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                  <text>PorMI'Oy • Middleport, Ohio·

P• 12 • The Dally Sentinel
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1111 n &amp;

·

Ohio Lottery

Knlcks beat
Cavaliers iri
playoffs

GaJ.:

Plck3:
4-7-1
Plck4:
8-0-7-9
Buckeye 5:
9-23-26-28-33

Sports on P9 5 ·

Clearing tonight, Iowa
In the 301. Saturday,
sunny. Hight In the !lOa.

I

1))~11
•
VoL47, N0.2
3 Sections, 32 .....

Vote on minimum wag·e
blocked in U.S. House

·'

.REGISTER·TO WIN A
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CHIPPER/SHREDDER!

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93-8209-1

\

Cremeans reverses stand
b y Ch OOSing
• ,.&amp;0. dera1~•1 vo,e
,.

ship, House Republican moderates
saythey'ttcontinuetopressforavote
on raising the minimum wage before
the end or the election-year session or By TOM HUNT.ER
Congress.
Sentinel Ne- Staff
"I think it's difficult to discuss
Only one week after joining 20 other GOP coognssman in changing
helping working men !llld women his position to lupport a proposed increase in the federal minimum wace.
without discussing a raise in the min- U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeaas was one ol the Republicans to cast a "no"
imum wage," Rep. Jack Quinn, .R: vole against the propos.. Thunday.
N.Y., said Thursday as he sid.ed with
Former Rep. Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, Cmneans' opponent In
Dem~rats who tried unsucc~ssfully . this faD's Sixth Dls*l congressional raee, criticized Cremeans for hili
to muscle the measure onto tile ftqor, vole against.work f11111Uies and unstable position on the issue.
A second GOP lawmaker, Rep.
"This is unbelievlible. Three weeks ago, Frank Cremeans llllld increas·
Christopher Shays or Connecticut, lng the ~lnimum wage could be a 'job-killer.' Two weeks ago, be told
voted with the Republican leadership an open forum in Jackson that he didn't even see the need for a lllini·
on the procedural vote that blocked 01um wage, Hriod. Last week, he endorsed a $1 increase in the mini·
consideration orthe bill, but said the Ilium wage, and thiS week he voles apinsl a 90-cenl increase," said
issue will return. "The bottom line is Strickland.
. the leadership would lik.e an altetnaWhen questioned about Cremeans' posilion on Thnnday's vole (Roll
tive,.. he said. ''In the end we think CaU Vole No. 113), representatives in his WasbbJ&amp;toa olftces were not
it should be the minimum wage," aware of any acdon taken on the)Deasure oo Capilal Hill.
•
possibly as part of a larger package·
"There was 1)0 vote on the issue Thunday, and Col!gressman Creor measures.
•means did come out in support of the Issue last )Yeek."
. ·
Whatever the outcome, the issue . '~This ·man doesn't know what be's doll!g. i&gt;ii one hand, he's nervous
has thrown majority RepublicB!IS on enouKJt libout his chance fl!r re-elec~n 10 's tart changi111 his Jli!SIIioo
the derensive little more than six on issues. On the other hand, he's triliied 10 vote with his party's lead·
months berore the electi\lll. · .
en - who all oppose an lncryse in the miniJllum wa!Je," said Strick.President Clinton ancfOemocrats land.
·
·
,, ·.have proposed a 90 .cent increase in
the federal minimum wage.over two politics," said Rep. John Linder, R- stantial support for an increase in the
·
.
years. "As I have said so many times, Ga., adding that Democrats had not minimum wage,"
you ~mply can't raise a family on brought minimum-wage legislation to ' . Supporten or an in.crease say. the
$4.25 an hour, but millions or Amer- the floor in !"993 or 1994; when they ".'tmmum wage hasn t ~n ~~~ed
icans are trying. to do.that," Clinton ' controlled Congress and the White , stnce 1989, and 11 soon will be at a
House. .
,. '
...,,..:... 12:Y~ l~!n . I!Y!CPB&amp;tng PQwer. ·
~d. d\lring the day. , ·.
.
At the same .tim~ ffw:iaJs ,l:on, . ' ." .Oi'pbnen~. lecj,by'Hbuse Major~ejlublica'iis attacked the oetllocratic effort as a political ,show ce,de the political potericy of the 11y ~ader Dt~kArniey, J:t-Tex~,_say
·designed to cuny favor with.the labor issue, all'~ say polls taken for GOP ~n mcrease wtll.hamper JOb creahon.
·
subOffi~tals sa1d Hpuse. · Speaker
unions. "It is crass politics. It is mean campaign

.

Five Southt.lrn,High School seniors will vie of Flaclne; and Samml Slaaon, daughter of
for the title of FlOwer Festival Queen Saturday · Joyce and .Ernie Sleson of Syracuse. A1tenat the third Flaclne Area Community OrganiZl!- danta are, front row, from left, freshman Jody
tlon l=J-r Festival. Candidates 11re, s .e cond Hupp, daughter of Steven and Laura Hupp of
row, from left, KeltY Swlaher, daughter of Racine; sophomore Jilytne Miller, daughter of •.
Michael and Cynthia Swisher of Syracuse; Jon· James and Denlie Miller of Portland; and junior
na Ma11uel, daughter of John ·&amp;nd Megan Keri Caldwell, daughter of Howle ·caldwell and
Manuel of R~";;.,JennHer Cummine, daughl
. er Christy Lavender of Syracuae. The queen will
of Todd and
Cummine of Letart Faile; Jyt be announced Saturday, 12:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.
· ~all-a, daughtwr of Charlie and Rita Mathews

~~~~~~~~~;:~~
New
. w~~ tak~ng a dir~!'C~t,., •These officials. al'!_o ~oted .that ,. J-!~u~e SJIJIServatjve~ fJ~u_lJ.~P-liJe, ·
a~roach m ~n;ate d~uS'~to~. Ot~grrelrm!jSt work not only with
telbng colleagues that m~ny law• Anney, but also with Sen. ~ob Dole,

makers probably couldn t afford the Kansas ~publican who is Sen·
politically to declare outright oppo- ate majority leader and GOP presisition .
dential nominee-in-waiting. Many

believing he wtll ~ too willing to
strike a compromise on the issue with
the Democrats.

Sheriff's department wins grant
t() purchase DUI testing ·machine:·_

Ford's recall
U.S. history's
2nd biggest

~~ei~~::~~~~~~~;~~~~:s~~~eticb- .Shell

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By JIM FREEMAN

WASHINGTON (AP) - Jillfletcher was driving with a business
associate on a highway near her home ·
in Framingham, Mass., when the
steering column or her 1989 Crown
Victoria wagon suddenly started
smoking.
She pulled over, ran a few steps to
a restaurant and called the local Fire
Department. " When I came out there ·
were names shooting everywhere,"
Fletcher said. "My car is a total
loss."
The .fire, which occurred April 17,
VICTIMS'
. lned th
· ·11 d ·
· · b A ..
lima of Crime Cornpenaetlon Program expla
e com~.1s stt un er mvesttgatton ut etc..- tlon program for crime vlctli:M and their families It Thursdays
er believes it was an ignition-switch Melgi County Vlctlme Rights Week Dinner In Pomeroy. Mora than
fire because or where and how the 40 people attended the firlt annual dinner, which highlighted
fire started.
, National VIctims' Rights Week activities locally. Pictured with
Qn Thufsday, Ford Motor 'Co. Hammond II Melg•·.eounty·prosecutlng Attorney John Lentes,
announced it was recalling about 7.9 · right. (Sentinel photo by TOIIl Hunter)
million cars, minivans and pickups in
er's car and that has caught fire in
hundreds of vehicles.
It is the second-largest recall in
U.S. history.
.
.
The No. 2. automaker also is
expanding its Canadian' recall of
vehicles with the switches from the
248,000 announced late last year to

Seeking the-crown

S«&lt;tlnel News Staff
The Meigs County Sheriff's Office
received a new weapon this week in
its arsenal to combat drunk dri1(ers .
The department was awarded
$5,000 rrom the Ohio Department of
Public Sarety to purchase a blood
alcohol concentration unit, commonly called a breatiJalyzer, to be used to
test suspected drunk drivers.
The department received the
breathalyzer, the Intoxilyzer 5000,
this week, but has yet to instail the
sophisticated device.
"I think it will be a big help in
combating drunk drivers," said Meigs
County Sherirf James M. Soulsby
Thursday afternoon.
, The department does not now
have.a breathalyzer and has relied on

Pomeroy and Middleport police
departments ror testing , suspected
drunk motorists.
"We have gotten good cooperation
from Pomeroy and Middleport,!'
Soulsby said.
All deputies will eventually be
trained in the machine's operation and
certified to test and calibrate the
device.
.
"The $5,000 grant the Meigs
. County Sheriffs Office rec~ived will
enable them to rurther prevent il\iury
and deaths on Ohio's road," according to OOPS Director Charles D.
Shipley.
'The unit will be used to test suspected drunk drivers. If test results
·exceed the legal linlii cif .10 percent
blood alcohol concentration, the
deputy can 'take the motoiist's oper-

ator's license on-the-spot and begin a ·
90-day suspension if11mediately.
The grant used to purchase the
BAC unit was processed by the
Orfice of the Governor's Highway
Sarety Repn:sentative as pan of a federal incentive j!rant Ohio receiv~d
rrom the National Highway Trarfic .
Sarety Administration. .
Soulsby said the breathalyzer will
also likely be used by the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court ror
alcohol tesiing on probationers.
"We have people in our Community Corrections Program that periodically need to be tested ror alcohol
and dQJgs," explained Court Admin-'
istrator Paul Gerard.
(Contlni.ted on Page 3)

plant •puts destroued
unit ba.ck into ·onett.ation. .
I '

BELPRE (AP) - A production
unit that was destroyed in an explosion that killed three workers at a
Sheil Chemical Co. plant two years
ago is back in operation:
"We're back," Shell spokesman
'·

Mike White said. "Our employees
and this community have been
through a realty tremendous challenge,"
AMay 27, 1994 explosion and fire
destroyed the Kraton unit and killed
•

Gary Reed, 41; George Nutter, 50;
and Mike Harris, 36. Hundreds of
residents in Ohio and West Virginia
were evi!Cuated ror several hours.
Belpre is along the Ohio River,
about 90 miles southeast orColum-

~

bus.
The umt produced about I00,000
The p~ant produces Kraton poly ·. pou~ds or Kr~ton on Wednesday,
mers, whtc~ are used as perfonnance ~hue .s ~td. It ts capable of making
enhancers 10 food packagmg. toy~,
mt ton
annually.
sponmg goods, adhestves and lubnThe
cost more than
$IOO

00 11

1

1/C, OHV, Briggs &amp;Stratton engine wHh overhead valve design for improved
tuel economy. 42 in. deck (catc~er capable). Heavy duty in-tine transaxle wHh
forward speeds, one reve11e speed. Dash-mounted key ignition. 93·1143-6

MOIITHS FREE Then

Theswitcheswillbereplacedfor

Just 138

OHV 1/C engine by Briggs &amp; St111ton. BIQ
421n. cut. twin blade deck. Hydrosblft
" lnfln~e

Speed" transmission. MulChing
capable. 93·9149-t . . .

·FOR JUST sa

MORE PEi MOtirHI
'Monthly Payment DNI~ on Wtsttm Auto canr Pu~Wse AvaHabto In Store. Clldt
l'foiMProvldod ByNIIIonSBink, NA

MIIDUPOU, OH...

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- .reiler at a civic event Apl'il20 in twoconcemsaboutthemill:thatifit '
Huntington.
is built, it should use the most mod·
ex.pected to exceed $200 million, · heats up, envtronment~tsts. and Sen.
"After it was over, I went up to em, chlorine-free technology, and the
Fo•d sources said, speaking on con- Jay ~ockerelle~ have.dtffenng vtews talk lo the senator and asked him to company should use local workers io
dition or anonymity.
of the senator. s pos1t1o~ on a pro- · tell me how .he reels about the mill. build and run .the plant.
Traditionally tess than 70 percent posed $1.1 btihon pulp m1llm Mason
"He said, 'I support it, and I bet
On the federal level, he said,
of vehicle owpers actually bring in .County.
,
that you-don'\ pointing at the "Stop "Rockefeller has been the most
their v¢hicle for a recall repair.
Rockefell~; s staff say~ . he ,has !Jie..Pulp Mt_ll button I was wear-1 responsive legislator ... to our con.. . .· h blem w
never taken a fonnal pos1uon on . mg, Fout S81d.
·
cems."
The ~gmuon-swttc . pro
as
the
project,
which
environm~.
n
taiis\S
.
'
·
~ut
another
mi_
l
l
opponent,
St~ve
und~r mte~se sctutmy from 1be wpose·because of concerns us chlo- .Whne of the 1\ffiltated Construcuon
Rockereller "believes that. per;
Nau~n~l Htghway Traffic sarety fine dioxide .bleaching process will .'l'tades Foundation, says most of ' mittilig for the pulp mill ... li!S~ in the
AaddmmiS::;O~ be~~~s~ cdnfu,~~~~~rs, eloit dioxin, a highly, toxic by,prodc 'West Virginia's senators and con· haltds of state.regulators and the peoh . n:po
a ut , tres ~ e tii:l.
gressmen have avoided taking a pub- -ple 'in the community that are affectSWitches.
.
'·
. Janet Foul, project coordinator for lie position.
· ·
. ed by the _project," spokeswoman
The ftrst C.anadtan recall followed the Ohio Valley Environmental
"None of them has ever really tak· Mindy Rossi said Thursday.
"We have pretty much stayed out.
260 !'Cpons _or fire or s~oke ~?m Coalition, says her organization has . en a fmn stand," White said. "They
ig~illon switches, causmg. ~~~or seen Rockefeller as a key support or usually have made some non-com· of it," she said.
mJurles to three peop~~- No mJu~,::s the project. .
mi1tal respol)se, like they're for jobs,
have been n:ported m the Umted
Foul ~d Rockereiler, D-W.Va., andifsomethingrnec~environmenThatslatementpromptedlaughter
StatC6.
had bee .
. . · · stated his support as recently as last .tal requirements, they're ror it.
from Foul.
NHTS~
n. t~vesll~atmg week.
"They have never n:ally been
Fout said environmentalists have
23.5 mtlbon Ford vehtcles tn the
"And 1 got it from the hone's pushedtomwadecisiononit,"be . viewed Rockefeller as a key supUnited :!tales wilh the same type of mouth. How's that?" she 115ked.
said.
·
.
porter of the project.
ignition switch.
Foul recounted meeting kocke- · . Wbite said hisJorganizatlOII has
· '

free. The cost of the recall was . As West Virg!nia's cam~aign season

WIIIIID IU H.P. HVDIO
DIM Wllt111Cf011

7111.21D

isfi:;A;~hiN~~~~~.!ty·s ?e~J:~:

A Glnntll Co. lla•IP FIIH

R k f II
~:~;~~an~:~~~i~~fi!:i~n:~: .Environmentalists press oc .e e er
~~~:~~~~; ~~~~~tn~~7 ~i:~~a~ for public position on pulp mill project

tRACTOR WITH
OVERHEAD VALVE DESIGN

WESfBI

31-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll26, 1996

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Supermarket
en effort to raise
for the March of
lh~ the day,
poSt -bond for Vaughan,
the ·
Marcti of Dimas. Pictured with \ltlughlll! Ia Bruea Swift of the Middleport
Pollee Department•
.

on..

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�•

:commentary

'-w2

Frldif, April II;,_

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The.Daily Sentinel FDA offi.cial~s testimony is assailed

WASHINGTON - Rep. Joe B.-- ny and .the document5
h8ve been using them for the study was corrupted because
' 'ESftiJ~ in 1!148
more than a decade to some of the scientists involved h8d
ton, R·Teus, chlraed last 111011th provided to him as well
that a Food 111111 Dru1 Adminiltration . as the course of Mr.
repair Sll(;h common ail- potential conflict's of inteRst.
olf~eial lied to Coacreu last fall Zeller's conduct, I
ments as hemiated disks, According to documents, one scien111 Court St., P~. Ohio
when
testifying
under
oath
about
believe
a
criminal
as
well as more critical tist "was given a check for
614-tt2·21tll • Fax: 192·2157
documents he received relating to a investigation is justilike fractu,res.
S17S,OOO" for his organization three
But thousands of months before a scheduled hearinl!
controversial medical device mown fled," the letter niads.
as the pedicle screw.
Zeller has insisted that
Americans claim the to discuss the safety of the screws.
Congressional investigators arc he told the committee
screws · have broken off
Plaintiffs' attorneys believed tbe
now
wondering
if
FDA
officials
told
tbe
truth.
and
left
them
in
severe
documents
they gave to Zeller would
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
the truth to the Justice Department
O'Hara says it doespain. At least 200 patients cast negali ve light on tile industry
MlchMI Blnllleln have joined a federal Jaw- study, and perhaps lead the FDA to
last fall. Judging from documents n'I matter if the docuROBERT L. WINGETT
we've reviewed, tbe FDA and the ments were marked confidential suit in Philadelphia against 13 of the change its mind about approving the
Publisher
Justice Department petitioned a U.S. because "it would .be perfectly screw manufacturers. Although screws. Their strategy apparently
District Court in Pennsylvania for appropriate" for anyone ·in the Coale is not a party to the federal - fiiled, however, as the FDA gave
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
the
release of documents that the agency 10 receive such documents suit, he does have clients who are preliminary approval for the screws
Generlll M•Mger
Controller
in October.
:
FDA already had in its possession.
for use in an intemal investigation . suing in state courts.
An
intemal
FDA
probe
round
that
If the documents were already in "This is politics as usual," O'Hara
In 1994, the screw makers orgathe hands of the FDA, investigators told our associate Jan Moller: " And nized a study to investigate the even though two of the participating
are ~king, why then did the agency . we welcome a full and fair inquiry charges that their product was defec- scientists failed to disclose their
L - to 1M-.,. 4 'co 110.
ohcHtlcl 11o- llron300 - · Allloflotw
.,. ~"' -..--IMolfiiMI-Inc-HdiWO -10/op/wno , . ,.
go.to court to have them released?
into the facts."
live. Completed later that year, the financial relationship with·the screw
IIOr. No ......., /otloro . . 1M pubii~Md. L - . 110 In , _ - . ,
I ' f I f' tf ,..,.,
·FDA spokesman Jim O'Hara said
Pedicle screws are steel bone study was used .by the Food and manufactui'CI\ ·no other rules were·
the documents that the FDA was scrcws that doctors commonly use,in Drug · Administration in deciding broken. 11le intemal investigation
asking for last September are differ- spinal surgeries. Although the whether to approve the screws for also found !hat even though there .
ent from the ones given to agency screws were only recently approved more general uses.
_,ere conflicts, they did not affect the
Lawyers for the plaintiffs contend integrity of the study.
official Mitch Zeller three months for general back surgery, doctors
earlier. The documents in question
By WALTlR R. MEARS .
have been a continual source of fricAP Specl81 COITMpondent
WASHINGTON - As political theater, the debate over congressional tion between the FDA and the GOP.ITM.QI.P TAKE
· !linn limits is a play with unlimited acts. It will be on stage in this campaign controlled Congress, which has been
hounding agency officials·on a variand reopened in 1997, a cause too politically popular for a final curtain.
· _· But the plot doesn't change. The arguments are well-rehearsed, replayed · ety of issues since I 995.
1D SEARCH YGIIR IQ
The documents were given to
. as the Senate argued- then buried- a constitutional amendment that realTHAN KAG%YNSKI'S .
Zeller last June by John Coale, one
.ly was dead before they even got around to it.
· It already had been blocked in the House, more than a year ago, and by a of several attorn~ys representing
margin that guaranteed the measure wasn't going to get through this session patients who claim they've been
injured by the screws. Although the
of Congress. . .
But Sen. Bob Dole had promis~d he would put it befo~ the Senate, too, documents were clearly marked cona gesture with a political purpose. Republicans could safely vote to consid- fidential and under court seal, Zeller
er a popular cause, as ali'S3 did, eve~ though some of them actually oppose read the documents and discussed
limits on congressional tenns. They didn't have to say ~.or risk an unpop- their contents with FDA Commisular vote in a campaign year, because Democrats prevented an up-or-down sioner David Kessler.
When Zeller was grilled about the
roll call.
'
.
. Democrats said the GOP handling was set up to raise the issue and avoid documents at two congressional
real action, for what Sen. Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont described as "bumper oversight hearings last fall, he said
he didn't realize they were confidensticke~ ... campaign fodder." Amendments were barred, and he wanted one
so that the proposed tw&lt;l-'tenn limit on Senate tenure would be effective now, tial unlil two months after receiving
them. Republicans on the House
· not prospectively, applying only to future service.
Commerce
Committee now believe
: By that rule, 44 members of the Senate would be over the limit. One vote
Zeller
was
lying under oath. A ·
Oil the side of terlh limits was that of Sen. Strom Thurmond, 93, campaignMarch 26 letter from Barton to
ing for his eighth tenn in the Senate.
.
: Dole, who has been a senator sipce,J969, used to oppose term limits, .but Attorney General Janet Reno sums
he's come arou!ld. No matter that he's been telling voters his experience and up their case:
"Based on th~ serious conflicts
kt~ow-how in Congress would serve him, and them, well in the White House.
· The certain RepubliCI!n presidential, nominee, Dole can read numbers, between Mr. Zeller's swom testim&lt;&gt;"
too, so he i$ casling President Clinton as the leading opponent of tenn lim. itt, saying Republicans dm't get it done alone.
· "I was lukewarm about the idea for some time," Dole acknowledged
bOfore the 58 to 42 Senate vote that Jailed to shut off a Democratic filibuster
oil the issue. "But we are capable of keeping up with the American people." By George ' R. Plegenz
VanDusen had suffered a stroke five years before. Th'is had left him With '
: The public opinion polls indicate that 70 percent and up favor tenn limIt used to be called tlie "unbeliever's ticket to hell." Cim suicide also be a severe speech impediment, but he was able to walk with a cane and suf- •
its on Congress.
.the believer's shortcut to heaven?
fered little pain. His wife was the victim of crippling arthritis, but she had ·
; Twenty-three states tried to set tenn limits for their senator.s and House
;
.. 'Ote cJassical position of .both Christianity and Judaism is that, as it made a trip to England a month before her death. •
members, but the Supreme Court ruled in 1995 that it couldn't be done with- involves the vollflltary taking of a life, suicide is murder. Becau~e ordinariThey were ending their•lives.- they said in a suicide note, because "we'are
o~ ·• constitutional amendment. Legislative term limits apply in 23 states, ly the person committing suicide cannot repent afterward, he goes to hell.
.both increasingly weak and unwell and who would ·want to die in a nursing '
and to scores of local officel!olders.
.
(It is possible of course that a person taking sleeping pills to coinmit sui- home?''
. Given the popularity of the .issue, were it to pass Congress with the cide could have time to repent before he pies.) .
The Van Dusens believed that following their suicides they would "enter '
required tw&lt;l-'thirds majorities, ratification - which requires approval by
The church's hardened· view toward suicide has been greatly modifted. together the afterlife which is tbe comerstone of the Christian faith." What
tq~ee-fourths of the states - would be l! next-to-sure bet. But it would \like
Ministers who once would not give a Christian burial to a person who took they were doing was taking a shortcut to heaven.
6me, so tenn limits, proposed at I2 years for the Senate, six for the House, his own life now "consider eacll case in its own setlinjl -- Circumstances, the
"Nowadays it is difficult to die," their note said. This was ~I most surely
~l&gt;uld not become real until well after the year 2000.
person's mental state." etc. ·
·
a reference to modem medicine that often keeps people alive into old age
-: But there will be no letup on the issue. "There will be another day," Dole
Dr. Jack Kevorkian. known as the "suicide doctor" because he has assist- and infirmity.
iaid, adding that the voters can now sift through the records to see who was ed patients to die who have no chance of recovery, has drawn national attenCould the Van Dusens have been implying that because of medical sci(Or and who was 'against what most of them want done. House Speaker Newt tion to the plight a11d suffering of the hopelessly ill.
ence some people are liying past the time allotted them by God? Was an •
(lingrich has sai&lt;! he'd make it the first item on the GOP agenda in the next
The Michigan law that brought Kevorkian to trial recently states that it is action such as theirs an attempt therefore to readjust things according to the. ·
CJ,ngress.
.•
illegal to assist in a suicide where the primary intention is to cause death. But divine plan where death 's role is that of a welcome visitor who will forestall
; • But.action doesn't mean approval. While majorities voted for the amend- the jurors found that the primary motive of the controversial physician was the pains attendant upon old age?
oient on .both sides of the Capitol. peither came close to the two-thirds to relieve pain and suffering. He therefore has not broken the law and was
More than 30,000 people committed'suicide in the United States last year:
~- to propose a change in the Constitution.
acquitted.
Besides the terminally ill, many were victims of loneliness or poverty. Many
:: So the dispute will~· advocates saying they want more than turnover,
Half of all Americans feel that fu the case of a fatal illness a doctor should were males over 75 who make up the largest group orthosc who commit suithey want a citizen Congress,' not O!IC or career politicians, and opponents be allowed.to help a p'lient end his life. But what ;~.bout those who take their cide. Most of these had lost their wives and had few friends.
~en~ndlng that elections are the right way to limit tenns.
. own life when.they are not suffering from a tenilinal illness? What happens
Among the 30,000 there were those too who could see the terrors of old
- : Elections and retirements; I 3 senators are leaving after this -Congress, a to them?
· age coming up inexorably over the horizon and who lacked the courage to.
A!eord, and 46 House members already have said they won't run again.
·
That was the case in the double suicide of Henry Pitney Van Dusen and face so bleak and cheerless a future.
: • To which sponsors reply that when incumbents do run again, they almost his wife. Van Dusen, a Presbyterian minister and president or Union TheoWere
some
of
these
desperate
souls
reassured
by the faith of the Van
•!ways win. Even in a tumaround election like the one that gave Republi- logical Seminary in New York City from 1945 to 1963, was 77 and his wife
Dusens that, despite what they were doing, they were not forfeiting their
cans control of Congress in 1994,1he incumbent re-election rate was 91 per- was 80 when they each took a lethal dose of sleeping pills in 1975. Neither
claim on God's mercy or their place in heaven?
cent.
.
. was terminally ill.
.1•
George Plegonz Is 1 1yndle8t8d writer for Newepeper EnterpriM Aaoocllltlon:
: The idea of limiting terms was debated when the Constitution was writlen. It has had some imposing advocates since. President Harry S. Tru!'lan
wanted it done. He said it would cure two congressional ills -seniority and
senility.
.

£

AccuW. . . . fOI'eCUI for

Hazel Combs
Hazel Combs, SS, Racine, died Wednesday, Apri124, 1996 at Overbrook
Nursin11 Center, Middleport.
She was .born in Kentwky on Aug. 26, 1937, the daughter of the lite Dowel and Martha Baker.
Surviving are her hush8nd, Chester Combs; four sons, Terry Combs of
Jackson, Mark and Mlllthew Combs of Raci!IC, and Chester Combs Jr. of
Chesler; two daughters, Qebbie c;Jeek of Pomeroy, and Darla Childers of
North Carolina; five brothers, Warren Baker of Tennessee, Ll9yd and Ray
BakerofJackson,Anhur Baker of Michigan, and Ed BakerofByer; and three
sisters, Irene ~olsom and Verna Lawson of Michigan, and Opal Bledsoe of
Allensville.
Services werc held at I p.m. today, Friday, April 2&amp;, 1996 at the Mayhew
Funeral Home in Jackson, with the Rev. William Hinds officiating. Burial
was in thti Salem Cemetery.

IND.

•leo~umbusl52"

I

Cathy Ellen Spencer
W.VA.

Cathy Ellen Spencer, 36, Somerset, died Thursday, April 25, 1996 at U"iversity Hospital, ColumbJJS.
Bom May 30, 1959, to Virgil and Barbara Kirkhart Spencer of Somerset,
she is survived .by a son, Roy Spe!ICCr; a sister, Alice Spencer; and two brothers, Ted and Joe Spencer, all of Somei;Set. ·
·
Also surviving are her maternal grandmother. Faye Kirkhart of Long Bottom; and several aunts, uncles and cousins. .
Memorial services will be at the convenience of the family.

fttllt,.,..,.,.,...

A play with unlimited acts

CABIN.

Church modifies stance on suicide

Edgy

Republica~s

The hysterical pessimism that has overtaken
some
of my Republican friends is getting a little
~11ed on wuhlngton end national politics for more
silly.
th811 30 ,.....
This time the liberal media can't be .blamed for
it. It is in their nature to declare that the Republican Party is in terminal disamiy, that the polls
prove that Dole will get fewer votes' than David
By The Auoclated Preu
·
Duke, that Clinton is the most popular president
: Today is Friday, April26, the II 7th day of 1996. There are 249 days left since FOR, that Newt Gingrich is so disliked that
in the year.
_
.
,
he has to travel at night, that the 104th Congress
: Ten years ago, on April 26, 1986, the world's worst nuclear accident has accomplished exactly nothing, etc., etc. But
OccUrred at the Chem6byl plant in the Soviet Union. An explosion and fire we have heard all this before, and we will hear it
tn the No. 4 reactor sent radioactivity into the atmosphere; at least 31 Sovi- again. . \
.
ets died immediately.
What is (at least relatively) new is the tone of
: In 16()7, an expedition of English colonists, including Capt. John Smith, despair in the voices of a great many garden-variwent ashore at Cape Henry, Va., to establish the first permanent English set- ety Republicans who ought to know better. Dole
Oement in the Westem Hemisphere.
doesn 'I do for them what Reagan did. The bright
• In 178S, the American naturalist and artist John·James Audubon was .bom promise of the I04th Con- .
In Haili.
gress, especially in its first
: In 1865, John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln, was sur- I 00 days, seems to them to
(ollnded by federil troops near Bowling Green, Va., and killed.
have petered out into nothing ·'
• In 1900. seismologist Charles Richter, who devised the earthquake-mea- much. Bill Clinton, whom .
wring scale that bears his name, was born in HIUllilton, Ohio.
they used to enjoy savaging,
: In 1937, planes from Nazi Germany raided the Basque town of Guemica appears to have gotten his
,
.
. ··second wind and can been ·
during the Spanish Civil War.
: In 194.5, Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, the head of Fra!ICC's Vichy gov- . seen grieving like a Rodin
~I'IIJI'Ient during World War II, was arrested.
· statue at hal{ a dozen mem&lt;&gt;"
: In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika and Zanzibar merged to fonn rial services for Ron Brown, .
and hobnobbing with Boris ·
Tanzania.
.
,
: In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the Nevada desert a 1-mega- Yeltsin in Moscow. How on
(On nuclear.!levice called Boxcar.
·
earth ca.n Dole hope to beat
·: In 1970. the Broadway musical "Company," by Stephen Sondheim a!ld this paragon in November? .
Qeorge Furth, opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York.
Let me suggest to all such •
: · In 1980, following an unsuccessful attempt by the United States to rescue depressed RepubliCans that
die U.S. Embassy hoStages in Iran, the Tehran government announced the they take an aspirin and lie
Captives weR being scattered to thwart any future rescue effort.
down for a while.
. In 19921 wonhipen celebrated the first Russian Orthodox Easter in
The eleclion is still more ·
Moacow in 74 years.
than six months away. AI '
· In 1994, voting .beaan in South Africa's first all-race elections.
this point in 1992, Bush's poll figures made Clin~n years .,o: President Reagan. during a stopover jn Hawaii as pan of · ton look like a basket-case' Neither·Dole nor Clina 12-day trip tQ Alia, teleJihc!ned ~~ted Philippine President Ferdinand ton will even be officially nominated for four
Mutos. Actor B!OI!erick CraWford dted •t age 74.
more months. By then, let alone November, the
Five yean aao: 23 people were killed as four-dozen tonutdoes raked state of the nalion, the world situation, and the
Kansas and Oklahoma. The aoveriunent Rported the nalion had sunk deep- personal qualities of the incumbent president and .
er into recessipn in the first qurtet of 1991 as the gross national product . his challenger may all look unrecognizably ·differ·Shrank at an annual rate of 2.8 peraent.
.
EDITOR'S NOTE Auoclal8d Prno, h•

w.a.. R.

liMn, vlw prosldent Md columnist for The

Today in history

•

•

•

•I

'

should calm down

ent. We can't predict how
memory, but it's at least a close paraphrase) "tf
these situations will
Jesus Christ retumed to earth and ran for president
change, but you can bet
on the Republican ticket, the Dcm&lt;&gt;&lt;;rats would
that they wilt change.
oppose hifl1 with all the bittemess and kno.w-how_
But, being human, we
they possess, and believe me; Ike. they have .both
want to feel good now.
bittemess and know-how."
·
Suppose Haley Barbour
. Around mid-September Ike finally geared up,_
yielded to our pleas and
and the re~t is history.
spent right now, on 1V
OK, Dole is no Eisenhower. But .he is an expeand radio, all the money
rienced politician with real ability ansi character.
he's raised and is saving
Don' t sell him short-- certainly not yet.
,
William A. Rusher I• • Dlmlngulohed Fellow o1 tiMI
for September and Oct&lt;&gt;" By William A. Rui!l&amp;r
ClaremOnt Institute for the Study- of Sta-h)P.
her. Suppose Congress
and PoiiUcet Phllo1ophy. ·
•
speeded up its hearings
and got to the .bottom of Whitewater and Travelgate next week. Suppose that, as a result, Mr.
Clinton's poll ralings sank, and Sen. Dole even
. edged him out of first place. What
then? What would the Republican
Party do for the next six months?
·. The Republic11ns who are prophesy- ·
Stltt\NK&amp;NG
ing doom don 't know; all they know
c~"o..a
. is that they wo11ld enjoy May and
June more.
Sorry, but that's not a good
. . enough reason to blow the election
ofl996.
·
Dwight Eisenhower was nominated for president by the Republicans in Chicago in July 1952. He
spent most of August practicing his '
golf stroke, and the polls weren't all
that enc-our•ging. By Labor Day,
·· · many infonned observers thought
' his Democratic rival, Gov. Adlai
Stevenson Jr. of Illinois, was well
Mysteriou. shrin~ ~s
on his-way to victory.
At that' point Bob~onsidine, a
H\\cldlto Mlna.gers to vi•wt.he
popular columnist _who was openly\,Pr&lt;&gt;"EisenIHOI"Id -:-an4 themselves-In
hower, addressed a famous Open Letter to his
• cliKe~ liftt-ot..tNnev.r
hero.'J'he key sentence read, "Ike, you're running
~•fore. .. . &lt;i~.,... 8tae »
like a dry creek." Considine went on·to say that he
knew a lot about the Democrats.because his own
. . . . .. I ftp til? ........ • . . . . . , . . . . , ....
mother was tbe Democratic national c:ommittoc·
woman from Connecticut. and (I base ibis on

it

,.

east of Ohio, some clearing will
spread over the state with a mixture
of clouds and sun through .the moming and early afternoon hours.
Highs today will climb back the
upper 50s to low 60s in the north,
with readings into r.he low 70s in th~
south.
A second cold front moving
through the Plains will bring another .bout of showers and thunderstorms
as it pushes through by this evening.
Temperatures behind the second
frontal system will fall rather quickly with a drop of atourid 10 degrees
expected by evening and overnight
lows falling into the upper 20s in the
north and low 30s in the south.
The rain will linger tonight with a
possibility of. a mixture cif r;tin and
snow in northern and eastem areas of
·the state. No accumulalio)• is expect·
e d.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
.station was 89 in 1948. The record
' low was 26 in 1972.
.
.

a.m.

Units of ihe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 13
calls for assistance Thursday, including two transfer.calls·. Units responding 'included:
·
MIDDLEPORT
II :4 I a.m., Story's Run Road,
Herschel Gilkey, Holzer Medical
Center;
··.
5:S9 p.m., volunteer fire department to State Route 7, brush fire.
POMEROY
9:59 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Bernice Nelson, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
II :4J' a.m., Rutland, Teresa Van
Cooney, HMC;

Weather forecast:
.
Tonight. .. Cold. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of evenin'g rain showers southwest and rain or snow showers northeaSt, then clearing, Cloudy
in the east with scattered evening
showers changing to snow showers
with generally little or no accumulalion. Lows from the upper 20s northwest to the mid 30s southeast.
Saturday... Mostly sunny west with
increasing clouds in the afternoon.
Mostly cloudy in the moming with a
few flurries east, then partly cloudy
in the afternoon. HigliS from near 45 Council to meet
northeast to the mid 50s S\).uthwest.
The Me·igs County Family and
'
Children First Council will meet
. Extended foreeast:.
Tuesday at 9 a.m. at the Meigs
Sunday... A chance of showers. County Department of Human SerLows in the 30s,. Highs fn the lower vices.
50s north to the lower 60s south.
Monday.. :A chance of showers
Skin testing clinic
and thunderstorms. Lows 35 to 4S.
A free skin .testing clinic will be
Highs in the 60s.
'·
conducttid by Connie Karschnik,
Tuesday... A chance of showers R.N., Meigs County tuberculosis
a~d thunderstorms. Lows 35 to 45. nurse, at the Racine Fire Depanrilent,
H\llhs mid 50s to mid 60s.
Tuesday from 4:30 to 6:30p.m. All
individuals who are io food services
are required to obtain yearly skin
tests. Residents are encouraged to
COLUMBUS (AP)- lndian·a-Ohio direct hog prices at selected buying
take advantage of the evening clinics
points Friday by the U.S. Department of Agnculture Market News:
Barrows artd gilts: steady .to weak; demand light to moderate on a mod- which are provided in various ·areas
of the county.
erate run.
.
.
U.S. I -2, 220-260 lbs. 48.00-50.00, Tew 47.50, instances 50.50; plants
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
49.50-51.75.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 41.50-47.50.
FRI., SAT., SUN.
JOHN TRAVOLT~
Sows: near steady.
. .
. .
CHRISTIAN SLATER IN .
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 Jbs. 3 I .00-35.00; 500..650 Jbs. 35.00-38.00. few 39.00.

Akzo ••• ~ •••• ,..............................57\.

Aahlend 011 ...........................41'1.
AT&amp;T .....................................61'1.
Bank One ......·........................34'.1.
Bob Ev•n• ..............................16
Borg-WariW .....................~ •••3c;Y.
Chamj:llon l!ld. :....................... 19
Charmln:ll
Shop ........................I6
.
City Hoi ng .......................... 25~

Federal Mogul ................~ ... ~.19,.
Gannett .... -...................... ~.•,.68f

Goodyear T&amp;R ...................... 51 ~
K-mart ................................... 1o'l.
Leneta End ............................. 19'1.
Limited Inc ............................20~
Peoplea Bancorp...................23
Ohio V•lley Bank ....................40
one Valley .............................3oo.
Rockwell ..............................&amp;7-:.
Robbins &amp; Myttrs....................38
Roy•l Dutch/Shell .............. 141-:.
Shoney'slnc .........................11'1.
.S1ar Bank ..............................
Wendy Jnt'J ............................ 1'9~
Worthlngton Ind ................... 19'.1.

DOWN PERISCOPE

-·-·-

[]My life Insurance
0Mysavings
My clilldren's sal1ngs
My parent's savings
A bank loan 1aken out
by my spouse
I'm not sure

D
D
D
0

Funeral planning makes good
sense.Call us for your FREE
copy ofthe 20-page booklet,
"A Guide to Planning Ahead".

Tltere is n~ obligation.,

-··

.\

CREMEENS
FUNERAL

The Daily Sentinel
tU~PS Zl:l-960)

POMEROY

Published every af1emoon. Monday lhrou'ah

992·2588
VINTON

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Pb. 992.2tS6. S&lt;oond

c:lus poslqe paid 01 Pomeroy, Ohio.

Racine, Oh
. 949-3210

· Galll8 County Dlaplay Y..-cl

MtMber: The Associoted Press, and the Ohio

Mllln St.

Ne.-spaper Auociation.
POsTMASTER: Send addre11 corrections 10
The Daily Sendr~tl , Ill Court SL ~ Pomeroy,

~IVBID~!

Ohio4S769.

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32 Weela ...................................:.......... $11».12

... ..

Rutland Garden Club
· Rutland Garden Club will hold ~regular meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m..at
the ho~e of Dorothy Woodyard in
. Langsv1lle.

Crowning time
The Racine Flower Festival queen
will be crowned Saturday, 12:30
p.m. instead of at 1 p.m., as originally announced. The time ·changed is
due to a previously scheduled girls'
softball game,

COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY TIIRU THURS
ROBIN WIWAMS,
GENE HACKMAN
IN

THE J:)IRD CAQE
·R

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30 ·
.446-0923

• FREE Activation.

• One Cent
Bag Phone ·
•

• Installed Car
Phone $39.95 :

• Two Yec:1r AgreeiJlent Required.

Presents
Ecorwmy Corner!

HOMES

roo CBora
19•6 14x70·
2or311Hroona ·

.

.

Built by Am4'--iea 'I 11 HorrN~buil(lerl
&amp; offered by ''Th .Leculer in A/forda_ble Ho1Uin61"
Open M·F 8:30-8:00-ISat. tll6:00. Cloeecl SUnday .
Located It U8 ~a SR
'

&gt;

'

l l - b ..............................................$29.25

26

&lt;

Miller, represented by Columbus
attorney Thomas M. Tyack, pleaded
not guilty to a charge of grand theft
at a February arraignment.
A pre-trial date for Donald R. BeU,
Letart, a fonner stores supervisor,at
the Kyger ~reek Plant, also allegedc
ly rnvolved tn the rnvoicing scheme,
rs set for April 30.

HOME

Near Ponwoy-MDan Bridge

Fri&amp;ly, Ill Coon St, Pomeroy, Ohio. by the
Ohio Volley Publishing ~y/Oonneu Co.,

26
52

Plant for fuel that was never deli~
over a· IO year period, resulting in,a
loss of $260,502.08 to OVEC. -

PG 13

U my delltb oeeUI'I'ed
to•orrow9 the •oney
needed to pay for •Y
funeral would - froma

(Continued from Page 1)
"We'll just walk them over next
door and do (the testing)," he added.
Gerard foresees the device becoming an important pan of the Community Corrections Program.
.
"The sheriff is very kind to Jet us
use it," .he said.

. Stock reports are the 10:30
•• m. quotes provldtld by Advest
of G•lllpolls.
.

' l3

GALLIPOLIS -A jury trial date
has been set for one of the two me~
allegedly involved in a phony invoicing scheme that defrauded the Kyger
Creek Power Plant of more than
$350,000.
An Oct. 28, 1996 trial date was set
for Larry E. Miller 'Thursday in the
Galli a County Common Pleas Court.
The court ordered that discovery be
comp.leted by Aug·. 31 with motion
filed by Sept. IS.
Miller, who operates a BP bulk
fuel plant on Pine Street in Gallip&lt;&gt;"
lis, was secretly indicted on Feb. 5 by
the Gallia County grand jury.
It has been alleged that Miller
billed the Ohio Valley Electric
Corp.'s Kyger Creek Plant Power

446-1088

Sheriff's office

66/'

· MAILSVIISCRIPTIONS
1-Motpc-,

in alleged invoicing scheme·:

R
AND
KELSEY GRAMMER IN

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissio.ns - none.
Thursday discharges :- Mildred
Matlack, Middleport.
· Holzer Medical Center
Discharges April 25 - Nedra
Johnson, Shamar Hutchinson, Helen
Pratt, Doris Mace, Donald Bennett,
Nina Glass, Roddy Moore.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Hoben
Cundiff, son. Middleport.
(Published
with penni5sion)
.
.

Am Ele Power .......................40'-"

li•.. coftiereach-k.

t';~~~tid;;~e;~a;~~s;;· suspect:;

BROKEN ARROW

Hospital news

Stocks

·

4:28 p.m., ·South Fifth Avenue,
Mary Skinner, HMC.
RUTLAND
II :OS a.m., Union Avenue, Jordan
Cleland, Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
II :24 a.m., Mill Street, Barbara
Colmer, HMC.
SYRACUSE
iO: 12 p.m. Wed!ICsday, Seventh
Street, Samuel Williams, PVH;
II :44 a.m., Salein Street, Mary
Hudson, PVH;
·
I p.m., West Main Street, Charlotte Crank, PVH;
5:07 p.m., Elmwood Terrace
Apartments,- Edison Johnson, VMH.

if party memben insisted.
:
"I always knew I never did anything wrong," said Sandra Recbeit
ofWorthi•1ton, field coordilllllor («
the Reform Party in Ohio and IncDana. "I'm glad they investiglled aJ!d
did their joh."
:
•
Fonner Perot supporter Anne
Saileier, whose hundreds of calls 0&gt;
petition signers brought about t'!e
investigation, said she expected
Miller's decision not to piosccute.:
·
•
•
Many Franklin County petililjn
forms were circulated by Recksep.
Several signers said they got the peJi-·
lion from someon~ who did not
come dose to matching Recksei(s

Meigs announcements

TQday's livestock report

..

-he is not a .candidate but would. llln.

COLUMBUS (AP) The
Franklin County prosecutor has
clemed Ross Perot's Refonn Party of
any wronadoinc in collecting signatures to qualify for the Nov. S ballot.
"It is my conclusion that, given
the 'state of the evidence available to
. this office at this time, prosecution for
violations of (the) Ohio Revised
Code ... is not warranted," Prosecutor Michael Miller said Thursday in
a letter to Secretary of State Bob Taft
Taft referred allegations of fake
signatures imd improper signing pr&lt;&gt;"
cedures to prosecutors in Franklin
and Montgomery counties.
The Montgomery County investigalion contipues.
Taft said Friday tbat a second p_elilion drive had qualified the party to
put a presidential candidate on Ohio's.

EMS units answer 13 calls

By The Auoclaled Preee
Sunset today will be at 8:2 I p.m.
As precipitation pushes off to the Sunrise on Saturday will be at 6:36

~:

••

Sunny Pl. Clo::dy Cloudy .

Cold fro~t slated to bring
clearing skies to region

't"E IMCREDLBL&amp;.

._,__

tee

Flurries

Berry's World

.

Probe clears Reform_.
Party of wrongdoing·.:.

OH I 0 WP attw r
Setunlay, Aprill7

~r

Fll A6Etm l.Of6ER·

The Dilly Sentinel• P 11 3

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aprll28, 1981

' 10% tin., 2ol0 rrMMi, II 10.150% opr wllpp. Cl'l!ll

~ ·

,.

-

.110 E. 8tMa St.

. ATH!Ns

982·2825

1~00-44-CELL-1

Ingelea~lcl

MIDDI,.EPORT
992-7070
342-9909
88 S. Market St. 204 W. Second St. 119 N. Main
LOGAN
.POIEROY . NEW LEXINGTON 753..3'525
BlllcllburM Appllllnce
~

8oulh of login

Nallonvllle

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·Sports

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t=rld8y, Aprtl21,1111

Pomeloy •Middleport, Ohio

.The Da.Hy Se.ntin..!}

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In the NBA t*YOW.' curtain-ralllfH',

Rockets, Knlcks,
Jazz and Hawks win

Fnct.y, Aprtl21, 1118

Andrews' grand ·slam helps Expos get 8-4Win over ·Reds
MONTReAl. (AP)- The same
"There 's a lot of team unity
tenns kept popping up in the Man- here," Andrews said. "Last year, we
treal Expos' clubhouse: Intensity, didn't have th~t .so .much. This year.
confidence and conSIStency.
you cap feel 11 msule. The .veterans
All three were factors as the are doing a great Job, and It makes
Expos ~ompleted a I0. game home- the ~ounger plarers push to do what
stand wllh an 8-2 record, beaung the they re d01ng. It s always a pat on the
Ci ncinnati Reds 8-4 Thursday night back . It's not 'Hey man, what's
for theJr seventh stra1ght wm.
wrong with you?"'
Shane ·Andrews h1t .h1s second
.After dropping two of three to
g~and slam and drove m a career- Pb1lade.lpb1a, The Expos swept three
h1~ five runs, cappmg a homestand from Pmsburgh and two each from
wh1Ch s.aw .Montreal score 56 runs St. Louis and Cincinnati.
on 83 hns, mcludmg 21 horne runs.
There's been production fro m
What:s bee n the key?
,
specific players beyond what was
"The co~~lstency of the offens!ve predicted, too. .
productron, Expos manager Feh~
Mark GrudZJelanek, handed the
· Alou sa1d. "There's no let up 1f starting job at shortstop .when Wil
we 're behind, no let up if we're Cordero was traded to Boston; has
ahead. There's· been a lot of hard · matched Cordero .offensively and
work."
played well de(ens1ve ly. He has h1t
Montreal, which sputtered offen- mall but one of the Expos 22 games
si vely' in 1995 and finished last in 1\le this year batting leadoff. He is on a
NL East, is off to its best start since major-league leading 17-game hitgoing 15-6 in 1981. The Expos tmg streak, hitting .347 and is &amp;J!long
entered Thursday's game leading the the league leaders m runs and h1ts..
league in team llattjng average, runs
" It 's the confidern:e of knowing
scored and home run s.
I'm going to be out there every day,"
The seven straight wins is the Orudz1elanek sa1d of h1s streak.
club's longest streak since it won "I'm feeling good about myself, I'm
eight straight July 18-26, 1994..
relax~d and I'm just going out and

having fun."
inninp llld relired 14 suailht before
Mike Lansi nals hitting .39 1 out Hal Morris hit a ono-ou1sinale in the
of,the No.·2 spot, sivi nglhll Expos seventh.
a 1-2 punch.
Andrews, who won Wednesday
And most notably Henry night's game with a single in the lOth
Rodriguez, batting .344, has inning, hit his third career slam off
emerged as the left-handed power reliever ;rim Pugh in the seventh He
. source the Expos lost when Larry hit a grand slam April 16 11~ 011
Walker left for Colorado via free Pblladelphia.
a~ency. He appears to haye played
Leai~ing 4-2 in the seventh, Lansh1mself out of a platoon with Siler- · ing doubled, Segui reached on a
man Obando, leading the NL in !U!Is grounder and White · walked.
with 25 and is among the leaders Andrews followed with a sOOt to Ieft'y;ith nine home ·runs. He hit six on center for his fourth borne run.
the homestand in his first 17 at-bats,
Leading 3-0 in the fifth Alou hit
includi.ng one in four ~traight ~ames. the first pitch from' John s:niley ( 1M01ses Alou, David Segut, Ron· 2) over the left-field fence for his
dell White and Darrin FletCher, who sixth home run
·
were to carry the Expos offense,
Smiley, wh~ walked ;hree and
have contributed as well. All are hit- struck out six, was charged with four
ling better .'han .300 and giVe the runs on six hits in five innings as the .
Expos a sohd hneup through the sev- Reds finished 2-8 on a IO.game road
enth spot in the order.
trip.
·
. 1 Alou homered for his SOOth
Eric Anthony hit a solo homer in
career hit Thursday as the Expos sent · the Cincinnati ninth.
.
Cincinnati to its fifth consecuti ve
Segui 's RBI single opened the ·
Joss.
scoring in the&gt;first. 'Grudzielanek had
Pedro Martinez (2- 1) allowed six an RBI single in the second.
hits in eight innings, strpck out eight
Nota: The Expos would not disand walked one. He faced one ba!- close results of an ultrasound test on
· ter over the minimum through six pitcher Carlos Perez on Wednesday

night to further examine his injured
sho!,alder. An MRI Tuesday revealed
that Perez, who has not pitched this
season after being placed on lhll dis·
abled list March 31 bas a small tear
'

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

iu muscle in the umpit liiU.... The
Expos homered in all 10 sames of
theirbomeatand.... The Reds' slrellk
of 21 strai4ht sarnes with a double
ended.

ARRIVES AT THIRD - The Melg8 U..udlra' Kelly Gilkey gets tier
len-. on the third bue t.g to beat the throw to River Valley third
beaanlai1.Belly JoMs during Thunc:llly:t ~I action at Malga High
SChool. After the Marauclera took a 12-6 victory In the completion
of the tu.penc!M game, the Ra1dara notched a 16-2 win In the ragularly·tlatad contaat. (Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

•

Eastern diamondmen get 4-1 win over Trimble
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Coac h Dan Thomas' Eastern
Eagles are up and coming, defeating
• Trimble Thursday 4- 1 on the Eagles' .
home field.
Sophomore Stevie Dur5t picked
up the win with nine strike outs, five
walks, and two scattered hits. Chris
Bailey came on io post the save in ·
lwo-thirds innings of work. He
served up a nice double play ball
fielded by Mike Smith that began a
6-4-3 double play with the tying run
at the plate. Brady Trace suffered the
loss with no strike outs and one
walk, while Zach Miller came on in
relief to post a strike out and no
walks.
Eastern hitters were' Don Goheen
'!Vith a single, Chris Bailey with a
home run (his fourth of the. year) and
a double, Jason Sheets a ~ingle , and
Eric Hill a double. Trimble hitters
were Mi~e McClelland and K.
Dugan.
In an earlier 7-2 win against Nel-

sonville-York, Eric Hill picked up
his second career victory. He fanned
three and walked just one. C. Roberts
suffered the loss with three walks
and seven strikeouts.
Tied at 2-2, Ealllem scored four
runs in the fout1h when Don Goheen
and Brian Bowen had -consecutive
singles, Bailey walked, Sheets
walked to force home a run, Hill
reached on a fi elder's choice, 'then
after two straight strikeouts, Stevens,
walked, and Smith singled. The fiasco produced four Eastern runs and a
6-2 lead . '
Eastern hitters Were Goheen with
a double and single, Bowen a single, .
and Bailey a double. Nelsonville·
York was led by Schults with .two
singles, and singles by G. Sullivan
and S. Collins. ·
Thomas said, "We're getting bet·
tcr and better, but we still have some
work to do. We are hitting the ball
better, b~t we've.got to take care of

.

lpnjpalmla
Trimble ................ I00-000-0=1 -2-3
Eastern .................OZ0.:200-0=4-5- I
WP - Gurst
LP ~ Trace

ANDREWS SCORES- Montreal's Shane AndreWs (left) trots pest "
Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubenaee and score• during the lecond
Inning of Thursday night's National League contest In Montreal;·whera the Expos won 8-4. Their HVenth consecutive victory -·~ :
achlav,cl In part because ~Andrew&amp;' grand 1I1m five Inning~ lateror~
(AP) .
.
· . .
,,

Vinton County hands
Southern .14-2 defeat
In the · continuation of a game .
started earlier in . the year, Vinton
County rolled to a 14-2 win over the
Southern Tornadoes d.uring high
school baseball action Thursday.
Matt Dill and Billy Young ·combined in the loss. Dill gave up five
runs on six strikeouts and five walks,
while allowing five .hits. Young in
three innings gave up nine runs. one
seven walks, si• hits and one strikeout.
J. Maerker picked up the victory
for the Vikings. He fanned eight and
walked two with three hits.
,. ·

Southern hitters were Kevin
Deemer, Jesse Maynard, and Jay
McKelvey. Vinton County hitters
'l'ere T. Patrick and R. Ebenson with
two hits each, T. Ruckel with three
hits, and singles by J. Ward, R. Murphy, J. Beckett and A. Ward.
Southern will host Federal Hocking tonight.
Iumu1 mlBb
Southern ................ ! 110-00 l-0=2-3-5
Vinton County. .320.025·2=14- II ·O
WP-Maerker
LP - · Dill
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Of GAWPOUS. OH.

195 Upper
River Rd.

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Scoreboard
San Frnnchco 8, Atlanla 0
Sun DicJO8, Chinp,o ,l
4os Angeles 6, Houston 4

Bas eball
AL standihgs ·
l!' L

1'&lt;1.

Gil

New York .............. 10 9 .526
Toronro .................... 9 IZ .429
Dttroil ....:..... ,........... &amp; u .:\48
Bnata~ ......................6 16 .27·]

2
4
6

Ballimort: ............... IJ

8 .6!9

·

7 ~~

Ctntral Olyldon
CLEVELAND .......lJ 7 .6l0
Chic"JO.................. I2 9 ..SJI
Milw~~t~be ............. 11
9 .550
Minnesuca .............. IO 10 .SOO
KaiUM City ............. 6 16 .27l

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2

J
· R

Wtstem Dlwlsion

Texas , ........ ............ IJ • .s .619
swtJe .................... n 9 .591
.Ci.lifot'Ria ......,........ l2 g , ..S71
OilkJAnd .. :............. :JI ·10 .Jl4

\&lt;..

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2

'Thursday's scores
Mil w::~ ukce 6, California

!'i

Min ne.stu:~

I I. Detroil I
Bnslnn ~ : Tellls J

O •it:ngu 4. Seatt le]
CLEVELAND 4, New "York J
Oaklulkl 4. Toronto ~ ( II l
8;"1ltimore .1. Kanu s Cily 2

New York {15rin&amp;hauscn J -I} a1 PiU i-burgh (Z.Smith 2-Q). 7:05p.m.
Philudelphia (Groce= -~-0) ut CIJ'liCIN·
NATI &lt;Burba 0. 1). 7Y i p.m. ·
At lanta ( AYcry 1-1) 11 1 St. Luui s
.( An.Benes 1· 21. 8:05 p.m.
Mon1reul {AIYartt. 0-0) at Colorado
(Rey noso 1· 1). 9:0$ p.m.
. Chicago (Tmchsel l· l) m Los Angeles (AStllCiO 1-2), 10:05 p.m.
'
Housron (Hampron 2· 1) at San Dieso
(Valenzuela ().I), IO:O..ll p.m.
Floridn (Brown 1-3) Dl San F~a ~ i aco
(Ferriandez 3·0).. IO:O!'i p.m.

Ouklmu.l (Johns 2· 1) at Ot!roit (Keagk
.
Scu uJ~ (JQhn sufl 4-0 J ar M i l wa uke ~
{Karl 2-1). 7 : 0~ Jl.nt
Kilnsas City (Hekhcr 1· 1) at Boston
(Clemens O.J ), 7:05 p.m.
CL EVElAND &lt;Hcuhi ser I · 2) at ...
ToroniQ(HMson 2-]), .J''\ ~ p m
Minnesolu (Rildke :l·2) AI New York
{RogL'fS 1..0) , 7 :1~ p.m.
•
Tex~ (011Yc:t 1,0) 111 Bnlii mort &lt;Wells
2-1). 7:)5 p.m.
California (Grimsley 1-0 ) 111 Chicago
{McCaskill 0-- 1). 8:05 p.m.
~- I ) . J : O:"' p . m

Sunday's games
Nt!w York al Pillsburrh. IJ5 p.m.
Philuddphia at CINCINNATI. 2: U
p.m.

Momreal :u Co lor~o. l O.Ii p.m.
Chicago al Los An geles, 4:05 p.m.
HnUston m San Dirgo, 4 :0.~ p.m.
Aorida at San fmnci~ o . 4:05 p.m.
Atlama a1S1, Louis. 8:05p.m.

Basketball

2). 1:L'ip.m.

Minnc,ola ( R o b~ rrs on 0-4} a1 New
York (Gooden O.:l), J J~ p.m.
Tc11as (Win 2- l l at Ball imort (Eric k·
son 1·1 ). 1:35 pm.
Sc:mllle (H1h:hco.:k J-0) ar Milwuukcc
(Bones 1-.~ l. 2:05 p.m:
Callrorn in (" bbotl 0· 3) :u Chicnliu
(feroandez. J- 1l. ]'05,P.l.l!L- - . . . . , - -

Kanw Cil:y al 8oS:!on, I:05 p.m
CLEVELAND at Toronto, 1 :0~ p.m.
Oakland (II ~ ltoi t , l : l~ p . m.
fdi nnesotn nt New York. I :3S p.m.
TexQJ Ill Baltimore, 1:3.Cj p.m.
C..lifornia at Ch~go 2:05 p.m.
Si;allk: at Milwnukee 2:05 p.m.

Ne w York 106, CL EV ELAND 8) ;
New York lendueries .1 -0

14

!ill
1 ~·

j:~
6
6~

.391

CentrallHwlsion
.522

St. Louia ....... ~., ...... 12 · I I
HouSion .............. ,.. II II

ll

Pinsburgh .......... ,.. .10 12

Transactions
'·
Amerian L"e lpe
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DETROLT TIGERS:.Optioned RHP
Cline Sadowsky lo Toledo of the lntema· .

To Be Published

riomd le;~Jue . R:tHP Jose Uma
.,. From Toledo.

I\&lt;.,

2~

7 .682
San F111ncisco ........ II I I .500
Los An,eles....... ,... ll 12 .478
Colorlldo ................IO ) I .476

4

4~

4~

LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Plna:d

(YOUR MOTHER'S
NAME)

RHP Darren Hall on the IS·day disabled
list. R ec aU~d RHP Jim Brvike (rom Albu·
querque of !he hcific Coas1 lalaue.

SAN FRANCISCOGIANTS: Pl"''td

RHP Rich Del.uci1.1 on a rehabililalion DS·
signment wi~ San Jose of 1ht California

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND
SUSAN

l...cllSUC.

··Fiori(la4, Plnobullh 1
. J'llllldelphia 7. Colorodo I

.

CAROLINA PAiffiiERS: As~&lt;ed ro

·--

Make Pri lc loa Ontl·

·

COfiiTOCt .

.(YOUR MOTHER'S
' NAME) ·
'

ForwThil Specifll
Mother'a Day 'liibute Is
- MomkJ:r,_~ay 6, 12 Noon.

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Sastern softballers beat
~elsonville-York 11-0

LOVE,
JOHN, JOE
AND .

•

De~

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· (NBC)

Houston :u L.A. Lakers, 1:30 p.m.

Sunday's games
Dctro i1w Ori!Uido, 12:30 p.m. (NBC)
Phoeni " a! San An lonio, ] p.m.
&lt;NBC)

Miami ac O.icaj o, S:)() p.m. (NBC) '
~-romenro ar Seattle,~ p.m. (TNT),,

Hockey

SUS~N

',The

Thursday's
nrst-round scores

8 o11on 6. Florida 2: fkwida lead• IC·

., rie;s J. j

Philodelpll;a 4, T - Bay: l'hlllde~

ondo lelduerio&amp; ).2

r-----------~----~--------,
... $10.00
B. 1~5 GREETING w/PICTURE...$13.00 I
I CIRCLE ONE. A. lX3 GREETING
·
(PLEASE PRINT or TYPE)

•I MOTJIEil'S NAME:
I v~~

·I

NHL playoffs

•

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Fill Out The Fonn Below and Drop Off With Payment To
,
The Daily Sentinel "Motber's Dl,ly"
· · '
P:O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OHio 45769

I

Toronto!!. St. Louis 4 ~on; St. Louis
leads seria ).2
Colonodo '· VIIIICOUm 4 (00'); Col·

'

HApPY
MOTHER'S DAY

WR Marc us Dowdell. 'ffi Oscar McBride,
LB Simon Shaaks !md RB Ryan Trrry.
. Re-sijnr_d Jerry Hardaway, scout
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p~~;a te.dsrericl).l

Thursday's SCORI
Moonoal 8, CINCINNATI 4
New YOft 9. St. Louio3

on errors.
Southern then broke the game
open with a I O.run sixth inning.
Southern hitters were Cynthia CalddGfeating Vinton County 19-7 Thurs- well with a single, lonna Manuel
ddy night. · .
.
. with a single and two walks, Sammi
:.The game was a continuation of Sisson two doubles, Jennifer Cuma tame that began on April4.
mins a single, Keri Caldwell a sin·
~Jennifer Lawrence picked up the
gle and Amy Northup with three sinvi~tory on !he mound for Southern,
gles.
str~king out two ·and walking three.
' For Vinton County; Hale was 3Waters and Hale combined in post- 4, while Liz Zion, Peck and Waters
ing the loss for Vinton County.
· each had two hits and singles each by
;southern took an 8-2 lead in the Rutherford and Haulk.
thrrd when lonna Manuel singled,
Southern will bust Federal HockAtjlber Thomas walked. Bea Lisle ing tonight.
w'lked, ~ammi Sisson doubled, Jen- lpniu mlBb
.
.
nifer Cummins walked, Keri Cald- Southern.........:008.0 I(I 0)-0= 19-9-3
well had a sacrifice Oy; Amy Vinton County... 200-020.4=8·11-6
N~hup singled, Manuel walked
WP- Lawrence
anll Thomas arid Lisle each reached
LP-Waters

ect its record to II· 3 overall and 9·1
ill'tbe very tough Hocking Division
at the .Tri-Valley Conference by

HAPPY
MOTHER'S DAY

The DaUy Sentinel

New Ynrk al CLEVELAND. I p.m.

Wdttrn Dh-Illon

•=The Southern softball team boost-

(PICTURE)

N11tlonal IAaaue
FLORIDA MA\LINS: Clmimed OF
MMqui ~ Riley otT w~s fronl tile Cali·
fomia Angels and optioned him to Char·
lotte of the lnte(llatioaal lea&amp;ue. ·

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I YOUUDDIESS:
I .. CJTY,'STATE:
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MADCJIEC&amp; ..AYAJIU:TOTBEDAILYSIMlNIL

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River Valley's hitters were Sarah
Meigs and River Valley split two
non-league softball games Thursolay Ward (2·3, a double, two stolen
evening at ~eigs High School.
· bases and an RBI), Jones (24, a douIn the first contest the Marauders ble &amp; an RBI), Mulford (2·4 &amp; two
scorell six runs in the final two RBis), Staton (1 -2 &amp; two stolen
innings to post a 12-.6 victory over bases), Denney ( 1-4, a triple and an
the Raiders, with the contest being RBI) and Lindsey Peters ( 1-4 &amp; an
the completion of a game that was · RBI).
.
started April 9 and was postponed
Raider head coach Amy Shriver
because of bad weather. The game was ejected in the second inning of
restaned after five innings, with the the second game protesting a calL
score tied at 5-5. In the second game She will miss the next two games
the Raiders posted a 16-2 win.
according to Ohio High Scool Ath·
· Meigs broke the tie in the first letic Association rules.
contest with ~ single run in the sixth lgnip1 totele=IIIIP· 11.1Dt
inning. Julie King walked, advanced Meigs ............. 220.301 -6=12-13=5
to second when Jessica McElroy was River Valley........ l!B-010.0=6-6-4
hit by a pitch. King ·then ·came
WP-Fackl~r
LP-Mulford
around to score on Stephanie Stewan's single.
.
lgnjgs Wele·'!CIII•r PIU
: The Marauders broke the game · River Valley...... 130.030.9=16-10.0
wide open in the seventh by sending Meigs ...................000-002-0=2-4-4
nine girls io the plate and scoring six
WP.- Eddy
·rims in the process. Kelly Gilkey had
LP-Fackler
a:single and two RBis for Meigs in
Marauders blast
li)e inning.
Aleunder 17-11
; Emily Fackler pi~ked ~p the. win
On Wednesday evening the
for Meigs. Cassey Sanford added a Marauders broke a six game losing
double and triple for Meigs. McEl- streak and pounding Alexander 27roy added a pair of singles.
II . Meigs pounded out 22 hist
• River Valley'~ pitchers- Megan enroute to the .victory.
Mulfoid and Betty Jones - comKipg ~ad four singles to lead
bined to strike out six and walk eight. Meigs. Stewart, Cotterill, Lee and
·· River Valley's hitters were Marie Melissa .Ramsburg bad three hits
Denney (2-4), Gretchen _Cloak, each for Meigs. Cotterill had two
kber Staton (both 1·2),KariAider· double and a triple and five RB!s.
man and Erin Conley (both 1-3).
Cotterill picked up the win with
'"
Fackler
coming on in the fifth
.
In the second game the Raiders inning. Heather Lovsey, the first of
held a 7-0 lead heading into tbe final ·- three Spartan pitchers, picked up the
inhing before exploding for nine runs loss.
·
·
oil four errors, three walks a hit bat·
Meigs jumped l!!Ut to an early 4·
ter and a double by Marie Denney to 0 lead, but Alexander came back in
pOst the win.
the bottom of the inning to take a 8' Terri Eddy picked up the win for 4 lead. Meigs platejl five runs in the
RjverValley, getting five strikeouts second inning and sent 21· batters to
aQd giving up five walks and four the plate in the fifth inning plating 15
biJs. Fackler took the loss with relief runs to blow the game open. ·
help from King. ·
•

$outhern softball crew
tpps Vinton ·county 19-7

1x5 Greeting
whh

Friday; May Jo

SEATiLE MARIN RS : P1aced RliP
Bobby Ayala on the IS-day disabled list.
C.illled up RHP Rafael Carmona rrom
Tacoma of I~ Pacific Coast,League.

Meigs·and River Valley
split softball contests ·

••

'S..ball .
·

SaturdaJ's games

san Dieao.............. IS

,

wy

..

Miami Ill Olic:tgo, 9:30p.m. (TBSl
Suc rume nlo at SeaUie . IO:JO p.m.

~
I~

.500
.454
.4S4

CINCINNATI .......... 9 13 .409

I

til Bruton, 7:30 p.m., irncces·

· terms wilh lB Duane Dicken:
DALLAS COWBOYS : Siancd T
Adant11 92, Indian::~ 80: Adama leads
Tcka Brown, C Kevin Dogins, WR Mark
series 1·0
Harris, DT Mike Harrison, LB Erri ck Her·
U1 111l 110, Portland 102: U1ah leai.ls
rin. TE Rob Higbee, G ~Tony Hubon; LD
stdes 1·0
Kerry Moc k, FB Harold Morro w, CB
Houswn 87, L.A. Lakers !13: Houston
D_uster Owens, R~ Jarvis Perry, ~8 Rea·
leads: se ries 1·0
g~e: Relief, QB Scou Semp!impheher. WR
Tonight's pmes
~
Jason S htlle~ . DE Hoy w~od ~if'nmons ,
.
S
.
DE Rudy SIJIIth, P Cnmeron Tnck~y and
.De• ron m Orlando.~ P·!l'· fTB )
. f~ Germnine Williams.
Ptitmrtr~·n""Smm-A'n"tOili"O~ ·8"·p-:-m~----- '"'--9ENV£R BRONCOS · Si&amp;ne!d RB

Atlurlta at lndi aaa, 8 p.m. (l'NT)
Ponland ::11 U!ah, 10:)0 p.m. (TNT)

Eastern Dl•biun
Idlll.
l!' L .....
Montreal.. ........... I ~ 7 .682
Phil:ldelphin ........... l l 10 . ~24
Atlanlu ... ................ IJ II .522
New York.. .............. 8 12 .400

•
•

•

,.FI ~rido:l

tNBC)

NL standings

Cb iCA~O .................. IO

W)'

FootbaU
ARIZONA CARDINALS: Sigoed

Thursday's
first-round scores

(TNH

~· .
'
0
This Mother's Day, a heartfel~ ''thank you" could be
the best gift you could ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.
'

N•tionlll Football U.ue

NBA playoffs

(TNl)

Sunday's games

IVur·M om

Pit11burg~ ~ Washington, J p.m.
N ~ Y. Rangtts al ~nlreal , l p.m.
Detroil Qt Winnlpea. 3 p.m.. i( rteeel ·

t

(Osborne 1· 1),2:15 p.m.
'
Moou-eal (Cormier 1-1 ) at Colorndo
(Freeman 2·2),l0S p.n"t
Flortda'( Burkell l·.l ) :.1 San Francisco
(M.lriler 1-J),A:05 p.m.
New York (Wilson 1-1) nt Pinaburgh ·
tDarwin 2·2). 7:05 p.m
Chkugo (Navarro 0.)) al Los Ange·
les (Candiuui 1·2). 10:05 p.m.
Housto n IReynokJs ].J) a1 San Di.:go
IAshby J.O), lO:O.Ii p.m.

games

Sunday's games

Allanta (MBddu x 3- 1) at Sl . Louis

Saturday's games '
Kansas ~i l )l (A ppier I· J) a1 Bo$1on
{St: le t. l). 1. 0~ p.m.
CL EVELAND ( Nr~gy J.O) :~t Toronto
(Quanlrill (). J ). I:O.S p.m.
Oakland (Re}"ls 2 · ~ J at Derroi r Cl.irn 1·

Sal~rday's

Boston u1 F1oridD, I p.m.
Phil~lphia M T3mpa Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Toronlo at Sl. Louis, 7:30p.m.
ColocaOO nl VancQUvcr, 10:30 p.m.

Saturda]''s games
Phil ndelpllia (Mulholland 2·2 ) ,at
CINCINNATI(Ponugnl O.Jl.l:ll p.m.

1'onight's games

.Fiorida ................... ~.9

Wl"!ltpe&amp; ac De~ron. 7::.0 p.m. .

1'onighl'sgames ·

Ea1ttrn Diwlsion

Iwn

Tonight's games
WashinJ!OAoa1 Pill$bur&amp;h. 7:30p.m.
M~t~l arN . Y. ~gers. 7:30p.m.

I'
I
I
' I

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

....

with II :12 remaining, they went cold
from the field llld missed II stnight
shots. Olajuwon had two consecutive
hooks and a tap-in in a 13-0 run that
pot Houston in control.
The Lakm didn't score again
until 3:23 remained. Los Angeles
almost made up a IO.point deficit in
the final 100 seconds, but Drexler
maile the second ·of two free throws
for a four-point pad with 3 112 ·seconds left.
The Rockets made only two
three-pointers to the takers' nine,
but they turned the ball over j ust 10
times and forced Los Angeles into 22
miscues.
Cedric Ceballos sc,ored 22 points,
Johnson hlld 20 and Eddie Jones 19.
Nick Van Exel, playing for the first
time aftef a seven-game suspension,
went just 1-for-11 from the field.
"We had ihe shots, but we just
didn 't knock them doWn," Johnson
said. " He (coach Del Harris) has got
me playing something different. It's
weird for me. And when I tried to
tum it on, it wasn 't there."
Kn1cks 106, Cavaliers 83
The Knicks finished just two
three-pointers short of the NBA
record set last' year byHouston.
. Cleveland choS. to' 'tlouble- and
triple-team Patrick Ewing in the
low post, and that left plenty of open
room on the perimeter.
· "We' ve got a lot of guys on this
team who can shoot. We made the
pass to find the open man, but it's
am!Wng to shoot that percentage."
coach Jeff Vari Gundy said.
New York outscored Cleveland
37-16 in the fourth quarter and
totaled 66 points in the second half
against a team that set an NBA
record by allowing just 88.5 points
a game during the regular seaSon.
Ewing scored 23 points including the eighth three-point shot
of his playoff career - and John
Starks six three-pointers among his
21 points, Charles Oakley had 17
points and Hubert Davis five treys.
Dan Majerle had 23 points off the
bench for Cleveland, which .scored
·just eight points in the last nine min-

AP BnlssliAII Wllw

.
Evans with two singleS. Patsy AeikEastern Eagles contmued
er singled .and Martie Holter each
th~ir dominance of league foes with
an' ll-0 win over Nelsonville-York. singled also.
The lone Buckeye hitters were
iRe~ Evans picked up yet
·
anether win Qn the mound for East- J'.!CGee and Shaffer.
Eastern
will
h~t
Alexander
Monenl (8-1), fanning eight, walking fO!lr
a~ hurling a two bitter along the . day and go to River Valley Thesday.
wa). McGee suffered the loss for the lnoip1 bdlll
B*keyes (0.10). She gave up nine Nelsonville· York ..000-()()()..(}::()-2-1
h!tj, struck out eight and walked Eastern ................031-430.x= 11-9- 1
WP-Evans
CIFt. ·
....
LP-McGee
:ro open the game, Evans struck
oui two of the first three batters she

Traek aad field

PHILADELPHIA

(AP)

-

Olympic marathon qualifier Anne
Marie Lauck won the I0,000 meters
in the Penn Relays with a meet·
record time of 32 minutes, 5.64 sec·
onds, well under the 33:24 needed to
qualify duringlhe Olympic tri~s.

'. J',
'

·---..,'.'~: . .1

.L..,.,........o..;_ _o.;,.._.,:PI:...,._0_·"!'-"!'8"!'8_0_..
--..

•

Hawks 92, Pacers 80
With Miller out with a fractured
eye socket, ihe Pacers did not have
a go-to guy in the fourth quarter. It
shO)IIed, too, as Indiana shot just 4for-17 and was outscored 24-12 in
the period.
Steve- Smith scored 27 points,
matchin_g his playoff career-high, .
Christian Laettner added 14 points
and Craig Ehlo.scored all ·12 of his '
points on three-pointers in the second quarter.
"They got a lot of offensive
rebounds. The beginning .of the
fourth quarter, we just self-destructed and they took it 'to us. We took
some horrible shots and passed up
some good shots," Indiana coach
Larry Brown said. ·

-Sports briefs--

Foster Homes.are needed for · ·.
•. ·
· •
· ·
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call "2-2117 for Information and
t be rt f th ft rt

:-

"If we would have lost this ballgame. I would have felt the 'I'Orst
I've ever felt as a ballpft.yer, because
of all the missed free throws," Malone said.
._
Hornacek had 3.0 points on 10-of13 shooting and Stockton's 23 assists
were one shy of the NBA playoff ,
record he shares with Magic Johnson.
The Jazz trailed by eight points
after three quarters, but outscored the
Blazers 37:21 in the final period. :
Bryon Russell had all 12 of his
points in the final period.
•
"In the 'playoffs you're going to
be playing against good people every
night and you liave to play all.48 '
minutes," Blazers coach PJ. Carlesimo said.

AMHERST, Mass. (AP)- Marcus Camby, college basketball's
player of the year,' plans pass up his
senior season at Massachusetts to
enter t~e NBA draft, according to
published reports tOday.
The Boston Globe and Boston
Herald, citing sources close to the
Massachusens program, said Camby
will announce his decision during a
news conference Monday.
Neither Camby, a 6-foot- 11 junior
center, from Hanford, Conn., nor
coach John Cali pari could be reached
for comment.
If Camby goes through with his
·plans, he likely would be one of the
top three players chosen in the draft.
The Globe's source said Camby
had not signed with an agent, which
wot~ld allow him to return to school
if he changes his mind. Underclassmen have until May 12 to declare
their eligibility, but can rescind their
decision anytime before the June 26
draft is held.
:·Basically, he wants to test the
waters, to see how things unfold
leading up to the draft," the source '
told the Globe.
Camby led UMass to its first trip
,to the NCAA Final Four, averaging
20.5 points, 8.2, rebounds and 3.9
blocks last season.
·

.

ern~tern bitten were Mayle ; ith

LAYUP TIME comes for Clevelend't TarreiiBI'Indon (1 ), who geta
In front of the Naw York Knlcks' Patrick Ewing (behind Brandon) and
Charles Oakley (far right) In the ftrat quarter of the NBA playoff serlet.
opener In Cleveland, where the Knlcks won 106-83. CAP)
.

Camby plans
to enter
NBAdraft

IT . "'liES
li
·
111111
· . TO
1.co••UNITY
. PROTECT ACHILD ·

faded. then
sttuck
the sideh~lf
in the
seq&gt;nd
inning.
In out
Eastern's
of · ·
thefsecond, Mindy Sampson walked,
Ev; ns had an RBI single and lull
Hayman ·reached on an error before
Kim Mayle slammed a misplayed
double to left that drove in two runs
fbr,a 4-0 Eastem lead.
•
fromthatpointonitwasaiiS.·
three hit,; a double ll1d two sinJies;
NiCole ~elaon with two sinaJes and

One night into lhll playoffs, and
already a week's worth of questions
have been partially answered.
Can the Houston Rockets maintain their championship form ?
Apparently so.
Can the New York Knicks summon OIJC last gasp from their aging
team? Yup.
Can anybody on Portland stop
Karl Malone? Nope.
Can Indiana survive without Reg.
gie Miller? Apparently not.
The NBA playoffs began Thursday night, and somehow Michael
Jordan and the Chicago Bulls didn't
manage to dominate the spotlight.
Instead, the two-time defending
champion Rockets began this post·
season the way they dominated the
last one - winning on the road with
all tbi:ir confidence intact.
Hakeem Olajuwon had 33 points,
eight rebounds and five steals, Clyde
Drexler scored 21 points and the
Rockets held Los Angeles scoreless
for almost an eight-minute stratch in
the fourth quarter of an 87-83 victGry. .
"We've been together for a while.
We know how to win when it comes
down to it," Olajuwon said.
"It was a Rocket game, getting
the game under control, getting the
ball in the right people's hands,
doing the little things. These guys
focused so quickly it's amazing, "
coach Rudy Tomjanovich said.
The Rockets, who have won their ·
last eight road games in the postsea·
son, were one of three teams to come
B)"ay with victories on the road.
The Knicks set a team record with
17 three-pointers, missing only five
times from behind the arc, and had
a 20-0 run in the .fourth quarter of a
106-83 trounciong of the Cleveland
Cavaliers.
Utah got 33 points from Malone
on 14-of-21 shooting - surviving
his 5-for-15 effort from ·the free·
throw line - and 23 assists from
John Stockton in a 110-102 home
victory over Port!'and.
The Atlanta Hawks took advan- ute ~.
Jazz 110, 'fraU Blazers 102
tage of Miller's absence and held the
Malone and Stockton kept Utah
Pacers to just 12 points in the fourth
quarter of_a 92·80 victory at Indiana. in charge even though it .missed i 9
All four series resume Satu~day, of 48 foul shots.
. and the 'Rockets, Knicks, Jazz and
. Hawks.have history on their side..In
124 previous best-of-5 series, the
winner of-Game I has gone on to
win 99 times:
Rockets 97, L11kers 83
After Magic Johnson's threepoint play put the Lakers up 69·65

,..,-

-:;-

i

1995
:::r.::::....~-1..!992~ ~~~-t.:....,...u1 FOmRoo:::.._l,1i999595i~~E~RA~MMI
KING CAB ~E
DAKOTA LE
RANGER
2500, 4X4, SLT
5spd., sir, can., p. mirrors,
low 11ills,

CICab, auto.,
cruise, lilt, low

V·6,

air,

5speed,

""''''"

V· tO, all

, auto., 1-

�.. ...-·

'

•

~

•

·•••••l*t.
.Attempts.to transform immigration bill fail in Senate
Page I • The o.lly Saallnel

Pom •rov

By CAROLYN SKORNI!Ck
.
AIIOCiabld P1111 Wrllw
WASHINGTON - Tho SeiiiiiC fended oft" lltempcs 10 include C1lls in lesal
immiJI'&amp;tion in an illesal immigration bill despile projections thai the le1al
in nux will soar this year.
"The lesislation before the Selllle rilhl now aims to cnct down on peopie who break lhe rules, people who 'Violate the laws, people who seek 10
come to this country wilhout having proper documentation to take advantsge of the benefits of America," Sen. Spencer Abnlwn, R-Mich., said.
Legal immigrants, on lhe olher hud, ''want to come 10 this country in a
positive and constructive way to make a contribution, to play by lhe rules
and ... to make a great, great addition to our American family," he said.
The bipartisan, 80-20 vote Thursday killing 1111 amendment by Sen. Alan
Simpson, R-Wyo., to reduce family-sponsored immigration was followed by
a 74-26 rejection of a similar amendment by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. .
The votes came despite new government projections thai legal immigra.
tion ,;,ill zoom.41 percent this year, folloWing last year's 10.4 percent decline.

Ohio

FBI seems to be making a serious November.
effort to negotiate a peaceful resoluBroderick and her co-defendants
tion wilh the Freemen. Negotiations allegedly earned more than $300,000
were not pan of the assault at Ruby . a monlh from lhe seminars.
Ridge, he said.
The olher defendants are Adolf
Weaver's wife and soil were killed · Karl Hoch of Lorna Linda, his daughby federal agents during the 1992 ter, Laura Marie Hoey of Moreno
siege at his cabin in Ruby Rid~e . Valley, Barry Switzer of Santa ClariGritz helped negotiate Weaver's sur- ta and Julian Cheney. Cheney also is
render.
·
charged wilh obstruction of justice.
Weaver said he hopes to help perThe Freemen contend they are not
suade the Freemen to surrender and subject to federal or ·state laws, but
fight in the courts.
are sovereign citizens of their own
"There are only two wavs lhat country and are governed only by .
(the standoff) can end," Weaver said. . common law.
"They can come out peacefully, or
The group issued a 19-page paper ·
lhe FBI will eventually go in. Thursd,ay, oul)ininglheir legal arguThey've made their point. Now lhey ments justifying lheir actions, starting
should come out and argue lheir case from lhe premise that the United
to the public."
States is bankrupt.
In California Thursday, five peoThe FBI has allowed relatives to
ple were indicted on charges of mail visit the Freemen, and four people
fraud, counterfeiting and conspiracy. spent about an hour in the compound.
Prosecutors believe they learned
State Rep. Karl Ohs, R-Harrison,
of the check scheme at a seminar and John Connor Jr., the state attortaught by LeRoy Schweitzer, 56, a ney general's top special prosecutor
leader of lhe Freemen group in Mon- from Helena, also met with the
tsna. The California indictment Freemen for a second consecutive
alleges lhat M. Elizabeth Broderick day. They did not speak with
of Palmdale began holding similar reponers.
seminars in southern California last

~

A poc.tol1c
Q . u ol Jo- Brill"~: I
VanZoadl IIIII W..t

DAYTON (AP) - .Authorities which was ,gutted in Wednesday · learned abuut l"idnight Wednesday
that transients may have-been using
were trying to dete.nnine whelher two night's fire.
The Montgomery Coun~y coro- the building.
.
men who died in an ,arson fire at a
ner's
office
was
trying
to
identify
lhe
Willie
Hooper,
a
Hlll'l'ison
Townfonner tavern may have been
bodies,
fire
Lt.
David
Richardson
ship
fire
investigator
called
to the
vaJrants known to have frequented
said.
scene because he has contacts with
the building.
Fire officials originally lhought no lhe homeless, said concerns aboutlhe
Investigators on Thursday found
the bodies of two men in the rubble one was injured in the fire. But Fire . men increased after lhey were not
· of the three-story brick building, Chief Robert Zicklcr said authorities seen at homeless shelters Thursday.
'
The Miami Valley Urban Search
and Rescue Task Force used special· lytraineddogstosearchthebuilding
Thursday.
The following land transfers were
Deed·, Home National Bank to
After finding the bodies, investirecorded recently in . lhe office of Ralph F. and Debra Offe~berger, . gators determined there were no othMeigs County Recorder Emmogene Syracuse lot;
er victims and ended the search
Hamilton:
·
Right of way, Fannie and Sol around 9 p.m., Richardson said.
Deed, OMEGA JV5 tli Thomas L. Bigley to Energy Search Incorporat·
and Betty H. Boggs, Oliye, 6. 122 ed, Olive, eight acres;
Right of way, Marvln, Dohrman,
acres;
Deed, Mark A. and Nancy S. Phyllis and Darlene Reed to Energy
Grueser to Mark A. and Nancy S. Search Incorporated, Olive, 40 acres;
Grueser, Nancy S. Grueser Trust,
Right of way, Facemyer Lumber
Bedford parcels;
Company to Energy Search IncorpoDeed, Sue Zirkle to Brent Zirkle, rated, Olive, 40 acres;
Pomeroy paacels;
Right of way, Howard L. and 'BarDeed, Terry L. Melheney to Gary bara J. Barber to Energy Search
L. Ensinger and Leora Skivers, Salem Incorporated, Olive, 35 acres;
Auto. tnJna., 4.3 Yartax motor,
· parcels;
18"1lrM, goocllrUCII. ..
Right of way, Terry E. and Janice
Deed. Brian E. and Brenda K. K. Hill to Energy Search IncorpomtJohnson to Ernel M. Spires, Pomeroy ed, Olive, 36 acres;
parcel;
.
Right of way, Marvin ·and MarM FORD 1'1110 I oyl. 'HID. n.,
Deed, Laverne G. and G' kl J. jorie J. Keebaugh 10 Energy Seerch
long bid.-......__ ...:.......~
Chase to Wayne M. and Pauline Incorporated, Olive, 3~.4 acres;
88 BUICK ·BKYHAWK C DR.
Aulo., .... .....,
......
Chase, Scipio parcels;
Right of way, Marvin and MarDeed, Wayne M. and Pauline jorie J. Keebaugh 10 Energy Search
M fORD LTD 2 DR.
CROWN VICTORIA
'Chase to Laverne G. and Gail J. In~rated, Olive, 64 acres;
13,1100
. . . . ml.........- ...$2211
Chase, Bedford parcels;
· Right of way, Ray Barber Jr. to
lllny c... •Trucb • 4114'8
Affidavit, Linda R. Warner to Energy Search Incorporated, Olive,
•v... 110 clloolllroml
Virgil C. and Mary D. King;
eight acres;
Deed, Virgil C. and Mary D. King
Your LUI Stop Car Sllop
Deed, James E. and Linda B.
to Steven Reitrnire, Bedford parcels, Keesee to Victory Biptist Dt~h.
3.058 acres;
Middleport corrective "-!;
Deeci, Hoole National Bank to · Affidavit, Leab Jue Swatzel. to
Charles and OWlcne M. Estep, ~)'I'll.· Charles E. Swatzel, Pom.eroy.
cuse lot;

570
St.,
Sunday school-9:45a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m..ud 7 p.m.
Wednellday SeiVice • 7.p.m.

Puaor: Les Hayman

.
Rulllllld

"-5511-11122
Eltllllllltetl1-

Pllone IIIH211
&amp;llllllhld 11110

Pllont 555 4431_

RI&lt;IIM Flnllapllsl
Pastor: Rev. Larry Haley
Youth Pastor: Aaron Young
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Sllnr Rua Baptist
Pastor: Bill Ulll•,
Sunday S.hool • I Oa.m.
Wonbip. II a.m., 7 :~0 p.m.
Wednesday Services·l:30 p.m.

80 Years

78·Years

Acme Rentals

Vlrcap Services

Ph-S&amp;M782
Elllblllhld 1815

Phllllt 555 11242
Elfllllllltd 1117

•

70 Years

67 Years

The Geist

E·Z Motor Service

Phone ss5-t245
EstlbllaiMd 1825

MOTORS

.

'

.r

75 Year
McGinty Building

Betblebtm BOpclst
Racine, Ofl
Plllor : Daniel Benline
,, Woilhip- 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Studf • 7:00p.m. Wellnesday

Lo-lllo~Cburdo
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 P•"'•
Wedneoday Setvi6i J:30 p,m, ·

Phone 555 ....
Elllblllhld 1eM

60 Years

Years

Coin &amp;Stamp Center
PhoneiiU-1118
Elllllllahed 1135

Phone SS5 8585
Ellllllllhld 1141

52 Years
Ball Security BOnde
Phone 555 elY
Eltlllll1hld 11143

44 Years 40 Years
Kl;amer &amp;Sons.

S&amp;M LandscaPing ·

Phont 555-t777

Ph01lt5555454
Elllblllhld 1155 .

EIIIIIIIIIMcl 1e1

Fonst Roo Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship ·I I a.m.
ML MorlaiJ Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St.• Middleport
Paslor: Rev. Gm&gt;ert Cnia. Jr.
Sunday Schoo(· 9:30 a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.in. ·
Aatlqoily Baptist
Sunday S.hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m. .
Thu!Sday Services - 7:30p.m.

'
Rot._. Fftt Will Baptist

Rolload
. Sunday Sebool· 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services ~ 7 p.m·.
Salem Ctater
· Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School • ~ 15 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m. I

... . .

~··

-· .. ' •

....,~ •...,...~ ·~.J

of Liller Boy Soleu
Ponland·Racine R.d.
Putor: Janice Danner
Sundoy S.hool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
~ednesday Services-7:30p.m.

1

~:,_

•·

. Rtmlock G....,Ji'O U'Cil ·'
... Geni Zopp .
Sunday ·SChool • 19::!0 a.m. •
Worship. 9:30 a,m., 7 p.m.

·- -

SaowvUie
Sunday ~hool • 10 a.m.

Reorp~ CIJ111&lt;h of J01111~

• Roecla.W. Oon:k or Christ

.wonhip • 9 a.m.

Belllaay
PastOr: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wed~y Services ·IO.o.m.

.-: · -~. '11ii O•rcli or Jnu

.CbrUI oli.olletoDo1Saials
St. Rt 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday S.hoollO::ZO.ll a.m.
Relief Society/PrieSihood II :05·12:00 noon
Sacrament Seivice 9·t0:15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, .lsi Thurs. -~ p.m.

Pastor: Philip Slum
Sunday School: 9130 a.m.
Worship SeiVi&lt;e: 10:30 a.m.· ·
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Lutheran

HUtlord CIJ..-.la ol Cloilslla
CIJ-Uotoa
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor; Rev. David McMal)iS
Sunday Sehoul · II a.m..
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30 P·l!l·
Wednesday SeiVices • 7:30 ~.m.

Church of God
ML M.,Pil CIJal'&lt;b oi.Gocl
Racine
.
Pastor: Rev. Jamea Satterfield
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m. .
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Oar Soriour Lotlleru Cloan:b
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Jntrim putors: George C. Weintk ·
Sunday School • I 0:00 a.m. ·
\Vorship • II a.m. .

East Lttart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Suadsy School - tO o.m.
Worship • 9 ·a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

St. Pout Llllbonn C!Jun:ll
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St, Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spalding
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
. Worship · II a.m.
.

Roclne
Pastor : Brian Harkn~
Sunday S.hool · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.

Gnlaom Ualted Melllodllt
Worship-9:30a.m. (lsi .t 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3nl.t 41h Sun)
•Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

S y - Flnl Ch-....b of Geld
Apple 1nd Second Sts. , ·
Pastor: Rev. David RusseU·
Sunday SchoOl and Worship- tO •·!11·
Evenin&amp; Setvi~s- 7:30p.m,.
Wednesday Se1V1ces • 7:30 p.m. ·

Hocld ........ Cbon:h
Gnnd Sireel
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • It a.m.
Wedncoday Servioes • 8 p.m.

Moip Coopend•&lt; Porllh
NortbeootCluaaor
All'rod

Catholic

CbHier Cbun:h of God
s . R. 248 &amp; Riebel Road, Chesler
Pastor: Rev. William D. Hinds ,
Sunday S.l)o&lt;&gt;l • 9;30 a.m. · '
Wonh1p • 6 P..m.:
-•
.
Wedftesda'y, 7 p.m. Famd~ Trainina ttour

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship. II a.m., 6:30p.m.

TorrbCburch
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
.Wonhip -10:30 a.m.

Ch-r
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m. .
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
ThuJSday Services- 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Rldoe Ftnt

25 ·Years

llfci.Care Center Inc. Trlskett PlltJ Center
1M2

Pllont 555 t855

!tllblllhld 1-

o-•

of ... N...,...
. PaoiOI: Scott Rose
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

I

Poslor: =andolph
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Suilday
School • 10:30 a.m.
.

.

Middleport Cloarrb oftbe Nuanae
. P111or: G•eaory A. Cuntliff
Sunday S.hool • 9:30a.m.

...

I

30 Years

Cool•lllo Ualled Methodist Pertoll
Pastor: Helen Kline
CooMik Churrh
Main .t Fiflh Si.
Sunday S.hool • 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 9 a.m.
Tuellday Services - 7 p.m.

BetMICII""'b
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday'Sc:hool- 9 a.m.
· Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servj...es • 10 a.m.

ML Olivo Ullltod Metllodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: R.ev.•Ralph Spi~
Sunday ·S.hool· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
. ThuJSday. Services : 7 p.m.

',

Chlin:h ol God ol Proplle&lt;y
OJ. While Rd. off Si. Rt. ttl()
Pasror: P.J. Chapman
'
Sunday S.hooi·IO a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Momla&amp; Stor
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 9:45a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servioes · 7:30p.m.
Sunoa
Pasror: Kenne1h Baker
Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Worship - 10:45 a.m . (1st .t Jrd Sun)

Un1ted Methodist

llotlud Churrb of God
PlSior: Gregory L Sears
Sunday S.hool • 10 a.m.
Woiship- ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday .Services· 7 p.m.

C1111110l
Pa•tor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m. (2nd .t 4th Sun)

St. J-LIItbt,_ Chorrh
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dawn Sv-lding
Worship . 9:00a.m.
Sunday School • I 0:00 a.m.

Christ1an Union

· Salem St . .
Pastor: Rev. Paul T1ylor
Sunday S.hool· 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wednellday ServiOCI - 7 p.m.

. Saend Heart C a - CIJIII'dl
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
· PutOI: Rev. Walter E. Hemz
Sat .. q.n. 4:'45-5: l5p.m.; Mus· 1:30 p.m.
Sun. Con. -8:45-9: !Sa.m.,
.
Sun. M. . - 9:30a.m.
Dailey-Mall - 8:30 a.m.

-~

Pastor: Ke11h Rader
Sunday S.hool • 9: IS a.m.
Worshif. 10 a.m.
'
Youlh Fellowship, Sunday· 6 p.m.

"

.'

Sunday School · IO.a.m.
Worsh1p - t I a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednellday Servicea - 7 p.m..

61 Years·

a...... CCIIIIIIUIDIIJ Oon:la

Latter-Day Saints

Railroad St, Mason

~ ·

. Bklulry HUts Cbarrh'of CJirlol

Liberty Cluillila Chon:b
Dnler
Pu10r:'Woody Call
Sunday Evening • 6:30 p.m.
Thursday Service-6:30p.m.

Follh ·Bilt&gt;lltt C!Jurdl

Pomero1
Pastor: Raben E.-Robinson
Sunday School •.9: IS a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m. ,
Bible St..ty Tuellday - 10 a.m.

Lourrl CWJFne Mllllodlol Oon:la
Putor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday S.hool • ~30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednellday Setvice ·7:00p.m.

Mt.Uaioalaptlst
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday S.hool·9:45 a.m.
Evening • 6:30p.m.
Wednellday Servic,. • 6:30p.m.

VIctory Bapllsllodt...-.1
525 N. 2nd St Middleport
Pulor: James E. Keesee
Worship ·IOI.m,, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

PeuiCIIapel
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

a..-.s a.lll'dl of Oriil .
Comer of St Rl. 124 .t Bradbury Rd.
Evangelist: Keith Cooper
Youth Minister: Michael Teaaarden
Sunday Sc;hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship. 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ,• 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Roy McCony
Sunday S.hool- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services.• 7 p.m.

Hillside 8aplllt Clulrrll
St. Rt 143 jUS! off R.t. 1
Past..: Rev. Jomes R. Acne, Sr.
• _Sul)day Schooi · ·IO a.m.
Wo&lt;ahop - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneoday SeiViccs -7 p.m.

Mloornlllo
Paslor: CMrtes Neville
Sunday School • 9 Lm.
Worship • 10 a.m.

HJtOURu Boa... Cllardt
Putor: Robert Monley
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- !0:45a.m., 7 p.m.·
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.

Evangelist Joseph B. HO$kms
. Sunday School • 9 a.m. . ·
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Ser\oi~ • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kellh Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 o.m.

Hutla (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagayc Sullivan
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Wnloyoa Bible H..._ Cloo"n:la
75 Peul Si., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 Lm., 7:30 P·l!l·
Wednesday Selvi!'O - 7:30p.m.

Rotllod Cllan:llur euut
Paslor: Euaene E. Underwood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
. worsh;p. 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Eo~

FoniiRuo
Pastor: Chu~s Neville
Sunday School · 10 a.m . .
WoBhip 9a.m.
ThuJSday Services· 6:30p.m.

P1ae Gren BIJ. H-Cioudi
112 m;le offR.L 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedn&lt;lday Setvic:e ·7:30p.m.

Bndbury Chlll'dl ol Cluist
Pasloo: Rick Snydel l
Sunday Sebool- 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.

Putor: Cllar!eo Neville
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday SeiVic:H · 7:30p.m. ·

Flotwoocla
Pulor: Keilh Rader
Sunday S.hool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

- o f - - C I J......
Leadin1 Cleek Rd., R.ulland
· Putor: Rev. Dewey KJna
,
Sunday school· 9:30a.m. · Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednaday prayer rneetina- 7 p.m.

'l'llppen .... CIJ..-.la of Qrill
Pastor: Stanley Minclui
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship • 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

East Main St.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor!hip • 10:30 a.m. .
Flnl Soatllen Ba~
41872 Pomeroy P1ke
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School ! 9:30a.m.
Worship • I 0:45 a.m., 7:011 p.m.
Wedne!Kiay Services • 7:00 p.m.
FlniBaPdot Charrb
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th aad Palmer Si., Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship. 10:15 a.m., 7:011 p.m.
W.dnellday Service· 7:011 p.m.

........,u.

sQWdl

. Cololl)' P11p11o Cllapel .
Han-illeltood
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Suaday School 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip- II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Pf'·

Puaor: Paul Stinson

Albu7 cSyno:-l

31057 Stare a.... 325,
Putor: Rev. Rid&lt; Maluyed
,
S...y ICIIool ·9:30a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:35 a.m. .t 7 p.m. •
Cbiklren'ochun:lt ·10:35 Lm. Youth 6 p.m.
Wednellday prayer service · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rtl43)
Pascor: Roger Watson
Suftday S.hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services·- 7

Sunday School - 9:30 o:m.
'.'!or&gt;hip • 10:45 a.m.
Pomeny FlniBapllst

'

· IIIIUihld 1103'

, .... a h

Zloa C!Jorcb ofCilrUI

Fin! Baptist Chun:h

Ctttlnl~r

Holllless

Poslor: Jack Colearove
Sunday Schoo! -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:H - 6:30 .P·"'·

Sunday SeiVice • 7:30 p.m:
Sunda'y School-tO a.m.
Wednesday Servioe-7:30 p.m.

.

An1lr Bros. Co.

'tlb

llelnroQow Rldae Cbur&lt;b of Cluist

Fne WID lllpllst Oon:h
Ash Slreel, Middlepon .

Old Bttbel tnt WID Bapllot 0111'&lt;h
28601 St. R.i. 7, Middleport
Sunday School· 10 ~.m .
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thul)day Servic:H - 7:30 ·

s.till''llnc.

.

Kno 0111'&lt;11 ofCilrill .
'
Worship • 9:30a.m.
Sunday S.hool· 10:30 a."\.
. Putor·Jeffoey Wallii&lt;C
1st and 3rd Sunday

'

' f ers poste·d
. Ian d t rans
MelgS

(INL,•acts

P·'"·

't Q.-da ol Cllrtll

aad Main
P-.AJHanson
Youih Minister: Bill Frazioo
swiday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship-8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7p.ln.
Wedn&lt;lday Savic:a • 7 p.m.

•

Fomt Hill Cleaners

Putoo: Sharon H111111111n
Sunday Sc;hool • 9 Lm.
Wonhlp - IOa.m.
Tunday Scrviceo -7:30p.m.

Su:::J;,School • 11 a.m.
W
·- tlla.m., 6 p.m.
W...._..y Sotvic:H • 7
M.,d,

·--------- \lO\.\. -----·
----Of ----·
---

89

TllppenPioluSLI'ut

33!26 O.ikna'• Home Rd.

Eveilina . ~:30 p.m.
Scrv-

,

100 Years 95 Years 92 Years

CII..Oei ... N" ...,
loluk A. lluclla
~y School · 9:30' a.m.
Worship- t0:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday SeiVic:el · 7 p.m.

p,p-.,,. Walllldt a.rdl orCIJdol

~~­
S...y
School · 10:30 a.m.

·

Authorities hunt identities of fire victims

211W. w.itSI.
, _ , Neil Pnoudfool
~ Sdlool · 9:30 Lll.
Warabip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.a.
Wedoeoday SeiVic:H - 7 p.m.

"

..... .

S...y Scloot - 9:30 .....
Wonllip . 10:30 u11.
I , ••Pdew ' 'z

., a.... orCIJdol

r

The .Daily Sentinel's

•

•

The o.lty Sentinel• Pege 7

Directo~y

Be A Part Of

Ran·gelan·d reform bill includes
proposed grazing fee i~crease
WASHINGTON (AP) _ A pro- crafted bill would give ranchers too enmonmental . pohc1es over the
.
h 1 f fed 1
·
much power over rangeland rnan- decades have led to overgrazmg and
0 sed
P 1. . over . au Ho
erati graz;~g agement and exclude other users environmental destruction on the.
pdo tcy awaats f ouse ate on a er including sponsmen and 6shennen.' government's 260 million acres of
.a vancmg out o comm1 tee.
.
1 d fr
M
N
.
sed
·
"We're putting cattlemen·agamst range an
om onuana to ew
bl
R
. The epu 1can-propo gnwng h
d fi he
" ·d Re
Mexico
bill was approv~d 23-14 Th~~y by B~lnltRie~harandso 15 0-r;;"Mn, : __ !;
The iegislation would raise grazthe House Resources Committee. A
a c
n,
· ., w ~ ..~ .
.
.
.
slightly different bill was approved ~ leg_islation would li~it publi~ par- mg fees by 37 pen:ent ~ $1.85 a
s
51 44 r h'
ttctpauon ·m how Jrazmg lands are month per ammal un.at, which means
by the enate - . ear 1er I . IS year.
eel ·
either a cow and her calves or seven
The b1ll would ra1se grazmg fees · us ·
h · Cri ·
hai d fh
'II
for ranchers to use federal rangeland
But a Democratic substitute pro- sf eep. ttcs c ge lhat w:sdsu .
h'rd Sr85
th · P.Osal and anolher measure that would ar too 1ow to ensure at .e era1
by abo~t o,ne-t ~ .. Iobel . ahmtonlh ·- tiave req~ired broader public panic- rangeland is not overgrazed.
per amma - .ar
ow w a . e . . .
.
.
.
.
Clinton administration had sought apauon 1n a grazang advasory board
under a proposed rangeland reform were defeated handily in lhe comTJrogram two years ago.
mittee.
But a proposal by Rep. Edward
Allhough lhe fee is adjusted annuRep. BarbaraCubin, R-Wyo., who Markey, D-Mass., to peg federal
ally depending on market · condi- owns a ranch where livestock are grazing fees atlhe same level as state .
tions, ranchers ·currently are facing grazed on federal land, argued that · fees was rejected 28-11. Western
tough economic times because oflow llflgeland decisions should " be made states charge' an average of $5.58 a
beef prices. They have argued that by people at the local level" and by month for use of state lands and pri·
steep increases in federal rangeland ranchers.
vate Jrazing land goes on average for
fees could drive smaller ranchers out
"The rangeland is in better con- twice \hat amount, according to conof business.
,
dition lhen it has been in 50 years in gressional staff studies.
Supporte~ of lhe House bill, part because of grazing," said Ms.
including many Western lawmakers, Cubin, arguing lhat ranchers - and
Ranchers ·have maintained lhat
argued that ranchers neil&lt;~ relief from not the government - have the
private
and state grazing lands are.
an intrusive grazing policy dictated resources and interest in making
more
.expensive
because tbey are of
from Washington and that local offi- rangeland improvements and prea better quality or have improvements
cials should have a greater say in how serving lhe range for future use.
the federal range is managed. .
Environmentalists have argued not found on the federal rangeland.
But critics said the Republican- lhat low federal Jrazing fees and lu

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-•

Simpson, the inlmilfllion bill's cllief ~lhor, pressed for cuuin1 qal woulclnonully Jive under ooe (OOf while curtailing "chain ulignticlll"
immigntion byiO percent for the Relit fi.ve yean. But be dlopped.,. ~~~~end. throop which dozens of.extended fllmily members obtain visas.
•
ment callinJ for lower limits on employment-based ilnmipstion after lhe
" Tho 1oal of the Simplon Ullendment is the reunification of the nuclelr
drubbinJ of his earlier proposal.
family," said Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.
Senators opposin1 Simpson's family-related amendment cited both the
Abnham, wbo led lhe effort to keep legal and il~gal immigration issuer
desire to keep legal immigration issues out of this bill and the specifics of apan, produced a list of orpnizations that agree walh that approach. It ~
the measure.
tum! business poupi llld high-leehnology organizations lhat oppose limi
The Ullendment would "push aside" the adult or married children of U.S. on employers' llbilities to bring in foreign workers.
.
citizens in favor of spouses and minor children of permanent resident aliens,
Tho House immigration bill passed last month only after lawmakers ehmsaid Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio.
inated its limits on legal immiJI'IIIion. Like the pending Senate bill, lhe HouseCiting findings of the immiJration commission headed by lhe late Bar- passed version focuses on illegal aliens and would restrictlheir access to pub-bara Jordan, DeWine said that of the 1.2 million spouses and minor children lie benefits while doubling lhe number of U.S. border guards.
of permanent resident aliens who have long awaited visas, at least 850,000
Abraham said he was willing fO move on the Senate legal immigration
are already here, illegally. Meanwhile, the adult or married children of U.S. · reform bill awaiting action; but Simpson said he remained "somewhat skep- •
citizens are kept out of the country, he said.
tical" of that bill's prospects.
~..
"That's anti-family," said DeWine. ''You shouldn't do it"
In olher
lhe senile passed by voice vote an amendme~tlhat would ...
Simpson said he w~ trying to focus family reunification on those who add domestic ·
and
as
for
alaens.

Negotiator arrives at compound
to seek end to Freemen standoff
JORDAN, Mont. (AP) - The
man who helped end the deadly
siege at Ruby Ridge, Idaho, was
barred from reaching lhe Freemen
compound but did win a concession
denied other would-be mediators: a
meeting wilh lhe FBI.
Meanwhile, five people in Los
Angel95 w~re charged wilh running
a frauiMJ:fit check scheme based on
teachings of the anti-government
Freemen, whose stsndoff wilh the
FBI near Jordan is now in its fifth
week.
Former Green Beret Col. James
" Bo" Gritz arrived here Thursday
with white separatist Randy Weaver
to help end the standoff. Some
Freemen are wanted on stste and federal charges that include writing bad
checks.
The FBI turned Gritz and Weaver
away fr9m the Freemen's 960-acre
ranch, but later mel for more tban an
hour with Gritz at its operations center.near Jordan. ·
Gritz said an FBI spokesman
offered him some useful suggestions, and he intends to remain in the
Jordan area to try them out.'
He said he is encouraged that the

Frkl8yI April 21, , .

•

...
·.-

s.day Sdlool - to ....

w~ .

10:30 a.m .• 6:30p.m.
W-.doy Services • 7 p.m.

1!-.. 7:30 p.ll.

P·•·
Soollil letllll -y·
.,=-Silver R."*

Tuoldoy 11:111on&lt;1oy - 7:30

R111:ko• r ..a ' \

a..rcta oflllo N - -

•Jnterim P -: TertSI Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 .....
Worship - 10:45a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service•. 7 p.m.

s,.... a..rcta or ... Nuan...
PUIOr. Bill Stires
Sunday School · 9•30 a.m.
Worship · 10•30 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wedn&lt;lday Servioes. 7 p.m.

,_"'1 0111'&lt;11

or 1M N_n..

PISIO&lt;: Roben llorber

Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.M.
Worship • 10 a ...., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Seovoe&lt; • 7 p.m.

CutetO. J•ta••u·b•ua.l a..rdl

Kinpbury Road .
PostoJ: Jeff Smith
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wnrsb1p Service 10:30 a.m.
Wunohip Scrvice•lst and lrd SUnday, 7 p.m.
No Wedncsdly Evcnina Sc.rv~a

PISICI': Rev. Thomos M&lt;Ciung

Sunday School • ~ 30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and~ p.m.
· Wedn&lt;lday Se"'ioes • 7 p.m.-

·r-Golpelllllaoaoo

Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pa$tor: Re V; Roger Willford
Sunday S.hool • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

~a..rcta

ortM Nuan..
Putor: Rev. llerben Gro'!'
Sunday School • 9•30 a.m. ·
Worship • II Lm .. 6 p.m.
WednOidly Services· 7 p.m. ·

New H11Yea CloudJ of lilt Nua"""
Paslor: Glendon Slroud
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
WoBtlip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
.Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

..

w~ae's

Ctupel Wellefu
Coolville R.Oid
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • I0:30 a.m.
Wedn&lt;sday Seovice • 7 p.m.

Rullud C~lll'tb ortM N...,..ae
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10•30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednellday ~rviceo • 7 p.m.
PortlaadFint CIJurdo oltbt Nuon..
Pastor: Mull MaiS9Q
Worship . 10:30 p.m.
Sunday S.hool • 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Services -7 p.m.

.

Folnlew lllble C!Jorcb
Letart, W.Va. Rl. I
Pastor: Rankin Roach·
Sunday S.hool • 10:30 a.m.
Worship 1 9:30a.m., 7:00p:m.
Wednesday SeiVice - 7:00p.m.
Follb Fellowslllp c...- l'or Clu1sl
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Col\'11)' Bible Q...,b
Pomerpy Pike, Co. R.d.
Pastor! Rev. Blackwood
Sunday S.hool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednellday Seryice-· 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Clirtlllla Felowllllp Ceater
Salem St., Rutland
Paslor: Roben E. Musser
Sunday Sehoul.- 10 a.m.
Worship · ll :ISa.m., ?p.m.
Wednellday'Service • ?·p.m.

SU.en.Uie Word oiFoltb
Pastor: David 'Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Hol»oa Chrlsllu fello-p Cllurcb
'
Rev. Clyde Hondenon
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30 P·'l'·
Youlh Fellowship S~nday, 7:00p.m.
·
Wednesday servtcc, 7:30p.m.

Rojokhll Ule Chorrh
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon

Failla hil ~I Cbn:b
Lon&amp; Bottom
Putor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
, Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednellday • 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship oervlce 7 p.m.

of J,_ Clu1sl,
Apoatolk Follll
1/4 mile past Fort Meip on New Lima Rd.
Past01: William Van Meter

Tile BtUe••n' ro~wddp 1\'l•totry

Cllftaa Toberucle Chu.rc~
Clifton, W.VL
Sunday S.hool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thu!Sday Service • 7 p.m.

New Ume Rd., R.uOand
Pastor: Rev. M1r,pret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

..-.ulo Commuatt; Cllan:h
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 P·~·

Eacltbne H01110 of Pniyor
(at Bu11ingham church off Roule 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
... ·
Sunday worsh;p · 10 a.m.
Wednesday service ~ 6:30.p.m.

Middleport Commuahy Chun:b
l75 Pearl Sl., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson

Pastor; Uwreno: Foreman

Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Wednesday 'Services- 7 p.m .
C~lll'&lt;h

Sunday-7:00p.m.

r

Pentec osta l
' P e a - l Allomhly
St. Rt 124, R.ac:ine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
. Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

'

Middleport Peatec111tal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School-- 10 a.m.
Evening 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Seovices ·7:00p.m.

e

Sy111&lt;- Mluloo
1411 Bridgeman,St. , Syracuse
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday service- 7 p.m.
Hue! Com-by Chun:h
OffRI. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday S.hool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Dyesville Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mono Clllpel Cb11rt•
Sunday sc:hooi·!Oa.m .
Wmship - 11 a.m.

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.
F~ilb

GGipel Char&lt;h
Lona Bouom
Sunday S.hool - 9:30 a.m.
WOJShip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
ML ou.. COIIIIIODIIy Cbun:ll
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
·sunday S.hool • 9:'30 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.
Uahrd Faith Chon:h
Rt. 7 on Porrieroy By-Pass
Pastor: ~ev . Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
·wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

e

Presbyterian

s1n ..... Flnt Ualted Prrsbyt•riu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday Sebool - 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 11 a.m.

Harrlsonrille Presbyttrioo Cloardo
Worship. 9 a.m.
Sunday S.hool - 9:45a.m.
Middleport l'nlbrterln .
Sunday SchOol - 9 a.m.
Wonhip.- 10 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se-tla-O.J MY•Illl
Mulberry Hta. Rd., Pomeroy
PISior: Roy Llwlnsky
Salurday Scoviees:·
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MLitermot~UilhtdBre­

la .CilrUI Cliun:b
Texas Cominunily off CR 82 '
Pastor: Robert SandeJS
Sunday S.hool ·9:30a.m.
W011hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednellday Servi&lt;es · 7:30p.m.
Edea Uollod Bntbrea Ill Cbrlst ·
2 112 miles nonh or Reedsville ~
on Slate Roule 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben Markley ·
Sunda~ School • II a.m.
·
Sunday Worshtp • 10:00 1.m. &amp; 7:011 p.nj.
Wednellday Services • 7:30 p.m. .
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m. :

FuU Gospel UplboUH
3304$ Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pa."'ror: Roy Hunr_er

20 Years
Crystal Glass Co.

Phont5SIIDZ87

PhoniSSS.~

Elllllbhld1170

Ellllllllhld ~~

llf\VE YOUR BUSNSS LISTED%

RACINE PlANING MILL
Mill

l· '!..',~~ 1~ 1 ~ 1

Worb

Cabmel Makm~ W

UC:IIE.WEI

,.,..s&amp;Sfnllflll

....... Sink• Tedrllld11
11••1• IUIIIIIPAII.·
""""r· M.-2114
.
. . . TIM.

SfNIR'

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

212 E~ Main Street

992·3918

The "Honor Roll" will appear in the
Friday, .May 17th ~dition of
The Daily Sentinel.
The C~st Is Only $12

RAWLINGS·COATS

•
992-3785 Pomeroy

~Syracuse

•

K&amp;C JEWELERS

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAl Fl
204 Condor l't
Polll8t'Oy, OH

···2978

992-6141
264 South 2nd
M!ddleport

You Don't Have To Look FIJt
To Spy the Best Buys in the
Classifieds.

Grow's Family Restaurant
•FHturing Kentucky Ftled Chic:ken"l
228 W. Main St, Pomeroy

Veterana·
Memorial H01~1

e. Main

115 E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
. 992-2104

. 992-5130 Pomtroy

N.tionwkle Ins. Co.
of Columliul, Oh.
804W. Mllln

SfMRS

SWISHER &amp; J,.OHSE

'· INSURANCE
SERVICES
214

IWILnMI

992-5432

Brogan·W&amp;~ner

EWING FUNERAL l:fOME

(I
' .

. 1!112·2318 ~
.•'

,,
I

"Dipily IUI4 SlfVice Always" .
Eatablilbed 1913

992·2121
EAST ~N POMEROY, OHIO
992-22!18
. 10IIIilulbtny A-

.

.
New Ule Vktory Cooltr
•
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, 9H
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Servioes - 10 a.m . .t 7 p.m:
Wednesday - 7 p.m. .t Youlh 7 p.ni.

SIUiday S.hooiiO a.m.
E¥ening 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

'
Follb Tobonulclo
Cbun:h
Bliley Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Rawson
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
·Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

•

Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Fridiy· 7:00·p.m.

·PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescl'iiJikln8

992-2955
SNOUFFER

FIRE a SAFETY•

SA' E8 a SERVICE
112-7075
172 Hclrlh Second Aw.
~Oil. Ott

Pomeroy

�I

: Peg&amp; 8 • The o.ily Sentinel

Pomeroy • MiddlePort, Ohio

FrlcMy, April 21, 1111

--------------

Women wise up to spousal abuse
umn, my boyfriend-took me through
·the classic steps of~sal abuse.
First, be started an argument. Next,
Landers
be shoved me. Then, he .slapped me
1995, LolA . . . .
and punched me. Soon after, he
...
became· remorseful and begged me
.wns,.-..
to forgive him. The following morning, I arrived at work, and your colBy ANN LANDERS
umn atlr8cted my attention --espe- Dear Ann Landers: 1 am a 28- cially the pan that said, "Get out."
. year-old female with three beautiful When I went home. that evening, I
• daughters. I am writing to thank you called a neillhbor over for protection
: for the column you wrote in which and told my boyfriend to move all
: you urged wife batterers to s.et coun- his belongings out of my apartment
seling. That column · helped me · and hand over the keys.
.. avoid a life that could have
Ann, . pi~ keep telling your
. · destroyed me and the furure of my women readers that no matter what
· children. ·
·
· . their station in life, they do n01
I waso the victim of a battering deserve 'to be abu~. We should
boyfriend. He was physically, emo- never allow a man to put us through
tionally and verbally abusive, and as that kind Of pain and suffering. Now
your column pointed out, whenever that I' ·Ve finally gotten sman, I want
his control became threatened, he to encourage others to do the same
developed . an inner rage that ·was before it's too late. -- Once Lost But
iruly frightening. After daily criti- Now Found
· eism, arguing, fighting and comDear Found: Millions of abused
.plaining, I always forgave him and women will read what you've writ. believed he would see the eiJOr of . ten. You are to be commended for
his ways and iniraculously change.
laying it on ¢e line for the sisterThe night before I read that col- hood. Brava!

"Ann

,...~_.c

Dear Ann Landers: You lei:Oildy
printed a letter about the theft of
bani:: receipts from a dUDipSter, and
you asked why the forgers weren't
prosecuted. I can give you the
answer from personal experience.
Two yellfS ago, a new friend of
my daughter's . tole some of her
checks and gave them to her mother,
who was an accomplished forger. It
was a nightmare dealing not only
.with the crime but with the police. I
traced the woman's aliases myself
and informed the police. She had
forged my daughter's name in a
five-county area, but the police didn't follow up in any of the counties,
except one. I (fied to get the other
district attorneys to do something,
but all four told .me it was not a violent crime, and the stores only wanted their money back.
This type of crime is costing our
nation millions of dollars. Not only
are stores defrauded, but prices are
increased to cover losses, and the
consumer suffers, too. Because it
·doesn't involve guns or drugs,
police aren't concerned.
· I'm now a firm believer in shred-

ding machines. ·- L.K., Ripley,
Okla.
Dear Ripley: You ·have written an
extremely convincing letter. You
have .~so sold a 101 .of sbreddina
rnJIChines. Thank you for making a
difference.
Dear Ann Landers: This is for
".Truly Perplexed in Lafayette,
Ind.," whose husband likes to run
around the house .naked siace their
son moved out. Why" not surprise
and delight him by serving a special
dinner and appearing in the nude
yourself? If you wanted to "go formal," you could wear pearls and carrings.
. .You might have one of most
hilarious evenings of your life -- and
I guarantee you will smile every
time you think back on it. -- Epjoy
Being Silly in Simi Valley; Calif.
Dear Silly in Simi .Valley: The
picture ·you painteil did more than
bring a smile. It made me laugh.

e:eiiN"'"rntl.d c~~:zmu:~~~:-O•Ino·l JO~~!'!~Rerpoval
. 8:00a.m. • 3:30p.m.

•.•••.••.,,..•••

1·614-991,..6614

1995
GMC
SAFARI

Evangelist Willard Wilcox of
GriJilnville; Tenn. will speak at the
First Church of God in Gallipolis
April28 through
May I. ' All
evening services
will begin at 7
p.m .. with the
exception
of
Sunday evening
. which begins at

reared iri the hills
of Eastern Kentucky. He was cbnverted and began p~hing at the

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Revival services, Rejoicing Life Church, Middlepon, Sunday through Tuesday, 7
p.m. each evening. Rev. Mike Foreman, New Life Church, Cbarleston,.
W. Va. Nursery provided.

Hultltards Gr...-$&amp;

Brianna Ayres ·celebrated her second birthday recently, with a l:iaster
tbemed party held at tbe home.ofher
pirents, Butch 1111d Linda Ayres,
Reedsville.
•
· .
· A P1!f1Y was also heid for ~res at
Cowdery's Daycuc, Reedavillc;
Several people were in ~~at

~pany. .

.

.

;"

204 Condor SL ·
Pomeroy, OH.
SPRING a SUMMER HOURS
.Open llol1dl~- 9:()0.5:00
.
Sllurclly 9:0().3:00

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

.

VB, leather, low miles, loaded

2 &amp; 4 Or • Your.Choice

$29,995

$11,995

1995 OLDS
1994 CHM 5·10
CUTLASS SUPREME
BWER
01 1995 PONTIAC
01
GRAND PRIIoa
1994
1995 BUICK REGAL
GMCII-Y

VIIY UASOIUU
IAVIUFIUICU

$2.99 per min. ·
.Must be 18 yrs.
Sarv·U (61 t) 645 1434

. 614-915-4110

MONDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County Ve.terans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
Monday, Veterans Service Office,

Mulberry~A~v~e~··;r.~¥.;:;;-;;;;:1

•New Homes

·~cldltlons, Bat~Js,

•Garages

•

•Complete

....

Remodeling

jolltt~···
Contact Rodney Ro"l'ry

Stop !t Compare ·
FREE ESTIMATES

594-3780 days, 698-7231

. 9854473

evenlnas or

· · ~~ · I==~
L
,. Psychic-Line

ROOFING
NEW-REP.'"·IR

Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions
love, success, care, soul
mates, seW·help and
· more. · ·
1_900-2S5-0SOO
· Ext. 3505 .
$3,99 per min.
· Must be 18 yn;.

"'
Gutters·
Downspouts

949-2168

Serv-U (619) 645-8434

· WHiTE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER •
1ldl, ~X8; 2le•, 2x6
...,. 8~~10~ 3Ge a.ft. . .
~ ,.,:
i ' .;; 14'~1.'35¢
' ..
.
AliiO
livallable
,.
4x4'a-: 4x&amp;'s

'',.

.

' 61~,07

I'

. 614-7~2-3337

..

I I

.· :1/Wt-DCI .

'

'·

. ....,.... ' ·, .,

YOUNG'S ' •

CARPENRR SERVICE

I

•Raom 4d~tlons

·

•New Garagn

•El-lcal &amp; Plumbing

•ROoflng ' .
•Jnlerlor &amp; Exterior
Palnttn~ ..

Also Concrete.Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) .
.V.C. YOUNG Ill
112-6215.

...POrn-y,.Ohlo

SPORTS/
ENTERTAINMENT
. ._ PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE ·
HOROSCOPE, SOAP

.

.. RESULTS

1-90o-776-2525 EXT.
5961
$2.99 Jl!lr min
MuSt be 18- yrs.
Serv-U (619) 654-8434

...

IEAUTifUL WOMEN
Ill WAITING 10
HIAIFIOM
YOU NOW!U
1~1·~4

Ext. -4309

$3;99 per min.
Mu.t be.18 yra.
,Serv-U (811) 645 8434
iWII/Imo.

Vegetable Pllnll .......$6.50 flit
Hanging BasketS $5.75-$10.95
Coinblliltlon Pots .
-$3.50-$9.95

Public Notice .

.

In Memory

Notice

Judgment therein rendered, 1:~•;n:d\t~a~:. and ten•mentl,
being c- No. 116-CV-403 In
at 817 8th Street,
Aid Court, will offer for Ale
Ohio 45771 : A
at the front door of the complete llpl de!JCrlptlon
Couithouae In Pomeroy, of the real eeteta Ia ••
Melga CountY, Ohio; on the follows:
17th dey ·of May, 1996, at
Situated In the Tclwnehlp
10:00 a.m., the followlnt of sunon, County of MIIP.
and Stata of Ohio;
Lot No. Twenty-nine
In Wolf'a Addition to
Incorporated VIllage
Raclna, Melga County,
and . balnt the eame
property conveyed by
· Edwlrd llle and Dorl• lhle,
hla wlfa, to Slllrldan A..
Soarbtrry arid Sylvia
s-beny, by dHd dated
April 21, 18&amp;5, and~
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® .by Larry Wright
In Book 182, at P... 541,
lila IIHd R~rdl of Mllp
County, · 0 hi o,
And
ih~teafter con¥eyed by
Sheridan A•. Scwberry and
Sylvia Scarberry, hulbaitd
and wlfa, tl! FnMflrlck L
'\-\.Iii'/ •. MAN I
Johneon and Fem Johnaon
· by Died dated June
1"~\'&gt; I~ ou P· t857, and recorded In
'"Tufl.f"!
_ , Pllgl _;_, of Aid D
Recilrdl. ..
I.
R.,.,.ROI ~: Volume
309, Ptllle 171 of the Mllga
County Dtld fl"ocordl.
Auclltor'a Paroet NumHI':

NOTICE OF SALE
· By virtue of an .Order of
Sale luued out of the
Common Plea• Court · of
Melp CountY, Ohio, In the
ea.. of the Home National
Bank, Plaintiff, va. Rober! J.
Damron, Jr., et el.,
Defendanll, upon a

VCR Sick?
Call Quick ·
COY'S VCR

' · PUBUC NOTICE ·
; NOTICE Ia hereby gl¥en
111111 on Slturday, APril 27,
1996, at 10:00 e.mi, • public
aile will be held at211 Wast
992-4507
·Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to·.sell for cash the
following coUateral:
1992 Chevrolet Cavalier
'1G1JC1440N7113775 &amp;
Public Notice
· 1989 Pontiac Parlalenne
1G28L69Z2GX260751 ·
any or all bids aubmltled.
· The Farmers Bank end . F.urther, the
abo¥e
Sevlnga
Cclmj)any, collat.ral will be sold. In )he
Pomeroy, Ohio, reurvee the condition It Ia In, with no
right to bid atlhla ule•. end e!&lt;preu
or
Implied
to withdraw the abov.a warranties g,lven.
. .
For
further
Information,
to Bank
aele.
Farmers
contact Deel- at992-2138.
· Company (4) 24, 25, 28 3 tc
to reJect

1

In Memory Of

MARK ALLAN
BEEGlE
who left us four
years ago today,
April
1992.

~;;,~:~

~

I

~

,.,.._ .
ESTATE.
APPRAISED AT: 127,500.00.
· The real •tata oaniiOI be

eoiCI fOr lllllhllrl--itrl
... . . . . . . . Value.
I~ OF SALE: .Celli
• OR~
. Of dUd
..
.

.........

0,.0 Dellr I un.-1 p.m.
SunciiY 1 p.ni.-1 p.tit. .
,IIM778

S'*"'olllllgitl
12, til,. 3TC .·

&lt;•)

r

L&amp;E
.
ADVERDSING .
THE HAT MIN .

BISSELL BORDERS,. INC.

53211 .

40 .·

N•w24hr.
.•

Dateline
Meet the Man or Woman
ol your Dreams Never
.be lonely agal!l.

·

Giveaway

Homos. 814.-.o&amp;!O.

~----~-~~~~~~~~,;,..,--!!!~dl
'

.s·.........
.DDERrc
I II ,I I
POMEROY, OHIO

773-5033.
Non-Working Wathen, Oryeia.

Rangeo. RolrlgeraJDra, Frooze&lt;o,
Air Condllionero, Color T. v:·a.
VCR"a. Also Junk Cara. 814-258·
1238.

Wanted To Buy: Older Loo Cabin
In Good Shape. Will Reloco.te.

Reuonabl,. Pric:ed, 114· 44'8-

1814, Allar 5Of L88Y8Moo-.
Top Pricfl Paid: Ol.d U.S. Coina,

~ilwer, Gol~. DiamOfldt; All Old

do appraistilo. Ollllt Mardn. 81•·
992·7441.
Uaid Mono Lovia. Lee &amp; Wrangler Joana &amp; Denim Jack8il. Niko

3yr. old spayed female Aualralian ·Shoes, 81&lt;4-448·2468.
Shepnard. Neecta room to run in

.

counuy.:JCM.67S.7888

Wanlod To 814
Buy Uood.
Mobile
HQtri&lt;IO. Call:
-448.0175
8115-3703.
Wanted To Buw: Aulo"a &amp; Jruc~a
614 ' 388' 9082·:0r
Beaotllul Wltito 2112Monlh Old :;'X.
Puppioo. Friendly, Moody Hutky.
814-319·9057.
Want&amp;O To Bur : Junk Autos With
Cuto Pupploa All Fomalo, 2 Lo~l ~~;.~~!~:~·· Call Lorrr
Garmon Shepherd Mix. 81 4-258·
8832.
Wanted To Buy: Lillie TlMeo TdJ•.
F,.. Pupplet, 8;,._388-8532.
lloi-Z41H887
.

e· oloCiric baaeboard hoaler. 304-

.f;.=·

. Tr.-h Removal -Commercii! or Reaidentlal
Septic Tanks Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollals Rented.
Dally, wee~Iy &amp; monthly rental rates.

wr OFFER GENERAL
HAULING
•

Free Puppiea: Part Lab, 6
Old, 61.-3117·721111.

Weeks

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

L,lmeatQfle, Silnd, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

WE HAVE A-I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992-3954 or 985-3418 ,,

-----

....

Small mixed Terrier, 1yr old,

"""'"

304-875-4302.

CALL NOW
1·900-988-6003
Ext. 1021
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (614) 645·8434

1:./VE!
ONE ·ON. • ONE!
CALL NOW!
1-900-446-1414
EXT. 3694
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18: yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

IABB~

na

Pick-up,discarded
battertea, appliances a
many lnetals.

614-992-4025
8arn-8pm

SPARKlES ·
ELECTRIC
Serving all Your
ELECTRICAL

New At Ingles lleeironies

LAWNC::ABE
• Tree Trimming
• Mowing (Residential"
and commerciaQ
• Shrubbel}'
Maintenance
• Odd jobs per request
No Lawn Too Large or

lladle lllaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD

To'oSma/1

Plan Ahead, Call Today!

:If.

106 N. 2nd Ave•• .Middleport

FIND TOTAl
SATISFACTION!
Through a Uve
Personal Psychic!

992·2825

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

949-2512

RACINE ·HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; I,UCHINE SHOP, INC.

.1-900-255-0500
Ext. 4009

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.

211563 BASHAH RD.

Serv-U (619)

Rac:lne, OhiO 45771
· 949-3013 Phone

645-8434 .

949-2018 FAX

needs ·

Phone

614-992-5048
'
Free Estimates

H&amp;H .
SAWMILL.

.Jusl the mate.of
your choice.
1·900-988-6988

Ballflsaw 8

(614) 441-1191
1-800 -508 -8887
• Top • Trim • Removal
•
.Grinding

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; P1!90y Brickles

614-742·2193

..
-··

. Owner: Rick JohnsOn

•
HELP WANTED
•
Gallia · Meiga Communily Ac1i0";

Ext. 1449
$2.99 per min.

Agency JTPA Program 11. Ac~ •
cepling Applications ·For The Fol: ·

Must be 18 yr&amp;.
.
Serv-u (619) 645-8434

All Yard Salta Mutt Be Paid In
.t.dvanco. Deadline: 1:00pm lho
day befOre lht ad it 10 fltn, Sun·
dat edldon- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon·
day oclliOn IODOa.m. Saturdoy.
Gorage Silo. 5 lamilt aalo, Iota ol
nice Items, May 3, Uay 4, houra
0·5, Adclro11: 1381. Dulk8)' Ally,

(UmeSto., LowR.....)

WI~Ks ·
. YOUR MESSAGE .
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY. .

HAULING
'

HowardExcavatin

F~AII~In'atock

for linmectllle ·~

Syracuae. need directions call
814-992·771111.

Free Esllmlll-.
IWY010212

.

l~wlng Tempor~~ry

tiOns!

Summer Po~i· '

•.

Tlolnor II lnvol- Providing 11e. ·
medlaiiEnrlcllmenl Educollonal
Sarvlcoa. Workollo lll!'riow And
Malnlonanco, Record MilD·
lt"'!nco, And Olller Rlqulrad ,..
llvllioo. Politlon RoqulrW 11A ~·
grot In Educadon, Valid ·Ol!io
Taachlng Ce&lt;•llcalll. Vollcl Drl¥·•
ofallconu, And Rollablo Trani-'
porltlon.

.

BENNETTS

Se!'VIcea .

- 992·3838

Manuiactured Housing

Air Co,idltiQ;..,., Hllit Pumps,

Tn.iclllng · ' '•
Ul!leatona
~SulldOZing and
Backhoe

· Limestone, . ·
.Hquae Sft.. ~nd
•
. Utllltln
Gravel, Sind, .
Top Soli, Fill Dirt. ·. . All Kinch oi fmth VJork

~1~-347o

Molblle and

· Mobl,. H()me Heating &amp; Cooling,
.

. , wllltfiW,...I•~toWitup
• Wtet Ybilnle·

EOUALOPPOAIUNRY
EI,IPLOWER

'

·'
•

J &amp; O'a Auto Parts. Buying ·•1vage vehicles. Selling part1. 304-

Used furnilure- anliquea, ane
plece or to!'lPiete esrates, a)IO

2· Kittens, liner Trained, To Good

614-992·7643

Remodeling
Kltchan It IIIIth
Rtmodlllng
Room.AddHions
Siding', Rcloftng, PltiOI
.l'l••ollable
lneurtra • Ex"'"*'ced
Call waynef!all
182-440$ .
For FrH Eallma..•

Wanted 10 Buy .

Paporwoightt. Etc.
ol peroon who dona demage.lo Coii&lt;tctibl••·
M.T,S. Coin Shop, 1$1 S•concl
car lit Zu1pana trailer park an """"'"'· Galtipolio. 81+4.e-2843.
Tltu"""f April 18,18811. 30ol-773-

·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMER.CIAL and.RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Imprinting
•Shirts -Hats
•Sportswear
•Ball Uniforms
.3rd Sl, .Racine, Oh.

ReWard 1500. For information
loodino 10 llle amtat or COtWiclion

~ew Homes ~ Vlny! Siding New :

NEFF REMODELING
. SERVIa

No ~rgumentsl
No·Nagging!

Property Addre1a:. 817

•

Plitne Beware:· Do To The lncreaae In Crime We Offet The
Vtr'l Belt In Unique Pepper
Spray ltema AI Well At Many
Other Safety Produttl. Do Not
Gamble With Your Safely Of The
Ones Vou Love. Call Now For
Free Oehver'l To Your Door! 1·
BQ0-830·2589. 213-854-1320. No
Plofmi1 AI 0111198.

::.:..;;.;;~;.-, ~I

Date-Line

.

6th StrHI, Racine, Ohio
41771

·llhnllll'l
Rhodortendrona
. . . . -t12.95
TrWs.;.az.JIH10.95

$3.~9 Per Min. ·
Must be 18 yn;

30 Announcements

•

1~000. '

llcertted

Portilble

a:: 1

AD'-·••.~ .............. S2.75-$8.95

is waiitinr1l
to
from you!!
. 24 Houts A Day!!
Call now
1·900:-446-1414
Ext.14n

MJNOUNCEr.1ENTS

(61.4t 992·236.4

742-2803

.

Geranl.-m~ .............. $1.00,&amp;up

--...

~

Public Notice

••r•h;•.

Smilh Buick Pamioc. IGOO Ettl·

35 Yean Experience ·

...

·
..i L------------1~~~
,.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

Public Notice

P.O.Bqx53t
. Syracuse, Phlo .s779
Terri Clraey
(614)992-2800
. Hoi'H &amp;111Ck Sales--

.,

,.....

••

!!11- TFN

au~tlon

"'" .......... GalliltoliL

•Roofing - Rubber - lilhlnglea - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Balhrooma - Kitchens - Siding

RoY J - Rd.,

Hou.. R•pelr 1o

'

Flick .,_.,...n f!Uction Co...,..,w.
full time aucllonMr, complete

Clean Lale .Model Carl · Or
Truc~o. 1990 Dodoto Of Howe&lt;.

Residential - COmmercl•l

.LONE 01, FAIM

·

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

"'"""'"'*'
90

. COISDUC!IDI

•Lessons
30$91

·cronroada•. Groceries, new
Ed F&lt;u1or 1130. •

713-5115 Of- 713-6447.

BIB IOOnll' and

Howard

POOLER·!Ill

AI U - c.,. It Tr!Ack~ llult Go.
Taxes and title tee not included.
All payments subject
io creel~
approval. ·
.
.

!las.44~

Mt Al!o Auction. Ewrr Frifilay
7pm. E*Y SIIUfdop lpn Rl 2-33

tet,Ohlo &amp; Wo11 Viftlnia, 304'

~Trill

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSIRUCIION

· years esperieilee now
avall.able r, r aU ty~ or
New R-, Garages,

All V-6, all loaded VOURCHI)ICE

$13 995

,.,,...

REPAIR

waIk'I•n g s hoe·s 0 r
seventh Wal kAm'.er"lca

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FFIEE ESTIMAtEs

lue ... ,.1.... of.
......... let Ul H If

Kitchens, ~ks, Siding,
. Roofsete.

·GRANDAM
OR
199HLDS
ICHIQI ·.

"No Job Too ....
' ·-- or Too S'tnll/1"

LIITIIItQM. Gravel
Dirt • Sand

1

Rides
•Trllnlng
. ,; Bpardlng
'

lltiEIIH·ImiiOI

1·900·990.3737
Ext. 2261

I··"'

ITS WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

age
of 17.
hasbeen
pastored
in several states
andHehas
involved
in ibe
.
.
.
.
media ministtyfor45 years. For the
There's still time to put on your .
past 37 years, he has carried on a walking shoes and join an estimated Point Pleasant. He is a first grader at
w~kly half-hour tel~vision ministcy · 2,000 people at the Seventh Annual North Point Elementary. Dianna is
enbtled ~e Low~r ~1ghthouse.
. ,Tri-County WalkAmeiica for March the daughter of Brian aild Sandra
Blake of Bidwell and is a fourth gradSpecial music 1s planned and ' of Dimes.
~ursery ~ill be provided. For more
. The event will be, held Suf1day, er at Bidwell-Porter Eh:mentary.1bis
mformatlon call the church at 446- April 28, 3 p.m. in Harmon Park at is her second year as ambassador.
The mission of the March of
4404..
Point Pleasant; W.Va. "Il)e..tri-county
Dimes is to improve the health of
walk h.as been recognized by the.
March of Dimes as the largest per- babies by preventing birth defects
capita walk in the entire nation. Last and infant mortality through comyear's walk drew over 1,500 partici- munity services, advocacy, research
' pants 'lind raised $57,000 .for the cam- and education. The majority of the
money raised by Wal~merica is
paign against birth defects.
Dianna Ellison has cbaired the tri- used to fund research programs that
county walk for the last six years, and benefit everyone everywhere.
The goal for this year's wtJk is
!his year the event h~~~ on a co- $65,000.
. chairman, Shirley M1 . is year's
slogan is "Walk For Someone You · For more inforlnation, contact
Love." Walk ambassadors are Ellison at675-1607.
Mitchell Harbrecht, Mason County,
and Dianna Eads, Gallia County.
Mitchell is the soli of Kim Harbrecht
of New Haven and Jeff Hartirecht of
SYJ'IIC.U II
BRIANNA AYRES
·
Bedding a
GRAVELY TRACTOR .

Second birthday:
qelebrated . '

1996 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

SERVICE

Ph. 773-1~~ Will Work Within your~ 773-586

367-()266 - 1 SOQ-950-33&amp;9

LINDA'S
PAINTING

AnUCTIVE
I ' WILLING
TO TALIIII

$17,495

995

SeiVIoea • Steel SaleiiJ, Fabrication • Repair Waking
•Akmlnum'Stalnlees. Toot oreee~ng. omaJJI8Rial
Steps ·Stall$, Ralinga, Patio FLIInltura, Fltijllace
Items, Plarpr hangers, Trellle'es &amp; lots of other slufl!l

Owner: Ronnie Jonu

FRE;E ~=S

I.L HOUOI

:. ~==========·-~· .J==~~~~~l----~!!~~~--~--2L_jl!~~~~~~~----~~wv~JIL--~--·~-'~·o_h_Jo~

Red, V6, loaded, 38,000 miles

SATURDAY
RACINE __ Family night, Racine
CARPENTER •. Hymn sing, Car- Branch of Reorganized Church of
penter Baptist Church, 7 p.m. Satur- Jesus Christ, Latter Day Saints, 4 p.m
day at the .church. Public invited.
· Sunday, Dailey family to . present
gospel music. Potluck dinner to folDANVILLE --Weekend services · low
·
h D "II Ch h 0 f Chr" 7
·
. at t e an vi e urc
Ist,
. MIDDLEPORT -- .Sexton Trio to
p.m. Saturday; 10:30 and.6 p.rri Sun- s1ng. at the H-L
· · Fe11 ow·
uuson Ch. nsban
day. Denver Hill, Foster, W. Va., ship, Sunday, 7 p.m.
·speaker.

wn•n~wttcox ~:·m~!~lco;nd Still time tO pUt 0
.'

...
·Pilntlng

-

8 pass, loaded

.

20 Years Et:perie.nee • lmured

•Rooft""

~&amp;:::1

EXT VAN

.- · · Col)1munity calendar----

MIDDLEPORT -- C.J. and the
Country Gentlemen rounu and square
dance Friday, 8- 11 p.m. at the old
Legion Hall in Middleport. Free
admission. All welcome.

Windows, llloMI
Insulation, Slilnn
Doors. Stann

.

·

IVIclftiY

·--":!""~:-......,. o':PC::K

&amp; Stump Grinding

•Remoct.tliit) '
•Siding

wltbuver30

r

c

·New~

Vl!!yl Alpi8C~

1996CHEn
CIMARO

.

T~e Community Calendar lli
publubed as a ~ree service.to nonprofi~ groups wuh~g to &amp;nnOIIDte
meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not dt;signed to promote
sales or fund ·ratsers of any type.
Items are printed as spao:e permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of d!ays.
FRIDAY
RU'Ji.AND ·- Rep. John Carey,
open door meeting, Friday; 9 to 10
a.m., Rutland Village hall.

•Additions

vtnrt • Alum.'IUdlng,

•

Send quesdoas to Ann Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceo·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045
· ·

Area businesses were honored for
.
their participation in the Occupational
· .Work Experience c ses at Meigs
. ·I:Iigh School durin e annual OWE
~mployee-empi9-y · ppreciation
.breakfast Thursday at row's Restaurant in Pomeroy. I .
· To show their appreciation, stu. dents of the program presented
.clocks, yearly planners, and key
chains to employers and guests.
. . . Employers recogni7~d were Danny Crow, Crow's Restaurant; Charles
.Kitchen, Middleport Dairy Queen
·Brazier; Phil Harrison, Don Roush,
. 1\lld Enos Singer, PDK Construc4on;
Jim Johnson and Dave Sigman, Big
Bend Foodland; Kim Elliot, Subway
of Pomeroy; Ray Ross, Subway of Pt.
.Pleasant; Trina Bachtel, Pizza Hut;
.D'eana Larkins and Becky Mankin., ·
:&lt;fiofcDonald's of Pomeroy; David Sny: ~er, Overbrook Center; Bryan Bran. ham, B&amp;S Wholesale; Vanessa ·and
ferry Runyon, Runyol,l Logging
MEIGS OWE' BREAKFAST ·Area businessCroW's Restaurant In Pomeroy. In a show of
Company; Jim Sheets, Sweet Greet- es were honored for their participation In the
appreciation, studenla preaented employers
lngs; Debbie Haptonstall, Pomeroy occupational work experience programs at
and guastll with gifts during the annual break·
Elementary; Nancy Hill and Carl Meigs High School during the annual OWE
fast
Hysell, Meigs County Juvenile Offi- . employee-employer breakfast Thursday at
'cers; . John Jacobs, Meigs County School Principal ; Dennis Eichinger, . bers attending were Bill Haptonstall, Shawn King, Mike Klein, Mike
Meigs High School Assistant Princi- Manning Roush, Kenny Utt, Gene . ·O'Neil, Angie Powell; Tim Priddy,
Health Department.
. Guests attending were Mick Dav- pal; Dana Kessinger, Secondary Triplett, and Jim Hill .
Andy Robinson, Jason Runyon, Clint
eilport, Big Bend Fitness; Lennie Supervisor; Dave Harris, The Daily
Students attending were Tom Stewart, and Patr.icia Williams.
llaptonstall, Western Auto; '" Bill Sentinel; Manning Kloes, Meigs Billingsley, Chris Brown, Phyllis Instructor for the Meigs OWE chiss
Buckley, Meigs Local Schools;·John County Truant Officer; Bob Buck, . Clark, Jay Day, Ryan Dailey, Tara is Ron Logan.
·
Riebel, Meigs County Superinten- Meigs County Juvenile Judge.
Fitchpatrick, Alyssa Hoffman, Luke
'
dent; Fenton Taylor, Meigs High
OWE Advisory Committee mem- Holman, Misty Jeffers, Karan Kauff,

Nt~"'' Ret.&amp; .

ESERVICE

SMITII'S

·: Area businesses recognized

Visiting
$vangelist
to spe,ak
·at
revival
..

Pt.FISS •

'

·-

.

•

�hge10 •

n. Deily Sentinel
.
.

PomiN"t•lllddleport, Ohio

............
....
. ....
•---K.-

~··

PHILLlP
ALDER

The O.lty 81nllnel• Pege11

I

-

1 111111 Of 1111111
41aft&amp;lrtlli

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

I In ._(II.)

nice--·
_..,.,.""'

al~trlc,

S.A.S.E. 10 PrNJigo llnlr ll. P.O.
3271D.

Experienced Carpentera; .E•~i·
enced In All Plwlll 01 R..idan.

llal R.modtll,... Must Have ·Own
Truck And TDols. 5 Y•ara Eli'P.
Minimum. Carpenter Htlp•ra
Netdtd Alao, Chr!stlan'l Con·
ltrUCJion, 814-4441-4514.

E&lt;porlanc:ed ROCIIen: Eop. In All
PhaHI 01 Realdontiol Roofing. 5
Years Minimum Expertence. 61._
4o46-&lt;151..
.

General auiOIJ!DIIve e~tperlence ~
· Send
10 , Boo 437,
Maoon, 'IN 25260.

""'me

HELP WANTED Men iWomon
s•eo Weekly AlltmbllnQ
Circuit Boards 1Eiec:tronlc Com·
Earn

polio,.,.

Oak Wood Homea, 5175 David

imitatloo 0&lt; dscolmioatloo

350 Lota &amp; Acreage
3.8 OCfOI lor •lo wiihirt Pomon&gt;y
Munlc:Jpal llmlta, located In NtW
aubdivlaion, ready to build, Mau·
tiful violr on toll rap, 117,500, ......

tlmltatton Of dllcf1mltiatlon,
I

....18, 814-9!12·71151 .

..... _

'111111 nawopaper wiN not

.

5 A.craa located S.allor Road.
South Of Vinton, 110,500. 114·
388-8521.

knowtlngly IOCepl
advelllsen)onta lorl881 ootate
wtlleh !I In vtolatloo ollhe law.
OUr raad8ra are hereby

BRUNER LAND
614-715-0173
GALLIA COUNTY: :\0 Mlnulla
North 01 Huntifotton • 011 THna
Run •
Roadl. M.,. 10
Ac:re loll To Choooa Fran) • One
• St•.ooo. Your.
I'Horo11Pond
Will love Thia 8 Acre1

Informed lhet all dwelling&amp;
advertised in ttolo n o - r
are avaltable on an equal ·

c...._

basis.

!llgh qualltr Carpet lnotalloro 3 Bodrooml, 2 Ballo Ranch, 2 Car Neighborhood Rd .• 22 Acroa
Needed, Fullllme And By The Garage, Spring Valley Area, Altar $28,000, 5 Ac:tea • 110,800 Or 10
Job, t.tuar Have E•perlence, Ap- 8:00P.M. 814-448·~.
· ·12,000.

A"""'·

Caii1Pieala.

Home TW"piata. PC Ullfl needed.

$45,0QO incama pollntill. Cllt 1·
800·513-4343 El&lt;l. 11-9368.
Immediate Oppottunitlee For Route Salesman Full·Time Polential
For Rigt'lt Candidate, Mu1t Be
Available, fle11ible ·Hours &amp; Daya.
Call For An Appointment, 81• ·
·46-.4511.

'

on Our, Medical

· Is. Actively Seeking To Recruit

CNAs Who Are Looking To Work

long Term Home Care Cuea
Where YDu live-In And Stay
Overnight In Ehh., 24 Hour, 48
Hour, Or 72 Hour Shlhl. It Paya
16 Hours A Day, But An Over·
nidll Stay Is Required. If Interest·
edPtease C8U lisa Ker0100 AI

1.aoi}ON-OUTY-2. .

78 acres mil With thrM bedroom,

Pln;es 11 + Acrea •

oage, 814·742-1902.

• $7,500 Or 5 • •
Be'Purc:ha.ed

Assumable Loan With 8 112 In·
Pa~ment .

.3

Bedroom Hou1e With 1 114 Acre

&amp; Pool , After 5 P.M. 81 4 ·388-. Call For OWner Financing lnformation + Maps. 10% OFF Cash
836 1
Purchases.
·

By ONner: 7 Rooms &amp; Ballo, Front
Porch, Screened Back Porch, Pa·

Five acr-. aetaiOr, near Raeine,

tio Screen Car Port. 3 Lots In aasume loan ot St3;soo, 814·9493028
Vinton, 128,500, 614-3811-9973
:.::::..
· - - - - - -·- So. Main S!reet, Vinton.
Parcels available lor new nome
House + 29 Acres, .3 BadroDms,· construction on Ra~burn Road. 5
parcel a ranging lrorrr 1.84ac: to
.2 Baths, Basement. 2 112 car Ga· s.32ac. Paved road, c:ounwy water,
rage, Pool, Lg. Deck, Plus Extr• reasonable restrk:~onsJMap and
Spw;e, 814-245-5378.
inlo available on requasJ. No sin-

12 1:::

gle wid'· inqLl'lriea please. 304·

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Small 3 Bedrooma. Very Good

Overbrook Center. a 100 bed . Condllion; NewVinyl Siding, Car·
long·lerm care lacllily In Mlddl• por t Unauached 2 Car Garage
pori . Ohio, is curren tly seeking With NeW Aparvnent Above. 614 ·
apptlcationa for an Accounting 446· 1774 Home ; 6 14·446-0374
Asaislant to handle collftetions. Work Ask For Mark Palmer.

The preferred candldaJa will have
experience 111 collection• 11 wtll In Syracuse, 3 bedrooms, base ·
as gerteral bookkeeping, Uu1t be
able ID work withDul direct IUIMt(viaion and mutt be able to work
evening hours. S:e.nd ~eaumes to
Administrator, Overbrook Cantet,
333 Page Street, Middleport~ QH
45760.
·

COUNTY: Mlnuloo To
.Pure Country Lots. Prlo·

two blllo brick homo. ilvae pondo,
pole barn building, two Car ga-

terelt, low Down

...

ment, garage, neiN deck, ~tew
windoWs, &amp; almost two acres lor

land. 6 14-992-8116.

LEON : Vet} nk:e, well maintained
3 bedroom, 12JC12 storage barn,
314acre. call VIrginia lee lewis
30-4·586·1400. Old Colony Com·.
Postal &amp; Gov't Joba $21 IHr + pany.

Benetlts, No Eop. Witt Train, For :;,;::.;::.._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Awl And tnlo I-800-5:J6.30ol0.
Ma•well Ave., 3bedroom, LA, DR.

large family room, dOuble garage,

Red H~t Fat Loll Produc~ Oyna· 8yra old, $107 ,00.0 . 304·675·
mlc Marketing Plan, Lose Weight 4048.

&amp; Make Monerl 614-•46-1236, 1- - - -- .,....,-:-r"'----'114·44 t-0187.
Nice home in AOci~ large buHd·
ir,g will house small business,
'Screen Prinler, Experience Nee:· also a one car garage, fenced
euary, Serious Inquiries Only, yard, out of flood area. asking
814-446-2388, Asi&lt;For CIYi~
147,000 614-949·2804. .

675-5253.

jwnt

.

Scenic Valley, Appla Grove,
beautiful 2ac lois, public .water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304-578·23311. ·

---·25811.

.
·N 3rd Avo., Mlddloporl 1bed·

Sotolll

1 Bedroom In Country Sal·
Waaher IDryer. Stove, Rt·
tr;~~~::~
No Poll, No Smokora.
~
I
511181, 1300 O.poll~ Boot&amp; Br Rodwlng, Chip-a,
$350/Mo., Appllcationo AI 1743 Tony Loma. GuarontHd Lowest
Cen11norr Rood, Golllpollo, 114- PricHAtShlleC.fe, G'"'F 'L
448-2205.
Brond Now 5ato Utilitr Trailer
Nice 2 or 3 bodloom ~In With Tilt Bod, IS Inch Wheel!,
Middleport, no poll, 114·M2· aeso. e1&lt;-418-n52. Clit Aft• 4
P.M.
5858.

'

One bedroom apartment In Pt.
Plea..,~ no petl, l _t4-tt2-51111.

sma 11 apartment near ~
~moror.

no pets, nan-amoktr, udliti11 In-

1-100-537~.
Dlneno Sat With 6 Chalro $100:
0Ner $100; tt82 Suzuki125R. M
·~

eluded, 1450 pluo dopoil~ 114• Wa1ar Cooled Bike, Complororr
94f-3.103.
Gone Ttorough, $650, OBO, 814·
148 11805, Allor+ P.M. '
'IWin ~sT-. now accaping
applications fo r 1br. HUD aubtid- Electric
Scootera
And
ized apt lor elderly and handl· Wheelchair&amp;, Naw IUiad, Van I
capped. EOH 3Q0-875-fl67l.
Car Lilt Jri&amp;Jallod, Stairglideo, Uh .
Chalro, Call For Brochure, 814·
Wanted : Someone To Share 2 44&amp;-7283.
Bedroom Apartmem 1 Expen1e1
$200Jt.to. Your Part, Cfoae To firawood, alleady cut, you haul,
Galllpollo. 11 lnrerured Wrlghr: . US per lood, Laurel Clill area,
R . S. nr . 0 . B01 5~8. Korr, OH 1114·048·2503.
:..;_;..:..;:..:;:::;_ _ _ _...:__
45843.
JET

450 ·

Fumlahed
Rooms

AERATION MOTORS •
~eel. Now &amp; R.buiiJ In Stocl&lt;

Coli Ron E•na 1-800-537-G528.

Rooms for rent - week or month.

longaberger baskets w/all accenoritt, magazine t 120. Retlr~ large hamper 1300. WI tea
Sleepinq room• With cooking. · blaket 135. Wt largo peg $50. 6
AfsD tra1ler apace on river. All mullin $40, H omall pur10 1$0.
hook-ups. Call afler 2:00 p.m., 304-815-1077.
304·773-5851, Mason 'IN.
Marchi,.. Jenny Lind babr bod,
manreu. changing tabl• &amp;
460 Space tor Rent
dr•saer, used litUe, exc:. c:ond .
Trailer lor on Soour C8fll!&gt; Roed at $300 ..New linle Tykes race car
Che11er, includea lree gat, $801 bed. $115. Now Brother oewing
"""614-tl5-397t.
machine wJcaae. $110. Stroller
$10. 304-675-1077. .
Star~ng

at S120/ma. Ga:llla HoJot
814-oW&amp;-951!0.

RENTALS

410 Houses for Renl
2·3 bedroom house in Rutland,
deposit &amp; references requked, no

pets, call614·742·2tl61.

2bedr0om houn, c;;arpeted. Gar·
port Deposit &amp; laeM required. No
peto. $3Somo. 304-1115-5904.
2bedroDm in Hartford. S250m0.

MERCHANDISE

No pots. Call after 4pm. 304-8822016.

3 Bedroom· Home tn Centenary,
$4150/Mo. Plus Security Deposit,

510

614-44~566.

Houselorsale. 304-675-6720. '

In Middleport available Mar 111,

3 bedroom, 2 bath, basement, rfv·
er view, $400 per month ptua uliU·
tie~ 614-992-71311 ahe{8pm

Household
Goods·

::-:-=:...:...:.:..::---....:...----1

180 wanted To Do
Oon·s Lawn Care. Reasonable
Rateal Will Do Churches, a Co·

610 Farm Equipment
1 Row Tobacco Settet, Exceuent
Condlaoo,.e1H45-0610.
1QOO Ford Tiaclor, Diesel Front

End Loader, Disc Plow (2) 130 Hr
E•cetlent Condition, Like New 3
Pt. Hook-Up , S12,000 For All,
614·4.46· 4559 Serious Calla Only.
Used In Garden &amp; Woods On~.

SOMEBOoors NOT ·
TAKIN6 TWIS 6AME

SERIOOSL'&lt;!

1965 Massey Ferguson Tractar,
Very Good CDnditlon·, Runs EK·
cellenl814- 742·2•~7.
2 Ford tractors. NAA I 961, like
new. Call 304-895·34.4 1 altar

..

4:30pm.
477 N.H. Harfllne, Bl4-ll62·3956.
49.4 John

Deete corn plantet, 711

llt2 Chilly Z-34, Red 3.4 litre.

760

Auto Parts &amp;

• I

Accessories

Loaded, Garage Kept, Excellent

Condhion, Low Mileage, 814·446- Budget Tranomiuloni, Used 19e&lt;
7002.
built. All Trpu, Acce11iblt Jd.
llt2
Ford
Rlingor
o&lt;L
cob, V-8, 5 Over 10,000 Transmission, Aftt1.
Cullpac.ker, JQngu·e needs minor
·~
lpd, lpot.l l Beall. ps, new tires. Overhuall&lt;ita, 814-245-.5677
$100. 30~-1175-5253.
$8,500. 304-875-2214.
New. gas. tanka. on·e ton tr~
Gehl Round Baiera. t.tower Con- 1182 Lincoln CDnlinental Lload- wheel~ radlamro. floor mats,.etc. ,,
D &amp; R Auto,' Ripley, 'IN. 304-372•
dltianera, DIIC Mowera. Olac odlt13.200, 814-441.0738.
3D33 or t·JI00.273-8321.
·· •
Mower Conditlonera. Forqe
Equlpmenr Salea And Service.
790 Campers&amp; '''i·...Il
Alrl~er Farm Supply, 814·2455183.
.
'
·Motor Homes

N:ew Holland chopper, for sale or
trade lor catl!e, 304·~76·2065.

"'P""·

,

••

1967 Shasta c~mpor. tO', rofriO'!
pona. p·onr.-

er.BtDr, stove, sink,

rwo ~~. new tires,

goo~

condlllon.' asking SSOO. 114·742-l
3142,
1

Ul!lh opookorl,ll4·tt2·7207.

Rainbow sweeper wirh auachSocial Worl&lt;1rs, Now Hiri... U3 I
,.., Pizza.
monts. 304-1175-1725.
Hr + Benefit&amp;, On The Job Train- Slx room hDuse and bath . utility
Reconditioned ReFrigerators. Stoves, Washers
;,.. To Apply _In Your Area, 1 ·~· room, big red barn, 2 112 acres on TwD 3 Bedroom House ~ Kanau- Appliances: .
339·8150.
New Lima Ret., Rudand. 614-742· ga S3751Mo $150 Deposit, 614• Waahero. Drrers, Rangeo, Ratri· And Dryers.· Ajl Reconditioned
446-7473.
.gratort, 80 Day Guarantee! And Gauran14ldl $100 And Up,
2757.
Someone to mow lawns in Camp
French Cit' Maytag, 814· 446· Wil Oeliver, 614-ee9-8«1.
COnley area. 304·675-6639.
·
Stat&amp;ly 2story brick in establi9h&amp;d Two bedroom house in Pomeroy, 7795.
neighborhood ,
3bedroams, HUO approved, rent and deposit,
Sam SDmtrville'a Army camou·
110 Miscellaneous
2batha, famil~ room, 2fireplaces, no pets, wiH aell on cOnnct. 61&lt;4· Country Furniture. :JO.t-875-8820. llago by Sandyville Posr Ollice.
698-7244,
Rt
2
N,
8mileo.
Pt
Pleuon~
WV.
covered patio, 1car integral ga·
Fri·Sun, noon·Spm. {Turkey sea•• swimming poDI. no liner.· rage. Call 30&lt;-675-3262 lor appL,
T.-Sarll-6, Sun t1·5.
son Apr 22)'. 304-273-5855.
$35.00. 30&lt;-1175- t 464.
Two bedroom house,
leave message.

Weat Nortll

2+ . 2•
Pus · 4 •

........·

NH T har blno. Gohl grinder mil·
er. Ford 532 square baler. All
good cond. 304-273--4216.
.

...

TJIE BORN LOSER

Tractor hydraulic fluid Ste:ag,
SQal. Sicler'l Equlp,.,t. 304-6757421 or I·JI00.277-31117.

EVEJi:. I:DIDEi:IW

,

VfEBIUBT~

I~I'TEDIT!

~~-..~Tift. In() (No'£

Two Trantport Diaka· fnttrnatlonal, 1111. •
e IL: 7ft.

.rom c-..

.~~TO f'().U

hayblno: Vicon Disk mower; g ft.
grain and 10od grill; Maooey F"'·
guaon 3 ••• of plowa: u....~
Fer~~~ · work horse tractor;
614199.

in-ground pool, 814-992·5057.

Two bedroom in houJie in Pomeroy, on land cootract with good relEileen's Personal Care. Spec;ializ· eroncea, 814-698-7244.
lng In Alzheimer's care giving.
Call us • We can help. 304·782· 320 Mobile Homes
General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed

GutJera Cleaned Light Hauling,

for Sale

BIG NATE
420
Aoct.r recliner. _.0; ama:ll c;ouc:h
and onoman, $60; rwa maple end
~IBblea, $20; waloot IWin bed, complete, SIOO; 814-885-35115.

Commeric:al, Residential, Steve:

14JC70 SChultz 2 bedroom 1 bath
on appro•· 1 a~;re in Gallipolis
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't Feu~ area. $17 .500 . 304-67'5haul your logs to the min just call ._,_6t_7_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
304·675·1957.
1988 Richardson mobile home,
12x60 $3,500 . ,price neg . 304Give plano l&amp;110na tn my home, 4.58-1S..6.
.
to all age groups, also teach
chording &amp; tra.naposing, if inter· 1973 liberty 1 B&amp;droom, Good
ested, caM 61.(..992·540:1
Condition, 614-446-6648.

Proleutonal Tree Servicl, Stump
Removal , Free EStimates! In·
surance, Bidwell, Onio. 814·388·

9648, 61•·367· 7010.

.

1982 mobile home, t4o52, window
air, 10M12dec:k. 304-578-241i.
1986 Clayton, twO bedroom, 1 1f2
balh, kitchen, living 100m, laundry
room, new c;;arpel.._deck includ&amp;d,

Sun .valley Nursery School.
ChUdcare M·F 6am·5:30pm Ages VGC , $10,000, Hoge• Abbou,
2·K, Young School Age ou·rlng 814·092-6114.
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini·
1988 141170, 2bedroom, electric
~nr&amp;H-446·31157.

(

~e Will

Haul Saw Ousl, Stone
For Orlvowaro &amp; Sand, .614·379·
2777.

614 ·448-4878 No Calls After 10

PM.
Will babys• t your child, county
certified or pt"iva&amp;e pay, have fel·
_erences , rvuonable
rate.
Cheater, 81~-1185-3406, Sandie.
Will Do ln1erior ·er E~~:terior PaintinG. Rea1onable Ratel, E•perl-

enced, Raltf.ncel, For Freo.Esd·
mato1, 614-245-!1755.

'

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

o Honies for sale

~2- 2218.

199S ·Bfeezewood, 3bedroom aU

1995 Clayton I ~•70 2 Badroomo,
2 Baths, Garden Tub. 8JC10 Build·
ing, Coli AllOr 4:00 614-441.017t.

..

.

no pet!, 01

Bedroom New1
Range. RefrlgeraiOf j'urniS!lOd,
Gas Hea' S2tl6flolo., Plus Utiitios.
Deposit Required, 614-448-2957.

~:::.:.:.:-;:"·;.::7"&lt;::-:: 81~·245-

2 Badroom Upotairo

300 Fourth Avenue, G~~~';
Utilllea Paid, No Poto, ~

IEIIMII

• -'-nt

520

Sporting
Goods '

-due

Price Bu111r. 1998 3btdroom.

'*'"'"·

\

.

local ret.rence1 furniajled. Call

1

(614) 448·0870 Or (8141 237·:
o•ea Rogers Waterproofing. El· \
tablished 1975.

'

TRANSPORTATION

710 AutOS for sate

n-. .• 014-lg2· 7471 ar 114-94t·
287t.

540 Miscellaneous
MerChandise

250 Kawasaki 3 ·wheetor S700.
Air cond. 11,0110 BTU $250. 2.1 '
ong1na *""- m. 304-571-2753.

I FRIDAY

. :

.A:p.p_l-ia.;;,nc"'o-Pa-:-r-II_A_nd_;So~,.-,-c,-:....,
Ail'~:
Name Branda OVer 25 Years ~
p8rienGI All WOfk G·uaranttiCfo
'

V'

'f

he N limate call Che' 6u.gJ12. •

304·675-3126 Allor

.22-ltlel

24 EmplOy

25Howl-

28 Fal! monlh
27 Metric weight
21 Skallton part

· 3+
All pals

.

I

'110 Ponrlac Grand Prll SE Sport
Coupe, auto"'!.atk:; air, aH power,
moonroof, loaded, red with tan
AKC 'Rtgiottrod Black Labrador l•ather
miles,
Ralf- Pups, Champion !ltoodllne, Shots. Wormed, at4-ete2482.
•
tt57 Ford, 4 door, V·8, auto;
10,000 ICtual mites, looks a runs
AKC
pupa, ""'"l!:tood;::::·~·1
:::,500::::·~8.:.;14-2:.::4;_7~::2t12.=-­
1 '*ld
wlth Rooi
back
muBok, ..,
wooned
and
reaclr to go, o~ty twa maiH left, ttl5 BUick Sk,lark Convwtablt,
·1200,114:-7. .
Vorl Roltorablo, Askl~g $800,
Al1or 5 j:!IU\4:387·7031.
.
:Black &amp; white Coehor Spaniol
pupa, 6wila old, SSOtL 304·773- lt7t Chav' Pick-Up 4x4, Au·
So78.
lomatlc ; 1991 Dodge Drikola
.;.;.;.;;.;,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Pick Up, 40 000 MI..., 1t87,.,
Coppor no11 Baagla pupa: firol
•
·
,..;
"''
. .,.11 and -mod, $10, 814•11112.
Sundanco. 2 Doaro, 114·
3537.

t978 &amp;O.co XLT, 351 II 01\!0D. 6"
lilt, 38" tires on Am8fican racing
wheels, rroon viaor, nerf bars, too
many extra• to liat. $3,000. 304·
773-50711.
.
1984 full aizt van wlheavy dury
wheel chair llh, 814.-843-5384 or
814-M$-S5e.
,.

DRYWALL

'

'I

Hang, llnish, repair.
• •
Ceilings textured, plaater repair. :

Call Tom 304-675-4 t88 ..20 ye• ,
.experience.

30 Shlr1·fnlnt

-t

33Cutwfth

ocr-

. 38 QM..fn Hwn
unmbWtrM
41 Prof.'l dlt43 Stelr part
45 TM type
47 HIIWI

41! Hnlal!an
food l!lh
4t Bumpldn
51 illtr!llllflt
52 Tableland
53 Home of
Adem

56 Food
addltlvl

!r*·' .

57 ioc!cllol,l...
(abbr.)
·

.CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

peop..,

Cellbrlly Clphw c'YJ*IIi•'• ~ ~ lrom quotlllionl by famot.Jt
pu1 anc1 presen~
EIIChllftlfln~C!phtfltlndllofanochef . Td)''aclue: L ~Ill

'DWHUW

I HZ W

HEC

YLIX

V .\'.' HGME

PMFV

PM F

MEDP
YXWE

XMFQW,'

MJWVH

H!

PMFV
PM F

B •

WHVQ
liM

s

XMRW

IM

HE

I

IIMPQSXWC.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "One thing's for sure. No child ol mine will have a
name like Kieler." - Kiefer Surhe~and .

.I-:
I

--,E,...,..,N""'E,...,.IS-H-,--., : ~,

· ·

"How much education do
you
have?" the agent asked the
5
6
·
old timer. "Well,' he replied,"six
r---;:--r-v-l'r'l,.....,.-..., years of schooling and 72
CLIJ&gt;AD . ,yearsof ........r
.

I

A

PRINT NUMBERED

6

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

G Corn~loto

rho chuckle quored

by f.lling in the miqing words

you develop from lOop No. 3 bo!ow.

I

Aviary· Acute • Merry • Steady · DRIVE the CAR
The best years as parents is when kids can shovel
!mow but are still too younR to DRIVE the CAR .

!

8323.

186 Buick Rogal, 2 door, PS, PB,
R•toading 1 Flshing Supplies.
Liv• Bail &amp; license. Crawford'l, AKC .German Shephard pupa. PW, $2500,114-882-5030.
'304-875-61138.
I too.OCIIo liOn, 'IN.
~ Tt.r~'!! SC,.IW&lt;) door, 5.8
.AKC LAb pup!, bl:c~ &amp; Urowh, titre, V-8,.tll~ model turbo, PS,
raady Mar tO, 1001. 304·8t5· PB, AC, S apitd, pawitr •••••
31121.
and locka, "Great Car." 15200

18,000 BTU Roper AC S200 Firm,
114-448-61112.
·
1ggs Lawnmowor Hlth Whooi
litoe NeW 4 Horoa, 22' Cu\ Used
Onl, 4 112 Hro, t Year Lett On .
Warranrr. 1100 Firm, 814·448·
87118.'

1708.

1995 Ford F:150 4x4 ~ulomatic,
AC, St1,500, 614-379-28110.

SOUNt&gt;!

., BASEMENT
•
WATERPROOFING
Un~;onditiDnalllletlme guarantee. 1
·

7195.

om·o. female beagle. ready to

11Thl21 AFL·-

SCIIAM LETS ANSWERS

----------------~
C&amp;C
General · Home t.tai\\-:·
tentnce· P•lnring, vinyl sidinr. ~
carpentry, doors, windows, bath&lt;!
mobUe home repair and .mort. For •

48'x102',
614·885·

cludtl

$6,500, 614·318-0408, Alter 5
PM.: Or Dora: 304·576-4563.

A NKE.

Home
Improvements

French City Martag , 6H ·HI·l ·

. 81--34;17,

total electric, apo
furrolilo.ld launc!rr room
ID ICr-l•ln ttJWn.
available at: Village
~..~.__..,. •• t4t or call 014-tt2·

1993 Ford Ranger .XLT AMiFM

Casaette, ·Ac. New Tires, Price:

C.L.a.NC':o!NC:.

810

Wather Heavy

73118.

g~:c-- ·

7 Bow mlul!a

~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

UW:.K, THEY
Mr'\KE A HOLLOW,

SERVICES

1881 8·10 1984 GMC S-15, Fi ·
noncing Approved Wittoln Hour In

Lot Office, Cook Motors, 614•448·
0103. .
'
.
.

~D

Choooe From; Dryer
Gold $95: Elocrrlc
more Harvell
Refrigerator
1
Warranty, 1 Compressor $350;
Refrigerator Fro11 FrH Kelivina·
tor While $150: Skaggo Appliances-, 76 Vine Slreet, Gallipo·
lit, , ·800-49t ·3499. 614-446 ·

2 bedroom apertmant " Pomeroy,
start. ISO.
no pets, 614·992·5856 ..
Turkey, Archery, Guns, Ammo, e:oo

S825
$159/mo. Froo dellv·
orr &amp; ntup. Onlr ar Oakwood
2 Acral Off teo AI Porter Nice 1 HomH. Nioo wv 304-755-5885.
Badroom, 24132 10x10 Shod
20x22 Qara~. ura Good All tn s...... ltH double wldo ropo.
2barh. Will deliver a
a ..... $31,!100. t41 -543· 7112,' 3bedroom.
oorup_on ,aut ioL 304· 755-5588.
614·388-t411 .

•

i

. 1

t 992 14170 Oakwood 2 BedroQm
2 Full Baths, Great Starter Homel
Locared Rr.2 WV, 814·256·8980
Alter SP..M.

!NOTICE I
OHIO VA~LEY PUBLISHING CO. 2 Bedrooms, Fo, Sale Or Rent,
recommend&amp;thai you do bu&amp;l· Cha,m;r-e ArO., 814·367-7812.
nell with people you know, and 3 Bedroom MDblle Home. Must
NOT 10 sand money through the SaHJ 304-7311-7295.
ma il until you have lnveltigared
•
t1ot af!oring,
188 I Model Sal Up On lot, Bar·
boullvilie, 'IN 3CH31H295,
Commercial building for rent In
cehttr Df downtown Middlapart. Limited Ollerl t9ge doublewide,
2500 oq. IL, 014-ID2·24511.
3br, 2belh, $17~9 down, 1275/
mon th . Free delivery &amp; setup.
local Vending RouJe. $2,500 A I Only at Oakwood Home• . Nitro
'Wk. Poltntiti.,MUII Sail. 1·800· wv.304-755-51!85.
840-3828.
New Bank RtpoL Only 4 JelL Still
REAL ESTATE
in...,..,rr. 304-755·7191.

31

ftpolil required,

1901 Brookwood 14x 76 , CA, 3

-Jric. $15,000. 304-675-~79: .

.

1 and 2
nilhed and

Mile Creek. 304-453-2244.

1992 NDrris 11:iK80 3 Bedroom, 2
Baths, Central Air, LP Gas fiJr·
nace And Sto~~te, Underpinning &amp;
Many Extrat l Vet~ Spaclou1.
Priced To Sell I Easy Financing
Available! &amp;14·247·2032' Aitet e
P.M. Or lea~• Message.

Apartments
for Rent .

440

tN!tTEJoJ&gt;

Early F•

Jackoon Co. Pvlled Hereford AI·
Wanlec:l to buy- good, und pool soc. 23rd Annual sale, Friday
pump, preteroblr oand liltlr, rea- Mar 3rd, tete 7:30pm. Jackson
Co. Falrgroundo, 7ml. well of RipSave Big On Carpet &amp; Vlnrl In sonable, e14-992·5053 al1or 5pm.
2bedroom in Middleport,
ley. 40iota, cows w/calvea, hell·
erences &amp; deposit required.
Srock $6.00 Cash. ICarrr Mollo·
Building
Ofl, bulla, ataera. !!GI-1115-3514.
han Carpets. Rt7N. 814·441· 550 .
682·3267.
7-.
SUpplies
Performance r.-,sted, b-lack An·
Beautiful River View, 2 Bedruoms
In Kanauga, No Pets, References,
VIllA FURNITURE
Block, brick, aewe'r pipes, wind- gus j88ffifll! bu~ Birlh •, I , Willi(!·
614·448-3158
OeiXIsit, Foster's Mobile Homes,
owl, lintels, etc. Claude Winters, ing •25, m!lk +~2. yearling +40.
614-4-41 -0181 .
'
Cua~rr Houlthold F..-nure And
'
Rio Grande, OH Call 114,245· ' 304·875-6248. \
Applloncea. G,..r Deal a On
5121 .
Two and three bedroom
I
Cosh And Carrrl RENT-2-&lt;JWN
homes, starting at $240·$~0,
And Lay--Alao Available.
sower, water and trash included,
Frae Delivery Willoln 25 Miles.
614·992-2187.

heat, 12i28 porch, located on 16

BR. 2 Balh on 112 Acre lor. RE·
Will BabysiJ And lOr Clean OUCED $30,000. Will Sell MH Sa·
Ho"at, Dependable, References, porattly, e.~.. 614-25JI.6391.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprlght, Ron Evan• Enterpl'isea,
Jackson, Otio, t.J100.537·95211.

iO Putple trult

dtYPCI

34 ......,.••

I--T,'I'7""'1,-.,,r-.,,r:8:-rl-l
. .....J.
L-.1.-.J...-.l.-.J.l-...1.

14x70 New Vorker w121 ft. expan·
do, $10,000.:114-1175-5091.

81 4-388-0429.

21 Eaat wlncl diPiy
31 Cllamlcllaulllx
32 Rcwura• taalll

I

""""riG' 614-37t·2847.
2544.

no~-.

Eaal

For stl!rlets, here's a question from
a game show: What is the maximum
speed of a New York City subway
train?
In this deal, the final contract need·
ed a very lucky lie of the cards, but
only one declarer found the right tract
home .. How would you play In four
spades agalnst the diamond-king lead?
The auclio!l was hair-raising, racing
into the stratosphere. North, Wltb such
great distribution, didn't want to pasa
on the first round. Yet, as he was tOo
weak for three clubs, he compromised
with a bid of two hearts. &lt;Double would
have been for penalties.) With his use·
lui-looking heart honors, South
thought he was worth three spades.
Finally, North, taking the view that bis
partner wail unlikely to win exactly
nine tricks, took a shot at game.
One declarer, after ruffing in the
dummy, played a heart to his ace,
ruffed another diamond and exited
with a heart. He was hoping for a 3·3
spade break and a· winning club fi.
nesse. flowever , here the contract
failed. After winning with the heart
king, West· played a diamond to EaSt's
queen. Then another round of hearts
promoted a trump trick for West. The
defend~rs scored a trick in.each suit.
Peter Straeter from Germany did
better. After ruffing !he diamond lead
in the dummy, he called for the club
queen. East won with the king.and returned a diamond, but after ruffing in
the dummy, declarer played a club to
bis 10, drew ·trumps in three rounds
and claimed 12 tricks . .
"Sorry, partner. I underbid badly,"
said North, tongue firmly in Cheek
A New York subway train can do
about 40 mph, but a game-sbow .eon·
testant thought it could manage 500
mph ,

U!8d 25~4XP Case ttonchtr.
614-894-71142.

Ttvee bedroom home in country,
Whites Hill Fld., Rutland, ana baJIO,

DOWN

24 III!JIJllanllll

By Phillip Alder

makea

Call 814·188-8373, Rt. 7 AbOve
ProciOnlilte, Ohio, Bet~ Glcwan·

.,_

23 . . . . rlc!lr'l

Racing
to destruction

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

2

12livlng Room Suirea, 2 PieGe Prom Oreal, New Size 4 Match ·
Sho"' e 112. 11150, 814-448Nor $4H EaCh, Onir W5 Eoch, ing
2350.

II itll .

11 ... ,. .
It The 'l'hlrd ,..

Opening lead: • K

I AIM TO INVITE
.YU.HAID, WILL'M,
ARNIE, .JANEY,
THURLOW AN'
.POODY II

$100. 304-353-35711.

lUrnla~.

South
,.
3.,

•

.BARNEY

Orlando, 4 holel nights near Dis·
ney. Uaa .,.Jimt. S300 value, 11011
Pioneer recliYM. ,BSR

leiMI

2111tl, •·t-

VIIJ!!erable: Neither
Dealer: South

Bland - SOto F1eoc With Butlat'·
lly And Log Ex1en1lon Accaa1o·
rill, 111100. 814-245-51184.
Carper I Vinyl Saio·: Mollohan
Oarpotl, 614....a.7«4 Rt, 7 N.
Conc,. 11 &amp; Ptallic Saptlc Tank&amp;,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallon• Ron
Evan• Enter,n~aa, Jackson, OH

AIIM•a or eo.....,.,..,.,

compan!an
uT. . .
37 Zela-Piihlrll'oii~-..
Ml
3t African anlmel

6A K Q t 7
•A J .
•• 3 2
610 7 4

!'OOm, tumlohed. Oopo1i1 I rotor·

Now acctpJing oppllcatlano lor
Lydia Apartm..t, l~tld on An·
deraon Street, In M.aoan, WV, 2
boclroomo. ID!al oloctrlc, appllonc., Jumilhtd. " inter-. cqniiCJ
Ruia.. t Manager Dixie Bqwleo
at (304)773-5521. Equal OpporIIJrilf HOOJiing.

11

•A Q J t as
Eut
•J as
••o e 2
•K I
•Q 10 5 4
+A KJ t 8 4
• Q 10 7 5
•• 3
•K 2·

- · Allor 7 PJoli
Groclouo living. 1 ind 2 bod 11110rtmonta aJ VIIJate Manor and
Rivi(IJde ApatiiMI!II In 111porL From 1232-13!16 . Ca!ll14tt2·50M. Equal Holullnt Oflpor·

COftlllll!lllld

17 ....,.

... 7. 3 2

t275/lolo. Ullll1iel Pold, 114-44

Cr"k Rood, Barbouflville, WV
25604, 304-7311-34011.
.

16 Cll U 111
16 I' P'ot

a ...)
maMr!lil
11 ' " - - (boiW) 5I D!lftcu!t 10

Nartlr
65 4

Pold, IICI7 t11 1111 Allor 7 P.lol.

ponents AI Home. E•perlence
Unneceuary, Wiii ·Tral n. lmme· -~~~~~~~~~~~diate Openings Your Local ArH. 310 Ho!lljls for-sale
With Sueam • $11,GOO, Nice
CoN Hi20·a80-71111 En D11l114.
Bulldlng 5 A&lt;rll • tl2,000 Or 11
Ac:res · $11,000. In Golllpolio On

ply At: Tope Furniture, 151 Second
Galllpollo, No Phone

--·Gall-

MIIIIndOf . . .

*•

11 Rmlvw (Of

==-=:.=.=.::.:.::::.___ 1AV.nuo,
~ ~-·~··t 21 Aoor ....,
Galllpollo, Furni&amp;IJell

blsed oo race, color, rollgloo,
sextamlhl 'talus or natlo!\al
or1gln, or any lntantton to
make any such pt'll'f&amp;&amp;IIC8,

~njty

addllionel room 11122.

colll14-~7-2141

AI roolwtale a!Monlllng In
ttlo now poporls IUI&gt;ject to
1l1e Federal Fair Houtofl1g Ac:t
ol1968 Olofok;n mekeo ~Illegal
to IKMir1lse "lnypref......,,

Goo

Fui"llhtd Efflclenc' 2 Aoon!o,
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can help you
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·11ov. 22) Friends
make 1he relationship work. Ma)l $2.7510 may resen1 you Kyou try 1o sollcH money
ASTRO·ORAPH
Mat~hmaker, c/o !his newapaper, P.O. for your pet charity roday, Even If lhey
Box 1758, Murr1y Hill Station, NeW York, co""ly, they will not appJeCiate your racNY 10156.
llc:s.
·.
GI!MPIIP (Miy 21-June 20) Your Judg· SAGPTTARIUS (llov . 23·DIC. 21)
ment pertaining -to an abrasive tamlly Aisoclates might not be inler.-red in
BERNICE
Issue could be better lhan your mal6'a almilar objec!lves today. 'rry not to base
BEDEOSOL today, but I you fry to lr~~poee ft rOreatully, your aaaumpllons on a sltalty premlae.
he or alta wlllrealal you .
. CAPRICORN (Die. 22:JIIn. 1t) Mlaulling
CNICER (June 21-July 22)1n rllfl8fd lo your imagination could impede .your
an objective y01.1 want IO achievl today, p~ loday. Do.no1 make 1he miSialca
1 your llret ldeaa might nol be your best
or thlnldng !hat your 1815t1 are
dlllf.
011111. Run them by a lriantl who haa had cult !han they are.
. OUCCIII in lhllaraa.
'
AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-l'.tl. 1t) Today you
' LEO (Ju!y 23-Aus. 22) TIY 10 be a com- may have 10 taka a
direct approadt
parlaon a hopper Ieday . Before buying 1n regard ro a deliCate ITIIItw you want 10
.,..,
I anything IMIW, cheCk Olhar- to- r~so!WI with a friend. Let your colnpaall98
'
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· K!iCIU can got lhll ume Mllfl) for a biller e1on direct your actiOnl.
tn lhll yaar lhlad you maYJIOQUh • , _ priCe.
.
·PIICI!S (l'ab. :1Ht18rch 20) If you aril
pc~U~~aalon you've alwaye wanted bul VIRGO (Aus. 21-Sept , 22) !t will be roo lndecPs!WI about Jllllllllaaues loday,
COUld not allord. V!)U may be JIIIIJIZed at lmperat!WI to 11hlbllah a good worltlng your behavior might lntlalt your coo..,..
how lhlldl'4etcpe.
atmot~~ltare roctay.
you lead by lone. Do not make 1 big Cleel ebout
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) 5t could · .,....., no 0111 wfll man:h 50 the bear ol lnllgniiPcanl flclora.
.
prove ~nwlll todaY to fry to 1111an the your Cln.lll.
AJ11U ·(lllnll 21-A,wt! 1•1 ~
..wl!h·l pereanyou ,IMihalwiOIIgld UIRA (lajM,Ja:Oot 23)You ahould not or volunfMrl COUld hinder you mort than
yoo In the p11t. llt!IP making lhinga apancl.,_ _,~Ill IIIII Willi do men tor . ttMJy 1t4!1P ·YQIJfodly, " an ~rrpo.tant IUk
wQfll. Trying to patch up 1 broken Olhlnllltan IIMJy do fllr yoU; In lll:t, Wyou neec11 robe dOne·COI'reCI!y, you w11 have
J'IIIIIIIIOI? The Altro-Grapll MaldMI ~ ICICiecl -lfhlrtg up tha oppollll might 10 do It you!MII.

...

mo..

more

unr.aa

APRIL 261

�•

. , . 12 • The Deily SenUMI

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April 28, 1

•

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
I've never lcamcd the identity of
the youngster who sang at the Oklahoma City Memorial Service but
Jane Walton advises me that she saw
the young man on one of the television talk shows.
She also never picked up on the
name but did learn that the bis goal
of the singer is to present The National Anthem at a major league ball
game. "You Are the Wind Beneath
My Wings" was the selection the
youngster whom Jane says lives in
California sang at the Memorial Service. If you heard it, you'll remember
him.

really appreciate havina beard from
so many friends. The couple had a
most enjoyU.Je anniversary day.

Mother's Day is comina up on
Sunday, May 12. anc1 if you're loojcmg for some special activity you
misht enjpy a trip down to Rio
Grande to the spring concert of the
Masterworks Chorale being held on
the University of Rio Grande Campus.
The concert starts at 3 p.m. so
you'll have time to do dinner out
before attending.
The first half of the concert is
made up of five Gilbert and Sullivan
Just after staging their flower fes: numbers taken from their operettas
tival this weekend. members of the while the second half of the prescnRacine Area Conununit} Organiza- tation is a choral revue of the Amertion· will be holding their annual yard ican Broadway musical with excerpts
sale at the Star Mill Pait. That will · of some 28 songs from 2 I Broadway
be on May 3 and 4.
shows.
Everyone is invited to make conBob Ervin of Jackson is narrator
tributions and if you have something for the revue by the chorale which is
to contribute just call 949-2071. underthe direction of Dr. Merv MurThere is also pickup service of your dock.
,
items if you desire that.
The chorale is a unique mix of
University of Rio Grande students,
Leanne Cunningham and Tina · faculty, staff and citizens from JackNeigler, hoth registered nurses and son, Meigs, Vinton, Gallia and Mason
' ·
both employed with the Home Health Counties who enjoy singing.
Service at Veterans Memorial HosMeigs residents who take part
pital were a real bfessing for Marcia .with the group include Lois Burt,
Houdashelt and her late husband, Gay Perrin. Diane Hawley, Alice
Bob, during their long ordeal.
Globokar and Carolyn Thomas, all of
Leanne was assigned to whom are members of the Trinity
Houdashelts and Tina filled in when Choir in Pometoy; Jim Pelligrino,
Lee Ann wa5 tied up with other cas- Amy Rouse, and Sam and Ryan
es. Both were so compassionate and Cowan.
helpful and Marcia wanted them to
The concert is free of charge but
know that the family is so apprecia- a free will offering will be taken and
tive of their wonderful effort and · refreshments will be served in the
expertise.
atrium following the performance.

•

:.::_-.

.

In order to serve you better· Jn the future, we are currently
Installing new warehouse technology. This has resulted in some
merchandise not arriving on a timely basis.
We are sorry for any Inconvenience this may have caused
you.
To show our appreciation to you, our valued customers, we're
offering this "1 0% Off Coupon" on your enti~e purchase of
regular and sale priced merchandise, Saturday, ~pril 27th, · 8
a.m. to noon. ·

---------·

And big thanks to you from Mazie
and Vic Hannahs for the flowers and
cards sent for their 50th wedding
anniversary. As I recall the anniversary was on April 21. Mazie and Vic

Will I be seeing you among the
posies at the Racine Area Community Organization's Aower Festival at
Star Mill Park in Racine Saturday? I
hope so--and smiling. of course ..

. ....

.

.

·1OOth birthday celebrated

William Grueser of Roi:k Springs
recently celebrated his I OOth hirthday at his home, with visits from
several friends and relatives to celebrate the Occasion.
Mr. Grueser received over 100
cards, including greetings from
President
Clinton, 'Governor
· Voinovich, Senator Mike DeWine,
and Congressman Frank Cremeans. ·
Visiting were his son and daughter-in-law, Leo and Jeanie Smith of
Berrier Springs. Michigan; daughter
and son-in-law, Helen and Harold ·Blackston; gr~~ndchildren: Bob,

Brenda, Jeremy, Joey. Bruce, and
Clayton Blackston. and Sherrie and
Jack Kane of Charleston. W.Va.
Other visitors included Nancy
Morris; Robert and Jenny Burdetle,
John Blake, Ed Ball, Lula ShafTer,
Dorothy Morris, Amy Baker, and
Brenda Cunningham. He received
calls
his gran'ddaughter, Beuy
Mettler of Michigan, and Ruth Ann
an~Angely Wiley of Arizona.

·rrom

41300 LAUREL CLiff ROAD • POMEROY

-

~

. OPEN 9 . . .__, .·~-~ MON.~SAI.
SUNDAY I 0
lt.M.

...

. ·-

IOaOOAM·6aOOPM
lcOO•JcOO

fREE FINANONG

Alexander
marks birthday
Carol Ann Alexander. daughter of
Bradley W. and Stephanie Alexander,
Vinton. celebrated her seventh birth-·
day
March
21. · with
a
suiiilower/spring-them party at her ·
home. She had a yellow and white
cake featuring a miniature patrol car.
Atlending the party were her parents and siblings: Katie, Nick and
Jessie Alexander; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Houchins; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Alexander; Victor · Casto and
Annabelle; Judy Alexander and Stacie; Krista Eason and Amanda; Mr.
and Mrs. Hue~ Eason; Trhonda Case
to; Jonathan and Austin; Patli Wallen;
and Geremy and Zach.
Sending cards and gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Perkins. Tim Casto,
Robert Eason, Karen Tripp, 'Dale
Bing and Danielle, Josh Murphy and
Beth Payne.

VISA
M/C

(WITH APPROVED

DISCOVER

~ •

,,&lt;'•

. . .• !5 ...

".-

.. .
~

.•

·····"""'

Students
named to ·
honor rolls
Seven area students were recently named to the winter quaiter honor
roll at The Ohio State University,
Columbus,.for achieving high academic averages fOJ: their quarter's
wo~.
·
Those honored received a grade
.poirit average of at least 3.5 and were
_ enrolled for at least 12 credit hours.
Area studentS named included:
Barbara Joan Anderson, Sarah Elizabeth Anderson, Julianne Renee
Buck. Jeremy William Buclcley, ·
Cleon Reginald Pn!tt U, Andrew
David Wolf, all of Pomeroy; Robyn
Ann Stout, Syracuse, ·

•

Supplement to:
~alliPolis

Daily Tribune
. · The Daily Sentinel .
'

Point Pleasant Register

. . Friday, April 26,-1996
..

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