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\

~ 1_
2•

:

'J'!M Dilly 81nllnel

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott, Ohio

'

_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.

..•

••

'•
'

- ."

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.
- ·········

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
•

Sport., Page4

I

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.
.

-.:::::

'

-~,,

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.
· •·.•

•lr

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
~

I

145 N.2nd

1992 FORD ·

'

.

.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;'. '

.

'

.'

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

'

,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
- u... _...__

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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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 .

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Nicki Thcker.
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4th Grade ·· Mtchael Roush; all
A's. Jason Autherson, David Gloeckner, Montana Jarrell, BJ. Bamho~t
and Amy Norman.
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·1992 FORD MUSTANG

FJNEST EQUIPMENT AVAD ABU ·

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grade.

Pick 3:
411 .
P~ck 4:

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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

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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

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.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
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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.
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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.
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Commentary·
The Daily Sentinel

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To Americans under 65, the great
In the third cJ~egory
· banlcs over domestic Communism just mentioned - evi·
waged between liberals and conser· dence possessed by the
vatives in the late 1940s and tally U.S. government -- by
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
' 814-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157
1950s must seem as remote as any far the most important
other historical event occurring disclosures thus far are
before they came of age: Lind- contained in a file of
bergh's 1927 solo flight across the documents code-named
Atlantic, for example, or the assassi· "the Venona Pa~rs."
A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·
nation of Archduke Franz Ferdinand These include coded
in Sarajevo in 1914.
_
communications
Most
of
them
know
only
what
betwC!ln Soviet intelliROBERT L WINGETT
our
schools
and
the
media
have
seen
gence
officers in Wash.Publl•her .
to it they know, and know well: That . ington and Moscow
sometime
around 1950 an evil Mid- Center from 1942 to
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGABET LEHEW
senator named Joe . I 945 inclusive. Over
western
General Manager
Controller
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McCanhy smeared a lot qf innocent the following years they have been
liberals as Communists and spies, partially decrypted by the Army's
and was duly condemned for it by Signal.s Intelligence Service and the
the overwhelming vote of his fellow NatiQrial Security Agency.
senators.
,
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Enough has been· decoded to
Of the answering argumenls of reveal in astonishing detail the scope
the conservati ves -- that ihe Ameri· of Soviet activity in the Uni!ed
can Communist Party was the disci· States, including extensive espiplined tool of Joseph Stalin; that in . onage; and the identity of many of
the decades of the 1930s and ' 40s the actual agents.
"
hundreds ~fits members and fellowThere are, for example. numerous
By WALTER R. MEARS.
travelers cheerfully committed espiAP Special Correapondant
onage against their own country on
WASHINGTON - While· promoting free trade as an engine of the . behalf of the Soviet Union; that the
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·American economy. President (:linton is watching his political flanks on the party penetrated deeply into Hollyissue, vowing a tough, aggressive stance against barriers to U.S. expons.
wood, the trade unions and (above
Sen. Bob Dole, his Republi,can challenger, says the president has not been all) the U.S. 'government, subverting
tough enough against unfair foreign competitors. Dole says he would hard- all of these to serve the secret puren the line, using all the powers of a new administration to break down for- poses of its foreign masters -- of
eign trade wal!s.
these grave charges, Americans
Because Dole supponed the two m'\ior trade agreements of.Ciinton 's . today have heard very little, and·dispresidency, and because both original~ with previous Republican adminis- believe what little they have heard.
trations, it isn't likely to be a major issue be.tween them. But it does get on It is perhaps the single greatest tripolitical nerve~. given the vein of protectionism mined by conservative Pat umph of liberal disinformation in
Buchanan in his losing, if loud, challenge to Dole.
American history.
It is one of the points on which Buchanan argued there's not a dime's
So it is not only·gratifying to conworth of difference between the Democratic, president and the Republican servatives, but of enormous historiSenate leader.
.
cal and political significance, that
Por Clinton, trade policy has stirred problems wiih organized labor. For the truth' is coming out at last. Prom
Dole. it has meant trouble on the right. Clinton urged, and Dole supponed, the archives of the KGB in Moscow,
the NonhAmerican Free Trade Agreement and GAIT, the extended, broad- ·from the lips of former Soviet agents
ened world trade agreeme~t.
themselves, and from secret evi- ·
Both have since tried to placate dissatisfied political allies with rival dence long in the possession of the
vows of stiff enforcement against trade abuses. Labor threatened. to punish U.S. government but only now
Clinton for NAFTA, but that off-year rift didn't extend into a. campaign . reve,aled; the conservative allegawhere the option is a Republican.
tions of Communist inOuence in
Buchanan argued that the trade deals Dole ' upponed ha.ve shipped ~i.l­ America, on behalf of the Soviet
lions of blue-collar JobS abroad, where pay scales are a fractton of Amertcan Union, have been vindicated: game,
wages. And Democrats also are sensitive to that charge in a time of U.S. anx- set and match.
iety about job security.
.
Because the major pany rivals draw distinctions without clear differencps
on the trade issue - Ross Perot opposed NAFTA- this campaign probably will present a revised version of the last one.
·
As president, George Bush said freer trade would strengthen the U.S.
econorny and gen.erate jobs. Clinton as a candidate endorsed the trade deals By George R. Plagenz
BIBLE QUIZ: Jehovah's Witnesses, sticklers for " what the Bible says,"
evenwally enacted in his adminiStration, while advocating a jobs program
do not celebrate binhdays. Does the Bible have anythi~a to say about binhand training for displaced American workers.
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Now Clinton says his administration has concluded more than 200 trade days?
Answer below.
agreements seeking a fair•. open world marketplace. ".Ame~.cans have legi~­
Asked by his third-grade teacher to draw a picture of "What Easter
imate concerns about Job secunty and standards of h vmg, the prestdent s
economic report to Congress says. "But neither ... will be enhanced by clos- Means to Me, " 8-year-old Tyler made a drawin·g of a man he labeled
"Moses" coming up out of a grave. The caption said, "If he sees his shading the American economy to foreign competition."
.
' The administration argues that ·wo\lld be a retreat i'nto economic deCline, ow there will be six more weeks of winter."
.
Those who believe we are living in an age of biblical illiteracy might'use
costing jobs, not creating them.
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When there are wage inequities and job losses due to foreign col!' petition, that story as an example of what they mean. But that,
the White House says, the solution is in better education, training, tax cred- . would obscure the fact that there are also many bibits for low-income Americans and an increase in the $4.25:hourly minimum lically literate people who can rattle off the names of
wage, blocked in the F,epublican Senate as Clinton pressed to get it raised. Noah's sons (Shem, Ham and Japheth) and explain
There's a harder line, too. The administration has just issued a list of 42 how strongman Samson got his stre'ngrjt back after
countries and four trade blocs it accuses of imposing onerous trade harriers. Delilah sheared him. (When his hair grew b~k. Sam·
It promises negotiations against such practices, with the possibility of trade son's strength returned.)
These were two· of the questions asked on one
·sanctions· if bargaining fails. Japan led the list; Clin!on is expected to raise
broadcast of a new religious quiz show, "Inspiration,
trade disputes and _seek- redress when he goes there in mid-April. ·
Earlier, the administration set up a new unit in its trade agency to stiffen Please," seen on the Faith and Values channel on cable TV. There are three
contestants on each broadcast and the winrter at the ·end Of the season gets a
enforcement of trading agreem~nts. ·
.
Clinton says the trade deals have boosted the American economy by bil- trip to the Holy Land.
According to an anicle in the Wall Street Journal, some religious people
lions of dollars " and produced 'hundreds of thousands of good-quality jobs
are saying "Inspiration, Please" trivializes the Bible even though, as the ani·
at home."
_
Dole said he supponed them to promote U:S. exports. Now he's hedged cle mentions, the program "spurns sultry letter-turners and roulette-style
a bit. "At this time, we need to step back and assess whethef'these agree- wheels'' (a reference to Vanna White and the casino motif of "Wheel of For'
ments have in fact benefited working Americans as originally hoped,". he tune " ) .
·
Most
church
people
regard
it
as
a
good
sign
that the Bible is finding a
says.
The Kansas senator also has proposed legislation to quit the trade rule popular audience through instructional quizzes and fun-and-lll!ffies show~ .
Rev .. Robert St. Clai~;· a ·retired United Methodist minister in Lancaster,
ehforcement panel that is pan of the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Ohio, recently included a Bible puzzle in his bimonthly newsletter that
· Trade. should that agency abridge U.S. rights.
.
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The political logic behind the maneuvering sh~ws in polls of·presidential delighted his subscribers.
The game was to find the 16 books of the Bible hidden in this paragraph.
primary voters so far this year. Not many more beheve t?at trade creates Jobs
for Americans than think it loses them. And the susptcton tl costs U.S. JObs
is most pronou.nced in the big, Midwestern industrial states that could be
crucial in. the Nov. 5 presidential election.
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Politics and trade

Bible literacy

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.Today in history
By The Aeaoclatad Press

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Today is Good Friday, Ap~l 5, the 96th day of 1996. There are 270 days
left in the year.
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Today's Hig~light in History: .
0n April 5, 1887, in Tuscumbta, Ala. , teacher Anne Sulhvan taught her
blind and deaf pupil, Helen Keller, the meaning of the word " water" as
· spelled out in' the Manual Alphabet.
On this date:
In 1614. American Indian princess Pocahontas married English colonist
John Rolfe in Virginia.
·
Ip 1621; the Mayflower sailed from Plymouth, Mass., on a return trip to
England. .
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h y1 u · ·
In 1649, Elihu Yale. the English philanthropist for w om a e mverst·
ty is named, was born.
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In r792, George Washington cast the first prestdenttal veto, reJectmg a
congressional measure for apportioning representatives among the states . .
In 1856. black American educator Booker T. Washmgton was born m
Franklin County, Va.
In 1887, British historian Lord Acton wrote, "Power tends to COJ'!UPI and
absolute power corrnpts absolutely."
.
In' 1895, playwright Oscar Wilde lost his criminal libel case against the
Marquess of Queensberry. who had accused the wnter of homosexual prac-

ti~~

19SI. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were ;entenced to death followin~
their conviction on charges of conspiring to commit espionage for the Sovtet Union.
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In 1964, ArmY Gen. Douglas MacArthur dted tn Washmgton at age 84.
In 1975, nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-she~ died at age 87.
in 1976 reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes dted 10 Houston at age 72.
In J99i medical student Suada Dilherovic, .who was hil by small arms
fire becam'e the ftrSt fatality of war in Bosnia-Herzegovina as Serb nationalisis !)ega~ forcibly opposing the republic's secession from Yugoslavia.
· Ten years ago: An American soldier and a Turkish woman were killed in
the bombing of a West. Berlin discotheq~e. an incide.nt which prompted the
U' S. air raid on Libya more than a week
later.
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Not much .good can be expected from another
presidential bid by Ross Perot, but there's one service the pesky Texan can perfprm: make President Clinton and Sen . Bob Dole, R-Kan., face up
to the need to reform Social Security.
Despite mounting awareness that the retirement system is fiscally unsustainable and grossly
unfair in the way it redistributes income, both
major-party candidates will want to avoid touch-ing the legendary ''third rail" of American .Politics.
·
· ,.,.. Indeed, the tendency of both parties is to·demagogue any effon to bring entitlement spending
under control. Democrats are especially prone to
wave the bloody shin, as they did over Medicare
reform last year, but the GOP also attacked Clin- .
ton for propoSing modest Medicare cuts in 1994.
Perot. despite his personal flaws (paranoia and
authoritarianism leap to mind), has been adept at
focusing attention .on issues that the two panics
want to duck, such as a balanced ·budget in 1992
and campaign finance reform last year.
Social ~ecurity needs the same treatment this
year. By harping on (Jle flaws in the system, Perot
could force Clinton and Dole to acknowledge that
therc;'s a problem aitd create' the polilical climate
for reform in 1997.
The case for reform has been laid out in compelling form by two Democrats •• Roben Shapiro
of t'' ' Progressive Policy Institute, writing last
fall 10 the Democratic Leadership Council publi·
cation, the New Democrat, and Matthew Miller, a
former Clinton budget official, in the current
issue of.the New Republic. •
· Ammunition for change will be furnished in
more official form sometime this spring )¥ith the
repon of the Advisory Council on Social Securi·
ty, which.is appointed every four years Ill assess
the system.
As both Shapiro and Miller point out, Social
Security was described by Nj)bel Prize· winnins.

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and - ga·me~

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economist Paul Samuelson
·15 percent tOday. The younger generation . will'
in 1967 as based on "the
have to support the elderly rather than save for its'
greatest Ponzi scheme ever ·
'dwri' retirement.
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contrived" -- a growing
The cutrent ·Social Security system also ls·
work force_and economy.
"&gt;tJnfair because the basic Social Security tax. is ·
The scheme has worked
regressive -- incomes above $65,000 are exempt.
for 50 years but is demo'and
are dividend and capital gains income ..: :.
graphically destined to col- ·
· while benefits are based on past income and go
lapse over the next 30 years.
.disproponionately to the well-off.
•
The situatioil' is ripe for intervention by Perot'::
Though most people
thin.k that Social Security is
\; bec~u.se the, fat;ts ·are so stark. because the m'\ior ,
an msurance plan financed
' pantes ·are so reluctapt to talk about them, and ·
by their own and their employers' pay-ins, bene- becau~ there's political hay be made by tepre· '
fits to current' retirees actually: arc financed bJi ( seqting the interests of the young.
cui{ent workers. TJ:Ie collapse will come in a fcvl •· Already, Pi:rot scores · better among younger ,
ye;II'S when the burden on workers becomes voters than he does among older ones -- 20 per- ·
unbearable.
.
cent of 1~- to 29-year-olds' support him , but only ::.
Thanks to the power of lobhic" representing,''. II' percent of those over 65, according to Gallup. ·
the retired, Social Security benefits have skyl'\x:k- · Yount.voters, however, still prefer Clinton by 0::
eted o~er the past 30 years, to rhc point where the . 1~ widest margin of any group :- 56 percenl, :
-per capita dispo$11ble income of Amcrkans over compared w'th 45 percent for those over 65. Dole~
6S .is 40 percent greater than that of ynun~cr citi- gets 23 percent of the 18· to 29-year-old voiers ·
zens.
• and 41 pereent of those olde.r than 65. ·
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Most retirees think they are only !!Cttill¥ uut 1•f ·
So far this year, only Republicans have shown .
Social Security what they paid in. hut a"u:~lly u lbe courage to ~iscuss Social Security reform. ~n :
medium-income couple that retired in 1980 will their,New, ,Hafllpshire presidential debate, they!'
get $208,000 In benefits, on avcr~gc. after paying · called for remedies including privatizing the sys- ~
lifetime payroll taxes of just $75,000. ~couple : 191ll' and increasing. the retirement age. Dole was ;
retiring today will collect $226,000 after paying , rion•committaiiiS to what plan,s he'd favor. Clin· : ·
taxes of $148,000.
·ton . ~as not addressed th~ subject at all,
·
To pay for the elderly, payroll taxes ··on .•- Various innovative ideas have been put for· ,:
younger workers have heel\ pushed hig~r ·and wan!, including Shapiro and Miller's proposal ro :
higher. As the' Baby Boom generation tetires, ..: ~reate a mandatory privaJe savings system and :
fewer and fewer yqung~i WQ!kers will hav-e ·to' means-testing l:l!:nefits.
support more and inore older people, meaning . . Perot doesn't have to solve the Social Security : either that benefits will have to drop or taxes will · 4ilemma during· the 1996 campaign, bill. he can :
lutve to rise, or both.
·
.demtlnd that Dole and Clinton either talk abQut ··
If the Baby Boom generatio.n receiVes 'the . : how they'd fix the sysll:m or quit claiming dlat thC :
same benefits that c:UJTent retirees do, the taXes ' 1996 campaign is about "our children's fut~.'? . :
required to pay for them will amount. to as 'l'uch· · (~orton Kondracu Ia uacutlva editor of AD~f ;
as 40 percent of payroll in 20301 compared with - C.l, the _.,.,.. rr1 C.pllol HUI.)
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Rex Brown .

weather forecast

The Red Cross·Bloodmobile collected 66 units of blood 111 the Meigs
County Senrtir Citizens Center
Wednesday.
Donors were, by community:
Pomeroy -- Laurie Wayland. Dennis Gilmore, Timothy Hall, Mary'
Voss. Jane Walton, Mary K. Spencer,
Billy Spencer, David Plan tier;William. Radford, Harold Norton,
Carolyn Thomas, Eunice Jones,
Albert Parker, Paul Marr, Betty
· Lowe, Barbara Crow; David King,
Nancy Reitmire, Jerry Reitmire,
William Quickel , Geri Walton,
William Snouffer, Roger Abbott,
Deborah Haptonstall, Byran Shank,
Linda Foreman, Aladine Baker. Patricia Banon, Nancy Thoene. Dale
Thoene and Linda Fraley.
Racine -- Harry Hblter, A. Mllrie
Bush, Janet Theiss. Freddie Simmons, Louise Frank, Clarence Frank,
· Patsy COrnell. April Nichols, Melissa Holley, Barbara · Dugan and
Richard Dulin.
Long B8'ttom -- Debra Inge ls,

Henry Bahr and Trennia Harris. Middlepon --George Harri' Jr., William
Slater, Donna H~wley, Juditi\Hunter,
James Dailey. Gloria Peavely. Linda
Haley and John Reynolds.
Reedsville -- Teresa Talbott, Elli$
Myers and Debbie Smith. Rutland -Marta Blackwood. Tu11pers Plains-Karolyn Welsh. Shade -- Charles
Cook. Ponland -- Carolyn McPherson. Gallipolis -- James Ramey.
•Langsville -- Ellis Myers. Syracuse !
- Pau)eue Hendricks and Carolyn
Charles.
,.
Janies Ramey. of Gallipolis was a:
first time donor. Multiple gallon'
donors were Carolyn Thomas, one•
gallon, and Nancy Reitmi(e, one gal-:
lon. The canteen was serv.ed by the ;
Child Conservatiqn League of Mid- •
dlepon.
:
RSVP workers were Helen Bod- :
imer, Peggy Harris, June Ashley, Jane·
Brown, Joan Sorderi, Ted Hatfield,
Gladys Cumings and Katie CTist.
The next scheduled bloodmobile
visit will be June 5 from 1-6 p.m.

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Suits for judgment filed
. Editor's note: Alawsuit outlines Ca .. ~eks $3,39 1.59,plus cosrs and
the grievances of one part)' against interest from Scott A. Chapman,
another. It does not establish guilt Middlc~n. allegi ng defa,ult on a cap- .
or innocence.
ital cash account agreement.
Two suits for judgment were filed
En a suit ftled March r29. Bank One
recently in the Meigs· County Com- Columbus NA seeks $7, 195.44 plus
mon Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. costs and interest from Don Roge r
Crow Ill.
Smith and Sandra K. Smith, Rutland,
In a suit filed Monday, Ftrst from a promi ssory note.
Deposit National Bank of Pleasanton ,

Opa.l Duff
Weekend weather will be
Opal Duff, 69, of Holley Road, Pomeroy, died Friday morning at the HolzC!'nter. Arrangements will be announced by Bigony Jordan Funer- WalkOUt.;,. Continued-from page 1
inore tlke winter than Easter eral Medical
Home, Albany.
we have 750 students and only 16 .ponation problems for students in the
By The Aa•oclated Prell
.
:· Cool nonherly winds will keep
Ohio temperatures lower than normal
~nd could produc~ some snow flurties in pans of the state tonight and
Saturday.
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• Lows tonight will be in the 20s
a'n4 highs on Saturoiiy will be mostly in the 30s. the National Weather
Service said.
~ - And little change is expected Sun- .
~ay, or Monday, with highs again in
.

Wllllng Workers bake Stile
,
· St. Paul's United Methqdist
&lt;!:hurch Willing Wo~kers of Tlippe~
Plains will hold a bake sale Saturday,
9-2 p.m. at the church. .
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Oilnce announced
: · Arourid and square dance with C.
'· and the Country Gentlemen will be
••:id at the old legion hall in MiddletKin. Friday, 8 to 11 p.m.

Spe&lt;'lal couhcil session set
· A special meeting of Rutland Village Council will be held Friday, 6
p_m. to ·discuss personnel matters

-- . services
Revival·
; Revival services will be held
Monday through April 13, 7 p.m.
each evening; at the Free Methodist
Church. Redtown, north of
cilauncey. John 'Elswick will be. the
c.v·1angelist.
Sunrise will be singing
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the 30s and a chance of snow.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 83 degrees in 1947 while
the record low was 15 in 188 I. Sunset tonight will be at 7 p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:07a.m.
Across the nation
Thunderstorms rumbled across
Texas today·before daybreak, while .
rain showers were moving through
parts of the 'llonheast.

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noppy sale canceled
:· The poppy sale planned for Saturday by 'the Stcwan-Johnson Post

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~~.~rs 3'3-~)

DUCKS 6/s13
CHICKS 6/ssoo

PAMPERED PAWS FAMILY PET STORE

every afternoon. Monday tbrouJb
F,riday. Ill Coun Sl., Pomeroy; OhiO. by the
Ohio Volley Publilhina ~yJGanneu Co..

"'"""'~'·Ohio 4l769, Ph. 992-ltl6. S&lt;cond
cttu pot:tage paid a1 Pomeroy, Ob\0:.

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r:ttmbtr; The AUbcilled PleP, and die Ohio

Newspaper As~f'ion .

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POSTMASTEII1Send . _ , , com&lt;tJO.. 1&lt;&gt;·
·'llle' Deily S.ndnet," tl1 Coiln 'S1 .. ·Po!IICioy,

Qhto43769.

·

SUBSCRIPTION RATIIlif
By CorHor or """"" .- .

One W&lt;ek.............................................Sl.OO
On&lt; Monlh ........ ....................................... $1.70

One Year .......:::... :....,... .... .'.....:.. ....... :,; .. $104.00

StNGLI! COPY PlttcE

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No sub~eripdisn by mall permitted in
where home emier sc:rvice is avalllble.
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NICOlAI (AGE

The following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the 'office
of Meigs County Clerk. ofCouns Lar(y Spencer:
.
Dissolution asked -- Timothy W.
flale and Amy J. ' Hale, both of
Albany, April 2.
Di~solution granted -- Shelly L
Rupe and Jason A. Rupe, April I.
Divorce granted -- Carla L. Grindley , from Christopher A. Grindley, .
April I. '
.
. -

Doily ......................:.,....... c,,................. l5 cHu

Don't wait until
it's too late... ·

949·3210

. dissolutions ·

Publi~ht:d

HOSpital news

l:ORBECTION

.o~vorces
and.
.

,0,:

said that will be preserved through
retention of the village's name and zip
· code.
Closing post offices in small
towns and replacing them with "cornrnunity post offices" is a trend of the
U.S. Postal Service as pan of its costcutting program .
The Shade Post Office is the last
of several to close along U.S. Route
33 between Pomeroy and Athens.
'

ed. "When they were told there were
other ways to make their feelin gs
known. they c~m e back."
, The board tab led a decision until
The Galli a &lt;::ounty Local Board of · irs regular meeting on Apri l 22 .
Education was to consider a reopening of the fortner Hannan . Trace'
High School Thursday to reli eve
overcrowding at RVHS and trans-

Dirt-road meeting raises
h9pes in Freeman standoff

: . Units oft~ Meigs County Emer- Dori~ Haines, VMH; .
.
gency Medical Service responded to
5:23 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Steve
t2 calls for assistance including three McCullough, HMC.
transfer cal!s. Uaits ,respondi~g ' RACINE.
included: &lt; ..
7':o6 a.m., Hog Hollow Road,
MIDI)LEPORT
Marjorie Salser, HMC;
; . 9:01 a.m,,!lrpadway Street; Ver.
9:36p.m., Rainbow Rlilge, Mayri&lt;in Little, I;Jolzer MC!Iicai,Cel)ter;
ford ~l!JTis, VMH.
; ,', 12:26 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabil- RUTLANQ
,
iJation Center. Ray Garlinger, Veter10:09 a;m., volunteer fire depart'IAf Memorial Hospital;
ment and squad, brush fire on state
' 4:21 p.m., Nonh Second Avenue, Route lfll, no injuries.
Rusty Meadows, VMH,
SYRACUSE
POMEROY
..., ' . 9:3j p.m., Rose Valley Road, Jen12:08 a~m. 1 Short Founh
Aven~, nifer,.Robef'!son, VMH.
..

"

Continued from page 1
persons who have expressed interest
in the contract operation and that others are expected to bid. Once a contract has been awarded, then Crego
said it will take about 45 days to
implement and stan up the commumty post office .
Crego emphasized that the community post office will be required to
maintain at leasr the same hours of
operation the current post office
keeps. As for community i(lentity, he

HT and Southwestern auc.ndance .
areas.

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions .:.... none.
Thursday &lt;!ischarges - none.
.
VPW Auxiliary in•Mason, has been
Holzer Medical Center
canceled.
Discharges April4 - Nlrs. Craig
"
'
· ·
· .
Coons and daughrcr, Janie Goble,
Cemetery cleanup set
Mrs. Brad Gilliland and twin sons,
It has been request&lt;!~ by the
Goldie Dodds, Lydia Gilkey..
Lebanon Township trustees that all
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Preston .
flowers and other decorations need to
JORDAN, Mont. (AP) - On a Freemen representatives were not Jordan, son, Gallipolis.
be removed froin cemeteries before dirt road on the fringes of their com- known.
(Published with permission)
April 15 so that spring cleaning can pound, the Freemen set up folding
chairs and met for the first time with
get .underway.
negotiators; easing fears that the
..
S!*ia.l education meellnl! ·
siege might end in bloodshed.
· THURSDAY'S AD SHOULD HAVE READ
Karen Smith, parent mentor, will
The standoff on the · sprawling
be at Ponland Elementary Thursday wheat and slleep farm dragged into a
00
from 8:30-11!30 a.m. to meet with 12th day today. Thursday's talks,
parents :about new policies and pro- which lasted about I 112 hours, were
•
cedures .for special education.
the first sign of a break, but authorities would not say if any progress was
RiGht to' life meeting
made.
Meig~ County Right to Life will
At least one of the negotiators was
MIDDLEPORT
271 NORTH SECOND
meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy. a federal agent; the identities of the
992~244
· other three could not immediately be
· library. .,
confirmed.
identities of the four
Racine Board or Public Affairs
Racine Bt;mrd of Public Affairs
will meet Monday, 10:30 a.m. at the
fire depanrneitt annex.

~eigs EMS logs 12 calls .

The Daily Sentinel

wanted to discuss the issue," he not-

·Shade Post Office...

apnouocements.

'

"'

\

KY. ·.,...,.

~
· Meig~
,

I once innde a remark about the hidden books of the Bible. It was a lulu .
Kept people looking so hard for facts, and for others it was a revelatio~ ..
Some were in a jam. Especially siace the names of the books were not capitalized. But the truth finally struck home to numbers of readers. To others it
was a real job. We want it to .be a most fascinating few moments for you.
. Yes, there will be some (tally easy ones to spot. Others may require judg~s
to help them. I will quickly l\dmlt it usually takes a minister to find one .of
them, and there will be loud lamentations when it is found . A little lady SB}'S
shf.&gt;·brews a cup of tea 'so she can concentrate better. See how well you can
compete. Relax now for there really are 16 names Qf the books of the Bible
in this story.,,
· ·
'Bible Baseball" is another Bible 'game. Invented by . ~
Fon Wonh, Texas, minister and ore of the laymen in his
church, the game is played with two "managers" who use
major-league lineups. - · :
·
-.
A player gets, on base when a.correct answer is given to
a question about the Bible. Three' wrong answe.rs and a side
is out for the inning.
·
Before each question is pitched, tbe manager must decide
whether the player is to go for a single, double, triple or home run. The more .
bases, the more difficult the question .
Check with your Christian bookstore to see whether the game is still
• being manufactured.
-.
ANSWER TO BIBLE QUIZ: Only t',Vo birthdays are mentioned in the
· Bible -- one for Pharaoh in Egypt (Gen. 40:20), the. other for Herod (Mark
6:21). Both ~ions were marked by murder~- - of Pharoah's butle,r and
John the Baptist.
. . ,
Jehovah's Witnesses regard binhdays as pagan customs. At best, says a
Witness publication, :'the t~o Bible accoun~ ,put birthday celebrations in a:
bad light as ,a practice Qf those C$tranged from Goo."
··
The Bible, they also point oOt, instructs Christians to commemorate
Jesus' death, not his binhday. The Jehovah's Witnesses also do not celebrate
Christmas, Jesus' birthday.

'

H. Madeline Dow Pickens, 63, Given, W.Va., died Wednesday, April 3,
1996, at her home. . .
.
Born Sept. 28, 1931, at Racine, dliughte'r of the late Stanley anctNeva
Elizabeth Eaton Dow, she was a homemaker. •
Surviving is her husband, Sam Pickens of Givens; two son$, Darrell Pickens of l:.iberty, W.Va., and Daniel Pickens of Huntington, W.Va.; two daugh. ters, Elizabeth Webb of Fairplain, W.Va., and Jean Fi~her of Given; four
grandchildren ; a sister, Maxine Johnson of MillwoOd, W.Va.; several nieces
and nephews. ·
·
/
' She was preceded in doath by a brother, Bill Dow; a sister, l'atty Dow;
and 11 son, William Samuel .
. ,
Services will be held Saturday, II a.m. at the Straight, Tucker &amp; Roush
Funeral Home in Rav~ nswood , w:va., with .the Rev. Clarence Edens officiating. Burial will follow in Ravenswood Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday, ~9 p.m. at the funeral home.

• , Rex Brown, 57, Hopkinsville, Ky., a former resident of Meigs County,
died Wednesday, April 3, 1996, at his residence.
Born Feb. 16, 1939, in Christian 'County, Ky., son of Earline Shemwell
Brown Lawrence of Cadiz, Ky., and the late George Dewey Brown, he was
a U.S. Ariny veteran and member of the Catholic Church. He was employed
at Western State Hospital and was a member of the Vetcmns of foreign Wars,
American Legion and the Fraternal Order of Eagles.
He is.survived by two brothers, Morris and Jerry Brown, both of Hop•
kinsville; a sister and brother-in-law, Betty and Kenny Rogers Jr. of.Cadiz;
·several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a brother, George Everett Brown, and by
two
nephews.
lower
40s.
Chance
of
precipitation
30
By.The A'soc:Jated Pre••
Memorial
services will be held Monday at 7 p.m. at Saints Peter and Paul
percent.
·
Southeastern Ohio
Catholic
Church
in·Hop)&lt;insville with Father Gerald Baker officiating. The
Today...Ciouay with a chance of Extende4 forecast
Good~in
Funeral
Hqme of Cadiz is in charge of arrangements and no visSunday and monday.... A chance of,
,prizzle . High 40 to 45. Nonhwest
snow... Especially east half. Lows in itation' is planned as the body is being donated to the University of Kenwind 5 to 15 mph.
tucky Medical School.
• Tonight...Cioudy. Low in the the 20s with highs in the 30s. ·
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the St. Luke Free Clinic,
Tuesday... Dry. Lows in the 20s
upper 20s. Light north wind.
90~
E. 9th $1., Hopkinsville KY 42240.
·
Saturday ...Cloudy with scattered with highs in the 30s
rain or snow showers. High ' in the
I'!.';"

r

to

'

w.w•.

•

so

I•s· I

H•. Madeline Pickens

'

Tod~y's

Perot shoul·d push Social SeQurity refo.rm.

EDITOR'S NOTE - Waller R. Meara, vice president and columnist for The
Aaooclated Preaa, has reported on Waahlngton and national politics lor more
than 30 years.

·Saturday, April6

'

references ,io · Julius delegation wlto returned home via
RosenheiJ - ·enough to Moscow.)
"
end all doubt that be
In Moscow, Ales said, a high
commined the atomic Soviet official (Ales hinled it was
espionage for which he t.ndrei Vishinsky, then deputy ft&gt;rwas executed in 1953. ~' eign minisier) passed along to hiril
And here at last the gr~tude the GRU felt 10 him
tll'e traf1sparent refer· and the small ring of agents ("for
ences to '. Alger Hiss, .the most pan consisting of his relaunder the code names lions") that Ales said he ran. (111at
"Ales." In M~!fCAt 1945 would be Hiss's wife, Priscilla, and
the KGB. re&amp;idoitt in hi's" llrotbei, Donald, both of whOm
Washington
advised . panicipated in his Communist aciivMoscow of a chummy ities.)
.
conversation with Ales,
There is undoubtedly much more
who stated •that he had to come: Only a few hundred of the
'been working with the GRU (Soviet 2,000 decrypted :Venona messages
mililliry intelligence) since· 1935. · have yet been published.
(According to Whittaker ChamberS, •_ · But it is already clear that the
Hiss began reponing to Ch~befl! •• ..Amef!cans wh9 . warned · against
do'niesiic Communist subversion
himself a GRU agent-- in 1935.) ·
Ales further assertea.tllat bo had . :ha"- WQ!l theJong argument, hands
accompanied FOR on bis February down.
1
1945 trip to Yalta, and had gone on
.
'
afterward to Moscow. (Hiss went to
William A. Rualler . Ia • Dlatln·
.
guhtlled Fellow of the CleremonllnttiYalta wtth· Roosevelt, and was. one, .• tute tor 'tht Sll!dy ·of Sdteamanalllp
'of four m~mbers of the American •nd Pot~IC81 Phlloaoplly.
·

be fun

Bloo mobile visit
yields ·66 units

OHIU 'vVcatt1cr
AccuWclll~ fORQII

meaning of the .Venqna Papers·

'E.st#6fisfwl in 1948'

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

O.dalk"BuiWer

.._....... iRK4..
.... c. .... ·

--

ll's lilY to IJII!Iudld on building your own home.

Just illil the 'Mnglli modll - · attd htlk to
IoddOIOiudtaboutjtlllllliWhonaplonslodw.

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• Two Year Agreement
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CELLULARONE

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L0GA11
•. POMlllOY lllW.LEXIIKTGII MIDDUPOil
ATHENS

. ,._-

•••

�•

•

..... 4.
Fridly, April I, 1111

TORO!m) (AP)- Terrell Brandon wasn't relaxing with a 23;point
lead late in the first half, even when
· the opposition was the expansion
Toronto Raptors.
" I've bec\n in too many zames
when you take a 2G-poinl lead into ·
the second half, only to"see the other team come back.': Brandon said
after the Cavaliers cruised to a 98-77
victory over the Raptors on Thursday
·
night.
However, thi s was not the same
Raptors team that upset the Cavaliers
100-89 in Cleveland on Ma.rch 3.
Toronto ·was without Damon
Stoudamire, Oliver Miller and
Sharone Wright, three-fifths of their
starting linuep. That trio combined
for 58 points again ~ t the Cavaliers in
the March 3 game.
' . '
Howevl'r, Dan Majerle, who
EASTERtt LIFTERS - Eastern High junior
participated, helped to ra• monies for expan·
scored 16 of his 19 points in t.he secShawn Seth ...-np1a a IHt of 190 lb1. during la1t
slon and new coristructkm at the weight room ~ ond quaner. was quick to point out
· ThUI'Idllf'l "Lift·A-Thon" at Tuppers Plains I";Je.
and training faCilities at Eastern High School.
that the Cavaliers' s!Mii ng backeoun
mentary. The event, In which 41 Eallltern athletes
(Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)
of Brand on and Bobby .Phills
duo
.
were not in the lineup pn March 3 .
"We had some of our key players back," Majerle said. "Those
two guys are a big part of our linThe. Eastern High Athletic McDaniel, 205 lbs.: junior Shawn Aieker finished third with his lift of uep."
Majerle was a big pan of the CavDepanment and football programs Seth, 190 i bs.; sop~omore Nathan
150 lbs.
aliers'
offense Thursday night, hitheld their first "lift-a-than" last week Goodwin, 180 lbs.; sophomore Chris
Other lifiers placing in the 131ting
a
three-pointer at 5:49 of the
at Tuppers Plains Elementary.
· Buch~nan , 170 lbs.; sophom ~re
ISOclass included: sophomore Beau
second
quarter, one of four in the
1
Each pfthe 41 lifters took pledge · Steve Durst. 160 lbs.: seventh-gradBailey, !50 1bs.; eighth-grader Matt
period,
to spark a 17,0 run that
amounts per pound, with all pro- er Andy Reed,' 140 lbs.; fre shman
Bissen; 135 lbs.; eighth-grader
resulted in a 50-27 Cleveland lead
Lester Parker, 1351bs.; and freshman
• ceeds from the e.vent to go toward Joe Dillon, I 25 lbs.; seventh-grader
with I :24 to play in the half.
construction t;&gt;f a large addition to the Jason,-Warner, II 0 lbs.
J.T. White, 105 ~bs.
" We didn 't want to let up," Mar• Eastern High School weight room
Winners in the 151-170 lbs. class
Winners in the 110-130 class
said. "We're'lhinking about the
jerle
and training facilitie{
were ·freshman Mike Sobieski,
were freshman Adam Sanders, playoffs. This win everis us with
Winners in the heavyweight divi - bencl)ing 245 lbs. Senior Robbie
benching 145 lbs. Finishing second New York.l'
sion were junio'r Chris Bailey, bench- Murphy f!)lished second, lifting 225
was Wes Sanders, lifting 140 lbs.,
Not q"uite.
ing 240 lbs. Junior Bill Fmncis fin- lbs, while junior Eric Dillard finished
while junior Rick Hollon finished • The Cavaliers. who improved to
ished second, benching 225 lbs. . third with his lift of 220 lbs.
third with his lift of 125 lbs. Also
Senior Don Goheen finished third ,
Other lifter~ placing in the 151- ·· placing was eigh th-grader Man.
also lifting 2251bs.
1701bs. class included : senior Travis · Boyles, with a lift of 95 lbs.
·
Other lifters placing in the.heavy- Cunis, 200 lbs.; eighth-grader Aaron
The 41 lifters lifted a total of
weight division included : senior Schaekel , 185 ibs .; freshm11n Jason 7,065 lbs., which is just over three
Jason Sheets, · 215 lbs.; seve nth- Stevens, 1851bs.; sophomore Shaun and a half tons. Head football coach
grader'\VesCrow, 1901bs.; freshman Long, 180 lbs.; sophomore Nate Casey Coffey was very pleased wiih
...
ilill Schultz, 180 lbs.: freshman Josh Radford, 170 lbs.; sophomore Abe the interest shown by the fans, and .
ST. LOUIS (AP) .,- Wayne GretHager, 17~ lbs .
·
·
.
Rach , 160 lbs.; junior Daniel Otto, the effon of the lifters .
zky
of the St. Loui s Blues will be
Winners in the 171-190 lbs. class 155 lbs.; sophomore Travis Lad"The kids learned a lot: They
sidelined
a week to I0 days with a
were senior B.rian Bowen, benching wick, 135 lbs. ; aod freshman Mike were nervous about getting staned,
lower
back
injury sustained in a 3-1
240 lbs. Senior Mike Smith finished Tuttle: 125 lbs.
because thi s was the first weight-aloss to the Toronto Maple Leafs on
Winners in the 131 -150 class thon that we've had 'in front of an
second, benching 21S 'lbs. Senior
Thursday night.
Eric Tuttle finished third, also lifting were sophomore Chad Wheeler. audience here at Eastern. This defi· Gretzky was dumped to the ice by
2151bs.
benching 150 lbs. Eighth-grader nitely got the ball rolling for what
a
Doug G"ilmour check late in the
Otber lifters placing in the 171 - Justin DeLaCruz finished second, will be an annual event. We anticifirst
.period. He sat out a few shifts
_190 lbs. class included : junior Adam . lifting 150 lbs., while sophomore Pat . pate a bigger one next year," said
in ihe second period and then came
Colley.
'
.
off the ice for good at 8:35 of the
period.
Blues general manager-coach
.
Mike Keenan said the injury was a
, The Eastern Eagles staned ·their si ngles . Meredith Crow two si ngles, fifth and seventh, while scoring live
deep bone brui s~
·
~oflball season on the right tmck by · and si ngles each by Kim Mayle,
in the sixth.
"It caught hlm right in the lower
• , (eating Trimble 15-1 Wednesday Nicole Nelson, Tracy White, Rebec.Eastern had 16 stolen bases anc;l
lumbar area," Keenan said. "He has
ca Evans, and Martie Holler.
. · Trimble just two.·night at Glouster..
·
a bad bruise."
On Thursday, the Eagles tniiled 7· Eastern scored one run in the first
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt said ,
" A lot of times you get hit and
5 after three innings and had runner~ when Nicole Nelson sin81ed and "For the first game played, !thought
you kind of play through it, " Gret.)n second and third when cold stole second. White took a third we played great defense. I was worzky said. "You get in. the heat of the
spring rains washed out the compe- strike but the ball got away from the ried about our offense, because we
baule and the pain goes away until
' 'lion. The game w1ll be rephiyed catcher, then was overthrown . at haven't been outside much, but we
after the game."
..-om scratch later in the year.
firs!, allowing Nelson to score.
came through with II hits."
Not this time. Grctzky said he
. Rebecca Evans picked up the win
Leading 1-0, Eastern scored
Eastern's reserves won Monday
knew ii was time to sit down when
on the mound for Eastern, hurling a another in the second. Kim Mayle · night 16- 10, as the sco re was
he made a poor effon on a chance to
three-hit, nine strikeout petfonnance, singled, stole second and third, and reversed in Thursday's edition of The
break in on goal during a power play.
with seven walks ..Manic Holter was scored on a Nelson error.
Daily Sent.ineL
"I really couldn't•push on and
the catcher.
In .the fourth, · White' walked and
Eastern goes to Alexander Mon- . when I took the shot I had . no
Richards suffered the loss with 12 singled. Aeiker singled and advanced day, then hosts Waterford Tuesday.
strength, " Gretzky said.
walks and f011r strikeouts..
on an error, ·then stole third. Mindy Ionia~ l!IDib · ·
.
Gilmour said he didn't know
Trimble hitters were S. Hardy Sampson had an RBI single, Evans Eastern......... ..... 11 0-425-2= 15-11 - 1 quite what happened .
·
with two singles and Tonya Trace a reached on an error thai let in a run,. Trimble.... ,...... .. .. 000-001 -0=1 :3-12
'' I wasn't really moving and he
single. Eastern was led by Patsy and Meredith Crow had an RBI sinWP- Evans
wasn't really moving," Gilmour
Aeiker with a three for four mght . glc JO push the score 19 6-0. Eastern
LP- Richards
said. "I kind of pushed him and he ·
with a double: Mindy Sampson two scored two more runs in each ahc
went back.
''He looked off-balance and then
he just went down."
Grctzky was more mad at him self
ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece Academy. 'The educalional facility is to Atlanta in the IOC vote six, yeats
·
than Gilmour.
(AP) - Athens, bitter after losing lqcated ne xt to the ruins of the ago for the 1996 host city. Gre~k
"You
can't
get
yourself
in lho•e
the centennial Olympics to Atlanta. ancient sanctuary where the first officials had vowed never to btd
Grotzky
said.
"Gilmour
positions,"
received a boost today from IOC recnrdcd Olympics were held every again for the Olympi_cs but changed
hit me with a clean check. I' m dispresident Juan Antonio Samaranth four years from 776 B.C. until they their mind and submmcd a cand1daappointed I let my teammates
for its bid for the 2004 games.
were al'iolishcd in 394 by the Chris- ~y for the 2004 games.
down."
"Athens we hope will have a very tian Roman Emperor Theodosius.
. strong bid," Samaranch said after _a
The Olympics w~rc revived in the
. meeting of -the IOC's. executive late 19th ~cntury by Pierre de Couboard 1'n' the town where the hcrtin and the first modem games
Olympics were born,
were held 10 Athens tn 18%.
The 11 -member board met on the
Many.:.Oreeks wel'!1 angry that
grounds of the International Olympic ~e ntim~ntpl favorite Athens lost out

"

EASTERN BASE!tALL - · Members of 'eastern's baseball team are (front row, L-R) Chris Bailey, Don Goheen, Brian Bowen, Pet Aelker and
Jeremy Kehl. In the second row are Jason
Sheets, Travis Curtis, Mike Smith, Michael Bar-

nett and Eric Hill. Behind them are assistant
coach Casey Coffey; Wally Rockhold, Cliff
Stevens, Steve Durst, Micah Otto, Josh Cesto
and head coach Dan Thomas. Absent for the photo was assistant coach Shaun Bush.

Meredith Crow, Patey Aelker and Crystal
Holsinger. Behind them are Amaoda Milhoan,
Martie Holter; Kim Mayle, Chfistie Mills, Michelle
Caldwell, Mindy Sampson.

; In series closer,

ove.r Reds

·: Paniagua's arm helps Expos tally 10~2 victory
. By JOE KAY
• CINCINNATI (AP)
In so
pHiny way s, Jose Paniagua was
!~ccivin g.

; :: Tl)c Montreal Expos right ~hander
•3idn 't act like he was 22 yearii old.
didn 't pitch like a Double-A play-

:tfc
:~~

•: ' And, for the tirst five innings
• •
· •'Thursday, Paniagua didn't give the
: Cinc"innati Reds anything to hit He
: w.on his major-league debut I0-2 by
. : a~; ting a lot more mature and pitch: ing a lot hcuer than anyone e~pect·~ .
: ··: '' It looked like he has been in the
leagues for a couple of years, n
• said Henry Rodriguez, who haa one

:,,g
•

.

·of Montreal 's three homers. "He was
outstanding."
"He showed· a lot of composure
and he showed he knows how to
pitch," said. David Sogui , who had
three hits and drove in three runs.
" In the first inning he was a little
wound up. Once he got out of the
first inning, he se ttled down."
He gave up just four hits and one
run -over five innings, handing a 2- 1
lead to the bullpen.
Once the Red s' bullpen got
involved in the sixth, it became
another blowout. The bullpen failed
repeatedly in spring training and has ·
imploded tho last two games, giving
up 12 runs, 18 hits and seven runs in

seven innings.
Things shou ld improve when
doser Jeff Brantley comes eff _the
disabled list this week end in
Philadelphia, but merely adding one
dependable am1 probably won 't correct the problem .
PI just know somebody 's going to
ha ve to do it," manager Ray Knight
said. "Sometimes you hope guys do
the job and you pencil them _in there,
and it just 4oesn' t happen. You ' ve
got to lind a way to gel it done. I ·
don '! have an answer now."
Expos man4gcr Felipe Alou had
only one answer when shoulder ten•
dinitis forced Carlos Perez onto the ·
disabled list Thursday : Paniagua,

.
Los Angeles ·(Candioni 0.0) nt Chil.:u-

Baseball

•

gu (Bulli ngt"r 0-0), 3:20 p.m.

S:an Francisco {0 . Fernandez 0-0J 'ot
Florkla {Rapp 0-0l. 7:m p.m:

· AL standings
,

EMslrrn Dlvisktn

I&lt;lllll

L &amp;1.

~

Uallimore ... ,..

.... J

0

.. Ne w Yurk-. ..............2
.. • Toromo ..
..... 2
.. :

liJI

J

8t1SIOR... ... . . ... . .. .0

·~

!XX)

I

C l uc;1~o

2 ..UJ
2 .&lt;ro
3. '.000

Wutern Division
T!!xas ...... .
..... :\ 0 1.00
, Scnuh! .. :................. 2
I 667
Cnl1furnin .. ... .. .... 1 I j{J()
J

: Onld ;md -- -· ....... __ 0

.

Pin s bur~;h

rDarwin 0-0J at New York
!Ci ilfk 0-0J,. I :.W p.m.

I
I~

LuJ Ang,d ..: s (R . Mauinel 1-0) a t

2

Chicago (Navano 0-0), 2:20 [l .m .
C IN CINNAT I {Salkeld 0 -0 ) at
Philmlelphia {Hunter 0-0). 7: 0~ p.m
S:an f'rand5eo (M . l.eilcr 0-1) ut Aorid:~ (K . Brown 0.1 ),'7:0:'i p.m.
St .Louis (Andy Benes 0-01. at 1\ll&lt;ml~
{ M;~~~~u~ I ..OJ. 7:10p.m.
San 1Ji~8 o (Ashby 0-0 ) m Hnu,s1on
(Reynolds 0-1 ), 8 : 0~ p.m.

,I
I Y:
.1

{XJO

Thursday 's scores
New York m CLEVELAND. ppd .. rain
Oilltinlllrc: :'i, KM!i:'l s Cily ~
Dc lmil 10, OnklamJ 9 (l:'i)
l'l'XII~

Bnsh&gt;rl (Waktficltl 0-0l m Kmuas Ci1y
• · (lkkhc r.O-Ol. 2: J~ p.m.
·
•
Torou10 tGu:tmom 0-0) .11 CLEVE: LAND (Hcrshiser0-01, 7:05p.m.
l bh•mor~ (M~r~· k,.-r 0-0) m M r nn~5tml
,
• • (Hawk1n s 0-01 . 11 : 0~ p.m.
New Ytlrk (Kt.!y 0-0) al To.:•as (Will 0•

• . Ulnsku= 0-0), 10 :0~ r.m.
:
[krmi t {Goht tJ-()) v~. 0 1lkland UuhrL~
0-01 al

.

Tnro nlu (Ha nson 1-0) nl CLEVE-

,

• - LAND &lt;N: tgy 0·0), I :0.~ 11.m.

80 199 PIS

N.Y. l s l:~ mlcr s ... 20 4~

4S 209 - 299

Hos1on {Clemens 0- 11 ac Kansas Ci ty
(Ap1u.cr 0- 1). _
2:J5 p.m.

•

Dl•lrPil (l.n;t (}. I) \'S. OaklaOO {Rcyn
0-I J :u l..:ts Vc~tas , 4:05 p.m.
Uullimore tM ussina 1-0) nt M innc~snloa
(R&lt;Iolk I ·O) . IW~ p.lll,
New York (Goo...len ().OJ ill Tuns (Hill
0-0). 14 : :1 .~ p.m. .
Chh::lj!.O tFernandcz 0-0) a1 Cntirmniu
•

( AhboH U-0), lll:OS p.m.

:·

Mdwauht' (S p:.rk. s 0-0) ;u Seall lc
1 0 : 0~ p.m.

TorurHtl .11 CLEVELAND 1.0~ ll m
Bah1rnnrc :11M1rmcsuHt. 2:05-r .rn.
Bosh&gt;n at K:nt$1L'&gt; Cily, 2 : J~ p n1.
Chicago m ,(:llil.t\rnia. 4:05p.m.
LA.·no1t \' S. Ouk l;wd nt l..:ts Vegn., _4 : ~

·

Iwn

~

M n nl~ n l ................ . 2

New York ................ 2
. Phil;1dt:lphia ....... .... 2
• rloritl:a .................... !

Fr.ancik'O ...........1

:LosAngdes ........ ,.... l
•,.

n

2:1 '~

.'i.'i6

.l6

50

l07

J 06

m

Tororuu .................. l9

:'i4

.260

45 ~

-llim
.

Midwn~Ditiooht.

•-Sun Anumiu,........~

19

.t-Utuh ....................:'iO
K* Hou~tun .............. 4:\

2:\
~0
42
49
:11
60

6~)

4

., M!J
.42)
J29

2.1
:\2

.167

41 '~

12'!
20

-'~

514

20 '~

.39
42
47

.458

24'1-26'1!

J6.)

Pudnc Oit"ision
y·Coloradn .. : . 4J 24 10 96
Calgary .............. 32 :\4 II ' 75
9 ;am.:n uvtr ....... ,. JO 34 I~ 75
AnMt im ............ J I :l~ 7 69
Edmomun .. :........ Jo 41 tl 68

.10~

22K

226
269
2 12
232

22."i
214
230
291

Washington IIJ , Allnnta I 10

..
"t

.2.~

Chica.o I00, Miami 92
Pbocm~ 107. U!ah 100

Detroit a1 Philadelphin, -1:30 p.m.
A1lomta at New Jersey, 1:30 p.m.
Chicu.apcu Olal:lolle. 8 p.m.
•
New York Ill Milwaukee, 8::\0p.m.
Waahinston .11 San Anton io. 8:JO
p.m.
.
Ponllaad at Denver, 9 p.m. •
Mlnnetota at Utah. 9 p.m. ·

Manw-t:a l 10. CINCINNA11 2
FINida 6. Ptusburgb 2
New York IO,St LouK9
• Chicago 9, Los Angeles 4
.-• Philadelphia 7. CoiOfado 4

r • Sun Fnmcisco 7. AtliUIIQ I

•

·

.. Colorado ~ R~r,noJo 0-0l :u Monrreal
"(Conpier 0.0). I : . ~ p.m.

Phoenix or Seanle, 10 p.m.

Friday April 12 &amp; Saturday April 13
There will be no classes on
Thursday evening April11
We will r~open

Tuesday April 16

g:ao a.m.

l...t.!e Smith on the Iti-duy tlisoble4 liM.
CLEVELAND INDIANS : Traded C.
Jesse levi~ 10 1be Milwnukee Bn:wcfll for
LHP S~;ou Nu1e arid a rlayer 10 be ll&lt;lmetl.
Oprioned OF Ryan Thompson to Buff11lo
uf lhc Ameri can Allloc:i:trion . Sene OF
NiFel Wilson oulright to Buffalo.
NF.W YORK YANKEES : Si3ned OF
Diun Jnmt!. OJ'(ioned OF Mall Loke tu

I

•

•

'

,..

And.nowfor
. something .
Completely Different/

•
•

wllb·

'

'

Parakeet Seed..................65C lb.'
Coc:kated Seeci .....~............60C lb
Parrot Seid............- ••••••65C lb.
Canary Seed.....~ ......~ .......60C lb .

Vancouver Dl L.A. Lakcrs, 10:30 p.m.
Houston 11t Sacrumenro, 10:30 p. ry:~ .

· • No Cover Charge
• Door Prizes Every 15 Minutes:

••

1
Hair Cuts, Oil Changes, Dinners from local Restaurants 1 .
•
'
•Register to win ntp to Caneun_

.',

to win

!I
1

Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday and SatUrday
'
.
.

:t

Finished Drywall Singlewidesl ·

"E.,,_,

roof, ownblt4

Be one of the 1st to see these
Great 16' wide Homes/

fllim!Otn, ,_
2XI Flolwjoim, pt., .
M11&lt;h morr/

IVERDALE

Don't forget about the birds·you been feeding aU
wintet long they have come to rely on you /or feed
we' carry a variety ofwild birds seeds year round.

-·•

~

We're rewarding you for shopping early for your penon~ :wateraaft blast
this water season! Buy bet:w~:en April! and May 31, 19'1t;; 'aiid·~ur)'o1aris
•
dealer will give you the Polaris Single Spring Bonus of a FREE Polaris . •
1 ·
Performance lifevest.
·
·
. •
Come see the exciting eight model line-up of 19'16 Polaris P.rsonal
watercraft at Y.,ur local dealer. From the· new flags'!ip 'SL'){j(j . to . the
all-powerful, 1050 SLTX to the exciting ~nd affordable SL700. Yoi.l:ll sec
there's fun in·our new
fleet.·
~
:".~ ........
.
I .
. "'
. _,.

•

PDLRRIS"·ne t,. e v:·~ ·. ,.· ~

RIYERF·RONT.POLARIS
lllflll IT. 7
•

.

-

'

-

•

•

•

lllliPOUS, OliO
/

.
Offw ~ Arril 1· llt•rll. '"'·
.
1\1• (lffcr t. unlr -a.bk tn U.S. falidm111 ._. .nlW*:- only •• 7"""' panici('ltir!Jt 1\ttuiJd!:alcr.,
.
. , rllMI\Kari• l~~ ~~ " ~
•
,

•

•

April 5 and 6 • 9 p.m. 'til 2 a.m.

•

'

1-!J00-466-7671

Guinea Pig Pellets ............35C lb.
Hamster Feed.~................ 4SC lb.
Pot Bellied Pig FHd.....-.35&lt;-lb.
$8.30 ..... 25 lb.

f

.!

lllllbiJ:
2X6 at. ...u.. 7 112
sidftHlh, solid wotl4
. &lt;llln, pW _,rr"f,
vilf,l sitli"l •llbi"llt

•

Rabbits ......... saoo
Chicks .......... 6/S420*
Ducks ...... ~ ..... 6,~114. 20*
'

i~

.

~

R&amp;-

~

· 399 W. Main·

.

chicks
&amp;·ducks
in tots_"' six. Sec1lon 929-62
I
PtGeasenof
te-EOilEioDLaw&amp;requiresSthaUtwepHI
·p' •IV

Po~r ·Pit. (614) H2·2161

s~~~~~~~~-~,~~~~~~~,

1992 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME ·

1993CHEVY
LUMINA EURO PKG.
4 Door, V-6, auto ., cruise, V-6. auto., air, cass., all
till, all power, 1-owner.
power, 1-&lt;lWiler, low miles. • - -

1

warr.

1993FORD
FESTIVA
V-8. automatic. XLT lariat, 2 door,
all power, cruise, till
stereo.

19111 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

Dtlnce to the coUntry aDund of

'

·Driving·Ti•• ·

•

'•

· Friday and Saturday-•.Aprlt·12'and 13

White

•

•

1993 MAZDA 4X4

1994 PLYMOUTH
SE-5 PKG.
DUSTER
5 speed, air, cassene, 1· 4 door, automatic, air, all
auto., air. an .power,
owner. low mileS
~wer. local trade.
ltactor'j warranty.

Check out the Prices of our
small animal feeds:

.

I
I
I

i

Wlkf Birds Seed... {01 .$3.00...251 '5.05
. ...SOt 59••0
Niger Seed ;.......~ 51.00 lb
Whhe M111et........ 25C lb.
Black Sunflower•• $6.85 25 lb 35C • $12.95 5011.
Striped Sunflower 35.c Ill $7.35 25 lb. $14.00 50 •·

1995 DODGE GRAND

1995 CHRYSLER~

CARAVAN SE
CONCORDE
All
power.
V6.
7 V-6, automatic, ABS ,
passenger, .factory war- power. facto"'
ranty.

'r

. I

'

MILLENIA

011~~:&amp;

SUGAR RUN MILLS

••

\

1995MAZDA

all

NISSAN 4X4
1992 DODGE
KINGCABXE
DAKOTA
5 spd.. air, c;ass., P. C/Cab,~auto .. LE, V-6, air,
mirrOrs. chroma pkg., low cruise, till, low miles.
miles,

Don't forget "'s for your fertilizer, lawn seed
,and pasture field needs.

I

i

~~~-,

Athens submits bid fo.r 2004 Olympics·

Amtriun Lfatut

Golden Srme 98. Dtnver 90

Toolpt's.games

Thursday's scores

We will be .closed

CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Plu"d P

Thursday's scores

2 .JB

992·2289

LEAGUES : Named Mi chell Momgomery
us5ismnt mnrl:.e1ing direclor.

~1 ·~

CLEVELAND 98, TororMo 17
Boston 100. Orlando 98
'1:

eourlf1~\' irD~ e~ ~AMJe&amp;

Baseb~ll

.y·clim:hed division

-J~J

Today's 1•11!..

Poe-inc Dh-i1ion'

4n

,·

NI\TtONI\l ASSOCIATION OF
PROFES SIONAL
BASEBALL

• ·dincl~ d pl~yo(f sp01

I .667
l ' . .M7
2 ..m
2 ..UJ

~

:\04 · 172
259 204
2 12 2~6
234 24:\
7:\ 260 27 .~
Ill 211 2:'iM

EXPOS: Ph~~.:cd t HP
Carlos Perez on•tiM: 15-da)' tli~ubiL'd lisl.
Purt:lms..'lllhc co nrnlCI of RHP Jusc Punia~uu fro m Otluwa uf lh c lnlcrn111ionul
l..ca)!ue.
._.

STATE ROUTE 124
MINERSVILLE

However, Whttttelcl-tlblltlltfle
only TOI'QIIlo play« 10 show mucb:of
anything apiiiSt the Cavaliers. •
Tracy Mwray, on &amp;·roll illely, W
S-of-17 from the field for 10 poiiiJS,
while Doug Chrislie wu ~f-B
from the noor tllld finished ..,;m
·eight poin15. As a team, Toronto sllot
just 39.7 percent.
;
While Kaplan coach Bre~n
Malone gave the Cavaliers' fense
much of the credit for the
win, he jlut port of the bl
is
team's poor showing, whK:h eat
a season-low 29 points in t fti'st
half. on injuries.
.
" It 's hard · to&amp;gcl much goi!'g
w!tcn you're missing three key players," Malone .aid. "But give lhCm
credit. They took advantage." •

Eastern softballers blast Trimble -15-1

Noalionai -Ltagu"

MONTH:EA~

~0

- ~0 1

.625
.."i21

2

122
90
711
.76

II

27
.\ 5

2

lt L I J:lL !if liA

·

43-31·. still trail the Knicks (42-30)
by two percentage points 1n the race
for founh place in the Eastern Conterence and homccourt advantage in
the first-round of the playoffs.
Brandon also had 19 points for
the Cavaliers, while Phills scored 18.
Chris Mills had 16 points and 10
rebounds , helping the Cleveland to
their fifth win in their last eight road
games .'
· •
.
Raptors ·forward Dwayne Whit -,
field recorded his tirst career doubledouble in his first career stan, scoring 16 points and plt)ling down 12
rebounds.
' " I would gladly trade those points
and rebounds for the win," Whitfield
said. "But I finally got a chance to
show wharl can do."

Back injury
sidelines
Gretzky

Transactions

65 231 251
J7 174 27J

.140

x-L.A . l..olkas........ 45
~nix .................. 38
Putll;md ................. .)?
Soc-nuncruo ............ J.1
Gulden Stme ......... :\2
L.A. Clippeu ......... 27

.667
.JJ.\

Co lomdo nl OallaJ, 3 p.m.
Annht'im 111 S'lfl)rn;c, 3 p.m.

269 2.SK
224 242

{ill

I
t

.667

Columbul! of the lnccrnillionul t...eaguc.
Named Gregg Mauola direc:lor of rubli c:uinn!; Anili!tte Guan!ubasdn manager ul'
public re lations and ~pedal event~; K:lfi.
McGovern und Tinl Wood assisli1nt dn·t cton of publications; and Rocht:lic Cungd ·
· lo ~s,;istanl direcllH" .or markc~in~ .

42

.795

I

· Notes: The Expos put Perez on
the disbled list \M;fore the game to
open a roster spot for Paniagua.
Perez has tendinitis in hi,s left ~boul­
der and had to come out of his spring
training start March 30 •tftcr one
inning..... About 33,000 t' ts have
been sold for the Expos' h, , to opener today against Colorado.... Thursday 's win was Montreal's I,OOOth on
the road . .. . Cincinnati's Jeff-Branson
got his IOOth career RBI in the socarid .... It was 57 degrees when the
game began . A steady rain slowed
the last four innings, and.only a few
hundred fans were left !'or the final
out.

24 ·

J2

Chnrton' ........... ··"

15

•
•
:

:

:12 .562

20

y -Sc:~ U k:- ................. 5~

.667
.067

•

•s&lt;~n

60K
lRI

-

I

•
Wtstcm Dlwision
• S:ui t&gt;l ego ... ..,.......... 1 I .500
• co la rado .................. l

40 '~

... l&lt;l.

.,
Ctnlrll Ohision·
•Chil.'ugu .. .................. 2
I .667

:.. Hou ~!On ... ,............... 2
-' Pi n~bur~th ......... :...... 2
· CtNCINNAl't.. ........ l
~ St. Louls .................. 1

Atl:mt:. ... .............. .41

Minncsula .............. 24
Dall:~ ...........•.......... 22
Van..:ouver ............ 12

Eulnn Division

1\t lanru ...... ............... 2

CLEVELAND ...... .4.l

Denver .... ... ..... JI

NL standings

25
26

"'----

Central Oivi1ion
y-1A:n oit.. .... ... .. .~8 L\ 6
x-Chicagu .......... :\9 2ti 12
~ ~ - L-ouis .. ...... __]2 32 14
Tnm nto ...
32 :1.'1 I 2
Wi nnipc~ .......... .14 .~M 5
Dallus ................. 24 :\9 l :l

Sunday's games
N.Y. R:mgc·n al New Jersey, J p.m.
Bo!lon :u Philadelphia. J p.m.
.Dccroil ut Chicugu. 3 p.m.

.
344 26J .
256 239

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Iwn

p.m.

BJ

WESTERN CONFERENCE

'

Milw;auk ..'\! a1 Scunl~ . 4 : ~~ p.m.
New York m Texas. M:O:'i p.m.,

•·

20'~

M Ki'19

29
.l t

M i 1Wi1U~l'C ............. 22

Sunday's games

,

12

Octroi!............ ..... 40

r Hurtado I -0),

•. p.m.

DolTalo ........ ..... 29 41 7
.............. l6:'i6 .S

On:~ w a

Central Division

y-Oticugo ........ ......64
lmlimla ..... ..............45

~

94 260 215

Nurthea!iil Dh·lsioo
y· Piusbur}!ll .. :...47 26 4 98
M t) mr~! u l ....... .. .39 :H 'l
K7
D o~ltln. .. .. ... ..l1 30 ! I Ko'i
Hoartfurd ..
.J'2 J6 t,l 7J

17 ~~

New Jersey at Hartford, l:_lO p.m
Sun Jo5e at Colorado, 4 Jl.m.
BUff:~l o at N.Y. lslam.lcn;, 7 p.m.
Tn"!pa Bay nt Pinsburgh, 7JO p.m.
flond;a a1 Mootreul. 7JO p.m.
S1. ~mi~ at Toronto, 7:.)0 p.m.
Cu l~;ary at Winnipeg, 7JO p.m.
Washinttlon ac Olcawn, K p.m.
Vancouver a1 LOs Angeles. 10: ~0

·

82 224

lill

I

N.Y. lslum.len; at On:~wa. 7 : ~0 p.m.
• Philade:lrhin n1 N.Y. Rangers. 7:.30
p.m.
.
Bufr~lo al Tampa Buy. 7:.lO_p.m. _.
C h tL'a~o nt Oaii:L~ . H.:m p.m
lktroll :11 Anahetm, 10:)0 p.m. ~

lt L I J:lL !if liA

Ncw Jmcy ........ J4JI 12

Atlantic Dlvlston
Iwn
~ L ' &amp;1.
Y·Oflmldo ............ .'i:'i 19 . 74~
Nc~ Ynrk ... ........ 42 ~0 __,H ~
Mi ami .... .......,. ........n ~tl ..~07
Washingcon ........... J4 .W .46fl
New Jc r~l')' .......... .. 29 43 .40.l
Bu ~h\11.. ..·............. 29 4~ ..\92
Philmtl.!lphioL. ., ....... I4 59 . . I'J2

Saturday's games

Atlantic Divislt;m

Tnmpa Bll~ ........ J .~ 29 I 2

EASTERN CONFERENCE

o-m.

47 246 H5

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Culomdo ac Momreal. I : J~ r .m
San Frnndsc:o ~~ Aoridn. I :J:'i p.m.
Pillsburt:h ul N~:w York . l:40p.m.
U H Angtlc! 111 CbJcat o. 2:20p.m.

!'IIBA standings

1..4t ~

Vcg&lt;IS, IO:O.'i p.m.
Milw :lL.lkc ~· ~K;~rl 0-0).ul Seall le (l uhn-.
• -: snu
1o :o~ p.m.

,
•

62 240 287

SanJose ............. 20~1 7
y-cli nchtd tlivision title:
x-clinched playoff spot

NHL standings

87 245 221
~~~ 222 194

Basketball

.

Saturday's games

97 268 197

at Houslon, l:~;'i p.m.

two games close .
Burba gave up a two-run homer
in the lirst to MoiSes Alou, then held
the Expos scoreless until Alou singled home a run in the sixth. Hector
Carrasco relieved and gave up an
RBI single to Segui and a three-run
homer to Rodriguez, making it 7-1 .
Segui had a two-run single in the
seventh off Xavier Hernandez, ·and
Darrin Fletcher hit a solo homer in ·
the eighth off Hernandez. '
"Guys might be a lillie nervous or
trying too hard," Burba said of the
bullpen. " But who isn't'! It's something that stands out right now and
it's going to get better."

Tonight's games

Hockey

x·N.Y. R:mgers .. 40 22 14
Florida ...... ........ .39 29 9
W&lt;~sh in~torl ........ 17 30 II

01. X :.~:'i p .m.
C h icag11 (IJerc 0 -0) al Ca lifornia

Los Angdes .\.. ... 22 :l8 18

Thursday's S&lt;ores '

,Houslun at Denver. S p,m.
U1ah a1 Sacr:jmc:nto., 9 p.m.

l -l' hilat.ldphia ....42 22 IJ

San .Di~go

His co nfide nee helped, too.
Asked if he was nervous, Paniagua
said, "No. Never in my life."
"He threw well, period," Cincinnati's Barry Larkin said. "He's got
a good arm."
The Reds' bullpen could have
learned from him. Cincinnati's
relievers have failed to keep the last

Monueal :l, Boston 3 flit)
Piusburgh 4. Wu~hinglon 2
Hartford I, New Jersey 0 ·
Philalklphia4, N.Y. Rangen I
Toronto 3, S1. Louis I
Sun J os~ :'i. Edmon1on J

D.!troit :n Bosmn~ 12::\0 p.m.
San Amonio al L.A. l...:akers. J p.m.
Phoeni x ar Vancouver, J p.m.
Chkagn al Orlando.~ : ]() p.m.

S1, louis all\llontot. 1:10 p.m.
•
C IN CINNATI al Ph ihu.l elphi a, I :J.'i

rm.

Today's games

·

I

New York at Toronto. 6 p.m.
Miami r~c lndi an a. 6 p.m.
Milwaukee at Ni::w Jeney. 7::\0 p.m.
Philadelphia at At lama. 7:30p.m.
Chari Q II ~ al CLEVELAND, 7::\0 p n1
LA. Clippers at Dallas, 8.:JO p.m
SewIll..: at Ponlarx.l, I0 p.m.
Miuneso la at Golden SUite. 10:.10
p.m.

lwn

Sunday's game$

n. Boslon 2

lems."

Sunday's games

C1\li.muJo ('(ltomp~u n 0-0) :11 Mumrl.':tl
(Fassero 0.1 ), I :J,, p.m.

·~

who was supposed to sian ihe season in Douhle-A.
"There are ~ orne things he's got
to learn. Pitching is not only throwing to home plate." Alou said. "But
when you have that kind of arm, you
can hide some of the other prob-

Scoreboard
Saturday's games

1011 (Kile 0-01. ~ : 05 p.m.

Saturday's games

_m

MdwaukL-c ........ I

t.ry 0-0). 7:40p.m.
·
Sun Dicgll (Tewk.!ibury 0-0) :u Hous -

•,:
I •-:
J

Crn lral Divi!don
Mmnesoln ................ 2
I .667
................. I
CLEVELAN D.... ....0
Km1 ~ a s C ily .. ...........0

Sl. Loui~ (Urbani 0.0) at Atlilnta ( A~ ··

I .00

0 !.00
0 !.00
2 .~00

.. .. .. 2

• • Del roi l.

C IN C JNNA T1 (Portug al 0; 0) ot
Phil:u.ldPhia (M ..Willinms 0..0), 7 : ~:i p.in.
Piusburgh (Z. Smith 0-0) at New York
(Miicki 0-0). 7!40 p.m.

EHS ho·l ds :first 'lift-a-thon'

•
EASTERN SOFTBALL '- Members of ·East·
ern's softball team are are (front row, L·R) man·
ager Sabrina Morris, Lauren Young, JennHer
Mora, Rebecca Evans and Nicole Nellon. In the
second row are Candace Bunting, Tracy White,

Cavaliers get revenge on
Raptors with 98~77 victory ...

•

•

The Dilly 81nlln1l• P11 I

.

·T he ·Daily Se tineI

•

'-·•

•
(Jomeroy • Middleport, Ohio ,

'

•

··sports

. T

I

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'

1994FORD
RANGER
5speed,

slereo,1owne&lt;.

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�•
, PQ 8 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio.

Pomeroy •lttlddleport, Ohio

The o.tly S1nilnel• P8ge (I

•

,_.,.... w- Qwd tlaortoe

'f:' X.
VonZoad? and Word

Clooordo tl , _ Qrtol

l'lolor' Jameo Miller
Sunday SdlooJ . 10:30 a m.
E....i111 - 7:JOp.m.
Scrvioea • 7:30

33'2:z6 Olilckon"olfome Rd.
Suodoy Sdlool · 111 m.
Wonlup . IOLm., 6 p m.
Wodnaday Strvioea - 7 p.m.
Mld :1 pw 7 Chrdl of c.rtot
Slhmd Main
PlllOr. AIHaruon
Youlb MmiSICn Bdl FIUI&lt;r
Sunday Sdlool • 9;30 a.m.
Wonbip-8.13, \0:JOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv'"'' • 7 p.m.

.

Sunday adlool • : a.m.
Worahtp · II a m. Uid 7 p.m.
Wedneaday
7 p.m.

s....,,.. .

, _ Wlllloptill a...•
Ash Skeet, Middll port
Puior: Les Hayman
Sunday Se"'i"" • 7:30p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a m
Wednesday Serv...,. 7 30 p~m .
Rlltlattd Flnt Bapllll aun:•
Sunday School • 9 30 a m.
. Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
Pastor. Paul Slinson
East Mam St.
Sumlsy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhtp · 10.30 a.m
Fln? Sou?beru Bapllst
41872 Pomeroy Ptke
Paslor: E Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School • 9 30 a m.
11/orshtp • I0·4S a m , 700 p m
Wednel!ida.y Services - 7 00 p m
Firs? Baptll? a ...h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmet St., Middlepon
Sunday School • 9.1S am.
WOBhtp • I 0 I 5 a.m., 7 00 p.m.,
Wednesday Stmce- 7 00 p.m.

.

RoeiDt F1nt Baptist
Pulor: Rev. l.afT)' Haley
Youth PlllOr. Aaron Young
Sunday School • 9.30 am
Worship • 10.40 a.m , 7:00p.m.
Wedneaday Se""«S • 7 00 p.m.

Sllnr Rua Baptise
Pastor: Btll Little
Sunday School- lOam
Wonh•p · lJam, 7 30pm
Wednesday Se"'tces-7 30 p m

Rullud Cburtb of Christ
Sunday School - 9•30 a m.

Worshtp . 10:30 a.m . 7 p.m
Bradford Cbu,.. of Cbrlst
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Brodbury Rd

Pastor : Joe'N Sayre

Sunday Sc:jiooi-9:4S a.m.
Evening - 6:J9 p m.
Wednesday Servtces - 6 30p.m~
Bes...hem Baptist
Racme, OH

Pastor · D~Jniel Berdme
WoBbip • 9:30 a m Sunday
Bible Study • 7:00 p m Wednesday .
Old Belhal , _ Will BaptiJI Cburcb
28601 St. Rt. 7, Mtddlepon
.
Sunday School • 10 a m.
Evenmg· 7 30pm
Thursday Serv1ces • 7 30

Youth Mm1ster Mtchael Teagarden
Sunday School · 9·30 am
WoBhtp • 8 001 m, 10·30 am , 7·00p m
Wednesday Sc:"''"' • 7 00 p m

Hickory Hills O...b ofCbrtl?
Evangelist Joseph B Hookins
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
WOBhtp · IOa.m, 7pm.
Wednesday Servtces • 7 p m.
Ubtrty Cbrlstlu Cbun:•
Dexter
Pastor· Woody Call
Sunday Even~ng • 6:30 p m

Lllnp•llle c.rtsllu Cburcb
SWiday School ·9:30am.
Worshtp·l030a.m,7.30pm.
Wednesday Servace 7 30 p m

St. Rt 143 just off Rt.7
Pastor Rev James R Acree, Sr
Sunday School - )0 am
Worship - 1 Ia.m., 6 p m
Wednesday Serv1ces -7 p.m.
VlctOI")' . .pllll Iadepndu?
52S N. 2nd St Mtddleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wo..hip·!Oa m , 7 pm
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m
Fallh Baptll? Cbun:b
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday Sc:hool · I0 a.m
WOBhtp·llam ,6pm
Wednesday Servu;es • 7 p.m.

ML Morilb Baptist
Founh 8&lt; Main St , Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Crail' Jr
Sunday School · 9-30 a.m.
Worahip • 10.45 am

•

All?lqolly Baptl!t
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
Worahtp • 10.45 I m
ThUBday Seroices • 7 30 p m
Rotlaad , _ Will Boptlst
Salem St
Pusor· Re\1 Paul Taylor
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se"'ices • 7 p.m.

Catholic
So&lt;nd HUit Cl?ltolk aarth

Rtorpabtd Cbur&lt;b of Jesua Cbr?tt
or Lotter Day Saints
Ponland-Racme Rd.
Pastor: Janice Danner
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
W=h•p - I 0 30 a.m.
Wednesday Servtces- 7.30 p.m.
The Cbun:b or Jau
Cbr?tl of Loiter-Day Sala?l
Sl Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday School I 0 20-11 a.m
Relief So&lt;~ety/Priesthood II 05·12 00 noon
Sacrament Serv1ce 9-10 IS a.m
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs - 1 p m

Lutheran
St. Joba Lu,..ran Cbun:b
Ptne Grove
Pastor Dawn Spaldmg

Worship - 9:30a .m., 7 p m

Reedavllle Cbur&lt;b o!Cbrlsl
Pastor. Philip Sturm
Sumlsy School. 9 30 a m
Worship SeNice· 10:30 am
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30pm

11a11ront c•ur&lt;b of c.r~s~ 11t • ,
Cllrlatlu U.UO.
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor Rev Davad McManis
" Sunday School • 11 a m
"WoBhip ·9:30a.m , 7 30 p m
Wednesday Se"'icu · 7·JO p m

Worship-9:00am

Sunday School- 10:00 am.
Our Saviour Lu?btnll Cbur&lt;h
Walnut and Henry Sts .• Ravenswood, W Va.
lnlnm ~: Ocorge C. Wemdt
Sunday School· 10 00 am
Wonhtp • II a m
'
' St. Ptiul Lutbena aar&lt;h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St , Pomeroy
Pastor Dawn Spalding
Sunday School • 9:45 a m
Worship - 11 am

United Methodist
Church of God
ML Mortala Cbarcb of God
Rae me
Pastor· Rev. James Satterfield
Sunday School • 9 45 a m
Evening - 7 p m
W~dnesday Serv1ets - 7 p.m
Rnllaad Cburtb of God
Pastor: Gregory L Sears
Sunday School- I0 a.m.
Worshtp • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se"'tces -·7 p.m.

Fontt Raa Baplitt
Pastor Ar1us Hurl
Sunday School • 10 am
Worship • II a m

Latter-Day Saints

Jlemloc:k Grove Cburtb
Paslor· Gene Zopp
Sunday sc:hool - 10·30 a.m.

Christian Union

llllll7de Baptist Cbortb

Rutland Community Cburtb
Pastor. Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenins - 7 p.m
Wednesday Scrvtoea- 7 p.m

Evangchsl. Ke1tb Cooper

Syn&lt;UH Firs? Cbun:b of God
Apple and Second Sts
Pastor" Rev , Dav1d Russell
Sunday School ana WOBhtp- 10 am
Evcntng Services- 7 30 p m
Wednesday Services · 7 30 p.m
Cburtb of God of Prophecy
0 J. Whtle Rd. off St. Rt. i60
Pastor. PJ. Chapman
Sunday School • 10 a m
Worsh1p • 11 a m
Wednesday Scrv1cts -7 p m
Clttster Cbar&lt;b of God
S R. 248 &amp; Rtebel Road, Chester
Pastor· Rev William D. Hinds
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m
Worship • 6 p m ;
WednescllS'. 7 p.m. Fanuly Tra1nmg Hour

161 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy, 992-S898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E Hemz
Sal Con. 4·45·5·15p m ; Mass- S:JO p m
Sun. Con -8:4S-9 IS am ,
S101. Mas5 - 9 30a.m
Dailey Mass-8:30a.m. ,

Seoond &amp;: Lynn, Pomeroy
PaSIOr: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday achool and woBhip I 0 2S

Church of Christ

Episcopal

l'omm&gt;y am:b of artst
212W.MaJOSt.
Putor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School- 9·30 am
Worshap- tO·JO am , 7 p m
Wednesday Serv•cp - 7 p m.

Gnu Epllcopal aar&lt;b
326..E. Mam St., Pomeroy
Rector: Rev D A duPiant1cr
Holy Euc:hanSI and '
Sunday School 10 30 a m
Coffee hour rollowtng

Congregational
Trtnl?y Church

J

Gnllam Uolted M - t
Wonhtp • 9.30 am (lsi 8&lt; 2nd Sun),
7.30 p m (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Scrvtu . 7·30 p m
ML ou.. United Me?llodll7
Off 124 behmd Wilkesville
Pastor Rev Ralph Spues
Sunday School · 9.30 a.m
Worshtp • 10.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Serv~ees • 7 p.m
Mtlp CoopenHvel'lu1sb
No11bto17 Chaster
Alhd
Pastor· Sharon Hausman
Sunday School- 9·30,a m
Worshtp - II am, 6:30pm
Cbts?er
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
WDBhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Thursday Sem&lt;es • 1 p.m.
Joppa
Putor Bob Randnlph
Wonh1p • 9·30 am

Sunday School- 10:30 am
LAmaBostom

Sunday School- 9:30 a m
WoBhtp • 10.30 a.m
~lilt

Pastor Rev Charles Mash
Worshtp. 9.30 a.m.
• Sunday School- 10 30 am
UMYF Sunday 6 30 p m

Tuppers Plllua Ss. Paul
Pastor· Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 am .
Worship - 10 am
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Ceatnl Cluater
Asbuey (Syrac.tf
Pastor Charles Nevtlle
Sunday School · 9.4S am

•

F•-•

Cat.WJ Bllllt
Pomeroy Ptke, Co. Rd.
P!IStor: Rev. Blackwood
Sundt' School • 9:30 a.m.
Worahtp 10:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servi"' • 7.30 p.m.

Other Churches

SUnmilleWOI'dofFID
Pastor: David Dailey •
Sunday Sc:hool9:30 a.m.
Evenana
- 1 p m.
;

ll,bsnn Lhri"uan t'ellowsbip Cluartll
Rev ( lydc Hcndcr.;on
Sunday scrvtec, 10 on a m , 7·30 p m

Rock Spolap
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9 · 1~ am.
Worship . 10 a.m
Youth Fellowshtp, Sunday· 6 Rm.

h"b full Gospel Cbun:h
LAmg Bouom
Pas1or Sieve Reed
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m
Worstup · 9 JOa m and7pm
Wednesday - 7 p m
Fnday · rellowshtp serv1ce i p m.

a-

RejoldJai Ule Cbvtll

CorDKI
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · "9.30 am
Wor&gt;htp - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Sutloa

SIIJI!Iay School • 10 a m
Worsh1p • 9 a m
Wednesday • 7 p m.

-·

Paotor: Rev. Clarlt Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

'

Sunday School , 9 o.m.
Worahtp • 10 a.m.

Nazarene
Pastor: Scott Roae

l

,.

Se...sb·llaJ Ad......,
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Paator: Roy Lawinaky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Worshtp • 3 p.m.

Un ited Brethren

'

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•

ML Jlermoa Ualted Bri?lna
btOritlaTexas Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robtn Sanders
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m
Worshtp - 10 30 am., 7·30p.m
Wednesday Se""c:es • 7:30p.m.

l!dea Ualled Ilrf?ltna .. Cbris?
2 1/2 md.. north of Reedavllle
on State Routel24
Pastor Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School • II a.m.
Sunday Wonhtp • 10·00 a m. 8&lt; 7:00 p m. ·•· ·
Wednesday Servaces - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth SeNice . 7·30p.m. _

Unhed Follh Cbun:•

Pastor· Rev Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a m
Worshtp • 10.30 a.m, 7 p m
Wednesday SC"'t&lt;e • 7 p m.

Sunday School • 9.30 am
Worship . 10·30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p m.

..

Seventh -Day Adventist

Rt 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass

Radu Flnt Cb•n:• of ?be Nuareao

' 1 )1

1Middlepor? l'roti&gt;Yitrilll

MI. 011•• Communl?y CbUr&lt;b
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m.
E\'enang- 7 p m.
Wcdneday Servace ~ 7 p m

Tort.Cbor&lt;•
Co Rd.63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WDBhip • 10:30 a m

.

" ,,

llarr?tonnu. Priabyt.....,a c~un:b
Wonhap • 9 a.m.
,
Sunday School- 9:45 o.m.

Faltb Gospel Cbun:b
Long Bottom
Sunday School • 9 30 a.m
Worsbtp·IO 45 a.m , 7 30p m
Wednesday 7·30 p m

RoddaJIPOI1 Cburcb
Grand Street
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worshtp • II a.m.
Wednesday Se""ces • 8 p.m.

'

Sunday School- 10 a.m
Worship - t 1 a m.

Morse Cbopel Cbun:b
Sunday school-tO a.m.
Worsh1p • I I a.m.
Wednesday SeNt« · 7 p m.

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m
WOBhtp • 10 am.
Wednesday Strvices • 10 a m

....

,

Syncue Fln? UDI?ed Pnsbyterioa
Pastor: Rev. Krillna Robinson

Dyuvlllt Community Chur&lt;b
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m
Worshtp • 10:30 am., 1 p.m.

..,..,a_

...

Mlddlepor? ...........
'fbird Ave.
~·

Huol Community'•Cb11rtb
OffRt. 124
Pastor. Edsel Hart
Sunday School • 9.30 a.m.
Worshtp-1030am, 7·30pm·

Coolville Ualted Mttbodltt Parlsb
Pastor Helen Kline
c-.JieCbor&lt;b
Main &amp; Ftflh St.
Sunday School - tO o.m
Wonhtp • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

1 • '

'

Peolo«&lt;IIIJ-bly
St. Rt 124, Ractne
Pastor. William Hoback
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Even1ng • 7 p m
Wednesday Services - 7 p m

.

iastor: Bnan HarkneSs
Sunday School • 10 a.m
WOBhtp • II a.m,

•

Pentecostal

Syra,_ Mlsaloa
1411 Bndgeman St., Syracuse
Sunday Sc:hool-10 am
Even1ng • 6 p m
Wednesday Service - 7 p m

Ellt Le?ar1
Pastor: Bnan Harkness

_There's Nothtng Lfke A Big Bear

'

Fal.. Tabtrna&lt;le Cbron:b
1 Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sumlsy School • 10:00 a.m.
Evemng7pm.
Thursday Servace • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9 30 a m
WoBhtp • 10 45 am (1st 8&lt; 3rd Sun)

..

New Ule VIet..,. c..ttr
•
3m Georgea Creek Road, Gallipobs, oil
Pastor· Bdl Staren
'
Sunday Serv1ccs • 10 a.m. &amp;. 7 p m. • ,
Wednesday · 7 p.m &amp; Youlb 7 p.m • ,

Middleport Commualty Cbur&lt;b
575 Pearl St., Mtddleport
Pastor. Sam Anderson
Sunday S&lt;hooiiO am.
Evenang • 7 30 p m.
Wednesday Serota • 7 30 p m.

Mornln&amp;Ss.r
Pastor: Kennclh Baker
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m
Wonbtp • 10 30 a.m
Thursday Se"'ius • 7;30 p m

•

•

Clifton Tobtru&lt;le Cban:b
Oifton1 W.Va. .
Sunday School· 10 a m
Wonhip • 7 p m.
Thursday Se"'t&lt;e • 1 p m

Pas1or· Rev Margarel J Robinson
Serv1ces· Wednesday, 7·30 p m
Sunday, 2·30 p m

Ilad?lmt Jlouae of Pnyer
(at Burhngham church off Route 3:3)
Paslor Robert Vance
Sunday worship - tO am .
Wednesday serv1ce- 6:30pm

I

..

•

Betboay
PISlor: Kenneth Baker
Sundiy Sc:hool - IOa.m.
Worshtp • 9 a.m
Wednesday Scrvtus • 10 am.

.

C..,..b ofJesaa CluiJt,
: .
Apollolc Fltt?lo
,
1/4 milepost Fon M01p on New Uma Rei
Paslor: W111iam V111 Meter
~
Svnday-7:00 p.m. •
Wedneaday-7.00 p.m.
Friday·7:00 p.m.
•

Tbt lklltven;' F&lt;liowsblp Ministry
New L1me Rd , Rutland

Hamson•lll• Commuahy Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday • 9 30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p m.

..

SOON 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor. Lawtell« F&lt;nman
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Wedneaday Semc:es • 7 p.m.

Yuuth f ellowship Sunday, 7 00 p m.
W~;dnc"~ "Y M:rvlcc, 7.30 p.m

SaoWYIIIe
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Mlddltpnl1 Cbon:b oflha Nuanae
Pastor. Gregory A CUndafT
Sunday School • 9 30 a m
•
Worahtp - 10 30 a.m , 6 30 p m
Wedntaday Scrvtces • 1 p m

1Aar1, W.Va. Rt. I
PIII.Ot: Rankin Roach
Sunday SthooJ . 10:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 9:30 o.m., 7:00 ~. m .
We-y Service • 7:00p.m.

Newllavea Chon:~ ofsJte N..,...
Pastor: Glendon StrQUd
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
WQBhip • 10:30 1m, 7 p.m
Wednesday Se""CCI • 7 p.m.

Porueroy
Pastor· Roben E Robtnson
Sunday School • 9: I5 1 m
Worahip • 10:30 I m.
Bible Study Tuesday • I0 a.m.

Salem CenSer
Putor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School • 9:IS a m.
Wonbtp • IO.IS a.m

•

Foltll
~. rw Cllr7lt
· Paator: Rev. Fraoklin Didtena
Service· Fnday, 7 p.m.

W011h1p - 10 a.m

•

••

FatmnBiblo~

Cbrltrtlln Ft-ablp Ctattr
Salem St , Rutland
Pastor Robert E Musser "'""
Sunday School • 10 a m
WorshJp · IIJS a m, 7p.m
Wcdnc\C.I~&amp; 'I Scrvace • 7 p m.

Ratllnd
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servtces • 7 p.m

-·
..

Putor: Marl&lt; Millon •
Wonbip • 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvioea • 1 p.m

PaortO.pol
Sunday School '9 a.m

llyaell Run Jlollaeu aun:b
Pasaor· Roben Manle)'
Sunday School · 9:30am.
Worshtp · 10:4S am , 1 p.m
Thursday Se"'tce - 7 30 p.m
Lllurel CUff,_ Mtlhodld aartb
Pastor Peter Tremblay
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worshtp . 10.30 am aod 7 p m.
Wednesday Servt« • 7 00 p.m.

...

Portlud Fins a - tlsJte N.......

M .....•llle
PL'I.Inr' Charles Nc.-llle
Sunday School - t} a m
W~nhap - IU a.m

Wesltyoa Bible Holla... Cbvdl
75 Pearl St , Middleport
Pastor· Rev John Nevalie
Sunday school • 9 30 a m
Worsh•p - 1030am., 7·30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30pm

Wednesday • 7 p m

...

liNt~ (Middltpw1J
Pt....aor: Vcrnapye Sull1van
Sunday Schnnl - 'J·JIJ a m.
W&lt;&gt;rsbtp : I 0:311 a.m.

Pastor Rev O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m
Worship · 10 30 am., 730 p.m
Wednesday Service - 7·30 p m

Worsh1p • 9 45 a m

Pastor Eugene E Underwood

....

........ .... Phillip II h •
Sunda)' Sdlool • 9:30a.m.
W-lp r IO:JOa.11.
Wedjpday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 a.m.
· Worahtp . 10:30 am., 6:30pm.
Wednadoy SeNi&lt;eJ • 7 p.m. ,

Pastor· Charles Ne.ille
SoindaySdlooJ . JOa m.
Worship · 9a.m
Thllllday S&lt;"'ices • 6:30p.m.

•

Tuppers Ploln Cbor&lt;b of Cbrlst
Pastor. Stanley M1ncks
Sunday School • 9 a.m

Sunday School • 9.30 a m
Worsh1p - 10 30 am

,_

l'lroe G..,.e Billie lloll- aoon:h
1/2 mtle off Rl 32S

Pomeroy, Hut~~onvdle Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor· Roger Watson
Sunday School · 9.30 a.m.
Wo1&gt;h1p • 10.30 am ., 7:00pm.
Wednesday Sc:rv1""' • 7 p.m.

ra-:Samuel Buye

Fla?woodl

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kms
Sunday ochool· 9:30 o·m
Sunday wonbtp -7 p m
Wednesday prayer medtng· 7 p m.

Zloll a .... ofCbr?tl

Thursday Servi&lt;:e • 6·30 p.m

ML Ualoa Baptist

Rooe of Slulnioo u-... a

• • • • Qudlfltlrt n

l'ut&lt;W: Kotlb Ratkr
Sunday SdlooJ . to a.m.
Wonbip • II o.m

Paator Rev Vt- Rouah
Sunday Sc:hool9·30 a.m
Worshtp • 11 a m , 7:30 p m
Wedneaday Se"'i« • 7.30 p m

Beuwllllolw aJc1ae am:h ofar?ts
Pastor Jack ColeBJl&gt;Y•
Sunday Si:hool -9.30 a m
Worshtp • 10 30 am., 6 30 pm
Wednesday Sc:rvl«&lt; • 6·30 p m.

Bndbuey a.,.b of Cbris?
Pastor: R1ck. Snyder

l'lolor:
Sunday School · JO o.m.
Wonbip • 9 o.m.

cu...,.
....... CllaptJ
Horrioonville Road

w-.,.

WM?a'a a-t
Coolville Rood

N-

Paalor: Rev. Herben Oruo
h • • 9:30 .....
W • · llun.,6p.m.
w . y Scrvlcel • 7 ~·IlL

.,KotRI.r
....

.

- - R h o.n:ll
310S7 State Route 32S, Lanpvlle
Putor: Rev. Rick Maloyed
~
Soinday achool • 9:30a.m
Sunday worship • 10:35 a.m A 7 p.m ;
Olildren'• c:hufch . 10:35 a.m Youlb 6 p.m.;
Wednuday prayer service - 7 p.m.
I

Keoo c•vdl of Cllr7lt
Worsh1p . 9:30 a.m.Sunday School- 10·30 a.m
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallaoe
1st and 3rd Sunday
St.,

=

~ CltllrG olsJte

Wonltip · II L!ll·
• ' ·
Wet .Oty krvicel · 'l::JOp.m.

Full Gospel Ups.....
33045 Hiland Road, Pmneroy
Pastor Roy Hun1er
Sunday School • I 0 a m
Evening 7·30 p m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday •
p.m.

?:JO

It

Soulh Bethel New T ....tlltll7
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunda~ School · 9 a.m.
Wprship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m
Wednesday Serv1ce 7 p.m

R.ttdnllle Fellowalp
Cbvdlol?beNuonne
lntenm Pastor· Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 a m
Worshtp • 10 4Sa.m., 7 p m
Wedneaday Services • 7 p m.

e

Sy,..._ Cbortb oflha Nuareat
Paator. Btll S~res
Sunday School • 9;30 a.m.
Wonbtp • 10.30 1m, 6 p.m
Wednesday Se""c:es • 1 p m

Carlttoa Iatenleaomlaa-Cburtb
Kmgsbury Road
Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p Service 10:30 Lm.
Worshtp Se"'ice-lst and 3rd Sunday, 7 p m
No Wednesday Evcninc Serv1ce

P.......,y Cbur&lt;b ol?llt Naureae
Pastor Rev Thoruu M.Ciuug
Sunday School • 9:30 a m ~
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m
Wednesday ~NI&lt;es • 7 p m

Freedom Gospel Mlsalon
Bald Knob, on Co Rd. 31
• Pastor. Rev Roger Willford
Sunday School • 9·30 a.m.
Worsh1p- 7 p m

..

•

~-'.·

•

l

• -

'

~==~--~~~==~--~--~~----~
· ~··
P. J. PAUL~, AGENT
RlDENOUR
'

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804W. Main
99~·2318 Pomeroy

CLASSIFIED ADS
· a supermarket
for everything
'

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

MOWERCUIIC

...., ••••• , ....lela.
KIIOSIIE IIARIIINII
M9·2104
...'

SNOUFFER

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
192-7075
172 North Second Aw.
Mlddllport, Ohio

·~

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY~
2p4 Condor St.
Pomeroy,OH

992-2975
RAWUNGS ·COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

Mldclltport

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Ycu 'U be floating on a
cloud with the buys ·
you 'U find in the
clas~ifiem.

..

SUPPLY.
•

....

&amp;HARDWARE
Hometite Saws

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-66677
BILL QUICKEL

,.

Cro~'s

Family
Restaurant

"Fmhlrillg Kenmcq Fiiild &lt;CIIicke.N ~

228 W. ·~~omtroy

EWING FUNERAL HC!)ME
."Dignity and Service Always"
Established 1913

992·2121
106 Mulbeny Ave.

•

1
214 E. Malr
992·5130
Pomeroy

Veterans
Memorial HotaD1b1li

Prices Effective APRII..f • 6 • 61996
•
We Redliem Feclelll Food

115 E. Memorial Qr.
992·2104
1"' ...

....

.,

•

�'

Page 8.• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Friday, AI*" 5, 1986

-

.

~

----------;___Alfred news notes--~...,.;,;_---~-~.:
By fELUE PARKER
The 501h weddina anniversary of

Russell and Eloise Al):her was celebraled at lhe Alfred Uniled Methodist
Church March 24.
• Their children and families, Jim,

Mary Lou. Jonathan, Lindsay, and
Samantha Archer of ,Springfield;
Joyce, Steve and Slephanie St. Clair
of Lancaster; and Jackie, Eric', Erin
and Jody Brooks of New Marshfield
hosled a buffet meal.
~

Pastor Sharon Hausman aave
graee. More than 170 family members and friends from around lhe stale
attended the celebratio~.
-----------The church and conuitunity mourn

lhe death of an M. Fol1rod. 94. She
has lived in the communitY since her
marriage, ended the Alfml Cburi;h,
and was 8 member of hte Alhd Unit:
ed Methndist Women. Many attended visitation and funeral services at

. Pomii'Oy, •

the White-Blower Funeral Homs. 1111 breakflllwith ~ Hausmfi,
After me funeral meal was served ll civillg lhe blessiag, MelissaJo ~
the chwch by mcmblrs and friends or was ~zed durinalhe worship w•

lhe family.

------·--·
Alfred Church held a Palm Sun·

Mldcllfport
~VICinity

All Yard S..taa Mull Be Paid In
Advanct. Oaadllht: 1:OOprn thf
'dlly bttort !he ad il to run, Sun·
day tdlllon- 1;OOpm Fr~. lionday odtion 10.1100.m. S.OIIdoy•

vice.
•
· Ni1111 ltobinson is recovering 81
~- feillowina recent hospitalizi·

dr-n tor the May 1HII
T - ol 1M Common t&gt;teu
Court ol Mid Coiii!IY
Wlllece Brirecledflloortdd,
1
1.0. M9(:oy, Commleal-•

·Syracuse, Ohio
Now IIYellable FmHA
All One BR Apta.
.
· Sen!or, Ol~blect, Handicapped
· Beale Monthly Rent $0-$273'.00.
Rnidenta pay electric only. Range,
Refrigerator, AJC, On-81te Laundry,

'

112 II ulberry Av..,

~II'~.JtOIIIo.

i

·

SEE MANAQER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

•

•

/

&amp; Stump Grinding

'

~~

run•aton.
LoW Ratts}

IIMOOII.Ih&amp;l611s.

A math/science family night
- a flrat for the Salem Centat
Elementary Sc;hool - was held
laat-k.
The event was sponsored
by a grant from the Discovery
Project of Southeast Ohio
through Ohio University.
Various projects were displayed In the gymnasium for
. parents and their children to
pilrtlclpate In as teams.
These hands-on ae11vltles
were provided to show parent&amp;
and children that math and science can be fun as well as educational.
Ralph Kelsey, O.U. Discovery Instructor, was at the .atten~. led classes last summer
school to assist Mra. Sandra through Discovery Project to
Walker, sixth grade teacher· learn more about how to teach
and Tim Curfman, fifth grade math and science using handsteacher In the family night pro· on projects. ·
Top .Mrs. Walker. Works with
grem.•
The two teachers had T.J. Light and Harley Small•

Rents llased on inc...
Range frolt SG-$506
HCIIdicap AccessiWe Units
Ma~~~~gt•nt and Laundry on site.

(

(

(

J\

'

')/

'NeedD~?

Love.•
BualneU
Family F' tter.
AUowYour
Pereonlll Psychic to
Assist You

...

.. r

18

• Trail Rides
•Training
•Bolrdlng

DOWN PAYMENT ASSISTANCE INTEREST SURVEY

. ........ for

The Meigs Gdunty Community 'Housing Improvement Office is conducting a survey to
determine the need and interest in a Homebuyer Down Payment Assistance program in
Meigs County.
•

Meigs County Commissioners

1996 CHEVY CAVALIER
. .

$12,318

199,~
#3553

CHEVY SSERIES PICKUP

$9 949.

01
01

89 BUICK SKYHA~................$3495

Air bag equipped, V-6, tih, cruise, air. Nice clean car

4 Or., auto., air, runs

90 FORD RANGER XLT ---..$4995

gOOd'

87 MERCURY TOPAL...............-$2995

Black whh topper, air contJ., 5 speed, cuslom
wheels, sharp.
•

·Auto .. air, clean.

90 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER----.....$5995

V-6, auto..lrans., 74,000 miles.

-.o-.. .

V-6, auto .• air, cruise. Loaded with extras.

18 FORD AEROSTAR VAN

'

$4995

· V-6, front&amp;· rear air cond.; tlh, cruise, P. locks &amp; P.
windows.

89 PONTIAC GRAND AM-

$4995

4 Or:, air, tilt, cruise.

17 CHEV. MONTE ~..$2995
89 BUICK LESABRE..----...o.-$4995
. All options. Sharpl

·

.

: : fJ:u:E·ESTiMAT!S
' :
949-2168

MalntaiWIC8 '
-Odd lobe per~
No Uwn Ton LMp

1111"'" IFN

Noon,5:il0 P.IC

'

· :J&amp;liNSUWION·
, 537 BRYAN PLACE
·
MD~ 8112-2772
Hoin; llon.-Frl
• 8:00 Lm. • 3:30 p.m.
: VInyl a Altllli- !lldlng.

: VInyl ,,piC-',·
: : WI. . . Blown
• lneui•IOI'~ stonn

;

·: ~o.r'
~'
~

91 FORD ESCORT-.............:..-.$4995

·. 'DI!qN, ~-

.

,,.,.

, II

I

I ,,

4.3 V-6, 5 speed, air oond., tih, cruise, extra sharp
lruck.
.

87 CHEV. S·IO TRUCK----~-$5495
V-6, 5 speed, long bed.

.

89 OLDS CUTLASS (IERA.....-.......;$4995
Auto. trans .• air cond.

arlfo~~AriccoiO::_
spe8d,

2 Or.• 4 cyl., 5

ster9olcass. ·

.01 ,

. , . lib

W&amp;ViiN
hp HrwAI 'II
'*-lJHJ Us-1~1

uu,..
Rv

,,,.
,.,.
SAWMILL

16 FORD Fl so- TRIKIL..................$3995

•

""~-"~

...........

Across from Super America ln'Pometoy · ·

IS

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks·Must
. Taxes and title fee not Included.
All payments subject 'to credit approval

,__&amp;fllnnot

11Mut1H .

~­

..

.

DON.TATE MOTORS, Inc~
ITS WORTH

DRIVEl ·

- tlbl!et to dtiler.

1111&amp;1 IIIEIS

Wanted To Buy: Junk Au tos Witt1

Or Without Motors. 'Call Lany
LNety. 614-388-9303.

Datea, Welt Est With ~any
1B And

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Over. All

Professionals And
CDnfidential .
It Wonts! Greenup.

Ira

~ -Fri,

1 P.l.l -9 P.M.

.

'

11.0

Help Wanted
· $-WANTED·$

PH. II06-473-5001 .

10 people . who neE!d to lose
weight &amp; "J ake money, to try new
patented we i g!"'t~ loss product

304-773-5083 241'rSiday.

· unwanted alurtainuin,
acrap IJI&amp;tal. tin and pop

304'518-2448.

$1.000 Weekly Procenin'g Mail
Free lnlo. Send Self-Addressed
Sta ~ped . Envelope : Erpress
Dept.131, 100 East Wt1 itestone
BlVd., Suite 148-345, Cedar Park

TX 78613 .

AVON f All Areas f Shirley
Spears, 304·075-1429.
Able Avo n Representatives
needed. Earn money lo·r Chnsrmas bih at home/at WOfk. 1-100-

.992·6356 "' 304 -882·2645,

Rep.

ASStSTIINT· ·

Perfect, Network And Other PC

Compleie Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kftchelll - Siding
35 y..,. Experlenctl

--

140NI9·3943

Matching couch &amp; cha ir. 304 815-3822.
One year old female Beagle.
ahota and wormed. 6 week old
mai8Beligle, wormed, 614-843-

52G.
Shredded Paper. HJt Come 1St
Serve! Back Of Buildi.ng, Press-

lations. Send Resume To HOlzer
Clinic, Human Rela tiOf).&amp; Oeparrment 90 Jackson Pike, GaHipoli s,
OH45631 .

AdrnjpjAtcatjye Clerk· 6· 8 week
assignment ih the area srar tl ng
April 26. M•cros oft Word/Excel
sk ills requ ired. Send resume to
Wesrern Stall Services, P.O. Box

764, Lancasler, OH 43130.

room. Galipolis Daily Tribune, 82:i AVON · S8 ·S15 /Ht. No Door To
Third A""""', Gallipolis, Ohio.
Door, No Minimum Order. Bonus-

es 1·800-827-4640 Old/Sfs/Rep.
Cosmetologi st Wan ted, Guarantee d Wages, Paid Vacations,
Full &amp; ParHime Posilions 614· •

Lost and Found
found : Dalmatian, Five Points/
f latwoods vicinity. call lo 10, 614·

992·3366.

446-7267.

C fuise Sh•p Positions, Travel To
Exolic Paaces, $200 -$900 Week-

ly, Call

7 Days,

407-875-2022

En

0526C14.

Los1: 2 Black &amp; Tan Doberm an EARN $ l,OOO. Weekly SIUtting. EnPups In Kyger Area. One Has
Bright PVlk Collar, Chitds Pet. Re- veJopes At Home. Slarr Now. No
· Experience Free Supplies, Info.
wardle 14 -36 7. 7528.

mo.

Nd Obhga fJ on. Send SASE To:

;;;..-,;;.o;;;;;;;;;;;;;o..;.;,;....-;;..,.;,·.;.
--;..;.;
· -;;..;.
· ;..,
· _ _ ___, l ost: A Small. Male, Brown &amp; Fa irway, Dep t. t 35 1, Box 4399.
1'
I.
~nhito Lon~~~~~:/~~: ~~· I :W:-es-t7Covina.:::
·::::-c_A_91:-79-I.- :::-• •
0111
.
mo.
From Eurel&lt;a Area. If I •-'opes
weekly stuHing On·

J D r ng (
1111

.,., ;. /}_

~

P.O. Box 587

.

pany

Racine, Oh. 45n1
Ja-• E. Diddle
,._

kh
D
Ba kh.
D
1i k
rae oe, ozer, c oel ump rue ,
J ckhaJnmer, .....
A,
. a
vaIIabfe.. 24 Hrs.
We dl ba
ents ut i
tl
g 88m . t p n 88p C

1i

., __ ,,.,
~00 ;;nriGII

aystema, lay linea, underground bores,
For .F"" eatlm. call949-2512
II.UNJJAII.IIIArll
-

II ~~~k~i :~\.;~~'25~"~·-mon
•• ·

Please contact 1 ......

LOST: German Shephard, adull
male, blacklwhiiB. May have beeo

86

Earn up ro S1,ooo·s weell,ly stuff.

1110 envelopes at home. Start now.
No experience. Free S\.lpplie&amp;. in- .
form.al ion. No obligation . Send
self-addressed &amp;lamped envelope to Bucks Dept I 72. 320fi.C E.
Colonial Or., No. 308, Orlaudo, fl
32803

Tmh Remcml - Commercial or Rnidentlal.

' $20.00

~ Tankll ~- It

16 Sesalons For

Pol1able Toilets Rented.

Dalty, wwidy &amp; monthly rental...-. ·

. :.

Op4ln 1:00 10 3:00
4:30 lo 10:CJO P.ll.
·
Ownets: , . . &amp; Dlsne '
llendrlctcs

I

i

Phone: 11...a2·2487

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
'
Ulnaatone, Sand, Grlftl, Coal&amp; Water
WE HAVE A· l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

Earn up to $1,000 weekly stuffing

001Velopes al home. Start now. No
given to someone in PI Pleasanl expe(lence. Free supploes. •nlor·
area Please call 304-965-1020 or manon. No obl•gation. Send self
= -3-15-8380 Willi any •nforma· addreSSed Stamped &lt;lnVOIOpe 10
Expoess Dept 36, 100 East
70
Sale
=·~,: .fx•: ~~·t• 14&amp;-345,

POMEROY, OHIO

For .

hom e. Be your boss .
No
Free
info. Noexperience.
obligation. Send

&amp; Ellen· su~~·t
· 6 14' 446 · s.1
to Prestige Unit •L. P.o.
,
Help Would Be Much Box 195609, Winrer Sprmgs. Fl
App'ecialed l
•
32719

MDIIII

TANIItl.
' 1~ Sessions

Ind.

Assoc iate In Accoonling_.. BUsi.
ness AdministJalion Or Adminialrative· Se&lt;:rerary Preferred.· Prali·
cient With PC And Calculator.

Residential I. Commercial

(6141 992·2364

.

ACCOUNTING

Wednesday, Thursday,
Sa1urday, 1699 McCor tnside, Be_, 160 I

9 :30 A.M.

·5:00 P.M.

Fu ll or parr llm~ posrl.lf]n~ -:::~;U.,
able P liny Trut:k Stop. 304-937-·

2456 or 304-937·2766.
Ful lime baby ~""' for • 112 year
in my
area home. days and eve11ings .
E•perianca a must. prlter a ma-·

old arxt 2 month old,

Racno:

ture ......,, caR 614-949·2512 for'
a('

ioteMew.

•

Need 5 People To Sell Avon,:
GU..uG-3358.
.
••

:rNimo.

.

.

cessing Mongage Retunds·, Own.

Howard Excavatin
. Trvckl,.g ..
umastone

Hou10. Call (909) 715·2:100, Ext•
c:u~,;aiD~ .. Hou~Ol~ kl::-35:-1-:
, (2:-4-'-Hou--'rs)'. _ _ _ _;
Pleasant area bustness ae- '

ce(Hino appl ications tor luJI bme:
front desk ~try tevet offtce posi-.
tion
varied tler1ca1 re- •
Oual•fied apphcants:

Bulldozing and
Bac:ldloe

.. il'lcluded.•.

pleasatlt

Sentlce8

ttcuesn.alllld
OPf !l
SUNDAY I 5

For Frienda. Companions Or

992·74AI.

To $900 W.ekfy /Polential Pro-:

,....1.......... .

... .................
"•'

Meet Others From Tri-State Area

Giveaway

FREE ESTIMATEs

!'our .tan Stop~ Shop

13-soo:J. '

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. Coins,
Silver, Gold, Diamonds, All Old
Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc.
f.4 .T.S. Coin St1op, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis. 814-44&amp;-2842.

No Experience Necessary! SSOO•

l'tlti .......... ..

6 cyt:, aulo. trans.

SIDE

•••na.una••
........ .

D's Auto Parts. Buying sal·

~age vehicles. Selling paris. ~-

.Syste ms, And Payroll Tax Regu -

=$25.00

PAlIIIII&amp;

.

Gutters and Downspouts

Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone
.required. .
(619) 645 8Q4

773-5785 0. 304-713-5447.,
"go . Wanted to Buy

Knowteage Of LOTUS 123, Word

SUMEI-&amp;ES

Serv-U

l•cen!led

Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs

Uve Psychics
1 on 1
1-90();255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.

.32124 Happy HOllow Rd.
Middlepolt. OlliO ..Sieo
Danny &amp; P;iggy llricldall

serv1ce.

Imprinting
•Shirts -Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms

'1!/e will worl&lt; within your budget
Pit. '173-9173
·
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomero Street
Mason, wv

H&amp;H

au ctton

1166,0hi o &amp; West V1rgima, 304 -

IIIIDOftll ad
COIIftiCftll

J,o• "'00 Large Of""
II It

Auctlon Compan~.

Used furniture · antiques. one
p1ece or compler&amp; estares, also
do appraisals, Osby Manm, 614·

·Pirsqnals

(No

• Weklng Supplies olndU&amp;Irial Gases • Machine Shop
Se .
S
Sales
MCe8 • teet
&amp; Fabrication• Repair Welding
• AlumlnumfStaintesa • Toot Dressing.• omameniaJ
S
S
tepa . lairs, Railings, Patio Fumitum, Fireplace
items. Plantei' hange
" rs, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

LINDA'S.

~s99s

614-992·7643

/VteMM 1"1 """~
A uu"'
·""~rized A"..
""" o·IStributor

614-742-2193 ~·

$3995

)4ew Homes • Vlnv! Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddHions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

., .

4 Dr.• auto. trans., air cond.

92 CHEV. S10 414 PICKUP .....-$9900 89 DODGE SPIRIT_.......... ..

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

r--·- -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - Af, L J

Pearson

full rime aucuoneer, complete

L&amp;E
ADYilftSING
THE HAT UJI

~111

&lt;h I ;Snl!t

.,

:ontc"e

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

,, " U&amp;

Rick

;===============~ ;~~~0~W~Ith;~P~h~otos. Blue Col·

U1111Stone • Gravel
Dlrt•Send
985 4422
Chester, Ohio

· TII·STAn SEWER &amp;
DRAIN a FIJING

· ' CIWckltOulll - -

,

wToo sm.tt

Public Sale
and Auction

Mt Allo Auction. Every Friday
·. 7pm. Evory Saturday som .A1 2-33
. ·crossroads· . Groceries, new
merehandise. Ed Frazie.- 930

7

Members

DUMP TRUCK ; .
. SERVICE

,~:;;;;;;;;$~·

~.

A

IPoin your a&amp;sslfled

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING.

'f:-·=iDO;i;wi,.iuiiiiiDI;.r:~. Plln~:= .

' ,'3 mi,.. nor111 or Chllllr ·
' .•
.oil RL 7· •

1993 IUICI LEStiiE ..........................- - - - · ·..•••••••..···-·$11;995
1993 BUICK 'EIAL ••~...................,............:.:.~............................ $7995
1995 OLDS CIEU Only 1.000 mnea..............~.......................""~...... $13,995
1992 .C HM COISICI.~•••••••~······...............:.:•••••~••••~~......:.••••;~~itS995
'
1994 CADILLAC
1991 IUICI CENTUIJ .......................;••,...,;............_._..,,........;.............~ ..,,,

the Number,of players
949-2044 or 949-2038

80

14-992-4025

Divorced, Single Or Wi~owed?

''

Md-1111)
··Shrubbery

• '. Gutter c...n1
119
.
'
;;
Painting

· :

88 CHEV. CELEIRITY ~-·--$2995

4 Dr., 4 cyi., auto. Iran$.

•Molfllll (BIIUIF"..

Downspouts

'

Your Cltofe•

91 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN ·-$1,995

•'IIW 'lltmll*t8

•

with 21 players or more
Raises $50.00 ea.
week. Pay according'to

I.IRUII

..•Set., Mln:h 30, ...,.

AS
LOW
AS

Sun. Nights
LuckY Ball $300.00

'''111'1

·' :AIIo
some paints and
•
brvahM.

'995 Pontiac &amp;rand Prix

·$5495

' . ROOFING
'
· .: NEW-REPAIR
GutterS

Greenware Salel
. 25-50%0ffl

1995 Buick Regal

Air cond,, 5 s.,.ed, long bed )Nith
liner, PS &amp; PB, stereolcassJtte.

------·-. . . _

" •

.

1'14)112 . ..
Hol1e a Tack~

;. : CE_UIIICS
: : . AID ttm

1995 Olds ·Cutlass Supre••

UNGERXLT

· 614-367-oJOJ
.• Mil

.

5 apeed, 2 door, cassette, air,

1991 FORD

,..,..~

.

.

· If It significant number of households are interested, the County may include this
program in the FY '96 Round 8 CHIP application now being prepared. · ·
·

P.O. Box538
SyraCuse. OlllO 45779

; Howard L Wrltalel

If your household would be interested in participating in this program, please call the
Meigs CHIP office' at 992-7908 ..,. Monday thru Friday :.. 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. -Jean

Legion #602
·. Bingo

30381 Roy JQnea Rd.,

J:·IIII-~CceiiOrfel
• I

Racine American

LOIEOAIF•IM

f.l &amp;.lltar~ *79 &amp;lp

The Homebuyer · Assistance program would provide down payment/closing cost
assis.tance to Low/Moderate Income Households in Meigs County. This would enable
. the house~olds to purctlase approved homes in Meigs County.
··

.

•L.eseona

Plno; D,...
&amp;hi..

Patio Sale F11 5th &amp; Set 6th. 116 Pieasan t St. Baby Htma, infellt
bey clothes. gi~ clotnes 3-12. quilt
matefial, housenol(j ,things. worn.
.,. clolhing. nintondo tapes.

J &amp;

'CWBV.I.P

985-4473

•

etn fwerlle, GaQipoi5.

DATING SERVICE

•

'

'?- Rt 2 to 87. •miles on l.he left

Rain daiS Apri &amp;th.

Plck-tpllsa.lled

005

•New Homes
·~a rages
•Complete·
Rem~ellng
Stop &amp; Comf*re
FREE ESnMATES

Serv-U

· &amp; Vicinity
3-Family yard sale. April Slh !laJn.

Smolh Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·

ANNOUNCEM ENTS

101111 BISSELL
CONSTIUCIIOII

~.

.. .
. . ·t·

llt\PPY

Frtie &amp;tlmstea

$2.99·per mlri. Musl be

. . . . . 1.

w/eoapoo

Cheshire, Oh
(614) 367-11266

Pt. Pleasant

'

Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,

flEE

20 Years Experience * Insured

Ext. 361!5

( ' ·/. .... ,

Mon.-Sat. 1G-6

=

Owner: Ronnie Jones

.r .

~~ -

· &amp; Stump Grinding

' .. ltZ-4401

1-900-na-o1oo

.. ~ ......r'

lnaUI'ti'a·.. ·E.... Iwlcld

Clll WafM Nill

HorO!K:Ope.

Pomeroy, Ohio
..-'

Top, Trim, Removal

Moving sale, 927 Brownell Ave ..
Middleport. April 4,5, Thursday,

==::::::::::::==~f~ Clean late Medel Cars Or

448 lt11

Sld'N!, Rooftnil, Pat!oi .
R•••on•l~

line. AnaiK:e·Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Poinl
Spreads, Daily

'

-308 East Meln Street' '

n,m:aih"lll ·~
Room ~ddllkN•

· FANS ·
•
Let your fingera do the
· walking to the sport&amp;

.

Don Tate Motors, Inc.
·wood on a projeCt whlla Sher·
w Hart and har son, Randy,
lbok on. Bottom, Camille Bolin
and her iwo sons, Cameron
· and Clay, participate in anoth·
er math/sciance projeCt.

pazza
Monday lhroup Wednesday ·
I

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Kitchen .......

614-992-3470

Dresses
Levi's
ttppi'-IH &amp; IIIIIY .....

lie/nod '""II

Limestone, ·
Bravel, Sand,
Top Soil, FIJI Dirt

.. SAVE-A-LOT .
WILL
BE CLOSED
.
EASTER SUNDAY

' 614·949-2012
TDD 1·800·750~750

.

"-...,..•

Toll ,._ 1-11J0.172.5167

' . 5ElYKE '

HAULING

902-5535

•t.oo o~ any• X-large 18"

lllllth IM;.ta A.....1o 1»c1r It up
Serving S.E. Ohio It WNt VIrginia

NEFf

WICKS·

..

•Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Pro111

.Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling ·

Accepting Applicatians for • IIICI two

•Roofing

IWVtt0212

Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771

Discovery
Project .

•Siding

FNe EttlmMee

IENN

Car, furniture, clothes, mower,
IDOla, etc.

Friday, lola ot misc .• 9:00·?. rain.

614 446 4462

l

Garage saJe. April s-e. g...,.Spm,
4 mitea ..., o1 Rocit&gt;e 011 SR 12• •

•Rei'I)OifellolO .

.

Utlllll!ls
idl K1nd1 of [Gttl• V/ork

-

992-3838
. '
~..

',•.

'

...

,

lhine.

Sliver Bridg e Plaza

Own•r: Rannie Jon••
367-4)286 -; 1-800-150-3359
•

•New Hom.•
•Additions
•NewGar9.B

Asbab~u~ ·s

20 Yean Exp~nte . • lnaiCI'fd

. Equal Housing Opportunity

ELMWOOD TERRACE APARTMENTS

,

N Mon,-Fri;·N s... a IIUn. ·Locelld CCII'MI' o1
81. Rt. 14Ut
114-1112-111114.

JONES'. . TREE SERVICE.·
Top,' Trim,
Removal
-·

c-..~aRtmoc~e~lna

Middleport, Ohio
(Special Prlc:e on Aluminum Cans
from Marett 1 thru 28)
. Bring In minimum of 50 lbe. of IIIUmlnum eMS to
reaJ•Isl tor BuM Colt n+wlo ~~~~ -ay.
or.wtng will be held on Msrcll2tth.

10-yvu. .

992·2825

MillY'S ,:,~~,,
RECYCLING CEITER ._,,,

SIIITII'S
CONmUC1101

503 MIU Sb...

a '-idwiiiA d eo11!1 Wlllnut IIICI ceder Hnsci
blanlllt e11eet Yllued It SliGO to Ill giVWi...,
illlirch ..... Til. Co. Recycling open 7 deys a week

.

·t106N. 2ncl ~ve:, Middleport

•"'t

I

wtn

'

Community Room, Management,

614-992-6419
TOO 1-800-75D-0750

.

. o.ya during the Mouth of Mer~h
Do·yow f*t far our -11-•LBring us yaur
llunl. c-. IIICI Oltw ,.,ycJitlu 111C1 retillsl to

Your favorite artist
·on Tape or. CD.

ofJurora.
J~4ry drewlno will tall•
pMoe et ttw MaiO• County
ao.rd o1 Etectlona loc.lled

·~\\1

Amounces Customer Appreciation

ladle lllaeli Dealer

Juror• will be publicly

WADIS EDGE APIIIMEITS.

· Maintenance Provided.

. , _ • .,_.IIIICI

N.wAtl......

Public Notice

~

m.lly Sentinel• Page 9

'

�•

•

'

}

•

•

•

'

''

(

,.

•

•

Frld8y, April I, 1 -

: :t10 Help Wlllled
~ )trostal &amp; Gov't Jobs S21 IHr

•
~ ~elila , No E•p. WiU Train. For
' -.lppl
1~ 3040. -

And"""

,
PSYCHOLOGISTS
' }olow Htdflg licensed Ph.D. Pay·
• &amp;f'lologlsts &amp; Uaater Level Clini: &lt;liln• In Galtipolis &amp; VicinitY For
• ,._reaulc Population, L.., SVtlf.
•lfiig h Sat1afactian, Select Houra,
• . ~ Resume To: CC, 18114 lolecl: irjl. Suito 106, Medno, OH 44258.

: flOcoptioilist with typing comput·
• )r-onented skib and booki&lt;Mping, pick up application at Royal
Oak RosorL :J:l.l29 Flo- Rd.,
Racine, 614-992.f!488.

Ell22DO.

center of down~ Mlddlopor~
2!iOO sq. fl, 11+9112·245.

Small One Man Praso~r• Wa•h·
lnV Buointoo, Up And Growing,
Fully Equipped, NMit Arvl AI, Be
Your OWn . Ban &amp; Make You r
Own Houro, can Pay For hsoll In

On. S..10n, Great lnveatmentl

Red Hot Fat loss Product, Oyna-

81+3117-7755.

mJc Marketing Plan, lose Weight
&amp; Make Money ! 614-..41-0167 .

230

Sales Par10n Commiuion

AoMft

With leads Bene11ts, Apply At
frenc h City Prest, .. 23 Second
Avel'l.le, GalipoDa.

Professional
Services

Paved Road, S32,ooo- 080. t.tobilt Home Can Be Sold Seperately, But Mu11 8• Moved for
$17,000 Firm, No land Conuac:t
Serious tnqu it1es Ontw- Please,
81+25e-83G1 LeaYII Me..age. .

Two Upowro Apartments: 1 Furni ahad. 1 Unlurnlahed, Private

18112 10110 Oakwood 2 Bedroom
2 F~ l Belho, Groot Startet Homo l Entra~, No Pets, Aefeterut
located Rt.2 WI/, 614·256-6980 Depoti1 Roquired, 81...__
,_.,_,.
Allsr SP.M.
Fum """"'
450
Bank Rapoa. On!)' 4 leh. s;11
In"""""''~&lt; 304-755-7191 .

PtraOnal lawn care at Sun Crest
Cemetery. Your lo~ed anes de-

Nrve apedal anenlion. Call et•·
9112·7552altor8pm lot more W&gt;lo.

Price Bust&amp;rl. New 14x70. 2 or
3br. Only 1995 . I 195/moro!h.
Free dtl ivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes, Niuo WV. 304755-511115.
New Bank Repos Only 3 Lefc!
304-7311-7295.

essary, Serious Jnqutriea Only,

614-&lt;IAS-2388, ~For Cl'ri~

1 ,000 Gallon Plaollc Tank Only
Uoed FDI Wow 1300; Flborgtosa
To- Wllh ~~To ~ft Standard e· Truck Bod 1100, 15
Minu!M t;rom Gollpollt, 81 +379:IIIOt.

1Me

Dogo&amp;C.OI
Sohnau•or pupplu, mlnlatllras,
Champion Grand Site: aloo Poodos, flltlo 1oyl I ttiOU:f4o!MC,

I

RoomS

Rooms for rent • week or monf'l.
Starting at $120hno. Gallia Hotol.
81 ... 411H80.
Sleeping rooma w ith c:ooking.
Also trailer space on river. All
hook-up•. Can after 2:00 p.m.•

30&lt;-773--5651, -

t21BO TraiiOt Frame, 614·386-

1100
·
15 Inch FaPagatel Sp•ktlfl &amp;

Box $150; 400 Won Hollhot
Amp. With RCA Cablu, UO :
Sherwood CD Player $1 SO ;
Winchester 1:0 Ga. 1300
Defender Model I Shot, 1150 :
WinChaater 12 Ga. 370 Modal .
Singlesho~

SilO, 614-379-211311.

570

SoutheasUtrn Ohio. Lic:el'lled SoFiaJ Worker And Gra_duate From
An Accredilad Social Work Pro·
gram Required; MRIOO Ex~ri~
ence Preferred And Knowledge

01 Medicaid ICFIMR Regulltlono
Helptut. Travel Requ 1r~ •• Mu11
Have A Valid Driver's licenN

And

- Selary:
$22 -25,000 IY801. E•collont a-

pay-on
_.....,_
Cal
6111.

moka low~

pilno,

18 Ft. 11 Ft. Aatbed Tilt Tralltt.
18Ft. Car 'Hauling Trailer 1700 .
Etld\ 614 401111575.

1-800-l!ea-

FARr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

wv.

P.O. Bo• 604 , Jackson,

OH

. 1158.40 ; ATTN': c::;:· ll~·:~;,.:::
Resumes Must Be Post
By ; 4/1 8/96. Equal Opportunity

Employ.,..

Social Workets, Now Hiring t23 I
Hr • Benerits, On The Job T111ift.
1ng To l\pply In Your ArN. 1-1100·
339-6150.
.

r~ERCHANDISE

. ..__Of_

- " " ...... txltlr, retiglon,

origin. or any -.aon to
mal&lt;e wry IUoh pnolorance,

lin1itallonDt-."
lhll neu IJMIPit wll nol·
le IOWiingtv aocopt
-lllorreol8118te
whlci11S In violation altho law.
Our readers are hefoby
~~·ned that al d•ue•Y'
aciY8t'lla8d in tNI new&amp;rer:w!'f

. Free Pro ..u·am, 9-S, Top Wage, 1•
.....,

garage with aparrment, orl"ltr

buildings, Home National Bank,
Radre, 011. 81+1M9-2210.

12one,home• in Middleport.thelive in
son To Serve As A Part-limo o;, ===-------br The
new

Lillian E. Jot"'Et6
ing A Creati11e.
Energetic And Dependable Per-

eolect 2 ran1all off
olher,
$.«1,000 obo. ean Ron Cuci. 614092·2290.

rector

lbedfoom, in Flalrock,

Museum.

roof,

new porch, neW hot water tank.

Electric Craftmatic Fuii"Sae Bed,

Your support wiU be appreciated.
Dale V WOOd, Independent DiaL
Home Care Product•. fo 1 a free

See. 304-578-2152.

Rarlc:t\ 1 Ba. , Garage,

to school.

Syracuse. 24d0 block garage,

675-69~1 .

.

uo - We can help. 304-762·

2544.
General Maintenance. Painting,
Yard Work Wi ndows Washed
G~uers Cleaned Light Hauling.
Commerical, Residential, Steve:
George-s PortatMe Sawmill, don•t
haul ~' Jogs to the mil just call

Nice home in Racine, large buikf..
i ng will house small business.

304·67!&gt;1957

also a one car garage, fenced
rard, ou1 ot llood area , asking

Mo'w La wns &amp; Tri m . Schedul!
Now For SUmmoti61+-

$47,00061+1149-2804.

Poin1 P1easan1 area lawn Servees available lhrough T &amp; S Lawn
Services. Call Srwe ar 304·875--

Older chest freezer. works good,
150. tyr old coal wood Durning

2br., Hartlord, f'l:l PGII. 304-882-

stove, glasa fronr, wl2·3tans
&lt;MI, $500 DBD. 304-~7..

2016 aller 4pm.

or.

Newly de_corated 2.b edroom,
basement. References. Deposit.
No pets. 304-675-5162.

PICKENS FURNITUIE
New/Used
304-a75-14!i0

58 Hayrakt: Exoel-

18nt Condition. StSOO. IU-379·

2818

Two bedroom hOme in Pomerb;.

Save Big On Ca1pet &amp; Vi nyl In
Soock 16.00 Cash ICa"y Mollohan Carpftl. R•7N. 614- -4-46 ·

HUD approved, 1300 will\ dopo~~
no pe1s, wm seU on comract. 614·

698-n...

7-.

Two bedroom house, carpeted:

ni~ and clean, deposil required,

~·1 171 .

VIRA fURNITURE
614-&lt;14&amp;-3158

Quallly Houoehold Furrillre And
Ajlpiiancas. Groot Dealt On
Cash And Garry! REf!IT-2-0WN
And ~ NIIJ Mlilable.

Two story duplex . 3bedrooms, 1 ·
.112bathi, t350 plus , deposit.
Homes1ead Really, Broker. 304·

Mo. Depos it &amp; Reference Re·

440.

~partmenls

Free Delivery W'l!hin 25 Miles.

520

Sporting
Goods

992-2218.

2 - m aparlmont In Pomeroy,
no fJOIJ. 61 +992-5858..

7 Anglc:roas C:owt\ springh·~g with

$300, Sell For $100, 614·523·
8'196.

second call (vaccinated) . 304·
67S.Si28ahot Bpm.

Wa·

ATHENS liVESTOCK SALES
Saturday, April t3th, 1. P.M.
Spring Special, AI Broetit F Calf &amp;Ue, Cattle Being Accepied

Rehigeraton, Stoves. Washers
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
Ana Gauranteedl $100 And Up,

3168.

Reloading &amp; Fishing SupP.Iies.
L•ve- Bait &amp; l icenae. Crawford' a,

Ton 11.595; 4- Ton St ,695; Prices
Above lnch~de Normal lnstalla·
tfon. full 5 Year Wauanty, Free

Standing - · moslly
742"2148 SYefings.

p;'nO_ 614·

.4

•7

I ldl.

•"'*"

•:BARNEY

re110ra11on. $11 ,900, 8U·882·

\.,_; .-

.•

YOU DO ALL TH' WASHIN"
:; AN' liON IN', toOKIN' AN'

1977 Ha~.,. Davidson. 380 miles
on complew r1110tallon, $1 t ,900,
11+1192-3878

,

46

BLEil YDf!1

66'

PAIISDN

PLOWIN' PM'

., TAKIN' CARE
• OF YORE
· YOUNG·UNS--

1NO Suzuki GS750L, now bat-

Soutb
2•
3. .

..

·'

1991 Kawaaaki EX 500 Street

tUU3 Yamaha 414 Kodiak 4·
-or.
120 miles. »H75-a858
aftoiSj)ln. ·

•AKQ743

l

AA K Q J 9

I

West

North
2•
3•

I'Ua
Pus
Pus . 5•
PUI PUI

Eu&amp;

Pua
Pus
Pass
Pass

i

LimouainttiCharolail bull, 15mos'

Dfd. 8501bl. $501). 304·882-242i·

IT W..S CJ:JI-.£ TO

[ HD'!f.BY

Parlor manoa Tooted, blado .An·
guo -""! bulltL llrfl ·.1, _ .
ing +25. milk +12, yHt!ing·..oo.

f!\Y f..'trulrtct-1

~D'OO\T

rK

TW-.T~

-.a75-82&lt;18 . .

€/Ia\ mD

vru .foft£.

:t:!m!l •

cw.l~ME:"

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

'«&lt;~TOP

11 Woe lew.!
22 l'ra II • ·
24Poot..,

S Alex Haley

38 Palalon

Hc.lle=

boolt

:;:::- -

·=·

IMIJIJ. ,_.
21111.8triep '
31 Hid tuneli .

•

33 APL-- '
38 Ale IIIID"n :

. ,_

37 H. Cllliel'l:

--

l1lllltM

"'*·

.·=:..=:
.,_
--lch '
... Tn~eot

52-~ ­

QAc!NieBIIIn

CELEBRITY CIPHER
,

by Luis Campoe

.

'H

p

PW ,.

THZZTV

z.s y

SPA A

-o s v

H N

r~v

p

NYRAHAX

zsy

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In spite of
QOod at heart: - Anne Frank.

.....
.....

-d·

O Roorrongo

lttlors of
four ocramblod
low to form fovr -.Ia.

I
I I I I 1~
H.A p

sI

R

:-rs--..E
·I I_R-ro---.s
I, I~~-,.:,,_..

c u

I

16 1· I 0

you

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f1lling In the missing words
develop from step No, 3 below.

PRINT NUMBfREO lETTERS IN

.

SCIAMUTS ANSWIIS

675-4306.

Scwlnrs You'll Find In 11le

. .Ciossl(ltd Sec11on.

TRArj SPORTATIOtJ

15KW, 20KW, 25KW, 1 Used 3

Scro/{-.Fiown- Putty- Lounge- NOT LOSE
Gramps believes thai life is like tennis. The player ·
who serves well, usually does NOT LOSE.

I FRIDAY

Ton Rheem Heat Pump, 1· 800·

287·8308, 610-446-6308, 1-800291-11098.

don, 1800 OBO: 7H Old! Omoge,
nlce car, $500 080; 814 -992·

way •efrigerator, excellent condi·

Chester. 614-985-3406.

2146.
Baby bed,

School.

Chlldcare M·F 6am-5:30pm Ago&gt;
2-K Young School Age During

Su,;mer. 3 Days per Week Mini·

car seat.

swing. srroll-'

er, &amp; wallcer. 304-875--0548.

·

Boots By Redwing , Chippewa,

Tony lama. Guaranteed Lowest
Prices At Shoe Cole, Gailipob.

A~TRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Matchmaker..can help YCI~ understand
Wltat to ilo tQ !nake the relationship wotk . .
Mall $2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this news- ·
paper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
· Station, New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156.
.
' TAUAUS ·CAprll ~ 20) In Important
~rear dewloP,ments today, do not malce
· hasty judgments. Your initial irnpraaslor•
might be biased, driving you o11 course.

lllr.....- -.......-

Saturday, April 8, j 998
EleCtric

Scooters

And

W.heefchaira, Ntw /Used, Van 1
Car lih ln111811ed, Stalrglldoa, Uh
Chaira••CIII FOr Brochure, 61•·

-7283.

If you

•lrlve to

lmJ!!QVe your job petfor·
at;Md, you may dis·
that ~ p!Ovlde you

-maitce In the 'year

·covar - wllli' ~you ,_thought were
pQIIiblt. .

~

.

4flll8 (llarch 21·Aprll11) Tott.y, you
miGht hava to ell~ .,_..n dolng
IOnlllhjng lor tile illke Ill appeannce
M:l doli1g samat111tog II* oiTatl you pet'·
aonal bllllflll. Trying to patch 11&gt; a bro-

. kan romance? The Altro·Graph

••

assoclating..wHh people wtfl1se goals are
not in harmony With yours. Rewards may
not materialize Wyou waste lime wilh lhe
wrong people.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24.flov. 22) Make it a
point to dquble-(;heci&lt; an of the faCts and
figures in your commercial dealings
today. Indifference or carelessness .could
dee&lt;ease your profits.
GEIIIHI (May 21.June 20) Your financial · SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21).Today,
· eltualion _could be fragile and -uncertain tt couid prqve unwise to reveal business
today. Take time to deliberate and dom secrelsJo anyooe not dlr~ly involved
be afraid to ask questionS.
will! your company. This information may
·
CANCER (June 2hluly U).lnstead of railch your competitors.
· concerning yourself w"h' probl!'fflB you · CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 11) Even
think "light arise in the lutura, .handle though you canl do anything about h at
~hat Is ne,uessary for today. let the the moll)eni, lake lime to ponder an
luiure take care· of ilaell.
appropriate way to mend a relationship
LEO (~ly 23·Aug. 22) Try to be. frank that is on tti last legs.
and for'lhright today with persons who ' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·F•I!· 1II Think
depend on you to convey conetruc:live befo(e yo~ ape~ today becauee If you
critic:lam. Do riot pretend to have knowt· put your foot In your mouth, you might
edge you don1 pOsleia.
. haw trouble getting and the lilua·
YIIIGD (ollUSi. 23-lept, 22) A rniaunder· lion wll Only g a t -·
standing with a friend that baa ca11111td PIICU (FaiL _, Match 20) V:ou wll be
you mental angulall won~t be rnotvec:t ~today if you dHirnphaalza mater·
until you 1111 yourull fOrgive and forget. lal de8trel and ahlft your IOC!II to the
Try not to mope. , ·
prtceltal lntangtblee that Involvement

out:

UliRA (s.pt,

n-oct: 23) Today, avoid

wfth ftlandl can provide.
,.- !

I

•'
1

' \

I

THESE SQUARES

TO GET I'.NSWEI

110\fE OUT OF

' ,

•

'

T Y D Y

GVUTA.'

$250; 3 Used Elec-tric Furnac:ee

SAND IE'S DAYCAAE · ' IOIIOn·
able rates, references, playroom.
home environment, T~xas Rd.,

XYA

~ UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS

OUR l«tc-ER AWl&gt;
I&amp;NORE ME AND...

• I

GUHZHAX

HA

ZVUVNP.
·.'
f :
every1hing I sliM believe thai pocple are reaiy
.
.~

WVZSVU

$

size l, c:oat $300. asking S150.

OYAKHT

p.

vJ

zv

TYZZYU

I 15

'\.onllill" prom &lt;hll, ..... lui ajolr1,

·

Celebrity Cipher t:ryptogramt. are created Jygm QI.IO!aliOnl ~ llmOUI ~ put ltld .,_,. ·
Eactllener In the cipher slandl for another, Todly't "*-: I( .... C

L-..J.........J........J.L-...L
. ......J..--'-

HE'LL. ~Bl..'( PEC.\DE
'I'I'\ NOT GCIOC&gt; ENOU(.II

:

SJ=, .

·1

BIG NATE

.

47 lolll:w aMtm
lrldllo• .

Common sense is havln11
_ . . .
the knack of seeing things as
. - - - - - - - - - . they are and doing things a::;
AL R 0
they • • - • • • be done.

THIS IN~TN-11'!

Accessories

.

:1:..~
.
1 •• '

r-.

eot.rrm..~

•

.

31Dtdn'1..- :
40A'*'- .

3

OW~Jbf/'C.f..

·,

Auto Parts &amp;

E.VER.Y ~ OF

HA.N(. ClUT WITH
HII'\ A~t"'DRE! HE'LL

nace, 160,000 BTU's, Upflo•

........

111W-- ';
17 , ... ot

.~

3S U,...alaall

"Why not cash the ace atid king of
hearts first, before taking a ruff? That •
way you learn how the suit is breaking.
When it I~ 4·3, you can draw trumps
and claim.'~
A. P. Herbert, the former British au·
thor and politician, claimed that breakfast time is the critical period in matri·
.mony. Make of that what you will.

TO

Fum808, 70,000 BTU's, Completa.
$250: 1 Used Johnaon Gaa Fur·

i

1.'l'obet:c o ciMw
2 Plalntltl
3 Complent

118m
32 - St. uurent
33 Urban arM
34 SpanloiiiiUnl

wasn't-imp~.

Merchandise

cOiomln Down Flow Gat

DOWN.

30 CI&lt;Hlkroom ,

What is the critical period in matri·
mony? One person's opinion is given
at -the end. '
In ·today's deal, the declarer reached
the critical moment and went wrong. ·
But as is often the case, if be had tak·
en the correct preliminary steps, he
wouldn't have had to guess.
After opening with a sQ-ong two-bid
and receiving a positive response from
his wife and partner, South wasn't going to slay out of a slam.
It was difficult for West to fipd the
killing spade lead. Instead, he started
with the diamond jack., Aller covering
with dummy's queen and ntfflng away
· East's ace, declarer ruffed a low heart .
in the dummy and cashed the diamond
king for a spade discard. But how
should South continue? Should he
draw trumps, hoping for a 4·3 heart
split? Or should he orgauize a second
heart ruff iri the dummy, which re·
quires finding clubs 3·2?
Knowing that a 5·2 heart break is 31
percent whereas !14·1 ·club split is only
28 percent, South entered band with a
trump and·ruffed another heart in tlie
dummy. However, when Easl showed
up with four clubs, South had lost
trump control and finished three
down.
South pointed out thai he had fol lowed the percentages, but his wife

540 Miscellaneous

.

10 Drunlllnl

,r,uthQf Clllfoll

-~.· 27 --Ia
~n
laboncl

as 3

Antiques

304-875-88llll.

:&amp;•by

By Phillip Alder

14,1100. 304-875-ee75. · .
Bille, New Rear Tiro And Banery,
t811 4 Mu-.g GT, Red, 5 Speed, · 1,500 Miles, $1 ,800, 614·245·
1r Tire&amp;, Premium. Sound Sys- 0319·
11m Wilh CD ICoiMIIa, 814·3811·
19113 300 Honda 4U, V.G.C.
11445.
$4,ooo Firm, 614-387-75n.

760

S7~ttme

111'1110fthe
_ ..... out
20 Clmbrlclge

Find out first

Z24

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprisea,
Jadwin, Olio. t-800-537-9528.

sa~·auuntiO

Opening leacl: • J

m

1U95 Cadillac Saville SLS Dia·
mond White 12,000 Milas, Eloet·
lent·Condition, Ahor 5 PM. 811-11585.

sa A1gar11roa

Vulnerable: Neither

MotorcycleS
1977 H.D.. 380 rri1eo. on i:omplete

,.,, , mag .wheels, c~rburetors
·T·: han been jetted.out, runs great!

convtrrlble, red,
black top, .auto, exc. cond.,

eulllx
11 M·gnet

Dealer: South

740 .

tt91 Pontiac Flreblrd v-a,
Topo, l•oded, Alorm, 44,000 1750, 614-367-03l!3.
111111, lt,OOO, Neg. 814-3'19- 1985 Horma Retiel S1 .~so. 814·
2514.
. 448·22118.
19.. Buick Rogal Sporty Co;,
Honda 125, 4 tra1, 2w0 4·
19.. S·10 Pick-Up. JUDO S-10
$1,500. :JIW-875-11M1 .
Pido·Up, Tredol Welcome, Cook
- . . &amp;1+4*1)103.
1887 Hondl •·-ler 250, good
cond.• 11,800. 1988 Kawaaakl •·
11182 Lincoln C011ti- leathtt ' """""220; good oond., 11.800.
Moon Roof KO)'Itlo Entry 614· 304-458-1
or 30+458-1105.
441.0738.
1&amp;eo' Yamaha Warrior 350, axe .
~or Salo:tll93 Ford Tempo GL.
cond., many e•oras, $2,000. 304L~. 38,000 mi .. AMIFM cao7-73-5113.
oone. Callalttt 2:00. 61&lt;·2•5·
5321
19111 Harley. Davidson 1200 CC
Soortlter 7,000 Milts, Lille New,
1114 'Muit•na, GT la.zer, rt~-~ Blue
$7,800, 814·446·9355 Altl!l'
auto, loadad, 12,000ml. 19SII .4P.U.
•·

Cavalier

M N8utl c11 rope

23

...

Availlblt, 814-5U2·2322, 814·
898-3531 .
\t

Buy or sell. Riyerine An1iques,
1,12-4 E. Main Slieet, on~- 12•,
Pomeroy. Hout~ : M .T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 4:00 p.m., Sundar 1:00 10
6:00 p,m. 614-9112-25211.

1 Used

Eut
•A 5
•J t 2
tA 7 4 3
678

Starting 4- P.M. Friday. All- Con~
signmen11 Welcome, TrL!Cking

_-..
___f\_·wv_.______. 550
1
530

terSpm&amp;

3878.

1'8, PW, PS, PU, POL, oir,

IO:J.:-and

!!r::&gt;

14
1s eomp.aa..

ICII•

West
•11;1032
•10 •• 5
•J -1 088

tlt2 CheVy A1iro Conversion
Van, 41,000 miles, 4.3 V-5, auto.
loadod, 4 COf1llin -~~I bench,
,.., lit...
goraga814-t&lt;48-2481
"""· must -af·
aliling
110,100,

Riding Lawn Mower. Weed Eater,
Tll1or, 61&lt;~702.
Black Anguo lfOdlr calves, heif·
SQII And .2 Mald!ing Chair&amp;, Col· ers. bulla, S!Hrs, 814·U85-4117
or Glean And Gold, Very Good · or 61..-s-4120.
~Condi:.::.::::tion:::::.·.:.6.:..1':.:':.:'.:.1-08=..:1::3·---l co;;?led steers lot sale, hanging
SPRING SPECIAL : Central Air weigtC. $1.00 lb., 61+742·2274.
Conditioners 2 Ton S1, 1D5; 2 112 Four Hereford IWD rear old red
Ton St ,295: 3 Ton lt ,395: 3 112 helterual81+985-3805.

Eldmatea, 1·800-29!-IIOUI: 614·
446 6308.

Springfield 30 cal. 1o1 1• e~J'; cond.,
ltade tor 1911, 45 cal. 304-875·

tor Rent
1 and t ballroom aponmonts. furnished and untumlsh~ . security
depoSit required, no pets, 814·

O~an&lt;ID, '4 Hotel NightS Near Dioney, Can Use A~ytime, Value

W!IIJe!iver. 61&lt;-11611-64&lt;1 .

Sofas, Lovesea.ll. Chairs, Raclin-+ng Sota With Malching Rocker 1
Recliner Corbin &amp; Snyder 814-

LlYHIOCk

Hogan grafoto shahs drivw and 3
&amp; 5woodl, 814-9112·6104.

Pine Headboard Oueon Size
tet8ed$100,614-44H081.

8' truck camper. 11ove, oven, 3

mUm 614-446·3657.

N&lt;lw Holland

3499.

Vine Sreet. Garlipolia, 1·800--498·

4782.

Sun Valley Nur1ery

aftitBpm. .

2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom
Trailer In GaHipolis, 614-&lt;46-81149
for lnforOIItion

~-

2 t!Dry, 3bedroom, 1 ·112baths.
125.000. :lo4-875-31N18.

New l\9illnd 2el square hay bal·
er. oxo. oond. Call 304-875-2648

"630

U~

61&lt;·383-0429.

$7,995; 85 Uaosoy Ferguson
Naw t.!otor I3,DU'S: 35 Mauey
Ferguson 13.685: 614-~522.

One HI R.H. Latll•s ·Square Two
golf &lt;21bt. 3 thru 9, PW' and lady

V'-.

ol tho area, mull Hill

Loader,

Appliance s, 814--448-7398, 78

Bay Window&amp;, Wrap Around CJJifed. 814-:M7-Q632.
Fo&lt;cl;i, 1/2 k.re, Ohio River
Beau1illll River View, 2 BedroofT!I
Fairlind Schoo,At, 1147,500, 8,14- In l(anauga, No Pets- References.
256-e287. ,:]
Deposit, Fosler's Mobile Homes,
1·.:.01:.:8:.:1:.:
1
Fwe bedroom. three bath home, ~6_
.,...
____
. --'---~HemlOck Grove Rd., new WlftdOwS, Two and three bedroom mobile
-kitchen, heel pump, -.11 bas&amp;--j-ii.O&lt;nu:1iarl inli at 1240·$300,
ment, nirw acres, 814-992-5085.
trash fncluded 1

Moving out

With

41 o Houses for Rent

Washe, like New. 1 Year War-

Bland New Crown City Route 7• 1 2 Be.droom uobile Home $2501
Siory 3 Bedroom&amp;, 2 Balhs, CH &amp;
M
Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo,

INa., 3bodiVOI11, LA, DR,
large lamity room, double - ··
8yrs
old, I 107,000. 304-675.·

Tractor

tr1c Range Almond. $150; Sl&lt;aggs

78 acres mil wilh lhree bedroom, 675-5540.
·
..., balh bricll llome, 'lhtee ponc1s, · ::.::;::;:;::;...,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,..._
pole barn building, - car ga- 420 Mobile Homes. '
- · 6t+742-1902.
for Renl
Air. Kitchen !Dining Room With

Eileen's Partonal Cste. Specializ·
mg in Alzheimer's care giving.

Call

3bedroom. 2bath. hp, 21arge
decks, new outbuilding, privale,
4.35icres. Smiles I~ town. 304675-:1)83. - •

$150, 81,4-387-781~.

Ma1111 Ftrgusan Lata _
M odel
2115

Sgel. Si&lt;ter'o Equipnent 304-8757421 or 1-1100-m-3017.

Two bedroom. new carpel,. stove,
cablellrash included, in Mason
near park / construction workerS
welcome. Call 304· 773-576-4 to
&amp;et up appoinrment
-

guaranteed. 1 Syrs experience.
References. Free eslimates. 30•·

Gold US: Magie Chef 30 Inch
Gas Range, Almond $185, Hot·
oolnt'RelrlgeratDt 1150: Whinpool

New Catdio Glide Exercise Ma·
ch ine, Brand New, A11embled

Altizer Farm Supply, &amp;1•·245·
51113.

Vearo Did, Good Shape, 1200,

~.• corner 10~ clOse

Check thi s out First save IS.
M1ke's tnterioflenerior painring.
roof palnling, hand wash down
houses, mobile homes. Neat work

Hotpoin t Waaher Harveat Gol~
$95: Kenmore Dryer Harvill

ditioners, Dltc Mowara, Disc
'Mower Conditionera, Forage
Equipment Salta And Service.

81Uol&amp;-1231 .

no •nside pets ; three bedroom
house, depqait required. no inside
pets: 614-99~-3l90 . .

67!&gt;2711-&lt;.

1-800-499-34911.

JET

AERATION MOTORS
R11110oed, I Aebui~ In Stock
Call Ron EVIIIIII, 1-1100· 537-9528.

Gel11 Round Bolero, MD- Con-

Trac:tor hydraulic llufd IUUHt/

3 Bedroom

a·abysltting in my home, reason-able rates, flexible hours, have
refe,ences, close lD ~ehool . 304-

Vine Street, Can 814· 448· 73911,

catalog: »H75-10110.

6 HP Troy Builljillor 1500, 614245-9185.

Nocdictra.c Far Sara. APprox 2

New Windows, 12xUI Deck.
10116 Storage Building, Green
T~ B14o.w8.W5.

180 Wanled To Do

rangaa. Skaggs Appliances, 76

.. &amp; Cheshire, 61 4-367·7010.

sponsi~e for Adminisllative Ou-

tees, Ulian E. ...,_ Mui8Um, 75

APPLIANCES

Washers. dryers, refUgerators.

LDl For Sate: 2 Acraa ; 2 Trailer
Hook-Vps. Between Bidwell, Part·

tlea Including Setting Up An Offlee, Co-ordinati~ And Assisting
Volunteer Commure.e s And _D ocents And Helping With Exhibit•
And Special Evenls. Salary Is
Negotabte.

Broadway Street, Jackson, Ohio
.45640 No La.ter Than April 15,
1996.
I

USED

GOOD

heK!Iown, 614-IM9-202S.

$«),000. 30+675-2327.

Applicants Should Send Resume
!Cover Letter To: Board ot True·

Good Condition, 1115, 614-37112720 AFTER 6 P.M.

Five acrea,
aerator. near
Aacine,$16,000 can finance with

Reporting To Tho Seven lleniler
Board, This Person Will Be Re·

heat pump. 814-902·531S.

'.

$1,900 mosdt. Contact Roy lee

I am giving 5'!1. ol my sales in 1110
monlh of April 10 tho ~ lund.

ranty $205; Caklric 30 rnch Elec·

2 bedroom home. 5 acres. 2 car

Of .~~~~~~~:,:~:

lues-Sat U , Son 11-5.

RENTALS

Telemarketing Needed, No Sell·

The Board

30+875-ee20.

At 2 N, 8miles, Pt PJeasant, WV.

Cr~k side camp sites and 1011,
112 acre. road, water , electr ic.

~-310 Homes for Sale

800-m-1718,

Country

are avdable on an equal

REAL ESTATE

Ha"""'od - · polling toil, huCrpr••• mutc:h.
pine bjllk mulch, 2 bogiiS5. Sale
end• April 13. Paint Plut 30-4675-40114.
.
mua, 3 bagtJSS.

Scenic Valley. Apple Grove,
beautilul 2aC lots, publtc water,
Clyde ll&lt;Men Jr., 304-578'-2336.

Free Program 9-5, Top W.ge, 1·

mg, Sening Appointments , for

C~i~

1991 Muorang GT with sunroof,
TI-m 1ra1t- Iliad! intorior. 5

2217.,-

IO-~PiafolllfiC8,

ing, Seuing Appolnrmentl ; For

·

111811lodat Dayton~ 2.5 4

der, AC, J:ll, AUfFM Cassette,
Good Condition, High MUeage,

S1+38&amp;-81!il.

All realostate adve11181ng In
1hil ,_, riJ'IIN'f II Uljacl to
lhe F - Fait Housing Act
&lt;&gt;11968 wlll&lt;:h makes 1111ega1

Telemarketing Needed, No Set~
600--3ZH718.

1U8U Dodgt Ooytona Auto, AC.
Till S•lrlng, .All/HI Ca&amp;Mlll,
01 ,000 Miles, Now Tkas, 13,300
080, 614-256-8168.

lola "'oondlti011,
• • sa.ooo
"""'·
lent
SUIOO,
814-U49•

llmltallon D t -

U Dl1p1 1

21 For fqr 1111t

Soutb

l!pOOd,

Good Driving -

efit Package. Send Retume To:

tKQ852 ,

••o a 2

Peymehts On Plano. S. locally.
1·80Q-288-e211.

CONSOLE PWIO
lhPU .... Jllt1Y .,.,...,

-· .

...

Nelt
•Q J •• 4

CGnsolt Plano, ~bto Petty
Wanted To MJkt low Monthly ·

6\4-992-&amp;1811.
• ,E;ght Reaidential Programs For
Peaple With Mental Retardation
A(ld De¥elopmenlill Oisabiitift In

·-~-

gOod,

lnStrumll1tS

Flatwoods Rd .. Racine.

SOCIAL WORKER Needed For

M, rUM

1. . Fonl•...,_ 12.000 peo.
-.n5-ZI11Dt--.

MUIICII

330 Fanns for Sale

Part rime security guaid and
maintenance position, pick up ap.
plication at Royal Oak Reaort.

Dodoo Altos

.-

l.urnlller

.•

.. Wol'"l

13Rilh*

oh!Jtol-.nod,11-7

-

Screen Printer. Experience Nec-

~3429

One Mdroom offlcltt~q oport·
"*"- 81+11!12-2t78."

20 Minutet South On SR 7,

Commercial building for rent in

'61•·446-1236.
,.

18111 Broolt- II l&lt;xt6 3 Bod·
rol&gt;ms, 2 Batho, Dllhwllsh«. CA.
Doc~ 15 Fl Atxm G/OUnd Pool.
Primestat Satellite 01sh, New Out·
-Guilding On 112 Acre Lot, Located

liE*~ ~.r
..... ta.300.
•

•

.... I .. 11'11/ I I , _

I Souniiloot ,

c:.n.

1114 Roo.

•,

:=.
.
.
.
."..
===)
•

c:.n. lfiiO¥.

1

12 t'1tanar ot

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
'l.u- Prlco Up?" s- Buifd..
ingo Ooalor Prvl• Are UPIH Coot
Ao Low AI 13.00 Sq Foot. National Ma,..llcturor -ding Local OEALERSHIP. 303-751·3200

, ........

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

•

York Rengors (Uoe) (CC)

�w

•

Landers
1119.5, l..(u.
TIIN'I s~
Milli S~.

A 11~ki

w

c~

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I come from a
big fannily. My married older broth er, "Mitch," had an affair with
"Suzy" about two years ago. He
eventually broke it off and reconciled with bis wife.
Here's the problem. Suzy started
seeing my younger brother, "Joey,"
who lives at home with my mother.
Mitch has turned very negati ve on
Suzy, and needless to say, his wi fe is

still biller about the affaiJ. They always nervous that the other one the provertiiaJ skunk. at the family us who so far have not been able to
refuse to attend any family functions might sbow up and creat5 a scene. picnic and Mitch is so full of guilt he · kick this habit7 1 can't believe I'm
where Joey and Suzy will be pre, We're thinking of setting up regular c•n't see straight
the only one, although I have never
sent. ":fitch won't even !lo. to my visitation at Mom's so that they'll · Dcf.rAnn Landers: Recently, you metanother "cheekchewer." -- C.N.,
!"other s as long as Suzy ts allowed know ~ho os where and when. Mom published a letter from "Golden DENVER, COLO.
on her home. ·
has started to worey about who will West," a person who had suffered
DEAR DENV.ER:' You say you
My husband and I are often the attend her funeral since she knows from compulsive hair pullinJ for 27 never have met another cheek chewones who entenain the family. We Mitch won't , show up if Suzy is years and through your column er. You may have and didn't know it.
are in the awl(, ward position of there.
found help 'for this condition, which People don 't generally talk about
deciding whether'\o invite Mitch and
What is the right thing to do? is l:nown as trichotillomania.
such things.
his wife or Joey and Suzy. If I tell Please help us out. -- · LONDON,
For at least 30 years, 1 have been
My advice to you is the same as
them they are bmh invited ..nei_ther ONTAR)O
chewing the inside of my mouth to the advice I gave to "Golden West."
woll show up. My mother os on a
DEAR LONDON: I would the point of heing sore, and yet, 1 See a psychiatrist, not for counseling
worse spot. She wants to see Mitch adhere . to Landers' Law of cannot stop biting and hurting but for medication. Or, if you are
and the grandchildren, but she does- Internecine Family Warfare. It goes myself.
,
·
lucky enough to have an excellent
n't want Joe~ to move away. Mom is like this: Invite whomever you want.
The help you gave "Golden physician•. he or she will prescribe
77 and a wodow. She ~oesn:t need If one of the invitees says, ''I'm West" gave me hope that there might the medication. P.S. By now, 'I'm
thos stress.
sorry, I won:t come if you invite X , be help for us cheek chewers, too. If sure you'v.e guessed the chewing is
We feel guilty visitiM either • or Y, or Z," you should say, "Sorry, you are acquainted with1his behav- rooted in what we used to call
Mitch or Jo&lt;;y, and when one of my we'll miss you."
. .
ior, will you ple~e write about it in "nerves."
brothers comes to our house, we are
P.S. It appe~rs to me that Suzy is your column for the benefit of all of
Gem of the Day (Credit Reader's

Holy Week services for
area churches announced•
Portland Racine Branch of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Chnst
of Latter Day Saints
East~r sunrise services at 7 a.m.
Sunday, with breakfast and an Easter egg hunt to follow.
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Churth
Sunrise Service at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church in Mtddlcport will he held at 6 a.m. Sunday.
Worship s~rvice wilt be held at I 0
a.m. with Pastor Les Hayman.
Racipe First Baptist Church
Sunrise services at Racine First

Long Bottom/Reedsville UMC
Long Bottom/Reedsville United
Methodist Church Sunrise Service
woll he at Long BottQ.JII, 6:30 a.m.
w1th Sunday school at 9:30a.m. Warshop serv1ce at 10:30 a.m. with Rev.
Norman Butler.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Sunri se services at the Freedom
Gospel Mossmn, Bald KnobStovcrsville road. Long Bottom, will
be held- Sunday at 7 a.m. Pastor
Roger Wilford invites the public to
attend.
Hysell Run Holiness Churth
Sunrise services will be held at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church, 6 a.m.
Communion will follow. Sunday
school , 9:30 am . and worship service, 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
A cantata and drama, "He Lives,"
will be presented at the Middleport
Church of Christ at 6 a.m. Easter sunrise scrvoce, and 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Apri I I0.
Ree.dsville United Me~dist
Church
Good Friday services will be held
at Reedsville United Methodist 'at
7:30 p.m. Hal Kneen will be guest
soloist. Rev, Charles Mash, pastor.
invites the public.
Grace Episcopal Church,

B'optist Church will he held at 6:30
a.m. followed by a breakfast, Sunday
school at 9:30 Easter worship service
at 10:40 with communion, and Easter night service at 7 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
· An Easter cantata will be presented at tne Hillside Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Easter morning at II a.m.
and again at 6 p.m.
Mt. Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Church
A musical entitled "Lord of Glory" I;Yi II be presented at the Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ
'Church by the youth, Easter morning
at6:30 a.m. Breakfast will be served
in the fellowship hall following the
sunrise service. Sunday school will
be at 9:30a.m. and ll)Orning worship
at 10:30 a.m. There will be ·no
Pom~roy
ev,ening service.
Good Friday Liturgy, 7 p.m. to
Chester United Methodist
include the Solemn Collects, VenerChurth
ation of the Cross and Mass of the
Good Friday service at 7:30p.m. Presanctified.
and Easter Sunrise Service at 7 a.m.
Holy Saturday, 7:30 p.m. the
will be held at the Che&gt;ter Uniteo;l Great Vigol of Easter including the
Methodist Church.
lighting of the Ne~ Fire, Holy Bap. Faithful Gospel Church
tism and the first Eucharist of Easter
Good Friday services, 7 p.m. Sun- at the Christ Church , Point Pleasant.
day sunrise services, 7 a.m. Pastor
Easter Sunday. 8 am. Layds, brief
Steve Reed invites the public.
service of prayers, psalms and scripMiddleport Good Friday service ture, and 10:30 a.m. Solemn festival
The Middleport Ministerial Asso- Holy Eucharost.
coation will have a community Good
Hemlock Grove Church
Sunrise service 6·30 p.m. m the
Friday scrvice .at 7 p.m. at the Mod-.·
dleport Church of Chnst, Fifth at Hemlock-Grove Church with break'Main. Special·music will be present- • fast to follow at the grange hall. Suned by a communoty chmr. Sharon day service at 9:30 a.m. with egg
Hawley, Amy Perrin, and AI Hartson. hunt.
Speaker will be Richard Nease of
Mt. Union Baptist Churth
Heath United Methodist Church.
Communoon/Candlehght Service,
Syracuse First Churth or God
Froday, 6:30 p.m. Sunnse services,
Special services at the S~racuse Sunday, 7 a.m. Easter Program, 6:30
First Church of God woll onclude p.m. Located 2 112 miles south of
Good Friday services. at 6 p.m. and Carpenter Pastor Joe M. Sayre
Easter mornong, sunnsc scrvoccs at onvitcs the public.
6:30a.m.

Digesa):' When you are young, y~'
want to be the master of your fate: , '
and the captain of your soul. Wh&amp;n
you are older, you'll seule for bei~g·
the master of your weight and the,
captain of youf bowling team.
!

---:--Society s9rapbook--SENIOR SAINTS
Goldie Love of Point Pleasant
was speaker at the recent meeting of
the Rutland Church of God Senior
Saint.s held at Dale's Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Love talked on healing of
the body by God's spirit. She is the
author of the book "The Greatness
of His Love."
Bob Eads had the blessing and
Jackie Preece led in ' the business
meeting. The group donated paper to
the church copier and signed several

Parkersburg, W. Va. recently.
get well and binhday cards.
A discussion was held about the
Plans were made for a trip to
Founder's
Day donner to be held
Hunti~gton. W.Va. this week, and to
April
25
at
the Sportsman Restautake yet another trip this spring .
Attending were Mrs .. Preece, rant in Athens. Ann Rupe, president,
Mary Romain, Nellie Hatfield, Bob had charge of the meeting attended
Eads, Yvonne Sexton, Homer by Charlotte Elberfeld, Carol
Preece. Mildred Ingram, Geraldine McCullough, Nlartha McPhail, Jane
Sexton, Joann Eads, Maxine Hart, Walton, Rose Sisson, Jean Powell.
Reva ~aughan, Clarice Kraut!Cr,
and Chester Sexton.
Velma Rue, Joan Corder and
SORORITY LUNCHEON
Eleanor
Thomas.
Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
·Next meeting will held on April
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
II
at Grace Episcopal Church.
had a luncheon at the Point of View,

USA TODAY
What a difference an hour makes.
The loss of one hour's sleep when
most Americans "spring forward"
Sunday to daylight-saving time causes an average increase'of 7 percent to
8 percent in traffic accidents. says
researcher Stanley Coren. He speculates the hour's change disrupts sleep

patterns, atfe~ting judgment and
attention.
Conversely, the switch back to
standard time in the fall causes a 1
· percentto 8 percent decrease. ·
As a nation, Coren says, we don't
sleep enough: "Our sleep deprivation
is so great that we skate on the brir
of disaster." U.S. research shows th '
cost of sleep-related accidents of I

'

The Community Calendar is Trustees, Friday, 6•30 p.m. at the
HARRISONVILLE -· Easter egg 1 MONDAY
published as a free service to non- · Township hall.
hunt, Scipio fire department, SaturPOMEROY
Big Bend Farm
profit groups wishing to announce
day, preschoolers through I 0 years of Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.in. at
meeting and special events. The SATURDAY
age.
the Meigs High School Library.
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type. 778 and Star.Junior Grange 878, SatRACINE -- American Legion,
Items are printed as space perm its uoday. 6:30p.m. potluck supper fol- Post 602, Easter egg hunt, Saturday,
and cannot be I!Uaranteed to nm a lowed by a mcctmg at8'p.m. Inspec- . II a.m. for choldren, ages one to 15.
tion to be held with conferral of the Prizes will be awarded. Egg throws
specific number of days.
second degree in full form by degree for women to be a feature.
team .
FRIDAY
.
REEDSVILLE -- Clove Townshop

kinds on 1988 was·$56 billion, including 24.318 deaths and 2,474,430 disabling injuries.
Part of the problem, Coren says, is
a "macho" work ethic that sees
sleep as a waste of tome. However,
"Evolution dc~igned us to sleep
about 10 hours a. night." In 1910,
,...-.;·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
FALL &amp;WINTER HOURS
Open Tuesday-Friday 9:00-5:00
Saturday 9:0b-3:00
Closed Monday

'I'JII;
GRAVEI..V

SYSTEM

•

EASTER DINNER BUFFET
11:00 A.M.- 8:00 P.M.
- ~ Included .with regular items: Baked Ham,
Scalloped Potatoes, Candled Yams, Waldorf Salad
&amp; french 'cherry Cake.
"

6''

.$

satad
\nctudesert ear

VI.

/ -

,,••.

.....

Now Opa for the
Spriq S•ason

Complete line of ~eddlng &amp;
Vegetable Plan...
. Hanging Basket
(Blooming &amp; Foliage)
Geraniums
Shrubs, Trees, Azaleas
RoeeBushes
Open Oally H; Sunday 1-5

Foster Homes
are needed for
'.
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 9!J2·2117 for information and
to be part.of the effort. . ·

Golden Buckey" Card

•,

:_
Not as near as officials.hoped
.
.

By TOM·HUNTEA
· .Time•Sentlnel Staff
· POMEROY - Efforts to modify the structure of
, Ohio's welfare system are heing stalled, while human
:Service officials in each of Ohio's 88 counties formulate
~tate-requested reform proposals and state officials wait
- ~n a final blessing for the reforms from Washington,
D.C.

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Hubbard's Greenhouse'
.

Syracuae, Oh

992-5776

·•

•

•

-·
•
,
•
··
:·
:;.

munity voice

"a

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Alive

....
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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
MERCERVILLE - A
projected ·return of stu- :
dents to the.Gallia County ·
Local School District
should a second high
school open will in part
defray startup ~nd operational costs if the former

100%

.H~ .,Tr~e ­

'992000

ThEi !1own side
7tireils v.tlere national perfonnance
has sigrlfficantiy ~ned:
,
.

'

. '
f t Reading achievement at grade
~ 12has-~reased. ·
·
· • ....-...~.
The Jl9rc8nli!!ll! 0 1~·'""'' .
• schoOl tetlcll8rs Who hold · .

60%--

-----.....:.,...

. O"k
'92 "'3

· "'
Qrada 12
. 100%,
100% --~......C..---'--±

t.;j ......

..:.;.

degreeslntheir~teacr,.inQ ~ ' . eoo;. .-------±:--±:-~

assignment has deCreaSed.:• .,,..

lillie~ The qap in adult edtlca!i&lt;lil .
. ~ pe111dpatlon bfitween adUlts
who h!lve looeived a hi!J) ··
school tiploma or less, and .
!hose wflo have adcltionaJ post~l. edUcation has .
I
t rug use
has Increased.

School building is
this fall, Gallia Local
administrators predict.
They currently expect
that 30 studen previously lost to o.r;n, e·nrqllment may
return to Gall Local clasSroolJI~ •t( a ·soutllem biaJi
school I re lly.
Propo
of the HTHS reopening have assured
administrato and the board of education that the figure
could oncreas significantly if the board opts for the
reopening.
The board
ed,a decision on the reopening proposal Thursday and srud it will make a decision at its regu·
lar meeting on April 22.
•
In the inlerilllo the board will examine a feasibility
study-containing fin"ancjal projections to either keep the
one high s'chool concepl: alivc at River Valley Higjl
School, or operate .RVI:fS and IJ'ru-*,'parate'· sccondtiry.
buildings to better serve
. Galli a Local's }jjgh$hool sru-·
dents.
~~.--~
The study also presents pros and cons on workin~.
a new, centrally· located high school.
_
"We know River Valley is overcrowded and thai Han-·
nan Trac~ may be one way of relieving that sitl!aticin,
there's no doubt about it," board memher John Davis
said. "But l,'ve asked about the expense of modulars, and
that's another way, so we're looking at several different
options."
Gallia Local Treasurer Debbie Ratliff said HT area
citizens have provided the district with lists almost doubling the amount of students expected to return if HTHS
opens.
"Depending on .how many students come back. il
may reduce the cost of opening another buildinJ,"
Ratliff said.
Continued on page A2

fioo,:, _____ ,_"'..,_.,....,...__

400,;; -!!!::!"-:
·.
20%
O"lo
'992000

.til·

.The sale of drugs at school.has increased. .

Gannett Newo service

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WASHINGlON- The rising controversy over tobacco industry cam. paign contributions to Congress is not
stopping most are,a candidates from
accepting them.
·
A new study by Common Cause, an
advocacy group for government
reform, lists area members of Congress
who have accepted campaign funds
from the industry. They include: Reps.
Steve Chabot, R-Cincinnati ($6,250);
John Boehner, R- West Chester
($3 I ,506); Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis ($5,250); and Lee Hamilton, DNashville, Ind. ($18, 700).
Among senators, recipients include
Mike De Wine, R-Ohio ($33,000) .and
John Glenn, D-Ohio ($1,000).
A group called the Campaign For
Tobacco-Free Kids has challenged
members to· stop accepting tobaccorelated contributions.
·
Pledges to not accept tobacco
.money have come from two qemocratic challen&amp;ers: former ReR.,Ted Striclcland, D-Lucasville, in the 6th Congressional District and Mark Longabaugh in the 'lst Congressional District.
,
'
.
But most Tristate incumbents said they
had
no
plans
to
twn
back
tobac•
co· money, despite the criticism. Barry Bennett,. a spokesman for Gremeans, said the 6th District representative
does 'not agree with the tobac.
\

w

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Good Morning

Area lawmakers inhale tobacco company money

• "Easter has been real good this year," she said. "People seem to be buy:ing more pre-millie products:"
.
.
: She estimates thi~ season, 300 of the bunny cupcakes have been sold and
COntinued ~n page A2 .
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could _defray cost
of opening· HTHS

Campaign '96: ls$ues and politics

: By USA PETERSON
·.: Time•Senllnel Staff
: . GALLIPOLIS • If Julia Childs
• and the Easter Bu.nny should ever
·~ collaborate on a project,- their end
·~ product might look something like
t the baked goods of Patti Weaver.
.~ Weaver, a resident' of Gallipolis
; Ferry, W.Va., is the deli manager at
":Food! and olt ·Second AVenue and the
: person responsible for those dreamy
•showcase dessens at the deli.
.t She puts the extra swee~ness on
~ all kinds of sweets, from do.uglinuts.
; to cookies to cakes. ,
. ,
~ Though she admit~ her favorite
',
;project is cake decorating.
: When . you decorate a doughnut,
: •you just decorate a doughnut, she
Panl Weaver with her cl'lllllona
~said. lint the possibilities are endless
[with cakes.
'
l Weaver has free artistic design ·in·tlie bakery and tries lo create some.thing
lfor everybody. For Easter she designed a baskel i:ake with cherry tC?Pping,
~bunny. cupcakes' and cakes, cpokies with Easter motifs and a number of pas.

j. .

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..of House Bill 167. Some of the federally lljlproved
waivers include:
• lillowing the imposition of a t!vee:year·time limit,
but extending benefits to individuals who reach •he liroit
through no fault of their own;
.
• allowing for the sanctioning of pregnant recipients
' who fail to cooperate il\ an HMO substanc~ abuse
assessment and treatment, as lbng as there is a specific
protocol;
·
.·.,
.• allowing the signing of a self sufficiency contract as
process to move forward. But, there is going to a condition of eligibility;
have to be major legislation moved through the Ohio
• allowing for pay-after-performance;
General Assembly and Washington ·io do this," said
• requiring an unmarried pregnant minor to reside in
Mike Swisher, dire!tor of the Meigs County Department an aditlt supenisedliving arrangement;
·
of Human Services.
• establishing educational requirement for a peBOR
The new call for welfare reform comes as a result of 15 years or younger to have a high school diploma, GEl)
House Bill 167, signed into law in August by Governor or working toward one by age 21;
George Voinovich. The new law limits for the first time
• requiring child suppon cooperation and good cause
recipients of Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) to for non-cooperation;
·
monthly cash benefits for 36 months over a 60-month
.
· ·requiring paternity cooperation:
·· period. The bill made Ohio one of only a few states
"We've felt that the savings that were based in House
nationwide that has adopted statewide time limits on Bill I 67 would be the be'st for us to ~tart with in Meigi
cash benefits.
County. These 18 wai:vers that were included in thlil
Thus far, the federal government ha:; granted 18 or 21 cover a lot of what Franklin County is trying ·tO do ill
waiver requests to .Ohio to allow for the implementation
Continued on page A2

l----~--~----------~~~~~~~~~~----------------~~~;:~N~a~tio:n~ai~E~du~c;ru~~~G~oa~~~Pa;n~e~l::::::::::~F~~~nk~.P~o~mpa;;·~G~a~nn~e~tt~N=ew~s~S~e~N~~;•!J
'

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"! , :·

Editor'• Note: This ,. the first Installment of a continuing eerlea of Gannett
News Service,, Sunday Times-Sentinel articles,.entitled "Report·Card'on America," looking at Issues crucial In lhls election year.
Corporate downsizing,' the dramatic shift to the servoce economy, the widening
income gap, the high value placed on technology skills - all these trends have left
p~~~:ents looking for ways to protect their children and feeling a little desperate about
American Education in the 1990s.
.
"This'is all linked to the economic anxiety of ~ople," said Edward Kealy of the
Center for Education Funding.
"It's a survival rt~Jljlnse people11TC taking," said Kealy, "saying, 'I've got
to make sure my kids have·the hest education possible.'. "
.. .A'ro9ld ·Fege.frllJD the National ~~11grees.
•. .. .
_
"It's a.fealization the .new ~!'J~Itill commodity in the econotilic
system is really ~rainpower. "Fhete's tremendous anxiety ·amo11g
; parents about assuring their children are on the cutting edge."
This anxiejy, say educators, is why education surpasses such
issues as jb~s. crime and. deficits in various' national polls. And
any issue toJlliiJlg_voter worries, even a mostly local one such as
.· .
education,. will figure prominently .in the presidential election .
.. ·
In rural areas like southern Ohio, some educators see the ongoing struggle 'for equity in funding becoming more.pronounctd as advanced technologies become increasingly important 1''-~"''.'ck''"" '~;;;:i,&amp;i~'·'''''"''f'!i'i'W'-i'"''·'''""'"''M'''''''+'
to·curricular issues.
·
"We dop't want to see the emergence
of haves and have-nots in terms ohechnology," said Sllaron ' Yates, Ed.D.,
Coordinator of Graduate Education at
the University of Rio Grande. "This is
an equity issue of growing impOrtance."
Yates also sees a need to bridge the
gap between trad.itional classroom
.learning and the world of work.
· ''Theory and . knowledge are best
.learned if immediately applied," she
said. "I have become very interested in
- and have hecome an ad'vocate of 'school-to-work' programs."
liffo~"
The veteran Rio Grande educator
furtl)et views "service learning" and
greater sense of commtlnity" as essential elements to the future of education.
Yates said an enhanced sense of community is imponant because, " ...as isolates,
we cannot do what we need to do."
·
"We need a sense of vision and missil')n of where we can be in 10 to 20 years,"
Yates added.
.
When parents,and educators realize the schools they.need so badly are in such difficul,ty, this anxieiy becomes combustible: Consider:
. ,
Continued on page A2

iJust
add.
2
.
'
HEa~ter) eggs
Iand
sti.
r
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Middleport Church. of Christ
'
.
Fifth at Main
992-2914

'

Franklin County officials unveiled a plan earlier this
week which would cut the application form from 40
pages to two; allow people who earn more to keep more;
and require all able,bodied adults receiving assistance to
work.
•
The proposed Columbus-area program, People
Reaching Independence and Developing Earnings

.
(PRIDE), is one of the answers to tl)e Ohio Departmen!
of Human Services invitation to each county for development of reform proposals.
The proposal's goal is to assist people in becoming
self-sufficient so they can leave tbe welfare rolls. ill the
Columbus-area, low unemployment rates and numerous
job opportunities afford Franklin County officials an
optimistic view when exannining the plan.
In other areas 9f the . state, particularly southeast
Ohio, officials are concerned about the formulatiQn pf
reform proposals. The concerns are directed mai'ry
toward the possibility that such proposals won't ever·go
into effect unless state and federal governments allow
counties to break a nutl)ber of rules concerning welfare.
"I think every&lt;&gt;ne wants reform, and the time is right

Vol. 31. No.9

Return·of student$

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~norlhe

Breakfast - 7:00 am
Worship I - 8:15 a~
Sunday School • 9:30 am
Worship II· 10:30 am

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

1',

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Gnll1polis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasilnt • Apnl 7. 1996

elfare reform:

"

before the invention of the modern
lightbulb, we slept about 9 . hours;
today, it's ·about 7 112.

A dramatic presentation of the Easter cantata He~
with a cast of more than 80 people!

&amp;oess

OPEN 7 DAYS: 8:00A.M. TO 8:00 P.M.
FRIDAY NIGHT SEAFOOD: 3:00 TO 8:00 P.M.

PAGEANT
WINNER .
MIIFkanz~ Redman, daughter
of flay · and Mandy Redman,
Maion, W.Va. won the prettiest
eyes 41nd tirat place In beauty
In the .one-year-old-group .at
· the Sunburst Beauty . Pageant
held recently In Parkersburg.
She received trophies, a banner, a crown, and hal her beauty fee paid to tM l8tll finale to
be held In May at HarrlaoniJI,Irg,

.·.

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'

Sunrise Service • 6:00 am

ALL·U·CAN·EAT

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Most people quickly respond "I. know that."
But the question we would like to ask is this: .
"If Easter is so much more than candy or bunnies, why not make a concentrated
effort to worship the ONE whom Easter is all about- Jesus Christ?"
We'd like to invite you to join us this Easter for an inspirational time of worship
as we celebrate the risen Christ.

RAVENSWOOD, WV

,

•&gt;

Reported ill were Ethel Arbaug))
and Opal Eichinger. The death ~f
Ada Bissell was noted and a card
from the family was read. The chai;
ter. will be draped for her at the ne:ll
meeting and member~ were remind'
ed to wear white.
;:
A letter was read from H~len
Taylor about the state sessio~ ~t
Marietta to he held in August.
'
The rally to be held on April ~7
was noted and mcmhers were askca
to make luncheon reservations wit~
Bette Biggs. A practice for the ral)y
will be on April 21 at the Senior q~
izens Center, I p.m. State sessiqn
reservations are to be made with
,,
Joan Baum.
''
The flagbearers escorted Ernla
Cleland to the altar for recogni.ti\ln
of her binhday. Mrs. Baum ~ad
"Dearest Kind of Friend", and
Esther Smith gave "Special Person"
and "Do You Know What a Birthday
Card Is?" She was presented witn a
gift from the Council.
Refreshments were served by,the
Good of the Order Committee.
Atten.ding were Ethel Orr, Mary
Holter, Margaret Amberger, Doris
Grucser, Lora Damewood. Roberta
- Maidens, Laura Nice, Marcia KeHor,
Jean Welsh, Kathryn Baum, Evereu
Grant. Joan Baum, Mae McPeek,
Esther Smith, Mary Barringer,
Goldie Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes,
Erma Cleland, Thelma White;
'Deloris Wolfe, Opal Hollon and
Betty Young.

''EASTER Is MORE-'' than candy or bunnies!

.MOM'S SMOBOASBOBD

Low: 208 ·'

...

or

Dangers in sleep-stealing at daylight-saving
By KAREN S. PETERSON

.

-Featured on pt~ge C1

who is impossible to buy for: .
Send a self;add~, long, bUll··
ness-sire envelope and a check
•money ol-der for $5.25 (tlils•
Includes .postage and lumdlitlg).
to: Collection, c/o Ann Landen;
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, ·Ill.:
60611-0562 (ln Canada, $6.25). ;;

charge.

other prizes are, left, firefighters Skipp Johnson, Scott Curl, John Bechtle and Brant Manley. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

:Jellowslllp
and.frlendsltlp

"A Collection of My Favorite'
GeQJJ of the Day" is the perfec:t:
little gift for that spec:ial someone'

· of America, met recently at the hall
with Goldie Frederick, councilor, iri

· Members of the Middleport Fire Departml!nt
fill the last of nearly 2,000 eggs for Sunday's
annual Easter Egg Hunt at General Hartinger
Park. Filling the eggs with gift certificates end

HI: 30a

(

Chest~r Council 323, Daughte~

-----Community calendar-----

,

~

rations--...., Chester
D of A
meets.

..------Easter

•

Friday, AprilS, 1991:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lander's Law of Family Warfare says you ·can't please everyone
Ann ·

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Pqe 12 • The Dally Senti~l

.,
, , . ,_.,.,.~r

Today•s Gttm..-Jt;;;l'"•l

co industry on all issues but
·
16 Sections- 154 Pages
needs help to hofd onto his congressional seat in this year's
Calegdeg
election.
ClepiQcck
D3·7
With organized labor expectComjCs
lpsert
ed to provide help to challenger
Strickland, "We'll take whatever
A4
Editodeb
help we can .get," the aide to ereOfl!tuaries'
A6
means said.
Spof1s
BI-ll
Strickland said he is ' conWet!ther
AZ
vinced "there are some real ethical problems" with the tobacco
industry and made a decision not
Colu mns
to solicit money from tobacco
PA,Cs.
Jack Andenog
M
He said the country should try
8obHoe0kh
Cl
to help tobacco fannets switch to
1
Ann "'""n
new crops. "I think we ought to
Cl
J!mSaptll
try to help the tobacco farmer.
C4
..while at the same time holding
C4
Dorothy Sm!!
the tobacco industry account~
OIUo Volley ...bllohiq C...
able," Strickland said.
While the tobacco indpslry is
under attack on many legal and regulatory fronts, its contributions to Congress seem to be preventins ~ny action against the industry the{C, Common Cause charges.
Tobacco companies gave $4.12 million in political contributions ia
1995 and have given $20.6 million o~er the past decade. "With their
to the wall and standing aa:used of encouraging cigarette sales to children• · ·
the tobacco industry lw reiponded with record-setting contributi~IIi-geted to buy reaulll," Common Cause'l'laident AM McBride said. •

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29452">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29451">
              <text>April 5, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="262">
      <name>brown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6107">
      <name>dow</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1873">
      <name>duff</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="251">
      <name>pickens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
