficient school building would cost less w·oper•
ate and not need costly repairs or renovations fat years.
The board has made s01ite cuts, he added.
·
In 1993 an&lt;l 1994, the· board cut half of a math teaching position, elimi. nated a bus route, a custodial posi1ion and fout reserve coaching positions,
and two teaching positions- were filled by beginning teachers, saving a total
of $109,674, he said .
Last year, the board closed Racine Elementary School for a savings of
$72,454 and cut three teaching positions - one of which was restored due
to the size of this year's kindergarten class.
·
.
(Continued on Page 3)

i Comrr-issioner,s

veto
boat launct)· job bid

By JIM FREEMAN
· Sentinel New• Staff ·
.
,
.
,
The Meigs County Board of Commissieners took care of'mostly routine
county business at its regular Monday afternoon meeting.
.
Commissioners opened and approved the sole bid su~mitted by the Downing, Childs, Mullen &amp; Musser Insur\lnce Agency of Pomerqy for food stamp
insurance for the Meigs County Department of Human Set:Vices for $11,273.
For the Middleport Boat Launch parking lot project, the cgmmission vot. ed to reject the sole bid of $47,544.35 by D.V. Welie'r Construction of
· Reedsville.
•
The figure was substantially higher than the $26.800 allocated for the pro- ·
ject, according to Commission President Fred Hoffman. Commissioners
agreed to re-advert!se ilhe project.
In addition, they agreed to administer Community Developmen\ Block
Grant funding locally as opposed to paying the B~ckeye Hills-Hocking Val. ley Regional Development District. f?r ad,niinisle~Tg the J&gt;r?~~~-~ Curre.!J!Iy the county pays $7,500 fQr admtntstenng the graill''hriSiiey. ·
~
In a meeting with County Engineer Robert Eason. commissioners briefly
discussed a petition by Sand Ridge Roa(l rcsiilents to make the ChesterTownship Road into a county road.
,
.
· "We can't do it ... it's illegal," said Eason .
· Eason said the residents would have to meet first with Chester Township
trustees who would then have to approach him and the commissioners.
"It would take money from the township and cost county money to upgrade
the road," Eason said.
Besides, ''a county road muslbegin and end at another county road, state
route or at a public facility." he explained.
Also, Eason explained the need to vacate parts of Rocksprings and A~t­
woods ~oads due to state highway construction on the first phase of the
Ravenswood Conn~ tor Project. The portions to be vacated are along the connector right of way.
Hoffman said the commissi'on would .write the citizens who signed the
petition explaining the situation.
.
Commissioners approved the highway department advertising sand for
sale.
·
/
'
ln .other business, commissioners:
• Met with John Saunders of Saunders Insurance Agency of Gallipolis
about health insurance for county employees:
' .
• Approved transfer of a liquor license from Harry Lodwick and James
A. Lodwick to James R. Lodwick and Lodwick's Market, Tuppers Plains.
• Approved weekly bills of $115,589.67 consisting of 162 entries.
Present was Commission Pr~ident Fred Hoffman, Vice President Janel
Howard, Commissioner Robert Hartenbach and Clerk Gloria Kloes. Also
attending were Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentcs and county ·housi ng
director Jean Trussell.
·

By AMY MARCH~SE
The Herald-Dispatch
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Toyota
MotOr Corp. has chosen a site at Buf·falo, W.Va., to build an engine plant,
• !I Japanese newspaper reponer close
to company officials told The_HeraldDispatc,h Monday.
· ••. Ajsu h,LHoni!!\ as ~!l!.nl..,~ ~~q~~
ajllf,a~nli}{.4Staff wnter on the eco. nomio'c(~:O:.eslc of The Chunichi
S1U~\ll!.~ 'newspaper in Tokyo, said:
'·' lt s -no.c:Aptil Fools' joke." The
company. tSCommg to the small Put- ·
narn County community. He' s so sure
CLioRK RE-SWORNVIllage Clerk/Treaaurer Kathy Hysell was sworn In to begin
of it, his paper published the story in
her second term Bt Monday
meeting of Pomef'Oy VIllage .CounCil. Mayor Frank Vaughits morning edition today. .
an1 .1efl, administered the oath while council members, from left, John Musser, Geri Walton and
Honda was first. to report Toyota's
Scott Dillon, ob!lerved. (Sentinel photo)
·
decision to build a truck plant in
Evansville, Ind .. last year and most
. recently he reponed Toyota's deci- :
sion 10 move its North American ·
headquarters to Northern Kentucky.
Both turned out to be accurate.
Nowhe'ssaying the 150-plus-acre
By JIM FREEMAN
president of the Pomeroy Youth
School District will pay half the
engine plant, which will cost 200 milSentinel News Staff
League, received permission to
cost of the project, Vaughan said. ·
Parking tic~efs and part-time
remove part of the fencing from the
' During open discussion, Musslion, be highly robotic and hire about
. 500people to make 200,000 engines
workers were among the items disMechanic Street Park to construct
er noted the village will not receive
a year for Corolla in .California by
cussed by Pomeroy Village Couna balling cage near the youth
a grant from the Ohio Department
1999 will be built at Buffalo.
cil at its regular meeting Monday
league ball fields near the Meigs
of Natural Resources to ·remove
"A high ranking official under the
night.
'
High School Football Stadium.
utility ·Jines from Main Street as
condition of anonymity said the comParking violators beware, that
Wright said the cage is. needed . part of the Downtown Revitalizapany has been negotiating with one
simple parking ticket may cost a lot
for batting practice due to the n11mtion Project.
·
place, just one; and that is Buffalo,"
more if it isn't paid. Pomeroy
ber of teams playing this year.
However, plans for t~ RiverHonda sajd.
Mayor Frank Vaughan said the vii."The number of kids signing up front Amphitheater were approved
Mineral Wells in Wood County;
lage is cracking down on motorists
has increased since the fields carne and Musser said he sees the project
the other leading contender, was not ·who don't pay their parking tickets.
to town. A lot of people didn't being let out for bids in the next
chosen because it's "too (ar from
"If you got a ticket, you'd betknow Pomeroy had a youth
week or two.
Interstate 64," Honda said. The comter pay it," Vaughan said.
league," Wright explained. Sixteen
In other business, council :
pany has lined its properties along the
The alternative? Lax motorists
teams will be playing in town this
• Approved the minutes of the
Interstate spanning ·several states, . will be summoned to mayor's
year, he added.
March 18 meeting and approved
and Mineral Wells on Interstate 77,
coun, he explained, . where the
The fields are entering the third the mayor's report of $4,995;
more than an hour north or'
simple parking penalty become
year of use and a current project
• Agreed to switch carriers for
Charleston, is out of the way of their
substantially higher due to fines
involves li ghting the fields for the village's long-distance tele'"just-in-time-production" loop.
.and court costs.
night games, Wright said.
phone service;
The GOP nlllasures all the goods
100 official announcement will be
Drivers cited to court will pay
Council President John Musser
• Approved first reading of an
WASHINGTON (AP) - The and services produced by workers
made May 6 at The Greenbrier hotel
fines and costs totaling :$7 4, he
said the village is awaiting word on ordinance exchanging village propeconomy grew just 2 percent last and capital located in the United
,
Wh'
s
1
h
s
·
h
.,.
said.
Plus,
they
still
have
to
pay
the
a
g
a
t
&lt;
th
1·
h''
B
..._,,
u
·
h
·
h
ad
'
a,
ne up ur pnngs w en •OYr n •·0 r e tg ung.
erty on reeq-o.etg ts Wit
tayear, the smallest advance since the States, regardless of ownership.
parking' ticket ar tickets.
In add t't1·0 n, counct·1 made a cent l'k
oIa preM'denl Ok uda H'1rosh'1 WI'II be
1 e ·propeny owned by Robe'n
last recession, but signs are springing
·m "'
v·
·
·
,
b
·
d
Aspartofanongo
.
ing
'
campaign
$500
d
t.
1
h
p
d
K
h
''
11
·
nest trgmta .or a usmess roun ana 10n o t e omeroy an at y n:tse ;
up of a modest rebound as winter
table meeting with Sen. Jay Rocketo secure funding, the next step is
Youth League to be used for the
• Approved appointing Gene
ended.
feller, D-W.Va.
. c
to deal with delinquent water cusleague's liability insurance. Coun- ' Triplett to the desi·gn review comThe .Commerce Depanment said
Official comment from Toyota is
tamers, Vaughan said.
cil has made the donation for the mittee; '
today the revised gross domestic
that no decision has been made, but
Council also discussed hiring at
last severll) years.
...
• Approved the purchase of
product was even weaker than its iniHonda's sOuf\'eS say that the site is in
least two part·lime summer workA.t the urging of Meli.nda , equipment fo~ the Pomeroy Voltial 2.1 ~~estimate in late FebWest Virginia.
ers, most likely high school or colStrong, mother of two Pomeroy unteer Fire Department for
ruary. ·r
10
Honda said his sources tell him it's
lege students,
help out with
Elementary School students,
$14,676.
The Index of. Leading Economic
Buffalo or nothing. The company will
mowing the cemetery and other
now call for creating l)d&lt;dfiion,al
The Rev. David Du Plantier of
Indicators rose sharply in February as
not choose another site in another
tasks.
parking space at the s9fi,ool.
the Grace Episcopal Church gave
businesses socked by the January
st~te if the Buff~lo site doesn't work
Prospective workers can pick up
Workers will put
larger the blessing before the meeting.
blizzard ~rought workers back on the
out, Honda said.
employment applications at the
chunks of ·
from
Present were Vaughan, Hysell,
job. The Conference Board, a New
· The only thing that could slop the
police department; Clerk Kathy
the school and
them with . council members Musser, Geri
York business research group, said
plant could be the result of an archaeHysell said.
smaller ~tone to J'educe
Walton, Scott Dillon, William
today the index climbed 1.3 percent.
ological dig .. B~t- , Steve Stathakis,
In addition. Bennie Wright,
Vaughan_.said.
Young, Larry W&lt;~hnJng:-arod-George--t
As for GDP, the 1995 performance
,
president of the Big Blue Archaeo- ·
Wright.
was the most anemic since tbe econ- j
·
logical Society conducting the dig,· ._------------------f---~----...:;...~-----~--....1 omy actually shrank I percent in So"tcO' u.s. DoQI. orcomm•""'
· A!'
said it's '"pretty safe 10 say whatev-1991. the last year of the previous
Theec~n~mysh~gnsof
er we find from here on out will not
, econ omt c "'o
" wn 1urn_. The GOP had strengthening in early 1996 when the
dolay the project"
COLUMBUS (A~)'- State Sen.
·made. "We 're not n;ady to even be 1shot up 3-5 percent m _ l~.
partial governmem.,.shutdown-a d _
11
: Nothing significant has been Gene Watts says heanngs-will-begin-- the program
soeial and talking about legislation," he said.
: Th~ 1995 expan~JOn was hdd blizzards and severe weather fro~e
follndin two montnsotdtggi'iig:'Tile within two weeks on Gov. George ~onomic criteria instead of race.
Ohio's 1980 law on minority set- · back 10 part by a shm 0.5 percent output in many areas .
dig could be complete in three weeks. Voinovich's proposal to revise Ohio's
·•we 're looking forward to.work- asides requires 5 percent of state con- , annual rate of growth m the . final
f..ately, il has shown signs of ickRegardless of what the archaeol- 16-year-old affirmative action pro- ing with the legislature in reforming struction contracts and '15 percent of ! three months, ~own from the ongu~al ing_ up speed, with an explosi:n of
·
_ _ the ex~!jng law and.making_it.better goods and.serv.i~es-purchases .to-be- ; 0.9 pe_n;_ent esU!I)J!.Ie.lt had grown at : new joiJs-in February, increased·-~ac
-•
.ogists have left 10 do, Debora)J gram.
Phillips; executive di~tor of Putnam
The--th'ird-ranl&lt;iiig Republican for everybody involved," · said awarded to mtnoflly contractors ' a 3.6 percent rate from August tory orders and·str
h
sal
Ceunty Peveloprnent Authority, said leader in the Senate said on Monday Michael Dawson, the goverqor's exclusively ·
·
·
·
' through September.
·
· "The economy .ong om~· es.
Himda's report is premature.
the Financial Institutions, Insurance · press secretary.
'
. . Black l~wmakers said last week
The revision was due to less'bu~i'l to be running at as::~:~blls.stage
: "We've had conversations, but and Commerce Committee will study
But Senate Minority Leader Ben that the program has never been prop-· ness mvestment, smalle~ mventones clip,'" Federal .Reserve Ch~:OO
I: y~ . not ~~. !old it's. deci~," the, governor's plan to change the Espy, D-Columbus,.·tbe legislature's erly run, that minority companies · and 8 smaller dechne m tl)e trade Alan Greenspan told Con ss 1an
P'!illtps saJd. ' I m surpn~ed a leak ·way slate contracts are reserved for top-ranking black leader, said more "fronting" for white-owned corpo- delicti than ·first thQugl\t that offset · week Just a rnonth ' r (liehe 1181
came_out of Tokyo. There s a lot of minority businesses.
·
study is needed before changes are . ratjons have been aiiowed.to partici- more co~sumer spending than origi- worri~ about a "dis~:f.~:~ tohad
. (Continued on 'Paga3)
'•
pate,
nally esumated. ,
year.
the
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GNp post ed ·
Gross
2 o/o ·increase do
d U rt' ng 1995 product

tfj...

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.

Pomeroy Council/earns village
cracking .down on parking.tickets

Assorted. Spice. Berty
or Black, 10 oz.

p

a

'

JUST BORN
JELLY BEANS

Baby·ShampooReg. orGentle·15oz.
Baby Oil-14 oz.

Buckeye·5:
1:.u-20.25-35

•

Pastel Kisses,
Reese's MinllltufeJ.-'l-1
Reese's Pieces Eggs·14
Reese's Peanut Butter Eggs11 .4 oz.

2 FOR

994
Pick 4:
7348 .

Toyota
to·locate ·.
.in W.Va.

HERSHEY'S

JOHNSON'$

Pick 3:· '

R~port:

r'

BABE

The Community Calendar Is
POMEROY·· Meigs High Band
published as a free service lo non: Boosters, 7 p.m. Monday, in the band
.proftt groups wishing to announce . room.
. .meelina and speclal events. The .
·c. . .llar Is l!ot deslped to promote TUESDAY ·
sales or fund raisers of any type.
PAGEVILLE -- Scipio Trustees,
.Items are printed as spac:e permits
6:30p.m.
Tuesday at Pageville.
and cannot·be r:uaranteed to run a
specinc_ number ~ d~ys.
PORTLAND -- Portland PTO, 7
1'·"'·
Tt!esday at the grade school.
MONDAY
LETART -· Letart Township
RACINE .. Easter cantata and
trustees, Monday, 7 ·p.m. at the office
drama, "The Centurion", 7 p.m. Tue sbuilding.
·
day at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
·Directed by Rev. Aaron
CARPENTER
Board. of
· Trustees, Columbia Township r.:lon- Yo~ng .
day, 7 p.m. at the fire station.
POMEROY -- ·Pomeroy PTO,
Thesday,
7 p.m. Pomeroy Elementary
SYRACUSE .. Sutton Township
School.
·
Trustees, Monday, 7:30, Syracuse
municipal building.

Reds 1.996
opener
postponed
Sports, Page 5

\

'

Ohio Lottery

'I

.

Heara·ngs on tap fa· r

'

Diet Coke

12 pack 12 oz. cans
'

Potato

' .

$299'

&gt;•

.'

99¢

...___________"1-.1'
.,

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