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. .
~.12. The

Dally Sentl~l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: Thursday, Apr1123,

1•

Friday
Weather

Honor roll anoounced for Meigs Local Schooi ·District
The names of .students making
the honor roll for ~ools in the
Meigs Local School District for the
third nine-week gradio1 period have
been announced.
Those students in their respective
schools making a grade of "B" or
abOve in"all their subjects are as follows :

Cody Davidson, Jennifer Kuhn, Joel
Lynch, Chalsie Manley, Katie Rodehaver, Jordann Thomas, Cassi
Whan, Clerissa Davis.
Special Clau: Brittany Annstrong, Patricia Johnson, · John
Lamb, Emily Ohlinger.

Sermonette, Page 10
Reds lose again, Page 6
Local' diamond results, Page 6.

Today: Sunny

ley, all A's; Ashley Baylor, Madison
King, Cassie Lee.
Grade S (Lisle): Adam Snowden, Sarah Wilkes, all A's; Justin
Coleman, Kimberly Taylor.
LDIDH (Primary): Michael
Hudson, Tiffany )14cDonald.
LDIDH (lntermdiate): . Troy
Barrett, Andrew McKnight.

Runyon, Ben See, Brandy Shea,
Josh Simpson, Allison Smith, James
Smith, Emily Story. ·stephanie
Story-Schwab, Jennifer W•lker,
Beth Wilfong, Jessica Wolfe, Hannah Woolard, Jennifer Zielinsky.
G.,.de 8: Andrew Baker, Jessica
C:undiff, Delana Eichinger, ~ber
POMEROY ELEMENTARY
Ellis, Josh Glaze, ZacJC Glaze,
Kindergarten: Chlsey · Arms,
Shawn Gwinn, Ben Haley, Amber
BRADBURY ELEMENTARY
Kristen Ballard, Shannon Barrett, SALEM CENTER ELEMEN· Haning, Erin Hartson Greg King,
Grade 4: Samantha Cole, Sarah Joyce Billings, Erin Dunn, Veronica TARY ·
'
Melissa Kirk, Darrick Knapp, John
Davis, Michael Durst, Anna Hanen· Grimm, Stephanie Hudson, Holly •
Grade 1:
Michael Bailey, Kraw\.czyn, John Lentes, Nick
bach, Briuney Jacks, · Meghan Jeffers, Ryan Jeffers, Autumn Rebecca Canterbury, Chelsea Car- McLaughlin, Jason Miller, Mbnica
Leslie. Kayla McCanhy, Autumn McDaniel, Ariel Nitz, Shlby penter, Jonathan Hal)dley, April Moon, Josh Napper, Chris Neece,
NcLaughlin and Melia Whan, all Ohlinger, Erin Pattel'$on, Richard Oiler, all A's; Matthew Dunkle, Mindy O'Dell, Krystal Pennington,
A's; Nathan Becker, Justin Bell, Reuter, Ryan VanMatre, Ivy Conde, Michelle Eggers, Brittany Kim~le, Beth Phillips, Kristy Puckett, Misty
Jamie Ellis, Ashley Engle, Aaron Ashley Laudennilt, Max Linle, Alyssa · Longstreth,
Stacy Puckett, Erin Ralston, Melissa Rich·
· Fife. Laura Hollen, Kylen King, Mara Perry, Bruce Youkers
Macomber, Samantha McDonald, mond, Joy Rose, ressica Ro.trsh,
Tara Lee, Jo Beth Rodehaver, and
Grade 1: Lacee Arms, Henry Skylar Rupe,-Robin Tay lor.
Leslie Runyon, Jessica Schuler,
Eric VanMeter.
Grade 2: Ryan Barrett, Joshua Mary SchuUz, Stacia SimS', Jacqb
Doerfer. Sarah Hubbard, Thomas
Grade 5: Melissa Boggess, Katie Klein, Josh1.1,a Morris, Aaron · Burnem, Corinna Cross, all A's; Smith, Rebecc.(l Smith, Amber
A workshop on period C:ostume design. with emphasis on the
Reed, · Brooke Venoy, Chet Wigal, Oliphant, Alexandria·Patterson. Erilf Dusty Adkins.
Snowden, Tember Wilson, Tara bustle yeara 187G-18110 was presented b~Becky Baer, Meigs Coun·
and Natasha Wise, all A's; Brian Perkins, Calee Reeves, Kel sey
Grade 3: James Wallace, all A's; Wyatt.
ty Extension agent, at the Meigs Museum last week.
Adkins. Emily Ashley, Brandon Sauters, Haley Sayre, Josi Van- Lauren Elliott
·
Attending tl:t• n11lon co-sponsored by the Meigs COunty/Ohio
Carpenter, Ryan Frazier, Lisa Meter, Deanna Cundil'f, Ryan CurGrade 4: Zachary Weber, all A's; MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
Bicentennial Committee and tlie Extension Service, were those
Gheen, Joe ilowat:d, Megan Maves, tis, Shane Day, Emily Fields, Kelly Napper.
Grade 9: Cara Ash, Shandi lntereatedln Mrvlng ea greeters tor Cumberland Princess pallenJordan Rawson, Anna Sayre, Megan Lucreshia Howard, Jessica Jewell, · · Grade 5: Randy Han, all A's; Bobb. Derrick Bolin, Alex Chaffee. gera vlaltlng Pomeroy, S!wheal Festival queen candidates, and
Tibbetls, Donnie Whan..
tume design projectl.
·
.
Ricliy Laudermih, Alisha 'Quillen, Jeffrey Baughman, Eric Burnem, Andrew Davis, ~hristopher Dodson, 4-H club memblre tlkllag
Michael
Hammon,
Aaron
Krautter,
Bear
used
poatera
end
anaparencles
to
show
how
to
told
miteBilly Ramsey, Randall Reeves, Zachary Bush, Aaron lhle, SamanAndrea Krawsczyn, Carrie Light- rial or use wlra meah trarnft to create bultle foundations. She Mid
HARRISONVILLE ELEMEN· Charles Runyon, Devan Sou)sb;Y,' tha Pierce, Curtis Varian.
foot, Samantha Marshall, Beatrice that allka, serge, poplin, taffeta, moire, velvm and woolana were
TARY
Nathan Timmons
.Mbrgan, Christopher Pickens, Shan- used by the women tor the dreaHI, 11111ny of which had hanging
Kindergarten: Dawn Bissell,
Grade 2:. Zachary Konkle, Lind- SALISBURY ELEMENTARY .
hlgl! fitted, boned collara, end jacket bodlcea.
ian Bullington, Alyss Green, Cody say McKinney, Gregory Musser,
Kindergarten: Jeremy Ash, Joey non Price, J.effrey· Sh an k• Joshua aleevea,
Stemwheal Featlval queen candldatea, Jamla Drake, ·left, and StiHill, Chrisie Lewis, all A's: Alysha Cas.sandra Patterson, Amorette Blackston, Collen Blankenship, Ste- Simpson, Timothy Snider, Stephanie flnl Bearha,look over-someoot thi poatertahowlng attire of thslate
Chapman, James Black, Justin Cot- Salser, ·Kaylyn · Spradling, Steven vie Bunce, Kelsey Burton, Justin Wigal, Connie Willet.
·
)
·
Grade , 10: Meghan Avis, Seth 1800's. (Photo by Charlene ,l;toefllch
terill , Rebecca Donohue, Cassie Stewart, 'Lisa Bla~enship, Travis. Ellis, Darby Gilmore, Scott
Morris. Zac Young.
Eblin, Chelse.a Hicks, t;lradley Kennedy, Bobby King, Samantha Baker, Keith Barrett, 'Steve ' Bella,
Grade 1: Elsa Gardner, Bethany · Jones, Jesse Mowery, Jill . Reeves, King, Stephanie Shamblin,• Gabriel Lisa Bias, Amber Blackston, •
J ·1
I a
Lee; Mason Metts, all A's; Ryan Felicia See, Molly Smith, Megan Williams, Caleb Davis, Kristen Bethany Boyles, Stacey Brewer, .
&amp;1ha Bing of Bailey Run &amp;.ad- held~ the Golden COOal in GaJiipolis on
Browning. Travis Hicks, Clinton Still, Caitlyn Thomas, Leah Whit- Eblin, Breana Hemsley, Adain Beverly Burdette, Robert Day, Pornciuy enfalained several gues111 ·on Good Friday.
·
Kennedy; · ·
.
Lavender, Tiffany Reitmire, Jacob Heather Ferrell , Marjorie Halar, lliller. '
tekind, Austin Willford.
'
Thepanyhashostedbyher~S.­
Grade Two: Talisha Beha, Doug
Grade 3: Dakota Arms, Zachary Riffle, Cassie Smith, Brett Curtis, · Melissa Han, Amber Huddleston,
Those JRSerlt were DiU Kay and Joe bara Delong of Canal WIIIChesT«. Ikr
Herdman, Chelsey Noel, Daniel Arms, Michael Blaettnar, Meghan Cody Will.
Eric McCartney, Amber Perkins, Md!lroy Pomeroy· Jeff McFlroy and grandson, Adam Bunten, presented a ·
Runyon, Kay lene Slater, Hannah Clelland, Evan Dunn; Courtne.y
Grade 1: Ruebel Davis, J.T. Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah Smith, Michelle•llrown. Waverly, WVa.; Jessica magic show.
Williams, all A's; Jonathan Black, Haggy, Mian Herman, Scotty Muss- Evans,.Amanda Gilkey, J.R. Greene, Shannon Smith, Joshua Sorden, McElroy, ·Nelsonville; Derrick HewiU.
Severnl Cllds and gills were received.
Cory Gates, Justin Gibbs, Nicole er, Stephn Will, Jerod Wyatt, Chris- Brandon · Hanning,
Morgan Julie Spaun; James Stanley, 'Yes ley Alhens; Vernon and [)arleen Bing,
AnmJirig Were Jim, Mindy andA&lt;ilm
Hill, Samantha Hivley, . Carrie teena Young, Randy Collins, Cecilia· Kemiedy, Ashley Mayes, Andrew Thoene, Amanda Upton, Mtchael Poinemy; \amn and Shelly Bing,~ Burden, Thornville; lbm, Susan, Alat,
Phelps, Brittany Picas!, Janella Core, Mark Cozan, Rene Edmonds, ,O' Bryant, Brittany Paxton, Deme- Willilon.
aml3en, all ofGaJiipolis· Tony Aqt;tn- · Andy and &amp;nina Delong, Strulsvil)e;
Stover, Ashley Wervey.
Heatller Elarn, Kayla Grover, Sarah tria Pearson, Antl1ony Shamblin,
Grade 11~ Jennifer Arthur, Lacy da and Hayley Bing, ~;
and 1lld I¥.ong, Canal Wmclteseer; Pam,
Grade Three: Sarah Lantz, all Jeffers, Daylon Jenkins, Trista Ran- Caitlin Swartz.
Banks, Candy Barnett, Kristen Melissa Leach, Ammla .00 NtelxJias, Don,ja;d)andShellyBarber,LaGraltge;
Grade 2: Amy Barr, 'Kyle Boggs, Brown, Melissa Darnell, John Colutitbus·"ImyandSharonSayrc, Travis • Kxen and Maxine Griffith, Pomeroy,
A's; Daniel Bookman, Cory Dill, dolph, Casey Richardson, Andrew
Celeste Taylor.·
Roush, Britnee Sauters, Tiffany .Ben Coppick, Decca Hans tine, Davidson, Tricia Davis, Stoney Day, and1ad,GaJiipiis; Misty Sayre, Canton; AllheaStrongofWUk=ille; Mr. and Mrs.
Kaylee Kennedy, ~rk Legar, Tren- Brandy Gangwer, Melissa Holman, Jlllice Bower, CirtlcviJie; a.iswp11er am Tun ShMo, GaJiipolis; Beay Reibel of
Fourth Grade: Miranda Beha,. Zornes.
Grade 4: Wes Ault, Bryce ton McClintock, Whitney White.
all A's; ~chael Gardner, Joshua
Justin Jeffers, Rebecca'Johnson,Jes· DiMd Hudson; CirtlcviJie· and 1bm and P'a!ieroy· am Fae Oaig. Por1aoy.
Grade 3: Shauna Clark, Andy sica Johnson, Kristina Kennedy, Wanda Hudson and B~ Otillioothc.
Davis, Amanda Jeffers, Nathan JefSpires, William Taylor.
~fitmEI)Iiawerep)j(pJones,
Grade Five: Peggy Duff,' Carl fers, Josh Kennedy, Chris Moss, Garnes, Brandon Pearson, Dru Sarah Larkins, Kelli Lighlfoot,
'
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jones, Jr. and family·
Noel.
'
Brandi Reeves, Whitne.v Thoene. Re&lt;;d. Jennifer Smith; grade four Dwayne Madison, Patrick Manin, {)atlnl*lbtltv
Mr. and Mrs.· Paul Jones,
am~
Jeremy Vincent, Daniel Young, Derek Brickles, Chris Fields, Cody P~nny ·Napper•. Tara Nonnan, Tamra
A binlxlay parly honoring Emma FredJones;RalphJooes.
MIDDLEPORT ELEMENTARY
Miranda Yourig, Chelsea Dent, Huddy, Matthew Meadows, Brooke 0 Dell, Jaymte Osborne, Alyson Reibel Ogdin on her 90th binlxlay8oise\\lllkinsofP011aoysenlagift.
Kindergarden: Kayla Grah811), Weston Fife, (;;ody flysell, Adam O'Bryant, Christopher VanReeth, Patterson, Macie Pierce, Ryan
·
·
Bubby Wills, Aaron Little,. Megan Pelligrino, Jordan Shank, Abby Lula Webb.
Ramsburg, Elicia Ritchhart, Kim·
Alley Tara Jewell, Maranda Rigg~. Stewan, Jake Venoy, Josh Venoy,
Grade S: Grant Arnold, April berly Ritterbeck, Nikki Robens,
Jacob Dunn, Olivia Carpenter, Alison WoOds.
Coppick; and Ross Well. ·
.Fram:o Romuno,. Tiffany Savage,
Andrew Blankenship, Kelsey WilGrade 5: Brittany Cremeans,.
Rebekah.Smith, Adam Sorrell Jereson, Tricia Smith, Kyle Rsselll)ller Jason DeMoss, Justin DeMoss, MEIGS MIDDLE SCHOOL
my Thomson, · Bridget Vaughan,
Andrews, Dustin Nasl1, Megan Dun- Rosanna Dillard, Justine Dowler,
Grade 6: 1Y Ault, Jodi Barrett, Christina Westfall, Sllfri Wright,
fee. Cody Smith, lake Lynch, Kris- Eddie Fife, Ben Hatfield, Clare Sis- David Boyd, Page Bradbury. Kara Jonathall Wyatt.
tine Davis, Trinity Kimes, Jennifer son, Jenny Bowles, Trevor Depoy, Buffington, Brandyn Bumgardner,
Grade 12: Vicki Adams, Rachel
Payne, CayLa Taylor, 'Zack -Whit- Keri "Evans, Brandon Grover, Matt Nik.i Butcher, Kenny Carsey, Katie Ashley, J)avid Banks, Stefani
Latch, Shanalle Smith.
.'
Krawsczyn, Maggie
Molden, Childs, Jaynee Dav,is, Maegan Dod- · Bearhs, Katherine Beaumire,
Grade 1: Hailey Ebersbach, · Michael Sayre, Annette. Sheets, Jilli son, Jennifer Dunn, Lesle Edwards, Michelle Bissell, Stephanie Burton,
Amber Hockman, Lian Hoffman, Young, Jenni Young.
Rosie Eggers, Andrea Fetty, Kelly Seth Carleton, Carly Cchasteen, JeriCara Lawless, Nicki Smith, Nicbol , Self-contained: Amber Evans, Freeman. Jesse Gates, Aubrie ca Clark, Floyd Cleland, Seva Cline,
Bailey, Amber Ebersbach, Nicole Erick Sydenstricker, Cody Vincent, · Kopec, Jonathan Larkins, Sara Lee, Eli Cline, Crystal Eblin, Brandie
Hailey, Nikki Lawson, Courtney Cassie Waison, Amanda Wittig.
Chrissy Miller, Ashley Payne, Erica Elliott, Elizabeth Farley, Jeffrey
Mayes, Willie Barcus, Caleb Bevan,
MH-MS: Gene Buckley, JoAua- Poole, Tia Pratt, Josh Ra~, Henry F()wler, Emily Fowler, Brianna
Chad Bonnett. Megan Bush, na Fetty, Katie Kibble, Angie Rider, Bradley Slaytop, Angela Gilmorp, Danielle Grueser, Cortney .
Chelsea Davis, Jennifer Fife, Laura Queen, Ruth Snyder.
·
Smith,.Jessica Smith, Xantha Smith, Haley, le11nie Haning, Carrie HarGheen, Hannah Hoffman, Chris
f
Ryan Stobart, Brandi Thomas, Holly mon, Jennifer Hayman, Dustin HerKimes, Jared McKinney, Renae RUTLAND E.LEMENTARY
Williams, Jorda~ Wil!iams, Angela shberger, Kristen .Hill, Jennifer
Richmond, Tess Thomas, Chassidy
Grade 1: Adrian Bolin, Clayton Wilson.
Husk, Hyung-D Kim, Sara .Lee,
Will.
Bolin, Justin George, Lilly Jacks,
Grade 1: Bridget Atkins, Brook Heidi Legar, Michael Leifheit, Jill
Grade 2: Austin Dunfee, Kay La Morgan Lntes, Maria Madows, Bolin, Lindsay Bolin, Ben Book- Lemley, Misty LyO!IS, Raben MalGheen, Natasha Knapp, Kaitlin Jason Morris, · Eugene Patterson, man, Dawna Brumfield, Ceigha hotra, Amanda Napper, Christina
Leslee, Breanna Mitchell, Trevor Briana Willis, all A's;,Corey Hutton, Bryant, Andrea Burdette, Wes Call, Neece, Patrick 0' Brien, Danielle
NichOls, Doug Noel, Casey Smith, Justin Little, Jessica Maines, Valisha· Jassiline Carter, Mindy Chancey, Peckham, 'Annette Pierce, Melissa
Lacey Stobarr, Alexa Veney, Robert Richmond, Joe Satterfield, Merissa Ashh:y Colwell, Carrie Darst, Loret- Ramsburg, Melissa Reeves, Andrea
Fore,man, Mason Conde, Joshua Snyder, Tyler Wamsley.
ta Darst, Kayte Davis, Maria Oren- Runyon, Caseyne 'Sanfurd, Charles
Eakins, Katie Evans, Holley Geary,
Grade 2: Jacob Barnes, Katie ner, Casey Dunfee, Josh Eagle, Ash- Searles, Amy See, Matthew Sellers,
&lt;;hris Goode, Sarah Hollen, Tyler Doczi, Keith Moore, Cassady Will- ley Eblin, Juley Eblin, Alllanda Wendy Shrimplin, Sabrina . Smith,
Littl~. Katie Patterson, Lesley
ford, all A's; Emily Davis, Bethany Fetty, Candace Fetty, Ashley Fields, Amanda. Smith, Amy Smjth, Mar·
Preece, Tiffany Simpson, Phillip Gibbs, Brittany Harrison, Seth John- Robyn Freetnan, Jon Halar, Chris lana Staats, Jonathan Stewart. Cry$·
Sisson, Patti Vining.
son, Kori Priddy, Aml;&gt;er St. Clair, Haning, Meghan Haynes, Courtney tal Taylor, Jeremy Thomas, Jennifer
Grade 3: Sarah Engle, Terry Josh Starchr.
Hicks, Lucy Howerton, ·Heather \lining, Nancy Whaley, Jessica
· Light, Amanda Schartiger, Alex Sis·
Grade 3: Bthany King, all A's; Hysell, J{elly Johnston, Kathy Whec;ler, Matthew Williams, Melisson, Valerie Carpenter, Laura Andrea Banru;m, Alisha Compson, Jones, Jessica Justice, Malory King, sa Williams, Jessica Wright, Sandra
. Eakins, Billy Fink, Brandan Fisher, Keilah Jacks, Adam Lambert, Amanda Langdon, Ryan Lemley, Young.
· Brittaney Haning, Joey Kim~s. Brit- Timmy Spires.
· Shawna Manley, Anthony Martinez,
tney King, Matt Landers, Steven
Grade 4: Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Valarie McClintic, Aaron McManis,
Hudson, Errinne Kennedy, Christy all A's; Josh Bolin, l)lson Gorge.. Jason Murdock, Sonya Powell, Jes- 1"!'11!1'-lll
Miller, Whitney Smith, Michelle Adam HUlltphreys.
sica Preast. Jenni Priddy, . Jason
''
Weaver, David Poole, Angela Casci,
Grade S (Jenkins): Renee Bai- Rosier, Jeremy Roush. Michelle

High: 70; Low:_40
Tomorrow:·Cloudy

High: 70;

Lo~:40

a1
Meigs ·County's

By BRIAN ,J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Hazard mitigation projects in Sal·
isbury Township ~~d Rutland Village
are among project ~ in 10 counties·
which have received addi!ional fund·
ing from the state.
The State Controlling Board .
approved a request earlier this weok
from the Ohio Emergency Management Agency to allocate $8,333.0:44.
representing an increase in projoct
funding from the state.
,
The projects funded are the result
of flooding in March, 1997, which
devastated communities in Southern
Ohio, according to Nancy Dragani of
the Ohio EMA. T~ funding will be
used to match federal dollars received
after President Clinton declared the
area a federal disaster site.

Covered wagons donated to fair board
Visitors to this year's Meigs County F.airwho have
trudged up the trail along ·the cliffs overlooking 'the
~ace track or Climbed the path behind the grandstand
to get frotn event to event on the Rock Springs Fair•
.grounds, will appreciate the gifts of Jeffrey and Deborah Harris.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harris have donated two wagons to the
Meigs County Fair Board. They come complete with
seatinJ, folding steps for ea.~y boarding, and yellow
and white canvas topping to shield riders from the hot
sun or a summer rain.
The wagons .were buill about IS years IIJO by Mrs.
Harris' father. Earl P. Cross. They were i!sed at the
H¥fis Farms to haul people back ~o ,!!!« ~~~ITY •
· •• andllllflben'Y patdtes until !!bout our years ago when
-thii-"JJid; your owq·~"tias discontinued.
Ko looser needing the wagons, Mr. and Mrs. Harris

TO REPLACE YOUR

Majority o~ _Ohioans against
·Pr.0 PO.s.ed .sales-tax 'increase.

s!!;:.:,

CINCINNATI (AP) _;__ A ·survey
The passage of Issue 2 would
of'likely voters in Ohio said ffiOlll inc~ tbe state sales ll\ll from S peropposed a plan to raise the~ 5111cs cent to 6 percent and'raise S 1.1 IIi I·
·
lion annually. Half of that money
. tax by ~penny
per doll ar to generate
•
hooJ
ordi
woold
go toward increa.•. ing · ""
mon: money ,or sc s. ace ng to
r~,,r·
the latest Ohio PoH.
pllpil state subsidies and repairing or
The Ohio Poll, sponsored by The replacing school buildings. The oth·
Cincinnati Enquirer and tbe Univer- erhalfwould offset a property·tax cut
sity of Cincinnati, 'found thll) SI per~ for ho~wners..
.
.
cent of those questioned said they
OhiO s . large~t c~rporauon~ .and·
opposed the tax increase, while 37 . 'largest teac~':' umon have gtv_en
$2.5 mtl.hon.to the Every Child
percent said they supported it. Twelve .nearly
C
fi
f h
percent said they were undecided.
. ounts campatg~ m avor o I e Ia~ .
The university's Institute for Pol- mcrease, ac_cordmg to_reports tiled
Th rsda
h Secre
fS
Bob
icy Research at the Univerility of
u · YWt!,
tary o tate
Cincinnati, which conducted !he poll Taft's office.
.
relea.oed today, randomly questioned
Oppon,ents have satd they do not
· atnng
· · te1evtsron
· · com633 Ohioans who identified them- .mtend to hegtn
· 1
·
he
d
selves as likely voters. The telephone mereta s agamsl I propose tax
poll was conducted from April 13· 21. inciease until this weekend.
The margin of enor was plus or
"We realize we have our work cut'
00 ~ for us;" Cun Steiner. who is manminu~ 3.9 percCIItage points.
Suppon for !he issue, which will agmg the pro-Issue 2 campatgn, told
· appear.on the May 5 ballot·as state, !he Enqutrer in .a story publi!ihed
Issue 2. dropped 7 percentage points today. "We still need to do a better
from a similar Ohio Poll relea.'led job explaining our position." .
·
April ·12. That poll foond Ohioans.
Alrrecl
director
p 1. R
h .of
· • 'J. ,Tuchfarber,
h
I
1
0
surveyed evenly divided 011 the issue.
e ~ttute ,or tc;y esearc • Cit·

~ . PRICE

. Plans for .the annual ·motherdaughter banquet to be held on May
8 at6:30 p.m. were completed when
the Bradford Church of Christ Lydia
· Council met recently at the home of
Sherry Shamblin.
.
Theme of the banquet will be
"Friendship Wanns the Hean" using
scrtplure from Proverbs 17-.
Paula Pickens, president, opened
the meeting with prayer requests and .
prayer, officers' reports .were given
and devotions presented from Matt.
i8, verse 8 by Nancy Morris and
Sherry Shamblin. Readings titled
. "De~otions from th~ Hean," "Fear ·
and ~oy," and "Easter" were present-

. Our Greenhouses'
·fire Bunting With Colorl -~~·
.

ALL YOUR
ANNUALS.

BOB'S .

"

CDoiens Of
Varlotloi)

Baskets

.

.

DWARF FRUIT TREES ..

Jult

·
••••••llnJII
·
IPPLI • PilCH • PEAR • CHERRY
'

on May I. Ohio University Public

Senate,OKs ec;Jucation
savings ~ccoun~s .56-43

.

Beautiful
.
Banging

·JAVOIIIE
SUMO

School Funding ·Issues to be highlighted on OU public television

$14'

1

ALSO. ·

FLOWERING IIEES INCLUDING:
Bradf•nl PHr eCrab Apple •W~•plng Cherry

Bureau, will focus on State Issue 2, a school funding formula, and JegislaTelevision will air two programs proposal to rai&amp;e. Ohio's sales tax . tors .decided to let voters have a say.
desi~ned to educate the public about
from five percent to six percent, and
The second program "Fi!rum:
·,&lt;;llucation funding in Ohio
to split the one billion dollars in year- School Funding,'' will delve into
"Your
. Schools,
Your ly revenues between schools and southeastern Ohio perspectives. J'wo
Mon~y... :Ohio Votes on School property tax relief for homeowners.
southeastern Ohio lawmakers, SenaFunding" will air at 9 p.m. "Forum:
The special will featufe arguments tor Mike Shoemaker, 17th district,
.School Funding," produced by Ohio from supporters and critics ·· wh~ are and Rep. John Carey, 94th district,
Cfni&gt;:ersity · Public Television, .will split into two camps •· of the mea- and Athens City Schools Superintenfollow at 9:30 p.lll.
.
sure.
dent Carl Manin, will discus~ the
, The first program, "Your Schools,
The docu!flentary-style program · funding issues. Shoemaker and MarYour: Money...Ohio 'Votes on School also will explain why the meaSure in tin are against the measure, while
Funding" p[reduced by the Ohio Pub- on the ballot •· the Ohio Supreme Carey is for it. A fourth panelist is yet
!ic Television . Statehouse News Court demanded a· re-write of the to be announced.

Tw'o Loc:atJ,~o_s_

tf.l ml.llt. 33

(114 mi.IIGIII 01 Ponier-/
....... tlrldgl) ........ WY
• ,

..

77H721

,
•
. \

COME ON
OVBRtO •

'

ed.
Mndeline Painter will handle
Thank-you notes were read from cbmmunion in April, and Shamblin
the Mildred Withee bmily and in May.
· "
Nancy Morris. It was noted that sunPlans are underway for Vacation
shine baskets went to Diane David· Bible Scbool, June 8-12.
,son · and Charadene ·Hanning in
New Lydia Council program
April.
houkleL• were prepare~ alfd distribI!ems to be brought for flte "pack uted by Pickens ~nd .Carolyn
the pantry" project for are baby sup- Nicholson.
plies, and for May, canned meats.
The May hostesses wiii be BienChurch supplies will be liquid soap 'da Bolin and Sherry Smith. ,
for April and toilet tissue for May.
Hostesses Sherry Shamblin and
Plastic silverware will be pur- NA!ICY Morris served refreshments
ch~ed for the church by the Council to Megan Dyer, Diane Bing, Paula
and Young Adult Class. Ladies' fel- Pickens, Carolyn Nicholson, Jackie
lowship will be held on May 28 with Reed, Suzie Will, Gerry Lightfoot
Bradford handling refreshments.
and Sherry Smith.

"

•

..

Z!OO Ellllm ,r.,..
(Aaoll flotn K-MIItl
Olf
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..

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448-1711

decided to donate them for use in transporting fairgoers 11round the hillside.
·
Dan Smith, president of the fair board, said that
the wagons will be put to good use, not only at the
fair, but other events that take plllee on the gfOUnds•
like the fall EXPO.
.•
Plans, according to Smith, call for- the Big Bend Fann
Nttiqlle Club to provide the tractors and drivers for
the wagons. Both the driver and a person who will
be seated at the rear of the wagon will have radios to
cootdintite starts and stops, theteby conaibuting t6 the
safety of passenge(S. There will. of cou~. be no
charge for riding ill the covered waaons..
.
Here Smitli shows Mr. and Mrs. Harris one of the
plaques which will be attaChed to the WIIOfiS.
·- ··- .. ,.,......,.,
- CI I T I' 1,Sf:
- · ' I I · t lliill)
·; \•100

Poll:· ·

Our
Conaplete

Council plans mother-daughter banquet

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Mitigatio·n project$ ·receive
boost with additional funds

Mr.

~ydia

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A Gannett co. Newspaper

·hm

..

Post-season
playoff•
start in NBA
Page7

•

Socl"etu.,',. sc·."1!:2pbook

~~

Sports

Aprll24, 1998

/

WASHINGTON CAP) - A bill have more of a role in the education
CJUiing tax-freuavings accounts for· of their children." said Sen. Judd
!IChool.expeiL'IC~ becume a !ihowca.'IC Gregg, R-N.H.
for sharp partisan divisions on its way
Supporters·had promoted the SIIY·
to narrow Senate passage. ·
ings bill as a modest way to help
· Just a handful of Dc:mocrats and working and poor families meet
Republicans broke ranks on the final . school e~penses and if necessary find
56-43 vote Thursday, and it came alternatives to dangerous or substaO·
only after days of wrangliqg during dard public'· schools. Opponents,
which both sides !IOIIJhl to stake out i.ncluding teachers' unions, described
· positions ·likely 10 play a role in the it as a vehicle for ll\ll ~aks to help .•
faK midterm c~ssional elections. affiuent parents send children to pri·
The Senate bill. which must be vate schools.
reconciled with a House-passed ver·
"Whql this means is the death of
siori, also evoked a W)lite House veto public edncl'i&lt;&gt;n," said ~mocratic
threaleven before Republicl!lll lidded leltder Tom.Daschle of South Dakoamenclments opposing new f~l ta.
.
.
math and Jadin&amp; rats for lllldents
Before' the vtlte; conservative
and ending the Education Depart· Republicans lidded ari amendment
ment"s conllol of some !dtoolspend- effectively bloc:king Clinton's proinj JII'OII'IIIIIS·
.
~ new federal tests. to ~re.
Repubucans uid they simply ·!ndivtdual madJ and readtna adu~ye,
wee mumilll • rauc11 power u pos- • ment. An am.mdment . converting
lible to IIIIa. !dtooJ boMdll and par- · some ·federal tchool pi'OI!'Illll . to
entsllld lhlkilll up a system :hat lets grants also wu ~·
.
stl!lleat IChievcmcat ·fall while
Some .of tbc bills would-be
cnrichina bureluaa!J,
, Dc:~tic suPf~D~:!en and some
"What we have here is a ~hoice Republ~ were drivCIIaway by ~
IJ;etween the lllatUI quo and people 111ti-tesung amendment and the shtft
who Willi 10 empower parents to of some power sway from tl)e Edu·
•
cation Department.
c

•

...

The $8.3 million wiU be trans- · Rutland project, which is now underferred from the $40 million appro- way, has been ~stimated at $829,000.
prjated by .the legislature to pay for · with federal and state soun;es confiQOd disaster-related expenses. trib4ting $600.000 of that cost. Boyd
including the required match, accotd- . Ruth has been named project director in Rutland and is now working
ing to Dragani.
The additional funds will bring !he with 37 property owners affected by
'
total share of state fundmg for milt· the flooding .
Work
on
the
Salisbury
Township
gatio~ projects to nearly $10 !"ill ion.
Local governments wtll provtde $6.5 project is slill in the early stages.
Homes in Laurel Cliff and Rock
million in matching funds.
The projects will allow tho.oe in . Springs are targeted in that project.
The projects are designed to break
flood-prone areas to either sell the
properties to the village or township a cycle of damage, repair and more
and relocate. move structures, or.to damage, accotding to the EMA. Such
modify their homes by raising them steps will reduce the cost of response
or retrofitting them against possible and recovery efforts ·· Ohio has been
the subject of eight Presidential disfuture flood damage.
Dragani said the actual cost of aster declamtions due .to flooding in
each project cannot be de1ermined the past IOyears, three of which were
until each is completed, although the within an 18 mo'nth period.

Corporations ·pour : m~IUons
of dollars into sa·les-tax effort
COLUMBUS (AP) -"" Ohio's
· largest corporations · and biggest :
teachelli' union gave nearly $2.5 mil·
lion to a campaign a.~king voters to
raise the state sales tax ~o the state·s
\SChools can get more money. ·
The amount raised for the E:v~ry
Child Counl~ campaign was much
greater tlian the lotal oollecied 5ylwo
groups oppQsed to the tax increase,
which will ap~ar as state Issue 2 on .
the May S ballot. The figures were
included in documents rded with Sec·
'fetary of StJlle Bob Taft"s office on
Thursday.
The tax increase is a response to

an Ohio Supreme Court ruling that
said the state's current way of paying
for public schools is unconstitution·
al. ·
.
Issue 2 would increase the state
sales tax from S percent to 6 percent.
Half of the $1.1 biHion raised annually by the ta~ ·boost would. go
toward increasing per-pupil state subsidies and repairing or replacing
school buildings. The other half
would'be to offset a property-tax cut
for homeownc{'i.
The Ohio Education Association
was the. top con!ributor to Every
Child
. Counts•. .donating $500,000.

The Procter &amp; Gamble.Co. kicked in
$250,000 and the Ohio As.o;ociation of
Realtors 'contributed $150,0110. Carl
Lindner of Cincinnati was the top
individual giver with a contribution
of 535,000. More than 30 of the
state's largest corporations and trade
a"ociations gave $25,000 to
$100,0110 each.
An anti·ta~ group, Ohioans
Against a 20 Percent Tax Increase.
raised S 19,200 in ca.'ih and in-kind
conailiutions such . as post~jle and
mailing costs, the repons showed.

~~~rica#~t~~~u~~~!~~~;~
~~~~.~i~:s.~~~::: ~~:;;:~ ~:~~= ~~e2~~k~onths.

~:~~e:lr~~~ ~~n~~~~u~o~":'.:swt~~t

are
busilions for the March of Dimes WalkA· nesses, school groups and others in are a.•ked to go to this location today
ed opposition from most of Ohio's merica Help Fund Breakthrough for these three countie~ have been hold- to tum in their funds . After this col·
education establishment as one factor Babies walk that will be held on Sun- ing, fund-raisers and have used other lection, a better idea of the amount of
in the latest poll results. •
,
day at 3 p.m. at Harmon Park in Point creative ways to raise money forthis fund• rose should be available by
••Getting
voters
to
approve
a
tax
PIeasan t• W"
'Sunday at the walk.
.
.
.. .., hf·-.....
. .a.
-.ause.
mcrease
ts
never
easy,
•UC ''""'r
The
.
1998
tn·~ounty
event's
c~
The
·
L- . d
The three-mile walk begins with
said .. "In this case, it's even more !lif~
~
top money ratsers, ......,e on
ticult because the natural allies of an chairs Jane Graham and Tamara Zus- a calculated process b~ the campaign registr3!ion of e~isting, and any othpan have been preparing for the pa.•t committee. will gain special recog- er new interested parties, st:irting at·
f:.~ation tax increase are opposed to several months for the walk and at nition. Others meeting certain crite- 2 p.m. at the park. The co-chairs are
The Ohio Educati.on Association, achieving a goal of raising $95,000 ria are eligible for awards, which will a.sking that al! donations be in by
the state's largest teachers' union, for this year's campllign.
; be presented in early May·once all the April 30.
contribu~ 5500,000 10 the pro'
This year's goal is up by $15,0110 final tabulations are made.
Different prizes will be distributed
due to an overwhelming increase in
Donations up to this point have for amounts collected. A donation Iff
Issue 2 campaign. But that money
$7•
was offset by opposition from pther donations last year. During last year's exceeded $10.275. This is a prelimi~ per person must be raised to
campaign. the · goal set by the ~o- nary figure based only on sent in . receive aT-shirt and other incentives
school groups such as the Ohio Fed·
be . db ..
eration of Teacher. and the Ohio chairs was $80.000. and $90,283 was donations.
can gasne y ratstng more funds.
collected by 66 teams.
Bank Day, where money is colFor more information about getSchool Boards. ·
The event is no~ in iL~ eighth year lee ted from . teams, is taking place ling involved in the walk, call Zuspan·
the plan lacksh suf- . to raise funds to help babies. The
ti .Opponents
.
,l!BYthe
at (304) 773-5528 . .
tctent money oor poorest sc oo1s
•
.
and would not do enough to address
lo~g-teim problem.,.
"The bottom line is Issue 2 is a ·
COLUMBUS (AP) The has ~leaded innOcent to a charge of Oddi. a.•king him to resign. Colley
bad plan because it doesn't fix the tax Franklin County clerk of courts, theft.
said Meeks confirmed the letter was
system or the education system," said charged withltaking $381 in traffic
Franklin Coonty Prosecutor Ron received "and indicated the resigna·
Brian Rothenbf;rg. a spokesman for tines;is expected I!J resign, the coun- O'Brien said investigators are look- tion woold be in on Friday."
Odd' ·
'bl
Oddi, who is free on bond, could ·
the Vote No on Issue 2 Coalition.
ty Republican leall,er said todaY,.
ing into whether
1 IS responst e
The Oht'o Poll also queslt'oned
Mt"chael Colley, GOP chat' rm
' an, •or nearly $10,000 still unaccounted not be reached today. Directory assis·
tance said the phone at his home in
voters about Issue I, · a proposal
to said Jes!ie Oddi's attorney notified ''for in the clerk's 'office this year.
authorize the state to issue bonds to him that his client expected to submit
Authorities believe Oddi. 49,took lhe suburb of Grandview Heights hild
finance school construciion lind. his resignation on Friday. No rea.~on money by voiding receipts, and the heen disconnected.
If Oddi resigns. the coonty comrepaint '
· was discu.~sed. Colley ~id :
. pattern appears to go back to at lea.~t
missioners
would appoint an interim
' The poll foitnd that St percent of
A telephone message wa.~ left. 1992. O'Brien said.
those questioned said they supported ·today with Oddi's attorney William
Colley and Central Committee clerk and the Republican Centt;;tl
Issue 1 and 27 . percent said they Meeks.
Chairwoman Jo 'Ann Davidson. who Committee would appoint a replace·
opposed it. TWenty-three pen:ent said
Oddi, clerk of coun since 1995 is also speaker of the Ohio House, on ment. That person would have to see~
. they were undecided. .
·
and an· office employee since 1969. Wednesday hand delivered a letter to . election in November

GOP leader says clerk"of court expected to step down

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

2 Sec~ons • 16 Pages
. Vol. 49, No. 5
Cekadar

JO

O·niOnlc:
Comks

12·13·14

....

15

z.

~lhlrla!s

3

Sports

Wqt!Jcr

. 5-6-.7-8
3'

Lotteries
RUnAND ROOF RIMIRI • Roof replllra

blglln thll Wllk on thl Rutllnd Cl¥tc Cenlllr•
Worbr.l , wltll ·Home Creek EnllrpriHI,
Pontll'IW.... lnlllllly COftl'lnt . .........
1n t1m1 tar
Shaw. Till
1ecelved two
, 1 t40,000 Community
DM,topn.ent lock GriM throuah tha Mllp

=v.Mty

v1••ae

.~ .

OHIO
Pick 3: 512; Pick 4: 3725
Buckeye 5: 5-8-1"2-26-37
W,YA.
Dltlly 3: 047; o.lly 4: 3~07
0 1998 Ohio Valley Pubtilhina Co.

�•
The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'COmmentary
The Daily Sentinel

•

Frldly, April at, 1118

SatunlayrApril 25
AccuWealber• forecast for

oondmons and htgh temperatures

Norma- Berry .

~ol.itical-economic conspiracy in S. Korea

By Jack Anderson
"I was. of
umes.
out that it was a ploy carefully laid
and Jan Molter
course perOlo says that has company's funds out be~md the scenes.
.
For South Korea -- try10g desper- sonally very
were transferred to the Daelim
"Chun Doo Hwan ... d1d thmgs
111 Court Sti-aet, Pomero~. Ohio
ately to recover from a financial cri- shocked."
Group. whtch at the t1me was owned hts own wa~. If you were out of favor
614-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157
SIS sown, m part, by years of corrupt Cho told our
by a. close ally of the president, who fo~ not paymg bnbes, ¥0U could be
political and busmess practices -- the associate
also happened to be the brother of the rumed. I lost all my com~y ~sets.
story of Bo~g Koo Cho IS wonh Aaron · Karp
speaker of the Natwnal Assembly.
. They took away everyt'!in~.
remembering.
dunll'g
a
Cho and his family, who are now
Many South Koreans are JUS! now
It should also be reqUired read10g recent visit to
U.S citiZens, filed a lawsuit In Los learmng about w~~~ happened to .c~
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
for international bureaucrats now our Washing·
Angeles County Supendr Court last f~r t~e first lime. The ae~ pubii.~
charged with helpmg this East Asian ton office. In
year demand10g the return of thetr d1dn l know what happened,
ROBERT L WINGETT
country nghttls economic ship
an extensive
funds. Legal cxpens believe the odd expla10ed s.~lly Ch~ Seabnght, Cho's ·
Publisher
Not long ago. Cho was one of mtervtew, Cl\o.
Mollar 7
lawsuit -- seeking redress for. wrongs daughter. They JUSt thought we :
South Korea's wealthtest men. As now 78 and
Anderson
that occurred long ago m a faraway were bankrupt and were boug~t out. ,
chamnan of the Samho Group, the u~able to walk Wilhputtheassistance country -- is somewha\ Of a long shot. Only a few people at the lop really '
OIANEHIU
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
country's n10th biggest conglomer· of a cane, detailed the purponedly
Wm or lose, Cho se~s the lawsuit knew the IDSide story. When the law- .
General Manager
Co!Itroller
ate he oversaw a flourishing busi- Illegal seiZing of his fortune by as a way to bnng auentton to his sun became known (last year) and 11
, ne~s and lived m a 15,000 square-fool Chun's corrupt government.
plight. and t9 decry the colluSive was (wnue n about) in a couple of
mansion But because Cho didn't
Chun was convtclM m 1995 by a practices of hts country's recent past. ne~spapers In Korea, people were ,
The Sentmel wM:om•• /.rtert to tM «&lt;lfor from ,._,.,. on • bl'oH range of topkt
p le thought that
s~ort ,.,,. poo ..oo~o .. ,..,, ,..,
publlol&gt;«&lt; Typo&lt;~,,.
"grease the palms of the government South Korean court of accepting Fpr South Korea to bo unce back r,.rom shOck ed
cop
.
my :
,,,,.,, pror.rrettond on ,.Y "- Jdn.tl E1&lt;h ohoukt rnctudo ulgnoruro, Odttrost,
. officials," then-President Chun Doo extenSive bribes He was sentenced
its economic cnsis, Cho sa~s. It needs father passed aw_ay a lo~~ lime ago." ·
lnd ""ytfmo pl!ono number. Sp..Jiy. ""'' H , , .... ,.,...,. " " provlouo ortl&lt;lo
Hwan forced Samhp to transfer all o,f to life '" pnson, thou•h he wa&lt; par,- to end the conspiracy between govA-s the ~conomtc cnsts deepened
or lett.r Mall to: Lett.r• to the Editor, The SMIIIWI, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
e
"~
f 11 he 1
1"''
·
ns assets .. which today would be doned m December by newly elected emment and mdustry that's become last a t
ntern~IIOna woon~t!lry
1 46719: or. FAX ro 6t4-H2-2t67.
...,.-====;.o,;,.===---~-----------..1 ' wonh ·$2 billion -- to a nval compa- PreSident Kim Dae lung. Kim was a mgramed m,the system
Fund responded wuh a $~7 billion
ny
strong opponent of Chun's military
What happened to Samho "was batlout Ktm : meanwhile, has.
That was '" 19S4, when "all of a dtctatorshop -- and was once sen- totally unthinkable under any reason- promiSed a senes or reforms that
.• sudden" Cho and his famtly lost 'tenccd to death by the dictator .• bur able circumstances of the lime, or any hopefully will make companies more ·
' .
everythmg. They fled to the Unued Kim vtewed his pardon as a concilia- other titTle in any place m the mtema- responsive to the market and less
States, where Cho now lives m a tory gesture mmed at forgmg nation- ttonal community," Cho said through responstvc to the whtms of ~aim­
. '
small Los Angeles apanme nt
al umty 1n these harsh economic an Interpreter. "Only later -did I find greasmg politicians An encouraging
DJ:ar Ed nor,
sign came recently when You
• My letter IS In response to a letter by June Ashley published Tuesday,
Keun, Ktm 's top C&lt;.'tlhomk-il ill;l\lt~;
•
Apnl 21
iHeRe
Wii.L.
U
PRo~SSi'-le
declared
that "the era of slr\lng, To get straoghtto the pomt. I support every word Mrs. Barbara La~rcnce
armcd government intervention is
LoSs cF coJIITRot.. artr&gt;
pQlin her letter on Apnl 16 promotmg our upcommg school levy According
'fH~Re'S 14o
over "
irtCRe8SitiG Pair-1.
h r Mrs. Ashley, all we need to do IS repatr our old schools Well , whether you
CURe FoR
Whtle ·cho was disappointed ihat
like the tdea ol a new butldmg or not, money IS the key factor here. Wnhout
I l'M SORRY. •
M~a&lt;DeD
Kim
pardoned Chun. he is conlidcnt
a Jcvy passing , money doesn't come mto t~e picture. The other buiidmgs you
CaRe.
that the veteran opposition leader wtll
ITiCntJOned. the Metgs County Courthouse, Independence Hall ani:l the Whtte
be a wonhy prcsu,lcnt.' And he's
H~use, thmk of how important these bUIIdmgs are and how much money has
"cautiously optimiStic" that, given
Ixlcn put Into them to keep them gomg How much money do you thmk has
lime,
Ktm wtlllead South Korea to a
~en put mto Southern Local Schools lately Mrs Ashley?
new era of prosperity
: Overcrowdmg IS a ' btg' problem, I've wen,t to school at Southern for
'
But he wants to make sure that hts
sovcn years now api:ll have wunessed all this myself. I have younger broth·
story
IS not lorgottcn
ds and sisters who have went to school at Southern's grade schools
and I
'
"I have seen a·lot ofthangs during
m,llsl say II IS extremely obv tous that somethmg needs to be done for more
my
lifetime ," satd Cho, a gross
sP,acc Trust me tt's not fun for children to have class on a stage or In a baseunderstatement
if there evc'r wa.~ one.
ment where more than likely !her~ IS not adequate heat and Children are
" I want to sec that (what happened to
f:_irced to wear thetr coats to class. How would you hke to be a 5 or~ year
Samho)
gets known to the Wider puboliJ child who has to walk through the snow and rain to another building to
lic,
so
that
people like us who sufcat lunch.
fered
from
InJUSliL'Cs
do not have to
: These children don't have large enough rooms, gymnasiums, caf~terias. or .
sec other people suffenng the same
II~ranes. Constder these factors Mrs. Ashley when you choose to put down .
fate."
a ~c hool whtch has htgh academics and is dire need or larger facilities. ·
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
• I am a semor at Southern High School and I have already published two
are wrilers for United Feature Synstbnes m our school page supponmg the levy Myself and Mrs Lawrence,
dicate, Inc.
a~d many others who care about their loved ones'· educations, plan to vote
"yes" on the levy issue and ! .challenge you to suppon a better future for
Southern Local students and Its teachers
·
Jennifer Yeauger
SHS Class of 19911
''
By William A. Rusher
California
'
But in Matt Fong the GOP has the perfect combination
One popular stereotype of the
there
arc
RepObhcan
Pany
!"Ould
have
you
two
maJOr
of quality and ethnic appeaL And this ought to be.a gOO(I
Qcar Edt tor.
ethnic blocs
• I am wnung, m pan, to respond to Mrs Ashley's Apnl21 leiter rcgard- believe that n consists exclusively
year to win the Senate nomination, because Boxer is so
(excludmg
~~g the Southern Local School Distnct May 5th bo~d Issue f, w1ll address of wealthy Anglo-Saxon males and
impassioned a leftist that even many Democrats find her
blacks,
the followmg concerns . the school butldmgs' repair. separate elementary then fashiOnably dressed wtves
hard to stomach.
·
wnh blue-unted .hair, waving mmta·
who,
as
- schools, ~nd a"quaiiJy educatiOn "
elsewhere,
: As Mrs Ashley noted, age has less to (lo wllh lhts tssue than does the ture Amencan nags on the· porches
are
over- Reserv~. From 19M I to 1985 he was radio-trans miner ankle hra.;clct on
upkeep and repatr of the buildmgs. However. repair of each school buildmg of their elegant country clubhouses
This
IS,
ol
cours~.
nonsense
But
whelmmgly
a certified night instructor an~ com- the House !lour Lucktly, un~ 'nf the
os not lcastble because of the extraurdHlary !!Xpense involved. Lcakmg wmDemocratdows and roofs would need 10 be replaced as would madequate electncal every stereotype contains a tiny
mcrcial,pilot. He got hts B.S. degree Repuhhc:ms btddmg to replace htm
oc ): Htspan- from the Atr Force Acadfmy m this fall is Asscmhlyman Gary
wmng The heating systems are so melftctent that ktds wear thctr coats nugget of truth, and m the case of
ics .. agam, 1975, a . Master's of Busincs! Mtllcr. who ptlcd up such un
mstde aJ some' locations. Also, there are no fohcrs on these healing systems the Repubit can Pany the truth ts
Rusher
that
Amcnca's
white
population
as
in Texas, Administration fwm Pcppcrdinc in tmprcsstvc recnrd us chuirmun nf
whi ch permii dust and germs to be recycled to other children posing health
its
base
Thai,
ol
course,
compnses
mostly
Mcx1can-Amcncan
-- and 1982; and a law degree fwrq 'so'uth- the Assemhly's powerful Budget
hazards The systems arc outdated and expenSive wnh a cost m 1997 on gas
os
preciSely
why,
m
order
to
amass
a
Asmns,
wuh
Chtnesc-Amencans
and clcctnc alone of $47.180.18 to the taxpayers If each of the four butldwestern in 19H5 He left the pracucc Committee th.u Los Angeles Cnunmgs was 10 be repaored , the cost would not he covered by any governmental voting maJOrity, the GOP must try to predominating The Htspantcs arc oflaw in 1991to hccomc a member ty named hom "Legtslalor ol the
win over ethnic voters -- ··expand more numerous, hut the As1ans arc and vtce chairman ol ttie Stale Ycur...
subsidy.
·
11s
base." as the poht1cal expression growmg fast, and thw powerful on- Board of Equaii1.utmn
Another tll'In m Mrs Ashley's letter suggested that If a new butldmg was
, .1•
But m Matt Fnng the GOP has
goes
entation toward family values ought
really needed (as 11 clearly IS}.thcn each communlly should have Its own eleFong's opponent for the senator- • I he perfect comhmatum nl quality
Unfonunately this ISn't always to make them particularly vulnera- tal nominauon Is Darryl _!ssa, an and ethmc appeul And thiS nughtto
mentary Once agam, lhas IS 1mpracucal because nlthc mcrcdJblc expense to
1
the t.IXpaycrs It would cost much more to butld lour mdtvtdual schools, par- as wcll-rccogn!led, even hy othcr- ble to RepUblican appeals Thus lar, allractl'Ve scll-mude hus!nessman he a good year to win the Senate ,
ucul arly because the government would not help substdtze any such con- wtse smart politicians, as 11 ought to however, both groups have usually . who is plowmg a ior,midablc nominnlton, because Boxer IS so_
be. The New.Ybrk Republican party voted largely DemocratiC
amounl of hts own .mtlluins into hts tmpassmnc'd u lcfllstthill even many
strm:uon
has,
historically, bee~ prelly good at
In 1994, however. ihe GOP nom- campaign But lssa h:Ls nclier held · Democrats fmd her hard tn stomach.':
Although dtsagrcc mg with mucp of Mrs Ashley's opinion. I would like
wooing -JewiSh, Italian and lmh mated !VIauhew Fong. a Los Ange- public office_. and the lccling IS that
In thank her lor her astute observation that "buiidmgs do not a quality eduTo he sure. lssa (whn IS of
voters.
(My favontc statewide uck - les attorney, as Its candidate for he would do wclltn seck snmc less- Lebanese cxtractmn) can claim to
cauon make " The teachers and stafl ,of the Southern Local Dtstroct have
dnnc an outstaildmg JOb 10 educatmg our students As one Indicator, profi· e( was Lcfkowllz, Fmo, and GIIhoo- Stale Treasurer. and he promptly , er ofl)ee -- perhaps Cnngrcs~man -- he an ''ethnic" candidate· too, hut'
ctency test scores have been favorable 10 the county's'aver3!!C. In addotton to ley ) But Texas Republi cans have won. Now he is baulmg for the ftrst. Ultimately, he should have a how btg, m California. is the ·
their mstrucJion. the teachers have gtven a solid, moral example Jo help the been deplorably slow about recrutt- Republican nommallon to succeed bright future m Caiilorma,poiihcs
Lebanese vote'/ A' lot of Republi·
students become capahle citizens m tomorr&lt;lw's communny Let's acknowl- mg bnght young Chtcanos and U S Sen. Barbara Bnxcr. and If he
O.L~oursc, ethnic considerations cans ate hopmg that Mall Fong can
building them up mto S!atewtdc wms the pnmary, he will be the first must always yield to those of quali- win the nommatio~. topple Boxer.'
cdec ,md suppnri these commendable ellorts
·In clos10g. I encourage members of our communny to take advantage of caridtdatcs capable of appealing to Republican of Astan ancestry to sll ty Caiiforma RepJibhcans were and Inaugurate a IQng Golden Age
thts opportumty 10 provtde our children, and our community. With sqmethmg Mextcan-1\mencan voters As one IR the Senate smcc Hawaii's Htram . pamfully rcmmded of this recently of Chinr.sc-Amcrican 'Repub\ican·
· when Korea-horn Republican Con- tsm
they deserve -- a safe. clean and updated school Please vote YES for the Teus Republican politician putt! lo Fong (no km) m the late 1950s ·
"'-me, "If we earned JUS!40 percent bf
In addtuon to b~mg a Chmcsc- gressman Jay Ktm, from i~e eastern
Southern Local School Dtstrict May 5th bond Issue.
William A. Rushe~ is a DJstin.
Teresa (Shuler) Powell the Chtcano vote, the Democrats Amencan, f.ong h~s an enviable suburbs of Los Angeles: WM con- . gulshed Fellow of the Clarenlont "
Ra&lt;ine would never wtn another stalfWtdc personal record He served on active vtctcd on corruption charges. He Institute for the St1dy oi"Statn·..
elccllon m Texas:"
duty m the U S Atr Force from now has the grim dtstinction of manship a•d Pollllcal Plllllosophy.
1ft California too, the GOP has 1975 to 1980, and IS still a lieu- hemg the only memher o'r Congress
'
'
d~agged Its heels mexeusably In
tenant colonel m the Atr Force wbo by coun order has to wear a

Nonna Berry, 82, of Gallipolis, died Thursday Apnl23, 1998 at St. Mary's
Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. '
Born Feb 26, 1916 on GallipoliS, daughter of the late Chauncy J. Chick
and Mary Calhoun, she was a homemaker and a member of Grace \)mtql
Methodist Churc;h.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband.
John C. Berry.
.
Surviving are three sons. John L. Caner of Leonard, Md: James C. Caner
of Racine; and Charles W. Powell of Gallipolis . and a sister, Gail Sprague
of Vinton; five grand~ hildren and SIX great-grandchildren. . .
Services will be I p.m. Sunday at the Willis Funer~l Home, with Rev.
David Hogg' present Bunal Will be at the Ohto Valley Memory Gardens.
Fnends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from 7-9 p.m.

'Estufisktf in 1948

''

• IColumbus Iss' I

Harold Norris .

.

W. VA

'"""-"•-•'HJntl

Showers T-storms Ram
Via Assoa.ted Press GraphicsNet

Today's weather forecast

A student's perspective

Extended forecast
Saturday night...Cioudy with a
Southeastern Ohio
Today...Mostly sunny. Warmer chance of showers. Lows near 50
with highs in the lower 70s. West . Sunday... Partly cloudy wtth a
chance of showers and thunderwmd to 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight... A chance of a shower storms: Highs in rhe lower 70s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy wtth a
until midnight.. .Otherwise panly
cloudy. Low~ in the upper 40s. West chance of showers and thunderstorm.
wind 5 to 10 lllph . Chance of ram 30 Lows nell{ 50 and htghs tit the mid
70s.
I?"tcent
·
Tuesday .. Mostly cloud)' with a
Saturday... lncreasing cloudmess
:0. chance of showers late. Highs 70 chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows m the lower 50s and
to 75 Chance of ram 40 percent
htghs m the lower 70s.

By The Associated Press

lm-

'

Unstable air may produce
weekend storms across Ohio

Should Republicans seek·ethnic vote?
'

l;lepair of buildings not feasible

Council on Aging a blessing

r

•

a

.

sat down to
per, 21 of its crowde!.l' happily the U.S. population continues to '
s,uppcr, the
around two long tahles in the m~r)'ase. We arc still crowding one
&lt;loorbcll rang
kitchen .. the 15 in thelt family and anOther.
and I. who
our SIX .
"Some couples arc closer than
was overfed
And I decided then that, a.• much ever these days," repons the Wall
wtth human
as I like a lot of room, I would Street Journal. That is a sly way of i
contact. sntd
rather he m a small room' w1th a saying that wnh apanmcnt&lt; scar~e ~
with Irrnahappy family of 15 than In a large and rents skyrocketing, people •
uon, 'Who Is
toom with people I don't particular- looking for affordable housing have :
that now'' '"
ly like .
to move mto cramped IIvmg AUar· :
His guests,
This goes for the workplace too ters.
,
&lt;
satd Lorenz.
I once worked in a begrimed news·
In San Franci,sco, the average :
were
paper offict where there WIIS no air rent ha.&lt; shot up 30 perL-cnt m the ·j
shocked
"condtttonmg, and the city's dirt la~ttwn years. You can nnw expect !
"To he less
,
! blew in through the open windows to• pay $1,50(1 for an apartment •
than overJoyed when the doorbell m the summer. Our arms got black "roughly the si1.e of five pa~king ;
rang was mcomprchenstbli: to these from the soot on our desks and we spaces."
!
people who. lived deep in the coun· stirred our coffee wtlh copy pencils.
One New York couple sharing. :
try. It made me realize how much I
But we outgrew the fncndly old clos.c quaners had to convert tbeir i
had become a VICtim Of OVercrowd- building and moved intO D new; airy. shOWCf stall mlo a clothes closet. i
mg."
well-hi, roomy structure of concrete Nqw they can only take baths. - : ;
Though Lorcn1. .is undoubtedly and glass. If we wc~c overcrowded
. But while some couples arc trip: ;
nght, II probably ought to be added · where we were and needed more ptng. over each other or learning the 1
that the reason we dtsiike crowdina space, we had it nqw.
•
"bathroom dance," others are ;
is that by and large we dislike the, · But somehow a lot of the lllve · . enjoying the new intimacy. As one· i
people who are crowding us: We do that permeated the old place stayed happy husband puts It, "When she· 1
not love our neighbor as ourselves. back there to live with the ghosts ol sits close, that's not crowding."
'
One of our favorite families is . those happy days on Nmth Street. ·
Geo11e Pl~~~tnz 1o • syndlated· :
the Murphys. Put and his wife
Even though the world's .' writer' for JljeWipr r Enterprlli I
Kathy have 13 children. The last birthrate is not growing as fast·as it A110eiafloa
"
• .l
time we were at thetr house:for sup- once .did. because of Immigration

!

•',

,,

ant Valley Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
8 0 I p.m., Chesler Road,
Pomeroy, Blaine Qualls, VMH.
POMEROY
8:27 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Manah Robinso"-VMH .
RACINE
""'
I :06 p.m., state Route 338, U!tan
Falls, ~w Rtchards, VMH:
RUTLAND
4: 16 a.m., Swick Road, Belly
Swtck, PVH , Central Dispatch squad
assisted.
SYRACUSE
8:09 p.m , Bridgeman Streets,
Charles Eakins. HMC.

Goldstone through
talking to Congress

WASHINGTON (AP) - The are up for reelection.
nation's second largest tobacco comlated t~uoderstorms were possible. pany is through talking to Congress
By The Assbclated Press
and is turmng up the volume on the
A warm and pleasant weekend is Clouds were moving out of southern ·
mdustry's grass roots campmgn for
promised for Ohio, although there New England but a cold drizzle
what
it calls rea.&lt;onable legislation
always Will be n chance of a shower could persist over Mame . .
"I'm done makmg a pomt to these
Clouds spreading toward the Ohio
or thunderstorm.
people
in Washmgton," RJR NabisForecaslels said a low pressure Valley Will bring a chance of showco
chairman
Steven Goldstone said
system oVer' the Upper' Mississippi ers and thunderstorms
A band of high pressure buildmg today m New York. "My diScussions
River Valley will dominate the week-·
over the Southeast should produce now are gomg to be with the Ameriend weather.
can people." ·
•
Sku!s will be mostly cloudy with mostiY'fair skies from Tennessee to
Goldstone
took
the
industry's.
temperatllf#s g'eilerillly.in the 70s. · . Louisijlna and from Maryland to
adverti~ing and public relauons camLows tomght under clear sktes Flortda.
Mostly sunny skt~s should prevail paign from tobacco country to Wall
will be in the 40s.
Street today, tellmg analysts dunng a
acl'O!i~ll\e s.usty Plains and the Great
T~ , record-high temper~ture for
mornmg' meeting that he is disapth1s d~le at til~ C~lumbus weather Lak&lt;!!l. Patchy min and tsolaled heavy
suition was 88 deg.:tes in 1960 while thund~tslo~ms were possibiii from pointed in congressional Republicans
the record low was 28 in 1930. Sun- , western ' Nonh Dakot4 to western for pushing a btll that he said would
mise taxes and bloat the federal
set to'nighlwi1Hle-at'8: 18 p."m.'and · TeKastl' •
Rain spreading toward the Rock- bureaucracy.
sunrise Saturday at 6:40 a.m.
"What amazes me. all of this from
ies was likely to tngger showers
A(J'OSS the nation
a
Republican
Senate,'" Goldstone
A chilly ram fell on pans of New mainly on the western slopes of Ida"SILENT ONES"
said
in
a
telephone
conference call
England early today as some drizzle ho. Montana. Utah and Wyommg.
Poem by:
MoiSt air filtermg into the Pacific wtth reponers.
hung over the Nonheast Skies were
Cadoy
Lenlea
He also coticized House GOP
clear and breezy over an unseason- Nonhwest could produce thunderSometimes the silent ones
ably cool Southeast, and showers storm&gt;' across ea•tem Washington and leaders for failing to go along with
the
,settlement
signed
last
June
musl speak.
into Nevada. Patchy showers could
~e~vmg to:ovar~ the Nonhwest.
between the tobacco mdustry and 40
The
throat contracts, words
fall
inio
central
New
Mexico.
S_kies ~g 10 the Nonhstates.
Snow showers were posstble
east ' as drter air moved into the
cramp wilhin.
"I am dtsappomted wllh some of
region. though rain showers and iso- across peaks of the Sierra and CasDisbelief and sadness, even
the Republicans in the House,
cades
fear
because I think they reacted too
clampdown
upon the hearl,
quickly and too negatively... lo the
June 20 resolution." Gol~&lt;tone said.
but
His
comments
came
two
weeks
you can lellthe shadow !ale
COLUMBUS (API - Indiana· under 300 lbs.) 8.00-21 .00.
,
after
the
mdustry
rejected
a
Senate
and must
For t~r week: barrows and .gth~
Ohto dtrect hog prices af ~~le~lt:d.
btllthat
would
impose
a
half
trillion
A finger 10 the lips bears no
buying points Fnday as P"lv~ded ~y 1.00-1 150 , higher; sows steady to
dollars in taxes on tobacco compames
1.00
htgher.
the U S. Depanment of Agricuhure
relief.
and severely restnct its ability to marEsttm~ ted receipts: 34.000.
Market News· ' '
' ·'
A brave streak shimmers in
1
Prices from Produ(ers Live- ket products.
Barrows and gilts: steaf,ly to
your blood.
Though many Republicans on
mstances 50 cents higher; demand stock As~ialion
Cupllol Hill say the bill flies in the
Frida&gt;;'~ trends:
and movement mode,rate.
Breathe jn.
Hogs '5o cents higher; ·sows face of conservative prin~iples, GOP
U S. 1-2. 230-260 lbs. country
leaders
have
been
unwtllmg
to
do
the
Look up.
~
steady to 50 cents lowpoints 35 00-36.00, few 36.50, plants steady; cattle
'
.
industry
favors
in
a
year
when
all435
er.
Trees
spread
open
arms
for
36.00-37 00. few 37.50. .
,.
Summf\I'Y
US 2-3. , 230-260 lbs. ~0.00·
, ,, of Thursday's auction House seals and a third of the Senate
you.
Bucyrus:
34.50:2 10-230 lbs, 2(!,()(1-30.00.
The sky blooms clouds to
Hogs: '''
Sows: unevenly steady.
blot out pain.
Markel ; ~o~s: 33.75-37.10: light
U S . 1-3 300-400 lbs. 22.00And
btrds lrust compassed
24.00; 4oo,5oo lbs. 23,00.,25 .OQ; SOWS 2;3.25--6.00; heavy SOWS 26.75wings
Am Ele Power ......... ,............ 47\'.
500-li&lt;iQ lbs. ~S.00-~8 ,00 •. fe~ over , 29.75.
to bring lhem home.
Feeder .P,i~s: 16.00-52 00 head; · Akzo ...................................1os'l'.
600 lbS 28 00-29.00
AmrTe&lt;:h
...............................
44'1.
39.00-45.00'
CWI.
Boars!'over 300 lbs. j4:011-17 OO;
Ashland 011 ........................... 54\
All boru-S 15.00-25.75.
You too can fly.
AT&amp;T .....................................61~.
Cattle:
You loo believe.
Bank One ............................. 59,.,
The. Daily, Sen~inel
Slaughter steers; choice 61.00Bob
Evans
............................
20~
Find
words to live• • ."!
•
''
..
'
64,50:
Iieleci'
•
57.00-61.00.
' .. tUSPI
~I.I-41A)
•
Borg-Warner
.........................
68\
' " ' 1 ;_
-J._
you're nol alone.
Broughton .............................16\
. 'lilaughler'lheifers: cboice 59.00Publlstled 1cvefy aflernoon, Monday lhfoug,h
Charm Shps ...........................4,.,
63.75; select 55.00-60.00.
Fr1day, Ill Courl Sl , Pomeroy, Oh1t1, by lhe
City Holding .......................... 44~
Ohto Valley Publishing Compa.ny!Gannell Co ,
Cows:
,
Fllder1l Mogul .......................63\
Pomertl)' Ohio '4~71i9, Ph 992-21:116. Sccumi
Commerci1l and uiiiity 44.00 and
c:lau posta"e p~td 111 P6mctoy, OhKI'
G•nnaH ................................. 70~.
down ; canter and culler 32.00 and
Goodyear ............................. 71,._
Mnlkr: Tbt l\55()('tlted Press, and the Ohm
down
.
Kmart ...................................17'l'.
Newtpaptr I\UtJC1o'd1nn
!(roger .................. ,...............43'1.
_All bulls: 4·2.00 aml down.
j.ands End ............................. 36~.
POSTMASTER: Send addteu carrtt:t1ofts to
Sheep &amp; lat;nbs· chmce wools
The Oa1ly Sentinel I I I Court St , Pomeroy
Ltd.........................................31 ~,.
63.5()-..66.00: ·choice clips 6,2.00Oh10 4~71'.9
·
Oak Hill Fin I ..........................
68.50: aged sbeep 38.00 and down.
eva
..........................--.......:..49
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
PROTECT A
Onoi Valley ..................: ............40
ly Carrltr or M•lor R..ll

Stocks

I·S more-'th e mer_rler
• · a_
Iways·
·
rl-•9ht?..

Tothe'Edttor,
.
Wuhthensmgcost ofhcallh care. howcan onckccpthese costsdownwhiiC
Improving their own health m the process
.
The Licensed Pracucal Nursmg Progra111 of Buckeye Hills Career Center m
Rto Grande has been reviewing thts quesuon for It's student n~ms . onslruclor.;, By George R. Plagenz
patients, and commumty
·
The world's population growth is
Smce the adopuon of well ness as a phtlosophy m 1995.thc students and stall slowmg down. The 1mproved status
have been committed to promotmg well ness to all. Wellncss "defined as obtam- of women IS giving them more con·
1ng optimal phys)cal and mental health. prcvcnung~Iseasc procc.&lt;~cs, and mcor- trol over how ·many children they
poratmg emotional, mtcllectual, sptnlual. occupational. and SOCial well bemg will have Greater availability of
through the promollon of preventiVe heal!h mcasu'l's . '
•
contraceptives IS havmg tis effect.
The students and stall of Buckeye Hills LPN Program have e"!'braced the too. So is the decline of the family
wcllncss philosophy by tcachong and promollng preventive healt~ measures to farm, whtch needed a bunch of chtlthe Galiia. Jackson. Vmton commumty members through the practice of ci!Iiical - drcn 10 help wuh the..chorcs.
rotations at surroundmg communuy agencies. !"e students and staff also have
All thiS js good news for our
participated 10 area health fairs and demonstmuons
.
.
overcrowded world . In the ghetto,
The overall hope of the LPN Program of Buckeye Hills Career Ccnler IS to we arc told. murder is the most likeopen the eyes of students. stall. and commumty memhcrs that ohtammg well- ly cause of death for youofg men.
nc:;s is bencficmlto all par1ICipants 10volvcd.
s~ml scienusts say mucb of this
A,, an lnstru~tor at the LPN program. I h~vc seen many students contm.ue can be blamed on overcrowding.
wllh thiS wcllncss philosophy as they graduate and become practtcmg nllfSeS
Karl Lorenz, the German sctenwllhm' our commumty.,l commend all those nurses aiid s1udent nurses who have tist said "I strongly. doubt whether
commlllcd themselves to kecpmg a well individual, patient, and comll)unity.
yo~ can' condiuon mah so that ·he
Rebecca Stwlp does not become nervous and neuRio Gnonde rotic when he is crowded "
Lorenz said II was hiS cxpencncc
that "people who live miles from
the nearest neighbors and are not
Dear Editor,
overwhelmed by soctal contacts
The services that I have received from the Meiss County Council on show the g~eatest human kindness."
Aging have heen a blessing to me ..The girls are wonderful. They are very
He told a story from the days
good workers. The home maintenance stall has ~epl my home in _very good when he lived 10 Munich.
shape. Please vot~ "yes" to renew t~ Semor Ctltzeris Levy
"We had house guest~. " he satd.
Iva Powell "An American couple who lived in
Pomeroy the wilds of WISconsin. Just as we

Umts of the Meigs County Emergency Medtcal Service recorded mne
calls for a..sistance Thursday. Units
respondmg included
·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
II ·26 a.m., state Route 7, Tuppers
Plams, Wtiiie Jones, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital;
2. 17 p.m., Mulberry Hetghts,
Pomeroy, Mary Bunch, V~terans
Memori~ Hospital;
4.53 p.m., stale Route 338, Letan
Falls. Woodrow Richards, Holzer
Medical Center,
7:53 p.m., General Har1mger Park,
Middlepon, Counney Avtrian. Plea&lt;.

Today's livestock report

l

Wei/ness philosophy

Harold Norrts, 75, of Albany. died Thursday, April23. 1998 at the Vet·
erans Administration Hospital in Lexmgton, Ky.
Arrangements will be announced by the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home
in Albany.

Meigs EMS logs ~ calls

'Le. tters t 0 , th e ed I•t0 r

. .

Strickland announces
money for mine workers

hoe2

.tt

2n.

One W«k
One Month
Orle Year

1 •

,

••

,

.$2 00
.. .$H 711

$1U41JII

SINGLE COPY PRICE
01uly ....................... . . · ..
S11bscnben not desmnllj 10 pa)' 1he nmer ~AY
remit In adunce d1rect to The Oa1l)' ~nllnel
on alhrte, SIX or 12 month ba11 Crcdtl wtll be
atven c1Nfer tllch wuk

No IUblcnpuon by ma1l perm!lled tn nus
where llome ann'' sef\'ICC 11 avatlable.
hblisher rtstrvCI ltle' rilhl 10 ldJUSI fiiCI du.r·
ln&amp;lhe subltripa10n per1od Subscnp~ion rate
cttanJU may be implemented by &lt;:hana••Jthe
d\lradon or Ihe IUbkriptlon,

M.UL SUISCIJPI'IONS
l•fk Mt!P, C011•tJ

IlW..tS:. .... .... ... . ... .

26 Wnko,., .....
52 Weeks

••

.

. . ..
.

,

Hospital news

Holzer Medical Center
DIKharges April Z3 - Nathan
Harrison, Alex Hatten. Kimberly
Hall. J'~nnifer Caldwell, Megan
Lunsford. Dennis Pearce, Latona
Thomas. Betty 0' Donnell. Lindsey
Midkiff. Austin Bowman. Shirley
Harden.
Births - Mr. 1111d Mrs. Joseph
Casto, son, Mtddlepon; Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Fraley. daughter. Juckson.
(Published with permission)

Peoples •••••••..•••••••••..•.•..••.•••.•..48

Prem Flnl............................... 22~
Rock-11 .................................58
RO/Shell ................................s&amp;'o
Sears................ :...................59"i•
Shonay's ................................ :s\
Slar Bank ...,...............................,;
Werldy'a ...............................22'1•
Woar1hlngton ......................17"1.

-·-·-

Slock reporla are the1 ,~~~~~~
a.m. quotes provided by A
of Galllpolla.

tt.

rKES
COMMUNift
ro

ttCBILD

Congressman Ted Strickland
announced the approval of more
than $7 milhon in lederal funds to
assist 1.200 dislocated mine workers
in Ohto, Pennsylvama and West Vtr-_
gmia under the Dislocated Worker
Program.
In southern Ohio, the money will
go to help mme workers in Athens,
Galha. Hocking. Jackson, Meigs.
VinlOI\ and Washington Count 1es.
The funds will be admtmsrered by the
United Mine Workers of America and

Gallipolis livestock auction results
Producers Livestock Market
rep&lt;rn from Gallipolis for sales con·
ducted on Wednesday, Apnl 23.
Feeder Callie.
200-300f St. $82-$102. Hf. $80$96. 300-400# St. $84-$118. Hf.
$78-$93. 500-650# St $78-$92 HI'
$63-$84 650-800# St. $65-$82: Hf.
$58-$76.
(Feeder Callie sale is the second
Wednesday ol each month)
Steers.
Hetfers
Cull Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed $35-$45
Medium/Av~rage $32-$36.
Thm!Ltght $26-$33. Bulls $41·

S273o

• tll.H2

.. SIOS.S~

lltllft O.blll Mtlp CN•IJ
I)-kit ................... .' ... .' $l 9 23
26 w..P, ............... ' .... . .
., tl~.61&lt;
52 Weillo. ... .. . . .,. .. .. .SJO'I. 72

RACO meeting slated
The Racine Area Commun11y
Organization will meet Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park. New member.;
welcome.

IKES to meel

IKES ,;,,II meet Monday at7 p.m
at he club house

..

- ------;--"·-------·-~ -----,--- ------------··

..... _
..... _
.....-.

AA 'and At-Anon sets session
AA and AI-Anon will meet at 7
p.m Thursday at the Sacred Hean
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy.

121,421, :r.n, 11:11

1':11

'"'llll.
I:41. 4:41. tAl, 111:41

rM

MUll.
121,4:11,721,11:21
1':11

What can I do to prevent child abuse and neglect?
The prevention of child abuse and neglect is possible, but it
requires achve involvement of the whole community.

In your home

·

•Make an effort to spend more
"quality time" with your
children. Listen lo their
thoughts, dreams, and
concerns.
•Eat meals together as a
family, without the
interruption of TV or phone
calls.
•Express feelings in words not in fits of anger.
•Laugh wilh your child every
day.

Where you worship
•Encourage ydur chu[ch or
synagogue to sponsor
activities lhat family
members can enjoy logether
. •Invite local experts to speak
lo your congregation or
adult education classes on
child abuse pi-even lion and
lrealment

.

•Volunteer to help wilh child
care at your place of
worship. Encourage your
church or synagogue to
provide day care for lowincome children.

In your neighborhood
•Volunteer at your local child
care center or ot_her program
serving children and
families.
•With the help of local
resources, sponsor a child
abuse prevention prcrgram at
your nexl PTA-PTO meeting.
• Encourage your local
recreation center or library to
creale a sludy corner wilh
materials on family issues,
posilive parenting, and
nurluring children.

Each year in Ohio, nearly 100,000 reports or
suspected child abuse and neglect are made to
public children services agencies around the
state. These reports involve children of all ages,
from all backgrounds, and from all cultures.
These ~ports may involve children from your
community.

Violer.~ce

$45
Back To The Farms
Cow/Calf Pairs $400-635; Bred
Cows $350-$500: Baby Calves $110250: Goats $ 16-$55
Feeder caltle &amp; brood cow sale ·
Wednesday. Apnl 29. 12 noon
For free on-farm vosots, please ·
call614-446-9696.

A11nouncements

1' prills Child Abuse Prevention Month and you
can become involved In
abuse
or neglect In your community.
~sponsored By: ~igs County VJC11iilts1::Pi'~lar~lm

·'

wtll provide a variety of essential se&lt;- ;
VIces mcludmgJOb sktlls training. job '
search trainong and a.~ststance, child :.
care, tmnsponato on assistance and 'famtl~ counseli~£ .
Stncklnnd satd he will contmue to ,
push for the more than $70 mtllto~ a ,
year from the Abandoned Mme ;
Reclamation Fund that has not been .
appropnated in recent b~dgets . As a :
result expens estomate that nearly .
Sl .3 billion IS curr~ntly soiling m the ;
fund unused, he satd.

At your workplace
•Encourage your employer to
provtde volunteers or
financial assistance to local
programs hclpmg children
and families
•Encourage employer lo posl
or dislribulc mformation
about ava1lable community '
resources for families,
including after-school
programs, pare nt support
groups or classes,and
substance abuse treatmenl
' services.

'

�friday, April24, 1998

Pomeroy • Ml~~leport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

:Sports

'A game of chicken'

Su.san McDougal turns down_
chance to talk to grand jury
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) Susan . McDougal has turned down
what prosecutors said was tier ia.st
chance to tell what she knows about
the linancial affairs of President
Clinton and his wile.
The next move is Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr's.
Prosecutors threatened Mrs.
McDougal with criminal 'contempt
when she refused for a second time
to answer questions before the Whitewater grand jury Thursday. Her
lawyer, Mark Geragos, said they
didn' t charge her.
\
" I don't thi~k that . anything's
bee~ resolved," Geragos said after
meeting with the judge and Starr's
deputies. "This is kind of a game of
chicken. Somebody's going to have
to blink at some point."
Prosecutors had said they had new
questions for Mrs. McDougal and
that she risked. a contempt citation
.and more jail time if sh~ didn't talk.
She didn't talk.
" I told them the same thing I've
been saying ... I'm somebody who
has been in jail and has really paid a
price," Mrs. McDougal said on her
way back to jail. "I didn 'r want them
to think I was contemptuous of ·
them."
Prosecutors refused to comment at
day's end.

.." '

ESCORTED FROM COURT HOUSE ·. White·
water figure Susan McDougal, leH, is escorted
from the Little Rock, Ark., federal court house
Thursday· by an unidentified woman. Ms.

McDougal said she didn't say anything when
asked by a reporter II she talked to the White·
water grand jury. (AP)

.;Prosecutors: Girls as young as
&gt;14 enslaved by prostitution ring
MIAMI (AP)- Lured from Mcxicc by the promise of jobs. 20 women
~ - some as young as 14 -

were

. · forced into prostitution rings that
prostcutors saill imprisoned the v1c: tims in a life of S£X slavery. beatings
. and forced abortions.
,~
In a 52-count indictment releas~d
•: Thur&gt;day. federal prosecutors told at
' the horrors rntlicted on unwilling v1c, : tims: 15 days' continement in a closet for escape. rapes and beatings.
• even squads to hunt down those who
: got away.
,
.
:
The allegations ·are shock1ng
• ~ and unconscionable ... said Bill Lann
: • Lee. the Justice Department · crvil
rights chief.
,' . The govemmenl charged 16 mem, , bers of a family-run prostitution rin g
1
•

, -r

based in Veracruz. Mexico. Eight

..

were taken into custody and ei~hl
remained at large .
.
The indiclment charges the deten-

ters. Sometimes the prostitutes earned
as little as $3 per sexual act, while the
ticketeros charged ~20. · .
~llllllllg. u t h~:::r th 1ngs.
Prostitutes weren't allowed to
It ""s the Ameri can dream of
fin U1 ng kg1 tim ate jobs. such as leave until they paid back their smuggling debt- $2.400 in one case. And
h nu sck~t:pi n g and restaurant work,
that led a r11ght mansh lrfe for the they couldn't leave brnthels at all
·
\vo mcn ami g1rls. prosecutors said . ' without an escon.
Threats of violence kepi the
The prmtrlut ron crrcur t se rved 12
women
in line, prosecutors said.
brothel.' 111 mo,t ly rural Florrda citks
Some
thre~ts
became reality.
.tnd two "' Suut h Carolina.
A
pregnant
woman who was
Rccruih!U from Veracru z. the victim' v.erc hau led firs t to a border kicked in the belly suffered a mis- ·
crns...,Jng 111 13rnwnsv ille. Texas. then carriage. A 21-year-old woman was
to a ""de IHJu,c" 111 Hou ston . Then thrown in a closet for trying to
came the end of the lr ne - they were escape. A 26-year-old woman was hit
forced to '-'Ork as prostitutes for as for try1ng to stop the rape of a IS·
·muny '" , i x Jays a week. the rndict- year-old girl. Women forced to have
abortions were forced back to work
mc nt . . aid
Tire brothel;, mo.stly catenng Jo within weeks.
Amazingly. two IS-year-old girls
nTi gJant Ln m worker..;, were run by •
·. "t ickelcros." ~- ho got their name for got free and went to the Mexican concu ll t!cti ng condo m wrappers that sulate in Miami with th.eir tales of
. :erv~ d a-. tick~r . . for sexual encou n ~ being made to perform a.~ many as 20
sex acts a day for $20 each.
u:111ts wiil1 consptracy. alt en smuggh ng and in vo lu ntary servitude,

~: EPA

report
says
tougher
auto
.'
:: pollution controls are needed
•

•·
,
'·

Meigs land transfers posted

,;
,
~

·

'' :
''

::
~'

•!
•·
'' '
t

•

-i

·•

.
I

:)
f1
~;

ATLANTA (AP) - The number
of people • dying from job-related
injuries has dropped dramatically in
the past 15 years, and homicides now
rank behind only tmftic accidents as
the leading cause of workplace death.
.The number of work"reluted .
deaths dropped 27 percent from
7.405 in 19RO to 5,406 in 1994, the
Centers for Disease Control and Pre· .
vention said in a study released
Thursday.
" There is g
news in that the
ovemll fatality mte ·son the decline,"
• said Dr. Linda R nstock, director
of the National lnsti~ te for Occupa·

Ex-Nazi officer
will appeal
deportation order
PHILADELPHlA (AP)- A fat·
mer platoon leader accused of help·
ing the Nazis massacre thousands of
Jews has been ordered deported back
to his native Lithuania.
Jonas Stelmokas. 82. a nitired
archiiect from Lansdowne. made no
comment Thursday when Judge
Donald V. Ferlise condemned him as
a liar who collaborated with · "Nazi
thug friends ...
If Lithuania won 't take him. he'll
be sent to Russia, Ferlise said. Under
Lithuanian law, Stelmokas could be
prosecuted for war crimes.
Stripped of his U.S. citizenship
three years ago when another judge
found he had concealed his wartime
actillities. Stelmokas will appeal the
deportation onder. said his lawyer.
John Manos. He denies persecuting
Jews.
.
·
" It seemed to me that the judge
siJent most of his opinion on the issue
of the credibility of an 82-year-old
man who's had three strokes," Manos
said.
Stelmokas. who came to the Unit·
ed States in 1949 and became a citi·
zen in 19S5, claimed he had been a
teacher in Lithuania during the years
he served in the battalion and joined
the German air force in 1944.

tiona! Safety and Health in Washington D.C. .. At the same time there are
still a remarkable number of jobrelated deaths that we thrn'k are
inherently preventable ...
The study. using death certificates.
found that traflic accidents account·
ed for 23.1 percent of the 88.622
deaths reported during the perrod

.

COLUMBUS - Net income for
the first quarter of thrs year decrea.sed
12.7 percent for American Electric
Power. the energy company reported
Tuesday.
The company's net income for the
quarter was $150.6 mill ion, nr 79
cents n shitre, compared to $172.6
million 192 cents a share) for the
same period in 1997.
For the 12 months ihat ended
March 31. net income belore an
extmordinary item increased 3:2 per·
cent to $598.4 million. or $3. 16 per
share, compared to $580 , million
($3.()9 a share) for the same period
last year.

I

ve.··

Batting sixth and playing first ba.o;e
in his debut, Cordero was met with a
smattering of boos. It was nothing .
close to the treatment received by
Belle. the former Indians slugger who
had an RBI double a~d made a runsaving catch in left field.
"Even though you heard jeers. I
think th~y were respectful," Manuel
s.aid. '"I mean, it wasn ' 1 as 1r he was
Albert."
Cordero was given a 90-duy suspended sentence after pleading guilty
to beating and threatening his wife,
Ana. who has since given birth to
their child. Released by Boston. he
signed a $1 million. one-year contmct

\'Vulern Diwl!lion
S1m Ore-go ........ ..... , . 16 4
Stm Fruth.:ts~o ../- .. ·· ....... ... 10 II
l..m Anr,ck:ll ..
.. .. 1} II
C(\l(•rmlo .
,
. M 14
Anznn,c. .. . .. ... ... .. .
. f.. If..

Ohio H.S. sports
Coaches' softball poll
COI.UMBUS. Ohm ~APJ - How,, stllll! p.md

nr r oaches rates Ohio high sdmnl ~1rls ~tJt't~ ••tl
teams m the.' final roll for The 1\ ssl&gt;l:tat~.--J Pre ss (~y
Ohicl High SdnlOI Athletu.: Auoctallnn lltVISII\11.'&gt;,

with th'e White Sox on March 23.
"The guy&amp; received him well.' '
Manuel said. "I think they embraced
the pjayer and the man ...
He was 1-for-4 and dropped a
popup on the pitcher's mound for an
error on his first chance in the bottom
of the second inning.
" I was excited, yeah. but not nervous," said Condero, who must learn
to tune out boos in this comeback.
"When I'm on the field. I concentrate
on the pitcher. Whatever they want to
say, it doesn't bother me."
Travis Fryman led off the eighth
with a walk ·against Carlos Ca.•tillo
(0-2). Brian Giles failed to get a sacritice bunt down, then single~.
"I guess he knew he was dead if
he didn' t come through after not get·
ling the bunt down:· Indians manager Mike Hargrove said.
Simas came into a tough situation
a day after being called up from the
minors, with Cordero. In a somewhat
surprising move, Hargrove sent Bmn·
son to pinch-hit for Dunston - a
.297 hitter with runners in scoring
position the past tive years.
"It wa.• just a left-right thing, and

wuh linl·pla.ce

studied. said Dr. Dawn Castillo, a
CDC researcher at the Nationalinsti·
tute for Occupational Safety and
Health.
The second leading cause of death
was homicide, 13.5 percent. The
majority of those killed were service
employees, such as cab drivers and
convenience store clerk!'.. ·

'·

vote~

in p.. rend~it:S )

Di\'ision I
Iwu

1'1&gt;.

1-&lt;N. C. tnl!lll HtMI\IL"fl4)
! -Wu•tswunh 121
.l ·'ipnn):li..:ld Sou1h.
4-Ptdo:ll"nngtou (I) .
~- . \krun Ellc~ . .

(1 ..

'ih
.n
. 44
H

tt&gt;A~hl:mtl ... . .. ...

. ... ~I

' 7-Mt:\htk1 ... .. .... ...
2M
K-C.n Syr.tmorc &lt;21
.. ... . . ....... . ... .. 27
9-H•IIknl
. ... .. . . .... ... 2~
10-Akron SprtnJfidd . , ..
.
........ 20
Othtn rtef'iwlnl U or murt pulnt1: 11-Fre·
monl Ross 14

Division II
Iwn

• 1-t.aGr:lftgc Keystone(2l ... .... ... .. ....... .

1'1&gt;.
(J'i

• · 2-MINFORD( I)
.......................... .... :'il
.. ~- Hillitvd DaJby (I~ I:. ' ... . . . ····· ....... 47.
4· Tn llm."\dge (2) ... ... .
4h
'i-Krn:ky Ri\·er..
........ . ............ 22
6-Col Rc;Kiy
. .. ..... ,., , ... 20
7-Akmn Hoban .
..
.... 19
Onylon Oakwood .. . . ...
..
. . I'J
' ' IJ.Cuy~ FAll s Walsh J(suil ...................... IM
• 10-Lim.;tBath~l)
......................... 17
Olh~rll ncelwln1 11 or mun pulnts: I I·
Srnng. K(nton RiLlS'= I 2

The extraondinary item reconded
in the third quarter of 1997 was the
United Kingdom's one-time windfall
tax ' on privatized utilities. which
reduced AEP's share of Yorkshire
Electricity Group's earnings for the
12 months by $109.4 million. The
windfall tax was based on a retroac·
tive revaluation of the original privatization prtce.
After the windfall lax, earnings for
the 12 months decreased 15.7 percent
to $489 mtllion. or.$2.58 per share.
"Our first quarter 1998 net income
declined primarily as a result of the
unusual weather effects induced by
El Nino," said E. Linn Draper Jr.

I

Division Ill ·
Iwu

1'1&gt;.

1 - Ro~:kfordPllfkw:J y f.S )

. • .
. ... 7-1
. 2-Loudonville{4) .. . ..... .. .. . ..
~~
l -N H.nh•n~on Col Crawford ,, .. ......... ·... ~0
-'·RACINE SOUTHERN ..... _ .......,._. .... .,~......-10
~-SOUTH WEBSTER
.......... ;\ .\
6-Convny Cre~lvJc-w f I ) .. ... ... .. ... ..
~2
7- Strau~hurg
.... .. .. .. ... ... .. .... ... .. ...
~I
1'-Shcrwood,Fairvkw
.. ....... , .
.-........ 2~
ii-Ha.nnibal River .....
. ......21
10-H:wtlnnd Wayne TJ:"-.'C . , .
~
.
21
CJlhrn rrc:~hrin11 11 ur mort puinl•: ti -Mor·
ml Rid&amp;edalr 20 12· SyL:anmr.: M~Jhawk 16 1.\
Uie)-Mc-ramura Evt:l):rn"O. Old Flll1 I~

AL standings

Gallia County's La~rgest
Heating &amp; Cooling Dealer
Is Having an

N~!w Ynrk .
nn~lnn
1\ ,tltlnM•r~

IN"I!tlnn

l!

T:unp.1 ll:ly
Tnn,onlu.

,706
. 700
. C..CXI

CLEVELAND .

. .... I~

K : msll~

. ... I)

Om.::t~\11

txm•i• ..

NHL first· round
playoff slate

_

.

__)

Thursday's scorts

MomrCnl l Piu~burgh 2 !OT): Mont rl!"rll kiKis
'il'rie ~ 1-0
•
St Lou1s R, Ln~ Angcl~o.-s ~; St. l.i.un s lcmls !oe ·
n~s 1-0

Tonight's games
Bru"r nn m Washinl_!Wn , 7 p m.
Phqcnii' "' Dctrnil 7:l0 f'l.m.
Otli!WII at New JcrliC)'. J-:\0 p.m
Oultulo ilt Pluli1ddph1a L \0 p m
S:m Juse .11 D&lt;tlla~ . 8 ~ p m
',Edmunrun r11 Coluradn. 10·]0 p m

Tonight's games

St. Louis (M~:r~:kt'r 2-0) :11 Phtl:uldphl,t !C:Jr.tl'C
1·2 ) 1 o~ r .m.
Clllomllo (llmmr!!nn 1-lllll F-loru.la (Mc:kluws
2-l). 7 0~ p.m
Housmn (Lima 2-1) .11 M••ntrc:tl (VuiJ~~ 0-1 ).
7.JS p.m.
CINCINNATI tRemhnger 2·2) 111 N.Y. Mcls

Saturday's gamts
Muntn:1tl at Ptttsburgh, 7 JO p nt
Uts 1\ngeles ar Sr. U.tuts, 7JO p.m.

(Jufii:S 0.2t 7·40 p m

Arizon11 ~Amk:non I-ll nt A1lm11u (Nc-ilglc 2- 1).
7:40
C 11~ugn Cubs {Wood 1· 1) :u L~1!-o Ang~l~5
(Vallk.'"lll·1). 1005pm
Piu~bur~h (Schmid! 2-1) a! Sun Dtegn (Smith Ill. 10: 0~ p.m.
.
Mtlwaukee CW~ncr 1-l JIll San Frnru:isc.o (Her·
shtscr0-1). 10· \~ r m

r,·m

Sunday's games

Nt:w Jer~y ill Ounwa. 2 r m.
Washington a1 Boston. 2 p rn .
Oetrutt 111 Phoenu.. :\ p.m
Dallas at Sma J.osc-. :\ p.m
Color:.,kJ "' EJmnnton. b r m

Transactions

Saturday•s games
CINCINNATI {Whh!o' 0- 21 :u NY . Mcts

I ..OJ. 1·40 r m
Milw:cuka: (Kari1-Ut ;at San frall l!t!ii."IJ &lt;Ruclcr

CYo~lm

2-IJ, 4 ·0~ p.m
Houswn

(Reynold~

o. 21. 1:o~ r m

1·2)

;n

Mnntrco1l

iV , .;~.quct

·

Amona (Adamsol} 0-2) .11 Fl•,rida fHl·rrumllez
2-21. 7:0~ p m
St Louts 11\ybm 2-21 at Phil11dclphia (8l'CI.'h 0.

II. 7:0l P·"'· •
Cnlnmdo !Ktlc 1-.l l 01 Allanla IMrllwood ;\-OJ.
7· 10 r m
- Chicago Cub5 (Gon.z:clc-z 1-2) ;II L.1J Angcll.'l
CDnmon 0.1). 10:0~ p.m.
P.i111burgh (l..ouw. 1-1) a1 S11n Oil.:gu CSmith"J.
I), JO;O"i J'l m .
•

Sunday's games •.
Anznnu :11 Anrida. I :II~ p.m.
Colnc-o~Un &lt;tl A.ll.mla. 1·10 p m
.Hnustnn :at Montreal. 1.15 r .m
St Louis :11 P.tuladeltllu:t, I :\~ 1'·111.
CINCI"'NATI at NY Met .~ . 1·40p.m
Ch• ~••!!u Cut-~ !Ill· ·~ Angdes. 4 0'\ p.m
Put~tlurt.h m '\.m lil.:)!n, 4 ~ p.m
m S:m

Fr:mri~cn~ 4 :0.~

pm

Baseball
Amrrican Lr•1•
CHICAGO WHITE SOX · R~c.tlll!d RHP Dill
Stma5 from Calgary of lh~: PU~:Iftl.." Ct'IUSI Le;r~u~
Optioned LHP ToJd Riuo o1R1i OF Ln11 Pr:V.Il"'l' tn
C:~lg •.-y
·
DETROIT TIGERS . Waiwtl DH Pete hK;cv •gha.

NEW YORK YANKEES · A.cll\lal.:t.l RHP

Mnri .. no Rm:ia frum the l~ ·day desablt:d h't OJ•·
tu•nct.l RHP Mil.:c BudJie ru •Columbus uf 1hc l11tc r·
n:iuonal Ll'-uguc

National LnaucATLANTA BRAVES: R.:c:tlled OF Oamn11
Hill frQm R1dtmnrnl of 1tk- lnlcrnutumal l..cit f!IIC
Ojlliuned RHP P:wl Byrlltu Richmnml
CINCINNATI REDS: Pl;~~,.-c:t.llHP S1~:ve Cut•L
nn I.Ci d:ry disallkd li!!t. Oj1tim-.et.l JII"Aanm RtMliiC
to llkllan. trolt~ nf lnll"rn.lliunul l..!:tt!lll" Recallc11
kHP D.mn y Gr:t,,e,. .u11l RHP S ~:.ou Wandll"~t\·r
ln•m lndtan:IJMIII ~ tlf lmcrnauo11al U:aj!Ut'
MilWAUKEE UREWERS; Pl:1ccd In Julm
J:1llil on II~ I "i -Jay t.h~'lhk\1 h ~l R~'l::tlkll Of Gculf
lcnl.:ins trom Lllui~vtlle ur the lnl l"rn.•t ln n:d

~

1

~1'1·

l'

'
,.

7 • MU

12
.... K 12
.. . . .. 7 12
. .. . ......4 14

-4.2'J
-1011

•

\t.K

222

WHirm DivWon
Te11:a~
ll fl fl.~
~:mlc . .. . ...
10 II 17.,
1\nahclm ..........•..........IJ • 10 _414
O.tld.mt.l
........... .f• I~ ..\lf~

PITTSBURGH PIRI\T~S . Acti\·:ut•J RHI•
trnm lhc I ~ -day dis tthlcJ hsl Or·
tiwlCd LHP Jeff Tuh.•L1 '" N,,.h11illt! nl Ilk' t•a,llk
Eln~r Dc~Sl"fl~

Cu:1M lc:.lj!UC

-4011

'·

Mmnc"-llll

•

r;uslfurtth 7 San Frmk:rscn 0
Milwaukc-c 2, L·~ Anr.~lc!5 l
S:m Dica:o 4, Chn;:lj:Ll Cuhs I
Montreal 5, St. Loui s 2
Colnr..UO 4. Flnrulrt .\
Jlhdadelptu.1 6. CINCINNATI \
Atlant:1l Arizo11:1 I
Hnusl on ill N. Y M!o'l5 , r!1t.l., min

t. c.:t.

l'c-nlrallti•l!iHN1

Clly .

II

Basketball

12 ~
I 4 ft
!2
H
II
K.
. . H 12

.

. 4~0

..lt'\-1
271

l ..t":Jj!UC.

t:a~trrn

Iwu

Hockey
6'·
7

·'

~ ··

'
••
7

SAN ; .I':Go PAPRES: Sis.nct.l I.HP Ruhcnu
ltl,. It' Cllfllrtl&amp;!l

NBA first-round
playoff slate

Rtlnti~7. 1U .1 null• •

Thursday's scores

"Ch:ulullt! \11. Atlama ~7
lm.hana lOti, Cl.fV~I.AND 77
HtlU ~htft JOJ . U1:1h 90
S:m Anlnntot IU1 I,Mtelnl WI

Tnni~ht's games
N'--w Yurt lll t-hanu. 7 I'm iTIJS)
N.._-w krii:y :II OliL:af!ll KI' m ITNTI
Minfk•:wta al .S.:o~nk . tt \0 I' n1 fTIISI
l"l~larKI ..II •. I\ . l...•k~·n . IO;:l(l Jl.m t1'NTI

Salunl•y's gamos
CLEVELAND n11nchan:l. I p.m INDO
San A111u11io at Plkll:f!IIL, ~ .VI J&gt;.m. (NUC)
Arl:tnta m Charlouc-. K p.m.
H(lmlt•n nl U1ah. 10:.10 r .m. ITNTI

Thursday's scures

rrNT,

'1"1111111&lt;1 Day 12. T~·l:l~ 5
cu:vtLANil ~- nk.~u Whir-.· s,,,"'

Tonight's Kllntn
IIL'IItun (W;~ kctichl 0-11 at ('Lil VJ:I .ANI&gt; lliur·
lt•2· 21. HI.~ r m
Anidk'IOI (Wahnu 11-2 1 oil Tunljl:t IJll)' 11\lvnrw
·' · I ). 7.(15 ll Ill
U.1~l:uwl fko.l!'-'h 2 - ll:~r U .tltun&lt;~"'-' cK.unic ml'l. ·
"' 2-0t. 7. 0~ jllll
lktrml fKt··•Fk IJ. .~ I otl NY Yatt""-'Cii 1l'unc Ill. 7:.\5pm
",
Tclt:t~ !lim Leu 1-21 "' K.m• :•~ Cu y I N:u~dt 1· \1 .

Sunday's 1111mes
New Yc&gt;rl: at Mi:1mi . IVOJl.m. INDCJ
Pun land :It I. !\ l..akL.'I ~. ~I' m. 1NUCI
N~o.-w'Jmii.')' ttll•ka~~·- ~: :lCJ 1•.m. tNPO
Mimll."." ";' 011 S..·.,nl-· 'J ptn ITNTI

REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

SJ95,00 llshtletl"
"Up To t3 UJ..

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ningest expansion team in April as
Mike Kelly homered twice and Jason
Johnson earned his first major league
victory.
The Devil Rays improved to 11 8, topping the expansion record of 10
victories in the opening month by the
six innings .
The Indians couldn't put away 1977 Toronto Blue Jays and 1993
Jason Bere after a 40.. pitch lirsl Florida Marlms. Tampa Boy still has
inning . Bere. who came in 0-3 with seven games lefJ in April.
Johnson ( 1-0). making his first big
a 20.00 ERA lifetime at Jacobs Field.
allowed three .runs. six hits. and five league start and his initial Tampa Bay
appearance. blanked the Rangers on
walks in five innings.
In the only other American three singles until leaving in the sixth .
· Bobby Smith homered. doubled
League game.Tampa Bay beat Texu.~
twice and drove in three runs for
12-5.
Tampa Bay. Ivan Rodriguez and Lee
Devil Rays 12, Rangers 5
Tampa Bay became the win- Stevens homered for the Rangers.

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Page 5
Friday, April 24, 19,98

thtrd, Ruben Sierra's homer in the
fourth and Belle's double.
Wright equaled his career high
with eight strikeouts; but could not
overcome the lapses with two outs.
He allowed four runs and six hits in

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we needed somebody to put the ball
in play," Hargrove said. "I just
thought Jeff had a better chance of
doing it than Shawon. A week from
now, a month. two months, I might
feel different."
Eric Plunk (2-1) pitched I 2/3
innings for the victory. and Mike
Jackson pitched the ninth for his'
major league-leading eighth save .
Belle gave Chicago a 4-3 lead
with an RBI double over Kenny
Lofton's head in center field in the
fifth .
The White Sox scored all four of
their runs with two outs- Cordero's
homer in the second, Wright's wild
pitch that scored Mike Caruso in the

-·

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Thursday's scort•s

Milw;~ub.~

(740) 611!-4118

Dnlbllt'Bulldl!r

Branson, a contact hitter, ended the
drought.
Batting for Shawon Dunston with
runners on lirst and thind in the
eighth, he drove in his first runs of the
season with a liner off the right-tield
wall on a 3-2 pitch from Bill Simas.
"Pinch-hilling is one of the tough·
est things in the game," Branson said.
"I was trying to hit a fly ball to get
the tying run in. I tried to work the
~ount and got a fastball I could dri·

Scoreboard

•

Baseball

1 Cnl Ln. AdiWII

'I

By .KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP)
Wil
Cordero is back.
The Chicago White Sox still have
a ways to go.
Condero homered on the tlrst pitch
he saw in a White Sox uniform. but
pinch-hitter Jeff Branson hit u tworun triple in the' eighth inning as the
Cleveland Indians defeated Chicago
5-4 Thursday night.
Cordero returned to the majors ·
after pleading guilty to beating his
wife. He wasted no time showing
what he can add to this lineup behind
Albert Belle and Frank Thoma~. hit·
ting Jaret Wright's lirst pitch in the
second inning onto the left-field
patio.
Still, the White Sox dropped to 7'12 and 5 1/2 games behind Al Central-leading Cleveland:
"Once I think we get the right
mix, the right chemistry, I think
we'll start to )um the comer a lrttle
bit," White Sox manager Jerry
Manuel said.
Heading into the eighth. the lndi·
ans had stranded nine runners- seven by cleanup.hitter Manny Ramirez.

.AEP reports decrease
in quarterly net income

• •u .... .

•

whether Clinton knew about a fraudulent $300,000 loan she received in
1986 and whether he testitied truth·
fully at her 1996 trial , in which she
was convicted of four felonies.
She refu sed to answer the questions - even after being granted
immunity - and was sent away for
18 months. Her contempt citation
expired last month and she begun
serving a two-year prison term for
fraud convictions in her Whitewater
trial.
Prosecutors had said they ·would
ask Mrs. McDougal about evidence
developed since her earlier grand jurv
appearance. Most recently, the grand
Jury has been looking at land developed by her ex -husband. James
McDougal. who died in federal
prison last month.
McDou gal ran'the failed Madison
Guaranty Savin!;S and Loan that is at
the center of the Whitewater investigation. He was convicted in the
same trial that ended in convictions
for Mrs. McDougal and then-Gov.
Jim Guy Tucker. who has appeared
before the grand jury twice this
month .
Mrs. McDougal was being held in
Los Angeles while awaiting a trial em
a charge that she embezzled money
from symphony conductor Zubin
Mehta and his wife.
·

.

Branson's _triple pushes Indians to 5-4 win over White Sox

Traffic accidents, ho·micide ar.e
leading causes of job-related deaths

and miles traveled "will likely overWASHINGTON lAP) - It US.
take" pollulion reductions from curCIIJ~s want to meet federal ~ir quali rent tailpipe controls even after
ty standards in .the next Jecade. they
automakers
introduce cleaner cars
may have to adhere to tig_ht&lt;r poilu·
beginning
with
the 1999 models.
t ion con trols " f\)f automohiiL:.- . an
according
to
the
study, released
ck
an
up
tht'
air
Environmental P.roteclion Age1_H.:y
.
An expected growth in vefiicles Thursday. _
report concl udes. ·
Richard Wilson. head of the EPA's
air pollution oftice. said the study will
be used as guidance in developing
new auto pollution control requireDeed. t:lcanor Lou i'e Kloes to ments that would take effect m 20!14.
The following land transfers were
posted recently in the office of Meigs Watrcr F :rnd Ann:r I. Rous.h. Sut- He emphasized. however. that no
decision h:.- heen made on what addi1o n/S) 1ac ust::
County Recort.led Emmogene Ham rlDeed . l'ha rb :rnu Judy Weber to tional co~trols will be required.
ton:
The Associated Press reported
Da'ld :rrr u C1ndy Durst. Orange:
De~d . Ronald D. and Judy A
key
findings of the study last week.
Dcod. 'vlary Eileen and Kenneth
Hagerty to Judy S. Prckett. Columbra.
David ll a~s to Robert H. and Sue A.
I R. I."B acres;
Right 11f way. William L and Smi th: Sut ton.
Dt!cd. Ker1n~l h and Retty Younu.
Martha C. Hkks to Tuppers Plai n'·
Chester Water Distnct . Letart p:orcel. Greg and t&gt;o.uge W1n ebn:nner lO Bt:lty Youn ~. P.o rncroy:
.49 acre:
Right 11f way. Sarah E. Neigler 10
l~r g h t tl f ""Y· Stcw n and Sandra
Cl.r) to Buek ye Rural Ekctric
D.
TPCWD. Letart . .R7 acre . 2.-15g I
COI1[l&lt;'r:rti\ c. Rut land. 2. 139 acres:
acres:
Deed. loseph Wood gerd to Daniel
Right of way. 1\. W. Nease Jr and
E S hc ... lma. Col umhia parcels:
Donna Nease to TPCWD. Sutton.
R 1~h 1 ul w.ty. Juanita and John J.
11 2.93 acres:
Ri.ght of way. Caryl E. Pooler 10 Grnthcr to Ohi o Power Company.
Sutlon.
·
TPCWD. Chester. 3.SO acres:
Ri ght of way. Foster J. Akers to
Right of way, Gilbert A. and Vi e·
kt V. Woods to TPCWD. Chester.. 25 OPC. Salem:
Ri~ ht of way, Rcda F. and Charles
acre;
Rtght of way. P.Jul E. and Maxine R. Hi, le. Evely n B. Thomas toOPC.
Hot'fman to TPCWD, Chester. I 02 Rutl and:
Deed. Todd S. Cundiff to Roscoe
acres:
.
Right of way. Albert and Marrl yn and Sandra Mills. Slllton parcels;
Deed. Wrlliam D. Tillis and Joy K.
l. Pooler to TPCWD. Chest~r. ?5.5,0
Moranty to Brian M. and Dolly R.
acres;
.
Right of way. ln•z V. ~nd Boyd T Warden. Sutton pafcels;
Deed, Rhojcan V. and Her&gt;hel
Spurlock to TPCWD. Orange, I acre:
Tak~ Advantag~ ofTodays I,ow lnteTtst Rates and
Right of way. Christopher E. and McC'j urc to Charles Bi ssell, Chester,
ChooSt from Ovtr 150 DlffeTtnt Floor Plans.
Jena R. Tenogha to TPCWD. Orange; l ~~res:
. Deed. Rhojean V and Herschel
· Right of way, Susan Marie aqq
Irs lillY ftl get S!OIIId on building your ti'M1 home.
McClure
to Roland E. and Sherry S.
Gerald full ins to TPCWD, B!:dful~,
llllll'isil
tfte Wingllf model home 1111111 and tulk.to
Goodwi n. Chester parcels:
2.004 acres:
· 1
Todd «tony aboln your I1IW home plans today .
Deed. Duane Wolfe to Diane L.
. Right of way. Erma J. ~pd David
McVay to TPCWD, Ol,ye, 7.62 Wolfe. Olrve parcel&gt;:
De e&lt;l. Charb and Martha K.
acres;
Right of ~ tay. Oipl) pnd Josephine Wheeler to Diana L. Bauserman and
Young to HCW[fi Ohve. 37 acres Jame1 T Them. Midd leport;
Deed. Diana L. Bauserman and
and 19.75 ool's;
Righi of '\vay, Anthony M. and James T Them to Emest E. Engle Sr.
HouB. Mon, lue, Thur.t Fri. 12-S,
J(iin"rty A. Sam5&gt;son to TPCW D, and C'aro lrne· F Eng le. Middleport;
Sal. 1-4, (]0!111 Wid. t Sun.
Deed. Dtana L. Bauserman and
Orange;
Right of way. Jerry. and Donna Jamc&lt; T Them to Charles Wheeler
'EitcJrlc HIGII'IImps Htal, {Dol and Saw!" '
Bentley to TPCWD, Bedfond, 21 .496 and Martha K Wheeler. Middleport.
acres:
Thl' rl'port. lo he u ~l'd a~ guidam:t:
i.l"l the I: Pt\ Lh:vl!! up\ nev.- auto eml~­
~lo n n:qu1rcm-:nts thi:-, yl!ar. s:.ud
au tom,t"cr, · vo luntary plans to build
,~.: k ancr Glf\ wil l not ell Q far enough 10

It wasn't clear when pro;ecutors
and Geragos would meet next. The
grand jury expires May 7.
Mrs. McDougal was brought here
from California. where •he wa.' being
held for Whitewater c rime s while
awaiting trial on an unrelated embez·
zlement char~e.
In the federal case here . a JUdge
could impose a pri son term of up to
six month ~ withoul requ1rin g a trial.
If prosecutors sought more sl.! vere
penalties. they would have to indict
her and hold a trial - somethin g her
lawyer said would give her a forum
to complarn that Starr was trying to
get her to lie about the Clintons.
"This is nut a woman who's
afraid for one minute of a jury trial
on criminal contempt." Geragos said.
" She would welcome the opportuni ty."
Starr has offered Mrs. McDougal
immunity from prosecutron for any thing she might say as long a; she
doesn't commit perjury. Mrs.
McDougal said her version of the
truth differs from Starr's and fears
that if ;he doesn ' t follow his line. she
could be penalized for lying.
Mrs. McDougal has repeatedly
said she knows of no illegal activity
involving the president or lirst lady . .
At her previous grand jury ·appear·
ance. Mrs. McDougal was asked

·The Daily Sentinel

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Page 6 • The Oaliy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll24, 1998

.

Rolen's eighth-inning homer helps Phillies beat Reds 6~3
· • PHILADELPHIA (AP) - To
bunt or to swing? The Philadelphia :
Phillies are thankful that Scott Rolen
made the right decision.
Hitting with two on and no outs in
the bottom of the eighth and the score

tied 3-3, Rolen hit his fourth home
'run of the season off reliever Scoll
Sullivan to give the Phillies a 6-3 win
over the Cincinnati Reds on Thursday night
"To tell you the truth, 1 thought

about bunting," Rolen said:-. "They he doesn't quii and he is always try were playing back and I had lleen ing to team," Francona said. "He·
struggling all night
finally got a pitch he could handle,
"I had been getting jammed all and that was the difference."
night. and I thought he would throw
The Reds took a 2-0 lead in the
a fastball. I finally got a ball that I second inning on consecutive home
could get to and was just trying to put runs off · Phillies starter Garren
the ball in play hard."
Stephenson. With one (lut, Dmitri
Rolen was hitless in his first three Young hit his first of the year, and
at-bats and hadn't felt comfonable at Willie Greene followed with · hi s
.,
the plate.
fourth. It wa~ his first hit in 22 at"It was one of those games where bats.
you have a weak night at the plate
The Phillies scored three runs in
and then everything turned ou1 all the founh off Reds staner Pete Har' right ," he said.
nisch. Bobby Abreu hit a two-run
By The ·Associated Press
hitter for Pinsburgh 's first complete
Phillies manager Terry Francona triple down the right-field line, and
Although they're off to their best game this season, and Jason Kendall said Rolen is constantly trying to Mark Parent followed with a sacrifice
start ever and have the best record in drove in three runs off slumping improve. .
fly.
baseball. the San Diego Padres aren 't Shawn Estes.
"He was fighting it quite a bit, but
The·Reds tied it in the seventh off
getting a swelled head.
Kendall had a two-run double in
"By no means are we going to get a four-run second inning and added
too high. By no means are we think- a saqifice fly as the Pirates won their
ing we' re the best team," Andy Ash- second in a row after losing seven
Raid~rs comeback bid, Meigs held an
by said Thursday after pitching eight straight The Giants went 1-5 on a By DAVE HARRIS
8-3 lend heading into the bottom of
scoreless innings in San Diego's 4-1 road trip to Milwaukee and Pitts· Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs scored four runs in the the seventh inning, but River Valley
victory over th.e Chicago Cubs. burgh.
·
Cordova (3-1) struck out eight and eight inni~g to .break a 8-all tie and stormed back to tie the contest and
"We've just got to go out and keep
playing."
walked one. Estes, 19-5 last season, post a 12-8 win over River Valley in force the extra frame.
River Valley took an early 2-0 lead
Ken Caminiti homered for the dropped to 0·4 after giving up nine non-conference , baseball action
Thursday
·
e
vening
at
Kyger
Creek
in
the
first inning on a single by StanPadres, who improved to 16-4 and hits and · six earned runs in 5 113
Middle School.
ley, a walk to Stout and two Meig.~
remained unbeaten in seven series innings.
The Ma!lluder win spoiled the errors. The Raiders added another run
this season.
Rockies 4, Marlins 3
"We're having a good run," manKirt Manwaring hit a two-o~tt,
ager Bruce Bochy said.
two-run triple in the ninth inning, raJ' Once again, Caminiti played with lying Colorado to victory at Aorida.
pain. The third baseman ·has a
LarryWalkerdrewaleadoffwalk
. strained back that makes its difficult from Vic Darensbourg, and reliever
for him to throw, and he's also been Rob Stanifer (0-1) walked Vinny
bothered by an ingrown toenail.
Castilla. Walker advanced on a fly
"He's got the highest pain thresh- . ~II. and reliever Felix Heredia struck
old of anyone I know," Bochy said. out Todd Helton. Manwaring, who
"There are days when you question entered the game in the eighth in a
whether you should put him in the · catching change, hit the next pitch
lineup and he goes out and ha.s a great over center fielder Mark Kotsay's
day."
head.
Ashby (3-1) allowed seven hits,
Jerry Dipoto (I : I) pitched I 213
st.ruck out four and walked one for innings for ihe win.
the Padres, who took two of three
Gary Sheffield tripled and doubled
games from the Cubs.
twice for Florida.
Expos S, Cardinals 2
"We've had a couple lackluster
efforts · on offense the last couple
Vladimir Guerrero and Randell
REACHES ON PASSED BALL - Moments after striking out, Rlv·
games." Chicago's Mark Grace said. White homered in the third inning for er Valley's Trevor Kern (20) beats the throw from Meigs catcher J.T.
''We've got to pick it up, atid when Montreal against St. Louis.
Humphrey• to first baseman Ryan Ramsburg (left) to reach on a
it happens, it's going to be fun.
Guerrero homered off Cliff Poline
passed ball In the second Inning of Thursday's game at Kyger Creek
Middle School. The Marauders rallied to win 12-11 In alghtlnnlngs. (Trl·
Nobody likes losing when you score (2-1) with one out and While hit
one, two runs.··
another solo shot one out later to give bune photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
In other NL games, it was Pins- Montreal a 3-0 lead. Guerrero went
burgh 7, San FranciscoO; Milwaukee 3-for-4 with two RBis.
2, Los Angeles I; Montreal 5, St.
Ron Gant homered in his third
Louis 2; Colorado 4, Florida 3; and straight game for the visiting CardiSouthern defense made two errors.
Atlanta ·3. Arizona I.
nals. a two-run shot in the fourth that By SCOTT WOLFE
SenllneiConwspondent
Jessica Howard suffered the loss
Houston at the New York Mets cut the EKpos' lead to 3-2.
The
Southern
Lady
Tornadoes
with
a seven hitter. seven runs, (Joe
was postponed by rain.
Montreal starter Dustin Herman·
r
aised
their
record
to
a
15-2
overall
strike
. out and five walks. The
Brew~!rs 2, Dodgers l
son (2-2) went seven solid innings,
record
Thursday
nighf
by
defeating
Wahama
defense made no errors.
Marquis Grissom hit a tiebreaking giving up two runs on five hits ..
Wahama
7-3.
·
Southern took ·a 1-0 lead in the
homer otT Hideo Nomo in the seventh Ugueth Urbina pitched the ninth for
Southern
is
again
proving
to
be
second
as Ashley McKinney walked,
inning as Milwaukee beat visiting his fifth save.
one
of
the
d.pminant
teams
in
south·
stole
second
and scored on a Kim
Los Angeles.
Braves 3, Diamondbacks l
eastern
Ohio
and
statewide
under
lhle
double.
Southern
went up 3-0 in
Nomo ~ 1-3 ), coming off the short'fom Glavine improved to 3-0 and
coach
Howie
Caldwell,
the third when Kara King walked,
est start of his career, lost despite Andres Galarraga snapped an 0-forTrish
Warner
went
the
distance
to
Cynthia
Caldwell laid down a bunt
pitching a three-hitter. Grissom had II slump with a 415-foot homer for .
pick
up
the
win
while
scattering
sevsingle,
a
gro~nd out and a Kim Sayre
two hits, including an RBI single.
Atlanta.
'·
en
hits,
walking
three,
striking
out
two-run
single.
Wah~ma.scored twice
-Grissom broke a 1-1 tie with his · tilavine, who leads the majors
1wo
a~d giving up just two runs. The
second homer of the season. an _with a 1.00 ERA, pitched seven
opposite-field line drive just inside strong innings to help the Braves win
the foul pole in tight.
·
their third straight and eighth in nine
· Jose Mercedes (2-0) ga.ve up one games. He allowed one run on six
run and six hits iii seven innings. and hits. walked three and struck out five.
Nelsonville-York used the "Hit. Sophomore Eric Smith again
Doug Jones pitched a perfect ninth
Kerry Ligtenberg pitched the
t'em.
where
they_Ai~'t"
philosophy
in
pnched
well for Eastern. but Nelfor his seventh save.
·
·
eighth. and Mark Wohlers struck out
Pirates 7, Giants 0
the side in the ninth for his sixth save lurnm~ e1ght h1ts tnto mne runs m .sonv1lle fou_nd the hole at the nght
defeating E_astem 9..0Thursday mght 11mes m takmg advantage of the s11Fmncisco Cordova pitched a five- in six chances.
at Nelsonville. .
.
uation. Smith walked JUSt two, gave
The game was a destgnated home up e1ght h1ts and struck out four as
game for Eastern.
Eastern made JUSt two errors.

Padres beat Cubs
4-1 to claim series

reliever Wayne Gomes on a fielder's
choice RBI by Ed Taubensee.
Jerry Spradlin (2-0) picked up the
victo'y and Mark Leiter closed ~ut
the game for the Fhillies, gaining tljs
first save si nce Jtdy 31. 1994. Leiter
was used in the closer's role m place
of Ricky Bottahco, who 1Shkely to
undergo an elbow opera11on next
week.
"Ricky Bottalico is a big pan of
our club, but we just can't stop playing," Francona ;:aid . "We just hope
other people w11l step up, because
nobody is going to feel sorry for us."
Cincinnati ma?age_r Jack McK,eon
thought the ~eds mam problem was
pitchers getung behtnd toooflen.
"I thought both Hamtsch and

~

Sullivan got behind t~ much and ~ut
themselves tn a.hole. McKeon sauJ.
"And then S~l.hvan threw the baJI
ovc~. the plate.
.
.
Sullivan (0-2) summed;~p his J'C!''
formance directly.
"To say I was b.~d wo~ld be.ge~erous. I JUSt st~nk, he said.
About the p11c~ that Role~. put o~t
of the park, Sullivan sa1d: He did
exactly what he should do w1th a
pitch like that. II was supposed to!)&lt;:
•. sinker and it ~~nk about 400 feet
nght 10 the gap.
_
The victory was only the ltflh f(lr
the. Phillies. in t~eir last 11 ga~~s
a~mst Cmcmna11 and only thetr th1rp
wm !n the last 15 games at Vetemn~
Stad1um .

Meigs gets by RVHS 12-8 'i n eight innings
in the second inning when Kern
struck out, but reached on a passed
ball. Kern stole second and then
scored on a single off the bat of Stout.
Meigs scored' a pair of runs in the
third inning on singles off the bats of
Pat Manin and Jeremiah Bentley.
Both runners moved up on stolen
bases and came into store on a

Raider error.
Meigs tied the game in the fourth
inning on back-to-hack singles off the
bats of Ryan Ramsburg and Aaron
Vanlnwagen and a sacrifice fly off
the bat of Brad Davenport.
Meigs added a big four spot in the
fifth inning to take a 7-3 lead. Tony
Dugan walked. and Rusty. Stewart
followed with a single. J.T.
Humphreys singled and two Raider
errors plated the runs.
Meigs increased the lead to 8-3 in
the sixth inning. Dugan walked,
Stewart reached on an error and
Humphreys hit a sacrifice fly . .
The Raiders came storming back
in the seventh inning. Stanley walked
and was forced at second. Brian
Bradbury trfpled to score. ~ run.
Mike Mollohan singled. C.J. Johnson
walked before Michael Stephens and
Carl Dewitt singled. One put later,
Steve Conley singled to tie \he game.

Jeremiah Bentley doubled to lead
off the eighth for Meigs. Dugan singled and stole second and thirl!.
Stewart singled and Humphreys
before Ramsburg and Kyle Smiddle
walked to force in the Marauders'
final run .
Davenport went the route to pic'k
up the win, striking out I0. walking
three and scattering 10 hits. Bentley
had a double and a single to lead
Meigs, Stewart and Martin added two
singles. Dugan, Humphreys. Vanlnwagen and Smiddie each added singles.
'
. Stanley picked up the lo"' with
Bradbury coming on in relief in the
eighth inning . The two combined to
strike o~t eighi. walk eight and give
up 12 hits. Stanley, Jay Stout and
Dewitt each had a pair of singles to
. lead the Raiders. Bradbury added a
double. Mollohan each had singles'.
Meigs is now 8-5 overall and will
meet Belpre on Friday.
Inning l91ab
Meigs
.
002-141-04=12-In
River Valley
21 0-000-50=8-1 0-2
Baneries
Meig ;: Brad Duvenpon (WP) and
· J.T. Humphreys
·
River · Valley: N. Stanley. Bradbury fLP1 and Pa.-ons

Southern posts 7-3 victory over Wahama
in the founh on a Yonker single. an doubles and a walk !2-2J; and singl~s
error and two fielder's choices.
by Warner and Holman.
Southern added a single·run on an · Lori Bumgardner had a 3-4 nigfit
lhle double and a Trish Holman sin- with three singles. while other hi nets
gle for a 5-2 tally. ·
were Fields. Weaver. Yonker and
Southern added two runs in the VanMeter.
'
lixth with Warner'ssingle the, ~ey hit .. Inninetlllab
., -_:· .
of the inning (7-2). then added a sin- Wahama
000-200-1=3-7-'o
gle run .in the seventh on a Stacy Southern
. 0.12·10HF.7:,'7Jl
Lyons walk and Kim Sayre d.Quble.
Batteries
·
•
Southern hitter were , &lt;;ynthia . Southern: Warner (WP) and AshCaldwell 2-4 with two singles. Kim 1i Davis
·
Sayre a double and single, .l~le two
Wahama:
Howard (LP) and Fields
.
'

Nelsonyille-York rolls to 9-0 win over .Eagles

Ravenswood gets .7-0
win over
Southern
.

•I

l

STEALS SECOND -As River Valley second baseman Megan Mut;tord (center) sprints over to cover the play, the Melg1 Marauders'
,Tonya Miller gets her pants dirty as she goaslnto second base llhead
· ·of the throw from Raider catcher Susie Yost to sllortstop Merle Denney (far left) in the fourth Inning of Thursday's game near Cheshire,
where the Mara..-s won 15-3 {Tribune photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

The Southern Tornado baseball
team fell to a 7·0 defeat at the hands
of Ravenswood Thursday.
Ravenswood's Brian Archer put
on a pitching clinic as he scattered
just three hils ove&lt; seven innings To
pick up the win. The junior hurler
struck out 17 Southern baiters. Seventeen of the 21 outs were directly
antibuted to Archer, who also walked
seven in the process. Rave"'wood
pla~ed errorless ball. ·'-&lt;
Southern's Benji Manuel suffered
the loss. fanning three and walking
five as Southern committed five

errors.

Marauders cruise
past River Valley 15-3

Zac Adkins and Dan Curry led the
Ravenswood hitting. The Red Devils
~ollected nine hits·off Southern pitching.
Southern's hitters. were Pete Sisson with a single. Adam Cumings a
Meigs scored runs in every inning seventlt to round out the scoring. double and Josh Ervin a single.
but the third en route to a 15-3 win Amanda Davis doubled. Me~an MulRavensw004 scored in the firstr
over River Valley in non-conference ford walked, Casse Justice Lindsey · inning when the firit batter reached
softball action Thursday eyening.
Peters both singled to score the · on an error, sto.le seconc!,;md anOihThe game avenges 1f earlier r&gt;-1 Raiders runs.
·
er error in the' outfielaallowed the
loss to the Raiders this season. ·
Laudermill. who picked up the run to score.
· Meigs jumped out OJI ,loJ! 3-0 in win. struck out one. walked three aod
Southern, !jed the game when
the first inning. Mei~s took adl•an- scattered eight hits. Gilkey had three Porlt Dill walked and Ad.1m Cumings
tage of three River Valley walks and singles and a ,double to lead Meigs. slammed an RBI double. but Archer
a pair ol singles by Amber Vining and Laudemilt added her home run and a stfi!CIC out the third bauer of the.
S,ephanie Wigallo plate the runs.
pair of singles. Vining a triple and a / inning in sinking out the side.
In the second inning the maroon single. Williams and Amy Hysell
. Two runs scored on an Adkins'
and gold had a single by Abby Har- . added two singles each, _.Harris,. smgle. an error on a bunt that allowed
ris. a walk to Bethany Boyles and and Jones. Shannon Price and Wigal the lead runner to score, then anetha single by Kelly Gilkey to plate the added singles.
cr single lei in the second run for a·
runs.
Kim Preston led River Valley 3·1 RHS lead.
Meigs increased the lead to 8-0 in . with a pairof single•. Amand;a Davis
Southern. loaded the bases on
the fourth inning, with the big blow had a ~ble. Marie Denney, Holly three walks m the fifth, but did not
c:oming on a three run home run off Hash, Herd• Shaw and Cynthia Ward score.
the bat of Tangy Laudermilt. It was added singles.
Ravenswood opened up the game
I1IOI'e of the same for Meigs in the lnalna: .11!1111
with four runs in the seventh inning
fifth a.~ the Marauders plated two runs Meigs
320.324-1=15-17..() to put the game out of reach with
011 singles by Kelly Gilkey. Tonya River Valley
000-000-3=3-8-S Archer holding Southern at bay the
Miller, Broolte Williams, Lauderrnill
Tangy Laudennilt (WP) and remainder of the game.
·
IIIII Tawny Jones.
Amber Vining
..
Jppi'llllllfl
The Lady Maraudcirs plated five
102..()()().4:7-9..()
Terri Eddy (LP), Megan Mulford Ravenswood
runs in the sixth and seventh inning (6) and Susie Yost, Danielle Mus· Southern
I00-00().(): 1-3-S·
10 open up a IS-O lead. River Valley grave {2)
•
Batterin
scoml three runs in the bonom of the
Southern: B. Manuel (LP) ·and

Ravenswood: Archer (WP) and
Romeo

•'n.'c

Oldi'll!lbloacd .
BIH) Catered By: .

,.

5~8°/o

f'IBA playoffs begin

NHL playoffs resume

Rockets, Spurs,
Pacers, Hornets
:r ecord tr.i umphs

Canad·i ens get ·b y
Penguins 3-2 in OT; .
Blues top Kings 8-3

By ALAN ROBINSON
after Jaromir Jagr grabbed the puck
sweep," Houston coach Rudy Tom- ·
PITTSBURGH (AP)- The PiHs- off a faceoff.
janovich ·said. "Our guys responded
b.urgh Penguins had every opportu''It's a tough way to lose, but all
tremendously."· .
•
nily - ~ven a penalty shot - to you can do is put it behind you and
Clyde Drexler, playing in the
knock off Montreal in overtime. It\ try to get beuer the rest of the
postseason for the final tim~ in his
the playoffs, at least. that simply series." Barnes said. "The series is
career as he near.; retirement, scored
doesn't happen.
more than one game. and you try to
22 points, inclnding 15 in the second
Benoit Brunet caught Pinsburgh learn from each one.'
half. Kevin Willis added 18 points
in a line change to·beat Tom BarrasBefore that. Montreal shook off
and 14 rebounds for the Rockets, who
so from the top of the left circle at Pittsburgh !lefenseman Brad Werenhad six players score in double lig·
18:43 of ovenime, lifting Montreal ka's shorthanded goal at 7:21 of the
ures and hit 10 three-pointers.
past the Penguins 3·2 in their Eastern SCIJond period to lead 1..0 and 2· I and
"Everybody's going to say bad
Conference playoff opener Thursday dictate the predictably conservative
things about the Jazz. but I think we
night.
tempo.
just played a hard. solid ball'game."
The Canadiens haven '1 won a
• The seventh-seeded Canadiens,
·said Charles Barkley. who )lad 12
still looking for their first playoff playoff series in five years. and the
points despite a hernia. "Anybody
series victory since they last won the pressure has grown in Montreal ever
. Stanley Cup in 1993,·won their 14th since. First-year coach Alain
who thou_sht we were dead? They're
consecutive overtime playoff game. · ·Vigneault even sequestered the Canawrong." ·
"That's pretty amazing, 14 in a diens 40 miles away from Montreal
Spurs tOt Suns 96
Duncan showed his offensive tal.row," forward Vincent Damphousse . for their first two pre-playoff pracents with a variety of moves inside
said. "I knew about that. ... Thai's tices this week, closing the first 40
win."
and
on
the
ba!;eline,
especially
down
why we fell pretty good going into minutes each day to the media.
, Duncan, meanwhile, was an
the
stretch
when
he
made
five
baskets
overtime."
.
Maybe it was the unusual sight of
unstoppable force in the fourth quar· .
and
two
free
throws
in
a
personal
12They
probably
didn
'
rfe~l
so
good
empty
seats in the Civic Arena, a rar· ter as he scored 18 of his 32 points
6
run
while
being
guarded
by
Hot
when llenguins rookie Alexei Moro- ity during the Mario Lemieux era, but
!P
Antonio's 102-96. victory at
~·~.
~
~,.~'
.
Rod
Williams,
Phoenix's.
best
bigzov had a chance to win it just I :44 Montreal seized the early momentum
Phoemx.
man
defender,
and
·
Antodio
into
.the extra period. But his back- ~and lead- by outshOoting -Pitts. In the two other games, the home
1 DON'T THINK SOl -That thought must hav.e been on the mind
McDyess.
.
·
hander
on a penally shot - a rarity burgh 14-5 .in the first. period.
of Indiana tronNiner Antonio Davis (right), who swats away the shot
·team won as Indiana crushed CleveHis
first
three
field
goals
in
the
run
Playing without injured center
of Clevel\l.n d forward Shawn Kemp In the second quarter of Thure· in NHL overtime J!layoff hockey,land I 06-77 and Charlotte beat·
gave the Spurs a lead each time. The
Saku Koivu (broken hand), who will
day night's NBA'playoff series opener In Indianapolis, where the Pac· clanged off the tight goalpost.
·Allanta 97-87.
"He went to his backhand an·d the ooiss at least one more game, Moo· Four more first-round openers are third lifted San Antonio to an 88-87
ere won 106-77. (API
edge
with
4:46
remaining.
and
it
was
puck
kind of ·turned over on him," treal showed an unusual look by
'i\cheduled for tonight as New York
94-89
when
Duncan
made
a
free
at
least
nine
Jlllints
the
rest
of
the
way
ing
one
stretch
and
wound
up
with
34
said goaltender Andy Moog, who often playing three ~efensemen and
visits Miami. New• Jersey visits
to improve to ~6-0 this season when points on 15-for-19 shooting as the stopped 34 shots. "I never got a pad only two forw~rds against . Pitts'Chicago, Minnesota is at Seaule and throw 2 I12 minutes later:
"I started feeling good down the scoring at least 100 points.
Hornets beat Atlanta for the first time on it. but those thing~ happen." .
burgh's top line of Jutomir Jagr, Fran,Portland visits the Los Angeles LakDefenseman
stretch
there,"
said
Duncan.
who
also
·
'"The
bottom
line
is
they
beat
us
Patrice
Brisebois
cis
al\d 'Barnes.
·
in
five
tries
this
season.
•
ers.
.
"We've
always
realized
that
we
grabbed
10
rebounds
an~
had
the
sevintentionally
knocked
the
net.
off
its
"It
was
different,
and
you
don't
up
in
every
aspect."
said
Cavs
coach
On u night when Glen Rice and
Steve 'smith enga&amp;ed in a shootout. enth-highest play~ff pomt total by a Mike Fratello, who saw the Pacers can beat this team," Rice said'. "It's moorings just as Moog turned away see that very often. but I thought both
the Pacers gave the Cavs a lesson in rookie. "I'd been really defended shoot 69 percent (ll-of-16).in each of just a maner of us going "ut and play- Marii~ Straka's shot, resultlng in the teams played well," Barnes said.
·
penalty shot
Martin Rucinsky gave Montreal a
postseason intensity, and Duncan well the whole game, and then I got the first two periodS. "I don't know ing our best."
some
shots
to
fall,
got
some
space
on
The
Hornets,
who
shot
59
percent
if we
Still, the second-see.Md Penguins 1-0 lead with a power-play goal at
iibowed why he'll !'e the runaway
. could have made it much easi- -their second-highest percentage of wouldn't
blame their rookie forward 12: 15 of the first, jumping on a
·rookie of the year. the biggest sur- the court. and we started to move." . er.
David
Robinson
had
26
pqints,
IS
Chris
Mullin,
back
iri
the
playoffs
the
seasonalso
broke
a
five-game
for'the
loss
- their seventh in ·their rebound of Damphousse's missed
prise was the performance- if you
rebounds,
five
assists
and
live
blocks
for
the
first
time
since
I
!&gt;94.
led
the
postseason
losing
streak
datillil
back
last
nine
playoff
series openers.
shot in the slot and stufting it by Barwant to call it that - put on by the
for
the
Spurs.
·who
mounted
a
comePacers
with
20
points,
including
four
"The
kid
made
a
great
move
and
rasso,
who stopped 37 of 40 shots..
nearly three yeats.
.
Jazz.
"We really · blossomed. We just · got a backhander over his pads, but
The Pe'nguins tied it with one of
lllah started slowly. fell steadily back after tmiling 81-74 with 9:58 three-pointers. Reggie Miller had I I
left.
J&gt;,.vJ:ry
Johnson·
scored
II
of
his
·
it
hit
the
post."
center
Ron
Francis
their
unlikeliest goals of the season:
his
19
points
in
the
first
quarter
the
will
to
go
out
there
and
wi~
.
'
.
'
of
:had
lxihind and was down 21·entering the
22
points
in
the
first
quarter.
when
Jqdiana
took
the
lead
for
good.
Charlene
coach
Da•'e
Cowens
sa1d.
said.
"But·
we
still
had
a
chan~e
to
·
Werenka's
shorthanded breakaway
fourth . The Ja~z closed within eig~t
.
l'acen
1!16,
Cavaliers
77
·
win
the
hockey
game."
just
nine
seconds
after Montreal
"It's
really
great
to
win
and
make
a
Hornets·97, Hawks 87
jllidway through the fourth, but Greg
Youthful
Cleveland
was
no
match
Both teams had ample scoring failed to score during a two-man
Some 6.000-7 ,ooo empty &gt;eats statement."
' Ostenag missed two free throws.
for
an
Indiana
team
back
in
the
post'
Smith
hit
D
of
22
shots
for
chances
after that. but it took Brupet's advantage lasting l: 12.
didn't
have
any
adverse
effect
on
the
. Clyde Drexler scored at the other end
season
after
a
one-year
absence.
Alla~ta
and
wouil(\.tip
with
35
points.
breakout
off ·Vladimir Malakhov's
Werenka left·the penally box just
Hornets,
especially
Rice.
and the comeback was over.
·
Cleveland
trailed
31
:
18
after
the
pass
to
win
it.
·
ahead
of a 3-on-1 rush on Malakhov.
Charlotte's sharpshooter made 13
including Hi in the tirst quarter.
. "I felt insulted by the way the soopening
quarter,
an!llndiana
led
by
.
consecutive field-goal ;utempts dur"I got a great pass on the wlde He took Slegr's lead pass, skated in
' called experts were predicting a
side," Brunet said. "I had some ice unobstructed from the blue line and
and took advantage of it. I just want, punched the puck past Moog to the
,Olympic champion speal(~ to.girls on-daughters' day
,
•.
. .· · ·
ed to hjt the net: I didn't even really · 'stick side.
·
look at where I shot it I shot it us
The Canadiens answered with an
hard as I can and i• went in."
improbable goal of their own: P~ter'
' .
.
. .
Piusburgh had rallied to tie it with P&lt;;&gt;I)Ovic's first goal in 16 playon· · .
. A Nike official reminded the only I:38 remaining in the third peri- games at 16:44, a slap shot from the
:vJd
the
uncertainty
of
her
future.
take
the
next year off. ·perhaps serv·
ByBOBBAUM ,
Street ~ai~ she's feeling better atx&gt;ut .'ing a.s a t.el~vision commentator for . youngsters·that the company doesn't od as Stu Barnes got his stick on Jiri left point past Barras&lt;n. who h:~d lost
. ; BEAVER'J;ON ~ Ore. (AP) the World Championships next Feb· allow autographs, so Street passed Slegr's shot from a•crowded crease
Picabo Street came inlo the gym on things ROW.
(See PLAYOFFS on Page 8)
In. an interview Thursday, she ruary·at'Vail, Colo.
out hugs instead.
crulches. to the wild cheers of 600
said that when she had her knee oper·
Still, there is a timetable developgirls. and choked back the tears,
Tilt spiti1ed talk with the ,girls Ulioo two weeks ago. the damage wa.s ing in the back of her mind.
"I've been thinking about 2001 who came with their mom or dad to not nearty a.~ bad a.s wa.s. earlier
' Nike headquarters for "take your thoughl. much ·less severe than to her 2002," Street said. "Maybe I'll· ski
·ilaughter to ...-ork day'' wa.• Street's left knee after a December 1996 2000 jusi to get back into it. maybe
.
. ~ki my way into shape and kind of
tirst ilppeamnce since her devastating cra.sh. .
"~sychologically, I know it's grunt through the points so I can
·Friday the 13th crash six weeks ago.
.
It's hard to say whO iva.• more going to be much easier to come liack charge in 200 I and 2002."
she
said.
"I
alro;ady
have
90
·
·
Her
immediate
concerns
ar~
getfrom,"
inspired: the obviously impressed
roung audience or the Olympic gold percent flexion without a problem.·so ling tbe metal plate out of her left leg
lnedalist whose spirits gel a muc~­ I know genlng the rest of my flexion and then allowing the holes where the
isn't going to be hard at all, It's prob· screws ha've been placed to heal so
needed lift
ably
going to take me about a week she lessens the chance of another .
"I'm klnd of el'lolional," she t.old
t'he girls. ·:My life is crazy tight. now. once I g~t the go to do it. And the left break.
Meanwhile. she's climbing back
My li.fe is the happie~l it's ever been leg is healing phenomenally."
When u ·girl asked if she would on the publicity-endorsement circuit.
because I won a gold medal - but at
come back to ski in the 2002 She filmed a Chapstick commercial '
tile ~arne lime I'm broken inside."
Then she set aside her crutches Olympic's in 'Salt Lake City. Street on Wednesday. and will make perisounded more optimistic than she did odic appearances for. her various
and hobbled carefully on her own.
.
·
sponsors .through the summer and
"I'm 1101 supposed to do this," she a month ago.
"I
hooestly
don't
think
I
could
.
fall.
:~ whispered into the microphone.
•
pa.,s .up the chance to race in the
One·o( the kids asked her what she
:· "Don'ttell my doctor.''
::
Street told the girts she's "kind of Olympics. especially in America," would do after her skiing career is
over. Maybe a television.talk show. .
.; been hiding" since her Man:b 13 she said to whoops and cheers.
In
her
:
interview.
she
said
she
she said, and some motivational
i· crash in the women's downhill in the
.
:: World Cup Finals at Crans Montana. knows .people look at her situation speaking.
"And'someday I'm going. !O be a
:· Switzerland. She broke. her le~l leg and doubt tllat·she can come back.
"I think more people think 'My mom ai.d have some lillie girls of my
.; and tore up her right knee just one
gosh;
why, sliould she?'" Streel ·said. own." she said.
.
:; month after coming back from anoth- .
:·. er severe knee injury to win the gold "I've had some people ju.~l flal out · . That brought another round of
''l'nedal in the super-G at the Nagano say. 'You're not·going to ski anymore · cheers. .
~re you?' I say, 'Yeah, actually, I
When it was over, Street shouted,
.,'· Olympics. .
.
.
think
I
am."'
"Remember,
follow your -dreams!"
::
After a difticult time coming to
She's in no hurry. though. She will and then was mobbed.
terms with the severity of her injurie•

$y ·c ttAIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
One night into the NBA playoffs,
and two things are already clearer
todaY than they were 24 hours ago:
I The Utah Jazz might not be ~uch a
Jbck, and Tim Duncan might be even
beuer than his reviews.
The Jazz put .on a sloppy. dispir·
ited performance before their home
fans and actually heard a few boos as
they were trounced 103-90 by the
·aging Houston .Rockets on Thursday
.night.
"This whole thing about Houston
being old and being hun, we swal·
lowed that hook all the way down to
the gills," Utah coach Jelly Sloan
said . ."They outcoached us. outplayed us, and they deserved to

San.

.

.Street makes ftrst ~ppearan·ce stnce crash

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Specializing in: Adult medic~ne- Diabetes; High Blood Pressure, Chronic
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~ have a special edition with photographs
ofhigh school seniors graduating .ihis year.
Now ihrough Friday; May 8th; Drop Y~ur
Photo Off at The Daily Sentfuel o~ At Your
High School Office to Be Included In This
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Cuming~

Doyle Smathers picked up the win . Buckeye hitters' were Watkins a
with three strike outs and ~hree single. T. Watkins a single. Be~
walks. The Buckeyes played errorless · Robey two singles. Oliver a double.
ball.
Blackburn two singles and Robens·a
Three hits and two errors trans- single.
formed into a four run second inning
Eastern hillers were Kirt Spenc~r
for the Buckeyes, who went on for and freshman Wes Crow.
the 9-0 win . Smathe.rs singled,
Eastern goes to Fet)eral Hockin~
Schultz reached on an error, Black- Friday.
burn hit a fielder's choice and Caner Jnnin&amp; l.!!lllb
hit . a two-run double. Roberts then Nelson.ville
040-010-3=9-8-0
had a two-run single around another Eastern
000-000-~-2-2
error.
Batteries
,
Eastern made good contact, but hit
Eastern: Smith (LP) and Broder,
the ball right at the trusty Buckey ick
fielders,
N-Y: Smathers (WP) and Caner

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

Pomeroy_• Middleport, Ohio

F~day,April24,1998

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Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll24, 1998

TaJiadega track to see Martin among .tw~-a-day racers ·Sunday
By EDDIE -PElLS
TALLADEGA. Ala. (AP) - A
glance into his trophy case gives
Mark Martin reason to look forward
to Talladega Superspeedway. Common ·sense says otherwise.
Martin, who has enjoyed as much
success as anyone over the last few
years at NASCAR's fastest track,
says the high speeds and numerous
accidents so common at Talladega
make him as jittery as anyone as he
prepares for Sunday's DieHard 500.
Like Jimmy Spencer, Dick Trickle and Sterling, Marlin, Martin is
scheduled to race twice this weekeoo
on the 2.66-mile. high-baked trioval.
All are en.tered in the Grand Nation- ·
al circuit's Touchstone Energy 300
race on Saturday.
That means two chances for accidents and double the worries about
the speed-limiting rcstrictor plates
th at drivers blame for keeping things
so bunched up.
"Restrictor plates arc going to

happen, 30-car drafts arc going to
happen," said Martin, who has two
Winston Cup wins, four third-place
finishes and a Grand National victory at the track this decade. "A great
race for fans is almost ·guaranteed.
After that. you pretty much just wait
and see."
One of the more outspoken fans of
the plates is Bobby Allison. Although
he's not driving anymore. it was Alii-.
son's harrowing.wreck in 1987 at Talladega that made the devices neces-

. they're still a blessing.
"They're the best thing NASCAR
has ever done," he said. "The avail·
ability of the knowledge. the tech·
nology afK) the commitment means
nobody is ever going to separate from
anyone elSe by too much. Without
carburetor plates, they'd still all be
bunched and we'd be h·aving these
wrecks at 240 mph instead of 190."
But a dozen cars crashing at 190
mph can still get messy.
Ask Ricky Craven, who was
sary.
injured in 1996 after a 14-car crash
Allison was going about 21 0 mph that se.nt his car rolling into the catch
with an unrestricted engine when his fence hiJh above the first-tum wall.
back tire was tom apart by a piece of Or ask seven-time Talladega winner
metal, sending the -car spinning and Dale Earnhardt, who fractured his
airborne. The 'car careened off the collar hone and siemum after being
fencing and just avoided nying into involved in an II -car crash later that
the packed grand,tand. Several spec- year. .
tators sutTered minor injuries, but no
"It's gotten to the point where the
one was killed.
cars have probably outgrown the
Allison has heard all the argu- · ·track," Martin said. "The cars want
ments against the plates and insists to go 230 mph, the track wants it
restricted to 190.1 don't know about

Winston Cup slate, standings posted
By The Associated Pres!l
NASCAR Winston Cup schedule,
winners in parentheses. and driver
point standings:
Feb. 1.5 - Daytona 500. Daytona
Beach. Fla. (Dale Earnhardt).
Feb. 22 - Goodwrench Service
400. .Rockingham. N.C. (Jeff Gor'
don ). .
March I - Las Vegas 400 (Mark
Martin) .
March 8- Primestar 500, Hampton. Ga. (Bobby Lahonte).
March 22 - TranSouth Financial
400. Darlington. S.C. (Dale Jarrell).
March 29- Food City 500. Bristol. Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
April 5-Texas 500, Fort Worth.
(Mark Martin).
April 20 - Goody's 500. Martinsville. Va. (Bobby Hamilton).
April 26 - Diehard 500. Talladega. Ala.
May 3- NAPA's California 500,
Fontana.
May 24- Coca-Cola 600, Charlotte, N.C.
May 31 - MBNA Platinum 400,
Dover. Del.
June 6- Pontiac Excitement 400,
Richmond, Va.
June 14 - Miller Lite 400,
Brooklyn. Mich.
June 21 - Pocono 500, Pocono.
Pa.
June 28- Save Mart 300. Sonoma, Calif.
.' July 4 - Pepsi 400. Daytona
Beach; Fla.
.
July 12 - Jiffy Lube 300.
Loudon. N.H.
July 26 - Pennsylvania 500.

Pocono.
Aug. I . -

Brh:kyard 400. lndi-

anapoli&gt;~

Aug. 9 - The Bud at the Glen.
Watkins Glen. N:v.
Aug. 16 - DeVilbiss 41XJ.'Brooklyn. Mich.
Aug. 22- Goody's 500, B,ristol,
Tenn.
,
.
Aug. 30 - New Hampshtre ,300.
Loudon.
Sept. 6 - Southern 500. Darlington. S.C.
Sept. 12 - Select400. Richmohd.
Va.
Sept. 20 - MBNA Gold 400.
Dover. De I. •
,
Sept. 27 _:_NAPA Autocare 500,
Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 4- UAW-GM Quality 500,
Ch.arlotte. N.C.
Oct. II - Winston 500. Talladega. Ala.
Oct. 25 - Dura-Lube 500.
Phoenix.
Nov. I ......: ACDelcQ 400. Rocki.ngham. N.C.
Nov. 8 - NAPA §00. Hampton,
Ga.
Driver standings
I. Rusty Wallace, 1.191. ·
2. Jeremy Mayfield, 1,158.
3. Terry Labonte, 1,086.
4. Jeff Gordon. 1,085.
tie. Dale Jarrett. 1.085.
6. Mark Martin. 1.055.
7. BiiiEIIiqn, 1.054.
8..Dale Earnhardt. 1.025 .
9. Ken Schrader, 964.
I 0. Jeff Burton. 942.
II. Bobby,Labonte, 940.
'12. Michael. Waltrip, 930.

13. Bobby Hamilton, 915.
14. Jimmy Spencer,. 909.
15. Ted Musgrave. 906.
16. Johnny Benson. 892 .
· 17. Ward Burton, 867.
18. Chad Linle,' 845.
19. ·Brett Bodine, 842.
20. Steve Grissom, 786.
21. Ernie lrvan. 782.
22. Dick Trickle. 768.
23. John Andretti, 762.
24. Robert Pressley, 727.
25 . Lake Speed, 704.
26. Geoff Bodine, 672.
27. Kyle Petty, 671.
28. Kenny Irwin. 643 ..
29. Ricky Rudd, 632.
30. Rick Mast, 630.
31. Sterling Marlin, 621.
32. Kenny Wallace, 575.
.33. Joe Nemechek. 559.
34. Mike Skinner. 537.
35. David Green. 499.
36. Darrell Waltrip, 470.
37. Kevin Lepage, 466.
38: Jerry Nadeau, 450.
39. Randy Lajoie, 426.
40. Derrike Cope, 422·.
41. Ricky Craven. 403.
.42. Greg Sack's, 400.
43. Todd Bodine, 343.
44. lefT Green, 340 . .
45. Hut Stricklin, 315.
46. Morgan Shepherd. 2Z,I .
47, Wally riallet\bach Jr/.201 . .
48. Dave Marcis, 134,
49. Gill')' Jlradberry, 125.
50. Steve Park, I 10.
51. Mike WaiJace, 9~4 : .
52. Andy Hillenburg, 76.
53. Billy Standridge. 58.
54. Rich Bickle, 40.

how safe .that makes it. l,t:s like 43
gnats Hyins out there, waiting to run
into each other."
Before winning last year's Grand
National race, Martin went through a
string of three races in four ye¥5
where he was put out because of an

accident. That's given him a good
dose of reality about racing at Talladega, But he knows the track is a
fan fayorite. one where risk is always_
high and the rules are unlikely to
change soon.
"It's fun for the fans, not so fun

for the drivers," he said. "But it's an
honor lo race here. This is where the
legends were when I was still in my
diapers. That doesn't mean I have to
love it. -But it's always exciting to
wiQ, because whenever you do, it
means you've oven::orne a Iot. "

HOLE-IN-ONE CAR - The golfer who hltl a
hote-ln-ona on the number nine hole at the Melga
County Sherlff'a Department Drug Abun R,at• ·
tinea Ed'!callon (DARE) Golf Tournament S.l·
urday at lhe M•lga -County Golf ·courae will
receive lhli Pontiac Sunblrd or a llmllar vehicle
1fom DOn Tale Motore Inc. of Pomeroy. The four ·

man.lic.ramble lllfllh blind draw will begin wllh •a
ahotgun atart at 9 a.m: No alcohol Ia allowed.
Shown here are Sheriff Jamaa M. Soullby, Don
Tata uln . repreaentlllve Brice Tidrick and
DARE officer Mony Wood. For more Information, ·
call Soulaby or Wood at lhe aherllf's department

'.

.

The ·Choice is Yours
600 Local Bonus Minutes
Rlc1lw 50 Local Bonuti M/"*' a month for 12 mllfllh1
whtn ~ 1/grl up for MW Unlttd Sfate1 c./lui.- Servlc:e.t .
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tHew 18-m&lt;PII UnitiO S.S Cell~ar ser~ce 10f!ll1lllj requited 011!1 ~ ody oo artan tilling ~w lt9 95 anilhlgller. Rtlolli&gt;w,) Chifges, tilltl, lOlls anil fii!Yioll Slldiarges,.•
~- ObHBSmOIB anildllges 1N1 IWJ. ~ ~ Ulllii!AIID¥1. Nol ¥111t1111ttt ~ i:ltB 111tr. See sates assa:ille lor COIIpiele *'lils

011!1 !lids !pri;M), 19!18.
,
.'At!vefllsal p!lce requi1es rew at:llvitllon. service commilmer4 With atocalltfOOii!!d ~!ter antt cretin apprO'Iil. Acflvalion tee Is reQUired. Amorlhlyiefvlce :
tee. long distance lees ind cliarges tor aillime will be made.'fees wry depending on lhe plan you select. Callier r.IIY impose I flat ot pro·raletl penally lee kif •
tally tlfmifliltiOO. II you !lfminate service wllhln t20 days_01 ac:livatlon. ta avoid a saoo cha•ge kom RadloSiilt:lt, yoo mtJsltelum the phone.
!

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--r··

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I

•

of a spoiled brat. Your father gave
you six. years of college plus many
extras that other college students
only dream about. It's your turn to
be generous.
·Offer to pay half the wedding
expenses, and ask your father to pay
the remaining half. This will ease.
the strain on his relationship with his
wife. He has been extremely good t() ·
y()U all );QIIr life. Now, it's your tur~ .
Please be gra•• allll. take my
advice, You won 't regret it.
·
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 71J!l, Los AngeleS,
Calif. 90()45

ter, chief engineer and chief locks
County Locks until 1917. By this area. .
Milk, · produce and fruit were . man.
.
time; Struble noted, the industrial
o(ren
sold
to
the
workers
and
occ)lIn
conclusion,
Struble
noted how
world was aware of the' unique ben·
pants
at
the
lock
site
as
well
as
to
the
riverscape
of
Meigs
County_
has
efits of Ohio River Transportation.
·
passing
boats.
And,
Struble
said,
evolved
over
this
past
cen1ury.
ll
has
As a result, many well connected
1
leaders qf industry gave -their sup- since th~::~e locks were also public gone from a stagnated waterway full
·port to the Ohio Riv~r Project, as it landings aitd the grounds were of falls and sandbars only open to
meti&amp;ulously maintained, they were .navigation on a seasona~le basis to a
was called.
the
earliest sites for recreational uses first class waterway of commerce
· Struble pointed oulthat ~nique to
·in
boating,
pic11ics, social and politi- and recreation regulated by the engi- · ·
topography of Meigs County. is its
100 mile border and 60 miles are cal gatherings. The sites maintained neering designs of men.
An architectural legacy was
riverfront. In Meigs County, the their own watet system. and if local
wells
fan
dry,
people
could
get
'
w
ater
given
to the ,people of this area, he
Ohio River had its steepest drop in
from
the
locks·.
suggested,
in the construction of the
elevation at .any point in its length.
The 54 locks and dams on the powerhouses and lock houses on the
Because of this, he said ' it was
Ohio
River were replaced in the Ohio River. Some were wisely used
necessary to construct 5 locks with.,
1960's
.with 19 high roller dams on and preserved, while others were
in a short distance of each other to
provide for the depths of the various the Ohio River. The wickets were forever removed from the l1111dscape
pools of water. Most locks on the replaced with massive rollers that by the follies of man, he said.
."We are left, however, with the
Ohio River, Struble' said, had a dis- could be·raised or lowered to regutance of JO · to 50 miles between late the depth of water and the 600 memories •.the people, and the e~er
locks; Meigs County had locks of 8. foot locks were replaced with 1200 present Oh1o R1ver. When all else 1s
foot locks because the lengths of the . gone," Struble concluded, "the
to 15 miles apart.
At each of these five locations in tow's on the coal. barges have River will remain but at present it
still has the ability to tell us a
Meigs County there was a power- increased in size.
Struble
Sllggestcd'that
we.
should
.
rel)larkable story_of its pu'J'"se, its
ho11se to operate the locks •. lock
never
lose
sight
that
in
the
Lock·
pres~nce , and of 1ts people.
houses to house the lock master and
Struble said many agree with
his workers, and the locks them- . houses Meigs County residet)IS lived
and
worked
as
their
lives
hecame
Zadock
Cramer - The Navtgator selves. The locks were.600 feet long
with
thC
commerce,
navwhen
he
des~ribed the Ohio River as
intertwined
and '"'oulil raise or lower the barges
MICHAEL STRUBLE praaented 1 hlalory of the Ohio RiYII' Locks
igation
·and
histocy
of
a
gr~:.t
Amer"l'he
mo~t
heautiful river in the uni- end 081111 lit 1 !Meting of Relum Jonathan Melg1 Ch•pter, Dllughas ~~~y passed through. Common to
vers1:."
all 1he slructures at all five of the ican experience.
tera of lh&lt;· A'""lcen Revolution.
An
example,
·he
'noted,
is
Eileen
Pauline Atkins, regent, conducted awarded the 1998 scholarship by Ihe
Meigs County Locks were the red
Carol·Spence Sisson was accepttile roofs. The tile were -mll!lufac- Buck, a memher of the Return 'the busines! meeting following the
ed
for membership. Ne•t meeting
· turdd by the Ludowici-Celadon JonathanMeigs Cl\8ptii: DAR and a presentation. Atkins anno4nced cer- Ohio Association of Garden Clubs. will be May 9 at. the Meigs County
Company in Chicago but they main- retired teacher in Racine, who had tificates of achievement received by Bohner is a senior at Ohio State Uni- public Library with, Marcie Seif~et.
.tained a
plant in New Lexington the unique experience in that she the. chapter for the past year includ- versity majoring in horticulture.
which is still in operation today grew up in (he lock )louse at Apple ingi 100% participation in the Presi- ·--···1'---~--~~~~~----11!"----•
Grove because her (alher, . Early dent Gencrat:s Project, media cover:
RE•ELECT
making specialty tiles. · ·
age for Constitution . Week, ·most
Struble also no1ed that the pres- Roush, was the Chief Engineer.
_eJICC. Of the locks in a largely ~ural . Those people responsible fo.r the printed media inches in the Stale Of
au!a allowed :for ~pmmercial and operation of the locks were Ohio by a chapter, and outstanding
social interaction. Also, hecause of . employed by the U. S.' Army Corps community voluntee~ service.
It was annou.nccd that Amy
their need 1o communicate "':ilh of Engineers. The hierarchy of command
a
t
these
locatiqns
were,
at
the
Bohner
a member of Return
oth\!r locks, they had .the ~arltest
top,
loc~
master.
assistant
lock
masJonathan
Meigs Chapter has been
Cou~ty
tclephanc communtcnuons 10 the

tile

FRED

o·FFMA..
n

1

Your
Commissioner

Meigs

OVER 500 tJEW RURAL WATER CUSTOMERS
DURING THE PAST FOUR YEARS

Ansted W. Va's

'T'fie :Neals ·
will be appearing at ·

The First Baptist Church ofRacine·
-Sunday, April 26th
. ·7 pm
.

R&amp;R MARKET AND'
TRADING POST·

By Nellie Parker
tor of Salem Center and Wil~ville locDt; Linda Henderson WiUiams, BelAlfred United Methodist. Chuim .chun:bcs.
pre: Jackie, Eric, Jody and Erin Brooks,
,
held Easler Sunrise SeryiL-e, Easter
01hets attending services included New Marshfield'; Doug. Susie. and
{'..=._-- .
breakfast, Sunday School and worship Katie HollSie, Sarah Yost, Kathy, Stacy Michael Trout, Ryan and JJ Bailey,
111111 an Easter e~g hunt on Easter mom- and Alan Watson, Pete and Osie Foil- Cold Spring, 'Ky., Mana Layron and
ing.
rod, Pat and Joe Mayhew, Philip daughter, Randy an~ Charlene
Brenda Johnson was in chlirgc of the Boyles, Vte10r Bahr, Debbie. Jeremy Dilr.ngcr. Athens.
Sunrise service. She read the Elster · and JYier Barber, Kevin, tonya, Hallie,
Olhcr churches represented were
iJ _
.
story ti'om Luke, led the congregation in
Aaron and Heather Brpoks, Manha Kenny Memorial · Wesleyan in
n:Sponsive reading and gave J!myer.
Jackson, Lloyd and Rwh Brooks, Bob, MarihfN:Id, Athens Oum:h of O!riSI
111
The congregaiion sang, "Oirisl the Karrina- and Rachel ~rooks, Thelma and Pomeroy United . Methodist
Lord is Risen Today," and members 1 lknderson. Richard. Flaence·and lim Churth.
gave ti play, "Were You There?" The Speslcer, Sarah Caldwell, Janice Weber,
Easter dinner guests of Brenda and
Choir sang. "Night Before Easter."
Dave and Mary Jo Baningcr, Uoyd and Gary Johnson were Mike Weber .and . 1'H ............ fill..
Gry Johnson gave a reading, "Son- Doris Dillinger, NiM Robi~son, Manle · Jessica Wood, Gallipolis; &lt;;tirence and
MIDDUPOII VIllAR ·
rise." Mrs, Johnson asked the congrega- .GUthrie. Shetia Whltlaleh and children, Eva Johnson, Walerford; lasoo, Jcmny,
I.MITAI .
lion to·say what they were thankful for Marilyn ' kobinson, Mark and Cindy · Amber and Mazzie Johnson, -Beverly.
(
.
and gave a reading. "An Empty Egg." Rhonemus and Shawn, . Robert Lee
Easter dinner gucsU of Pete and Osic
The service closed with prayer led by · Keaton, Marlene Donovan. Joe, Laurie. FollrOd were Nina Rollinson. Kathy,
.APRIL 30, 1"1
Rev. Slwon ~man.
Maahew, Ashley, Jessica .and Janae Stacie 'and Alan Wauon, local; Steve,
. '-- fllll'l will be t:herged •
After church services. Rev. Haus- Boyles, Phi6p 'Boyles, Ru5seii ·Archer, Kan:n. Kalie. Brian and Brannon Foil12$.00
man gave a S{ICCial biCIJSing to Brenda . Shelia, . Dane, Dan~ lie and Kurt rod. Athens.
J~ro" ancHamily. She will be thc_JliiS· Spencer, Gc111\Jdc an:' ~e.lvin Thlcy, all
~ ' .

New

w. ~·

tON'T
· FOROETI

-~

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Hartford W.Va.·

.

u.s~ 33

In Business for 22.Year5 ·
.
• Live Bait
• Gull, Amo &amp; Huntlng.SuppUes..
_ . We will' Buy &amp; T-:ade Anything of ValueSee W@yne, Gene or Kim
.,

·

~·A~J

,A

'j

me time to avel with my friends.
Even though I have been working
for the past two years, my father has
still been willing to take care of me
until I marry. · ,
'
• I have dreained of this we~ding
day since I was a little girl, and 1
want it to be very special. My grandmother says the plans I have laid out
are quite extravagant and it is ·
putting a strain on my father 's rela- ,
tionship with his second wife . I feel
it is nobody 's business but mine and
my father's.
Please, Ann, my grandmother
reads your column faithfully and
appreciates your common sense. We
need your advice. :_ Bride-to-Be in
D.C.
Dear Bride: You sound like a bit

WI

now hl'ft Amllh Proclucla • 'Butter • Chilli
.llucltllcn

• We Dlllww hr1Y Tn!plocll

.

• 75 name-and-number
memQry

.
(Reg. lt9.99 with
·llctillation. l319.99 Wlthout.l

I

The story of the power houses
and the lock houses along the Ohio
River was detailed by Michael Struble of Syracuse at a recent meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Daughters, of the American Revolu-·
lion.
· Struble -is a native o( Meigs
County, a member of the Pioneer
America Society, arid author of journal publications. The speaker noted
that the Ohio River nows some 981
miles in a southwesterly direction
beginning at the connuence of the
Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers
at Pinsburgh, Pennsylvania and .
empties into the Mississippi River at
· 111 .
Ca1ro.
.
In the early days of our·nation's
history, he said, the only feasible
method of transportation. in regards
to westward development was the
. vast network of rivers. There were a
variety pf early anempts to make the
waterways more navigable: Wing
Dams were · built to divert flow of
., water; Snag Boars were deployed to
remove trees, logs and debris; and,
Scoop Boats were used to help dear
the channels.
In 191 0, Struble added. Congressman -Theodore H. Burton of
Ohio introduced a provision into the
. apprQPr.iations bill that provided
money in sufficient funds for !he
navigational upgrading of the Ohio
River. It funded the construction of
~ locks on the Ohio River. The
original cost of the project was $63
. · million dollars, however, Struble
said, cost
.
.
overruns ran the final bill to an addi·
tional $42 million dollars.
Although the funds were appropriated in 1910. constt:uctioil did not
begin lo take phice on the Meigs

Alfred News Note ·

·V!bratlng Mini-Handheld Cellular Phone

• 40-number speed dialing
• Data-capable

based in the same tjty. We have a
house in the suburbs and are doing
very well.
·
·
Here is the problem. I am planning for the wedding of my dreams.
I ·am so happy and excited! · My
grandmother, however, ha~ told nie
that I ilm being selfish and unfair to
my father by expecting him to pay
for my.wedding.
Ann, I am his only child and the
light of his life. Shouldn't -he foot
· the bill, like most fathers do ? My
father is not a wealthy ·man, but he
1\as always been very frugal. He paid
for my college luition and the additionat two years for my master's
program . During this time, he also
paid my rent. credit-card debts and
other necessary expenses .. allowing

' Pomeroy Elementary Schqol is
-participaiing in the Supervision With
A Principal (SWAP~ Program. administered by the Oh10 Assoc1a\1on of
Elementary Scho£!1 Administrators.
The SWAP program is an excellent
opprtunity for community leaders to
spend time getting a first hand vtew o{
their schools," said Principal Debbie
Haptonstall..
,
"This brinJ!s community me!"bers
into tlie schools to build understanding of the variety of challenges in
delivering a quality education education," she added.
Friday afternoon. Sandee Mills,
co-owner of the McDonald's restau·
· rant in Pomeroy, toured the schoot:
with Haptonstall.
.
Mills viewed .a computer lab in th:e
elementary school, participated in a
: peace assembly, and loured classrooms and the playground.
The school holds monthly peace
assemblies to recognize those kids
who follow the "I Care" rules. The
rules stress that "hands arc for help·
ing, not for hurting", an~ that peopl~
.are responsible for their own behavior.. .
· •
· The assembly tcatures a drawing · .
.
.
f~ students with prize . in_cluding a • ENJOYING TOUR- S.ndee Mlll1, eo-owner of McDonald'• of Pomet:oy, 1hoWII.et right, and Pomeroy
· bmhday party at M&lt;Oon;•ld s donated Elemenllry Principal Debbt. Heplonatlll, rc•r, enjoy a llghlhnrted m«M~~I wifl etudentl during~ lour
by Mills.
of the 1i:hoo!Frldlly eflemoon. The tour was pert of the SWAP (Supervlllon Wllh A Principal) progn~m.

We offer

. ..

ihink. I have had several women
write to me about it over the years.
(Never a male, strangely enough.
Apparently, wives don'tdo this.)
Resign yourself to the fact that
this is never going to change. Hal
has a psychological glitch when it
comes to nanies of certain people
close to him, and he will not use
them, no mailer how many times· he
is asked. Please understand that this
has nothing to do with you. It's an
idiosyncrasy that Hal simply cannot
conquer. Give him a pass.
• 'Dear Ana Landen: I am 28
years old and have been living with
my fiance for almost four years. He
is now vice president of a prestigious company, and I am a.regional
director for a national company

Pomeroy Elementary.and McDonald;$ participate in SWAP Program

II 992-3371.

.

Friday, Apr1124, 1998

O'hib"River locks and dams revisited at DAR

I

NHL Playoffs •••

.

also never uses a nickname or a tenn
of endeannent. In fact, he never
Ann
addresses m~ ai .all. He always goes
directly into .the conversation,
Landers
1997, Lot Anacles Timcs
whether in person or o-:er.the phone.
SyndlC'Ile 1nd Cn!atOII
Neill\er docs he address his parents
Syndieue, •
or mine by their names or relationships, although he ah• oys calls the
Dear Ann' Landers: I · don't childrert by name.
recall ever reading about my prob1 feel that Hal 'is not showing me
lem' in your column. I am a 47,year- the respect 1 am entitled to as his
old woman with four children, ages spouse. 1 have spoken io him about
9 to 18, all of whom live at home. I . this many times, and lie says he does
am a teacher, and my husband of 20 . not know why he never uses my
years, "Hal," is a chemical engineer. name. 1 believe it is sheer stubbornHe has always, been a quiet person - ness, and' it tears at my heart. Can
- ·a man of few words. He has no you help me understand this? --· Np
major faults, like so many husbands Name, No City
·
I have read about in your column.
Dear No Name: Your problem is
The problem is that Hal never not as uncommon as . you might

benelirs to playing a game at Ohio
By contrast. it's been a quiet
Stadium rather than putting the play- spring so far for the Buckeyes. For a
ers through their paces at just anoth- change. the quarterback situation is
er practice aj the Woody Hayes Ath- settled· with Germaine a solid No. I
letic Center.
and Garcia backing him up. No pre"The thing you learn is how good mier players are in trouble with the
some of those guys are going !a play law -or nursing serious injuries.
in ga'l'e-type situarions." he said.
"We haven't had many distrac- ..
The coaching staff selected the tions." Coop,er said. "Very few disteam~ on Wednesday. Some linemen
lractions...
•
will play for both teams.
Miller said, "I think everyone
. "The first-team defense will be knows now what's going to go on this
going against the first offense," season. There's been no controverCooper said. "It's going to be a chal· sy.••
lenge. It's ·not going to be a cakeThat's just the way Cooper and his
walk."
staff like it. Now if they can just get
For example. top receivers David ·through one more day of workouts ...
Boston and Miller (of the Gray
"We've had a pretty good spring
squad) will be running routes against so far." said Cooper. wrapping up his
starting cornerbacks Antoine Win· lith spring at Ohio State . "We got a
lot of work done with those young
fjeld and. A~med Plummer.
'
Quarterbacks Joe Germaine and kids. We .had a lot of contact."
BUCKEYE FAX: Tailback Joe
Mark Garcia (both .on the Gmy team)
Montgomery.
limited the last two .
will likely be protected from blitzing
comers and linebackers. After all, years by a knee injury, ha~n't missed
nobody ever won a national cham pi- · a workout all spring and is listed as
on ship in April but quite a few teams third on the. depth chart behind
may have lost one.
Michael WiMy and Derek Combs. ...
Exhibit A of what can go wrong Rob Murphy. Tam Hopkins, Henry ·
Fleming, Eric Smith and Steve Wiscam~ in 1984 when Ohio State quarlerback Mj,ke Tomczak went down niewski -all important elemenls on
with a broken leg during the second tlie offensive front wall - have
mis!&lt;ed all or most of spring workouts
quarter of the spring game.
with inju:ries.

NASCAR posts BGN slate, standings
II . qic~ Trickle~ 878.
By The Associated Press
wood 200, Darlington. S.C. CBobby
12. Tim Fedewa, 871. ·
NASCAR Busch Grand National Labonte). •
1'3. Elton.Sawyer. 861.
schedule, winne'rs iri parentheses,
March 28 - Moore's Snacks
14.
Glenn Allen, 839.
and driver standings: .
250, Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott Sadler).
15.
Phil Parsons, 817.
Feb. 14- NAPA Auto Parts 300, . . April 4 - Coca-Cola 300. Fort
16. Jeff Burton. 797.
Daytona Beach,
Fla.
(Joe Worth. Texas: (Dale Earnhardt Jr.).
17.
Tracy Leslie, 752.
Nemechek).
.
April II - dalaxy Foods 300,
18.
Tony Stewart, 745.
Feb. 21 - GM Goodwrench Ser- Hickory. N.C. (Ed Berrier).
vice Plus 200. Rockingham. N:C.
April 26 - Talladega 300, Tal;
19. Andy Santerre, 740.
(Mall Kenseth).
ladega. Ala.
·
20. Shane Hal). 700.
Feb. 28 - Las Vegas 300. (JimMay 9 - New Hampshire 200,
21. Joe Nemechek, 685. ·
my Spencer).
Loudon.
·,
·
22. Ed Be.rrier, 681.
March t 5- Bell south MobilityMay 17 - Core States 200,
23.:Mark Martin, 681.
24. lefT Purvis. 66So
Oprylqnd 320, Nashville'•. Tenn. Nazareth. Pa.
·
(Mike Mclaughlin).
May 23- Car Quest' Auto Parts
25. Matt Hutter•.66S.
March 21 - Diamond Hill Ply- 300. Concord, N.C.
26. Stanton Barrett, 61 S.
· 27. Joe Bessey, 604.
May 30- MBNAPiatinum 200.
Dover. Del.
·
28. Robert Pressley, 600.
(Continued from Page 7)
· June 5 - Hardee's 250, Rich29. Jeff Krogh, 593.
his stick in a collision with Damp- . mond. Va.
30. Mike Cope, 582.
housse. Br~net would later score
June 14- Pikes Peak 250, Faun31. Mark Krogh, 553.
from neariy the iilentical spoi. ·
tain. Colo.
32. Blaise·Alexander. 536.
"This series is going to be like this
June 28 - Lysol 200, Watkins
33. Michael Waltrip, 477.
alithe way ·through," the Canadiens' Glen. N.Y.
34. Kevin Lepage, 464 . .
35. Jimmy Spencer, 398,
Mark Recchi -said.
July 5 - Diehard 250, West
The teams are meeting in the play- Allis. Wis.
36. Kevin G111bb. 391.
37, Jason Jarrett. 391.
offs for the first time in their 31-year
July II - Myrtle Beach 250.
rivalry. even though they spent sev- Myrtle Beach, S.C.
38. Dave Blaney, 374.
39. Kevin Schwantz, 347.
era! seasons in the same division.
July 19- Kenwood Home &amp; Car
The crowd of 14.692 was 2.262 Audio 300. Fontana. Calif.
40. Bobby flillin, 334.
41. Casey Atwood, 318.
under capacity, and the Penguins
July 25 ~ South Boston 300,
announced repeatedly Jhat ample South -Boston, Va.
42. Dale Jarrell. 304.
1
43. Patty Moise, 290.
seats remain for their three possible
July 31 - Kroger NASCAR 200,
44. Lance Hooper, 290.
IC!Ilaining home games in the serie~ . Indianapolis.
45. Lyndon Amick, 258.
It was Pittsburgh's liut overtime
. Aug. 15 -Pepsi 200, Brooklyn,
46. Brad Loney, 228. ·
'playoff game since Petr Nedved's Mich.
47. Jimmy Foster, 217.
game winner decided their fourAug. 21 - Food City 250, Bris48. Wayne Grubb. J89.
overtime thriller against Washington tal. Tenn.
.
.
.
49cBobby Labonte, 180.
in 1996.
Sept. 5 = DuralubC 200. Dar·
50. Mike Wallace. 170.
In the only other game Thursda¥ lington. S.C.
51. Sterling Marlin, 146.
night, St. Louis routed Los Angeles · Sept. II - Autolite Platinum
52. Randy Porter, 146 .
.ll-3.
250. Richmond. Va.
.
- ~3. Jeff Green. 1~11...
· Blues 8, Klnp 3
Sept. 19 - MBNA Gold 200.
54. Larry Pearson. 131,
At St. Louis, Geoff Courtnall had Dover, Del.
55. Hank Parker Jr., -128.
a goal and five assist~ for a te~.m- •
Oct. 3 - -"!II Pro Bumper To
56,'
Kyle Petty, 127.
record -six potnts. Bes1des break~ng Bumper 300. Concord, N.C.
51.
Mike
Stefanik, 125.
the points record by one. he :llso tted
Oct. 17 - Carquest Auto Parts
58. John Andretti.'l24.
the franchise assist record. set by 250, Madison, Ill. ·
.
' 59. Dale Fischlein, 112 ..
Doug Gilmour in 1986 against MinOct. 31 - AC-Oelco 200, Rock·
60. Kevirt.Gywipski, I06.
pesota.. . .
ingham. N.C.
61. Andy Hauston, I 03.
{ Mario Lemieux was the last playNov. 7 - Stihl Power Tools 300,
62. Derrike Cope. 91.
er with six poinls m -a postseason Hampton. Ga.
63. Stevie Reeves, 86.
game. He did it i~ Pittsburgh'~ 6-4
Nov. 15 -Jiffy Lube Miami 300,
64. Rick Fuller, 82.
victocy over Wa.~mgton on Apnl 23, Homestead. Fla.
..
65.
David Green, 80.
1992.
Driver ltandlnp
66. Jim Bown, 77.
Jim Campbell. Pierre Turg~n
I. Dale Earnhardt Jr.; I, 138.
67. J.D. Gibbs, 76.
11111 Pavol O,:miti'a each scomltw1~e.
2. Matt Ken!ldll. 1.107.
68._Dennis Setzer, 70.
11111 Breit Hult hod a goal and three
3. Elliott Sadler, 1.09;2.
69. Morgan Shepherd, 67.
assists for the Blues.
·4. Mike Md.aughlin. 1.053.
70. Kelly Denton. 64.
· The Blues have had eisht soals
5. Randy LaJoie. 996.
71.
Dale Shaw, 46.
twice in the playoffs, against Van·
6. He1111ie Sadler. 970.
72. Doug Reid Ill. 37.
couver 'in 1995 and Winnipeg in
7, Buckshot Jones, 965.
73. Gary Laton, 34.
1982. They also tied a team rec«d
8. Mike Dillon. 927. '
74. Chad Chaffin, o.
with four second,period goals.
9. Jason Keller. 911 . ·
75.
Ron Barfield, 0.
10. Mark Green. 907. ·

Page9

·Hubby can't call·wife by·her first o~me - but is that ·a problem?

OSU football team prepares for· ·
Scarlet vs. ·Gray game Saturday
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -To
the coaches, it's not much 'more than
a practice with a big crowd . .
But t6 Ohio State's players, Sat- ,
urday's annual intrasquad Scarlet vs.
Gr~y game is not only an exciting
diversion from four weeks of humdru·m workouts. It's also a chance to
earn some bragging rights for tbe season ahead.
· "There's some pride involved,"
linebacker Jerry Rudzinski said.
"There's a lot of trash talking in the
spring game because you're out there
against your buddies."
. It may be difficult for even hardcore .fans to conjure many lasting
memories of past spring games, but
the players don't forget.
.
Safety Damon Moore didn't bat
an eye when asked if there was anylhing memorable abopt his p1evious
four spring games.· ·
"Two yearS' ago. Dee . Miller
. caught a pass·on Ty Howard on the
last play of the game to beat us," he
said grimly. It was . clear he didn't
exactly cherish the memory of a fellow defensive back getting scorched
by a teammate in front of 20,000 or
-so spectators.
Coach John Cooper said there are

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.

.

'

.

'l

.

.

• C,old Beer • Party Supplies

• Deli Sandwiches.. ·Made to·Order·
. .
..
.

• Video·ROOm
..

.

.We have herb plants, seed
potatotts, onion sets, t,rtmzer
and o~her vegetable plants tor
. your gardell · ·
'

We accept food stamps for .eilglble Items.
'
L

I

"

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'

I

6 •,

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�&lt;

..
Friday, Aprll24, 1998

o•The Dally Sentinel

Page 1

Serm.onette
each other for several minutes
before they crossed the field,
gracefully leaped a fence and
disappeared into the lush woods
near the creek. They must have
been the ones ·. I've seen there
several times before.
Is9' tthe Lord good?
One of my favorite Bible
verses is Psalm 42:1-2 (NASB ), •
"As the deer pants for the water
-brooks,
So my soul pants for
The day the Lord hath
Thee,
0
God.
My soul thirsts for
made
God, for the living God .. .'' A
By Bonnie Shiveley
simple walk becomes a time of
I needed to walk off some praise and worship. I loved
energy. As I Sal on the deck being right in the middle of his
steps tying the long shoestrings l)eautiful creation, enjoying his
of my hiking shoes ill'a..4ouble impressive creatures.
knot, 1 looked across the (counBack in our lane, the setting
tryside. Starting out our winding stin left the horizon .pale yellowcrushed limestone driveway, I orange.-In the heavens, a quarter
noticed two squirrels scamper- moon and single evening star
ing around a tall hickory tree. A . sparkled against the blue-gray
delightful bree~e and warm sky. Dark silhouettes of longtemperature caused me to praise necked Canada geese rose from
God, "Thank You, Father!''
the grass around the still pond,
On down the asphalt road. I painted by renections of the
stopped w enj oy Lois and Win- sun.set.
ston 's- spring lambs·. race from
I paused again to drink the
'one end of the barn lot to the beauty the Lord had creat~d for
ot her - round and rouncj they· · me to enjoy. Again His word
ran. Finally, the leader coasted came to me through Psalm
up to mama ewe, rubbed his II 8:24 (NASB), ''This is the
face against hers as . if to . day which the Lord has made;
announce, "I won''' and that fin- Let us rejoice and be glad in it.''
ishcd the contest. I chuckled.
Father, thank you for the
shook my head in wonder and relaxation that I nee'ded. Your
moved on .
.
creation , including playful
At the edge of a bright green lambs .· and graceful deer,
knoll in the freshly sown field, brought joy to my heart. Help.
three beautiful young deer sur- all of us to constantly look for
prised me' White tails nashing, You in everything in life. Amen.
they darted about 50 yards, then
Write Bonnie, P.9. Box 951,
turned to eye me. We watched . ·Xenia, Ohio 45385.

·Crime Victim's Rights. Week observed
The Meigs County Prosecuting Rickman, Hubbard's Greenhouse:
At(orney's Office ~nd .the Meigs Vic- Donna Nease and Vaughan's IGA.
tims' Program .is observing National · Cathy Le~ wife .of the prosecuting attorney, penned a poem entiCrime Victims' Rights Week. ·
The victims' program held an tled "The Silent Ones".
·open house today from noon to 2
p.m. at the pr.osecutor's office in THE SILENT ONES
Pomeroy; in addition the victims'
advocate program is planting a white Sometimes the silent ones must
dogwood tree in memory of victims speak.
of domestic violence, sexual abuse The throat contr~ ·ts, words cramp
and homicide here in Meigs County. within.
The tree was donated by Dale Hill of Disbelief and sadness, even fear
Karen's Greenhouse in Portland.
clamp down upon the heart, but
"Nearly' everyone in ,our commu- you can tell the . shadow tale· and
njty has been touched, either directly must.
or indirectly. by crime. When one A finger to the lips bears no relief.
.person is hurt by· cririle - a family . A brave streak shimmers in your
member or friend, neighbor or co- . blood.
worker- we all feel collective pain. · •
That's why today, as never before, Breathe in.
victims' rights arc right for Americi:' - LOok up.
,
and right for Meigs County," said Trees spread open arms_for you.
Lcntcs.
The sky blooms clouds to blot out
"Nearly one out of seven people pam.
who live in the United Stat~s arc vic- And birds trust co111passed wings
timized each year," he added.
to bring them home.
Susan Baker. owner of the Ohio
River. Bear Company in Middleport; You too can fly.
donated one of her bears designed to Yoo too believe.
be us.cd as a comforting tool for chil- Find words to livc'dren brought into the Meigs Viptims' You' re not alone.
Program. Other donors included Jim

· BEAR DONAnoN - In oblti'Vance of National Crime Victims'

~lghtl Week, ProHCutlng Attorney John A•.Lantal, left, I• .tlown

l!f8MIIIing Connie Doci.an and Chrlltl Lynch of the Milt• Victims'
itrogram an Ohio River Bear. named ~Hug•" that Will designed for
ttpt donatecno the victim•' program by Ohio River Beltr COmpany
r Susan Baker. ~e bMr will be used to comfort children who
been victims
of ebuM.
d
•
.
.

Community Calendar

RRIDAY
1. POMEROY ·- God's N.E.T. will'
~ doing the "Friday's Fun. Food and
ilellowship Project" Friday a1 6 p.m.
(~ teenager.~ using the center. Nutritional foods will be served to t~
t~nagers. ·
~ SA11JRDAY
i CHESHIRE- Bend Ami Gospel ·
Sing. featuring rour groups. saaurday, 1
~m. a1 the Old Ky~r F=will Baptist

~~:n': :~~~&amp;~

1
. ~ Jubilee,

POMEROY -

mittees, CNJ-1 and Amnesty lnlema·
tionaf. The U.S. Depll1ment of S111e :is also popular - maybe ·one of IO;'
pars
David Fri~d has planned for years applicants will land a position.
"International-relations students
to snag a White House internship,
designing his studies, jobs and com- always want to do the State Departmunity work' to . improve his ment," said· Jennifer Ceriale, an
chances. The controversy now international studies coordinator at ·
swirling around President Bill Clin- Syracuse' University. "It is kind of a .•
ton and former intern Monica· crap shoot as to whether you get
good work there, but it's prestigious
Lewinsky leave~ Fried unmoved.
·~r ve wanted to do · a White
to have on your resume and you can
House internship·since I started high get g(!Od assignments."
.
school," said Fried, ·a freshman at
Students can be blinded by what
Manhattanville College. in Purchase,' Ryan called "the ritz and glitz'.' of '
N.Y. "The scandal hasn't changed some internships. But what is more
·my view: I still have a great respect important is what they get to do.
for the president and the presiden"I tell the students that it's a
cy."
trade-off. You're going to do scut. It's a fascination with public work. You should also demand that
affairs that leads thousands of col- you get some policy work," said
Jege students like Fried to Washing- John Macartney, a Syracuse profeston, D.C., every year. Most interns sor and director of its Maxwellland unpaid posts in federal .agen- Washington International Relations
cies, on Capitol !-Jill, in think tanks, Semester program.
trade associations, pu~lic ·policy . Making copies, answering
,groups and .the news ,media. There phones, opening · mail, running
'
are slots for those interested in poli- errands are constants. But the work
'
tics, government, economics, the can include things like research,
arts, social services, .medicine and organizing events, coping witli canthe sciences.
stituents and drafting legislation.
"Washington runs on interns,"
In fact , active internsh)p proHELLO • Sam Scherfel, 3, meets El Bear, the mascot of the Meigs
County Early Intervention and Early Start program at a ChildreTt's said Mary Ryan, executive ,director grams try to steer students clear 'If
Fair held at the Rejoicing Life Church on Tuesday. The program was of the national Institute for Experi- places that provide nothing but cler·
held in conjunction with the Week of the Young Child, and lncludec( ential Learning: "They rea~ly are the ical work. In addition, the U.S. Sip•.
ex)libita and activities emphasizing child wellneas. Also pictured Ia unsung heroes of the day-to-day dent Association. a grassrool• lobb;t
Dr. Slllrln Nuggud of ACCESS/Gingerbread House, who coordlnet· operations."
.
'.
ing group, asks its members to pusil
ed the event. An estimated 150 children from various day care and
Most are llridergraduate or gradu- their campus coordinators to check
,
other age11cies visited the event.
ate students gaining -college credits the quality of the internship opportu.
.
and experiel\ce. They find the jobs nities they list and to keep student
through their schools, from ,online or evaluations on.file.
pri'nted guidebooks or through foun"The mission of internships is
dations specializing in internships. not to give employers cheap labor,"
Many go on to paid positions in or said Anthony Samu; USSA's nation· around government.
al vice-president.
·
Important
issues
in
the
world
of
What internships do is provide
(water doesn 't contai~ as much enerSPORTS AFIELD
interns
include
the
quality
of
the
.
employers
a chance to try out
gy), smoked oysters, and franks and
A Hearst Magazine
work
and
opportunities
for
lowprospective
employees. Across the
Oli short treks. pack "real " (ood, .beans. Good breakfast foods include
not dehydrated - it's better, ·cheap- canned hash and pudding. Don't income students - .but not the cur- country, businesses and graduate
schools increasingly demand some
er, and tastier.
bother with canned vegetables, rent controve~y.
"I've
just
totally
igllored
that
sitkind of internship or work-study
Deciding which foods to pack on they're packed with a lot 'of waler.
Beyond canned food there is ·a uation," said Christopher Pemie, a pr~gram . experience from .applithe trail can present a dilemma. Plan
right and every meal will be a lip- bounty of other eatables. Bagels, · University of Maryland senior cants. In Washington it's almo:~t a
smacking feast. Plan wrong and tortillas and pita bread, .for instance; interning in U.S. ltep. Eliot Engel's rite. of passage, said Howard Wolryou'll discover the real meaning of are filling ahd durable. Tbe same Capitol Hill office. "Anybod~ son, Congresswoman Nita Lowey's
grueling. But when you're preparing goes for ctackers and cheddar who's the least bit serious has let it spokesman (and a fonmer intern).
·
.
And internships in ·D.C. provide
a back-country menu, taste isn' t usu- . cheese: Smoked meat and cbeese go by."
About
30,000
interns
a
yqr
work
excitement
as well as experience.
ally the main issu,e. wrote ·Duane sandwiches last as long as the bread.
(n
D.C.,
up
to
1,000
in
the
White
"Interns get Potomac fever while
Raleigh in an article in the May JuSIIay off the mayonnaise and vegHouse alone.
they're here," Macartney said. "It's
issue of Sports ~field- it's weight. etables, ·which .won't keep.
To land· an .internship, a"student power and excitement. This is the
Conventional wisdom says that
Whatever foods you. take, don't
needs
' solid academic records, center of the free world, so to speak
to have a good time, reduce (atigue gc•. stuak in one track . Mix 'it up and
proven
interest in a field related to - it's al!lll a young person's city
and make a trip more enjoyable, you be careful to plan around your water
should try to shav~ as much weight sources. Bring coilVentional food for the position, and good recommenda- with one of the ·highest percentages
of young professionals in the world.
from your pack as possible. This the first couple of days, a~d dehy- tion letters.
About
four
tif(les
as
many
stuSo they find almost a campus atmosoften means going with dehydrated drated stuff for the tail end, And
dents
apply
for
White
Housc-internphere, specially in the summer: On
concoc1ions prepared speci fie ally don't overlook the dehydrated food
•ships
as
get
them.
But
in·
fact
the
Capitol Hill the'staff is young and in
for backpackers. But most excur- in your grocery. Tbere you'll find
most
sought-after
positions
arc
elsemany cases powerful and innuential.
instant
mashed
potatoes,
rice,
oatc
sions onto the trail arc for trips of
That's
a-heady cxpericnq:." ·
where
like
congressional
comthree days or less. Long weekends. meal, dty soups, noodles, instant
quick getaways. Iri this situ~tion, pancake mix, ~nd couscous. Tbesc
pack-weight becomes le~s imponant
- you're not dealing with the backbreakin~ effects of trekking for days
on end. For the short backpacking
trip, the weight you may save by eating dehydrated foods is less important than the pleasure you can enjoy
by eating '·real" food. which just
tastes better - and is cheaper.
When weight is your primary
concern. as it is .for long treks. dehydrati:d foods are indeed the correct
choice. These come in a variety of
menu options - from peach and
•
pecan chicken to vegetarian !'hili ~nd typically weigh less than a halfpound per entree, or· about half that
of their canned equals ..Dehydrated
foods can also•be more conyenient:
lust pour boiling water into the foil
pouch, cover and eat in about five
By; J,.ANNiptG TAUAFERRO
Gannett Suburban Newspa·

Apostolic

Po01eroy WeoiJide Church or Christ
33226 Qlildren's Home Rd.
·
,Sundar School • 11 a.m.
Worshtp. 10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

•

Sunday school

Fl'ft Will Baplisl Church
Ash Streel, Middlepon
Paslor: l.cs Hayman
Sunday Service - 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday SCrvice -7:00p.m.

Pomeroy Fint Baptist
Easl Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10)0 a.m.
First South~m Baptist
41872 Pomeroy P1ke
Pastor: E. Lamur O'Bfyanl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.I'Q ., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Kelly Celebrltl·es
195-75x14 only
995.

$3

Hickhry Hills Church or Christ
Evangdisr Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servil."e:i ~ 7 p.m.

' Baptist Church
lklhlehem
Oreal Ber\d , Rou1e 124, Rocine, OH
Pa~tor : Daniel Berdine:
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP.. 10:30 o.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedne'\day 81ble SIUdy - 7:00p.m.

Liberty Chrislian Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evening · 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service · 6:30p.m.

•
Old B&lt;lhd ·Frte Will Baptist Churth

.28601 St R1. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School · 10 u.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:3p

.

Hemlock Gron Church
,. Pastor: Gene :lppp
Sijnday school - 10:30 a.m.
'v._3rship- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
- • Reedsville Church or Chrlsl
.....~astor: Philip Sturm

Victoi'J Jlo,tiJIIP!depeJidaot
S2.5 N. 2nd St Middlcpon
Pas10r: James E. Kc~c
Wo~hip .

-,Sunday School : 9:30a.m. ·
Wetship Servict: 10;30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:31J p.m.

.

103.m.,·7 p;m. •

Wednesday Services · 1

P.m.

Cnristian Union

Failh Bapli•I -Church .
Railroad St., Ma.'iOO
. Sundo1y Scl1ool - IU il.m.
Worship - I I il.m., 6 p.m.
Wednc~duy

Ha1on1 Church ol Christi•
Christian Union
·. H~rtford, W.Va. .

Service;\· 1 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : AriUll Hurl

.

Rullond F- Wilt Baptist
Salem S1.
Pastor: Re-v. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Reorgilnized Church of Jesus Christ
of La_tter Day Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Se!'Vices. 7:30p.m.
The Churth or JeSUI
· Chrisl ol Lauer-Day SaloiS
S1. R1. 160, 446-&amp;247 or 446·-7486
Suoday School 10:20"11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :05· 12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- tO: IS a.m.
Hom~making mectin·g, h;t Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Catholic
"

United Methodist
· Graham United Methndisl
Worship -9:30a .m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
· 7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 41h Sun)

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pustor: Rev. Roalph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p".m.
Thursday ServiCes - 7 p.m.
Meigs Cooptralive Parish
Northeast Cluster
Po1stor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:3Q u.m.
Wor~ hip · II a.m.. tl:30 p.m.

Fn~t

Rutland

Snowville
Sunday School · 10 u.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Belhany
Pastor: Dewayne Stuller
Sunday School- 10 o.m .
• Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.
Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Rac ine, Ohio
PastOr: Dewayne S!uller
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
Bible Siudy Wed. 7:00p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m .
Wednesday ~ 7 p.m.
Racine
Pu~tor : B'rian Harkness
Sunday.School - to a.m.
· Worship · I I ;a.m.
Coolville United Melhodlsl Parish
. Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday.School · 10 a.m.
Worship .IJ a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7 p.m.

Ret'd.,itlt
Wurship . t):30 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:]0 ;1.m.
UMYF Sund,1y h .111 p.m. .
Suml.ty ol Mumh - 7·30 p m. ~crviL'c:

Pomeroy Churth or the Naurent
PaStor: Rey. Lloyd D. Grimm)r.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv~ces · 7 p.m.
Chester Church of tht Nazarene

South Bethel New Tt!tament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School · 9 a.m .
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
I

Pastor: Rev. Hcrben Ora1e
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p._m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

· Carleton Interdenominational Church
Kingsbu ry Rofl.d
Pastor : Jeff Smith
Su nday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 1OJO a.m.
No Sun d~y or ~edn esd ay Night Services

Rullond Church or the Nazoro~e
Pastor: Charles Swiggcr
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:31J p.m. ·
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3 I
Pas tor: Rev. Roge r Willford
Sundov School · 9:30a .m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Portlaad Flrsl Church or lht Nazaftne
Pastor: Mark Matson
Worship · IO:JIJ p.m.
Sunday School - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

White 's Chapel Wesltyan

· Coolville Road
Pastor : Rev. Phi llip Ridt:nour
Sunday School - 9:30 a.ni.
Worshi p - 10:'30 01.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p. m.

Other Churches
Hanrnt Outreach Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd .. CheSler
Pastor: Rev. Mary M(.':Oa niel
Sunday Services: 10 o.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Agape Lire Center
"Full-Gospel Church"
P~stors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-SOI7
Service: time : Sunday 10:30 u.m.
·Wednesday 1 pm

Faith Chapel Open Bible Church
923 S. Third S1., Middleporl
Pns1or Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday servkL~ 7 p.m.

.

Fairview Sible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: John Hart
Sunduy Schoql - 9:30 a. m.
Worship · ?:UO p.m.
Wedn t:sday Dible Study · 7: 00 p.rJJ.

.

Faith FelloW5hip Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev . Frankl in Dicken!'!
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd .
Pastor : Rev. Blackwood
Sunday 5chool - 930 a. m.
Worship 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wed ne sday Service-7:30p.m.

ChrlsUan Fellowship Center
Salem St. , Rutl;md ·
Pastor: Robc:rt E. Musser
Sunday School- 10 a.m
Worship · I 1:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Slivers ville Word of Faith
· Pastor: Dav id Dailey
Sundny School 9:30 ;J.m .
Ev~!ning · 7 p.m:
Rejoicing Life Church
50U N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Sunday service, JU:OU a.m·., 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:lMJ p.m.
Wednesday service, 7:fKJ p.m.

Pastor : Lawre nce fo rc m:111
Sunday Schoo l - 9:JU a.m.
Wor:-:hi p- 10:30 urn
Wcdne~da y Sc r vi~.:es- 7 p. m.

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom
P.Jstor: Steve Reed
Sunday School ; 9:30a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
,' Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Friday· fellowship service 7 p.m.

Church of Jesus Christ,
Apostolic Faith
,
-1/4 mile past Fori Mei gs on New Limo Rd . ~'
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:110 p.m.
Wcdncsday-7:00 p.m. •
Frida y-7:00p.m.

The Believen' Fellowship Ministry
N~:w Lime Rd., .Rutland .
Pastoi: Rev. Murgarct J. Robinson
Services: Wedncsduy , 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Cliflon Tab~rnaCif Church
Clil'lon, W.Va.
Sundi1y School- Ill a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
W~.:dne~day Service . 7 p.m.

Harrison"llle Community Church
Pastor: lheron Durhum
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

New Ufe Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipol is, OH
Pastor; Uill Staten
~
Sunday Services- 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p. m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; You1h 7 p.m.

or

Endtlmt House Prayer
(at Burlingham t:hurch off Route 33)
·Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday worship- I 0 a.m
WedncMio'1y service-6:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. R1. 124, Racine
Pa.stor; William Hotmck
SUnday School • JO a. m.
• Evening- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m ;

Middleport Community Church
575 P.carl S1., Middleport
Poaslor: S;1m Anderson
Sunday School lU 1.m.
. Evening - 7:30 p.m.
WcdncMJay Service - 7:30p.m.

Middleport Penttcostal

Third Ave.
Paslor; Rev . Clark Bakt.:r
Sunday School- I() a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Failh Valley Tab&lt;made Church
Uai Icy Run Road
Pastor: Rev . Em melt Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
'fhursday Service- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman S1., S)'racusc
Surlday School - I 0 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~.:c: - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
r

.

SyracuSl' Fint United Pn.'sbylerian
Pastor: Rev. Kri.-.;;1n;1 Robinson
Sunday School - I(I a.m:
Wurs hip · II a.m.
Harrisonville Presb)'terian Church
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sund:ay School - 9:45a .m.

BeJhel Clmr&lt;h
Township Rd .. 46~C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Wednesday ~t:rvices - lU a.m.

Community Church
Oft Rl. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday Sehoul - 1)::'\U a.m.
Worship , 10:31/ a.m., 7:311 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Gr:md Strett
Sul}day School - 10 a.m.
Worship· I l·a.m.
Wednesday Services- Kp.m.

DyeswiUe Communily Chore~·
Sund;1y School - 9:311 q.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Seventh -Day Adventist

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday school· 10 :1.m .
Worship · II ;a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Sevenlh·Oay Advtnlist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pome roy
Pastor: Roy Lawin~ky
Saturday Sctviccs:
Sabbath School' · 2 p.m.
Wor.. hip - 3 p.m. '

Rerdnille Fellow~hlp
Church of tht NazaRRr
Pastur: Teresa Witl(,leck
Sund;ty SChoOl .. 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
WcdncstiOJ)' Scrvi~·es - 7 p.m .

Long Buunm
Sunduy School ~ 'J:30 it.m .
Worship - HUO a.m.

.

Rock Sprin[lS
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.
Youth fellowship, Sunday · 6 p._m.

Middleport Chun:h or lhe Nazarene
Pustor: Gregory A. Cundiff
Sund;ty School - 9;30 a.m.
Wor,hip - 10:3U a,m.• fl :3U p.m .
Wednesday Servi~.:cs- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Doh Rando!ph
Wor~ hip · 9:30a.m.
SumJ;ay School- 111:311 &lt;J.m.

• Trinity Chul'&lt;h

Pomeror.
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wors~ip - 10:30 a.m.
Bible SIUdy Tuesday : tO a.m.

Nazarene

Chesler
· Pastor : Sharqn Hausman
Worship · Y oun.
Sunday S~.:hool • JO n.m.
ThursdUy Services - 7 p.m.

Co ngregattonal

Sundiay School- 9·a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Torch Churth
Co . Rd. 63
Sunday S'hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Atr,..d

Paslor ; P.J . Chapman
Sunday School - IU a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.
Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Second &amp; Lynn, Pome-roy
Paslor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sund.-y 5tho:ol and worship 10:25

54.':rvice - 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olin United Melhodist

O.J. While Rd. off S1 . R1. 160

Pearl Chapel

Pastor: Brian Harkness

. SL Paul Luiheran Church
Comer Sycamun: &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick
Sunday School-9 :45a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

' Chun&gt;h ol God or Prophtry

Minerswille
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship • lD a.m.

East.Letart

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wi.ilnut ilnd Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: Do1vid Russell
· · Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Apple ant.! Second Sts. ,
Pas!or: Rev . Da..,id Russell
Sund.1y S..:hool .and Worshtp· 10 a.m.
E..·cning Services-- 6·30 p m.
Wedndi~ay ~rvicts - 6:30p.m.

Healh (Middlepon)
. Pastor: Vernagaye Sullivan
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - ltl:30 a.m.

MorningStar
Pastor: Dewaync S1u1ler
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship - lOa.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. George Weirit'k
Worship -9:00 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Syracuw· First Chul'('h or God

Forest Run
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thursday Services · 6:30p.m.

Salem Center
Paslor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School · 9:15 a.m.
Worship - 10: IS a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servi(..-es • 7 p.m.

Rutland Community Church
Pastor: Re v. Roy McCarty
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
· Sunday Evening. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Randy Barr
Sund;•y SduXll - JO ~t . m .
Worship - II a.m., tJ p.m.
Wcdnc ~day Scrvi~.:c:~- 7 p.m.

Wor!Ohip- 10:4~ a.m.

•'

Laurel CUlT Free Melhodisl Church
Pastor: Dav id DeWitt
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m .
Wed nesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Rutland Church of Cod

Sunday Evening · 6:00p.m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mul~rry Ave., Pomeroy , 992-.589N
P;~stor: Rc-.. . Wallc1 E. Heinz
Sat. Con. HS -5: ISp.m.: Ma"· S:JO p.m.
Sun . Con. -~ : 45~9: 15 u.m.,
Sun. Mass -.9:30 :1.m.
Dailey Mtsss - S:30 a.m.

Run H~llness C~urch
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m .. 7 p.m. ·
Th'tmday Service-7:30p.m.

ML Moriah Church or God
Racine
Pa~tor : Rev. James Salter field
· Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Evening . 7 p.m. .
Wednesday Service~ - 1 p.m.

Aftliqully Bo,llst
Sunday School ' 9:31J a.m.

••

H~sell

C,;urch of God

Worship. 10:45 a.m.

·!

'•

. Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev . John·Neville
Children_'s _servi~e - 10 a.m.
Worsh1p- 7.JO p.m.
~ednesday Service -7: 30p.m.

Pastor:Jim.Hugh~

.

Evening· 7 p.m.
Wc:dne~;1y Services· 7 p.m.

I

Pine Growe Bible Holiness Church
1/2 mile off R1. 325
Pastor : Rev. O'Dell Ma.1ley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser-w ice . 7:30p.m.

Wedne ~ d:1y

MI. Mpriah Baptill
Founh &amp; Main Sl., Middlepon
Pas1or : Rev. Gilbert Craia, Jr. '
Sunday School- 9:31J a.m. ,

.

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Loading Creek Rd .. Rutland
Pas!Or: Rev. Otwey King
$unday school- 9:30a.m.
Sunday worshiP -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetlng-7 p.m.

Sunday School - 11 o.m.
Worship- 1:.1 :30 a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
, .Wcd~ay Services. 7:30p.m.

SJ.ln.day Schoo/- to a.'l'.
on;)up · I ~.m.

'·

.

Enterprise
Pastor :·Keith Rnder
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

Fl'-twoods
PaS1or : Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • ll a.m.

CaiYiry Pilgrim Chapel
Harrison"ille Road
Pastor: Rev, Victor Roush
SUnday S'h0019 :30 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7;30 p.m.

l.all[lSville ChrisJian Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
WorShip· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
w~~nesday Service 7:30p.m.

Hilllide Baptist Church
Sl. Rl . I43 juSI off R1. 7
Pastolo Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sund•y School · tO a.m.
Worship. J Ja.(n·., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

. .

.

•'

Syracuse Churrh ofthr Nazarene
Pustor. Ruhcrt J. Cot.:n
R;idio Ministry - R:tvL·nswod Station
4-4:311 Saturd:1y
Sunday School - 'J:311 a.m.

Haz~l

Failh G.,pel Church
Long Uonom
Sunday S&lt;.:houl · Y:JU a.m.
Wor.o-.hitl - 10:45 a.m., 7: ~0 p.m.
Wcdnc:sd&lt;IY 7:30 ~. m .
Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastur: Lawrem.:c Uush
Sunduy School · 9:30 il.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wcdneday St.:rvicc • 7 p.m.
Uniled Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pom~.:ruy Oy -Pass
Paslor : Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sund01y School - IJ:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.• 7 p.m.
Wednt.:sday Xrvicc · 7 p.m.

Middleport Pmbyttrian
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wo!ship • IU a,m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon l.Jnitfll Brethren
in Christ Churrh
Texas Communily off CR ~2
P3stor: Roher! SmuJer·:-.
Sundi.ly SchOOl · lJ :J\1 a.m.
Worship· IO:](I a.m., 7:j() p.m.
WedncSllay Scrvk:c~ ~ 7 : 30 p. m .
~•
2 1/2 miles nonh or Rccd~ville
on State Rou te 124
Pa.~tor: Re v. Robert M&lt;~rklcy
"'
· Sunt.l:1y Sehoul · II u.m.
Sund:.~y Wor:-.hip - Hl :(XJ a.m. &amp; 7:1Hl p.m.
Wcdn~· ~d;1 y ~crv~en - 7:30 p.m.
Wct.lnl'sday Yuuth Sc r'o' ice - ?::'\0 p.m.

Edtn United Brethren in Christ

&lt;

Full G.,pel Lighthouoe
331)45 Hiland 'Road, Pomeroy

....
'

•

.

• THE D LY SENTINEL
• GALLIPOLIS·DAILY TRIBUNE
• POIN.T PLEASANT REGISTER
IF YOU·R BUSINESS IS INTERESTED
•
Ill PARIICIPATING.II THIS ,·
SPECIAL SECTION
CALL:
.

Jfie~er ~ uneral ~ome

212 E. Main Street

••
••
•
.•'
l

•

.

... ,
•

DIY~ - HARRIS,

. · Davi•CMckal Agency Inc.

•

:,
-I

•'

••
'••
,.•

,,•

•

·'

RACINE
MOWE~ CLINIC
'

Briggs ~ Stratton
Master Se~ice Technician

'•
.,1

,,'

Pomeroy

992-3785

·'.'.

Ell. I 04

BEFORE·· y 1.1,-1998

•

•

992·2156

POII£ROY ·

Brodlord Church or Christ
Comer of St . Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Ministe r; Dill Ambergtr
Sun'day. School - IJ :30 a.m.
Worship · StOO a.m.,' 10:30 a. m., 7:CX) p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m. .

Mt. Uaion Baptist
Pas1or : Joe N. Sayre
Sun4ay S&lt;hoot-9:45 a.m.
Evening- 6:'lu p.m..
W~dnesday Services- 6:30p.m.

,.

Danville Hollnm Church
31057 Stale Roulc 325, Lan[lSvlle
P!!-Stor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service- 7 p.m.

Rolland Church or Christ
Sul)day School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Litllt
Sunday School- tOa.m.
Worship;- II a.m., 7:30p .m.
Wednesday Servke$- 7:·30 p.m.

·'

Holiness

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School - 9:45 a. m.
' Worship.- J I a.m.
Wednesda y Smices - 7:30p.m.

Paslor : Roy Hunter
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Even ing 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday· 7.30 p.m.

Worship- 10:30 a.m., b p.m.

•

Meigs County

801 W.IIAIN
112 Ul4
1/4 Milt down river from P

Bradbury Church oiChrisl
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Suodily School -9:30a.m.
;wvoiship. 10:30 a.m.

. Racine firsc Baptist
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 1(1;40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~day Services. 7:00p.m.

WI._
LL BE HERE -WEDN.ESDAY, MAY 20

--------------~-----,

Tuppers Plain Church orChrisl
Instrumental
Pastor: Scot ,Brown
Worship Service · 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m .
Sunday School · 10:15 a.m.
-Youth· 5:30pm Sunday ·
Bible S!udy Wednesday 7 pm

Flrsl Baptist Church
Pastor: Murk Morrow
6th and Pal mer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School, 9:15a.m.·
Worship - 10: l:'i a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00 ·p.m.

..

'

:Zion Church orChrisl
Pomeroy, ,Harrisonville Rd. (Rt .l43)
Pastor: Roger Wa1son
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 v..m.

Worship · 10:45 a.m.

IDI,.IO ·' 18

ln nation tn
Health 'Care
or

Pastor:Tcrry Stewart ·
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wors hip · 10:30 a.m ., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m

Sunday School-9:30a.m .

'

326 E. Main St., Pomeroy
Rector : Rev. D. A. duPiamier
Holy Euc:harisl and
Sunday Schooi!0:30 a.m.
Coffee hour following

Bearwalh&gt;w Ridge Churth of Christ

Rutland Flrsl Baptisl Church

J

Cnce Episcopal Church
·•

Keno Church or Chrlsl
Worship -9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffre y Wallace
lsi and 3rd Sunday

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plal•s St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Episcopal

~9:30a . m.

Worship· II a.m. and S p.m.

IEAL!I

'The problem with dehydrated
food is water - you don't always
have it handy. In the winter, preparing dehydrated foods often means
melting snow, a time- and fuel-consuming chore. And whal do you do
in arid area&lt; such as the .Southwest,
where water is scarte? Or when
water is plentiful along pan of the
trail but not all of it? In those situa- ·
tions you end up lugging your cook•
ing water, whi~h defeats the weightsaving function or tbe dehydrated
meal.
- Do the math '.for a three-day ,trip ·
and you' II discover that you save
only 3 pounds - ttie weight of a
quart-and-a-half of water- per person .by carrying dcl)ydratcd. 'food
instead of conventional groceries.
Factor in that your load gets lighter
with each passing ·day, and suddenly
regular old "heavy" food doesn 't
look so bad.
Almost any can!!Cl! food will do
for a main course, but I've found
that the tastiest and most filling
entrees ale the hearty ones like chi Ii,
beef· stew and baked and refried
beans. Some good ~hoices for snack
and lunch foods are also on the
meaty side and include tuna in oil

Middleport Church or Christ
~th and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
)'oulh Minisler: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8: 15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
~cdnesduy Services - 1 p.m.

Hope Baplisl Church (5:0uthern)
Pastor: Jim Diuy
570 Grant Sl,, Middleport

Real food -·not dehydrated for 2 short getaway

L!

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Church or Christ
2t2 W. Main S1.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday Sdlool· 9:30a.m.
Worship- !O:JIJ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

..

Includes mounting &amp; balancing

·

RebmJTeachcrs. Satunlay, noon, Trio- •
ily Outh. Pometoy. Maijorie Conwie
and AnJe EVIW to speak on sdlools in
New Zclland. .

MONDAY

CHES'ffiR - Chester Alumni
Association ' meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at Chester United Methodist
Olun:h.
RIJ'Il.AND - Rutland .G'arden
Club, regular meeting, Monday, I p.m.
at tile home o( Dorothy Woodard,
Langsville.

-

Monica? Who cares? Just give me
an internship in Washington, D.C.

minutes.

!

Friday, Aprll24, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

'94Q.2B04

·Support your
local
churches
Place an ad .in this space

.. .. .

SAVE TIME ··
WITH A
,CLASS/FIE{] AD!
-'--··

'

c'l nc.

Crow's Family Restaurant

264- South Second Ave.•M~, OH 45760
740-992·5141
Bruce R. Fisher - Director
590 East Main

s- •

POmeroy, OH 45769
740-992-5444
· James R. ~"· Jr. - Oirec:tor

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E: Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

St. Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.
985-3308

Buy, Sell or Trade

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955 ·
Pomeroy

Sentinel

992·2121

Check the Sentinel
every Friday!

Pomeroy

992-5432

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Searching for a
local church·?

106 Mulberry Ave.

Clean out your basement
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy OF attic with the he)p of the
'Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken'

EWING FUNERAL .HOME
Dignity and ServicfrA/ways
Established 1913

Time to clean house?

in the

CLASSIFIEDS!
SNOUFFER .
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middle rt, Oh

.,

CLASSIFIED SECTION!
. :francis FLORIST

---· ...

Meig3 c;ounlyi Oldest Flori.tl

740-992-2644 .
740-992-6298

l""'t IJa ."io•n•• Your 'l'h.~lu. l'itA. Spedal CaN

Advertise your
business each week
In this space
and support local
churches

'.

. '

•

�·•

•

'

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Variety of causes and treatments for hoarseness
By DR. STEPHEN ROTHSTEIN all) dasarrx.·ar\ uvcr time un tts own.
New York University School of
But v.hcn hc&gt;.&lt;rS\'ncs\ lasts longer
Medicine
thnn IWt&gt; or three weeks, a me"dical
For AP Special Features
t'\a)uation h In order.
Nearly everyone. including the
Smul...ing. for example, c.:an cause
President of the United States. .1 chron1c Jntlammauun of the vocal
develops a hoarse voice at &gt;Ollie J.:OILb Il Gill ~ll\n IL·ad 10 cancerous
time or other. Hoarseness is cau,cJ gro"..th~ (\II the cord~. a scnous co nby a disruption in the nonnal opera- Jittlm tha! may rl!qUi rc MArgery or
ti on of the larynx, which contains r.tdtaticm therapy treatmcnl.
the vocal cords. It can be produccJ
II pol yp' ..rc the cause of a hoarse
by a viral infection or respi ratory 'ou.:c . they ~an also be removed sur·
tract illness: excessive use of the g1c.llly to 'olvc the prohlcm. l"he
voice from yelling, too much drink- phy " iL' Ian may recommend some
ing and smoking , digesti ve dJSurdcrs I) pc ol vo1cc therapy, such as voice
such as heartburn, even dry air in the modu!Jthm tc12hni.q~es, .to help prehome. In a child. prolonscd crying Yen\ n:tum ol the· po l yp~. provided
can also produce a croaking voice .
the under!) mg ...:a u ~c 'i ~ bcmgn .
Continued overuse of the vocal
rhac arc m:wy ways to tame or
cords can also cause n odul e~ or
polyps. small and usually bcn1gn
growths on the cords' mucous mem brane, that can interfere with the
nonnal fun ction and closure M the
-voca l cords, bringing on a hoarsl'
VOICe.

Wheth er caused by illnc » &lt;•r
· 'voca l cord abuse. the condition u;u -

trL"at a hoarsl! . voH.:c: Por hoarseness
cau,cJ hy o' cruse of the voice or by
a re;,p1ratory tnfcrun n, resting the
'OILC m;_w he ull the trcarmenr nccd l.'d D\ln ·( ~rc..th tu an)'onc not close
cn d u~h ll) tou~..:h . Othcrwl!)C. you' ll
have to ratsc your voice. And. if
lm 1.1rscnc~., is caused hy g ~stri c
JUt cc~ . wh~ ch

c&lt;m irriL1tC th (' l ar;~ nx ,

treating the heartburn may help.
Speak in a normal voice. Qon't
whisper. Whispering is an abrasive
way to use the voice. producing
tense, abnQJlTla! vocal cord motion.'
Inhale steam to lubricate the vocal
cords. Stand in a hot shower for 10
minutes or so, or run a humidifier in
the house. Moisture is inore important than heat; however, and drinking plenty of liquids is good for you.
Throat lozenges can be helpful.
Avoid smoking. Eve n seco ndhand
smoke can irritate the vocal cords,
ancl shun caffeinated beverages and
alcohol. all of whicl) are dehydratmg.
If a hoarse voice lingers for a few
weeks. especially if accompanied by
any difficulty in breathing or swal lowi ng. it would be wise to have the
condition immediately evaluat~d by
a physician.

Business Services

".....,~. :or
"''""'~- ~.

E.rimates
446-4759

Dr. Stephen Rothstein is Assis- ·
lanl Professor of Ol&lt;alaryr•go,lo~:y
at New York University SchO&lt;al
Medicine.

era, Court Houae, Po"'aroy, next two years Is One

Ohio 45769, untll12:00 noon Hundred Thousand Dollars
on tho 27th day of April, ($100,000.00).
,1 998, and opened and read
BE IT FURTHER RE aloud at 1:00 p.m. on thai SOLVED , that noti ce be
dolo from any financial given to all banks in said
Institution legally eligible County and such other
which may dulro to submit ·t lnan clal institutions as may
a written appllcotlon to ·bo 1 be necessary as provided
Public Depository of tho by law. All applicants shall

Active, Inactive, and Interim submit , In writing , their
deposito of public moneys Institution 's policy con-

of sold Boord •• provided
by tho Uniform Depooltory
Act, Section 135 of the Ohio
Rovlsed Code.
Sold application shall be
made In conformity with the
lollowlng rooolutlon adopted at o regular meeting of
the Meigs County Boord of
Commlsolonors hold April
13, 1998.
' BE IT RESOLVED, that
tho ootlmatod aggregate

cerning th e lollowlng: (1)
Charge lor checks; (2)
Service c har9e ; p) Mi nimum

balance requi red; (4) The
amount of the $3,000,000.00
qualified for . under 30% of
total non -public assets ,

(10% Savings and Loans,
non-public assets ). Said
Board
of
County

Commis sioners

maximum amount of public lnactlve , and

lunda oubjoct lo tho control
of oald board to be Acllve
dopooltlngo at any one time
during tho next two years In
Throo Million Dollars
($3,000,000.00). Tho ostl·
mated aggrogolo amount of

reserves

the right to reject any or all
bids. Awards 'for the Active,
Interim

deposits of public lunds
subject to the control of
said Board will be made on
April 27, 1998, lor a period
of lime commencing on the

1st day ol May, 1998. Each
applicant sha ll fu rnis h a

4576t:

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

.

YELLOW FLAG
YARD SALE

JEFf.-WARNER INSUUNCE

40%:

-·-· ---- ---

--·-·--.~t .

·-lai-'"'W-

f::t

~

.

You were our encouragement,

Our strength and wisdom every day.
With guidance and love in good times c111d had
You always knew what to say.
What did you have to show fur all you have done '&gt;
· Did you realize the lives you had touched''
We hope you knew how proud we were ol yo u
We sometimes wonder where you hid your w1 ngs. ·
'For you must have been an angcl.. .that would cxpla!n
It sent down from the heavens above .
To show all this world, your 2 boys anu ) girl '
The true meaning of Love.

e.,

The greatest compliment we could receive in th i' Ill
And we hope someday it will be as such
That we are wise and caring, full of love
And understanding as our moth er was before us.
Trul y missed hy hu.,band,
children and &lt;&gt;ritncl,,-h ;ldr~•. n

r,.-••Ht•

Itt
Across
. . . Ahlly Sentinel .

· IUWIIII·BOiRD

lnch:weekd~rs

•.,.

Inch Sundar
AT992·2155

Happy

tTRUCIING

16th
Birthday
Princess!

Gallia·Melgs
Communltr Action Agencr
1010 N. State Route 7
P.O. Box 272
' .Cheshire, OH 45620•0272·

INTERNET SIGN-UP POINT
POMEROY, OH '
740-992-1135'
4/13/111 mo.

Variety, Quellty en4 loll¥ Prlct

.Hanging Baekete $6.13 ·
R,tbloo_n;ol!'ll Lilli!, HOIII, Ptonlu, Bleeding H..rll, ale.
Variety of Perennials 94¢
· Fruit &amp; Flowering Treea, Shruba, Pine• &amp; Azalee1
Morning Star CR 30
Rac_lnp, Ohio
9411-2115

\

(614) _992-3838

Two /Four Fam 11 y: On Saturdav

April 25tli Starling At 8:30 A.M.

Women• Clothing, Plua Sin
Clothing, Boys Infant /Toddler
Clothing And Umited Mens Cloth·
ing Are Available , Location 7
Mllea From Gallipolis On Teens

Run Road, (JustO" Route 7).
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

"6• Mile Yellow Flag yard sale,

12/t8/lln

Pomeroy I Middleport May 1 ·2.
Regis•r. pick up your flag axtay.

LARRY'S LAWN
CARE

Advanc;•. Otldllnt : 1:00pm

Sunday &amp; Monday edition ·

Mowing [Residential &amp;
Commercial)
e Weadaoting
e Tree Trimming
• Shrubbery Moinlananta

-e

· FREE ESTIMATES

Plan ahead. Cali
today for free estimate
742·2103 or 44'"3622

614-698·5716

or
614-698-723'1

P/8 Contractors Inc.

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

3130/'QII 1 mo pd

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

. •Bobcat'Servli:e
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commerclel and
Roeldentlel
24 Hr. Bobcet Service
AVIIIIble

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop Be Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

FrH Ellf!Mt.l
No Job Too Smell

Brian Morrison
(740)985-3948

i

I
I

985-4473

''

7/22/thl

4'111 .....

LIMESTONE

CHEVALIER'S
CARPET CLEANING
SPRING CLEAN
SPECIAL
50% OFF ALL

Special Thru
Mareh
8 ton Delivered
$120
Mileage Limit
Call Randy

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Cleaning
258 Pearl St.
Middleport, OH
.992-0077 .

992-5050

Computer Graphics
De_s lgns
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
. •Commercial
•Realdential
Owner, Mickle Hollan
Cheater, Ohio
740·985·4422

(Lime st~ne~
Low Rates)

;

•h•

day before tht ad Ia to un,
1:OOpm Frldq.

Huge yird u 'le- JOhnson's, 114
mile up Wolf P«l Rd. oH 1.3. Apt'U
24·25. 9am-5pm . Lots of large
size clothes lor men and women.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

WICKS

HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
liop Soil, Fill Dirt

Anliques &amp; clean used furniture,
w ill buy one piec:e , or complete
hou t ehold, Osby Mart1n, 740·

992·65'/e.

614-992·3470

Buying Standing Timber &amp; Land

Wilh Timber, 740~82-7318.

BALI.£DAND
BUALAPPED lltEES

N0rw1y Spruce,
White Pine end
Clnldlen
Hemlock
Delivery Available
Hemlock Grove Road
Pomeroy, .Ohio 45769
Ph. 740-992·7285 .
After4 P.M.

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CUISSIFIIEDSI

ANNOUNCEMENTS

C1Eian Lale Model Can Or
Trucks, 1Q90 Modell Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eas t·
ern Avel"lJe, Gallipolis.
ford Tractor BOO Series No Deal·
ars, 740-446·3874.

&amp; 0 Aura Parrs . Buy.ng
wrecked or salvaged vehtcles.
304·773-5033.
.

J

O ld wooden phone booth . old
barber cha ir. pedal cars &amp; juke

box. 304-576-2106.
Person.a ls
Wanled To Buy: Junk Aulo's·Any
005
,.,.,....,,......,..-::-;_.,---I
CondiliQn, 740-446-9853.

Daily Chec::kal Proceuing
I Waf'lted To Buy: Used Mobile
From Hornell! Free Details: Write Homes, 740-446·0175, 304-675·
Checks, 3825 Niagara Drive 5965.
(A1A). Lexington, Kentuc;ky

40517

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

'.

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
'

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

"'- !

CHESHIRE
FOOD MART

Open 24 Hrs. A DaY
7DayaAWotk
Hot Breakfast
Blacull Sandwich,
· Hot &amp; Cold
Lunch Sandwich
Including PIZZI
12" $7.49 Deluxe
All Topplnge
C1~ In Ordtra Accepted
.740-387-7838

~------~------~~----------~-

'

Hanging Baakete,
Phlox, Azaleas, ·
Shrubs, Spruce
TrHI
Open Dally 9-5
Sunday12-5

CALL

1·740·949·2015

4/1e.w1

•

HUIBARDS
GREENHOUSE
mo

:!l2!~·· i

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o

COMPANION I
, EXT.88M

$2.H Per Min.

Galila ·Meigs CommU'nity Act ion
Agency MaY Be Able To Assisr

MustOe 18Yra.

Serv-U (81gl145-8434

You In The Fotow1ng
Wavs;.
.

30 Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May

a. Enlil!H

To Recei~ Your Oia·

Red Cron

·

tllegu~td

tl'aining

dan

now forming . Beginning Sunday.

MOW 3td. Coii7&lt;10·SI92«ll3.
Giveaway
40

Training: Shorr Or Long Tetm
Training In Fltkll ~ch AI Com·
purttra, Nuralf!g Astlatanr. COL

And Olhorl At Area Schooll.

I -· ~So~u~nd~~~:.!~1::~Coii74D-3e7·
Or 740-H2-

Experienced salesperson- Home
Furnishi ngs, Carpet. Wind ow
Treatments, Furniture, Resume
To : Tope Fvrnnure. 15 1 Second
Avenue, Gaii[Polis, OH 45631 .

pl\collarl

-

-llolfo COftVftUrthy

AcllooAgoncy
~QIIox212

8010 -

51110 Rouse 7

c....... Olio 45820-0212
Equal Opporanl)' e..._
(tOOWAOI

FRUSTRATED? NO REAL ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
GLAS~ CEILING?

As Followed:

• Guaranteed Hourly Wage
Verses ComrruSion Program
• Top Retail Cof'l'Vniaston
. With Prices
• Heallh Insurance Available
• Paid Vacations
• Stcx:k Purchased Ptan
• Manager Is Ellg1ble For·
Monthly A~ Amual Bonuses
• Supplies Furnished
• Merchandise DiiCOunt
• Advanced Training
• ()pJ»rb.lnity For Advancemef'll
For More Infor mation Call Bill
Rooker, 1-888 ...888 · 7778 Ext.
HVAC lns1aliers Needed For Ex·
panding Company For !natalia·
tions Ot Healing &amp; Coating Equipment In Manufactured &amp; Re1 1·
dentiat Houstng
• 3Yrs.l;xperilnce Needed
o RSES Corofied

•PaidVacaions
o Paid

Hc&gt;idays

• Excallt~nt W..gas
inlerview A.ppoinlmlnll Only l
Bennens Heating &amp; Cooling

740-445-Q418 Or 1-800-8725967, Gallipo"•· Oli-45631.

Immediate openi ng lor e1perl ·
enced Detail/ ClearFup person.
Apply 1n person ar Don Tare Mo·
tors. ine .• 308 Easr Main Strttt,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

·

Immediate opening lor aa:peri·
enc;ed aal•speople in new end
used car ulel· compedrlve sal ary and wofk s~hedule. Apply In
per~on ar Don Tare Uorora, In,,,

Accurately. Send R11ume With

Requlromonll To Golllpo\io
Daily Tribune. CLA 433. c/0 Gill!·

Solooy

polls Daily Tr ibune, 825 Thud

Averue, GaiHpoli' 0H 45831 .
Tr uck drive rs ne~ded to deliver
!lowers in 24' Ryd8f' ttuck, COL &amp;
medical card required, call 7•0· .
2-4 7-2664
.
W:a nted· pan t•me bartender and
kitchen help for pr1vate club. send
resume to : Bo.x 32 long St. , Ru -

tland. Oh 45775.
WILOLIFE JOBS TO $:11.10 MR .

Inc. Benefits . Game Wardens,
Seeuriry, Mainranace, Park Rangan. No Ea:p. Needed . Fo'r App.
And )~I'm Into C_all 1-800-8133585; Ext 64 75. 8 A.M.· 9 ~M .. 7
Days Ida, inc

110 · Miscellaneous

ahar 4pm.
1 BO Wanted To Do
ANY ODD JOBS

cJuded .· 304~75-7154

A Glen,..rk-Genesla Facility

EOE

RETAILLENDINO OFFICER

Shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed, mulch ing, llbwer beds, land scaping,
sidewalks, edging, mow tng,
etc.. .. Free Estimates. Call Bill

304-ll75-1112.
ANY ODD JOBS

Shtubs &amp; weeds vimmad, mulch·
inO, flower beds, landscapi ng,

• Self Molrlation

oidewalk edging, mowln~.
304-875-7112.
B&amp;B Lawn Mowing &amp;Londocajoerc ... Free Estimates. Call BJII

• 1 ·2 Years Lending Experience
Thia Positi on Often A Generous
Benefits Package Including •01K
Reurement, Opportunltv For Ca·
reer Advancement , And Merit
Bonus Opportunities. Salary
COmmenaurate Upon E1pet'ience.
Experienced And Qualified Person• Should Submit A Resume
To: P.O. Box 240, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.

ing, ·Experienced Professional

Services. Competitive Rates, Frae
Esllmatea, 740·388-8080, 740·
258-1219.
Dependable man will mow. ti ll
small gardens, paint, pu1 up 'hay,
etc . Free Estimates. 30"·676·

3628.

.

Duttbus1ers Proteuionai Cleaning; Commercial And Residential

EOUAL OPPORTUNIT-Y
EM.PLOYER
SHAWNEE MENTAL
HEAlnt CENTER, INC.

Can Aher 5:00 P.M. 7&lt;10-388-9422
Free Estimates.
Experienced carpenter will do remodeling , dec;ks. vinyl tiding,
plumbing. Free estimate•. C•ll

Scioto County C~nic_

•
ADULT CASE MANAGER - Re- Jim Shull. 304-875-1272. Refer-

quires A Bachelor Degree And
Ohio LSW Or LPC , Must Have

ences upon request

• .

KnOwledge Of Comrruni\y Support · FurniiUre repair, refinish and rea·
System Components; Extensive 10radon, also cusmm orders. Ohio
Knowledge And Background In Valley Refinishing Shdp, Larry
Mental Health Printiples And Cri· Pt-illips, 7&lt;10-992-8578.
sis lntervenlion. CompelltiWI Georges Portable Sawmill, doo't
Salary And Er:cellent Benef~t 1
haul your logs 10 lhe mill juSI call
Package. Full· T ime Position · :JJ4-675'1957.
Available lmmediatelv. P'laase
Apply To SMHC. Inc .. Ann .: Peo· lne•pensive
made-to-order
sonnet Director, P.G. Boa: 1507, gr&amp;ating cards, pari)' invitarions.
Portsmouth, OH 45662. Or FAX : business cards, resur..:.es, etc .740· 353-.8206. Appl ication, Ac-- c;all Grac;le' a Gr11llngs, 7-40 c;epted Until Position Is Filled
742-1 007.
EEO -'AFVH

SunPius Home Health Services,

Lawn Mowing, No Lawn Too
Smail! 740-379- 2502, For Eati·

Inc.

matea.

SunPius A Rapi'diy Growing Di - Lawnmowing, roofing, paintir'lg,
versi fied Home Health ·Agency odd jobs wanled . Top quality, reaHas Several Openings For LPN &amp; sonable rates. Call lor tr. . esH·
CNA's Current LPN License &amp; matea. 740-9D2-~49.
CNA Cerritica1es Are Required.
Please Submit Resume Wilh Sal· Mowing, ttimming Or Odd jobs; ba·
ary History To :
byaiuing, any shift. Call Jim or
Paula in Minersville, 740·992 ·

4288 ·

Ann Claypool, RN

~
S
o easionai ,ree ervlce, Stump
Removal, Free E-.timates l ln surarice, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388-

Pr f

SunPius Home care
10249 Chilltcothe Pike ·

456_4_o_--l
--.,Ja_c_k,._n.;_,_Oh_io_

The Meigs Local School Dia.tricr
IS currenrtv seeking applications
Smith al 614-992-7.WO.
from certified appli&lt;:ants for As·
Full or part time, sell starter, moti· sistant Varsity Football Coach,
valed to suc;c;eed. must have Reaerve Football Coach (2 posisales experience and be able to tions). Freahman Football Coach
work with public, knowledge of (2 positions) , 7th &amp; 8th Grade
floor covering &amp; decorating a Football Coach, Boys' Aaaiatant
plus. long time c;ommitment nee· Varsity Basketball Coach, Boys'
Reserve Baskelbail Coach. Boys·
essar~. send resume to : Daily
Sanlinel, 'P.O. Box 729-60, Pomar· 9th Grade Basketball Coach,
Boys· 8rh .Grade Baaketball
"'· Oh.45769.
Coac;h, Head Track Coach, As·
1istan! High School Track Coach
HAIRST'ILIST !SALON
(2 positions) , Middle S'hoai
MANAGER
Smaro SiYie Will Soon Be Opening Track Coach. Auisrant Middle
In The New Wai -Mart. Super School Trac;k Coach, Head BaHCenler (And II Owned B,- Regia ball Coach, Reserve Baseball
Corporation) And Wilt Be HWing Coach, Girla' Assistant Volleyball
Several Hair Stylisls, As Well AI Coach, 'G irls' SofrDall Coach,
A Working Salon Manager, No Giria' Rea.erve Sohball Coach,
Clientele Needed, Juar Have Girls· Midd le School Volleyball
Sheers &amp; Ucense·At Hand, &amp; 'He- Coach, Girls" Assistant Middle
Shall Supply The Rear. BaneUtl School Volleyball Coach, Girl s"

Now hiri ng safe drivers, Qood
pay, florlblo houro. ~ In per-

QG.l8, 614-367·7010.
Shafets Lawnc:are SetYic;e , Fr9e
Estimates, Call 740-441 ·03t8.
We Do IJirrti Siding, Replacement
Windows, Roofs, Room ~tiona,
Remodeling, Cetamic THe &amp; Hard·
wood Floors, New Construction.
No Job Too Big Or Too SmaH t
Contac;l Joe Saunders At 740 ·
446-2450, References At.tlilllbie.
Will haul Junk

or

trash away. $3SI

pidwp bad. 304-675-5035.

Will Mow &amp; Trim Lawns, Reason able Ra.es, Conract Joe Slur\·
ders At 740-448--2450.
~

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity
71h Grade Basketball Coach, Mkldlo Sc;hool Newspaper Advisor,
INOTlCEI
High S~hool Cheerleader Advi·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING C!l.
sor, Middle School Cheerleader

Adv ltor, Junior Clan Advisor,
and Quiz Team Advisor for the
t 99S.99 s~hoot year. Applicants
must hold a valid Ohio teacAing
cerrificate and lor coaching positions mull meet cer11lita1ion requirements of Ohio lor spor11
medicine and CPR Persona in1eresled 1houtd contiCI Bill Bucleley,
Superintendent. Me•gs Local
Schoo.! Oisrr•ct, P.O. Box 272, Po·
rnen&gt;y, Ohio.
Town of New Haven 11 now ac: cepting applications lor position
ql 'cort1fie&lt;f" 11\o guard lor lho Now
Haven sw 1 mm 1 n~ pool. Piek up
appliution at City Building. InqUires call :JO.t-882-3203.

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
II You Are lnteteated In Oblalni ng A Comm~rc; ia i Dr ivers license As A Truck Driver And II

210

rec;ommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send monev through the.
mail unri1 you have investigated
the offering.

HOT NEW DIET EARN THOUSANDS While Losing We ighl
New M.LM. Oppottunity, Calll ·

1188-1!57-9968.

230

Professional
Services
Joo'oT'I•VCA s.rvtco
Free Esrima1es
AR Work GYaranleed

304-87!1-1724

l tvingstM' s basement wate ~·
proofing, ali baaemanl repa 1ra
done, tree estima te•. liletl me
guarantee. tOyrs on job expellenoe. ~4-875-21•5.

You he Ao;sloceted Wort&lt;er.

REAL ESTATE

Gatiia ·M11g1 CommunitY AcUoli
Agency May Be Able To Assist
You W11h Tra1ning. Telling, And
Related Cost&amp;.
•

31 o

Homes tor sale

3 Bedroom Ba. .menl, Cen tra;t

Air. Carpeled. $30,000 7&lt;10-«8-

{ A O•slocar&amp;d Worker Is Gener-, 1124, 740-«IHIB:t
al!w A Person Who Haa Worked
AI Least 12 MonlhS AI One Oc· 3 Or 4 &amp;edroam Ranch, OptionAl
cupat1on, Is Now Unemployotd Or Family Rqom; CA. 2 Balhl, lr,·
Under Employed Oue To A Bus.i · Ground Paol, E•traal $73 ,000
neu Closing Or Cutback, And Ia 7&lt;10-4&gt;46-4173.
.
•UnlikeCy To Return To Their flrev:
!
lo.ut Occupation. There Are Ad · 4 Bdrm, 2 bath, Pl. Pio';-bnl
ditional Oualiticationa, However homo .. IIOOaq.h. E&gt;. cond. I
noi{lobo&lt;hooc!. 304-175-71211.
Income 111 Not A Factor.)
4yra. old; • bedrooms, 2 t/2

Four Wteka, Training Will 81
Conduc;tad In Marietta, Ohio Or

Ashland, l&lt;onlu"'Y·
son 11 Domino'lin Pt.
oont
l)poning For Experlenoed Morine
OoNio -Motto Conwt~~nlty
ACIIoft Agency
Technician. Apply AI Big
water Toya. Choahire, Ohio,
P.O. Bo&gt; 212
111110 Norlh s... RoouiO 7
387·7Sl2.
Cholhiro, Ohio 45120-om

'*• - call 30H75-t2721or mort lnlor·

-120 IHr, No Door
a.outllul puppioa. mother rl9i•- Door, $8Easy
C11h. F.un, 1-800·
~~~...;o:~~~~~- 11\her Sloof- 381-o.lee lnd/tii!Np.

•

ed, 740-682-7318.

To

To Find Our It You Qualify PleaH
family room, In l i N -Call 740-367-7342, 740-U8- botho.
brook. Priced. in 130'a. --875JTPA ·PrHP1018,.0r
7&lt;10-992-682g
And
Ro308 East Moln StrHI, Pomeooy, ,quell A JTPA Pretppllcat10n . 5118.
Ohio 451'1!11.
'
Tr1inlng PauOd Is· Approximately H.. ,. lot ule nexl to

3 minen paw kltiena, gray wirh

wN•.IInor rolnod, 7&lt;10·H2-T.Ie2.

penters And Carpenters Helpers .
-References, TranspOftation, Valid
Drivers License And Tools Re·
quire d. Christian's Consttuction,
inc. 8 -5 P.M. 740-446~4514 .

• Paid Medical ln....ranc;;.

Employment : We're Lookmg For
Ofivetl To Perlorm Delivery Du·
liea in Gallia Countr.· Oaytlme
Work , On A Regular Schedule,
Monday Through Friday, $5 . 15
Per Hour, Up To 20 Hour! Per
Week. We Al10 Have Non· Dnv ·
ing Jobto Nailoble.

1. \liar Old Dot (Pori Golden R• Do lolh: Work PerJ-Timo, At·
rrtovor !Shephard) H11 Boon l8r1d Clan Part-Time.
Sf}IJtcl, Friondly, 1&lt;10-3118-HSI.
2-0idl.lb.740-388-91117.

25550.
EXPERIENCEO Roofers, Car-

.

LOOKING FOR A JOB

1·100-21!1-1217

Experienced legal Setretarv : require good com put er sk1lls •nc;luding WP 5.0 : knowledge of
pleadings and other legal document&amp;; proper telephone eli·
queue; and general office skills .
Send •esume to : Bow CW· 18 cJo
Point Pleasanr Reg ister 200
Ma in St: Pt . Pleasant, WV

Agtnclet. Must Be

Handle Dffloe Without Supervltion And To Typo NOIJI' And

Kings1ze wat&amp;i'bed wlheadboatd,
Kingaize walerbed w/out headbOard. mattulll , heater, liner in·

P.O.Box311
Hunllnglon, WI/ 21108

45701, EOE!ESP.

1873. '

Help Wanted

AOE ~5 OR OLDER

en-esn

Eaeter Flowera,
"anelea, Cabbage,

•Septic Syste~s
•Basements
. •Excavating

•

For More lnlormatton 1·888·

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

·JACKIOE liD .·
DOZER SERVICE

aanipolt, OH 45631.
MEETYOUA

Suppllea AI.No Cot! To

HUIIARDS
GREENHOUSE

Jl 'S

GenUeman Seeking Compansion·
ship From Nice Female For Ta lks,
Walks &amp; Friendsh ip. Send Re·
piiea To: CLA 309, Clo Galiipolia
Dally Tribune, 825 Tt'lirt.l Avenue,

pr ivate non· profit based
At he ns, Ohio. B.S. or M.S. in
Community Heallh, emphasis on
human sexuality. 4dvocate for reproductive health issues . Con·
duct community
education
through speaking engagements;·
wo rkshops and developing col ·
laborative eirorts throughout eight
counties. Travel required . Even·
ing and weekend hou rs requ 1red.
Send tener of interesr, resume
and three employer references by
April 27 , H198 to Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast OhiO, 396
Ric hland A~enue, Athens, Ohio

II y~u are employ.ed ~nd feet .vou
are 1n a no ga1n 11tuahon, you owe
il to yourself to consider joining
the Loewen Group. This ia a high
income proreaalon,. rapid ad·
vanc;ement pollntiai, and self·
satisfaction helping families. for
your last job in.terview, c;all Steve

Antiques. top prices paid. River·
ine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio.
R-uss Moore owner. 740·992·
2526.

Hartt.g• Manor
101 13th Strttl

• Banking BaCkgrQurd Prelerred

Wanted to Buy
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·

ver And Gold Coins , Proofalts,
Diamonds, Anttque Jewelry, Gold
R1ngs, Pre - 1930 U.S. CurrencY.
Stifling. E1C. Acquisitions Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis. 740·4"6-~2- •

con am:

• Ea:callenr Corm~unication Skills

Experienced Timber Cutler Need -

90

all things. Call (3041 525-7622 or

174-:J01 Easl 5th Ave. Suite 112

Cof'licana. Texas 75110.
Educator - lull tine lor

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auc;tlcneer. complete
auction
se rvice.
Licensed
f66,0hio &amp; Wes1 Virginia, 304 .._

773-5765 Or 304-773-5447.

Nurolng Aaolltlonlo

Fr•sh Challenges Leading to
Profetsional Growth at Heritage
Manotl Seeking RNa, LPN• and
CNAa. lull and part·time, br varl·
oua shifts . ReaponsibUitiea includ.- direct .care, adminiatration
and documenrarlon, medication•
and treatments . Uuat be licensed
and cettified in WV. Tuition reimbursement. health, dental , vision,
hearing, life and 401(k) with employer contribution offered. Glen·
mark-Gan esi1 means quality in

Earn St ,000 Weeki•. Swffl~ en-

'
·~
veiopes, no prior experience,
free
E
deta•ts. send SAS to : N.B. Dept

cessories, Beanie Babies. Misc.

Llcenud Pract&amp;cal NUrMI

. Cortlltlld

Seektng An Experienced And
QuaiUied Individual For A Full Time Retail Lending Position. To
Oualily for This Position The Ap ·
pkant Will Need To Have:

odHion
·2:00p.m
.
Friday.
MondiJ
OldHion
•·t n1 ay,
· 10:00 a . m.~u
Satruday. April 251h. 8:00 A·.M.. '

o To ST. Lots 01 Olher Baby Ac-

Rogr.-HurwH

A Southeastern O hio Bank Is

Ace, Dept 135t, Box 5137 , bU•·
mend Bar, CA 91765.

Help Wanled

Help needed-Experienced c;ooka.
kitchen help, waters &amp; wa itre11·
ea. hoa1e11e1 , bar·lenders, e.xcellent pay, flexible houri. Send
resume to : Twllttrt Sports GriD
t 07 Academy Drive Ripley, WV

No Obligation. Send LSASE To :

thedaybetoreth•.c:t
Ia to run. Sunday

Saturday 412519&amp;-AI 8:00, Irvin's
Glasa, 1273 Eastern Annue,
Gallipolis, Boys And Girls Clothes

Umntone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer .Sitea
Lind Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syatem &amp;
Utllltlea
Elllmat.e s

Gra~e Campus.

velopes At Home. Start Now. No
Experience. Free Supplies, Info.

842 112 First Avenue (Garage
Behind 842) Recliners, Desk,
King Size. Waterbed, Cuh Reg is ter, Craft llama, &amp; Misc ., Call
For Info 740·446·3059.

~~~~~:~--~~~

$950.00
_$50.00

.

I

f)lugs, SWitches, &amp; Electtical Wail
Oudets; Handling Ba1ic; Plumbing
Problema ; And How To Do Vari-

Earn S1 ,000 Weekly Stuffing En·

AIJ.. Y1rd 81111 Must
B• Paid In Advance.
PEA!!LINE: 2:00p.m.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO•.

Professional Floor
Covering

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Fiala

75% Off

PUBLIC NOIICE

··

"We don't 1111111t to make money, we j11st
want to sell flotllers.,

Save Up To . . .

Career.Opportumties

Take·the pain ou,t of
painting, and let me
do It for you.
Interior
Before II p.m.
leave meaaage.
After&amp; p.m.
(740)9115-4180.
Free Eatlmatel
419/9e 1 mo. pd.

Covered.Will Be: Repairing l.lmp

Held On OUr Rio

&amp; VIcinity

OFFERING WDLE MAKING SUPPLIES.
2 ner Angel Blrdblth
Fountains, lncludea pump,
· lor $129.00 ·
Candlet, Relllll,
Atromatheropy,
Wooden Angeli,
Stuffed Rabblta &amp; Bearf
Open Tu11.-F~. 1H
Sot. 111-4; Clo11d Sun. • Mon.
At. f24, MlntrtVIIII, OH
. 740-992-4559

CARPET
PLUS

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

BINGO

I

V/4J1'FN

PAIR --April 28, 29, &amp; 30 From
8:00 P.M. ·10:00 P.M . Topics

~~~~~~R~d--A~r~e~a,~R~E-.
=
ous Wall Repairs. CAll BUCK·
1
_.
Sale
EYE HILLS CAREER CENTER,
70
Va ru
ADULT SERVICES TODAY AND
==========I
REGISTER . 700-245-5334 Ex1.
Gallipolis
209 --Cost $45.00. Class Will Be

All Yard Satoa Muot Be Paid In

NOWI

IUI'I Pleasant Valley
:
~---------~--'~H-_o_s~p_l~-----------'~~~·o~E ~

'I

LOST : Male Golden Retr iever ,
child's
answerA to 'Tanner·

COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP

•Room Addition•
I'
'.
•New Garag81
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alao Concret~ Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Give us a call for system repairs,
sales, upgrades or consult1ng. ·

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR:

MON.&amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
~UlLAND . .·
POST 467
·STAR BURST

VarcoRoad, 740_.46·3745.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER"SEVICE \

'"Your One Stop
Computer Shop"

.

.

too

~

Phone 740-992-3987
Free Estimates
Owner: John Dean

COMPUTER
PERFORIIANCE
UPGRADES

PICKENS

HAULING

992·5583

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
lff:oi
ill''• Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding· : ii'.o!:
Commercl.al &amp; Residential
;...
lll.~ 27 yrs. exp. ·
Licensed &amp; Insured iii"'

"'DI'~O"'"'"mwc:n

I

Evenings) 01 BASIC HOME RE·

Found: Large Brown Ma!e Dog,

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

lfn..

CELLULAR PHONES

614-992-5479

Just In Time for Those Spring
Repairs .. ·. T~elve Hours (Three

Oxy- Accet Regulato~ Repair
Welding Supplies • Steel Sales
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

Joe Wilson · !
. (614) 992-4277

740· 245· 5334 Ext. 209. Tul·

lion: 14o.
00-ITYOURSELF·ERSI

60 Lost and Found

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
·

·t:~~~;t~~c~~~~~~
~ JD CGNSTRUCTION ~

R, L. HOLLON
'·TRUCKING

IN MEMORY OF MARY LOU PROFFITI
WHO PASSED AWAY FOUR YEARS AGO
TODAY, APRIL 24, 1994.
Just now we are beginning to understand
Some of the challenges you have had .
With all.of the struggles that life dealt you
We rarely saw you sad.

RADIATOR REPAIR

la~er.

:

. '

"&amp;"MILE

(anyllme) oo 304-875-5955 aller
8pm Wed lhru Sal.

day, Uay 18, ,Q98. Both Cla11es
Are From 9;00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
Contact Bu ~keye Hills Career
A~~~L--;-::---:--1 Center, A'dull Serv iG&amp;&amp; Jg Rvg-

4111/1 mo.

"Build Your Dream"

. . . . . . . .'\JQ

tentJal. No exp neceuary, must
be 11 laast 18. Call 614-992-6387

13

OPENINQ SOON

DANCERS WANTEO $$$

To good home only, wery playful
male cat, neutered . haa had
Unar trained. 304·675-7625

M&amp;J

1998 Martin Street ·
Pomeroy, Ol&gt;tlo 45769

$$$

110

Help wanted

F1111111e. Poaaibly Part Bel· AVON I A.ii •. Areas I Shirley 25271.
and Lpyehle Speart, 304-6 75- t 429.
DTR Truck Driver Needed, COL,
:;;-.-.,~--- Call (7401
and Hazmat Requ ired , Fiat Sed
Avon · U -$20 IHr. No Door To E&gt;porlence CaH 800-~2-5238 0&lt;
Free pupplet, seven wnks old, Door. Eaay Caahl 1· 800 · 2i6 · (7&lt;101''4-:J358
molhor Atr-Ia, falhor o•lmallan, 0138 \ndlsll/rop.
POSTAL JOII TO 111.:15 MA.
graatwilh !Udt, 304-863-8351 .
CPA • FIRST AID COURSES Inc. Benefi!l. No Experience. For
Free to good home, German For Those Indivi duals Working App. And Exam lnlo., CaU 1-800Shepherd/ 4ustalian mi:.: P\IPS, 1111 With The Pubtic And fOr CtlMcken. 813·3585, Exl 6'74. 8 A.M. . g
Two Classes To Choose From! P.M .. 1 Oayslcta.inc:.
·
males. Y&lt;I0~7-7302 .
Saturday, May 2. 1998 Or SeiUr·

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

LOAD

state ment ot condition
.Tho object of the
signed by Ita Caohler or complaint Is 1 divorce and
Parts and Serv/ce/1
other authorl:ud officer. tho prayer 11 tho ptatntlft be
App lications should be granted 1 divorce from tho
•Mower• •Chain Saws •Weedeaters •Authorized
sea led
and
marked defendant, llmporary end
. Dealer For:
"Application under lhe 'porminenl cuolody of the
.
•Brlgge
&amp;
Stratton
~MTD •Murray •McCollough
Unilorm Depository Act." I parties' minor children and
Gloria Kloeo, Clerk ·child oupport.
•Echo ·Rtobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
·Meigs County
You are required 1o
ANDOTHERSI
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT
Commissioners answer tho complaint within
lrltgs &amp; Strallon: Master Service Technician
(4) 17, 24 2tc
28 dayo for anower will
END TO END
commence on that dll•·
OuiMof' Power E.,tpmtnt A~sodation: Certllied 2 Cycle
Public Notice
In case of your !allure lo
MAY 1 &amp; 2--- ALL DAY
State Routji33B • At VIne • Racine, Ohio
anewer or otherwlae
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
(614) 949-2804
reapond •• required by tho
COURT OF
Ohio AuiOI of Civil
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Procedure, ludgmont by , r----~-...,.....,.. ._.....___.....__;...._____,., ,...::::::-::-::=~=:=-::~~:=-:~~~~~
Jacqueline S. Milam
doleult you
will lor
be the
rendered iI ·
i _
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS ··
Plaintiff,
agalntt
_ IMIACr .,IICIMf
vs
demanded In the
1
'11EAT :
William Ira Milam,
(4) 10, 17, 24, (5) 1, 8,
I,
Will 1M Eoeluolvo POI...od
Defendant
,
MIRROR':
Case No. 98-DR.007
Tf:fJINILOCV'
1
. 360° Communications
Notice JlY Publication
To William Ira Milam,
whose laat known addreaa
was: c/o Nathan and Pam
Milam, 1805 Strawberry
I;
Lane, Cleveland, TN 37311;
Sentinel
you are hereby notified that
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH. .
you have been named
Classifieds
de1endant In e legal acllon
992-2156
enti tled Jacq~allne S.
OFF
Milam, Plalntlft, v. William
...
· Ira Milam, Defendant. This
Position immediately available
action haa bean aaolgned
.... ...-.. ......
tor mobile home Toter Ortver.
PINE GROVE
CHESHIRE
\JOJII-•••
Cose No. 98-DR.007 end II
Must have COL License.
pending In the Common No Sunday Work .·Must be hard
FARM FEED&amp;
FOOD
MART
110 CITHII Wllr11CI'W' CAlf t:CIIt'A/161
Pleas · Court o.l Melgo
worlcing and honest.
Open 24 Hrs. A Day
SUPPLY
County, Pomeroy, Ohio
Benetits include VacatiOI'!.
7 Days A Week
QUALm WINDOW SYSft.S
Insurance. and 401K.
33100 Pine Grove Ad,
Hot
Breakfast
Pomero
Ohio
!192-4119 or 1-80C).291·5600
Starting Pay range $11-$12 Hr.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
Blocult Sandwich,
If this sounds like you then
740-949-2461 ·. .
..
In Memory
please apply at:
Hot&amp; Cold
'
Lunch Sandwich
Quality Service
Pf.l Gr- .........................16.25
Pizza
Including
In L~ving Memory
For All Your ·
12% COII'fleta H0111 ...........1S.60
12" $7.49 Doluxo
OfROBERTN.
Garbage Be
In •ftblf .......................18.00
All Tapplngo
CLARK ·
Call
In
Ordora
Accepted
1
Rubbish
Show ihkkttt ..................... 7.30
DUMP TRUCK
who passed away
740.367·7838
'lhtsl priciSIII for SO# bag
Pick Up for
18 years ago
. SE~VICE
Residential &amp;
·April 24, 1998.
Agricultural Ume, ·
Commercial
The memory of someOPENING APRIL1
Umestone • Gravel
(No moss left behind)
one dear is like a
..' .
Ohio River
Cell
Dirt· Sand
treasure of gold
Campgrounds ind
,J 985-4422
I
OHIO RIVER SfRVICE
'
.
That never dulls or
Bait
&amp;
Tackle,
&amp;
Gravel, Sand,
Chester, Ohio
740·949·3006
tarnishes or never
Gen. Merchandise.
. 11112........
Llmeatone,
Dirt,
Top
..
grows lhe least bil old.
New &amp; ulod llama. We
Soli, AnYthing you
Buy • _Sell • Trade; Toolo,
We cannot bring the
need to haul.
lllhlng equip., TV'a,
past back,
J&amp;LSIDING&amp;
CB'I, aterooa - little bll
Howard L. Wrltesal
No lob
am111.
His face, His hancls we
of everything. Located
INSULATION
Some too big.
cannot touch,
on Ohio 'River Camp•
• Vinyl Siding • SoHir
But we treasure, loving
grounde, St. At: 124,
740-949 4802
• Fascia • Seamless
Recine, Ohio.
memories of him .
740-949 4803
740·949-101.
2
Gutter • Raaling
Whom we loved so
Gutters
•
Replacement
Windows
much:
• Statianary Doclcs
Downspouts
Sadly missed by Son,
• Blown lnsularian
Gutter Cleaning
Larry &amp; daughter-in• GaJagl!s • Declcs
law, Joy, and
Painting
24 x 24 Pale Building
Grandchildren Tamra,
FREE ESTIMATED :
stor~ng at $5995
Penny &amp; Wendy
Hauling, Excavating
..
740.992-2n2
949·2168
&amp; Trenching
Umeitona • Gravel
Card of Thanks
Sapllc Systema
....---=:--~--- -1""""'-- --Trailer ·• HouA Sllea
Boyd's
Re•aonablfl Rat.,
.Landseapine
The · .family of
Joe
N.
Sayre
Love,
Mowing, Mulching,
Marshall
(Bob)
.
Pruning
TIM'S CUSTOM
Adams wishes to
Clean and Install Gutter
express their sincere
Flowers,
CARPET
thanks to those who
Brush
Removal,
Public Notice
Install New Beds
Just off Bradbury Rd.
remembered them In
Free Eotlmatos
(Look for signs)
prayer, for the many
OR MORE
"Go Anywhere "
Middl
Oh
cards, vlslls and the
No job too oman.
eport,
PER
GAME
beautiful flowers.
Mon.-Sat.
740-992·5379
Special thanks to the
BEECH GROVE· ·
(740) 669-8904
Day.&amp; Evening Hours
41&gt;211 mo. od
Racine Emergency
ROAD
Squad, and to Ewing
•
Funeral Home, Dr.
Singh and the other
doc;tors · at- Holzer
Hospital who aaCompetitive Salary &amp; Benents .
sisted him during hie
hospitalization-. Also
Assistant Executive Director of
the Ladles at . the
Racine Fjrst Baptist
· Patient Care Services
The
Gallla-Melgs
CAA
Is
Church and others
Required:
who prepared the
looking to purchase six
rr Bachelor or Science In Nui;'Sing
•
food for the family.
rr Five years minimum experience at a senior management level
developed lots or land that can
Pastors Larry Ha·
Preferred:
.
.
ley and George
be
developed
Into
six
lots
In
Weirick for their
rr Masten d~ree In Nllfsing or related field
comforting ytorde,
Meigs County. The land should
Send resume and salary requirements to:
('
Diane lhle andjl.llllan
ha~e all utilities available. The
Hayman for their
William A. Barker, Jr,,
·
music, and Bob and
.land should have access to
Assistant Executive Director of Admlnistntlve Services
Dorothy Stewart for
central sewage system. For
their beautiful tlngPleasant Valley Hospital
•
jng. Your thought·
more
Information
please
2520 Valley Drive
1
fulness 11 appreciPoint Pleasant, WV 25550
,
Samantha Rumley,
ated and will never · contact
•
be forgcitlen.
Housing Developer at 992-6629
Florence Adams
or 367-7341.
&amp; family•
,•

and Blac;k Mh~ed Breed

Remodeling

Custom Homes

.,

7411-9811-4174

Public Notice

cop y ot Itt moat recent

740.985-3831 .

SPECIALS ON SPRING CLEANUP

4124111 1 mo.

Beautiful. Friendly, Black Puppy,

11 o

Help Wanted

110

Did. 304~75-5505.

Near Chester on St. Rt. '7

'

Motl'ltr AKC Golden Retriever Excelt.rll opportunity lor !he rlghl
'Fa'* Uri&lt;,_, 7&lt;10-370-21138.
girt $500(• )per week earning po--

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICES

CALL NOW TO SET UP A LAWN
MAINTENANCE PROGRAM.

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

ad Call992-2156

Giveaway

Black mala killen 1bou1 Swks

LIMESTQNE DELIVERED

$65 A

place on

•GRASS SEED .

CLELAND'S GUftiDOR
· MAINtENANCE
STARTING AT

To

• MIJI,(;U

'

• Vinyl·Siding • Garages
New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

40

• FERTRIZER
• GARDEN SEED

9:0D-4:~~~kdlyl~

·The Dally Sentinel• Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

9:00-12:00Saturday .
---J~~~!;;;~!l,_..;_J_' L:AO:::V:::A:NC~OO~DA~A:IN::A~Q:!;E,!S:!YI::T::;E:MS::,~IN:c;;_.----...,jltlli:&amp;l...J_,

LO"G'S
CO"STROCTIO"

1998

Business Services

Coll992-2156

Tllppera Plalnl, Ohio 45713
740/985-3813
4" thru 48" plastic culvert In stock
Full line of water storage tanka •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Water line· 100' thru 1000' Rolla
Sewer Pipe • 3" thru 8" , Gas Pipe &amp; Regulator8

Qalllpolla, Ohio 45631
• Top • Trim • Removal
· • Stump Grinding
· Insurances
20 Yrs. Exp.
- Ins. Owner: Rick Johnson

·

NOTICE FOR APPLICATION Inactive fund s for 30-60-90
UNDER THE UNIFORM
days , 6 mcnth a, or 1 year is
DEPOSITORY ACT
Three Milli on Five Hu ndred
· MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Thou sand
Dol l ars
Nollco Is hereby given ($3,500,000.00). The estimatthat applications will be ed aggregat e amount of
received by tho undersigned Interim funds for a time to
at tho onlco of tho Board of be d ealgn~led by the
Molgo County Commission- County Treasurer during the

To pl,a cc an ad

St. Rt. 7

•

Public Notice

--·-- - --.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Call 614·843·5426
Public Notice

Friday, Apr1124,

Friday, Aprll24, 1998

Part•tlrM ••pefltnced caretlktr
for m~ elderly mother. Please

~~---------------

Equal 0s&gt;J&gt;or1Jnil)' E~
110Tt).t.DI

Sltl'=l

Elementary s,hGCIII. lhrH
room, livirtg room, famUr roo'""

Iorge gorogo with ltiOI:hod -11thop, one and 112 ac;res. Mulft

- 10 -~··
1375-Bpm
~I••

oeN 740-llt-.

=

Polnll lr••· Log home, a
bedrooms, '2 batloo. hall ba...

! Wl3
~~~.::;:~~:
Cllr ~~~-. 11 ,000, 744).

-'-----

flt2·1'1111fl0r8pm.

r

'

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�•
- -·Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aprll24, 1998

~ __. ·- -~-- --~··.

--·-·- ' --

. ·- --. · --- . . L_ .

t F~y.~I24,199B

""

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

~

•••

IlliDGE

·'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

~

••'

PHiLLIP

'

420

large lelectian or used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooma. Sllrting at $2995.
Quick del ivery. Call 740· 385·

1

lhls news:~r is subject to

•

:
1

•
1

1

•

. .:

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to adver1ise "any preference,
limitation or dlscnmlnat10n

9621 .
1998 Ooublewide 3br, 2 baths.

It ,699 rdown $259/mo. Onlv at

Oakwood Homes Nitro, ~ 304-

755-5885.
M'ake 2 Paymenta Move In No
Payments After ~ Y&amp;ara, 304-736·

7295.
This newspaper will not

Nov! 3 Bed100m Home

know•ngly accept

Onlv $169.00 Per Month
1·800-251-5070

actven1sements for real estate
which is in violation of 1'1e
taw. Our readers are.hereoy
Informed that all dwellings
advertised 1n this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

New 1998 14:~10 three bedroom.
includes 8 months FREE tot rent.
Includes skirting, deluxe a1eps
and setup. ·only $187.08 per
month with $1075 dowQ. Call -t -

800-837·3238.

nancing available .
7191.

BEDROOM HOMES PROM
$4,000 local Gov'L &amp; Bank
Ropo'a Call1 -800·522-2730, X

w.va.:

'

304 -755 -

Commercial Of residential. -487 11

SmaN 2 Bedroom Mobile Ha,.. In
Porter, Close To Stores &amp; Hospi·
tal, Trash &amp; Walor Paid , $2351
Lto., $235 Deposit Available 511t
98. 740-388--9325.
.

blew1de Display In 26 Years
Down, 304--736-340;.
...

3041 , 740-992-3557.

Single Parent Progr1m. Spectal
2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes. Payment• 11 low ••
I1BO.Call mw304-755-5885.

,A4iddleport, beautiful !WO atofy, 3
2 bath, large l.r. &amp; lr., oak
doors &amp; trim Smith's c:ustom oak
Ci,llbinets, J~nn - a ir range, diahvtaaher, demched garage, by ap·

pointment, 740-992·5243.

Special 16x60 3BA. 2 bath.
$1 ,325 Down, S205 Mo. Free air
&amp; freeskirling. 1-600-691-6177.

MODULAR HOUSE AUCTION
A 26'x58' Ranch Stvle Modular
House Will Be Auctioned To The
Highoot Bidder On Mav 9, 19118
At 12:00 .Noon At The Bockeve

SPRING SPECIALS
$491 Down
9.9 Fb:N Alln
$198/Mo. Paymanto
$17,995 on 3BR:

Hilla Career Center locate'd At

frH Delivery &amp; S.t·up

Rio Grande, Ohio. Public Viewing

Only At Oakwood Ho._

Monday Through Friday From

Nllro, WV. 304-755-5885

9:00 A. 11. To 3:00 P. II. Pleaoe
Call 740-245-5334 For An Appolntment Formal v....ng 01 The

Hause Ia During The Buckeye

Hills IO~io Valley EXPO,On Sa~urda)', APfil 16, And Sunday, Apnl

. 19, 1998: 12:0Q Noon - 5 :00P.M.

Each Day.
•
MUDSOCK RD.· All BRICK

diato posee..,on, $15,000 cuh
or negotiate land
517

Free Set·up &amp; Delivery Only 3

Lehl Onlv at Oakwood ljomes "'I·
lro WI/. 304-755-5885.
Ver11 N1ce, 16x80 Redman 3 Bedroo:Oo, 2 Full Baths, Garden Tub,
Kilchen Appliances, Central Air,

Repoa
Double Wldes And Single Wldes
' Won'tlalll.ongi
Call: l-888-73&amp;-3332
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
SUAU.. BUSINESS,

•St4.

COUNTRY ESTATE)
63 .95 Acres, Approx. 8 Acre

Both

Lake Mobile Home With large
Add 'On Dan, Gallia County.
County Water And Electric

tnaulated

Calline~ , 1 12,800 ~ ~·· 74().368-B6?8,

Room Central ·Air, Gas Hee\ Full
easement Level Lot. Large Catport Located On Second Street,

Galipolis, 740-4&lt;18-2573.
Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 Bedroom Aparunent, SIDY8, Re-frigerator Included, No Pets, 740-

We Uovedl Usad Furniture Store
Below The Holiday Inn In Kanau ~
ga, Ohio. Beds. OreS&amp;efs, Couches, Ma1tresae1, EeL Hrs M-T· W.
ICl-4, (7..0)4-762

2 Bedroom Aparlment, 10
Umutea From Holzer Hupilal,

$3751Mo., Plus Doposi\ 7ol0-441 ·
1519.
2bdrm. ap11 , rotal electric, ap·

pli1ncea furnished, laundry room
lacihties close to aehool in IOWn.
Appllcailons available at: Village
Green Apts. 149 or call740 ·992~

.

530

•

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET.PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
~om S279 to $356. Walk to ohop
&amp; movie•. Ca
. II 740 ~448·2588 .
•
Equal Hou~ng Opportunity.

Buy or sell. Riverine Anliques,
1 t 24 E. Mliin Street, Or'l Rt 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : U. T.W. 10:00

With water Tap sa.ooo, 740·2541·
·
1789 Serlou• lnq~irieo Only.

4 Building Sltea-2 Acres each.
con'ittn!ent yet private, 8 miles
frvm Point Pleasant 1 114 mite otr

Bethel Rd. aH Sandhill, no olngle
widea. S14· 18,000ea. 304·875·
71l48 belore 9pm

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise .

113 cara~ round diatnflnd soUtaire,
olze 6, paid 1800, wil take $550;
Marquis wedding set 112 carat ,
size 7, paid •1400, will take
dl
lth 11
$1250; wed ng gown w ve
size 7, paid $700 wiN take, $300;
740-387.0288 or 740-949-2481 .

304-675-1137.

FumiJhed Efficiency All Utililiet
Paid, Share Balh. $165JIAo., 817 46· 1nch big 1creen TV with free
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 740· &lt;VCR. Only 118 down delivers to
446-31145.
your door. Call Horne P10cludl @
1.8QO.779-(1536.

1-~~--:--:::---::-~

8X8 Heayy duty utility trailer.

road ready wlloading ramps. 304·
port. From $249·$373. Call 740· 875-«148.
ll92-5064. Equal Houoing Opportunillel.
&amp;Fr. Flbergluo topper, 12hp

-----------:~1 Economy lawn tractor, Gravely
Modern 1 8drm, all utilities paid tulky 1 tiller, 30• mower for
except electri' !n Galljpolil F~r- Gravely, pu1h mowtrl, 38011.

rv. wv. $250/mo. plus depa111.
304-1175-1371 Of 304-e75-3230.

Wolnullumbor. 304-675-41104.

0•111• Co.: Gallipolis, Neighbor·

1979 Schultz mobile · hOme
14x70 2br, good cond. 304-875·
0258.

Loll Of L- $19,000, Or 22 Acr·
ea With Pond NOW S24,000 .
Frien&lt;ly Ridge , Last 2! 8.5 Acres
17,500 Or 6.5 Acre• 18,000, Both

111T""" IIIJv81S, E-ZFinancing
2 or 3 Bedtoom. Atound 1200
month.

992·3725.
Portable Dishwasher SSO : Baby
Buggy $75 ; Baby Back Carrier

$20, 74().:188-98311.
Prlmtelar· 1.99 Installation with

360

ote, Shuttle, 45 HP; 15 Hours,
Loaded, Uke New, 740-379-2748..
.

is now only $49.85. Money 1 back
gUarantee. Call (800)811 ~ 5930,
exL7758078 \filii Maotorcard.

R&amp;SFumMure
Maeon,WY
IIIJv, Sell; Trade

p(if'ller. Only $10 down deUver1- to
your door. Call Home P10clucts @

Cash Paid For land In Gallia
Countf, Blackburn Realty, 740 -

t-1100-7-536.
Concrete 1 Ptallic: Septic Tanks,

.

Dirt

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron

450
Rooms

Evans Enlerprlaes, Jackson. OH

HIO!I-537-9528.

Small Compact Camcorder With
All Extrall Paid .1 .100; Will Take

cuum Cleaner. Only $1i down
68fi¥trt to your door. Call Home

, .. . . 1-1100-7-536.

1550; Man'o HuHy Bike Ridd'n

Wottrlino Special :, 314 200 PSI
521 .95 Per 100; I" 200 PSI
137.00 Per 100; All Bra11 Comsmirh Coront ..Word Proeeuor prltllon FIIMgs In SIDCII
Wiltt Screen , Has lotus 3, liON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Spreadohoeto. Herd t;)rivo And A .......... Ohio, 1-1100-537-t528
Disc Drive, More Features. Call
Pam Al740-245-91135.
Wedding Gown·Baautilul Ivory
aequined. rt-embroidered lice,
aile 10 IOilll veil. 0n1v
304675-11040.

Twa, 175: 740-4411-78115.

sus.

Deelo""''P• In ,..
mar~oll. Huge ptalit
CaiiMr, Moonlt. 304-

190hp. Mercrui._, Inboard motor,

1888 Plymouth Sundance New
Brakes, New Tires, Good Car,

with trailer, life.'preJer¥era &amp;

bull1*8. $2,750. 61H-14.

7411-245-5687.
121100, 74().742-2820.
1989 Cavalier 2.0 4 Cylinder

'

1981 Sundance Convertible All
Opliona 89.000 Miles $3,205;

760 · Auto Parts &amp;

1988 Chevy Truck V8, Auto.

Accessories

ra...... 740-742·2875.

and bruoh hog,

80 ,542 miles, whita with burguncly

New gas

ta~ka,

t.

loy wheels,' maud au~ ·740·949- Rlplev. WV. 304: 372-3933 or 1·
2311 daf' 740·9411-2644.
,::800:::-=-2=:~=:11:~3211~.::--::::::--::::
; 992 Plymouth Lazar' Auto. AC. WANTEO TO BUY: 1988'
Cruise, Tinted Windows, New Through 1872 CheYelle Or Elca·

Far mall Super M Wide

Tire 1, Greal Gat Mileage I 3~4, .

Power Steering John O.ere
$3,500 Elich, 740-3711-9361 .
Gehl 95 grinder/mixer,

turned, axcellenl

790

speed, $3,000. 740·949-2311
c1ays. 740&gt;949·26'4 ......

Maule Ferguson 1010 4 WD
With Belly Mower, $5,HI

080,

740-258-15311, 74().258-1371 .

bar 3K loot lor S750, 740-948·

'

/

-

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,..

•

\

~..,..~.

--

.•

'

Size• Of 4 WJ) And 2 WO Fatm
Tractora. Ha~ Equipment, john
0eero Slcid Sitar lotdero. Check

With Uo About Finand"R AI Law
AI 2.1% On lawn 1ractaro And
Law Rate Financing On New And

U1ad Equipment Carmichael's

1993 Ford Tempo,

4 Do01s, DS,

211111 Amual Bonder Pig Sale: Fri·
dar APfil 24111, 7:30 P.M. Fayauo
Caunrv Fairgrounds, Washington
Courthouse, Soiling 200 Hood, 01
Harnpa · OUrocs. Cro11brtd Bar·

Conaign.,, Roger

Bontloy, 1137-584-231111; Larov
Larri&lt;lo ;37-780-4102.

North

Pass
.Pass
Pass

1998. Chrysler Concord 29,300

sleeps I, walled IWHper, runs
good. S-4.000. 304-8S2-3237. Ar-

,..

IT'~ TI-\"-T ~TUf'f u-1:11€.~ C:£1"
IN. Tf\£UU.f.(:b
(o(f

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bird

Peter-

TO COME
6ET 'f'OVR DOi ..

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27- · 29 Frog'a cCIIjlln
30 Thua
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37 BIMbellefl
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France

47 Some
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

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PRINT NUMBERED

V

LETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSW~R

',

. ..

-2-6173. 740-ll92· 1
Bad Credit, No Credit, Bankrupt- I -,9-9_0__E:-d-'d-ie-15:-,-,":'9":'80:-::F:-1.-....":'in~g
cy7 We Can Holpl Blink Finonc- !7' Awning ; t975 Mallard 27'

Awn 1ng; 1172 Aristocrat 20' .,

t985 Chrysler New Yar~er 4 Cy-

IInder, Tutbo, 1888 Bob McCor·

AS'I'RO·GUPR

BERN'!CE
BEDEOSOL

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: , do not mind what language an opera is sung In scj·
long as Hia one. I do nol understand." "- Sir Edward Appleton
.
~

1996 Neon GrNn • Door1. Auto, bergay, mutt ' "
appreciate.
10
AC. 31 ,000 Miles, $7,200 080 seriaUI calls only, sasoo, 740740·256·8340, 740--7.
~
20 5.

.........
,.
..................
,...........
...................
,._,,.111
liM,..
...................
.=-., ... • ,.........
.........., . . . . ...

'
&lt;'

new carper, ¥inyl, afl window•
have custom Kirsh bhndlltam·

'

.

50 Brlelge or !ian
lull'
52 Thick
53 Not
'

Enroll· Giant· Lowly· Malady ~ WANT to DO

PW, POL, CD Playlf, Tinted (qu.., oiza bed), lui oiroti\.ing &amp;
Windowo, C.llular Phone Hoo~- klto:hon, ,_ ful oize , _ &amp; rei.,

........1111 Of ........,..., llliring,
- - " ' _ • ._ lllatllr U••nHtl oltctricl~n. Ridenour
Elaclrlcal, WV000308, 304-1751786.

([

An elderly colleague once tOld me that the winners
do what the losers don't WANT to DO.

I FRIDAY

1

48 High c.~rd•

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWERS

••panda's, lull size bedroom

Electrical end

•

38 Actor Peter -

, A
V

s

..... 7-1511, Gallipolli.
Vthiclll, No Turn Down•. C111 ·D-IIaire truck camper, lfl. long,
VicOie, 7.- ... 21117.
""
....-, Mlf~containlld, OOOd COnd.
!lllio Vallev Bank Will Ollar Fer :s1 ,800. 'Stupar far pic~- up,
Sola A t988 Toy all Comry 1 or 2$450. 304-1112·3:17a
1004490. Rubl lc Auc1IIHI Will Be
Held At The OVB Anne1, 143
SE RVICES
Third Ava.. Gallpolis, OH On S'2l
98 AI 10:00 A.M. Tho AINMI WWI
l!o 'Sold To Highest Bidder "AI lo 810
- Whort Is• Without Exprouad
Or Implied Warronty And II"Y 811
Seen Bv Callng KOilh ~ ·AI
-NT
740-441-1038, OVB Raoarv11
WATEII'IIOOfiNG
Tho-Right To Accept Or ReJect
Any And AH Bldo, And Wllltcfraw Uhconditionll litelirM 9uar•ntM.
~~~ From Sale Prio&lt; To Sale. local reference• furntihed. E•:
Tarmo 01 Sale: CASH 011 CER· tabllohed 1i75. Call (740) 4.00·
0870 Or 1·800-287.0578. Rot~81s
TFIEO CHECK.
Wotarproaling.
Upton UseG Ctrs Rr. 82·3 Milft ~-=-~~-::----"--:-:--.-:::
South or· Leon, WV. Financlne Appliance Pllrts And Service: All
olni-. 304-458-1111111.
· ' Name Brands 0vor 25 V.oro fl.
720 lhlclts for Sale
porleneo All Wor~ Guaranttod,
Frtncft City Moytag, 740·448·
'17 Dodge 112 tan, 318, lllr concfl. l :::77115.~-::--:--;;-:::~:::;::1tOOO, 140-742·2420.
C&amp;C General Homo Main.,
2k
1
01011 tenon•~· PalnMno. wirlfl t iding,·
runo """"' • - carpontry, · wlndaols. bolhl,
,..... · mobile home rtpair,tnd mare: For·
tree 81IIIJ!Ote caW CM~ 7o10-8U·

of

you develop from· srep No. 3 below.

HEV, CIIAIU.£5 •. MOM

.2 Doot Sjlort Coup, $7,099 080,
t,
.
MO • o
7411-256-15311, 740-258-1371.
304-e75-3000. 8am-5pm
19114 Yellow S01nt c_., 35', 2

lng on Used Ve~ic~t, 740-4.. 1-

aounda

21

25 Cuahlonl
211 Caln'a
brollter

e

HUM Colell'liln Jameaton pop--up,
--::--:--:::-:::-:-::::- aleftpl 4 , ••iras, exc. cond.
1996 Dodge Neon, 27,000 Mi!H,
800 Call KIK .. bil H mao

Up. St2,500, 7•25&amp;--«147.

41 Exclemetlon

11 Heeltatlon

11 BI'Hd lpread
12 Pllnlet

22~-

You know that a 5·3 fil exist• in
one major suit (1~1'~ call it hearts), but
you hold ~even 10 the ace·queen·IO
, in the olher major (which, by prOC'ess
of elimination, must be spades). Do
you go ~ith the known fit or insisl on
your spade soil being lrumps? ·
My instinct would be to go wilh
the seven-bagger. As long as partner
.has a minimum of help, we should be
safe;but an eighH:ard fit is vulnem·
ble to a bad break,
In lh.e given . auction. I have a
s1rong dislike for North's two-dia·
mond cul'-bid, which showed at least
lhree hearts and IO·plus supporl
poiniS. I think thai if lhe dealer opens,
your partner overcalls, and the
responder passes. a riew soil by you
.(the advancer) should be forcing for
one round. So; I would bid a simple
one spade. Isn't that so m~ch better
!han two hearts? Soulh will raise to
two spades, afier "'hich lhe only dan·
gerwill .be getting too h,igh in spades.
Against four beans, the·defenders
began wilh two rounds o( dia'mDnds.
Then, when Eas_t got i'l wilh 1he
spade king, he played il third dia·
mond. pi'Qmoting a trump Irick for
West: one down. True •.the 5·0 trump
break was unlucky, but four hearts is
worse than four spades. Unless the
.·spade finesse is winning. !he defend-ers are threatening to lake foor lricks
in more lhan one way.
· At the other table in the male~.
Easi opened four diamond.~. THis
silenced South, and North bid .four
~pades. of courSe. The aulhor of lhe
report claimed lhal lhis eoniract can
be defeated, but I don 'I see bow. Can
you?

875-1832 or evening• 304 ·89$- ::IIW::Spm::.:::-·-:--'7"-~"":":-':"

1998 Monte Carlo LS like New,

5 Golf peg ·

33 Mary Tyler 8 Earlleat 11om
34 Actreaa Winger' 7 It could be
35 Llkeneaa
, tlhhyl
·
38 Killed
8 - - Cl•r Dayo
37 Ennui
9 Label
38 Waxed
•to Large wading

PEANUTS

1970 Winnebago Moror Home,

:::::-:=::-:::-::-:-:--::::-:-::-::-=:-:

miles. leather inletior. loaded,
aakino pay orr prie.e. Da~s lOot -

......

Opening lead: • 6 ·

1995 Chrysler Concord 68,000 1973 23h Dodge Concord moror
Miles, Loaded, $8,500 080,7411- home, 4.0 Ona generator, new
2~169.
lites, 011 1 elec"lric htat, mi·
--.,.:-----.,.::---.:::-:::-~ l.crowawt, double-door rettigertiOI',

..,:440~·2:;4,;;12:.;.t-800-5Q:-=::~~4-11;.;1;:-t;...--·I Credit Problema? We Can Help.
630
Livestock
e.., Bank Financing For Uoed
2,040 pr,und Tobacco Allolmtnt
For Leaot, .25J A Pound 304875-5131 '

&amp;

antperS
Motor Homes

-:::::--:::--.-::---:-:::-:::-:::: I

Form &amp; Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740- 04107.

1 Rod Re9ioterid Lirnouoln Bull
740--.73111.

,,

PB, Air, Automatic. Trade Or Run• Good 12,500, 740-367. S3.495; 7411-245-&amp;m.
11M7.

~30~·1~1~.~~;f.i;:~~~tl3815.
For Reoidendal And Commercial
.E 1
l C -ct U"l"ty
1
lawrt qu pmen om_
u
Tractors From 20 To 38 HP. All

C

Refr1gntlon

•

.

:;;:;:;-:~::;-;:=::--:;;;;::::;:--;;;~ 1-==::-=~::'~~:::--:t.:=:­

840

-•

-~ BIG NAtE
.

1970 Through 1972 Monte Carlo
_458--:-t--62::1-,_740-_388--:--899-::-7_.-::::-:=I Conoole. "MUST BE HOIISHUE
o·
1992 Toyota Carollo, 92,000 SHIFTEII 1YPE" Phone : 74 '
milu, nwoon with gray interior, 4 ~44~1~-1~0;;SI:;·~nCEni--

8323,

T

USWAAT

U:U.ULOID

mino Console, Can Also Be A

door, amlfm caaaeue. air, 5

304-273-4215.

WI~ ,

TW..

Fl(,.t•\';&gt;!

t~n true~

8 N Ford ·llrm U.ctilr, exc. cand.
S3,400. Ford 18f1p. ridi~
..,..,,
eoc. cond, 11,000. 304-17
24.

,..

C.N.I"(OU

lealher interior, auto, tunroor. al· -wheels &amp; radiators. D &amp; R AuiO.

4222 dau

' IIYenlng~

rows &amp; Gilts,

wo~.~'&lt;

W€. ~ 601N6
" TO Lf~ NroT

11l92 Cable Runtbaut 17 112 Fr.
Wllh Tr'llller, LOll Or Extrasl Like
H,.., sa,ooo 7..0·4411-4782, Gampoll~ Ohio.

Auto, Air, High Milea, $1 ,500,

THE BORN 'LOSER
,. '
._.--::---,

'

1988 Kawuakl 650 Jet akl, 2
Hater with lrallef, $800. or 080.
3114-882-3586.

1189 Camara RS, must sell,·

( 40) ~
•• '
1992 BUick Regal Grand Sport,

Olivet 550, good condition, equipJTMII1t plow, diK, blade, bfwh hog.
2 trailefl, at1 in ooacf to poor conditlon, all for &lt;tK, aJao rough lum-

Wa- &amp; drror polr will! lrtt va-

tHtloe wttand interior, sCyl,

wlll1
disc, cultivalar,

4&lt;46-7283.

7..0~

1988 Sea Imp 19 1121t. deep- V,

~~-100~~"~~--~~
7
103

3S

New Holland 478 711. hay bine wl
stub guardo, cylinder &amp; manual,
exc. cond. 304-2~42t5.

Zeniltt Floor Model T.V.,

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

19115 Pilla"' st. 7511 Wator Crah
With Trallel, I..0-448-7498 Altar
1989 Oldo 2 Doors, Red, V-B, 4P.M.
Auto, Air, Red, lntlrnatlonal Str- 1Caw1saki STS Jet lki, 1till under
ioo, AI Power Equipped! t..0-446· warranry, flrae uaUN 13 hOf. .
2532.
power, bought now July ol't7,
lhrH
matching Kawasaki 1ki
1991 Pontiac: Sunbifd GT Loaded,
V-8, CD, Rod. ·Alum. Wheels, One vtlls and trailer all go with ir,
740-948-2203 Of 740-0411OWner, New Alt8fnator, 7-t0-379· $5000,
2045,
will
consider trade lor a
2748.
good pontoon I&gt;Ool

Scoo1era, Electric Wheelchalra,
Sales ; Rental, Trade, New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 7.0·

Troybllt Madel Horse Like New
1850; Noma Riding Mowar; 4
WhMI' Stnrlng, 18 HP. .oo• Cut,
145 Hours, 1800, 740--13.

~018

Condilion, PB, Automatic. Trant·

miulon, POt. AC. FWD, Vorv
Good Gas Mithge, $2,900 080,
7oi0-44W780.

3•
.3NT

· West

By Phillip Alder .

2388,

750

tO 8 7

long suit

Suzuk i 250 4 Wheeler Racks
Front&amp; Back, $1 , ~50. 740 -3·7 9-

1985 Po~tlac Trans-Am Auto,
Air, T-Tops: Black Sharp, $2,500
7-40·643-0832.

......
··,_,
- ..-·-··
........
a grandparent)
a•n.

32 Nelghbora

6 K 2

Go with the ·~

miles, runs good,· needs minDf ,paJrs, S2.ooo..740-992-5559.

Ford
3600

n8Vel'

-·noon.

ot, 80,000 Milot. 740-4&lt;46·2532.

1989 Dodge Davtona, 100.000

Quit 'Smoking In JUst Seven
Oaye ~ Guaranteed! Smoke-Away.
The nalural way to quit smoking
easily and for $OOdl You hawe
nothing to lou qut your •making

habit! Older Howl Hationanv sold
at $179.95,' Smoke-Away prqgram

..

II

1998 YamAha Kodiac .tx4 E•cel-

V-8, Brougham Power S_eat.a,
Power Roof,.T·Cruise, Alr, t OWn-

304-675-1310.

2 Farmall Cub With
Ford 800, Ford
M.F. 3S Diotel ·2·

263-2840.

Thr" ron heat pump, uMCI v..-y
llttlo, 1250, 7411-11411-3226.

CompUt• IJtlem wi1h free

REN TAL S

$1,800090.304-875-3187.

tree movie ehannela, StarOna
apecl1l, 141 lf\llalla,lon, 800-

...__

Real Eslale
Wanted

448-0008.

14' John Deere disc With t¥dra.u·
lie JICk, excellent condUion.

$50 rebate . First month free with

·$1,300 740-448-2829 teava

1148-5678.
44&amp;-2470.

1030 Case 13.950; 310 G Case
Dozer $4,950; B250 $2,450; 1385
Oliver $5,950; 740·288-6522.

Diggers,

Sun Wave Spa 4 Petaan, Brown
Tones With Redwood Ea:lerior

I::;-:-;-:'":-::-:--:-::::::-;:::-::;::::
Call "edit line 1·800·

DoobleWide
3 Bodiooml. 211alhl
111185 Dawn $2811 Per· indudH Otlivory And Sat Up
Callt-8Q0.251·5070

items, walkers. toddler car 1ea11.
etc. Tue~ay through Friday, 740·

7..0-985-4006

Large Wooded Building Loll With
Some A&amp;stricnons, Near S.R. 850,
Just MifJJtes From New lnd11s1rial
Park, Same Restrictions, 740441..,541, Allor 5 ~~~.

pet

2 Bedrooms , Remodeled , 7.t0-

Farm Equipment

reclinef love seat, good condllion, Two Maoaov· Furgeson
$200 tor bolh; Healthrider; ab . (I) T.0 .35 gao, (2) SOIIF
chair: dining room Jable wilh fou.t goad tires on bath ; 740· 742·
chaus; solid walnur coffee lable
wilh marching end tables: call 2875.
Your Area John Deert Dealt~

1995 Clavton Mobile Home 2

9738 L81V8 Mee.uge.

Pomeroy Thrill Snap now buying
large outside toys and baby

Sleeper sofa with maldtlng roc11er

Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Gas Fife·

place Garden Tub On Rental Lo\

610

TELL!~

'

1982 Gatdwing GL Motorcycle,
High MileaQe, E~tlent Condillon,

t988 Dodge Dvnaoty Verv Good

d=-uc_ts_@;;_t::-800:-::·--::9--0__ · - : - : - 1 1997 Ford 3930 ••4 Dull Rem-

3 Games, $150, 7ol0-245-9357.

' $12,000 Firm, 740·387-7094.

Flna~cing Available •. 740·245·

Only $19 down deltvera a complete living room aulte, bedroom
and dlneue to your door-plus a
ltee 25-inch TV. Call Home Pro77 536

Sega Satui-n Sys1em, 2 Con lfOIIers, 1 Controller Exrension I

1991 Redman Breezewood 3
Bedrooms, 1 112 Baths, 14w70

1881 BUick leSabre Umite(l in

1
~J
:'101e :_
4W-n

3

Motorcvcles

lent Condi!lon, $4,500, 740·256·
11193, leave Moooilge.

djlcts @ 1-1100-779-0536.

wlheat pump. $13,900. Will de- Acres $18,000 ·12,000 Down +
liver loca.l. Call K &amp; K Mob•l• S2121Mo .. Or 9 Acreo S16,000.
Homes 30' ·675-3000 berween Water Oyesville, N1ct 11 + Acr·
Bom-5pm
•• $10,500 Very Priva•. .
.
1989 t4X72, 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, )'10 Acre Lot, Heal Pump, Call For Free Maps + Owner Fi- ·
Air, Carport, Back Porch, Porter nancing tnlo. Take 10% Off listed
Prices On Cash Pufchasesf
740·381HI234.
.

740

1985 Oldl Cullin SuPfemo, 305,

Now That Spring Is Hare It Ia

TI+AR WON'T BE NOTHIN'
LEFT TO

'

1991 Handa 250x 4 Wheeler
01 Extra'sl740-441-1419!

Riding lawn mower .with your
choice of a frte pu1h mower or
weed eetow. Onlv St9 down deiv·
ers to JOur door. Call Home Pro-

Co.: Danville. Nice 17

. 992-11980.

1982 Cullals Supreme, 2 0, 260
VS. Good ConditiOn, S1,900 Or
BeiiOIIor, 7411-992-4568.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

'

I•

63 ;000 actual miles, excellen t
condition, $22,000 firm, call 740-

8 P.M.
570
Musical
liTO 5hp rear tang tiller. 12hp.
Instruments
38" cut MTD lawn mower. ladder 1~==--::::::-;-::-;;;:::::--;::::­
rack lor lull size pick-up truck. Ludwig Drum Set, Zildjian Cym304-895-3053.
bala Cases, 740-44Q-749B Alter 4
New release 1Y Beanies $0.50, 2 P.M.
Peace, s35 oec11. 7ol0-992-523.2.
5x10 Tilt 78"118, 78"118 Ft 740446-81i108, 740..46-7787

IDA BELLE II

JUGHAID

1995 Dqdge Diesel 4WD, loadtd,

good c 0 nd. S2,000. 304 -675·
1295.
· 740·446·9730 Aller 5:00P.M.

1-800-771l-0536.

S1 s.ooo. County water.

m11es.

S14,995. Call 304-675-11261 oher
8pm,
'

lilt Chair, Good Working Condition, $150, 740-379-2720, AFTER 304-863-8351 '

Relngerators-Only 119 down de."
livers 10 your door. Free mi crO*ave. Call Home Produc1s @

hood Rd., 10 Acre Building Site,

Melga

Wanted - male Airedale for reasonable pri&lt;:e or slud service,

304-773-5341.

14 x70 3BR, $999 Down &amp; ONtV
$119-per fTO. Free air &amp; free skirt·
ing. 1-888-!128-34211.

exc. cond. 1988 Clayton 14x70

Avenue, Galipolis.

Used &amp; Antiques
Furriture.

BRUNER tAND
740.441-1492

!981 OakllloOd t4 x65. $12,500 .

Lawn Boy Mower With Gran
Catcher, Runs Good $60, 21 Neil

65,00

SHE'S OVER SPENOIN'
Tl+' DAY WITH

aooo aos'"

$18,995. 1994 Ford F-1 50 XLT

1978 Delta 88 Oldsmobile, good
cond. 304-773-5492. .
1980 -t990Trudls For $100111
Seized And Scld
LocaHv This Mcntl!.
Truck~. •b:-4'1, Etc.
t-800-522-2730, X 3901 .

I GOT SOME REAL
FER
YORE AUNT LOWEEZYr

leather, loli"ded, 45,000 milu.
loaded ,

South

BARNEY

'1g95 CheYy .Blazer lT 4dr, 4X4,
414,

=::::.V:~

1 Type or paata
Rlver In

·2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

1990 Ford F-150 V-8 alr, lrn-cao4~~:4 new Urea, 4• lift kit.
$9,500. Dav• 304-675-1932 or
'eveningo 304-695-3015.
·

Autos for 5ale

~the

t K 7
• Kt 6

utte,

1978 Chell. Stallonwaeon, so,ooo
Original Milos, One Owner, Good
Condlti011, 740-446-9072 9 A:M. ·
5P.M. ,

To Stock-Up on Your Avon
a.m. 10 8:00 p.ln., Sundev 1:00 10 · Time
Skin-So· Soft Moisture Suncare
6:00 p.m. 740-992·2526, Run Pluo, To Order Call Pam At 7..0·
Moore owner.
2~5-5443.

ble, Free AC, Partl~ Furnished,
.
Available In June Or July, Please 8't'IK1fngl. .
Call At 740-245-5100 &amp; Come 24ft long Pontoon bait wJewttas.
See Us For Interview, 1 Block OOOd cond, garage tir• chang..fromCollete.
wlbalancer, Hond1 generator.

apartments ar Village Manor"and
Riverlide Apar1ment1 in Middle-

71 o

New Trailers In Stock 5x8 nit Bod

Antiques

3711 . EOH.

Gracioua livlng! 1 and 2 badt'oom

3 Acres Recently Landtcaped

Sale By Owner: Nice 3 Bedroom
Brick Ranch Home 1 ·1 112 ~lh
carpet, Nice Kitchen &amp; Olmng

Carpet

pot 112 Price Kirchen Prinl $5.00

Sq. Yd. 740·4~8-7444, Mollohan

Brand Now Apartment For Renl In
a hp, oupor
·
C b C ·d
0 et, 1
Rio Grande, Single Female want- 1988 · u
traeiDr, etr·mower dec:k, tllc:el'-nt
ed All Udlltioa Included, Free Ca- condldon, $3000, 7o40-g92-2219

(AmNnoN DEVELOPERS,

East Main m Rulland ,

388-9770.

875-1550,

!:~~~8~14-ti~98-~3~7~71~..~~:1'-GOO-:J83.6862. '

house, a year old .stding, imme-

1 Bedroom Apartment, Handi·
capped Ace .. Clean &amp; Quiet,
Close To Holzer Hospital , 740-

Rttirement sale Room Size Car·

1br apartment Pfivate, qufet De-

RANCH on 17.4 acres, full base- Deck, Already Set Up On lol.
men1. two- car garage, barn, Take Over Payments Of $298 Per
loncod pasture. Phone John, ERA · Month, 7-40-448·0571.
·
MARTIN &amp; ASSOCIATES, 614· Late Model Repo Set Up On Lot

New 2800 5&lt;!. Ft Brick Ranc~. 3
Bedrooms, 3 Baths, Front Parch,
Deck, ·-1(740)441-1345
one plus acres, ·,. bedroom

(740)4ot~-

2957

posit Raferencea. S2501mo. 304-

TRAN SPORTATION

21"

' on (IICta llka
28-

...

: • QJ

20 ...; Canale

. zS

• AKZ
• 8 .4·
.. J
East

• 6 3
t A Q J 10 9 52
6 A Q 5. 4 2
• tO 8 7 3
South
• J 9 4

New Paint Job, Exceflent Condi·
lion, 740·446·8605.

Vine Slrtet, Call 740-446·7398,
1-800-499-341l9.

Holzer S279 Plus Utilities, Deposit

West
• 5
•96543

'

1988 GMC S-15 4x4, New Engine

USED APPLIANCES

&amp; Utod Fumhure
Polly'a We""" have Annr.SurpkJalll
2101 Jellorsan Avo.
Open 9:30 • 5:00 Mon-Stt
304-875-SOfA (7832)

STORME T.o.N\(5.'

Uft, New Tires, New B~ ~tery, Au·
tomatlc, Air, $0.500 F1rm , 740446·2134 Leave Message.

dryers, ref~igeratora,
ranges. Skaggs Apphancel, 76

ll92·2218.. '

AATCH ~UT TO
THE WI'.TER '

1988 Ford Van Willi Wheel Cho,ir

Washer~ .

nished and unfurnlahed, 1acurhy
deposit requ ired , no pete, 7•0·

'

367-()514, 740-367-7242.

7795.

448-2583.

, TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $t891mo.

Parts Excelleitt Condition, 7•0·

Reconditioned
Washert, Dryers, Ranges, Refri gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City May tag, ·740·448·

1 end 2 bedroom apartments, fur-

1nd lease Requ11ed

7o10-ll92·2548.

GOOD

-- ·--- ------

TH£R£'S 1&gt;. LQII.DIPIG

North
04-24-98
• A Q tO 8 7 6 3

t 987 Plvmouth Voyager 80.000

Appliances: ~

Apartments
fQr Rent

4 WO, 12,500,

On•Rebu iH Engrne, Many New

'plo Design Bed Can Be Full Or
Queen With Vlft\'1 Cover &amp; Full
Size Mattren &amp; Box Spring•
S700, 740-•41·9508 Call Altar 8
P.M.

1 Bedroom APartment Newea\
and Cleanest In the area, near

linanc1ng on

.tlr.
1

.

C~ovrolet

•a· Gib1on electric range, good
condition, tour years old, $375,

American Drew 4 Postet Pineap-

Small two bedroom mobile home
lor rent in Recine, 740-992-50311.

440

1983

74~78-23ee .

8-piec:e wh ile wicker patio 1e1
$250. 20-pie&lt;:a muiU·colored for·
mal liv1ng room set. 12.500. 304·
875-5493.

2 S. Rl. 7 N. 740-448-4263 aher
1pm. '

New Ooublewide 3BR, 2 ba th .

tral Heat, Air, Andeflon Tilt In
Windows, Full Basement, Front
~nd Back Po,ches, 7•0-992-

320

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Rant, No Pets, Rfi'ltrenctt Re·
quired, 7!1()·245-&amp;212.

auction

una Ford 414 V-8: Shortbtd ,
120 ooo Milos, Very Good Condl·
tlon, Boll Ollar .Accopred 740·
3711-2433.

Household

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The Dally Sentinel• Page ~5

-....---

-

; ALLEYOOP.

.

Glme 2.. Teams lo Be

�•

•

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Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Fridly,Aprll2~,1998

Foxglove:An old- fashion
. f19wer for today's garden

'My Fair Lady'

The Cino i d Enquirer
If you are foro of old-fashioned
flowers, plant a few foxgloves (DigiuiliS
~). They have survived in ~
gardens;praaically unchanged, f!l' hwldRds of years.
·
Alice Coa!es, an authOOty on the his-.
tel'Y of flowers, tl'llres the flower's fanciful and poelic name to the Anglo-Saxon·
phrase fox gleow, a g)eow being a musical inswment that consists of a row of
bells hung on an .-ch. Fox may be a
ruption of "folks,• aref~ to the lit~
tie people or fairies. "Glove" refers to
the similarity between the long 1Ubulal'
flowers and the Qngers.of a glove.
If this isn't to your liking, you can fall
back on the common names of ''Witclles-thimble" or .. Bloody man's fingers... ·
Or you may prefer the bolanical 118111(\
digitalis. which means "o[a finger."
The common foxglove is by nature
biennial; althoqgh it _will occasionally
bloom ihe first year, and if it likes the
spot where it is growing it will self-sow
and 'persist as a perennial. The foliage
appears as a large rosene, bold and lush,
deep green, 'wrinkled and, slightly hail)',
The flower stalk is elegant and appears
· in early summer, crealing a wonderful
·. venical accent in a flower bed or border.
The foxglove will fkui!h in shady
spots, among the roots of trees, for
example, where Olher plants will not survive. A rich, woodsy soil with lots of
compost is ideal. Bll they &lt;bl't require
·sliai:, and an cpll1 sunny bed is fine as

will be staged
at Rio Grande
-SeeC1

'

Major league basebaU • Sports on B1
50 yearS in bUSineSS e Featured on 01

..

tmes·
•
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

a

. ,

,

I

.

That's a spiritual crisis, according "Why?"
to a new awareness among grief
It's an emotional question that
experts.
doesn't allow for a satisfying ratio"It's so true, having a major loss nal answer. But. as Pope John Paul
does impact our spiritual belief sys- has said, modern Americans lack a
tern, " says Denise Stone, grief sup- · "theology suftering" to comfort
port coordinator for Wuesthoff Bre- them amidst grief.
vard Hospice in Brevard County,
"In the Middle Ages, the horrenFla. "It pull~ the rug right out from dous death was to die quickly,
under you and leaves you saying, because you were unprepared. for
'Wail a minute, I have to check this. death," Doka says. Suffering I believed this and this and so and physical or emotional ·- had meanso, and now I'm not so sure.' "
ing. "It made sense. ·In that retribuWhether facing their own death, tive theology, it weighed against
or the death of a loved one, most what you owed.''
people experience the five stages ·of
Modern people more 'often congrief describe~ by psychiatrist Elisa- elude that, like the biblical Job,
beth Kubler-Ross. a pioneer in death "you can't comprehend" why you
and dying i~&lt;ues: denial, anger, bar- or another per.on has to die.
gaining, sadness and acceptance.
"ICs like exp)aining nucleOli
To those, Doka adds what he calls physics to a cat," Doka says. "It gets
a crucial step: spiritual reconcilia- you nowhere, :and it ultimately
tion.
annoys the cat."
"Sometimes when a loss occurs.
Another stage of grieving is findwe experience a deep secondary loss ing one's definition of ilnmonality.
of our spiritual basis," says Doka, which ·may be traditional Western
who differentiates that from rcli- theo!ogy- or·might embrace Eastgion. "Spirituality is a transcenden- em thoughts of reincarnation and
tal• belief system through which we nirvana. But Doka cites many more
II)' to explain life. "
ways people seek immortality.,
:rherefore, when a death chal"It can be biological , where one
lenges a person 's ~hilosophical lives on through one's descendants.
framework, "reconstructing mean- Or creative: A person lives on
ing becomes a task, to understand through what he or she had done in
how a loss has torn apan meaning," life."
he says.
·
Others believe they ach.ieve
One of the first responses people ·immortality through "eternal
have when facing death- their own nature,'" the fact that their bodies
or a loved one's - is the question become . part of Earth's natural

cycles. And some people consider and can be helped with 'little more
organ donation a way to live on than a visit with ~ .grief support
beyond their own physical death.
counselor. Or,. they may gain suffiGrappling with such spiritual cient comfort from family,' friends
concepts is a normal pan of the and rituals associated with death,
grievi~g process, says Doka. · such as funerals or memorial ..,.._
According to th~ Association for 'vices .
Death Education and Counseling
Other people create their own rit(ADEC) most . people experience uals- powerful tools for helping to
grief normally. llut sometimes psy- ease grief. Planning a ritual helps the
chological complications call for grieving person to focus his or 'her
continuing help from ·a grief coun- thinking. The ritual itself gives peoselor or support group.
pie license to vent their emotions.
Also . potentially complicated
· The best rituals also give grieving
grief situations are multiple deaths, a sense of releasing the person ·
successive deaths, and those with they've lost, and provide 'spiritual
second31)' losses resulting from the . suppon by reiteratin,: one'sphilosudeath, such as loss of one's home or phy or faith "because they hit us at
circle of friends.
the threshold of consciousness, the
But most people - between 60 liminal level right above sublimiand 80 percent, according to ADEC nal,'" Doka says.
- experienc~ uncomplicated grief
with the healthiest

$5,950.

can visit the auditor's office for information.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
Asked about pa•t reappraisals and the effect on tax bills, Denver Warn- ·
Tlmea-Sentlnel Stan
er.
who has been doing appraisal work for the county sonce the 1970s, s.a1d
POMEROY- Reupprnisal of Meigs County's 2s:ooo pieces of real estate
r~ nearing completion now. bur propef!y owners won't kno:-v the real effect that a' far a• he knows, "taxes have never gone down in a reapproisul. they've
always gone up."
.
of the value changes on their taxes until Janu31)'.
.
'
The
county
is
required
to
do
reappraisals
of
each piece of prbpeny evel)'
.
• That's when bills for lhe tirsl half.Qf 1997- figured on the baSJs of the
six
years.
Since
no
individual
or
local
firm
is
certified
to handle tlrat size of
new apprnisal ftgures and a pro~rty sales analy~is made by the state - lire
job, the auditor said a contract was awarded to Apprnisal Research. ·
mailed out.
'
'
·
Once the figures are in from the appraisal company, then they still have
Whetl)er the reappraisal will result in on incre.~se or a decrease. in 'axes
to
be
approved by lhe state which makes the final determination o~ true val.will depend on the updated property values, ac;cordt~g to C&lt;J?nly Audrtor Nanue.
explained
Warner. He said that again in three years the state wtll update
cy Parker Campbell. Those value figures wll.l no1 be avoolable unt1l somethe figures.
.
time in the fall. she said.
The reappraisal and the probability it will increase ta)\es, along with the
• J " •"'•~l)'lhing is complete and the values are set. lheh Campbell said
' \;~~'lltltertise that fact in the newspaper so thai property owners who . levies to be voted on in May. have raised concerns of some property own(Contlnued on AS)
choose to know about their taxes in advance of the January tax statements

.

ing process ·are those who have th.l:
most opponunity to talk with family,
friends, clergy or a counselor, ·says
Doka.
Bwt thcie's no such thing as "getting over" one 's grief. There's only .
what Doka·calls "amelioration;. a slow but ste,dy improveme~t..
"Grief is vel)', vel)' hard work,"
and it is a v~ry ind.vidualized
process, say's Doka. "Avoid prescription, and avoid people who give.
prescriptions.''
Research indicates most people
experience an active grieving
process for up to five years, according to ADEC.
"Never give yourself the message that your time is up for grieving," says Doka.· "The end of grief
is not. the end of memory. It is when
we can 'rerr1emberwitt1out

Sfi' 950

Mi Mill Plllllr

:News Watch
Issue 2's impact
·on sales vexes
prpfessor at'OU

8,950

Slack Nunbor 1Ttt4'AA
Wilrbnotor:b •

•

Portland Ciu-olyn McPherson;
Shade-- William C. Cvok; Rutland- Debbie Brown. Kendall Brown,.
Marcia Elliott, JoAnn Eads, Marta
Blackwood, Larry "Edwards and
Donna Davidson; Langsville -Kimberly Argabright and Joseph
Argabright; West Columbia -Cheryl Clark; Mason -- Charlotte
Thompson, Misty Grogan; Gallipolis -- Vicky Brown; Cheshire -Selby Manley.
Retired and Senior Volunteer
Program workers assisting the
Bloodmobile were: Helen Bodimer.
Katie Cr.ist. Peggy Harris, Betty
Spencer, June Ashley, Jane Brown,
Sampson Hall and Ted Hatfield. The
canteen was served by the Middleport Conservation League.
The next scheduled visit fonhe
Red Cross Bloodmobile at the .
Senior Citizens Cenler in Pomeroy
· will be June· 17. 1-6 p.m.
. J

'

10,950 10,950 SJ0;9SO SJ.0,950
5

5

1!17 Niall SnllllE
SIJCir tt.mblfnilmii

Column s

,

1997 Cltefy Lumina Sedan
•3100 V-6 Power
• TiWCruise

• AMIFM Stereo

• Well Equi~l

• Power Wintlow$/locks
• Fuly Loaded!

.. .

Easy brownies make great family treats
By The Associated Press
Yes. we have brownies for you
when you use this One-Bowl Brownies recipe with its creamy frosting.
One-Bowl BroWIIMs
4 squares ·unsweetened baking
chocolate
3/4 cup (I 112 sticks) butter or margarine
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
I teaspoon vanilla
I cup flour
I cup c!)arsety chopped nuts
(optional)
White Chocolate Coconut Frosting
(recipe follows)
Heat oven to.350 F (325 f. for glass
baking dish). Line 13- by 9-inch baking pan with foil extending over edges
to use as handles. Grease foil:
Meh chocolate and buner in heavy
saucepan (about I .quan size) over
very low heat, stirring constandy, The
chocolate will melt more easily if it is
I

chopped into small pieces. OR:
M1crowave chocolate and butter in
large microwavable bowl on high 2
minutes or until butter js melted. Stir
until chocolate is ~ornpletely melted.
Stir sugar into chocolate'until'well
blended. Mix in eggs and vanilla. Stir
in llour and· nuts until well blended.
Spre!!d in prepared pan.
Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until
toothpick insened in center comes out
with.fudgy crumbs- take care not to
overbake. Cool in pan. Run knife
around edge of pan to loosen brownies
from sides. Using foil as handles, lift
brownies from pan onto cutting board.
Frost with White Chocolate
Coconut Frosting. Refrigerate brownies I0 minutes to set frosting. Cut into
squares or cut with cookie cutters into
Easter shaj!es; such as bunnies. (Pre$S
cutter down into·brownies to cut; then
lift up and push the bro)Nnie up
t,hrough the cutter unemove.)
DecorJite with deoorating materi-

als, including· icings, glossy gels and
tiny omamenll!l candy ~s (deCo- •
_ rnling tips he low). . _
. Makes 24 brownie squares, or
. about 10 brownie cutouts:

)4,950.

5

White Chocolale Coconut Frost·

ing

·
I stick softened butter
I cup powdered sugar
2 tablespoons milk
3 squares mel!ed white baking
·chocolate
7-ounce bag (I 113 cups) sweetened flaked COCOnUI
· Beat butter, sugar and milk in'
medium bowl with elecllic ·mixer on
low speed until blended. Beat on
'medium speed until smooth. Beai in
melted chocoli11e. 'Stir in half of
coconut.
Sprinkle remaining coconut over .
brownies after they are frosted and : '
cut, if desired.

SJ'
J
95D•r..·'

·-

I

. ..

,

6To Choose From!

1997 Clevy Blazer 4U011r 4x4

15,9'50

5

• LS Pacltage · .
• A1t1riun Wh aals
• VOIIIc OlD V-6 Powar. . • Fuly Loadidl

I'

GALLIPOLIS- An Ohio VaUey
Publishing ·co. editorial staiTer ha~
won first place in a calegol)' of the
~ssociated Press Society of Ohio
Newspaper Awards contest.
,
· Jill Williams of· t,he Gallipolis
·Daily Trt"bune won·the lOp ~n~ in
the features category of DJVJSIOO I
, newspaperS for her Sunday 1ime~'
·Sentinel feature. "Lighls. Carneru.
Drjve-ln.'' published J.une 29. 1997.
· The fl:aiUre focu!led on lhe expe·
'rience of viewing movies allhe drive..in, a disappearina aspecl or popular culture thai nevertheless remains
'alive and well locally lhrouah the
Kanaup Drive-in, in nillence si-

. . ;·-----...:.--..1

.,_ •llltr.o_. _ _ .,..,............................. _ _ _

r' ,..______________...,""""_____

.

.,......It:

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis will be looking for a new city man·

agar.

.

On Friday, the Gallipolis City Commission aaked John K.
LeBlanc, who has served as city manager since July 1, 1997,
to step down.
· .
·
LeBlanc told the Times-Sentinel Saturday, "I received no
backing from this commission and was limply aaked to
resign." He said !'IO other reasons were given.
· CommlssiCiner Herman Koby ·said, ''Things juat weren't
working out, !hal's all." Commisslon!lf Dr. Gene Abllla agreed
wheri contacted by the Times-Sentinel. Atte'"pta tCI reach oth·
er comnilssloners for comment Satt,rrday were unsucceaaful •
The commissioners will formally accept LeBlanc'• reaig·natlon In a special meeting In the city manager's office at 8
a.m. Monday.

- .The way it once was...-

Studenta from Waahlngton Elementary School In Gal- .
llpolla watched •• Dan Hinton
of Waterlown, OhiCI, wCirked
at his craft •• a blackamlth,
above, It the Federal Army
Homecoming, continuing thla
weekend It the Gallipolla City
Park until 4 p.m. Sunday. At
right, battle technique• and
weapon• were explained by a
fec:Jeral aoldler re-enactor.
Schoolchildren to11rec:! the
camp on Friday and received
living blatclry lelaona from
re-enactCira. The annual
event. A hoSt or other eventa, .
ranging from a program on
Civil War mec:Jiclne at the
Ariel Theatre to artillery
dlmonatratlona and a presentation on the Under·
ground Railroad, are round·

lng out the gathering of reenar;tors, one of Gallia Coun-

'

· Commissioners announced plans to
By BRIAN J. REED
S«k or pmvilk linandal assistance to
Times-Sentinel Stan
· TUPPERS PLAINS- Residents elderly residents. as well as those
seeking financial assistan~e in con- who ')Ualify as lnw and moderatenecting lo the Tuppers Plains Region- income households. with the costs
at· Sewer System have been gr.tnted assnc'ialed in connecting their homes
to sewer laps and those costs
an e)OJCnsion.
Wist momh. the Meigs County involved in disconnecting and crush-

ty'a first major tourlam IMit ttl
of the year.
·

ing eKisting septic tanks.
According to Jean Trussell. the
county's grants administmtor. the
applications are actually income surveys wilh cost estimates. No funding
source has been found for the work.
The 'commissioners have extendeJ the application deadline for anoth-

'

ertwo weeks. Trussell will meet with
residentS&lt;IR Friday. May I fmm 1-4
p.m. at the firehouse in Tuppers
Plains to distribute applicat ions and
answer 4ucstions. and will accept
applications by mail or through· the .

commissioners' nftk:e.

The Environmental Protection

Agency re4uires homeowners to
pump their old septic tanks. till them
with inert material and crush and cover them so they are unusahle. according to Trussell .
The sewer districl ha)ro, obtainetl
J!,ranl and ln;;m fund!~. In linance th~

(Continued on A8)

·Touting home ·upkeep:
Lawnmower repairmen agree simple
· maintenance s•ems engine problems

JHIWIIIIIma
c:a~eaory of the divi1ion were submilled by the Bucyrus Telearaph-

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
RACINE - While most people
are busy mowing their lawns. others
are hustling to repair those mowers
that invariably fail to start. making
spfingtime an ene!JletiC: time for
small engine repain'neq.
''l'm very busy this time of year."
said Lyle Baker. owner of the Racine
Mower Clinic, who explained he is
running ·anywherc from a week to 10
days behind in his repair IIChedille.
Dave WDitcman. owner of Dave's
Small Engine Repair,' Pomeroy,
apeed thai springtime is the busiest

lime. .

"The bisgesl problem is they wait
until they need them. then they covWilliams. who has been with the. Forum and the Circleville Henlld.
er you up, • he added. "They wanl
Williams· fealure wu one of 360 them the same day they bring them
OVPsince AUIIIII 1995. will receive
enuiti
from 21 newiPIPcl'l in ~vi­ up."
tier awird 11 a June 1-4 ceremony in
.
lion
I
done
durinJ 1997 lhll were
· Columbus. The Unlveniry of Rio
Baker and WDitcmah both asreed
Grande
coven the police iudaed ~ ediKne 111t Daily MObn- lhll December and·Januuy are senand counhouie beat fll' lhe Tribune ISin f.alle bf Jasper, AIL Overall, ?J enlly the slowest months fqr small
Ohio newaplpCrs served by lhe AP engine repairmen. particularly durina
and Sunday nrnes-Sentlnel.
• AP's Division I includod dlily submilled entries IIIIo competilion. 1 winters like the recent one wilh little
The Ohio AP annou~d the , snow. me111ina no broken dow.n
newspapers with circ:uluion of 8,000
awards on friday.
Of leu. Other winners in lhe features
•

1950.

4'l5South0turd!Strect· Rlpk:y. WV 1-iKXHI2204f7 ·:J12-JI44
t'r1t117 I I&amp;· tO pa •llttlny 8 I&amp;· MIIIIJP&amp; •IIMJ I pa ·II pa

M
M
C5
BS
C7

LeBlanc to ·resign
as city manager

Residents obtain extension. on TP sewer financial help

AP awards
ov·p staffer,
in contest

12To Choose From!

19Y7 Geo'PriZII
• Automatic
•I« Conditioni'll

,

.

15 To Choose From!

Jack Anderson
BohWmty
Max 'Dnrney
Sam WIIIOII
Jim Sepd1

Vol. 33, No. 11 .

at ·district contest

Good Morning

Bloodmobile collects 71 units during·Meigs·visit
Meigs County residents donated Raymind Landers, Deborah Folmer,
71 units of blood when the Red Gretchen Anderson, Timothy Hall.
Cross Bloodmobile visited the B~rbara K. Matthews Crow,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Ccn- 'Michele Ramsburg, Wilma Man~­
tcr on April 15.
field. ~aurcen Hennc.scy, Adam
Multiple gallon donors were: Jenkins and Vicki Canan;
Henry Bahr. 14 gallons; Debra
Racine -- Sara Ervin, Charles I.
Mora. eight gallons; Timothy Hall. Mugragc, Evelyn Mugragc. Harl)'
two gallons; Donna Davidson. 13 Holter, llarry .Brown. Patty Young.
gallons ; Judith Hunter, 10 gallons ; . Patsy Cornell. Stacey Shank, MariDarl&lt;~ Thomas, five gallons. and · lyn Bogard, Elizabeth Ayres Thornen and Bridget Ritchie; '
. Patricia Young. one gallon.
First time donors were Raymond
Middleport -- Cindi D. Stewan;
Landers. Charlotte Thompson, · Patricia A. Lyons., Vanessa A.
Misty Grogan, Vicky Brown. Larry Compston, Ellis Myers, 'Jennifer A.
Edwards, Sara Ervin and · Adam Garey, Dinah Stewart, Donna HawJenkins.
ley, Patricia Logan, Norma Wilcox.
Donors by community were:
Frank Herald. Elaine Ralston, Judith
Pomeroy -- Jackie Hildebrand. Hunter;
Debr-a D. Mora, Thomas B. Hart,
Tuppen Plains -- Karolyn K.
Janet K. Peavley, Patricia J. Barton, Welsh; Minersville -- Mary L. Voss;
David King, Jane Walton, ·Barbara Reedsville -- Johnny Roush; Syra:
Smith, Carrie Kennedy, John W. cuse -- Vicki Morrow, Carolyn
Moore, Daniel Lantz. Gerald E. Charles. · Bobby Ord and Darla
Rought, Albert Parker, Paul Marr. Thomas; Long Bottom -- Henry
Niese! Gerard, Bethany Cremeans, Bahr; ·

Key Clu·b makes
.sweep of awards

• .COLUMBUS CAP) - 'A penny
may n01 sound like much, but tack
h·onto the state sales tax for every
dollar spent and it could add up to
By JENNIFER RICHTER
what we -have done;· said Shelton.
billion in lost business for
Tlmea..S.nt!nel Stan
"We didn't have hours of hard work.
1ymv retailers. warns a conservaGALLI POLl$ -In the past three we had thousands. All the hard work ·
tive university economics profes- ·years, the Gallia Academy High they did truly paid off." ·.
sor.
.
School Key Club has been succe~~The single service project that the
Ohio University Profe~sor ful at receiving Key Club state bon- Key Club wa~ awarded a trophy for
Richard Vedder studied the potenors for commuriity service projects. was its ToyTown Plus communiiy
tial economic fallout if v01ers on . but when the club entered this year. service project. This ChristmaHime
~~;~:;;:.2w; it 801 ·more th'an.it barJiWred for at the· )l!'Oject besan .in·the fall with distrilidlstrict convention.
ution ihe week. prior to; Christmas.
percent to 6 percent.
. The ,GAHS Key Club entered
Clothes. toys and food were dis€ouplecl with county sales taxseveral of ils project reports to the tribuled.to the less fortunate in Gal·
es of O.S percent to 2 percent. a
districC awards ,ceremony held in lia Couniy. The club supplied fami·pm,:ent state soles to~ would send early April. butliule did they know lies. 'shelters and food pantries with
Ohro shoppers stream tog across the
what the end ·resull of their entries over 15 tons of food and over 1000
bord.er into neighboring states that
~ld he ~ a full ·sweep of the children received special gifts.
have much lower sales taKes. Vedaward.,. ·
During its application process for
lkr told i'eJ10rters Friday.
"Winning one t~ing· for lhe pa't the single service award.the cl~b had
two years wa• great. but winning to write up lhe need. plan. implethree and sweeping the awards was mentation, final results and pub.lic
just awesome." said advisor Barb awareness for its project. Also includShelton. "It made me proud of the ed in its application were phQ\os. live
people 1 work with. they are the best television and radio broadcasts and
Today'a c-.~~bcel al Galli a Academy...
newspaper clippings.
14 Sections • 156 Pqes
"What can you say.'? They have
The overall award required the
done it all. they are the best.'' said club to complete· a . recoll!.mended
GAHS Principal · Bruce Wilson. nine community service activities
Calendu ·
'1'hey lr.tve worked hard and l··am . throughout the year. The club not
. proud of them.''
only completed nine but also did
GAHS journeyed back from the ~yond lhe recommended amount.
Ohio District 49th Annual Key. Club
These activities included helping
Convention with first place honors in the American Cancer Society. Head
the single service. ovemll achieve- Start. Children·s Home. Keep Gallia
'ment and oratorical categories. ·
Beautiful. Iodine Deticiency DisorWeather
A2
"We set: all the re&lt;:ords. I don't der. ToyTown Plus. Ariel Theater.
think statewide any club has done
(Continued on A8)

5
·

.

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· April 26, 1998

Property reappraisal in Meigs
County is nearing completion

The sp~ritual connections·in learning to grieve
By RITA ELKINS
Florida Today
Woody Allen once said, "I don't
mind dying; I just don't want to be
there when it happens."
For those who haven 't figured
out how to do that, there are experts .
like Or. Kenneth Doka, an
author/lecturer on death and grief,
who 'has his own witticisms such as
this rule: "No one has to die in a
state of psychoanalytic grace (with)
all their loose.ends tied up."
.
OK, not exactly a knee-slapper.
B.ut consider how many people died
in this country last year.
And you· weren't one of them.
Everyone wants to live forever
and believe that tragedy and mortality happen to other people. But by
midlife - between ·the ages of 30
· and 50 - :·adults have to struggle
with the awareness of mortality,"
Doka says.
With half the nation facing age.50
or above in the next decad~ . there's
an increased interest in spiritual
books, lectures and videos about
death and afterlife. Boomers are facing the no-escape nature of life and
loss. says Doka.
"First, our parents die," he ~ays .
"Secondly, as one ages. one experiences physical declines. And, finally, friends die .- not (suddenly) )Jut
of degenerative conditions. Then
comes the awareness of finitude:
Not only. 'I can die,' but 'I cari die at
any time now.' "

Details on
pageA2

•

cor-

STARS HONORED- Seniora Teaching and Reaching Students (STARS),_a program which places aal\ior citizens in public schools as mentora and tutors, has10 partici:
pants at the Pomeroy Elementary School, one of only 15 schools In the state selected to take pert In the program.
.
Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, left, spoke to stUdents Wednesday at a ceremony recognizing the local STARS volunteers, who were chosen to CCimplementthe nHda of the
school's students. Judith Brachman, Ohio Department of Aging dlrec1or, conducted the ceremony. STARS honored, along with state and regional aging agency officials pictured here left to right are, front, Helen Frank, Lois Hawley, Margaret Wyatt, Ellen Johnson, Belly Curfman, Dorothy Janey, Ethel Wolf, and Lorene Goggins; and back'row,
are Madgle Smith and Joanna Council, STARS, with Brach man, Diana Coates, RSVP coordinator, Meigs County Council on Agln!!; Lt. Governor Hollister· ·Jeanne Naguckl
area coordinator of STARS, Pomeroy School Principal Debbie Haptonsllll; and Susan Oliver, Meigs County Council on Aging director.
'
'

Hl70
LOW 50s

snowblol!(ers.
And w,Cn it comes to making sure
your mower starts in lhe spring, the
~painnen agree: fuel additives are
lhe key. .
Sam Combs. a Wheelhorse tech·
nicitin at Baum's Lumber in Chester. ·
·recommemb a comprehensive maintena111.-c: schedule to keep mowers in
· lip-top condition. Althoogh he work.~
only on Wheelhoise mowers. ~said
his maintenance lips would apply to
:any mower or lawn tmctor.
In addition to recommending a
fuel additive be added for storage
during winter. he also suggests the
~~ne be started a few times during
t~e. winter and discournges jleople
against storing their mowers·withoul
fuel.
In lhe fall, don't run lhe carburetors dl)' before storiniJ the mowet for
the winter. said Baker. Use a 11a~
addili ve instead; running t~ carbuRtor dry causes parts lns.ide to dry
and crack. and eventually fail.
But if you really want to visit the
repair shop, the repairmen say don't

.J '

·
TIME - Lyle Baker, owner of lha Racine Mower CHnlc,
tlhown bare working on a weed trlmJMr, aap springtime Ia hla
bualelt time of lha year.
change yopr ~ngine oil or air filters. run wide open," Combs said. "They
don't sharpen your cutting blade.' and · run best at a certain RPM; running al
don'l run your mower's engine at full a slower •peed causes Clllbon lo build
up on the c;ylinders."
lhrotlle.
•
"When the engine nons wide open
Some ~le run their mowers at
less than full throtlle, thinking they . il pulls more air through the "rrouds.
keeping the engine cooler," II(; said,
t~M.extending the life of the engine.
"Run the throttle wide open," adding, "Don't run the engine wi •
Baker advi11es. "for maximum horse· out the shroud~."
Another way to en!IU!e your mowpower and maJ(imum cooling.''
"Mower engines are de•igned to
(Continuecl on AI)

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