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Ol)io Lottery

·Kentucky,
Minnesota
win at tourney

·P ick 3;

9-5-4
Pick 4:
4-3·2-8

Sports on Page 4

Buckeye 5:

•

2·7·12·16·19

Becoming · cloudy
with a chance of
sho-rs, lows In the 408.
Saturdey, cloudy and
windy, highs In the 40s. ·
1~nlght

•
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Vol. 47, NO. 221
01887, Ohio YaiiiJ Pullhhlng Companr

•

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Racine resumes local bLisjness climate survey

SeVeral to
~IIOose ·l roml·
Stop :by for a
·fest drive
'

Information will help in de~erminat/on
of what village residents want to see

'

By JIM FREEMAN
'
1
Sentlriel News Start
"
"Now that the river has gone down, we want to finish up our community ·assessment," according to Racine Mayor Scott Hill .
For the past month, the village of Racine has been conducting a survey
of area residents, business people and community leaders to get community ideas and interests in community economic development efforts.
The surveys also ask questions about shopping habits, and the kind of. retail
businesses area residents would like to ~eep and see est~blished in Racine:
"We've been very happy with the community's response ," Hill said. ''If

I

.~_. -

2 Section&amp;, 12 " -· 3 5 A O.nnett Co. Naw1 PIPIT

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Friday, March 21, 1997

fuuay.

. seeking
accord

any one else wants to return their surveys, the drop-off boxes will be left in
the various locations throughout Racine for another week."
"
The drpp-off boxes are located at the mayor's office, Racine Home National Bank, the Kountry Kitchen, Eber's Citgo and Sun-Fun Pennzoil. Blank survey forms are also available at the Racine mayor's office.
"We want residents and business people to participate in this survey
process. It is important that the village and Racine businesses kn.ow how how
the residents feel," said Hill.
"With the information given on the surveys the village c,an possibly take
steps that could attract more businesses and employers to our area. and also
help the businesses in Racine grow and thrive," he said.
Hill formed a steering committee to assist with the survey process. Steering committee members include Gary Norris, Tom Wolfe, John Dudding . .
Bobbie Roy and Jeff Thornton.
·
.
.

utfora

Americans seem
to prefer western
U.S., trend shQws

hope to resolve
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Yeltsin, Clinton
thorny NATO

.
.
The village is being assisted in the community survey cft'ort by the Cor·
poration for Ohio Appalachian Dev~lopment through Project Good START. ·
After ihe surveys are collcctell. COAD will tabulate and 11nalyzc the data for
preSentation at a community meeting, at which time Racine rcstdcnts will
he able to discuss funher developmc}lt ideas.
The meeting will be held Thursday. March 27 at 6:30p.m. in the Rac ine
Fire Station.
.
After the community meeting, COAD will develop and present a "Report
to the Community" that will include recommendations and action steps the
village, groups and organizations. or individuals alld l&gt;usinesses can take to
improve and enhance the business climate in Racine.
COAD has also provided infonnation on technical assistance. education
. and loan ptograms.through various state and federal agencies to small rcta.il,
professional and manufacturing businesses..
·

.

By MAKEDA RUSSELl
GanneH News Service
. WJ\,SHINGTON ~ New population estimates from the Census
Bureau show a consistent trend ov.cr
·the.pa.r decade - growth in the West
at the expense of the East.

expans1on 1ssue.

. HELSINKI, Finland (AP) · __:
. Opening a long day .of summitry iri
this chilly . Scandinavian capital,
· Russian President Boris Yeltsin said
. today he hoped he and President
By The Aseoclated Press
Clinton could "erase the differences
According to county-by-county
The 1990s have been a decade
of opinion" tluit complicate'American
population data being released March
of growth for some big sub~rban
plans to broaden NATO:
20, eight of the I0 fastest growing
countiC!', new Census ·Bureau esti. The two presidents met at-the seastates since 1990 are in the West and
mates released Thursday for Ohio .
'si!le Finnish presidential residence,
eight of the s.lowcst growing states
showed ..
w~re Yeltsin left no doubt he was
arc in the East.
Delaware, Wan·en and Un.ion
deail' sct against the spread of NATO
countic·s posted the largest gains in
Nevada continues to lead growth
..to.absorb Eastefu.aiKI ·Cedt~Ulurothe years since the big national
in the West, with its population up '
countiies.
·
head count in 1m. the Ccnsu·s
more than 32 percent - compared to
Asked if a widening NATO poses
Bureau said.
I 8 pcrccn! in the second fastest
a threat to Russia, Yeltsin replie&lt;j in
..... ·"
ThC suburban Columbus coungrowing state. Arizo'na .
a strong voice, "I'm nQt convinced
ties. Delaware and Union. eKperiIdaho. Colorado and Utah also arc
otherwise."
.
.enccd
gains of 24.4 percent and 17
growing. up more than 17 percent ,
The talks were taking place in the
percent, respectively.
nearly 16 percent and more than' 15
newly built residence with towering
Cincinnali hcdroorn communipercent
respectively since 1990.
]!lass windows and a breathtaking
tics in Warren County also posted
Some demographers sec the move
view of the Gulf of Finland. "I think
gains, expanding that county's pn[&gt;West
as a quest for the good life.
. we'll have a good meeting.·· Clinton
·ulation hy 18.3 percent between ·
"When we interview (people who
predicted.
1990 and 1996.
have mo.vcd West). the No. t reason
• In contrast to his talkative counOhio's leading loser: Jefferson
we gel from fulks is the scenery. the
terpart, Clinton wa.~ taciturn. "Boris,
•
County. where the population
recreation and the space... said
we should shake hands," he urged. As
'
shrunk hy 4.1 percent. The state as
Richard
Morrill. professor of geogthey shook. Clinton lricd to cut off
a whole grew by 3 percent. from
raphy and environmental studies at
· questions but Ycltsin continued on.
the 1990 count of IO.K million In
· the . University of Washington in
"We always come 10 an agreethe
burcau's-1996 estimate of II . 1
These Pomeroy 2'year-olds pulled out their riding toys, a sure algn that sprlrig Ia here, Sam
Seattle . ."It is referred to as the 'rurmilium.
ment with Bill," he said. "It's the
sCherfel, aon 'of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Scherfel, takes Haley Engllah, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
al rebound.' and no one knows
duty of the presidents of the two great
Locally, population has grown
English, for a ride around the parking lot.
whclhcr il is lon¥-tcr_m or not. .. .
superpowers and it's simply our
in Meig, County since 1990, when
" The revolution m commumcahuman duty."
Meigs wa.' listed with '22,987 restions allows people to live an urban . idents. The new estimate for Meigs
"We have the good will to move
cosmopolitan lifestyle in a lqw-densc during 1996 is 23,938. an increase
toward each other and erase the dif,
environment.''
said demographer of 4.1 percent.
fercnccs of opinion that we now · COLUMBUS iAPl - Central patch for .a story published today he -serving thc ·614 area. to determine if
Wiliiam Frey at the University of
In other area counties, estimathave:· he· said.
and southeast Ohio may be ·next to . docs not know what the new area a new code is needed.
·
Michigan
in
Ann
Arbor.
"There
is
not
ed
increases were nolcd during
Senior U.S. aides have prepared sec their telephone area code split in code will be or which counties will
"It's a hasic math equation ...
·a
lot
of
regulation.
and
it
is
lcs'
stress1996
in Gallia (32.820. up 6 per·
five .tentative documents' of under· IWO.
he affected.
Robinson said. "You have so many
ful."
ccril from 30.~54 in 1990); Athens
standing. These include one on Euro··we're simply running out of digits you.can usc. The area is growAmcritech said on Thursday it
The opposite is true in the -East. In (61,162. up 2.7 percent from
. pean security that would set forth may begin as ·early as next month numbers," Robinson said. Cellular ing .so much ."
. areas of agreement, a second on implementing changes toward adding phone~. fax machines and automated·
Recently, the 330 area code was fact. the only two slates tn lose p&lt;&gt;p· 59,547), Jackson (32,352. up 7 peradvancing strategic arms ·control, a new area code to the corner of the teller machines have contnb~tcd 10 added. to the 216 area in northeast ulation over i.hC scvC.n year~ arc in lhc cent from 30,230), Vinton ('12,068 .
and a third on U.S. economic assis- slate now' served by 614.
the prol&gt;l,em. he said .
Ohio and the 937 code was put in the. Northeast - Connecticut and Rhode up 8.7 percent from 11,098) and
Island. .The D&gt;&lt;tricl nl Cnlul)lhia Washington (63,827, up 2.5 per. tanCc tO Russia.
Company spokesman Dave . Ameritcch has formed a consor• 513 area in the southwest.
cent from 62,254 ).
also
lost population.
The two others. a U.S. official _ RGI&gt;inson told The Columbus Dis- tium. made up of phone companies
said. would deal with controlling
chemical weapons and distinguishing
· which missile defense systems are
considered legal under past accords.
In some ways; this 12th Clinton·
. Ycltsin meeting in four years was
NEW YORK (APl - As tobacco opponents celcb(atc Liggett Group'·s
shaping up as their most troublesome. admission that cigarettes cause cancer. Wall Street analysts say the
· But the two leaders kicked it off With announcement is old news and should not hann the industry.
. .
kindly statements.
.
"This is a media event and has no relation to the rest of .the industry."
''I think we' ll work somethrng said Jack Maxwell, tobacco industry anal~st 'wilh Wheat First Securities in
· out ·· Clinton said as they sat down Richmond. Va. "I've been telling my clients today it's a damn good buyong
· io dine Thursday night: "r hope we opportunity for the tobacco group," .
,
. .
.· .
will .... And l"m glad to sec President .
Industry critics reacted gleefully to Ltggcu s conlcsston Thursday. rn whtch
Ycltsin looking so fit and well ."
the Durham. N.C.-bascd maker of Chesterfield. Lark and L&amp;M cigarellcs
.. They dined on young reindeer at agreed to settle 22 state lawsuits hy puttittg- warning labels on paclfthat say
the presidcnlial palace. on the water· smoking is addictive and Caus\!s cancer.
front alongside an open-air:,markct.
It also agreed to pay up front cash of ahout $,25 million, plus 2.5 percent
Known for its opulent Hall of Mor· of its pretax profits over the next 25 years, a~d provide documents about the
tors. it was the site in 1990 of a sum· marketing of cigarcucs to children.
.
mit between Presidents George Bush
Others in the industry have refused to say cigareucs are addictive and sue·
and Mikhail Gorbachcv.
.
ccssfully blOcked the release pf the documents, 111 least temporarily, by claimClinton's conciliation went . ·ing they arc recordings of confidential conversations among industry offibeyond warm words.
~L
.
· He brought with him a package of
Critics see the confcssio.!i as a crack in the legal wall tobacco compa~ies
arms control concessions. hoping th~ have-bllilt for protection.
·
,.
· ·
.·
offer would end a long impasse on
"!.think their credibility is shot before the first witness is called now," .
the · START II· missile -reduction said critic Richard Day nard, head of the Tobacco Products Liability Project ·
m!aty.
at Northe;~Stern University in Boston.
· In return, Clinton wants a clear
Investors appeared worrie4, selling off shares of the f~r other tobacco
commitment from Yeltsin that the companies that continue to maintain no direct link between smoking and
treaty_will be ratified by the Russian health.
.
parliament this sprins .. START 0 ' But tobacoo analysts said thc .admission is mostly symbolic and does not
would cut U.S. and Russtan strategte indicate a breaking of ranks in the industry. Liggett is a small company and
SENIOR DONATIONS - The lhlga County
preeented the ciMnlng aupplles to Melge
riuclear arsenals in half by 2003.
the others are resolved to scrap with their enemies in coun indefinitely, they
County Senior Cltl&amp;enl Dl~or SUIIIn Ott,.
Senior Cltlzwte wea 'thll:lentficlary of cleMI"'
On the NATO front. Russia's say.
..
Oliver 1nd Bert.. Klenlngamlth, dlrlctor 01
aupplles donl1iHI by thl Country Neighbor PrO· C!PP05ition to the absorption of iiS f~r- ·
· ~The cvidenc~ is a'ready out there of addiction," said Tom Hennessey,
the Ashtabull County center, .,. both 11111'11grim Senior CIIIDn Center of Alhtallule Counmer lilies within the alliance begm· managing editor of Andrews Tobacco Industry Litisation Reponer, which .'
ty In thl Wllte
. of thl1 month'l flooding. Red .berl of • ateta orpnlza1ion.
. tiing next summer .is 'unyielding. seeks to provide objective ·coyerage of tobacco litigation .
llytar end Alton Yutzy, both of Orwttll, above,

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AS LOW AS:

peah

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.. ,...... ."'"~~···
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Ameritech looks to split 614 area code

........

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AnalyStS expect mioimal
impact from admission

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,.

• I ./•

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...

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,y
,;,..~;.·/·· &gt;~

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{"'

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'!( .:}·

Population
up . in Meigs,
census says

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t;ommentary
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: F~1 MIIrch21, 1187

. Satutday, Man:b U

II

Lincoln's·ghost shuns Democratic onors
WASHING'It&gt;N - Lost in the
volume of reponing about overnight
slays in lhe Lincoln Bedroom by Bill
Clinlon 's.frietlds and financiers is one
111. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
significant omission: None of lhese
814-992·2156 • Fall: 992-2157
high-rolling guesu got to see the
ghost of Abraham Lincoln . '
Il's understandable, of course.
Lincoln was a Republican, and would
presumably be reluctant to lend his
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
spirit to lhe Democratic National
Cgmmill~e's fund-raisi'ng efforts. Or
ROBERT L. WINGETT
maybe he just didn't.care for !he ClinPublisher
. tons' guest list.
. ·
. A moral man, would Lincoln have
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
tipped his hat to Candice Bergen,
Gertoral Manager'
/
Controller
whose .televtsion persona, Murphy
Brown, was decried by fonner GOP
Vice President Dan Quayle as
Tho Sentinel • • - - to file- fn&gt;mtil lap(30/)
til_, P'
hod.
, immoral?
Trl*l- _,.,....od- oil lilly/»-.
And why should Lincoln haunt
- . , 01111 CloyfitH , _ _ , _ , Spfodffo . , . , illorw'o o ,.,• .,,..,.. o ·
playwright
Neil Simon, a $3 I,000
1114uo , ._
"" to 11.- - · Tho Senllnel, 111 Court sr.,
PomoR&gt;y,Ohlo451H:or,FAXtoll-.;tS1.
·
'
Clinton contributor• If Lincoln did
~,__ _ __.._ _ _...._ _...;:....:;•_.,_ _,..._..:;._ _ _,.;,..-1; offer Simon. a spectral glimpse,
Simon might have wriuen a new hit
comedy -like "Barefoot.in lhe Lincoln Bedroom," or "The '(Lincoln)
Apartment" - and domited aU the
proceeds to the Democrats.
. And while Clinton may be enamored with "Funny Girl" Barbra

.2,

loa.-- --,-}-II»-.Elich--·..,_..
, ,on. o-,.
tt'

Clinton's Term II lives
~up to expectations:
·:nothing but trouble

By Jack Anderson
and · .,
Jan Moller

I aM
Fi;JD

--To
f\IVRfJSiN6

GOiNG oN

HeRe!

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l'

"'.

Thr~sting

~d
"t. 0,

Joseoh Soear

Media assistance appreciated

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.

· Hbw ¢an so many become so IC\V .
in the space of orie week'' They
cr0wd· mto the 'churches on Ea~!er
Sunday. bw where arc they the next
Sunday·•
Many rcoplc - mcluding some
churchmen -think the Sunday after
• ~a.'e· c·.
Easter is called L,ow Sunday in the
.:,~,,
''
Ul
Church Year because of the Jow
~Dew Editor: ,
. ,
,
· -. .
church altendancc on that day. (Actu.~' 'Wcil. (vlcigs County, we have seen what Mother Nature can deal us when ally the name lciw Sunday was
- ~ cqmcs to bad times but ~s for a lot of people in Rutland. Mother Nature coined by the church in lhe 15th ccn1
.
_ tury to contrast it with the high feast
:tsn't the only tault ... man h~s had a lot to do with it.
~ We all in southern Ohio base our lives around coal, but abandoned stnp of Easter.)
:mines in Meigs County arc such a maJor player in our floods that this flood- ·_ Ttw Rev. Fleming Rutledge. an
~'ll! will never be fixed until they're all re~laimcll and creeks arc cleaned out. l;tfiseopal clergyman in POrt Chester,
1 Our government hjl~ spent millions of tax dollars studying the lovcmak: N_,Y , may have ,the reason .for the
}ng of frogs. but wlfc'n it comes to helpmg fix·a real fixable problem. they . · suilden congreganonal downs1zmg on
llpn't have a dime.
.,
. .
. ·,
_ " the Sund~y after Easter.
f Americans, don't be lied 10. They tax every ton of coal m the USA to . The fanhful go to church on Eastj-cc1aim abandoned strip mines everyday. but the money ~tays ~n Washing- er. he jBys; ~~. hear about th~ resur~on. D.C.. instead of being used as it was put on coal for us bemg used for · rectton, but the rcsurrectton has
pur 'national debt.
'
·
· ·
.
bqcomc a~ e"!b~rrassmcnt to many
Q1te would wonder how our elected senators and congress~en co~l'l_ let mo~~rn, S?f'htsllcated church peohis h,p_pep. So 1 only hope everyone who reads thts letter wntes Washml-· pie:. .
,
1
..
~dli, D.~ .• and s~aks their mind ~bout this tax money that n~ds to be spent
It ts hard! he observes, to ~nd
'here ~ 1100n. Where are the congressmen and the senators from Ohio at? a robust behef m t.he_~~su'!ccuon
bn vacition overseas or Canada trying to sell out mot:e American jobs'?
nQwildays tn the mamhne churche~.
P.$. Every bin in t~e past 10 years has l_ost A:m~rican jobs, )\Ot one bill As • re~~lt. we hear from the ·pulpn
creatod 11 milhon JObs coast-19~oastm tndustry,
. about a new ~ason, ne\v growth,
Whete- is !lllr tax ~ ~?~,..ake tlp ll!ld,help tlie tax payers before new life.' ~e he.i of :sap ~ising in the
.OJ\e in paying here in An!erica. ·
.
·
'
. trees. !he smgtn~ of buds, !he warmth
So for Meigs County and the rest of' southern Ohio, we 1111 ~· to yell ?f the lengthen_tng days.' We "7ar of
ause this flooding isn't goink away. It will only ,aet worse ..So wnte today. a new se~n ~n the Cll!1h ·and tn lhe.
e ~the people to stand together.to pt Meigs County reclaimed and ~~fhuman1ty.' Wellearlhat •tove
f011tl1iml Ollio liac'k green instead of Jtrip mine brown.
•s stronpr than dealh('" .
l · .
· ..
Floyd H. c;.~
But nothing about the resurrec1
•
·
Rutllnd tion.
·

'amBt'/"On n·eelile'd here and .nOW

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We can also rtPQrt. exclusively,
that all -those Friend&amp; .of ·Bill who
bragged about sleeping on the original bed of the Li.ncoln era were plain
wrong.
·
That's because there were· so
many complaints for years about how
uncomfoi1able and lumpy the mattress was lhat President George Bush
decided to send for a kinder, gentler
mattress. . The Cleveland-based
Stearns and Foster (urniture cl)mpa.ny filled out a~ · order from the White
House "housekeeper" in 19,89to eli.•·
tom-make lhe odd-sized mattress, 63
inches by 94 inchc.•. The mattress. a
"Regency Inspiration," was delivered for a mere SSOO. ,
Clinton's gi/CSIS should be grateful for the switch. The only sure Lincoln conncctlon is that t~ old mattress was tlie one on which Lincoln's
11-ycar-old son, Willie, died. It is \
unlikely that Abraham Linc'ohi ever
slept in lhe bed itself,' be&lt;:ause in his
day it was a guest bed.
'
So any' of Clinton's donors who
.anted up so they cduld brag that they
slept on lhe bed or in the bedroom in
which Lincoln slept are, by all rights,
entitled to a full refund from the president.

viet. Fortunaiely. Senate Majority
Leader Trent J,Ott does nOt appear too
keen hn DeLay's idea. The appropri'\le t1mc to challenge judicial activists
is during the confinnation process,
'Lou has said. No impeachment trials
would he conducted in lhe. Upper
Body, he said, as ' way of expressing disagreement with rulings.
Another Republican sil~c ~ho
wants to constram the courts IS fCJ_ccted U.S. Supreme Court nommec
Robert Bur~ - He is now a prpfcssionallhinkcr who hangs out at a tonk
called ihc ·~meri~~n Entc'l'rise.lnstitutc. In hts wnungs and lectures.
Bork says the Court to which he once
aspired is. ~nt. on destroying o~r cuiturc. has d~ctdcd ~?rule_ us Wllh?ut
any,warranl!n l~w, and IS engagmg
m the promot1on of anarchy and
lic~nsc . in the mor~l order a~d
advan.~mg tyranny m the soc tal
order.
.
How Bork could possiblf harbor
such opinions. about a High Court of
seven Republicans and two Dcmocrats. h)rded over by a political primhive named · William Rchnquist ,
might escape the normal person, but
-

remember, we are(lal'lopg about
· fanatics here. . ~ · •
Bork wants a constitutional
amendment !hat would permit Congress to overri.tlc the Supreme Court.
I suppose it would work like campaigns: The special interests kick .in
some money, the lawmakers do some stumping and whtp up snmc popular
.pa.'-•ion_ They _amass u simple major,ity. and the law goes out the window.
As a believer in the constitution- ·
al system that has wor~ed wcll. lor
220 years, I itm skittish about rcmoving so-callca:&gt;activist" judges. But 1
coult! he convinced by a show of
faith .
If charges arc brought first against
David Sentelle, the appellate jUdge
who oversaw the firing or I_ndcpendent Counsel Robert Fiske and the
hiring of Kenneth ~tarr, 1 might go
_along. If charges arc then brought
against Lawrence · Silberman, who
joined w1th Scntcllc to ovcnurn Oliv_cr North's conviction, then by Jove,
they will have a convert on their
hands.
'
(Jaeeph Speer lee c:olumnllt tor
Newspaper Enterprise Aesoclti·
lion.)
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0

Why do' 'Easter·sermons s·k.·p the' resurrect'l•on' ?

~ · Your efforts in getting information to t,he more lhan I ,750 fam1!1cs aflect~,ed. by this flood were a great scrv1cc t~1 the people in your commumty and
.
:to 'he American .Red Cross. ·
:
, Jay Scott
1
Public: Information Officer
·
2
t
Disaster Operations Headquarters
Chillicothe
•

c

have some questions.' ,. . -

politics i_nto t~e court ,. sy~~~-m.,

to the editor

:•the
the American
Whcnadlsastcroccurs.thcpublicnecdstobcussurcp
Red Crosspeople.
is at work
doing the job they would want the Red Cross 10

ab e - and lhat he prefers Republicans.
President Reagan's daughter Maureen and her husband, nnis Revell,
slept in the Lincoln droom during ·
!heir visits because lhe long bed was
lhe best one to fit Reve , who stands
6-feet-7: The couples 't inore than
·100nights there witli t ir dog, Boxcar Willie, who was nt-to bark .at
some unseen figure.
Revell told our associate Pale Van
Atta that he once saw a preSidential ·
poltergeist near the room's fireplace.
But Maureen Reagan didn't believe
her husband until the night she woke
up and saw a transparent figure in a
red coat standing by the windd'w. He
turned to stare at he~ and then vanished. When she told her father,
President Reagan said. ·"If you see
him again, send him down the hall. I

(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
era columnl•t• lor Unltacl l'eltura
Syndicate.)

Some of the -keener minds in scattenng of poisonous 'substances .
Republican ranks are working on about the landscap,:. This\made Tom
schemes to improve the wayward and DeLay very angry. and he decided to
rcrvcrse federal bench.
' . run for ·'the . state lcgi~laturc, He
They want judges to improve
their interpretations of the law - .
which is to say, the deep thinkers ·
want a more conservative spin. They arrived in Washinglon in 1984, and is
plan' to effected this advancement in remembered fondly as the hothead
ju_risprudcncc by fon:ing judges to he who described the Environmental
more acc~untable to Congress - · Protcctign Agency as the "Gestapo of
wh1ch IS _to say, the GOP eggheads government."
would like to politicizcthe judiciary.
· Now DeLay is leading a moveOne of the savants who is leading ment to impeach judges that he and
the way &lt;Jn this issue is Rep. Tom other perfcrvid firc' catcrs find lackDelay of Texas, the House majority in g. The Constitution would seem to
whip. Truth he. told, I never en vi- limit such drastic action to ·magissioncd the man from Sugar Land as trates who commit "high crimes and
-i Dear Editor: :, . On behalf of the American Red Cross Disaster Headquarters for the South- a cerebral ~1ant. but m my rese~rl· h I misdemeanors.'' but that 'caveat is
l'ound a ~elercncc t~.htm a&lt; an ·,l.ntcl- seen as a minor impediment. DeLay
:~ central Ohio floods, we wish to express our apprcc1ation for your cnopcralcctual Ideologue . The Ideologue told the Washington Times a couple
~ tion during the disaster relief eflorts.
part
I did know abo~t. .
.
of weeks ago that articles of impeach: When disaster strikes a community. the media arc a major contact with
T&lt;:11_n Delay " one ol those m- mcnt arc heing drawn up against a
• disa,icr victims and the general public in the affected areas. It is at times nec- your-lace conservatives who arc so federal judge in Texas who set aside .
: essary fi1r t~e Red Cross to ge t ciitical adviSories lo the public. such as evacsnarly they., cm~arrass Newt Gin- some lo.:al election results hecausc
:; uation _illformation on the locauon of Red CrosJ&lt; shelters and lcedin~t sites: grich. One of DeLay's pel peeves is 800 suspect absentee ballots were
1health and safety prccautions:_ the.types of services1the Red Cross oft'ers: and cnv~ronmentahsts. He once owned a cast. Twu other judges arc hcmg con.,ttie locat1on of Red Cross scmcc centers prov1dmg emergency financml asSis- company 'called Albo Pest C.)ntr 1. It sidcrcd for removal.
0
! tancc.
·
was a. line business until the state
The House can impeach with a
~ in addition to keepmg disaster victims and the public informed. we have
decided it might improve the public simple majority·vote, but the Sena\C
:;:a ~cond objective. Although the Red Cross is lhe designated disaster response health -to regulate the promiscuous deeds a two-thirds majonty to con.:agency by congressional mandate. we arc, as you know, funded solely hy

-~.• Letters
•

Sueisand, espei:ially in Iicht or her
Wliito House lore holds'that Lin$85,000 in contributions, there's no coln haunu (he room not because It
reason why lhe perennially shy [,in- · was the late president's actual bedcoin would take 'to hj!r. If Streisand room, but because it was !he room
where he was autopsied and
embalmed after his assassination. lrr
. honor of that presence, a copy of lhe
Emancipation Proclama~ion hangs in:
the room. ·
The first reponed sighting of the
ghoSt _of Lincoln wasr by someone .
had seen ~im , she might have been who was decidedly no Democr~ in
prompted to bell out a petulant , his own country, Winston Churchill.
"Don't Rain on My Parade," or com- He was sleeping in the room when
plained to Abe's ghost. "You Don't legend has it be saw a spectral Abe.
Bring Me Flowers."
and went running from !he room stark
The diva Streisand may be able to. naked. ·
see forever on a clear day, but she
Princess Juliana of the Nelherdidn't get .a peek at the staunchly lands also reported a sighting, as have
Republican Lincoln.
lesser luminaries..Still, White House
Or consider how Ljncoln 'would historian William Scale has dishave felt about one bedroom guest missed these oc:cu~nces as hav_in~
who contributed a whopPing emanated from g~ost_ stones ong~ ­
$436,023 to the Democratic cam- _ natty concocted as a JOke by Preslpaign. Steven Spielberg. who direct- dent Harry S. Truman.
ed "Poltergeist," might have been a
The most recent reports, however,
believer of sorts. But Lincoln was came from folks who spent a lot of
apparen~y not about to give him a time_in lhe room durin? the Reagan '
factual pretext for doing "Poltergeist adll)lmstratiOn --: wh1ch suggests
4" and forking over more money to lhat the ~hy l\1r. Lmcoln only haunts
the opposition party,
!hose With whom he feels c;omfon-

Rutledge. who Clips excc'l'l' from .
"Easter is not.a day for mnocuous first fruits of them that slept. Dcaih'
scnnc&gt;ns from .the Nc_)Y York Times sentiments: ahout springtime in 'the · is swallowed up in victory!"' · for his ''Quotations'" files. says he is hean, This is the day l'ortrumpets and
As my old seminary clu.-matc, • ,
··aix1ut to give my Easter file a new ·timpani and organ fanfares to burst Henry Niles from Mis.,issillpi, would:
the eardrums of Satan!1\ave said, "Good 8ravy. I say that's ,
"ThiS is no day for wistful prcachin' ."
.
;
V
•
thoughts about the possibility of an
And if· we heard it more often: .
name: 'I 00 Ways to Avoid ' Saying aftcrlilc . ThiS'is a day for. St. Paul's fmm our pulpits on Easter•. we just ,
That Jesus Christ is Risen·From the - cry of triumph: 'If Christ he not risen; might have to rcnaine !,ow Sunday. :
Dead.' •Over and over .in these ~cr- then is our preaching vain, And your
(George R. Plegenz II e i:olum-:
mons the same words appear. ,_
f~ith is also vain. But now 'is Christ nlat lor Newapepir Enterprise;
renewal, revival. rebirth.' They arc risen l'rom the dead and become the Association-)
'
·
used far more often than the word
resurrection."
If Ruf:dgc ·is right, that may be
the reason the f~ithful don't return th9
The Dcmcx;ratic National Committee decided to return $107,000 to lhe ·
· Sunday after Easter.
· Cheyenne and Arap'uho Indian tribes of Oklahoma. Thus ended a campaign:
· "Seriously now.'' he ask.~·. "would linancc scandal sc1rdid even by the standards of the Lincoln bedroom rentals, : '
today 's Easter sermons inspire you to The Cheyenne-Arapaho reservation is one ,of.!he poorest chunks of real estate :
come ba~k the next Sunday? Put in the nation. Unemployment exceeds 51 JIOrccnt, 83 percent ol· the tribes' ;
yourself in the place of the women workers have annual mcomcs of $7.000 or less .... They had no money to • ·
who went to the tomb that Easter give. They did. however, have a political need. They have tried for 68 year~ :
morning to anoint the body of Jesus. to regain possess10n of Fon Reno, a1,500-acrc parcel they.cooed to the gov- :
Maybe the flowers were blooming emmcnt a century ago in exchange for military protection: Tribal elders had :
and the birds were singing as the a brainstorm : They would stop begging Congress and take their ca.~&lt;; to Bill ·.
women walked along. Do you' think · Clinton, who npt only could feel their pain, but as commander in chief could :
they took comfort from !hat? ··
sign an executive order returning the parcel. A political firm run by old Clin- :.
"Is. it likely they loolled ·out over ton -Gore hand Peter Knight suggested a $100,000 contribution for the right : ·
the fields and said to one another, to sip coffee with the leader ofthe free world .... No sooner hll!llhcy returned ·
'Maybe the Master is going to come ·home lhan lhe Knight firm allegedly began hectoring. them -threatening :.
again like wheat that springeth to sabotage.Fort Reno efforts unless lhe Indians shelled out more cash. Wl)en :
green'? The women and lhe ~sties The Washington Post revealed the shakedown, the party suffcrc;d a spasm of :
did not start liclieving in the resur- delayed'guilt syndrome. It may be true tliat both parties shake down con- . ·
rection beca11se lhey saw lhe green tributors, but only lhe boldest operaton have tried to fri9k !he destitute. Who :
grass comins up. Something more would hllve thought you could wring '$JQO,OOQ out of Native Ameficans i~- :
than thiU had to- have happened. cerated on a flat plain in lhe middle or nowhere? Manhiltta~._may have been ·
What bappencd is !hat Jesus_himself a steal, but what about $107,000 for a cup of loe'/- the Dlttolt ~.
appeared, and he was alive. · ·
M~17
·
•

Geor"e R Plagenz

Other. voices, other·opinions

"

,.

•

.

·Meigs announcements

0 HIO \'Jt:CltiKI

·-,

: By WALTER R: MEARS .
'
.
: AP Special Correspondent '
·
.
• WASHINGTON - Those nagging second-term headaches started early
: for President Clinton. And they keep coming. It's chronic. For ~:&gt;residents who
·- get a second time around, it goes with the territory, although seldom so soon.
' Clinton's troubles .began even before his re-election, w1th the disclosure
·; of fund-raiSmg excesses by lhe Democratic Party, which is promiSing to return
' $3 million in undocumented or illicit donations.
' ·
' \
: That's become a preoccupation in Washington, and a factor in other wJes,
. .::as in the embittered withdrawal of Antliony Lake, his fomier national secu~ rity adviSer, as hiS nominee to run the CIA.
.
. • Lake said he was not involved in the Whi~e House fund-raising push, but
,.; it was one of the points raised by his Republican opponents at delayed. dragqging confirmation hearings, which he called an intolerable circus_
·1 Now Clinton has chosen CIA and Senate Intelligence Committee_vcter&lt;an George Tenet as his fiflh nominee to that post. Three served, .an earlier
·:one withdrew in a flap over a foreign household employee.
·: The fund~ cloud also has slowed confirmation for Alexis Herman. Clin: Jon's nominee to be secretary of labor, who had been assistant to the presi: dent for public liaison.
·
That's not all of it.
.
. , • Senate Republicans on Wednesday pushed through a resolution
: •demanding that Attorney GeAeral Janet Reno seek court appointment of a
::special prosecutor to investigate · Democratic fund-raising. Democrats
t.: pressc.d to broaden th.e measure to include congressional and GOP linanc·~ ·
'
.
-. mg. too.
It isn't binding, only advisory. Clinton has declined to discuss the topic,
['!saying it should not be a political decision, -but it certainly has~ome a polit'lical· issue.
·
·
·.
j; • Clinton and GOP congressional leaders talked of working together, in
,•bipartisan harmony, to settle on a budget-that would be balan~d in 2002,
;1 butlhe harmony didn 'I last. Republicans said CliijlOn 's version actually would
:;lead to a $69 billion deficit in the target year for balance; and s~d be stmuld
'-write another one. The House evep adopted a resolution seeking a new bud- ·
~get from him. The White House said no.
·
.; . Republicans have their own internal differences on' what to do about the
:.:budget and their long-promised quesffor t!U\ cuts. Congress is supposed to
'1 qct on its own budget resoluti'On by April 15, but it won't.
: • Senate and House investigations are coming soon in the fund-raising con·; troversy. While they are supposed to deal wilh political money matters beyond
: the White House, they are certain to concentrate on the Democrats, and the
~president, the invitations, access and - the most ardeni Republicans say;influence donors got.

The Dally Se11tlnel• Page 3

Frtdlly, March 21, 1887

----

- ·-

-

Page~

.'

....

AccuWea1~ forecast for daytime conditions and

-Joan Mclain

MICH.

•

Joan McLain, 64. Racine, died Thursday. Mmh 20, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
.
.
She was born on May 12, 1932, in Kennsington, daughterofthe late John
.00 Edith Spealey Mc:Ciig. She was lhe owner of a drug store/ice cream store,
and w.as a member.of the Veterans Memorial Hospital Auxiliary and !he Meigs
County Senior Citizens. ·
She is survived by her husband, Charles L McLain; two sons ~nd daughters-in-law, Charles "Mike" and Patricia McLain of Gallipolis, and James
"Jim" and Melinda McLain of Pomeroy ; a daughter and son-in-law, Beverly and Richard Moore of Racine; a sister, Kalhryn,.Ellis or New Lexington;
and six grandchildren..
She was also preceded in death by two brothers and two sisters.
Mass of Christian Burial will be II a.m. Saturday in the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Pomeroy, with lhe Rev. Falher Walter Heinz officiating.
Burial will be ·in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may.call at the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 5-9 p.m. today and 9-IO ·a.m. Saturday.
A vigil service will be conducted in the funeral home at 8:45 tonight.

IToledoI 38" I

""·

IMenslleld Is~ I•
I

'

IND.

41°

•
W.VA.

Justine Smith

Gospel s1D1 sd
' A Good Friday all-night gospel
sing will be held at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church beginning at
7p.m.
Featured singers will be the
Builders Quartet, White Oak Choir,
Steve Newland, Narrow Way, Jubilee
Trio, Christ Like and Chm11an
Sounds.
The all-night sing was started II
years ago in Rutland. In 1986 it took
place in the old Freewill Baptist
Church, but smce seating capacity
was not sufficient to accommodate
the large crowd, it was moved to the
Rutland Civic Center.
.
Then in 1992 a new Rutland
_Freewill Baptist Church was built.
Paul Taylor i~ pastor and Evelyn
Roush is the g\)spel music promoter.
The public is invited to join in the
sing.

dents are asked to remove flowers
which they want to keep.
Tkkets for sale
Tickets are now on sale for !he
• Meigs County Grange banquet to be
held on April 18 atlhe Meigs Co4nty Senior'Citizens Center. Tickets.are
$1 for adult and $6 for children and
are available for Ziba Midkiff, Helen
. Quivey, Norman Will, Chuck Yost.
Anhur Crabtree, Opal Dyer and Patty Dyer_
Coin club to meet
The OH KAN Cmn Club will met

Monday at the Meigs County Arts
Council building in Middleport. S
p.m. Plans will be made for the 35th
annual co,m show, April 6 at the HoiJday Inn in Gallipolis. Dealers from
the tri-state area will be there and
door prizes will be awarded.

Workshop offered
Justine Smith. 80, of Canton, formerly of Meigs County, died Thursday.
Woodland Centers Inc. IS offering
Feb. 20, 1997 in the Aultman Hosp1tal. Canton.
'
a series of four anger management
· ·Born in Meigs County on Oct. 28, 1916, she was the daughter ofthe late groups for Meig• County children.
Cecil and Emma Sanders. She spenf most of her life in the Canton area.
ages 6to 12 at the Meigs Clinic, MulShe
is
survived
by
her
husband,
All)ert
W
Smith:
two
sons
and
daughSU::nr . Pr. Clo::iy Cloudy
berry Heights, Pomeroy, Wednes-ters-in-law, Duane and June Worthen of Canton·, and Larry and Elizabeth days, Sto-6 p.m. beginning April 2.
,,
Smith of North Carolina; a son, Robert Wonhen of Canton; two daughters
Pr1mary focus of the group will be
and sons-in-la.;,., Charlotte and Arthur Cline of Louisville, and Nancy and to educate children on how to ~eal
Robert Cronon of Austintown; a daughter, Linda Burton ,o f Canton; several with anger in.appropriate and effccgrandchildren and great-grandchildren; and four sisters, Carol Felber of Can- t,ve ways. Concurrently, a parents
ton. B~cky Pullins of long Bottom .. Wilma Eynon of Reedsv.ille. and Eve- group will he held with emphasis on
lyne Bonnette of Parkersburg, W.Va.
parQhting techniques related to what
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a daughter, Helen children will he learning in gro1.1p. ·
By The'Associated Preas
some· clearing over -' the west and
· '
1
•' .
The service is funded' in pan by
,, The ·first full day or spring in Ohio south; while clouds and a few flurries Worthen; and by .I sister and two brothers.
Services
were
conducted
at
the
Reed
Funeral
Home
in
Canton,
with
the
the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of
·; should be a 'nice o'ne as temperalures will linger in the northeast. Highs ~ill
officiating. Burial was in the Forest Hill Ceme- Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Men"rise well above normal. But more be in the middle 30s north to the mtd- Rev. Raymond L.. Tucker
1
•
tery.
,
tal Health Services ·.and 1s being
,.; sca~;Qnable wealher is expected to ' die 40s south.
·
offered
to participants without
; brief!y return this weekend.
w..ther foftcast:
' It will be cloudy todliy as a front
• Tonight ... Becoming cloudy with a
charge.
Those interested may call 992; bringing warm, moist air- .and the chance of showers. Lows in the mid
possibility of showers- moves·into 40s. Soulhwesl winds I 0 to 20 mph,
2192.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaCattle: steady.
the state from the southwest. High becoming northwest. Chance or rain Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Slaughter steers: choice 64.00Bon advisory issued
; temperatures wi'll average I0 to 20 40 percent.
buying points Friday as p(Ov1ded by 71 .75; select 60.00-64.00.
' degrees above normal and range
Saturday...Mostly cloudy and the U.S. Department of Agricultl're
The Leading Creek Conservancy
Slaughter heifers: choice 63.00: from the upper 50s northeast to the windy with a chanc~ of sprinkles. Market News:
9istrict
has issued a boil advisory for
68.00; select60.00-64.QO.
Temperatures remaining in the 40s.
: lower 70s southwest.
residents
on Ball Run Road due to
Cows: 1.00 lower; all cows 42.75
Barrows and gilts: fully I .00 high, It will remain cloudy tooight,
. Saturday nighi.. ;Mostl~ cloudy · er; demand good on a light to mod- and down.
repairs on Thursday. The advisory
· wilh showers or snow showers like- • wtth a chance of sno~jt, flumes. Lows erate movement
Bulls: steady;-all bulls 48.25 and will be ih effect until further. notice .. .
ly nonh and showers possible south. fro~ the upper 20s t~ around. 30.
.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. c&amp;llllll'y down.
Lows will bt in the lower 30s northExten4kd f~~:
·Sheep and lambs: 2.50 lower to Ball to begin
points 46.5()47.50, few 46.00 and
west to the lower 40s•far south.
Sunday... Partly Cliiudy. Highs in 48.00; plant&gt; 47.00-48.50.
2.50 higher; choice wools' 96.00The Chester Baseball/Softball
, The front will move east of Ohio · the lowe~ 50s.
,
J0l.00;
chOice
clips
96.00-105.00;
ASSOCiatiOn
Will meet_March27, 6:30
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.00; late today as a cold front works· its , Monday aild 'tuesday... Partly 46.00; 210-230 lbs. 36.50-41.00.
feeder lambs 91.00 an~ down; aged p.m. at the Chester·Fue Statton. Par·, way out of lhc Great Plains and dri- Cloudy with .a chance of showers.
sheep 37.50 and down.
ents and coaches are encouraged to
. Sows: mostly steady.
,
· ' v~s temperatures back down, to n~&gt;r- Lows in the mid' 401l~nd highs in-the
attend.
U.S. I -3 300-4~0 lbs. 39.00-41.50,
,. mal on Saturday. The fron,t wtll brtng mid 60s.
i.
few 38.00; 450-500 lbs. 41.00-43.00;
Road to close
500-600 lbs. 43.00-46.00, few ·over.
Swick Road in Rutland Town ~hip
600 lbs. 47.00.
·
is
closed until further notice for
. Veterans Memorial ·
Boars: 37.00-38.00.
Thursday adlllissions - Edith emergency road work.
Estimated receipts: 30,000.
Reed.
Middlepon.
,, ~ -For !be weekt barrows a,nd gilts
,
~ All sehOOls in the''Meigs L&amp;al School District will c~ two HoUts· firm to 50 cents higher; sows l.OQ to
.Thursday discharges - Virgil Cleanup to bepn
Cleanup
of
lhc
Miles,
Robinson
early next Wednesday and April 3 for a teachers' inservice, according to
Walker.
Racine;
Henry
Ebhn.
Rut2.0Q lower.
,
and Wright cemeteries in Rutland
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley' ' '
, ,.,. -··
·
Hog market trend forFm)ay: 1.00 land.
Township will begin AP.ril 7. ResiHolzer Medical Center
higher.
Disclui'rges
March
20
ManSl111111181')' or ThUJ1chiy's Pro·. No injuries were rcpo~ followi~g two-cat accident f?n Nyc Avenue
ducers
U•estock Aasoc:ledoa auc- ning Wetherholt, Irene Napper,
pear Chester Road in Pomeroy Thursday around 6:47p.m.
Louise Farley. Linda Johnson, Lester
Jerry E. Reitmirc, 24, Pomeroy, W&amp;i sou!hli'?und on Nye Avenue and . tlon at Bucyms: ,
Leonard, Clarence Freeman. Alfred
Hogs:
1.50highcr.
turned left into the path of a northbound ·car dnv~n by Jacob Roush, 49,
Thornton .. · ·
Butcher hogs: 38.75-48.35.
Pomeroy, while attempting to tum into a parktng lot, .ac;Gording to a
Bit1hs - Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Pomeroy Police Department report..
.
:
Jonas, son. Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Damage to lhe left-front of Roush's 1988 FoniTempo an\~. !he left-front
Isaac .Ross. son, ~on. W.Va.
·
of ~citmirc's I990 Chevrolcl Beretta w~ Jisted_as heavy. R,oush's car was
(J'I!blished with permission)
The followilig couples w'crc
,. toWed from (he scene, th~ report stated. . ·
.. 1
'issued 'marriage licenses rcc'ently in
'
Reitmire was cited on a charge of failure to yield.
·
the Meigs County Probate Court of
:~;:~:-;;;;;.;-:::-~;:;;;;~;:;;;;;::;; · Judge Robert Buck . Issued hccnses

1Return to more seasonal
·:weather set this weekend

-i

Today's livestock report

Hospital news

· Local News in Brief:.Schoi'ls close early for ln.servlpe

·

c

Driver ticketed following •ccldfJnt

.......,

a

II PICIID UP BY

UCIIft A HD

-·-cRiiFt•CAft POl A 6• PIUC*AL
PAM PillA 111 ITIII I PCPS!.
o\IID A CHOICI or 110'1 IE • , lS !ACtl.
PICK UP TOUa 1'1CII'I'II A'l' CALLII'Ot.LII
OQII1W0'8 PillA LOCA'RD MasY '!'0

SPIIJG VALLEY ClMIMA OR AY
(IP·l~ VALLEY ClMIRA)

Marrtag, licenses

~-Meigs EMS -runs
~

Units of the Meigs County Emer: g~ncy Medical Service record~ four
: calls for assistance Thursday, Unit~
~ responding inclUded:
'
C~NTRAL DISPATCH
'
B rd
R d p
, 8 a.m., u cue oa , omeroy.
: M~blc. Tracey.- Holzer Medical Cen: ter;
: · 12:33 p.m.. Kingsbury Road,
, Pomeroy. Freda Mahr, HMC. Rut"1 a· uad
- d
, an sq
asstste ; ook N ·
; 10:09 p.m .. Overbr
ui'Stfl@
: Center, Middlepon. Berni_cc Nclso~,
• HMC:
• II :.51' p.m., Main Street, Rutfand, ·
: Rose Stanley. HMC, Rutland squad
• - ed
~ ass1st

.

: . The Hatch Act was passed in .,
~1930,
forbidditi" federal c it service
if
C!
'employees from takin
ncti\'e
"'an in political campaign. .
...

'l'he ·Qaily · ~entinel
c

'

.

...bltihed ..W'f - -·

•

'
~-y ~

~....l~~;.=:~c~.
........,.. Oblo 457 • I'll. 992;1156. SOcood

w"~~visLceGilmore,

Stocks

Am Ele Po-r ...........'....... :.... 41'1.
Akzo ..... :..................... :.:........69'/o
AmrTec:h ..................-............&amp;1'1.
Aahland OII ...............,...........4Ctl4
AT6T .....................................34'1.
Bank one ..............................43).
Bob Evens ............................13'1.
Borg·Wamer ..........:..............40%
Cheinpjon-............................. 18'i.
,Chllrining Shop8 .................. 5.,_
C~Hokllng, .....................-...32'1.
F ,.1Mogu1.......................24'•
Gennett ...................:...:.........87'1.
G~dyll!lr ..... ,........................ 54~
K-mert .........................,; .......-12'1.
Lande End.............................27'!.
Limited ..................................19'!.
qhlo Valley Bank ..................37'.1

.

.

One Vallev.........
. .~ ........::. ••••.•;.39'k
...,,,

Peoples ................ ,......,; ............ .
Prem Flnl ............................... 14~
Aockw.ll ............................... fl
RD-Shell .............................. 175'1.
Shnnav'e ............................... u4'.4
-·-·
' ...................."~.......43''.. ·
Star
Sink
WenciY'i' ......:.~··•••••oo••••··~'''''"'""21

68

Worthlnglon ................,..•..•.••.2o\

-

-·--·.,-

. Stock reporte ere lh~ 10:30
a.m. quotea-provlded by,Advelt
of Gallipolis.
'".;, '
.

18.Pomcroy.
and Tracie Marie WcstjotJn. 1S. Long
Bottom; Wayne Allan Hubbard. SO.
and Katc'Marilyn Lindsey. 47. both
of Pomeroy; Robert Charles Avis. 36.
a'nd Jacqueline Kay Whitlatch. 31 .
both of Coolville: Randall Luther
Arnold. 27. Middleport ..and Angela
Faith Elliott. 23 . Rutland.
·

t,EBAL NOTICE

matters. This heartno ls'schedtiled

to beQIII at 1111 CommiSSion offices

at10:00 a.m. on March 25, 1997.

All interested pirtles wHI be 'given
an opportunitY to be heard. Further

lnlormatlon may.be olrtalned by ·

contacting the CommiSsion at180

East Broad Strett. C,olurribiJS, Ohio

4326G-Q573 ·

-11'ho /Waollled .....,, ond 111e Ollio

Ne•¥4

~--·

SUIIICIIII'TION IATIS
.
.,.camor
..
_..
'
Ono __ _, ........................................... $3.00

0no Mondi................................................ S8.'70
0no v................................ :.............. S\01Jlll

SINGLE COPY PlttCE

-ben

Dolly ,................._.... ,.......................... ll (lela
not detlrioaro

pay '""'orriennoy_
N!lftil iP 111Yt8c:e dlrwo1 110 n.e·Ddily Seliintl
.._ ...... ,;. ocll ...... - . Cledltwln ...

____

~~---No IUbtalpdOO by lUll ,
pamllltd
.........lo'-.-

fJJui!}u.nff!J &amp; fJJrass
T,aster Speciafs
Beautiful fresh cut flowers: Iris, Glads,
Daffodils, Potted plants, Easter lillies, Hyacinth,
'
haogil!g baskets, ferns, floor pl;inls.
· Gift items.:
Easter bunnies~· baskets, tins, !elly Belly Jelly
Beans, speci~lty baske~, balloon bouquets

....,._ ..-.......·... rilhl 10 ....... '*' ......
.

MAILIUIICJIIPTIONI

.

·-NtfiiC...O,

13 \Voeb ............................................... .$:!7.3Q
26 \Voeb .............._............ _...................$ll.Jn
l2 - . .............. _... ,.......................... $1111.56

.~ weeb~-~:.~?.-~-~.:. . -~. .$Z9.2$
26-. ............................ _..,.,.,, .......... .$56.68
l2 -

· BURG~DY &amp; BRASS
FLORALS &amp; GIFTS

3rd. a .PMrl St. . 148 ROSE (781:'3)

............................................ ,SI09.n

i
{I

.

IO.&amp;Kt:· U.M .,...
witboatautam+ uldtfromobeoJring

G:r
--

LISNDER.

.•.

COIJII'QII AU.-~~
(61t1
'
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.
Mlddiopolt I'IJme.oy lll1tllnd TOO Only

-

ct1Hpn1!s
•~z

•• lho ,.btcripdon J*lod. Sulll&lt;dpdoo c:hllplny lie tmpleiiiii!IIIIDII bJ ehinJhw lhe

..,_ ....... -l)ldw.

Talk To Oar Dedicated

The Public Utilities Commission ol
Ohio has set lor public hearing Case
No. 96·102-EL·EFC, to ravlaw the
luel procurement practices ll1d poll·
cle$ of Columbus $oul,llern power
Company, lhe operation ol Jts Eleclrlc Fuel Component anct rel-'ed

, .... pdialo'j&gt;old • ,.,...,, Olrio.

POSTMAS'11111t Send """""' ...,...Ioiii' 10
1'ho Doily Semlwl. Ill Coon SL, I'Qmen&gt;y,
Olllo 4l769.

- - - o.IIIIG SOO.I - - 'fUIID A 1'0111 IIUMiBI•s IKJVI&amp;'

'19Z-666t

99Z-zm m-28811 3'*7123

.
. AIIIMIIUt-lDCIICil.....
.
'
• Elrqll: Alot!&gt; lor Ill ....... ol S&amp;,OliD.OO 1111 41 manh wtUd 1M J1C!111HY Jlllllllfll$ al Sl2U7. ,
Tltellltll.._.c:lwgtiiGUII~St,III0.58.

.

• ~ '•
•• ~A lot!&gt; lor lllllliau1 al$5.000.00 lor 48 l1lll1lb wtUd lll,itllllOIIIy pl!ll1d ol S130.V. .
Tltellltllillwlclc:lwgtwUilltlt,252.1l
.
·'.
C1mnL Pecip111 B111k loiN . . &lt;IIi .............. Till J*IOIIIIIIMII'IIII ... llltdl31, 11117.

.

'

�'.

. .

Friday, March 21, 1117

Sports

The D8ily
Sentinel~
.
...4

In NCAA men's toum•ment •ctlon,

By NANCY ARMOUR
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (APJ - As
the buzzer sounded and his Michigan
teammates rushed the noor, Roben
Traylor pumped his fist and started
screaming. Playing in the second~st tournament still beats not playmg at all.
And the Wolverines have Traylor
to thank for keeping them in the Nf.f.
After blowing a I 5-point first-half
lead, the 6-foot-8, 300-p&lt;Jund sopho. more was everywhere - scoring,
rebounding, . even .setting up the .
·game-winning shot.
"Nothing· will. make up for not
making the NCAA," Traylor said.

.

Minnesota, UCLA and Utah win in OT; Kefltuctw triumphs .
By The AMoct.ted PreN

manc:c from Bobby Jackson, ")'ith a
UCLA, Minnesota and Utah had · career-high 36 points. Jackson was
nOihinJ!l to complain about after a operating without his backcoun part·
Ions night ·on the coun. Kentucky . ner, Eric Harris, who left with 7:10
spent the usual 40 minutes proving remaining in the seeond half, -apparits worth.
enlly with a separated right shoulder.
1be top two seeds in the Midwest
Jackson made a three-pointer
and West Regionals advanced to the with 3:SS left and a flldeaway jumper
NCAA's final eight Thursday night. in the lane l"ith 42 seconds remainTop-seeded Minnesota worked the ing in' the second ovcnime.
longest, needing double ovenime to
"We pretty much try to stay in the
beat Clemson 9()..84 at San Antonio.· team concept," said JackSon, who
UCLA. No. 2 in the Midwest, then had nine rebounds and just one
went one e.xtra session before edging turnover in 49 minutes. "We moved
Ibwa State 74-73.
the ball around. but when the ball
: Utah, ranked second in the nation came back.to us, coach always gave
but seeded only second in the West, us that freedom to take the ball to the
tOok Stanford 82-77 in OT, with All· hole or do wh~t we wanted to do."
J\fnerica forward Keith Van Hom sit·
Sam Jacobson matched his career
ting out almost all of the ovcnime. best with 29 points.
·
Only defending champion Ken" Wow, what a game," coach
tllcky wasn't stretched beyond reg- Clem Haskins said. "I've been in a
. ulation, ea.•ing past St. Joseph's 83- lot of games, over 2,000 that I've
68.
either played in or coached in. and
On Saturday, the winners meet for this game tonight ranks up there."
berths in the Final Four at lndiClemson (23-1 0) got .22 points
anapolis.
.
.
from Greg Buckner.
In the second game, Cameron
Tonight, it's Texas (18-11) vs.
· Louisvill.e (25-8), followed by North Dollar's driving bank shot with 1.9
Carolina (26-6) vs. California (23-8) seconds left lifted UCLA. The
in the East at Syracuse. N.Y.; and Cyclones (22-9) rook the lead when
Kansas (34-1) vs. Arizona (21-9), Shawn Bankhead scored off an infollqwed by Providence (23-11) vs. · bounds play with 12:5 seconds to go ·
Tenncssee-Chauanooga (24-10) . in · after the. Bruins (24· 7) committed a
the Southeast at Birmingham, Ala. traveling violation.
The 'winners play on Sunday.
"I got the go-ahead l'rom Coach ·
Midwest Regional
to break it down and go to the rack,"
·Minnesota !10
Dollar said. "I got by Jacy Holloway
Clemson 84 (2 OT)
at the foul line and put the shot up
UCLA 74
over Kelvin Cato. If he was going to
Iowa Stale 73 (OT)
block it, he blocks it and we go
AI San Antonio, the Golden home. If I make it, we advance."
Gophers (30-3) got a superb perforThey advance.

Dedric Willoughby scored 34
poinrs for Iowa Swe, includins a
three-pointer that fore~ ' the overtime. Dollar wound up with · 20 ·
points as the Bruins came back from
a 16-point deficit.
WeltReaJoul
Utah 82, Stanford 77 (OT)
Kentucky 83
_ SL Jooepb's 68
At San Jose, Calif., Andre Miller,
Utah's point guard. and freshman
Han no Mottola took over when Van
Hom fouled out early in ovenime.
Mottola's three points gave the
Utes (29-3), who have won 14
straight. the.' lead for good. Miller
added three more fiee throws as the
Utes scored their final seven poinrs
at the·foul line.
Van Horn did not got straight to
the bench after fouling out with 25
points and 14 rebounds. He walked ·
over to his teammates and talked to
them for .several seconds · before
leaving the game. ·
"I told them I had contidence In
them and they should have confidence in themselves," Van Hom
said: uThis is not a one-man team,
and we proved it."
Brevin Knight, Stanford's star
point guard, led a comeback Iron\ 16
points down. Knight, who got his
t'ounh foul early in the second.half,
scored 25 of his 2:/ points after halftime and hit a three-pointer with 7.1
seconds .lefi to fon:e bT.
"It was just a nightmare guarding
him," Miller said.
The Cardinal finished 22-8.
Kentucky (33-4),played without
regulars Derek Anderson and Allen

On baseball's $prlng training scene,

:

•

.:•

EASTERN CONFERENCE
A.dlndc Diwllion

'

i•

.

..

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.

tie hit of adversity. La~t year we had
a lot of talent on the team, and we
overmatched people. This year is
•
totally differ&lt;:nt."
N&lt;1. 4 seed St. Joseph 's (26-7) got
26 points Ji·o:n Rashid Bey.

.

. .

firsct ~" •· .}
.
·
W¥n Mesa slumped last season,

.672
.642

.l)O

:
:
:
•

11:.:
28:.:0
32
37

•

7;ll p.m.

.Thursday's quarterfinal score

Providence (23·11 ·) VI. Tt:n;.:u«·
Chaunnooxa (24-IOJ, JO minute~ urt~r

10

12~

· ••~

22

.470

s....., •• nn.t .

26
JO

)9 · .409
42 .J7J

'""'"""' '

-lflnlllt'Oftt .

·5

JO\

.2&amp;1 ·

33 ~,

Vuncouver ............. II

~8

. 1~9

40

At.A'

A·Scanlc ................. 46 lO .tl17 ·
A•L.A. Lakc:n ........45 21 .682

Phueni11 ....

.... 211

~9

Sa~rom..:oto ......... '.. ::!H J9
Goldm Stille ·----- . 2~ 42
.11-clind~r.J

I

.588
.446

. TimeoTBA

'

,

2

pluyoft' ~flUI

.

.

.

Orlando 100, Golden Stale 9~ ·
L.A. Laten 89, CLEVELAND 76
Pur11and 97. Milwaukee 78
HOuston 96, Wasllinaton 90
Phoenix I 1.1, San Antonio 106
Scuulc: I 23, Denver .91

Ohio H.S. boys'
state tournament

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

•

~

.

•· '

·

fJJ, 1Jl.m.

••
.,•
••

.

Ccur)l.ia 124-~)
10). 12:.l0 u.m.

" ·~ - Vu1ld~:rbilt

:-•
••
•

••• ·
•.
••
••
••

"..
•.

i"•

Monday -Saturday: 9am · 8 pm ·Sunday: 1-8 pm

·-.. . .,..,_ __ illlllll!il••-·--"""-..,......a-..
,

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II

II "I
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'

-

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' •

, I

I

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I

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::io-.

I' •

missing shots.
" I said to him, 'Brandun, we can't ~
win without you. You've .got to tell
me if your head 's in it. I know your
hean is,"' Fisher said. "I was hoping he would tell me before the game
ended, and he did."
Hughes came back in with 3:27
left to play, and finished with fi•e ,
points on 2-of-9 shooting.
.
The Irish players ,Jeft the court -~
with their heads bowed, but coach ' o;,
John Macleod said they had nothing
to be sorry for. 'This wols the same .
team that was picked to finish last in
the Bi2 East. and it ended uo mak:ng its first posL.eason appearance
since 1992 instead. .. '

..•

.••:::..

,..
,.

i

;

J2
JO
J4
J9

t:!O·
·

7
II
H
4'

~~~- IJ
SiKtJMe ............. 24 40 7

7~ 224
71 209
10 195
62 221
~9 '190
~~

216
20:\
W4
246
·2J9

ny M:•l!&amp;:l!: have d t:111ed waiven _Off!!rcd
Oaltey, u.·Rule V dra ft pick , baek 10
Tororuu wh•~h the Blue Jays have acet=plo:d. Released RHP Jeff Williams.
DETROIT TIOERS : Rt'l!!ased RHP
ll15un Grimsley . .
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: SC11t LHP
Mitch Williams. LHP ken Pallenon. OF
Ry!m ~humpsun 11nd C Erik P~JIP115 In ·
the!~ ffilnor:le;l_gllt' o:~mp. Optiuncd RHP
lrumt" Brewmgtun Ill Omaha of Ihe 1\mc:r·

-

Pegut:s tu Onawu. ~iol)t'd INF Orlnnclo
Cabrcm and RHP M1ke n1unnan 10 Hlll·
r rishur~ of lilt' Eastern ~f.PC .
PHILADELPHIA PHI LUES: Sent C
Bobby EM:1~lla nnd OF 8rcn1 Buwera 11'1
1
thdr minor· ICIIfE~ ~IIUlfl.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : Op·
timux.l OF Dmllt Powt'll 'ttl Pht'ICnill nf the!'
PCL
'·-

Basketball

kan .-\ssu~· i111iun .

Na.tonal Ltaaur
ATLANTA BRAVES: Rcle~ INF,
· OF Hensley Mcuh:ns. Optioned OF Damon Hollins, INF Rant.lall Simon and INF
Many Malloy to Rit.ilmond or the lnlemu. lio:na' l.eaJUC. Sent LHP R01y Kin!! and C
M1ke Mahohc:) lu thr:ir nlinor· lea~tue

camp.

.

HOUSTON ASTROS: Rdcused INF
Tununy Gren.
MONTREAL EXPOS : Scm RHP
Tuvo Alvun:z outriB.IK tu OllliWII uf 1hc In·
1erm11iunal Lc: :1guc . Orti uncd·C Ruul
'Cium!:t. RHP Sttve F11ltci~c:k 11nr.l LHP
Nt:il Wrbt:r Ill Ouawu. As~gnOO OF Stev.: '

Natiunal ._.et:._U A..oriltion
ORLANDO MAGIC: Promoted 0::LI')'
Brnt.:aw lu Uin.-clnr or !k!Oulinp. CO\fll(IS.
SACRAMENTO KINGS: 1-1 rcd G:w· ·
ry S! . Jc;m. ~:uat.:h . N:mll!d Edr.Jlc Jurtlan
cnach.

Football
National Football Lea1uc
BALTIMORE RAVENS : A.pt.~d 10
. lcrms w11h OL U·u Gocl\li un :1 multiyc:'lf
Ctlftlf:JCI

VENVi.:.K UMONCOS: Signed lll.
Lorl'll:lll Gr1."t!ll ,
.
GREI-:N BAY 1'.1\('I(Hi.S: A'p.n:cd m
l crrn~ w11h C Fmnk WintL"'i.
,

IRI 2J6

x·dinched playoff Jpol

Friend ·D ay

Thursday's Kores
Pboenb. 4, ChiCIJO 2
St. Louis4. H.-ford I

San Jose 2, Vaocouver I

Tonlpt'• pmes
BuffalQ at WubinJ,tl)n. 7:JO p.m.
Hilrtront nt Dallt~~. ti:JO p.m.
Aauhdm.al Co~. 9 p.m.
Tumpu Bny 111 Calpty. 9:.'W p.m.
I

.

Soturday'spones

OttaWa nt Boston, I :30 p~m.
··
N~ Jersey 111 Pinlbursh. I ::W p.m.

Philadelphia at N.Y. II(mlden,7 p.m.
Washinaton u1 Mor~tre11l, 7:JO p.m.
Buffalo a1 Florida, 7:JO p.m.
Phocnix. ~a~ Turonto, 7:JO run.
"Taqm Bay a1 Vancou\'er. 10::\0 p.m.

Sunday's games

BasebaU

Amtrkan LNaur '

March ·23rd

..'

at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth &amp; Main

,.•

Cottre worsliip tire greatest frieru£ ever,

Jesus-Ciirist!
lt_couft£ ~a aiffere~ in !J(IUT ufe
·
forever.
Worship- 8:15 or 10:30 am
.Sunda School-. 9:30am

'.

Division IV slale
·
v~ .

By Side Refflgeridor

Lincul-

SAVE

Top
Mount$

NHL standings

SAVE

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Iwl
Atl~~t r~~·.o.. ta: 1iA
'\11-Vhihulclphia ... .402110
!l- Nl:wJ\.TSC)' ..... .lHlO IJ
Florida ..... .. ...12 2_. 11

I)()

2.a2 U17

tW 2UO 16.1

Kl I'IK 171

*As Low As

iRECREATIO
'

Saturday, March 21st

TAZ's MARATHON'

M

Country

Shuey, 26, was 5-2 with
and four saves. ·

&amp;tmo,uon ....... :.• JJ
Anuheim .... .. ..... JO
Cmlf!ul')' ........ .. ,... JI
Voncuuv.:r ...... ~. 29
Los .-\nfeles ...... .2~

Hockey

S.tuday's •mift•ll
I011.m.

Fadrk:Diwllion
x-Colorodo .........~ 18 9 W 244 11J

• BAI.TIMOKE . ORIOU~S: An·
nuunl'l.'ti RHP Tum Davey anti JNJ: [)an·

Sflrin,. . C:uholic • {11-1-J) ' n
Zm~e!~illc ROSL"Cntns (2 .~ - 1 ). Frid.1y. I : I~

w..t RtliOIIII

t NCAA Division I , ·
I men's tournamen(

I

.

Norwalk Sl. Puul (24·2)
nvicw (2..~0}. fridn). -l p.m.
Final Snl..nlay. 6 p.m

Adams F6tidho41!1t. M~. Mtlnl.
· Stunl'urd 1-'2· 11 v~ Vifl(iniu12.1·11.

68 I"" 184
~8 210 2SO

Transactions

Hinul Suturt.luy. 9 p.m

&amp;n1ilir1al wiuntn.:

Ull••at Dtn~r. \I p.m. · ,
,_ Snn An1i1nio ;II LA. Cli)1J1Cn, 9)Ull
Scntdc 111 VmK:oUVL'f. ~ p.n.: ·

s

Division Ill slate

1

c•..un.c....

p:nes

90 222 11J
IIJ 225 166
n 210 222
71 11J 21\1

Division II Oaal

11.m. ·

f'inoi

I

!!: L l' .fll. Ill liA

x-OollaS ........ ,.... 42 B 6
, Dettoil. .. ............. l4 21 I~
Phu!:nix .. .............14 .1-t
· S1. Loui• .... ....... )1 J2 . 9
Chicugo .............. 211 J212

.-\naticin1 at Edmonton, J p.m.
llt:truit :II OJit.:ilte.U. J p.m.
Dullas at St. loui•. ? p.m.
ColorJdo at Phillldclpltia. 8 p.m.

Clc. VA·SJ (17-fll vs . BELPRE (1;\1~). FriUay. 6:45J•.m. ·
- · Pl11rick Henry 120-4) tM' Onmrln (2.'1,) vs.10Dy. O.ri1titut (2.1·31. Fridi1y. 9:.10

f1.ftl. .

C.rolln• Colittum, Cohftbi1, S.C.
North Camlinn UV-2) n . Georp.~!
W1,1Shinamni27-S). II :JO am.
....
.NVIre Dam~ !l\1--61 v•. Alubmnu 125--

n . Clc. Hci~hiJ

Akron But:htt'l (2-t -6) ~~- Ch::. 8~::1_;­
, die lint: !22-~). SafunJ.ay. II a.m.

FiOII

Miami 111 Minm.'!IOia . . JO J1.m.
PurtliiiKI at New York. H lt,m.

I'

Zant"~vilh~ (2~ · 1)

Monotor.-:u

C•ner·Hawkf}'t Anna ·
Semifinal W\llneh
!;

2~8

'· S;HI Jnsc al Los Anr.des. I O:JO p.m.

cl:\.JJ. Smunll.•l•· .l p.m.

Colorudo !2J·Hl \Is . Tcnnt:s~ (2S.
IOl. IO:lp p.m.

Salllrdl}''t·lffn.......

DIYI.oiootll

Division I Onal

Rp.m

· 11fst Rqlortlll

Lukewood SL Edward

Atroo BuLine162, H:unihon Badin ~3

S.Wn!IJ'I - b
A.ftllll
Connco.:ticLtl (.12--U) v5, lllinoi~ (2... 7),

Saturday's pliles

~S.

0:. Bcnedi"1ine 61. Cn/. Mifflin' 56

C1ner·Hawk~

L.A. Lak.:ra. at OriMdo, ll:JO p.m.
Nt.'W Jc!'tk)' 011\nslon, l p.m.
Allantu 41 Toron1o. .\ ~ . m .

••

Zanesville

Mldw..t Relionlll

P.ortluntlm Wushin11t~n. 7:30p.m.
Gul\kn Slate ut C.'tuwlbttc. 7:30p.m.
Detr~t nt Cbi~.r.o. lt:i&gt; p.n1.
CLEVELAND o.t Dulla~. K::\0 p.m.
Phocai~ at Hou1ton, 8:30p.m.
New York 111 Milwaukee, \1 p.m.
l :A. Clippers at Utah, 9 p.m.
SN.-nmen10 nt S.Wdr:. !0 p.m.

'

Qiwilioo I

Oc. HeiJIH• 76. SpriiiJileld Nonh 60

-wptnen's ~milment

Topight's games'

195 208

207

Detroit • ·H.Y. Rarips. 7:JOJ1.m.

· Thursday's semil!nal sro...

NCAA Divlsi9n I

Orlando ut.Boston, 1 p.m.
·
Ch~tolte at Toionto. 1 p.flt.
New Jersey at Ph!~lph~u. 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lnkm at M1am1. 1':30 p.m.
Dr~llaa oal Atlantn, 7:30 p.m.
Mjnne.sota at Detroit. 7;;1() p.m.
Chicugn utlndlnnu, 7:JOp.m.
·Qennr at Varw.:oover, 10 p.m.
San Antonio at Sa~;ramento, IO:JC

••

;,.an:

A~Son ~A""" Son Jqlio, Calli.
· K'C:ntucky (~·]·4)' VII . 4tllh ilY~']),, 6

·
p.m.

249 2J9 ·

220 149
194 221

Piulburgb 6, Toronto ]

Fiaals

Thurld.ly, Mardl i1
' 1\1 M8dilon
C.nlen
Semifinal ~- . p.m.
SemifiMI winnm. 7:30p.m.

S.Aetoftio,

Utall 1!2. s,_.. 77 con
Komudy Rl, So. I'*Jlh'! 6J1

.4111 .' . 1~: .'
.)7]
,

210 118

Florida. 2. On11wu 2 (tiel

,...;.• ::oii:JWu

16~~
IH'~

.41_11

.

Conftfr.fllcut·Ncbrasku wianer vs.
F.forilla St. (19. I I J .
Michij!:an (21 . 11) vs. Afl(nnsas (I MIl )

W..aR--1

7

- Thursday's seores

:
:
:
:
:
.:
•
:·
:

,...

••

(16-

.' . T11tsd1y, Marc• U
At Mad'- Squ•~.Cit"dtn. Ntw Yoril.·

UCU (14-7) n . Mianesotu (J()..Jl.
;l:40p.m.

Paclnt Division
2H
.16

.

I

Con~lh:ttl

S"ninnals

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

27

.242

Sund~,··

·rom Peden

fouled with 21 seconds left, but he
missed the frpnt end of a 1-and- 1,
and Michigan got the rebound to set
up Hughes' jumper.
The game might have ended differently if not for a pep talk .from
Michigan coach Steve Fisher. Hughes took himself out of the game earlier, saying he was frustrated at

Ccnt..tDhillon

Toronto .............. 26 40 6

Tonight's quarterfinal

Nebmsb (18!14,_nt
1.4), 1:30 p.m.

MiDIICSOia 90. Clcmson.84 (2 OT)
UCLA 74. Iowa S.w 73 lOTI

16'·:

~0

.

Midwest R~IUII

Gil

Denwr ................. 19 , 47

-'

At Bl'"'t...,_Jtll:.- CU.I&lt; c.ff
Kan~as - Arizona winner ws, PtDvl. rJ.:nCc-Tenn·essef·ChnttnnooJII winner. '.5
p.m.
·d· •
.

.12 ~

San Anmnio .... ....... l6

Michipn 67. Nutn! Dnrne 66

first same

Northeast DJ...UNJ,n
Buffulo ...... ...... J7 22 II 8~
Pittsburgh .. ......, ..W .~ 1 7~
Montuml ............ 26 J2 14 66
,'Hnn(nrd ........... ,. 27 ~ 10 64
Occawa .............. .2~ lJ IS 1 61
Boston .....,..........24 J9 .e ~1

:ru.

NIT action

Mandoy,Marchl4

Sta:Urtth11b 'II'C Flftlll
8llo:lltlti\ lftp ,.. ft'tlll

on hs next possession. White was

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Stmifinnl winnm

K1101111 04- 11 VS . Ari~ona UJ-111.

11: L &amp;!.

Ponland ................. 40
LA . Clirf!CD ....... .29

M...tly,l\laodP:U
Madl11JArtn•

TotWpl's semifinals

•

x-Umh ................. ~ 11 .746
x - Hrn 1 ~1un .......... .4~ 22 .672
Milll~livlu ..............1J JJ .So:&gt;
Oall&lt;tJ.,.... ............12 4.1 ..HM

I ;'

c..-

ahead 63-61. But Traylor was right
there, hiiting a_hook shot to tie it. The
Irish went to Garrity again, and he
was fouled as he put up a jumper. He
convened the three-point play to give
the Irish a 66-63 lead with I :37 left.
Taylor came back with a dunk,
and Notre Dame turned the ball over

9 7~ 2J) 20S
H 64 181 199
1 61 IRS 220
10 ·60 199 212

-·-

f'ino!

M BH'minaltaM•Jtft'tnon Chit C.:enkr
lairmm,lum, Ala.

. Midwest Dhi~tkln '

C
;
:
:
•••

(.11 -:\). 2:30 p•.,...

SI¥Jiheast Regional

WF-STERN CONFERENCE
Islll

S.lurtlay'slftlllllnall
Mackey Arena. W; Lal'ayelte.lnd~
O.ld Dot:nini9n 131·1) vs. LSU (2~-4),
noon
·
Floridu (23·8) Yl. Louhianu Tech

FIJI Size C1mrst11 VII

'

.J_c~~~~:-~~
·not know
how
· will he do
without
Mesa. their
who goes.on trial for rape. .
_liri
Cleveland;
Cleveland
·I.
•.
'

Toronto ................2~

'
t
I

. I

..

ti

--·-

•

~

450*
om• Nrw tMi Ckn

Plus much 1110re

H~:~;;;~·:.made Shuey the closer

te

Milwau~ ....... ...... 27

:

SodoWsky walked Jon Nunally with
the bases loaded in the eighth inning
to force -in the decisive ,run for
Kansas City.
•
Marlins 8, Tigers 3
At Melbourne, Fla.. Bobby BonilIa hit two homers, atid Pat Rappwon
his second game of the spring for
·Florida, which improve!' to 18-4.

'·

• .1164
:• .m

Allaata .,.... ,,........... 4S ' 22
. Ctw~e ................4J 24
CLEVI!I.AND ....... ll ll
lndillna ........_. .... : ..... JI U

:

•Y-tl'ollr
• Nt ConCIIatt
·Pow Wlu:la :l LDcb
• Aim~

Various Grass Seeds
t:tummingblrd feeders
Gardening Insecticides
Dairy Supplies

Dccroit. .............:...... ,

·----~-------------------------------------------------------------------------:
Edwards because of injuries. It did· the top seed.
when we have shon numbers or a lit- ';

.
.
Mariners 6, Cubs 4
Williams refused to talk after pendent league. .
. emerging from Boone's office, othThe Padres acquined rights to
At Mesa, Ariz., Johnson got the
er than to say, "I'm going to Oma- lrab~ in a deal with Japan's Chiba suppon he n,ecded when Joey·Cora
ha," as he packed his belongings and . Lotte Marines. Any deal San Diego liit a grand · slam. Johnson con·
makes for lrabu's rights must be tributed to the big hit by drawing a
· walked out in obvious anger.
The cut followed a perfect inning approved by Chiba.
.
walk to load the bases in the fifth
in a 5-4 .victory over Pittsburgh~
The Regina Cyclones of tl)e inde- inning.
Yankees: Hideki Irabu still pendent Prairie League are interestRoyals S,.Pirates 4
hungers io pitch for the New York ed in signing ,lrabu.
At Haines City, Fla.. Clint
Yankees, if only the ..San Dieg\1
Padres would trade him.
After arriving home in Japan, rhe
27-year-old right-hander said he has
a plan in case they don 'I - playing
in Canada's independent l(lague
"rather than training alone by
myself."
Bur, he conceded, even that door
could be closed to him. .
"This way also is being Shut·ou~"
lrabu said, a_lluding to -repons that "
Japanese baseball authorities. might
. suspend him if he goes to an inde-

Stop Jn &amp;
Check Us Outl

•·Cllicqo ............. l7

•
'
''c

"Once we go out on the court, we
just have to deal with what · we
have," said all-America forward
Mercer, who had 19 points despite a
sore hack. "We tend to play lxittcr

Gil

lS ...711
4!5 ,30(1
•• ,2S8
ll .191

Mideast Recional

Sundl7,'• tlnU
At'l'loeC.rlorlloooe
_ North Carolina-Califomlu winner vs.
Te•u-l...ouisville winner, 2:40p.m.

C..ioiDi-

I
I
I

.

opens the season April2 at Oakland.
Mesa -had 39 saves in 44 chances
last season: and has saved ss games
for Cleveland in the last two years ..
Royals: Bob Boone sounded happy with the progress of reliever
Mitch Williams. But "Wild Thing,"
as Williams is known, was anything
but wild about the Kansas City manager's decision to farm him out.
The Jeft-hander, who set singleseason save records with two National League teams, but is better known
for his failures ·- blowing a 14-·JO
lead in a 15:14 loss in. Game 4 and
allowing Joe Caner's deeisive homer
in Game 6 of the 1993 World Series
"';.~ was asked Thursday to go to
Triple-A Omaha.
"He's disappointed, ·• Boone said.
"He's made significant strides. But
it's a rnauer of right now I can't give
·him enough innings. "

·WMbhtJ1on........... J2
NeW Seney .... ,... , .. 20
l!ltJitodottoNa ...... ,... ,!7
................... 11

••I

n't matter. The Wildcats ran a relentless atlllck from the stan .
Reserve Cameron M!lls also
scored 19 poinlli and Wayne Turner
added 16 points a~d six assists for

L &amp;!.

17 .. 742
•·JWw York. ............a~ 18 .7JI
Orlando .... .........-... .. ,.17 ·' 29 .561

N.Y. Raaaers ... J~ JO
Washington ...... 2M J~
TllmpuBay ....... l7J6
N.Y. lslanden ... .2~ J6

Stmifinnl winncn

Toniahl'lttm"'MII
o\1 Tht Carritr Dome, SfrtH:UM, N. V.
Texas (18- lll vs. LoUisville (2~ - 8):
7:39p.m.
· . North Caroliaa &lt;26-6) vs. California
(l:l-8), _30 ~nulc!sllf'ler ru$1.~

NBI\. standings

:r..
:W
x..Miomi .. ..............4\l

AdaftoiFidd:.-

EutRqlc:ul

B&lt;l s ketbclll

ond hi:H of Thurlldlty nlght'l NCAA .Miclweet
Regional aamlflnal conte•t In San 'Antonio,
Texaa, where tM;_ Big Tan champion Golden
Gophers won 90-84 In do.uble overtime. (AP)

screen that freed Brandun Hughes
for the game-winning jumper with
seven seconds left. Notre Dame had
one last chance. but Traylor blocked
Admen White's reverse layup.
. Pat Garrity led the Irish with 23
points, and White had 14. Pete
Miller, who was 3-for-5 from threepoint range, finished with 13. Maurice Taylor added 16 for Michigan,
and Louis Bullock had 12.
"I saw (White) going baseline."
Traylor said. "I put my head up and
got a piece of it. "
··
Despite blowing a huge lead, the
Wolverines didn't trail until2:20 left,
when Garrity's dunk put the -Irish

Scoreboard

~

Joh,nson gives M.'s scare; Shuey to serve as Indians' new closer
By The Associated Press
·
·The · last thing the Seaule.
Mariners need as ·they attempt io
wrest the American League West title
from the Texas Rangers is an injury
to pitcher Randy Johnson. .
.
For a moment Thursday1they had
to wonder if that would be the case.
1be 6-foot-10 left-hander stirred
concern in the fifth inning at Mesa,
.Ariz., when he grimaced in pain after
• fielding Brian McRae's soft
grounder.
·
·
"It was. jus\,a little ache," said
Johnson. the 1995 AL Cy. Young
winner _;,ho missed most of last Sea. son before having back surgery in
September.
·,
Johnson . threw 69 pitches, and
only one of the three runs he allowed
in 4 213 Innings was earned in a 6-4
viclory over the Chicago Cubs
i'lthough.t I threw preuy well,"
· he said. "It was pretty hot out there.
and I felt like I kind pf hit a wall in
niKii.ttthc fourth-inning.
''The only way I can get work is
to $0 deep into 'the game. But I felt
goOd. That's the most important
thing."
·
·
He !laid he never thought about
hiH . back while fielding McRae's
grounder.
lodUins: Paul Shuey will get the
first'shot at closing games while J(JSC
· Mts~~ is unavailahle due to a rape tri·
al, Cleveland manager Mike HarJiro~e - said.
· .
. '
'•'He's been gt'09mcd for t~e role ..
!-fc't[ got outstandjng stuff," Har,
grove said. ''1-Je's the guy we'll go to

" Bur we' re still going to do our best sbots. The jeers were in reference to
to win this tournament. "
' questions about the $47,000 SuburMichiaan (22-11) advanced to the ban he's·been driving lately.
NIT semifinals with a 67-66 victory
Traylor says a relative paid for the
over ~otre Dame ( 16-14) on Thurs- Suburban. But it's still raising quesday night.
tions, especially after Michigan offi:
1be Wolv~rines play Arkansas cials said last week that a booster .
( 18-12) on Tuesday at Madison with close -lies to Traylor and ' his
Square Garden. Nebnlska and Con- grandmother, . Jessie Carter, was
necticut play tonigh.t to determine the invol~ in violations of NCAA
opponent for Florida State ( 19-11) in rules.
. the other semifinal-rnatchup.
But the crowd's taunts backfired.
The raucous Irish ctowd, excited
"That just fired me up, made me
by Notre Dame's first postseason want to play hard," Traylor said.
appearance since. 1992, tried to rat· ~ scored a career-high 26 poihts
tle Traylor by · wavinr keys and and grabbed 13 rebounds, one shy of
chanting "Suburban" when he took his career best. He also set the

..

SOMEBODY GET ITI,.;.. Mlnne•ota'8 Courtney
Jame8.(upper left), Charlea Tlloma• and Bobby
Jacgon (24) bailie for a rebOund while crowd•
lng out Clemaon's Tom W~n during the sac·

The Dlllly Santlnei•.Page 5

Traylor helps Michig.an get by Notre ·oame 67·66 in NIT quarterfinals

.

____..

•

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

ST. RT. 7

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Pomeroy • lllddlepol't, Ohio

P1lge l•lhe Dally Sllillnll

·-·
"

Friday, March 21,111%

Man's broken heart is just a stone's throw awa :
Ann
Landers
~~- l...GI
T~

.J.t!f!=lu

S)'ftdituc ..t Cflt·

"""'-

By ANN LANDERS .
·Dear Ann Landers: A little over a
year ago, my· sister;jJI.Jaw introduced me to a frlclfd of hers -- a
wonderful young woman who, like
me, was single. Despite 'the differences in our ages and backgrounds,
"1ina" and I shared great conversation, warmth and a growing friendship. I knew she wasn't ready for
. anything more, but after a few
months, I simply fell in love.

After several weeks and much
discussion, 1ina broke off our relationship, slating that she had to concentrate on graduate school and that ·
she was too young to get serious
with anyone. I respected her decision.
Over the next six months, I final ly got over it. My work kept me very
busy, and I had little time for regrets
or foolish notions of conlacting her
again.
Recently, I had quite a shock. On
my way to work, I saw Tina's car
parked in front of an apanment
building not half a block from my
own. l almost ran.off the road. I later
learned she ha~ . been living there for
several weeks. I can't ·believe that
after I respected her decisio11 to walk

away from me, she moved 1 stone's
throw from my house. We're bound
to see each other sooner or later.
I don 't want to drag my family
into all this, especially my sister-inlaw, who feels unfairly placed in the
middle because she introduced us. I
had hoped to heal my broken bean
and get on with my life. but now I'm
in trouble. Should I attempt to contact Tina? Should I move out and
find another ph.~e 'to live? Should I
just ignore the situation and try to be
jlolite when we eventually run into
each other? Please help me noodle
this out, Ann. -- Renewed Heanache
in St. Louis
Dear St. Louis: Under no.circumstances should you attempt to contact 1ina, nor should you move out

of your apartment. If you run into
her by chance, be politely cordial ·
but not overly friendly.
It ls possible that Tina's moving
into your neighborhood had nothing
tO do with you. If this assumption is
incorrect, you will know it soon
enough.
Dear Ann Landen: Yoo advised
"Grieving Mother'' to repon her
parents' neighbQr, age IS, for sexually !"Oiesting her 5-year-old daugh- .
ter. That was excellent advice. As a
juvenile attorney in Connecticut, I
see this son of thing all the time. It
is NOT a case of being a troublemaker, as her parents insisted. Peopie who repon moleslation are doing
everyone a favor, .both society at
large and the perpetrator.

~·
Vinually every abuser was ten an txtremely imporunt letll:
abused in some way.,MIIIy abusers People must be told over and om
end up in prison or on Delth Row. again that molesters rarely s~
They almost never stop. Reponing molesting. They must be apprehe..,
abuse is required of teachers and eel, identified, dealt with through It
sOc:ial workers, but it should be the justice system and kept under swresponsibility of everyone.
veillance after their time is served.
People who "don't interfere" are, To assume they have been "curell1
in . effect, aiding and abetting is a mistake. Thank you for ~~
.extremely serious ~rimes. You can- . opponuriity to repeat this advice. • :
not know who the next viciim will
be. The admonition to mind your
Gem of the Day: Nothing is IIi
own business must give .way to soci, helpful to :an ignorant man as
ely's safety.
silence, and if he knows 1his, he is
"Grieving Mom," as a responsi- not so ignorant.
ble adult, must act. Her parents'
wishes are irrelevant. -- Slafford
Send questloois to Ann Lande~
Springs, Conn.
Creaton Syndlute, 5777 W. Cet~­
lury BIM., Stdte 700, U. An114!leS,
•
Dear s·.s. Conn.: You have wril· Calif. 90045 .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By BOB
. HOEFUCH
Have you heard•
Bill .Radford of near Pomeroy
went through his heart bypass.
surgery at Riverside Hospital in
Columbus Monday very well.
By Tuesday evening, he was sit'ti0g up some and had laken on some
food. Bill's operation was a .major
one with five blockages being corrected during the procedure.
If he continues to recuperate so
well he's expected to be returned to
his home here over the weekend. His
room · number is 2010 at Riverside
Hospital , Olentangy River ll,oad,
Columbus, in case you'd like to send
a card or perhaps, you'd 'rather just
send it to his home address since it ·
looks like he will be coming home
soon. )Jy the way, Bill's wife,
Louise, who has had many health
problems over the pas.t few years is
also currendy !Iaing well. So, · it's
good news at the Radford household.
Fifty-two Meigs ·County resi dents w~rc tested during the March
17 cholt!sterol screen program conducted at the Meigs County Depanment ofHealth by the home health
departments of the Holzer Medical
Center, the Oak Hill Health Care
Center and Veterans Memorial Hos. ' pita!.
Norma Torres, director ofnursing
at the health department, repons that
al)'long the 52 tested, 12 percent
were well within the normal limits for cholesterol, under 200; 33 percent were at mild to moderate risk,
200 to 239, and 23 percent were in ·
the high risk category, over . 239.
Those in the high risk category were
urged to follow up on the problem
· with their physicians.

--------·
Under the leadership of Grace
'weber, the workers in the annual
Meigs County Hcarf Fund drive i,n
the Reedsville area have again ·done
a fantastic job.
The group collected a total of
$1.232.88 for the fund and Grace
extends thanks not only to tbe solicitors but to the residents who were
generous in their contributions to
make the drive in Recds~ille such a
success.
.
The workers include Sina Murphy. Beverly Wilford, Mary Bise,
Nola Young. Marilyn Hannum,
Wendy Hannum, ,Marlene Putman,
Patty Grossnickcl. Teresa Church,
Yuanita Wells, Cindy Chadwell ,
Geraldine Holsin!jer, Jncz Boring,
Ruth Durst. Dcbbtc Gilmore, Billy
Francis. Connie Scmelsbergcr and
Mary Browning.
Good job!
. The laboratory at , ,Veterans .
Memorial Hospital has been moved
to a new quarters and is now located
directly across from the : x-ray-rad1- ·
ology department.
· The relocation )Nas made to make
room for a new medical service
facility. scheduled to begin ojx:rating
at the hospital in June. 1'he new
facility will be usinll the laboratory
space plus lhc· area that used to be
the emergency dcpanmcnt. Signs
mark the new lab IIJCation RO you
won't encounter much difficult~ in
fiading it.
·

Are9 student
receives
:,
scholarship "

· Rosario Schuler, right, fqunder of My Nappy Hair salons In Los Angeles end Oeltlend, Calif., doet a cultOmer up at her salon.
Har first sslon opened In 1989 and haa an equal clientele of men and women. Natural hllr salona ere few outalde large metro at'llla,
unlike In chlee auch 11 New York and Loa Angeles.

More·black people wear natural. hair
locks-to evoke pride, b.a~tle prejudice
By RUBY L. BAILEY
·
Thl Detroit News
In some African · cultures, hair
tells a story. Whether yiiu are married or single, celebrating or ·in
mourning, the hair is braided, twisted or otherwise styled to show your
slate of bei ng.
The multitude of thick coils called drea!llocks...:. dangling from
the shoulders of 10-year-old Zuri
offer a story of freedom.
·
' "My hair ll!cans I don '·t have to
follow the rules of a society that
don't ·look like me,'' says the
Detroit youngster. ·who decided at
age 4 · that he wanted dreadlocks.
"My hair means I like me; I like
my hair, whether anyone else does
.
or not."
Locks - strands of hair twisted
together that naturally " lock" - .
are as old as Africa and as new a.&lt;
Eddie Murphy's "Metro" in which
the actor sports short twists. If left
undisturbed•, his thin twists will
lock and grow in length. And he'll
join Whoopi Goldberg, .singer
Tracy Chapman, members of the
·group Arrested Development.
author Toni Morrison . and actor
T.C.'. Can,on, all of whom have
locks. For·somc, locks are os controversial a,.; the Rastafarians who
are said to have dubbed. them
· "dreaded" as a sign of defiance to

Daniel W. Fisher, a senior 'at
Southern L,.ocal High School, hits
.been awarded a University Challenge Grant from Capital Univcrsily.
The. grant is awarded to incotll·
ing freshmen and transfer studentA
on the \)asis of .standardi1.cd te.~t
scores and/or scholastic achievement.
.
. •.
Fisher, who plans to .major ;~n
business. is the grandson of Wilda
Scarberry, and resides at26680 Mile'
· Hill Road, Racine.
'
Capilal University prepares stu'
dents forAifclong learning in tnday's
global environment through five
colleges: College of Arts and Sciences, Conservatory of Musi'c.
School of Nursing, Law School and
Graduate School of Adminisiration.
In addition, there are Adult Degree
Program centers in CJcvcl~nd, Dayton and Columbus. ·
· ·

European oppressors. R'astafarians where perm kits, texturizers and
" It's a style (worn by) all ml\jor
also, shun· meat, alcohol and tobac- pressing combs reign on store · cultures in Africa - worn hy
co products and celebrate marijua- shelves and in .beauty salon~ . ·
pharaohs. the Masai tribe, in 'Senena as a sacrament.
•
Natural hair .salons are few out- · gal," says Orin Saunders, one of
Some black people have · side large metro areas, unlike in · the owners of Locks and Chops in
dropped the word "dread," saying cities ~uch as New York and Lo,~ mid-town Manhattan. The 10-ycatslave owners described them as Angeles. Many loekticians opemte old establishment has grown in
such. They instead refer to them as from their homes. And Michigan, popularity in the past five years.
Nubian or African locks or, simply, Iike much of the country, has yet to
. Historians say loeb fanned on
locks.
.
·
pass regulations recognizing natur- the heads of slaves during the MidZuri, whose parents .don't usc a a! hair styling.
·
die Pa.&lt;sagc, scaring owners who
last name, is probilbly one of the The stares and questions are many, t~ought the slaves were undergoing
youngest warr.iors in the battle to say lock wearers, including Zuri, some snn of beastlike trllllsformaproclaim as cherished the natural who says he was once call~d names tion. Colonists called them dreadcurl and even · kink in African- and handed a hair comb at a subur- ful, cut the ·slavcs' hair and forbode.
('.merican hair texture.
han mall.
them to grow it back.
Those in the hair industry say
But those are minor aggravaMost people of African ancestry
locks are today what ihc afro was in tions and. worth bearing. And when have stayed away from locks and
the 1960s - a symbol of power, askc!d, "What is that in your hairT' their natural hair texture ever since,
liberation and raei~l pride. · many answer from a perspective says Saunders.
Although the afro gave way to the that goes beyond fashion or poli,
"To have natural, kinky hair has
Jheri curl, they don't believe locks tics. "It's .a spiritual thing," says . come across as a negative since
will fade in popularity.
Dciroitcr Kenneth Bishop, 32, an slavery," says Saunders. " We were
"We worked for 400 years try- administrative assistant for com- not trained to wear our hair natural.
ing to get this stuff (hair) straight," munity and economic dcvelopmcnf1 But it comes out of the roots like
says Rosario. Schuler, founder of with the Southeast Michigan Coun- t~at. And if Gnd made it, it's got to
My ' Nappy Hair salons in Los cil of Governments. When Bishop be good."
.
.
Angeles .and : Oakland, Cal if: recently had his hair twisted, "I just
· That is )'lart of the philosophy of
Sc~ulcr styled a wig for one of felt that connection with my anccs- the Rastafarians. Stancd in the
Eddie Murphfs ~tunt doubles in try." he says.
1930s hy followers of the Ethiopian
"Metro." Her first salon opened in Locks arc deeply rooted in African king, Haile Sclassic I (whose given
1989 and has an equal clientele of cultures. As children, Masai war- name was Ras Tafari Makonnen),
men and women. "After' awhile, riors nunurc .the naturally maned the movement cmsscd !he Atlantic
you just ~et tired .. The neKt st"ll is locks . and .grow them until their to the Westl~dies and was adopted
natural tulir." But 11 1s a ·broad str~dc pa.«age mto manhood •. when the hy the Maroons. a group of
to take in Detroit, like many cities, hair is cut.
Continued on page7

Kathy McDaniel, Long Bottom,
presented a TOPS (fake Off Pounds
'Sensibly) program titled "Walking-What A Way To Go!" when TOPS
IIOH 1383, Cheshire, met recently at
the Cheshire United Methodist
Church.
"Some people avoid activity
because they misrakenly believe that
nothing less than an all-out effon
will make a difference,:' said Kathy
McDaniel. "But that's not true. Any
activity is better than none--provided you have your doctor's approvaL"
As with any new ,exercise pro-

gram, she said, &lt;t's a good idea to
check with your dpctor for an evaluation of the shape you're in now.
Your doctor. can recommend a
beginning program and suggest a
rate of progress to aim for.
Walking is one of the safest and
mosl effective fonns of ex.ercise .

One reason it is so safe is that you
can begin at a pace and duration thal
suits your current level of fitness .
Th~n. as you get into shape, you can
increase the speed at which ypu
walk, as well as aimin~ to spend
more time w~J ki ng or c'ovcr ·more
•

.. Have a 'Heart..
campaign .proclaimed.
a success in M~igs

CARPENTER --The Mcsscn~ers
of Wellston. 6:30p.m. Sunday at the
Mt. Union Baptist Church ~ outh of
Carpenter.
·

·
RACINE -- Racine youth league
linal signup day Saturday, 10 a.m. to
noon at the kindcrganen room.

SATURDAY
- SALEM CENTER . -Star Grange
778, soup supper. Friday. 4to 7 p.m.
open to public. Dona\ions accepted.
Program at 7 p.m.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND -- Meigs County
Bikers Association. Sunday, I p.m.
Eli Denison Post, American Legion,
Rutland. Plans for Memorial Day

run to be discussed.

Elliott sisters
earn nursing.
·degrees

POMEROY -- .Mcil!s County
Shepherd's Club. Sunday, 2 p.m, ·
Meigs O&gt;unty Library.

-·--...

.....M

•

•

.'

•'

I

I

' ..

A total of $501 was collected in Pomeroy Exxon Tiger Mart and ·
the"Have ,a Hean·: campaign of the Fruth's Pharmacy.
Meigs Division of the American · . As explained by Dr. Wilma ,
Hean Association carried out here Mansfield, president of the Meigs
.Division, an ~mphas i s was placed on.
last month. . .
,
The program not only included making people aware the February
good panicipation in paper hean is American Hean Month and that
donations, but also strong promo- hean di sease is the number one
tiona1 benefit for the American . cause of death in Meigs County.
The funds contributed go to supHe&gt;lrt Association through displays
research and educational propen
by · businesses. Dollar donations
jects
of
the American Heart Associa· were given in exchange for person:
tion.
·
aliied paper . hearts which was
For information abo11t the Ameriprominently displayed in several
businesses. Pa,rticipating were can Heart Association gr about car,
Vaughan's Supermarket; ' Meigs dioyascular disease an4' 'J&gt;revention,
County Multipurpose Senior Center, residents may call . BOO-AHA. .
~roger, Pomeroy · Food Shop, USA!.

i

by Pam Roach, Pomeroy, when
members met on March !0. Katie •
Moore led the· KOPS Pledge. A
verse titled "No Day Is Lost" was
read by Helen Trout.
· TOPS besl loser .was McDaniel
with Emogen~ Johnson, Pt. Pleasant, as j(OPS best loser. Songs were
led by Helen Trout and Kathy
McDaniel .
TOPS membi:rs weigh-in from
8:30 to 9:45 a.m. on Mondays at
Cheshire United Methodist Church.
The meeting is from 10 to II a.m.

By BONNIE SHIVELEY
In predawn darkness people quietl y made their way through a small
park for Easter Sunrise Service. The,
only sound was one bird singi ng his
wake-up cal).
. . When we gathered. we also
· began singin g praises to the One we
honored. Then a hush filled the air.
In the fainl li ghl of dawn silho~elles
of trees and shrubs began to' appear
through the thin fog resting on the
earth . My eye caught a movement in
the distam woods -- a woman
dressed in white silently made her
way through the morni ng mist. My
eyes fo llowed her. Was il a morning
like this when Mary we nt to the garden to mb of her beloved Lord Jesus?
In thi s electric moment, J·heard .only
HEART MONTH AWARENESS - Bringing apeclal attention to my own heartbeat and the song of
Heart Month was this sign displayed at Vaughan's In Middleport. the h~ppy bird. The wo111an disapThey·. ware one of several bualnanea who dl1played personalized peared into the forest .
hearts for d!)natlons to the Meigs Division of the American Hearl
From tlie East, a man also·
Association.
·
dressed in white, slowly and quietly

walked toward us. My heartbeat
quickened -~ Jesus, the risen Lord,
re'surrection
morning!
The
·sun
peeked over the
honzon. and brilliant ray's of li ght
shone through the
·misl . and the
threes. We burst
into
. jubilant
song , "U p from
the grave . He arose! ... Hallelujah,
Christ arose!"
Mark 16:2, 6 "Vecy early...just
after sunrise, they were on their'way
to Jhe tomb ... (the angel said) You are
looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who
was crucif1ed. He has risen! .He is
not here." Yes, Jesus Christ lives
'today.
"
Father, we prai se You for auf
ri sen Lord. Amen.

if'fi"

Locks .. . . .___._____.__~·~---------:-----:---- UMW contributes to
parish flood relief

founder of the oldest A!i'can-Amer: and questions from co-workers.
ican hair care and cosn\)otics compaBeyond that, a black person's
Jamaicans descended from slaves.
ny, became a milliona~e by selling basic qualifications can be quesThe group let their hair grow into the pressing comb. i ck women tioned . because of hair style. And
locks in part as an expression of wanted freedom tro the natural there may · be the concero among
faith in adherence 10 a l'&gt;iblical curl and kinkini'SS oft, ) r hair. And employers, . " Willi fit into the com· Scripture which commanded never they also wanted thee· nomic ben' pany?" say s Ronald Shelton. of
to comb or cut the hair.
efits that came with · · ore main- · Dfroit.
,For.today 's lock wearers, "Every stream look.
. .
" If I was a ' young man looking .
lock is . a step .towards self-affirma" It was not, 'I , _.an! to l]e for a job, I would not be wearing
tion, towards self-love,", says white,"' says Noliwe
ks, author dreadlocks,'' says Shelton, who
Schuler. · "We've ·finally come into of ''Hair .Raising:' Be!mty, Culture locked his hair a few years 'ago. The
our sense of being in tenns of loving . and African Americtitl Women ••, 41-year-old pipe fitter-welder spons
ourselves .."
·
· an d
·
(Rutgers University l:'ress, $16.95)
shoulder-length Joe ks wn· h smts
That has been a bat\)e for many lier book details the hh tory of the ti es.
~lack pe~ple. Having their hair ruled. politics of beauty in the black com" Your aim is to move. up to the
unattracu~e smce sl~very,,~ome ~ow "· munity from Madame Walkec 'to next level ," he says. " You'll never
Judge
hatr
or
,'
·
d readl oc ks, an~~
" b. d" the•r
b h own
.
· htas good
1·s also d'~rector, do. that• wearmg
1ose 1o today s. looks. Rooks
a
y
ow
strwg
or
c
.
d'
d
·
•
Sh
·
E
. . .
d of Afncan-Amencan stu 1es an an that 's reality.'
e1ton,
w ho has
1
1
uroh~hort ~· ~ ~ texture .•n d. .assistant professor of English at the . worked for a company for several
1ongt ' ...... . . • l.r IS 0 ten perc~~ed University Qf Missouri·;.K'ilns~ Oity. \ yew:s, says he sees .no room for proas ba~ na1fr that c an~ 01 gtowk. . kn.
"It was ab9ut econom1i!' opportunity. motions in his current pqsition. · ·
any stgn. o natura dcur -or m 1- Jo bs were easter
· to get w11· h stra1·g ht
·
·of the· Fox· te1evtston
··
An eptsode
ness- ts trans 1ate as nappy.
h. . ..
·
· ·
· · · · "L' ·
s· 1 " d It·· 'th
After that comes a long life of
....
.
seti~S
IVIRg mg e
ea. WI
·
t
"fi " the ha·
w·th
And
they
probably
sllll
.are.
the
ISSue,
when
T.C.
Carson
IX
1r I
·
· d' s chartrymg 0
· .
b hot curlers· perm That's why some lock wearers say · acter, Kyle, nearly mtsse a promopressmg
com. s,
, ·
. d untt
. .1 t hey were lion
· be cause he re f used to cu1 h'IS
.
they watte
k1ts
or tex1unzers.
d
be'
1
ki
~
h
·
h
·
1
k
That . striving toward someone emp1oye
.ore oc ,net e~ r atr.
oc s. .
. .
.
else's concept of "good hair" is in
And they asked the boss s op1nBut m real hfe .as well .. s?me
pan the reason Madame CJ. Walker; ion first. Ail reported acceptance employers are placm!! restncllons
·
·
from supervisors, albeit a f~w stares on half styles. Amencan Atrhnes,
Contli'tued from page 6

1 1

for example, J5rohibits flight attendants from wearing their hair in
styles that are totally braided:

"There are all kinds of caSes and
all kinds of stories," says Roo~s: 30.
.",A security guard in Sacramento
was fired because his locks scared
customers even though he wore a
hat."
. · Zuri isn't w,;..ied about employment prospects. And not because
he's only 10. Freedom, he knows,
has its costs.
"To go to someone and ask them
to accept me and give me what they
have is"hot what I want to be'about,"
says Zuri. "I .will make my own
way. My locks .se[ me apan and
make .me free . And I will always live
like that. "

A $50 ·contribution was made to "Sweet Hour of Prayer and "He ·
the . cooperative parish fo, n ood Le.adeth Me."
relief when the ~ock Springs Unit- ·
Officers' repons were given by
ed Methodist Women mJ&gt;t recently al Hazel Ball an~ Frances Goeglein. It
the church.
was announced that the UMW
It was reported that the dinner spring retreat will be held al The
honoring those who worked in lhe ·Plains April 26.
The program carried out the East- · ·
flood effort at the church last ye ar
was ·a success . A productS party was er theme and refres hments were,
planned for Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the served by Belly Dill and Sharon·
church.
Folmer.
Virginia Wears had· the closing
Pandora Collins report ed on
cards sent to the sick and shutins and prayer. Auending were Dorothy Jef-·
Lenora Leifheit had a prayer for fers, . Lenora Leifheit, Hazel Ball,
them.
·
Louise Bearhs, Betty Dill, Sharon
Dorothy Jeffers ·read a poem Folmer, Virginia Wears, Iris Collins,
titled "The Power of Prayer." The Rita Radford, Mildred Jacobs, Pan- '
group gave the purpose ' and sang dora Collins and Frances
..
. Goeglein.

Up to 60o/o

Easter services
to be held at
HHiside Baptist ·
Twin

FuH
Queen

King

Drama to be presented at church

Three travel to Area Agency on Aging conference

,j

your joints; burn calories; tone and diabele~ . a method for building musstrengthen calves. thighs. ankles, cle and bone strength, and weight
feet, arms: shoulders abdomen, hips. controL
and buttocks; go it alone, walk wilh
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds Sensia panner: or stride out in a group; get bly) best loser of the week lbld
involved easily and inexpensively. KOPS February best loser was Katie
All you need is the right footwear, Moore, Syracuse. Best losers of the
she said.
week receive a certificate of recog"An active lifestyle provides nition and a gift from the gifl box .
these benefits," said McDaniel. Monthly best losers receive a cash
Greate~
energy and stamina; prize and a certificate. ·Helen Trout ,
impro~ements
in . flexibility, Cheshire. read a verse titled "They
improvements in mood, enhanced Said You'll'Never Make II."
self-esteem, cardiovascular health; a
Pledge of Allegiance, Never Quil
way for preventing
Pledge and TOPS Pledge were led
. and controlling
..

Reliving the resurrection

Brandon Bachner, son of Steven
and Tamara Bachner, Middlepon,
A weekend prayer service h.S
celebrated his fourth · birthday
been
incorporated into the Easter
recently with a party at McDonald's
at the Hillside Baptist
observance
in Pomeroy.
·
Church.
Refreshments including cake and ·
The prayer service will get underice cream were served and the·chil.
way
at 3 p.m. Friday and continue
dren attending enjoyed games.
until
Easter morning. Anyone with a
Attending were Bob and Jonetta
need is encouraged to contact
prayer
Davis, maternal grandparents, Jack
the church, 992-6768. The requests
and Carolyn Bachner, paternal
will be placed on the altar so that
grandparelns; Paul. Cunningham,
will be continuous prayers.
there
great-grandmother, and Joan TewksChristians
willing to prayer for an
bary, Ann, Ry.an and Milsayla Van E~inne and Danielle K&lt;:nnedy, and
Maire, cousins, and Lol"ry and Michael and Becca Owe,o . Sending hour during the sc~vice are also
Bruno Casci, De~ise and Aline ·gifts were Tina and Brian Manning, asked to call the church.
The Good Friday service at the
Arnold, Ray, Mandy,' and Mackenzie Mary K. Roush, Helen and Clyde
church
will begin at I p.m: with Dr.
Redman , Jamie Bailey, Gail 'and Belch£r, Lorna Johnson, Nora, DenJames Acree preaching aQd special
Brad Davenport, Eva Kennedy , ver and Bill Rice.
musical by Sandy King and Jamie
Humphrey. Following. the service
there will he a spaghetti dinner at .2
"Watch the .Lamb", a dramatic ' Palm Sunday, 7 p.m. an(\.,Good Fri- p.m. to which the public is invit.o:.&lt;J.,l
presentation that tells the story of a day, 7 p.m. Special mlisil:.,yJill open
Easter Sunday services will
man and his two young son~ as they each service and the service will including a program titled "He Has
come into Jerusalem at the time of conclude with the drama. Refresh- Risen." The church choir will sing.
Passover, will be presented by t~e ments will be served.' The public is Services will he held at 'II a.m. and
Racine United· Methodist Church invited.
6 p.m. on Easter Sunday.

TU:!g:E
RACO, Tuesday, .
6:30 p.m., Swr Mill Park. New
Arnie and Rebecca Elliott,
members welcome.
daughters of Marcia and Herbert
You . probably would rather not
Elliott of Rutland, will receive nursknow but March is National Nutri·
ing degrees fiom Hocking College.
tion Month. That means it's time for
Nelsonville. in ceremonies Friday
· you to ta~e stock of your diet lind
afternoon from Hocking College,
~ec if you are consuming healthy .
Nelsonville . ·
foods since nutrition, . we're told.
Three Meigs Co~tntians wer~ asses~ing the needs of· older adults ,planned li special meeting before the There is a small increase in ·state
Both are graduates of Meigs High
does play a major role in warding off among those attending the recent • and identifying resources available 16th id conjunction with the area's funds in block srant, but no addi- School.
·
•
some diseases.
. quanefly meeting of the Regional to meet these needs, and recom• Senior Center DirectorS to fomiulatc tionaJ state money for the PASSArnie has coftlpleted requires'eems like the healthy foOds just Advi~ory Council of the Area mends to the Executive Committee a message for members to take to the P&lt;;&gt;RT proJram. There are addi·
menL•
to qualify to be a licc.)lsed as .a
.
don't taste as good do they ? Lotsa Agency on Agi 0g in Marietta where. of Bucl&lt;eye Hills those programs Ohio Legislature unique to south- tiona! programs, one of which is registered nurse, 'while Rebecca hiS:
seniors in schools.· Presendy those
which ,should be awarded funding, eastern Ohio.
luck.
em~is was on providing the basic
as well .as fundinJle:vels.
Mary Mcintyre. Area AJeney funds are ta!Jeted for lirbln areu. It attained the status of licensed pracd-~
needs of Ohio's,elderly.
The common focus for the four Director, reviewed Ohio's biennial is proposed and Ms. Mcintyre rec- col nurse. Rebecca will continue ~
My phone c;allers advise me that
Lloyd Blackwood of Pomeroy,
employment at the Holzer Medical'
there are $OIIIC good buys on gaso- Helen Swartz of Coolvihe. and John · committees, which meet prior to the . budge~ which, she said, "looks good ommended advocacy to the Gover- Center while returning this summer•
&lt;;ounpil, wu the April I Sth Coali- for AJing's programs." .
nor for funds to go to one rural area .
line in Maip County these days. . C. Rice of Reedsville.
to HQCking College for the R. N.~
The Council reViews 1111d com- , tion ·for Eldercare Advocacy Day in ·
Gasoline is down to S}-1 5? at some
degree.
:.
Increases will come from expect- .
The next meetina will he June
loc:ations. So you mijln want to menta on all I:OIIInlllnjty policies and Columbus. This is a ·rally to suppon
'
Arnie
will
postpone
scckint;
shop arotind and ;yo;. also might programs wl1lth llffett older Ameri· the basic; needs of Ohio's elderly. ed increased federal funds and carry 13th at Scenic Hills Senior Center in
e~plo~ent until aft.er her wl!iddinjj;
cans, wi1ta,the ARaAgency s!3ff in The Advocacy Committee has over from •,assisted living funds. Los an.
want to k~p smiling.
thiS SptlnJ.
.
::
.
"

.

mileage, she said.
M~Daniel said that if you're out
of shape, it's best to stan out slow
and easy. "This lets your body gradually get used to new demands. It
also helps your mind become accus- ·
tomed to the new approoch: 'ijey,
this isn't so bad after ali--in fact ,'it:S
fun!,'" said McDaniel.
When walking for exercise,
McDan.i el pointed out that you can:
work out almost anywher", anytime;
set a. pace 'that suits you, no matter
what your level of fitnes_s; enjoy a ·
physical challenge that's easy on

'.

Bachner marks
fourth birthday

-'-----.-------:-·CommuQ·ity calendar--· --------The Community. Calendar. Is
publlsh.ed as a free service to non•
,profit aroups wishing to announte ·
meetlna and special . events. The
talendar Is not deslped to promote sales or fund raisers of llny
ty!Je. Items are printed as spate
permits and cannot be paranteed
to run a .specific number of days.
FRIDAY

The Dally Sentlnei•·Page 7

TOPS program .reviews benefits of walking

.

Beat
of.the
Bend
&lt;;!

'

Friday, March 21,1187

Public Notice
eech unit. The Spaclallat
will alao a..tot In Ihe
contractor bidding procell
ond revtaw of att bld1;
attilnd•noe at pra•
oonatructlon meeting;
Interim conotructton
• ••
lnapecl 1ona; over
oomplll- wtth Relldanttal
Rthabtlltetton Standarda;
und.rte'ka Rnat tnepeqllona
and paymanl approva tt;
and provtda written Nparlo
tiDplamtnt 111• progr1am, 11 · 01 all tna-ctlona to . tht
funded, \lfttll March 3 , 1117
nty
~00
11110:GO a.m. "" pro,....ta
~,. • propoaate ohoutd
will thin Ill oonalclered at ltat•
quallllcallont,
1:aa p.m. during the ret~ular lnoludl"'l all Nlatad trelntng
county commllllcntra lor lha ,proltcl acttvlty;
IDNtlno. ·
,
1
TIM=Nm wttl require pravloue exparlanca n
thea• v:~'!_c;e,.! olio CDIG/HOME Hou.otng
~..
..,...._......
program•; .acopa of
provlcllthe followt"" _ , . ...,..,U:.e to Ill provldad. and
...,
amount of compenaatton
of . . wte11:
re'!Uirld lor lhl tbOYI
Prtllmlntry tnapactlon 11 rvlcea.· All related
and pttparallon of qllllllkiMion ancllcir training
rthallllltallon . work oartttlcattona thould be
1 p • o lflo all o n'a
o I attachad to the propoul.
eilproxiiMW!y
atngll
I'H propolata mey be
family hoMea; and 0011 malled ·o. r detlverad to thl
~·tor - h work on
,.

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
REQUEST I'OR I'EE
PROPOSALS
Thl Melge County
Conimlaetonera will II•
epplylng tor FY 87 CDIQ
Community Houalng and
Imp rovement Program.
fundl119 and wtU - p t •
p r o Po a a II
I0 r
REHAIIUTATION
COHIULTiiiO SERVICES. to

*'"

. Public Notice
Melgo
County
Comml,atanera,
CouriiiOu.., Pomeroy, Ohio
45711. Quaatlone In reglll'd
to thta raqu..t may ba
addrealld to Jean Tru-ll,
Orante lldmtntatrator at 1114·

Public Notice
,Mondtiy, April 7th, 1.7. The
· bide wtll tholl be opened
end Nod aloud at 2:00 p.m.
on Monday, April 7th, 1817
tor the tottowtno pure-:
Furntahlng ol vartoue
gredee of aaphett
- mav 1M required lly the
Jan,. Howard, Prelldant Melga County Highway
.
l,
Melga County Depa-.
Commtnlonera
lid epealflcallona may Ill
(3) 14, 18, 21; 3TC
picked up at lht Mtlga
County EngiRHr'e Ollloa 00:
the OffiCI of lht Malga
' '
. County Commllelonera.
The Board of Matga
County Commi .. Jontr.a
Public Notice
may accept tha to ...al btd,
or aellet the blat llld lor the
tn .. nded purpoae, and
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL ,..., _ the right to - p i
Notice to AggNgatl
end/or rfleol any or aU blda
V.ndoN:
and/or any part u.o-1 and
In accordance with wiU llward a.GOtlteiiOl to u.t
HCtlon 307.141 of the Ohio llldcllr which II In the belt
Revflld C-, aealad btda tntiiiWI olllelp Courity.
will Ill received by the
Glorlil KIOel, Clerk
Board of Metga County
Board olllelp County
Commtaalonera, Court
COmtnlaalonera
,
.
Houu, Pomeroy. Ohio p)lt, ilt;ITC
ut111, unttt 8:00 a.m. on
\

---

led
Mirror

.....

cone,..•

Tallie

to

·60°A.

DinaHes

Hitches

oH

Drop~ Tables

Chairs
SAVE UP TO

60Yo
....

I

,

.

,, '·
•

\

''

�•

Frldat,llarch 21,1.-r

-··--·-...

•

•
•..

Jlllr

Sun. Malo - 9:30 IJD.
Doiley MMo - 8:30 Lm.

Gna ~r
326 B. lin

,..,,o,,a ...a oiQrllt
·

Apostolic -

p...,.,

Bearwollo" JUdat Cbur&lt;b ort'lortst
Putor: loclc Colepe
Sundly School -9:30-o.m.
W011hip/ 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.
Wednelldoy Se1Vi&lt;:e5 - 6:30p.m.

Fne WW llltJJilsl Cbun:b .
Aoh Strut, Middleport,
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sundly Service - 7:30p.m.
·Sundly School- 10 o.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

...
'

~

PIUo Clourdl ofCiorill
.·
Instrumental
.
·Pastor: Scot Brown
WorshipService - 9 Lm. . · Communion- 10 a.m.
Sundoy Sehool- 10:15 a.m.

Uberty Cllrtstlaa Cllum
·Dexter
Paotor: Woody Call
Sundly' Evening - 6:30p.m. ·
. Thursclay S.tvtce - 6:30 p.m.

Mt. UaioD llopllot
Paslor·: J~ N: Sayre
Suodoy St:hooi-9:4S a.m. . .
.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
·
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bothlobomllo:rlll
Racine, 0
Pastor : Daniel Berdine
Worship-9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study . 7:00 p.nl. Wednesday

Free

--.... c~- art'lorllt

·Pastor: Philip Sturro .. •
·Sundly School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study,Wedneodoy, 6:30p.m . .

Hii!Jide Baptisi Cbur&lt;h
St. Rt 143 just off Rt. ~
· Pastor: Rev: James' R. Acree, Sr.
.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wedtiesday Sef)lii:es -7 p.m.

.0

Cl1n st1an Union
n.rtront Clio~ or Cllrlli 1a

Pine GrOve .

Comer Syc.,morc &amp;. ~nd St., Pomeroy

Gnltom Ualted Mttltodlll
Worship- 9:30 1.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun), .
·
7:30p.m. (Jnl a 4th stfn)
Wednesday Ser'o'ice -7:30p.m.

..iloptisl

PastoJ: Sharon Hausman
· : Sunday School·- 9:30a.m.
Wollhip : II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Rall1ad Fne WW
Salem St
Puoor: Rev. Poul Taylor
· Suodoy School ' 10 o:m.
. • " ., ,
£venin&amp;- 7 p.ml
·.
l Wtdtioaday St:rv)ces- 7 p.m..

..

CilthoiJc

Cong regnti on&lt;l I

·,, ·Sticftd 1Je1rt Catltolk Cloarch

·161 Mulbeiry Ave., Pomeroy. !192-5898
.P.Oatbr: Rev. Walter E. Hemz· •
•, s._.eon. 4:45-S:!~p.m.; Mau- S:30 p.m.
·.~' · SUn. Cop. ~8:4,·9:15 1.m.,
.

• Trtnlty Cbun:b
Second a Lynn, Pome"'y
Pastor: Rev. Rolond Wildman .
Su.ndoy school and worohip 10:25

· :

t

.

.

RiedsvWe
Pastor; Rev. Charles Muh
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - I0:30 .i.m.
. UMYF Sundoy 6:30p.m .
Filii Sundly of Month • 7:30 p.m. l&lt;rvice

.

1411 Bridseman So., SyntCU$0
Suodoy ·School • 10 a.m.
· 'Evenin&amp; - 6 p.m.
Wt.llnesdoy Service - 7 p.m.

Huol Cotlunoidly Cllwt:b

OffRt. 124
· Pastor: Edocl Hart·Sundly School· 9:30 a.m . .
Wo11hip -10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Dycovlllc Coatawai'y Cbudl
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m .• 1 p.m.
. Mono Cloo]iel Cbun:b .
Sundly school- IQ o.m,
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m. ',
Filth Gospel Church
•
Lon Bottom ·
Sunday SC~ool- 9:30 a:m. ·
Worship- 10:4S ~-m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday 7:30 p.tn.
ML OUvo cG.iunually Cb....,b
PaStor: Lawrence Bush ·
Sundoy St:lx&gt;ol - 9:30 1.m.

R-.Wc follo'lfllllp
Cbur&lt;b ortbo.NuorettC
Pastor: Muk A. Dupler
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wot&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servius·.. 7 p.m.

'

'

s,......~

Middleport Cburcb ortbo Nuoreoc
Pasthr: Orosory A. Cundiff
Sunday ·St:liool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m•
Wedneoday Servi..s ' 7 p.m.

'LoaalotkoD
Sunday St:liool- 9::i0 a.m,
Wmhip- 10:30 a.m.
'

Fttllll Volley To-le Cloorrb
.
lloiley Run Road Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
· Suodoy-Evenins 7 p.m:
Thutsday Service·- 7 p;m.

'

'

MILL

.K&amp;C JEWELERS

Mill Work ·
Cabinet Makirig , ,
Syracuse -:

212 .E.' Main Street
·'•

l;'omeroy
992-3785

992-3918 _
DAVIS-QUICKEL

tf~~~~UNC
. Y:fiiN~~· ·'
IJ .u, '"

- FISHER
FUNERAL HO!'e'E

RACINE MOWER
· .· · C~Nie . .
Bfllp Ub&amp;tton _

:::.:s.:.

Chester

992-5141

264 South 2nd

. ,·

1

~·Wai:ner • ·

' INSU~NCE ~
• SERVICES

rvlce TechnlciM ·
214 E. t.'!Bin .
HEATER RE~Mtl 992·5130 Pomeroy

·WBG~-= 1030

WITH A

~TALKNID . , " CLASSfFIE{JADI .

~ coutm'Y IIIUII.C

'

' ·'

~:m:.:_~o~:

. 804W.Matn , ,

992-~18

.

~slg1

~ounty

Comt•I&amp;•Ja......,
. .
·~ , •••..,. 01110

.

. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
.

.

..

f.l

Veterans
Memorial

PHARMACY ~ i

· We AU·Doctors' · .
- Preacrlptlons

'

Hospl~l

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pameroy

992-21b4

'
EWING FUNERAL HOME

•ttlc with the help

C~SSIFIED

SECTION!

You don't have to look far
to spy the best buys in. rne 1:
classifiedsl
-SNOUFFER

"Dignity and SeMce Always"
Established 1913

- FIRE ~ SAFETY. ·
SALES SEFtVICE

992•2121

172 North Second Ave.

' .•

ot the

a

992-707_8 _ . .

.(

SarY-U

a:ra Ytl.

(8111114514~.

up 11&gt; 3D poundo, 3D DAV MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Natutol, ·
OociDr Roeommended, 814-441- 1
1982,Frao .........
Dental A11latant• .Som• experi·
ence detlred, but not required.
Only mature, raaponllbla per10n
need apply. Send t11umt to Box
P-ta. %PI Pleount Reatator. 200
Main St., PI PleountW'I 2S55(l
Earn 11 ,000 WHkly Stuffing En·
valopea At HQmt. Starr .Now. No

.EJperitnee. Free Supphea, Info.

No Obligation. Send LSASE To:
ACE, Dept: 135t, lloJ 5137, Olomond Bar, CA 81785.
E·aay Work·! EXcellent PaY I Assemble Products at Home.

I

'BINGO
MON.&amp;WED.
6:30P.M.

..---~"'!~-r"-:'::·....._,

.

..........

,; • ..,CALL',

·Qravel, Llmaatone,

..Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand, Refuu.

:
:
;

'
:
:

, •-:.s..u!..

B&amp;lhs, Grooming,

sweet.~ -

In Memory of ·

Jfappy '.IJittfij{ay,
tJJrarnfy Sniier

JEREMY .

: Hilgraves, pallbearers'

: and the people whO
•
: volunteered their tiem
and work opening and
closing the grave.
Oready appreciated,
Daughter, Son &amp; Family

andLove

271 North 2nd
Ohio

SHOEMAKER
' BcirD Sept. tl, l!J67

· Died March 21,1993

Dsnspter, It's 4
today. You han been

jaone . bat never
.roraotte.n u IoRI 11
,your mother laiMn.. .
It really , hurt Die
to tee cotlter
·,

aad

. 4GinatblsJII

."'1~* er, alter we -

· do ~ totedler.
we- to do. Bat
hGW
ll't .0. IIIII .
.we all

Memory of
Ada Emma Bissell on
lhis''the fint anniversary
,.Cr passing. March 21

of

You'.re· always in our

not burdened with
times- of son:ow..I
wish you the ·
sunshine of
tomonow. Mylife's
been full, I savored
much, Qood friends;
good times, a loved ·
·one's touch.
IP,rhaJ~s my time

· seemed all tO(&gt; brief.
Don't l_engthen it
riow with undue
grief. Lift up your .

peace to
thee. GOd wanted me

Mom, and· we
love and miss you
greatiy. •'
We love you al.,.ays,
·Janet and Michael and
Families
:·

words

can say; and ' .

·loved more than ·
you,' II ever know.
l~om, Granny &amp;

FREE
,
ESTI.. •:rEES
885'"'"
4473

. .

Tho T(lintr II II Rftponsibla fat
Dellvtry 01 And Proper Docu-

. mentation Of Employment And

40

Giveaway

...

1 112 yaar o111 tiixed broc~. ,e~,
Lib, moll. 304-e7S:Ii890.
2 Female Pupploo, Black
Shophord Croll With Black_Lab,

Troinlng Actlvltloo To 1\lllgnad
Pa~dclpanta. The Trainer. II Yuat .
Work Wit\ Otllet Stall Itt lloellng
·Progrom Goola And Allltting
Portlclpanll In Muting Thair Individual Goalo. Poaltlono Requlrn A llechelofa O.H. At&gt;'
plleanr.
_ Muot Po11111 ·". Valid ·
Dri¥11'1 LleenM, Rtlllblt 'fran•
por•don, And A Wlllingn•aa To

.,BilL-·
....,..

IIIGS'

!fOlie hllprove. .ts 3351 Hippy Hollow Road
Mkidleport, Ohio 45780
New Homa, Additions,
. Siding. Pate lllrne,
Decka", P1lnt1ng,
GngM, Porchee.
Clll Us ·For A,,..
Eetltllln.

Septic Sy&amp;teme

_Trailer I
Houus-..
R•aOIJifble Rlltea
JoeN.Sayre

--

Sayre TI'ICklllg Co•

614-742-3090
614-70.33~

...

614-742-3076

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERYIQ

.
lntroducinq.
HtlriWIII

Any Type
of Cleaning
·

Honest, Dependable
and Trustwortl)y llllles 1
ready to clean your
mime or business.
RHaonable Rites

992.,6342 (Diane)
or 992-7275 (Brenda)

ROOFING ·
NEW-REPAIR ·
Gutters

H11res ·

olntlrlor • Exterior
A'illntl
. .1111
Allli Conctoll Work

Painting

V.C. YOUNG IU
912.at5
'-roy, Ohio

FREE ESnMATES

-

f

:~

Sack by ·PiOl)ular·Reql-!,98ts"
·
Moose Lodge
The Band "Stone Street"
l=riday &amp;SatL!rday n}ght

while

~ucoon

MatCh 24 at 7:00 •
HouiSa. ·

1\IC";-VJT Dance

7 pm' 10 pril .

Uorlahl Plano. can
ot\ar~pm.

60 Lost and_Found

ALL Yard Baltt MUll 11 Paid

In Adylne •• DEADLINE: a:OO
p.m. th1 dar bolon.tltt ld le
run. Sundtty edition • 2;00 p.m.
Frld.y. Monday- •d'-lon • 10:00
•.m:a.tunll)'.

Middleport
&amp; VtclnHy

3/17/IWfFN

102 E. Mali!

.

All Yard Salu Muot Be Paid In
A.dvaflGe•. Dladline: 1:OOpm lhl
day t&gt;olort the ad II 11&gt; tun, SUn·
dar- · &amp; Monday •ditlon- 1:OOpm

......~""'"':~--il ; Friday!:!·;-=--=-=--==-

.':::':::n

-- ' R. ·t. HO~LqN .- ~·:',.::
80
=
---- . TRUCKING_
WICKS ·. ~LI!Ifl=lef~•
Au:::;::ction:-:;:Sor::::;::vlce:O,L•::U.allo
L.W.Jew. Auedonear. Houathold,
--·
·
e . . .. Farm Soles. Coii814-4411-=-- DUMP TRUCK
H
·
A
U
.
LING_
.
0241,011 31U443.
Rick ·pq;10n Auction Company,
SERVICE ·
----· lull tim• ouctlonttr, complete
• G,ravel
Limestone;
••etlan . aonrlca. Llcenaad
·
d
·
l Wool VIrginia, 304·
----- Umeltonl
. Plrt • S.nd .
. · Grave I, San ,
m-s715 0r 304-773-5«7.
::
e 4422
Top Soli, Fill Dirt ao . W111tec:lto Buy
1
0:
Chester, Ohio .
614~91112·~170
Altlol•• Top Dollar: All u.s. Sit·
=
-

~.Ohio

S..-~~~-1;;"""".;;;:;111i;;;';;;''ol,
~

. • .• . ----- .

CHESRR STORAGE
One Unit Now .
Available
101128; $8$ per mo.
. 992-3961

FREE 3mln.
Psychic
·reading for

"Lo""Money
"'C8reer •Health ,

18t '•

1· 800 8t2-4170
vi~Mnc

1 800887-3721

.t&amp;•- ·.
.'

·

var And Gold Colna, Prooloato,

Diamond' Antiquo .._,, Gold

RintiO. Pr•1830 U.S. Curr•ncy,
SllrliiiCI, j;tc. Mquililiono J-lry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sacand
- · &lt;Wipolll, 814-441-2142.
Anllqitoo, lurnlture, g1a11: c:ltino,
~ina. IOfl, tampa. l~nl. , IODII,
tltat•a: elao appralaala, Oabr

na

.......11~2-74-lt

Antlquel, 1Dp prl&lt;lto paloi, Rivtr·
In• Antlquto, Pomoror. Ohio,
.Ruoe Moore, owner, 814·88225lll.

-IISULAIIOI

U711iwM P..Ac1
- ~ ..
· Dul.ana ·

.....

•• . 11111!1 --~~~·~"- p.lll.

liMn&amp;

·.

..1IIIIZ.
EOUAL OPPORTUNITY EllPLOVER .

0r...,.

Hair Stylill Wanltd Rent Your
Found: Pari SIIOpbenl a Port Blue. &lt;iwn Station,
sto ro S15
Healer, Black Ooo Wllh White An Hour, Call Carol King, 11~- ,
Chell, Cora V.lclnlty, 614-3 79 · ~•e 8822.
2854.Hair Stylist Wlntod: API&gt;Ir At -Hair ·
lost: Wallet, Vicinity: Johnaon'a Highlights, 453 State R~ute 7,
&amp; Second Avenue, Gallipolla,
Gampolio, &amp;14-448-4587.
614--44$-t!iOO.
Hairdresser Wanled: For New ·
70
Yard Slle
Salon Opening SOon .In GaUipoHo
===::::~:::::::===I A~ 614-258-tl336.
~HELP WANTED UaniWomen
Ga llipoliS
EaTn 1480 WHkly :Anemblin9
• VICinity
Circ:uit BoardiiEtectronic Com·

·Pomeroy,

94~2168

. 892·7696 ·

Cafeteria
o,J.~·Aoctcln' R~

Ruaty.· Nud• A Goad Home, Applications Mar Be Obtained
Yaung, White,- Longhalred Part And Submitted At Tho 'Chtahire
Olflco At 8010 Jojorth State Roult
~.114-308-118011.
7 Choahiro, Ohio. Deadline For
Two y11r old male Airedale to S~bmiasion Of Applications And
· Reaumea Ia 1:0Q RM On APril • ·
good t-&lt;lmt, 014-742o2D45. ·

FTi, SaL B-e, t030 Secclnd
A-ua, Largo Sizo Clothing And
Etc.

Downspouts

(FREE EmMA"!''S)

--=
-,.
;----·
---=-------::
BOARD DEADLINE :
-:: 2:00BULLETIN
PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
-= , ,
,. ,:·}'.'

Tho Trainor Aide lo Rooponolbl•
For Dolvery 01 Toanng Ao:tlvhiH
Ill llitoctod 111 O!h« Stall Dullel
May Include Malnlt..- Of lieporta. Forma, DOcumenta, Sc:hedulea, ·And Records. Poaldon Requireo A High Scl1ool Olptolrtl Or
5:30pm
GED, -Excellent C.ommunicatlon
Nlc• -Fomalo .Cat Spayed De-. And Typing SkUio. ATypi111J Toat
ela. .d very Gentle, 614·446· llay eo "Required. Pooition May
Roquirt Tr1vot lletween Agency
-1083.
In Tho Servlee Aroa
Pit Bull, boon opayad. itivea Facllltloo
And Oc:caalonal Travel To Other
...., .... :104475-7183.
Loc:ationa. AppliCIInll Uuat Pol1111 A Valid Oriver'a ·llcenae .
Puppioo
to
good ttome._614·992·
6882.
.And - e Tra,.portolion.

Cat male, 4moa o,d, gray long
hair. milton PIWI. Adult male
dog, 2 112 Ytllfl old, 112 Golden
Relrlovtr, 112 lriah SaRor, good
children. 304'!174-484~ after

Gutter Cleenlng

:! lll1111J lllllllliiiiiiiJ 111111111111111111111111 1111111111111 '= ..--~~~
-

and

Chetlter, Ohio

Howard l:. Writesel

oftciom Addltlone
oNIW !i•ragee
.
ol!llc:blclf a Plumbing
oftooftng '

'

-

CarPentrY
s.vingrlle .,.. fDf
-t1llfH 15,..
MlbW.Mercum

Done?

.

...,

ExteriOr ,

7

2fttM71-.

'helltS and

now; He ~~ me F.-ee.
Missed more than

•

•New Hom11
•Garages
•&lt;;omplete
Remodel.lng .
Stop &amp; Compare

Doctor'nlltta,
~ vleit., etc.
Ploont11~
Ful1~

In Loving

h~arts,

will miss.

.

wlllelchllre. llellcllltiA

614-142·2138

and left it all.
could not stay

I

-~ual":;:l;

.

sat. 12-8; Sun. 12-4

for now I'm free.
following the path
God has laidyou
I lOok His hand
when I heard Him.
call, I turned by back

remembered joys. A
·friendship slu!red. a

.. . . . . , . lllmCI

". Mon., Tues., Wad~
·· Thure., Fri. 1o.6; .

1123n1 to 3/22190
Free

another day. To
laugh, ta love, to
work or play. Tasks
left undone must
. thai way. I found that
peace at the·close of
the day.
If my parting has left
void, then fill it with

~m.

BUILDING.

"'

Limestone I Gnwel

'' Kennel Care

GUINTHER

laugh, a kiss, oh yes
these things 1 too

ANNA"JO".

EEO

For The Poaltianl Of JrJ!Dtr II
And Ira!otr Aldt With The JTPA

&amp; SON

COISTRUCnOI

'

Pln214,1

Pm

. In

1

· 1RAN$~A110N

PagerHIOO 1112-2327

Ciii•JIRISI*

•..,.,...ft., grieve for me,

~

s,-.-. Ohio 45m

VINYL

ao·IEIT IISSRLL

HOJU.

llsdl_.IDCIP!Id,

,, ' 992·7074

BEEatGROVE
.
..
ROAD .

;
;

Send '"ume ID: tno phOne coils)
P.Q Box307

(up to 93 United Inches) ·
.(OplloniAoolloblutAddltlanol Cool)

.

post 467

sso.oo
. . ...
1* .... • '

Wei the family of
Lenora VanMeter
(Granny) would like to
thank the people _· who_
hel~ ·us through our
Joss Feb. 22, by sending
flowers,
•· Cards,
telephone calls, food to
out
homes
and
dbnations. also a special
thank$ to Rev. Charles

" Subatitute 18acher .Udet· rriUal

· have high school diploma or
oquh!alon!. .

TIIIYOI.

$1'500a00

Card of Thana

ol Em.calion Ctr1ilicllion.

caiitotoil Sehool

PRICES"
$195.00 INSTALLED .

.

M H lCJlJI JCL 1.1 ll JL ;

·BURST

.£or~t !MOJIIfl

Lonll•? Taitt A Chlnct On Mo,
White Male 34. P.O. Bo• 993,
Gdpullo, Olio ol51131.

·REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
"FACfORY DIRECT

• Aquatron Boats • Cutty
Cabins e Bow Riders • Base
Boats • Sea Ark John Boats
• Johnson
Outboard
.
.

O.V.Iapment.

nu 'l'lt. come a
W4!Jfrom tliis to

t..poo-21t.yy fxt 2724 t3.0D
1'W Min. Mull lie 18 YrL Sorv-U
(811) 14514~

·
• Subltltu18 teadllfl- must have
or bolllgille fat Ohio DeplrliiWII

Athens, Ohio

.:&gt;VJO...&amp;.....

· CltiUM are _,.....
to llttlnd .thll mMtl"' !"'

(the oourtl!ouH le 1
handicapped ODOHIIbll
·t•olllty), .Jie- oo,nteot
. Qtorllt Kloel, Clerlt, priOr to
'lllrch 31, tll7,11t flt4) . .

TY aOJoRD OF IIR/DD

poillo -Mtlgo community Action
Agoncr lo S.•klng Appllcanll

lllllliMI'II:od allove, lllfore
the oounty 1ultlllltl Ito
Apjlll~ . to 1111 Ohio
Department
of

CDIQ CtiP ~pi 'LaoiL
· II a pootlclptlnl will 111111
IUldlllry aids (lntlrpl'stlr,
bnlllsd or t1p0t1 Mlterltil,
. ......tv. lletaill"' tlevloo,
.otbtr) due 10 .• dlilblllty, .

.

Attorney At Law

sppllcetlon, lneludlng -1111
propond
ullvllln

1111'011 at, 1111 to • . . lhllr vleM lind ~
. on 1111 county'• projlo*

,

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNI·
TIES WITH THE MEIOI COUN-

UYEPSYaiiCII
TELL 'lOUR
Rll\IREI .

Attorney Wil,liam Safranek

,...,_
_. ••••A: on ...
ioottnly'a propMecl CDIG

'
·'

Ext -?Mil t2.88

Lunutl. Muat

can relieve a debtor of
financial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep •exempt• property for their personal 'use.
ITIJlY include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
' For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

(614) 592:..S025

PaPa

' '

~ 'f'*M

80ffiED WILL POWER! LOSE

c,n

..61 ~992.·7643

41743, to ghrt Oltllens 111
~tlequats opportunity to

Scve nti1 -Dily Adventist ·,..

· Ualted F1ltlt Cb..-.b ·
Rt. 7 on romeroy By-Pasa
· Paslor: Rev. Robcn E. Smith, Sr.
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.

992•5432'

·985-3308

Middleport

.. ..
.· BILL QUICKEL I~
~L_~==~~~~
' ...._-,.,.--ro-.,.,.- ~.~~·SAVE
T~ME • P.J. PAULEY~ AGENT
. •. -.....thii....._

Wnl
lleltl
31,
)II 1:DO p.m. during the
rogul•r meeting . of the

Suodoy St:bool • 9 o.in.
Worohip- !Oo.m.

on Stole Route 124
Putor: Rev. Robert Marltley
•
Sundly St:bool - ll ·o.m. - ,
Sundoy Worohip • 10:00 o.m. A 7:00p.m. ·
Wednesday Services • 7:30 P·lll·
Wednelldoy Youth Service· 7:30 p.ni. · .

43130"61o-eti7-So1011.

ATTDTION

Hu 'lliur MlrriiQ&lt;I Or RlloUonllllip Got Up • WoN, Slo9 In Prln- - Anti'Rsm Dna Of Our
lldull Vldaoo. 1380 Eaor.rn AVf!nue, Galllpolo. Or C~l 014-44
111122. .

20Y!I. Exp.• J. . . 0wner:RannleJoMa

New
· · Homes ;. Vtnyl Siding New
·Gar!lges·· Replacement Wlnstows
· · .Room Additions • Rooting
. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ·
FREE ESTIMATES

A

MWJoportProobytcotu ·

United Brethren

005

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

LL BUILDER$,

ville Pntlutcrtu QIU'dl
Wonthip- ~ .a.m.
Sundly School - 9:~5 o.m. _

Mt. u.._ Valttd .,...._
.. Clorill Cbudl
Texis Commun~y off CR 82
Putor: Robert Sonde11
Sundly St:IIOoi : 9:30 o.m. •
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.• 7:30p.m.
Wednoadly Se\'cca - 7:30p.m•

banefitl lind nQet. Mail resurM
to: Wid Ohio Tree Strvi'ce•ooo
Ratlt Ave.-Lancuter. Ohio

Toll Froo-1-800·407-5500 EXT.
12170.

11&amp;11 II I

. Mulberry HIS. Rd., Pomeroy ·
Putor: Roy Lawinsky
· Satuolay Services:
Sabballl School - 2 p.m.
, Wonthip- 3 p.m.

oCsH Today tor Your
F,.. eatlmatea

992·2753

P-: Rev. Krisana Robinstin
Suodoy School- 10 o.m.
Worship - ll'o.m.

Sn--0., MY-

{614) 802..4277

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

Home Repair Needs

"

Sy...-FintUalltd~

these area
.·.· merchants
TIME FOR
Family Restaurant'
RIDENOUR · Crow's
CLEANING?
"F1111f1Jring Kentucky Fried Chicken'
SUPPLY
CkMn out your baHment or
228 w_. Main St., Pomeroy

· RAWLINGS~COATS

.

.

Joe WIIIOI'I

eatablilhed rtaa 1ervice. Good

DATE8I
. OUY8 I GALl
AOIUNCEI

"No JOb Too Small
•Any and All of 'V9ur

«emodeelng
_.....
oDecka

to Ulldlrtllle

Presbytenan

Edt• Ualtad llntllreo Ita Clorill
2 1/2 milosiiOIIh of Reedsville

.

-New tt&lt;»m8.

experienced toreman/cllmber for

AWJOUNCE r,lHJTS

•u.-.,...........,,

th1 county Is

In Memory
.

19118 Milrtln Stntet
Ohlo415788

a.: oountf'•

Ny

Evenin&amp; • 7 P·rl'!·

Wednc_day Service· 7 p.m.

u~~eement or

ARE YOU WANTING TO RELOCATE? W• 'orelooking IDr In

"Build Your Dream"

a

Mlddi~Pmeaiitll '
iniAve.
Putor: Rev. Cluk Dab~
Suttclay Sdtool· 10 a.m.
Evoni111- 6 p.m.
W - y Servlea: 7:00p.m.

'tComm•Bify ChrU .

AVON I ldl Atoao I Shlrter
...... :104475-14211.

M&amp;J ·

On II•: ·a,ttt7,
Prtlllt'llll
- tho
· oalllity Ollltluotld a _lim
pullllo hMrlnO to lnl0r111
t:lttzlns . .Ill 'the CDIG
provram, • - It lillY Ill
liNd, what Htlvltlll· are
rlglble, Mtl Dlllar ~l$altlitl
prlllrMI fl ILIII
B•MCI on. both 01t11en
lnplll ancl lOcal otlloiU'

St. Rt. 124, Rsciue
Putor: Williom llobook
Sundoy ~ • 10 o.m.
llveni"'- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;:e5 - 7 p.m.

· 5i!harl St., Middleport
Pliloi: Sam Ande11011
Sundoy Scltooi!O 1;m.
Evcnina .. 7:3Q p.m.
Wedttesd&amp;y Service- 7:30p.m.

Raclao Flnl Chun:b or tbe Naamoo
Pastor:rsrot1 Rost
Sunday sChool .- 9:30a.m.
Wonthip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\'i~s ~ 7 p.m.

• Pastoi: ~andolp!l
· Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Chum or God or P"'pltoey
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor. PJ. Chapman
Suodoy St:bool-10 a.m.
Woroblp • II o.m,
Wellnesday SeiVices -7 p.m.

•

J

,.._All,

r,yr·t·.·

.I •\ .' ' t . &gt;

Ca thll

Public Notte 1

Pentecostal

!."':".£.

Nazarene

Cbeottr
Pastor: Sblron H,usmon
W011hlp • 9 o.m.
Sundly Seloool -10 o.m.
Thursday Servicea-·7 p.m.

New Ufe VIctory Ccllter
3773 Oeorses Creek Road, OallipPiit, OR .
Pastor: Bill Sttten -.
.Suodoy Servi&lt;:e5 - 10 o.m. a 7 p.m.
Wednesday ,-7p.m. &amp;_Youth 1 p.m.

Houao

· Grand Slreet
Sunday School • 10 a.m •.
Worship· 11 a.m.
·
WedneSday ~1'\'.ices- ~p.m .
Ton:b Cbun:b
.
Co. Rd. 63
Suitday School - 9:30·a.m.
.
Worship- 10:3() a.m.

All'rtd .

Clifton, W.Vo. ·
Sundby School - 10 1.m.
Worship- 7 p.m. .
'lbund&amp;y Service· 1 p.m.

EadU..
or...,...
(at Burlinpam church off ROute 33)
Pastor: Ruben Vance
wonhip • 10 o.m.
W
y service - 6":30 p:m.

lloeldasport Cburcb

Molp Coopenu.. Parllb
Nor!b&lt;lll Closter

'

l'lslor: Theron llurhom
Sundly -.9:30 o.in. ond 1 p.m.
.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

BotbeiCbur&lt;h
, Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
.Worship ~ 10 a.m.
We~nc~y Service~ ~ 10 a:m.

ML Olive United Mcthndlll
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pas1o1: Rev. Rolph Spires
Sundly Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursd•y Servi~s- 7 p.m.

CIUiall Tobcrucle Cliun:~

Rlrrioott- Comitlull)' Cllon:h

Coolrillo Clolll'tb
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday Sch"'''-10 a.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Serv_ices -7 p.m.

_

.
1/4 mile past Fon Meip on New Lima Rd.
' · Pastor: William Vait Meier
Sundly-7:00 p.m.
· Wednelldoy-7:00 p.m.
Fridiy-7:00 p.m.

'llle ....eri' F.......... Mialllrj
· New Lime Rd., Ruilond
· Putor: Rev. Morpret J. Robittoon .
• Serviceo: Wedneodoy, 7:30p.m.
Sundoy, 2:30p.m.

PastOr: Helen KJine

or J01u Ortst,

Coll992-2156
110

1111 oou.w,- 11 naa•te

Rejoldtl&amp; Ufe Clorrcit
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
· Sundoy 9chool· !O.o.m.
Wednesday S.rvia:l - 7 p.m.

Apoololic Foltlt

Folth M Golpel Cloudl
''J:bn1 Botlom
Paiitor. steve Reed
Sundly .:lchool -9:30a.m.
Worohip' 9:30 Lm. ond 7 p.m.
.. Wedneodly-7p:m-· ·
Fridoy - l'dlq,..lup aerv,.. 7 p.m.

Coolville Ualted M e - Partslt .

United Methodist

S)TIICuoe Flnt Cbum'orGod
Apple _ond Second SIS.
1
Putor: Rev. David Ruasell ·
Sundly School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
·
Eveniaa Serviceo- 7:30 P·ll'·
. Wednesday Services ' 7:30p.m.

Sundly Scloool - 9::JO o.m.
Worship - 10:4So.m. •
' ThiiiSdoy Serviceo- ~:30 p,m.

.

.. , II : I
......CI It
C
I lllflrl

tr.~f'

Tn plnle nn' ud

~;.,. ldllllniMtsllll"

Pome 00y Pib, Co. Rd.
Putor:ilev. Blackwood
Sundoy School - 9::10 a.m.
Worship 10:30.a.m., 7:30_P·'1'·
Wednesday Service ,7:30p.m.

c•-•

-• Wednutlay aorvtce, 7:00p.m.

MIJ I

lltii;11C

A"

IN

" " - 1lle CHI' .......
provl•e• I RIOIIIIIIIIa
lllndlnt ... of PIIO,OGO fOr
....... IIOIIvlllee, prouldld

Stlvornllle Word of 1'11111
Plllor: Dovid Doiley
Sundoy St:hool9:30o.m.
Evening- 7 p.m. .

·'Suttdif' iervlt:c, 10:00 a.m., 7:00p.m;
Youth Fcl)oojrohip S~ndiy, 7:00p.m,,

.

tf

will

The Dally SanUnel• Page 8

HolollntMtl .... ovw•tl
1"rot!No11, 1 tide .., funded

c.Jolll')' Bible Cloudl

F~Cio­

Riolo•
' Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • II o,m.

st. Pitul Lutbena Cbon:b

Rev ..OeorgeWeirlck
Sunday School - 9:45 •.m.
· WoMhip -. ~ ·1 a.m. ·

-

I'Y'

c(CDIG)
.._""' Ceaaualty
.,_ Cirelli

Putor: Rev. Flankliil Dicbna
· · Service: Friday; 7 p.m.

....._Ciortrtlaa
. · Rev; Clyde Hende11011

l!all Lotort.
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School - tO a.ni.
~orship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., RavenSWOOd, W.Va. ·
lntrim pasto.-.: Rev. Robert Hupp
Sunday Scltool- 10:00 a.m."
Worship· 11 a.m.

RutliDd Cburdl or God
PISior. Rotidy Barr '
, Suodoy Sch&lt;»l · 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.. .Wedneoday Services - ~p.m.

Atdlq•ltJ lloptlll .

.

Our Sariour Lutheru CbiiRb-·

ML M_., Cburcb or God
Rocine
· Putor: Rev; lamos Satterfield
Sundly School - 9:45 a.m.
Eveninc- 7 p.m.
.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

. ML Mortttli Baptist
Founh &amp;: Mlin St.; Middleport
Paslor: ReV. Oilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wot&gt;hip - 10:45 a.m.

.

.Rev. George Weirick ...
Wonthip • 9:00 a.m.
Sunday Scltool- }0:00 •·"!·

Church of God

Fomt Run B1ptlst
Pastor: Arius Hurt
SUnday School - 10 o.m.
Worship- 1t a.m.

...( .

St. Joba Lu..,.na Cburcb

DIJirt•••t
•
DtYliiJ-A. fw .......

Faldt l'tllowalp ~ ror Clto1lt

• Cltrlotlu FelltnrAip Cetoter
Salem St., Rulland
Puto~;: Rebert E. Musser
Sundly Sebool • 10 o.m.
Wonthip• tt:!S 1.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servleo ·7 p.m.

SuUOII
Pastor: Kenneth 8aket
Sundaji'St:~ool- 9:30a.m .
W011hip -10&lt;45 a.m. (lot a Jnl Sun)

--.
.__.IIa

till

t~e

lleHI

Business Services

• Fatnte"lllble Cltorclt
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I
Putor: Jolin llort
Suodoy Sebool· 9:30 o.m.
.
Wonhip • 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study • 7:00p.m.

Follll Cbapel Opea Bible Clorrcb
923 S. Thinl &amp;~.• Middleport
.
Pastor Mithad P•hsiO
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
• Thuntday service, 7 p.m.

M....~a 1 star
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sundly School - 9:45 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m. •
Thuntday Services.- 7:30p.m.

tl

Willle'a ClooPol Welle;,.
Coolville Rood
Putor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
S...S.y School • 9:30 •-m· ·
Worohip •10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

. 320 1!. Moin St., Pomeroy
(Potneroy Municipal Buildin&amp;luditorium)
.·
l'lslor: lim Codner
·
Worship oervia:l: Sundoy, 101.111. _
a 6 p.m.

ClnDOI

Lutheran

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Puoor: Rev. ROI"r wmront
Suodoy SdtoOI - 9:30 o,m. .
'
Worohlp-1 p.m. · ..

ne Celtbnlloa C&lt;Dtcr

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Scltool - 9:30 a.m.WoBhip -10:45 a.m. (2~ a 4th Sun).

CbrlllorLtttlfr-Day Salats · ··
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
.
SundaySt:hoo1!0:20-lla.m,
Relief Soeiety/Prieothood 11:05-12:00 1100n
Sacrament Service 9-10:1~ a.m;
Homemaking n1eeting. 1st niurS. • 7 p.m.

·

.

BoiUoy
Putor: ·Konneth Baker .
Sundly School- 10 1.m.
Wonthip - 9a.m. ·
Wednesday Setvieoa- 10 o.m.

·The Cb""'b or Jnu

'

Faith Baptill Cbtln:h
Railroad St, Mason
Sundar School- 10 a.m.
Wo,.htp ·II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sci'\' ices.- 7 p.m.

1

or utter Day Salllll
.
·
Ponland-Rsclno Rd.
Branch President - Michael Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
W011hip- 10:30 a.m.
Wednelldoy Services - 7:30 p.m.

Clnilttlo Ualool
Honford, w.vo.
.
Plllor: Rev. David McMIIils
Sunday School • II a.m.
..
Wonhip • 9:30 ~m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelldoy ServiCes· 7:30p.m.

525 N. 2od St. Middleport
·Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wonthip. !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

'

·.~toorplllzed .Cbur&lt;b or J0101 C-t

·

Vklory B1ptlst !Ddopotldttnt

'

Latter-Day Saints

H - k Grove Cbarcb
Putor:Oene,Z.opp
·
SundLy school- 10jf! a.m.
Worship • 9:30 o.m., 7 p.m.

Old Bethel
WUIBaptlst Cliuroh
28601 St.' Rt 7, Middleport _
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening- 7:30 p:m.
Thu,.day-Services- 7:30

. I

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

.......... Goopot~

Appe Ufe c.t.r
'Fuii-Ooopd Olurclt'
,._.,. a Patty Wide
603 Secolld Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service ~""'' Sundly 6:00 P.m·

SaltmCeatir
Postor. Ron Fierce
Sundly School-9:15a.m.
Wonthip- 10:15 a.m.
'Sao...W.
Sundly School - 10 a.m. ,
· WOtship - 9 a.m.

. SWIIIIjly Evening- 7 p.m.

Lttapflllt Cllrllllu Cllun:b
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
,W011hip -10:30 a,m., 7:30p.m.
·Wednesday Servoce 7:30p.m.

,_,

PutOr: Jeff.Satith •
S~St:bool- 9:30 Lm.
w
Servioe 10:30 o.m.
No Sundly ot edneadly NlaJ!t Services

.OMrootdl
~
OldAtneri..,
LoaJon
Hall,
Fourth Stru~ Middleport, OH .
Putor: Rev. Mary McDuiel
_Sunday Servlea: 10Lm. _4 6 p.m. .

.
RulisDd
..,.. Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wotship - 10:30 a.m.
Thunttlay Services - 7 p.m.

Rutllod eom..ltyCIIun:b
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sundly Scltool- 9:30a.m.

likkory HWo Cburcb or Cbrt1t
Evanseli.sllosepb B. Hoskins
Suodoy School'· 9 o.m:
WoiWp·!Oa.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7. p.m:

SUvor Rua Boptlll
Putor: Bill Little
· Sundly Sdtool -!Oa.m.
Worship- J Ja.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Services- .7:30p.m.

.

Ltttonl CHJrFrec Modlodllt'Cb....
l'lslor: Peter Tremblay ·
Sundly School· 9:30a.m.
Worohip- 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

RutliDd Cloun:b ofCiorill
Putor: l!uaene E. Undetwood
Sundly SchoOl, 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Raclae Flnt Baptlot·
Pastor: Rev. LawJencC T. -Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young · ·
· . Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

..

Putor: Robert Manley ·
, Sundly School - 9:30 Lm.
· Worship " 10:45 a.m:, 7 p.m.
Thuntday Service· 7:30p.m.

Putor: Joke Copley
Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Wonthip - 10:30 1.m._

llrldford Cllurcb DtCiorill
ComtrofSt. Rl. 124 a Bndboa-y Rd.
Minister. Doug Sblmblin
. Youth Minister. Bill Amber1er
Sundoy Sehool- 9:30a.m.
·
Worohip- 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedaelldoy S.rvoces -7:00 p."'.

.

cartet.lalerdtarn'"doe•' Cl..U
Kin&amp;lburY Rood

=

Pastor: Robert E. Robi111011
Sitndly St:bool· 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip ·10:301.m.
Bible Study Tueaday- 10 o.m.
RDc:k Sprtap
Pastor: Koith Rat!er
Sundly Sc~l· 9:1S IJD.
Wonh1p • 10 a.m.
, .
Youth FolloW.hip, Suodoy- 6 p.m.

u,..u Ru u-.aa.....b

a........,. Cbordt orCbrlot

Clllller a.vc~o ar ... N...Putor: Rev. Hetltort Orate
Sollldity Scltool - 9:30 o.m.
Woroblp- 11 o.m., 6 p.m.
Servlceo -7p.m.

•

~Rood,
L'~'r··=~-=~
33045 Hilaad
oy
l'lslor: Roy H.-

llll• • r

Soto.. 11e11ti1 Now T I . I
Silver Ridp _
. PastOr: Robert - .
Sundly St:bool - ~ o.m.
Wonltip -10 o.m., 7 p.m. •
Wcdneldoy Servleo- 7 p.m.

Other Ch urch es

.Purl Chapel
Sundly Scliool- 9 1.m.
· W011hip -10 o.m:.

. Pastor:·Rev.lohn Neville .
aiildrtD'o service - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:30 p.m
_.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

'

Sunday Sebool- 9-.30 .....
Worohio -10:30 o.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesday _Servlea - 7 p.m.

..

.,,,

Sundoy Sdtool· 10 Lt••
l!vet1iq 7:30p.m.
Tueadly a Thitraday -7:30 p.m.

hrtlud flnl a..... "'~ l'loarolt
. l'lslor: Marlt Motooo
WurohiP • 10:30 p.Ql.
-:
Scltool- 6 .......
W.
y Servia:l· 7 p.m.

"flaOnvllle
·
Pastor: Otorlea Neville
Sundly Sehool - 9 o.m.
W011hip - 10 o.m.

w..,..
...... llollaeu Clulrtb
· 75 Pwl St., Middleport. .

OJ ClouldtDt..,_N_
l'lslor: Rev. , . . _ McOwta

Suodoy St:bool - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip -10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo- 7 p.m.

u..tlt (Middleport) .
Pa$tor: Vemapye Sullivan
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p -10:30
'.
. o.m.

Pille GroVe Bible Roll- Claurdl
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
PUIO&lt;: 'Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sundly School· ~:30 -a.in.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lilt., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday _Service • 7:30p.m.

. ZloD CbURb ort'lortst
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (RI.I43)
Putor: RoserWoiiOtt
.
Sitndly School- 9:30 o.m.
Wo11hip- 10:30 a.m.;7:00 p.m.
Wednesdoy Services - 7 p.m.

Rutlaad Flnt.lloptlst Clourdl
Suodoy School- 9:30a.m.
Wonthip- 10:45 a.m:
PomttCOY Fli-st lloptilt
- Pastor: Paul Stinson
East Main St.
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
.Worship· 10:30 a.m..
Flnl Sototbon1 lla!"bt
41872 Pomeroy Poke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Brylllll
Sinidly School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.
Flnt Baptist Cbun:b
Pastor: Mark.Morrow
6th and Polmer St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15 o.m.
Worship ·10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneoday Service- 7:00 p.m.

.

Putor: Rev. Dewey Klng
Sundly school-9:30a.m. ·
Sunday wo~ip -7 p.m.
Wednesday _pnoyer meeting- 7 p.m.

I

·~d Cli- oi'IM 1'1......
·
Pulor: Samuel Basye

.Fomt ltUil
Paslor: Charles Neville
Sunday St:bool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Thuntday Servicea- 6:30p.m.

Wonhlp-10::!0L"''7p...
Wet 1ey Slnril:ll- 7 p.111.

....

w_,

Flanrooda
Pastor: Koith Roder .
· Sundly School - 10 o.m.
Wonthip - II a.m.

Leodiq Crook Rd., Rutlond

Worship - 9:30 o.m.
Sundly School - 10:30 o.in.
Putor.Jeffrey Wollace
1st ond 3rd Sundly

Hope 11op11at
(Sototltmt)
Pastor: Richard OliVer
·
570 Onont St., Middlepon
Suodoy school - 9:30a.m.
Wot&gt;hip- II a.m. ond 7 p.m.
Wednesdoy Service - 7 p.m.

.0

PllltO&lt;: Kooth Rader
Suodoy Seloool - 10 o.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

a- orstwaa Hallaeu Qurcb

.

'

Ett~

Honi..mlle Road
Putor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday $c:hool9:30 o.m. ·
Wonbip - II L!"·• 7:30 P-'11·
Wedneodoy Servoce- 7:30 p.m.

l'lslor: AI Hlrtlon

p

Sundly Sehool - 9:4S o.m.
W(JI'Ship • 11 a.m.
Wedneiday Servicea -7:30p.m . .

Caltlll')' Pllartm Cloapol

Youlh Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday Scbool - 9:30 Lm.
Wo11hip- 8:15, 10:30 o.m, 7 p.m.
. Wednelldoy Servic;es - 7 p.m.

W&lt;&gt;nbip- IG-.30 Lift., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servlea - 7 p.m.

Cealnla..ter '
Albotry (Sy._)
Putor: Cbules Neville

3!057 Stole Route 325, Langsvlle · ·
l'lslor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sundly odttiol - 9:30 a.m.
Sundly wonhip • 10:30 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
Wedneadly pnoyer aervice - 7 p.m.

. Mlddleporl Cloudl ort'lorlll
. 5th ond Mlin

or CJorill

.'

Du.W......._Cio_~

33226 O.ildrtn'o HOnle Rd. .
Suodor Scbool - 11 o.m.
• Wonhtp- IOI.m., 6 p.m.
Weclneo\lly Seovoces • 7 p.m.

JUDO Cllur&lt;b

Sundoy Scbool - 9 o.m.
Worship · 10 Lm.
'!'uoadiY Servicea- 7:30p.m;

Holiness

,_,.., w..hido Cloudl orCiorill

P.O.""' 467,
Lane
Maaon,W.Va.
Pillar: Neil Tennant
Serviceo-IO:OOo.m. ond 7 p.m.
_!lji.~~~~ -1

.

Cltvdl
;'..,,r-roy

Rec:IGr: Rev. D. A. duPiantier
Holy l!udwiot lnd
Sundly Seloool10:30 o.m.
Colhe loaur followiq

212 W. Moin St.·
Neil l'l&lt;ludf004
Sundoy Scbool - 9:30 o.m.
Wo.Wp- 10:30 o.m., 1 p.m.
Wednelldoy Ser.:iees - 7 p.m.

=-

s,_a...c."'~"'
J'-.BUIStlno
Sutldoy St:bool • 9:30 Lift.

~-·1'1111
Putor: Shoron no......

Epi'iCOpill

Church of Cl1r1st

.

Pomeroy • Mlddllport, Ohio

·ponentt At Honia. E-xperience

Unnecessary, Will Train. Imme-

diate Openings Your Local Area.
Co111·521Hl80-7891 EXT. 01094

Holzer Senior •Care Center Ia ·
Takirlg ·Applic:ationl For R.N. &amp; \
lPN Pari·Timo Po~tiono. Apply In

Parson, Mon., Thru Fri. 81)0 A.M.
• 4:ooP.M. Br 3128197.

HOllE TYPISTS,
PC uaers needed. $45,000 income po!ential. Call 1·8D0·51:J.:
4313 ExtB-9368.
local Busineas looking For Sec·ratary, lluat bo 'Knowio&lt;jgoablo In
Generil Bookkeaplng, CompuTax Koowlodga Helplul Conllct .
614·2•5-9555 or Send Resume:.
Robbie TnJilera Shiite Route 850
llol 160 Gallipolo,Oiio 45631

II' t Nttdtcl

Experience required In comput•

·

era cash registers. •cannera,
Fle~lble hours, application• accopted at ·J.D. Driiing Co., Rttdne
un~ Maron 31, 1997.
Neaded 10 Ladlea To Sell AV"'!,
. cau _614-446-3356.
;

"Now hiring. Safe Drhttrs. Domf·
no'a Pine. Pt Pl1111nt. 3Q~·
875-5858.
I •
•

.

.

Part Or Ful Tlnw Loore Land For
Gal I Oil J)!lina Helt&gt;lul I Fomiliar With Form l.allda, Call M~
Nid&lt;,01~- -

PHYSICAL THERAPIST

,

""'YSICAL THIRAPIIT

{

A8SISTANT .
•
OCCUMliONAL 1'HEliAPIST I,·

OCCIIPtlo110NAL THERAPIIT

ASSIII'IMT

.

IPEEal LANIIIWIE
MTHCLOOIIT ,

•'

�.

..

.

...

-FriUy, llarc;h 21, 1997 ·

I

•

-

-··

.. -

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

..

PHILLIP
ALDER

,. .

. . ,• •

I

1•Puall

1 ,. 1

SIIN

·~
llorw(Jwilt.)

12 TV'a tolldllg

13 llld'o

of ro,..lrL
1lro ...... .._ 01 Rio- Ar&gt; 2bt houN, lo Ollertao4-17.,._
·-ncooOMnlnpFGrAI'arl· euoo or Tlooo Foculry llilmboro In Tho 2122.
-oOIEoonomloo, Flnanct,
FarS.BrO..
'"~Ill, And CDmmunillrloOL A :114 Bld1001111, 2 ... bl.... FIIJ/
~~ J.1'J~
comrat olt, llordwood Hooro. 38
Nw lank ilepo'ol Only 3 loll.
•• Dotroo Prtllrred. - · -c:utllll4475-n&amp;
financing ovallablo.. 30+
T-ing E....Pro"...
755-71t1.
-A1..- AppllconiJ
Should
""' ' .....
. . . lull flnls'*f
- ..."
01 Ai1d Rolumt
ronch,
lw bo.,a,
01 Thnoo - - --~~~ with larQ&lt;O ..... n..
oncu lleloro Tho Dtodllno 01
nloo- "-- Morell 21, 1117 To Phflllt llo· oudlu'Jtl~..-:::~. ~~~.8
...; PitA, 01 .,....,. At...
NUtal, Unl-llity 01 !llo mlloo from llllta lllno 131. call .330 flnnl for Slle
- . Boot F21 11o - . OH 11+7o!N2211
I ,,.,,.~~,
110 .... llrtn. i 1/2 ...., e74.EEOIMio:ct*ra:
. . Houtolor uto in Rutland, 114- det.cl hauM, new prage, new
_ , oi1d oudlulldlngt,l14-742o
Wonlld: Lady To llv•ln For ~11112~101~7;.
. -:-:--:-~:-:-::-':"::-:­ 2157.
Conl!*olon Ftolllollll For llrwo Mini Fwm 15 Acru 1111. 8 Bod·
lnlo, 114 Ul 341t.
room, Uloih Nowly Rtmodlod

0::::

....

=·

-Tho -

a"

. 180 WintiCITo Do

11U111121
Ohio YllloJ llenk hot o 2-lrory,
Goo- ""..."'. So-.ml.ll. don't 5br, home lor ... In - ·
houl,.., !ott 10 . . nil lull od WV. CoM 114-441-GIIIO. Sorlout

-?

lnd
~304-1~~~~t57~---~~--~~=~~7~~-~~77~~ 340 BUIIneia
BuildingS
1

-

Help C~ 'obur

Wll Do· ~ Or Spring
~ IU
PI I 0'' .t Tl'8e ·-·leo
_..,. ,

•11021. ·

c-.

s&amp;1~

Rtmnal, Fro• Eadmotoal hi. . - . - · Ohio. 11 +:181- . 11+387·7010.
lfMICI CLE.IINO
Gil Your Spring CIHnlng OVtr
--ISC&gt;ondYourSUmmor
In loiluro. Coli -To llol'llour
·s,wtng F - CIMnlng Dlocounll
8114413r.8
WI! Do Bo~llinlng In lly Homo,

bu-

OUt of Hood plain· ol 142 IIIII
Stroo~ lllddltpor~ Oh, roducod
lor 101~ Sooond
tram •ze.soo to $21,000, - · Golno
sner.
Rt 33 In 304-771I!ICilllng. 114-082-561.4~
5851.
Sandhill Rd. Sbr homo, 1 112
bioth, plonty of gordon opoco. 350 LOll lo Acreage
Homotltod Bond, Brokor 30+ 1 AC &amp; 2 AC Iota lor aolo In
IB2·2401.
Scenic Valloy ' Su bdlvlllion.
Soodonol Sbr, 2 lull botho, dr, *dgo Roolty. Broker :104-1752122.
~
~-~ ~
· - pu,..., 1 ......... ~
3.71 AcrH In woodod lo~ In 01·
~~-clirllivo tub dlvlllion all Soildhlll
8PiCW.. NOTICE
Rd. Homottoad Bond, Broker
FLOODVlC11118 •
Tr~Siatt Homo Cantor Athland, ~240&amp;.

Ntwborn To 3 Y0111 Roloronc11 KY. hot modo llf"'Ciol facto&lt;)' ar~
Upon AecluHt. Oaya &amp; Ewnlnga. rangamenll for alngle wide I
l'llllor 011 Aroo. Cd For Dolllilo, double wldt procluctlon lor Trl·

11-1:14.
Stata flood vlcrlma noodlno
-ld Uke To Cloon Hou- In quick rllr.ntt on tholr hauling
Galllpolla Aroo, 114·378•tle5 nooda. I you currondy own o
Alii 111r Cd'f.
monulocturtd homo thot hot
nood ~ w w111 -)'IOU&lt;
- I n wltfo NO MONEY DOWN
f I~JANCIAL
. on your Cloor Tldo. Condhlon ol
Homo lo Not tmportandll Coli 1·
Bullnel8
800-88HI777
lor lurthor o11lt·
210

~~~~~~~~:~:~A.~r~~~rodi~Amo~ ~ "~B~uil, l11o

i ' - ...,...,, • "

..... Nlot "Chonco'
••
fl Dog pupploo,
In
Volloy Wollnooo Contor. f121. lflllllio 11om-nl Bound", laking
111 UUICO&amp;tllbrl'lm.
dopollitt, will bo,..., to 110 Afirl
1211\11+88GI·~ .....
BEAUTIFUL Al'o\RTIIENTS AT Antiquo Coli lnHo 1irb Wilt a..
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON Foot, 1200; Udllty Trolltr Tip A¥1:; Lolil'loppiM.304 11115 8«11. .
ESTATES, 52 Wottwood Drlvo Down 1400: 814-871-2720 AI· AICC mota Go~n R t - . 20
'
morotloo old, ootUIIrtd, hot had
IN01o 11210 10 13:14. 10 iilooP TEA I PJL ·
I movloo .•COII 114-4411,.2511.
Are you lick Widno loofo}llugo? I ..... wry f'ltrU.., kldt, • liD,
Equal-.~
woo, no more. llound o jllodooC1 11+742-31102.
)'IOU _, i!UJ 1llol wiM lhtoil
I
p
doodl
AKC r:l'•- ·Ch nooo ~
1
poo1eon1 wt., nomo, oi1d : : ' : : : " ' ~
Dhono to: Product, P.O. Box I,

F u . - Elftoloncy All Urlldtt

.......

l ' l l d , - Belli. 1110/110., tit
-""" ......... Otllpollt, 81+

Oiooctouo!Mng. 1 oi1d 2 bodrwn
.,..,....,. 01 Vlllqo Minor and
Rlverlldo ,.,..,_ In lllddloport From $23H304 . Cd 814-

.......

11112·50&amp;1. Equal Houlino

otor&gt;or·

NawiJ remadalad 1tne bHfoom

apartmant, In ·Uidd•rt, with
kllilhon oppll- lndooclt d, ...
potlt I reference• required,
~~1-71133-epooo.

Ono Mdroom opo~nmenc In PL
P
ICO no pea 11• 882 5851

no,_

One Hdroom furnlihed apart•
rMnl:ln Ill" ; II
·N IIIf·
oncoo ond dopollit r;;qulrtd, 11+

882·1!833- .

Ono Mdroom· rurnlohtd oponbodrooln fllrnlohod
llldollopor~ 114·tt2·

114-7~1173

Thlo Ia Tho Ono 't'ou'Vo lleon
LOOiolna For. one lied""""' Em
Nlco. Walhtr, Dryor, Scavo, Rt~lgonotor lnchodod, Wt Pay W.·
cor 1 Oorbogo. No Poll, No
Smokan 11300 Dtpoolr. IS50/IIo.,
IU

.......

t•

H., 114 448 2205.

Norill
• Q J 9 8

At• tar 111t

~IUCJ!I.II+M-IlW.

Ul7 Comoro RI·BS. lliS outomoUc; IIIII Camono, 401 au-de; 11111 Camono, 3&amp;1 au- ; Bpllzor Roor Enetne
~. 251', 477 d, Uti .. 1110
tllloft.,11.-z-2221. -'11,
11+lM7-.
·

"

~11l

..•

w'" e's
•

~

M-.,
-·a-a,

ant ononllo, cotll100 ..... toll .,

-

Wurlltzer organ, axe cond, .eult-

.

6 K 3 2

_________

·,
:

,__

··.

Opening lead: "' K ·

1\11 ""' -

odVet1lllng In

.,..ne••iwl•rtaa.tJflctlo .

.,. Fo~ Houlling A&lt;l
ol11l18- mtkoo "logo!

ro - • "any pt-a.
lioi_,Of_

_,.mliio,_

baled on,.,., color, religion,

Of ..-

1565185.

;

r8t7 14180 3 or 4 Bedroom,

tUM down, 12281rno. Froo olr,
oklrllna. &amp; dtllvory. Only or Ook·
wood ftomeo lltro,WV. 304-7555115.

,.

.

..

..

., ..
'

~

~~~ AATTit. o'H~~

,

C.MI '100 T,Et,L

I(.).WOO

I&lt;Dl~

~Tm-1!1?

I
I
i

L.-'-----'

f
i"
0

..

'

Agoln.

HCMIIHCMiiHC.

WESTWOOD

wl.,
acce-loo, tiro 18, 1225 080,
--2800. '

a llelhl. Full

Bea-n~ Oa,.Q&lt;O. Boo Hoot,
A jl 11, v..oL l.iol.
'll. Lot Alva
~ City !lclooolt.
,500, 11+

_,,..

t-4,bo11room houoo, hoai. pump.

....,., ~. IN•IZIWif~ 1

cor gorogo. fUU boHrri!tn~ nlc4o
~10 hoiiiiiOI
tnd - ·
In
,...,.,.,,
114·882·8118
.ot
1111111214&amp;1.

. .

... brtok - ; . . . . , - 2
............., olr, "':::':- go·

::r:·..:.m.~:.-;~
1•
out IIMjulreo ONlY. ·1104 ..75-

Como;ete ·,,. :chuck.l o q:oted.

A

~

PRINt NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQU~RES

A
V

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lEllERS
10 Cff ANSWER

I·FRIDAY

,.
,r.
r.
;;·

i'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·Warmth - Cower - Eider . Unpack · HARD WORK
Granny was always happiest when she was busy
She believed that happiness was nearly always a rebound from HARD WORK.

MARCH 211

~

r

f'

•r•

.

~·

~
.1
-~

Clolipollfo 11 +441·

Antlqutl

1124 E.lloln Strto~ on At 124,
""moroy. ttouro: II.T.W. 10:00
Lm. to 8:00 p.m., Sundty 1:110 1o
1;00 p.m. 814·1t2·252e, Ru11

---·

Appll*- Porta And Sorvtcoc M
Homo Brooodo Ovtr 25- Experience AU Wot~ Guaranteed, _

540 llllcellei'IIOUI

ASTRO~ORAPB

Fronch City llayoog, 114·441•
7785. '
' '
-=c~&amp;~c-=o:-.-..-,.:-1:--:1:17'•-'m-o:--:lol':'a-:-ln· .'
tan•-· Pointing, v1ny1 oldlne, ·
carpomry, cloort, w1o-., lliitne,
IN!Iillt ·repllir ond more. For
~- ttdmoto coli Cho~ 114,._
1323.

MtfcMndlse

I 0(00n ~~~, 17.2 Cu. Ft.
Rolr~tor; 1• Clolcl Olbton I 4
CU. Fi. Rolrtgoralilr; 1 Rop-

or Oaa Btovo; 1 ,Almond 0 .E.
Eltctrlo Wothor; I Polr Oroon

g=.~~=
a. Wlfl 4 Cholrl; En.......,.,c .

111112 Ftonl F-150, llapol, oir, om-lm
.
75,000ml., l7,1i00. 304-

Ctnllr. ~u· 4~1 1011

1----::DR'o'WAU.::-::=---llnllh. .......

BERNICE '
BEDF; OSOL

..

teJIItl.lt'ed, pia11er fepair. ""

1 ·Supot Slnglo .wocorbod with
-f10011e71;
It! of bunk . . .Ont
.121
.

1885 8·10 5 Spood, 4 Cyllndor,
41,000 Mllft, ,15,100. Kt Auto
&amp;aiel, 114·448-1172, 81+25.8·

304-175-411&amp; 2 0 -

o=:r~

12111.

1817 ChowY EX! Cob 1,000
mlloo, VliriOx 1,000 onglno Y·l
ang1nt. lt7,RIO.IO+I7U7!Q.

Salunlay, Man;h 22. 1997
I

' The .ynr ohead 00\lld be a very active
· one tor you socially and commercially.
Yoo tirll , _ qurt. .o few illvolve...... In
bolh . - and y&lt;Mi'l iind them on ~oble and produalhro.
.
· A111U (MMIII 11·aprt111) Toiloy you
could 1111 on !he rnlndl ol -.r piraonl
who ..,.. proud 10 ... yeo. • fllond. Do !101
1111 aurpriHd IT you hear .rrom ooma or
thtrri. Trying !O p.wtct1:,up a ~rokon

For aolt or trodo, 1117 Dodeo
Dokota. V-1, tl&amp;ndord •anoonle·
lion. liQII mlloo, good, ....
.,... 111100. 81+74MIIZ.

f

II

.

by hlhng in tke "l•nmg words
you de..,elop from sreQ No. 3 below

Buy Dr nil. Riverine Antlquea,
1 Bl down Rtnch,

~

Swimming is a sport that
teaches people how important
it is to keep the ir·· ···· shut'

I,..::O:...:T;.,..,
, .!.,!

T.lll8, 1--..1H121.

530

· ';'

•

. .,

1-__,..!.,T.,.:U~~=-5
_ ..'0
1 I _ I ,,......-l,

W.ohtr Sill!; Oryor 1111!; Electric
Rang• Its; Rolrlgorotor $75;
Wrlngor
Woohor 1·125: Waahor
-lo~ll+440-1110.
llko .Now12!15 1 .v.r Warranll';
Nlco 2 Bodroorn:lta~~25111o•• I Dryer llloe NiM $205 1 'IMr W.r..._ Dawn 211,
AI••• roncy; IMog li"' I Dryor.
"· Dapooll """lrod, 114-.441- 1250: Skogga Appllonotl, 71
~

.

~~

~:::::~:::::::_-_L,--..J-'M-,

Purpl&amp; ond block prom -

=•
Vlno

I

AHEEV

Nlco 2 Btdoooon Toallilr For Rtnl

1112, 114-211-131 .

-d• ...,.

1-,~·.,..-,
.
1 1

abouton11.1200.304-5~32Si.

eo lllnutot. We Will Piy Up To or Solo, on land Comracc, On
Homo

47 Tented areat ...

I.
I .-T,-r,--i-

'Ilia•••

1Wo Wookt llotol Or Slxllo..,.
Lot Rtnl Wo'll -You FHI At

....-

38.Dining opol '
41 Grooved
·'
· 4S·Cryotol-·
containing '
atone

I

......___

141110 2 Bodroomo With Alr W&amp;D
Stove, I Rtlrlaorotor, M Eloc~lc.
Nico Country Soiling Rtllr.,... GOOD USED APPLIANCES
I Dopollir. Cell 81+25MD44,
Walhera. dryera. rtfrlQtratora,
,.ngoa.
Blloaal Applloncoo, 78
Ux70, 3 blldroo_m, t300 per Vlno ~~~ &amp;K 11+441·1388,
,..,., .,... 742-2714.
1.0 . . 3111

•1 dtpoaiL :10+182-32117.

-•noorg. .

34Track- ..
38 een.in
;

0.

1887 11xl0 3 bodroom, 2 boih,
I1,32Sidown, 1218/lno, troe tklnlng. With o-Vod credit 1-100·

Two Hundred HamH Avallabtl
For tmmodlojo Dtllftry. Call I·
800-251·1070 Crooll AroPruval In

_,

'=~=' S©t•co.•
\\.4\\lA- ~ t.tfs·

2 1 3 bodroom mobile homu Solo On Room Slzo Carpota In
-dng
taO-UOO.
-- SID•k Mollohan Corpota, 114·
...
.ohd 01lrUh
lnckodod,81·
+882·
-7444.
2187.
esu-em.
soro .cMtt 1250. Bunk boda lw1
2bochom.-lric~2mlloa monroo·L Codor chut. Curio.
JIOfWwtlnol
lef7 doubltwldo $1445 down, out
ol Rulland on IJma Rd.,
-ogly 1iCC1111
f22111mo. Frtt dollvory I IONP, 11+742-2803
.. 81+742-2421 .
-crett lt...._
- Cou1try
· Plotfllrllul'ftlure
oi1d con-llwro•ototor'""'- II ~1..:-.:;,:_::.:.1""..:'..:'..:'·--·- - 104-17ll-11120.
Rt
2
N
PI
Ploot·
2 Bodroom Trolltr 12•50 114·
-~~"'
-lion
of tnt loW.
8 Tnolltra br 1t1o. 304-176-1071.
IIIII. ~ lloiodojL
ue
'22'
Good
Condi*Nt
•s.ooo.
pur- 0181ieooby
~oloomed llltlal ~
ATTENTION FLO® ViCTIMI • 2 Bodroom Vorr Ctaon
Uotd Fuioolorro 1:10 Ptko,
ld\JtiiHd in dW niWIJl'f1P81
Help 11 On 111 War. lmmtcUare
Boda. Manroaaoo, Color T.v.
Hoot
Pump,
No
I'WII,
ClotliH Dryor, Couchoo, Ch&amp;lro,
aoa ovo'ohle on an equal
Oollvory On Now Or Pr_.OWnod 814-3811-.1100.
Dlnottot, Much Mort 114•441·
_..,n~y ·
Homoo. Wo Will ~ork DlrocU,
With lnoronct Company. OVor 2lw hiler in Mldlllplttt, rtflfeii0,10·f, Wo Buy Utod
011gin, Of.., irUnllonto
moko ony IUd1 protenonco,
111...uota or cllcrir'rl6nlli•

31 Rl- nymph ;
32 Animal .
.

.

Prom drna tirotn bo- w"ll·
vor ooqulno, lito 22 altartd co

420 Mobile Homes
fOr !'tnt

30~polt '

Plato was a forward-thinking fellow.
49 Mimics
,1
For example. he pointed out that
51 Hord to find ,
52 Muolcian
democracy is ·a charming form of g(\V· brt-+-Getz
ernment. full of variety and disorder,
53 Compoos pt. ·:
and dispensing a sort of equality to m-'t-t-55 Zlofo
'
equals and uneqolals alike."
.57 Brit. naval '
Bridge offers a lot of variety. It is .__...-...~_
· abbr.
possible to be faced With two apparently idl!ntical situations. but the winning
play in each .is different. Today'~ and
tomorrow·~ deals will give you a flavor
CELEBRITY CIPHER
of this.
by Lull Campos
. In three no-trump. declarer had only
Celebrity CipMr awtoQramt ·~ cre•led from quota~ by tamou~ pt&lt;!plt. , ... n pteMI"'I
E-=t. lifter 111 the eiphef slandl tor another. TQy'• cltle: R eQUM Y •
six top tricks : one spade. two hearts.
two diamonds and one club. Clearly.
'
the spade finesse would'have to work.
•
And if diamonds were 3 ·3 and clubs 4•
·x·o
ZTCY
WOER
lZ f!ITOGC . X
4. declarer could get home that way .
· However, that was ·well against the
S K 0 0.
u as. VXPG NV V
NYOXEG
9dds: a pr:iori. an 11,6 percent chance. ·
t
So. South ducked l.he first club. won
ICYO. EISNCY
0 G C, . X
Y T C' S
West's club·IO continuation, entered
dummy with a heart to the king, and
SKOQ . ' ,- ZENCP
IXCNSEN .
'called for the spade queen.
PREVIOUS
SOLUTION:
"No
matter what dlanges take place in the wo~d. or
Now East fell from .grace, coveting
In iooe. notlling ever seems to disturb tho lace or spring.' - E.B. While.
•t
with the king. ·D eclarer won with the ·
ace !lnd played a spade to dummy's
eight. Wben that finesse worked,
South led a diamond to his .ace and
. played another spade, claiming when
WOlD·
the 10 appeared from West. Declarer's
GAM I
'r
nine tricks were four spades. two
~V (lAY I. I'OUAN - - - - - hearts. two diamondund one club.
loorrongo loHon of !!'_o
If East had only.played a low spade
lour scromblocl
under dummy's queen. the contract
loW. to lorrio four -cis.
,·
would· have ilied: 'l'liere Is a reliable
.
'
"
. principle: II declarer leads an honor to
' '·
;.
H Y MMU C
take a finesse, cover the last of his
',t
touching honors. and only then when it
· might gain your side a trick. .
Here, you don 't coveo- dummy's
queen, but you do cover the jack. the .
S G0 E 0
"
l!'st of the touchi~tg honOI'S ..
•·.

SoMata

1887 14•70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
IUS - · · 1185/mo. Only at
~Hamel, NIOO, 'NV. 304-

,, ......

-'

.

----aim.
Gocicll

_

10--.-youi
.
tlon '1 l . ..
;
11 Ciolfi lOyer ,

48 Fade

.

Household

clay

9· Anlklnlg
olllcer .

21 -poriod t
24 flt8k or Cluo ,
25 Fru~ drlnko ,
2S NYCt .
•
Cenlnll28 Actor Krilget •

By Phillip Alder

_,,

Hou10 With 3 Btdroom 1 112 510
Bttho In Chuhlro, Avollablt
lloon, 814 111 45110.

a Pon:atatn

'

ablo lor looinoo or ohurch. 12.000
Long White Prom Gown, Size 4; flrm. 804·175-&lt;4624 ••-n 3· 18t·1 Lumlno APV Von 87,000
Milot, Fu" - - V-1. 1 Sooltr
....
Shoeo, Jowolrr; All For 1225
Grt&amp;l Condition t7,800 'OBO;
080 (Paid 15001 814-182-1181
'ftnolha DX·21 prolatlli- ·kty· 1'81g loBorron Convtrlalllo
.
Klnga llotol Lowoat Rttoo In COol&lt; HUraa),
IUU olzt ktyo, loodod 40,oaa lllloa On Motor
Town, Nowlr Rtmodolo4, HBO,
......
bog,
.
..,.,
1240.
814-441· a..ac Shope 14,700 oao: 1na
Coot Iron Bt"""bl. Dilltnont
Clnomax, Showtlmt 1 Dlanoy. Coioro,
Celebrity Stadan Wagon Qaod
814-3~·2720. AFTEII I 0135. .
\'lookll' Rote&lt;. Or llonl'ily Rtroo, P.ll.
Condlilon, With N:; 13,000 F~m,
114 ... " 11+441.S117.
814-441-111111, lit 31111837. .
FARr.1 SUPPllf S
Nordic Tro~ Sklar
Aoorna IDr rent • WHk or ..,.nih. llaah Solalllle
1881 Plymouih 5ui1Citnco 4 Cylln&amp; l.IVESTQC K.
SlorMng 01 e120hno. GalUo Hottl. Gun.I.Dcllor485;
dor, 5 Spood, Nlco Cor, Loodtd
IU UIRS 0
12.100011011+441-0514.
PITTSIIUooH AIIITS ON SALE
""ping r.Oma . with cooklns. Ctilng
111112 Plymouth Aclalon V-8, Aulo,
,._$11.88Gal,
610 F.-m Equlpmtnt
Atoo· lllllar opo~oo on river. A I
Low wu-, AC, .loodtd, ExcolLa
•••
Flit
Woll
Point
S
1
2.te
hook-upo. Coli ollor 2:00 p.m,, Gal.,
1112 Ftonl 8N A-1 Shopt, 1 For· tonc Condrdon, 15,100,114-311304-7JS.III&amp;1,-WV.
lain Simi A'MI 11~ Gal.,
Cull c u - . With Ftrlllll·
'
• Sproodor, I To10 Wloooalhorto
Soolor lor- .
460 ·.Spice lor Rlnl
Lawn Tntetor, 1 Seara 18 HP
OrywaUt.lt Gal. .
Aluminum Flborat· L8wn And Tractor; 2 Cub
High • Drr lnlllor llialol. - r d , Wo aloo C1d11
Mover Decka,
od RooiCotilntl 5.Gal. l2t.88 •
· ~ Pllle HARDWARE
PIHII1.,_, .
llobllo hooroO lor -~ up
3 Point lllch RD., Tlltr Tobocco
to IIIOIO't, 180 por month, wator,
WS:iM ·
Stntr 3 !'Oint Hitch Spray Bontl
...., and tralh inclucled. 114·
Digital Picture I Digital Sound. Tobocco Wagon All In Good
11112-2117.
.
No Equlpmom to Buy. Coil Now! C......,, Coli Ah• 5, 114'256·
..
Trollor lot lor ron1 In lllddlapor~ ToM' floo 1·118H31-4S21. Dls•lb- 11g7.
114-1112-1387.
Yted by Tlmewiarner · Satellite

410 Hou181 fOr Rent

dl-·~
7 Apple lulce

Onetime,
turn this way

loo!o&lt;dfoy-.

RUHA I S

Eaat

10

V!llnerable: Both
Dealer: South
South
Welt North Eost
INT
Pass 26
P.ass
~llpass
2•
Pass 3NT

..

-.1550.

1411-0103.

22 S.ult - Marla
23T- ·
24 Opilnlng
27 "'-nt (pral.)
28 """'of
tp IICh
331ftlllttnt
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318rnolllalot
37MeUiocl
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1175. 61+142-3102. .

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1814 crwo. - I ·Dorwt. Good

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Forry. lluat Nt co apportcoto.

_....,

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U81 Nliooan 4x4 iJiOrl 71,3CXI;
lllloo: 1881 Covallor Hilh lllooc&gt;
1U7 Flroblr,d 2 Sooitr 84,00f,
,
IIIII Oldo Cudon Sup... me 2 111oo. Looclod. 8f+25&amp;-1517.
~ VI, Auto HOD 11~·4111· 11112 Ford Elololoow Eddlo ......
~
WNit, 112,8118, 81+a!H7111. ;
illdljOr!,Ohlo- ·
-EtkionoDo•...,_· · ·
a.
I'•
.... Ru"" ond
rIIIli Pondoo -n-' ~ 1ge3 Orand Chor- Lorotl(
Boola By Rtcrwilng, ClolptltWI. - . "r
;;::::;-r
.
llnlutlhlm Ill&lt; Milot,
Rocky, Tony LIMI.&amp;u.- 150 ooch, No r-...L W,.,od, • ¥-1. 4 11aar1,
Clton, ........., cand, wil nmta.
~- N - C1ft.- 81+387-7721
Doyo: 11+4111·1815, Allor; 1:00 brl13,500.304-1f3.15221.
!Its Ford F150 Xl'F 4x4 Club
llpola.
Beoglo Pupploo. Out 01 Good 11..-1244.·
·
. · Hundng S1ock $25 Each, 114· !814 Blooll Crown Vlcllirla, Au· Cob,304-~
. 21le-r05r Alliif 5P.M, ·
-do, Oo9d Condition, "-DO;. 11tl t;ord Truck XLT E111on41td
Cob 414, 1~ ,100 Milot, II
ClriiVOPtll
I1+31N121.
'
271 N. S1canc1 AYitVJe
1814 Pontlec Bonneville rufta llontne Or 21,000 llllollth Oil "
Warr•ntr lOti, Of Exttllll Prier.
llloldltporl. Oh 81+tt2o41114
good. MIO. 304-17-lt. .
120.000 l'lrin, Phont 4 P.l£;
'
11115 Monro Corio BS,..; pw. otr. 11 t 411 8075. .
A lila . . .
buckot NOll. 14,200. Call ahor 111117 F-150 Ltr101. Ellland,d Cab,' ·
IIAROjt~1
.... ~, ..
AulD, Low llilto, Hu Worronty,l
Extra•
4.8 Lillo, Coli 811·448~
11185 Oldo 81 Rogonoy 15,000
2S'Mo OFF EVER'f!HIHO II
1a.r• n Na An••r LtiVe Mea-, ·
.............. 814 t1111227.
STORE
..,. On ~~~~:~ft.
!
18111 Comoro ._ 327 auto ......
Qrubb'a Plono- boning I -''"'
.S.oo
oil! tit gooomll~ OllPQinl- OUIO
~
metar gougo, 8111 rally 740 lloton:yc~M
P"'blomt? Nood Tunod'l Coli tho
mtnlt In monlo 0 APril .
-·with now drtt: 304..75plono Dr. 811111 11125
IIJIIIOin-.r.
1817 Hondo 50 Vtrr Oood Con-•
2?14 .. 111144~1511.
11+38/-oes2,
••
'l1lri ;au cmuy
- (22011150
...
111111' Z-2t Camero, 305, ~lgh
boil .....gotndtr,
Slop. 3ph 1450.
8112 lntorfOIIIIO,nal cold IIDr&amp;go Dolmodon pupptn; AKC Roglo· Ouepu~ Tlvoo llpood Auromotlc, 1811 Kawoaokl Tocaro 4
· now anglnt, now pl&amp;tllc, •
lrHitr Wlun(taph u.ooo ..e.1o ttrtd, 11~ co U50. 304-837- With O..rdrtvo, loo_ko Good In· and more,. mutt MM. •2300:
knack down collier w/unlt, 3ph .211211. .
lido Out! 81 ~- 11103, Or. drea
.
caao.
81• OQ2 1451.
.~
114-&gt;1o11H151
Alk
Far1850. Cutting IOiolt $100. W..pplng 1ablo $100. Plooll• food Dalri\ation Pu~ Full Blaadld. 1117 ChiVy Covallor CS. AC, 1fi4 Kowaookl KX125 Dlrlblioo; .
wrap machine •210. Buy all • ISO. I Weokt Old, 3 lloiM, 114Auto, Cruloo, Now Tirot, - . _ Wattr co-. Looko And Runt,
package deal. All cammllfclal 258 &amp;3nCII-. .5P.M.
.
SIIUII, 11,200, 080 114·245- Good Aiklng $1,850, Or Trado, ,
;;qulpmenl aero.. !lr&gt;m 304-718.'
114 ... 0211.
~
Flvo AKC Roglotarad Cocl&lt;or 1300.
5341, alw!lpn 304-113-6842.
&amp;ponltj puppiH- ... ond 11181 Chovy llerona OT, lcyl, 11101 Suzuki GS 500, &lt;100 n11oo, : ·
lour rnllit: molhtr ond ,..,., on t5oopd. 111144711,.13/11.
JET
llko naw. 12800, 814-te2-5571 •
•
AERATION MOTORS
prtmlooo, born 2·10·t7, flrtl
RtoUod.· -~~In­ lhatt and wormed, $110 each, 1818 POnllu Flrtlolrd 5~,000
COli
Roo11 E.,..,i1__,-81i21.
l!+td-21112 -7jlm.
lllloo, Ex15,1100
'.
114·441·4051, 814·446· 750 BOlts .. Motorl
1'1111 Pluo, Sllvor Brldgo Plaza. 080
for
Sill
0101.
'
JB Kiln, kiln oloiod hard - · 81+441-0710.
campedtlwt prlc11. St Rt 12.
1188 cavoller; 1818· a.rona.
Woll Columlolo WV. S04-773- 570
MuaJcal
litO Cavollor fltation Wogan:
1!060or 1-IJII&amp;.711S.
1110 &amp;core LX 4 Dooro, All
Instruments
Ha'ltl Auta Trana: A/C, Cloth
King alto Tlffarir moctrHO. utod
S.Ckel Soolt, Coole lloiOra, 814·

For""'""'--

10--~ ........ montt, pond, W/11184 OouloliooidO, :stor; 2 houit; in
bolhl. 1mlli oil Rt.2 In Galllpollo 2171.
304-175-7138.

14~

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romance? The ~trq-Graph Matchmaker lllllJII8. You rnay be' able to: spOt' assets .
can help you~- wro,t _to.do lo lhey'llloH)o-.
·.
mal&lt;a lhe relaliOnlhiP WOlle. MaH ~· 75 10 UI!IA (sept J3oOc1L 23) This I* a '*Y
·Molclomaker, C/o lhi~ newspoper, P.O. I UAU&amp;•oel day wilh' tome l!ltJ88nlllurpri8·.
·eox 1758. Murray Hill Slation, Na., Yo&lt;k; oo. You wit be lo.icky lor your companiono
·NY 10i56. ,
·
·
:
and they In turn coulcf be lorttonlle lor .
. TAURUS (AfirH 20.Moy 20) •You have you .
.
.
recenlly done your lair share of goad . SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. ~~ Dedicale
deeds lor olhera. Tocloy mlghl be the !lay your locus and energy today On the ROQSI
when yOu'll be reOMmbarod ond be on . lrnpo01an~ ao&amp;ignmant which now con·
lho re\)ai.tnQ.encl.
·
fronll yob . You will know how 10 got
GEMINI (lloy 21-June 20) Several lhlnQI done well.
.
lriends .mlghl have helpful inlormtlllJ&gt;n SAGITTARIUS (Nov, ·23-Dec. 21) Over·
today, and they'll be oagar to tlllblllh all condillona look lavorable lor you
ct wllh you. LHvo word whore you lotlay. Yoor ocllons will 'generate good
roached.
will in others.
C ~C.ER (June 21·July 22) H you've CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lon. 11) Soniat&gt;een'-puHing lorth your boal ellorl oacenl· tiling nlco only o.-nty devolap -.o
.ly, tho reward~, yoo'¥8 been anr~ling !lie !lay 11 over. It could
a malarial
mlghl a torr to roll ln . It could be an bone(tt toryou, lrfon .....,...., way.
lmprlllivll ~.
AQUAIIIUI (Jim, ........ 11) The 'blllilf'
LEO (July 23-A . .. .22) Do not dloc:ard ,you . . today, lhe baMr you'R porfann.,
ony ldNa you get.lodoy,..., W!hey.,. Whon you bogiriiO • teo•. MwilllJ4
more grendlooa then your uaual con· to your wo*..,ll&gt;ll onlol•pilellog Wlya.
capll. Your lllg plana hove a DIIOd PIICII ~felt. ao..,.;oh ZD) Oppor·
c:111ra ol prodi!CinD ......_ ·
tun111e1 lor apenltiD up I -.r 10U1Cf ,
VIRGO lAue- D t·pt.llt) U.. vaur own of income might 1111 ·prenntad to you
peowpllon In COii'NoilfOiol rnrrtten today ~ !I)' a IIICCH*'tll parton who hU
..Iller lh8n !he guldlli- ootlbiiOhed b)l . YIIU! lntetoot Ill '-!.
' •

w

�~..ll

You be ·
the judge:
Betlot •lloWa rNCier.
to cho- • P~~ge ce

•Ito..,

JJ(!AA

Making her mark

,/tlfoHdGfl'• O.car

mid-west

A111 Bailey itiiiOIIIIrllltd

~o c•l•bra~•

aWlliace ;. §je •llll war
/Mt bro•gllt lrlr • §jelitrte of
recognition

lftovl•--~ch1Hf1

• FNtulfld on ,.ge Cf

regional
finals
.,.,..,.

• flllurtd on 1»11 C1 •

HI: 40s
Low: 20s
Details on
pageA2

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A Gann ett Co. Newsp aper

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Ga ll ipolis • Mid dleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 23, 1997

Regional jobless rates remain weir
·ab.o ve state aver~ge · in February

.
'
GALLIPOLIS ~ While th~ state's 'overall unem- ( 12.6) percent;
"The recent (loodlng In , adjustment factors for these data do not
allow for the unusually mild weather
ployment rate increased !)y 0.4 percent between January and, Vj nton: 14.9
southern Ohio has ·
we had during February," she said.
and February. jobless rates in southeastern Oh1o reflect- ( 15 . I) percent
According to · other economic data,
ed a mixture of increases and decreases.
The
jumps caused disruption In
Regional rates, however, remained among the hig~est reflect an .appar- employment in 'that part . Ohio's economy continues io be strong.
in the state: and , in many cases were more than double enl increase in the
she said.
--our survey of employers shows
Ohio's February rate of 5.4 percent
size of the labor of the state. The effects
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services' figures force, said Debra of the flood will not show job creation is holding steady and even
increasing somewhat in the service secreleased Friday show Gallia County's rate held steady at Bowland, adminup
In
our
data
until
next
tor and in construction ," she said. ·
11.6 percent for the period.
·
istrator of the
The depanment said this month 's
. Meigs County's rule fell by 0.2 perceJII -;- from 14.2 ' Ohio Bureau of month. ''
,
percent to 14t:&gt;ercent:
. ··
. ' ': • . .
Employment SerOBES Administrator tlooding disrupted·. employment in
. Other.regional February rates (January rates in paren- · voces.
· , Debra R. Bowland southern Ohio, although the effects will
thesis) were: Athens: ·7.3 (7.6) ~rcent ; Jackson : II
''At least pan
not show up in unemployment figures
{I0.2i percent; Lawrence: 7.5 (7,0) percent; Scioto: 12.8 of this ioicrease·may be due to the fact that the seasonal . until ApriL

·Lack·

Ls·PIIg.,

•

Vol. 32 , No.6
0

The nation's · unempl oyment :
rate was 5.3 percent for February,
compared with 5.4 percent for :
-January.
,
Vlnlon
The number of Ohioans with ·
jobs was 5.4 million, down .2.oo0·
lololo
from Januar¥. The number of
"4-lll 'l workers , unemployed
w.S
314,000, up from 291 ,000 in January.
· Over the year. the number of
Ohioans working increased by ·
L•M~.. '
129,000, from 5.3 million. Tlie
number unemployed increased by
34.000 from 280,0,00.,
J1cbon
The county rates for February
ranged from a low of 3.2 percent
. 0 , 111,
in Franklin County to 19.2 percent in Morgan County.
Twelve co~nties had rates at or
.,...;.,
below 4:5 · p,ercent. Eleven had
II ____!'~~~~~~~~~ jobless ~ales of at least 11 .0 pertL
cent.

M....

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Historically significant
structure won't be -lost
Ewington Academy
changes hands; .
Retains 140-year ·
herit~ge of service .

The
·County Local Board of Education approved the ~code my's.sale to the Huntington
Township Trustees .for $I last month so
. f(ir fiQOCf
.jobs
that the historically significant structure won't
. CINCINNATI (AP) - The
be lost to residents. Trustee Dick Neal said.
f.!IJ~rlll gqv~rnment said, Friday it
The trustees, the Ewington Academy Founwill .releast.up 'lp $5.5 million to
dation - which has overseen the building's use
put p~ople to work ill t~o1fporary
for years - and Americutl Legion Post 161
jobs to help _clean up damage from. approached the school systet'n's administration
the r.ecent Ohio River f1poding.
about the' possibility of buying the building
The U.S. Department uf Labor · "because we didn't want to see it get away from
suiil tts emergency grant will
us," Neal said.
'
., was used us Ute COtflmunity's elemenl~ry school.
alloW' participant' l\l work for up
Although it has not been used for educatio111ll'-pur- .: · It remait~ed a grade_school until 1948. when students
tn six monfhs with 'public or pri·
poses for almost 50 years. Ewington Academ,Y--- ha&lt;r were transferred to Vtnton. But _us pan ol the Vonton
vute nonprolit agencies to help
become a community center used by organizations rang; . school_system, the academy was mcluded 111 the merger
with cleanup, -repair amj restoniing from the Legion post and its auxiliary to 4-H c)ub~:··,, w11h Btdwelltbat created the North Gallta Local School
tion effons.
The trustees. who were allowed to erect a towgship , Doslncl tn 1957.
.
·
, The projects may include elimbuilding on the academy property, were concerned' nbout
When Nonh Galli a became .ran of the county ~on­
inating health. and sal~ty threats.
the lm1d and structures slipping away from them if the · soltdauon 111 I\174, the academy s ownershtp was shtfled
removing debris and providing
propeny were sold, Neal said .
·
to the newly -formed Galha County Local Schools . ·
assistance at · emergency shelters.
As one of the earltest major centers of leanung 111 the_
"The land could possibly be sold and we didn't want
the department said.
to see that happen," he said. "We would hate to .see it fall county. Ewmgton Academy was recugmzed as a pan of
Those eligible ·to -work in the
into the hands of those who might sell it or tear it d~wn." Ohm's hen tag~ by the local and state hostoncal soctetoes.
program are the long-tenn unemSuperintendent Ruben Lanning said that since the· and w~ placed on the Nauonal Regtster ot Hostonc
ployeil and workers who lost jobs
building was not being used as a school, the
Places tn September 1982.
.
..
as a result of the flooding. which
receptive to the community's wishes to gain
students began attendmg classes at Vunon, the ·
occurred early this ,month.
found other uses for the butldmg. The school
, "The foundation came in .utld felt it would
'The Ohio Bureau of Employbest interest of-the community to turn · it over
.
granted the Legion post a 25-year lease in 1976 ·
ment Services will administer the
trustees," he said,
to conduct meetings and activities there, a leas,e that was . ·
program: ' · · . - . · ·
2026. .
· Erecte~ ih 1859 under the sponsorship of the Ewing- later extended to _
The .progral..; will 1'unction in
ton Citizens'·Literary Institute. the academy offered high
Ne~l ~atd that unmedmte plans are to try to upgrade
Adams . • Athens, Brown, Galli a,
school education for some 60 student• a year until 19(&gt;1 , the bu1ldmg. .
.
Hnmiltmi, Highland. Hocking,
when it ceased Q,PCralion as an academy. When students',
"If everythmg works out, we hope to _o?,tam some
Jackson, Lawrence·. ·Meigs, ·.Pike,
and classes from -the one-room Ewington elementary grants to tlnprove tl for the people who use II, he added.
Scioto and Vinton counties:
school were displae.ed By a fire in 1927, th.e academy "I think everyone is very happy about this."

fiklthek~se
. .$5.5M

clean,¥p

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'Call.ll
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Veterans' care committee
to visit region March 3~
GALLIPOLIS - The Veterans' Care Committee ot the Ohio
House -will visitt~e Gallia County
to view p&lt;lssible. construction sites
for a pmposed vetenl!Js ~ -~c;nne ,
according to Galliu .'Cmlnty 'Service Officer Steve Swords.
Committee Chair C~arles
Brading's confirmed that they
will view a possible site near the
Gallipolis Developniental Center
on March 31 , at approximately 2
p.m .. following a visit to u Meigs
County.
The committee. formed us a
result of House Bill 581. was
forn\ed in 1994 to conduct a study
of.the feasibility qf locating a veterm(s home in .the southern half
·of Ohio.

.......
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OPEl

Good Morning

.·~

Today'a

Gtm..-.S tilbW

12 ~lions • l~ Pages

Calmdars

Cl&amp;J

C9mics ,

Iosert

Editorial$ ·
Epterta!nmenl

A4
C6

Obituaries

A5

Soortl

Bl·6

c•·u'Oedi

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D IW7 Ohln V1llcy F\lhti11hinJ Ct~.

',

By AARON MARSHALL .
T-S Columbus~reau ·
.
COLUMBUS ,-- Munching
on a sandwich and sipping bottled water at massive conference table in her Statehouse
office, Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister
touched on a wide range of
issues during a recent lunchtime
interview.
Topics covered in the oneWHILE LT.
on-one interview· included her Indicated lhe II
on I run
future political plans including lot S.cretary of Stile In 1888; lhe did ;
.. 'bl
·
h not rule out moving to State Aud,ltor
a posst e up~otntme iH to 1 e this year should a vac1ncy crop up.
Stale Audttor's prist thiS year.
·
.·
her work on a farmland presemition task fore~ and her testimony on :proposed federal clean air standards.
·
.
:
Whit~ Hollister again indicated that she is &gt;' focused'' on a run for Sec-:
retary of State in 1998, she did not rule out moving to Slate Auditor this;
year should a vacancy crop up .
.
.
•
· An opening in the a.uditor 's chair is being dtscussedin Statehouse cir~
cles because of serious consideration current State Auditor Jim (&gt;etro iS:
receiving in Washington for the 15 -ye_ar appo.inlll)el,ll to ll).e.Col])ptrpUe~
General post of the General Accounting Office. . . ,
,'·
.L , · ,, 1
And if Mr..Petro did go to Washington would HoUister be interested in
his post? "''ll just have to wail and see what happens,:' she said, adding;
tliat her attention is square~ on a 1998 Secretary of State's race. " But that
focus doesn' t mean that y.fu don'tleave.other doors open too, that is jusC
part of the process."
·
·
' ~
Her declaration to keep "doors open " may nut sound like much, but
consider for a moment the political lanpscape come 1998. With all the·
o~1er statewide elected officials firmly committed to higher .profile runS:
tluin Auditor, Hollister would be a front-runner for the appointment iC
Petrp leaves.
·
.
·
If Hollister daes run for Secretary of State in 1998, -it appears she wi
fac e competition in the 1998 Republican primary from Cleveland-area
BV' CHARLENE HOEFLICH
ties Improvements Fund grant is that the final phase- inslallillion of
State Rep. Ed Kasputis. Kaspulis, '35. said his declared candidacy "is nor.
new a.sidewalk and s.teps at the front
Tfm••~ntlnel SlaH
"'
nearing comple!ion.
POMEROY· Renovation of the
Margaret Parker, museum dlrec- of the Butternut Avenue building - - against her (Hollister) it's just that I believe in myself."
Knowti for his deeply-held pro-life beliefs, Kasputis said he is more
Meigs Museum funded with a tor and president-of the ~eigs Coim- · will be completed this week.
.---- -- - - - - , 1 electable. than Hollister. ,"1
Once
that
and
severol
small
$79,000 Appalachian Pll,blic Facili- ty Historical Soi:ieiy,.-. suid Friday
inside
and
ou'tside
jobs
are
finished
,----~·---·--~·--~~
the year-l&lt;mg project will be comfl~t/y ~ated·thllt . said the Westlake auomey first elected in
pleted. said Parker. She credited volunteers with "Stretching the money"
. slui,.woUidn't be 1990. "I 've travelled to 58 countie~
to do a job .estimated earlier to cost ·
runnl.O.. stiJteWfite already over the past year and I'm from
~.,.
the most populous section of the state
thousands more.
1
. ' Parker said that as soon as everyf!·.!J~i ~!dn't thfnk and certainly have a higher narne 1D up
\hing is finished an open house will
of December 31, 1996,
.be held so that the public can see the
'' hiJVfl fvt1Tit6d 8V.Qii, had $34,800 in her election war' chesl
improvements. Sh~ expects. that to
be some time in May.
. single eounty 111. while Kasputis had approximately
$110.000. according to Kasputis.
.'
· · '·
After years of patching up and.
this st~... l know
Flatly stating that she wouldn't be
making do, or as Parker put it.
"band-aid rcpa_ir," the museum has
. what (t takes -to run.'. running statewide if she didn't think she
now taken on a new IQOk .
s.t.I"W/
_•' de CIJm..~. could win, Hollister said a Kilsputis chill:
- .le0 ge is not a problem. ''I have WOJrkectl
· The tlat areas of the roof which
pa til ''shlli Bald. every single county in this state.. .I know
have had pr\lblem leuks for many
~ '
··
what i1 takes to run a statewide cam:
years, have been elevated and the
paign," she said.
'
.
·
;
entire structyre has been re-roofed .
Hoping to breakthrough to a U.S. Senate Subcommittee on CleanAi~,
The front of the attached garage.
Hollister testified earlier this month at a special field hearing in Oklahoma
ion~ used as ",a display area for
antoques. and artifacts , has been
City. Her tesliniony outlined.how Ohio will be impacted ' under-the U.S:
redesigned to compleme!lt the main
EPA's propoSed new air quality standards.
.
structure. The otu garage doors have
One tool tp put the brake$ on new air quality rules could be a fHI•rol
been removed and an exterior door
law allowing Congress to rescind a rule with a cost factor of ov~r $100
installed.
·
million within 59 days of being implemented, ·she uid. "The botto~ line
The 32 windows.in the house and
is that.. we need to get Congress '!Q move to say slow ·down.. .let s use
entry d®rs have ~II· been replaced
some comnlj)n sense in this approach.'" she swd,
• fiSE'I'IG REPLACED - AI ~ fln•I phi .. o1 '
with more effici~nl ones, g11ble areas
Conlin~ on pllg&amp; A2
the Nelga Munum, the •ldew..k •nct•Mtt•·1re
o~
PI'"
A2
·
Co!lll!1u.d
are !Iaing mllde (or ~n opi!D hou.. In Mly.

Museum

. '·'

If

near completion

· .· s~Jeifl..lft"!(~· ;r!; he~~

'· a

.~

I

reno~ati9ns

a

Ut~c).V.~ ~p(ll~ter ~h~: ~~es::~:; '~f;~,~~~Y b~~~~nor,"

•

•

Lt. Gov. keeps
'doors open'
on future
state political
plans however
Ednor's nots: Lt. Gov. Nancy
Holllstsr has been highly visible in southeastern Ohio. In
r8cent WIH!ks, she has dlstrl,:.
uted development funds In
Meigs County, spoke at Gal/la
County's Lincoln
Dinner,
at the
and will be the

By KEVIN KELLY
'flmes-S.ntlnel Stllff
EWINGTON - The two-story frame building known as the Ewington Academ.y has been
a fixture..-oQf 'this nonhero Gallia County community for nearly 140 years. and its future will
be ' the
.
who have ,
it

.,
.,

Hollister 'focused' on
run for Sec·. of State

.

•

...

. ;;:,
'

H911iste~

•

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