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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ·

P-. 14 • The Deily Sentinel

'
Wedneed8y, April~ 18M :· ·

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Ohio Lpttery

/·Expqs rally,

Barin

defeat Reds;
l"dians lose

Pick 3:

016

Pick 4:
•
2488
. Super Lono: ·
' 15-17-25-37-39-45
Kicker:
970248

·'

· Sports, Page 4

199,, Lol A111e:k1
TP'IIC4 $)'ftlficMc Mil ereliM Sywdicllc.

Dear Ann Landers: I read the following in the Des Moines Register
and cannot figure it .out. Here's The
story: "Indecent exposure charges
against a man wearing only makeup,
a wig, high heels and an unzipped
sweater in a HiaWatha, IoWa, cqnvenience store were dropped after the
county attorney decided no law was
violated.
"The man entered the HandiMart

· Cloudy and colder
tonight. Low In 30t.
Friday, cloudy, high In
ilo.. '

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Foodla,.fl WislaCe.s You And Your l"amil' A.••

35A O.nnett Co. ,...,..,..,.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aprll4, 1996,

•

Cabinet
,me-mber
perishes

·BEllS

c

Tim and Crystal Powell Baker of
'Racine announce the birth of a son,
:Adam Bradley, Feb. 22, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
W.Va. He weighed s~vcn pounds, I0
ounces, and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandp~rents are Jerry
and Margaret Powell of Racine .
·Paternal grandparents .are Carol
Southern of Middleport and the late
John Baker of Hamilton.

a•

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Bodies of· U. S. Commerce
Secretary Brown, 32 others
are found today in Croatia .

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Racine Council mulls installation of trash storage bin
Use of the old elementary school
and installation of a trash storage bin
were among the items discussed at
Monday's metting of Racine Village
Council at Star Mill Park.
. Mary Ball and Kathryn Han, representing the Racine Area Community Organization, gave a report on
RACO activities and funds provided
in 1995. The group is holding its1
third annual Flower Festival on April
27 at Star Mill Park.
. The two also inquired about using
a room at the old Racine Elementary
. School building when it becomes

.
available.
to the landfill -- for $225 a week.
Council has not actu-ally disStreet commissioner Glenn Rizer
cussed other use of the building oth- . said the village is currently paying
er than for the mayor's office, clerk's between $161 and $200 a load, nor
office and police department; it was including fuel, wear and tear on the
noted.
·
compactor and time.
The RACO representatives asked
Council members expressea con- .
council to advise them when space cerns over the location of the bin,
becomes available so arrangements rejecting · one proposed site on
can be worked out. '·
Greenwood Cemetery Road. MemA representative of Modem Sa_n- . hers approved alwo-month trial and
itation, Pomeroy, proposed placing a agreed to·locate the bin behind the
50-yard bin in. the villa~ so that water building on the riverbank area
compactor truck Cll!' unload in the so that it is accessible to only the
village, .saving lhe time and mileage compactor truck.

Also Rizer reported the new water
well is ready for use upon receipt of
a letter of authorization from the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency.
He said the Logan OEPA office
said the village could call for permission to use the well if it is needed before receipt of lhe letter. He also
reponed th~t the vent pipe on the
well has to be raised I0 feet.
•
Council also met with Robert L.
Wingett: administrator of the Ernest
Wingett estate, regarding the deed
I
Cuatinued on page 3

Judge Ito ~riticized in another high-profi/e .case

Jobl~ss

LITE I

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2 Ll.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - , In
another high-profile disappointment
for prosecutors, Lincoln Savings &amp;
Loan boss Charles Keating Jr.'s state
swindling conviction has been overtl!rned, and again Judge .Lance Ito
.was taking criticism.
A feder&lt;!) judge ruled Wednesday
that Ito gave flawed jury instructions,
wrongly saying Keating could be
, convicted as a direct perpetrator of
fraudulent bond sales to Lincoln
investors.
Keating, a former Cincinnati busi- · ..nessman, will remain in prisotl while ·
he appeals his conviction on -federal
charges. He was the most notorious
figure of the 1980s S&amp;L debacle,
known for his lavish lifestyle, his
political influence and for selling to
elderly investors junk bonds that
eventually became worthless.

WESTOVER

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RED OR WHITE $199

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46

. WASHINGTON (AP) - A somber it is." t
stunned capital was in mourning
Brown's longtime friend~ from his
today. Flags flew at half-staff and · . activist civil rights and DemocratiJ:
grief hung over the Commerce party days remembe.red the 54-yearDepartment on a sunny spring day old Cabinet member as a gifted black
that should have held the promise of ·leader.
new life.
. "He wanted to do good things, big
The bodies of Commerce Secre- things," Vernon Jordan, a ·fonner
Interior work on the structure will be cornplettd by church:and
, · ·CHURCH WORK PROGRESSING - Work on 1118 new Middletary Roll Brown and his entire :Qrown colleague at the National :
community volunllera. Sarvlcea are expected to begin In thll
, pon Church of the Nazarene Ie continuing at a steady rata, with
entourage had been found , recovered Urban League, said on NBC's church by mid-summer.
photo)
1ha ~cture expected to be completely roofed by lalethle - k .
from a plane crash in Croatia on "Today" show. "He loved life, he
. . (Tom HunleriSentlnel
.
Wednesday.
loved people, he had a •need and
"People are coming to work" said desire to accomplish things for him-'
one Commerce staffer, who declined self and his community."
to provide her name. "B.ut obviousRobert Johnson; chainnan of
years
ago.
This
project
would
not
ly,
it's
a
very
sad
day."
Black
Entertainment Television :
By TOM HUNTER
The business, in tum, danated a of etposure what will be a beautiful
have
been
possible
without
the
genA
grieving
President
Clinton,
called
Brown,
"'the first of a· ne.: •
.280 X ·204 foot lot at the corner of new church. It's definitely plus for
Sentinel News Statr
-erosity of !he Vaughan's and ·the whom Brown helped win the White black generation"' unlimited by racial '
An agreement reached between a General Hartinger Parkway and the community," said Vaughan,
Ground was broken for the project praye~s of -the all the folks at the . House in 1992, ordued;, ags flown barri~rs. "He,wasapower.brokerof -~
church and a Middleport business has ' Grant Street for construction of the
proven to be a win-win sit.uation for neVI church, an~ Coiltribllted a sub" in early• December, Wllh ,~xterior church. We are very excited about the ~t half-staff m the nail on~ cap.'tal._, 1 the kind y~~ re not used to among :
_Jam~s Carvtlle, .a s~n
atde tti black me~ .
.
·
.
both parties and the entire communi- stantial amojlnt of money · to tlie constructiop bCing handled by A and new church, and the opportunity for
prugn and
The Air Force and"1he"N:litflii1-al~~B~ ti~g P.J!Wtford,,~,ya. The u3-.to.grow. It's going to be a terri~ A;: Imton s 1992 elechon
ty, w1th the result being construction church for lhe new cbnstruction.
'""The Ibt ·on which we gave IOil'ie · c urcfi W.Ti feature a 62 x ·35 foot addition to the. community," said a top adv1ser st1ll, 1d the mood at Transportation Safety Board dis- ·
.p( • ·new/06;100 square foot Middle·
the Whtt~ House .was "uniquely patched a team to Dubrovnik to .
church was purchased by us about a sanctuary, along with a classrooms, Cundiff.
port ·Church of the Nazarene.
The
interior
of
the
church
will
be
somber."
investigate Wednesday's crash near :
year.
and
a
h~lf
ago.
It
was
a
win-win
·
office
space,
a
large
fellowship
hall
The exjsting church, located at
" People real!t kne~. him and the Adriatic coiiSt. And the Army field :
580 Beech Street, and an adjacent situatio.n for the chyrch and for us; and meeting l!fCa, according to Pas- completed solely · with volunteer
,
labor, by members of the church and knew htm well, Carvtlle satd on ·headquarters tn Thzla, Bosnia, assemhome were purchased by Vaughan's We now have the property we Aced tor Greg Cundiff ·
"The whole ' process of building the community. Services are sched- ABC's "Good Morning America." bled an emergency team to help
Cardinal for a planned store expan- ·· · for our expansion, and the church
·
gets
a
&amp;!eat
lot
that
will
prQvide
a
lot
this
church began over two and-a-half uled to begin in the new structure by " I'm son of taken aback at how search for bodies
sion, according to store manager
Don Vaughan . ·
·
Aug.4.

New ·Middleport church ·. to be complete by August

8 48 '1

.s 41
Samantha Dyann Sisson, daughter
of Ernest and Joyce Sisson, has been
awarded a trustees scholarship by the
University of Rio Grande. She is a ,
senior at Southern High School.
Sisson plans to major in early
childhood development and has as
her objective owning and operating
her own day care center.
The trustees scholarship is a)Varded to students graduating in tlie top
1S percent of their class who have
earned a composite score of 20 on the
·ACT and have a 3. grade point average. It covers partial tuition for the

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Baker birth
announced

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ADAM BAKER .

•

Keating's l991 conviction on 17
"It has never been a crime to aid
securities fraud counts was held up as and abet an innocent act," Davies
a shining victory for the Los Ange- wrote in his ruling.
les district attorney's office, which
Keating prosecutor William
has.lost many majot cases.
Hodgman, who also had a role in the
Ito later went on to preside over Simpson trial, said he would appeal
the biggest of those losses - last the ruling.
'
year 's acquittal of OJ. Simpson. · Hodgman said the special aiding
Many coun observers criticized Ito and abetting instruction was crafted
for allowing defense lawyers in the 'because Keating used the actual bond
case to take control of his courtroom. sellers as·his unwitting agents. "To ,
U.S. DiStrict Judge John G. .say the mastermind g6es free is just
Davies said in his ruli/lg Wednesday ridiculous," he said.
•
Hodgman pointed out that·Davies
that !to unconstitutionally 'expanded
California law by Jl[lowingKeating to , once towered Keating's bail from $5
be convicted of aiding and abettihg 'million to $300,00(hfterstate judges
fraud, even thougli the actual bond refused to do so. " Davies has treatsellers had no intent to defraud ed Keating favorably once before.
investors. Davies got the Keating There's a precedent here."
case after a state appeals courts
Keating was sentenced to 10 years .
upheld the conviction.
in prison for his role ii) selling risky
.
\

bonds in his parent company,
Phoenix-based American Continental
Corp., to investors in Irvine-based
Lincoln. The bonds became wonhless after the government seized Lincoin an&lt;fKeating's empire collapsed
in 1989 .
Keating also was convi&lt;;.ted in federa! court of racketeering, fraud and
conspiracy. He was sentenced to. 12
years an_d seven months in prison for
those cnmes, and must serie 85 percent of that sentence.
.
Hodgman estimated Keating has
about seven years left on the fj'deral
sent~nce.
. .
- Lmcoln 's collapse cost taxpayers
$3.4 billion and
American ~onti - .
nental bondholders lost $265 million.
Most of lhe loss was t:ecovered later
by suing Keating's lawyers. accountants and other advisc~s.

UnabQmber suspect
'lived .like··a hermit'

•
•

Former co/lege prof~ssor taken into
custody by FBI in Helena, Montana ·

•

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HELENA, Mont. (AP)- A for- .
"It's going very slowly because :
mer Berkeley math professor who we're not sure if it's booby-trapped;" :
"lived like a hermit in a mountain said one federal agent. "We have an •
shack" was in jail today, suspected in explosives ordinance team X-raying . :
the deadly Unabomber attacks that everything before we touch it." .
:
have baffled authorities for 18 years. .
Kazcynski was t~en 'into custody • :
Ted John Kaczynski, 53, was to be by federal agen'ls\Yednesday so they ~ ·
charged with one count of manufac- could search his cabin SO miles '
ture of a bomb later today, according northwest of here. He was not immeto a federal law enforcement source. diately placed under arrest or
The initial charge \WOuld hold charged.
Kaczynski but would make no ·menA source close to the investigation
tion of the Unabomber's attacks had told The Associated\ Press late
while agents put together a detailed .Wednesday that the FBI was con.
case. The source spoke on CO!ldition cerned becau~e ·agents had not yet
of anonymity.
founcj all they hoped to find in the
FBI and Bureau 'or Alcohol, cabin .
Tobacco and Firearms agents found
And CBS News reported from
bomb-making equipment in his Washington today that during their
remote wilderness cabin late Wednes- \investigation, agents ran across eviday, bu! their search was expected to denc~ t_hat could provide the suspect
_continue all day \oday.
an ahb1 tn two of the bombings.

Boater parking area
.

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lhtl

claims.. :drop afte~. GM strike ends

WASHINGTON (AP) -· The \.ver~ filed during the week ended · at thi~ j'uncture, details on past data the Wel!lily repons. ,
numtk.r of Americans filing first-time July 25, 1,992.
.\portray weakening J~bor marl&lt;et,"
Durin$ the w.eek ended f)farch 23,
· claims~'for JOble~s lienelits fc:ll. by . The "?w-ended strike had idled .M.arilyn Schaja,; .an econo_m_ist at - t~l states and territol'les reponed .
25,000 last week as• workers affect- · more lhan 17S,OOO woJ'\&lt;ers - both Donaldson, Lufkin &amp; Jenrette 5eCW ~ Increases-and 32 registeml&lt;lcclines..
ed by the General Motors Corp. strike GM employees 110d those work\ng rities Corp., 'said in advance of the The State data is reponed a week tatreturned t9lhcir jobs:
· · for related businesses such as s.up- report.
·, •·
.
.
. ler than the national tOtals.
The Labor Department said today pliers.
. '.
·
.
The four-week moving average of , States ·.wilh lhe· iargest increases
that new applications for unemployAnalysts said that now that the new weekly jobless claims continued :were Michigan, 33,104; Indiana
ment insurance still totaled a se\\Son- ·dispute has. been settled, claims to climb, rising by 11,250 to 394,750, 8,4S3 ; Wisconsin, 4,923; New Yor~
. ·· Excavation work le being completad 01'1 the , _ bolltilr' flllrkally adjtJSted 408,000, much higher should co~hnue to tumble. ~~y highest since applications totaled 2,892, 1ind Maryl110d 2,744. All ~!lid
lngarea near the MlddltPort LIYH. Paving and COIIIPieUon of ihe
• than the 367,000 level tha.t many ~il-. contedded JOb growth would 'fmam 397,250 during the period· .ended · most of the claims
strik.e-reliuproject .. atllllchadulld _, be COIIIJIIiiiN In . . . for the 1-- lysts had expected.'
sluggish. Before the strike, claims O!:t. 10, 1992.
·
ed.
·
""'bolting ...eon, accorclng to vlllagl ofllclale. Ott. Mlftl at
Claims had risen to 433,000 dur- we~ in the mid-300.~ riiiJe. .. •.. ' Many analysts prefer to track the
The biggest dec:reues were in Calthe levee will lriCiude laiUII'i"" lnttr.lllilkM oh 30 by·10.fQcit.
. wid~ aluminum dock .tor UN by boltara 1hle eummar. (Tcfrn
ing the pRvious week, even stteJ!er -,· . Ev~ th9ugll a luc1d perceP!Wn less-volatile four-week averaae · ifomia, . 4,?79; Oklahoma, 3,188;
HuntlriSentlnel photO)
. .
.
than the 429,000 original estimate of the Jabot market ... ts noposSJble because it smooths out the spikes in New J~y. 2,701; Puerto Rico,
and the larg~t sihcc 523,000 claillllj
·
1,314, and Nonh.Carolina, 1,275.

a

EASTMAN'S

BIG iEND, TWIN

Now At Eastman's
.fOQdlarid

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;Commenta·r y

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Thut'Drl Apfllot, 1811
Ptlge2
Thuisday, ~prllotl 1198

Racine· village Council•••

(}Hiu \'h:ather

Fridtr Aprtl5
1

· - · ·• ,, .liN cx::aa
~MICH. ,

The Daily Sentinel
'Estll6fislid in 1948
111 ·Court St., P~y, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2.157

·.!lr

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGffi
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW"
Controller

-·=
_.,,'"·-·not---

L.,_. to ,_ 010 ooltlcomo. JlNr tltould 1M /011 lhon 300 wor&lt;M. AU lottoro"
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muor 1M,,...., 11111/ncludo MldiWOI 1tid·to~ num·
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will N puOI/all«&lt;. ' - - tllould , . In flOOd tollo,

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Let's make a deal

•
ilyTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - As skilled creatures of compromise, President Clinton and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole may have to fight hard' to resist
the temptation to cut deals and split differences.
The upcoming contest between the president and the presumptive GOP
presidential nominee features two quintes~ential politicians - each with a
history of pragmatism and deal-making.
'-'We have to ao business," ~le said recently. "If we can get a good balanced-budget amendment, we ought to do ii.... I would win, (House Speaker) Newt (Gingrich) would win. the president would win."
·
And Clinton seemed to echo that appeal. "I tbink I should do my job and
Senator Dole should do his," he told reporters Tuesday. "And we should
n_ot have a work stoppage between now and November just because we've
got an election."
. : Dole, vacationing in Palm Beach, Fla., responded, "Well, he's probably
·right, but I wish they'd stop running those ads bashing me on television ....
The president can't have it both ways, and so I'm prepared to set aside polilics."
: He added, "As far as I'm concerned, we're not playing politics. We're
~y to work with the president:"
.
; Both Dole anq Clinton have voiced hope Congress can agree ·on a bal-anced budget measure before the November election. , ·
Never mind that Clinton mixed.his appeal for bipartisanship with fresh
· jabs at Republicans. Or that Dole has taken to calling Clinton·"old v~to Bill."
Both are well-versed in the art of conciliation.
In recent days, Dole and Clinton helped forge important compromises
on line-item veto legislation, an increase in the government's borrowing limit and a major fann program overhaul. Earlier, they agreed on a major
telecommunications "overhaul bill.
-But there are limits to how much Dole and Clinton can compromise and still mount effective campaigns against each other.
, "The Senate floor is no place to.campaign," said Sen. Chris!opher Dodd,
0-Conn., general chairman of the Democratic National Committe,e. ·
Both leaders have advisers urging them to be more confrontational, to
draw sharper distinctions.
·
. Dole strategists, after all, don't want voters to decide·to keep them in their
present jobs.
.
.
"They're both deal make1 s and they're both establishment Politicians,"
said University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato. · "~ut ,they each
know there is a time for ·compromise and a time for warfare. On the redr.~eat issues, they'll keep the compromiser inner child at bay."
But-even on measures like Medicare spending, welfare.reform and cuts
in education and-environmental programs, there may be room for,compro-

This column has "Rot offered a
contest for a while. Because I n"9(1
help, let's have a contest. ·
Let us suppose that Bob DOle, a
self-described "mainstrea.w conservative" Republican, win~ The presidency. That will mean that for tho;
first time in 66years (!) there will be
an aii-Re(mblican7conservative government. That would include the
White House, the Senate, the House
of Representatives, a majority of
governors, and a sympathetic
Supreme Coun. There would also
likely be a Republican/conservative
majority of state legislators and state
legislatures. This ;:ould yielil an
American politics vetjl .different
from ~hat all but the oldest Americans can recall.
The que~tion for the contest is
this: What would happen next, short ·
term and long term?
That should yield a simple
answer: We would ·have Republican/conservative government. But
there are more than a few varieties of
conservatives: Main Street conservatives, Wall Street conservatives, K
Street consei"va!ives, neoconserva-

tive5,.paleoconscrvalives, !Oeial con"
But what would this big factionservatives, economic conservatives, alized and $ub-factionalite.d party
religious conserv)ltives, libertarians, actually DO if it accedes to office?
inclusionists, isolationisiS, intema-· It is said that conservatives agree that
there should be less. government.
True ·for now.
But might it be that conservatives
don
't like government because th;,
tionalists, nillionalists: protectimf'ists, free-traders, suppJy.side con- haven't controlled it for iO long?
In control, what inigtit they aim
servatives, pro-growth conservatives,
slow-growth conservatives, no- for? A balanced budget, slirely. Many
growth conservatives, tax-cutters, conservatives favor private school
vouchers. But what haprens if that
budget- bal~ncers, optimis"ts, opportunity conservatives, compassion requires costly federal bloc grants to
conservatives , communitarian con- give it a chance to work? Most
servatives and Reaganauts. That only Republicans still favor term limits,
publicly. But will they favor term
begins the list. •.
limits
when they are solidly in powNo surpiise ·there. Big parties
always form into f~ctions. !lig fac- er, thereby shrinking the power of
tions form into sml\ller factions, their own incumbency? Conservaagreeing on certain ideas and dis- tives want to "de-fund the left."
When in power, will they then want
agreeing on others.
,The Republicans have become· a to fund the right? Would a Conserv-'
big party, and conservatism has ative foleign policy favor "America
become·its dominant faction . What First" or "America is Number
do they agree upon? One thing for One"? To diminish sex and violence
sure: Right riow they all want to get on television, might they opt for a
Bill Clinton out of the White House. form of censorship or zoning ,. and
That should provide a unified party drive their libertarian faction crazy?
Suppose a new .conservative era
during the election year.

Ben Wattenberg

would last for several decades, as did
the recent .liberal era. Suppose the
economy grows rapidly, spurred by
a balanced budget, tax cuts, and
deregulation. After a while, there
could be big federal budget surpluses. Will conservatives pay down the
r.ational debt, cut taxes, or spend the '
bonus on big conServative programs?
If ttley spend, what w_ill they spend
on?
What would they do about abortion? A majority of Republicans ·
oppose illegalization; many activ.ists ·
support it. As devolution of power to ·
the states proceeds, will conserva- .
tives find out that state governments ·
are less capable than the Feds? What ·
would they do then? Will defederal·izing welfare cut illegitimat~ births? .
If not, then what? Would conservatives be kind or cruel? Evolutionary .
or revolutionary? Would they be .
sanctimonious know-it-ails believing
their 'press clippings about liC"ing j ·
"the party of ideas," or open· minded? Would expensive artificial hearts
be funded by M)ldicare?
Alternativel¥, might the whole
enterprise crash quickly?
As _it happens, I am writing a
book, a futuristic novel, tentatively
entitled "2033," that deals with the
idea of a long conservative era. It's
a 'tricky situation. What could we
have guessed about the future in
1933. when Democratic/liberal ideas
went into ascendancy?
.
.
So, the contestseeks an answer to
this ql!estion: What wo.uld a bole ·
victory mean?
Do not limit entiies to the questions above. Think big if-you'd like .• ·
, Entries, preferably typewritten or
word-processed, should not exceed ;
650 words (preferably much shorter), ·
and should be sent to Ben Watten- ,
berg, c/o. Newspaper Enterprise
Association, 200 Madison Ave., New
York,' NY 100i6. Entries must be
postmarked ~y May 16, 1996, and
should include a copy of this column,
marked with the name of the newspaper in which it appeared. The best .
five entries will receive prizes, and
may be published in whole or in part.
Help me.·
Ben Watteuberg, a senior fellow
· at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author11f "Values Matter Most," and iS the host of the
weekly public television program
"Think Tanll," and a syndicated
w~ter for Newspaper enterprise
Association.

W.VA.

•

T
I

Morton Kondraclce ·

L:etters to the editor

me

.

'·

. ' Friday... Cioud~- in the mornmg ... Parllal cleanng m the afternoon. Chilly... Hrgh only in the upper
40s.
. Extended foreeast
Saturday::.Fair. Lows in the 20s
and highs 40 to_45. .
Sunday... A chance of snow... Especially east half. Lows in the 20s and
. highs in the 30s. '
.Monday...A chance of snow northeast... Fair elsewhere. Lows in the 20s
and highs in the 30s.

By The Associated Preaa

Across the nation
A cold wave is headed for Ohio,
Snow fell in Buffalo, N.Y., and
forecasters said. High temperatures Marquette, Mich.,·before daybreak,
.on Friday will be mostly in the 30s, as hail storms gusted into Arkansas.
or low 40s.
lt was 57 and cloudy in San Diego.
The rain will continue in the north
A line of strong thunderstorms
tonight !llld could tum to snow, the dropped large hail across parts of
National Weather Service said. Lows Oklah9ma and nonhero Texas on
will be 25•35.
Wednesday. •
· The chilly-conditions are expect- ·
The cold front that helped genered to continue through the Weekend. · ate those storms waS spreading much
- The reeotd-hi~h temperature for cooler air t~y into Kanas, western
this date at .'til~ Columbus weather Oklahoma and Nebraska.
station was 82-degrees in 19,86 while
Snow, sleet, rain and freezing
the record low was 24 in 1995, Sun• rain were lriixlng to create slippery
.set tonighfwilrt&gt;e at 6:59p.m. and roads across northern Wisconsin and
sunrise Friday at 6:09 a.m;
nonhem Mi'chigan early today . .

Hilan·d ·r~n cra_
sh probed

A vehicle suspected of being .•es, Soulsby . dded.
involved in two hit and run crashes
- The vehicle was sJ)otted WednesMonday afternoon was located day afternoon by one (){__the witWednesday . afl!lrnoon by Meigs nesses to the accident who furnished
County Sherifrs Peputies on ~S. the sheriffs office with the license
Route 33.
,
·plate numlier, however, it was gone
According to Sheriff James M. when deputi~s arrived, he said.
Souls by, the driver of the ~aroon
Later the ~heriffs o~ce wa~ noliChevrolet Blazer allegedly failed to fled by a wrecker serv1ce that 11 was
negotiate a c4rve on state Route 684 picking up a vehicle on U.S. Route
in Harrisonville and ran off the road 33. At that t1me ts was learned that
into a yard and fence on property it was the suspect vehicle _and a holdowned by Glo~~ Kloes. Also mail- er ._wa~ placed on the veh1cle, Soulsboxes at the mtersection of New by sa1d.
.Lima and · Smith Run roads were
Soulsby said the driver, whose
damaged.
. .name is being ' withheld pending
then the vehicle failed to make contact by deput1es. faces two
the curve at the Old Landfill Road charges of fail!fre to control and two
and state Rmite I 43 and went off the charges of failure to report an ·acciroadway smashing into a power dent involving' damage to realty.
company P,Ole,a~d several mailbox-

he said in a speech, ;'p)lblic
pohcy has fundamentally ·transformed and unbalanced America's
labor markets. It created huge inccnlives for•wall Street to. pressure
American corporations to break the
soc1al contract between corporations
and their workers. Those ·. policies
were driven by the very economic
elite that most benefited from them,
and public opinion was manipulated
into accepting the inevitability of it
aiL"
The major question will be, what
. to do? Clil\lQ.n is emphasizing mooerate proposals 'such as tuition·. taK
cr~its, but other Democrats -·
including Sens. Ted Kennedy
(Mass.) and Jeff Bingaman (N.M.).
- suggest that Congress should ere· ate new classes ofcorporations to be
given special tax and regulatory
brca.ks if they treat their employees
well .

Livestock report

'Hospital news

COLUMBUS (AP)- Prkes fr~~m
The Producers Livestock Associa·
lion:
Catile: steady.
Slaughter steers: choice 59.0063.00; select 55.00-59.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 58.0063.50; select 52.00-57.00. ·

Veterans Memorial
, Wednesday~ admissions -' Fred
Miller, Racine.
Wednesday discharges - Gladys
Barrett, Pomeroy.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges April 3 - Jeffrey
Lykens, Shelia Cozart, Mrs. Garry
Stover and son, Mrs. Ryan Mahr and
son, Joseph Graham, Erica Mulholand. .
.
(Published w~ ~rmlssion)

OtHer Democrats suggest Pat
Buchanan-style trade policies to shut
out goOds from low-wage countries.
If such ideas"end ~pin the Democratic agenda, they will.set off an ideological battle royal between the parties.lt could be intellectually stimulating, but given the public's distrust
of government, it will be a hard fight
for Democrats to win.

(·

Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill, and a
syndicated writer for N'wspaper
Enterprise Association,

-..·

fl&gt;moroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. il92.2tS6. Set&lt;md

I'''""'" pold" Parnon&gt;y, Ohio..
:;-.::,~::.~.t-1'\aJ. •i!d 1¥ or:·~

class

Ohio4~769.

r

SJ..

VFW auxiliary
The Tuppers Plains VFW ·Post
#9053 Auxiliary will meet Thursday,
· 7:30 p.m., at the post home: All
Members urged to attend
A"nnual poppy sal~ set
The Stewart Johnson VFW "Post
#9926 Auxiliary, Mason W.Va., will
have their annual poppy sale Saturday, from 8 a.m. till 3 p.m., at the
Pomeroy Mason Bridge:

:·Deputies probe burglary-'V
A Racine resident visitins in Florida over the winter returned to
find thai his home had burglarized during his absence.
Roscoe Wedge, Pearl Street, reponed Wednesday to the Meigs
' County Sheriff's Depai tment lhlla television, videOcassette recorder,
a sew ina machine, bedsheets and t!&gt;wels were stolen from his home,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
·
Entry was made 'through a back door, it was rewrted.
The Racine Police Department is assisting in the investigation. -

Racine fire

in~estigated

M--

SUBSCRiPTION RATIIS
Br Conleror
One \Yeel,,,,.., .................... M0"0"""''""""'$100
()oo Monlh ....................
$8.70
0.0 YCII ......................,.................... St04.00

,.o.....................

.

Athens jail

escape~

~~-----

.

remains at

'

•

••
•

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',
'

\

auto., cruise, titt, all
local trade, very
clean.. .
I

ONI
1993NISSAN

I

I

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE

2 Door, automatic, V-6.

•

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................41'!.
AkzO .......................................515'1.
Ashland 011 ...........................38'!.1
AT6:T ......................................1$4 .4
Bank One ........................".... u36'A.

1988 BUICK
REGAL
I
FESTIVA
F·150 4X4
Door, auto., V-6, air. all
V-8, automatic, XLT ·Lariat, 2 door, 5 speed, AM/FM
power, very clean.
stereo.
all power, cruise, @

1990 FORD

Bob Evans ..................... ~ •••.••••. 16
Borg-Warner •............ ~•••.••••.•.34l
Champion Ind.......................17~

1993 FORD

,.

Charming Shop .....................5'City Holdlng ........................:.23'tt
Federal Mogul .......................19'h
Gannien .....................·............67%
Goodyur TIR ...................... 52~

K·mart ·~···· ..........................! ....9~
Lande End ................~ ............17:.
Umlted Inc ............................18\

V·&amp;, power locks, lactory
warranty.

Peoples Bancorp.................23'/,
OhiO VaUey Bank.............m••••43

0118 Valley.............................31'.4
Rockwell ................................59
Robblna a Myers ....................34
Royal DutchfShell ...........:.. 145\

1993 MAZPA 4X4
SE-5PKG.

ShoAefslrtC.....••..•.......••.•.••••.I\
Star Ba.nk ................................65
Wendy lnt'l............................1.81,4

speed, air, cassette, 1-

Worthington Ind..........~ .........19\·
.

1 o•mer,, low miles

-·-·-

door; automatic, air, all

power, local trade.

auto., air, all power,

llaclorv warranty.

, ...

.'

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes pr'&amp;vlded by Advast
of Galllpoll~.

~'

Wewantto . .
chang~ the way

.·

you look at ·
monuments~

1995 CHRYSLER
1995 MAZDA .
CONCORDE
MILLENIA
V-6, automatic, ABS, all V·6, aula., heater tealher
power, factory warranty. seats, all power. .t-owner,

ltkl
~usmeatea

memorial just

for yoa _·

~15

~

'

NISSAN 4X4

1992 DODGE
KlNGCABXE
DAKOTA
5 spd., air, cass1, P. C/Cab, auto .. LE. V-6, air,
mirrors, chrome pkg., tow cruiSe, tin, low mites . .
miles, 1·ow•ner.

1994F.ORD
RANGER
5 speed,
stereo; 1 owner.

.·
•·'·

'

.,

.

.- '
'•

-• Chocolate .
Lab '175"

.

••
•..
••

,o.,,t(t:lt lioke,.,,r.:

• ChlhQab,.a
f250" . ''

..

'
·- '

..

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c-;. :rw

..

. ...

POIIIROY '
,._I'OiiMUf
!!iltldge
?'

MAILIVIICau:IIOiG

·~-~~,.?.::"?..-::. . .

.
·01118

13 \\loeb .....
$27.30
26 \\loeb .....................................J . .......SS3.12
52 \\loeb ......................__ ..__:_ __SJQ'-16

13i \\loeb-~"""'P-~r
.......:..........: ........................ $29.25
26 . . ................. - ...........- ..........- ..."'-.
52\¥iob.......,.........., .......................,~I09.1l ,

-

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Vlfi'ON

2

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.

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'

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l~uge

•

I

SENTRAXE

No oabocrlpdon by mill ,.,...,.. In ----loavalloble.

'

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,'

ATHENS (AP) - An Athens
"He made up a big story to get out
County prisoner who has escaped of jail and facilitate the escape," Casr
custody for the third time in 17 years tie said.
remains at large.
: Waddell told authorities he wanh
Mtchael -Waddell, . 44, · of Nel· l ed to help them recover jewelry, mon-,
sonv1lle, who was berng held on a · ey and guns he allegedly stole in
burglary charge. escaped on Monday, December Castle said
·•
said Sheriff's Lt. Vern Castle.
'
·

trustees to meet
The Bedford Township trustees
will meet Monday, . 7 p.m., at the
Bedford township halL

• Dudl.s 61'15

•Chicks

.

••
••

Meigs County Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District customers
from Success Road and state Route 7 to Thppers Plains, in the community of Tuppers Plains, Pine Tree Drive, state Route 681 East to,
and including; Rice Run Road and state Route 681 West to Alfred are
under a boil advisory announced this morning by TPCWD operations
supervisor Roben Harris.
. .
The reason for the boil advisory is a break in a 12-inch main line
along state Route 7 below Tuppers Plair!S, requiring depressurization
of the' area.
1
Several Athens County roads are also affected by the order.

SINGLE COPY PRICB ' ,

1-.

'

Boil advisory issued

Bedfo~

Doily .......... ....:............................., ...... 35 Call

Su~ben noodo.iiioi ~·p.,·lho c:oriiw IIlii~
railil ia ldvanoo direcl • ·1be Dlily ~
on
dx or 12 CIJOIIIh bioi• Clodlt will be

-

No injuries were reported following a fire that damaged _a Ractne
residenCe Thesday morning.
.
·
,
Firefighters of the Racine Volunteer Fire Department responded to
the Larry Griffiih residenc:e on Fifth Street and extinguished a fire that
engulfed the utility room, containing a "furnace and water heater, and
a portion of the attic, according to fire department Captain Scott Hill.
The cause of the fire has not been determined, Hill added. The utility room and attic sustained fire, smoke and water damage.
· Thirteen Racine firefighters were·dn the scene along with seven
from .the Syracuse VFD. Five trucks were also on the scene and a squad
Trom the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
'·

1992 OLDS Cun.ASS
1993CHEVV
LUMINAEURO PKG.
SUPREME
4-Door, V-8, auto .. ·cruise, V-6, auto .. alr, cass .. all
, all power, H&gt;Wner.
power, 1-owner, low miles:

l!f1i!r~!!~~~~!i~n~&amp;~~~~~~~;;~~~~

-oy.

, •..

Round and square druices
. • The 1\Jppers Plains VFW will
hold a rouod and square dance Saturday, 8 to II p.m., at !he post home,
with Alvin Chutes and the CountrY
' Drifters performing.

.. Hu.bard's ·~reenhtuse

f'OS't'MASTER: Send address corrections to

I. .

-Meigs announce,ments.:..;_

....nglng Bukela
(blooming &amp; follail9)
oOtrsnlums
.Shrubs, T - &amp; Rose Bushu
Open Deity IIam-s pm
i
Sun. 12 noon.S pm
(Cioted Ellllr Sunday)

.

Ill Coun
·

pital.
REEDSVILLE2:Q2 p.m., state Route 124, Grant
Boring, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
6:36p.m., state Routo.J 43, Aide·
na Welch, O'Bleness Memorial Hospi tal.
SYRACUSE .
6:58 a.m., Addie Deckfr Road,
Fred Miller, VMH.
.

--Local briefs

. v.getsbJe Plllnta

Published ...cry atiemooo, Monday - . . ,-

Seotinel,

Units of the Meigs County Emergency .Medical Service answered
six calls for assistance Wednesday
including one_transfer call. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
II :02 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Bernice Nelson, .Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
·
POMEROY
II: 16, p.m., Un~on Avenue, Laura Cleland, Veterans Memorial Hos·

. . ..

friday, 111 Coun SL. Pomeroy, Olllo•. by ,..
Oj!io Vnlky P!lbHIIIil!l ComolilyK!uiiCl! Co..

The Dally

MeigS
EMS answers 6 calls·
·

o£alter ~is .
I oCOII!JII~Una (If a.ddlng .&amp;

(USPS 2!J.MII)

'

. COIItiMied froia ;.. 1
for the w~ tank pro~~erty. He wu • llldit i$ held this yur.
advised thll the ~utina attar·
Thamtoa said he would con~ a
ney's office is pieplriiiJ the deed IIIII . canll'll:lllr concemiag cleanup of a
thai it had not been piclred up for fil- wor1t site on Third Street.
ing.
In other IK!aineu, council:
When Winsett had the pioperty
- Disc:ussod complaints about
surveyed for lots for sale, it was dis·
semi·lll!ClOR -and trailers cuninalhe
cover:ed that the water tank was not comer at Secolld Uld Main streets
O'!,.the deed's iocation. Wingett Uld causing damqe to a ~J~~U~hoie cover
colincil earlier agreed to swap SO-by· there.
··
SO- foot pan:els. ·
·
- Authorlzed the pun;bue of sevAfter the swearing in of ml items for the street depanment.
Clerkll'reasurer' I&lt;;aren Lyons by
- Discussed, but took no action,
May()r Jeff Thornton, council autho- concerning allegllions that Thornton
rized her to transfer money into the lu!d dillllliued charges against an
election appropriation line -item to individual cited to' Meiss County
cover .additional primary election Cou!t by the police department. ,
~ts.
.
- Discussed getting a deed for the .
Cou~cil also passed a resolution
old Methodist Chun:)llot. Tbe pros- .
authorizing councilman Scott Hill to ecu~ng attorney's office is preparing
prepare and file paperwork for finan- the deeds for the lots from the
cial reimbursement for snow and Southern Local School District to the
tlood costs.
village.
Bills and the financial statement
-- Adjourned until May 6, 7 p.m.
were approved. Lyons said the annu- ·
Present wc;ri: Thornton, Lyons,
al financial repon had been filed and Rizer, board of public affairs mem- ·
should be published soon in The Dai- bers Bob Roy and Lee Lliyne, Mar·
ly SentineL
shal Matt Richards and DepliiY MarShe also reported the state audi- shal Cory Hatfield, council members
tor's office called and said the village Robert Beegle, Heory Il'entz, Dale
might have to undergo an audit due Hart, Scott Hill, Henry Lyons and
to • the .receipt of federal money. Larry Wolfe.
Fundsw!llhavetobeapprornatedif

NOW OP.IN FOR
IPJUNfJ SMION

The Daily Sentinel

M.utual funds don't provide easy money
D,ian Vujovicb

·

Winte·r-like weather will return
.to Ohio during Easter holidays

Ra~r.

Although shareholders 111e notified
when there is a -change of portfolio
managers and fund investment
objecti•es, subtle changes or tweaks
in investment styles can happen
ulfannounced. Shareh'olders also
aren't privy to knowing how much •
- if any -- pressure thete is for a portfolio manager t() perform. And then
there's the question of performance
in a bear market.
In the end, mutual funds do offer
investors a unique investment product choice.·
Dian Vujovlch II die ·author of
. "Stralgba' 'I'Illk About M$al
Funcls"IUid "Stiallht 'llllk About
.Investing for Your ·RetlftiMDt,"
both of wbkh an ·pablllhed by
McGraw Hill. Sud qpesCLn to
her In .care of dlk oewopaper. She
II 11 syndlcaled writer for Newapa: ·
per Enterprise Aaodadon. ·

J

'
Southeastern O~io
:Today... Partly sunny this morntng.
Bnef showers or thunderstorms likely this afternoon. An early ~fternoon
high near 70. Southwest wind 10 to
'20 mph a:nd gusty shifting to northwest late this afternoon. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Tonight...Cloudy and colder with
a chance qf light rain or drizzle. Low
in the upper 30s. Northwest wind IO
to IS mph. C)lanee of precipitation 40
· pen;ent.
'

Democrats' ~~g~n,da' re"dy to ro~l

This year ·s prestdential campaign released just after Congress returns House Minority Whip David Bonior,
is likely to be a contest between twq from its·April recess, according to D-Mich., declared that ," we live in a
moderates for the center of the polit- Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., who time when many parents feel fike the
m1se.
ical spectrum. But the struggle to headed one task force' along -' with economic struggle, they wage every
On welfare overhaul, for instance, Clinton once announced support for
control Covgress could become, ideday limits their ability to teach and
the Senate-passed Dole-sponsored version - a stance that angered liberal
.ologically( speaking, a battle scene
protect their children from an . en~iDemocrats. He later backed away.
·
out of "Brave heart. "
ronment of moral decay.
'
"Every minute a mother is forced
Capitol
Hill
Democrats
appear
Sen
..
Harry
Reid,
D-Nev.
Dole in the past has shown support for many domestic programs that conintent on making it so by accusing
The House version, whose draft- to work late to make ends meet is ·
servative Republicans now seek t&lt;&gt; cut.
Republicans of "callous .Darwin- ing is being overseen by Reps. David another minute She spends away
In fact, it might be easier for Dole to 'reach common ground with Clinism" in the face of growing income Obey, D-Wis .. and Vic Fazio, D- from her children-- not helping with
ton on many issues than with House freshmen and other conservative
inequality and by proposing a leg- . Calif., wo'n•t be completed · until homework, not reading them bed. attivists; ·- -islative agenda that the GOP surely after it has been discussed at a time stories, and not teaching them
With Ross Perot ruining about the irnpact of special interests on U.S. polwill characterize as ultra-liberal, if Democratic Caucus retreat Apri119. right from wrong. Every _ hour a
itics, neither Clinton ·nor Dole can claim the "outsider" mantle.
not
."socialist."
· ''
Democrats have had input from father is forced to work overtime is
Both look to the same sector for support- corporate America.
Though President Clinton has pollsters Mark Mellman, Geoffrey another hour he spends away ... from
A good case in point: Dole's refusal to make an isSI!e of Clinton's report- ·
adopted the Republican theme that Garin, and Stanley Greenberg, but dinne.r conversations and away from
ed efforts to strike a deal with Russian President Boris Yeltsin to lower Russ"the era of big government is over," Senate · Minority Leader Tom l)is community." ian barriers against U.S. chicken shipmeniS.
.
early
·indications are thanhe -Demo- Daschle, D-S.p., insists that proIn an exhaustive review of ecoAs first reponed by The Washington Times, Clinton·and Yeltsin discussed
cratic congressional agen~a will call posals in the aJienda will not be pre- ·nomic litera,ure prepa!lld for Obey,
the issue and YeltSin's re-election effort at an anti-t~rrorism summit last
for major ne~ gov~mment activities tested the way contract items were· the House Democratic Policy Commonth in Egypt.
to e~e econom1c pressures on the 'by GOP pollster Frank Luntz.
The bulk of U.S. chicken exports come from Arkansas, Clinton's home
miuee staff documented that in order
middle class.
I
Actual contents of the House and , to make up. for an .ll percent decline
state. Some Republicans· have seized on the issue tb blast Clinton for using
Separate House and Senate Senate drafts are 'being closely held, in average worker compensation
his office to promote the sales of Arkansas poultry.
·
Democ(atiC task forces have pre- but party leaders promise that the si~ce 1978, t&gt;articipation in the work
But bole decnned to, only quipping, "I thought Yeltsin was for me."
pared draft~ of a platform and have main target will be middle-class force by mothers of young children
In fact, both Clinton and Dole have received campaign contributions from
begun
_conSide~ng wheth~r to meld . economic insecurity, or what has increased from 45 percent to 59
the owners of the Arkansas-based Tyson Foods, one of the nation·•s largest
them
mto
a smgle _mantfesto for Daschle calls "paycheck issues" percent, average hours worked by
coicken producers.
.
Democrats to run on tn 1996.
ranging from pension protection and men have increaSed by S percent, and
F.uithermore, Dole has long backed grain and wheat deals with Russ1a.
"Agenda,"
not
:·contract,"
is
the
the
minimum wage to health insur- household debt has increased by 48
One longtime contributor is Dwayne Andreas, chairman of agribusiness giant
Democrats'
term
for
the
document,
ance
reform and tuition vouchers for percent.
Archer Daniel~ Midland.
but House Minority Leader Richard college and job training.
The Obey study declares that
Gephardt, 0 -Mo.; says that it will
In addition to economics, though, wage-pressures 'are "not being driven
EDIToR'S NOTE- Tom Raum coven the White House and nation·
perform the same function that the Democrats show signs they will try by global competition." If that were
al politics for The Associated Press. · '
1994 GOP "Contract with America" to ·stelll back the "family values" true, Obey contends, corporate profdid, giving voters a way to judge the issue from Republicans by claiming its would be falling along with
party on the . basis of '·'promises that job pressures on the midtlle class wages, whereas profits in fact are
made. promises kept" in the 105th ' are more responsible for social dis- "booming and CEO pay has Increased
Congress.
locjltion Jhan such favorite GOP tar- from 35 times the average work,er's
Time to take dow(l campaign posters
The Senate · version, titled gets as ,:fV porn and legalized abor- · salary in 1960 to 225times that now.
,
Neither, says Obey, .are inexDear Editor,
( )_
those areas outside the city limits are "Expanding the Greatness of Ame.r- tions.
ica,"
is
.
a
15-!Jage
booklet
to
be
In
a·
recent
speech,
.for
instance,
·
qrable
"m8fket forces" to blame.
A little over a month ago, the forgotten.
,.
Jlolitical campaig"n season .was_movWhen runn!ng for various public
ing into high gear. One of the cus- offices, candidates often express
tomary modes of a candidate to get their concerns for the local governhis or her name before the public is ment, the county, for growing busiMoney is tlowing into mutual na, every performance number that's stock fund's portfolio on a day-tothe utilization of campaign posters. ness, for progress, for neat; clean
funds
these days as if there weren't publ
·s old news . . In other day basis unless you've invested into
You saw (and still see) them every- communitie~. etc.; probably most, if
any
dark
sides
to
thi.
~
investment
wor s, 'it's history and is na guaran- a unit ·investment trust in which all
where, mostly on ihe utility poles not all, are genuinely concerned. I
t~o owafundisgoingtoperform, · t1JI: securities in ihat trust are fixed
along every street,- highway, county would think that most would abhor vehicle. But there are.
With mutual fund assets totaling:·
and held for .a specific time period.
and to)Nnship road, and on stakes in the thoughlofthemselves becomirfg
Sure, there are top 10 holding lists
the lawns of supponers.
part of an on-going problem, partic- $3 trillion and net sales into stock
and aanual reports ihat tell which
1have no qualms with candidates ularly in rutal areas -- litter! But, as funds during the first quarter of 1996
using campaign posters,,and realize the campaign posters are lefi estima'Gi) to be around $75· billion, in the future. And speaking of guar- companies the !ISSeiS of the fund
they are effective campaign tools. attached lo trees an~ utility poles, it looks as thQugh investors have tak- -antees, there is no guarantee that' hAve been invested in, but unlike a
But now lhJt the. election is over~ they soon beCome weakened and en to stock funds like ducks to water, when it comes time for you to sell po11folio of stocks that you've.creThis now of dollars into equity your mutual fund shares !hat you'll ated on your own, the professional
- why-not-rcinove:;-thG now-lllfS'l'ghtly tlfm by
wmd antl~nd evensigns? . Most that ~ posted in tually fall 'to the ground.""!!y the funds has been fueled in part by an get back more money than was orig· management side of mutual fund
lawns have_ ~islj)pe8Rld. Bu~ the o~ names on the posters, it becOIIICl$ . agin~ull market and also by retire- inally invested. The returns you get investing means leaving the stock
on the ubbty po~es alon~ pubhc apparent who has indirectly reneged . ment plans like 401 (k)s into which will be a result of market conditions, picking ~p to those managing your
fu nd.
new mo'ney is invested each and the funds selected and timing. -"
roads seem to stay· up unbl ~11.1\lfe on stated campaign concerns.
--Money flows arid performan~e.
"If there's a stock or security that
takes them down. M10y can~dates
·: How about it candidates winners every month by millions of employees.
While
that's
great
for
the
fund
Selling
market
conditions
aside,
you
think .you ought to bave -- or
are very good'about \Cmoving their arid losers -- why not wrap up your
Industry,
mutual
funds
do
have
some
remember
that
lots
of
money
flowdon't
wadi to have -- it's out of your
po5ters Pfll!llptlY; some town.sllave campaign by removing and proper-·
passed ordinances ~t -:e'IWI'II ~ ly disposing of your posters in ALL down sides that investors need to be irig into a fund as well as lots ofmon- · ·hands. Somebody else is going to
signs to be !""moved w1th1n • ~ areas? I, for one, would be most reminc:Je(J of. Here are a few of them: ey flowing out of a furtd can affect make that call," says Jon Teal, a
, •• What the future will bring. Per- that fund's performance.
.
spokesperso,tf at Lipper Analytical
period of wne after the elciclJOII. I appreciative.
formance
is
the
name
of
the
invest-What's
iri'your
fund's
poltfolio.
·
Services.
only wish the si!IIIC law would be
Daniel T. WUI
·
Portfolio . management.
exten~ county-wi(lc; seemingly,
Pomeroy ment game. In the .inutual fund are- Forget know)ng what exactly is in_a_
t
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Ouay s wea . er .orecas
#ol

The Deily Sentinel • P1ii 3

. ~ •lllddllpG'"., Ohio

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The Daily Sentin~

S'ports
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If this is any irdication ,of what
the Cincinnati Reds' buUpen is like,
they' re going to be in ttoublc.
For the second consecutive game,
Montreal's buUpen
·
;

into the late innings. This time, the
offense took advantage of three critical misplays and ndlied for an 8-4
viC19fY Wednesday night over the
Reds.

.

Wednetday night's . National Lugua game In
Cincinnati, where the Elxpoa won 8-4. Moving In
to make the call Ia umpire Steve Rlppley. (AP)

Mark Grudzielauek had a career·
high four hits, including a homer in
a five-run eiabtb, as the Expos
scorc4 !even error-aided runs in two
innings to get their fust win.
''1bal first win is always the hardest," Grudzielanek said. "Once you
get that one, you get comfortable."
Reds manager Ray Knight was
uncomfortable with his bullpen most ·
of the spring. What he saw Wednesday night kept him busy making trips
to the mound for pitching changes.
' "When your defense doesn't do
the job, you have to pick them up as
pitchers," Knight said.
That's been the striking contrast
in the first two games between the
team with the smallest payroll in the
m11jors {Montreal) and the one with
the second,biggest in the National
League:
The Expos bullpen has given up
just two runs in eight iMings in the
first two games. Dave Veres (1 ·0)
pitched one inning for the win
Wednesday, and Mel Rojas had two ·
perfect innings to save it.
1
"If we can take care of long relief,
we're going to be a tough team,"
manager Felipe Alou · . ·
By contrast, the Reds' bullpen has ..
allowed seven runs and II hits in
seven innings of the two games.
"We're just getting our feet on the .
ground," said starter John Smiley,
who allowed just one run and six hits
over six innings and had seven
strikeouts for 1,000 career. "We're
still gelling loose and getting the jitters out."

t

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PROJ'ESSIONA£.

-JE
REPAIR

Whether it was jitters or just bad

Scoreboard
Chlcafo ....... ,....... ,... :

Baseball
AL standings
.

New ¥ork .............. ~. 2

0

Toronta ............ ,. ..... 2
Detroir. ................... I
. Bolton ..................... 0

0

~
1.00

1.00

Ctnlnl Dh-ision
Minnesato ............. 2 I .667

Cblcqo ................... ! 2 .m
CLEVELAND ......... O 2 .CXXl

,,

.000

I '!

Western Dlvblon
TeJUI.J ....................... 2 0 · I~
Senttle ............. :........ 2 I - ~
California................. ! I ..
O~&amp;kland ...................0
2 .000

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Kanslll Oty :......... 0

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2

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Tonight's pmes

.

'Eastern Divlsktn

li.ll

1.00

I

,j()i)

I

NewYork ............... l

I · ..SOO

I

I

.500

I

2

.000

2

OoldenSIIIe ..........31 42
LA. Ctippert .........27 47
x·doc:hed playoflopot
y-clinched division

I .00
.667

.7!13
.S83

.514
.4S8
.403
.384
.192

)!·Chicago .i1.:........6J 8 .887
lndian11 ....... :.......... AS 29 .608

CLEVELAND .......42 31 ..575
Allanut... .................41

31

Detroit... .................40 32

Charlone ................ 37 ~6
Milwautee ........ :.... 22 ' 50
Toronto ................. .l9 ~3

1

11

II

32

=roll ............
x-Oiicaao .......... 39 26 12 90 2!19 204
St. Louis ............ 32 31 14 78 211 233

.625

.514

.4~8

.425
.36S

41~

12~

24'4
'I1

31~

Wednesday'• omres ·

New Jmey 100, LA. Cliwa94

~!lazy&gt;£1.%~i~t"i' Lohn 89
' IJelrOII 98, Cbarlone 83
·
Orlando 98. New YOit' 8l
San An10nio 117, Sacnunento 96
Seattle 118. Houstoa 103
Vancouver lOS, MinneiOUliOO
· TonJcbt's pmes
CLEVELAND at Toro1110, 7 p.m.
Bofton at Orlando. 7:30p.m.
Wuhinaron 41 Atlanta, 7:)0 p.m.
Miami nt Chiugo, 8:30p.m. •
Ulah a1 Phoenix, 9 p.m.
.
Denver a1 Golden SUite. 10:30 p.m.

'

Friday's pma

Detroit at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Atlanta at New Jeney. 7 : ~ p.m.
C ~ .iea,o Ill QuviOite, 8 p.m.

New .York at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Wuhingtoo at San Antoalo, 8 : ~0 ·
p.m.
Portland lli 'Denw:r, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at Utlh, 9 p.m.
Phoeni ~ at Scaltle, 10 p.m.
YIIDCOUver 111 L.A. Laken. 10:30 p.m.
Houlton a1 Sacrarneato0 10:30 p.m.

Hockey

Ill

.S69
.SS6
.507
.306

.264

Podllclll•lllon

y·Col0!11do ....... ..43 2410 96 303

Calpry .............. 32 34 II 75 226
Vllll&lt;OUver .........30 3415 75 269

Meigs spilued Vinton a S-2 lead
lifter six inni~gs apd scored two runs
in each of the finaltwo at bats to~
a'come-from-behind 6-5 victory over
the Lady Vikings in Tri· Valley Con· · fetence sOftball action Wednesday
';.evening at Meigs High School.
~
It was the season opener for both
teams.
The Vikings jumped.out on top in
the top of the first inning with a pair ·
of runs. Meigs c u~ lhe lead in half in
the bottom 'of the inning wlien Julie
King singled and came around .tb
score on a ground out by Emily
Fackler.
I!! · Vinton scored a run in the second
i'lo make it a 3-1 contest but the
arauders answered with another
ingle run in the bottom ·of the
. ~ing. Cassey Sanfo(d walked with .
wo outs ahd came around,.Jo score
·. · n a ~i11gic by Melissa'Rlijj{Sburg iO
ull the Lady Marauders to within 3·
·
The Vikings added sin~le runs in
; ~e third and sixth innlag to increase
•'Jiie lead to 5-2, but ll)e Marauders
~fefused to die. Ashley.Roach singled
~ith one out in the bottom of the
~ixth and Sanford followed with a•
~ouble . Sanford later scored on a
und out to pull Meig.·s '.o within.s. .

228

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Wednesday's scores

Wuhinaton 5, Buffalo I
0t11WP 3, Floridll2
Basion 4, Monlfelll I
Ta/npa Bay 4, Hartford 2
Chicaao S, Toronto 2
WianipeJ J, Dalla~ I
Sl. Louis 6, Colorado J
Colpry 4, Vancouver 3
AnAheim I, Edmon1on 0

Oeuoil 2·, Los A~~&amp;eles 2 (tie}

Tonlabt'a pmes
Montreal at: 80110n., 7:30 p.t;n.
WuhiDJIOn a1 Pittsbtlr&amp;h, 7:30p.m....
Hartford al New Jeney, 7 : ~ p.m.
N.Y. RPDJeU at Philadelphia, 7:30
p.m.
· Toronto Ill St. Louis. 8:30p.m.
Edmon1on Ill San Jose, 10: ~ p.m.

,.

...

Frid•y's pmes
N.Y. lslanden a1 pnawa. 7:30 P·trl·
· Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers. 7::\0

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Bu!f~o M1Wnpa !Uy, 7:30p.m.
Cbil:&amp;j!O U DaJiu, 8::1() p.m. ·
Deuoit at Aftllbeim, IO:~p. m.

,.

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Ll'•.''

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Senior ri hthander G
Stante
fi d 0 :. 11
d tru~ 1 . Y

~~~~ ~:-~ef~:~!all~er~uton~~

victory over Vinton County in TriValle Conference baseball action
Wed:esda even in at Meigs High
8
School. Y
The game was called after S 112
·mnmgs
·
""because of mtrkness.
·
Stanley, who is coming off a preseason injury to his pitching ann
which limited his W""k this spring
- • off Single
.
gave up ·only a lead
to•

• ' Federal Hocki.ng broke a scoress deadlock in the bouom of the
· nh inning,. posting six runs on
hits en route to a 6-0 season
ning Tri-Valley Conference vicry over Southern Wednesday night
i area baseball action in Stewart.,
,J The game was the first game for
lloth squads.
·
; :In three of the (irsl four innings,
S&lt;iulhern (0-1) put a baserunner on
~th less than two outs, but failed to
gCi the man funher than second base.
1
: Southern starter Kevin Deemer
diiJ a good job over lhe first (hrce .
iijings, but the potent FH lineup had
.ttlo singles (Trudp and Mitchell), a
~,w1tk and an error sandwiched
:fund a 2-3 groundout 10 plate two

.

·· :;southern ace Jesse Maynard .
c6)ne on in relief, but gave up a lworun single (both runs charged .to
'oeemer), a walk and ·another single
to: Curtis. When the smoke had
{'clljlll"'\\. FH led 6-0i Maynard retired
"'the side with ease the rest of the way.
·~bJt the damage had been done.
,. Southern threatened with a.May.
single in_ the sixth, but he was

19'h
22 ·
22'h
B~

Northeast Dhillon
46 26 • 96 340 261
...... ............ 39.31 8 86 2.53 2)6 .
Boooon ................ 37 30 10 14 266 m

left stranded. In the seventh, Shawn
Dailey . reached o~ ~n error and
Mike Ash walked wjtlltwp-out, but
.both runners were left in place as FH
, (1-0) rolled to the win.
· Deemer also had a single. Travis
Lisle r~ached twice on errors. May"
nard had two•singles, and Jay Ml:K·
elvey singled. Mitchell and Trudo
each had two singles for the winners,
·wnile Cunis and Chapman also singled.
.
Deemer suffered the loss with
five walks and two strikeouts, while
Maynard yielded four walks.
Scchkor picked up the win with three
strikeouts and a walk.
In other Hocking Divisio!J action;
Trimble's varsity heat Eastern 17-5,while Trimble's reserves heat,.East. em · 21· 7 in a contest shortened
because of 1darkness.
.Soulhem will play a doubleheader at Fon Frye Saturday at 1.1 a.m.
lnnina mllb

'44~

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;::.;.·- .IT.......:TA;._K_;_ES_A_C_O_MM
__.~
.U-NI_TY_T_O____,
PROTECT A CHILD

singled home another run for an 8-0

•

Foster Homes are needed for
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 992-2117 for information and
_.jo be part of the effort.

score.
Southern plated three more in the
•
second inning on a Jennifer Cumnlins walk, a Tassica Cummins RBI
single, a Northup single and walks to
Lisle and Cynthia Caldwell to make
the score 11-0.
founh
pushedadded
tile . 1';;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;=::;::;=::;=====~
scoreAtosix-run
17-0 before
Southern
two more runs in the fifth to mercy·
BRING TH WORLD TO YOUR DOORSTEP!
rule the Lan.cers (0-1 ).
Host a foreign exchange student for the upcoming school year!
Pullins suffered the loss for the
AISE is seeking families for high school students from over 40
Lancers.
.
In other Hocking Division action,
countries world wide. This non"profit organization offers a
Eastern's varsity blasted Trimble
terrific opportunity for Americans to_learn about l\IIOther culture
IS-I, while Trimble's reserves beat
in a' fun-filled, family setting. AISE provides host families with
Eastern 16-10.
complete. background infonnation on each S(Udent, and allows
Southern will ft-avel to Fort Frye
Saturday for an II a.m. doublehead·
families to select the st\ldent whom they woulil ·like to host.
er.
Interested families should call AISE at l-8~SffiLING. Call
lnginc tmJ11
.
tpday. The world is just a phone call away!
Southern ..._. ............. ll!\0-62= 19-12-1
Fed. Hockmg ............. ()()().00=0-1-3
I
American lntercuHunll Stuclant Exchange
WP- Lawrence
l AISE, Is i non..,a,lt, tax eliempt educallonel fliundetlcn.
LP- Pullins .

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New Shipment

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BERKLINE
RECLINERS .

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· Large assortment of styles and.
colors.
·
Sale prices start at only ·

.$349
9:30 TO 5:00 ·

ANDERSON'S

Monday til 8:00

Pomeroy

992-3.Q71

'

Southern .......... .....00\)-()()().0;:()..4-3
· Fed. Hocking........000-600·x=6-5-2
Batteries:
•
RS -~emer (LP) Maynard &amp; Lisle
FH-Scchkor (WP) &amp; Dixon.

HIT A HO E RUN WITH
E TERPRISE • NAGLE

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ifi;:r----------1
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· June 15th

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$10.00 Out of Every
1
Heat Pump Sold
Donated to Youth 1.
Baseball Leagu~ I

The 8th a.rfl)ual Ohio Riversweep, which spans a River area
in six states, is scheduled for June 15th, 1996, from 9:00- Noon.
.
.
Volunteers are vital to makiiig ()ur clean-up efforts a success
in Meigs County, and to help make·our portion·ofthe river
a cleaner, safer place for re~tion- and enjoyment.
~

4~

BASEBALL .
OR

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I . FREE

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

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$1 00.00 CASH BACK

With Purchase Of A Cooling System And Thla Coupon

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L----------------------------

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BUY ANY COOLING SYSTEM FROM I
ENTERPRISE-NAGLE And Receive
Absolutely ·~REE An Overnight Accommodation
. ·In Cincinnati With ·2 FREE Tickets To A
.C incinnati Reds Baseball.'G amef
1

Serta
Mattresses &amp; Box Spring_s

We hope you or your group/club can
. volunteer some ofyot.ir
.
· tinie for 'ti:Jis event. T-shirts Will be provided fm: all panicipants,
along with refreshm~nts. Additionally, garbage bags will
be provided for clean-up colleet~on.
.

Durapedic

I

Perfect Sleeper

Please call to register as a vo~unteer in Riversweep '96!

'

Twin

$79 pc.
1

ea.

Twin · 5 12~9

ll.pc. F"ll Set

SJJ9.pc Full ' 5 169~pc.
Queen .5299... pc Queen $439-pc.
Full

I

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King Set

.

Free Delivery,
Free Removal of ·
·old bedding ·

AN~ [)ERSON'S
'Pomeroy

5399

au~n Set · s499

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992-3871

5699
·
-

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To register as a volunteer, please contact:

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• Stanley Doon
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 in. On Cellter
• ARnSU'OII&amp; soJ•rian
Floor1ile ' .
'·•r "4
~.
• Marillate Cabinets
• 8 l'llol Cei IIIII
• 2x10 Floor Joilll, 16 In. On Center
• 52 CJallon W•ter H~
• Shaw C8qletl ·.
• Delta PIUCtll
·
•·
• MutcrT·Ioct Vinyl Sldina,With Lifetime W1f111!1Y
• 25 YCIC WarrantY Aaphjllt Sllilllle$
• I0 Year SliuctuJIII 'Wamnly On The Home

.•

T~ GAUJA, JACKSON, MaGS,
VINION
.
.
SoLID ASfE MANAGEMENT DIS1RICf
8 0 0 - 5 4 4 - 1 8 5 3

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EN.IERPRISE~NAGLE

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319 S. 2ND AVE~
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760

FAMILY HO~ INC.
Model Home Located a't
Intersec:tio-. of Rts; 7 &amp; 33

•

GRAND OPENING APRIL 12TH· 13TH

· Our Prlees An The.Lowest In The Ana.
t

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of Our: Home Standard Feature&amp;

fli-t · ·• Andcnen_ntt Wi~l

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Serta Rest

A Few

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PQmeroy, OB 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewilll Houn 1:00-S~ p.m.
n.e. • Sll. or by •!'Oiatma~t .

1·800·5 1,6•2932
VAUD APRIL 1ST THRU ~Y -31ST
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992·4485

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Tennh
HIL1QN HEAD ISLAND, S.C.
(AP)-'- Top:sceded Conchita Mar"
tinez of Spain. the two-time defend·
ing champion, beat Silvia Farina of
Italy 6-1,6-2 in the second round of
the Family Circle Cup.
In other second-round matches,
second-seededArantxa Sanchez Vicario of Spain beat Martina Hingis of
Switzerland 0-6, 6-7. 6-2 and Irina
Spirlea of Romania upset fourth·
seeded Gabriela Sabatini of Argentina 6-4, 6-2.

. lt"•bUrah ..... .

27

41 ~

wh!le Billie ~ Bobbie, M~,
Rhienfrank, S1sson aha Sbellie
Weiner scored one ~n each.
The Redwomen ':"Ill head to Cantonto face Walsh Fnday at3:30 p.m.

ter

Dueball
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - . The
San Francisco Giants took their second step toward building a waterfront ballpark, announcing a $50
million, 24-year marketing deal with
Pacific Be it. The Giants hope to have
Pacific Bell Park ready at the proposed China Basin site in time for
opening day in 2000.

:W L I flo. Gl llA

x-Philodelpbia ... .41 221J 95 264 196 ·
N.Y.Ronstn ....4021 14 94 ·2.19 211
Florida .....,........ J9 29 9 87 245 221
WoshinJIOO.;..."J7 2911 8l 220 190
Tampa Bay ........ 35 29 12 82 224 2l3
New Jeney ........ ]4 30 12 ' 80 199 184
N.Y. Isl'!lders ... 2048 8 48 209 299

27
41

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-. Sports brJefs,.-

Atlantk DfyiiJon

Ira

an RBI. l!illie McGhee had three;
RBls, while Rhienfrank had two
RB!s and Brady had one RBI. .
11te Red women saw Tanya H1cks~
and Sagle score two runs each,

. .
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Ruckel in the second inn mg.
around to ~ore to make it a2-0conRuckel ~ad tJ:ie V1king h1': Ward
Meigs broke the scoreless tie in test when Brad Whitlatch singled up was the losmg pitcher sca11en ng the
the third inning when Chad Bunon the ~iddle.
.
..
~our hits, striking out five and walkwalkl:d with one out, stole second
Vmton threatened 1n the fourth . mg two;
.
and came around to score when inning when with one out Ruckel
Meigs (1-0) Will travel to Fede_r·
Stanley hit a smash 10 second that the walked and Ebens reached on a al Hockmg on Thursday and w1ll
Viking second baseman misplayed Marauder rniscue •.but Stanley struck th~n ~o to Jackson Saturday for a
for an error.
· out the final two bailers to end the tw1~b111 .
•
· The Marau ders p1co.
· o:.ed ~p .an threat ·.
lggmg
lsll&amp;b
.
.
v· C t
()()().()()()..0. f"2
insurance run in the fourth mmng
Me1gs had four h1ts, all smgles by
m_ton oun y....... ..
when Paul Pullins reached when 11Je Cass Cleland, _Brent Hanson, Chns Melgs ......................OOI - IOx-2-4-2
filrsl base
' man dropped his. nnn.up. Roush and Wh1tlatch. Stanley struck Ward (LP) and Beckett
·
after Pullins stole second her -rcame out mne,
wa(ked two and h'II a bat - .Gary StanIey (WP) and Cuss Cleland

Southern mercy-rules
Federal Hocking;1,9·0 ..

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runs.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

2.S~

gave up six hits to get~ win.
.
The second game ,faw Lor1
Philpot pitch a . five.tiitter while
senior Heather Brining's 2-for-3 hitling included a double, a single and

enth inning but was later thrown out
•
· ··
at the plate for the inninss second
out. With Meigs facing a one run
deficit and two outs, Fackler
responded with a triple off the fence,
she came around to score on a
Stephanie .Stewart double. Stewar•
An eight-run first inning and sixthen scored the winning run
run fourth inning ,broke the game
another &lt;\ouble by Cynthia Cotterill.
wide open as coach Howie CaldMeigs pounded out 13 hits.led by
well's Southern Tornadoes rolled to
Fackler and Cotterill with three hits an impressive 19-0 shut-out victory
each. Fackler had a triple and a pair over the Federal Hocking Lancers ·
of.singles, while Cotterill added a Wednesday night in the clubs' seapair of singles and a double. King son-opener.
~
added two singles, while Sanford
Tassica Cummins led the hardand Stewan each had a double. hilling Soythem club (1-0 overall &amp;
Roach, Ramsburg .and J'onya Miller in the Hocking Division) with three
each added"a single. .
singles in a 3-4 night, while Jennifer
Fackler picked up the win giving Lawn:nce doubled and singled, Cyn. up six hils, s'triking out six and walk- thia Caldwell doubled and Jonna
ing 10.
Manuel; Amber Thomas, Sammi
Hale had a pair of singles to.lead Sisson, Jell}lifer Cummins, Bea Lisle
the Vikings. Waters wa~ lhe losing and Amy Northup each singled.
pitcher s(riking out one and walking
Jennife.r Lawrence hurled the
two while giving up the 13 hits.
shutout victory with three strikeouts,
Meigs will play Thursday ,at Fed- three walks and one hit - Hanlon's
eral I-{gcking.
fourth-inning single.
lgping illllla
t ynthia Caldwell, Manuel, .
Vinton County...... 211 -00I-0=5-6-2
Thomas, Sisson and Jenny Cummins
Meigs ................ ) 10-002-2=6-13-2 . started the game out with five
' Batteries:
straight walks, _crediting Sisson and
Waters (LP) &amp; Ford
Cummins with RBis. Lawrence and
Emily Fackler (WP) &amp; Cassey San· Tassica Cummins then had RBI sinfciid
gles before· Nonhup. Lisle and .
King singled to lei:t'o.ff the_sev.
Manuel each walked. Then Thomas

:6-0 win over Southern

NHLstandiqgs

17 ~

Meigs rallies to hand
·vinton County 6-5/oss .

.'

'

p.m.

~n ' Tuesday's · MOC softball
act1on, Rio Grande beat Mt: Vernon
NllZIII't~e 3.2 and 9·1 in the Red_women s first conference games of
the season.
. .
In the first game, Bllhe McGhee,
Roxanne Sagle ·and Melisa Sisson

federal H
_ ·ocking posts

12'h
21~

titte.s. run~ · batted m•. ~nd An~el
.Rodngucz s 2-for.4 hitting. wh1ch
incl~ded a triple and fou_r ~Is.
~emor C~y Staton got the WID to
Improve his record to, 1-0-I.
· In the second ga!"e• _the Redmen's only . run was dnven m by Rat-

i:

22.5
274
Aaoheim ............ 31.38 7 69 21l 230
Edmon1on ........ .. 30 40 8 61 229 286
Loa An10~1.. .... 22l8 18 62 2AO 287
Sanlooe ......... :... l951 7 45 241 . 331
y-clinched divilign rille
x-clinched playoff spot

turned 2-for-3 efforts at the pl~te to
lead the Redwomen (2-0 in the
MOC). Sisson ~ Shelly Rhien
frank each had one RBI. F~eshman
Brenda Brady struck out four and

·r·

Toronto.............. JI J~ 12 74 231 242
Winnipea ........... 34 38 5 n 260 m
Daliol .................24l9 I] 61 211 2.58

Tht _Dally Sentinel • P9 S

;e: I~b~';y!.~;c::;.,R~:~~ ' . =e~ights
in aI p.m. doubleStan
· ley· one
h•ltte'r helps· Me·•gs
sh'u't o
· ut vc . 2• 0
Rt.tw- lfteil DR
.
·
•
.

•hitting, which inclu~ a double and

1.~ 1 ~ $ l!A

2()~

20'•

cliff, who w~pi •J for 3. JohrWt..n
Cummins (0-l) took the toss.
The hdmen (6-11 overall &amp; 1· 3
in the Mid·Ohio Conference) will
head to Urbana Saturday to face the

.a doublehel!der with ShawMC State
Wednesday, winning the opener 14II before droi'Ping a S-1 decision in
~ second game.
.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Control Dl•lllon

3o

.J29

•

Pomeroy • Mlddlepoit, Ohio

lfledmen split twinbilf with SSU; Redwomen sweep Mt. Vernon , ·

f

20% OFF OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES

Hortfonl ............. 31 36 9 71 22J 242
Buffalo............... 2941 1 65 2.11 2.51
Ortdwa ............... 16 ~6 5 37 114 273

22\1..

'

!1: L f:cl.
18
30
3,:
39
43
4S
!19

.740

35 .,.4

Sacramenro ............ :u 39

Central DiviaiGft

Cmtrail Dl"Won

0
I

Portlond ................. 37

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allonlk Dtvlolon

y·Orlnndo .............. .SS
New York ..............42
Miomi .................... 37
WllSbin,ton ..:......... ll
New Jersey ............ 29
Boston................... ,28
Phi1Ddelphi;t ........... l4

49

J.·L.A. l...akcn •....... 4!5 27
Phoenix ..................3? 35

Friday'• i l l -

lam

19

Dall...................... 22 jl .301
/ ' Vancoover .............12 60 .167
hdlk Dlrilllon
y-Seoale ................ .511 1.5 .195

NBA standings

NL standings

Phtsburgh ...............~ 2
HOU$100 ................... 2

I

Basketball

Derroil (Gohr 0-0) vs. Oaklwnd (Johns
0-0) n1 Uu YeJilS. 10 :0~ p.m.
MiJwqukec: (Karl 0-0) at Seattle (Jolin·
son 0.0). IO:O!i p.m.

.·

MlnDeiOfD ..............24

CINCINNA T1 (Portugal 0-0) 01
Philadelphia (Williams 0.0), 7:3.5 p.m.
Pillsliurah (Smith 0-0) at New York
(Miicki 0.0), 7:40p.m.
St. Louis (UrtM!.ni 0-0) ar AIIMta {Av·
ety 0-0). 7:40p.m.
· Sm~ Diego (Tewklbul)' P,.O) at Hous·
ton {Ktle 0.0), 8:0:'i p.m.
.

(Bo•kie 0.0), 10:'" p.m.

0

3~

""colptado (Reynoso 0-0) at Mo~ lreal
(Co"""' 1).()), IJl p.m.
Los Angeles (CAndioiTi ()..O) ar Chic•·

(Will 0.0), 8:3S p.m.
.
.
Chicago (Bere 0-0) ut Callforn1o

Atlwna ..................... 2
MorMreal .......: .......... l

IJ•Utah .................... .SO 22 .694
11•Houston ............. .43 30 .S89
Dc!nver ................... 31 41 .431

Florida (Rapp 1).()), 7:05p.m.

. Bostoo (Wakefield 0.0) at Knnsas City
!Belcher 0-0), 2:35p.m.
Toronro (Guzmon 0-0) at CLEVELAND (NosrO.O~ 7:0.1p.m.
Baltimore (Mercker ().Of a1 Minnesoltl
{Hawkins 0-0), S:OS p.m.
, ,
New York (Goode n 0-0} Ill Texas

:W L f:cl.

.liA

go (8UJiinaer 0.0). 3:20p.m.
•·
..Son Fnncisco (Fernandez 0-0 ) ill

Friday's games

Floricb .................... 0

~

'

:W L l!sl.

x-San Antonio ... •...S4

(Mulholland S-13). 7:3.5 p.m.
5Jul francisco {Watson 7·9) ol' At1anlP
(Smoi!Z 12-7), 7:40p.m.

New York (Kef· 1-2) at CLEVELAND
(Hcrshlser 16--6), .O.S P.-m.
·Kansas Cily (H-.ncy 3-4) ott B~tltimore
(Erickson 13-10). J:O:'i p.m.
Detroit {Olivares 0-0) vs . Qoklnnd
(Van Poppe14-8) at laJ Vegos, N.O!I p.m.
Boliton (Wakefield 16-8) at Teu1
(Gro" 9-lll. B:JS p.m.

Plli)odelphia ............. l

Ira

Piusburgh (£ricks 3-9) 111 Florida (A.
LeiterO.O)•. I :3!1 p.m.
S1. Louis (Alan Benes 1-2) at New
York (Wilaon 0.0). I:40 p.m.
Los A.nzcles (Astncio 7·8) at Oticaao
{FoSler 12-11 ), 2:20p.m.
Colorado (Relmr 4·6) at Phlladelphi'l

· Mlnnesot~ 16, Detroit?
Olic.aao 4, Seanle 2
·, 'New York . .. CLEVELAND I
&amp;ldmore 7. Kanw Ci1y I
Tex!U 7. Boslon 2
Toronto 10, 03klnnd 4 .
Cu1ifohlir~ 3, Milwaukee 2 {II)

Iom

M'dwtst DM..on

•

Tonlcbt's aames
Monuea1 (Panillllll 0.0) at CINCIN·
,NJo.TiiBurl&gt;a 1~); 12 : 35 p.m.

Wednesday's scores

t

WESTERN CONFERENCE

.I

St Louis S, New York 3
Sun Diego 7, O.icpgo !I
Houaton S. Los Anae1cs 2
Philtldelphin 3, Colorlldo I
Atlanta·JS. San Francisco 2 .
Montreo1 8, CINCINNATI 4

!

.SOO

2

I
I

Wednesday's scores

· 2~

2 .333
2 .000

Milw~&amp;ukee .... ;.......... l

.500
.500
.500

Wellem Dl¥illon
Colorudo .................. l
I .500
Snn Diegp ................ I
I .5,00
Los Angelet ....... ,;.•.. l 2 .333
San Fmndsw ..........0 2 .000

llulem Dlflolon

I:.............if . t

I
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I

CINC NNA T1 ......... 1
St Louis ................. I

.

.

~o Grande.'s baseball team ~plit

play, the ~ fumbled the game ter wu playU., ,.Fimbu ~·
away in the final three innings. • Fletcher liit one ov'er--Gibralklt t
They took a ._,I lead into the sev- .head, and the rookie fellu he trlc!f
enth. councsy of Barry Larkin's to make an over-the-shoulder~ .
RBlsingle.and solo homer off starter
"At first I tbought be Willie
Pedro Martinez.
Mays-ed me there," Fletcher llid.
Third · baseman . Chris . Sabo 1" It was justtoo tough of a pla~Y• h •
flubbed Darrin Fletc:her:s grounder. ~- Two runs scored on the doubte,
with two out in the seventh, pulling putting the Expos up S-4. 01\'e Sil·
him on second. Henry Rodriguez vestri followed with a pinch RB!sin·
doubled off Hector Carrasco and " gle off Xavier Hernandez, aQd,
scored on Grudzielanek's single to Grudzielanek hit a two-run holM '"
CUI it to 4-3.
'
.
"We broke oUt,'' Fldcber sail. 11 It
1
The Expos batted ;u-ound in the took us 17 innings, but we hroke
eighth for five runs, all with two out."
.
·'
The Reds felt they'd given one
outs.
Rookie :'&gt;(eve Gibralter went in to 1away. ·
play left in the eighth and prompdy
"Last year, l.tbought we won ,a
dropped MoisesAiou's fly ball at the couple of games with our defense,". :
wall for an error.
Knight said. "Tonight, we lost one,
"I imagine it might have been I don't !hi~ we' ll have ·too man&gt;; ·'
first-g;~me big-league jitters," Knight ballgames where we'll play bad , ~
said. " But he can flat-out play . defense late. TIIllllineup we had on •' .
defense. He's proven to me that he the field late in.the game is the linecan be outslanding, whether he's in up I would want on the fi~ld every,
center field,left field or right field." day, defensively,"
Asked if it was jitters, Gibralter
Notes: Now that Cecil Fielder hill! ;
said, " You can call it wh'atever you stolen a base, Fletcher has the
want. I call it an error."
longest streak .of any active play~r
With two out and two on, Gibtal- without a stolen base.

.

•

uraclly, April 4, 1S,S

Expos tal(~ ·advantage of Reds' errors to notch·-8-4 victory
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - If the
Montreal Expos keep getting relief
pitching like this, they' re going to be
in a lot of close ganles.

' &lt;

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. Thursd8y, Aprt14, ~"!..

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AIR IS 1.5 TON WITH INSTALLATIQN

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: P9 I • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy•

,

;

Ohio

,
rn
0
c 01

: 'fhured.y, Aprtl4, 11111

-H EY BOYS AND.GIRLS,,
ENTER THE 1996
.

•

..

..
EASTER COLORING CONTEST AND
HAVE A .LOT OF FUN. AND
t:XCIT~MENT. YOU MAY WIN
UP TO $15
.
'AND IT'S SO EASY TO ENTER.;

,•

.

'

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•

'

· CONTEST RULES

•

.

.

,.J•r

I. Jmt color one or paor~ of the draWings on t~ese pages,
· f"all in the blanks and take your eritry to the sponsoring
store before 12 Noon, April 6.
..
2. Entries will be judged in two different categories: ages
4-8 ~d 9-12.
.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but
can win only one prize. ·
, .
' . ..
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

· FIRST PRIZE•••••••••115.00
SECOND PRIZE ••••• 110.00 .
THIRD PRIZE •••••••••• 15.00

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POMEROY, OHIO

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RUTLAND FURNITURE &amp; BOTJLE GAS
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IAddrell
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POMEROY

IIIDDLEPOAT

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ACQUISitiONS

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

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VAUGHANS CARDINAL
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Address,______________~----------'I
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SYRACUSE, OHIO. Member FDIC RACINE, OHIO · I ·

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RIDENOUR SUPPLY

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f'eoe 8 • The Dally St: ltlntl

Thureday, Aprtl 4.-1•

Pomttroy • Middleport, Ohio

Arts, history to be featured at
Museums Association conference
.,

''dhio Museums: Community
BIIS!Od, WIH'Id Bound" will be the
theme of the 1996 Ohio ,Milseums
Association annUal conference to be
held at the Ohio University Inn, April
14-16.
As a feature of the conference,
several field trips to cultural and historical sites in Athens · and Gallia
County have been planned.
Workshops will cpver topics such as
"Shoestring Strategies for Small Budgets." Visits to Gallia County's an$
organizations including a stop at the
French An Colony where •n exhibit
by prominent m:tists Jenny Holzer
and Mike Glier will be on display. .
· Margaret Parker, president, Meig$
County Pioneer and Historical Society, Pomeroy, a member of the Conference planning commit~. will be
a speaker at the workshop session.
Her topic will be "Coming Into Their
Own: The Museum Archives."
· Others speakers will include Kimberly Camp, director of the Museum
of African American History in
Detroit, the largest museum of its
kind in the country; Nancy Epping,
director of the Elgin Public Museum,
a natural history museum located .in
the suburbs of Chicago, .and A. T.
Stephens, Outreach and Educational
Support Manager for .the Fairfax
.County Park Authority in Virginia, a

-~-Community
THURSDAY

=~t.

I

county system of park lands, nature
centers and historic houses. '
'Representatives from all types of
arts, historical, cultural and recreational organizations are invited to
participate in the conferen.ce. .
Special events, activities, workshops and seminars ~ill be offered
during the conference.
Some of southeastern Ohio' s best
kept secrets will be highlighted such
as the Dairy Bam Southeastern Ohio
Cultural Arts Center, where an
evening reception will treat aaendees
to a special look at Area An on View,
an exhibit highlighting the works of
talented regional artis.ts.
Another special event will feat.ure an
evening of local history and cuisine
at Gerard Hilfeny and Associates,
Athens' internationally recognized
exhibit design firm.
Hilfeny will be remembered by
local residents as having lived in the
county for ~vera! years, and as the
original designer for the Meigs County Museum.
A cocktail party at the~ennedy
Museum of American An features a
behind the · scenes look at one of
Ohio's newest museums. Art lovers
will also enjoy an Athens County artisan tour showcasing the wcirk of area
crafts people.
Seminars will address topics such

furnlelllng
of
NCmCE 10 iiiDtJEII8
FEll llrlar ....
COunty COUMII
Hlfllwey
on ~ Inc., P.O. ilol 722,
l'cMMI oy, OH 417111, wnr
'..-of
1ccept ...led bide for •
1117....,. (11) p 1 tllnger liquid ••Ph.cr' required,

as computer technology and the

Internet, · working with graphic
designers, board development, volunteer training, building membership
and many othe~~o subjects .
Representatives from l)lree institutions will talk about their experience with and plandor identifying,
preserving and finding users for their
materials. This session is chaired by
George Bain, Archives and Special
Collection's,
Ohio University
Libraries; Athens. Speakers include
Julie McMaster, archivist, Toledo
Museum of An; Margaret Parker,
president, Meigs County Pioneer ood
Hismrical Society, Pom~roy; Anita
Weber, archivist, Cleveland Museum
of Natural History. That workshop
will he held on April 15 at the Conference site, Ohio University Inn,
Athens.·
Interested people have the option
of attending a single event, a work,shop only, a single day oi the entire
2 112 day conference. Registration
fees range from $ 15 to $ II 0.
Advance registration deadline is Friday, but anyqne wanting to attend can
register at any time during the conference.
For further infonnation, or to reg·
ister for the 1996 Ohio Museums
Association Annual Conference, residents may call (614) 224-9660.

Dodge Mexlven with
wh ..lcll•lr Hit until
Wed_neldly, April 17th.
Minimum bid -44,000.00.
the 1111111 County COuncil
o.n· Aging, Inc. nun11 1111
rlgM to eccept or~ eny
or 111 blda. For/ more
lnf~~m~~llon, conllcl W1nde
VIning, 614-982·2181.
(4) 3, 4, II 3TC

Public Notice

epproKimltelr 100,000
g1llone for the . ye•r.
Propoe111 er.e to be
returned on bid forme
aupplled by thl , llllga
County Engl.- •ncl lllllf
be oblllned threugh the
~·· Oftloe.
The
Melge
County.
Cornm
.-=~=-orre••rve
tht
right to
rejeot .,.,
or 111 bide, or enr pert
IIIM'eof lind will ~ lhl
belt bid for the llltlnded

PUBLIC NOTICE
:·Seturd8y, April 20, 1116,

r:::'Kian, Clerlt

10:0Cl a.m. the Home ~rd"' ..... County
Nellonal Benk will oflerfor Cornmllllonlrl
'
eirleet public llucllon on the (3) 28 (4).. 2TC
aenli Plrklng lot · the
Public Notice
f6110Wing~ '
, ttl3 Chevrolet Cem•ro

,c

Serial

'

.;rotAPI750DNt45013
• 1118 F4rd Temp GL Serltol ·
(2FAPP38XOJB137249
1188 loteocury Couger
Slrtll
'11MEBMI048JHIIII4t
The tarm• ollhe Nle are
cuh. HOIIIII Nlllonel Blnk
reoervea the right to bid 11
the Nle •n\f cir to reft!OVI
1111y or ell Item• .from the
Nh 11 eny Ume.

Township ball.

SATURDAY

......,

(3) 25, 21;
.
(41 1, 4, a, 11, 15,

•u

Loll: A Smell, Mole,

Tilt ............ reel ...... :
1111u111111 In the Vllfille Of •
, _ . , , County of llllgl
lnd . . of Ohlc!: '

AdMin
lmpleruntetlon were
ldrotllled 11 1111 flrll public
hllrlft§, end ~re alao
~ntHfecl In the Illig•
County CHIS (County
HoualnJ lmprQvement

_.........

In lectiOII I, Town 2, :
..... 13, betlnnlllll .. the • •

..........

Your favorite artist
'

106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

,

REFERENCE DEEDS:
Vol.ume 215, P1ge 273;
Volume 214, Pege 35, lotelga
IN THE COIIIION PLEAS
County QHd Recorda.
COURT OF MEIOS
AuditaJ'• P•rcel No •. 11COUNTY, OHIO
0IIIt.OOO end 1H1358.000
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
Bald r..t 11t111 w••
SAVINGS COMPANY,
eppnllld .. 3,000.00.
PlllnUfl .
S.le of Hid ...r - t o
VI.
.
be
lor not I••• then lwo·
ChrlelopherA. YIIIUQer, Et thlrde
(2131 the uoree1ld
AI., Deftndenta
1ppreloed VII.... C11h In
c... No. ttl cv 011
LlgltNodce
. lulnclcndlllofllll.
· Seld ••le le eubjecL to
Sherlfl'• Sale Df R11l ~~ 1pprove1 by the Common
AI Sheriff of Melge P1111 Court, Melgo County,
County, Ohio, I heooby otler
for 1111 ·~ 10:00 1.m. on Ohio.
M. Soul1by, Sheriff
Frldly, April 21, 1 - A.D.,
1111111
'Ohio
on the front lllpl of the (3) 21, 28, (4) 4; County,
3TC
'
County Courthou1e,

WI CIS
·HAULING
.

•••11•

Limestone,
Gravel; Sand,.
Top Soli, FlO Dirt

•

' •.

Toll

•

~ 9685 ,

.,...,.......
.......
' L•,•••flr ;
~

·~

.'~

~

G1lt•fW 'lt:&amp;lp

AlsoAccellolits
614-J.6 t4302
" ,..

•

ROOFING
NEW·fJEPAtFJ ..

First birthday
celebrated

autt.n . .

DoWnapouta

Gultel' Cleaning

.

Palt\tli19
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168 :·
eiiwnFII
Publlc~oe

Care for·
Elcle:ly ;mel
HancJrcappecJ
in Fcirnily CarP
Home
Middleport. Oh ,

Ext. 1277

LOlli OU FARM
30381 Roy Jones Rd., ·
· P.O. BoK 539
Syracl!JMI, Ohio 45778
.
TIITI C.FMY . .
(814) 992-2800
Horee&amp;TackS.Iee
112111-

LillY'S

. . . UBI/

• ·rre.
Trlrrimlng
'
•Mowlllil {RHidentlal i ·:
' ,; •nclcomm~lll)
•Shrulljlery

ROBERT BISSELL
COIISTIUCnOII

•

Legion #602
Bingo
sun. Nights
Lucky Ball $300.00
with 21 players or mora

Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according to
the Number of players
'f'II.-4-9-·20_«_or_94_9_-2_o_3_B.,:

.,
.:

Mllntentmce

All Ohio
[dS)'

/111to

lnsur;wu;

HAPPY EASTER-

1\ny IJ1 1v• ,,
DUI &amp; Sil :•:&gt;
. Oi~)·-_:(),J( !IS-·
COII1fHder- (JI H Jte~
iG ·~ ()c;;&gt; i'O·W

742·2803 ~·-

TRI·STATE.SEWER &amp;
DRAIN CLEANING·

&lt;

F'Oilll'IOY

' .New Homes • Vlny! Siding New
G•rageJ~ ~ Replacement Windows
-Room Additions • Roofing
- COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.FREE ESTIMATES ·

. 614•992·7643

L&amp;E

BIB RDDftll and
COIIfRUftiiN

IDYERnSING
IHEHATUN

Saie On Majtr . . Braids!
•• •nFlw?h

.......

Hilt

• .IWIJ£1

*7
HI:MI
·.~"' ~·~~-,
llr !Itt a 1 ~ ,....1a iiawtrl

Public Notice

~-

• Colonlall

ROBERT H. EASON,
P.E., P.S. .
MEIOS COUNTY ENGINEER
NO'nCE TO AGGREGATE
VENDORS
.se•led bid• wilt be
received by the Boerd of
Melge
County ·.
commle11oner1, Court
Houee, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 10:00 1.m. o,n
4115/116. The ltlde ·WII then
be opened 1nd Nld eloud
• 111:15 p.m. on the 15111 dey
of Aprll 1 1996 lor the
turnllhlng of Ill kinde •nd
.._ of . . ,. . . lhiiiiiiY
be required by the Melg11
Courlty
Hlghw•y
DL bnent. PropONII ~ .

Quantity

22

Item Description

Was

SALE

Swing Aim Floor
lar Stools

Imprinting
eShlrts -Hats
.Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms

Rooting .. Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters lnd Downspouts
·
• Complete Relilodellng
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

3rd St, Riclne, Oh.

(614) 992·2364

.

lie retumed on bkl fonnl

'

181

uvli! 11001

675-1581

..

f

'

•

Garage sale- April 5-6, 9am-5pm.1
4 mikts east ol Racine on SR 124. ...
Ca r, furnit ure , cloth es, mower,,
tools, etc.
Moving sale . 927 Brownell Ava.•:
Middleport. April 4,5, Thursday,
Friday, lots of misc., 9:30-7, rain.

shine.

Pl. Pleasant
-,.---'-·-vtc_l_,.n;..:Ity:._----''' .

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

3-F&amp;mily yard sale. A.pril 5th 9am7 Rt 2 to 87, 4mites· on the left.
Rain date April 6th.

:=:.::::::.:..::::::.::::.::..____.....

61~742·2193

Patio Sale. Fri 5th &amp; Sat8ll'l . 11e~ : ..
Pleuan_t St . Baby items, infant: .. ;
boy clothes, girl clothes 3-12, quiltt•
material. household things, wom-. ::
eM clothing, f'intendo tapes.·
. ..

TFN

80

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT ~-2772
Offlcti Hours: Mon.-Frt.
8:00 11.m. • 3:30 p.m.
VInyl a Alum. Siding,
VInyl Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, $torm
Doora, Storm
Windows, Garages.
Free Eallmlles

Live Psychics
· 1 on 1
1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch· tone phone

SUMEIIIIIGES
TAIIIIIfiG
12 8es1kll'r1 For

$20.00
16 Sealikrns For

Public Sale
and"'#tttctlon

.....

.

'
,.,..-,,....-,,..-:---:,--~,..,..,\' '
Mt Al to Auctio n. Eve ry Fr iday.

J:

7pm. Every Saturday 6pm. Rt 2·33- - •
'"Crossroads" . Gro ceries. new
merchandise. Ed Frazier 930 .

.Rick Pearson Auctipn ComPany, 1;
full time au ctioneer, comple1e:•,.

auction
ser'Jice .
U~ensedr:•
166,0hio &amp; ·West V1rg1ni a, 304···•

773-5785 Or 304·773.5-447.

90

:--·

wanted to Buy

1118itfn

LINDA'S
PAINTINQ

Clean Late Mo del Car s Or
Trucks,_1990 Models. Or Newei,• ..
Smith Buick Pontiac, 19.00 East·'"- •
ern A'Jenue, GaHipclis.
•

&amp; D's Auto Pan s. Buying sa l· .· ..
vage vehicle s. Selli ng parts. 304· · •

773·5033.

VERY REASOitllllE
HIVI REFiRENCES
614·915·4180

mo. pd.

(\

·

Used
antiqu es. one
pleco or complete estates, als o . ·
do apprai Sals. Osby Marrin, 614· .- • •

992-7441 .

FREE
Pick-up tllscm-detl
apjlli11Hes &amp; many metals

P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771 ·
. James E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For: Free estimate cali949-2512

......

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash Removal· Conomerclal or Residential
S.ptlc T•nU Cleaned &amp; Portable Toilets Renied.
Dally, wHidy &amp; monthly rental rates.

$25.00

Ill

ANNOUNCEMENTS

: .. ..

Wanted To Buy. 8.2 Ten Bolt Po· :. 1
sitrack Unit To Fn A 1968 Ch e- . . ~
veue Can U se Any O f T he Fol· .. ...
lowing Carriers, 65· 70 Chevrolet
'
64 -72 Chevolle, 64-72 C hevy II i ' . '
Nova, 6 7- ?0 .C amaro, 614 - 441 · , .. •
1053.

~------ · ·

Wanted To Buy: Junk Au tos WJtn , Or Witho ut Moto r s. Call Larry · , :
Lively, 614-3EI8·9303. •
..

.-.
·r~
'
'

EMPLOYMENT

30 Announcements
Anyone. Knowing. The Where·
abouls 01 Diana Beaver Please
W1ile: P.o. Box 201, Wiorield, wv

252t3.

Wanted : unwanted aluminu m,
iron, ·sc:rap me tal, tin and -pop
. cant.. 304-576-2448.

L._~-~R~K~UII!!!N.~'A~B~r~E:!!!!!!__ _.:1113111:::•JI40

MODEll

-

Top Pnce s Pa1d' Old U.S. Co1ns,
Silver , Gold , 0 1amon ds, All Old ,
Collectibl e s. Pap erwei ghts, Etc .... · ,
M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Second . •
Avenue, Gallipo lis, 614·446-2842. , ~

rou.

4131

:i'
•

Giveaway

AKC Reg. Golden Retriever, fe·
mete, 10mos. old. 304-882·3677 .
Female, blonde Chow, B14-669 ·
380~ .

House You Tear Down, You Haul
Awav. 614 -367- 7577.

SERVICES
110

Help Wanted
$-WANTED-$

10 peopl e who need to los e 1.. ~
weight &amp; make mo ney, to try new •
pa tent ed we igh;t -lo ss product. · '
304·7 73.-5()83 24hrSiday.

$ 1:ooo Weekly Process ing Mall

Fre:r; fo. Send Self-Add ressed
S la ped Envelope : E11 p; ess
Oep . 131, 100 East Wh iteston e
Blvd., Suito 146-345, Cedar Park

TX 78613.
AVON I All Areas I Shirl ey
Spears, 304- 67~· 1 4 29.

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

Open 9:00 to 3:00

4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
Pnr &amp; Dllna

Umestonl, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

owner.:

Hendrlcka
Phone: 8141'2·2487

3/111 mo. od. .

Howard Excavatin
''

· Trucking •
Umeatone
Bulldozing and
Backhoe
Sarvlcel
House Sltt1 and
Utllltltl

'

. ..

..
' ' .

,

W I - . . r1glot to llmll qo.wollllie.

All Ya rd Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance Deadline· 1.00 pm 1he. •
day belore the ad is to run . Sunday edition - 1:Oopm Friday, Man- "
d&amp;;y edition 10:00a.m..Saturday.

FREE ESTIMATES
rake the pal• o.t of
palatl•t· Let u1 do It
for

mo.

urge or Too Smsll''

Toys, Shoes. ,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
_ _...:.&amp;_V....:tc_ln_lt.:..y_...;' :

BIIIHISIIW• Mi11

Llmeltone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985 4422
Chester, Ohio

We will work w~hln your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FA)(. n3-5861
108Poineroy Street
Mason, WV

~

'1

wo""'n ~

lltlfERIOR·EXRRIOR

J.D. 'rilling Company

..

'

Thurs . Fn , Sat, 7:30· 5:00, 2094
Centenary Road, Prom Dresses;
Girls Teenage Clothes. Mens 1

.614·992·4025

"No Job Too

;

VCR's, Bar Stools, lots Clothes ·
And Mise Items!
·•

'

SERVICE

· Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • lndustrtel Gases • Machine Shop
Services • -Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamenlal
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Pall!&gt; Fum~ura, Fireplace
Items, Planter h11ngel'$, Trellises &amp; loiS of other stulfll

•

Ga rage Sale : Rain Of Shrne. Apr{
5th, 6th, 8 A.M. -4 P.M. 83 Her~ .
man Road AI Cen tenary Watch ..:

H&amp;H •
SAWMILL
Portahle

I•IOO.al9·3943
..........

TRUCKING

3'111

Serv·U
(619) 645-8434

•

Lots ToysI •

25-50%0fll

35 Yea,_ Experience

R~L~ HOLLON

'

required.

..

l

Residential - Commercial

.

/Girl s IBoy s Clothes, Home

ln terlot, Murray Ridmg MowerL

J&amp;L INSULATION

Sunday' Calls)

a

I

Bab~

Greenware Sale!

BISSELL B.UILDERS, INC.

DUMP TRUCK

A11"/ Cc11

Plln Allied, Cell Todayl .

ROBERT H•.EASON,
lllfli•llfll ' ,..,, ' ' .
·
P.E., P.~ 1 '
lotelal County EnalnS.WWUnll
NOllCE TO .ASPIIALT
'1 tmu
CONCRETE ·VIENDORS
Sealed bl!l,l~ .will • be: ·
Nil' hw• Wattt .
received by 'tlie IICNFJd of ·
lfiArAU:
Melgo
County
W&amp;Vlclto
Commissioner•, Court
House, Pomeroy, ~hlo
ilfp«ttoo Artlltt6lt
45769 until tO:QO a.m. on
, _ (3041615-1651
April IS, 1996. The' bide !"ill
then be opened· and read
aloud at t:IO p.m. 11n the
·15th day of April, 1996 fOr
· Public Notice
the furnllhlng of various
ll'•des of Alphah Concrete . ·
• :.
lor the Melga County 1986. ' ' A Specl!lc•tlon•
Highway Department. Sheet mioy be picked up Ill
Propo.. le ere to ' be· the , Office of the llielg1
returned on ~ld formf County Engl,_,. .
IUpplled bY, tfie VI~.· 0101'11 Kioee, Clerk
The bid JH'ICI ,..111 111 flr111 a-11 pi Melgl County
and In effect :cdiir1ng the; .COnimiMionere
';'
t996 pevlnll ••••on frOI1!' (31. 1414 zrc
'
May . through ·.NoveMber

F'ciY

Fri . Sat . 9-? G4 t Third Avenu e,

CERAMICS
AND GIFTS

,_

·Racine ·American

•Odd jobl per requ'll .,,
No UrW!J Too urge.;
. or Too SnM/1 *

'

miek Road. Inside, Between 160 t' '
588, Open 9:30 -A.t.t . · S:OQ P.t.t. •
B~ Varkooy.
"

Items, Baby Bed, ·Youth Bed 1

l'

'

E\ler y Wednesdily, Thursday . •
Frr day, Sa turday, 1699 McCor.-

Fro111 your t::Iasslfted

•New Homes
•Garages
•Com plate
Remodeling
Stop lc Compare
·' FREE ESTIMATES
. 985-4473

992-5042

•Training
•Boarding
•Le.saons ,

•"'

urday.

For Signs, Farm Equipment All 3 ,
PI, Hitch, 6 Ft Disk. 4 Ft Bru sh ·.
Hog, 1 Row Cultiva!Or, ~o usehold '

'.

• trail.Rides · '

Howard li: Wrltnal ·
'

SHAWN REEVES

All Yatd Sales Must Be Pa id In~
~dv ance . DEADLI NE: 2:00 p.m. •
the day before the ad is to ru n~
Suoda~ edition - 2;00 p.m. Fridlly: 1
Mo nday edition - , 0 :00 a:m. sat-

Al10 10me palnta and
brushel.
Slit., Man:h 30, April 6
Noon·5:00 P.M.
3 miles north Df Chester
Off Rt. 7
Check II Outtl

Owner: Ronnie Jotl88
Cheshire, Oh
(614) 367.0268
FIN Est/nudes

J

S3.98 Pot Minute
iluat be18 yre.

IN'IIfta.

Cr~hs, LoiJ More•
:::.:::::.:::::.:;:::.:
_ _ ___::· "

Mon.-Sat. 10-6

20 Years Experience * Insured

Touch-Tone Requinoct
Senr.., (1119) 1458434 .
'
""'

GUITAR
••

.

Top, Trim, Rem.oval
&amp; Stump Grinding

Love
Bt.islneaa
Family Mattera
Allow Yqur
·Peraonal Psychic to
· "' AUiat You
1·900 888 8600

1-ooo:77s-o1oo

Tillar, Small Appliances, C locka. u

' Monday through Wednesday
w/eoopon

wlffl "",.,. ....me. fo Heir, up
s.rvtng s.E..Ohio a \:'Vftt Vlf1llnll
1-800-872-5981
4t8 lt18

~~~~~~
ATTENTION SPORTS 1 ~--------~
., . I'4Md Direction?
fANS
Lei your fingers do the
walking to the sports
line. Finance Stocks,
NHL, N8;(; NFL. Poini
Spreads, ~ity
·Horoecoj)e.

llllng Ro ad. Ca r Seat !l a b~ '
Clothes Table &amp; Cha •n . T.V.' a
VCR's Kn llllng t.t ac hine Rotart

Dresses
Levi's

p1ZZ8

JONES' TREE SERVICE

, •..~~ ''" e.~~~te~_..,

,.

.C ornmiMio(3)28 (4) 4 2TC

.

"

-.-r.-,...~-F
. -n_&amp;_Sa-,,-8--?,;.57-a-~
--'·

992·5535
992-2753

2122/TfN

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

FREE ESTIMATES

'1.00 ~ff any X-large 18"

BENNETTS
-

._,.. E~ep~nenoe~~
,c~~~':C:'ff

L....;s_1_4-_992_..;.~_34_7_o_,

SALEM CENTER-- !)tar Grange
77&amp; and Star Junior Grange 878, Saturday, 6:30 p.m. potluck supper followed by a meeting at 8 p.m. Inspection to be held with conferral of the
second degree in full fonn by degree
team.

I•

'

Free EatlmtFtlt
IWV010212

HOUII Re""'r lj .
Remodeling ;
IIIIChen &amp; Beth
.Remodeling
Room AddHionl
Siding, Roofing, P•tm
ReaiCin•blo

.

'-========

Prom

· , NEFF REMODEU~G ·
SERVICE .

r---.-,.ft~IR~
' :· ....
, ~'

'*"'
ilolrd "' ..... COunty

992-3894

Yard Sale

70

•Now Home•
•AddiUonl
•Now p;aragea
•Remodellnll
•Siding
•Roofing
Painting

from MarCh 1 thru 28)
Bring In minimum of 50 lbs. of llumlnum cens to
roglstlr for Bunn Ccrffeemaklr io lie given nay.
Onrwlng will lie hold on Mlreh 20th.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; CoOling
(Lime StQneLowRatel)

C:U..II4rlldlngl A-doling

503 Mill Sbaet
.Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on Aluminum C..a

'

367·0266- 1-800-950-3359

18 ~ ~tv-U
81
'

CJiorilfOoM,

'

SMITH'S
COISTIUCTIOII

Silver Bridge Plaza
614-446-4462

Owner: Ronnie Jones

J•-

Shawn David Reeves celebrated
his firSt birthday Feb; 24 with a party at the home qf his mother, Julie
King, Pageville Ro!d.
Others auending were his father, .
Dave Reeves of Pageville; his mater~
nal grandmother, Joan King, Don and
Jennifer King Laudermilt, Ainber
Laudermilt, Jamie and JoAnna Jeffers, all of Harrisonville; Jim, Darlene, Travis, Mall and Jake Older of
Pageville; Rose, Brittany, Summer
and Ashley King, King Ridge Road;
Rick Reeves, Teresa and Zackaty
Harris and Davey Young, Rutland;
Mandy and Josh Neutzling, .- Harriso!lville. Shawn's paternal grandparents, Eugene "Jake" and Juanita
Reeves of Page ville visited earlier in
the day.
Gifts were presented to the honored guest and cake and ice cream
. were served. Shawn is the grandson
of the late Jack King, Sr.

·MULEY'S ,:,.,,,
•"" RECYCLING CENTER 11111

White Long Holred Puppy.
An ID Tag On Cofltll, Name Glz·
mo, Mil ling From EurN Ai• . H
Found Or Seen, Please Contact
lmmlfdla1ely, Vernon I Ellen'"'
HoucK. e t • -258·1.9'6 1. e 1•·••e·.
9838, Your Help Would Bo t.tuc ~ .

Asbabelle's

20 Yean .Experience • Insured

· M I be
$2·99 per'mtn.
us
·

1upplled 11r lhl vendor, end
· will be opened on 1111 !file
end pl•oe epecllled.
· SpeQifloedorl for bidding
!My be obUilned through
theE,..,_., Ofllce, a4110 .
F•lrgroundl
Ro•d,
Pom•GY· Ohio 45.781.

·-

992·2825

~~

JONES' TREE SERVICE

CHESTER -- The Chester Baseball/Softball Association will meet at
6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Chester
Firehouse.

to

_,nut

· on Tape or·CD ·

Public Notice

ta; eTC

Do your part for our environment. Brtng us your
8111111. Clini and ather ~ 8lld ,..._ to
wtn li l)anclcnrn.d IOIId
8lld cet11r llnt:d
bllrtket c11ttt Ylllued 1Ft S800 :o lie given OWlY
Man:h 30th. Tr1. 'eo. Recycling open 1 day8 • - "
to 10rvo you,
·
N Mon.-Frl;,&amp;-3 ~ &amp; eun. Locllld ceo~armftt,.., or
St. Rt 143 a
1114olll2-5114..

.

....-~~~~~

Dlld Recorda.

Announce• Cuatom• Appreciation
D•v• during the Month of March

lladl8 lllaeli Deal~r
'

Cltlun1 ere enct. tnoged a-112 dlarrrrWMit71foel .
Ill IIIey 20 .... wide; :
April 8, 18M, to expre11 1henct north eo dlflrHI .
their vlewl end coinmente -c 245 feel; the- '*"' ·
on the propo11d CDBG 43-3/4 drgre11 aut 1~ feel .:
to Nkl Prrrlter'l IOIFih line; ·
thence eoulh Ill dlflrell ;
'"' to the , _ of '
to hlndlc•pped per1one.
Pereon1 un•ble to •ttand ~tinning, containing one :
the hllrlng mey m•ll•
Excepting the co11 •nd ·
oomm~~nte by writing the
'Other
mlnerele heretofore
Melg1
County
CommtiiiOi--.CoUrthouM re11rved by V.I. Horton In
Pomeroy, Ohio or by ceiling dtMd r11:01 du II In Yolulftl M,
Jean .TrueMII, CHIP Gr1nt P.•g• 245, Mala• County
Coordltwlor, It ' 814·992· Dlld RICOrd1.
Relorence le mede to
71011.
dlld recordld In Volume
FNcl ttoffthM, Prelldl,nt
• · Pege 541, end Volume
lleiiJIICounty
207, Pat~~13, Malge ·eounty
Commlealo..,•

to - d IIIII llllltlng on to

~~~~

.l&amp;ii•IIIA- IliA.

New At l ...
la..lltdronlu
.

,...,.. kit; thence IOIFih :

I'J).

(3) 211. (4) 4 2TC

calendar---

POMERO.Y •• PER.! Chapter, lun· RUTLAND -- Rutland Township cheon meeting at noon .Thursday at
Trustees, Thursday, 6:15 p.m. at fire the Senior Citizens Center. Aetna and
Blc Cross and Blue Shield will have
station.
representatives there .to speak.
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of
Alcoholics . Anonymous, open dis- FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
cussion meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m. in
the basement of the Sacred Heart ..Trustees, Friday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Church, Mulberry Ave.

OhiO,
thl :'
Owner , It...
R111lll lolowlng HICrtflecl reel •

The llelgl

I

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'

W01k
-All Kinds
992·3838
of Earlh

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.

l
I

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'

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NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle
PHILLIP
110

Help Wanted

320' Moblll Homes

Mow laWn• &amp; Trim, Schedule
Coamorologl sr Wanted, Guar. How Fot SUrmwl eH ue ooa
't:tlteed Wages, Paid V1cation1,
• Fvll &amp; ParH1mt Pos•t•ons e1•·

FINAtJ CI AL

448-7267

Cn.uae Ship Positions, Travel To
Exolio Places, 1200 ·SSOO ly, Coli 7 Dlyr, 407-875-2022 Ext
0528C14.
EARN Sl ,ooo Woekly Sluffing Envelopes At Home. Starr Now. No
E•pe~ience. Free .SUpplies Info.
No O~llgolion. Send SASE To ·
Fairway, Dept. 1351 , So,-: •390:
Wesl COVIna, CA 91791 .
Earn up 10 $1,000 weekly ohlffing
erwelopes 11 home. Start now. No
••perl•nct. Free supplies mfor·
marion. No obligation. Se~d ~elf
addr.lled stamped envelope ro
E•preu Dept 36, 100 Eau
Whlteaton• Blvd., Suite 1 48~3"'5.
Cedar Park, TX 711e 13.
'
Earn up 10 $1,000's weekly stutt'"D envelopes at home Start AOW.
No ••penenct. Free supplies tn·
lormalion. No Ob llgatt on s8nd
&amp;ll~·addreased Slamped envel·
ope 10 Bucils Dept 172, 320S.C E.
Colonial Dr , No. 308, Orlando, Fl
32803.

210

Business
opponuntty

- fOr~

.

INOTICEI .
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommends tha t you do bual nell with peoP'e you know, and
NOT 10 send money throuph the
ma •t unlll you have investigated
1he ofloring.
•
Commercial bullding 1or rent in
center of downtown Middleport

•

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
1872 12185 Dolpl\in, ea • .,..... BUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
pordl, undo&lt; pinning, OJc. oond. ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drive
M.500 llrm. 31J4.87H13e.
' lrom 124• 10' 1315 Will&lt; 10 ahOp
&amp; rnoviu Call 114·448·2588.
1974 12110, lhree bedroom, E"'"' Ho111ing OpporluNiy.

needs 10"'- work, lt900; two

~ lumber Price UpT Steel Build·
mga OeaiiH' Profit&amp; Are UPIII Cost
As Low As $3 .00 Sq Fool. No·
tlonal Manufacturer .Awatding LO·
cal DEALERSHIP. 303· 758-3200

E.1t2200.

ALDER

bedroom 12X50, recond l!tontd
reedy to live in, must be moved.
12700; atll· conloinod camper:
Mill:&amp;1+9411-2528.

1991 Brookwood II 14x76 3 Bod·
rooms, 2 Balhl, Dilhwe-. CA.
Deck, 15 Ft Above Ground PbDI,
PrlmeoiOr S.IOIIne Dish, New Oul·
buildlllg On 112 Acre loL located
20 Minutes South Ot1 SR 7
Poved Road, "2,000 080, ~
bile Home Can Bo Said s.para...
1~. Bur Mull Bt Moved for
I 17,000 Ftrm. No land Caruraet
Serlout lnqulrlaa Only Pltaaa,
81of.25&amp;-8381 lte¥1 . . . . . ..

2500 sq. ft . 61&lt;-992 24511

1002 14x70 Oakwood 211odroom
2 Full Bottlo, Groor S1or1W HOmol
'FAST FOOD FRANCHISE•
Locared Rr.2 wv. 814·251·8810
Food Bu••ne11 For Salel Afford· Aflor5P.M.
able, low Overhead Operalton
Wtth E•cellent Loca1100 And In· I liaS 14x70 Cloy11n 3 llodroomo,
come Potenual. Full Training, On· 2 Bath~ CA, All Eioelrlc, Undet·
gotng SupPQrt &amp; Advertising Pro- pinning, Sklrling, Extended WarVIded. Godd Terms Some Fl- ranty, Other E.rrael $19,500, After
Full or part 11me posttlont avafl: nancmg Possible. Under 25K, 8P.M. 814-441-t415.
able. Pliny Truck Slop. 304 .g37. Ground Floor Opportunity To Join
2458 or 304-937-271!6
HunungiOn Booed Company Wilh Ftrsr time burers. E-l financing 2
&amp; 2 bedrooms AroundoS2oormo
Full bme baby Sitter lor 4 112 year 18 FranchiSes In WV, KY, OH &amp; Call Ruu Murdock 1·800-251·
VA.
1-800·377-6260
old and 2 monlh old, In my Racine
5070.
area home, daya and evemnga.
bpenen&lt;:e a musl. prater a ma- Small One Uin Presaure Wash· 1 Limitec
wre person, can 61•·949-25 12 br 1ng Business, Up And Grow•ng
ful~ Equ1ppod, Nwne And All
In lnlefView:
.
Your Own Boss &amp; Make Your
Need 5 People To Seq Avon, Own Houra, Can P8y For Itself In
One S&amp;asctn, Great Investment!
81~·448-3358 .
814·387·7755.
.
No EJiperience Necessary I $500
To S9DO Weekly 1Poten11a1 Pro· •230
Professional
cesslng Mortgage Refunds, Own
services
Hours, Call (909) 715·2300, Exl
1351, (24'Hours).
Personal lawn care 81 Sun Crest
Your loved ones de·
Point Pleasant area business ac. Cemetery.
aerve special attention. Call 614·
ceptlng apphcat1ons·Tor full ttme 892· 7552 alto&lt; 1lpm br ,..,.lnb
Pnce Buster! New t4x70, 2 or
front desk entry level off1ce poSI·
3br Only $995 down, $195fmonlh.
tton having varied clencal re Free del•very &amp; Stlup Onty a r
sponslbilttJes Ouahfied appl•cants
Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV. 304·
wi ll possess pleasant personality,
755·5885
have good commumcat1on, key ·
board, and phone sk•lls. Good
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Denetns It Interested subm1t re·
sume 1ncludmg salary require·
100ll200 lol on Rl 2, IOml., S
of Pt Pleasant. Beautiful view ol
ments 10 Boll '-'·31 , %Pt Pleasant
nver &amp; valley $6,900. 304· 578 Register, 200 Mam St . Pt Pleas.
2894
anr. WV 25550 An Equal Em·
All real asiOie adve~lsing In
ployment OpportuMy Company
this newspaper is subject 10
20 acres, 1973 mobile home, free
dedicated to dverSiry
residential gas, gas producing
1118 Federal Fair HOu~ng Acl
well, Home National Bank. Ractne,
Postal &amp; Go\l't Jobs $21 IHr ..,
ol 1968 wnlch makes illlegal
Oh, 814·949·2210
Beneltts, No E•p. Wtll Train, For
to aelvertise "any preference,
Appl And lnlo 1-800·536-3040.
llmllatlon or discrimination
Buildlng sues with road ffontage,
based on race, calor, rellgk:m,
back ob New Haven, rural water,
PSYCHOLOGISTS
sex farrMUalstatus or natlonaJ
and ftrtanc1ng a\latlable 304-882·
Now Htr~ng L1censed Ph 0 Psy2686
origin, or any Intention to
chologist! &amp; Master Level Clini·
make any such preference,
c1ani In Galltpolls &amp; Vtctntty For
Ffve acres,
aerator, near
UmMallon or dlscrlmNiion.•
Gereatnc Population, Low Stress,
Rac•ne,$16.000
can
finance w1th
H1gh Satisfaction. Select Hours
hall down, 614·949·2025
Send Resurne ;fa CC, 1684 Med
This newspaper will not '
tna. Sutte 106, Medina, OH 44256
Lot For Sale 2 Acres, 2 Tra11er
knowllng~ acc:epr
Hook-Ups, Between 81dwell. f1rt·
advertisements
tor
real
estate
Red Hot fat loss Product, Dyna·
er &amp; Cheshtre. 614·367·7010
which loin vlolallon of lho law.
mic Marketing Plan, lose Wmght
Our
readers
are
hereby
&amp; Make Moneyl614·441-0187,·
Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
614-446-1236
Informed lhal al dwellings
beautiful 2ac Iota, publiC water,
advertised In this newspaper
Ciyije Bowen Jr, 304-576·2336
Sales Per~on Commtss•on A,gent
are avallabte on an equal
W1th Leads Benefits, Apply At
opportunity basis.
RENTALS
French Glty Press, 423 Second
AvenUe, Gal1po1ts

ae

1878 CUII'-C, noW dr.., nHdo
aame work. Two used mtblle
~omoo. 30 ... 875·5951 or 304875-2445.

Norfll

187D Pontiac Bonnevnle crui..

•Q 3 2

air, new tlrea. ln~e&gt;nor .a 'txterio~

~~:~~w:it:;.~~~:· o•.

Furn1&amp;hed Apartment, 1 Btdroom,
$2251Mo . Ulllitloa Pold, 101
Fourth Ave.•, GalllpGIII, Share.
Both, 811 U8 38•4 Aller 7 P.M.

stove, oven, 3

24 lmpot'c.nt

ar.f~~·-

29 Reverie

31 Podc: foot

luflll .

37 Auah of wind

rrbbr.

2 Vclcautc flow
3Aiwmlnerale

4 Natal
annl-ry
5 Prefix lor -

8 u.. achalr
7 Behind
8 Chet-'a dad
9 Onlon'a coualn
10 Ooola

12 Partly
lermenc.d
grape lulce
13 Dlmlnutlft
autflx
17Mao-slung

·

A different Greek gift

One bedroom eff1clencw- apartmont 81 ..992·21 78.

IIY Phillip Alder

Twin Rtvera Tower, now accepting
apphcations for 1br. HUO sub tid·
1zed apt lor elderly and handl ·
capped EOH 30H75.ee79.

'

Two Upstairs Aparlinems 1 Fur·
nlshed, t Unfurnished, Private
Entrances, No Pets, References 1
Depolil Requ,ed, 61 ... 448.0284.

MERCHANDISE
-·--

510
1994 Honda • Ira• 4wd ...wheeiSt,
low"""''· $3,800. 304 773-5921 ~

j

750 Boats &amp;·Motors
for Sale

_~-.- .Ott,

'

1983 Searay ·sRV210 21 F1 Cud,
'dr Cabm, 350 Motor, All Equ1 p'
menr tfttluded. 614·446· 1763, Att
ter7P.M

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red, New &amp;;Rebu1t11n Sto&lt;Ok
Call Ron Evans, HI00-537-9528

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

For Sale.1093 Ford Tempo Gl
loaded. 38,000 ml , AM/FM ca.:
sette Call alter 2·oo 614·2455321

""

29 l&gt;ewabie
30Rutalen

~=-111ufllng

32
' 34CfolatenHI

\.-'AVfSS' .

BORN LOSER
.

P.M.

____

•.

,. .

lAC ,

..I'M Hf\VI N6 f\ &amp;JJe:: UFE I

PI~ MD HI~ BLLJe..
~litlOD ...

• •

38 Wine beiNI
Combine
42 Actnu

40

Perlman

43 Weapons
44 Future LL.Ba."

.....,

The Greek philosopher Aristotle
said, "What is a friend? A single soul
45 Fern. autl.
41 Climbing
dwelling in two bodies." In this deal,
plant
which was played in Athens, Greece,
47 ..........
there was a single soul, but it dwelt in
-hment
only one 'defender's hand.
41AcThe dynamic auction ended in five
50~
clubs doubled. When the dummy came
51 Bullllg'lt
down, the declarer, Peter Xydakis,
CMer
saw that he had to avoid losing two L...J;_,.L-.J.....;L....I..53 Craving
spade tricks. As East was marked
with the missihg aces, there would be
no problem if East had only a singleton or a doubleton spade. But what if
CELEBRITY CIPHER
he had three? Then East would have
by Lula Campos
'
to hold the singleton club ace.
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are cree.ted from quo1111001 ~famous people, past and present
Eac:tlllitter 1n tMt cipher at.anda tor anottw Todlly'• dt~~t P ~ K
After winning the first trick with
dummy's heart ace, declarer ruffed a
heart high in hand, played a diamond
D
SK HNHYACFDJW
OJ · MXDCH
to dummy's queen and ruffed dummy's last heart high, learning that
CFGC
' XHSX.IH
UHIOHNH
M CD II
East had started with a seven-card
suit N.ext, South cashed the diamond '
w s s v GC F H G Y C • ••
YHGIIA
G Y H
ace. With his preparations complete,
Xydakis led the club king to East's
GJJH
KYGJP
ace.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Nobody knows the Traubels I've seent• - Rudolf
If East had a diamond or a club with
Bing, after a dtspute wtth the Wagnenan soprano Helen Traubel.
which to exit, he would have begun
with fewt!r than three _spades.
Declarer would draw the last trump
WOlD
by playing a club to dummy's jack.
lAM
........ lty CIAT
I'OUAN _;,.__ _
_I_
Then he would lead a spade through
East, winning with the king and duck·
ing on the way back if necessary.
Here, though, East was endplayed.
low 10 form four -.11.
If he returned a heart, declarer would
discard a spade from hand, ruff in the
L 0 C R'S L
dummy, draw West's last trump and
play a spade. If instead East led a low
spade, South would win with dummy's
queen, draw the last trump and play a
spade through East's ace. Either way,
WOLFN
' Xydakis would lose only one spade
trick.

,.

•r:n:mbl:'r'-~.::

.•.t.t 011191bvNEA

sso.

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WOIIIIIR

'=~=' S~\\dllA-~"E~s·

~~C.(OUNTt.~TS ,-:

614-992·2290.

GOOD USE() "PPLIANCES
1994 Mustang GT, Rod, 5 Speed, 1993 Rlntoon Boat, 1Q0hrs.. 2411, ~
Washers, dryero, relr19eraloro, Kenmore Heavy Duly washer 610 Farm Equipment
17" T~res, Premium, Sound Sys. 60hp, oil inJected, Mercur~. powJ! ·
Screen Printer, Expertence Nee·
410 Houses tor Rent
REAL ESTATE
ranges. Skaggs Apphanc .. , 78 S50. Whirlpool Supr-• so dryer',
tem Wnh CD /Cassette, 6~4-388· rrlm. 1 .s.s., 3 alum. pfaps, extra•/
essary, Sertous lnqu1r1es Only,
Vtno S~ool, Call 614·448· 73a&amp;
304,6'/5.38! 5 afi.-.;,~Spm
Gehl Round Bolors, Mow01 Con· 9445
exc cond, S7500 304·675·215f
15- 112 V1ne Street, GalltpoUs, 2 ~ ·800-4G9-3490.
·814-446-2388, Ask For Chris
'
dtt1oners, Disc Mowers, Disc:
aher 5pm
11
Bedrotn Upsta~rs Duple•. Near
Social Workers, Now Hmng S23 1 310 Homes for Sale
R1ver. S33Sit.lo Water Paid, De- Holpolnt Washer Harveol Gold \ New Cardia Glide Exerctse Ma· EM ower Cf!ndltloners , Forage 1995 Cadtllac Seville SLS Oia- 25 HP Sea ~'"9 And 7.5 HP
chine,
Brand
New,
Assembled
qutpment
Sales
And
Serv1ce
mond
White
12,000
Miles
~xcel·
Hr + Beneftts, On The Job Tram·
posit, 614•446·2~19 .
,1 95; Kenmore Dryer Harveat $ 1$0, 814 -38 7_7814 .
Alttzer Farm Supply, 614 -245· lent condition, After 5
.
Sears Motots Bofh Run Good '
2 bedroo~ home, 5 acres, 2 car
614 .
•no To APP'Y In Your Area, 1·800- garage
Gold $95; Magi• Chef 30 Inch ::-:-7~=:..:..:::.::.
15193.
446·8565
614-446-7881.
~
wnh
apanman1
othet
2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
339-6150.
Gas Range, Almond $185, Hot· Nord1ctrac For Sale, Approx 2 ~---------'buildings, Home Nallona'l Bank,
Tratler In Galltpolls, 614-446-8849 point
~efrtgerator •150, Whirlpool Yean Old, Good Shape, 5200 • Massey Ferguson late Model
1995 Dodge Avenger Efea, 24v,
760 Auto Pans&amp;
The Board Of T:rustees Of The Racine, on.814-949·2210
For Information.
Washer like New, t Year War- 614·«6·1231.
2165 Tractor Wtth . loader, V·6, Power Sunroof, Fully loaded
Uthan E Jones Museum Is Seek
Accessories
$7,995: 85 Massey Ferguson All Power, 1&amp;,000 Mtles, Excelleni
2 homes m Middleport, ltve 1n 2205 Nor,th Matn, 3br. kitchen, rant)' $205; Calortc 30 Inch Etec:1ng A Creauve , .self-Mottvated,
tnc
Range
Almond,
$150;
Skaggs
One~~
A
H
Ladles
Square
Two
New
Motor
$3,995:
35
Massey
Cond11i0n,
614-448
f386l
.
one,
collect
2
renta,ls
off
the
other,
New gas fanka, one ton trucll.
EnergetiC nd Depen da bl e Per· $40,000 obo, call Ron Case•. 614- dtntng, t1vmg, and 1br. lurmshed,
$300Jmo., no pets, reference. &amp; Appliances, 61 4·448-1386, 78 gc&gt;l dubs, 3 i!Yu 9. ~W. ard lady Ferguson $3.695, 614·286-6522
wheels, radatol's, lloor mats. etc
son To Se e As A Part· T1me 0 !· 992 .2290
Vtne
Street,
Gathpolis,
1·800-499Hogan
graHte
shafts
dnver
and
3
199$
Mercury
Tracer,
4dr,
air,
D &amp; R Au!O, R1plt)', WV 304-372•'
rector for fhe Museum.
1.:.:.:..::;::.:.:.______~- deposit 304-458-1728.
3499
&amp; 5 woods. 61 ...992-6104
New Holland 56 Hayrake: E•cel- am-fm cassette, 5spd, 13,000ml.,
'
Reporting To The Seven Member 2bedroom, new roof, new porch, 2bedroom house 1n Pt Pleasant
tam Condition $1500 614: 379. burgundy wtgray 1nter1or, dam- =!!J33 or 1·800·273·9329
Board, Th1s Person Wttl Be Re· new hot water rank 304 ·675- $2.90/mo 3bedroom In New Ha· Older chest freezer, works good, Orlando, 4 Hotel Nighrs Near OtiS· 28t8
aged on ng'ht front. good title, Used Auto Parts Don't Be Swepr
$50. 1yr old coal waod burning ney, Can Use An 11 tlme, Value
spona~ble For Admln1strat1ve Du- 2327
S2850 3l4-67r3073a•· 6
ven $300/mo lease, refetences atove, gla,a fronl, w12-31ona of $300,
Awaw- By H1gh Pnces, Call Dray's
Sell For $100, 61 4·523· Stopped Farmm9· Selling Hand
' ·
~
•wr pm.
t111 lm:ludtng Setlmg Up An OfToday,
614·446-4924 '
&amp; securit~ deposit required. 304· coal, $500 080. 304-1115-3818
' 8798,
,
Toots, Wrenches, Vtses', Cham- 93 Plymouth Sun Dance, ... ,c,unfice, Co-ordinating And Ass1s.ting 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Ranch, Family 882·2221
Volunteer Committees And Do- Room, 1f2 Mile Off At 7, Georges
saw. Screw Jacks, Circular Saw, . der,Auto, Atr. 81 ,400 mtlagt, 790
Campers&amp;
PIC~ENS FURNITURE
Phon1cs reading game, never Buz Saw, Electric Motors, Stanley $4,700 abo. 614·250-6340 or
cents And Helping With E.11hlbita Creek Road, 152,900 814·446~ 2br .• Hartford, no pets. 304·88Z·
New
lUNd
Motor
uaed,
$200.
304-675·4075.
Homes
4• Sandet, Hydraulic Jacka~ 61-4· 61~256 6467
And Spectal Events. Salary It 7881
2016 after 4pm
387·7802.
304·875-1450
Nego!abie.
14' Sunllne loaded, GoOd ~and• ·&lt;
3·4br., corner tot, close to schoof, Two bedroom home m Pomeroy,
Pine Headboard Queen Size WaAulD Leana. Dealer w111 arrange fi.
t1on, $2,200: Or Trade M1ac 614-)
Tractor h~draulic fluid $16.991 na'nclng even if you have been
Appflcanls Should Sand Resume Syracuse, 24x40 block garage, HUD approved, $300 wun depoM, Save Big On Carpel &amp; Vinyl In ler Bed $100,614-446-80111.
Sr~~k .SS.oo Cosh /Carry Mollo446 3334 Alter 5 ~M .
Sgat. Sider's Equ•pment 304-675- turned down elaewhere. Upton
/Cover letter To Board Of Trus· huar pump. 614·992·5315.
no pets, wtll sell on contract. 614·
han Carpets, Rw7N 814·448- RelriQeratora, Stoves, Washers 7421or 1·1110·277-3917
Equipmem Ua•d Caro. 304·451·
698-7244.
,..,, lillian E Jones Museum. 75 78 acres mil wnn thr&amp;e bedroom
1g77 Prowler 20', 1977 W•ltter- {
7444.
And Dryers, All R~cond111oned
1069.
Broadway Street, Jackson, Ohio ·l'M&gt; bath brick home, ltlree ponds:
ness
24', 1973 Holiday Rambler ·
630
And
Gauran1eedl
$100
And
Up,
Livestock
I
Two bedroom hoy.se, carpeted. Sofas, Loveseals, Chairs, Reclan45840 No Later Than April 15. pole barn bu1ld1ng, two car ga
23', 1973 Fleo1wood 17', 1982
w~ Dol- 614-669-6441•.
n1~
a~d
clean,
deposll
requ1red,
720
ll'ucks
Sale
19118.
•ng Sofa With Matching Rocker 1
2 year old Leghorn hens, 75e per
Javcee Pop-Up 18·112' Pont~n
rage, 614-742·1902.
no 10s1de pets ; thret bedroom R&amp;cltner Corbin &amp; Snyder S14·
blld, Gary Michael. 614· 985 ~ '81 Dodge 3/4 Jon Converston .24' Nrce, 1699 McCormick R0(4
180 Wanted To Do
'
Brand New Crown Ctry Route 7, 1 house, depoSit required. no inside 446· 1171 .
39156.
614-4'46-151 1
'
van, 318 engine. under 70,000
'
Story 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, CH &amp; pels, 614-1192-3090
miles,
PS,
PB,
POL,
etulle,
atr,
4
Babysinmg In my home, reason- A1r, Kirchen /Otmng .Room W1th
VrRA FURNITURE
1Q78 larks 22' travel tra•lfr.
captam cha1rs, electriC rear sola
able rates, fle•ible hours, have Bay Windows, Wrap Around Two bedroom, new carpel, stove,
814·446-3, 5I
$3000, 814·992·5641
bed. lowmg hllch. $5500, '88
references, close to school. 304- Porch, 112 Acre, Oh1o Ri\ler V1ew, cable/trash Included, tn Mason
Quality Household Furnture And
'
Dodge Ram 50 Extended Cab
675-2784
Appllancea Grea1 Deals On
1994 lnnsbrook, fully loaded, tots
Fairland SchOols, $147,500, 614- near park, construction workers
$2000,614-7•2·2420
.
welcome
Call
304·
173·
5763
10
Cash And Carr;l REN'f.2·0WN
ot extras, 18ft. SartOua fnqwnft
256-6287.
I
Check tttls out First save $1
set up appotnlment
only 304·875-6903
And Layaway Also Mllable.
1992
lsuzu
pickup,
4
c:yl
5
Mike's interiorlextenor pa;ntlng, Ftve bedroom, three bath home,
Free DeiMtr; Within 25 Mliea.
spold, 70,000 miles, nice, $5500,
roof paJntlng, hand wash down Homlock Grove Rd., new ,.ndowa, 420 Mobile Homes
SERVICES
814·1192-2504 afler 6pm
·
houses, mobtle homes. Neat work new kttchen, heal pump. Ml base.
520
Sporting
·
for Rent
guaranteed. 1Syra exper~ence . rnem. nne acres, 614·992-5085.
1982 F150 4x4. &amp;cyl, 3Spd, Wlod,
Goods
References. Free estimates. 3042 Bedroom Mob•le Home $2501
67,000ml.
304·675·6858 afler 810
Home
·House
Jor
sale
or
,rent
tn
Porlland
875-8921.
Uo. Deposit &amp; Reference At· Turkey, Archery, Guns, .Ammo,
5pm
•.
are~ - 4 bedroom, lull bath, livtng/
Improvements
Raload1ng &amp; Fishing Supplies
Eileen's Personal Care. Specializ- dimng rooms, complete k1tchen, qulfed, 614·387..(J832.
1983 Chevy Pick·Up Auro, Wllh
Ing In Alzheimer's care giving . watt-to-wall carpeting, cenrral a~r, 2 Bedrooms, 8 Milos OUt SR 216 Live- Bait &amp; License. Crawford's,
BASEMENT
To-. $2,500, Gl 4-379·2213
Can us - We can help. 304· 782· covered/carpeted porch on shad· $2101Mo . Plus Deposll, Refer: -aon.WV.
WATERPROOFING
2544
ed hall acre lot. locared JUSt ott ences, 614·446· 8n2, 614· 258· 530
1984 Ford Ranger, VB, runa Uncondlbonal ltfetlme guarantee:
. Antiques
SA 12• 6 rn les from RavensWood 8251 .
great $1,409 090 304-675-2352 local references furnished Calf
General Ma intenance, Pamung,
allor 5:30pm
(614) 448 ·0870 Or (6141 237·
Yard Work Wmdows Washed br1dge. Available for occupanc~ Beauuh.tl R•vet View, 2 Bedrooms Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques
1, call 814 ·843· 5180 aher
0488 Rogers Warerproofmo Es· , '
1124 E. Main Street, on At. 124: 550
Gutters Cleaned Ughl Hauling, May
BuDding
1918 Chevr 112 Ton V·6, PS, PB.
'Tpm.
REGISTERED ANGUS
In Kanauga, No Pelt, References Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10·00
tabf!Shed 1975
~
Commer1cal, Res•dentfaf, Steve.
Deposit, Foster'e Mobile Homes: a.m 10 6:00 p.m., Sundl)' 1:00 10
And Chi·Angws Bulls, And Hell· Arr, Auto, 18,495, 8H ·446· 4225
SUpplies
614·388-()429
Call
Aller
4
P.M
Maxwell Ave, 3bedroom, LR, DR, 614-441.01~1 .
ers $700 Up. Excellent BloOdlines
8:00pm. 814-992·2526.
Appliance Parts And Setv1ce. •• • ·
Block, brick, aewer ptpea, wind- And Low Bitth Wetghts. State Run
Georges Portable Sawm•U, don't large lamlly room, double garape,
1991 Ford Ranger 81,000 Miles'
Name ~fands. Over 25 Years E"L'I~
Furntahed two bedroom mobile 540 Miscellaneous
&amp;yrs
old,
$107,000
304·675·
ows,
llntele,
etc.
Claude
W1nters
Farms.
614-286·5395
Jackson
haul your logs to the mdl JUit call
Excellent Condttton, $5,000. 614·
perience All Work Guarante~ -;
home on lhe river, $300/mo., all
4048
Rio Grand&amp;, OH Call 814·245:
304·675-1957
Merchandise
utillttes paid, furn\ahed one bed·
5121 .
Registered llmous1ne bulls
446-20156
Frencn Cl1y May1og 81&lt; •• '
7795
•••
-.. '
Blacks, reds, polled &amp; horned
Potnt Pleasant area Lawn Servic· Mov1ng out or the area, must sent room apanment, all utihlles patd, "loralle" prom &lt;1'011, red, full akin,
1985 Chevrolet S· 10Extlanf:led :::.~-::...,._::-:-..:_--..i''
2 atory, 3bedroom, 1 t/2baths. $300/mo.;614-949·252e.
Me1o1
Roof~ng
And
·~n:::i~.~~:
~o
&amp;
up
304·&amp;95·3571
even·
es available through T &amp; S Lawn $25,000. 304-87~.:19&amp;a
alze l, coal $300. aaklng $150 . van•zed, Galvalume A1
Cab, Many Exlrasl $9,500, 814· e&amp;c Geno•ai Home MIIOJ·
......
Sorvices. Call Sl""e a1 304·875·
Two and three bedroom mobile 304·675-8898
4-16-nso
·
tenenc:e- PaJnttng, v1nyl s1dlng, ~·
614-245-5193. .
4782.
Nice home In Rac1ne, large buifd· homes. a1ar11ng a1 S240·S300,
:;:-:-:;:-:--:~7-'--::-_:.,-1 640
Hay
&amp;
Grain
1995 5-10 Ntokup, ""· amtfm ca.. carp.entry, doors, Windows. baths, Jf
1
Used
Coleman
Down
Flow
Gu
lng witt house small busmess,
,.....
mobile home repa1r and more. FDf "'
SANDIE'S DAYCARE· reason· also a one car garage, fenced :~.~~1t;; and trash includeCI, Furnace. 70,000 BTLrs, Complere Two Sleei Buildings, Public l"'UI·
sene, air bag•~ 5 speed, 18,000 tree estimate call Chet 6 1"_992 _.ii:Jdauon 40'•24' Will Sell For Square bales of hay S1.751bate
able rates, relerences, pla~room, yard, out of flood area, ask ing
$250. 1 Used Johnson Gas Fur- $2,480, Open Ends. 50'x79' Will Round bale Silage $35/bale ~4· mtlel, will ••II for loan value- 6323 _
'
',
home envtronment, Texas Ad , $47,000 814-949·2804 ,
nace. 160,000 BTU'o, Upflow SeU Far $8,380. Guaranteed 675.4308
socoo. 814-247·:11132.
...:... ,1:
440
AP'ar1ments
c"hester, 61•-Q85-3406.
S250; 3 Uoed Eiec~'• Furnoeaa Complete With Blueprints. Can
liRvwALL
•, I
. for Rent
1ton, red ChEwy, long wheel bait
finish, repair
' ·,. ~
:;:::::::~::::.:::==----\ FOR SALE · Renlai Property
15KW, 20KW, 25KW, I ' Uoad 3 .,._, 1-800-292.(11 11 .
TRANSPORTATION
Sun Valley Nursery School House With 2 Apartments locat:
'9• model, 350 engine, 5apd ':elli~11&amp;
' •
Ton Rheem Heat Pump, 1·800·
33,000ml, , .:owner.. 304-675: - ~
te•ttlred, plaater repair.'~ ~
Chlldcare M·F 8am-5.30pm Aqea ed At 517 Fourth Avenue, Galli · 1 and 2 bedroom apartmenra, fur. 267-6308, 6U·448·6308, 1·800- 560
30H75·4118 20 rears '
nished and unfurnished, secunty 291·0096.
5332
2·K. Younv S ~nool Age Dur!np polls, 614·446-3983
depoSit required, nO pets, 814Summer. 3 Oays per Week Mmt~
1192·2218.
730
&amp; 4-WDs
••
..
'
mum61H46·3857.
1,000 Gallon Plastic Tank Only
320 Mobile Homes
Used For Watar $300; Flberlllen
.._
___
,I
dellng,
roofing,
Siding
call
81•·
2 bedroom apartrpent in Pomeroy, Topper WlrR Ciampa To Fil SIOnWtll Bal&gt;ysll I Child In My Home
for Sale
81J2-3160,
•
no pels, 8144112·5858
Jnlanla Too. In Ro&lt;lney Aree. Ref.
dard 8' Tnlck Bea $100, 15 AKC Aeg1110red Boxer pup~ rawn
erences AvaUable, 814-245-5887 12•55 2 Bedroom Trailer On
Minutes From Gsillpolio, 8 1•·370· colored wllh blaclt maak tll1d while
•Ron'a TV S.rvice, specializing 1n '
Anytime.
Renled Lor 112 Mile On 160, 2bdr,m apta., tofal electrtc, ap- 2101 .
.
toea, excellent breeding, Pfrents '89 Thufldi.rblrd SC, tWO door, 3.8 '87 S·IO 4x•
Zenllh oleo !18t'viclng moll Olltr
pliances rurnllhed, laundry room
Cab,
Y·8
$1 ,200, 814-388o9651 .
litre, v,e, ollie modei'wrbo, PS,
on
promises.
1200,
614·985·
bral'!fo.
callo, 1·800·707·
facilities,
cloae
to
school
In
town.
Will care for elderly In my homo,
PB, AC, 5 apeed, power seats 5 lpetd, llr, I 42K mllea. ""'lne .0015, Houee
10165 Mobile Home Greo1 For 3007.
1
304-5l'l-238il
.
Applications available 11: Village Storage, Shop, Or Otftce, $1,500,
~ 5 years e•perienee. 304· 882- 1965 10x50 Liberty, 2 bedroom.
and locks, ·Groat Car," $5200 ribUHI br Hemlock EngN, $31100
2634,
stove, refrigerator, copper wiring, Green Apta. N9 or call814·~82· 614-4411-2051.
614·985o31170.
'
A~C Reglarerad fe'!laia Cno. nag., 6U·992·7478 or 814·949·
underpinning, exceUenl"condltlon, 3711 . EOH.
840·· Electrlc:ll
I
colaro lab, $200 ; AKC Regia· 2870.
'89 Larlal 150 XLT 4WD loaded
W1U 00 Interior 0' Exterior Paint· reduced, 614-742·3076, 614·742·
tertd
female
Chihuahua,
$300
·
'
Refrlg..._.ton
15
Inch
Fallaga1e'i
Speokero
&amp;
1 Bedroom /3 Room Apttlmont,
1ng Reasonable Rates, E•perl· 3010
1968 Camaro. nlc' ahape. 327 2 ilfl kil, htiergiOII bed COver, fed
Trash Paid, NO PETS. On 554 Box ·1150; 4oo Walt Holshol Vl10, Mol!e/Card ICtlp!od, 114: sp. lf'anlmiaaion. garaged last 12 and alivor, very ohorp, $14,000
RSESC'ERrFIED DEALER
enc'ed, Reterences, For Fr" Eari11112.e244.
Amp. Whh RCA Cables S&amp;O·
mal&amp;s, 814-245-S"P,;S.
11180 Wlndoor. 14170, 3 Bedroom, Near Alrllr, 8f4-3111-IIOO.
OIIP.814-082·5447.
LA'MlENCEENTEAPRISEs
·' •
yrs,
814·
742·3190
or
614·742·
Sherwood CD Player 150; ·
::.:::::.::..::.:.::..:;.:::;____ 12 Bathl, Electric &amp; Gaa, CA, Well
2550.
AKC
Shurzund
Gorman
Shepl\era
'83
0ot1go
ES,
filly
!Dod·
Hoot
Pumpa,
Alr
CondiUonlng
II·'
·
Furnished
Apar1mon11
Bedroom,
Wtnchelltr
12
Ga.
1300
W1ll Do Sewing &amp; Allora11ono In waror &amp; Counly Wolar. Building,
ed, .., blue, 0,. _,.,,. reer air 'lbu Don'l Call U. Wo lolfl Lotoi
Puppitt. Fram German lmportt:
My Home;" Please Call 81..,245- Garage,
Garden, Pasture, U951Mo. Utillliu Pold, 920 Dolonder Modal a Shol 1150· Ptdlgr•e•
Avoiloblo, e 14·448: 1870 I 1972 llontt Carlo, both ~nd heal, s d!oc exc ...nger, ex· Frolt EoUnatu, 1·100·281•0011 ·
•
o:Jool
sr..nod·ln Back Pbrch &amp; Buill· Fourth Avenue, Golllpollo, 814· Wincheater 12•Ga. 370 'llodol' , 1142.
for ,2,500. 1002 runa 1 looka ceiionl condldon, '11.500, 814· II4-44&amp;-QJI, WV 002fC
.. ; ~;
448-3&amp;44Aft« 7P.M.
Singloolto~ MD. 814-379-28311. '
good. 1870 ntodl tnefne 1&gt;
Will mow commercial &amp; re•lden· 0n Sunroorn. Hannan Trace Ele7
hrl11miiiD\ 31J4.8~
Roaidonllol or ~.....,...,. l!ll!lifa.ti''
,.., lawna. HaYO experienc&lt;~. Fr• mtniiiY. 2 Acres +1-. Very Good Baodl St, Mlddllport, 21&gt;4droom, 18 Fl. 11Ft flllbed Tilt Troltr
ootiiiiiiOI. 304 -67S.SIHI3, ..k lor Condltlo!1. ~2,000 No Land Con· tum11hed, ulill1ie11 ,.rd. Dopolllr &amp; 18 fl. Car Hauling Tr111ter $7oO
1
VW au_. Blue/While Look J·~-~::Mrlice~:.,~
or rapawo. lollillii,IJ'
1080 AIIC Spirit. olio, It+' iiln
Good, RUlli Grarf t3,200, •814 •
tli.c,lcl•n. ·litdel!iiw ·',
lriCI014·251-1113.
Euh,8t4-441-857l
lllioe.
OIU611.
...DOl.
. . •
'
.
WVOQOi!Oir. 304.. 71! ),

ttt~te'S YOU, FIL.E
~ICif'tT ttt~e ••
l)Nl&gt;f~

'

1989 Cr1ss Cfalt Cudd~ CaDm ~
19', 305 V· 8, 200hp, outboard t ~
sharp, S790o obo, call Ron Ca '

loruhN
23AdVI•

j

lliESE ARE PERIODS ..
PERIODS ARE VER'i
IMPORTA~T..

Furnished
Rooms

22 c:ontal.-.

(abbr.l

36
Pass
Piss

· Opening lead: • 8

One bedroom apar1mant 1n PI

20 ABobiiUJ
twin
21 Grew! rlclges

2581.-y
clothing
28 PortiOn out
27 Addict
~~-+-~-+--+--1 _21 Alpa or
RocldN

We&amp;t Nortb

Pass
Pass
Pass

'

1 Mall eenllr

33Eternaf
35 ceremoniea

Pleuan1, ro pols, 61 Hll2·58si. ·

Eltctt1c CrofbTiatic Full Size Bad
Good Condttion, 1175, 614-379..:
2720 AFTER 8 P.M

,_-

Vulnerable: Neither
Sout?l

.

DOWN

Neither·•
(111r1Mr

31Langu.g.

De8.1er: East

.

i Ill!-~

... ~

22 1ype of bean

tA K 4
6K Q 10 8 6 3

One ,bedroom aparlment 1n Mid·
die pOrt, all utili tiel paid usa ·per
monlh, $100 dopoail, 814·892·
7508, Slln-Gpm.

~-

•

•Q

Graciq_ut liVIng. 1 and 2 bedroom
apertrilon!l ar Village M1111or and
Rlveflldt Aparvnentl In Middte·
pori. From $232-1355 Call 814·
992;5064. Equal Houoing
tun•hea.

•rauulaaPUIIII

-·~~ ord8f 43 W I '1 d....,

lll?lr.

20

Soortll
· •K 8 5

furn~the Efficiency 2 Room1,
Share Bo
l1g51Mo Utllllleo
Paid, 807
d AYtnUO, !Hili·
polto, 814-448-44 Afllr 7 P.ll.

'450

.-41 -

Ails

13 One wllo
12 ,.,.
__.._. M ·am.ttw
14 Out In tile open
(dr ndl
15 Sm8ller
55 Once upon
II Shrewd
-18 Fr1terf181
56 Afleooomn111fnrgaklllono. IM!IIbera
57---11181
18 Brillah N1vy

•A 8 4
tQ 8 7
•J 9 52
.
Wat ·
Eut
•to t &amp; 4
•A J 7
•• 2
•K J 10 9 7 53
• 10 9 6 s 2
tJ 5
.7 4
6A

od cond., 1700. la&amp;3 Hondo
no V-45, IO,OOOmj, - tires
ltttry, !ott of exuaa, laking
,2,300. 2 rocker gliders, asking
S150... 1Wo 115gol. flah lanka wr
l1and. 1111 OJc. inclJdlng filh S200.
114-441.0188.

Furnlshtcl 2 Room&amp; 1 Bath,
Downataua, Ut!i•ties Furnished ,

a:;:...
,_

11 CepiW al

12180 Trailer Frame.. I14·3811IIOO.

For loaoe: 2 lleclfOom Apatlmonl
PartlaHw- Furnistt.d Or Yau Furnish Yourelf, Vary NN::e Aooma In
Nice Area, Gallipolis. Central Air
In Every Room, 614-.7174.

ali?lll•40,..,.,...,.

I

_,:..r_u.,....I'..,..Y_r.....-11'~,' .

.~ I

t

I

rI

I .:
'

GULONE

Gramps believes that life is
like tenniS . The player who
serves well, usually does • • -

I

~_,..,,,--.-,.....,..,-,.---,r::-,-1
.

Q

Complete tho chuckle quolod
•...-.1
by ftll1ng in the m•ssmg words
I ·-.J.-...1.._.J.-.J.i-.-...L
you dev,lop from step No. 3 below.

tor

HOVE!

.

SCUM LETS ANSWERS
Thr Trtosurr You
the
Sovlnrs You'U find In the

Classified Section.

-I THURSDAY

Hawker. Azure- Nylon· Tomboy- NEWBORN

. My neighbor says that a j&gt;erfect example of minority
rule is when someone brinQs home a NEWBORN.

I

APRIL 41

...

I

vans

I~Po~.~~H~o~ma~·~;m: : .pr=o=m=.~nl=·~re:m:o· t
wv

a.na

's

..

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ASTRO·ORAPH
!·

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_.

•

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•

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ti:DII....~....

·'

'

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

~

•
Friday, April 5) 1996
In order to maintain ..,.,~ In

doing everything your way . Make room

escape criticism today W you take lhe .lid
oil the 1ar in exchanges wfth co-worl&lt;ers.
If you polnl out thetr faults. they wtll

lmpufalr,ely•_In reqf!rd to li'IVtt.tment
OjipC)rlunltl8a tOday. Study proposal• In
depth. If the deals are sturdy, they Will

atllllldal-.
, I;ANCI!R (J- Jt..tuiJ 221 Take cere

j not to Pll! yo~reeH In a poaltlon Which.
-*I 8llow othefa lq ,..... critlc!l1 dedlUll you.

.l!llghl

not

'

'

I

.

' '

' ~·

;

you out.

•

see

n

, , cai!IIOn': Get a l11mp·on lite by uncler· ...rtng,lo rpanaoe eon'ieltwng lor yilur
......... ~ ll!al gD1fM11 you fn P1181'·!1'0Up loday, flllke IUf8 you ,JIIll
!

notice yours.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Z:J:Dec. 211 Before
getting deeper l"volved with a friend who
Is already Indebted to you, ask him or her
to settie up the existing account flnll.
CAPRICORN (Dec. zz.Jan. 111 Realistic
o!ljectlves can be achleve'd today.
However, wyou eslabllsh goals~ know
you can1 leach, don1 el(f)eCI lUCk to baH
AQUARIUS (JIIn. 20-Feb. 111 In order to
aucoaecl today, you- vieW life reaflait.
' CBIY·
conditloni u t11ey are l!ld not
1111 you ,.ant them to be.
,
PISCES (Feb. INIII"olt 201 It will not ·
your beat,lnlerelll to get lnWiYed !
In a .~r-...~~&amp; you 11aw10 rely
on aomeor• ella's jl.idgment and experi·

..
' a1iang bqndi wt111 tialh """'''•
1.20 (Julr 28 •·· 1Jt Y041t boU might
AIIIU (lltrCit 11-Aprll 11) You .may be ~a tied mqod !Delay, eo ,I IW or aile
.II' IHp. c:rfllc:li' ~, ,.,., .. .., JIIIUI' .... yOu Ill \aU GII!W al. - . 1
~~· YOI6pDIIiclnwilll101bl .. don'I-.~III:JWiciO!f_._c..
. ~ .. you tltlnlr, 10 jii I I d wtllt '""IIIQ (A!Ig. • I f 7 lit _ , wlur!-

l•

• I'

tor others to give their opinions:
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 You cannot

'

..._ yellr~. ciOnotfOIIakieldfltendl alon81or yc!u. Wlrat ~

tor.:new acqualtiiiiiiCH· Strlye to· ICII'ge

qualified lo handle thts assignment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Friends may
shy away ·from you today Wyou insisl on

: ...h_,,.......
lain taskS.

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

the year ahead . Send for yo,ur Astro·
Graph pradlctlona today by mailing $2
and SASE to Astro-Graph, o/o this , _ .
. paper, P.O. box 1758, Murray Hill
Station, New YOlk, NY 10158. Make sura
to slate your ZOCI18C sign. ·
TAURUS (April :ZO.!IIy 201 If you haw
an tndifferent altitude toward your .work
today, your performance will be allec:Nd.
You might waste too mOOh time on oar-

ence IOday.

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'J'!M Dilly 81nllnel

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott, Ohio

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_SpeGial ,Holy Week serv~ces announced for a~ea chu.rche~.
R..nnr fli.st Baptilt Cburdt
Sunrise ~ices 11 Racine First
Baptist Church will be held at 6:30
a.m. followed by a breakfast. Sunday
schoollt9:30Easterworshipservice
atl0:40 with communi~&gt;n, and East·
er night service at 7 p.m.
SL Paul Unlted Methodist
Chun:b
Maundy Thursday wonhip will be
held at 7:30p.m. at the St. Paul United Methodist Chun:h, Tuppers Plains.
Hillside Baptist Church
· An Easter CIUitata will be present·
ed at the Hillside Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Easterm()ming at 11 a.m.
and again at 6 p.m.
ML Hermon Ulliled Bretbrea In
Christ Chureh
A musical entitled "Lord of Glory" will be pre5cnted at the Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ

Chun:h by the youth, Eastc:r morning
at6:30 a.m. Breakfast will be.served
in the fellowship hall following the
sunrise service. Sunday school wjll
beat9:30a.m. andmoming·worship
at 10:30 a.m. There will .be no
evening ~ice.
Chester Ullited Methodist
Cbun:h
Gl&gt;od Friday service at 7:30p.m.
and Easter Sunrise Service at 7 a.m.
will be held at the Chester United
1
Methodist Church.
Faithful Gospel Church
Gl&gt;od Friday services, 7 p.m. Sunday sunrise services, 7 a.m. Pastor
Steve Reed .invites the public.
Meigs Mlaisterial
Association
· Gl&gt;od Friday services, to begin at
noon will wnclude Lenten services
of the Meigs Ministerial A ss~&gt;Ciiltion .

sunri~ ~ices will be held It 6:30
a.m. .
,
Fnulom Go.pel Ml doil
Sunrise services at the Freedom
Gospel Mission, Bald Kn\lbStiversville road, Long Bottom, will
be · held Sunday 11 7 a.m. Pastor
Roger Wilford invites the public to
attend.
HyseU Rua Roll- Cburdl
Sunrise services will be held at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church, 6 a.m.
Communion will follow. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m. and worship ser"ice, 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.
Middleport Chun:b ofChrllt
A cantata and drama, "He Lives",
wilf be presented at the Middleport
Church of Christ at 6 a.m. Easter sunrise service. and 7 p.m. on Wednesda:() April I 0.
,

The community is invited to shire in
S1ations of the Cross at,Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Ave.;·
Pomeroy.
·
Middleport Good Friday
service
.
The Middleport Ministerial Association will have a community Good
Friday service -at 7 p.m. at the Middleport Church of Christ, Fifth at
Main, Special music w~l be present·
eel by a community choir, Sharon
Hawley, Amy Perrin, and AI Hartson.
Speaker will be Richard Nease of
Heath United Methodist Church:
Syracuse Flnt Chureb of God
· Special services at the Syracuse
First Church of God will begin
Thursday when communion and feet
washing will lake place at 6 p.m.
Good Friday services w,ill be held at
6 p.ni. Friday, and on Easter morning,
.

It ' tile UalliMI MetiMI•...
Chllrda
Good FQd.y servic.s will be be)d

at R!edaville IJni!N Methodist !fit
7:30 p.m.lhJ Kneen will be ~t
IIOioisL Rev. Charles Mash. pastor,
invites the pl!blic.
·
G.-e EpiKepal Churdl,

serW:e of prayers, _.,.alml and~
tuno, and 10:~ a.m. Solemn Felb~
Holy Eucllarist.. . "''Ioiii
. IGCiilt

..P-•oy Uiiltecl•..te~a I
4 N1ghts

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
•
W~&gt;uld you believe that Mazie arid
Vic Hannahs, well-known Pomeroy
residents, have been married for 50
years? Doesn't se11m possible. ·
However, Mazie and Vic tied the
knol on Easter Sunday, April 2 i,
1946. Over that SO years their
anniversary date has fallen on East. er. Sunday only one time. Easter has.
been on earlier dates over the years.

Another meeting of the Meigs
County Diabetes Suppon Group is
coming up next Thesday, April 9.
The meeting will be held at7 p.m.,
; in the cafeteria of Veterans Memorial Hospital. Dr. Enrico Tan, DPN •.
will speak on foot care for the diabetic and will do free foot checks for
th~&gt;se atte11ding.
·
Thest meetings are not only open
to people suffering from diabetes but
als~&gt; for their supportive relatives and
• friends. Excellent attendance ~as
been reponed for past sessions of the
. group.
"-·----. . Did you remember that 91&lt;acuse
. · once had a high school?
I ilidn'Luntil a newspaper clipping
. arrived from Bob and Esther Harden.
The · clipping is entitled "Glorious
: Ending of the Year's School Work at
· Syracuse" and gives a detailed
; account of the gr8duation exercises of
.the Syracuse High School held on
June 22. 1899.
There were five grad!13teS in the
~ class including Erskine King; Appie
W. Duskey. Annie J. Hughes, Clara
· McBride and Edith Mainwaring. A ··
picture~ of ihe five was printed with
. the account which .read, in pan:
"A class o(tive young ladies and
; gentlemen stood before ail immense

·;. Ninth birthday
:celebrated

Katharine "Katie" Alexander,
.: daughter of Bradley_ W. imd
.. Stephanie Alexander, Vmton, .cele• ' brated her ninth binhday Feb. 25,
· with a ballerina-themed party at her
; home. She had a green and white
' cake featuring .a frog prince. ·
Attending the party were her par-.
;. ents and siblings Carol, Nick and
.;. Jessij: Alexander, Mr. and M~s.
- Stephen Houchins, Mr. and Mrs. J1m
Alexander, Mr. Victor Casto and
Annabelle, Mrs. Angela Perkins, Ms.
. Judy Alexander and Stacie, Mrs.
· Krista Eas~&gt;n and Amanda, Mr. and
Mrs. Huey Eason. M~. Trhonda
Casto, Jonathan and Austin, Mrs. Patti Wallen, Geremy and Za~h, Mr.
Roben Murphy and Josh, Sere_na
Bums, and Brittany and Oma Cook.
Sending cards and gifts were Ed
Perkins, Tim Casto, R1&gt;bert Eason, .
Karen. Tripp and Dale Bing and
Daltielle.

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JU5nN JACKS ·

·::Third birthday
· celebrated
Justin Michael Jacks celebrated
his third birthday Marth 30. He is the
s~&gt;n ~&gt;f Michael' and Lisa Jacks.
Those attending the party• were
Jerry, Linda and Sherry Jacks; ~thel ..
• Nicholson; Ron, Mary. Stephanie ·
and Ronnie Jones; an~ Robert ·
• Wingett.
'
Mary Wingett W!IS unable to
attend but sent a•gift.

audience of their friends and receiv¢
from Superintendent Ervin the dipl~&gt;- ·
mas that represented about twelves
years of hard and earnest work They
had labored long for this moment and
it was a proud one to every member
of the class. They were all well
trained and delivered their orations as
if it were an every day occurrence
with them." .
Hetzel's orchestra provided the
music (or the ceremonies,which were
. often held in community churches
back then. HighlightS of each speech
were also presented in the article: Of
course, this was back in the days
when not too many completed their
high school educations--and in cop-·
trast to today, I doubt if many young
people were encouraged to do that
back then.

I nope you don't 'get sick, but if
you d1&gt;, perhaps .. you'll receive one of
the handmade get-well cards created
by Carol Tannehill, Middlepon, these
days.
Carol is, of course. a talented artist
and malles these get-)Yell carrJs which
are detailed .with colorful, blooming
flowers. Bound to make y~&gt;u feel better and something you would want to
keep "among your souvenirs" .
However, sure looks like a lot of
work and time involvement to ine.
Being completely non-creative I'll
have to go for the "ready-made" one.
I'm doing really good to get a card
addressed and I shudder to think what
one I made would look hke.
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WGsn't Monday's weather the pitS?
it was April Pools' Day,
Mother Nature certainly wasn't
foolin' around. She socked it to us.
~!though

Chris· Randolph, Bobbi Scarberry
and Lena Yoacham.
·
Sy1'11C115e Elementary
2nd Grade-· John Bentz, Chelsea
.Smith, and Jennifer Wolfe; all A's.
Ryan Amberger, Myca Michael,
Caitlin Neflse, J~&gt;shua Pape, Jason
Pierce, Derek Roush, Selena Spencer
and Jenny Warner.
·
3rd Grade •• Ashton Brown,
· Rachael Cottrill and S!!ICY Snyder; all
A's. Mirinda Davis, Heather Duffy,
Holly Duffy, Ashlee Hill, Wallace
Hill, Jordon Lidel, Adam McDaniel
and Tyler Roberts.
,
4th Grade •• Bethany Amberger,
Codi Davis, Sarah Hqwley, and Kalie
Sayre; all' A's. Shawn Barnhan, Jordan Bass, Timmy Cogar; Joey Riffle
and 1.0. Smith.
. ·
5th Grade •• Melinda Chancey,
Crystal Cottrill, Marium EIDahaja,
ani! Jennifer Walker; all A's.. Justin
Allen, Rachael Chapman, Justin Con- .
nolly, Cunis Crouch, Jeri Hill, Jordon
Hill and Amy Lee
6th Gi'ade •• Tyler Little; all A's.
Matt Ash, Joe Cornell, .Amber Duffy,
Joe Mpnuel, Rachel Marshall, Kim
McDaniel and Lindsey Smith.
Portland Elementary
3rd Grade-- Sani Cammarata, Jessica Gloyd, Bryan Smith, and Ryan
Smith; all A's. · Andy Henderson,
Kyle McKeever, Kyle Mees, Joanne
Pickens, Brandi Vance and Felicia
Wallbrown.
·
4th Grade •· Stephanie Bradford
and Andrea Tedford; all A's. R~&gt;bbie
'Weddle and Liz Wamsley.
5th Grade --Tara Pickens all A's.
Jamie N()fVille, Brandon Smith and
Tom Theiss.
·
6th Grade -- Lori Sayre and
Amanda Huddleston; all A'~. Nick .
McLaughlin and Amy Wilson. '
Letart Elementary
Due to the multi-age at Letart
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6:30 .p.m.; worshipt 7:30 p.m. ~b
even1ng through Thursday. Speake~ ·
Wednesday, Rev. Sharon Hausll\lll,
Pa.Mroy
Thursday, R~v. · Bob. R?bi~son.
Maundy Thursday Lit111JY, 1 p.m. Gospel preaching, spec1al smg1ng.
· to include food washing, the celeH~ ~rove Churcb
bration of the Holy Eucharist and the
Sunnse serv~ 6:30 P·~· at the '
stripping of the altar.
•
·Hemi~&gt;Ck Grove Church w1th bn:~
Good Friday Liturgy, 7 p.m. to fast to fol_l~&gt;w at the grange ha!l. Sun.
include the Solemn C9,1lects, Vener- ~y service at 9:30 a.m. With ega
ation mthe .Cross and Mass of the hun!. U lo Ba ..._ Ch h
Jnsanctified.
ML .• . a puot . un: .
Holy Saturday, 7:30 p.m. the
.Commun~on/Candlebght Se~1ce,
&lt;neat Vigil of Easter including the Fnday, 6:30 p.m. Sunnse services,
lishting of the New Fin:, Holy Bap- Sunday, 7 a.m. Easter ~gmm. 6:3()
tism 8J!d the first Eucharist ~&gt;fEaster p.m. Located 2 112 miles south of .
at the Christ Church, Point Ple'asant. Carpenter. Pastor ~oe M. Sayre
Easter Sunday, 8 a.m. Lauds, brief invites the public.
.

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Butyoukeeps~»iling.

CaM; ./)~s iNct

· 3rd Grade •• Brooke Kiser and
Autumn Reed; all A's. Ben Hatfield,

auto, lilr cond,
AM/FM cale, PS, PB,
. PW, POL, .,wr - t , tilt,
crulu, lellher

V-8,

auto, air
AM/FM cau, PS, PB,
PDL,, Pwr H ..,
cru11a, etc.

$16,94

auto, air cond, AMJFM

\

.DCyC, spokesman for Strick~a~~aign disagree on announcement from incumbent's camp
Incumbent Sixth District U.S: ed seats. It reverses a previous DCCC
Rep. Frank f!r. Cremeans itllo longer list that named1he Gallipolis Repuba target l&gt;f the Democratic Congres- lican, according to the Cremeans
sional Campaign CO!llf':'itlee, the campaign.
Cremeans campaign announced -this
"l think they fi gured out that
week.
· ·
there are better places to spend their
But the DCCC and a spokesman money than here in s~&gt;uthern Ohio,"
for former Rep. Ted Strickland, ·D- . Cremeans said. "My district has been
Lucasville, Cremeans' ~&gt;pponenl this represented by· a Republican for all
fall, challenged the statement, calling but two years for the pas! four
it "a desperation move." .
decades."
. Quoting a story that appeared in
But DCCC spokesperson Tricia
Monday's Washington Post, the Cre- Primrose said that Cremeans "is one
m~ans campaign said his name docs
of the top targets and opportunities in
: not appear on a list of DCCC target- Ohio."
·

CUI, PS, PB, eliding

llack.glau,etc.

HELI':NA, Mont. (AP) ~ A typewriter found in the mountain cabin of
a follJier math professor appears to
. have been used to produce the man. ifesiQio. and letters sent by the
Uimbombet in ·recent years, a senior
federal official said today.
The disclosure came as FBI and
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacc~&gt; and
Firearms agencs, wary. of possible
·, .lj,q,Q)ly traps, worked with h;leticu~y.s_
. ..,.~are o~'llie 'search ofTheoiloi'e lohri

·

Convertible, auto, air
COIId, AM/FM CUI, tilt,
cruiH, PS, PB, PW." POll.,
etc.
·

"
·---~

KATIE ALEXANDER .'

:=:_r~.-.~

9{pw tJJispfaying Our Spring ant£ Summer

Wearing Merdiandise f}'or Men and Women
• Koretof
California
_, • J~ntzen
• Alfred Dunn~r
• Levi-Bendover ·
Slacks
• Dresses

~RIX

4 dr, v..a, auto, lilr cond,
AMIFM cua, ·tilt, crut.e,
PS, PB, PW, I'OL
LOADED

. ·suits ·
• Blazers • S~rt Coats
• Slacks

'199lUDILLAC
....
SEDAN DEVILLE

• Windbreakers

• Levi Denims

· . Store of QuaUty and Service · .

BAHR·CLOTHIERS
lllddlap Drl

992·2351
.I

auto,

auto,

air -· cond,

IAllir:U CIIU, tilt, cruiH,
Pl;l, PW, PDL, Pwr
&amp; mora.
· •·.•

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concl,

1989
CONTINENTAL
auto,

air

cond,

can, tilt, crutu,

Auir:u cue, tilt, crutee,

PB, PW, 'PDL, Pwr

PB, PW, POL, Pwr
l,..e~er, low mllaa.

Alii/Fill

Lellhef

• Shirts (Loug &amp;short sleeve)
• Ties • Pants

THUNDERBIRD LX

$9,949
~

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145 N.2nd

1992 FORD ·

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.s7,949

RVHS students
protest proposed
reopening of HTH.S

THEODORE KACZVNSI&lt;I

Kaczynski 's cab· .
They ex pee spend several days
on I he searc fthe bin and a small .
outbuilding
y try to build a case
that he is the person who has waged
a 17-year-campaign of bombings that
killed three and injured 23.
This typewrirer and another found
"'the same remote site are still undergoing analysis in the FBI laboratory,
bl!.l~ 'itJQO~l,likeJile Qlalijfesto and
the lene/s from th~ Unabomber were
typed on this machine, :• according w
the official in Washington, who
. -declined w be identified by name:
" We ' ll know for sure after the
detailed lab analysis."
·
The Unabomber's 35,000-word
manifesto and letters to newspapers
" were. all .typed on . the same
machine," .the official " said. "We
believe he did that ililenti(mally as a
way for us I() know l~e communications were authentic."
The Unabomber's treatise on the
inhumanity of industrial society was .
published last year by The New
York Tittles and The Washington Post
in the Post. The Unabomber
promised to stop trying to kill if the
treatise was published. There have
been no bombings since.
So far, the search of the cabin also
has yielded a partially assembled pipe
bomb, bomb-making materials and
literature.

WASHINGTON CAP) - Folks sure 1h~t these safety devices arc
planning to celebrate Easter Sunday always working .
· with· a trip·to church need to be sure
to set their clocks ahead.
Daylight-saving lime arrives at 2
a.m. Sunda~. meaning that people
Daylight-saving time begins;
\vho forget.to'change their clocks will
. remember to set your cl~&gt;Ck
I
be an hour laic.
forward.one hour Sunday morning.
The spring change means moving
the c]oc ~ ahead one hour. You
remember, "spring f~&gt;rward.' '
Standard time returns Oct. 27.
Originally instituted to save energy during World War I. the time
change means later sunsets. Today,
. that permits people to enjoy working
. on gardens or outdoor projects, playing spons, having barbecues or just
idly relaxing outside.
And safety officials are reminding
Americans that changing the clocks
is also agl&gt;od reminderto change the
, bau~ries in smoke detectors, making

4

forward

Easter charade:

About 40 River Valley High
School studenls reportedly upset with
the proposed reopening of Hannan
Trace High School protested with a
walkout Thursday, an RVHS administrator said.
The mostly silent demonstration.
was over in less than 15 minutes after
the school administr~tion asked students to,make their sentiments known
in ~&gt;ther ways. Assistant Principal Tim
Scarberry said.
·
.
"They wanled to protest their
pelief agai.nst a so uthern high
school," he said. "They just wanted
to make a stalcmenl and they made
it." .

An old wooden cross accented with a pur·
pie drape and loPped with a crown of thorns ·
depicts Christ Crucified In this scene.at the For·
est Run United Methodist Church. The cross Is
surrounded by lilies, many given as .memorial
tributes t.o family members who have gone on

to join the Resurrected Christ. Kathleen Scott,
90, who has been organist at the church since
she was 16, places a lily at4he foot of the cross .
· in memory of deceased family members. (Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

The students left the h~ilding
around I p.m. When administrators
were notified and directed students lo
return 10 classes, 24 did at once, Scarberry said, but 16 remained outside. :
School counselors then lalkcd to . the students and they returned to the
building, he explained
''The students later felt they handled it wrong . and needed 10 talk
aboul il." Scarberry said.
"It was ~n cmotibnal issue, but .
when I hey werctold to do something,
they did·," he added.
Scarberry said he didn ' t take
names of lh ~ sludenls involved and
did n~&gt;l know from what grades !hey
represented. ·

·

"When you pul i1 in perspective,
Continued on page 3

After more than 100 years service,

Shade Post Office to close doors this summer
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
Sentinel News Staff
. The Shade Post Office, in operation since the liuc 1880's, will close
in late summer.
After that delivery a~d retail
postal services will be provided on a
contractural basis by a community
post office located in a Shade resi.(,
dence, business or other building.
A community post office is a
"contract unit operated by a private
individual. II is not a loca!ion staffed
by postal employees." explained Ross
Crego, regional post office review
coordinator.
.
Crego went on to note that the
selected contractor will be responsible for providing a -facility and the
labor 10 operate it, and be paid on a
monthly basis for providing services
to the customers.
.
The COSI of. opera,tion and . the

small number of people served
through that post office was given as
the main reason for closing the facility. A survey shows that 53 enstamers receive their mail there daily
and thai there is an average of 18
retail transaclions per day.
By moving to a community post
office, there wi II be savings of about
$18.400 in Salaries and other costs,
according ·to Crego.
The matter has been under consideration for :ncarly two years. The
longtime post•naSier retired in 1992 :
and since then an interim postmaster
has handled the operation.
. The final d~cision to close the
Shade Post Office came in late March
after tHe Postal Rate Commission of
Washingwn D. C. ruled against an
.appeal of a patron.
Cre~o said that ·the chanJIC ·will
come 'no sooner than 90 days .and

probably closer to 120 to ISO days."
Thai is the amount of time, he
explained, that it will take to establi sh a commtlnity post office w.hich
will provide "regular and effeclivc

either now or when the .communitY

services for the community."

tings.

He stressed that patrons will not
experience any interruption of service

post office is in operation. All rclail services will be offered
with lhc dccption of permit mail
acceptance and postage QJeter setCrego said that there is a
Continued on page 3

li~t

of ·

Bunnies? ·Hens do all .the work for Easter
.

PmSBURGH (AP) - While
bunnies get all the glory for Easter,
he,ns do all the work. ··
U.S. farmers sell about 50 million
dozen more eggs than·average during
th!) two weeks before Easter, but
· chickens can't just lay eggs accord. ing to the needs of the market.
"The 'hens don't listen when you
tell them it's Easter,'' said Lee Shrad·
er, professor of agric.ultural econom-.
ics for Purdue University in West
Lafayette, Ind.
··
No, the 'farmers don 't talk to the
chickens. To keep things moving,
the:t simply manipulate nature·.

.

.

Chickens lay eggs almost every
day a! t~ginning of an eightmontlllaying cycle ,but may slow
their rate to every other day by the
end, Shrader said.
.,
· After. hens shed featheR, they start
producing more eggs again. Farmers
can make the oi~s molt sooner by
dimming · the lights in the birds' .
sheds and by feeding them less.
' Or they can delay molting - and
keep the hens laying lots of eggs by giving them ample feed and keeping the lights bright.
·
'To keep up with demand, eggs are
also st~&gt;Ckp.ilcd, so they may not be as
&lt;'. '

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when its statement declared that the
Sixth District "is composed of five
different media markets, making ·it
one of the most expensive media districts in the country."
'
Sylvester dismissed the clailjl,
calling Cremeans "tbe biggest hog at
the trough when it comes to the 13
freshmen congressmen buffoons taking money from high-rollers.
.
"I think he's knows he 's in !rouble and this announcement was a deSperation move," he added. "I thirik
he 's concerned with his record."

Walkout

DST returns at 2 a.m. Sunday

====--..........,ltkt;..-----.......

the vote in the March 19 GOP pri- · tiy November.
mary that went to Q'eme~ns' chalCitizen Action, an Ohio-based
Ienger, B~&gt;b Kelley, was a sign "that cons'lmer and environmenlal advopeople are getting frustrated with an cacy group, has questioned the kind
elected official who's not acc~&gt;unt- of the campaign donations the Cre·
able."
means camp~ign pas accepted.
In a statement, the Cremeans camIn a report issued late last week,
paign n~&gt;ted that Cremeans "has the group reponed that Cremeans was
aggressively out-fund-raised his for- awarded $44,725 in 1995 from firm s
mer and present opponen(' by a mar- • Citizen Action identified as toxic pol·
· gin of more than 6 to I.
luters, and from allied political action
Cremeans has raised more than committees.
$700,000 for his campaign war chest
The Cremeans campaign offered
since defeating Strickland, and some appatcnl justification for the
expects to raise more than $1 million size of the candidate's contributions

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,1-· ·

Y. mile Down River from Pomeroy Bridge
Phone992-4484

· Primrose said the .Post story was
"not at all an accurate list" but an
analysis of , what the newipaper
believed is the OCCC's major efforts
t() unseat congressional Republicans.
While it did not carry Cremeans as
one of the targets, periodic lists cpmpiled by the DCCC include his name,
she said.
"I think we have a. candidate
who 's very nervous about his chances
for re-election," Primrose added.
Her comments were echoed by
Strickland campaign spokesman Ron
Sylvester. who said that 2~ percent of

.:Typewriter may be
key evidence·in
:Unabomber case

808 W. Main St., Pomeroy, OH 4S6769
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35centa
A Gennett Co. New~

Cremeans no longer on Democrats' 'hit list'

1993 FORD
MUSTANG LX

4x4, Supercab, 4.0 V-8,

In

high In 408.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; .Friday, AprilS, 1996

.

1994 FORD ~
RANGER -XLT

·cloudy tonight_ Low

201. Saturd•y. cloudy,

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v.a,

power.

Buckeyesi
3-4·9·1 Q-24

Vol. 46, NO. 238
2 Secllona, 12 Pe~

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1994 LINCOLN
.TOWN CAR

5664 .

•

Nicki Thcker.
..
4th Grade ·· Mtchael Roush; all
A's. Jason Autherson, David Gloeckner, Montana Jarrell, BJ. Bamho~t
and Amy Norman.
·

·1992 FORD MUSTANG

FJNEST EQUIPMENT AVAD ABU ·

~

grade.

Pick 3:
411 .
P~ck 4:

•

Convertible, V-8, airto, air cond, AM/Fill ceaa, tilt, cruln, all

GOOD HOIIST PEOPLE
.2 imd 4 Wheel Alignments (CQinputer)
•Brakes •Shocks •Struts •Tires
-on Changes •Lube Jobs •Tune-ups
•Engine Diagnosis .

Falls Elementary there will be n~&gt;
honor r~&gt;ll for the first arid second

.

4 God, 81ble saudy,

Southern ·Local School District posts honor rolts . ,
Southern lligh School
9th Grade -- Teresa Bush and Nikki Circle; all A's. Jenny Carleton,
Joshua Ervin, Sara Ervin, Suzanne
Evans, Kara King, Patty Lawrence,
Jesse Little, Jerrod Mills, Sarah
Roels, Crystal Rose, Jason Roush,
Kimberly Sayre, Jessica Smith,
Amber Taylor, and Adam Williams.
lOth Grade •• Cynthia Caldwell,
Crystal Coleman, Jennifer Friend,
and Evan Struble; all A's. Angie
Alley, Erica Amott, Leigh Ann Canterbury, Matthew Dill, Darlena Aowers, Melissa Layne, Ashley McKinney. Nikki Robinson, Ranetta
Wheeler, Corey Williams and Billy
Young.
llth Gr;lde ··Emily Duhl, Nathan
Haines, Hillery Harris, Trudy Justis,
Tonia Nazarewycz, Jessica Sayre
and Amber Thomas; 'all A's. Francis
Adkins, James Blackwell, Julia
Gopfert, Mark Lewis, Greg Me Kinney, Amy Rizer,
Kim R~&gt;ush,
Greyson Taylor and Sarah Wallbrown.
·
12th Grade ·• Jason Barnell, C.J.
Harris, Jennifer Lawrence, Jonna
Manuel, and Rayan Young; all A's.
Kim Cornell, .Eli Craig, Robin
Gillispie, Ryan Hill, Rochelle Jenkins, Jay McKelvey, Becky Moore,
Pam Roush, Jason Shuler and Sammi Sisson.
Southern Junior High
7th Grade -- Sarah Ball, Macyn
Ervin, Jonathan Evans, Chad Hubbard and Shawna Manuel; all A's.
Nicole Bensen, Clay Enslen, Brand~&gt;n Hill, Jessica Janey,.Garrett Kiser,
Lee Reynolds, Fallon Roush, Brenna
Sisson and Emily Stiyers.
8th Grade -- Jamie Baker, Kyle
Norris, . and Brandon Wolfe; all A's.
Erin Bolin, Sarah Brauer, Adatn
Cummings, Stacey Ervin, Braun Herman, Kim Ihle, Amber Maynard,

Ohio Lotfery

Expos tiand
Reds second
loss in row

'

.•
\

.fresh as usual at ·Easter.
Hillendale Farms eggs typically
arc ~bout two days old when consuwers get them. Ar.ound Easter,
they ·may be seven days old, said
Gary Betlie!. vice president of Hillendale Farms of North Versailles, Pa
'The company also has farms in Ohio,
Florida and other states.
About 3.9 billion dozen eggs were
sold in the Uniied States last year,'.
accordi~g to the Department of Agri- '
culture.
The average person eats 238, eggs
a y~ar and the average chicken lays
about 240 eggs in t)lat time. It's as if
.'

every person h'as his or her own
chicken somewhere laying eggs on
demand.
And what ·happens to the hard-·
hoiled, brightly colored eggs used for
children's hunts on Easter Sunday?
M~&gt;st families - 64 percent - eat
them, according to a national survey
of I,OOOmen and women ·by the H.J.
Heinz· C1&gt;. Another 22 percent toss
them out.
M~re than 20 percent said they
usually hide the eggs outside near
shrubs, bushes and trees, while 8 percent said the best place was in and
around furniture.
'

TO CLOSE - Kaith Mcl.ettd atandl outalde the Shede Poet
Office where hi! goes every Clay to pick up his mall. The Ppat
Office will close .lo late IUft\mtr end patrone will be HIWCI
thro11gh • comm·unity poet offltia, operated on 1 contractural
basis In enothar location.
·

;

I

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