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                  <text>•

'••

Pllge 12 • The Dally Sanllnel

•

••

Pomeroy • Mlddllpoft, Ohio

Magazine publishing spiked tobacco show
By SCOTT WI' ! tAMS
AP TllleYI8Ion Wrlt!tr

Ilion&amp; with a C&lt;14'1Me tranacripl on
its World W'tde YWob lite, and airing
NEWYORK(AP)-A "TIIming the catirc lbow by satellite today for
Poin!'' expose of the tobacco indus- retrieval by toc.l1V I!JIIions.
"We're jill&amp; plll!lns out a video
try thl! ABC News spiked in 1994
fact p!ICk," BdiJOr in Chief Jeffrey
will finally see the lighl of day thanks to Mother Jones, the muck- Klein said 1\lelday. "I'm making it
raking magazine with its roocs in the available IQ any news show thl!
wants to view it for themselves."
'60s.
Klein and his editors wouldn't say
The bimonthly magazine is publishing excerpts in its May/June whetc they sot their copy of the
issue, part of a 4G-page spread titled "Tumin1 Point" hour. titled "Toblc"l'obacco Strikes Back," on the co Under Fire." but said it did not
. industry's efforts to curb sovemment come from free-lance co-producers
Millin and Frank Koughan.
and social anti-smoking pressures.
ABC contends the "Turning
The magazine also is putting three
30-second video clips from the show, Point" episode was not spiked

bee:awe of tbe $10 billion lawsuits
filed by Philip Morris Cos. and RJ.
Reynolds Tobecco over an earlia' sto-·
ry on ABC's "Day One," which
llllcged that toblcco c:omplllies lidded
nicotine from oulsiclc sources to their
products.
ABC settled those lawsuits in
August 1995 with an on-air apology
and admission of error, and by paying undisdosed court costs and legal
fees.
"We did not suppress this piece,"
ABC News Executive Vice President
Paul Friedman insisted. "We killed it
because it would not make a good
hour of television, and that was

based 011 our editorial judjmetll"
FriediiWI said tbe epiiOde wa "a
borina rdiUh of malailll we bad

done before ... and thl! toes of media
bad dODe before." .
Friedman and ABC contend thlll
Mother Jones has no riabt to t1te the
piece, but the network plans no lepl
action; Klein said his magazine's
lawyers believe their plans conform
to "fair use'" of the program. .
Mother Jones contends that ABC's
decision to kill the hour was a reaction to the toblcco industry's pressure; and Klein said he doesn 't buy
the network's "interesting logic" in
spiking the entire hour.

BY CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
1be year 1993 brought Edith
Wharton revival. In 1995, it was all
things lane Austen. In 1996, prepare for Picasso-mania.
'!Wenty-thrce years after Picasso's death, a series of blockbuster ·
museum exhibits, a book and a
biographigal film are about to reignite- America's interest in the
Spanish-born enfant terrible of the
art world.
. What's. behind this Picasso
renaissance? Biographer and FOP
· (friend of Pablo) John Richardson
believes it's the myths and legends
about Picasso the artist and the
man that keep his legend alive.
"Picasso saw art as having a .
magic
function. He saw everything
LAMP PRESENTED- A mus!clan'sllinp was TWlla Chlkli In memory of Betty Fultz at Monhe
did
as having a magic function.
presented by Charles Blakeslee to memberS of (tay night's rn.tlng of lha Middleport-Pomeroy
He
was
a shaman in mary ways.
the Heath Methodist Church Choir ~lckl Rotary Club.
How he seduced people, insulted
Houchens, Paulina Horton, Nancy Cele 1nd
people, made love to people
through his work, that is what is so
fascinating about him."
Among the events forming
Picasso-mania:
-. Picasso and Portraiture, at
New York's Museum of Modem
.This may be affected by the fact
Rotary Exchange Student CaroArt April 28-Sept. 17, will be the .
that
things are much more expensive .
line Magne from France was the
first exhibit to study his earcer
guest speaker at the Monday night in France. she explaine4._ For
solely from the perspective of his
meeting of the MiddleportcPomeroy instance, a gallon of gasolinei,Wbald
portraits. The show has more lhan
·
Rotary Club at the ,Heath Methodist cost about $5.
200 painti~gs and works on paper
Magne has become acquainted
Church in Middleport.
from his blue, rose and cubist periShe has stayed wilh three families with 5everal olher students from
ods.
around the world through lhe Rotary
since. her arrival here last summer.
- Surviving Picasso, a bio-pic
She has attended Meigs High Exchange p'rogram and meets with
due out this fall from the MerSchool which she says is quite dif- other students in the program once a
chant-Ivory team, is loosely based
ferent from her high school in France. monlh for fun ancj support. The stuon Arianna Stassinopoulos Buffindents will take a bus trip across lhe
gton's 1988 biography Picasso:
In France, students attend .school country which will cover 7,000 miles
Creator
and Destroyer. Anthony
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a one-to- in three weeks after which they will
Hopkins stars .as the painter;
two ·hour . break for lunch, a 15 return to their homes.
DISCUSSES FRANCE Julianne
Moore and newcomer
minute break in the morning and
Upon returning to France, she Rotary Exchinge'Stuclent carNatascha
McElhone star !IS his
afternoon and an open campus, she ·- plans to attend college and study ceo- · olina Magne from France dlsmistresses Dora Maar and Franpointed out.
·
nomic or international relations, or cusHd her county and her
coise
Gilot.
She talked about other differences bOth.
time spent with f1mllles In
-Volume
2 ofRichardson'sA
between the countries including
I'Jesident Lloyd BlackWood called Meigs County at Monday
Life
of
Picasso
(Random House,
Americans' tendencies to be more the meeting to order. A musician's night's meeting.of the Middle$50), the definitive Picasso biog:"'I!Sieful as f&lt;~r as food and other lamp was then presented to the Heath port-Pomeroy Rotary Club. ·
raphy, is due out in late October. It
ttems than people m her native coun- Methodist Church Choir in memory
The meeting winner was served covers the years 1907-1917 and'
try.
of Betty Fultz by Charles Blakeslee. by the women of the church.
includes the birth of cubism.
- Picasso: 1be Early Years,
1892-1906. at the National Gallery
· of Art in Washington, D.C., will
feature an exhibit of Picasso's
By ~ARL HARTMAI\I
art museum, a classical concert or a for several years before it provides a
outhful works next March.
Associated Press Writer
ballet performance at least once dur- comparable income.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A new ing lhe year before, while only 68.7
cable channel devoted to art, plays million had gone to a sports event.
Investors who contributed to the
and classical and jazz music is com"&gt;nd, adds Tom Bradshaw, the $20 million financing include the
ing soon 10 television sets across lhe endowment's researcher, "1be price New York Times Co., Time Warner
country, with programs from all over of a museum ticket doesn't go up Cable and Agnes Gund, president of
the world.
nearly as fast as sports tickets do."
the Museum of Modem Art in New
Ovation, which begins operations
Like other cable channels, Ova- York. Their money is expected to
Sunday and will be. on the air seven tioit will collect both from advenis- . keep the channel going for·another 2
days a week, 20 houri a day, is head- ers and local distributors of its pro- 112 years until advertising revenue
ed by J. Carter Brown, who President grams.Distributors will pay an aver- builds up.
Clinton recently reappointed as chair- age of S.S .cents per subscriber.
The channel has no government
_
·
man ·of the U.S. Commission II" Fine Advertising would have to build up , subsidy.
Arts.
"It's going m be all arts, just as
other channels are all news or all
sports or 'all weather," said Brown,
who directed the National Gallery of
Art in Washington for 23 years.
Brown ·is convinced the potential
audience is there and that the competition is meager.
He noted that Bravo, which also
does arts ptogramming, has been
devoting more iime lately to films
and that the Arts and.Entertainmenl
network runs to mysteries, adventure
and documentaries.
In April, about 400,000 households will be able to sec Ovation's
shows in local areas from Connecticut to California, including Fairfa~
County, Va. and Indianapolis.
Ovation's first program Sunday
50 Varletlea To Choose From
evening will be a documentary on
cellist Yo-Yo Ma and his contacts
with the Bushmen who live in .tpe
Kalahari Desert of southern Africa.
All Your Favorite Bedding Annuals lnci)Jding:
Next is a session of Irish music and
a profile of James McNeill Whistler,
• Marigolds • Begonias • lmpatiehs ·
who lived in London wheq he did the
• Salvia • Petuniq • Portulaca • Ageratum
famous portrait of his mother.
'
The first week of programming
also includes profiles on two Ameri~
cans ..:__ Fats Waller, the jazz pianist,
and Jackson Pollack, the abstract
painter sometimes ~ailed "Jack the
.
Dripper."
·
.
More Americans go to arts events '
and museums lhan to sports contests,
the National Endowment for the Arts
V. ~·North of Po-roy"- Maooa·Bridto,
calculates.
M,._,wv
It sponsored a 1993 survey: b~
on Census Bureau figures, tndi.caang
Phone (304) 773-5721
thai 76.2 million adults had vtStted an

;Exchangf? student
addresses Rotarians

I
•

New cable TV channel to offer all arts

News Hotline
News Hotline
News'Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline

992-2156

rnm~morn

URGREEN DOUSES ARE
B
STING WITH ~OLOR
Hardy Hybrid Tea Roses
(3 CaUon Pots) .

·

(Floribunda, Climbing and Miniatures)

.....A.- Area's Finest QualitY And ~est Sel

.,

'

'

·• Over a Dozen Varieties of TOJDato PI-ta
• Over Six Varledes of Pe11t1M~""

'

•
•

)'

'
'

•

• And So Mueh Morel

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
7-3-5
Plck4:
4-7-8-6
Buckeye 5:
1-17-19-20.23

Sportt on Page 5

C"*- of showers 8lld
thunderstorms tonight,
low In the S01. S.turdlity,
ch1nce of 1howera, high

-eo.

•
1996 PLYMOUTH NEON
4-door. air, caaella. ,.. delroal, hl-llinal

'MSRP
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1995 NISSAN 412 TRUCK

aport pl&lt;g. air, V6, ca.s,
aport !'heels

.1994CHM
CORSICA

4 Door, air, cau, titt, ·
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1995 CHRYSLER
ORR US
· V-6, LX, auto, all power,
cassette. ASS. factory

4 door,.automatic, air, an
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1993 BUICK
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SE-5 PKG.
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•

••

Eastern
activities :
contracts
are not
renewed

.Nation pauses to reflect, relive ·
:Oklahoma City bomb disaster

· By KELLY KURT
year."
Marie Young, co-owner of Okla· Alsoclalecl Press Writer.
OKLAHOMA CITY - Families homa City Florist, ha!lded out roses,
:clutching flowers and pictures of their tears welling as she talked about how
' loved ones paused this morning in sweet the roses smelled.
•front of the grassy e~panse where one
"They were just so precious, those
·year ago a bomb ripped through the ' people, and the rose is so delicate,"
·Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. she said.
The Eastern Local Board of EduSome wiped away tears, others
Motorists turned on their headcation
approved non-renewal of sevshared timid smiles as they gathe(ed lights in memory of the victims. The
eral
extracurricular,
advisory and
to pause for 168 seconds of silence, stream of lights also served as a
·coaching
supplemental
contracts dtlr·a remembrance of the 168 people reminder of the seemingly endless
ing its regular meeting Wednesday
killed in the blast.
procession of funerals that followed
night at Eastern High School.
They laid wreaths and flowers at the blast
The following supplemental conthe fence surrounding . the site that
Rescuer.&gt; from around the ~ation
tracts
were approved for non-renctbears lillie resemblance to the rubble were reunited Thursday on the eve of
al
by
the
board, effective the end of
·heap left by lhe bomb that e~ploded the anniversary. ·
City. The .Meigs County Boa~d of Commis- the 1995-96 school year:
· •·
at 9:02 a.m.
"The whole thing is not over with
sioners earlier this week signed a resolution
Pam
Douthin,
athletlc
Wilh security concerns heightened yet," said Skip Fernandez of the
authorizing the minute of rellec:tion In honor of . director/head softball coach; Don
on the anniversary. sharpshooters Metro Dade, Fla., rescue team. "We
the 168 people killed·and 460 others wh() were Jackson, head volleyball coach, assisperched on nearby rooftops. A man didn't accomplish our mission 100
Injured. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freemen)
tant softball coach; Susan Climer,
wearing a Drug Enforcement Admin- percent. We wanted to bring back
marching band di~tor ; Tony Deem,
·isf!lltionjackei was an eerie reminder someone alive:"
Clinton was visiting St. Peters"
;,1 was there last year at9:02, and were killed in the blast.
of the crime Scene a year ago as
Fernandez and more than 500 oth- burg, Russia, · today, wl)ere he I don't want to bC there this year,"
State and business leaders orga- head boys basketball coach/volunteer
:investigators Searched for clues in the er rescuers and their families were 10 observed.a minute Of silence in mem- said Diana McDonnell, who was nized the recel'lion for the resc uers 10 assistant reserve softball coach/junior
wreckage of the bombing.
attend a public memorial service at ory of the bombing victims after lay- standing next to a friend's desk in lhe show gratitude to those who searched class advisor; Scon Wolfe. head girls
· Tammie Clemmons, who works at lhe Myriad Convention Center, five itig a wreath in honor of the more building when the bomb ripped tirelessly under the teetering chunks basketball coach; Paul Brannojl,
Boatmen's Bank downtown, stood blocks from lhe bombing site.
lhan half a million victims oflhe 900- through her eighth-floor office. ''I'm of concrete, called "widow-mak- assistant volleyball coach/volunteer
assistant reserve softball coach/assis:Outside the bank building watching
Bagpipers will lead' a procession .day Nazi siege of Leningrad .
~taying horne tomorrow. I could not ers. "
tant girls basketball coach;
what was going on. She remembered of survivors and families from a pri"The loss we suffered in Okla- go to work yesterday. And I could not
Casey
Coffey,
head
football
·that a year ago when she arrived at vate service at the bombing site 10 the homa City reminds us all that when go 'today. I've kind of reached the · "We were very an~ious to come
coach/assistant baseball coach; Arch
work, there was glass everywhere center, where Mayor Ron Norick, peace is broken, life itself becomes-, ~ P.oiill whe.re l could not go any fur- back," said Bill Lake, a fircfight
1
·
·Bnd pancjemonium.
. Gov. Frank Keating and Vice Presifragile," he said.
. ~r....
with New York City's Rescue Com- Rose, head track coach/student coui.·.·~~. a way, t~is, is reliving it dent AI Gore will give speeches, and .
Soroe survivors .planned to stay ':-;TI!!!ty,-five of ~t's. McDonnell's pany No. 2. "The impression the peo- cil advisor; Ron Hill, assistant foot~«i~k.sat.d..;_:!q!."l\!~YJwrd:!2 a videotaped'-5tl~MIIt~ll!ft&gt;m Ptesi• away from thc-'Sel'vices lteclluse oe&gt;:::e~rs..: ill' the 'J JeJfartment of ple of Qklahoma left on us, you can ball coach/drug free ·schools ·grant
coordinator; Bryan Durst, assistant
cope and know that today IS one dent Clinton will~ played.
painfulll)etnories.
Housil)g· and 'Urbllb, · l'levt~IOplnent ' only usc supe{latives to describe."
~ . . . - r: 1 .l
'.
'
't):$' •
: (
football coach; Dan Thomas, assistant football coach/head baseball
coach; Richard Rupc, volunteer var- .'
sity golf coach; Susan Wolf, flag
corps advisor; Monica Chadwell,
varsity cheerleading advisor; lisa
Sheets, junior high checrlcading adviBy JIM FREJ:MAN
·sor; Sheryl Roush, national honor
Bryant from being apprehended on
Sentinel News Staff
society advisor/freshman class advi: ·
Law enforcement officials are Sept 15, 1995.
·s-or;
·
:
In the block plant burglary,thieves
!loping a 41-ycl!f·Oid West Virginia
Kirk Reed, se nior class advisori,
man will provide the pieces needed used a fork truck to hoist the compa.Susie Francis, senior class play advi:
to solve a number of puzzling bur- ny safe through an office window.
sor; Jim Huff, volunteer senior clas ·
glaries in Meigs and Athens counties. The safe was then taken into a large, .
advisor; Wayne Siders. volunteer
James Edward Bryant is expected open garage at the site where it was
assistant football coach; Shawn Busbt
to be sentenced next Friday on two loaded onto a truck.
volunteer
assistant
footbal (
1be 2-ton safe was recovered latcharg~s of breaking and enterilg and .
coachl,voluntcer assistant basebalt
may plead guilty to two additional er at a farm in Athens County where
cpach; Lolita Morrow, volunteer
Meigs County burglaries.
it had been buried. according to
national art honor society advisor;
He pleaded guilty earlier in Meigs Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Bill Blaine, high school yearbook,
County 10 burglarizing two Pomeroy Soulsby. Subjects used a saw aod cutadvisor: Ci ndy Mayle, sophomoie
area businesses, S &amp; W Guns and the ting torch to gain access to safe's conclass adviso r; Mandi Sheets, volunWatering Hole. However, prior to tents, which included business and
teer junior high checrleading advisor;
r&gt;&lt;ntencing, he was transferred to personal records in addition to an
Tim Bissell. volunteer junior high_
· West Virginia authorities, reportedly undisclosed amount of.cash. · '
boys basketball coach;
..
to assist them. He was not jailed and
Bryant is currently being held in
Chris
Stout,
assistant
boys
bas:
tci
prices of products used to make steel and
later disappeared, making him a fugi- the Franklin County Jail by federal
cast iron, the U.S. Justice Department report- ketball coach; Brian Weaver, assistaill
tive.
authorities investigating an earlier
boys basketball coach; Joe Bailey,
ed.
According to the Meigs County riding lawnmower lhefl ring in Galassistant boys basketball coach; Pam.
prosecutor's office, Bryant may also lia County and other counties. He
Coffey, assistant girls basketbalf
plead guilty to the Oct. I theft of a · was sentenced on federal interstate
coach ; Di~ie Sayre, elementary choir .
safe from the Forest Run Block commerce charges. according to Galdirector (half,time); Mike Roush,"
Plant, Racine, and the theft of items lia sheriffs investigator Jim Spears.
volunteer assistant track coach.
•
from Ridenour's TV and Appliance,
Bryant was arrested at a campIn 01her matters, lhe board:
•
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -A Mason department's antitrust division in
Chester.
ground in Vinton County by underCommodity ferrosilicon products
• Approved the non-renewal of the;
County
metals producer. pleaded U.S. District Court in Buffalo, N.Y. , are alloys· of iron and silicon, used following contracts, due to the uncet-'
An accomplice in the Forest Run cover investigators posing as
Block Plant theft, Mark Schall, 19, campers.Achargeofobstructingjus- guilty and agreed to pay a $100,000 charged American Alloys Inc. of primarily as alloying agents in the tainty of · federal regul'ations -nd:
Guysville. is serving an IS-month tice is pending against Etta Noble, 52, criminal fine Thursday for conspiring New Haven, with .participating in a production of steel and. cast iron to finances , effective date at the end of..
prison sentence for .receiving stolen who allegedly allowed Bryant on her to fix prices of products used to make conspiracy between late 1989 and improve lhe properties of the finished 95-96 school year: Marsaret Cau'property. He also pleaded guilty in property arid then falsely told officer.~ steel and cast iron, according to the mid- 199t.to fix prices of commodi- product, such as its strength and cor- thom, reader guide; Carissa Bailej,U.S. Justice Department.
ty ferrosillcon products sold in the rosion resistance.
Athens County Common Pleas Court she had not seen him.
·
(Contlnuecl on Page 3}:
The
criminal
case,
filed
by
the
u.s.
..
to obstruction of justice for aiding
!&lt;,

·A:u·thorities expect .
pleas ·in burglaries

1987 NISSAN.
SENTRAXE

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1987 DODGE
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1991 FORD .
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1994
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1989
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local trade.

mHes.

1992DODGE
DAKOTA

&lt;fCab. ado, L£, V-$, air,
crul8e. ti~. low miles.

35_..
A Gannett Co. N__,....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Apr1119, 1996

2 SectiCIIMI, 12 PegM

One ·year later

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

1993 NISSAN
SENTRAXE

' Vol. 46, NO. 246 .

.

an

. i

•

Local high
school teams
post victories

Picasso
renaissance
on horizon

•

....

•

1994
RANGER
5 speed, stereo, t·ownar

American Alloys pleads guilty, fined ·
on charge of price fixing conspir~cy

.

Peoples Bank to assume control .over
Meigs, Gallia operations on April 26
The Peoples Banking &amp; lhtst Co.
will assume operations of offices and
motor b'anks at three locations in Gallia and Meigs Counties at 3 p.m. Friday, April 26, with no disll!ptlon of
service to customers.
This information follows an earlier announcement made by Robert
Evans, president and chief executive
officer of Peoples Bank, of plans for
{'copies Bank to pu~hasc banking
· .offices in Gallipolis, ~omcroy and
Rutland beipg sold by Bank One.
"We feel nothing but excitement
about the economic development ·
possibilities that exist in this region
of Ohio," Evans said.
"Through our pm:hasc of these ·
~ ojlices, we arc committing the
resources n~sary to sUpport d)at
.velopment
as well as serve busi1
IICSS1individual and faniily financilll
needs,'~ he, added.
, Llny Hpldrcn, execll(ive vice
~ident for Peoples Bank. said the
b,tnk is cumndy worlcing with, Btlnk
,.

One on communicating infonnation
to current Bank One customers about
the transition.
"Our hope is that there will be no
apprehension about upcoming
changes," he said. "In fact, we
believe that planned changes- such
as e~panded office hours - will be
met with nothing but approval."
Holdren also noted that staffing
will not change in any of the three
offices.
"You will still sec the same familiar faces when you walk through the
~... he assured.
.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co. was
founded in Marlena in 1902. Begun
to serve the burgeoning oil industry
in 'the region, it has evolved into a
true community . bank, supporting
education, business and industry, the
arts 111111 die people of its service area.
Peoplcs Bank currently has offices
in the Ohio communities of Marietta, Athens, Belpre, Lowell, .Middleport, Nelsonville, Newadt, Reno and

The Plains.
Each of these locations, eltcept for
Newark. which is a lending facility,
is a full service financial operation
offering a variety of deposit accounts;
TeleBank, ATM and motor bank
options; investment and trust services; discount brokerage; Vi~ cards; ·
, and other services.
Comniitted to progress in banking,
Peoples Bank also offers retirement
products such as individual "retire•
ment accounts and mutual funds
through Northwest Territory Life
Insurance Agency, a subsidiary of its
sister banlc, The rli'St National Bank
of Southeastern Ohio.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Co. is a
suj:&gt;sidiary of Peoples Bincotp, a publicly-held company traded on the
ROAD
TO COMPLETioN- Kok~­
NASDAQ stock exchange under the
.lng Conatruclldn c•-.,. busy Pf'8PII'Inafor
symbol PEBO. A bank known for stac0mp1at1on of two t.Ma on the 2.2klllaU.S. . ·
33o'l-77 four-lena connector projeCt between
bility and profitability, I ~S saw PeoRock Springs and
Polnta.
pies Bancorp complete tts 22nd conshown
performing
dirt
IWI01IM
and grade work
secutive year of profitability.

CLOSE

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a.-

on whit will 10011 be the on r~~mp tor eoutft. • _·
boUnd tl'lfflc at Five Points. Ofllcllla .,. hop- ::!
lng to resume full work on the proJioto u •llr .: • :
er permitting, within the next weal!. (81 illllat •
pholo·by Tom Hunter)

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO V'Je;~tiH'r

.Local News in Brief: .

S.lanbly,AprtUt

The Daily Sentinel
'LstafJG.slid inl!J48
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

.,2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW

Gene111 Manager

Controll!!lr

word•.

,.,.hoi,.

Lftt.,. to tiM edltiK MW ftl.:.:..na. Th~y Mtouk1 1:-e htu fhMt 3(JI).
An kltltrl
.,. •u~ to «&lt;lttng MJd mutt 1M •Md •tPd Include addrN• and
rrum·
,_ No Ur!l/f/Md 1 - . litH 1» pub//-. Lotrera 11!ould 1» In good tooro,

«1_1, ,...,.., not,.,..__,

i.

Cardinals blast
abortion veto

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Does

NRA's leadership r.eflect its members?

By Jeck Andlrson
andJIIchsel Bin skin

Alllericans .:. don 't understand t1w
The gun group is the subject of a
politic:i- and~ are chip- new book by Jack Anderson, "Inside
pina away at the American way of the NRA: Anned and Dangerous"
life .... Unless we take ~~~:lion today,, (Dove). The book charts the NRA's
the tona slide down the slippery·slope rise from obscurity to one of the most

WASHINGTON -- The first
anniversary of the bombina in otlahoma City is an appropriate ti_rne to
probe one of the groups whose mcen- will only continue until tHere's no powerful lobbying organizations on
diary rhetoric has fostered division in freedom left in America at all."
Capitol Hill . The group began
America: the National Rifle Associ·
In 1992, McVeigh wrote a letter to humbly enough in 1871 as a club
ation.
his congressman decrying laws lhat established lo " promote rifle pracThe NRA did not inspire Timothy prohibit possession of stun gu'ns ahd ticc."
McVeigh lo. commit the horrible noxious substances like mace. On the
Today, however. its extremist
crime he has been charged with. But back of the enyelope was a swnp . agenda has rankled prominent gmr
can the NRA evade aU responsibili· with abald eagle and the words "I'M · supporters -- like fonner President
ty if its invective influences suicep- THE NRA."
George Bu~h, who resigned his NRA
tible personalities to act out their vioThis begs the question: Who is the mc~bersh1p afl~r readmg the
lent fantasies?
NRA? On the surface, it's comprised LaPterre letter. Reured Gen. Nonnan
McVeigh was a member of the of 3.S million members -- most of Schwarzkopf also resigned, ·saying
NRA for at least four years. He whom care sincerely abouttbeircon- the group appeals "to a fnnge elereceived NRA mailings like the one slitutional right to bear arms and are mcnt of gun owners."
that the group's e.ecutive vice pres- willing to accept reasonable restraints
The NRA still gets it way in Conident, Wayne LaPierre, distributed in the interest of public safely.
gress, however, mostly because it
last year. II called government agents
But the NRA is run by a tight rewards candidates who carry their
"jack-booted thugs. "
cabal. of leaders who use propagan- water. The NRA's clout 'Vas demonThat letter also lashed out at Pres- . da.and the power of the purse to.suit strated recently when the House
ident Clinton by claiming ~in his their private agenda. The leaders repealed lheban on assault weapons.
administration, ·~if you have a badge, have turned a legitimate fellowship The Repubhcan leadership made no
you have the1!ovemment's go-ahead of sportsmen into a right-wing pol it- . bones aboul the fact that the repeal
to harass, intimidate, even murder ical organization that is not repre- was a poht1cal . payoff to a gmup
law-abiding citizens."
sentative of the moderate bulk of its whose campa1gn · conmbuuons .
The letter continued: "Most membership.
helped elect them in 1994.

One of the nngleaders was Rep.
Gerald Solomon, R-N.Y., who his
received $29,700 .from the NRA
since 1990. Solomon shamelessly ;
shouted down Rep. P~triek Ken~y. ;
D-R.I., who had JUSt movmgly .•
addressed the fact that two of his •
uncles were killed by gunfire .
"My wife lives alone five days a
week in a rural area of upstate New :
York!" Solomon screamed. "She
has a right ro defend herself when I :
am not there,.and don't you ever for- '
get it!"
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As we later report¢. none of Mrs. ,
Solomon's five rifles were -affected :
by the weapons ban. And our review
or the police blotter in Solomon 's
hometown revealed that the cops deal
with such mundane matters as animals stuck in trees.
The column generaicd a lot of
mail, which shows that the NRA stirs
up sJrong feelings on both sides of
'the debate. We·invite~ responses to .
a letter from Don Baralt of Blue Bell, ·
Pa., who loved eur story about "the
screwball congressman from Glens
falls.... The ll.epublicans fllle Congress and the NRA rul.es the Republi cans."

By SUSAN PAGI:
U.S: Catholic cardinals and bishops Tuesday condemned President Clinton's veto of the partial-birth abortion ban and urged Congress to override
i.t. .
.
The unitod stance by the nation's Catholic hierarchy -the second tim.e
in history they have joined to lobby a president -ensures the veto will be
a major political issue.
"Your action ... takes our nation to a critical turning point in its treat. ment of helpless human beings inside and outside the womb," the letter
·declares. "It moves our nation one step further tow,ard acceptance of infan-

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~-At«&gt;THER

EXPECTED
KI.LUNS

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Other
voices, other
opinions
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• . Lisa Blair Hathaway, her face bathed in tears, endeavored to explain to
sti.mned parents everywhere just why she allowed her 7-year-old .child to pilot
: ;the unn~essaty coast-to-coast-flight that killed..her. ")did everything so this
: &lt;Jlild codld have freedom and choice ... " Little Jessica Dubroff was killed
-lieading into a stonn that would challenge far more experienced pilots. Jes! )lea's father. Lloyd, and her flight instructor, Joe Reid, also died in the
: Cheyenne, Wyo., crash. No useful purpose can possibly be ascribed to their
: {{~aths. But the tragedy does provide reason to ponder the stylish notion of
- :children liS autonomous beings, pilots of their fate . It is a dangerously mis: ·guided,notion by which too many parent$ today, goaded on by trendy notions
: cif "children's rights," aitempt to avoid their responsibilities. Questions remain
: :a_llout the e~ tentto which the adults in her life pressed Jessica.... Jessica's
· Jather claimed ....This is just another experience that Jess has selected for her: -se1r." Even if true, however, children don't need "freedom and choice" so
: 1uuch as they require finn limits and structure. The worli is far too danger·
: &lt;tus a place for 7-year-olds to navigate, no matter how precocious they, may
· }!e. It is every parent's obligation to assert protective control- for the sake
: lif their children as well as society. The rates of violent juvenile crime are
: not rising because boys and gi~ls lack freedom and choice.- The Det~t
: News, April 14

~ Today

in

: By The Associated Press

hi~tory
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: Today is Friday, April 19, the IIOthday of 1996. There are 256 days left
: in the year.
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Today's Highlight in History:
One year ago, on April 1'9, 1~5. a truck bomb exploded outside the Alfred
: P. Murrah Federal Building·in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, and injur: ing 500. Two suspects, Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols, face trial.
On this date:
In 1775, the American Revolutionary War began with the battles of Lex : ington and Concord.
· In 1782, the Netherlands recognized American independence.
:
In 1892, the prototype of the firsfcommercially successful American auto: mobile was comp.Jeted in Springfield, Mass .. by Charles E. Duryea and his
: brother Frank.
·
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In 1893, tbe Oscar Wilde play "A Woman of No Importance" opened at
: the Haymarket Theatre in London.
\.. . _..:_
: In 1910, after weeks of being viewed through telescopes, Hall~om~t
. was reported visible to the naked eye in Curacao.
In 1933. !be United States went off the gQid standard.
In 1943, during World War II, tens of thousands of Jews living in the Ware
: saw Gheuo began waging a valiant but futile battle against Nazi forces.
: In 1945, the Rodgers and Hammcrstein musical "Carousel" opened on
· Broadway.
,.
: In 1951, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, relieved of his command by Presi: dent Truman, bade farewell to Congress, quoting a line from a ballad:_"Old
· soldiers never die; they just fade away."
: In 197S,India announced it had launched its first satellite, from the Sovi·
: el Union atop a Soviet rocket. ..
. In 1982, astronauts Sally K . Ride and Guion S. Bluford Jr. became the
· ftrSt woman and firSt African-American to be tapped for U.S. space missions.
.
In 1989, 47 sailors weie killed when a gun turret exploded aboard lhe
· USS Iowa.
·
.
,
:: • In 1993. the SI-day siege at tbe jtranch Davidian compound near Waco,
:fcxas, ended as fiR desiroyed the s~ture after federal agents began smashiris their way in; dozens of !IWPie, mcludmg Dav1d Koresh, wei): killed ..
: · Ten years ago: Ten~ of thousands of demonstrators ~J~arched and burned·
~can t11111s in Brilllin, West Gennany, Italy and Sweden to protest the
t.J.S. air raid on I.lbva.
·
. ..
: D 'd
·- Sovicl Presit!Mt Mikhail S. Gorbachev begll" a vtsllto Japan. Str av1
·Lean diRctor of the mov~ "The Bridge on the River Kwai," "Lawrence
of Wia" and "Doc~ Zhivago," died in London at age 83.
; One year ago: In his.Easter Sunda~ message, Pope Jo~n Paul II sent a
·meuase of peace 10 vicllllll of unrest, 1ncludmg the Palest•mans and Klinls.
: Tbought for Today:. "The crisis you have to worry about most is the o~e
011 don •1 sec: coming." - Mike Mansfield, -former Senale Democrabc
~ ud li.S. ambassador IO Japo o
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William Tyson of Tifton, Ga., shot
back: " It's my qpinion (that) Don
Baralt is crazy as. hell! The Honorable Gerald Solomon's wife ·- along
with my wife and every other honest
American -- has the right to O'l'n an
AK-47, Uzi ur any other weapon for
protection. Our liberal government
will not give us any kind of prot~c­
tion ."

They vowed that ''each of us .... will do all we can" to infonn.votersa threat that could carry a steep political price. Catholics, a quaner of the
··electorate, are a key voting group.
: · "The president said this is a morally wrenching issue, and he thought
·quite a bit about it and prayed about it," White House spokeswo111an Mary
Ellen Glynn said. But she said he vetoed the bill .)list week to protect women 's
liealth. .
.
V
, Presumptive Republican nominee Bob Dole has pledged if president to
sign the ban.
In the procedure, a late-tenn fetus is delivered feet first through the birth
· :~anal, then suction collapses the skull. It is sometimes used when severe fetal
abnonnalities are found too late for other methOds.
.
·: "The vociferous opposition of the church. hierarchy adds a different
dimension I'm not sure we've seen before," says John White, a politics'Jlro(essor at Catholic University.
·
· The letter was signed by all the USA's active cardinals: Joseph Bernardin
of Chicago, Anthony Beilacqua of Philadelphia, James Hickey of Washington, William Keeler of Baltimore, Bernard Law of Boston, Roger Mahony ofl.,os Angeles, Adam Maida of Detroit and John O'Connor of New York.
Also signing: Bishop Anthony Pilla of Cleveland, president·of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
: Susan Pllg~ is a writer for USA Today.

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Bill Pykus of Ashtabula, Ohio,
zapped us e-mail: "I don 't happen to
own either of these weapons nor do
I belong to the NRA, b~t 1 fjnd it very
dis turning that other people need 10
get involved with personal decisions .
about protection and self-defense ....
Why is ·it so imperative to take
weapons away from people who
want them'"
William. Hunt of Lompoc, Calif.,
disagreed with our conlentipli that the
NRA leadership controls the group:
"The voting membership rules the
NRA: I'm the NRA."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicltte, Inc.

Dev~l.oping
Few 'proposals f~r p~litical.refilr:m
have demonstrated their popularity as
convincingly as tenn limits for state
and federal .legislators ..Opinion palls
report overwhelming publiC support
for them. More to the point, vo1ers
have already passed, in 21 of the 23
states that allow 'such a procedure,
initiatives limiting the number of .
te.rms their members of the U.S.
House and Senate can serve.
But, to the immense relief of most
members of Congress, the Supreme ·
Court in · May 19'15 ruled, in a
cliffhanger .5-to-4 vote, that all such
limits are unconstitutional. If congressional tenns are to be limit~.
therefore. it will take a constitutional amendment to do so.
Now, the traditional way to amend
the Constitution, and the only way it
has ever been done, is by having both
houses of Congress pass a proposed
amendment by a two-thirds vote,
after which it must be ratified by the
legislatures of three-fourths of the
states. You can imagine how slender
thc chances are that two-thirds of
either house will ever give such an
amendment their blessing.
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a new strategy for term -limits

But U.S:,Tenn Limits, the largest . To give'iuldcd monlentum to the
group. supporting tenn limits, bas demand for popular election of senbeen dipping into the history books, ators, initi~tives were also passed in
and has come · ton a fiendishly various sta)es providing fur a nonbinding primary to select a senatori-•
William A.
at choice ~Y popular vote. If a legislator then voted against that choice.•
clever way of forcing an amendment that fact would be noted beside his
through.
name when he himself ran for rcA century ago, much the same election .. Thanks to this and other
problem was faced by those who pressures, so many states were soon
wanted to amend tbe Constitution to calling for a convention that the, U.S.
provide for the direct election of,sen- Senate knuckled under and approved
ators (rather tha!l their election by the the amendment itself.
state legislatures). The Senate refused
So U.S. Te1111 Limits is budgeting
even to ~ring the proposal up for 3 $10 milli'on over the nexr two years
\'Ole.
to support new state initiatives that
Supporters . of direct elections will instruct the state legislatures to
call for a constitutional convention to
thereupon
but · propose
· ·a tenn-ll·m 1·t amendment.
r. 1 1tumed
· · .to a never-used
1
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per eel y eglllmate a temauve way The initiative will also provide that
of proposing a constitutional amend- legislators who fail to vote for such
ment: Have the legislatures of two- a cal) . will have a notation placed
lhirds of the states call (as provided beside their names when they run for
in Article V) for a constitutional con- re-election reading, " DISREGARDvention lo draft and pass it. There- ED VOTER INSTRUCTION ON
after, as usual, three-quarters of 'the TERM LIMITS." In states not havstate legis!atures would n~d to rati- ing ihe initiative procedure, heavy
fy it. But Congress would be entire- lobb¥ing will be undertaken for
ly out of the loop.
equivalent laws.

Rusher

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Few state legislators are likely to
ri sk their necks by inviting such a
notation, just to keep oth~r politicians
in offi ce. When the number of states
calling for a convention nears the
magic two-thirds, the betting is that
Congress will crumple (as it did in
191 2, on the Senate question) and
pass · tenn -limit amendment itself, to
keep from being drastically upstaged.
There is nothing in the least
unconstitutional about putting information concerning a candidate's
record on t~c ballot, if the Jaw so provides. Of course. supporters of other
caus'f may want to use the same
techmque, but what 's wr()ng wi!h that
if they can get enough support to pass
the necessary law?
Some conserv~tivcs arc 'rearful
that a Constitution-amending convention might "get out o£ hand " and
adopt all sorts of ill-advi sed amendments.

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William A. Rushfi' is a Distln·
guished Fellow of the Claremont
lnsti~ute for the StUdy of States.
manshlp and Political Philosophy.

outdone by the still•earlier Babylonian storytellers who were masters at
stretching the creduli!Y .of their audi·
enccs.

all the elderly in the population are
The dean of St. Paul's Cathedral
applauding.
in London, Rev. W.R. Jngc, lent his
, An increased sensitivity .to the suf· considerable prestige to the euthanafeliiigs of the aged has spurred sia movement in the 1930s.
todar's interest in euthanasia anq
lnge said; "It seems' anomalous
medically asststcd suicide. (Euthana- . that a man inlly be p~.nlshcd for cru·:
~ ia is from a Greek word meaning
city if he does nol put J.'oorse or dog
· out of its migery byt is liable to be .
When you remember that one "easy death.")
According to Hastings Encyclo: hanged for murder if he helps a canBabylonian legend mentions a king
·
pedia
·of Religion and Ethics, cer patient to an dverdose of morwho reigned for 65,000 years, the
Genesis writer was exercising con· \euthanasia is "the doctrine that in phine. ! do not think we can assume
·' certain circumstances when , owing to that. God wills .the prolongation of
siderable literary' restraint.
1 disease .or senility, a person 's life has
tQrture for the benefit.of the soul of
By the time the Psalms were writ- ceased 10 be either agreeable or use- 1he sufferer."
ten (abo111 1000 B.C.), life expectarr-, , f~l, the sufJerer should be painlessly
George Plagenz is a waiter for
cy in the Bible was down to about· k1lled, either by h1mself or by anethNewspaper Enterprise Association.
what it is . in the modern era. "The er."
'
days of our years are threescore
/
years and ten," or maybe in exceptional cases . 80 years, said the~
Psalmist.
.
But lately we·have lx:en outstripping those .biblical limits. Centenarians ate no long~t a rarity. What made
•.,'
George Bums such a marvel was not
that he lived to be a 100 but that at
IOO he ~as enjoxing the pleasures of
a man half his age · - a good cigar, a
martini and a pretty girl. •
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Such a boon is seldom given to the
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chronically or tenninally ill among
the aged who have few enjoyments
and who must wonder why Willard.
•
Scott makes such a fuss over somebOdy who reaches the century nlark.
While an ~ in life expectancy
'
may be a reason· for the medical
"ATTf:NDANCE IS DOWN. M:'VE GOT TO 00
world to sll!lld up and take a bow. nol
SOMETHING/ TIY smiling a lot. •
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George R. Plafienz

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Dorothy V. Proffitt
Dorothy Victoria Wolfe Proffiu. 86, Racine, died Wednesday, April 17,
1996 ill the Veterans Memorial Hospital Elltended CIIC Unil
.
Born in Racine on June 17, 1909, daughter of the late Henry and Scva
Norris Wolfe, she was a schoolteacher, a member of the Mount Moriah
ChW'Cb of God. Racine, and a retired fanner.
Survivina are a son and daushler-in-law, David and Lola Proffitt of Racine;
1wo daughten, Carole Suzanne Bush and Nancy Lou Holsinger, both of
Racine; a fonner son-in-law, Larry Holsinger of Racine; and I I Jrllfldchil·
dren and 14 great-grandchildren.
.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Joseph Proffitt; a sister, Leslie
Smith; a brother, Robert Wolfe; and a son· in-law, Jacob Bush .
Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in the Mount Moriah Church of God,
with the Rev. James Satterfield and Pastor Lawrence Bush officiating. Bur·
ial will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery. FriendS may call today from 59 p.m. at the Straight, Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va.

Polneroy, struck and killed a deer that ran into the path of his I992 '
van, causing moderate damage.

(Continued from P.ge1)

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No injuries were reported after a deer/van colli ioo on State Route :

7 near Pomeroy Wednesday.
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Accordina to a ·~ias Coullly Sheriff's report, Nick Leonud, ;

Contracts non-renewed

. W.VA.

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VIIAssodllo&lt;l Plflll Cl..,_f

1Weather promises ·to be
':• wet tonight and Saturday
: • By TM Auocllted Preas

The record-high tempel'lture for
this
date at the Columbus weather
Another line of thunderstonns is
: expected to move · across Ohio station was 86degrees in 1941 while
:.: ·tonight, and some could be severe, the record low was 21 in 19S3. Sun·
· .foieca5ters said. Temperatures will be set tonight 111ill be at 8:13p.m. an11
sunrise Saturday at 6:46 a.m.
;"· in the mid-50s to -low 60s.
: ' More rain is possible on Saturday
; · while the mercury climbs into the 80s
Weather forecast:
: · some places, the National Weather
Tonight...Showers and thunder• Service said.
stonns likelY west ...And a chance
:
The showers should end Sunday east. A few thun&lt;lerstonns could be
' morning with fair skies expected severe. Lows mid 50s to lower 60s.
..
through Monday.

... today's livestock report

DPIA tutor.
• Approved renewal for one year
of the following supplemental contracts for the 1996-97 school year:
Cynthia. Chadwell, Riverview Elementary head teacher; Doris Well,
Tuppers Plains Elementary head
teacher; Jim Huff, stale and federal
program coordinator; Mary Price,
special ·educalion coordinator; Arch
Rose, transportation supervisor and
coordinator; Carolyn Ritchie, food
service coordinator.
• Approved a request from Olive
Township to use the district's twoway radio transmission system and
frequency, conditional that there is no
-interference .duri_ng school transport
hours, on a one year trial basis.
• . Approved an agreement with
Nationwide Insurance to insure the
district's buildings and contents effec-

Rutlllnd woman charged
with littering
•
Meigs County sheriff's deputies charged 18-year-old Phyllis J. Oarlc :
Qf Rutland with littering after receiving a complaint of bottles being :
thrown from a vehicle on New Lima Road.
A witness recorded the license number of the vehicle, which was :
stopped by Rulland Police at the Rutland corporation limit on New ;
L1ma Road. Deputies arrived and issued a citation, according to asher- ·
·
ilfs department report.

Leading Creek district lifts boil order
A boil order for Leading Creek Conservancy District customers :
north of Salem Center has been lifted.
:

MfJigs announcements

Po.meroy cleanup slated
sioner's office.
Also, State Rep. John Carey, ~­
tive for the period April 18 , 1996lo
.Spring cleanup will be held in
Aprill8, 1997.
Pomeroy next week. Workers will Wellston, w,ill hold an open d~r .
, Approved the final reading of the pick up rubbish on the following meeting April 26 a1 Rutland Vill~~ge
district transportation policy, and dates. first w~d,. Monday; .second Hall from 9-10 a.m.
adopted as board policy the district . ~ard. :ruesda~~ lhtrd ward, Wednes•
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drug and alcohol testing for com- day; village wid~. Thursday and Fn- Cookie sale
Girl Scout cookies will be sale at
mercial drivers license holders.
day. Workers Will not ptck up tnes,
, Approv.cd granting paid profes- wood or apphanccs.
the Kroger Store in Pomeroy, 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m . Saturday.
•
sional staff days for staff members to
work with the county office on cur- Skin testing ofl'ered
A free skin testing clinic will be Blood pressure clinic .
riculum developmentll!ld testing.
conducted
by Connie Karschn ik,
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
• Approved the creation of three
summer school positions for 1996 R.N ., Meigs County tuberculosis will hold a blood pressure clinic and .
only, including one high school cer· nurse, at the Syracuse Fire Depart- meting Tuesday 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.in.
tified teacher, one elementary ~ni­ . men~ Tuesday from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. The group will have a luncheon after
All individuals who are in food · the meeting.
· fied teacher, and one elementary -cer·
service
are required to obtain yearly
tified teacher's aid,
' Attending the meeting were board skin tests. The evening clinics are Founder's Day
Beta Sigma Phi Sororitv will
members . Jim Smith, Greg Bl!iley, held in various areas of the county for
the
convenience
of
residents,
observe Founder's Day Thursday at }
Mike Martin, Rick Sanders, John
The Sportsman in Athens. ·
•
Rice, Superintendent Ron Minard, Karschnik said.
and Treasurer Eloise Boston.
Open door meetings
Speaker at church
A representative of U.S. Rep.
The Rev. Arius Hurt of the For~st
Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, will · Run Baptist Church will speak at i 1
be at the Meigs County Courthouse a.m. Sunday at the Naomi Baptist
Monday, I 0-11 a.m. in .the commis- Church.
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Senate tackles problem
of expanding deer herd

COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- steady to SO cents higlir; sows 1.00COLUMBUS (AP) - If the Ohio
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• Ohio direct hog prices at selected I.SO lower.
Division of Wildlife wants to thin the
Estimated receipts: 40,000.
• buying points Friday by the U.S .
state's growing deer herd, some legPrice~~ from The Producers
: Department of Agriculture Market
islators believe lhe agency should
Livestock Association:
: News:
make it easier for hunters to bag two
Cattle: 2.00 10 3.00 lower.
:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
of
the animals in the ~arne day.
·Slaughter steers: choic~ so.oQ..
; ' cents ·higher; demand': moderate on
That was one of the ideas (hat Sen .
S6.50; select 47.00-51.00.
·• · moderate riln.
·
Ben
Gaeth, R-Defiance, and other
Siaughter heifers: choice S0.00U.S. I-2, 220-260 lbs . 47.00members of a ' special legislative
·
49.50, few 46.50 and 50.00; plants 53.50; select 46.00-SO.!JO.
committee
gave the Ohio Division of
Cows: steady; all cows 37.00 and
. 48.50-SO.SO, few 50.75
,
Wildlife
at
a hearing Thursday into
down.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 40.50problems
an
expanding herd cause
Bulls: steady; all bulls 39.50 and
46.50.'
for
farmers
and
motorists.
•
down.
Sows: steady to 1.00 lower..
Patrick Ruble, administrator of
Sbeep and lambs: s!eady to 1.50
wildlife
management and research for
U.S. 1·3, 300-SOO lbs. 31.00- , hig~r; c~qicc woo)s 75.00-82})(); .
the'
divisiton,
said ~ was a reasonable
.. . 34;1Jl~l¥).,6~.1~. 34.00-38.00.
ch01ce c!_tps ~0.00-85..00; feeder
proposa[
,
~
i/~:7~~ows and gilts lambs 112.00 and down; aged sheep
Hunters
in
most
counties
already
•.
32.00 and down.
may take two deer lhe same day, but
must leave the field to do so.
"You would have to kill one. put
a
temporary
tag on it, take it to a
=;;. Units of the Meigs County Emcr11:58 a.m .. t-'Jeigs Min~ 31, Vern
check
station,
get a pennanent tag,
: · gency Medical Service recorded eight Gabriel Jr. and Gerald Wend, O'Bleand then you could go back out and
::; 'calls for assistance Thursday. includ· ness Memorial Hospital; ·
~.- ing IWQ transfer calls. Units respond9:40 p.m., Noble Sum!flit Road, pursue a second deer. " Ruble said.
" They 're proposing that you
:-· ing includ~d:
. Charles Manley, HMC.
could
.shoot a deer, put your tempoBASHAN Vfl)
TUPPERS PLAINS
rary tag on it, and continue to ,hunt,
~.
1z':27 p.m., structure fire on Scout
S:40 a.m., · New Hope Road,.
: Camp Road, Carl Klinker property, Telitha Casto, Veterans Memorial without going and getting a penna::-.;· Tuppers Plains squap assisted.
Hospital.
:-":
MIDDLEPORT
p!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!~!!!!!!!!!!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"ii
Veterans Memorial
•
1:48 p.m .• south Thirct.Avenue,
Thursday
admissions - none.
Heather Beyley, Holzer Medical Cen- •
-none.
Thursday
discharges
- ter.
Am Ele Power ..;................ 40 .112
Holzer
Medical
Center
~REEDSVILLE
Akzo ..................~ ••••••••.••••••. 57 314
Discharges .April 18 - Mildred
011 ................;...;,.40 112
Alhl1nd
:;.; 6:S1 p.m., Stale Route 248, Mtuj
McGraw,
Donna Ullmer, Eleanor
ATlT
.......................................
61
~-." Newland, Camden-Clark Memorial
Bank
one
..........................
34
1/2
'
Evans,
Mrs.
Kenneth Plants and .
;::". Hospital:
Bob Evan• ........................ 15 318
daughter,
April
Smith, Jeremy Sims,
RUTLAND
Borg-Warnef\ •••••••••••• 1•••••••• 35 314
Perry Swaney.
·
·
Chlmplorllnd, ,._............... 19 718
' .·
~
Births
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Keith
Chlrmlna Shop ..............5 15116
~··
Jones, daughter, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
City Holclng ...................... 25 112
~
Mrs. Darryl Martin, son, Point PleasF~l Mogui ................... 18 518
Gannett
................
~
...................
68
ant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Timothy
·-·
The following couples . were
Goodyeer TAR; .......~ .......... 50 318
Smith, son, Gallipolis.
:,:; issued marriage licenses recently in
K...,...rt ........................,.........1D118
(Published with permission)
,_._, the Meigs County Probate Court of ·Lande enc~ ..........................17 112
:::;: Judge Robert Buck: '
Limited InC......- .......~·....,...18 314
::.~
Robert Allen Cooper, 25, and • ~lea Blncorp.... v .............23
Ohio VIIIIY Bank ....................40
~:·: Melissa Dawit Sprouse. 2S, both of
OM Valley ....................:....30 718
. :·:·' Parkersburg. W.Va.; Michael Joe
Rockwell .......................... 5&amp; 1/4
_., Grueser, 44, and Peggy S: Thompson,
Robbins a Myers ....................38
39. bolh of Pomeroy; Jo,hn Kevin
Royal Outch/Shell ..........1431/4.
~" Pullins. 30, Pomeroy, and Angela
Shonty'alnc ..••...........••.... 10 112
Lynn Mcponald, 25, Rutland; ~obe';' . ·Star Bank ..........................65 118
POMEROY
Wfl!dy lnt'l ........................ 19 118
Bemall) Six, 48, and Bobb1 Gall
Near
Ponieroy-Muon
Bridge
Worthlrigton Ind...............19 518
· Jones, 40, both
892-2588
... . of. Albany.
.
.
VINTON
Stock report• •r• the 10:30
Glillla
County
DllflleY Yard
a.m.
cjuotea
provided
by
Advsat
·· The
Sentinel of Gallipolis.
155 Mlln 8t.
388 8803
(USPS 213-9181

nent tag. They're saying there 's time
wasted out of the field to go tag when
you could stay there and go ahead
and get your second deer," he said.
The size of the deer herd contin, ues to grow - along with related
.crop damage and traffic accidents despite s~ efforts at control. Estimated population: 500,000.
"_It increases probably 4 to S percent a year.

....

'7115,1100 o.\JLI
IIAYIIfU8 SA'I' &amp; 81111

t sn

•..
~: EMS

..... .._

lsOO

S'rt:VI•: MAKt't

S&amp;J . llLID
IIGI .

h15 , 1:15 Olt1LT
IIA'I'IIfiU SA'!' I SUII

hts J : ts

JH[ IIID tiG[

7100 9120 DAILY . 110 IU.'I'JRU . ~·

.-..,.lliU£1 IND CIMPIN'

::rs.

SA1' I • • M'l'l•sa O.O.W . I ;]t hlO 101
~

cliRIMG IOCIII

VAll - - in ...,.. QUU'I"'
Gl" ClftlPlCA1'11 AVAILABL£1

units answer &amp;·calls
I

'

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HOSpital news

StOCkS

.

• FREE Activation.

•

Marriage licenses

• One Cent
Bag Phone

£2

-·-·-

Daily

Publiahfd every afta'ftotn. M~)' throuJb
Friday, Ill C:O.n $1., ""-f, Ohio, by lhe
Ohio Ville)' l'llbUolllna C-IGMnal Co., ·
r..-oy, Otdo 45'1611. Pb. lm·2t!!6. Se«&gt;od

,ll;

..

MICH.

•

~,

What the Bible said about _longevity
Methuselah lived to be 969,
according to Genesis 5:27. "and
then he died." Somebody today who
died at 969 years of age would have
been born in 1027, almost 40 years
before the Nonnan conquest of England in I066.
Who was the second,oldest person
mentioned in the Bible?
If you said Adam, you were close
-- but no fig leaf. Next to Methuselah, the longest-lived of the patriarchs
were Jared, Methuselah's grandfather, 962; Noah, 950; and Adam, 930.
Did these people really push the
age of 1,000 before lhey died? Those
who believe that everything in the
Bible is literally true say yes.
A Seventh-day Adventist book
says, · "When one considers how
close these pioneers of the human
race lived lo the creation of the world,
their longevitY does not seem unrea·
.
sonable:
"Not.only were their constitutions
perfect (unaffected by hereditary disease), but their food was Qf the highest excellence -- gi'c?wn in soil that
had not been denuded of heallh·giv·
ing minerals.
"The stream of life also flowed
more gently.'11lere were none of the
fierce tensions that make ~ople old
so soon today." ·
Most Bible scholars, however,
don't take the patriarchs' ages literally. They speculate that the early
Bibl~ writers we.re not about to be

No 'injuries reported in deer-van crosh

Ac.:uW~

••

· - -....... ' - · Otlio.
-lllc A.-llled ...... and lhe oibo

Ne·- "'*'-·

POITMAB'I1IRI &amp;!lid- ......V001 10
111c Doily Seodoel, It l CMJ 51., Pomotoy,
Ohio 4!7611.

'f

Conto&lt;or--

SI!IICID'TION IATIII

I

IIJ.............. - ................... ,_ .........$2.00
Ono - .
Ole Moalii ............... -...... --................... SI.lO .

o.o v.

......................... _.. _................ SI04.oo

id-.,_____

SlNoLB COPY PRICII

.•

•,llolly ... _ ...... _.:.................;.......- ....... 35 Cellll

.•

- l l a i ... dalri..... Plflbe- ..y
•· lllllillo
10 11lc Dolly-~
.
GO 1 -110 « ~~- baiL CNdil will bt·

:

.,

·'

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

)lo .......,.tM lly nil ..... ~~~~~

....,..._.,..~It•••"''
'

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r. - ·
.

.......--..-·-'-·· ~-·--..SI7.30
_ __ _..........., ..--..-;-.....Ull2

JZ-ijjj;"'.,...
q;"i;~..I),..._.___,.._ _,_ _.. ,...D.2t

·-----··-····..._........ _.,_.......-.12
J2 ....... _........... _ ....,_.. ,,.................

• Installed ·car
Phone $,39. 95

' .
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dfLOWERS"
~~ctRc~e·s· GREENHOUSES"

• Two Year Agreement
Required.

Super Selection of Flowers &amp;'Vegetables
Flat-. (48 ct.)
Baskett (1 0")
Plam•rs

~6.00 ...

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All plants are he8Jthy &amp; ready to dig In for summer
We believe in quality ~ old fashioned service
·
Sufi. • Fri. 12 Noon•?? (Suprise Me)
Sa~rdaY • 24 hours 11'11 Leave The Ught On)
Bring the kids, dog, &amp; mother·ll'l·law.
(After 3 days I start charging rent)
Queetionl: Lany'P. Circle
814-848-2021

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ATHENS
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Frmn RaciM, just put South8rn l'ligh SChool, trawl CR RD
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(Watch
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Superior Ellclronlcl

Rlchlend Ave.

1-80G-44~CELL-1
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1182-7070
342-9909
89 s. lllllrbl St. 204 W. Second Sl
1,19 N. Mlln
LOGAN ·
POMEROY
NEW LEXINGTON · 75~5211
~
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Blllckbums Appl-.nc.
' · Neleonvllle

.,

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�•

'S ports

The Daily Sentiil.~}

Marlins, Phillies, Cubs and Pirates record victories

By BEN WALKER
A'P S.Nball WrHer
• Robb Nen has known Ryan
Klesko since their high school days
in California, and has learned one
thing during the years: 'The NL
home run leader sure loves those
fastballs.
' So Nen turned away from his best
pi tch and switched to sliders. It
worked as he escaped a jam in the
bottom of the ninth inning Thursday
·night and preserved the Florida Marlins' 5-3 win over the Atlanta Braves.
Nen, who blew a two-run lead the
previous night, quickly found himself in trouble ag ain at Atlanta. The
Braves put runners on second and
third with one out and had Klesko at

the plate.
" He's always known what I
throw 10 him," Nen said. HI wasn't
going to let him beat me on that."
Klesko, who's hit seven home
runs, didn't hit anything at all as he
struck out chasing a ball in the din.
"He hung one and I missed it,"
Klesko said. "Then I swung at a couple of bad ones. They staned out
good and then dove out of the zone.
J 'guess I should have sat back and
waited for a better pitch."
Nen then retired pinch-hitter
Dwight Smith on a grounder to
record Florida's first save of the season. The Marlins stopped Atlanta's
three-game winning ~treak . •
Charles Johnson and Gary

Sheffield hit home runs that helped
'Florida take a 5-0 lead against Tom
Glavine (1-3). Glavine struggled for
the second straight stan, lasting only
5 113 innings.
"I'll be the first one to tell you
when I stink and obviously the
results are not what I want," last season's World Series MVP said . "But
honestly I can say that I'm not that
far off. ... .The ·location on my
changeup (his best pitch) is just a little off."
.I t was a bad night for Braves second basemen.
· Mark Lemke was pulled from the
lineup just before gametime with a
slight pull in his right hamstring: His
replacement, Mark Mordecai, sus-

Todd aile hit his first tWO home
tained a bruised kidney in the first
inning on a collision in the baseline runs for Philadelphia, connecting for
and later sustained a broken right a 1hrec-run shot in the ninth inning
wrisl when he was hit by Greg Col- · 1hat rallied the Phillies at Olympic
brunn 's grounder, putting him on the Stadium.
Zeile, wllo signed with the
15-day disabled list.
In other games, Philadelphia beat Phillies as a free agent in the offMontreal 9-8, Chica~o defeated San season, hit a solo homer in the
Francisco 9-8 and Pittsburg~\ SlOpped eighth. Philadelphia trailed 8-Sin the
ninth. but Mar.k Whiten had an RBI
St. Louis 6-2.
single off Mel
and aile fol·
PhUiies 9,
8

lowed with his go-ahead homer.
Zeile had the fourth two-l'iomer
game of his camer. BC!Iilo Santiago
also homered· for the Philadelphia
and Shane Andrews homered for the
Expos: David ·Segui drove in three
runs for Montreal with his first
career four-hit game.

c!.tr~l DlvWon
z-Chicaao . .. ...... _71 9 .888
~t · lndiann ................ so :'0 .623
•·CLEVELAND .... 46 :W .m
x - Oet~it ..... ......... ..45 JS .S63
k·Allanra ................ 44 .\6 . ~50
. Otarlone ...............40 40 .SOO

Baseball

(See NL on P!'ge S)

AL standings
Eatter11 Dhillon

film

r.a.

Ia!

-~

4

.471
.400

•4 ~

.200

8b

/ lY I.

Bal!imo!ll ............... ll
,:\
• New York ......... :......6 6
Ddroi1......................8 9·
Toronto ....................6 9
Bm ton......................~ 12

.786

Milwaukee ... ......... 2~

6 .HB
6 .na
7 .461

MilWaukee ...... ......... 7

Minncsota ................ 6
Cblcagt).................... 6 · 8 .429
Kansas City ............. 5 10 . J:n

I '~J
:i

Wntern Dl\'lslon
, Seartr.e ............. . 12 4 .750
- Tc:u ti ..................... IO 4 .714
• California ................. ? 8 .467
Oakllnd ..................6 8 .429

I
4h
5

lull

1

Vancouver ............. I~

Ameriam Le..ue
BOSTON REIJ SOX : Tradod LHP
Bryan Ewersaerd ro the Texas Ran~ers for
a player 10 be named. Opti'oned RHP John
Doheny ro Puwnu:kef or !he lmern:uional
League.
.

n

Ia!

.728
.667

27
~

.510

.42~

24'~

.55 . ~I)
67 .163

lJ'rl
45'1:

46
S.

.32~

·I

NEW YORK Y .o\NKEES: OJ"iioned

.'i
ll

C JOJJt: Posada to Columbus of the InleT"·
national Leogue.
'
TEXAS RANGERS : A11igned LHP
Brytm Ewerqerd to Oklahoma. City of rhe
American Association. Sianed LHP John
Shea IUid lliliancd him 10 Pon Charlone
of !he Florida Stille League.

J2 ~

Pttdfk: DMiion

· •·Searrlc ................. 6j

•-L.A. LWn .... :... 51
a-Ponland .............. 43
I.·PftoerUx .............. .0
S"""""nto ............ 38
Golden Stale .......... 36 ·
LA. Oippa1 ......... 29
x-:elinched ployoffspot
y-c:lindtcd.divlsioa
z-won conrerenc:e title

Thursday's scores

Tonight's games

t7

.718

29
37
40
42
44
32

N•t*-1 Leque
ATLANTA BRAVES: Placed INF
Mike Mordec.:ai on !he IS-day disabled
list. Recalled 2B Tooy Gra!Taaino from
RK:hmond of rhe lnremaciowd Lcugue.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Acti,.tctl
RHP Mark Petko\'sek from rtie I ~-dity
disobltd lisl.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Activ1ued
INF Luis.Lopez from 11le 15-d.!ly dJsablctl
li~t . Placed OF Chris Gwynn on the I~ ­
day disabled list, relrOOICt ive to April 17.

t2
20

.6)8

..538

2~

.SOO
.475
.450
.358

25
27

34 ~~

Thunday's a&lt;ores

Bu~ t on (Gurdon J.J) ;~~CLEVELAND
• CO. Manincz 2- l). 7:05p.m.
New YOI"l (Gooden 0-2) at Minnesota
· (Rodriguez I· I). 8:05p.m.
Milwaukee (McDonuld l~) ut KM~
~ Ciry (Haney 0-2), 8:05p.m.
Bnlfimore (f\.-fercker 1-0) :11 Te~tas
( Pavlik - .1~) . IU5 p.m.
Dc-rruil (Aldred 0·1 ) at Culifornia
- (LangSion 0-J).lO:Oj p.m.
Chicago fAivun:z 0.2l 111 Oaklaad (Pri ·
' ero 0..1 ). 10:05 p.m.
Turnnto (Henrgcn 2·0 ar Setitde (Wol:
• coni - I), 10:03p1m.
,

Orlttrtdo lt9. Atlanta 104
Mihnukce I I I, 0\artotte 103
CLEVELAND92, New York 77.
ChiciiJO 110, Detroit 79 •
Dallas I.:\2, Denver 98
Houston liS. L.A. Clippen I07
San Antunio IOJ. L.A. lat.!.!n 100
Utt.h 94, VMco•ver 79

'"'

Saturday's games

NEW YORK KNICKS :' Piuced F
C'haJies Oakley on !he injured list Acti vated F Ronnie Oran~ison from the injured list.
.
·
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: Acti·
var'cd F Doug EdWards from !he injured
list. Plnced C Rich Mannina on the injurrdJill.
·

Wnshi11Jton AI Toronto, 7_ p.m.
Boston at New~~~ "I:M»JJ.m.
OrlAndo at Phllldelpi'Nil. 7:30p.m.
Charlotte a1: New Yor1c:s p.m.·
Miami at Milwau-. 8:30p.m.
Vanm~ver 111 Dnvcr. 9 p.m.

I

Football
N1tional Football Lu.lbt
CHICAGO BEARS: ·Re-signed l&gt;E
AI Fonrenot 11.11d LB Myron Baker to oneyear contracts.
. CINCiNNATI BENGALS: Terminal·
ed the controcr of CD Mike Brim after he
failed a physlco.l.
DETROIT LIONS: Aareed to rermt
with S lknrUe Blades on a one·ycnr contract
·
EW YORK JETS: Sisncd DT Mike
enski.
OAKLAND .RAIDERS : Traded S
Patrick 8111es ro the Atlam11 Falcons 'for a
1996 second-round droft pick
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Signt:d
OL Sieve Wallttce, RB Vau~hn H~:bron,
RB Derrick Witherspoon . TE Jimmie
Johnson, TE Ed W~llt and DT Seb;tstilln
Barrie to one•}ICnt colltracll, and P Tom
Hunon,tu a 1hree-ycar contract.

Dallas 111 Phoenlx, .IO p.m ·
MinncaocaarSealtle, lOp.m.
POfdond at GoldeR Slute, IO:JO p.m.

Saturday'SJIIIDIOS
Deuoil at CLEVELAND. 2 p.m.
Indian~~ at Ctitcgo, ):30 p.m. '
NewJ~neyarAtlanta, 7::10p.m.
S!ICnune~o at Vtah_
, 9 p.m.
Minacs01a 81 LA. Lakcn, IOJO p.m.

Minnesot;~

(Aguilet'a 0-0). 8:05p.m
Ballimorr (Haine5 0-2) at Tm:M .
(Gross 2·1). 105 p.m.
Detroit (Olivares 1-1) m California
(Bos ki~ D-0). 10:0., p.m
Tororit o (Guzmon 2· 1) ut Seunle
~Mt:nhnrt 0-1}, IO:OS p.m.

SuiiCiay's
- r~-n nnales

5

New Vbn: at Botton, I p.m.
Philadelphia 11 Toronco. I p.m.

Sunday's games

0¥1l.JO ar WuJUnaton, 1 p.m.
Orllntlo ar Charlotte, BO p.m.

Boston ut CLEVELAND. I:O.'i p.m.
New York :11 MinnC!IQfa, 2:0$ p.m.,
Milwouketm Kansos City . 2 : ~5 p.m.
D~l!imoo: ut Texas, 3:0.5 p.m.
·
Chh.:ugu nt 011klimd, 4;0.5 p.nt.
Toronm ut Seanle, 4;35 p.m.
Detroit ur CulifOmia. 8:03p.m.

CLEVELAND 11 Indiana. 3:30p.m.
Phoefti• ar Houston, 3 : ~0 p.m.
Dallu Ill San f.ntonio, l JO p.m.
Scaitle at Deliver, 3:30p.m.
Atlwuau Miami, 6 p.m.
Vancouver at: L.A. Clippen, 6 p.m.
Milwau,¥e • Det('9il, 7 p.m.
Golden Suwe t11 ~name1uo. 9 p.m.
LA. Lak.m al Portlud, 9 p.m.

NL standings

--- ·
---

Basketball

100 Years 95 Years 92 Years

E1siC'rn DiviN

Iom

w

I.

Montreal .................. 8 7,
··Atlunru ..................... 8 . 8
•)'hilrMI&lt;Iphio ............. 7 .7
•.New York, ......
4
~
'•Floridu .....................5 II
!- .......

•

r.a.

Ia!

.$()()

%

.SJJ

.:100
.308
.313

~

.l~
IJ

,OCINCINNATI. .... 8

7

. ~iJJ

I

•P i tt ~ burJth .....
.... 8
•Hous1on ................... 7

7

,tl~

\1 .466

I
2

Wutern Di\'isloo
:San Diego ............. 10 ~ .667
~an Frnndsco ........ ~ ~
7 .."i]l
ol.-11s t\n gd&lt;=~ ........... !I
8 500 ·

2

t,
J\:

8 .428

Thursday's srorts

•

Saturday's games
11 Monlrtal (P.

Aero. fnloi .... Aowa In ......,
.ltotttoy !loom 11UII3410 Ctcll

I

• No Cover Charge
Hair Cuts, Oil Changes, Dinners from Local RestauranlB

Register to win
Wednesday,

I

I'
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I
I

i.
I
I

NBAstandings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

I

Allallllc Dl¥loloe

~ando ...........Ji ~ W; ~
Miomi ....................41 9
WIIIIJ ..too............39 41 .•4811 •
8011011..... _.............32 41 ,.400

New Jcr1cY .............10 ~
l'tiii'*IP!!ia ........... l7 63

I
1
1

1
trip to Cancunl 1
Friday and Saturday 1

Basketball

SIS

.m

ll ,
· 17 '
19

26

28

.2,13 • 41

78·Years

Aeme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Phone 555-6782

. Phorit 555-8242
Elllblllhed 1917

61 Years
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oodlow's Dlanionds
Phone 555-4461.

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Coin &amp; Stamp Center

Ball Security Bonds

Phone 555-9!1111

Pttont 551 1565

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•

The Southern Tornadoes scored
early and scored often in getting a
I0-8 victory ove~ the Meigs Marauders Thursday night in a· make-up
softball game in Racine. •
Meigs took a 2•0 lead in .the first
when Stewan walked, Cynthia Cot·
terill singled, Ashley Roach had an
RBI single and Gilkey reached on
another error to score a run to make
the score 2-0.
Southern ( 11-6) fought right back
and reclaimed the lead 3-2. Jonna
Manuel walked. Amber Thomas singled. Sammi Sisson had an RBI single and two straight errors brought
home two runs, allowing Jennifer
Lawrence and Jennifer Cummins to
reach base safely,
In the second inning, Southern
looked well on its way to a blow-out
as Keri Caldwell reached on an error
and Cynthia CBidwell sacrificed her
to second, sparking a seven-run rally and 1.().2 lead.
'
Thorn~ and Sisson reached on
co!isecutive errors, then Lawrence.
Cummins and Lisle each singled .
home runs. Cummins grounded out
4,3 to bring home another run, then
Keri Caldwell capped the drive witt)

NL·games•...
(Continued from Page 4)

~

DAVE YOIJR BUSINESS LISTED!
.

Pom I roy • Middleport, Ohio

.

By DAYI) GINSBURG
"Anytime you
it clone it's
BALTIMORE (AP) - Now that al_ways cuier to get lOme lleep. It's
their IlleSt losina streak is over, the aoin1 to be beher to come to the ballBoston Red Sox hope to build on a park," Vaughn said.
rtlle victory and climb back into the
Brady Anderson and Rafael
AL East nee.
Palmeiro holllefed for the Orioles,
The Red Sox ended a seven-game who had won seven of eight. Balli·
skid Thursday, beating Mike Mussi- more's 11·3 record is still the best in
na and the Baltimore Orioles 10-7 the majors.
for their third win of the year. The
"It's frustrating," Mussina said.
season isn't three weeks old and
"Everyone · did their jobs and I
Boston already has had losing messed up." .
streaks of five and seven games.
Former Oriole Jamie Moyer (2-1)
It's too lale for the Red Sox to do gotthc victory despite allowing four
anything about their horrid 2-12 runs and nine hits in S 113 innings.
stan, the wont in franchise history. Baltimore got 17 hits - including
But they still have plenty of time to four each by Anderson and Mike
salvage a season that has thus far Devereau• - off sjx· pitchers, but
been preny much a dis.aster.
stranded 13 runners.
"We' vejust got to take the posi"The Red Sox were pretty lucky.
lives from this game and keep mak· We hit some bulle.ts with men on
ing strides to go forward," said Mo base." Baltimore manager Davey ,
Vaughn, who hit his second homer. Johnson said.
"It's a good win, with contributions
Heathcliff Slocumb pitched the
from everybody. That's the .:vay we ninth for his seco"'! save, striking out
should be playmg baseball.
RobenoAiomar Wtth two runners on
Boston reached season high' in to end the game.
runs and hits (14) despite ·facing a
"It wasn't exceptionally pretty,
pitcher who had allowed only five ·· other than the battle we put up," Red
earned runs in his last 50 innings dat- Sox inanager Kevin Kennedy said.
ing back to last season. Mussina (3·
"That's all we 're trying to ask for
I) gave up live earned runs and 10 now, that the team fights in innings
hits in six innings,
one through nine and realizes that's
'' It's nice to do it against a top- the way it's going to be .. We keep
quality guy . like Muss ina," said doing that, then our ability is going
Mike Stanley, who wenl 3-for-4 to come forward."
with a homer. "This is a start, a step
In o1her games, Seattle downed
in the right direction."
Detroit 11-3. California topped
For now, the pressure is off the Toronto 9-6 and Milwaukee beat
Red Sox. It had been over a week Kansas City 8-2.
since they last won a game, and the
Mariners 11, Tigers 3
early-season woes of the defending
Seattle tied a teani record with its
AL East champions had beco'lle a eighth straight win. highlighted by
national story.
Alex Rodriguez's first career grand

•
d men
East ern d Iamon
.- and' RVHS 15.:08 loss
h

Eastern's baseball team posted its
second straight win and boosted its
record to 2-5 by defeating Miller
Wednesday before defeating River
Valley 14-8 Thursday.
Eagle coach Dan Thomas said,
"We are improving. We're staning 10
hit .and pul some fielding together,
but we've still got a long way to go . .
I'm proud of the improvement I've
seen and our guys confidence is real, ly up corning off two straight wins.
This is a definite confidence builder."
Earlier, Eastern fielding was atrocious and its pitching at times very
_suswct, bu!..the Eagles have. turned
the comer in both those areas
Things are starting to come together.
On Thursday, Eastern rallied from
a 8-0 deficit io defeat River Valley.
Eastern hitters were Don ,Goheen
with a double and two singles,
Bowen a double. Chris Bailey a~in­
gle and double, Jeremy Kehl,' ~teve
Durst, and Travis Curtis singles, and
Sheets' a double and two singles.
· River Valley hitters were Don
Wamsley (3-5). David Kelley (2-4 &amp;
a double), Jamie Gruber (2-4). Greg
-a two-run double.
James (1-4). Kevin Edwards (1-3},
Southern threatened on scverpl Chris Maynard (1 -4), M.T. Blaine
occasions after that, but could not (1-3) and Morgan Sullivan (1,4}.
squeeze home any more runs. Meigs,
In the first inning, Wamsley sinhowever, came back with two in the
third when Stewart walked. and
scored ot't back-to-back doubles by
Cotterill and Roach.
Trailing 10-4 at this point, Meigs
rallied for four runs in the fifth.
McElroy walked, Stewart sing.led
Eastern's softball team shook an
anil Cotterill tripled home two runs.
early
1-0 deficit and shut out visitRoa~h and Gilkey reached on errors
ing
River
Valley from the second
as the SHS d.efeose felt the pressure
inning on en route to posting a 16-1
of the rally.
Lee singled and Miller had a 4-3 victory Thursday.·
Eastern ;s Rebecca Evans struck
ground out to bring hoine a run to
out
five and walked none en route to
make the score 1().8. In the last two
the
victory. River Valley starter
innings Lawrelfe was perfect, shutting down the Meigs lineup 1-2-3 in Megan Mulford and Terri Eddy
combined to strike out six and walk
both cases.'
Lawrence pitched up the win II.
· ~ Eagles· hitters were Patsy
· with three walks and one strike out.
She gave up seven hits and gave up Aeiker (3-4 &amp; a double), Mindy
eight runs. Cotterill suffered the Sampson, White (both went 2-3 .&amp;
loss; walking three and fanni.ng
none. Cotterill's effort didn't get
much field support, as the Marauders made six costly errors..
·
Thomas led Southern with a 3-4
night, while Caldwell had a double
and a single plus reached on an error.
Other Tornadoes with at last one llit
were Cynthia Caldwell. Manuel,
.Sisson. Lawrence, Cummins and
Lisle.
Meigs hiu~rs were Cotterill (3-4).
Roach (2-4) and singles by Sanford
and Lee.
Southern goes to Belpre tonight.
IgPing l2llla
.
Meigs .. ................ .202-04().0=8-7-6
Southem ...........37(}.000-x= 10-11-2
WP-Lawrence
LP-Cotterill

softballers
·defeat Meigs 1(1-B

75

I

Sunday's gamts ·

r.. .513

80 Years

Sot.~thern

••

Stm Du~go at Allanrn. 1:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh a1 Montreal, 1:35 p.m.
St. Louis Dl Philadelphia, I Jj p.m.
Colorndo at New York. 1:40 p.m.
S11n FrMCiiCO at OriC,aJo. 2:20p.m.
CINCINNATI 11 Houston, 2 : 3~ p.m.
l.os Ans&lt;let 11 FloridA, &amp;iOl p.m.

•·New York.. .........46

PIIDtlt 115 trl3t' .
Eltllllllhltl11103 •

60 Years

MOTORS

• Door Pi'lzea Every 15 Minutes:

.. • C'd lurado (ThompsQn 1-0) nt New
.-lark !Cirvk 11-2). I:40 p.m.
• San Fmndsca (GIWdner 0-0) Ill Otjca80 (Bullinger 1.0). 2:20p.m.
• Los Anjtles (Nomo 2-1) at Florida (A.
~it er 2· I). 7: 0~ p.m.
' St. Louis (Aiun Benes 2·0) 011 Phil*l·
.W.io(f'errlalldoz 1·21. 7:05 p.l1l
. 511ft Dk:go (Tewksbury 2-0) a1 Atlanta
(Schmidt 2-0), 7:10p.m.
• CINCINNATI (Smiley 0-1) 111 Houa~~n (HI.IITI(IIOn 2- l.), 8:05 p.m.

..

at Tampa B;~.y, J p.m.·
N.Y. Raneen ar Monrreal. 3 rr.m.
lktrolrru Winnipeg.] p.m.
Qicogo at Calg¥)'. ~ r .m.

PlaN 1155-2211
Eltabllllltd 11110

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Phone 555,9245
Eatabllahtd 1925

OpUons ................................ $6995
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Phil~lphia

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MaMIBCl 0-1). I :].5 p.m.

Tonlpt's pmes

Phone 555-1022
Ellabllahtd 1815

The Geist

111 BUICK LESABRE 4 Dr. All

Sunday's games

Today's games

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•
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!Ror p o-n 7:0j p.m.
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• St. Luuis (Pt!kovu-k ()..()) at Phil~l­
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. Colorado (Ritz 1-2}&lt;~ I New York (HIIl{listh 1-0), 7:40p.m.
• San Oit:J O{Hamilton 3·0) ar Atlanta
~m olrz ':!· 1). 7:40p.m.
• CINCINNATI {Schoun:k ~- 0) at
~ o u ston (Sw il"ldell {).I ). 8:0.5 p.m.

•

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Saturday's game

Pinsburgh 6. S1. Louis 2
Chicago 7, S:m Francisco 6
Phlludl:lphin9, Montreal R
F l orida~ . Atlunta .1

•

· Tampa Bay 2. l'lliltldelptllo I tOT):
series lied 1-1
Montreal5, N.Y. Rnn8tn ~;Montreal
leads seri~• 2-0
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•'

Hockey

•

Forest HID Cleaners

~5~=~:~~:·

By DAVE HARRIS
elvey led Southern with a pair of sinSentinel Corretponclent
Meigs broke a scoreless tie with gles, Travis Lisle added a double and
II runs in the third inning and went Joe Kirby a single.
on to defeat the Southern Tornadoes
Meigs will host Trimble today.
15-0 in Tri-Valley Conference basewhile Southern
travels to
ball action Thursday evening at • Ravenswood,,W.Va. to face the Red
Meigs High School. The game was
Devils.
called after five . innings due to the
Meigs, will travel nonh on Satur·
15-run rule .
day to play Dublin Coffman in a
The win gives the Marauders a 6-.
4 mark overall and a 4-3 mark in the .triple header. The Shamrocks (6-5)
TVC's Ohio Division. Souther!!_ arc coached by former. Marauder
drops to 4-7 overall arid 2-5 in the Coach Tim Saunders. Saunders led
the Marauders to the TVC champiTVC's Hocking Division.
.
onship
when current Marauder coach
Meigs jumped on the·Tornadoes
Scott
Gheen
in the third inning by sending 16 bat- ·er in 1985. was an all-state catchters to the plate to blow the game
Ba.&lt;eball fans that make the trip
wide open. Scott George and Gary Saturday
will be impressed with the.
Stanley led off the third with singles, facilities at Dublin . . The field at
Chad Burton walked and Rick Dublin is one oft he best in the MidHoover followed with a single. Paul west. if not in the country. It is a field
Pullins reached on an error and rad that will put most minor league facil- .
Whitlatch and Brett Hanson sing ed. ities to shame.
·
TWo walks, two hit batters a So hDirections to Dublin Coffman
em error and a Cass Cleland sin e High School are as follows take 1closed out the scoring in the innin . 270 toward Indianapolis off of U.S.
Meigs closed out the scoring in
. Take 1-270 all the way to the
the fifth inning with four big runs. D · exit (Route 161). Off the
~unon w~ hil by a pitch to lead ,the
Dublin exit take a right and go to the
inning ofT, lioover reaclied on a error
first ligh,t and take a left on Post
and Cleland and Pullins both folStreet. Proceed to the next light and
lowed with singles. Two walks and ·take a right on Coffman Road. the
a fielders choice closed out the scor- school is on Coffman Road on tlie
ing.
right. Drive past the school to the
George was the staner ~nd win- second parking light, the baseball
ning pitcher for Meigs. The junior field is right behind the football field.
gave up four hits. walked one and
'There will .be f!lree games played
stru9k. out eight. Scoit also led. the
Saturday.
At ' II a.m. thO--freshmen
Mar11uders at the plate with a prur of
will play, The,reserve ~will play
single~Stanley,.. Hoover, Cleland\'
at
I :30 p.m. The varsil)' game is
Pullins. Whitlatch and Hanson all
scheduled
to stan at 4 jl.in.
chipPed in'lwith a singles. · .
.
IPDjQI
il!.lllb
Kevin Deemer took t(Je loss for
Southern with relief help from Matt Southern ......... ...... :...000-00=0-4.3
Dill. The. pair combined to give ·up . M.eigs...... .......... OO( II )-04= 15-8-1
WP '-- George
eight hits, walk six and strike out
LP-Deemer
four and hit three batters. Jay McK-

------------ tO\.\. ----Of ---·

Naijonal ...skdba!H Auoc:iaUon

Tonlpt's pmes

• Bbsron (Wakefield 0-2) a1 CLEVE• LAND (J. McDowell, 1-1), 1 :0~ p. m:~
Milwauket: (Mirando 0.0) at .Kansa.
Ciry (Jacome 0-0), 2JS p.m.
Chicaso (Van Poppe! D-1) ot Oaklond
(Tapani 0.0), 4:05p.m.
New York (Peniue :\..()) a!

46
50

Midwest 0..-ilion
R I. fa.

y-Siltl Antonio .... :.59
k·Utllh .................... S4
x·Houston ..............47
Denve.- ................... 34
Mianesorm .............. 26
Dallas .....&lt; .............. 25

Boston 10. Bnltimort 1
Milwaukee 8. Knn~1s .City 2
'Seaule II , Detroit 3
California 9. Toromo 6

.

JD
.lSO

Baseball

WESTERN CONFERENCE

~~

Central Dlvbion

CLEVELAND .........?

$j

Toronro .. ................ 20 60

Transactions

"'w

Meigs notches 15-0
victory over Southern
-.

..

21
25
26
27
31

•

flw) tlkiH bMtuun the home
umpire thd
Tnlvlt Litle (right) to tcore during Thunclly'l TVC bltlebtlll gmne
ltlleigl High School, where the illllnlu-. won 1.5-0 In • flve.lnnlng
Mfalr. (sentinel photo by blve Harris)
• ·

Be A Part Of
Th.e Daily Sentinel's

Toron1o at S1. Louis, 7:?10 p.m.

... . . .

,. .STANLEY
'. . •......SCJ;
~.,.,..~i~~ ~:-:::
Mlnluclerl'
~

Scoreboard

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Red Sox beat O's;
Brewers
also
w1n
aet

•
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In AL IICtlon, .

Friday, Aprtl1t, 1198

I

5

In NL action,

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Cubs 7, Giants 6
:Chicago scored five times in the
first inning, then took advantage of
errori by second baseman Steve ·
Scarsone and first baseman J.R.
~!bill ips to break a tie in the sixth at
Wrigley Field. .
Matt Williams hit his firit home
rul) of the season for San Francisco
and Barry Bonds hit his fifth homer.
Williams and Glenallen Hill had RBI
doubles in the fifth that made itS-all.
Luis Gonzalez had three hits for
the Cubs, inclU&lt;!ing a two-run double in the titst.

Plra._ 6, c._.,u.tsl • . . ·

Paul Waper 'continued, f!i1 sur·
prising "'WW l!lid AI Martin and
• ~o Merced ~red on con'secutive piu:hes as Pittsburgh won el
SL Louis. •·
.

gled, Kelly doubled, James reached
on an error. then Edwards made the
first out of the inning. Maynard,
Blaine, Rupen. Schuldt, Sullivan,
Wamsley, Kelly, and James all had
consecutive singles in the eight-run
rally.
Eastern came .right back. Mike
Smith struck out, but reached on a
passed ball by the catcher. Goheen
singled, Brian Bowen walked, Bai. ley singled, Cunis doubled, Sheets
walked and stole second. Barnett
wall&lt;ed. Smith ·walked, then Goheen
had a two-run double. and Bowen
singled.
The score now stood 9-8 and
Eastern never looked back.
Jason Sheets came on in relief of
Chris Bailey to pick up the win. 'The
combined for two walks and one
S1rike out. Don Goheen caught his
lirst game.
Blaine suffeted the loss ' with
relief from Sullivan ..They combined
for six wall&lt;s and three strike outs. f
Eastern goes to Vint Jn County
tonight.
lngjq il!.lllb
River Valley........ 800-()()()(}.:8-13-2
Eastern ..............911-030-0=14-13-2
WP-Sheets
LP- Blaine

slam.

Rodrip~ez hit his slam durins a

six-run second inning. Edsar Martinez and Jay Buhner hit conscc:utive
home runs in the seventh at the King·
dome.
. The Mariners matched eightgame winning streaks of 1985 and
1991. At 12-4, Seattle is off 10 its
best slaM ever.
· Chris Bosio (2-0) pitched five
innings for the win and Edwin Hurtado finished with four scoreless
innings ror his first save.
Ancels 9, Blue J•ys 6
Rookie George Arias hit his first
ml\ior league horne run and host California held on after nearly blowing
a 6-0.lead. ,
Arias connected for a three-run
shot that capped a five-run first
inning.' The homer gave Arias his
first RBis since opening day.
•

.

blletnlll....,

:

Joe CanCr's homer lid • «m1!
V .I dll
enabled TorontO toe!C* to 7-6 •• th6
sixth.
Blue Jays starter Jeff Wwe (G-2) .
has given up II first-innin1 run&amp; in
his two stans this season.
Bnwen 8, ..,_ 2 . .
Steve Sparb avenpd a d~~~p-_.
pointing defeal to the Royals five
days earlier. helping. Milwau~,break a seven-game IOSinJ sti'C8k 1n
Kansas City.
Sparks (1·2} pitched aeven .
innings. allowing one run on aeven
hits and no walks. In hiilall !IIIII. the .
knuckleballer gave up only one bit in
eight innings, but it was a ·three-run
homer by Michael Tucker that beat
him 3-1.
.
.
Kevin Seitzer homered and drove .
in four runs f11r Milwaukee.
·
by s«ond

l
.
h
p~ ..,.,~ "e p ane eras
I r A 1
k I.l.ls u·N's Berrlnger
'. .
·1

1

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By jEFF z~LENY
it with which it was intended to hon. RAYMOND. Neb. (AP) _ A or God. Brook honored God. Brook
Kansas map with burned, crisp edges enjoyed life to the fuUest."
was hicklen·in the dry prairie near the
Gov. Ben Nelson, an NU alumwreckage of the two-seat airplane, nus. said in a statement: Brook
Brook Berringer's hometown of Berringer touched OJ.Ir lives with his
Goodland barely visible.
skill on the field, but he was much .
Berringer. the lanky 22-year-old more than a football star. He was a ·
quanerback who helped Nebraska respected role model and a natural :
win consecutive national cham pi- 1 leader."
:
onshipsl died Thursday as he hegan
The university canceled a nationto work toward another dream -to · al championship celebration that
pilot a commercial airplane.
had been scheduled for tonight.
Berringer was piloting the 1946
Witnesses said the plane reached
Piper . J-3 Cub aircraft when it only 250 feet before it plummeted
crashed on takeoffThqrsday in a dry into the ground. •
alfalfa field II miles nonhwesl of
"We could tell it was going
Lincoln. Also killed was his girl- slow,". said Jim Jeffers, who lives
friend's 32-year-old brother, Tobey about a mile !rom the crash site.
Lake of Aurora, Colo.
"After takeoff, when the wing
'··' Berringer, expected to be select- dropped, I knew it was going to hit
ed in the NFL draft this weel&lt;end, the ground."
held a pilot's license and often llew
Jeffers, a pilot since 1965, said
the plane, said Harry Barr, the the plane attempted what he called
plane's owner. Berringer flew the an unusual tum. as if to return to the
plane earlier this. week. ·
··airstrip. He said the plane wasn't
At the Devaney Center in Lin- high enough to make tile turn.
co!n. players and fans hugged one
The plane crashed about. oneanother late Thursday at a Fellow- eighth of a mile from the .airstrip,
ship of Christian Athletes banquet, at Lancaster County Sheriff Terry Wagwhich Berringer had been scheduled ner said. Witnesses reponed said the.
to speak.
plane began to shake after takeoff; . •
"Brook would want this event to winds gusting to 30 mph slammed
go on as planned." Nebraska coach lhe ain:raft' into the ground and it
Tom Osborne said. ·:1 know he burst i~to flames.
would want it to be done in the spir-

.

I

I

Shawnee State softball
twice
·team defeats Rio
In the second game, starter BrenShawnee State's softball team
swept a doubleheader from Rio
Grande's Redwomen in Mid-Ohio
Conference action Thursday . in
Ponsmouth.
.
In the first game, starter Lori .
Philpot was shelled for 13 hits in lhe
Redwomen's 8-21oss. Melisa Sisson
· was Rio's leading hiuer in that contest with a 2-for-3 ellort. Teammate
Billi McGhee had an RBI.

da Brady t(]{)k the 12-21os.• 11fter giving up six hils and walking seven . .
The McGhee sisters and Heather
·'Brining went I for 2, while Sisson
went I for I.
.·
In both games, the Redwomen
failed to register a slfikeout.
The Redwomen (I 0-1 0 overall &amp;
6-6 in the MOC) will host Ohio
Dominican on Tuesday, April 23.

•
'

Eastern softball crew
tops River Valley 16-1
had a double), Kim Mayle ·(2-4),
Evans and Nicole Nelson (both 1-4).
The Raiders' hitters were Betty
Jones ( 1-3 &amp; a double). Marie Denney, Mulford. Sarah Ward (all 1-3)
and Kari Aldennan (1-2).
River Valley (4-5) will host Logan
today.
Jnninall!illl
River Valley......... I00-000-0= 1-5-3
Eastern .............246-013-x=l6-ll-O
WP-Evans
LP-Mulford

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1996 DODGE DAKOTA C/CAI

PM, delay wlpefs, 4x4, sport i*o. air, vs. caas. cloth bench

rear slidor, chrome pl&lt;g, &amp;

-

·

- · sport Wlleelt

MSRP.$20,528"

Wllllttlllilll
-1 Cwllll. A-

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1996 DODGE &lt;ARAVAN
V-6, auto, air, AMIFM cass. Dlt. CNise, 7-

Take Atlvfurtare t~fTIHhlyslAw l•temt Rtlte8111Ul
Cll1101e /1'0111 fher 1SO Dl.ffentft FIIHir 1'fJuu.
It's 1111¥ 111gll- otllluiWing jiiiiiiiiiii-

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.

1996 NISSAN SEHTRA GXE

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· F~y,April19,1181

•

. · P1lge 8 • The Deily ·S1ntlnel

I'Harriso.nvUie neWsr•

,~,.TV

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full
AM Pl,rf..
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.
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01

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went eye suraery in a Colum s
Sue .Feno and friend Ron Short hospital.
of Kentucky were weekend visitors
Steven and Julie Slanley and c 1of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop.
dren, Emily and Andrew of N rMrs. Helen Vinson and son of wicb, were house 8\!C'SU of his
Virginia spent a week with her par- ents, Duane and Hazel Slanley, aild
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil. King. visited her parents, Mr.· and Mh.
Weekend visitors were Mr. and Mn. David Napper and friends, Mr. ajld
Mel Felts and family of Michigan, Mrs. William Dummiu of Gallipo~s .
, Mr. and Mrs. John .Scott of MansThe Bill Foley family enjoyed
field and John Vinson,of Virginia.
Easter dinner with her sister, BlrBob Gibson and Ray Alkire of bara Dill, Pomeroy.
•
Colu!Jiblll! were weekend visitors of
Helen Bible and family a!'d
their J)an:rlls Mr. atld .Mrs. Bob Linda Finley and family of ColumAik.ire. .
bll$ wert Easier guests of their pir. Drew Gibson of Co umbus,.spent • cots, Don and Far Cotterill.
.
a weelc visiting his grandmother Vi!:
L,ouise Eshelman, who h!'5
• ginia Gibson.
recently undergone tl"o throat surgr · Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lowery of · cries at Pleasant 'Valley Hospital, ls
:
, Syracuse were Sunday dinnet guests recovering nicely. " ' •
·, of Mr. and Mrs. GeorgeLowery.
After being a palient in a Colum'
Mr. and Mrs. Randi . Gilley, bus hospital, Katherine Weaver is
Otway, visired her grandmother, ·recuperating at the home of her
Louise E~helman, and uncle, daughter, Sue.
'"Buddy," on March 23 and brought
Louise Eshelman received East~r
Easter gifts.
•
1greetings by phone from her brotper,
Mrs. Durham has been in West · Glenn Burbeck • of Urbana; her
Yirginia for several weeks visiting daughte(; Ml'$, Mike Pri~e •.Otway ; a
" ner daughier.
friend, Esther Dawn Clegg of
· .\' Doug··al)d Sherri Shamblin of Riverdale, Ga., and F4J Chapman of
North Huntingdon, Pa., visited her Syracuse.

BUGEATER • Adrlanna van den Beemt, a University of Michigan anvvlronmental ed~tlon junior from Marylilnd, enjoy!l aetlng
buga, Including the cricket aha Is holding she had just roasted In the oven. (GNS Photo by Alan Lessig, The Detroit New Photo)

·Eating insects doesn't bug some people
By KARL LEIF BATES
ty of \visconsin entomologist Gene DeFoliart says the "researchers (on
The Detroit News
.
entomopliagy, or bug:eating) have been coming out of the woodworlc."
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Meet Adrienne van den Beemt: college kid,
Van den Beemt says insec~ seem to be healthier- and therefore betinsect-eater.
_
ter for humans - than the ciUstaceans we prize so highly. A crab or lobA little over a year ago, the cheerful University of Michigan junior tried ster will peck at just any old gob of rotting flesh it finds on the iicean floor,
meal worms for the first time. She lik«lthem..:.. and isn't shy about say- but insects eat leaves, fruits and other insects. And unlike.a cow, for examing so.
·
ple, they're very efficient at turning what they eat into what the)' are.
. Since then, van def\ Beemt has been written up in newspapers and mag"One of the things I like about bugs is that more of what it eats goes
azines. done a few radio talk shows and has been featured in a segment on into bug meat." she says earnestly.
MTV. Though there may be several' thousand Americans
And what a fine meat it is - rich in iron and
· who have, eaten bugs more than once, van den Beemt - - - - - - - - -._..,._ zinc, high in the important vitamins ribofla~in and thiseems to have become their poster child.
"One of the things 1 like amine and containing a key amino acid, lysine, which
''I'm not one ofthose people who is afraid of strange about bugs Is that more 0~ vegetarians have a"hard time getting. Gram for gram,
food, ohviously," she said, holding a friend's cat back what It Hts gOfls Into bug · their calorie con.~nt is wonderfully high, and rheir fat
. kets .on her cram ped meat," Adrienne ilanden 1·s the "good" kind.
·
from a bo wI of ~.res h roasted cnc
kitchen.
Beamt says earnestly.
"They're sort of the base of the food chain,"
On the other hand, what's so strange about eating a
van den Beemt said. "Everything eats them," ·
six-legged creature, V3fl den Beemt asks. "If somebody can sit down with
Her ideas about bug-eating took wing while she was working as an puttheir little bili and hammer away at a lobster. they should be able to relate door educator at a nature center near her home in Marvland. "The more I
to eating a cricket."
.
_
was looking ai it, the more it clicked with what I thought about co·ws andExcept for the U,rlited States, E.urope and Canada, most of the rest of the pesticides." said the 2 I-year-old. who is philosophically opposed to eating
human world eats insects. A Mexican entomolog1s1 figured there are 441 beef.
·
inse~;;t species being eaten regularly aroupd the world: including about 200
It's not that van den Beemt whips up a batch of mealwonns every time
kinds in Mexico alone. Ant larvae taco'Vare a particular favonte m the she sits down to watch television. Mostly, her bug-eating is just the fun
southern states of Mexico, apparently.
·
· ' part of her o.utdoor education classes and a great party trick.
·
Insects ari: a good food for a crowded planet, especially because there
"Last year for family reunion, l brought a buncli of bugs,and cooked
are about a billion insects for every human.
them up," van den Beemt said. Both her p~rents have tried her cooking,
Despite the cultural phobia about eating insects. the word is staning to including mom,.who can 'I look a fish in the eye.
spread. Since he started the "Food Insects Newsletter" in 1988, Universi"They think it's really 'neat," she said.

,,
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321,24 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45780

.. Danny &amp; Peggy Brictdet

ContKt Rodpey Howery
594-3780 days, 696-7231
l.S00.%64-63M uytbMI

Pomeroy,

HIOO 4481414
Ext.4309
$3.811 per min •.

1-800-508-8887

--

Millt be 18 yra.

day befota lhe ad is to run. Sun- rect service care 10 ~dttr ~­
day edition· 1:OOpm Fnday, U~m- MUtl ha~~~e reU.bll ttan&amp;pattaaon,
day edition 10Uia.m. SaiUrday.
IOiephono in _, homo' Olld willing
.. - k .. ,.,. -nds. Appllell·
60
Public 5ale
lions are available 11 lhe Moiqa
and AuctiOn
Counl)' Mullipurpoae S8f11ot c ....
-:-=--::-==-=-=~I lor. Mulberry Helohts, l'ol118foy,
Anylhlng Everything Consign- OH. EOE. Provider o1 SaMe•.
ment Auction . Sun April 21 It
tpm. Mt Allo Auction AI 2-33 Middleport Parks • Recrt~~tlan Ia
now talrl;ing applic:atlona tor hf•·
"CroOirOICII'. Ed FraZier 930.
guards &amp; pool ~nager1 Appli.cf·
Aucllan Friday April 12, 1998, tions rnoy be picl&lt;ld up 01 lfillago
7pm a1 Bidwell Auction, Bidwell, Han. between8am-4pm, Man.·Fri.·
Ohio; special C:ontignment of 100
plua boM ot calleclible &amp; .misc.
NEEDED IMMEDIATlY
i18fna, 50 boxn ol books &amp; pap&amp;&lt;
APPT. SECRETARY
ilerr&amp; One large box ol Old lenets
ITELEMARKETER
plus 'ott'ler cohsignments , Ca rl local Co. Needs 4 Te&amp;emarUtetS
Aucloneer. .
•
To Set AppiS., Pari· Time I Fu\JMt Alto Auchon . ~verw- Friday Time. Call814-441-1975 Ask FOf'

Me-2512

Li:. • trw. Ownor: Riel&lt; Jollnlon

15 Yrw.

;~.--------~~~
(UmeStoneLowRataa)

Trucking·
Umeatona
Bulldotlug and

Cualllm Ull 11 lllto1 adalng
•NewHomn

•Additiona
•New Garages

HAULING

•Ramodeii"O .

FREE ES1111ATES

614-992-3470

(814) HZ-5535
(814) 1112·2753

•Siding
•ROortng
•P!!lntlng

All Kinds of Earth Work

-

992-3838

•

'

ELECTRIC ·

·Phone

614-992-5048

WindoM,~

~erving

all Your
ELECfRICAL
needs

Free Estimates

108 Pomero Street

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

537 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT 11112-2772
om. Houn!: Mon.-Fri.
B:OO a.m. • 3:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
VInyl ReplllciiiMnl,
• Wind a wa, Blown
lnau1811on, Stann .

GOOD HOHm PEOPLE

Howard L WriteMI

J&amp;LINSULAnON·

SPARKlES

s-y

7prn. Ewiry SaMciay Bprn. R1 2-~ _Dav-.,..•.~--.,.---.,.~

DUMP TRUCK
SEfJVICE

AIJihorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Sllop
Servk:es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnumi,Stalnless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs; Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
nema, Planter hangeiS, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuftll
"No Job Too Lsrge or Too Small" .
We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861

Services
Houaa $rtas and
UtllltiH

,

R.LeHOLLON
TRUCKING

#teJol.r !fetal.r

Backhoe

Limestone,
Gravel, Sind, ·
·Top Soli, Fill Dirt

~l}'

Howard Excavatin

SMITH'S
CONSTIUCTION

·crouroads·. Groceries , new
.merchandise. Ed Frazier 930.
Aick Pearson Auction Company,
full lima 1 .,c11onaar, complete
auction
aervice.
licenaed
HB; Ohlo &amp; Wes1 Viroinia. 304773-5785 Ot 3CW·773--54~7.

No Experience' Necessary I S500
To S900 Week ly 1Po1en1ial Pr4ceuing Mongage R'efunds, Owtt
Hours. Call (909) .715-2300, E.e.
1351 • (24 Hours).
' ·
NOW HIRING
Wanted Prior Military Wilh LeU
Than
3 Years Broken Service
90 Wanted to Buy
And Honorable ,Discharge Codllt
1 good used cheap saddle. Also Call 814-446-0848 /304 -52~·
~
1 KHshond puppy, lull -blooded_ 2105.
304-417...8~
On 0\Jty Medical
•
Clean Lale Model Cars Or Is Actively Seek i hg To Racrut1
Trucks, 1990 Models Ot Newer, CNAs Who Are Looklno To Wal)&lt;
Smith Bulc.. Pontlac, 1900 East· long Term Home C.are Casu
Where You live- In And St_,
l«ten.e, Gallipolill
Overn ight In Either 24 Hour/ .te
J &amp; 0'1 'AUlD Parts. Buying sal· Hour, ·Or 72 Hour Shills. It Pa~
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304- 16 Hou" A Day, But An Ove'na-5033.
night Stay Is Required . If lnlere1A·
ed Please Call Lisa Kenon AI
•
Top Prices Paid: Old U.S, Coins,
"1-800-0N·DUTY-2.
'
Silver, Gold, Diamonda, ~II Old
Collectibles, Paperweights, Etc. Pampered Paws I~ now accepti~
M.T.S: Coin Shop, 151 Second applications for full &amp; pan time
positions- gro.omlng, $1111 ana
- · Galllpolil, 814-448-21142.
animal care, 271 North Secoritt
Used furniture- antiques, OF)e behind Milch's Produce, e 1~piece or complete estates, alao 9112-41244.
do appraisals. Osby Marlin, 614802·7441.
Postal &amp; Gov•t Jobs $21 /Hr •
Beneli.ts, No Exp. Wlll Train, Fctr
Uaed Mens Lovis, Lee &amp; Wran· Appl And lrllo 1·800·536-304Q.
:
QJer Jeana &amp; Denim Jaclwtts, Nike
Shoos, 814,.46-2468.
PUMP MECHANIC'S HELPER
:

Umeltone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand
985-4422

Chester, Ohio

Maaon, WV

em

Gutter.
Oownspoub
. Gutter Cleaning

· PalnUng .·
·
FREE ESTIMATES .

Dooas, Stann

W~ OFFER GENERAL HAULING

949-2188

F-Esllmatee

Umeatcine; Sand, Grav.l, Coal a Water

,&amp;118194li'N

1/1

'•

:1·9000990.3737

Ext. 2261

.•

• MUll be 18 yre.
\Sarv-U (819) 645 8434

.,._. ....

COY'S VCR
REPAIR
992-4507

Meigs 4-H
members
attend ·
exposition

(4) 12, 19, 26 3TC

-••

.

.

60

-complete

for JOII•

VIIY -IWOIAILI
DYE UfiUIICIS
614-91$4110

614985-4107
614-742-3337
•

--·

Card•of Thanks

Call 843-6388

'

In the Townlhlp
County of ...IIJI

::

~
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County

.......,Nan

&gt;---.., ,...-.........,

~·n be (looting on a cloud with

. the buys yoilR find "' the.
closslfrtds.

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BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
:;
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ;

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-

..-

CENTRAL

' ' ~-'*'o!Mrt
Smith
and Rev, l!obert
1

Now Open South of the

MuuiUorthelr

.. ~~~

.

Silver Bridge Plaza. ,
We ,Make Loans Fast
. Call

· corritort llld praraa..
''Tjl Chertll er.n-.
· · for the 'INilutlfuf
•
poem. The
( ·tlf~IV~ who

rr-t ...

•rw••

And tv

~

CHERIE BARR
'

.

I .

'

I'

...

,
''4

I

•'

V!

(814) 992-2800
· Hon:e &amp; Tack Sal"

L.----...::=:.:::.l::.tl

patented weighr -loss product.

Cilrc fm
Elderly Cilid
H;:mci icapped
Ill Fillllily Carr.
Home
M1cldlcpor·t. Oh

Rooting - Rubber - Shingles - Mll:lor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts ·
Complete Remodeling
Decks ~ Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
35 Years Experl~

''

:
·

"-10na111e ·

P.O. Box 587

lneuren • Experienced

Call Wayne Neff

1112-4405

Riclna, Oh. 45771
Jamea E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, pilt In septic
sy&amp;tema, lay:llnea, underground bores.
For Free eatlmite call 94g.2s12
JI!IMONAI'I BArEl
tiWn

____......

For Frw hllmJ1!8a

._ _ ..

FIND TOTAL ··
~ATISFACTIONI
Through a Uve
Personal Psychic!
1-900·255-0500
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 vrs.

DOWIUIDER
CEUIIICS .

. L&amp;E

AID IIPIS

Serv-U (619)

Greenware Sale!
25-50%0ffl
AJtci some peti:ta end

645-8434

na
Pick-up dlacardad

brushes.
Sat., Mare.h 30, Aprll8
. Noon-5100 P.M•.

.......

blttlrtlt, ttpplllncea •
IMIIY metals.
814-992-4025

3'inllea narth of c......
olf Ill. 7

. Cl!Hir It Outll
•• !..,

IDVEITISING ·
TltEHITUN
'Imprinting
•Shirts -Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms
3rc1 St., RKina, Oh.

..., ...

•

·-

. LIVE! ~- .lfew At lntles IJear.,.ies
oNe ·ON • ONEI
'
CALL NOW!

1at11e lila- Dealer

1-90Q..448,1414
EXT. 36M

Your
favoriie
artisi
i

on.Tapeor CD

,$3.88 per mkl.
Mull be 18 yra. .

'

108 "· 2nd Ave., Middleport

.,,

...

:_

oos

Free Into. Send Self-AddrGUed
Stamped Envelope : Express
Oept.131, 100 Eas1 Whires.tone
Blvd., S"'1e 146&lt;345, Cedar Pari&lt;
TX 711813.

Screen Printer, ,Experience Nee:
essary, Serious Inquiries Only
8tH48·2388, Allie For Clwi•
:

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spoors, 304-675-1429.

Soeial Warl&lt;ent, Now Hiring $23 1
Hr + Benefits, On The Job Train:
ing To Apply In Your Area, t-80033D·8t50.

Avon

Representilllves

ATTN: ULTRA·SUCESSFUL
BUSINESS
1'1 forming a ground ."Oar lea~er·
snip ream wi.th new diviSion. ·Med.
Break1hru Praducl Line." Leader &amp;hlp package I••P- accL and
n\ed. ins.), JOIN THE TOP EARNERS IN INDUSTR¥. 614·823·
9920.

Telephone ·surveyors, C-TV
Specializing In Rural Cable 1!
Seeking Self Motivated Customer
Service Orierited lndivid~al WhO
Can Conduct Surveys From Their
Home Ourino Even ina Hours, 5
To 9, Compensat ion Ranges
From $25 To $50 Per tnsta"a.tion.
No Selling Involved, (YOU MUST
HAVE PREVIOUS PHONE EX·
PEAIENCE) ·Call Man AI 1-800489·3425 At1d leave Message.

The Melga Local School DlslriCI
id currently aeaking applications
Babysiuer Wan.ted In Our Home 'rom certified applicant&amp; tar 7th &amp;
For 2 Children, A.aes 6 And D. 8th Grade Football Coach, boys·
614-3151-CI674Afler3:00.
91h Grado Bukelball Coach
·
boya' 8th Grade Baaketbati·
Busy c~ropractic office~~ an Coach, boys' 7th Grade Baaket-.
energettc, neat appeartng, per- ball Coach, glrla' Reserve Bassonahle secretary to proCess in· ke.tball c
aurance claims. Previous e~~:peri oach, girls' Assistant Ju.
30 Announcements
ence with ir'!SuranceJcollecttons niQr High Volleyball Coach, girls'
,
Junlor-Hioh Oaslletball Coach (2
Now open
desira bl e but not necessary. "'· pqsiUons), High School Cheer- ,
Rocksprings Greenerill, 30279 tenDon 10 delail and a positive at· I8ada Ad .
J .
tilude are essential. Call Monday,
'
'IIIIOr,
un1or. High ·
Choetlead8f
Advlaor,
Quiz Team
RocklprinQs Rd., Pomeroy. Hang·
ing baskets, bedding, vegetable April 2 2 between hours of Advisor ·&amp; a1111tant Band Oirec.
plam. 61 ..W2·27112.
S:00pm·l :30pm , 614 .gg2.2160·
lor lor lhe 1998-97 achool year. ·
40
Gl
Cook, par11ime, one or rwo wee - Applicants must hold a valid C&gt;nio ·
.
veaway
kends dur ing summer and fall teaChing certiflc:ate &amp; tor coaeh1 Year Old Dog Part Lab a Ger- months. WV Slate Farm Mu ·. ing poaitlons must meet c:ertificaman ·shepherd Hou 18 ·Bfoken seum. Cell 304·875-5737 br intor· lion require menta of Ohio ror .
- 23 ...._ "5 oM
ma~on .
sports medicine &amp; CPR. Persons
14
:8.:.;
~·'.:.;'8:..;~=~~..;;·---::-r:. -:·
lnlorhtod ahould canlaCI Bill
Cruloeahlp pallilana. T.-10
Buckley, Superintenden~ Meigs ·
26" Magnavo• TV. 30&lt;·6
7223.
·
.o•olicplaceLS200-$900weekly.
Local School Diotrlct, P.o . Box
272, l'o""""Y, 0No.
Call7 dayL &gt;407-875-2022 81t
21ornolo Gorman Shephard pup_s,
05118C16.
and aloo mai&gt;Or. 304-615-&amp;IIW.
Truck drivera needed; April, May ·
Cruise Ship Positions. Travel To I June, short dally trips, straight
3 monlh old Husky- pups, e
E•otic Places, $200 -$900 Week· truclc, COl license, medical card
·:.g""=·. :25:.:1:.:0·--:-::---:-:---:-:-·ll•, Cal7 Days, &gt;407-875-2022 En Cloan driving record, 814-247:
SWM In His Mid 30's LikH OUiet
Evenings AI Hof!'•· Movies,
Ghurch And The Ou1doora. Seet&lt;·
ing ·swF Ago 25-40 Wilh So.me
Ot The Same Interest. Pteaae
'Mail Response To: P.O. Box 282,
Galli""'~' OH45631 .
.
,.....

:-:-::-;·1

05211C t4.
O&amp;nUII HyQi&amp;n,.l Needed To Join
:;;;.;;;;;;;~;;;~~~~
·
Our Denial Practice, On A Pari·
Adorable bled&lt; &amp; ·.
limo Bas,a, !AuSI Ba licensed In
. &amp; neutered. male cat
The State Of Ohio. Send Resume
elderly couple, exc . haoae
To: CLA 382, Clo Gallipolia Daily
lap pot 304-882·2302 or 30&lt; .' Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Gal~ 713-Stee.
palia, OH 4563t .
Chlhuahua Sm811 Dog, Female, 1
YOII Old, Gao~ W!lh Children, EARN St,OOO Weakly SIUIIIng En8t4-388-9718, After 7 P.M.
velopea At Home. SIOrt Now. Na
~~;~~~::~I
Exporienc.. Fr" Supplloi, lnlo.
Shopl&gt;Otd Pup. No Oblloatlon. Send SASE To:
Fairway, D~t. t351 , Box 4389,
whelping
W.•CoVN,CA8t?SU.
8~~~~.;--:-~~;1 Earn Stootia weekly lluHing en:vtiOPtJI el home. Be yoUr boll.
Dropped Small 00'01 I 8 Wk Old Slarl now. No experience. FrH
Pupa. To Givoeway, 814 -37g. aupplitl, Info. No obl';r.lon. Sand
21118.
S.E
~-· ·
~;!;;~~;;:;;"~rl Box
~. 1851101,
ID r•n&gt;&lt;QO
nit II., P.O.
Wlnt8f Sprlngo,
Fl
3271g, ·

~

Pen,

s•

~

.

E-loncecf Medical ~lionIll. Apply In Paraan Medical Pta·
Six 111&lt;)nth lhort·haired mlxod u, 8315 81111 Rout• 1ll0, Golliobretd, Ientile, beaull.lul - s h·
1 8
M
T
f
bfowri, weiQh1 "40 ltta., 81&lt;·8g2. pia. ell!'"" onday hru rt-

· ~tl

'

er &amp; billing experience preferred.
Cali304-87S..1932 from 9-Spm.

Rep.

Per11onars

Scheduling.tBilli~g Clerk needed

$1,000 Weekly Processing Mail

maa bills at home/at work. 1: 800992-6358 or 304-882-2645, lnd

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sales Rep For Snap On Tools,
EOE,606·92S.6128.
·

for local dental practice. Comput-

needed. Earn money for Christ·

992·5042

Red Hoi Fat loss Producl, ynamic Uarketlng Plan, los
eight
a Make Money! e 14· 446· 1238,.
6lH4t.Ot87.

~-77'3-5083 24hrSidaw.

Able

1·104HI9·3943

J.D. Drilling Co•pany

$-WANTED·$
10 people who ·need io lose

weight I make- money, to try new

Residential - Commercial

Room ~ltlona
Siding, Roor.na. Patloa

Help Wanted

110

2/tWI/Iftl

BIB RDDftll aad
'C DII I RUftiDI

Saav-u (819) 645-8434

wll

SERVICES

Tam caraay

. ..L-~-:~-~-...:--..-;.;:;;;a

Rfi!IDdlllng

----

rears

· Syn!Cuae, Ohio 45779

RIIIIDH!Ing

.

Sayre. To Phyllaa
"" ,and Plm Manley
·, .. fl.lr,_y~r
ot
·: deVOtion and .
. ~Jp.tothe

30391 Roy Jones Rd.,
P.O. Bmi 539 ·

Kitchen A·Bath

-----

Harder and Dixie

LONE OAK

Hou• Repair &amp;

:! 1111111111111111111 111! llllllllllllllllllllllllllll l llll l lll l!::

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

J

•Leason&amp;

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 992·2364

Mrf

Wanted To Buy : Auto's &amp; Trucks · Work involves anisting with 1hlt
Any Condi~ion. 81 4·388·9062, Or mstallatiOn of verticallsubmers•blj
814-4oi8·PART.
turbin• pumps. Position requ 1res
Wanted To Buy: Junk Au los With frequent heavy liltin9. Must have
Or Without ·MOiors. Call ·larry valid Ohio dri'tler's licel)se . COl
303
Cia" B will be required with Hailiv~. B14-388'9 ·
ardous Material certification upon
Wanted To Buy : linte likes Toys, completion of probation period.
614·245-5887
Send reaume11euer 'or apply ·a (:
G.M . Baker &amp; Son Co., 335 H
aack Street, ·Columbus.
EMPLOYMENT
&lt;13207. EOE

• Trail Aides
•Trahilng
•Boarding

.BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

(No Sunday Calls)

NEFF REMODELING
·. · SERVICE

'Menclly. Answers to
name "Oemlon"
. Rewtltd for 11ny
Information leading
to his mum.

1 • .,

614-992·7643

• T!!le Trimmlilg
• Mowing (Residential
and commerciaij
• Shrubbery
Maintenance
• pctd ~per request
No Lawn Too Large or
Too Small
Plan Ahead, Cali Todayl
742·2803

;: Black with tan ori
i: held It CheaL Very
"

..

JAIUD;S
IAWNt:ARE

4x4'a-4x8'.a

: 4115196 ·Portland
Area. Male
•
· Rottwellar dog.

ll

985-4473

so..

LOST OR STOLEN

•

4131 mo.

1x6, 1x8, 2x4, 2xjl
. 11'·10'
tt
14'·16' 35¢. ft• .
Alto IIVItllebre

Lost and Found

992-3954 or 985-3418

· ~e.w Homes • Vlny! Siding New
RemoCJeUng ·
. · Garages • Replacement Windows
Stop I Compare . ,
Room Additions • Roofing .
FREE ESTIMATES

...Illig. Lit Ul Ilia It

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER.

·TERMS OF SALE: Cash
on detlyery of deed.

Ja'me• M. Souiibv
;•
Sheriff of Mtlga County

FREE ES'TIMATES .

.Talu ........ Ollt of

,....

Call QuicJ[
•
sold for lesa1hm two-thlrdl
the appraised value.
•

•NewHomea
•Garages

POIYRftlll

VCR Sick?
•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSIIUCIION

IITiiiOI•EDEIIOI

·

$2.itl per min.

Samantha of Columbus.
Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, Mrs.
Shirley Frazier, Mrs. Mary Braley,
Mrs. Iva Powell and Robin Camp·
bell were dinner guests of Mrs.
Marge Fetty Easter Sunday.
Vanessa Ball of Columbus spent
the week with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Clark.
Mr.. and Mrs. John Anderson and
family of Cambridge spent the

LINDA'S
PAINTING

I

--.,.,.----:---:--1

WE HAVE A·l TOP SOIL FOR SALE

: IUUCTIVE
~ &amp; WILLING
: TO .TILK!II .

tta•• Homo

1111 Yard Saloo Must Be Paid In Hoolth Aide C8f~fication ol(d 1•2
Advanc•. Deadl ine: 1:OOpm the year~ exper~W~C•In ptOvktlng ell-

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Sarv.U (811)845 8434

~n-ttomoc• . - -

Folilonl
-:::-===~=i-::=-:::-1 Candldoteo should

UCINE HYDUULIC REPAIR
&amp; JUCHINE SHOP, INC.

(614) 441 - 1191

5001 .

Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

448 M16

J. ·E. DIDDLE, OWNER

-;;:z.::.-:

FloOd.
....;;====;.;.._---1

. , ,. ,_,. • - nc. "' bllck 1t""
llervlni I.E. Ohio a Waat Vlrglnle

. AIEWAITiiiiiO
IUIFIOII
YOUIOWUI

- - - --Laurel Cliff news notes-------

Members of the Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders recently, attended "The
Great American Horse Exposition"
called the Equine Affaire :in Dayton
at the Hara Arena.
Members and fam~y enjoyed two
days shoppigg at the many booths
that carried all kinds othors&amp; related
items. Seminars and de.monstrations_
on trail riding. training. saddle fitting,
massage therapy, horseback riding
vacations, horse racing and many oth-

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

ToiiFraa

-lla

Female, Some WHIIend Work.
...75 To S•r~
MMitls
Att8f 110 Day~ s.ntl ~1•
CLA 3llt c/o .. sr oia
uno, 825 Tt1itd - . ... _,,.....
All Yard Salao Mull Oa Paid In OH &lt;!183t.
·
Alhlonce. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lho day before lho ad is 10 run _ II You Alo lnllt"Oitod tn A CaDI&lt;·
SUf1C!OY edition . 2:00 p.m. F,ridly. lng Posiflon, Plene Con1ect
Monday odilion . 10:00 a.m. Sat· Holzer Caro C""llr 8:00 •
::utdly=·--::------~l &lt;:00~ ExP8flenOa Prolemtd. Af&gt;ply In Poraon, Or Call 81&lt;·&lt;. . .

Kltdleae, DecU, ~.
Roots etc:.

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

CoW 1·

IOQ.It3-4343Exl-

Gu- ' ~;;;;;;;;N;;d;f,ij;i;;Q;
Ho11~ Nude I,"- Of

n~apor

FI'N E•llm.tN

$45.000 -

3 F.,.;ly- Solo: Fti a Sot10.
4, Gltls a Bor• Clolhing •
I Levi Jeans Size 14 &amp; 11 In
Boys, Shltll Laroe S1ze In Boys,
18 Mo. To S.zo e. Giri1 Size 10.18
L,nnoa Furnac• Toys , 1873
Gtatm1 School

Additions, Balbi,

I'Nel!aiL:wlell
IWV0111212

IUUIIFUL W-1

, c! .y·

'

IWIPumpa.
fUm II A114 ulpmenlln .-cit
tDr linn • 't II I 7 IIIIIL

••

•,

D!il¥-.-,
1121. Tlinl
, .OH-t

Honw.,.... PC .... ftM\IOCJ.

&amp;VIcinity

r DOW

............. all type~ fll
New H - . Gancea,

.,...ufactured Housing

top, Trim, Removal
&amp; StUI1'P Grinding
20 Yean Experitue•lnwed
Owner: Ronnie Jones

TFN

.. .

'Jhe SyracCJse·Church of t_
he
nazarene woald like·to
Thank Everyone who.made
contributions in mtm'o..Y of
· Elladene Watson~

Jtan ~

.~7-0266 -1 800 950-3369

114-742-2193

To offer story suggestions,

a

Mr. ·and Mrs. Terry McGuire
spent a few days visiting their son,
Patrick, who graduated from boot
camp at Fort Jackson, S.C., Thursday. Patrick was shippe&gt;"~ to Maryland Friday and will start to mechanics school there.
Easter guesiS at the home of Mrs.
Ann Mash ~ere Dwight Cullins, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne -Pullins and ~esse.
Bett and Lcann Mash and Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Johnson and Kellie and

JONES' TREE SERVICE .

·WICKS

·. report late-lireaking news and
·• offer news
•• ••

rOLIII I
====o~====
GallpoHa
--

~-a.

II&amp;H
SAWMILL

The Sentinel News Hotline

2-2156

HllpW&amp; Hd

......
,... --..,- ,.,..
e,,.................
·..... ....,1..a
.....,.....,,

Mn. 0.. Howlld spelll a w.t JIMIIIII, Mr. M4l Mn. Bobll)
lj. lmtocky with her son and flllli- ~·
' •
Jy, Mr. 111111 Mrs. Elwood HoWIU'd Jr.,
Elnwe a.istbin r&amp;:cndy u

I

·•

110

•

-~

J

. The

~ •llfdllaport, Ohio

I

•.

•

-·~~-----:-----~·--~

·, .

·,.

121184--;:.:::::::::::::-::::;:::::::::-.::-'WANliO IMMEDIATELY
SECRETARY IOfFICE .
MANAGER
local Direct Sales Organlzalion
Need RELIABLE SacrtiOry. Mull
Have Experience In S~loa FInancing, lnwniDry Contral, Com-

~~;::.~:A~~:r=~Oia~:~;rnP•rr.

anca. Interviews By Appt.

nly.

·.;.Fri:;:._ _
1 c:.:a.;..U.;.81.;..4-«....;1~-1=97:0:5::Mo=n~
WELDER

Experienced Wt~lder, Fabricator
Needed In Jackson Ar01. Mini.mum 5 Yean lndu1trlal E1par1.
enoe Wilh Arc, MIG And RHd·
lng Blu...,lnll. Sand Reaume To:
CLA 314, CID Gailpalls, ~ Trll•- Thlnl ~
•--·~
~- ,_,_
uno•
...,""
,,.....
0H 4583t.

.

•
•

:

•

~~~~~M~~~~-- ·
'"'""'

.

Earn $&lt;00-1 :!00 ..... lrno, S3QOo.

5000 IIIII Vmo per . - 1 Trair,ing
ptovlded. NHd cor and phone ,

81&gt;1-823-11820.

•

'

"

�:..

Friday, Apr1118,·1186

1981

OOP

.......
--· ....

NJ:A Cro••word Pu&amp;ale

Parct!o IOailable for , _ homo
~ on Aoyllum Rood. I
pettlfl ranging from 1.1•ac to
5.32oc;.

Potlollll Cite. Sjloclolll·
Alzheimer's cate giving.
us - We can help. 304-182-

,lS«.
-Genoral Molntonanco. Pointing,
• Yard Work Windows Wuhed
.. Gu ners Clean.d Lighl HauUno.

Tl'ltoo IIHIOOIII holllo In country,
Hil Rd., Rullond, ont boll\
'"""'"nd pool, 814-l\112-5017.
Two bedroOm In houN I n -·
"~· on land .-.ct wilh good rof.

:commeric:al, Residential, St.,.: erencet.8t ...... 7244.

~

~~61~·~-~
~~~~·----------~ 320 MObile Homes

• eoorges Portable Sowmi\1, don't
•naul your togs to tho mil j\111 coli
30&lt;-1175-1057.

mr

.

G1ve plano les10n1 in
home,
to all age group1, alto teach
chording &amp; transposing, If Interested, cai81 ..992-5403
Will Mow Lawns, Alto Weedeat
ong. light Hauling, 61H41-2303.

'

'

Older Loo Cobin In Good Shapo
Wtll Relocal8. Reasonably PJiced
61 4· 4•6-1g14, After 5 Or Lea
Message.

1072 •Oa70 Covered Porch
Wao~or lf)ryer, Staraoo BuUding
S7,500 Ytry Goad Cond\1\on,

81o4~14CO.

1073 LIIMtrty 1 Bedroom, Good
Condition. at 4-446-6&amp;41.
1a111 Oirie 2bodtoom, ,.,.. I rofrigerator. copper wiring, under·
plnrting, new carpel &amp; wallptper,
304-175-5701.

se.soo.

.t

_____.:.:____

=.:.._-------1
FINANCIAL

11062.

u.,.,

-218:1.
IH Nli\L S

Iota 10:30tm

410 Houses tor Rent
15-112 GoiNpotte, 2 Bodrom Upll&amp;irl, N•r Rhter, Duplex, Ga..... t3251Uo., Wltor Paid, 0.
poli\ ............ tlo-441-2410.

E&amp;ec.trlc
SCOOIIfS
And
WhM ir:haira, New IUied , Van I

Car llll Instal~, Sral,gfidet, Lil't
Chait&amp;, Call Far Brochure, IU·
«6-7283.

Hld·o·bed cauc~ $85. 30~·112·
3188.

2·3 bedroom 'housa in Rutland.
dopolit I rtltroncos roquirtd, no
-eollet+7•2-2eel .

Fumlshed

Rooms

Aooma tor rent . WHk or monlh.
Starano 01112011110 Goilto Hotel.
614·o141-t510.

510

Lik• new electri9 r•nge, 2 ,.trig·
erator1, 2 aatoma11c wash&amp;rl, all
in OOOd condtion, 614·949·2790.
Never U1ed : New Home Professional Sewing Machtne Retaila
S500 Wilt Take $300, 6" ·U694115.
Relngera!ars. Stoves, Waahera
And Dryers, All Reconditioned

And Gouranteedl $100 And Up,
Will DeliVer. 814-669-8441 ,

Sam Somerville's Army camou·

Household
Goods

llage by Sandyville Post Office.

Fd-Sun, noon-5pm. (Turkey 181oon Apr 221. 00..273-5655.

Single size Crahmatlc electric
~;;;;:-;;;;;;-;;;;;;;-;;~12 Piecellvingroom Suite, Like ' ,bed. 304·578·2321 after4pm.
3bado0011\ bolh a l1olt cantril air, New, 81 ..258-8716 AIIM•PM.
t.ncad ...... 1
c. mp 22,500 BTU Climate Control Snap-On
torque wrench, 43•
car Qllraoe,
overall length, 600ft lbs. torque,
Contoy ,--....
aroo. •400/mo.
Rofonnc:·
••· 30 4·182-2gg 1 leave mel· Window Air Condlllonar, Works tikenaw,$300. 304-372·8480.
G,..ti $000, 61 ..:J88.()413. '
-·
SPRING SPECIAL: Central Air
!!!Appliancu :
Recondil!oned Conchttonets 2 Ton $1, 195; 2 ,2
F
or Rent Or ot~le: 3 Bedroom, 2 Walhers, Ory8f's, Ranges, Refrl - Ton $1,295; 3 Ton $1,395: 3 112
Bolho, Htot Pump, Clly SChoalo,
, M-·ge
grators, 00 Day Guarantee ! Ton $1,595; • Tan $1,695; Pricel
11 ~ ~~IOdll-..
French Cily Ma~tag . 614 -446·
Above Include Normal "ln1talla·
In Widdlepon- two bedraom, air 7785.
tron . Full 5 Year Warranty, Free
conditioner. pool, refrigerator,
Estimates, 1-800-291 -0098; 614ltOVI, wathet and drver, full Country Furniture. 304·675-6820. 44&amp;-6308.
bootmtn~ . gao h..l. 3 calling Rt 2 N, &amp;motes, Pt Pleaoen\ wv.
foftl, Ill corpo1od tiCOPI bot~· Tun-Sat 0-1, Sun I 1·5.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 qattan
room and kitchen, largo .ylrd, GOOD USED APPLIANCES U~right. Ran Evans Entaiprlses,
.......... ca11 81 • -2.-~· II In·
Jackoon, Ohio, 1·800·537·9528.
..,."""
"'Wuhers, dr)'trl, refrigerators,
tereltld.
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Used Wuher &amp; Dryer, Runs
Two bedroOm houoo In Pomeroy, Vine Stroot, Call 814-446-7398, Goad, Call Alter 5 P.M. Or leave
HUO llj)proved, rtnl and dopoolt. !-80().4li!J.:W99.
Massage, 61-4-387-7325.
pem, will, HI on comract.l14-

pMI;i14-002-30GO.

420 Mobil• HOlneS
fOf' Rant
2 Bodroom Uobllo Ho1110, 1300/
Mo. Rolertnco /Oepoolt, 81H~8·
73'.l1 .
l
Bedroom• 12115 Mobile Homo

eu-

I

Beau1iful River View, 2 Bedroom•
In Kanougo. No Pe11, Rolittenceo,
Oepo1it, Foster's Uobile Hamel,
614...1.0181.

(

Two and th;" bedroom mobile
homtl, starling a1 t2•0-$300,
..W.r, water end trllh Included,
614-11112·2187.
Unlumilhocl 2 bt., country Nlt\ng,
private, iiDVe a refrigerator, no
ullity depool~ &amp; lfUI1 pold,
referenCe• &amp; depoal~. no pats,
814·992-52114.
Unlurntshed mobile home in
Al~ed area, call 614·085-0372 al·

440

, Apanmems
tor Rant

Corn Plontoro, P-. Di.U. llo·
nure Spreader, Rakes, Squar•
Boloro, Bladto. Scoopo, Bo~
Movoro, Plhor EquipiiiOnl How·
o\1'1 Form Machinery, Jockoon,
OH. 81. . .51144.

New 2 Pc . Sola &amp; Chair $270,
Pickens Furniture, 304-875-1450.
Old ·wooden wardrobe; old above
manda mirror, 2 roseback chairs:
overstuUed charr &amp; ottoman; table
saw; complere w~nemaklng supplies; French Provtnclal desk;
brasa lamps; 38'" redwood fence
WlpOSIS: largo metal cabinet ;
more mioc .. c:aR 614·992·70114 1or

appointment

PICKENS FURNITURE
NawA.IIed
304-875-1 ~50
Save Big On Carpet &amp; Vinyl In
Stock S8.00 Cas~ /Carry Mollo·
han Carpets, R17N. 8 ,· U67... 4.

VrRA FURNITURE
814·4-411·3158
Quality Houlehold Furniture And ·
Appliances. Great Daata On
Cash Anc1 Catt)'l RENT·2·0WN
Ancl Layaway Alao Available.
Froo Dotovory Within 25 Mites.

520

Sporting

Goods

Wheei, Harse Riding Lawnmower
36" Cut, 11 HP Runs I Mow a
Good, 614·256-1274.

Building ·
Supplies·

550

Block, bnc~. sewer pipe&amp;, wind·

ows. lintels, etc Claude Winters,
R10 Grande, OH Call 614-245·
5121 .
Metal Roofing And Siding Gal-

vanized, Gatvalume And Painted,
6"·245-5193.
Rlto Bldg Spl: 30'145'19', I : 15'18'
Sliding Door, 1 -3' Man Door,
Painled Steel Siding, Galvatume
Steel Root: $6,444 Erected: Iron
Horae Bid" 1-800·352·1045.

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop -Pel Grooming. fea·
turing Hydro Barh . Julie Webb.
C811614-4o18·0231 .
•

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

l!et.

750 Boats &amp; Motors ~

tor sale

1003 Ford Probe; 31,001Jn'o .. IOide&lt;l . 30•· 773-8244 or 30•· 773·
587• •

Two Tranaporr Ollkl · International, 11 It, John 0...., 8 It; 7 It
l'layblnt; Vk:on Disk mower: D h.
grain and Heel grill; Ua11e1 Fer~
guaon 3 111 of plowa; Malley
Fergu1on work harM tractor:
01 .. 3118-9190.

2•111
day AfW\1
.
Fayette
County- fairground I, Waahlngton
Courtt1oL1a, SeUing 200 Head Of
Hkmpi OUrocs, Hamp Duroct
CroiSbreda, Conaigners Roger
Bentley 513·584-2398, leroy
Larrick 513-7fl0.41102.
4·H Club larnbO Far Salo, Bom 2J
15 -3119108 Idee\ stzo For Goltia,
Maig_s, Maaon. Lawranc.e &amp; JackiOn Co. Falra, Slo-441-1947.

pigs Apri 20th. eem to 8pm, St:on
Upton. 814-378-6102.

Fort Donolly Club lamb Sale, Friday April 261~. 7:30 P.M. Gal\ia
Co. Faiftlrour&lt;ls.
January ioi~. Club Pigo SIO A
Piece, 2 Pure Berkahire Boars, 4
Hampar;r, Sows, Bioi-jilt-~
REGISTERED ANGUS
And Chi-Angus Bu\11, And Hell·
trs STOO Up. E~&lt;:ellont Bloodllnn
And low Birlh Woig~ll. Sla\8 Run
Farmo. 81 .. 288-5305 Jad&lt;oan.

eK J t 54
tlO 5
•s 2

BankruPtcy Ctedit Probleml Are
O.K. We Can Finance Used Vo·
hicln Coli Ruth 81~-.2897 .
·collectors Car, 1887 Pontiac
Firtbird, All Original Equipment
60% RIIIO.-d, 81._245-5752.

1g84 ,S-10 Extended Cab, Y.6, 5
Speed ; t99t S·10; 11188 Rogal 2
Door. S3.te5: Cook Motor&amp;, 614·
441\-ll103.
19Q1 "Ford Ranger 2.3 5 Speed,
70K. SS,OOO, 614·245-58011.
19g 1 ford Ranger XLT Package
614-379·2122
1003 Fi1rd Ranger XLT AMIFM
CA11ette, AC, New Jlre1, Ptlce:
$6,500. 514·388..0408, Allor 5
PM.; Or Days: 300·576-4563.

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs .

TO EAT OUT OF

2!

22 Fl. Checkmete 2sb HP Johll:.

aon low Hrs . Showroom Condl:-'

et4:;

Step L forward

441-0200 .

.

E•callent Condition! 614-U-8 -.
•

Auto Parts &amp; ·
Accessories

swer leave message.

19 79 Ford Bronco 4"d, auto. a~;,
351 C, Rancho lift suspens1on,
35• tires. toa many 'xtras to list.
304-875-5655.

1979 VW Bus Blue !White Looks
Good, Runs Graatl $3,200, 8144411-1006.

1908 lull size Chovy Blazer, 305,
CD player, arr, pb, p!ll, new tires.

~

FRANK &amp;. EARNEST

~ ... ANI&gt; OUil Vf,Y L0N6·
llANGf Fo,e-GAST t.AL.L5
fO, Ttte- 5VN TO
"fVtNTIJALLY CO&amp;.,.APSe-

New gas lanks. one -ton truck
wheels, radiabs, floOr mats, etc . .
D &amp; R Auto. Ripley, WV. 304-3723933 or 1·800·273-93~.

790

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1973 Winnebago like Ntiw
40,000 !olil... 8 Now B,Piy. Tirol
Now Brakes &amp; Wheell, Cyllndor
Generator, 2 Wa1er Tanka, 2
Holding Tanks, Air, Fully ·
EquipPed\ $6,700, 6,.-446·3115.

AKC Reg1stered Boxtf pups, lawn
wilh black mask, shots and
wormed, ready ro go, excellent
bloodline, $200,614-985-3907.

Chinese Pug pupp.es, parents on
premises, S250. 614·992·6075.
Dog Obedience Classes The
Right Paw Traini~ Center, Sherry
Roberts, Certified Trainer ffnstructor CBII 814·448-1884.
Full blooded Pit Butt, 1 1121&lt;1 old,
very friendly, all sho11. Need to
sell begause moving. Price neg.

&amp;IHSS.&amp;sn.

·

Healer Pups, Full Blooded 614·
'379-2838.

1995 MOM ltiafo. F15 &amp; R23 $82.
·eo.ooo cout11 beg. Keeltfa Satv·
ice Center, PI Ploount &amp; Ripley
Rd. 00..8115-3870.

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Autos for Sal!!
'89 Toondetblrd SC. twO door, 3.8
llrre, V-e, elile model turbo, PS,
PB. AC, S ~ted, power ltats
and locks, Great Car,· $5200
neg., 8,.·9U2· 7078 or 81~·94Q2679.

,950 Chevrolet 2 Door Sedan,
Priced To Salll Coli Anyti1111, II No
AntWir leave Wenage, SU·
. . .111"t
1957 Fiird Custom, • door, V-8.
70,000 original miles. looks and
runo good, $1550; 1086.Bronco II
•wD. v-e 5 opoed, looko and
,.,,. good, 12450; 8"·2•Hm.

INTO ITft&amp;.F, Se-TTING
OFF A NOVA f)CPLOS
·~ .Tt'~T ~U-~ ~f"61JL.f /
Tt4f II'INtfl. PLANeTS. r,

tHE BORN LOSER

1980 Halidar Rlmbkttte clan
motor llomo, 27ft. law mllooge, IU!- •

1900 Dodge Ram Van B-250.
72,000 Miles, $6,000, Can Be
Seen At: Gallipoli5 Daily Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, G_alllpolls
Ohio.

c·~

ly sell contained, elcc. cond., plu• '
extra&amp;. $16,000. ~-875-8884. ~ ~

1.992 Chevy Astra Conversion
Van. o41.000 miles, 4 .3 V-6, auto,
loaded, .4 captain seats wlbench,
new tires, garage kept, $10,900,
614·949·2481.
1993 Ford Aerostar XLT eKtended van. 1992 Yamaha 350 warri·
Gr. Both eiC. cond. 304-875-2118.
94 Ford Ranger, 9,000 miln,
115,000, loaded, h...., duty. 614·
992-5532.

Lu1ury Van Packad With
Goodies For Kids. 1ggo Ford
Econolint, 71,000 Miles, Color
Monthly Flea · Program Need
T.V. Wire4 For N1ntendo And
Help? Ask JO NORTH PRODUCE
Seta. VCR, Air Coridldoning, And
614-448-1933 AbOut The HAPPY 1geo Cadillac Sedan Deville, •
Tape Deck 1Rad1o With Puvale
JACK 3·K FLEA COllAR. Ki\11 door. 97,000 actual milts, good Listening Stations. Captains
Male &amp; Female Adult Fleas. For shape, must be ~ten, $2400; Chalts, Courtesy Lights, Rk:h PolDogs &amp; Cats!
1083 Buick leSabre, • door. · ilhed Oak lnrerior, Sky lights,
Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding, 58,000 mifea on motor, new paint. Pow• Door&amp; /Locks /Windows.
Cruiaa Control, 5.0 litre V-8 Eno~apa, 11500; 614·992·
Stud Service Puppies, GrQOming, good
2~13.
•
gme, Rear Anti-Lo~;k Brakes,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Pa;;n,,,nll Welcome, 81~ · 388· 1881 Cuduo 2 Door, Au1o, 350, . PoW•r Steering, Po\Ntf Brakes,
· Automatic, 5 -Wire Towing Pack·
:.:.:::::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1.100.•1~10 .
age. Perfect For Kids 'And Sum·
mor
8 14·446·2055
1g52 Otdo 08 ~~ Braugltani Alttr 8:00. WWCall
Bo Gone Soon I
SIOO. 304-578-3107. ·

lra••'·

740

Motorcycles

1972 750cc BMW V.G.C. $1,650;
197~ 500« Honda V.G.C . 8\4·
446-3041 .

1977 Hartoy Davidoan, 380 mltoa
on comploto rootototlon, $11,1100,
614-002-3878.
'
.
•

FARM SUPPL IES
&amp; LIV ES TOCK

!UP Nl11on Puloat.Nl!, 5spd, I·
top'a. red, air, alarm S)'lllm,
100,000mi., exc. cond., $3,750.

304·!178-26110 - · ·

1180 blue Pontiac Sunbird, 614·
llll:l-1318.
'

I I . . _ Map
• i!Jqlloalva

Home .

Weal

Pus

Nunlt
3NT

'"

bro
· +wo

• 3
~&lt; 'l

""
a o
on

.

.....,

Of~n·

P. £60U

'-

7

/"

"'

Name Brands Ovlf 25 Years E.,:. :
penen~;e AU Work Guarantaed0 -.
FrenCh C·ity May tag, el-4-448.._ ~
7795.
.
__ ,

,..,~

l

-;u;

nrr

C&gt;

C&amp;C General Home Maintenenca· PalntlnQ, vinyl lidinQ.
carpontry. doaro, wi-. both.,..
mobile home repair and .mort. F."
free ead11101e c:all Chet, er ..ggzt; ~
6323.
~ . ..

~'~
I (;

~- I

..c..... .
14--·
21 ..... -

211181toiWIIIIW

7

•

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a-"'
,a" .
2111UIIMI t •

rl'==·

.,..._
aoC · ,_
Lalnl

• FIISDn

'

:MICinpMd :

=~=:

Perhaps you think that Geoffrey
Chaucer had the right idea about
brldse when he wrote, "Tbe lyf so
abort; the craft so long to Ierne."
However, It is the variety in bridge
that has kept it alive. Today'8 deal is a
good example. How would you plan the
play in three no-trump after West has
led a heart into your ace-queen?
Even if South were 8howiDg only 15·
17 points with his openiq bid, North
was riSht to jump to game. His good
five-card suit and two aces make the
band well wortb it.
South won the first tricli: ·with the
heart queen.
the club king and
ran tb'e club nine. ast happily won
with the qul!!!n and tumed a heart.
Now South, with only ilbt tricka, bad
to try lhe diamond ease; but tbat
!oat too and the de ndera ran the
heart suit to defeat the contract.
"Boy, look at that." grumbled South.
"Both finee6es wrong and the hearts 53. Of course, I could bave got the clubs
righS. but it wOuld have been awkward
to play that way."
"All that Ia true," said North. "Yet
you should have made the contract. It
Is one of those rare deals in which you
should attack your shorter sui? first.
Suppose you start by playing a dla·
mond to dununy's ace and a diamond
back. •
"Let me think about that. Here, If
East goes up with the diamond king, I
have nine tricks by way of one spade.
two bearte, four diamonds and two
clubs. And If he ducb his klnl. then I
can awilcb to clubit. Yes, or course. But
bold on a moment. What If my diamond queen loses to West's king?"
~Then you need diamonds to break
3·3 or to lind the club queen. You are
sliD better olf. •

42 IJIIIIInu7Swt

IUIIIx
A311I' a ••

44No--lelend
.
-~coin

....

aN.v.c.- ·
47"-

41 'Actrwa
51 N. Z. 7*"11

~

"

by Luis Campos
Ce6ebnty CipMr Cl=:lml .,. CfWMd frcm ".::14 liuiM by flmoul PMJ*, pul Md PNMnf
e.ch
In the dpMr ttilndl to. llnllhr. Todlr'l ct.: D ...... C

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J I I H

KHZ 0 C R T , l A

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DCOS

LKRRKY

TV

IIKCH .• '

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TV

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HK

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J. I I H

PTOOK.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In Hollywood, H you can't sing or dance, you wind up
as an alter-dinner speaker."- Flonald Reagan.
·
·

WGII
lAMS

·I I I

PERTC

r:~l

~R;:;E~T~O~N~, -....~,'

::
1

I. I. I.

I. ~

-r--ll

Sign seen on tailgate of pick
up truck: 'Keep Your Distance!

Wt;rLL HIIV£ 1tl..II'\ .. C()'o1ii1VNICA1E

/IOIVESnY.. NJP. .. IJM... fi.ESfECT ONE
N/011/ER'G FEEl/N6S ... NVP. .. IKI! ...
ENIIA~ BIIEAST SIZE 111ROUGH

,•

• (

Hong. 1\it\sh, - " ·
'
Coillngi lexlurod, pluttr ttpalr.· ~
:caM 1~(11 304·875-41ie. 20

/
J

PRINT NUMBERED LETTE)!S IN
THESE SQUARES

\

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

-s-ta«• ,
_/'

I'"'

·· l E. I e.n .
p.;~o,t.

I

\knew
.
.

~~· - r\ fi~

! t::lil . T

II II

HI

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'

~

Tht
SdYI"fS You'll Find In the
.Cldul(led Section.

Vision - Mourn · Rebel • Offset· FOREVER
While looking through an old scrapbook mom sighed,
"Moments are temporary, but memories go on FOREVER''

I FRIDAY

APRIL19I

LET'S (/;) fNEI. IT A6AIN. TillS TilliE
WrTIIO!If' WERfliNG TO ''CO&amp;MO"...

EKGRCISf ...

,_,.'i .
,
\

Home lmpravtlnW't• remo- ..
dtling, rooling,. aiding, cal/114- ~
992·3186.
• '•
•
Patio Decks, Carpont, .Sidlng, ji
FrH Eslimares, Call Steve, 01 .... .:
245-0510. ,
•
•
·
•
Ron'a TV S.rvlco, opoclollztng
Zenith also ·oorvtctna mot~ oiltM
branqo, Hoult calla, 1·100·1077

in.!

1983 H~ndo 200 ATY T~roo
1111\otltr, E•collont Condition, IO:OO:.:I..:S.:.;IIN.:.:..:,..::KM:.:.5::78-~2:3111:::._.,..._
$9000110. 8).. 4t8 3334 ·
Roortng •
hornt.
1883 Hondo Mo1orcyclt V45 remodeling do~o &amp; tldtno, 31
Magna 10.000 MMao. Ru111 GOOd, 100r1 oxporle-. 8 " B RoOIIIQ
$2,300, 814-141.0188.
and Construction, •~·~ -oi2,238&lt;4
or 1-800-88:St..a843. .,, ·. !.. ~
·
1985 Hondo Galdwlng limited
Edition Show Bike, one of a kind, Williamo Carpentiy II 'll&gt;u Nold
light 11t up, thla Goldwlng has Bullt.,RoPlocod Or Ropoltod, C.l
won ""'n' bike and ·light 1how1, 814· ...1-0210.
•
'
18800, 81,o-11112·254l8.
'

ASTRO-ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

&amp;1 o Farm Equipment

can help you understand what to do to
make the l'lllallonaltlp wort&lt;. Mall $2.75 10
Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hll Slltlon, New Vorl&lt;,
NY 10158.
GEMINI (llay 21·June 20) You might
haw a change of heart today In ~e~~~~td to
a c1eve1opm1n1 In whiCh you Initially left
\mpolad upon. You wilt lelm a valuable
I88IOn.
•
CANCIR IJune 21.July 22) The lnflu·
enoe you eicert today wll have ., uplift· .

it\g 1~ on others. 11 aomeone you
like needl encouragement, a pet on the
beck 11om you w11 mean a 101.

tnip.. 11 ~va

(111M .,. pr n"*' In the Ytlt
lll!'ld In Clittjuncll!ln wlltt lnciWllllla,wllh
·wl)om you """ 111ron11 ernotlonal 1111.
Mitt an p cj •• you o.n lhart

wllh...,..

~v:-tilllttorkMd-.

.......~

~

(A;Itl•llilt II) Your ,.._,
. · ~· • 1111 yOu mlglllt. •• kMMd

In\IOIM . , . or poflllllle IITiftlllllllll
todlly. Try not to lllCfude unptllductlv*
(! 1 Ill~· Trying to petall up a 111011111

.

.

.

LIO jJuly U·Aug. 22) Today, do not
depriW yout'Mif of a group IC1Miy you
lind enjoy.tllt jual ._,., . . you happen
to Cltlke one of the pet1lclplnts.
VIIIGO CA... D 81pt. 22) The people
you llCpeCI to help you with IOIMihlllO
you hope to .ltdlleva !night make .themaelv11 unavailable. Howevtr,' 1 mort
~Uub~!'~.•l!laY•) ln.
'-*'A·CltPL ---. 21 Today, lin. ..... UiCIIcll wll not hllp you to ICCOIII., p11t11 your 1101111. bUt Clltrm w111. The good
guya will be IUOky today, and the bid
guyt wl(l ~ ~·

"'

24-No¥.
be some une1pec1ed developments In
your houMhold today, but you will not
mind them a bit. They wHI stem fmm a
benign liluation.
8AGITTARIUB INov. 23·Daa. 21) A

lormed partnership arrangement
not have bean constructed fairly.
However. his problem can be COII'ICied
' today" you speak yoUr mind.
'
CAI'RICORN (Dec. D.JIIn. It) By per·
forming Mrvk:as lor others today, you
can reeelve largar·than·uaual returna.
Th\111 benellta may last for on!y 1 lew
hlltti!y
m~y

daya, 10 gal moving.
AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Fab. 1t) If you
gamble on lllythlng today, make'"" 11'1
on one d your own Ideal. You will have
good luck, but othara might nol be utor·
tunate.
PIKI8 (Feb. 20-Marcll 20) You can
lind . atrength ·In numbers today.
Sontilltlllgllllbllanti.ay beltellclallor you
and. your 11rn11y Cl!" be reaNnd "
one's klttiulot• -In hlrmot)y.
ARtiS {Marcil 21·Aprli11) llcHMone
who oan help you 1o lldlafy an ~lltteolrll
nMCI Olin be lllliJIOIChld tully • a
friend lnlervenaa. let your pal try to

evarv·

ll*d tip H p .g cm. ·

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.
--..;;;::

~

ll'

....

OU'\

7

.- ft

~·..;

t&gt;.

1
\1.

•

1%1-

tn~

likes
• • IIO's 7

H

"' NOT ' on~ne..

A~~liance Parll And Sorvico: ~

Par•

St ce

~us

~

0'1&lt;! a"
rto bou'ld!

'·- ''

.

Allllllr

Eu&amp;
Allpau

~

WATERPROOFING
,_,
Unconditional liladme gUarantee~ .. '
Local refer.,.Cel f1,4rniahed. CalL!
16UI 448: 0870, 0r 161~1 23~l,
0488 Rogets Waterproofing. Ea~' 1
labliShed 1175.
.
~~

,

11 . . . . . ,

-

~5

------.~~~~ME~N~T~--~-::

Oxpot~.

1. .........

ope,.

-••n Iii

~~,

DRVWAU.-

3

,..·,o_urr-B.Y.E_Nr-N
Don't You~ a······ sticker!'
6
I I J 0 Complete the chuckle quoted .
1
_J_jl......I.-.JL......l._...J
I
by fillinv in lho missong wordt
L - you deve~ from step No. 3 below.

-,

lmpro~ements

11....,..

1 11p1n ......
2 cry 01 ...

25 ......

A

810

DOWN

.......

:M 'CoaUt-

•.
:
,
'

uuloti ...,....

ate. Call 610·•~8'-8072
Massage PteaN.

a~ ·

14 ........... aunt 4 . - • 111ck
5 Vlolln'8

'

1989 Winnebago LtSharo LX.
Motor Home, 22 Ft. Sleeps 4,
Loaded, low Mites, $1~,000. 614·
3118-8678.

II Long 11110

=:·=~
(llbbr.)

,gg1 Chevrolet Mark Ill conversion van, axe. cond. inalde &amp; ouc.
tilt. crulae, a1r, am-lm casselte,
53,000mi., new tires. 304· 875- 19114 lnnsbtook, fully loaded, lots ''
6833 aMer Spm.
·of extras, 18ft. Serioua inquiries :
~
1991 Ford E•plorer Sport' 4x4, 4.0 a~y. ~675-8903. ·
V-6, S1andard, loaded·, garago
SERVICE!:':
kept, 614·.949·2481 .
·

1879 Camoro Z·28 •oo SB, T·
Tops, Auto, .POSI Rear-Erid,
Uanv New Plrt1, Very Sharp,
13.200,080 ""·3118-11881 .

Litke New. Mutt ' " 10

!side

94 car hauler. 16~. $1 ,300. 814-~
992·5532.
.
.•

Cargtll seed corn 8527A. No. 1 in
production &amp; dry, doWn Mason Co.

89,ooorn .. S5,ooo. 304-112·2326.

h

o• foot I toL
CloseR

1984 2.2 Uotor, $125; 1987 3.0~
Motor $250 ; 1989 2.2 Motor,l
$225; All Morors lo Good Condi-:

Sudg&amp;t Transmissions, Used IR..
built, All Types, Accessible To
Over 10,000 Transmission, Also
OvemuiOKits, 614·245-5677
1979 Fard 1121on 4wd, 4spd,
good shape, S2,495. 304· 675·
5007 qr 304-874 ·4~84, il no an·

oe

Stepf R

tion, 614-256-1233.

Z4
r7 l.lproMoul

41 . . .

e:

760

-*'ctlon
11 Glut

By Phillip Alder

1989 19 Ft. Well Croll 165 HJ!!
Anylime Aftet • P.M. 15t4·Ua-:
71143.
1989 Maxum 23', tuddy cabin.'
low hrs. sleeps 2, sink, stove,
coolers •. am·fm . canette, 454,
Mercruiser.
custom tralle..fl.'
$14,500. 304-675·4297 afttf' spm...

0150.

21 Undrlllnad

Of fortunes
sharpe aclversitee

~

·2, Ft Pontoon Boat 50 HP Motor.:

For sale or trade- , geg Chevy
one lon truck. e cyl. o4 speed,
look• and runt good, 614-8o43·
5286.

I CAN'T FIND

NOTMIN' ELSE

!60 HP, Good Shape, Price Re~

tion, St0,500, 614·446·1032,

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

Opening lead: • 5

1987 Citation Open Bow 19 Ff.i
Long, Inboard /Outboard Motor,•

88 Mercury Grand Mark, $5,000,
614-992·5532.
.
ChGv~ Tow Truck 440 Haimes
With Wneel Lrlt, 614·446.-4796,
61··..41-0889.
'

Soutb
lNT

t979 Galaxy t9 Ft. Open Bow,:
170 HP, l/0, Mere. Cruiser, Ga-,
rage Kop~ $4,000, 814-368-a7•4. •

1883 GMC Sierra Black, Auto,
Air, Crui11, Very Sharp, low
Mileage, Lola Of Extrasl$11,800,
~~~·245-0460. 81 ..384-42114.

If

a

Vulnerable: Bolli
Dealer: South

'

sonabkt, .61 4-388-9946.

no.-..

.....

22

tQJ75Z
•K g 7

1077 28' Pontoon Boat Wrtn
Trailer &amp; 1987 Evinrude 48 HP
Engine S2. 700, eI ~-4411· 0487 A'·

. ter8PM.

•

&amp;e.*
•A 7 •
eA Q

1978 Taylorcrah. 15ft.. Qohp, lwili'
pull 2 skiel&amp;) , optn bow, good
cond .. $1 .500. 304-875-5019 altar
5pm or ~ message.

14~

11 ~ wMerllgllt • All!* lime

East
•K Q 10
910. z
tK t I 4
•Q 4 3

s2

15 Foot Lund Aluminum Boa~ 5$
HP Ctlrylltr Uotor. Till Tq•ll •~·
S700 080 11"245-5670.
'

4·H Plgo. AI Sired Righi Slm For
Gallia. Meigs, Muon &amp; lawrence
Coumesl 8,.-256-1360.
Fair pigs, 95 Athlnl I Meigs
County Grand Charnp1ons, select

•J 4

r.

1088 Ford Pick-Up F-100 Goad
NH T hay blno. Galli Orindtr miX· . Condition. $3,000 Or Will Trade
lr. Ford 532 oquoro bator. All For Smal Campoct Car, 6"44.1·
0602.
goodcord.:llo-27$-4215.
Tractor hfdraull~; fluid 811.81/
Sgol. Sldefo Equlpmont. 304-1757421 011 -800-277-3017.

Wm

'89 Bayliner and 11'11...,, 1 coVr:
ers lnboardfou'lboard. 128 h~
614·99N132.

na'ncjng even if you have been
turned down elsewhere. \Jpton
Ef111ipmon1 Uoe&lt;l Cor~ . 304·•58·
1089.

720 Trucks tor Sale

'

UCUfol--

,...__
l'~

97. s
tA S
•A J 10 8 •

'87 S!ar bass boll with ttaller, fi~
be&lt;gtall, 1~·. •5 ~p. Man:ury mor
tor .and !tOlling motor, U)OO, 1140
985-:loln evening•
•

1eu Chevy Camara, Red. 5
S.,_ed: 28,000 UiiU, $12,325

·=

fnlaiiiY)

....

~5

...

10-outl-

11 On. grand

hot oil treatment. Pampered
614-992-6244.

AKC Registered Black Labrador
Retriever Pups, Champ1on Bloodlin&amp;, Shots. Wormed. 614 -698·
2482.

1124 E. Moln Street, on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Houri: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 10
6:00 p.rn 814·992-2526.

Red oa9• Hondo 300, 4 whotl
drtve, o4xo4, $3400 , 6 1 • ·9a2-687~
llter8prn
•

640 Hay. &amp; Grain
1987 Bronco II Eddie Bauer
.:....:..._;.=..;:....:._;.:..
___ . Good
Shape\ 61 ..258·1270.

Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo,
.Reloading &amp; Fi&amp;ning Supplies.
Live Bail I Licenae. Crawford's,
Honder1on,WV.
·'

Buy or sell. Riverine Anl!quea,

1002 Plymouf1 Sundonoe 4 Door.
AulllmOtlc. Air Cof1d\tianlng, All/
FM C111tllt, Nw TirK, S9 ,000
Uilll, 1~ . 500 QIIO, 814· 251-

1978 Sunline 15' Sell Coritaintd'
Camper, Very Clein. Excellent
Condition, 11,100, 080 81.. 411·&gt;
3334.
j.

AKC Registered Black.lab pups.
champion bloodline, second
shots and wormed, 814-6982482.

Antiques

Now Ideo 70S Dteltl Untor•ttn!
With Comtino &amp; Groin Tabla, Idea 2 Row Corn Picker, Jahn
Dooro 4 Row Corn Plonia', Ford~
izer Spreadtt, 3 Pt. Hitch, 300
Go ... Sprayer Wilh Boomo. 814·
245-5515.

. -

....

AKC puppKts, kittens. birds, f1sh
and all pet supplies . Have your
puppy's skin rejuvinatad will'! a

Turkey Guna: Remln~:d870 12
Ga. 3 Inch Magnum,
Condo·
lion, Sl90, Alao, R0111tngtan 1100
12 Ga. 3 Inch Magnu!" Good
Condition, S310, 610-406-3117.

530

Gthl Round lloloro, Mower Conditioners, DIK ' Wowers. OIIC
Mower Condhionart, Fo,.ge
EquipMent Salee And Service.
Altizer Farm Supply, 81o4·245·
51113.

,_

,.,

....

1:~ .... =~

~~~---·
Alii&gt; l.oonl. Dooltr will a r - fi.

Sears lawn tractor- 11 hp. , 36.
mower, 39• snow . blade, tire
cl'lalnl , owner's manual, $450,
614·94e-224D.

""8f1m.

12' Mottz Stock Troller

1ft ~a.._

14lllalllled

...~.1..--.

080, 81"'2~15170.

.....,._

c:a-1111~

:

I AMerCCiilholl-11'1. - ...........
IDIID
.._...._ •

Ponlioc Fireblrd Y·l . T·
LDaded . Al1rm, •4,000
fl.ooo. Noo . eu -37e-

0.... 12 FL, TaNIIIn Dllo. .....

~;OOpm.

w.-wv.

Two bedroom houla, carpatad,
nice and clean. dtpolit requited,
na lnlidt para: three bedroom
house. dlpolil required. no inaidt

•

450

or-

2 Bedroom House~ 2 Bedroom Sleeping room 1 with cooking.
Trailer In o.IWpot~a. 1 1........_....0 Alto tftller space on river. All
~Fot~iniDt:::;;;.,.....:;::;.:........-::--~--1 ~ook- upo. Colt alror 2:00p.m.,
2 Bodroom HouN, c-ot Loco· 300·773-5151,
~on, 1300/lolo. • Dopoo\t, ~o
~81~2300.
..
MERCHANDISE

rD

.....-.. -·-"00

1 .......

ALDER

UotNY Forouon 112 Squont

COnc:rtlt I Plootic So!&gt;tic Ta,q,
300 T~ru 2,000 Gallon• Ron
Evans En1etPt"i..l, Jar:kaon, OH
1-etl0-537-11528.

Vtrr clean ana bedtaam fur niaMd IPAriiMnt in Middltpor I,
call 81•·..e-301ll prolor~bly IMI·

898-n«.

'j '
.,,,

u-

- _.,.,. ""e--,
112 I'M" o1 oool a ~

rHIOI"'Ibae te&amp;lrkliOI'II. ~lp INI
..... Ill HUO gulclolin.,., all
1nto IV8itable on requeac. Ho tin- pold. ~ loca~
gle wide if'lqulrlea please . 30• _ , - Cl._o c..ur. Coli
1~5253.
114·002·7022. Equal Houotno
1Wo horol lond. For ~
, _ tnlo. ... ...., 304-578Twin RMrl r.-, ,_ OC&lt;Ipting
3110.
opplicadont lot lbt. HUD oubllid·
lzod opt lor tfdtrlw ond ~andl ·
WANTED TO BUY
1·5 o&lt;rtl In lolelgo County, 114· capj)Od. EOH 304-17H010.

fOrSIIe

1978 Feativi.l 14170 2 Bedrooma,
2 llot~s. Total £\oc:~l&lt;:. AC, Toto!·
·Proleuional Tree Servlcl, SIU
Removal , Free Et1imitesl In ly New¥ Remadalad. New CoveMd
Porch, Very IIHu~lul Silting On
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 8142. 1 Acroo, In BI-ll Aroa,
91148, 814-387·7010.
$35,000, w•t COnsider lontl eon.
Sun Valley Nursery School. tract, 114 381 ¥_
Childcare M-F 68m-5:30pm Aoet
2-t&lt;. Young Schaal Age During 1G71 Baron 141170 With 7114 Expondo 3 llodroomo. 1 Bo.,, Total
Summer. 3 Dayo .,.r Week Mini· Electric Wilh Backup Gal H"~
""m 614-448-365T.
AC &amp; 2 Porchll On 3 1/2 Acrt
W1ll babysit your child, cour"~t~ Wooded lot Clost To Oallipolia
r:;erllfivd or private pay, have ret- (Will Sell Separate) 814·••6·
eren.ces, reasonable
rate. 9543.
Chester, 6 14·985-3406. Sande.
t980 Windtor. 14a70, 3 Bedroom.
Will Do Interior Of E1nerior Pltnt- 2 Batns, ElecltJC &amp; Gtt, CA, Well
mg. Reasonable Rates, E11peri· Water &amp;. Count)' Water, Building.
encad, References, F.or Free Esti- Garage,
Garden, Puturt.
mates, 61"4-2.5-5755.
Sraened-ln Back Porch &amp; Built-----:---:--:-:::-:--::--:::--1 On Sunroom. Hannan Tract Et.
Will Mow Gra11 And Trim "In The men1ary, 2 Acres +1·, V.ry Goad
Galipolis /l&lt;ea, 81A-··U·1821 .
132.000 No land Con==..::...~::_
I Condition,
tract'81 .. _ 1 3 .
Will Mow Lawns I Odd Jobs.
Equ lpmenr Furnished! 614-448- 1881 GO¥etnor 14x70 With Tip3210.
Out, 2 Bedrooms, 1 112 Bathl,
Fifoplaco. 81 ..387-7524. .
Will mow lawn• in Pt Plea111.nt.
Call T &amp; S Lawn Sorvicft 01 30"' 1915 Schull 1~170, 2bodroom,
675-4782.
1bOth. loroa ktk:hof1, 41\nylllclrting,
o1c. cond., 113,500. ·304·773·

'I

Povod - · COUntY ......

s.c,,, a air conollioned HUD

., :::::&amp;.--·

~

PHILLIP

ll. Charlolte.Hamets at New

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Pege 12 • The Dally Sentinel

l

Frldlly, April 11, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Man needs guidanc?oi1 handling apathetic wife ;j
Ann
Landers
' " '· lo5 Atlfdct
'IINa 5)'111kaM: Mil Cte-

,.._Syndlcua.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: My wife and I
have been married 37 years and, for
lhe·most pan, have had a good life.
The reason I am writing is that we
haven't had sex in over nine years.
"Emma" says she was sexually
abused by a family friend when she
was a child and has an aversion to
sex. I have always known that she
did not enjoy it much, and I often

asked her for suggestions on what I
could do to make it better for her.
Sbe finally said that stopping altogelher would help her more .than
anything.
She has told me she has no problem with my finding someone else,
as long as I just leave her alone. I
have never followed her suggestions. I am not an attractive-looking
person and feel that .since she has
rejected m.., no one else would be
interestetl either. Plus, I was brought
·up to believe·that marriage vows are
sacred.
Emma has told me it doesn't matter to her if we stay together and
have a comfonable life or if I go my
own way. She said either choice is

OK with her. I have tri~ to persuade ers that bringing guns into Canada
her to sec a counselor, but she says it would result in a stiff fine and conwon't help. Do you bave any sug· fiscation of the weapon. In Mexico,
gestions for me? - Married Man in this mistake can also result in legal
Mempllis
seizure of your Cit and even lengthy
jail
terms for people who did not
Dear Memphis: I commend you
intend
to do any wrong. This can be
for your generosity of spirit. Most
particularly
traumatic in a foreign
husbands would be bitter about such
rejection and leap at the chance to country where you may not speak
the language.
look elsewhere.
Since Emma refuses to go with
We recently worked with Mexiyou to a counselor, I suggest that can and U.S. authorities to have
you go alone. You need guidance warning signs placed at Texas borfrom a professional _who will get the der crossings. However, with the
whole story. Get gmng, please.
(' 11ew iaw in Texas that authorizes
Dear Ann Landers: Here at the people to obtain permits to carry
U.S. consulate general in Ciudad concealed weapons, we fear that visJuarez, Mexico, we read with great itors may inadvenently enter Mexi·
interest the letter advising your read· co with guns and suffer lhe conse-

On stage .crt Rio Red Sox
'Little Mary Sunshine'

telephone is open to calls 111y houri
quences.
of
the day or nipt. One oight I
As millions of readers see your
awakened
from a deep sleep by I(
column every day, we would apprecaller
who
asked, "Do all roosten:
ciate your printing this leuer as a
crow
at
the
same time?n
:
reminder to your readers of lhe risks
I
of bringing f~reanns into Mexico. -Trying to come up with a stupi«\
Larry Colbert, American consul gen- answer for a stupid quest!on, ~
eral, Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, replied, "No. Only those an tho
Mexico
same time zone." ·-' Sleepy i~
Dear Consul General Colben: I Philadelphia
'
'
am pleased to print your leiter
'
Dear Sleepy: Not bad, padrel
informing my readers that they risk
:
a jail term and the loss of their car Thanks for Writing.
should they try to bring firearms into
Mexico. Thank you for this official
I
I
word .. Muchas gracias por.su Carta.
. Sead questloas to Ana Lm·•
Dear Ann Landers: I enjoyed den, Cteston S~lcate, 5m
your stories about the roosters crow- Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los:
'
ing. I am a Catholic priest and my Aa1eles, Calif. !10045

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The Ohio Tuition Trust Authority
a new introductory
brochure abOut the Prepaid Tuition
Program this week.
The brochure is designed to help
educate Ohio families about the
need to save for higher education
and to provide basic information on
how the prepaid program works.
The brochure ·also offers families a
way to place their name on the mailing list for the next Prepaid Tuition
Program enrollment period scheduled for Oct. I to Dec. 9.
"We want to inform interested
families now about the purchase
options td be avai !able next all. This
. may help them to save ahead and be
better prepared to make volume purchases, which is usually the lowest
way [o prepay tuition. Volume pricing is based on the age of the child
and the amount of tuition purchased.
The next best option is to purchase
monthly through an automatic
method like payroll deduction or
cash transfers from bank accounts,"
aid Barbara Jennings, Executive
Director for the Ohio Tuition Trust
Authority. "These lower cost purchase llptions have been the most
.popular. Over 84 percent of sales
from the fall enrollment period were
launch~d

volume discount purchases, and
autopayment plan participation .flas
increased 104 percent this year,"
Jennings continued.
Ohio families can call the Tuition
Trust at 1-800 AFFORD IT (2336734) to request a copy of he
brochure and place their ·name on
the mailing list for the fall 1996
enrollment period. Families can also
, check their local library for a co)iy
of the brochure. The Tuition Trust
recently. sent all Ohio libraries a supply of the new brochure.
.Jhe Tuition Trust is a state
agency created by the General
Assembly in 1989 to promote saving
or higher education. Through the
Prepaid Tuition Program, parents
can start saving for college tuition
and fees while their children are
young by purchasing tuition units.
These. units keep pace with tuition
inflation and can be used at any
accredited college in the country.
The program. backed by the full
faith and credit of the state of Ohio,
currently has over 47,500 participants and $189 million in total
assets. Call 1-800 AFFORD IT
(233-6734) for more information or
vi~it
our web site at http:/
/www.ohio.gov/prepaid.tuitionl.

BY AL HARTSON
angel ahead of him and find a wife
· for Isaac. Biblical faith always looks
Middleport Church of Christ
Faith Doesn't Look Back How forward to what Ood promises.
many times have you heard or said
Earlier when the children of Israel
this: "Those were the good old days." were released from bondage in
I remember back when I was a kid Egypt. they were constantly comand it seemed like all we had to !lo plaining, bickering, whining and diswas play, those were the good old content. When God would say "Go
days. I remember w.hen my children forward to Canaan . ..." they would
were little and I coul~· ta~e care of all say "but back in Egypt..." Faith cantheir needs, those were the good old not look back and expect to be pleasdays. I remember when the family ing to God! Faith cannot look back
would all get together for the family and expect to be. blessed by God.
reunion, those were the good old Faith cannot look back and result in
days. On and on the list could go of successful Olristian living.
When God sent His angels to reshappy times we ~emember about the
past and the cliche resounds, "those cue Lot and his family they told them,
"flee for your lives and do not look
were the good old days."
back."
Lot's wife looked back and
Let me suggest to you that Biblical faith doesn't look back. Paul tells was turned into a pillar of salt. Lookus in Philippians 3 that he hadn't ing back often paralyzes us.
Jesus said in Luke 9:62 "No one
attained perfection as of yet, but one
thing he tried to practice was "for- · who puts to his hand to the plow and
gelling what is behind and straining looks back is fit for service in. the
toward what is ahead, I press on kingdom of God."
toward the goal to win the prize for
I would like to suggest to you that
which God has cal:ed me heaven- for the Christian "those good old
ward in Christ Jesus. ' He doesn't say days" are yet to come.
we shouldn't learn from the past, it
failures and successes, but that we
aren't dwell on it or live there. Often
times our past becomes an anchor
that prevents us from experiencing
the victory God promises His chil.dren. Satan says, "remember when ..."
and we begin to lose perspective on
who we are in Christ. We say to God
"remember when.:." and He responds
to His blood washed church '0! I
don't remember when because when
I forgive I forget."
In Genesis 24 we find a story
invo!'ving Abraham and his most
trusted servant. Abraham is getting
old and he wants to make cenain that
· his son Isaac has an acceptable wife •
to be his helpmate for 'life. His concern is that he might marry someone
outside of.lhe nation of Israel and she
could possibly lure him away from
his relatiooship with God. So he tells
his uusted servant to return to their
home land and find a wife for Isaac.
The servant says to Abraham. "what
. if I find a suitable woman and she
doesn't want to come with me, should
I then take your son Isaac back to Ur
to live" Abraham's answer is emphatic a5 he responds "Make sure that you
do no take my son back there!'' He
then
expmses his faith in God by telling
; his servant that God would send an

Staff Sgt. John Bissell, son of Glen Bissell
of Racine and Naomi Bissell of Bashan, rappalled from a helicopter In Panama laat month
as part of his Army reenlistment ceremony. He
was promoted to ataff sergeant after receiving
honor graduete at the Basic Non-Commissioned Officers Course at Aberdeen Proving
Grounds, Md. He and his wife, Anabel, will be

moving to Fort Bragg, N.C. where he will be st.
tloned with the Army' a 18th Airborne Corps. He
Ia a 1990 graduate of Eastern High School and
family and friends may contact him at PSC 01
BOX4290APOAA34001. He isahown·herewlth
his commander Capt. Fluet preparing to exit the
helicopter.

~.ay JIM FREEMAN
.
.
.
;'1'1mee-Sentlnel Slliff
.:; ANTIQUITY- "Earn thOU\Illnds stuffing envelopes.
::Rusti $1.00 and self addressed, .stamped envelope to.:·."
r, : 1Many people have read these advertisel)'lents in
·-:Jlewspaper and magazine classified sections, including
~ose in Ohio Valley Publishing Company newspapers,
~ promising thousands of dollars for being your own boss,· .
• working at home, ~imply stuffing envelopes.
'; Sound' too good to be uue? Maybe it is.
,:, Carolyn Goodrich and her husband, lame~. a retired
-: ouple living in the Letart Township community of
. ')1\ntiquity have examined some of the offers ... learning
.•they aren't all what they claim. Now they want to share
' what they have learned with other area residents. 1
.::. • Mrs. Goodrich recently responded to a business
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&lt;&gt;pp0r1unity advertisement in The Daily Sentinel w'"ting people to stuff envelopes.
. The COR;~pany, Prestige Distributors of Winter
Springs,, Fla., sent back information.
. ,.
"They made it sound like you would be ·working for
a company that wanis people to stuff envelopes in their
homes to save lhe!D office space," she said.
Then they wanted $20 fot supplies which she provided, but instead of getting envelopes and other business
supplies, what she received back was "the plan."
Tbe plan is ... "they want you to tum around and do
the same thiJ!g to other people," GQOdrich said. "They
send me $20 and do the same thing to someone else."
Mrs. Goodrich declined.
"
"I don't want to do lhe same thing to someone else."
Meigs County residents may find themselves specifi-

. lUO GRANj)E - Thirty-five American Electric Power SMART trees are going to college at the'
University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College due to AEP's efforts.
The Columbus-based utility donated the trees at
an informal planting ceremony Friday to enhance
the Gallia County university's 'campus-area landscape plan.
.
"We're delighted to work in partnership with Rio
Grande officials ·tO .
. our tree te¥arch, while
adding to tlie beauty
·
ltio .GJ!nde;~~
"- lll!itey, dtfFCtor ,of
lion 'regions, including portions of

ford on Uav~ It IO seav~r before

going on to the role of Nunc Chapel.
on Star Trtk.

Community
·calendar

. .on .PII!It.M

on

·

rl:s .t his7 detour .

Tt.IPPERS P(A.INS -AI •a motorists

•.

+-~•rill ' have .a ' smoOther go l'lf traveling

·I

~; aroutnd

the slip damaged section of State
7 An Meigs County, wlth paving
t :sJat••d for this week on the detour for ·
,,. tnlffic.
nighway ~rewf!&amp;"' scheduled to
l:::'~omplete shoulder and drainage improvement work on Orange Township
294 (Old Seven Road) Tuesday, in preparation for the paving of the
!l"avel base road on Wednesday • Story on page A8
D-.. •-

SATURDAY
.SALEM CENTER·· Star Grange
778 and Star Junior Grange 878,
potluck supper and fun night Saturc1ay, 6:30 p.m. at the Grange hall .

, ---~:

sets trial date for former DARE officer

.

POMEROY --Meigs County Better Livestock Dairy Cattle 4-H Club,
Sunday, I :30 p.m liome of Ed
. Holter, advisor.

·GALLIPOLIS -A trial date of August 6 was set Friday during a prehearing for former Gallia County DARE Officer Richard Mudd on
~lhar;ges of rape and gross sexual imposition. ,
.
M~tao, represented by Pomeroy attorney Charles H. ·Knight, pleaded
guilty to the charges last month in the Gallia County Common Pleas
tfC•~urt following a grand jury indictment March 22.
· According to the indictments,
the incidents 'allegedly occurred
between Nov. I, 1995 and Jan. 31,
~~--~----------~1996 .
.
Allegations of ihe incident,
Tod"y~a Gtimn·JJadiaal which involved a 15 year-old
female, prompted Gallia County
15 Sections - 164 Pages
Prosecuting Brent Saunders and
- - - - - - - - - - - . the Galli a County Sheriff's DepartCelendar
·C3
ment to ·request an investigation by
the Ohio Attorney · General's
Qppilleds
Bu)'eau
of Criminal Investigation
Com!q
lnmt
and Identification,
A4
f'4itodaJs
Mudd reportectly was hired by
Qbjtuerlg
A6
the Gallia County Sheriff's Depart·
ment as an intermittent corrections
Sports
Bl·8
Weather
A3
officer in November 1990, and was
lt~:~~~~~~~=:J promoted to DARE · officer in
November 1991.

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MONDAY
POMEROY - ~ Big Bend Sternwheel Association meeting Monday, .
7:30p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall.

..

POMEROY ••· Meeting of Meigs
County Gafden Club Monday, 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Public Library
to finalize plans for spring regional
OAGC meeting.
·

a

sounding advertisements. Fo~ instance, Mr. Goodrich
recently 'responded to an advertisement featuring postal
jobs, she said.
"They want $45 to send you an application," she
pointed out. ·
:
"I want people to think twice before they do this, • she
advised. "If people want to give you something for nothing, be skeptical.
·
•
"It's not right what ihey're doing to the public."
However, many .of these schemes, including the one
. mentioned above, are legal. Because of this, the Ohio
Valley Publishing Company daily reminds its readers to
do business with people they know, and not to sen4
money through the mail until they have investigated the .
•
offering..
1
According to Bill.Snyder at the Postal Business Center in Columbus, peopiF suspecting a mail order SCBII}
should contact their local post office for access to the
other shady Pos.tallnspection Service. .
·

off of," she pointed out ..
Meanwhile, the couple is ·e~amining

Bono campaigns for Cremeans

Mlljol llunlt played Mrs. Ruther-

SUNDAY
HOBSON ·• Russ Spencer and
the Gospel Tones will sing Sunday.
7:30 p.m. at the Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church. All invited.

Vol. 31. No. 11

cally wgeted by these
offers.
Between 20 aqd 21
percent of the county's
residents are . over the
age of 65, people who
may be prime targets
for shady con artists,
telemarketing fraud
and mail fraud.
"People are looking
for something to make
a little money to survive on. Twenty dollars
is not much, until you
consider all the people
they are making $20

;toea/ couple ·probes 's.uspicious; offers

Meigs County vendors who
cigarettes have been notified that cig-.
arette licenses are due to be renewejl:
for the 1996-97 year, according to;
Meigs County Auditor Nancy Park-·
er Campbell.
. :
Pursuant to Ol)io Revised Code:
· Section 5743.15, persons engaging in:
, th!: wholesale or retail . business of.
cigarette sales must have a license to; .
do so. Licensesmay be purchasyd by;
mail with the application which IW·
been mailed to current v~ndors or ill·
the Meigs County Auditor's Office. :
Cigareue licenses for 1996-97;
must be purchased before May 23.;
Revenues are distributed loc'!,IJY' to;
townships, villages and the county. ;
The auditor's office hours are Mon-·
day through Friday from 8:30a.m. to:
4:30p.m. If additional information is:
needed, the office number is 992-:
2698.

Tbe . Community CaJendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and speci_. events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any •,
type. Items are printed ll)i space ·
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number oC days.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM -- Faith Full
Gospel Church will . feature guest
speaker Dean Snider Friday, 7 p.m.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • April 21 . 1996

rroo-good-to-be-true?. Maybe it is!

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HI: 70.
Low: 'SOl

Qualify Of/ife • Hospice opens In Meigs • Page C4

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·ohio Tuition Trust
----Army reenlistmen'~-----.· Licenses
Authority launches
to be
introd~ctory brochure ..
re.newed sttt;.
on Prepaid Tuition
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Health Fair 1996.

IJ

One of GOP's
most popular ·
funrkaisers
visits Gallipolis

Citizens group
fears loss of ·
attendance with
two high schools
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmts-5entlnel Stiff
GALLIPOLIS -• The citizens
group formed in the wake of a proposed reopening of Hannan Trace
High School fears that operating two
high schools in the Gallia County
Local School District will cause a
"secession" of attendance areas
fr9m the system.
six-question survey distributed
·
United for A~l~r!l'!~

BY KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - One of -the most
sought-after fund-raising speakers in the
Republican Party was on hand here Saturday to support the re-election campaign of .
one of his. colleagues in they.s. House of

bel1alf _..,._ · Frank Cremeans of Gallipofound 82 percent of the respond~nts
lis a~d on the changes brought in Congress
would vote to remove ' lheir are$
after Republicans gained cO:ntrol of the
: from Galli a Local and join a nearb¥
House and · Senate following a 40-year
school district.
tenure in the·minority. •
Such action would be similar to
Bono, the former entertainer and busithe referendum that allowed Crowl)
nessman who was half of the successful
City to leave Gallia Looal and align
Sonny and Cher recording and television
with the Fairland district in 1993
team in the 1960s and '70s, is also seeking
after the creation of River Valley
re-election tliis year in his home district,
High School.
where he previously servell as mayor of
Results of the survey were made
Palm Springs.
·
available Friday by 'Ron Toler, who
He said·the GOP will have its hands full
was elected . president of Parent~
as its' seeks to maintain i~ con.gressional
United for Academic Excellence :
majority and ·retake the White House this
when the group organized last week: .
fall.
The survey was distributed to the: ·
"I think it's going to be a tough battle Gallla County Township Trualetl8 anil
. Preslmore than I00 people in auendance;
and lhere will be more money spent in this dent Noreen Saunders with his autograph Saturday.
former
The group wants to persuade tho
year's election than ever in the history of enl(lrtalner waa In Gallipolis to aid the 1'81lectlon bid of Rep.
Gallia Local Board of Education tci
Congress," Bono said during a reception· at Frank ·Cremuns.
•
.
delay consideration of reopening
the Our House Museum. .
our pan could be damaging to the nation," he added. "I
HTHS, as suggested by the adminis~
'"This is definitely a pivotal year and I feeJ failure on
Continued on page A2
Continued on page A2

Meigs Nflt ~et to go online
By JIM FREEMAN
ber. In the meantime, an 800 number can be used
Tlme1·Sentlnel Staff
for access, he explained.
LONG BOTTOM -With the apparent disin·
Meanwhile, May 4 has been.set for a tentative
tegration of plans for an out-of-town Internet in-service date for local Meigs County access.
provider to locate in Meigs County, another
Initial access will be through the Chester teleprovider is planning to begin limited service phone exchange's 985 number, making it a local
Monday -· with more local flavor:
ell)! from the 985, 992, 949, 667, 378 anp 742
' Eureka Net's plan to establish local service eichanges. Future plans call for a 992 access
apparently fell through due to a conflict between num.ber which wil.l include the Letart Falls and
Etireka Net and Tiger Net, another Internet access Portland exchanges of 247 and 843 , and later the
provider. Eureka Net.had gone as far as to adver- Mason, W.Va., 773 exchange when that becomes
tise its seryice in the Sunday Times-SentineL
a local call.
·
Now, county residents Ken Riggs and partner
A 992 number alone would not inc,lude
Herbert "Herbie'' Grate II are establishing a new · Reedsville and Coolville telephone exchanges
company,.Meigs Net, to provide Internet access.
prevalent in the nonheastem section of the counRiggs, who resides in the Long Bouom area, ty, Riggs e~p1ained.
said Meigs Net is now waiting for its phone lines
After paying a $10 service activation fee, for
to cOme·in before establishing a local access num- $25 a month a subscriber will have unlimited

.
Internet access. Another package costing S19 a;
month has 20 hours of access and student access·
for local elementary and high school students is:
$7.50 a month with five hours access. ·
.
Discounts are also available ·for a year's pay-;
Continued on page A2

Sat. April 20 Bam 5pm • Grand Central ·Mall
. The llllghter vou (J9 cboUt good health. the
~fer you'l feel! AI Heollh Foil '%, the v.tlole
farr11v ca11eom o 1o1 abOUt gemng ana
sltlylrg wei. It's hltoes1!11g ... ll's fun .. .and vou

• l'hlen vou CliNe at Health Folt '96, the ~
500 people get fl88 scr-*'gs lor • c~
• llbad """""" • Blood &amp;JIP • Nrmnaoy
Fulc1k:lo. and ' ecx..- CO I \POOII!oo 1/&gt;rd(ia.

m

con

rece!Y&amp;--

sc19&amp;11ngs.

IYs one ot the IWd-Otrio ~s most com·
plet&amp; &lt;n:1 carnptilh&amp;nsiV&amp; displays
the manv
Mallh rsoovlc&amp;s """*"*&gt; her&amp; n iJU' c:orT'ITllfily.. .

Editor'• Nota: Thloltt U..lhlrd In • ·continuing -'-• ol
Newa Slrlllce, Sunc18Jo Tltnit..._,tlnel artlcln,
"Report e.r.t on Amer1c8,\ looldnsran u.. cruclil
ol thle election yew.
·
values debate has both broadened and become
specific since Dan Quayle ignited a cultural forest
over a "Murphy Brown" TV episode about uhwed

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Somtllri"' for EniJVflel

or

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prioltty Issue In 1
motherhood four years aso.
the ·First Presbyterian Church.
After Quayle criticized the fie'
Earley points to two issues - one
tiona! TV character's decision to
traditional, one emerging - as exambecome a single' mother, the 1992
pies of that impact.
presidential campaign burned out
"Tax c9des and deductibles ·literally
over what values meant, who should
define what families ate; and, how
define thl}m; whether they even
much money parents can keep to raise
children," he said.
helonged.in the public arena.
"We 'tannot assume that public
Earley also points to the growing r~le
pplicy has no role to play in reinof govem"'ent in ''our high-tech age"
forcing and realizing our values,"
as a pj votal public policy issue.
said William Oalston, a fQ,rmer Clin':The access to information on lhe
1
t9n doniestic po~cy adviser who directs lhe University 1Intemet ... bOth positive and perye"" ... demands some
of Maryland'~ Institute for Philosophy and Public .Poli- regulation by our federal government," he said;
state-sponsored gambling and same-sex marriages.
cy.
.
.
.There is no !ioubt that politicians have co-opted and
Cljnton mentioned "values," "vinues" or "family"
Fot his part, a Gallipolis Pastor assumes jlublic poli- legitimized values as an issue for both Democrats and . II times in lhe opening moments of his State of the
cy plays a direct role in h~lping to form lhe society's Republicans; and, that they h~ve drawn lheir parties Union speech. He challenged Hollywood to "create
orientation toward value,s
·
. .
· into.debating specific items under.the ''values" rubric, movies, ·cos and television shows you would want
"I think the reason .v!llues and family issues aie
· In recent congressional battles, Democrats framed yoilr own children and grandchildren to enjoy."
growing in importance is because- whe• we like it Medic lire around valuing the elderly. Republicans · Conservative GOP hopeful Pan Buchlnall called it •
or not- deCisions at the federal level have a dramatic framed ·the budget . deficit around valuing childre!J. speed! even he could have given.
·
ContlnUICI. on ~ A2
, impact on our families( said Albert L. Earley, pastor of Meanwhile, riew battlefronts eQierge in issues · lik;e

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