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                  <text>The Daily Sentinel

W1' •II'IJ. Af•I.U. H11

and drove in four runs at
Houston · to overcome two
borne runs by Chipper Jones.
Alou tied hi&lt; career high
with four hits. He had his 17th
multihomer game in the
majors.
Reynolds (1-1) allo\ved five
runs and seven hits in 5 2-3
innings, and ~nl Bottenfield
finished for his first save.
Odalis Perez (1-3) allowed
seven runs, six hits and four
walks in three-plus innings.

. . . . 12..P d111l
SAN DIEGO (AP) - ust
year. Rickey Henderson got
released by the New York
Mets for walking slowly.
On Tuesday night, walking
slowly got him a pbc:e in the
record book.
Henderson, pinch-hiuing
for San Diego reliever David
Lee in the sixth inning, tied
Babe Ruth's career record of
2,062 Wallu as San Diego lost
to the Philadelphia Phillies 12-

Pirates 5, Dodgers 1

7.

"It's a great record;' HenOrnar Olivares (1 -2) comderson said. ~Being in a class
bined
with three relievers on a
with Babe Ruth is an outsunding achievement. I'm the four-hitter at Dodger Suditype -·of guy that individual um, and John VanderWal hit a
stats don't mean much if three-run homer off C han Ho
you're not winning ball games, Park (2-2).
Olivares "(1-2) allowed three
·and in this situation we're not
hits
in 5 1-3 shutout innings,
winning."
Held out of the sta rting struck out seven and walked
lineup because he's hitting just two. He was followed by Terry
. 1 II , he worked the count Mulholland, Bronson Arroyo
fuU,fouled off a pitch and then and Jose Silva, who allowed a
walked when Chris Brock ninth-inning RBI double to
missed low and outside witli a Chad Kreuter ·
Park (2-2) allowed three
90 mph fastball .
Bobby Abreu homered, runs and four hits in s~ven
drove in four runs and scored mmngs.
three times as Philadelphia
Expos l
sent San Diego to its eighth
loss in nine gan1es.
·
Randy Wolf (1 -3) struck out · , Darryl Kile (3-2) allowed
a season-high nine and made five hitS in seven innings al St.
it into. the sixth inning for the Louis, striking out seven and
first time in four starts, walking none.
although he blew a S-0 firstAlbert Pujols had t\vo doninning lead.
1 bles and three, RBls for the
Abreu's leadoff homer in the Cardinals.
Javier Vasquez (2-2) allowed
fifth broke a 6-6 tie and chased
Woody Williams (1-3).
six runs- four earned- and
nine hits in four innings.

Cardinals 7,

Rockies 14, Cubs I

Diamondbacks 9,
MaJtins 8.

Larry Walker homered twice
at Coors Field to tie for the
major league lead with 11 ~nd
match the NL record for
April. He also had five RBis.
Todd Helton added two
hits, including a three-run
homer, to help the Rockies
beat Kevin Tapani (3- 1) for the
first time in seven tries: They
also sent t~e right-hander's.
ERA skyrocketing from 0.?6
to 4.91, getting 10 runs and 11
hits off him in 3 1-3 innings.
Mike
Hampton
(3-0)
allowe.d one run and three hits
in five innings before leaving
with a stiff neck.

Jay Bell hit a three-run
homer off Antonio Alfonseca,
capping a five-run rally in the
eighth at Phoenix.
Bret Prinz (1 -0) gave up one
hit jn two innings.
Matt Mantei took over to
start the ninth with a 9-7 lead·.
He gave up a solo home run
to Cliff Floyd, got two outs
and then strained a · trice·ps
tendon . Russ Springer retired
Derrek Lee on a fly ball for his
first save.
Armando Almanza '(0-1)
was the loser.

Astros 11, Braves 6

Brewen 6, Mets 4'

Moises Alou homered twice

Pinch-hitter Tyler Houston

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Arizona 9, Florida o
Plliladelphla 5, San Diego 3
Tundey'l Gamet!
Houston 11 . Atlanta 6
• St. Louis 7, Mon1real 2
Mitwaukee 6, N.Y. Mets 4
Colorado 14, Chica!JO Cubs 1

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Philadelphia (Penon 1· 1) at San Diogo
(Jarvis &lt;H). 5:05p.m.
Atlatia (Uacldux 2·1) al Arizona (Biis
2.0), 9:35p.m.
Pi11!00fllll (RH- 0.2) II Los AngeleS
(Brown 2·1), 10:10 p.m.

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Mike Dejean (2-0) pitched
one-third of an inning, and
Curtis Leskanic got three .outs
for his second save.

Red Sox 9, 'IWins 4
Fooled his first time up, Carl
Everett quickly got more than
even.
Everett hit a grand slam in
the second inning, and the
Boston Red Sox led the rest of
the way, beating the Minneso- ·
ta Twins 9-4 Tuesday night.
Everett looked bad in the
first ·inning, striking out on
changeups from Mark Redman. The next inning, he hit
Redman's fastball over the
left-field waU at Fenway Park
for his sixth career slam.
''I've been trying to do too
much. I've been overswinging," Everett said. ''I'm still
climbing and . not where I
should be, but I'll get there."
Boston has won seven of
nine and leads the AL East.
Despite the loss, Minnesota
has won 10 of 12 and leads the
AL Central.
"We're still on a roll," Redman said. "One game's •ot

going to make a difference."
Athletics 6,
Th,c Twins took a 3-0 lead
Sox4
-in the first off Paxton Crawford. The rookie followed with
J ason Giambi hit his eighth
four scoreless innings ro get
the win.
career grand slam as Oakland
"I was nervous ~ml juinping won at Comiskey Park.
up and down in the first·
The_ victory enabled the
inning," he said. "After the Athlen~s to av~td the worst
first, 1 settled down and got in · record m team hostory through
20 games. . .
.
a groove."
Manny Ramirez had three
Chicago lost tts fourth m a
hits for the Red So;x and raised row. ~anager Jerry Manuel
his average to a league-leading satd he d gtve Frank Thomas
.429. He also drove in a run, the day off Wednesday and
and tops the AL with 22 JUJis. hold a team meettng.

White

.

1

loss. The Tigers. have dropped-.
It of 13.
:·
Pat Hentgen, a former hig~:
school star in Michigan;pitched seven solid innings fof.
the Orioles.
·

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Anpls 7, lndlau l ;!
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Slumping Wally Joyner hit i;
two-run homer and Anaheim:
stopped a four-game losinf
streak with a victory at Jacob'
Field .
Joyner, batting only . 154~
put the Angels ahead for gooct
by connecting off Clevelamf
BIHJayS 7,
ace Bartolo Colon.
The game helped mark th~
1OOth anniversary of the firs{
Raul Mondesi homered and game in AL history, wheli
drove in three runs a; Toronto Cleveland lost at Chicago o~
won at SkyDome.
April 24, 1901.
•
Ivan Rodriguez homered in
' .
his fourth straight game, tying
Rllys 4,
the Texas record shared by
l
Mike. Hargrove, Juan Gonzalez
.
and Rafael Palmeiro.
Greg
Vaughn
and Geral4
Jose Cruz Jr. extended his
Williams
hit
tWo-run
homers;
hitting streak to 17 games, the
and Tampa Bay won before ~
longest in the AL this season.
crowd of only 11,056, the
smallest in the four-year histo:S ry ofTropicana Field.
1 :·
Albie Lopez improved to 3~
. Baltimore won consecutive 0 with a 1.59 ERA in three
' games for the first time this career starts against Kansas ·
season, u~ingJay Gibbon~· four City.
htts to wm at Con~enca Park.
Gibbons hit two doubles
and two singles as the Orioles
'·'
.sent Detroit to its -s ixth straight

RlnprsS

Tom Lampkin hit a disputed
home run that helped, Seatde
win at Yankee Stadium.
The Mariners, off to the best
start in team history at 16-4,
made it 5-all in the seventh
inning on Lampkin's homer
off Roger Clemens.
Chuck
Left
fielder
Kn.oblauch jumped at the
wall, and the ball bounced out
of his glove and hit the top of
the fence. With spectators q:ying to grab the souvenir, the
ball fell untouched back onto
the field.
Third-base umpire .Lance
Barksdale ruled it a home run.
New York manager Joe Torre
briefly argued the play. ·

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

No . 197

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BaltimOre 8, ~ 3
Tampa Bay 4. Kansas City 2
Boston 9, Minnesota 4
Sea11le 7, N.Y. Y811i&lt;ees 5
- 7. C-nd2
Toronto 7. Texas 5
oakland 6, Chicago While Sox 4
T-y'•Texas (Roger&amp; 1-1) at Toronto (Carpent~r 2-1), 7:05p.m.

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broke a -1-all tie with a tworun homer in the sixth off
Donne Wall (0-2) at Milwaukee. Ri chie Sexson and
Jeromy Burnitz hit consecutive homers off Glendon.

lhursday

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Pittsburgh 5, Los Angeaes 1

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(Nugle 2-o), 9:05 p.m.
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2.0), 9:35p.m.
~ (Doll t.O) at Son Diogo
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Cincinnati (Fomandez 3-1) al San
francisco~ 2·1), 10:15 p.m.
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11/2
1112

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,
COMING FRIDAY: PRIDE 2001 - a ·salute to the region
'

suspect
8Y Mine E CUTIIt
OVP NEWS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Authorities are
looking for a man who
walked away from Peoples
Bank, N A, 251 3 Jackson
Ave., with an undisclosed
amount of cash Wednesday
afternoon.
Lt. Joe Miller of the
Point Pleasant Police
Department said an olive
complexion
man,
described as being 6 foot
to 6-foot-3 in height and
200- 230 pounds, entered
the bank lobby and quiedy
Went to the counter.
He brandished an automatic pistol and told the
teller, "I want some bills."
After receiving the cash, he
told her to lay down ' on
the floor and left the
building.
Because the suspect was
so quiet, Miller said other .
employees .working in the
bank were not aware the
robbery happened until
after the man had left.
Wimesses saw the man
walking as far as a block
away from the bank after
the robbery.
.• .• "He"~~ y~ry, .fialn\. ~d l
. CQ91;'' ~lt said~ ..,..,~
'
Miller said video surveillance
fro,~ t~c banli: .
have been viewed and
pblice hal(e agreed they do
not believe the thief is
from Point Pleasant. The
FBI diolc: bhe tapes for further investigation.
The nun is in his 40s
with salt and ·pepper hair,
mustache and beard. He
was wearing a blue shirt,
white tennis shoes and
.
I
Jeans.
Capt. J.D. Sallaz reported
that the an was on its way
to Point Pleasant to follow
up on some leads in the
case. Television and radio
reports of the amount of
cash taken from the bank
were incorrect, he said.
The local department
will be meeting with a
Jackson, Ohio, officer who
is investigating .a similar
robbery which o~curred at
Subway in Jackson on
Thesday.
.·
Sallaz said the cit)&gt; has ·
· called out · additional officers to work during the

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Ave Southern High School candidates prepare to contend for the title of queen in Racine's annual Aower
Festival. S])Onsored by the Racine Area Community Organization, the event will be Saturday at Star Mill
Park. Those competing are, from left, Emily Stivers, daughter of Betsy Jones of Racine and Don Stivers of
Middleport; Kenda Smith, daughter of Becky Dudding of Racine and Terry Smith of Bellville; Courtney Hill,
daughter of Janet and Dennie Hill of Racine; Macyn Ervin, daughter of Patricia and Herb Ervin of Racine;
Mia Bass, daughter of Angle Bass of Syracuse and Dave Bass of Pomeroy. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Practice mak~s perfect
.

.'

SENliNEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Getting athletes from
Carleton School and Meigs Industries prepared for the regional Special Olympics'
track and field meet was the goal Wednesday morning for several members of
Meigs High School's National Honor
Society.
The Meigs track was filled with volunteers during· an intense practice session
aimed at preparing Special Olympic athletes to "go for the gold" at next month's
track meet.
·
More than400 athletes fi;om around the
area, including 60 from Meigs County, will
be converging at Alexander High School
in Albany on May 4 to compete in events
designed to test the athleticism of individuals with developmental disabilities. ·
Events set for the Special Olympics
:include both a running and standing long
jump, a 400-meter dash, 100-meter walk,
1,0 0-meter assisted walk, a 100-meter dash,
a 50-meter dash, shot put, a softball dis. tance throw, various wheelchair events,
relay races, strike with hand, grasp and lift,
and a pentathalon.
·
"This is the second year that we've had

PJ••• ...

Olympkl. A3

Sentinel

Details, A2

EditOrials
'Obhuarjes

Sports
Weather

Law: ...

Lotteries
OHIO

.

84-6 Pldl S: G-5-0; Pick 4: l-9-8-1

87

.,school.

~ LaiiD: 6-7-1 1-13-17-35

A4 ICidlr. 3-{1-5-9-1·1
A3 W.VA.
B!-2,5.Q Dilly S: 11-2·3 Dilly 4: 11-2·1·5
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~ 1001 Ohio Vlllty Publlshlns co.
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'JiUPPERS PLAINS -~,unique parlnen!iiJ&gt;
between students and faculty of Eastern Elementary School and members of the Ri:verview
Garden Club of Reedsville and Long Bottom
has helped beautifY the school grounds.
Students in kindergarten through grade 3 and
the garden dub members began working on
the beautification project in October, when a
large shipment of bulbs arrived fro!" the Mail
Order Gardening Association.
The organization provided 202 premium
Dutch bulbs to get the students started on their

BY TONY M. LIAcH

lllp: 70S

· dassifieds
Comjcs

tO
· SENTINEL

'Jbds(•

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Students, dub
BY BitIAN

PIMH ... Rabbery, _A3

calendar

PleaH Ill PlaJtds, A3

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2 s.dlanl- 11 ......

RACINE - The Sierra Club calls the highway project that includes the Ravenswood
Connector and U.S. 33 between Athens and
Darwin one of "Ohio's Worst Proposed Highways," as deemed by the Sierra Club.
The group, Ohio Environment - Growth
Alliance, meanwhile, says that the environmental group is overlooking safety and capacity fac.turs that justifY the projects.
AU highways built in Ohio using federal or
state funding must meet Ohio Departtnent of
Transportation environmental regulations
which local government officials call the
utoughest in the nation ."
This month, the Ohio chapter of the Sierra
Club released a report naming .. Ohio's worst

PIHH Ill Effort. AJ

GEniNG READY _ Beatrice Morgan, Meigs High ~chool student and National Honor Society member, helps Meigs Industries client Connie Crow prepare for the 100-meter assisted
walk during Wednesday's second annual track and field practlce for the upcoming regional Special Olympics In Albany. (Tony
.M. Leach photo)

BEAUTIRCAnON- Garden Club members Ruth ·
Ami Balderson, Margaret Cauthorn, Frances
Reed and Wendy Hannum are joined near Eastern Elementary's sign by kindergartners Larissa
Riddle, Addie Hill and Sam Collins. (Brian J. Reed
photo)

House considers first abortion bill of year
· WASHINGTON (AP) - Abortion
foes, buoyed by having an ally in the
White Ho\tse, are trying to push their
first bill through the House this year - .
legislation that would make it a federal
crime to harm a fetus.
Abortion rights advocates deride ·it as
a foot in the door at getting a fetus
declared a separate person - an idea
they say was r~jected' by the Supreme

Court in its 1973 Roe v. Wade decision
legalizing abortion.
.
But Republican spol]lOts who were
bringing the bill to the House floor
Ttwrsday and their allies were shunning
the word abortion, instead characterizing the measure as an effort ·to get tough
with criminals who harm "unborn children ."
.
In one graphic ad run in several Pllb-

,

lications this week by the Nation,al
Right to Life Committee, a Wisconsin
woman holds the body of her son who
died when she was assaulted by her husband while nin e months pregnant.
The woman, Tracy Schcidc Marciniak,
assails a Democratic alternative proposal
that would stiffen penaltie• for assaulting
a pregnant woman but not make harming the fetus a separate crime.

Meigs Family Fun Festival
Look for the Holzer Medical Center Community Heallh and
Wellolj.SS Trailer at lhe Festival. Non-fasting cholesterol
and gluco$8 screenings will be provided at no cost.

Salurclay, April 28

10am·2P• .
lutem High School
For more information

call {7 40) 446-5679

Discover the Holzer Difference.

�•

The Daily Sentinel
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Flthy, April Z1
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11 t odl}f. April a. H01

Troubled neighllorhoods are not the problem
CINCINNATI (AP) Protesron
On April tO and It , protesa turned
came 6om all around Cincinnati to a violc!nt, with some people smashing
mostly bbck, low-income neighbor- willdows. and looting. Though other
hood to take part in demonstrations fol- parts of the city also hit, Over- lhelowing the faa! shooting of an unarmed , Rhine suft'ered the most.
black man earlier this month, an analysis
A review of 64 adult arrest reporu
of arresr .uords shows.
sh~ that 47 of those arrested in
Nearly three-fourths of the adula Over-the- Rhine did noc live there. Sevarres~ in Over-the- Rhine, just north enteen did:
of the downtoWn. business district, weie
"The hoodlums were 6om someplace
fiom ouaide the neighborhood, accord- else," said Marge Hammelrath, dire.l;tor
ing to an analysis by The Cincirinati of the Over-the-Rhine Foundation.
Enquirer.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike
T imothy Thorius, 19, was shot in an Allen said Wednesday that he was surOver- the-Rhine aDey by a police officer prised at the 6ndings.
, April 7, after Thomas ran from police
" Frankly, I do not know w~t to make
who tried to arrest him on I 4 misde- of it," he said. " I guess the word got out
meanor warranu, mostly for rraffic viO:. and people gathered and one thing .led
co another.... One would think you'd be
lations.

less likely to tear up )'OUr own ~eighbor­

hood."
The Enquirer's analysis inwlVC!i I 10,
or 80 pen:ent, of the reports filed for
those twa days of violence. The rest of
the reporu were unavailable.
Of the 1t 0, 64 were adula whose
identities. and penonal information is
public reco rtl. The resr . were j uvo:niles.
About 86 percent 'Were black males; the
rest were black females and white males.
The most common charges are breaking and entering, disorderly conduct,
rioting and receiving stolen property.
John Delicath, an assistant professor of
communications at the U niversity of
Cincinnati, 1&lt;1id it is not unusuil for people to come together fro~ different areas
to protest perceived social inj ustices.

Inc.

tuitio n by 6 percent beginning with summer classes.
The university's trustees voted Wednesday to raise fees by
&lt;
- - . .
the
maximum allowed by the state. Tuition for a full- time
s...., .. Clouclt Cloudy ,_
.......
..
undergrad!Jate student will be $4,665.
University officiab said the tuition increase was necessary
because of an expected reduction in stare funding· for Ohio's
public universities and increased operating costs'.' ' '' '
·
Trustees also approved a tO_percent pay raise forJJrtiversity
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
42 t o 46, Light and variable of Akron President Luis Proenza and extended his conrracr
A nice spring day is predict- wind.
another four years to 2007. The $~4 ,0~? B¥se. prf, !?ro"enza's
ed for the tri- county area on
Friday... Partly cloudy. High yearly salary to $264,880.
·
' · · .. ·
Friday, with lots of sunshine 74 to 78. West wind 5· to lO
and a warm southwesterly mph.
breeze.
·
Fridaf
nighL .Turning
Highs on Friday will be 65- mostly clear, Low in the mid
AKRON (AP) -A 19-year-old man died Wednesday after
75. Lows tonight will be in the 40s.
he set his house on fire room by room; police 1&lt;1id.
40s.
Extended forecast:
Michael Gr:l'y-Henson died after police and fi~fighters
Little or no precipi~tion is
Saturday
and pulled him fiom his burning home, the Summit County medlikely on the weekend, the Sunday... Mosdy clear. Low 39 ical examiner's office said. The cause of death was ndt known,
National Weather Service said. to 45 and high 67 to 75. ·
and an autopsy was scheduled for Thunday morning.
By early next week, high temMonday... Pardy
cloudy.
Police were called to Gray-Henson's house about 10:30
peratures will be .in the 80s.
Low in· the lower 50s and high a.m. after neighbors told them he was tearing it up. p.;lice said
Sunset tonight will be at 77 to 83.
that when they approached the house, Gray-Hensdn started
8:21, nd sunrise on Friday is at
Tuesday
and setting fires throughout the building.
- '
6:37a.m.
Wednesd.y. .. Partly cloudy and
Police Maj . Paul CaDahan saiil Gray-Henson had ~ bipolar
continued warm. Low 50 to mental condition and was not taking his prescrilied!lnedicaWeather foreca11::
Tonight ...Mostly clear. Low 58 and high 80 to 87.
tion. During a family dispute in October, Gray-Henson tried
to set himself on fire but failed, police said. The incident was
not reported co police at the time.
L1

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Warmer going into weekend

Man dies after bumlal hoine

Taft ag1ees t~• cancer help
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft has changed his mind
and decided that the state should provide matching funds for
a breast- and cervical-cancer treatment program for low.,
income women.
· Taft on Wednesday directed Job and Family Services Director Jo Ann Davidson to work: with legislative leaden to
include money for the prog~am in the state budget.
·
The state's cost could be froni $440,000 to Sl million a year
in matchinl! funds. The federal government pay~ 70 percent of
the cost of the Medicaid program that covers working women
aged 40-65 who earn .up to 200 percent of the poverty level
and have no insurance.
Earlier in the year, Taft said that because of the State budget
crunch, he couldn't commit to the program.
'

InJury rate spun suspension

. req
·.
uested
Priso. buyout
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft asked the federal government on Wednesday to buy a Youngstown private priSon
that is slated to close in August.&lt;
. "'- ·
Corrections Corporation of . America, which rurrs· the
Northeast 'O hio Corre.c tional .Center, announced·this week
that it was closing the Youngstown facility Aug. 18, affecting
SOO jobs. The prison•. which opened in May 1997, , houses
inmates from the District of Columbia. ,
Nashville-based CCA said it decided to close NOCC after
it lost its contract with the District of Columbia. 1'\he U.S.
Bureau of Prisons is about to take over jurisdiction of,the DC
. .
prison systen1 and plans to use other prisons.
. In a letter to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, Taft asked
the U.S. Department of Justice and the DC prison sy•tem to
consider buying NOCC.
· ·
,

·Pistor su1aeaders seat··

Coroner: student was stranaled

BOWLING GREEN (AP) -A Michigan State University
student whose body was found in a dump likely had been
strangled, a coroner said.
.
'
Michelle Salerno, who had been rttissing since June, 'd ied of
a neck injury, said Wood County Coroner Douglass Hess.
" It could have been a blow, but most likely ij was stt'angu1
·
·
'
•
lation," he said.
Salerno's body was found lase week buried in a dump near
the Bowling Green State University campus,.

MARIETTA (~P) -When a new veterans clinic opened
here this year, the goal was to 'p rovide medical services in
southeast Ohio · so that veterans wouldn't have to drive to
Chillicothe or Clarksburg, WVa., for care.
With an estimated 30,000 veterans in the nine-county
southeast Ohio area·, .organizers expected the clinic to be well
used.
On average, however, the clinic is seeing only t2-15 patients
daily. Officials agree 'that is·far fewer than the clinic's potential
and far less than the demand for veterans health care.
AKRON (AP) -A forrri~r teacher and counselor gave $1
"Everyone I see, I telhhem to sign up and get inYOived in
the system," said Robert Whipkey, 62, of Stockport, a veteran million to the University ofAkron to create a permanent provisiting the clinic this week. "For years, the veterans around fessorship designed to encourage women to 'study·engineerIng. ' , ., ~·
'I
here got nothing. But finally we are seeing some things."

· Ex-teacher donates $1 nalllltn

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.Pros~: ~lte feaq~l rl•l

CINClNNAtn AP) :._ A criminal' opera tid~ that fen,cecl ,
stolen goods- fo 0 d, cigarettes, baby fortnula and small appliances ' - at neighborhood grocery stores has been broken up,
··•
•·
prosecutors said .
Nine ofthe 12.people 'indicted by a grand) ury were arrested Wednesday, Ohio .Attorney General Betty Montgomery
u
··~··
,..
'
·
·
·
said.
Stolen food and goods were bought and resold at five family-owned ltores, prosecutors·said.The operators bought· some
goods from undercover police officers posing as thieves during the I 8- month investigation, they said.
Tbe biggest commodity was baby formula .

Ualvetilty ·ralsinJ b'lltion
AKRON (AP) -

No late alpt at •pee

L ·,

:·

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EPA colltiaues waste
r•oval
.
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219 N. Second
I

992-5627

· Middleport

·~

can Institute baa

AG: county

Quality Prescription Service
At Competitive Prices

II CDUPO"
N
:
,
I
1

•

,;... ..

,.~,..

Up·,.o $5~GO · Of·F_

1

II .An.y··Prescription ·:1
Limit 1 Per cuato1:11er Per Prescript(~~ .

1$wlsh~r &amp;..Lohse Ph~riTI~~Y:, I
L_ .

EXpires 05/~(0.1 .. " .·.•.•:

----~---1111!11-----~--

.JI

Kenneth McCullough, f(. Ph:
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Mon-Fri 8 1.m. to t:Oio p.m.
S1t 8:00 1.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sun 10:110 1.m. to 4:00 p.m.

..PRESCRIPT~O~ PHON£'~2~~·5
··

·E. Main •

.... ,_

...

•

....,_....

•
comaag

ot

...

.... ,_

_
....

D'llstees to
meet

__

Stream Sweep

, .:

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, ay ,,

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LOCAL STOCKS

·Effort
Pap

Project~

Food banks say do.Uar. · . , .··
stores cwttihg i~to donations

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•
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.O¥n

'F OREVER

·The D~ily Sentinel
.

Reader Services

""
,· -·" -~tk\.
·fi r . ...·

www.mydallyaentinel.com

•

Anlliversary

Date coneded

·

52 Weoka

$109.72

the athletes and the honor

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w-

· OH'''

,...

fering fromalm01t ,a.Yo centuries
allusi, ·acconling to
J im freeman, · t\.fe'igs';'SwcD .
warershed coordinator.
CHESTER
C
layton
and
"This is an opportunity for
RUTLAND - Helen M. Gardner, 85, of R utland, died at
Virgene
Bahr,
former
resilocal residents to make a difher residence on Wednesday, April 25, 200 I , after a courageous
+1 .63
dents, will celebra~ their 65th ference, and have a lirtle fu n at
battle
with canc~r.
,
'She was born on March 27, 19 I6, daughter of the bee Floyd wedding anniversary on May tb e same time:· said Freenun.
111.111.11 10,.144.II
and Neva Romine Cleland. She was a retired employee of the 2. Cards may be sent to them
Although many volunteers
....,, 11,722.ill
Jon.14, 21100
Athens Mental Health Center, and attended the DanYille H oli- .u BOS 35th Ave., Vero Beach, have already been obtaineid,
Fla. 32960.
ness Church.
other gioups' an d individuals
Apl25,2001
Surviving are three daughters and a son-in-law, Carolyn
1.5010
are invited to participate in
Dawson of Lordstown, Nancy Lightfoot of London, and Santhe Stream Sweep by stopping
1AIID
dra and Robert Lambert of Albany; two sons and a daughterat the park beforehand. or at
T UPP ER S PLAINS in-law, Marvin K. and Pat Gardner ofVinton, and David K.
the Meigs SWCD office in
1,3110
Gardner of Pomeroy; and 16 grandchildren, 14 great- grand- VFW Post 9053 will meet on Pomeroy and' filling out a regThursday at 7 p.m., rather
1,228.75
children and four great-great grandchildren.
istratio n for n1 and w~ive r.
1,200
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her than friday, as was re ported.
Children
l)nder 18 will need
+1.59
husband, Earl K. G~ rdne r, in 1960; two da ughters, Janet Gardtheir forms signed by a parent
1.100
ner Witcher and Marjorie Garrlner Lacy; a son-in-law, R oger
1.232.31
1.201.38
or guardian , Freeman said.
Lightfoot; three brothers: Wayne C lela nd,Wayland Cleland and·
.l.IXIO
- " " " ' 1,527.46
Stream Sweep Tcshirts,
N'Ail
- 2 4. 2000
- - FB!AUAAY
11AACH
Donald Roger Cleland; two sisters,Janette Cleland and Elenore
bearing the watershed logo
R edman Cleland; and two infant great-grandchildren, Brianna
AL FRED
O range designed by Meigs High
4.000
Sible and M ark Lacy.
.
Township Trustees wi ll meet Sc hool stud~nt Page . ,BradServices 'will be I p.m. o n Saturday, April 28, 2001 at the
in regular sessio n Tuesday at bury, will be given ·to ·r-he first
3.500
Danville Holiness C hurch in Langsville, with the Rev. Garv
7:30 p.m. at the ho me of tlw 50 particip ants to tur n in their
Jackson. officiating. Burial will follow at the Miles Cemetery.
clerk, Osie Fo llrod.
registration forms.
3.000
Friends may call at the Fishcr- Aet-ee Funeral Home in
2,059.80
O ther orga niza tions lre also
Pomeroy on Friday, April 27, 2001 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.nl.
2.500
assisting. Cleaning mat&lt;'rials,
The family would like to thank O hio Vallev H ome H ealth
+2.14
mcludmg garbage · bab'S and
l:lfl .
....
and Holzer Hospice for the wo nderful care gi~en their mo!h2.000
2.018.17
2,000.83
~: .~
~9rk glares, l!YH~ sup.£.1iq4~Y
er during her illness,
·
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•
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• Mer"' C'Olln\)' Offite' of
llocanllllgh: 5,048.~
u oo
RUTLAND - The Lead- · ·
:·" .
MM.tl10, 2000
·tng c ree k 'wa
tY&gt; t
h
d
C
R
ccyclmg
and
Lttter
Prcveners e
om.
R
.
.
.
.
.
tt o n . ut1and Tow nshtp ts
The
bank
reopened
for
nuttee, tn cooperatio n wtth
. .
.h
U ··
•
·
S ·1 d "' 1
assJstlng WJt co ec t10n of
th e M e1gs
regular hours Thursday.
01 an . wa er
filled garb
b
age . ags.
"It is very important for Conservation Dtstnct, u .
Freeman sa1d the Stream
anyone with information to holding an inaugural Leading
contact us," Sallaz said. " It is Creek Stream Sweep Saturday Sw~ep,, modeled after the
· ~P-49'4
Gannott- 64'4
Rockwell - 44'/.
investi~!ion .
Arch Coal- 34
General EIICbic- 47'1. . Rocky~-4'h
not necessary to ·callers to . in Rutland in conjunction Ohio RIVer Sweep, w~~ch ts
'Akzo - 42'1.
RD Shell - 59),
GKNLY-1~.
with Earth D~y.
held tn June, will probably
Along with the city police leave their name."
Ha~oy Davldoon
Seara-35
AmTICh/SBC - 40!.
and FBI, the State Police and
Those with information · Volunteers . will ·meet at 9 become an annual event, tarShoney's-'1. .
44}.
Ashland Inc. -~.
AT&amp;T-21'1.
Kmart - 9l.
Wai·Mart- 50~
Mason County Sherifi's can contact the ciry at 675- a.m. at the Rudand Firemen's gering different areas of the
" Bank Ono - 38
Kroger- 22'1.
Wendy's - 24'4
Department assisted at the 1104 or state police 675- Park by the Civic Center for watershed each year.
Wor1hklgton - 11 ),
Bob Evans -18 ~
Landi End - 29'4
the Stream Sweep which will
The Meigs SWCD is also
0850.
.
Dally IIIOCk ..poliS are scene.
ltd. -18
llorgWsmer - 45
.. Champion - 2~
. continue to noon ending administering the leading
lhe 4 p.m. closing
oak Hill F111811Cia1
quolols of 1he previous
·· Charming Shops- 5~ 13\
with a luncheon at the park.
Cr~ek Improvement Project,
OVB-24'h
day's lrani8Cdons, proCity Holding - 8).
Volunteers will be cleaning which can prov1de cost-~har­
more quickly than the other
DuPont-44~
BBT-35~
1/idld. by Smith Part·
ne11 at Advest Inc. of
Federal Mogul - 3),
Peoples -17'1.
· things· planted outside:' she up along Leading Creek on ing funds for landowners
·uss-211.
Premer- 7
Galipolll.
Leading Creek Road, Rut- wanting to implemern consaid.
.
. ,fRMI
A1
The flowers also provided a land .Firel1)en's Park and serva!=_ion t?ra~li ~~.PJ!ithin the
.
watershed. For more inf~rmabuilt-in lesson or two. The Langsville.
traffic concerns as the need
The Leading Creek Water- tion on the Stream Sweep or
flowllr beds through the "Kids plants were measured as they
for the U.S. 33 projects.
Growing with Dutch Bulbs" grew, and students carefully shed Committee is a new the Leading Creek Improve"The upgrade . of U.S. 33
award program.
watched their plants blossom. local ~up ·d~dicated to the ment Project, .r,;s}4,ents may
fi'OIIII ..... A1
will gready improve travel on
The Eastern Elementary. . .'"This is a project which not imprOvement of ' l..:ading contact t~e' Meigs SWC D at
a thoroughfare that is con- Parent/Teacher Organization only benefits the school and Creek and \ts tributaries suf- 992-4282.
, ,
proposed highways." Using gested with trucks, school
kic~d. in funds for additional the students, but the public as
·· environmental reports and buses and (arming equip- flowers, and Bob's Market and well," Needs said, noting that .
inform~tion provided by ment," said Pedigo. "The Greenhouses and Reed'[s the flowers are an attractive
local activists, the group nFwly-relocaied highW:ty will Country Store donated items sight for visitor\; 'to the'public
,· selected U.S. 33, from the greatly decrease the· number ·and discounted other items to ·
, li,brary whic~ is located-just
proposed Lancaster bypass to of accidents an'd near misses." 'complete the p'roject.
in,side the school's entrance.'
, the Ravenswood Connector,
Problems Witb ·curves, limThen' the work began.
Pictured' here ate garden
. including the Nelsonville
..
Garden dub memben pre- dub members and kinderbypass, along with the 1_7 5 ited passing, narrow shoulders
PHILADELPHIA
(AP)
S1eve
nson
.
of
the
.
G
reate r
. pared the flower beds around
Austin Road Interchange in and dangerous .intersections
garten students with t:}Vo of Three years ago, denteq cans, P.hil.&lt;!ddphia . Food . 6 ank ,
the S ~Hool's st'gn and near the
Dayton, U.S. 24 from the and access points will be
~
the more attractive . flower misprinted cereal boxes and which has se ~n do nations fall
school's entrance, and worked
Indiana border to Maumee, resolved, as will traffic confor two days with each of the beds . Alex At\10s, Victofia other . produqs pu)led off .21 percent itl thre e yea rs.
U.S, 30 from Hancock gestion in Nelsonville and schodl'! K-3 students.
Davis, Jacob Smart, and Kirk supermarKet shelves made up . While do nati o ll i' have
County to Wooster, and U.S. Lancaster, Pedigo said.
Tulips, . daffodils, crocuses, Pullins are pictured with gar- 11early one-quarter of th e remained stable nati onally,
32 from Cincinnati to Adams
"The relot atiotl of U.S. 33 hyacinths, muscari blues and den club members Max.ine d on~liO:Jl ! .. at . lo f~ l. fo~d food banks in Califill'raia an.d
·"' · ··
• : o f the
· East say they have
County.
is the culmination of 50 years paperwhite narcissus _ more Whitehead·, Nancy Wachter banles. ··· ..
parts
· "We're all concerned with of need in the commuhity," than 400 ip. all -were plant~ . (also a kinder11arten teacher at
Today, the so-called close- taken a big hi t beca use· foo d
the environment, but the said Frank Malick, develop- ed and tended to, and now are the school) and Margaret out and ·salvage merchandise distributors arc deciding to
Sierra Club should become ment director for Lancaster. . nearing full 'bloom.
has a better chan ce .of being sell e:.:cess rather thall do ll atc
Grossnickle.
sold
at dollar stores, flea mar- ·
more knowledgeable of the "The bypass will relieve trafSandy Needs, one of the
Garden club members
. facts," said Joe Litvip, Mont- fie coniestion that has grow~ scliool's"third grade teachers, Ruth Ann Balde rso n, Mar- kets or -other discounters it .Most food ba11 ks receive
gomery County engineer, to more than 40 ,000 vehicles said two ~maryllis bulbs ·were garet Cauthorn, Frances Reed than ending up at food banks
th at distribute food to home- less than 5 ·percent of. do na·. who is involved in the plan- a day, many of which ' are nurtured in the classroom.
and Wendy Hannum are less · shelters, food . pantries tion s from individu als, re lyning "of. the I-75 project.
heavy trucks .~ ·
"The amaryllis were great joined near th e school's sign
and other programs fo r the ing i nstea~ on co rporate dis. "We need this project to
"The improvement of.U.S. for the stlidents, because third by . kindergartn ers Larissa
tributors and th eir truckloads
-relieve congestion that has ·33 will create an economic graders are naturally impa- Riddle, Addie Hill and Sam poo r.
"I had a donor that called of surplus.
grown to levels that warrant boom for southeast Ohio that tien!, an~ they grew much C ollins.
,.
m~ with a whole truckload
th~ construction," he added.. lacks a mQdern high~y,'' said
of
meat products . About an
~ur goal _•• the reduce the William ,.SHaw, Hocking
hour later" he · call'ed me and
society members, said Beha.
states gro~mg number ~(. Cotinty' engi ' Jer and presi:.
said
it was just sold to the
traffic acctdents and fa~h· 1 • d · · · 'f · 'li ~J:"" ·
"~
Perrick
Bolin,
president
.of
,. ,
.d J
R h _,. rd
ent o t e- ""ounty ngt
, 1es, sat
oe
ut eno ,
, A
: ·.
·f on··, '
the honor society, and Cara Dollar Siore," said Marquette
10
spokesman for the Ohio n~ers · .sso~tanon
'
Ash, vice president, both said
· frOM Pllp AI
· ·
"The currem two~lane
Department of Transporta.
.
.
.
, tl)at helping ti1e ath,le~s is "a
.
D' tr ' rt ~ in Bowling road IS •a' death trap that fliPS! the ' Natiodii'l. Honor' Society lot·offun" and that the feeling
non tst~ "'
bfidH
lir'f:
Green. "The rebuilding and
~
xe_·.·. Ull)an •e ts ar assist our athletes in preparing one gets from being involved .
widening of inadequate road- more tmportant than the for the . niS;onal track and with such an import~nt proways such as U.S. 24 creates a Indiana ..oa~~ tatdesnakes and field meet,"' said . Steve Beha, ject is "truly incredible."
lafer driving environment for .other.. envtronme.ntal con~ executi~ director of Meigs
Ash noted that sev~ral
boih cars and heavy trucks."
cerns; Shaw satd, tn response County Boa_rd of Mental m~mbers of the honor.soctety
ODOT District tO's Nancy tp t~' . Sier~a Club's objec- Retardation· and Develop- wtll also be rravebng to
Finest quality Rock of
Pedigo in Marietta also cited · tions.,
·
mental Disabilities, .
Albany next month to asstst
Ages memorials
"The. program was very the athletes and to cheer them
and markers are
successful for both . groups of oq to victory.
unconditionally
Th,e Meigs County Special
individuals last year and· we ·
. watranted against
h
1 1 f Olympics is sponsored by
· ·
antlctpate .t • same eve ~ Carleton School 3nd Mei"" · defectl in workmanship,
commitment · and competi.,.
.
as well as weather
. (U8P8 213-HO)
Industries.
tiveness
again
this
year,"
he
Olllo VIIIOY Pullllohlnt Ca.
damage, cracks or stains.
· Publlohed tYIIY onemoon, Mondor ·
added.
Like your love,
'through Fndly, 111 Coun St.,
Pomlroy,, . Ohio\ Second-elliS
Beh~ said tliar ~ everal of this
Correction Polley
this gtiarantee is foreyer,
II Pomeroy.
' Our main concern In all ltOiits Ia ~PI~.
year's participants were previ-llor:
The
Aoooolotld
Pttll
lnd
tQ be accurate. If you know of an tho Ohio Ne-per AtloclaciOn., .
ous medal winners during last
arror In aiiOrY, W ·l!l• newaroom. Poetmaat.; Send addr111 corree· ·
-year's"
·· i'egiond · qualifying··
at (740) 992·2156.
tlono ,to The o,tly Stntlntl, 111 Coun.
Sl., ·Pom.!O)',·Ohio 457BS.
e-i.!nt and that he- anticipat&lt;&gt; a
Newa Dept~rtments
~!~!(;
'
good
number of' local athletes
Sub1crlptlon r1t11
The moln number lo 992·2158 .
ly oanier ar motor roult
making it to the:"ta\e finals at
Oepartmont oxtenlons are:
Ono_k , ·
s2 :
The .Ohio State•.University in '·
18.70
O.ntr11l maneger
Ext. 1'2 Ont'(IIOIIIII
Ont por
St 011
.Columbus on June 22-2 ~ .
Dilly
50 caniS..
. Ext. 13
" The -•practice that tHese'
Subtcrtbel'l not desiring to pay tht · ~
O
l(titt
may
remit
in·
advance
direct
to'
·
3'thleu:s - a ~~ ' rd: eiving ., ~is.'
· Ext. 14
or
f1if DillY Stn'tinel. Crldlt Wilt be given
oam.r each week. No subscription by
invaluable," added Beha. "1\
Other Mrvlcea
mall pertnlttt(j In areas wnera home
places them·in a' ~rnariq that
cartl•r service Is available.
Ext.
3
·
Advertlolng
is quite simila r tc.\ ' !he actu al
.
~
lubsalatlon
eve
nt.''
Ext. 4
Circulation
lntldt Molgo co'!lniY •
520 W. Main Street
Howewr, bes ides n)edals
13 Wteka
$27 .30
Ext. 5
Claoollled Adl
28 Weaka
$53 .82
Pomeroy, Ohio .
and &lt;l~l)lcti~ \abilitVJihe • most
.•
52 Week&amp; .
StOMB
PhQne • 992·258&amp; .
impor tant aspect of these
To Mnd •'"""
· .....:0 outalde)l!fiOI Caunl)'
newaOmydallyaendnel.com
practices is the special friend!'3
$29 .25
On the Web
2fl $58.'88
. ~hips that are made betwe'e n

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t

Obituaries
•

f.

We honor most third pal'ty prescription
.. plans. Your Swisher &amp;' Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and Ken, are here
to fill your prescrlptlon .needa:
.

~

- - - I2.GIID

LOCAL

I&gt;

TOLEDO (AP) - The board of health can ban smoking
inside all public places in Lucas County, including bars and ·
restaurants, according to the state attorney general.
The attorney general's opinion, while not l:iindi~g. gives the
Toledo-Lucas County Board of Health stronger legal ground
to impose the wide- ranging smoking ban.
The board is expected to vote on the regulation Thursday.
It would be among the toughest in Ohio.
.,
Attorney" General Betty Montgomery's opinion also said the
health board can't grant exceptions, such as allowing smoking
in bars.
·

'

The University of Akron will raise its

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DAYTON (AP) - Tbe--tl'.S. Environmental Protecti on
Agency said on Wednesday that hazardous waste will ' continue to be remove~ from .a landfill that sits near the wSter 'supply for 400,000 people.
,
, The EPA ltac:! il:ulicated .earlier it might stop the remoVal of
drums of hazardous waste from the 102-acre Valleycrest landfill. The; agency said its' dc;cision to continue was based ·.dn
concerns about the potential for future health threats and afrer
meeting with the public and health officials.
,
The landfill is on the Superfund list o( the nation's most
hazardous sites. Residents who live near the landfill staged
several protests to try to block any decision to stop removing
the waste.
.
·
"The people spoke, and EPA listened," said Rep. Tony Hall,
D-Ohio. "'the health and safety ofValleycrest neighbors atid
. all Dayton-area residents will benefit by this decision." ·
·

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS:
EASTlAND- DEXTER· KEDS'
HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS
n.shq~ ~~a~• ·

wee p,Gm•

c;oLUMBUS (AP) - As the children bobbea up" an d
down to hip-hop music and their parents snapped picrures of
the prom finery, Kathy Peck-Warfield looked at the clock and
cringed. It was 8:30 p.m. Bedtime.
·
Proms don't last until the wee hours of the morning, at th e
St. Dominic Center John XXIII Head Start program.
The school's about 60 preschoolers got dressed up 'fuesc:by
night and went to their dance marking the end of the school
year.
.
.
The child(en spent the evening bouncing, rocking ar)d
rwirling under swirling blue, red and yellow lights .as a di~c
jockey played hip- hop and rap tunes.

l

. CLEVELAND (AP) - An official in charge of reducing .
on-the-job injuries for city workers was suspended after a.
'
CLEVELAND (AP) -A pastor criticized for comments
he
newspaper reported some municipal employees are injured at
made seven years ago has given up his seat on the committee
t8 times the rate of the average Ohio worker.
that
helped organize Wednesday's "faith-bas~d sunmtit" .in
Robert LaWion, 48, was suspended Monday for tO days for
,
.
neglect cif duty and incompetence. The suspension came the Washington.
Pentecostal Church of Christ Bishop J. Delano Ellis resigned
day after The Plain Dealer reported that Cleveland could have
.
saved $tO million in insurance premiums' over three years by from the committee on Monday,' an aide said.
Ellis "did not want to hinder what the initiative was creatreducing worken' compensation claims to average levels for
Ohio ·cities.
.
ed for," Minette Jackson, a ipokeswoman for his church, told
,
Mayor Michael R. White ordered personnel chief Jeffery The Plain Dealer.
1
1\vo Jewish members of the committee had expressed conPattcrson .to perform "a full review df the workers' compensation program" with a goal of making city workplaces safer cerns about Ellis amid reports that in a 1994. radio sermon, he
and savi,n g ·money on premiums, said spokesman Brian had made derogatory comments about Jews. Ellis later said his
Rothenberg.
broadcast remarks were about Biblical characte~. not· ~bout
. In ~-letter tO Lawson, Pattenon said reasons for the suspen- modern-day Jews. He said his comments' were repea~ed' out of
SIOn mcluded the lack of a comprehensive training program in context.
. n. :
the city and Lawson's failure to notify his superiors of grants
and insurance discount$'.

Business slow at clinic~

Margaret Donovan, 60, of Annandale, N.J., made the donation in the memory of her Lne husband, R obert Donovan, 54.
who died aboard a plane that plowed into a m ountain in
Croatia in 1996. Robert Donovan, an engineer, was on a trade
mission, along with U.S. Commerce s.,cretary R on Brown
and about 30 others.
.
·
Margaret Donovan chose to create the scho)arshi,p&lt;program
at Akron po.rtly because the school is small enough fo r her to
see the effects of her giving. Her daughter, Kara, received a
bachelor's degree and a law degree from the unive rsicy.

T11e D ..ly Senllnet • Page A 3

Po.-.Dt&gt; .IIIJIIIport, Ohio

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VintOI\ •.388·$603
Gallipolis • 446·0852
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Flthy, April Z1
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11 t odl}f. April a. H01

Troubled neighllorhoods are not the problem
CINCINNATI (AP) Protesron
On April tO and It , protesa turned
came 6om all around Cincinnati to a violc!nt, with some people smashing
mostly bbck, low-income neighbor- willdows. and looting. Though other
hood to take part in demonstrations fol- parts of the city also hit, Over- lhelowing the faa! shooting of an unarmed , Rhine suft'ered the most.
black man earlier this month, an analysis
A review of 64 adult arrest reporu
of arresr .uords shows.
sh~ that 47 of those arrested in
Nearly three-fourths of the adula Over-the- Rhine did noc live there. Sevarres~ in Over-the- Rhine, just north enteen did:
of the downtoWn. business district, weie
"The hoodlums were 6om someplace
fiom ouaide the neighborhood, accord- else," said Marge Hammelrath, dire.l;tor
ing to an analysis by The Cincirinati of the Over-the-Rhine Foundation.
Enquirer.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike
T imothy Thorius, 19, was shot in an Allen said Wednesday that he was surOver- the-Rhine aDey by a police officer prised at the 6ndings.
, April 7, after Thomas ran from police
" Frankly, I do not know w~t to make
who tried to arrest him on I 4 misde- of it," he said. " I guess the word got out
meanor warranu, mostly for rraffic viO:. and people gathered and one thing .led
co another.... One would think you'd be
lations.

less likely to tear up )'OUr own ~eighbor­

hood."
The Enquirer's analysis inwlVC!i I 10,
or 80 pen:ent, of the reports filed for
those twa days of violence. The rest of
the reporu were unavailable.
Of the 1t 0, 64 were adula whose
identities. and penonal information is
public reco rtl. The resr . were j uvo:niles.
About 86 percent 'Were black males; the
rest were black females and white males.
The most common charges are breaking and entering, disorderly conduct,
rioting and receiving stolen property.
John Delicath, an assistant professor of
communications at the U niversity of
Cincinnati, 1&lt;1id it is not unusuil for people to come together fro~ different areas
to protest perceived social inj ustices.

Inc.

tuitio n by 6 percent beginning with summer classes.
The university's trustees voted Wednesday to raise fees by
&lt;
- - . .
the
maximum allowed by the state. Tuition for a full- time
s...., .. Clouclt Cloudy ,_
.......
..
undergrad!Jate student will be $4,665.
University officiab said the tuition increase was necessary
because of an expected reduction in stare funding· for Ohio's
public universities and increased operating costs'.' ' '' '
·
Trustees also approved a tO_percent pay raise forJJrtiversity
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
42 t o 46, Light and variable of Akron President Luis Proenza and extended his conrracr
A nice spring day is predict- wind.
another four years to 2007. The $~4 ,0~? B¥se. prf, !?ro"enza's
ed for the tri- county area on
Friday... Partly cloudy. High yearly salary to $264,880.
·
' · · .. ·
Friday, with lots of sunshine 74 to 78. West wind 5· to lO
and a warm southwesterly mph.
breeze.
·
Fridaf
nighL .Turning
Highs on Friday will be 65- mostly clear, Low in the mid
AKRON (AP) -A 19-year-old man died Wednesday after
75. Lows tonight will be in the 40s.
he set his house on fire room by room; police 1&lt;1id.
40s.
Extended forecast:
Michael Gr:l'y-Henson died after police and fi~fighters
Little or no precipi~tion is
Saturday
and pulled him fiom his burning home, the Summit County medlikely on the weekend, the Sunday... Mosdy clear. Low 39 ical examiner's office said. The cause of death was ndt known,
National Weather Service said. to 45 and high 67 to 75. ·
and an autopsy was scheduled for Thunday morning.
By early next week, high temMonday... Pardy
cloudy.
Police were called to Gray-Henson's house about 10:30
peratures will be .in the 80s.
Low in· the lower 50s and high a.m. after neighbors told them he was tearing it up. p.;lice said
Sunset tonight will be at 77 to 83.
that when they approached the house, Gray-Hensdn started
8:21, nd sunrise on Friday is at
Tuesday
and setting fires throughout the building.
- '
6:37a.m.
Wednesd.y. .. Partly cloudy and
Police Maj . Paul CaDahan saiil Gray-Henson had ~ bipolar
continued warm. Low 50 to mental condition and was not taking his prescrilied!lnedicaWeather foreca11::
Tonight ...Mostly clear. Low 58 and high 80 to 87.
tion. During a family dispute in October, Gray-Henson tried
to set himself on fire but failed, police said. The incident was
not reported co police at the time.
L1

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Warmer going into weekend

Man dies after bumlal hoine

Taft ag1ees t~• cancer help
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft has changed his mind
and decided that the state should provide matching funds for
a breast- and cervical-cancer treatment program for low.,
income women.
· Taft on Wednesday directed Job and Family Services Director Jo Ann Davidson to work: with legislative leaden to
include money for the prog~am in the state budget.
·
The state's cost could be froni $440,000 to Sl million a year
in matchinl! funds. The federal government pay~ 70 percent of
the cost of the Medicaid program that covers working women
aged 40-65 who earn .up to 200 percent of the poverty level
and have no insurance.
Earlier in the year, Taft said that because of the State budget
crunch, he couldn't commit to the program.
'

InJury rate spun suspension

. req
·.
uested
Priso. buyout
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft asked the federal government on Wednesday to buy a Youngstown private priSon
that is slated to close in August.&lt;
. "'- ·
Corrections Corporation of . America, which rurrs· the
Northeast 'O hio Corre.c tional .Center, announced·this week
that it was closing the Youngstown facility Aug. 18, affecting
SOO jobs. The prison•. which opened in May 1997, , houses
inmates from the District of Columbia. ,
Nashville-based CCA said it decided to close NOCC after
it lost its contract with the District of Columbia. 1'\he U.S.
Bureau of Prisons is about to take over jurisdiction of,the DC
. .
prison systen1 and plans to use other prisons.
. In a letter to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, Taft asked
the U.S. Department of Justice and the DC prison sy•tem to
consider buying NOCC.
· ·
,

·Pistor su1aeaders seat··

Coroner: student was stranaled

BOWLING GREEN (AP) -A Michigan State University
student whose body was found in a dump likely had been
strangled, a coroner said.
.
'
Michelle Salerno, who had been rttissing since June, 'd ied of
a neck injury, said Wood County Coroner Douglass Hess.
" It could have been a blow, but most likely ij was stt'angu1
·
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lation," he said.
Salerno's body was found lase week buried in a dump near
the Bowling Green State University campus,.

MARIETTA (~P) -When a new veterans clinic opened
here this year, the goal was to 'p rovide medical services in
southeast Ohio · so that veterans wouldn't have to drive to
Chillicothe or Clarksburg, WVa., for care.
With an estimated 30,000 veterans in the nine-county
southeast Ohio area·, .organizers expected the clinic to be well
used.
On average, however, the clinic is seeing only t2-15 patients
daily. Officials agree 'that is·far fewer than the clinic's potential
and far less than the demand for veterans health care.
AKRON (AP) -A forrri~r teacher and counselor gave $1
"Everyone I see, I telhhem to sign up and get inYOived in
the system," said Robert Whipkey, 62, of Stockport, a veteran million to the University ofAkron to create a permanent provisiting the clinic this week. "For years, the veterans around fessorship designed to encourage women to 'study·engineerIng. ' , ., ~·
'I
here got nothing. But finally we are seeing some things."

· Ex-teacher donates $1 nalllltn

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.Pros~: ~lte feaq~l rl•l

CINClNNAtn AP) :._ A criminal' opera tid~ that fen,cecl ,
stolen goods- fo 0 d, cigarettes, baby fortnula and small appliances ' - at neighborhood grocery stores has been broken up,
··•
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prosecutors said .
Nine ofthe 12.people 'indicted by a grand) ury were arrested Wednesday, Ohio .Attorney General Betty Montgomery
u
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said.
Stolen food and goods were bought and resold at five family-owned ltores, prosecutors·said.The operators bought· some
goods from undercover police officers posing as thieves during the I 8- month investigation, they said.
Tbe biggest commodity was baby formula .

Ualvetilty ·ralsinJ b'lltion
AKRON (AP) -

No late alpt at •pee

L ·,

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EPA colltiaues waste
r•oval
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219 N. Second
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992-5627

· Middleport

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can Institute baa

AG: county

Quality Prescription Service
At Competitive Prices

II CDUPO"
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Up·,.o $5~GO · Of·F_

1

II .An.y··Prescription ·:1
Limit 1 Per cuato1:11er Per Prescript(~~ .

1$wlsh~r &amp;..Lohse Ph~riTI~~Y:, I
L_ .

EXpires 05/~(0.1 .. " .·.•.•:

----~---1111!11-----~--

.JI

Kenneth McCullough, f(. Ph:
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Mon-Fri 8 1.m. to t:Oio p.m.
S1t 8:00 1.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sun 10:110 1.m. to 4:00 p.m.

..PRESCRIPT~O~ PHON£'~2~~·5
··

·E. Main •

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D'llstees to
meet

__

Stream Sweep

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LOCAL STOCKS

·Effort
Pap

Project~

Food banks say do.Uar. · . , .··
stores cwttihg i~to donations

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'F OREVER

·The D~ily Sentinel
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Reader Services

""
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·fi r . ...·

www.mydallyaentinel.com

•

Anlliversary

Date coneded

·

52 Weoka

$109.72

the athletes and the honor

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fering fromalm01t ,a.Yo centuries
allusi, ·acconling to
J im freeman, · t\.fe'igs';'SwcD .
warershed coordinator.
CHESTER
C
layton
and
"This is an opportunity for
RUTLAND - Helen M. Gardner, 85, of R utland, died at
Virgene
Bahr,
former
resilocal residents to make a difher residence on Wednesday, April 25, 200 I , after a courageous
+1 .63
dents, will celebra~ their 65th ference, and have a lirtle fu n at
battle
with canc~r.
,
'She was born on March 27, 19 I6, daughter of the bee Floyd wedding anniversary on May tb e same time:· said Freenun.
111.111.11 10,.144.II
and Neva Romine Cleland. She was a retired employee of the 2. Cards may be sent to them
Although many volunteers
....,, 11,722.ill
Jon.14, 21100
Athens Mental Health Center, and attended the DanYille H oli- .u BOS 35th Ave., Vero Beach, have already been obtaineid,
Fla. 32960.
ness Church.
other gioups' an d individuals
Apl25,2001
Surviving are three daughters and a son-in-law, Carolyn
1.5010
are invited to participate in
Dawson of Lordstown, Nancy Lightfoot of London, and Santhe Stream Sweep by stopping
1AIID
dra and Robert Lambert of Albany; two sons and a daughterat the park beforehand. or at
T UPP ER S PLAINS in-law, Marvin K. and Pat Gardner ofVinton, and David K.
the Meigs SWCD office in
1,3110
Gardner of Pomeroy; and 16 grandchildren, 14 great- grand- VFW Post 9053 will meet on Pomeroy and' filling out a regThursday at 7 p.m., rather
1,228.75
children and four great-great grandchildren.
istratio n for n1 and w~ive r.
1,200
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her than friday, as was re ported.
Children
l)nder 18 will need
+1.59
husband, Earl K. G~ rdne r, in 1960; two da ughters, Janet Gardtheir forms signed by a parent
1.100
ner Witcher and Marjorie Garrlner Lacy; a son-in-law, R oger
1.232.31
1.201.38
or guardian , Freeman said.
Lightfoot; three brothers: Wayne C lela nd,Wayland Cleland and·
.l.IXIO
- " " " ' 1,527.46
Stream Sweep Tcshirts,
N'Ail
- 2 4. 2000
- - FB!AUAAY
11AACH
Donald Roger Cleland; two sisters,Janette Cleland and Elenore
bearing the watershed logo
R edman Cleland; and two infant great-grandchildren, Brianna
AL FRED
O range designed by Meigs High
4.000
Sible and M ark Lacy.
.
Township Trustees wi ll meet Sc hool stud~nt Page . ,BradServices 'will be I p.m. o n Saturday, April 28, 2001 at the
in regular sessio n Tuesday at bury, will be given ·to ·r-he first
3.500
Danville Holiness C hurch in Langsville, with the Rev. Garv
7:30 p.m. at the ho me of tlw 50 particip ants to tur n in their
Jackson. officiating. Burial will follow at the Miles Cemetery.
clerk, Osie Fo llrod.
registration forms.
3.000
Friends may call at the Fishcr- Aet-ee Funeral Home in
2,059.80
O ther orga niza tions lre also
Pomeroy on Friday, April 27, 2001 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.nl.
2.500
assisting. Cleaning mat&lt;'rials,
The family would like to thank O hio Vallev H ome H ealth
+2.14
mcludmg garbage · bab'S and
l:lfl .
....
and Holzer Hospice for the wo nderful care gi~en their mo!h2.000
2.018.17
2,000.83
~: .~
~9rk glares, l!YH~ sup.£.1iq4~Y
er during her illness,
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• Mer"' C'Olln\)' Offite' of
llocanllllgh: 5,048.~
u oo
RUTLAND - The Lead- · ·
:·" .
MM.tl10, 2000
·tng c ree k 'wa
tY&gt; t
h
d
C
R
ccyclmg
and
Lttter
Prcveners e
om.
R
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tt o n . ut1and Tow nshtp ts
The
bank
reopened
for
nuttee, tn cooperatio n wtth
. .
.h
U ··
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S ·1 d "' 1
assJstlng WJt co ec t10n of
th e M e1gs
regular hours Thursday.
01 an . wa er
filled garb
b
age . ags.
"It is very important for Conservation Dtstnct, u .
Freeman sa1d the Stream
anyone with information to holding an inaugural Leading
contact us," Sallaz said. " It is Creek Stream Sweep Saturday Sw~ep,, modeled after the
· ~P-49'4
Gannott- 64'4
Rockwell - 44'/.
investi~!ion .
Arch Coal- 34
General EIICbic- 47'1. . Rocky~-4'h
not necessary to ·callers to . in Rutland in conjunction Ohio RIVer Sweep, w~~ch ts
'Akzo - 42'1.
RD Shell - 59),
GKNLY-1~.
with Earth D~y.
held tn June, will probably
Along with the city police leave their name."
Ha~oy Davldoon
Seara-35
AmTICh/SBC - 40!.
and FBI, the State Police and
Those with information · Volunteers . will ·meet at 9 become an annual event, tarShoney's-'1. .
44}.
Ashland Inc. -~.
AT&amp;T-21'1.
Kmart - 9l.
Wai·Mart- 50~
Mason County Sherifi's can contact the ciry at 675- a.m. at the Rudand Firemen's gering different areas of the
" Bank Ono - 38
Kroger- 22'1.
Wendy's - 24'4
Department assisted at the 1104 or state police 675- Park by the Civic Center for watershed each year.
Wor1hklgton - 11 ),
Bob Evans -18 ~
Landi End - 29'4
the Stream Sweep which will
The Meigs SWCD is also
0850.
.
Dally IIIOCk ..poliS are scene.
ltd. -18
llorgWsmer - 45
.. Champion - 2~
. continue to noon ending administering the leading
lhe 4 p.m. closing
oak Hill F111811Cia1
quolols of 1he previous
·· Charming Shops- 5~ 13\
with a luncheon at the park.
Cr~ek Improvement Project,
OVB-24'h
day's lrani8Cdons, proCity Holding - 8).
Volunteers will be cleaning which can prov1de cost-~har­
more quickly than the other
DuPont-44~
BBT-35~
1/idld. by Smith Part·
ne11 at Advest Inc. of
Federal Mogul - 3),
Peoples -17'1.
· things· planted outside:' she up along Leading Creek on ing funds for landowners
·uss-211.
Premer- 7
Galipolll.
Leading Creek Road, Rut- wanting to implemern consaid.
.
. ,fRMI
A1
The flowers also provided a land .Firel1)en's Park and serva!=_ion t?ra~li ~~.PJ!ithin the
.
watershed. For more inf~rmabuilt-in lesson or two. The Langsville.
traffic concerns as the need
The Leading Creek Water- tion on the Stream Sweep or
flowllr beds through the "Kids plants were measured as they
for the U.S. 33 projects.
Growing with Dutch Bulbs" grew, and students carefully shed Committee is a new the Leading Creek Improve"The upgrade . of U.S. 33
award program.
watched their plants blossom. local ~up ·d~dicated to the ment Project, .r,;s}4,ents may
fi'OIIII ..... A1
will gready improve travel on
The Eastern Elementary. . .'"This is a project which not imprOvement of ' l..:ading contact t~e' Meigs SWC D at
a thoroughfare that is con- Parent/Teacher Organization only benefits the school and Creek and \ts tributaries suf- 992-4282.
, ,
proposed highways." Using gested with trucks, school
kic~d. in funds for additional the students, but the public as
·· environmental reports and buses and (arming equip- flowers, and Bob's Market and well," Needs said, noting that .
inform~tion provided by ment," said Pedigo. "The Greenhouses and Reed'[s the flowers are an attractive
local activists, the group nFwly-relocaied highW:ty will Country Store donated items sight for visitor\; 'to the'public
,· selected U.S. 33, from the greatly decrease the· number ·and discounted other items to ·
, li,brary whic~ is located-just
proposed Lancaster bypass to of accidents an'd near misses." 'complete the p'roject.
in,side the school's entrance.'
, the Ravenswood Connector,
Problems Witb ·curves, limThen' the work began.
Pictured' here ate garden
. including the Nelsonville
..
Garden dub memben pre- dub members and kinderbypass, along with the 1_7 5 ited passing, narrow shoulders
PHILADELPHIA
(AP)
S1eve
nson
.
of
the
.
G
reate r
. pared the flower beds around
Austin Road Interchange in and dangerous .intersections
garten students with t:}Vo of Three years ago, denteq cans, P.hil.&lt;!ddphia . Food . 6 ank ,
the S ~Hool's st'gn and near the
Dayton, U.S. 24 from the and access points will be
~
the more attractive . flower misprinted cereal boxes and which has se ~n do nations fall
school's entrance, and worked
Indiana border to Maumee, resolved, as will traffic confor two days with each of the beds . Alex At\10s, Victofia other . produqs pu)led off .21 percent itl thre e yea rs.
U.S, 30 from Hancock gestion in Nelsonville and schodl'! K-3 students.
Davis, Jacob Smart, and Kirk supermarKet shelves made up . While do nati o ll i' have
County to Wooster, and U.S. Lancaster, Pedigo said.
Tulips, . daffodils, crocuses, Pullins are pictured with gar- 11early one-quarter of th e remained stable nati onally,
32 from Cincinnati to Adams
"The relot atiotl of U.S. 33 hyacinths, muscari blues and den club members Max.ine d on~liO:Jl ! .. at . lo f~ l. fo~d food banks in Califill'raia an.d
·"' · ··
• : o f the
· East say they have
County.
is the culmination of 50 years paperwhite narcissus _ more Whitehead·, Nancy Wachter banles. ··· ..
parts
· "We're all concerned with of need in the commuhity," than 400 ip. all -were plant~ . (also a kinder11arten teacher at
Today, the so-called close- taken a big hi t beca use· foo d
the environment, but the said Frank Malick, develop- ed and tended to, and now are the school) and Margaret out and ·salvage merchandise distributors arc deciding to
Sierra Club should become ment director for Lancaster. . nearing full 'bloom.
has a better chan ce .of being sell e:.:cess rather thall do ll atc
Grossnickle.
sold
at dollar stores, flea mar- ·
more knowledgeable of the "The bypass will relieve trafSandy Needs, one of the
Garden club members
. facts," said Joe Litvip, Mont- fie coniestion that has grow~ scliool's"third grade teachers, Ruth Ann Balde rso n, Mar- kets or -other discounters it .Most food ba11 ks receive
gomery County engineer, to more than 40 ,000 vehicles said two ~maryllis bulbs ·were garet Cauthorn, Frances Reed than ending up at food banks
th at distribute food to home- less than 5 ·percent of. do na·. who is involved in the plan- a day, many of which ' are nurtured in the classroom.
and Wendy Hannum are less · shelters, food . pantries tion s from individu als, re lyning "of. the I-75 project.
heavy trucks .~ ·
"The amaryllis were great joined near th e school's sign
and other programs fo r the ing i nstea~ on co rporate dis. "We need this project to
"The improvement of.U.S. for the stlidents, because third by . kindergartn ers Larissa
tributors and th eir truckloads
-relieve congestion that has ·33 will create an economic graders are naturally impa- Riddle, Addie Hill and Sam poo r.
"I had a donor that called of surplus.
grown to levels that warrant boom for southeast Ohio that tien!, an~ they grew much C ollins.
,.
m~ with a whole truckload
th~ construction," he added.. lacks a mQdern high~y,'' said
of
meat products . About an
~ur goal _•• the reduce the William ,.SHaw, Hocking
hour later" he · call'ed me and
society members, said Beha.
states gro~mg number ~(. Cotinty' engi ' Jer and presi:.
said
it was just sold to the
traffic acctdents and fa~h· 1 • d · · · 'f · 'li ~J:"" ·
"~
Perrick
Bolin,
president
.of
,. ,
.d J
R h _,. rd
ent o t e- ""ounty ngt
, 1es, sat
oe
ut eno ,
, A
: ·.
·f on··, '
the honor society, and Cara Dollar Siore," said Marquette
10
spokesman for the Ohio n~ers · .sso~tanon
'
Ash, vice president, both said
· frOM Pllp AI
· ·
"The currem two~lane
Department of Transporta.
.
.
.
, tl)at helping ti1e ath,le~s is "a
.
D' tr ' rt ~ in Bowling road IS •a' death trap that fliPS! the ' Natiodii'l. Honor' Society lot·offun" and that the feeling
non tst~ "'
bfidH
lir'f:
Green. "The rebuilding and
~
xe_·.·. Ull)an •e ts ar assist our athletes in preparing one gets from being involved .
widening of inadequate road- more tmportant than the for the . niS;onal track and with such an import~nt proways such as U.S. 24 creates a Indiana ..oa~~ tatdesnakes and field meet,"' said . Steve Beha, ject is "truly incredible."
lafer driving environment for .other.. envtronme.ntal con~ executi~ director of Meigs
Ash noted that sev~ral
boih cars and heavy trucks."
cerns; Shaw satd, tn response County Boa_rd of Mental m~mbers of the honor.soctety
ODOT District tO's Nancy tp t~' . Sier~a Club's objec- Retardation· and Develop- wtll also be rravebng to
Finest quality Rock of
Pedigo in Marietta also cited · tions.,
·
mental Disabilities, .
Albany next month to asstst
Ages memorials
"The. program was very the athletes and to cheer them
and markers are
successful for both . groups of oq to victory.
unconditionally
Th,e Meigs County Special
individuals last year and· we ·
. watranted against
h
1 1 f Olympics is sponsored by
· ·
antlctpate .t • same eve ~ Carleton School 3nd Mei"" · defectl in workmanship,
commitment · and competi.,.
.
as well as weather
. (U8P8 213-HO)
Industries.
tiveness
again
this
year,"
he
Olllo VIIIOY Pullllohlnt Ca.
damage, cracks or stains.
· Publlohed tYIIY onemoon, Mondor ·
added.
Like your love,
'through Fndly, 111 Coun St.,
Pomlroy,, . Ohio\ Second-elliS
Beh~ said tliar ~ everal of this
Correction Polley
this gtiarantee is foreyer,
II Pomeroy.
' Our main concern In all ltOiits Ia ~PI~.
year's participants were previ-llor:
The
Aoooolotld
Pttll
lnd
tQ be accurate. If you know of an tho Ohio Ne-per AtloclaciOn., .
ous medal winners during last
arror In aiiOrY, W ·l!l• newaroom. Poetmaat.; Send addr111 corree· ·
-year's"
·· i'egiond · qualifying··
at (740) 992·2156.
tlono ,to The o,tly Stntlntl, 111 Coun.
Sl., ·Pom.!O)',·Ohio 457BS.
e-i.!nt and that he- anticipat&lt;&gt; a
Newa Dept~rtments
~!~!(;
'
good
number of' local athletes
Sub1crlptlon r1t11
The moln number lo 992·2158 .
ly oanier ar motor roult
making it to the:"ta\e finals at
Oepartmont oxtenlons are:
Ono_k , ·
s2 :
The .Ohio State•.University in '·
18.70
O.ntr11l maneger
Ext. 1'2 Ont'(IIOIIIII
Ont por
St 011
.Columbus on June 22-2 ~ .
Dilly
50 caniS..
. Ext. 13
" The -•practice that tHese'
Subtcrtbel'l not desiring to pay tht · ~
O
l(titt
may
remit
in·
advance
direct
to'
·
3'thleu:s - a ~~ ' rd: eiving ., ~is.'
· Ext. 14
or
f1if DillY Stn'tinel. Crldlt Wilt be given
oam.r each week. No subscription by
invaluable," added Beha. "1\
Other Mrvlcea
mall pertnlttt(j In areas wnera home
places them·in a' ~rnariq that
cartl•r service Is available.
Ext.
3
·
Advertlolng
is quite simila r tc.\ ' !he actu al
.
~
lubsalatlon
eve
nt.''
Ext. 4
Circulation
lntldt Molgo co'!lniY •
520 W. Main Street
Howewr, bes ides n)edals
13 Wteka
$27 .30
Ext. 5
Claoollled Adl
28 Weaka
$53 .82
Pomeroy, Ohio .
and &lt;l~l)lcti~ \abilitVJihe • most
.•
52 Week&amp; .
StOMB
PhQne • 992·258&amp; .
impor tant aspect of these
To Mnd •'"""
· .....:0 outalde)l!fiOI Caunl)'
newaOmydallyaendnel.com
practices is the special friend!'3
$29 .25
On the Web
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. ~hips that are made betwe'e n

° .

r-----~-------~,
t

Obituaries
•

f.

We honor most third pal'ty prescription
.. plans. Your Swisher &amp;' Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and Ken, are here
to fill your prescrlptlon .needa:
.

~

- - - I2.GIID

LOCAL

I&gt;

TOLEDO (AP) - The board of health can ban smoking
inside all public places in Lucas County, including bars and ·
restaurants, according to the state attorney general.
The attorney general's opinion, while not l:iindi~g. gives the
Toledo-Lucas County Board of Health stronger legal ground
to impose the wide- ranging smoking ban.
The board is expected to vote on the regulation Thursday.
It would be among the toughest in Ohio.
.,
Attorney" General Betty Montgomery's opinion also said the
health board can't grant exceptions, such as allowing smoking
in bars.
·

'

The University of Akron will raise its

'

.

DAYTON (AP) - Tbe--tl'.S. Environmental Protecti on
Agency said on Wednesday that hazardous waste will ' continue to be remove~ from .a landfill that sits near the wSter 'supply for 400,000 people.
,
, The EPA ltac:! il:ulicated .earlier it might stop the remoVal of
drums of hazardous waste from the 102-acre Valleycrest landfill. The; agency said its' dc;cision to continue was based ·.dn
concerns about the potential for future health threats and afrer
meeting with the public and health officials.
,
The landfill is on the Superfund list o( the nation's most
hazardous sites. Residents who live near the landfill staged
several protests to try to block any decision to stop removing
the waste.
.
·
"The people spoke, and EPA listened," said Rep. Tony Hall,
D-Ohio. "'the health and safety ofValleycrest neighbors atid
. all Dayton-area residents will benefit by this decision." ·
·

NIKE • REEBOK· ASICS:
EASTlAND- DEXTER· KEDS'
HUSH PUPPIES. DOCKERS
n.shq~ ~~a~• ·

wee p,Gm•

c;oLUMBUS (AP) - As the children bobbea up" an d
down to hip-hop music and their parents snapped picrures of
the prom finery, Kathy Peck-Warfield looked at the clock and
cringed. It was 8:30 p.m. Bedtime.
·
Proms don't last until the wee hours of the morning, at th e
St. Dominic Center John XXIII Head Start program.
The school's about 60 preschoolers got dressed up 'fuesc:by
night and went to their dance marking the end of the school
year.
.
.
The child(en spent the evening bouncing, rocking ar)d
rwirling under swirling blue, red and yellow lights .as a di~c
jockey played hip- hop and rap tunes.

l

. CLEVELAND (AP) - An official in charge of reducing .
on-the-job injuries for city workers was suspended after a.
'
CLEVELAND (AP) -A pastor criticized for comments
he
newspaper reported some municipal employees are injured at
made seven years ago has given up his seat on the committee
t8 times the rate of the average Ohio worker.
that
helped organize Wednesday's "faith-bas~d sunmtit" .in
Robert LaWion, 48, was suspended Monday for tO days for
,
.
neglect cif duty and incompetence. The suspension came the Washington.
Pentecostal Church of Christ Bishop J. Delano Ellis resigned
day after The Plain Dealer reported that Cleveland could have
.
saved $tO million in insurance premiums' over three years by from the committee on Monday,' an aide said.
Ellis "did not want to hinder what the initiative was creatreducing worken' compensation claims to average levels for
Ohio ·cities.
.
ed for," Minette Jackson, a ipokeswoman for his church, told
,
Mayor Michael R. White ordered personnel chief Jeffery The Plain Dealer.
1
1\vo Jewish members of the committee had expressed conPattcrson .to perform "a full review df the workers' compensation program" with a goal of making city workplaces safer cerns about Ellis amid reports that in a 1994. radio sermon, he
and savi,n g ·money on premiums, said spokesman Brian had made derogatory comments about Jews. Ellis later said his
Rothenberg.
broadcast remarks were about Biblical characte~. not· ~bout
. In ~-letter tO Lawson, Pattenon said reasons for the suspen- modern-day Jews. He said his comments' were repea~ed' out of
SIOn mcluded the lack of a comprehensive training program in context.
. n. :
the city and Lawson's failure to notify his superiors of grants
and insurance discount$'.

Business slow at clinic~

Margaret Donovan, 60, of Annandale, N.J., made the donation in the memory of her Lne husband, R obert Donovan, 54.
who died aboard a plane that plowed into a m ountain in
Croatia in 1996. Robert Donovan, an engineer, was on a trade
mission, along with U.S. Commerce s.,cretary R on Brown
and about 30 others.
.
·
Margaret Donovan chose to create the scho)arshi,p&lt;program
at Akron po.rtly because the school is small enough fo r her to
see the effects of her giving. Her daughter, Kara, received a
bachelor's degree and a law degree from the unive rsicy.

T11e D ..ly Senllnet • Page A 3

Po.-.Dt&gt; .IIIJIIIport, Ohio

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VintOI\ •.388·$603
Gallipolis • 446·0852
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PaJeA4

Sentinel

r

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court ... Po!t•tOJ, ONa
740 ...1111 • Fa: 111-1117

D~ ABBY: A few yean ago, I

••

A. Sllauun Lassie

••• 1 ••• Edltar

RIGHT.

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•

NATIONAL VIEWS

lfsa
Williams' sisters dad should
depart from limelight·
•The Sara1ota (Fia, ) Herald-'Thibune, on Richdrd
Willidms: It's a pity that Rich2rd Williams, the father of tennis
stars Serena and Venus, doesn't recognize what a great deal he
has in his two · talented and faithful daughters. If he did,
Williams WJiilll.d walk away fiom the media sideshow he's created, so th~ectrifYing performances of Serena and Venus
aren't overshadowed.
·
... Williams, the father, rece1_1dy ma~- headlines after
announcing-that he was the target of racial dun during a recent
tournament. Although some witnesses cast doubt on Williams'
assertion, it should go without ~ying that racial epithets have
no place in a tennis tournament, or anywhere else for that matter. The same for discrimination ...
But Mr. Williams has a duty as well, one that has nothing to
. do with race. His daughters are in the prime of their lives,
young enough to zoom acrou the court in skintight attire but
old enough to command attention and respect wherever they
go.
.
.
· Yet their father won't yield the stage. He continues to hog
the limelight, holding up his cryptic handmade signs for the TV
cameras during tournamena, conducting bizarre preu conferences, making inflammatory remarks. When the father gains,
and seeks; more attention than rwo of the best, and most
intriguing, women in sports, something's wrong. Serena and
Venus are the real story now; perhaps that's their father\ problem.
·
.
Not so long ago, children were supposed to be seen and not
heard. There comes a time in parents' lives when they should
reverse those roles.
• The Newt 'Thlbune, Tlac:oma, w..h., on Boftng~ "Son~
Cruiser": The f!oeing Co. is betting that speed kills - or at least
hobbles Airbus lndustrie, its fierce commercial jet riwl.
Boeing has recendy announced it will abandon its superjumbo jet project- a stretched version of its 747- in favor of a
much faster, mid-size plane. That's a good move, especially since
Airbus already had a virtual lock on the superjumbo jet matket
with 66 orders for its A380 model.
·
But there's 3lso another reaso'n for dropping the super-sized
jet. At 600 tons, the plane's sheer bulk raises a host of safety
concerns and other problems....
Boeing claims its new project - the twin-engine "Sonic
Cruiser" - will be able to fly near the speed of sound. That's
.much faster than other commercial jets its size. ...
.
The Sonic Cruiser could be good news for the region if
Boemg chooses to build the new planes in the company's
Puget Sound plants, rather than start fiom scratch elsewhere....

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ABSOCI4TED PRESS

Thday is Thursday, April 26, the 116th day of 2001. There are
. 249 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On April 26, 1986, the world's wont nuclear accident occurred
at the Chemobyl plant in the Soviet Union.An explosion and fire
killed at least 31 people and sent radioactivity into the atmosphere.
·
On this date:
tn 1607, an expedition of English colonists, including Capt,
John Smith, went ashore at Cape Henry, Va., to establish the first
permanent English settlement in the Wes~rn Hemisphere.
In 1865,John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln,
was surrounded by federal troops near Bowling Green, Va., and
killed.
·
·
.
In 1937, planes from Nazi Germany raided the Basque town of
.Guernica during the Spanish Civil War.
In 1945, Marshal Henri PhilipPe Petain, thJ head of France's
Vichy government during World War II, was arrested.
In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit the first of
a record 61 home runs in a single season.
·
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika and ~bar
. merged to form Tanzania.
In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the N~M~da desert
a one-megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
In 1970, the Broadway musical ."Company" opened at the
Alvin Theatre in New York. ·
·
In 1980, following an unsuccessful attempt by the United States
to rescue the U.S: Embassy hostages in Iran, the 'lehran government announced the captives were being scattered to thwart any
future rescue elfort.
In I 989, actress-comedian Lucille Ball died at Cedan-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 77.
Today's Birthdays: Acttm-comedian Carol Burnett is 68.
Rh}thm-and-blues singer Maurice Williams is 63. Songwritermusician Duane Eddy u63. Singer Bobby R-ydell is ·59. Actress
Claudine Auger is 59. Rock mwiciari Gary Wright is_58, Actor
Giancarlo Esposito is 43. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran
Duran) is 41 .ActressJoan Cherl ·is 40.

,

_,_

Abigail
Van
Buren

LOCAL EVENTS
THURSDAY

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Nation's youth cries out for ~Bush leadership
The latest statistics validate President
On the surface, Bush's new budget calls
Bush's campaign charge that the country
for an 11. 5-percent education increase
is in an • education recession:• Now it's up
over the next fiscal year - whereas the
to him and Congress to get us out of it.
rest ofthe government is held to 4 percent
It looked as though they were cooper- emphasizing the priority he gives to
ating to do just that, but a much-vaunted
education.
agreement to combine quality reforms
However, Democrats charge that Bush
with added resoun:es may be in danger of
counted advanced funding already approbreaking apart. That would be tragic.
priilld by the last Congress, so that new
It's vital' that, beginning this week, COnfunding comes to just 5.5 percent - far
gress pass- and Bush put into action COWMNIST
shorto-f the average 12 percent increases
a new education initiative, given the disin ·education funding app~d over the
mal results just registered in the National
past five years.
AMessment of Education Progtess.
·
As leading liberal Sen. Edward Kennedy
The so-called "nation's report card" proficient.
•
(D-Mass.) claimed last week, "We ·have
showed no improvement whatsoever in
If that isn't a rue bell for Congress as it
fourth-graders' reading ability fro!h 1992 takes up reauthorization of the massive agreed to the president's' testing proposals
·
- to greater accountability for schools .
to 2000: More shocking, a full 63 percent Elementary and Secondary Education
of black students and 58 percent of Hil- Act, it's hard to imagine what could be.
and to an enhanced reading initiative for
-"
B
h'
Ed
·
panics 'penormed at "below basic" level,
us s ucatton secretary, Rod Paige, young children." But, he continued, "It's
· to get any used th e results to proclaim, legitimately, nonsense to
meaning they were unable
· think that we can reform our
sense ofwhat they'd read.
. that "After spending 1125 billion ofTide schools on the cheap. ... Surely, in .a time
That result constirutes a failing grade for 1 money over the last 25 years, we have of record budget surpluses, we can alford
the Clinton administration and should virtually nothlilg to show for it."
to provide schools with the help they
cause Afi-ican-.Americans to wonder just Bush, Paige said, has set a goal that every need to teach our children better." ..
why they gave such unfailing political · child should· be able to read by the third
pemocrats, including reformers si.ICh as
support to Bill Clinton.
grade. Bush has budgeted 15 billion &lt;iver Sens. Joe Lieberman (Conn.) and Evan
Clinton administration education poli- five yean for a .national reading initiative, Bayh (Ind.), favor spending $15 billion
cy consisted of reducing the cost of col- and he could be judged by furure NAEP. over five years on Tide 1 programs for
lege, throwing more money at K-12 edu- results as to whether his plans an: sue- poor children, whereas Bush is budgeting
cation and, on behalf of teachers unions, ceeding.
$9.1 billion.
fighting Republican voucher proposals. .
Bush aisQ plans an infusion of educa- · As that portion of the deal gets wobbly,
Clinton fancied himself a reformer and tional substance into the much-reyered ·there's a danger that House conservatives,
supported higher standards, testing and Head Start program, which over the years who favor no-strings aid to states, will charter schools, but his administration has become primarily a day care and par- back out of their agreement to impose
never denied funding to any state, ~ehool ent-employment program.
testing requirements and target funding to
district or individnal school for failing its
!u Paige noted, research shows that poor chill;!ren.
pupils - as happened nationwide, espen upper-income youngsters start school
Republicans are. als!) agitated because
cia1Iy in high-poverty areas.
·
with a vocabulary of 20,000 words,. but the deal allows too few schools and school ·
According to the NAEP - a sample lower-income srudents know only 4,000 distriCts to opt out offederal reqUirements
exam that's the closest thing to a national words. Head Start and elementary schools in a test oflocal flexibility.
·
test that Congress has ever permitted --::- should ~elp close that gap. instead, the
This historic reform deal deserves to be
only 32 percent ()f fourth-graders were widens.
patched back together this week - with
"proficient" or ·better in reading. while
When Congress left town for its spring ·adequate funding ...:... so that the country
more than two~thirds were not.
recess, it looked as if a deal had been made ·can get out of its "education recession:· Jf
Breakllig' the' results down by race, 40 to combine the rigorous standards,-testing U.S. children keep getting failing grades,
percent_of whites, 46 percent of Asian- and accountability standards that Bush and so will their political leaders.
Americans, 12 percent of African-Am - other reformers favor with the additional
(Morton Kondracke is executive ·editor of
cans :ind 16 percent of Hispanics
money that Demo~rats always demand.
Rol_l Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

saP

.

BUSINESS MIRROR

Home is becoming the All-American pursuit
BY JOHN CUNNIFF '

-NEWYORK - · You may think from
the advertisements that the primary
objective of Americans is to relax in a
hammock or take a long vacation or idle
away free time.
You are wrong. They are busy fixing up
the house.
If \here is any one all-American pursuit, engaged in by young and ol~ new
owners and old, urbanites and suburbanites, immigrants and native born, it likely
has something to do with the house.
And tl)e preoccupation seems likely to
evolve into an obsession. While projeds
might l?e simple as replacing a faucet, the
costs add up to nearly $180 billion a year,
, and migh\ evenrually even surpass newhome building.
That, at least, is the vieW of scholars at
Harvard U niveristy's Joint Center for
Housing Studies, who maivel at the phenomenon which, they say, has helped to
dramatically upgrade the ,- quality of the
natipn's housing.
The Joint _Center, which examines a
phase of the housing industry .each year,
has most recendy focused on remodeling
and repai!'!, recognizing its enormQus
t

DROP us ALINE.

chips in;butwby IIDp there? Schools
welcome the continual ~
of parents in their cbildten's education, and that i11voMrnent rauils in
mom diligent students.
DEAR. ABBY: I read in thiS
morning's paper the letter fiom the
paramedic who was called to the
·home where the little boy drowned. It
ADVICE
. was a sad letter that made my heart
had
id h
' ache.
no ea c:r-N_much wm:J' teac.hers.
We have a fence around our pool
devote to prepanng for then- pupils.
and '-II the gate securely locked.
I recmpmel)d this_as a wonderful, Our son knows how to swim and folvoluntee,f
opporturuty.
The added
-,
..
_
1ows the safiety -·'-rwa we L
,......,
estabbe neli
" t ~ exposmg ~. teen-~rs to lished.
the behmd-the-scenes actMaes of
1 thought 1 was a respoll$1.'ble poo1
· co1111111tte
· d pro•es~ these energeac,
_
.
,
sional teachers. :_. KAREN WAR- owner . until last Mothers Day. We
REN GAINESVILLE FLA
had lltVIted friends over for a cookout
DEAR KAREN: A'terrifi~ idea. and swimming party. We ate ~ shifts
Everyone'; a \vinner when everyone, so .an adult would always be Wlth _the
·. children as they swanL My friend and

discow:red an incredible need teachers
haw. The day after school ended, I
had a couple of fiee hours and impulsivdy Stopped by the school and
olfered to help 'my daughter's teacher
pack. up for the summer.You would
haw tho~Jt I donated an organ!
What I did was not hard: We took
down bu_Jletin boards, packed books,
etc. It was quite enjoyable.
Before school began in the f2ll, 1
olfered my services again, but this
time my 18- and 15-year-old daughters joined me. The teachers nearly
named a day after us. We cleaned cubbies, arranged desks, cut out shapes
and set out supplies. It doesn't matter
if you have one hour or four. It makes
a dilference.
· The most wonderful part was my
daughters telling the teachers they

ifii

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

financial and ~ociological impact on the dues to the furure by economists at the
entire economy.
Federal Reserve and examined by stock
That $180 billion figure, for example, is analysts for indications of corporate
a catalyst, the report's authors state, for health .
.
·
stimulating another $100 billion or so a · While it booms along with the econoyear in spending for furnishings, appli- my, remodeling and repairing is far less
ances and lawn and garden projects.
likely to collapse when the overall econThose are filderal budget-size figures, omy tanks. It •night decline, but far less
and in recent years they've been growing precipitously; then, it might even substilarger each year. Now, with existing tute for a vacation.
.
home sales reaching an annual rate of With average household incomes ISO
5.44 million unit;s, there likely .to contin- perce_nt higher t~an in 1940, adjusted for
ue rising.
mflauon, •mprovmg the home increasing·With each ownership transfer of an ly has become an oudet for creativi~ as "
existing home there usually comes a spurt well a place with a roof over one's head.
of spending, much of it for renoVations,
Viewed in its broadest perspective, the
furniture and appliances. Then come ~eldom mterrupted activity in the Ameradditions when a new family member- 1can homestead is like a vas't anthill, with
parent, spouse or child - is added. Now, oWners coming and going, getting and
technolbgical innovations are becoming a ~pend•ng and forever upgrading a~;~d
major force.
unprovmg.
·
This is not news to homeowners, who
And so long as young people marry
are well aware of the money and labor and have kids. houses deteriorate, owners
they put into redefining their homes. It is become bored with decor, breadwinners
the aggregate effect of all these projects get transfered, oldsters retire to smaller
tha~ has such an enormous impact on diS~ and the population increases, it will '
economic society.
rcmam so.
It also helps explain why housing is so . ao/m Cu•m!lf is a business arn~lysl for ii.e
important to the economy, studied for Associdted Press.)
I

IIIThWd7~~~0h~

111 Court SL, Po"'""'Y, Ohio
7-2·2151 '

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Volunteers for teachers earn gratitude.and learn respect

••

Eila1ll (,. JMI

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 8 p.m.. home of
Ella Osborne. Margaret Cau·
thom's program on bottle gar. def!ing.
POMEROY - Meiga County'
·Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
.he Bradford Church of Christ.
.Carolyn Nicholson will speak
on "Brown Bag Art.' Zion
·church will have devotions.
POMEROY- Meigs County
EXPO, Thureday, 7:30 p.m.
. Rock Springs Falrgrounde,
. annex building.
'FRIDAY

·TUPPERS PLAINS .- VFW
Poet 9053, 7 p.m., election of
offlceit ~d epeclal drawing.
. MIDDLEPORT- Melge CounIY Fwly 111d Children Flret
&gt;CounoH, Friday, 9:30a.m. a1
,lhe Melgt County Department
of Job and Family Services.
·Middleport.
·

.

'

HARRISONVILLE- Har·

. REEDSVIlLE- Delivered wil
sing at 7 p.m. Saturday night.
Reedsville Unhed Methodist .
Church.
PORTLAND- lebanon Town·

ship Trustees, regular sassicln,
Sarurday, 7 a.m. township

building.

CHESTER - Family Fun Fest,
Eastern Elemental)' School,
saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Health screenings, learning
activities, interactive games,
entertainment. VMH Outpatient
Clinic will provide free sports
physicals. Paranls mUll con·
118nt, cards must be preHnted.
American Red Crou bloodmobile will be there. Eutem Athletic Boolters will have
relreahmerit..
SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT- Goapel 1lng,
Sunday, 6:30p.m. at the Middleport Church of lhe
Nazarene. Delivered will be
alnglrig. Putor Allen Mldclp
invitee public.
POMEROY- County hymn

: Heonvtle Community Church,
sing, Pomeroy United
"'yjv~tday II)~ ~atU.~Melhodlat Church, Sunday 7 .
p.m.
-fling. B~ara
~-m.
Higginbotham Glb1011 of

· Columbul, 11peaker.
.SATURDAY

SYRACUSE ..:. Buildere Qulr·
tel, Syrao01e Church of the
Nazarene Sunday, 6 p.m.

I were eating pooJstde; -her hll$band
was in the pool with t!te childreiL All
four of i:he little ones (un&lt;kr 5) had
taken swimming · lessons and were
good swimmers. My friends son :....S
ftoating on a lrickboard. We looked
away for a moment, and when we
looked back, he was nowhere to be
seeiL We m~ the lrickboard, and
there he was, tiying to come up for
air! Somehow, I managed to reach in
and gnb him.
. We were lucky. He had been holding his breath. In a few more seconds,
he would have drowned. All this happened in 3 feet of water, 3 feet from
me, and with five adults in the area.
Since then, we have added new
rules: We now have at least one adult
watcher for every three children.lbis
person must be alert at all times and
watch the children. We ,.;tate so the
'
. ,.

.,

.' .

same adult im't always the watcher. If
a child cannot swim, he 01' she must
wear a life vat, md the parenls are
responsible for their children the
entire time they are in the pool
Abby, a fence around a pool and a
locked gate art mandator-y. We had 2
close call we wiD new.r forget. Safety
rules mu.t not only be established, but
strenuously observed. lJFB...
GUARDING
· MOM
IN
PHOENIX

DEAR
UFEGUARDING
MOM: There is no telling how many
lives you nuy have saved today
because you took the time to write.
Thank you for pointing out .that it
is not enough to be in the vicinity of
, a pool - or other body of water when children are in it. ·
.
(D:ar Abby u wnllen by . Pa11/me
Plulbps aruf dauglrter}I!Dnnc Plu/lops.)
.'

iAspirin is good - in moderation, Of course
Quntion: I know that people who are at risk of having a
heart at4ck should consume the
equivalent of a baby aspirin
every day. What about thrise of
w who are naturally built with a ·
. propensity (short and wide) to
heart disease yet are Still ~ung?
Is there a risk to taking a small
John C. Wolf, D.O.
dose of aspirin daily?
Aaociate PJOfeuor ·
Anlwet: Aspirin has certainly
of Family Medicine
proven its worth in reducing the
risk of a second heart attack. It
has also shown its value in pre- loved ones and for society in
Unfortunately, ~pirin is not
. venting a lint heart attack for genml. ·
without the potential to cause
those who have had the type of It only ram 30 milligrams of health problems. Stomach pain,
heart pain docton call "angina" aspirin each day to reduce the heartburn, ulcers, constipation
·or who have undergone a pn:vi- risk of a·5eCOnd heart attatk and and bleeding·liom the digestive
ow coronary angioplasty.
to . ofer benefit for those who tract are common complicaReducing the risk of heart have specific risk factors for a lions. Not surprisingly, those
disease is certainly ~ impor- 6pt one. This surprisingly small who ralct ten tablets each day are
. tant ~ce it's the leading cause of dose is eqnal to onentenlh of a more likely tO have these probdeath for both men and wome11 normal aspirin talilet every day. I lems than m those who take a
in Ol!r coun~The numben are suppose you could just keep an half a tablet. Even small
IQSIIering - -at least 500,000 aspirin on your nightstand and amounts, ·though, still increase
indiyiduals die ewey year of a give it one good lick. before the risk of complications comheart attack and another rurning ill each night. That pared. to sWallowing a Similarly
SOQ1QPO iom oth~r types of would give you the necessary 30 siud pill with no active ingrediheart disease. Obvjp1141j any- 1111- ,Becawe chis iln,'t very prac- ~nts ,(plac~bol; .
,
thing that can reduce these acal1 most of us recol11qlend ,.With , this backgro11nd o.n
·nuniben is a ~~ advan- takiJig one aspirin every other aspirin nsks, I can now address
tage for the individual, their day or one baby aspirin each day. the heart of yo11r question (pu-

::/.([IJ(tlp

. "CM'edicine

.
don the pun). Should someone
wil}! a risk factor such as body
shape - but no history of heart
disease ·- take a daily small dose
of aspirin? WeD, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines ·don't olfer. any guidance.
They say, "There is insufficient
evidence to recommend for or
against routine aspirin prophylaxis for the p_rinjary prevention
of myocardial infarction (MI) in
asymptomatic persons."
Let me put . this medical
"bureaucratese" in plain English.
If you have no history of pn:viOUS Stomach or bleeding pro~
lems, · then taking an aspirin
every other day has a low risk of
causing you harm. It becomes
your choice, but do talk to your
doctor about it.
The story of aspirin's benefits
doeSn't stop with heart disease,
however.
There is some data that suggests it may reduce the risk of
colon cancer and Alzheimer's
cliJeaoe. I hope that within the
nextfewyearsresearchwillclar- ·
1
ifY the answer to your question
in a much more definitM: way.

.. COMMUNIT 'Y NEWS
Hill receives
FFA Degree

Mt. Olive Cemetery, Long and th,e Chester Lodge 323,
Bottom, here he is buried on Daughters of America, will
May 19, II a.m.
participate in cerentonies.
Barringer, who served in Special honored guest at the
RACINE - Jeremy Hill, Company F, 4th West Virginia cerentonies will be Miles
son of Dale and Karen Hill, Volunteer Infantry, is being !:;piing, past national comman·
'has been selected to .receive his honored by Brooks-Grant der of the American Legion.
' State FFA Degree.
Camp 7, Sons ofUnionVeterBrooks-Grant ·Camp past
. To be · selected for this ans of the Civil Ware, and Maj. comm~nder, Keith Ashley, peraward, Hill had to fill out an Daniel McCook, Cirde 104, formed historical research of
·appli..cation complete with all Ladies of the Grand Army of P~. Barringer's service and on
.• records of~ SAE (Supervised · the Republic.
. his-family in order to locate
' Agticultural Experience). The
The Civil War soldier is one living m~rnbers of the family.
· ~pplication was evaluated at of seven who survivlld a mis- Descendants from Virginia,
.:both district and state levels be sion at the Siege ofVicksburg Tennessee; Florida, South Car.several judges.
at Vicksburg, Miss. in 1863.
olina, North Carolina, West
The State FFA Degree only
A special veteran's marker Virginia, and Missouri ate
goes to th~ ·top two percent_in etched in gold letter and not- planning to participate.
the State of Ohto.
ing his receipt of the CongresOthers . of the Barringer
Hill's SAE project consisted sional Medal of Honor will be family are invited to attend.
of working at Karen's Green- unveiled. Included in the cer- Questions on the f~mily will
house. He was involved in the emonies will be period uni- be answered by ' A,.s!il~y a');~ ..
operations at the greenhouse, formed Civil War soldier pro- copies of the family histol)'
which consists of planting and viding period fife and drum will be available to see.
propagating plants, watering music, rifle honpr squad, and
Wreaths will be laid J&amp; Civil
. and fertilizing plants and plug . cannon. fire.
War groups and other patriotproduction.
Also, participating will be ic groups in honor of Pvt. Bar. Hill is an active FFA mem- the Tuppers Plains VFW Post · ringer. A luneheon at a cost of
ber and in the pm four yean,. presenting ·flags . and a rifle $6 per penon will be held at
has been secretary, participated squad representing modern- 12:15 p.m. at the Long Bot.on the ' parliamentary proce- day veterans. The Meigs tom Communiry Center.
dure team, soils team, forestry County' Commission, the Reservations for the luncheon
. team, environthon team, and Olive Township Trustees, the must be received no later than
filled out l?roficiency applica- Meigs County veterans' ofli- May 10 by calling (740) 992tions in many areas.
cer, the Meigs County Pio- 7874. The public is invited to
, Hill is also in other school neer and Historical Society,- attend the event.
"activities, such as Pep Club
.and the Varsity S Club.
Hill is a member of Racine
'Fint Baptist Church and is in
the top three in· Ohio in his
The ·sentinel welcomes your photographs. Hent ani··a ff1W ·
floriculture and diversified
guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs ere aceepted, provided they. are In focus
· horticulture proficiency appliand have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
' cations.
please Include a print aloog with the negative.
.
·
: Hill plans to a1t~nd ATI in
• Black-and-photographs are accepted, provided they are In
Wooster this fall.
focus and hll\le good contrast. Negatives also are acceRted:. however, please Include a print .along with the negative.
Standard-size slides are accepted. provided they are In focus
B
and have good contrast.
Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
U1i1 1 "
let size_and no larger than 8 X10. I
.
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproPOMEROY ·
Pvt.
duce well on newsprint.
WiUiam Barringer, the last of
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are
'three Civil War Congressional
saved as high-resolution, hlghiluallty JPEG flies .
Medal of. Honor winners
• Advantlx-type photograph$ are discouraged due to their
buried ln Meigs County, will
unique sizes, which do not translate well to newsp11per solumns.
Adwntlx-lyiie negatives are not accepted.
·
be honoreli i~ a patrJ,otic Civil
• LaserwHter prjnts of digital Image are discouraged since
. Wu dedication ceremony at · tl)ey do not reproduce well on newsprint

•

•

taml"ly 50"......

•

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•II
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.;

)

. '"'
There will be a special edition
on Thursday, May 17th saluting
our Meigs County Graduating
Seniors
,

...

If Your Business
Is Interested In
Participating In
This Sp.eclal Section,

Call ·, ·

992-2155
Debbie Call Ext. 16

We want your photos!

arringer

.

or
Dave Harris - Ext. 15
Before May 5, 2001

i:

�I

....

PaJeA4

Sentinel

r

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court ... Po!t•tOJ, ONa
740 ...1111 • Fa: 111-1117

D~ ABBY: A few yean ago, I

••

A. Sllauun Lassie

••• 1 ••• Edltar

RIGHT.

.... K-r ...
Coull aliar

,._.,.._,...,.._......

'

_IN.......,_...

, _ · · - - - , . . , _ . , _ _ _ _ All _ _ '""""'
_~

,,...w,...,.. ...... ,......... ............... , .
c.. ~~~·:':;:-.,.::--•
.,.. .,.Jw.,- tV' ' e
-

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1:

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•

NATIONAL VIEWS

lfsa
Williams' sisters dad should
depart from limelight·
•The Sara1ota (Fia, ) Herald-'Thibune, on Richdrd
Willidms: It's a pity that Rich2rd Williams, the father of tennis
stars Serena and Venus, doesn't recognize what a great deal he
has in his two · talented and faithful daughters. If he did,
Williams WJiilll.d walk away fiom the media sideshow he's created, so th~ectrifYing performances of Serena and Venus
aren't overshadowed.
·
... Williams, the father, rece1_1dy ma~- headlines after
announcing-that he was the target of racial dun during a recent
tournament. Although some witnesses cast doubt on Williams'
assertion, it should go without ~ying that racial epithets have
no place in a tennis tournament, or anywhere else for that matter. The same for discrimination ...
But Mr. Williams has a duty as well, one that has nothing to
. do with race. His daughters are in the prime of their lives,
young enough to zoom acrou the court in skintight attire but
old enough to command attention and respect wherever they
go.
.
.
· Yet their father won't yield the stage. He continues to hog
the limelight, holding up his cryptic handmade signs for the TV
cameras during tournamena, conducting bizarre preu conferences, making inflammatory remarks. When the father gains,
and seeks; more attention than rwo of the best, and most
intriguing, women in sports, something's wrong. Serena and
Venus are the real story now; perhaps that's their father\ problem.
·
.
Not so long ago, children were supposed to be seen and not
heard. There comes a time in parents' lives when they should
reverse those roles.
• The Newt 'Thlbune, Tlac:oma, w..h., on Boftng~ "Son~
Cruiser": The f!oeing Co. is betting that speed kills - or at least
hobbles Airbus lndustrie, its fierce commercial jet riwl.
Boeing has recendy announced it will abandon its superjumbo jet project- a stretched version of its 747- in favor of a
much faster, mid-size plane. That's a good move, especially since
Airbus already had a virtual lock on the superjumbo jet matket
with 66 orders for its A380 model.
·
But there's 3lso another reaso'n for dropping the super-sized
jet. At 600 tons, the plane's sheer bulk raises a host of safety
concerns and other problems....
Boeing claims its new project - the twin-engine "Sonic
Cruiser" - will be able to fly near the speed of sound. That's
.much faster than other commercial jets its size. ...
.
The Sonic Cruiser could be good news for the region if
Boemg chooses to build the new planes in the company's
Puget Sound plants, rather than start fiom scratch elsewhere....

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ABSOCI4TED PRESS

Thday is Thursday, April 26, the 116th day of 2001. There are
. 249 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On April 26, 1986, the world's wont nuclear accident occurred
at the Chemobyl plant in the Soviet Union.An explosion and fire
killed at least 31 people and sent radioactivity into the atmosphere.
·
On this date:
tn 1607, an expedition of English colonists, including Capt,
John Smith, went ashore at Cape Henry, Va., to establish the first
permanent English settlement in the Wes~rn Hemisphere.
In 1865,John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln,
was surrounded by federal troops near Bowling Green, Va., and
killed.
·
·
.
In 1937, planes from Nazi Germany raided the Basque town of
.Guernica during the Spanish Civil War.
In 1945, Marshal Henri PhilipPe Petain, thJ head of France's
Vichy government during World War II, was arrested.
In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit the first of
a record 61 home runs in a single season.
·
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika and ~bar
. merged to form Tanzania.
In 1968, the United States exploded beneath the N~M~da desert
a one-megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
In 1970, the Broadway musical ."Company" opened at the
Alvin Theatre in New York. ·
·
In 1980, following an unsuccessful attempt by the United States
to rescue the U.S: Embassy hostages in Iran, the 'lehran government announced the captives were being scattered to thwart any
future rescue elfort.
In I 989, actress-comedian Lucille Ball died at Cedan-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 77.
Today's Birthdays: Acttm-comedian Carol Burnett is 68.
Rh}thm-and-blues singer Maurice Williams is 63. Songwritermusician Duane Eddy u63. Singer Bobby R-ydell is ·59. Actress
Claudine Auger is 59. Rock mwiciari Gary Wright is_58, Actor
Giancarlo Esposito is 43. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran
Duran) is 41 .ActressJoan Cherl ·is 40.

,

_,_

Abigail
Van
Buren

LOCAL EVENTS
THURSDAY

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Nation's youth cries out for ~Bush leadership
The latest statistics validate President
On the surface, Bush's new budget calls
Bush's campaign charge that the country
for an 11. 5-percent education increase
is in an • education recession:• Now it's up
over the next fiscal year - whereas the
to him and Congress to get us out of it.
rest ofthe government is held to 4 percent
It looked as though they were cooper- emphasizing the priority he gives to
ating to do just that, but a much-vaunted
education.
agreement to combine quality reforms
However, Democrats charge that Bush
with added resoun:es may be in danger of
counted advanced funding already approbreaking apart. That would be tragic.
priilld by the last Congress, so that new
It's vital' that, beginning this week, COnfunding comes to just 5.5 percent - far
gress pass- and Bush put into action COWMNIST
shorto-f the average 12 percent increases
a new education initiative, given the disin ·education funding app~d over the
mal results just registered in the National
past five years.
AMessment of Education Progtess.
·
As leading liberal Sen. Edward Kennedy
The so-called "nation's report card" proficient.
•
(D-Mass.) claimed last week, "We ·have
showed no improvement whatsoever in
If that isn't a rue bell for Congress as it
fourth-graders' reading ability fro!h 1992 takes up reauthorization of the massive agreed to the president's' testing proposals
·
- to greater accountability for schools .
to 2000: More shocking, a full 63 percent Elementary and Secondary Education
of black students and 58 percent of Hil- Act, it's hard to imagine what could be.
and to an enhanced reading initiative for
-"
B
h'
Ed
·
panics 'penormed at "below basic" level,
us s ucatton secretary, Rod Paige, young children." But, he continued, "It's
· to get any used th e results to proclaim, legitimately, nonsense to
meaning they were unable
· think that we can reform our
sense ofwhat they'd read.
. that "After spending 1125 billion ofTide schools on the cheap. ... Surely, in .a time
That result constirutes a failing grade for 1 money over the last 25 years, we have of record budget surpluses, we can alford
the Clinton administration and should virtually nothlilg to show for it."
to provide schools with the help they
cause Afi-ican-.Americans to wonder just Bush, Paige said, has set a goal that every need to teach our children better." ..
why they gave such unfailing political · child should· be able to read by the third
pemocrats, including reformers si.ICh as
support to Bill Clinton.
grade. Bush has budgeted 15 billion &lt;iver Sens. Joe Lieberman (Conn.) and Evan
Clinton administration education poli- five yean for a .national reading initiative, Bayh (Ind.), favor spending $15 billion
cy consisted of reducing the cost of col- and he could be judged by furure NAEP. over five years on Tide 1 programs for
lege, throwing more money at K-12 edu- results as to whether his plans an: sue- poor children, whereas Bush is budgeting
cation and, on behalf of teachers unions, ceeding.
$9.1 billion.
fighting Republican voucher proposals. .
Bush aisQ plans an infusion of educa- · As that portion of the deal gets wobbly,
Clinton fancied himself a reformer and tional substance into the much-reyered ·there's a danger that House conservatives,
supported higher standards, testing and Head Start program, which over the years who favor no-strings aid to states, will charter schools, but his administration has become primarily a day care and par- back out of their agreement to impose
never denied funding to any state, ~ehool ent-employment program.
testing requirements and target funding to
district or individnal school for failing its
!u Paige noted, research shows that poor chill;!ren.
pupils - as happened nationwide, espen upper-income youngsters start school
Republicans are. als!) agitated because
cia1Iy in high-poverty areas.
·
with a vocabulary of 20,000 words,. but the deal allows too few schools and school ·
According to the NAEP - a sample lower-income srudents know only 4,000 distriCts to opt out offederal reqUirements
exam that's the closest thing to a national words. Head Start and elementary schools in a test oflocal flexibility.
·
test that Congress has ever permitted --::- should ~elp close that gap. instead, the
This historic reform deal deserves to be
only 32 percent ()f fourth-graders were widens.
patched back together this week - with
"proficient" or ·better in reading. while
When Congress left town for its spring ·adequate funding ...:... so that the country
more than two~thirds were not.
recess, it looked as if a deal had been made ·can get out of its "education recession:· Jf
Breakllig' the' results down by race, 40 to combine the rigorous standards,-testing U.S. children keep getting failing grades,
percent_of whites, 46 percent of Asian- and accountability standards that Bush and so will their political leaders.
Americans, 12 percent of African-Am - other reformers favor with the additional
(Morton Kondracke is executive ·editor of
cans :ind 16 percent of Hispanics
money that Demo~rats always demand.
Rol_l Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

Morton
Kondracke

saP

.

BUSINESS MIRROR

Home is becoming the All-American pursuit
BY JOHN CUNNIFF '

-NEWYORK - · You may think from
the advertisements that the primary
objective of Americans is to relax in a
hammock or take a long vacation or idle
away free time.
You are wrong. They are busy fixing up
the house.
If \here is any one all-American pursuit, engaged in by young and ol~ new
owners and old, urbanites and suburbanites, immigrants and native born, it likely
has something to do with the house.
And tl)e preoccupation seems likely to
evolve into an obsession. While projeds
might l?e simple as replacing a faucet, the
costs add up to nearly $180 billion a year,
, and migh\ evenrually even surpass newhome building.
That, at least, is the vieW of scholars at
Harvard U niveristy's Joint Center for
Housing Studies, who maivel at the phenomenon which, they say, has helped to
dramatically upgrade the ,- quality of the
natipn's housing.
The Joint _Center, which examines a
phase of the housing industry .each year,
has most recendy focused on remodeling
and repai!'!, recognizing its enormQus
t

DROP us ALINE.

chips in;butwby IIDp there? Schools
welcome the continual ~
of parents in their cbildten's education, and that i11voMrnent rauils in
mom diligent students.
DEAR. ABBY: I read in thiS
morning's paper the letter fiom the
paramedic who was called to the
·home where the little boy drowned. It
ADVICE
. was a sad letter that made my heart
had
id h
' ache.
no ea c:r-N_much wm:J' teac.hers.
We have a fence around our pool
devote to prepanng for then- pupils.
and '-II the gate securely locked.
I recmpmel)d this_as a wonderful, Our son knows how to swim and folvoluntee,f
opporturuty.
The added
-,
..
_
1ows the safiety -·'-rwa we L
,......,
estabbe neli
" t ~ exposmg ~. teen-~rs to lished.
the behmd-the-scenes actMaes of
1 thought 1 was a respoll$1.'ble poo1
· co1111111tte
· d pro•es~ these energeac,
_
.
,
sional teachers. :_. KAREN WAR- owner . until last Mothers Day. We
REN GAINESVILLE FLA
had lltVIted friends over for a cookout
DEAR KAREN: A'terrifi~ idea. and swimming party. We ate ~ shifts
Everyone'; a \vinner when everyone, so .an adult would always be Wlth _the
·. children as they swanL My friend and

discow:red an incredible need teachers
haw. The day after school ended, I
had a couple of fiee hours and impulsivdy Stopped by the school and
olfered to help 'my daughter's teacher
pack. up for the summer.You would
haw tho~Jt I donated an organ!
What I did was not hard: We took
down bu_Jletin boards, packed books,
etc. It was quite enjoyable.
Before school began in the f2ll, 1
olfered my services again, but this
time my 18- and 15-year-old daughters joined me. The teachers nearly
named a day after us. We cleaned cubbies, arranged desks, cut out shapes
and set out supplies. It doesn't matter
if you have one hour or four. It makes
a dilference.
· The most wonderful part was my
daughters telling the teachers they

ifii

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

financial and ~ociological impact on the dues to the furure by economists at the
entire economy.
Federal Reserve and examined by stock
That $180 billion figure, for example, is analysts for indications of corporate
a catalyst, the report's authors state, for health .
.
·
stimulating another $100 billion or so a · While it booms along with the econoyear in spending for furnishings, appli- my, remodeling and repairing is far less
ances and lawn and garden projects.
likely to collapse when the overall econThose are filderal budget-size figures, omy tanks. It •night decline, but far less
and in recent years they've been growing precipitously; then, it might even substilarger each year. Now, with existing tute for a vacation.
.
home sales reaching an annual rate of With average household incomes ISO
5.44 million unit;s, there likely .to contin- perce_nt higher t~an in 1940, adjusted for
ue rising.
mflauon, •mprovmg the home increasing·With each ownership transfer of an ly has become an oudet for creativi~ as "
existing home there usually comes a spurt well a place with a roof over one's head.
of spending, much of it for renoVations,
Viewed in its broadest perspective, the
furniture and appliances. Then come ~eldom mterrupted activity in the Ameradditions when a new family member- 1can homestead is like a vas't anthill, with
parent, spouse or child - is added. Now, oWners coming and going, getting and
technolbgical innovations are becoming a ~pend•ng and forever upgrading a~;~d
major force.
unprovmg.
·
This is not news to homeowners, who
And so long as young people marry
are well aware of the money and labor and have kids. houses deteriorate, owners
they put into redefining their homes. It is become bored with decor, breadwinners
the aggregate effect of all these projects get transfered, oldsters retire to smaller
tha~ has such an enormous impact on diS~ and the population increases, it will '
economic society.
rcmam so.
It also helps explain why housing is so . ao/m Cu•m!lf is a business arn~lysl for ii.e
important to the economy, studied for Associdted Press.)
I

IIIThWd7~~~0h~

111 Court SL, Po"'""'Y, Ohio
7-2·2151 '

ru

Page~_

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Volunteers for teachers earn gratitude.and learn respect

••

Eila1ll (,. JMI

By the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, 8 p.m.. home of
Ella Osborne. Margaret Cau·
thom's program on bottle gar. def!ing.
POMEROY - Meiga County'
·Churches of Christ Women's
Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
.he Bradford Church of Christ.
.Carolyn Nicholson will speak
on "Brown Bag Art.' Zion
·church will have devotions.
POMEROY- Meigs County
EXPO, Thureday, 7:30 p.m.
. Rock Springs Falrgrounde,
. annex building.
'FRIDAY

·TUPPERS PLAINS .- VFW
Poet 9053, 7 p.m., election of
offlceit ~d epeclal drawing.
. MIDDLEPORT- Melge CounIY Fwly 111d Children Flret
&gt;CounoH, Friday, 9:30a.m. a1
,lhe Melgt County Department
of Job and Family Services.
·Middleport.
·

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HARRISONVILLE- Har·

. REEDSVIlLE- Delivered wil
sing at 7 p.m. Saturday night.
Reedsville Unhed Methodist .
Church.
PORTLAND- lebanon Town·

ship Trustees, regular sassicln,
Sarurday, 7 a.m. township

building.

CHESTER - Family Fun Fest,
Eastern Elemental)' School,
saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Health screenings, learning
activities, interactive games,
entertainment. VMH Outpatient
Clinic will provide free sports
physicals. Paranls mUll con·
118nt, cards must be preHnted.
American Red Crou bloodmobile will be there. Eutem Athletic Boolters will have
relreahmerit..
SUNDAY

MIDDLEPORT- Goapel 1lng,
Sunday, 6:30p.m. at the Middleport Church of lhe
Nazarene. Delivered will be
alnglrig. Putor Allen Mldclp
invitee public.
POMEROY- County hymn

: Heonvtle Community Church,
sing, Pomeroy United
"'yjv~tday II)~ ~atU.~Melhodlat Church, Sunday 7 .
p.m.
-fling. B~ara
~-m.
Higginbotham Glb1011 of

· Columbul, 11peaker.
.SATURDAY

SYRACUSE ..:. Buildere Qulr·
tel, Syrao01e Church of the
Nazarene Sunday, 6 p.m.

I were eating pooJstde; -her hll$band
was in the pool with t!te childreiL All
four of i:he little ones (un&lt;kr 5) had
taken swimming · lessons and were
good swimmers. My friends son :....S
ftoating on a lrickboard. We looked
away for a moment, and when we
looked back, he was nowhere to be
seeiL We m~ the lrickboard, and
there he was, tiying to come up for
air! Somehow, I managed to reach in
and gnb him.
. We were lucky. He had been holding his breath. In a few more seconds,
he would have drowned. All this happened in 3 feet of water, 3 feet from
me, and with five adults in the area.
Since then, we have added new
rules: We now have at least one adult
watcher for every three children.lbis
person must be alert at all times and
watch the children. We ,.;tate so the
'
. ,.

.,

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same adult im't always the watcher. If
a child cannot swim, he 01' she must
wear a life vat, md the parenls are
responsible for their children the
entire time they are in the pool
Abby, a fence around a pool and a
locked gate art mandator-y. We had 2
close call we wiD new.r forget. Safety
rules mu.t not only be established, but
strenuously observed. lJFB...
GUARDING
· MOM
IN
PHOENIX

DEAR
UFEGUARDING
MOM: There is no telling how many
lives you nuy have saved today
because you took the time to write.
Thank you for pointing out .that it
is not enough to be in the vicinity of
, a pool - or other body of water when children are in it. ·
.
(D:ar Abby u wnllen by . Pa11/me
Plulbps aruf dauglrter}I!Dnnc Plu/lops.)
.'

iAspirin is good - in moderation, Of course
Quntion: I know that people who are at risk of having a
heart at4ck should consume the
equivalent of a baby aspirin
every day. What about thrise of
w who are naturally built with a ·
. propensity (short and wide) to
heart disease yet are Still ~ung?
Is there a risk to taking a small
John C. Wolf, D.O.
dose of aspirin daily?
Aaociate PJOfeuor ·
Anlwet: Aspirin has certainly
of Family Medicine
proven its worth in reducing the
risk of a second heart attack. It
has also shown its value in pre- loved ones and for society in
Unfortunately, ~pirin is not
. venting a lint heart attack for genml. ·
without the potential to cause
those who have had the type of It only ram 30 milligrams of health problems. Stomach pain,
heart pain docton call "angina" aspirin each day to reduce the heartburn, ulcers, constipation
·or who have undergone a pn:vi- risk of a·5eCOnd heart attatk and and bleeding·liom the digestive
ow coronary angioplasty.
to . ofer benefit for those who tract are common complicaReducing the risk of heart have specific risk factors for a lions. Not surprisingly, those
disease is certainly ~ impor- 6pt one. This surprisingly small who ralct ten tablets each day are
. tant ~ce it's the leading cause of dose is eqnal to onentenlh of a more likely tO have these probdeath for both men and wome11 normal aspirin talilet every day. I lems than m those who take a
in Ol!r coun~The numben are suppose you could just keep an half a tablet. Even small
IQSIIering - -at least 500,000 aspirin on your nightstand and amounts, ·though, still increase
indiyiduals die ewey year of a give it one good lick. before the risk of complications comheart attack and another rurning ill each night. That pared. to sWallowing a Similarly
SOQ1QPO iom oth~r types of would give you the necessary 30 siud pill with no active ingrediheart disease. Obvjp1141j any- 1111- ,Becawe chis iln,'t very prac- ~nts ,(plac~bol; .
,
thing that can reduce these acal1 most of us recol11qlend ,.With , this backgro11nd o.n
·nuniben is a ~~ advan- takiJig one aspirin every other aspirin nsks, I can now address
tage for the individual, their day or one baby aspirin each day. the heart of yo11r question (pu-

::/.([IJ(tlp

. "CM'edicine

.
don the pun). Should someone
wil}! a risk factor such as body
shape - but no history of heart
disease ·- take a daily small dose
of aspirin? WeD, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force guidelines ·don't olfer. any guidance.
They say, "There is insufficient
evidence to recommend for or
against routine aspirin prophylaxis for the p_rinjary prevention
of myocardial infarction (MI) in
asymptomatic persons."
Let me put . this medical
"bureaucratese" in plain English.
If you have no history of pn:viOUS Stomach or bleeding pro~
lems, · then taking an aspirin
every other day has a low risk of
causing you harm. It becomes
your choice, but do talk to your
doctor about it.
The story of aspirin's benefits
doeSn't stop with heart disease,
however.
There is some data that suggests it may reduce the risk of
colon cancer and Alzheimer's
cliJeaoe. I hope that within the
nextfewyearsresearchwillclar- ·
1
ifY the answer to your question
in a much more definitM: way.

.. COMMUNIT 'Y NEWS
Hill receives
FFA Degree

Mt. Olive Cemetery, Long and th,e Chester Lodge 323,
Bottom, here he is buried on Daughters of America, will
May 19, II a.m.
participate in cerentonies.
Barringer, who served in Special honored guest at the
RACINE - Jeremy Hill, Company F, 4th West Virginia cerentonies will be Miles
son of Dale and Karen Hill, Volunteer Infantry, is being !:;piing, past national comman·
'has been selected to .receive his honored by Brooks-Grant der of the American Legion.
' State FFA Degree.
Camp 7, Sons ofUnionVeterBrooks-Grant ·Camp past
. To be · selected for this ans of the Civil Ware, and Maj. comm~nder, Keith Ashley, peraward, Hill had to fill out an Daniel McCook, Cirde 104, formed historical research of
·appli..cation complete with all Ladies of the Grand Army of P~. Barringer's service and on
.• records of~ SAE (Supervised · the Republic.
. his-family in order to locate
' Agticultural Experience). The
The Civil War soldier is one living m~rnbers of the family.
· ~pplication was evaluated at of seven who survivlld a mis- Descendants from Virginia,
.:both district and state levels be sion at the Siege ofVicksburg Tennessee; Florida, South Car.several judges.
at Vicksburg, Miss. in 1863.
olina, North Carolina, West
The State FFA Degree only
A special veteran's marker Virginia, and Missouri ate
goes to th~ ·top two percent_in etched in gold letter and not- planning to participate.
the State of Ohto.
ing his receipt of the CongresOthers . of the Barringer
Hill's SAE project consisted sional Medal of Honor will be family are invited to attend.
of working at Karen's Green- unveiled. Included in the cer- Questions on the f~mily will
house. He was involved in the emonies will be period uni- be answered by ' A,.s!il~y a');~ ..
operations at the greenhouse, formed Civil War soldier pro- copies of the family histol)'
which consists of planting and viding period fife and drum will be available to see.
propagating plants, watering music, rifle honpr squad, and
Wreaths will be laid J&amp; Civil
. and fertilizing plants and plug . cannon. fire.
War groups and other patriotproduction.
Also, participating will be ic groups in honor of Pvt. Bar. Hill is an active FFA mem- the Tuppers Plains VFW Post · ringer. A luneheon at a cost of
ber and in the pm four yean,. presenting ·flags . and a rifle $6 per penon will be held at
has been secretary, participated squad representing modern- 12:15 p.m. at the Long Bot.on the ' parliamentary proce- day veterans. The Meigs tom Communiry Center.
dure team, soils team, forestry County' Commission, the Reservations for the luncheon
. team, environthon team, and Olive Township Trustees, the must be received no later than
filled out l?roficiency applica- Meigs County veterans' ofli- May 10 by calling (740) 992tions in many areas.
cer, the Meigs County Pio- 7874. The public is invited to
, Hill is also in other school neer and Historical Society,- attend the event.
"activities, such as Pep Club
.and the Varsity S Club.
Hill is a member of Racine
'Fint Baptist Church and is in
the top three in· Ohio in his
The ·sentinel welcomes your photographs. Hent ani··a ff1W ·
floriculture and diversified
guidelines for submissions:
• Color photographs ere aceepted, provided they. are In focus
· horticulture proficiency appliand have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
' cations.
please Include a print aloog with the negative.
.
·
: Hill plans to a1t~nd ATI in
• Black-and-photographs are accepted, provided they are In
Wooster this fall.
focus and hll\le good contrast. Negatives also are acceRted:. however, please Include a print .along with the negative.
Standard-size slides are accepted. provided they are In focus
B
and have good contrast.
Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
U1i1 1 "
let size_and no larger than 8 X10. I
.
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproPOMEROY ·
Pvt.
duce well on newsprint.
WiUiam Barringer, the last of
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are
'three Civil War Congressional
saved as high-resolution, hlghiluallty JPEG flies .
Medal of. Honor winners
• Advantlx-type photograph$ are discouraged due to their
buried ln Meigs County, will
unique sizes, which do not translate well to newsp11per solumns.
Adwntlx-lyiie negatives are not accepted.
·
be honoreli i~ a patrJ,otic Civil
• LaserwHter prjnts of digital Image are discouraged since
. Wu dedication ceremony at · tl)ey do not reproduce well on newsprint

•

•

taml"ly 50"......

•

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~----~'--~--~~------~

•II
I

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.;

)

. '"'
There will be a special edition
on Thursday, May 17th saluting
our Meigs County Graduating
Seniors
,

...

If Your Business
Is Interested In
Participating In
This Sp.eclal Section,

Call ·, ·

992-2155
Debbie Call Ext. 16

We want your photos!

arringer

.

or
Dave Harris - Ext. 15
Before May 5, 2001

i:

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel
'lad luck'

(AP) President
Bush has changed nothing in US. China
policy, the White House and State Department are insisting: But on Capitol Hill,
nobody seems quite sure exactly what he
did.
•
Some lawmakers s2id his remarks that
the United States can usc military fooce in
T2iwan's defense negated traditional ambiguity in 'U.S. policy that has succeeded in
keeping China at bay for decades while
admitting that thet!j is but one China.
Others said even if that's what he did,
the time for ambiguity is over.
"Ambiguity never was any -good;' Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher, R -Calif, a longtime
foe of China's communist-led government, said Wednesday. In aU of this, the
White House and the US. State Department asserted Bush?s comntents represented no change in policy towari:l Chi na and
Taiwan, the island in the Taiwan Strait that
Beijing considers a renegade province.
"The Taiwan Relations Act·makes very
dear that the United States h.. an obligation that Taiwan's peaceful way of life- is
not upset by force," said Condoleezza
Rice, .Bush's national security adViser, That
1979 law is the basis of the one-China
policy and specifies how it is to be carried
out.
"What (Bush) said dearly is how seriqusly and resolutely he takes this obligation.,/\. secure Taiwan ~ be better able to
· engage in cross-strait dialog\Je;' Rice said.
In .Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman on Thursday accused Bush of violating commitments to China with his
remarks on Taiwan.
Spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue expressed
userious concern" over what she called
Bush's "extremely mistaken position."
. She said the United States was violating
its commitments to China and repeated
· demands for Washington to stop what she
called interference in China's internal
affairs.
Bush touched off the stir Wednesday in
a successian of press 'interviews to mark

PHOENIX (AP) -The R.ev. leon Sullivan, the civil rights
crusader who wrote the Sullivan Principles, an international
code of business conduct that helped end apartheid in South
Africa, has died of leukemia. He wa. 78. ·
' Sullivan, a former Phibdelphia minister who grew up in
Charleston, W.Va., died Tuesday night at Scottsdale HealthcareOsborn hospital in suburban Scottsdale, said his daughter, Hope
Sullivan Rose.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson called Sullivan "a world leader" and
praised the work in Philadelphia that be~ne the basis for Operanon Breadbasket, the economic arm of Martin luther King's
civil rights organization.
. .
. "Leon Sullivan was my mentor and my friend ... a tremendous
source of hope and vitality and moral authority," Jackson said.

No money in budget for suit
WASHINGTON (AP) -.The Bmh administration is not
requesting m&lt;&gt;ney to pursue a lawsui.t against big tobacco companies, prompting speculation that the federal case will be
dropped.
The administration has requested $1.8 million to pay salaries
and staff costs for the tobacco litigation team in the department's
civil division, Justice officials said Wednesday. .Bur no money has
been sought for legal work, sikh as gathering and analyzing millions of documents that tobac~mpanies have asked to see.
President .Bush on Wednesday expressed reservations about
continuing the lawsuit, opposed by Republicans and members
of Congress from tobacco-ptoducing states. He said he has not
decided whether to drop the suit.
" I do worry about a litigious society," .Bush said in an interview with Fox News. "I remember as the governor ofTexas that
we had all kinds of major lawsuits against tobacco- as in.every
other state. At some point enough is enough."

BOUlDER., Colo. (AP) - A former investigator in the JonBenet Ramsey case says he plans to release crime scene photographs from the case, despite the objections of the district
attorney.
lou Smit, a retired police detective who was a consultant for
prosecutors in the case, says the photos point to the likelihood
that 6-year-old Jon.Benet was killed in 1996 by an intruder.
Po~ce have said her parents remain under an umbrella of suspicion, but no one has been charged in her death.
.
A presentation of photos that Smit reportedly showed. the
grand jury in the case is to be shown Monday on "the NBC's
"Today" show.
.
·District Attprney Mary Keenan said Wednesday that Smit
informed her of his decision to go public with the information,
and she discouraged the move, sayi ng media .publicity has complicated the investigation .

Store owners.plead io fraud

..

House International · Relations subcommittee hearing.
Californian R.ohrabacher, long an aljvocate of stricter policies toward c~.
agreed in a telephone interview that
ambiguity "did pothing but leave a question nurk in the mind of potential eneinies as to what they could get away with
Bush
and what they couldn't."
.But Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., said
inva&lt;!e Taiwan.
He added into the mix his decision to Bushs comment- coming on top of his
let TaiW:ln buy .more weapons than ever, announcement that he'll do away witli .
althougb 'he deleted front its wish list the · annual reviews of Taiwan arms sales -·
top item: four Arleigh Burke class destroy- only raises more questions about U.S. polers with state-Of-the-art l'l.egis combat ·ICy.
" I fearthat in the course of two days \ve
control systems.
have
moved from deliberate strategic
For decades, U.S. administrations have
been purposely haiy on whether the ambiguity to strategic confusion;· AckerUnited States would go to war with man said.
China &lt;Jver Taiwan, as opposed to arming · "The president's attempts to be clear
Taiwan well enough to enable the isl1n~ about Taiwan \viU be seen within China as
to defend itself.
· '- further provocation and support for Tai"We have been deliberately vague about wan 's independence," he said. "Is that what
the circumstances under which \VC would the president is encouraging?"
come to Tai\van 's defense, not only to disThemc:&gt;st recent use of the U.S. military
in
Taiwan 's· defense was in 1996.. when
courage Taiwan from dra\ving us in by
declaring independence but also to deter a former President Clinton sent warships
Chinese attack by keeping .Beijing guess- into the area afie~ China began firing mis.ing," Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said siles in the direction of the island in what
Wednesday on the Senate floor.
Beijing said Were military exereises.
He said Bush's comments suggested the
Bush's arms-sale decision Monday
president abandoned the policy with would let Taiwari buy destroyers and sub"absolutely no consultation with mem- marines · that will allow the island tO
bers of Congress ·or with our allies in the upgrade its defenses against the expanding
.
regton.
reach and sophistication of China's air and
Kerry said the Taiwan Relations Act naval forces,
does not commit the United States to
In angry response, China Vice Foreign
defend Taiwan but rather to provide the Minister Li Zhaoxing lodged a "strong
island with equipment needed to defend protest" with the US. ambasSador to
itself
China. Selling Taiwan submarines,
Kerry's fellow -Democrat, Rep. Tom destroyers and anti-submarine aircraft, Li
Lantos of California , sided with the said; would "seriously impact" China-U.S.
Republican president and said it was time cooperation on ·preventing the spread of
to "go beyond" the old ambiguous weapons and cause "destructive damage"
approach.
to . overall ties. There was no immediate
"I think the president's straightforward, response to Wednesday's comments by
courageo\IS and unambigtious statement Bush.
day. In one he said
America would · do
"whatever it took" to
help Taiwan defend
itself. Later he softened
that a little by sayi11g
U.S. military force
would be "certainly an
option" if China should

..

the ringleaders of the tax scam .They pleaded guilty to additional charges of conspiracy. They admitted failing to report millions
of dollars in income, then sending the money to the Middle
.
.
~st .
.
•
KIEV. Ukraine (AP) - Fifteen years after the world's worst
The defendants, who own eight groceries in New Orleans nuclear disaster, people across much of the former Soviet Union
and one in Baton Rouge, face prison up to four years ar' enlit candles and offered prayers Thursday for those killed and sickten_cing S~pt. 12.
..:
ened by the explosion at Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power
plant.
The April 26, 1986, explosion and fire sent a radioactive cloud
SMYRNA, Del. (AP) - A 46-year-old man w ho killed a over much of Europe and contaminated large areas in thenwoman hours after he escaped from a prison in 1986 was exe- Soviet Ukraine, Rus.sia and Belarus.
cuted by injection early Thursday.
The. Ukrainian government says more than 4;{)00 of those
Until last week, David Dawson had insisted he was innocent who took part in the hasty arid poorly organized Soviet cleanup
of the death of Madeline Kisner, 44, who \Vas stabbed a i:lo:ten effort have died, and that more than 70,000 Ukrainians were
times. But at a hearing a \veek -ago before the stat.e Board of Par- fully disabled by the disaster.
_
dons, Dawson admitted responsibility
In ~ll. 7 lni llion people in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine are estiIn 1986, with six years left on a burglary se ntenc~. Dawson
mated to suffer physical or psychological effects of radiation
and three other inmates broke out of a Delaware prison by
related to the Chernobyl catastrophe,
crawling thro ugh a sewer pipe.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Grocery store owners funneled
more than $4.5 miUion in unreported profits to the Middle East,
using much of the money to construct elaborate homes for their
families in the_Palestinian West Bank; investigators say.
The details of a 17 -month investigation were revealed in federal court Tuesday as II defendants pleaded guilty to income tax
charges,
Two brothers, Bilal Hindi and Rabah Hindi, were described as

Disaster anniversary observed

Ex-fugitive executed for slaying ·

A few hours. bter, prosecutors
said, he killed Kisner and stole
money and a car fronl he r
home.
The U.S. Supreme Co urt
denied a last-di tch appeal
Wednesday
by
Dawson 's
defense lawyers.

The Daily Sentinel

...........

r~:::::::::=-=::::::::::::::====~====~~~~~~~~~~

Orthopedic Excellence
for all of the
Mid-Ohio Valley

It's a problem that your
youth suffer today.
Many teens suffer without
ever being diagnosed, some
go months, even years without knowing that they have it,
while others know and treat it
with medication and counselmg.
· ·what is .this strange thing
I'm talking about? It's called
Bi-polar Disorder, and millions of teens deal with it
every year - even right here
in Meigs High School.
I, Rachael Morris, was diagnosed with Bi-Polar Disorde~
about six months ago, and 1
have been treattng it . ever
·since. A lot of people, when
they __think about this, think of
adults, and people in insane
" asylurus. Not true.
_lr could be· one of your
fnends, or even that loud
obnoxious, class down over
there. Often people who have
J)i-Polar Disorder show out- .
side symptoms. They ~ay be
very moody. They may seem
like their emotions are on a
roller coaster, but this is
because they really are.
The brain in a .Bi-Polar person pro\iuces either too much
or not enough of a substance
called serotonin, a chemical in
the brain that assists us in
dealing with everyday problems and tasks.
·
Wjth today's advanced
mediclneLthis disorde,r can he '
successfully treated. Along
with counseling and lots . of
help froin friends. and family,
tb'e persoh can lead a ·happy,
healthy life.
.
To learn more about this
disorder or if you thlnk that
you may have it, 5"e your doc- ·
tor.
·
..

.S~ring fever
takes hold
atMHS
It is time to put away the
winter clothes, dig out the
shorts and· bathing suits, 6U up
the pool, ·drive around with
the top down, .or just sit on
t)te porj:h and enjoy the warm
sun 1)1ecause spring is here! '
When.' it . finally . arrives,
many of us get spring fever.
1re we sick? No, we're just
ready to enjoy the nice, waqn
weather - play sports, work
on cars, go barefoot in the
new grass, or just be lazy.
School is winding down,
seniors are anxious to graduate and students can't resist
the temputions that spring
has to offer and begin to slack
off their schoolwork. But
these last few weeks of schoo) ·
are, to some students, very
important because they are
pac_ked with exams and grad,
uatlon.
.But spring is not just about
fun and games. It is also a time
for family vacations and time
~ relax and spend time with
(riends, It is a time te do
activities you have wanted to
~o but 'were unable because of
the weather.
' Instead of being couch
potatoes aU spring and summer, exercise, play sports, or
just get out. You have aU winter to be pinned up inside the
house and play video games
or watch TV. So 'why suy
inside during spring and sumtiter' Enjoy the many nice
days that . we have because
winter will sneak up on us
faster than we realize.

~

•.

We 'r; YourBankfor/lfo... '"

Opparunlly Lender.

'•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE tOCAL FOLKS.

Inter.... . APR MHd on loan 1mount of 110,000. Annual
momborehlp ol SIO on. onnlvorNry. Member FDIC. Equal

, .

Skb;cribe today.
992-2156 '

'

,,

1hundll'f. April 21. 2001

ing reflects
on her career

BY RACHAEL MORRIS

•

*Rate II ftud fDr lhe flr1t I yeara end eubl.ct to chanue
annually ,,. 8111 ~- APR'o lot H - Equity linn wlll
not . - lb. Min. C...rH line Ia SI,OOO, Thoro lo • Set
CIOIIOII 0001. Coniluft 0 tax OCivl- -dlnJI doducllblllty 'ol

A7

Bi-polar disorder
is treatable

BY JUIICA KINQ

I

r.i:'l Farmers Bank

ra

his 6fst 1()() days in will guarantee that hostility in the Taiwm
office, which end Sun- Strait will not take place;' Lantos said at a

W~HINGTON

Civil rights·crusader dies

Ex-investigator to release photos

'lhundll'f. Aprll21. 2001

Bush's remarks on Taiwan cause stir

PUNTA ARENAS, Chik (AP) -Three doctors in a row, all
felled by medic21 eme~ncies at the South Pole's Amundsen~
~o!l Sution the coldest, windiest, emptiest and probably
riskiest place on Earth to get sicl or hurt.
Chalk it' up, as one doctor said, to plain bad lucie
"I think it kind of proves that fact is stranger than fiction.You
really couldri 'r write a scenario like this;' said Dr. R.obert
Thompson, who feU and suffered a ruptured disk in his back in
Nc:M:mber 1999 at the station, shortly after arriving to take care
of the scientists and other researchers. .
Thorupson~ who now lives in Harrisburg, Pa., had replaced
Dr. Jern N•el5"n at Amundsen-Scott. Nielsen, from the
Youngstown, Ohio, area, was evacuated the month before in a
risky 2irlift after she discovered a breast tumor that was diagnosed as cancerous.
·

.I

Page A&amp;

You get a lot of exposure
I have always been inter- with AAU and your skills
improved
ested 111 playmg basketball, automatically
and at an early age my talent, because rhe other girls r
or. _g1ft, as some say, w~s played with were extremely
notiCed,
\ talented.
·
In the second or third i My freshman year in high
grade when my oldes t SISter · school. I played varsity .bas-·
Jenmfer practiced at Brad- ketball and by the fifth ga me ·
bury Elementary, I wou ld tag . in my caree r at Meigs, I was
~long to watch. One day my not only pbying but starting.
ad Greg, who was the I we nt on to win numerous ·
coach, let me practice with awards such as TVC, di strict
the team. At that point I and state honors. 1 also won
knew that I loved the game four- time offensive MV~
of basketball,. and my dad Best Frejj Throw Perce ntage:
soon reahzed JUSt how good Most Ste~·ca-Rel1\4ost Assists.
I was. I co ntinu ed to practice This past year, I also won the
With them una] I was old MVP of the league, and I
enough to play on my own have brols,~n every basketball
team.
record at Me igs High Sc hool
_When I was in junior -including boys o r girls.
h1gh, I was asked to play on
I am now playing AAU
an AAU team. Amateur Ath- and am enrolled in Green
letic Union is an organiza- Mountain College in Ver. lion that allows two students mont, where I wiD be on a
from a school to play aU over four-year scholarship. I will
the Uruted States after the be studyin g education, and
regular season IS completed.! thy future plans are to be a
began playing with AAU, and teacher and maybe become a
I progressed very quickly. coach.
BY AMBER VININQ

I

DAY OF THE DEAD-:- Silent, expressionless Meigs Teen Institute members· moved around ·
the school as a remmder pf what can happen to those who drink and drive.

Teen l·nstitute members
depict 'the day of the dead'
The dead can't talk.
To give students a picture
of the results of drinking and
driving Teen Institute mem~
hers at Meigs High School ·
suged "the day of the dead"
Tuesday.
Twenty-one students in
inakJ~up to depict death
moved silendy and expressioitless around the school
and periodically 1 created
scenes of death in the haDways.
.It was all in observance of
"None for Under 21'', a pro_graql ·carried out each ·year
prior to the prom. which this
year will be May 5. ·
This afternoon an assembly is being held. Teen Institute members and their
spoqsoring
organization,
Health Recovery ,Services
will present skits and will be
speaking on drinking and Andrea Burdette, Jessica
driving, using statistics on Preasr, Michael Lambert ,
deaths and injuries,
Sarah Houser, Steph .BurTaking parr in the various dette, Courtney Kennedy,
activities this week are Ash Jamitha WiUford, Aja BlackEblin, Rachel McDaniel, well, .Bruce Glover, Evan

Prom theme announced:
'You're My Everything'
BY MARY SCHULTZ

Shaw,
.Brumfielil,
Jami Ha•ves\ Crystal Jacks, .
Tommy M&lt;:~onal•d, Bobbi
Burson , Julie
·n, Heather
Hysell,John
and Tyson
Lee.

POETRY CORNER
·Walkers·
Many people call us talkers, '
But really we are walkers.
We tell you how it Is,
Then we show you how it is.
Talkers?

No.
We are walkers.
Some people like to fight it out,
Other people like to talk It out,
But not us.
We like to walk It out.
What do I mean?

Is this a runaway •e••~A,?
No, not at all.
We won't let you put
backs
to the wall, .
Fight away. talk away.
No, we'd rather walk

-

Bobbi Napper

The welders have

This year at Meigs High
IJelped tremendously
School, prom will be prewith their creative
sented May 5 by the junior
class. The theme and the
talents by making a
song are "You're My Every14-ittcft star for tile
thing" by the band 98
Degrees.
entrance, tile backThe prom colors are pur- . ground for tire picture, .
pie, dark and light blue, and and other decoratious.
white,
AI.~o, th ey h ave created
..,
.
h . .
.o ratse money, t e JUmor
class students have participata gazebo ~nd
ed in selling Avon twice durafountarn.
ing the; school year, and the
class also sold QSP and
The prom festivities ·will
M.eredy valentine candy. start at 7 p.m. with "The
Also, the juniors held various Walk . of Fame". Couple's
raffles and two bake sales.
names will be announced as
AU of these fund-raising they "walk" or enter down
events raised money to assist an aisle. A new feature has
in the preparing for the been introduced to this year's
prom.
prom - tickets. When the
The welders have helped juniors and seniors registremendously with their cre- tered, they were presented a
ative talents by making a 14- ticket, which is necessary for
inch star (or the entrance, the entrance to the prom. The
background for the picture, Prom and "After Prom,"
and other decorations. Also, which is being held this year
they have created a gazebo at Royal Oak Park; will fol·
low the Walk.
and a fountain.

State tourney
a real blast
ADDtli HuBBARD
Basketball is a game, but
"State Tournament" is no
BY

longer just a game.
It's an event that few of us
here in Meigs . County ever
experience. Well, when
Eastern advanced to the
state level, we were right.
there to show our support,
evep though they are our
rival during the season. .
The students at Meigs
High School wenf to
Columbus on March 23 to
cheer the Eastern Eagles to
victory. Some students rode
,the pep buses to ihe game
'llld others drove.
Going to a state basketball
tournarrent was an experience that the other students
.and I will never forget. AU of
the students whom I talked
with seemed to have
enjoyed the game. Being in
an . arena of that size and
experiencing the intensity
of the game, the huge
crowd, and the rivalry
proved to be ·an awesome
r
experience.
C'?ngratulations to · the
Eastern Eagles for a wondetful season.

HOM~

Vaughan's
NATIONAL . Supermarket

33~Page

-BA K

Racine
Syracuse

OHIO Rl ER BEAR
COM ANY
'

dAve.
Middleport,
992·4055

253 N.

4oa
Hartinger

992-34 1

Downing ·
Mullen
lftusserlnsurance
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
CrQw's Family Restaurant
F~turilllf Ken~ucky

Mon-Sat

1Q am-5 pm

'

.I

228 Main St.
1111 IIIHIII IIIIP

Ohio

FrU!d Chielr..n
Pomeroy,

•

''

�Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel
'lad luck'

(AP) President
Bush has changed nothing in US. China
policy, the White House and State Department are insisting: But on Capitol Hill,
nobody seems quite sure exactly what he
did.
•
Some lawmakers s2id his remarks that
the United States can usc military fooce in
T2iwan's defense negated traditional ambiguity in 'U.S. policy that has succeeded in
keeping China at bay for decades while
admitting that thet!j is but one China.
Others said even if that's what he did,
the time for ambiguity is over.
"Ambiguity never was any -good;' Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher, R -Calif, a longtime
foe of China's communist-led government, said Wednesday. In aU of this, the
White House and the US. State Department asserted Bush?s comntents represented no change in policy towari:l Chi na and
Taiwan, the island in the Taiwan Strait that
Beijing considers a renegade province.
"The Taiwan Relations Act·makes very
dear that the United States h.. an obligation that Taiwan's peaceful way of life- is
not upset by force," said Condoleezza
Rice, .Bush's national security adViser, That
1979 law is the basis of the one-China
policy and specifies how it is to be carried
out.
"What (Bush) said dearly is how seriqusly and resolutely he takes this obligation.,/\. secure Taiwan ~ be better able to
· engage in cross-strait dialog\Je;' Rice said.
In .Beijing, a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman on Thursday accused Bush of violating commitments to China with his
remarks on Taiwan.
Spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue expressed
userious concern" over what she called
Bush's "extremely mistaken position."
. She said the United States was violating
its commitments to China and repeated
· demands for Washington to stop what she
called interference in China's internal
affairs.
Bush touched off the stir Wednesday in
a successian of press 'interviews to mark

PHOENIX (AP) -The R.ev. leon Sullivan, the civil rights
crusader who wrote the Sullivan Principles, an international
code of business conduct that helped end apartheid in South
Africa, has died of leukemia. He wa. 78. ·
' Sullivan, a former Phibdelphia minister who grew up in
Charleston, W.Va., died Tuesday night at Scottsdale HealthcareOsborn hospital in suburban Scottsdale, said his daughter, Hope
Sullivan Rose.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson called Sullivan "a world leader" and
praised the work in Philadelphia that be~ne the basis for Operanon Breadbasket, the economic arm of Martin luther King's
civil rights organization.
. .
. "Leon Sullivan was my mentor and my friend ... a tremendous
source of hope and vitality and moral authority," Jackson said.

No money in budget for suit
WASHINGTON (AP) -.The Bmh administration is not
requesting m&lt;&gt;ney to pursue a lawsui.t against big tobacco companies, prompting speculation that the federal case will be
dropped.
The administration has requested $1.8 million to pay salaries
and staff costs for the tobacco litigation team in the department's
civil division, Justice officials said Wednesday. .Bur no money has
been sought for legal work, sikh as gathering and analyzing millions of documents that tobac~mpanies have asked to see.
President .Bush on Wednesday expressed reservations about
continuing the lawsuit, opposed by Republicans and members
of Congress from tobacco-ptoducing states. He said he has not
decided whether to drop the suit.
" I do worry about a litigious society," .Bush said in an interview with Fox News. "I remember as the governor ofTexas that
we had all kinds of major lawsuits against tobacco- as in.every
other state. At some point enough is enough."

BOUlDER., Colo. (AP) - A former investigator in the JonBenet Ramsey case says he plans to release crime scene photographs from the case, despite the objections of the district
attorney.
lou Smit, a retired police detective who was a consultant for
prosecutors in the case, says the photos point to the likelihood
that 6-year-old Jon.Benet was killed in 1996 by an intruder.
Po~ce have said her parents remain under an umbrella of suspicion, but no one has been charged in her death.
.
A presentation of photos that Smit reportedly showed. the
grand jury in the case is to be shown Monday on "the NBC's
"Today" show.
.
·District Attprney Mary Keenan said Wednesday that Smit
informed her of his decision to go public with the information,
and she discouraged the move, sayi ng media .publicity has complicated the investigation .

Store owners.plead io fraud

..

House International · Relations subcommittee hearing.
Californian R.ohrabacher, long an aljvocate of stricter policies toward c~.
agreed in a telephone interview that
ambiguity "did pothing but leave a question nurk in the mind of potential eneinies as to what they could get away with
Bush
and what they couldn't."
.But Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., said
inva&lt;!e Taiwan.
He added into the mix his decision to Bushs comment- coming on top of his
let TaiW:ln buy .more weapons than ever, announcement that he'll do away witli .
althougb 'he deleted front its wish list the · annual reviews of Taiwan arms sales -·
top item: four Arleigh Burke class destroy- only raises more questions about U.S. polers with state-Of-the-art l'l.egis combat ·ICy.
" I fearthat in the course of two days \ve
control systems.
have
moved from deliberate strategic
For decades, U.S. administrations have
been purposely haiy on whether the ambiguity to strategic confusion;· AckerUnited States would go to war with man said.
China &lt;Jver Taiwan, as opposed to arming · "The president's attempts to be clear
Taiwan well enough to enable the isl1n~ about Taiwan \viU be seen within China as
to defend itself.
· '- further provocation and support for Tai"We have been deliberately vague about wan 's independence," he said. "Is that what
the circumstances under which \VC would the president is encouraging?"
come to Tai\van 's defense, not only to disThemc:&gt;st recent use of the U.S. military
in
Taiwan 's· defense was in 1996.. when
courage Taiwan from dra\ving us in by
declaring independence but also to deter a former President Clinton sent warships
Chinese attack by keeping .Beijing guess- into the area afie~ China began firing mis.ing," Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., said siles in the direction of the island in what
Wednesday on the Senate floor.
Beijing said Were military exereises.
He said Bush's comments suggested the
Bush's arms-sale decision Monday
president abandoned the policy with would let Taiwari buy destroyers and sub"absolutely no consultation with mem- marines · that will allow the island tO
bers of Congress ·or with our allies in the upgrade its defenses against the expanding
.
regton.
reach and sophistication of China's air and
Kerry said the Taiwan Relations Act naval forces,
does not commit the United States to
In angry response, China Vice Foreign
defend Taiwan but rather to provide the Minister Li Zhaoxing lodged a "strong
island with equipment needed to defend protest" with the US. ambasSador to
itself
China. Selling Taiwan submarines,
Kerry's fellow -Democrat, Rep. Tom destroyers and anti-submarine aircraft, Li
Lantos of California , sided with the said; would "seriously impact" China-U.S.
Republican president and said it was time cooperation on ·preventing the spread of
to "go beyond" the old ambiguous weapons and cause "destructive damage"
approach.
to . overall ties. There was no immediate
"I think the president's straightforward, response to Wednesday's comments by
courageo\IS and unambigtious statement Bush.
day. In one he said
America would · do
"whatever it took" to
help Taiwan defend
itself. Later he softened
that a little by sayi11g
U.S. military force
would be "certainly an
option" if China should

..

the ringleaders of the tax scam .They pleaded guilty to additional charges of conspiracy. They admitted failing to report millions
of dollars in income, then sending the money to the Middle
.
.
~st .
.
•
KIEV. Ukraine (AP) - Fifteen years after the world's worst
The defendants, who own eight groceries in New Orleans nuclear disaster, people across much of the former Soviet Union
and one in Baton Rouge, face prison up to four years ar' enlit candles and offered prayers Thursday for those killed and sickten_cing S~pt. 12.
..:
ened by the explosion at Ukraine's Chernobyl nuclear power
plant.
The April 26, 1986, explosion and fire sent a radioactive cloud
SMYRNA, Del. (AP) - A 46-year-old man w ho killed a over much of Europe and contaminated large areas in thenwoman hours after he escaped from a prison in 1986 was exe- Soviet Ukraine, Rus.sia and Belarus.
cuted by injection early Thursday.
The. Ukrainian government says more than 4;{)00 of those
Until last week, David Dawson had insisted he was innocent who took part in the hasty arid poorly organized Soviet cleanup
of the death of Madeline Kisner, 44, who \Vas stabbed a i:lo:ten effort have died, and that more than 70,000 Ukrainians were
times. But at a hearing a \veek -ago before the stat.e Board of Par- fully disabled by the disaster.
_
dons, Dawson admitted responsibility
In ~ll. 7 lni llion people in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine are estiIn 1986, with six years left on a burglary se ntenc~. Dawson
mated to suffer physical or psychological effects of radiation
and three other inmates broke out of a Delaware prison by
related to the Chernobyl catastrophe,
crawling thro ugh a sewer pipe.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Grocery store owners funneled
more than $4.5 miUion in unreported profits to the Middle East,
using much of the money to construct elaborate homes for their
families in the_Palestinian West Bank; investigators say.
The details of a 17 -month investigation were revealed in federal court Tuesday as II defendants pleaded guilty to income tax
charges,
Two brothers, Bilal Hindi and Rabah Hindi, were described as

Disaster anniversary observed

Ex-fugitive executed for slaying ·

A few hours. bter, prosecutors
said, he killed Kisner and stole
money and a car fronl he r
home.
The U.S. Supreme Co urt
denied a last-di tch appeal
Wednesday
by
Dawson 's
defense lawyers.

The Daily Sentinel

...........

r~:::::::::=-=::::::::::::::====~====~~~~~~~~~~

Orthopedic Excellence
for all of the
Mid-Ohio Valley

It's a problem that your
youth suffer today.
Many teens suffer without
ever being diagnosed, some
go months, even years without knowing that they have it,
while others know and treat it
with medication and counselmg.
· ·what is .this strange thing
I'm talking about? It's called
Bi-polar Disorder, and millions of teens deal with it
every year - even right here
in Meigs High School.
I, Rachael Morris, was diagnosed with Bi-Polar Disorde~
about six months ago, and 1
have been treattng it . ever
·since. A lot of people, when
they __think about this, think of
adults, and people in insane
" asylurus. Not true.
_lr could be· one of your
fnends, or even that loud
obnoxious, class down over
there. Often people who have
J)i-Polar Disorder show out- .
side symptoms. They ~ay be
very moody. They may seem
like their emotions are on a
roller coaster, but this is
because they really are.
The brain in a .Bi-Polar person pro\iuces either too much
or not enough of a substance
called serotonin, a chemical in
the brain that assists us in
dealing with everyday problems and tasks.
·
Wjth today's advanced
mediclneLthis disorde,r can he '
successfully treated. Along
with counseling and lots . of
help froin friends. and family,
tb'e persoh can lead a ·happy,
healthy life.
.
To learn more about this
disorder or if you thlnk that
you may have it, 5"e your doc- ·
tor.
·
..

.S~ring fever
takes hold
atMHS
It is time to put away the
winter clothes, dig out the
shorts and· bathing suits, 6U up
the pool, ·drive around with
the top down, .or just sit on
t)te porj:h and enjoy the warm
sun 1)1ecause spring is here! '
When.' it . finally . arrives,
many of us get spring fever.
1re we sick? No, we're just
ready to enjoy the nice, waqn
weather - play sports, work
on cars, go barefoot in the
new grass, or just be lazy.
School is winding down,
seniors are anxious to graduate and students can't resist
the temputions that spring
has to offer and begin to slack
off their schoolwork. But
these last few weeks of schoo) ·
are, to some students, very
important because they are
pac_ked with exams and grad,
uatlon.
.But spring is not just about
fun and games. It is also a time
for family vacations and time
~ relax and spend time with
(riends, It is a time te do
activities you have wanted to
~o but 'were unable because of
the weather.
' Instead of being couch
potatoes aU spring and summer, exercise, play sports, or
just get out. You have aU winter to be pinned up inside the
house and play video games
or watch TV. So 'why suy
inside during spring and sumtiter' Enjoy the many nice
days that . we have because
winter will sneak up on us
faster than we realize.

~

•.

We 'r; YourBankfor/lfo... '"

Opparunlly Lender.

'•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE tOCAL FOLKS.

Inter.... . APR MHd on loan 1mount of 110,000. Annual
momborehlp ol SIO on. onnlvorNry. Member FDIC. Equal

, .

Skb;cribe today.
992-2156 '

'

,,

1hundll'f. April 21. 2001

ing reflects
on her career

BY RACHAEL MORRIS

•

*Rate II ftud fDr lhe flr1t I yeara end eubl.ct to chanue
annually ,,. 8111 ~- APR'o lot H - Equity linn wlll
not . - lb. Min. C...rH line Ia SI,OOO, Thoro lo • Set
CIOIIOII 0001. Coniluft 0 tax OCivl- -dlnJI doducllblllty 'ol

A7

Bi-polar disorder
is treatable

BY JUIICA KINQ

I

r.i:'l Farmers Bank

ra

his 6fst 1()() days in will guarantee that hostility in the Taiwm
office, which end Sun- Strait will not take place;' Lantos said at a

W~HINGTON

Civil rights·crusader dies

Ex-investigator to release photos

'lhundll'f. Aprll21. 2001

Bush's remarks on Taiwan cause stir

PUNTA ARENAS, Chik (AP) -Three doctors in a row, all
felled by medic21 eme~ncies at the South Pole's Amundsen~
~o!l Sution the coldest, windiest, emptiest and probably
riskiest place on Earth to get sicl or hurt.
Chalk it' up, as one doctor said, to plain bad lucie
"I think it kind of proves that fact is stranger than fiction.You
really couldri 'r write a scenario like this;' said Dr. R.obert
Thompson, who feU and suffered a ruptured disk in his back in
Nc:M:mber 1999 at the station, shortly after arriving to take care
of the scientists and other researchers. .
Thorupson~ who now lives in Harrisburg, Pa., had replaced
Dr. Jern N•el5"n at Amundsen-Scott. Nielsen, from the
Youngstown, Ohio, area, was evacuated the month before in a
risky 2irlift after she discovered a breast tumor that was diagnosed as cancerous.
·

.I

Page A&amp;

You get a lot of exposure
I have always been inter- with AAU and your skills
improved
ested 111 playmg basketball, automatically
and at an early age my talent, because rhe other girls r
or. _g1ft, as some say, w~s played with were extremely
notiCed,
\ talented.
·
In the second or third i My freshman year in high
grade when my oldes t SISter · school. I played varsity .bas-·
Jenmfer practiced at Brad- ketball and by the fifth ga me ·
bury Elementary, I wou ld tag . in my caree r at Meigs, I was
~long to watch. One day my not only pbying but starting.
ad Greg, who was the I we nt on to win numerous ·
coach, let me practice with awards such as TVC, di strict
the team. At that point I and state honors. 1 also won
knew that I loved the game four- time offensive MV~
of basketball,. and my dad Best Frejj Throw Perce ntage:
soon reahzed JUSt how good Most Ste~·ca-Rel1\4ost Assists.
I was. I co ntinu ed to practice This past year, I also won the
With them una] I was old MVP of the league, and I
enough to play on my own have brols,~n every basketball
team.
record at Me igs High Sc hool
_When I was in junior -including boys o r girls.
h1gh, I was asked to play on
I am now playing AAU
an AAU team. Amateur Ath- and am enrolled in Green
letic Union is an organiza- Mountain College in Ver. lion that allows two students mont, where I wiD be on a
from a school to play aU over four-year scholarship. I will
the Uruted States after the be studyin g education, and
regular season IS completed.! thy future plans are to be a
began playing with AAU, and teacher and maybe become a
I progressed very quickly. coach.
BY AMBER VININQ

I

DAY OF THE DEAD-:- Silent, expressionless Meigs Teen Institute members· moved around ·
the school as a remmder pf what can happen to those who drink and drive.

Teen l·nstitute members
depict 'the day of the dead'
The dead can't talk.
To give students a picture
of the results of drinking and
driving Teen Institute mem~
hers at Meigs High School ·
suged "the day of the dead"
Tuesday.
Twenty-one students in
inakJ~up to depict death
moved silendy and expressioitless around the school
and periodically 1 created
scenes of death in the haDways.
.It was all in observance of
"None for Under 21'', a pro_graql ·carried out each ·year
prior to the prom. which this
year will be May 5. ·
This afternoon an assembly is being held. Teen Institute members and their
spoqsoring
organization,
Health Recovery ,Services
will present skits and will be
speaking on drinking and Andrea Burdette, Jessica
driving, using statistics on Preasr, Michael Lambert ,
deaths and injuries,
Sarah Houser, Steph .BurTaking parr in the various dette, Courtney Kennedy,
activities this week are Ash Jamitha WiUford, Aja BlackEblin, Rachel McDaniel, well, .Bruce Glover, Evan

Prom theme announced:
'You're My Everything'
BY MARY SCHULTZ

Shaw,
.Brumfielil,
Jami Ha•ves\ Crystal Jacks, .
Tommy M&lt;:~onal•d, Bobbi
Burson , Julie
·n, Heather
Hysell,John
and Tyson
Lee.

POETRY CORNER
·Walkers·
Many people call us talkers, '
But really we are walkers.
We tell you how it Is,
Then we show you how it is.
Talkers?

No.
We are walkers.
Some people like to fight it out,
Other people like to talk It out,
But not us.
We like to walk It out.
What do I mean?

Is this a runaway •e••~A,?
No, not at all.
We won't let you put
backs
to the wall, .
Fight away. talk away.
No, we'd rather walk

-

Bobbi Napper

The welders have

This year at Meigs High
IJelped tremendously
School, prom will be prewith their creative
sented May 5 by the junior
class. The theme and the
talents by making a
song are "You're My Every14-ittcft star for tile
thing" by the band 98
Degrees.
entrance, tile backThe prom colors are pur- . ground for tire picture, .
pie, dark and light blue, and and other decoratious.
white,
AI.~o, th ey h ave created
..,
.
h . .
.o ratse money, t e JUmor
class students have participata gazebo ~nd
ed in selling Avon twice durafountarn.
ing the; school year, and the
class also sold QSP and
The prom festivities ·will
M.eredy valentine candy. start at 7 p.m. with "The
Also, the juniors held various Walk . of Fame". Couple's
raffles and two bake sales.
names will be announced as
AU of these fund-raising they "walk" or enter down
events raised money to assist an aisle. A new feature has
in the preparing for the been introduced to this year's
prom.
prom - tickets. When the
The welders have helped juniors and seniors registremendously with their cre- tered, they were presented a
ative talents by making a 14- ticket, which is necessary for
inch star (or the entrance, the entrance to the prom. The
background for the picture, Prom and "After Prom,"
and other decorations. Also, which is being held this year
they have created a gazebo at Royal Oak Park; will fol·
low the Walk.
and a fountain.

State tourney
a real blast
ADDtli HuBBARD
Basketball is a game, but
"State Tournament" is no
BY

longer just a game.
It's an event that few of us
here in Meigs . County ever
experience. Well, when
Eastern advanced to the
state level, we were right.
there to show our support,
evep though they are our
rival during the season. .
The students at Meigs
High School wenf to
Columbus on March 23 to
cheer the Eastern Eagles to
victory. Some students rode
,the pep buses to ihe game
'llld others drove.
Going to a state basketball
tournarrent was an experience that the other students
.and I will never forget. AU of
the students whom I talked
with seemed to have
enjoyed the game. Being in
an . arena of that size and
experiencing the intensity
of the game, the huge
crowd, and the rivalry
proved to be ·an awesome
r
experience.
C'?ngratulations to · the
Eastern Eagles for a wondetful season.

HOM~

Vaughan's
NATIONAL . Supermarket

33~Page

-BA K

Racine
Syracuse

OHIO Rl ER BEAR
COM ANY
'

dAve.
Middleport,
992·4055

253 N.

4oa
Hartinger

992-34 1

Downing ·
Mullen
lftusserlnsurance
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
CrQw's Family Restaurant
F~turilllf Ken~ucky

Mon-Sat

1Q am-5 pm

'

.I

228 Main St.
1111 IIIHIII IIIIP

Ohio

FrU!d Chielr..n
Pomeroy,

•

''

�•
P8ge A 8 • 11w O.Hy Sentinel

Thursday, April 21,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

aib1

Kerrey says he's ashamed of.leadi-,g raid

•

Inside:

.The Daily Sentinel

Hendmon walkS past Baht, Page 82
NBA: Bucks dazz~;o¥agic, Page 88

t'

PageB1

•
~EW

YORK (AP)
Former
Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey uys he is
ash2med th2t as a Navy SEAL he led
a 1969 combat mission killing
unarmed women and children in
Vietnam. He was later a\varded a
Bronze Star for the r;Ud.
"To describe it as an atrocity, I
would say, is pretty close to being
right, because that's how it felt and
that's why I feel guilt and shame for
it," Kerrey said, a~cording to a partial
transcr ipt of a "60 Minutes II" segment scheduled for broadcast Tues-

day.
Kerrey says the Feb. 25, 1969,
killings in the Mekong Delta were by
and large carried our in self-defense.
But a member of Kerrey's Navy
SEAL uniCJnd a Vietnamese woman
who said she witnessed the killings
have given starkly different versions
of the raid, alleging Kerrey's team
massacred the women and children.
"We herded them together in a
group. We lined them up and we
opened fire," Gerhard Klann told "60
Minutes II."

The Bronze Star citation ·says 21
Viet Cong were ' killed and enemy
weapons were captured or destroyed
during the r:rid. Kerrey 's squad, in
reporting to military superiors, didn't
mention killing civilians. Witness' 2nd
official accounts of the number of
dead varies from 13 to more than 20.
Kerrey, who euned the nation's
highest v;alor award, the Medal of
Honor,
for a later SEAL action,
this."
Neither Kerrey nor Klann talked about the raid publicly for the
returned calls Wednesday from The first time last week in a speech to
ROTC students at Virginia Military
Associated Press.

Kerrey, who has nor ruled out a
run for president in 2004, said he is
haunted by the 32-year-old memory
of the raid.
"I have lived with this privately for
32 years," Kerrey told the Omaha
World-Herald in an interview publishedWednesday."I can't keep it private any more. My conscience teUs
me some good should come from

Institute in Lexington, Va.
Kerrey said the mission. took place
on a moonless night, when he was a
25-year-old lieutenant leading a
seven-man commando team. He s:rid
Klann and another one of his men
killed several people they came upon
at the start of the r:rid because they
believed they were 2 thre2t. Ker~
s:rid he had not ordered the kiUiJJ'&amp;s
but took responsibility for them.
About 15 minutes later, Kerrey
said, shots \vere fired at his squad and
his men returned fire.

Court still a_rguing over tobacco ads

Convicted killer put to
death by lethal injection

WASHINGTbN (AP) -

In lively address the federal government's
bwyer, Barbara Underwood, th e' ac ting
t"rcd Wedn~sday whether smte curbs on solicitor general.
cigarene ads are unconstitptional or
Underwood w:1s maklng the point
regulatory overkill .
that th e rul es are different for tobacco
Massachmeus' proposed ad bans near because of th e danger it poses,·especial- ·
schools and phygroundS'Could give the ly to children.
··
Assume, Thomas said, that it has been
conservative-led court ca use to reconside r whether govern ment limits on proved that children suffer long-term
commercial speec h violate the first ; health dangers from eating a lot of fast
Amendment.
food. Would the government step in
The co urt generally has held that there, as well?
com mercial speech suc h as advertising
" What's your rationale for regulating
may be regulated but not banned. ads by McDonald's&gt;" he asked. ·
A flustered Underwood did not
Tobacco compames and oth~r business
interests would like to see advertising answer the question directly.
accorded free-speech protections more
Courtroom regulars recall Thomas
like political and artistic expression.
speaking only one other time during
That was part of the argument that oral arguments this q&gt;Urt term.
tobacco company lawyer Jeffrey Sutton Wednes4ay .was the last day of argumade Wednesday, and the portion of ments, although the court remains in
the case that occasioned a rare from- session through June.
the- bench query from Justice Clarence
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg chatThomas. ·
lenged Sutton to explain why states
Usually silent and often leaning far should not try additional ways to keep
back in his chair during oral argu- an addictive product- she called it a
ments, ·Thomas leaned forward to drug- avo:ay from children.
argunu:~ nts, the Stipreme Court consid..,

HUNTSVILLE , Texas (AP) two appeals by Gofr's attor- A man convict&lt;'d of killing neys Wednesday afternoon.
a drug counselor in 1990 \vas
Goff said he wasn 't present
execmed
by
injecci o n when' McGuire, who worked
Wednesday.
and lived at the Star House
David Lee Gofr, 32, insisted rehabilitation center in Fort
he was innocent of the death Worth, was abducted and
of '34-year-old
Mi cha.el fatally shot Sept I , 1990.
McGuire. At the time, Goff M cGuire's decomposing body
was on parole for the robbery was found by some children
and attempted murder of two several days later in a wooded
. other people.
area about six miles away
· "I want to give all the praise
Goff was on parole after
to God and glory and thank serving less than five years of a
him for all that he done for · 15-year term for two counts
me," Goff said. '"With this, let of attempted capital murder.
all debts be paid that I owed Those crimes occurred on
- real or imagined. The slate consecutive days in August
is wiped clean, all marks 1984 when he was 15. Proseerased. Other than that there is .cutors had him certified to be
no justice. That's not justice." tried as an adult.
Goff was the seventh person
Those victims, who had
put to death this year in Texas, been shot, survived and testiwhere a record 40 executions fied against him at the punishwere carried out last year. The men! phase of his trial for
U.S. Supreme Court denied McGuire's murder.

" We 're dealing with a commodity
like no other. This is hi ghly addictive
and especiall y dangerous to children,
who ca n get hooked at age 13 and not
get off it for the rest of their lives,"
Ginsburg said.
The justices spe nt most.of the hourlong argument session focused on a
narrow le ga l question rather than the
broader constitutional issue.
Tobacco companies say Massachu- ·
sects cannot take this kind of unilateral
step beca use of the way Congress
wrote the 1969 law that took cigarette
ads off the airwaves and added warning
labels to tobacco packaging. .
. . Part of the. law prohibits states from
passing a "requirement &lt;;&gt;r prohibition
based on smoking and health ... with
respect to the advertising or promotion," of Cigarettes .
Sutton argued that trumps Massachusetts' plan, which would go further
than either the 1969 law or the 1998
billboard ban negotiated between states
and the tobacco industry.

NASA grapples with computer glitches
:&gt;fACE CENTER, Houston (AP) NASA crews
made progress early Thursday
in troubleshooting computer
glitches , that have delayed
plans for the robotic handoff
of the international space station's I 1/2-ton packing
crate.
U.S. astronaut Susan Helms·
hooked up a laptop computer and found that one of
three con1puters need ed to
perform robotics action was
up and running. Its two
backups were still down .
"We have the data ," ·she
said.
"You are making my day.
It's 'been a long night," flight
controller Bob . Castle said

.

'

from Mission Control ,.._.,~. ..pont:d to F~,ay;:,efficiais Rid.
Mission Control said they They said the glitch was not
planned to spend the morn- a crisis and that all other sysing working to fix the COIJlc • tems on the ~ ration \vere
puter problems. Use of tip::'• operating 'to'rrectly.
·
tops to access information in
Flight Co ntrollers sent' both
the com mand-and-control cre ws to bed Wednesday
computers was one trou- night with assurances they
bleshooting · option. The lap- would keep troubleshooting
tops would send the informa - in hopes of having the probtion to the ground so officials · ]em solved when the crews
could analyze what went awoke early Thursday.
wrong.
Out
they
determined
The computer problems overmght that th ev needed
have delayed plans for a new help .with co ntinu ~d efforts
billion-dollar robot arm at from Helms and US. astrothe station to hand off its naut Jim Voss,. buth aboard
packing crate to a smaller, tile station for a 4 1/2- month
older arm attached to space stay with Russi an cosmonaut
shuttle Endeavour.
and
commander
Yuri
The handotf could be post- Usachev.

lh....,. Apllll. ZG01
l

'Ji.ruR.soor's

01/P CORRESPONDENT

I

I : l1 '' &lt;

I, , , I

'

•

•

.

.'

.

l

'

EAST MEIGS
Federal
Hocking put the euly
squeeze on Eastern and never
looked back in posting a 12-2
trh.•mph.
Eastern hitters were Jimmy
Putnian, who ·was 1-for-3
with a double, Cody Faulk,
who went 1-for-2 with a single and walk, Cacy . Faulk,
who was 1-for-1 with a walk,
and .. Jason Kimes, who
reached on a· sing!~ and an
error.
Federal hitters were Sears
with a 2-run home run and
two walks, Bond, who went
· 2-for-4 with a double,
DeLancey, who was 3-for-3
with a two run home run and
two singles. McCumber had a
. single, Guess had a double,
,Poston . had a double, and
Gandee had a double.
Federal plated nine runs in
the first then went up 10-0
. the next inning before E2Stern finally plated a run in the
third. llut by this timeaall the
damage had been done . .
Jimmy Putman suffered the
loss with CWO strikeoUts and
five walks.
Poston posted the win with
one strikeout and fivt walks.
Eastern (7-6, TVC 6-6)
plays at ho_.91e agaj~t Trimble

'"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby"
•

Plaase call our
Professional stan 11
Plaasa• Vallev lospbl
·to receive
Pre-concePtion
infonnadon.
Be prepared_
Pleasant Valley
Obstetric Department
-·--------·-··---- -

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1230
------·- ---------

today.
•.I''
,!

(.

softball team at Eastern High School. .
Her club continued that tradition
Wednesday when it defeated Federal
Hocking, 12-3.
,
·· Only the night before Federal had
given Eastern a run for its money in a
' 9-6 battle that saw Eastern (12-1, 110) make numerous errors. This time
E20tern was sharp in compiling
another win that rates the team
among one of the best in school in
history, and also holds a number nine
1
ranking in the state coach's pol
Eastern
hitters were Kristen

Chevalier with two hitters, Sandy
Powell two singles, Janet Calaway a
single, Kass Lodwick a single and double, Juli Bailey two singles, Tiffany
Hensley a triple and Tammy Bissell a
single.

choice. Hensley stole home. Chevalier Hensley stole home with an error on
then reached on an error and two the catcher as the Eagles tnok. a 10-1
runs scored for a 7-0 EHS lead.
lead.
Again Eastern's speed played a fa~­
Bailey fanned four strikeouts and
tor in the win, ·as the Eagles stole three walks in boosting her persotul
home several times and advanced the record to 12-1 and 11-0 in the league.
federal hitters were Mary Fossett a runners without getting anyone Federal pitching had six strikeouts and
six walks.
double, Moore a single, Hornsby a thrown out.
single and Billy Jo Fossett a double.
In the top of the second, Federal
"We played a much better game
. Eastern plated seven runs in the first scored when Hornsby singled, and tonight than last night," said Douthitt.
when Carrie Wiggins walked, Powell Billy Jd' Fossett doubie her' home.
"We were very good on offense, and
singled, Calaway had an RBI single,
had
a pretty good defensive game.
With two outs in the bottom of the
Lodwick singled home Powell, and frame, Lodwick walked and stole sec- Again Juli did a great job on the
Bailey reached on an error that scored ond, Bailey singled sending Lodwick mound for us, and has put together a
Calaway and Lodwick. Tiffany Hens- to third. Lodwick stole hoiJle, then fine season."
ley walked, Tammy Bissell walked, and Hensley tripled Gibbs home. Gibbs . Eastern plays host to Trimble today
Nikki Phillips reached on a fielder's had been running for Juli Bailey. and travels to Trimble Friday.

Reds chop dovvn Giants

Meigs ~

bombs
Belpre

LArkin clubbers
Giant pitching
in Reds win

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP) -Barry Larkin jokes
that his success against the
San Francisco Giants is a
little bit of luck, a little bit
of skill.
Larkin is 6-for-1 0 in two
games in San Francisco this
season. On Wednesday
night, he was 4-for-5 with
an RBI as. ,the Cincinnati
Reds beat the .Giants 7-5.
"It's good to be good.lt's
good to be lucky. It's better '
to· be lioth:' Larkin Said. .

BELPRE - Meigs scored
five runs in tl1e top of the first
inning, and was never threatened en route to a 17-2
pounding of. Belpre in TVC
soitball action Wednesday .
Meigs jumped out with the
seven runs on only one hit.
Four walks, a Belpre error and
a Shannon PriCe triple plated
the runs. Meigs made it 9-0 in
the second inning. Two errors
a ground out and Kayte Davis
singled to center.

.,

Fryar 20 Southern went 'up 4- '&lt;'
Willi the first of Cmcm0.
·' .
·
nattds''s five RBI singles. The
•·
••
Re went up 6-2 in tho:
Souther~ !tel~ Mijler scoreinning with seve(! hits off
less over the first tWo innings,
Kirk Rue.ter (2_2).
· while scoring three more in
A~: ~:o:; s:~d Cj~:;;
the second. Tammy Fryar's
triple w~·the big blast in that
Castro also had RBI singles
.inning J Souythern took a 7in the inning, and Ruben
0 lead.
'
Rivera drove in a run with
Miller (3-10, TVC 1-10)
a groundout.
It was Cincinnati's sixth
plated one in the third then
SHS added four runs in the
straight road win, the
third on a 2-run Barnes douteam's longest streak away
from home since winning
ble and 6-3 groundout by
Fryar 'that scored Barnes to
eight straight from June 9boost the leaq to 11-1.
27, 1999.
.
After a 4-ruil fifth, SouthThe Giants lost consecuern plated seven more runs to
tiv!' games at Pacific Bell
end the gam~. '
Park for the first time since
; ~outhcitfi i1 idle today arid
dropping a pair against the
:goes ·to ·Federal Hocking Fri- . Diamondba~ l20t Sept.

'
Lanc6n squeeze
. . Eagles . :

,

Pam Douthitt has fielded a winning

RACINE - Pounding out
14 hits, Southern overcame
eight errors to claim a 22-7
victory in six innings over
Miller Wednesday.
.
Southern (6-11, 3-10) was
led by sophomore Brigette
Barnes with a perfect 4-for-4
night and a walk, while
Rachel Chapman W2S 3-for-4
. Each girl scored five runs.
Senior Tammy Fryar was 2for-3 with a triple, scoring
four times on the night as did .
Kati Cummins, who slammed
a home run and walked three
times.
Kati Sayre had two singles
and two walks and Deana
· Pullins had two singles. Every
Southern player contributed
to the win.
Miller hitters were Leslie
Altier, Rachel Jones, Courtney Wright and Trista Jackson.
Rachel Chapman hurled a
four-hitter,'while striking out
two and walking seven.
Southern made eight errors in
the field.
Miller's Rachel Jones suffered the loss with fourteen
walks, fourteen hits and eight
· strikeouts. Altier came in to
pitch the last two-thirds of an
mnmg.
Southern had . four hits in
.the first jnning - Chapman,
Barn~s, 'J:Q'¥, Pullins _ and
good ~erunning from Kati

~·

-

EAST MEIGS- For over 20 years

Tomadoes blow
awayFalco...s

day.

·-

BY Seem WOllE

Cu~.:*'~
Sayre . ~R
" ~LWcids
. , :?;, tQl!Jl~~~~ ~tr-."tl!~
~att
·-·
~·
1i
.~ SIX-run bpw 1.~~

'

-

Eagles blow by Federal

HIGHLIGHTS

••

·

,....._ ......

.

DOUBLE 'EM UP - San Francisco shortstop Rich Aurilla avoids the slide of Cincinnati's
Ruben Rivera .to record a double play Wednesday. The Reds won, 7·5. (APJ

The Marauders tacked on
three more runs in the fifth
inning on . back-to~back
triples by Kara M,usser and
Mindy Chancey, a Stephanie
Wigal double and a single off
the bat of Abby Harris gave
Meigs a 10-0 lead.
Belpre scored a run in the ·
bottom of the inning, but
Meigs scored two in the sixth
with out the benefit of a hit.
Meigs closed out the scoring
in the seventh inning by
putting five more runs on the
board.
A Belpre error started the
inning. Lindsay Bolin then
singled, a walk and singles by
Alicia Werry and Price scored
a run and loaded the bases.
Jaynee Davis cleared the bases
with a double to close out the
Marauders scoring. ·
Belpre scored a run in the
bottom of the seventh to
mall;e it a 17-2 final.

K~tie

Southern bunts d&lt;;&gt;uble up Miller
BY ScoTT WOLFE
DVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - For some teams, the
home run is the answer, for others it is
a hit here and a hit there and some
aggressiv.e base running.
For : Sou~hern Wednesday, the bunt
W2S the answer as Southern rolled to a
10-5 win over Miller (2-9).
Struggling at .the plate, and right in
fhe middle of a 5-5 ballgame, Southern
coach Scott Wickline dug deep into his
bag of.tricks and came up with a winning combination.
The top of the order Was coming to
the plate in the Southern sixth inning.

SHS had only one hit among its first
four batters. Leadoff hitter Brice Hill
started things off with a great bunt and
advanced on an error for a single. Based
on the theory, ''don't change until they
stop it," Wickline called upon Chad
Hubbard to bunt ,
Hubbard bunted and legged out a
single. Matt Ash then laid down a bunt
toward the niuund. The Miller hurler
glanced at Hill at third then launched a
throw into dead ball territory to score
Hill and Hubbard with the go-ahead
runs, the score 7-5.
Southern was not yet finished. Brandon Pierce laid down another bunt

between the mound and the third base
line and legged it out for a single. Two
more errors and a Brandon Hill RBI
sacrifice fly pushed the score to 10-5.
Miller ace Randy Nelson came on to
strike out the last two batters, but the
damage had been done. Fo~r straight
successful bunts put the ball in motion
for the Tornadoes.
Miller, however, loaded the bases in
the seventh with tw6 outs. After Southern starter Justin Allen gave up three
runs in the sixth; sophomore Curt
Crouch came on in relief with just one.

PI••• ... Southam, 85

Jeffers .a nd Jayn~e
Davis combined for a four
hitter. They struck out two
and walked one. Price had a
single and a triple with four
RBI to lead Meigs. Musser
added a triple and single,
Chancey a triple, Wigal a
double, while Bolin, Kayle
Davis, Harris and Werry each
had singles.
Adams picked up the loss
for Belpre. She gave up 11
hits, walked eight and struck
out two. West had a double to
lead Belpre, Jessica Arthurs,
Cline and Anna Arthurs each
added singles. ·
Meigs (10-7, TVC 7-6)will
travel to Vinton County today
for a make-up game.

.Big bats power Marauders to win over Belpre
in the second, after a walk and and Dettwiller walked. Matt
' sin-. ' Stewart following with a sina fielders choice Mdbre
BELPRE - Meigs scored gled in the run.
gle to score two runs and tie
seven runs in the third inning,
In the third inning, Thoma~ the game at 2~all.
hig\llighted by a Adam reached on .a nother error and
Eric Runyon walked to
Bullington grand slam home scored on a two out single by load the bases, John Stanley
run en route to a 13-9 win Smith.
singled in a run and keep the
ovc;r Belpre in TVC baseball • Darrick Knapp started the bases loaded for Bullipgton.
actton Wednesday.
· Meigs third with a single. He Adam then launched a 1- 1
Belpre scored single t~ns in was erased on a fielder's pitch over the fence for a
the se~ond and third inni~gs choice allowi,!!g Jacob Smith grand slam I and a 7-2 lead.
Belpre pulled to within 7-3
to build a 2-0 lead. Smtth to reach for tll'e inning's secreached base on a Metgs error and out. Zach . Bolin singled . in the bottom of the fourtli
BY DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

'!

inning when Thomas was hit
with thebases loaded. But the
Marauders scored a si ngle run
in the top of the fifth inning.
Runyon walked, stole second
and ~cored on a Belpre error
to make it 8-3.
Belpre came back in the
bottom of the inning, and
scored a pair of runs Alkire
reached on a !11-eigs error,
Smith singled atid Poling
doubled them hom e to make

it 8-5 .
The Marauders added three
. runs in the top of the sixth
inning. Andy Davis and ~ith
both singled and Davis scored
wh~n Dettwiller reached on
an error. Stewart then cleared
the bases ,.vith a double 1md a
11 -S lead. ·
Belpre scored a pair in the
bottom of the .sixth inning,

, ........ M..I•:as

�•
P8ge A 8 • 11w O.Hy Sentinel

Thursday, April 21,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

aib1

Kerrey says he's ashamed of.leadi-,g raid

•

Inside:

.The Daily Sentinel

Hendmon walkS past Baht, Page 82
NBA: Bucks dazz~;o¥agic, Page 88

t'

PageB1

•
~EW

YORK (AP)
Former
Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey uys he is
ash2med th2t as a Navy SEAL he led
a 1969 combat mission killing
unarmed women and children in
Vietnam. He was later a\varded a
Bronze Star for the r;Ud.
"To describe it as an atrocity, I
would say, is pretty close to being
right, because that's how it felt and
that's why I feel guilt and shame for
it," Kerrey said, a~cording to a partial
transcr ipt of a "60 Minutes II" segment scheduled for broadcast Tues-

day.
Kerrey says the Feb. 25, 1969,
killings in the Mekong Delta were by
and large carried our in self-defense.
But a member of Kerrey's Navy
SEAL uniCJnd a Vietnamese woman
who said she witnessed the killings
have given starkly different versions
of the raid, alleging Kerrey's team
massacred the women and children.
"We herded them together in a
group. We lined them up and we
opened fire," Gerhard Klann told "60
Minutes II."

The Bronze Star citation ·says 21
Viet Cong were ' killed and enemy
weapons were captured or destroyed
during the r:rid. Kerrey 's squad, in
reporting to military superiors, didn't
mention killing civilians. Witness' 2nd
official accounts of the number of
dead varies from 13 to more than 20.
Kerrey, who euned the nation's
highest v;alor award, the Medal of
Honor,
for a later SEAL action,
this."
Neither Kerrey nor Klann talked about the raid publicly for the
returned calls Wednesday from The first time last week in a speech to
ROTC students at Virginia Military
Associated Press.

Kerrey, who has nor ruled out a
run for president in 2004, said he is
haunted by the 32-year-old memory
of the raid.
"I have lived with this privately for
32 years," Kerrey told the Omaha
World-Herald in an interview publishedWednesday."I can't keep it private any more. My conscience teUs
me some good should come from

Institute in Lexington, Va.
Kerrey said the mission. took place
on a moonless night, when he was a
25-year-old lieutenant leading a
seven-man commando team. He s:rid
Klann and another one of his men
killed several people they came upon
at the start of the r:rid because they
believed they were 2 thre2t. Ker~
s:rid he had not ordered the kiUiJJ'&amp;s
but took responsibility for them.
About 15 minutes later, Kerrey
said, shots \vere fired at his squad and
his men returned fire.

Court still a_rguing over tobacco ads

Convicted killer put to
death by lethal injection

WASHINGTbN (AP) -

In lively address the federal government's
bwyer, Barbara Underwood, th e' ac ting
t"rcd Wedn~sday whether smte curbs on solicitor general.
cigarene ads are unconstitptional or
Underwood w:1s maklng the point
regulatory overkill .
that th e rul es are different for tobacco
Massachmeus' proposed ad bans near because of th e danger it poses,·especial- ·
schools and phygroundS'Could give the ly to children.
··
Assume, Thomas said, that it has been
conservative-led court ca use to reconside r whether govern ment limits on proved that children suffer long-term
commercial speec h violate the first ; health dangers from eating a lot of fast
Amendment.
food. Would the government step in
The co urt generally has held that there, as well?
com mercial speech suc h as advertising
" What's your rationale for regulating
may be regulated but not banned. ads by McDonald's&gt;" he asked. ·
A flustered Underwood did not
Tobacco compames and oth~r business
interests would like to see advertising answer the question directly.
accorded free-speech protections more
Courtroom regulars recall Thomas
like political and artistic expression.
speaking only one other time during
That was part of the argument that oral arguments this q&gt;Urt term.
tobacco company lawyer Jeffrey Sutton Wednes4ay .was the last day of argumade Wednesday, and the portion of ments, although the court remains in
the case that occasioned a rare from- session through June.
the- bench query from Justice Clarence
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg chatThomas. ·
lenged Sutton to explain why states
Usually silent and often leaning far should not try additional ways to keep
back in his chair during oral argu- an addictive product- she called it a
ments, ·Thomas leaned forward to drug- avo:ay from children.
argunu:~ nts, the Stipreme Court consid..,

HUNTSVILLE , Texas (AP) two appeals by Gofr's attor- A man convict&lt;'d of killing neys Wednesday afternoon.
a drug counselor in 1990 \vas
Goff said he wasn 't present
execmed
by
injecci o n when' McGuire, who worked
Wednesday.
and lived at the Star House
David Lee Gofr, 32, insisted rehabilitation center in Fort
he was innocent of the death Worth, was abducted and
of '34-year-old
Mi cha.el fatally shot Sept I , 1990.
McGuire. At the time, Goff M cGuire's decomposing body
was on parole for the robbery was found by some children
and attempted murder of two several days later in a wooded
. other people.
area about six miles away
· "I want to give all the praise
Goff was on parole after
to God and glory and thank serving less than five years of a
him for all that he done for · 15-year term for two counts
me," Goff said. '"With this, let of attempted capital murder.
all debts be paid that I owed Those crimes occurred on
- real or imagined. The slate consecutive days in August
is wiped clean, all marks 1984 when he was 15. Proseerased. Other than that there is .cutors had him certified to be
no justice. That's not justice." tried as an adult.
Goff was the seventh person
Those victims, who had
put to death this year in Texas, been shot, survived and testiwhere a record 40 executions fied against him at the punishwere carried out last year. The men! phase of his trial for
U.S. Supreme Court denied McGuire's murder.

" We 're dealing with a commodity
like no other. This is hi ghly addictive
and especiall y dangerous to children,
who ca n get hooked at age 13 and not
get off it for the rest of their lives,"
Ginsburg said.
The justices spe nt most.of the hourlong argument session focused on a
narrow le ga l question rather than the
broader constitutional issue.
Tobacco companies say Massachu- ·
sects cannot take this kind of unilateral
step beca use of the way Congress
wrote the 1969 law that took cigarette
ads off the airwaves and added warning
labels to tobacco packaging. .
. . Part of the. law prohibits states from
passing a "requirement &lt;;&gt;r prohibition
based on smoking and health ... with
respect to the advertising or promotion," of Cigarettes .
Sutton argued that trumps Massachusetts' plan, which would go further
than either the 1969 law or the 1998
billboard ban negotiated between states
and the tobacco industry.

NASA grapples with computer glitches
:&gt;fACE CENTER, Houston (AP) NASA crews
made progress early Thursday
in troubleshooting computer
glitches , that have delayed
plans for the robotic handoff
of the international space station's I 1/2-ton packing
crate.
U.S. astronaut Susan Helms·
hooked up a laptop computer and found that one of
three con1puters need ed to
perform robotics action was
up and running. Its two
backups were still down .
"We have the data ," ·she
said.
"You are making my day.
It's 'been a long night," flight
controller Bob . Castle said

.

'

from Mission Control ,.._.,~. ..pont:d to F~,ay;:,efficiais Rid.
Mission Control said they They said the glitch was not
planned to spend the morn- a crisis and that all other sysing working to fix the COIJlc • tems on the ~ ration \vere
puter problems. Use of tip::'• operating 'to'rrectly.
·
tops to access information in
Flight Co ntrollers sent' both
the com mand-and-control cre ws to bed Wednesday
computers was one trou- night with assurances they
bleshooting · option. The lap- would keep troubleshooting
tops would send the informa - in hopes of having the probtion to the ground so officials · ]em solved when the crews
could analyze what went awoke early Thursday.
wrong.
Out
they
determined
The computer problems overmght that th ev needed
have delayed plans for a new help .with co ntinu ~d efforts
billion-dollar robot arm at from Helms and US. astrothe station to hand off its naut Jim Voss,. buth aboard
packing crate to a smaller, tile station for a 4 1/2- month
older arm attached to space stay with Russi an cosmonaut
shuttle Endeavour.
and
commander
Yuri
The handotf could be post- Usachev.

lh....,. Apllll. ZG01
l

'Ji.ruR.soor's

01/P CORRESPONDENT

I

I : l1 '' &lt;

I, , , I

'

•

•

.

.'

.

l

'

EAST MEIGS
Federal
Hocking put the euly
squeeze on Eastern and never
looked back in posting a 12-2
trh.•mph.
Eastern hitters were Jimmy
Putnian, who ·was 1-for-3
with a double, Cody Faulk,
who went 1-for-2 with a single and walk, Cacy . Faulk,
who was 1-for-1 with a walk,
and .. Jason Kimes, who
reached on a· sing!~ and an
error.
Federal hitters were Sears
with a 2-run home run and
two walks, Bond, who went
· 2-for-4 with a double,
DeLancey, who was 3-for-3
with a two run home run and
two singles. McCumber had a
. single, Guess had a double,
,Poston . had a double, and
Gandee had a double.
Federal plated nine runs in
the first then went up 10-0
. the next inning before E2Stern finally plated a run in the
third. llut by this timeaall the
damage had been done . .
Jimmy Putman suffered the
loss with CWO strikeoUts and
five walks.
Poston posted the win with
one strikeout and fivt walks.
Eastern (7-6, TVC 6-6)
plays at ho_.91e agaj~t Trimble

'"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby"
•

Plaase call our
Professional stan 11
Plaasa• Vallev lospbl
·to receive
Pre-concePtion
infonnadon.
Be prepared_
Pleasant Valley
Obstetric Department
-·--------·-··---- -

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1230
------·- ---------

today.
•.I''
,!

(.

softball team at Eastern High School. .
Her club continued that tradition
Wednesday when it defeated Federal
Hocking, 12-3.
,
·· Only the night before Federal had
given Eastern a run for its money in a
' 9-6 battle that saw Eastern (12-1, 110) make numerous errors. This time
E20tern was sharp in compiling
another win that rates the team
among one of the best in school in
history, and also holds a number nine
1
ranking in the state coach's pol
Eastern
hitters were Kristen

Chevalier with two hitters, Sandy
Powell two singles, Janet Calaway a
single, Kass Lodwick a single and double, Juli Bailey two singles, Tiffany
Hensley a triple and Tammy Bissell a
single.

choice. Hensley stole home. Chevalier Hensley stole home with an error on
then reached on an error and two the catcher as the Eagles tnok. a 10-1
runs scored for a 7-0 EHS lead.
lead.
Again Eastern's speed played a fa~­
Bailey fanned four strikeouts and
tor in the win, ·as the Eagles stole three walks in boosting her persotul
home several times and advanced the record to 12-1 and 11-0 in the league.
federal hitters were Mary Fossett a runners without getting anyone Federal pitching had six strikeouts and
six walks.
double, Moore a single, Hornsby a thrown out.
single and Billy Jo Fossett a double.
In the top of the second, Federal
"We played a much better game
. Eastern plated seven runs in the first scored when Hornsby singled, and tonight than last night," said Douthitt.
when Carrie Wiggins walked, Powell Billy Jd' Fossett doubie her' home.
"We were very good on offense, and
singled, Calaway had an RBI single,
had
a pretty good defensive game.
With two outs in the bottom of the
Lodwick singled home Powell, and frame, Lodwick walked and stole sec- Again Juli did a great job on the
Bailey reached on an error that scored ond, Bailey singled sending Lodwick mound for us, and has put together a
Calaway and Lodwick. Tiffany Hens- to third. Lodwick stole hoiJle, then fine season."
ley walked, Tammy Bissell walked, and Hensley tripled Gibbs home. Gibbs . Eastern plays host to Trimble today
Nikki Phillips reached on a fielder's had been running for Juli Bailey. and travels to Trimble Friday.

Reds chop dovvn Giants

Meigs ~

bombs
Belpre

LArkin clubbers
Giant pitching
in Reds win

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP) -Barry Larkin jokes
that his success against the
San Francisco Giants is a
little bit of luck, a little bit
of skill.
Larkin is 6-for-1 0 in two
games in San Francisco this
season. On Wednesday
night, he was 4-for-5 with
an RBI as. ,the Cincinnati
Reds beat the .Giants 7-5.
"It's good to be good.lt's
good to be lucky. It's better '
to· be lioth:' Larkin Said. .

BELPRE - Meigs scored
five runs in tl1e top of the first
inning, and was never threatened en route to a 17-2
pounding of. Belpre in TVC
soitball action Wednesday .
Meigs jumped out with the
seven runs on only one hit.
Four walks, a Belpre error and
a Shannon PriCe triple plated
the runs. Meigs made it 9-0 in
the second inning. Two errors
a ground out and Kayte Davis
singled to center.

.,

Fryar 20 Southern went 'up 4- '&lt;'
Willi the first of Cmcm0.
·' .
·
nattds''s five RBI singles. The
•·
••
Re went up 6-2 in tho:
Souther~ !tel~ Mijler scoreinning with seve(! hits off
less over the first tWo innings,
Kirk Rue.ter (2_2).
· while scoring three more in
A~: ~:o:; s:~d Cj~:;;
the second. Tammy Fryar's
triple w~·the big blast in that
Castro also had RBI singles
.inning J Souythern took a 7in the inning, and Ruben
0 lead.
'
Rivera drove in a run with
Miller (3-10, TVC 1-10)
a groundout.
It was Cincinnati's sixth
plated one in the third then
SHS added four runs in the
straight road win, the
third on a 2-run Barnes douteam's longest streak away
from home since winning
ble and 6-3 groundout by
Fryar 'that scored Barnes to
eight straight from June 9boost the leaq to 11-1.
27, 1999.
.
After a 4-ruil fifth, SouthThe Giants lost consecuern plated seven more runs to
tiv!' games at Pacific Bell
end the gam~. '
Park for the first time since
; ~outhcitfi i1 idle today arid
dropping a pair against the
:goes ·to ·Federal Hocking Fri- . Diamondba~ l20t Sept.

'
Lanc6n squeeze
. . Eagles . :

,

Pam Douthitt has fielded a winning

RACINE - Pounding out
14 hits, Southern overcame
eight errors to claim a 22-7
victory in six innings over
Miller Wednesday.
.
Southern (6-11, 3-10) was
led by sophomore Brigette
Barnes with a perfect 4-for-4
night and a walk, while
Rachel Chapman W2S 3-for-4
. Each girl scored five runs.
Senior Tammy Fryar was 2for-3 with a triple, scoring
four times on the night as did .
Kati Cummins, who slammed
a home run and walked three
times.
Kati Sayre had two singles
and two walks and Deana
· Pullins had two singles. Every
Southern player contributed
to the win.
Miller hitters were Leslie
Altier, Rachel Jones, Courtney Wright and Trista Jackson.
Rachel Chapman hurled a
four-hitter,'while striking out
two and walking seven.
Southern made eight errors in
the field.
Miller's Rachel Jones suffered the loss with fourteen
walks, fourteen hits and eight
· strikeouts. Altier came in to
pitch the last two-thirds of an
mnmg.
Southern had . four hits in
.the first jnning - Chapman,
Barn~s, 'J:Q'¥, Pullins _ and
good ~erunning from Kati

~·

-

EAST MEIGS- For over 20 years

Tomadoes blow
awayFalco...s

day.

·-

BY Seem WOllE

Cu~.:*'~
Sayre . ~R
" ~LWcids
. , :?;, tQl!Jl~~~~ ~tr-."tl!~
~att
·-·
~·
1i
.~ SIX-run bpw 1.~~

'

-

Eagles blow by Federal

HIGHLIGHTS

••

·

,....._ ......

.

DOUBLE 'EM UP - San Francisco shortstop Rich Aurilla avoids the slide of Cincinnati's
Ruben Rivera .to record a double play Wednesday. The Reds won, 7·5. (APJ

The Marauders tacked on
three more runs in the fifth
inning on . back-to~back
triples by Kara M,usser and
Mindy Chancey, a Stephanie
Wigal double and a single off
the bat of Abby Harris gave
Meigs a 10-0 lead.
Belpre scored a run in the ·
bottom of the inning, but
Meigs scored two in the sixth
with out the benefit of a hit.
Meigs closed out the scoring
in the seventh inning by
putting five more runs on the
board.
A Belpre error started the
inning. Lindsay Bolin then
singled, a walk and singles by
Alicia Werry and Price scored
a run and loaded the bases.
Jaynee Davis cleared the bases
with a double to close out the
Marauders scoring. ·
Belpre scored a run in the
bottom of the seventh to
mall;e it a 17-2 final.

K~tie

Southern bunts d&lt;;&gt;uble up Miller
BY ScoTT WOLFE
DVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - For some teams, the
home run is the answer, for others it is
a hit here and a hit there and some
aggressiv.e base running.
For : Sou~hern Wednesday, the bunt
W2S the answer as Southern rolled to a
10-5 win over Miller (2-9).
Struggling at .the plate, and right in
fhe middle of a 5-5 ballgame, Southern
coach Scott Wickline dug deep into his
bag of.tricks and came up with a winning combination.
The top of the order Was coming to
the plate in the Southern sixth inning.

SHS had only one hit among its first
four batters. Leadoff hitter Brice Hill
started things off with a great bunt and
advanced on an error for a single. Based
on the theory, ''don't change until they
stop it," Wickline called upon Chad
Hubbard to bunt ,
Hubbard bunted and legged out a
single. Matt Ash then laid down a bunt
toward the niuund. The Miller hurler
glanced at Hill at third then launched a
throw into dead ball territory to score
Hill and Hubbard with the go-ahead
runs, the score 7-5.
Southern was not yet finished. Brandon Pierce laid down another bunt

between the mound and the third base
line and legged it out for a single. Two
more errors and a Brandon Hill RBI
sacrifice fly pushed the score to 10-5.
Miller ace Randy Nelson came on to
strike out the last two batters, but the
damage had been done. Fo~r straight
successful bunts put the ball in motion
for the Tornadoes.
Miller, however, loaded the bases in
the seventh with tw6 outs. After Southern starter Justin Allen gave up three
runs in the sixth; sophomore Curt
Crouch came on in relief with just one.

PI••• ... Southam, 85

Jeffers .a nd Jayn~e
Davis combined for a four
hitter. They struck out two
and walked one. Price had a
single and a triple with four
RBI to lead Meigs. Musser
added a triple and single,
Chancey a triple, Wigal a
double, while Bolin, Kayle
Davis, Harris and Werry each
had singles.
Adams picked up the loss
for Belpre. She gave up 11
hits, walked eight and struck
out two. West had a double to
lead Belpre, Jessica Arthurs,
Cline and Anna Arthurs each
added singles. ·
Meigs (10-7, TVC 7-6)will
travel to Vinton County today
for a make-up game.

.Big bats power Marauders to win over Belpre
in the second, after a walk and and Dettwiller walked. Matt
' sin-. ' Stewart following with a sina fielders choice Mdbre
BELPRE - Meigs scored gled in the run.
gle to score two runs and tie
seven runs in the third inning,
In the third inning, Thoma~ the game at 2~all.
hig\llighted by a Adam reached on .a nother error and
Eric Runyon walked to
Bullington grand slam home scored on a two out single by load the bases, John Stanley
run en route to a 13-9 win Smith.
singled in a run and keep the
ovc;r Belpre in TVC baseball • Darrick Knapp started the bases loaded for Bullipgton.
actton Wednesday.
· Meigs third with a single. He Adam then launched a 1- 1
Belpre scored single t~ns in was erased on a fielder's pitch over the fence for a
the se~ond and third inni~gs choice allowi,!!g Jacob Smith grand slam I and a 7-2 lead.
Belpre pulled to within 7-3
to build a 2-0 lead. Smtth to reach for tll'e inning's secreached base on a Metgs error and out. Zach . Bolin singled . in the bottom of the fourtli
BY DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

'!

inning when Thomas was hit
with thebases loaded. But the
Marauders scored a si ngle run
in the top of the fifth inning.
Runyon walked, stole second
and ~cored on a Belpre error
to make it 8-3.
Belpre came back in the
bottom of the inning, and
scored a pair of runs Alkire
reached on a !11-eigs error,
Smith singled atid Poling
doubled them hom e to make

it 8-5 .
The Marauders added three
. runs in the top of the sixth
inning. Andy Davis and ~ith
both singled and Davis scored
wh~n Dettwiller reached on
an error. Stewart then cleared
the bases ,.vith a double 1md a
11 -S lead. ·
Belpre scored a pair in the
bottom of the .sixth inning,

, ........ M..I•:as

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Henderson
now walking

side-by-side

f' '1 IIIII

---......

with the Babe

EMtDiu'
W
L
14

1

W

.on.
Millwood got hu first victory since last Sept. 22 delpite
leaving with a sore left hip in
the s"enth inning a. the
Adanta Bra\res beat the Houston Asttos 11-3 Wednesday
night.
"It's that .ciatic nerve down
in his back," Braves manager
Bobby Cox said. "He's been
barding that for a while." ·
Millwood (1-2) allowed
three runs and six hits in 6 13 innings. He was 10-13 last
year after going 18-7 ln 1999:
"It bothered me in my last
start, but it got better between
starts," Millwood said. "I didn't
feel it before the game, but
after the game started, it started coming back every inning
and was getting worse and

wone."
At San ()iego, Henderson
set the major league wallts
reconl at 2,063, W21king on a
3-1 pitch &amp;om Jose Mm leading olf the ninth of the Padres'
5-3 Joss to Philadelphia. He
took sole pOSleSsion of the
record he shared for a day with
Babe Ruth.
"The reconl is outstanding:•
Hendenon said. "It's great to
be in a class with Babe · Ruth
and all that good stuff, but I'm
the type of penon that wants
· .~ ·

to win."

In Adanta 's victory at Houston, Chipper Jones hit a threerun homer.
Scott Elarton (3-2) dropped
to 0-4 against the Braves,
allowing four runs and seven
hits in six inningS.

Phlllies 5,
Padres 3
Travis Lee hit a two-run
homer for the second time in
three games for the Phillies,
who won their sixth straight.
San Diego has lost nine of 10.
. Omar Daal, who led the
majors with 19 los~ last year,
improved to 2-0, allowing two
runs and nine hits in seven
innings. Mesa pitched the
ninth for his sixth save.
Brian Tollberg (1.-2) gave up
four runs and six hits in seven
innings.

Rockies 6,
Cubs5
todd Helton homered
twice and drove in five runs at
Coon Field, and Jelf Cirillo
hit a ninth-inning sacrifice fly
olf Courtney Duncan.
Todd Hundley tied the score
at. 5 in the ninth with a solo
homer olf jose Jimene% (1-0),
who blew his second save in
seven chances.

D-backs 10,

Marll~ 7 ...

Curt Schilling (3-0) struck
qut 12 to rai.e his seas\)n total
to 50 and take over the .major
league lead from teammate
Randy Johnson, who has 48.
Schilling (3-0) allowed
seven r.uns and 13 hits · in
· seven-plus innings as Ari%ona
completed a series sweep
before 23,097 - the smallest
crowd in Ba!lk One BaUpark
history. Bret Prinz pitched the
ninth for1his first career save.
Marlins rookie jason Grill(
(2-2) was pounded for nine
r~n~ and 10 hits in four-plus
.mmngs.

Clrcllnals 5,
Expos 2

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SAN DIEGO (AP) While Rickey Henderson was
walking into history, Kevin
Millwood was looking for a
more mundane accomplishment: his first win of the .ea-

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final out in the seventh and home run.
"No, this u not what I envifinuhed with one-hit ~elieffor
sioned,"
Manuel said after the
his first career save.
three-hour,
48-minute
marathon. "But I did mention
that no matter how long it
i:akel, i~'' important to win this
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Or't ld (Hndil CHI) II CflbQo
-Sol&lt; (,.._ 0.2), 8:05p.m.
'
flldor'O I
~ 0.2) 01 T""""'!
(Loolza 3-1). 7:05p.m.
Taxas C(lliver «&lt;J at Cloveland (~I
Q-0), 7:05 p.m.
I
Bay .IR&lt;IPO 1.·2) at OeOroit (Miici
lei 0.2). 7:05 p.m.
1
Kansas City (St.,. 1·2) at ,1losttH1
(CUtillo 2·1). 7:05p.m.
!
oaJdand (Mulde&lt; 2~1) at N.Y. Yankeet
{Hemandez 0-2). 7:05p.m.
:
aanmore (Me~s 0.3) at Mlmesot4
(lolayt2·1). e:os p.m.
i
Seattle (Sele 3-0) at Chicago Wlill
Sox (Bald!Mn o-o), 8 :05p.m.
l
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a.-.:1

SAVEHasaki,~ Seattle, 11!
Chicago Cubs, ·~llowed 'One ~;Mesa. P~iladlllphla, 6: JJimenez.
run and four hit:S rbefo~e leav- · Colorado, 5; Roc:ker, ' Atlaftta, 5; Koch, Toront'!• 6;. ~!wkJna. Minf
nesoia. 6; ~!meier, Bakimore~ 4f
'' '
ing after .five imrlngs with a BWagner, Houlton, 5.
Faull&lt;&amp;,
C~go, 4: •YIJJ), 1'\'P,,
blistered finger.
Bay, 4; lsrinQhaus~,· Oakland, 41
· C.C. Sabathl~ (2-1), the
AL Llllcien
Crabtree, Texas;,
'l'~onesj
Indians' heralded 20-year-old
Detroit, 4; RMHemanoe • KansaT
rookie, gave up five hits, four
BATTING-MRamirez. Boston, City, 4,
I'
walks and three runs in five .415; Stewart. Toronto. .393;
innings.
JaOiambi, Oakland, .391 ; JGonza·
lez, Cleveland, · .an: K9nerko,
Tranuctlon•l. · .
Mark Grud%ielanek tripled
. ., i'{
Chicago, .388;· Olarud, Seattle.
and .cored on a wild pitch by
.380; Suzuki, seante, .355; Mien,
American Laaa'Ui ,
Jose Manzanillo (Q-1) in the
TAMPA BAY DEVIL -RAYS_.
tklewlcz, Minnesota, .355; JoCna,
ninth, and Shiwn Green hit a
· hi
L-Toronto, .355.
OpHoned RHP Travis Phelps · a~
tliree-run homer.
.R uss Jo hnson t a t'u""• ., RUN5-Stewan, Toronto, '21; RHP Dan Wheeler to Durham
Terry Adams (1-1) sttuck , Carlos Guillen drove ·in nin slnuble offJelf Suppan (t- Lawton, Minnesota, 19; ARo· tl)e ln,amational League. Called u
out three in two hidelS illllinp three .runs with a pair of two~ 3) a'nd. Paul WiOOn '\von for driguez, Texas, 19; CDalgado, f\HP Brian Rose and LHP Jeff Wa~
out hits olfAndy Pettitte (3-2) · just the . second · time since Toronto, 18; CEverett, Boston, I B; lace-from Durham. Transferred
at Dodger Stadium.
...
visiting Seatde won its sixth 1996 as T;uilpa Bay held on at Koskie, MinniiiOia, 17; ·O'Neill, LHP WliMri Atval'ez frOm the 15: t4
Making his 300th major
home.
'" '
· New York. 17; GltlarraQII, 'Texas, the 6Q:d~y dis~d Hst i
·
league appearance - and tint straight.
The
Mariners,
despite
the
WiliOn
(1
_:2)
continued.'his'
17.
·
·
. )Uilonel Laallu•
•
against the team he made his
ofiSeason
loss
of
Alex
comeb~k
from
shoulder
and
RBI-MRami,.z,
Boston,
23;
ARIZONA
·OIAMOND,flt.CK~
.
tint 262 big-league starts with
Rodriguez,
have
won
10
ofll
arm
problema
by
allowing
Fullmer,
Toronto,
21;
CDalg•do,
Placed
RHP
Matt
Mantei.
S
"
1he
15j
- Pittsburgh's Ramon Marday disabled list. Punlhased
tinez allowed five runs · and and lead the majon with a 17- three runs on four hits in five Toronto, 20; JGonzalaz, Cleveland,
4 teconl.
in ·ng5 befcne'·a· crowd of just · 20; ' RPalmelro, Texas, 20; ARQn contract of RHP Erik ,Sabel f~
four hits in five inninjp.
Tucson of ·lht •PC4 l'iansterr
·t::.
Sellqll.
. N orm Chariron (1-0) got 11ru156,
,. ,, E·•·b
- an .."• an ;;,.t
r
~"" . ·driguez.Texaa, ~.!l:.oterud.
•
&gt;
19
RHP Bobby Win from the 15: to t
the win and Kazuhiro Sasakf fo}l"!h) rie. '
'
·
HITS MRamlrez, Boston, 34; 60-day di~ li". . I,
: I
pitched the ninth for his major
'·· .. , ··
"''
. Suzuki;Sellttls, 33; Siewert, Toron- j ATLANTA BRAVI:~urcha$e&lt;l
Jeague-leading 11th save.
NL I Mdwa
· io, 33; Knoblauch, New . Vol!(, 30; lli&lt;l ~.of BJif' t.latt ~hll~si
.
'JGonzalaz, Cleveland, 29; Brosius, from Richmorid of the tntJma!ion
BATIING-HoHandllwo"",
,
Col,
.
New York, 28; IRodriguez, Texas, League. f!tcafl~ill J.,JiP.1 DamJa
_
~. '· orado, ..388; Aurilla, San Francisco, 28,
Richie Sexson hit a two-run "" .
, ,
, ,. ,, c ·; ,.,.0 , ~ 0 ~ from .f.!icl)\l)!!n~,.PPtio"e
triple in a four-run seventh at ·
.386; Plljols, St. LouiS, .375t•LWalk• · DOUBLEs-Greer, Texa;, 10; R,HP Marif llll .Je$"t5'··•~phmohd
Milwaukee,
and
Jimmy .
er, Colorado, .375; JBeD.',ArlzOf1a, · Konerko, Chicago, '·a; Siewarl, · Oeiiglllted RHP -Chris l!eelbac
Haynes (2-2) allowed two
'
ToriiHunter hit a three-run .365; Larkin, Cincinnati, .384; Darr, Toronto, 8; JGonzalez, Cleveland, . for assignment.
runs, eight hits and four walks
San Diego, .353, ·.
,;,
8; 9 are tied wi1h 7.
CHICAG9. 9UI;IS-Activated 1~
double in the 1Oth-inning as
in six inning5.
RUNs-Helton;· Col0f8do, 23;
TRIPLE8-CGuzman, Minneso- Apr! Coom'\r f~om the ·15.:!1ay ~Is
David Weathers allowe!i one surprising Minnesota rallied at LGonzalez, Arizona, 23; LWalker, ta, 5; AKennecly, Anaheim, 2; ablad list Optioned OF Aooseve
Colorado; 20; TWaQier, Colorado, CNlee, Chicago, 2: JEncamacion, Brown lo'lo\va i&gt;fthe PCL'
~
hit in three inning5 for his Fenway Park.
The Twins tied the game in· 19; Fioyd, Flori&lt;ta, 1.9; Bumltz. Mil, Detrolt, /1 2; Durham, Chicago, 2:
LOS ANGELES DODGER$
third save.
Steve Trachsel (0-4) gave up the ninth on doubles by waukee, 19; Beri&lt;man, Houston, CEvaratt, Boston, 2; · Easley, Signed RHP luis Arriojas, Art
'Detroit, 2; RSanchez. Kansas City, Juan Barreras, ' RKp Yunhy BrrtoJ
three runs and eight hits in Jacque Jones and AJ. Pierzyn- 1B; Bagwell, Houston, 18.
RBI-LWalker, Colorado, 25; 2.
RHP Djurving Cleola, AHP Rodolf~
ski against Rod Beck (0-1).
five inning5.
HOME
RUN5-CDelgado, Gonzalez, RHP Leigh Neuage
. Minnesota· leads the AL Cen- Pujols, S!, Louis, 22; H~l).on. Col·
tral at 15-4 after posting the orado, 22; !,Gonzalez, Anzona, 22; r9ronto, 1Q; Quinn, Kansas City, 8; RHP Alvis Ojeda, RHP Arol Soto
worst record in the league last CJones, Atlanta, 21; LStev;ens, O'Neill, New York, 8; Daubllch, LHP Javier Arturo Lopez, LH
Montreal, 21; Casey, Cincinnati, Boston, 7; JGOr)zalez, Cleveland, Jorge Luge, ; LHP Jesus TrevinOl
year.
20.
7; 6 are tied wi1h 6.
INF Luis Casiillo, INF Christia~
Bob Wells (2-0) got out of a
HITS-Vidro, Montreal, 28;
STOLEN BASES-Knoblauch, Herrera, INF 'Fausto lopez, IN~
jam in the bottom of the ninth Pujols, St. ·Louis, 27; Aurllla.. San New York, 8; Cedeno, Detroit, 6; Euctides Sumoza, OF Ivan Castro
CHICAGO (AP) - Jerry
with a runner at third. La Troy Francisco, 27; LWalker, Colorado, GWIIiams, Tampa Bay, 6; Durham. OF Franklin Gutierrez OF Jesu~1
Manuel's pregame chat got
Hawkins pitched the 1Oth for 27;. PWilson. Florida, 26; Mueller, Chicago, 5; Curtis, Texas, .5; 7 are Perez and c Rafael Camarero t~
·through to the struggling
Chicago, 28; Hollandsworth, Col· tied with 4.
,
minor league contracts:
•
Chicago White Sox after 11 his sixth save.
orado, 26.
PITCHING (3 Decisions)MONTREAL EXPOS-Activate~ ·
inning5.
DOUBLES-Lowell, Florida, 10; WRoberts, Baltimore, 3:0, HXlO, RHP Anthony Telford frqm the 151
A few houn after Manuel
Nevin, San Oiego, tO; Hoi· 1.25; FGarcia, SaaHie, 3-0, 1.000, day disabled .list Senr'RHP Mik~
called a rare team meeting to .
landsworth, Colorado, 9; CJOhn· 4.06; Ml\:halak, Toronto, 3.0, 1.000, Johnson outright to Ottawa 01 the
address Chicago's poor start,
son, Florida, B; LSievans, Mantra· 1.62; Millon, Minnesota, 3-0, 1.000, International League.Jlp~oned 0
Paul Konerko hit a solo homer
al, 8; PWilson, Florida, 7; Abreu, 3, 12; Radke, Minnesota. 4,0, Peter Bergeron .to Ottawa
Cal Rjpken hit his first Philadelphia, 7; Affonzo, New York, 1.000, 2.52; DOIIver, Texas, 4·0, Recalled OF Andy •Tracy fro
in the 11th to give the White
'
,.
Sox a 2-1 victory over Oak- home run of the year, con- 7; MIWIIIIams. Arizona, 7; Larkin, 1.000, 5.24; Sale, Seanle, 3·0, Ottawa,
necting
olf
Steve
Sparks
(1-2),
Cinc!nnati, 7.
1.000. 2.25; Quantrill, Toronto, 3:0,
NEW YORK METSz.:rPiace
land on Wednesday night.
Baltimore.
to
lead
visiting
TRIPLE~rera, Montreal, 1.000, .00; Moyer, Seattle, 3·0, LHP 1'1 ~eiter on the 1~~ay dis!
"His meeting was about
Ripken,
rested
Tuesday
by
3;
Colangelo, San Diego, 2; Cora, 1.000, 4.09.
a1Jied list. retroactive to ~rll 21
capitalizing on situations, and I
Los
Angeles,
2;
ABoone,
Cincin·
STRIKEOUTS-PMartlnez,
Recalled LHP Tom Martin 110m Nor
manager
Mike
Hargrove
for
think he got his point across:·
natl,
2;
OJackson,
San
Diego,
2:
Boston,
54;
Zilo,
Oakland,
37;
folk
of. the lntemationalilaague!
said David Wells, who allowed the second time in three
LCasdllo,
Florida,
2;
Ochoa,
Clncln·
CCarpentar,
Toronto,
32;.
Colon,
Purchased
tilfl contract of RH~
only one run and five hits in games, went 1-for-4 .and is natl, 2; Vlna. St.
2; Lankf~, Cleveland, 30; Aloptz, Tampa Bay, Brett Hinchliffe from ;,Norfoll
batting just .161. Ripken, 40,
nine inning5.
St.
Louis,
2.
?.8; Hudson, Oaklanq, 26; Loaiza, Optioned OF Jorge Toea to Nolfol
"Going in, I thought we increased his career RBis rota!
HOME RUNS-LGonzalez, Ari· Toronto, 26; Clemens, New York,
, ··
,
, ·
; ..
were going to get our butts to 1,636, tying Ernie Banks zona, 11; LWalker, Colorado, 11; 26.
place.
for
19th
Bonds,
San
FranCiaco,
9;
He~on,
·
1
chewed out, but he went the
Willis
Roberts
(3-0),
makColorado,
B;
RSandera,
Arizona,
8;
I
opposite way and it paid off."
Mter winning the AL Cen- ing his second career start, Pujols. SL Louis, 7; Truby, Hous,
ton, 7; CJohnson, FlOrida, 7; Bur,
I
tral last year, the White Sox gave up one run in seven
hitz,
Mllwaukee,
:7.;
Sheffield,
Los
I
have struggled. They came inning5 as Baltimore won its Angeles, 7,
into Wednesday's game on a thinl straight
STOLEN BASES-4-Castlllo, .
four-game losing streak and
Florida, 6; EYoung, Chic8go, 7;
had lost eight of 10 PWIIson, Floridi,
6; SPerez, San
'I
•;
Diego,
5;
OJIICICIOn,
San Diego, 5;
prompting the meeting.
Glanville, PhDaile)phla, 5; Roffins, ·
"If we go out tomorrow and
Philadelphia, 4\ VGuerrero, Mon~
win again, this could turn into
treat,
.4: Ochoa, ,Cincinnati, 4;
Brad FuUmer hit a three-run
~momentum builder:· Manuel
uesday and W81:1n,e~;day
Floyd,
Florida, 4.
said. "And hopefully (or a long homer off Kenny Rogers (12 man team partnersPITCHING (3 Decislons~rp,
2)' and added a go-ahead
time."
ChlcaQti, 3.q'!'L1.ooo;·s.eo; •Himp·
Kon~rko homered with one infield single in the eighth ton, Colorado[. 3:0, . 1.000, 2·.97;
Women's ~.·League
inning
to
lead
host
Toronto.·
out in the 11th off former Sox
Schilling, Arlzone, 3-0, 1.000, 3.29;
' Mondays
Paul Quantrill (3-0) got one OFamandaz, Cincinnati, 4:1, .800,
reliever Chad Bradford (0-1),
setting off fireworks and high out for the win, and Billy 5.27; WMIIIet; Houston, 3'1 •. ~5o, ,
Koch worked a hidess ninth 2.35; R\IOrtieSan FnlnCisco, 3:1;
fives among the White Sox,·
1
·:
Thursday ;··.
•
his
sixth
save
m
seven
for
.750.
2.70;
Alfa¢io,'
Colorido,
:J;1,
"We're not too happy," KoriTwosomes
.750, 1.93; Tapanl, Chicago, 3,1,
erko said. "It's kind of like chances.
.750; 4:81; RRa.ed, !&gt;lew Yo(k, 3,1,
when a hitter's in a slump.
.750, 1.119; Glavl~. Atlanta, 3:1 ,'.
When you're 0-for-20 and
'750, 3.98.
'
Friday .
you get a hit, you're still kind
STRIKEOUTS-8chllllng, Ari,
of mad. It's like, 'Geez, it's
Lugu•• Beginning End ofAI:)I'II
zona, 50; RDJohneon. Arlzone, 48;
about time."'
Cour.. 11 •v•ll•bl• for Tournam1nt1
WMIIItr, liouf\C)n,·
Oagne,,L.oe
Ismael Valdes got his fint Angelee, 32; Wood, Chlltllo, 112;
Keith Foulke (1~2) gave up
and Outlnga
·
only two walks in two score- win since July, ,al)d Benji Gil Vazquai,, Montrea,l. 30j , ~t.Oio,
hit an RBI triple as Anaheim Colorado, 28.
less innings.
won
at Cleveland.
Jose Valentin hit a s.olo
8AVE8-Faeeero, Chicago, 8;
Valdes (1-2), whose last win Gravea, . ,einclnneu, 8; Nen, San
homer in the fitst for Chicago,
but Terrence Long tied it in came July 23, 2000, with the Francllco;--8; Shew, Loe Angel11,

Dodprs6,
Pirates 5

I

II

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10 . ·.Ale
524
·11
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..

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15
11

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2~t:35p.m.

1'-..gn , _ o-2) .. Lao Angoloo
, _ 2-1). 10:10 p.m.
Flllla/IGIMel
Flollda (Penny lo(J) II . _ , (Uml
1·1). 8:05 p.m.
Mol*61i (Tlumln 1-.3, at 111 ii!L.tM
(~ (1.0). e:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mill (~ 2•1) at St. lA*
, _ 2·2~ e:IOp.m. .
2-11 • Colonldo
, _ 3-1), 8:05p.m.

14
14
11

08

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\AIIIII Gll*l·=:J!iii!~~~== June 22, 1997
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RWSOx4

White Sox 2,
Athletics .1·

Orioles 6,
'dprs4

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Blue Jays 8,
Ranprs 5

and 3

·2 p.m.. Sundnr

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Jason KeUer are other prtme

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contenders •... This will be
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al California.

1'rMk 2 ''1 tiWrttoeN:
Jell Groen, C......,ltt,
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--Dole

tle&amp;fMI on 111e front ltroi&amp;hl 2000
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173.581 """'· Oct. 29,

--- · Auto Club 300
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Incumbent Green and Kevin
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It takes 1 rKW, pure and

, 1lmp18. Bob!;¥ Hemilton
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Htjulthldto ft(ld away to

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reterrlrw to llle ltpntlory
Cltlver who won 10 tlmea
hera before bllnt killed In I

~nl 500 Cl'llft In ,0):
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tne ..... con....,boltnt' a(ld

Wilted UJ1Iff ,.,. ..... 15
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TAlt.Ail£GA, Alt. - Mlt!o
""'Tott.,....,IIOO ""' •
Mclaulhlln.auo-,.
matte.r of simple arithmetic.
bottom of.1811edep
Early In the race, Hamltton . SuperaPiedwll) '1 benkt,.
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work nta ~to t!1efront of
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tilt lltld In IIIPfOXImotely 15 Yictory OYt&lt; Jimmy Spanc:or
tept. When 15 tapa were left In the Subway 300. ·
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be In a W, pi1' but at kat dlit way ~~ Man like Sieve Park and
can
Everyone wart co Til· - ~In H~iclll buthlttt u uiUII
;:.... 1.,1' fall, kept cheir ....,.., in the w-.iton Cup Seriu
1
face
1
~tdn atd 11111 put aD 1 srnti'ICI. dM:~· ( w:;ec::: 11 ~h·~

*'

really IIYnk M Ala hlppm
and I look forwtrd to Mrilnt

H

:=tn.

..a~•

kl OMI

k." : "bal: .. A:Z:r

k•P

~rill ;n

ld "II will

on~·.;;utina .'n:-,h~'l what

CHAMIIRI RI8URFACI8t ~ kAstAR exehltlJ. Thll itn't

like Formula One where you 1\avc a
pretty Jood Jd~a what driv.er with
what car make 15 going 10 wm week
in ~nd wnk oul. In NA.SCAR, any
driver and an)' make can win on any
aiven Sunda)'."

X

WHATSETSGORDONAPARI':

Slrona wbe~ chcy were w.nnm11
championsh1pt. They thdn'c lei up
after IIIey won one.
"The)' were prepared IO doh
again. I'm, noc saylnJ the!e other
jtlyl 1ren I, but there! so mu.ch
prenure on the whole tum thai 1t'J

hard 1o repeat.
"The

Leagu,e.··

Senior.Scramble

Anlels ·3,
Indians 1

· Every

..a;

Pine Hilla Golf Course

88 .&lt;Dale JarrcnJ wt;~ their

• --·
first title in '99 and then fJnla,hed
ChipOanaul_,;myteammliOqer r
bl
Tony Olover comp limenetd Jetr toun u 1_year.

Gordon and Hendnck Mo1orspo~
''Dobby LaboPIC ,woo Ihe clu.m·
he be
1 d lh current w1n piOJJship.lll!ll year and look where
w n ana Y.zt; e. .
· they are now. II looks like one year
aton CUp clwnpmnsh1p raec .
ri .. b k
d h
"l"ve.nevcr been 1 part ofa Cham· )'OU aet.all the 1,,1 rea •· an 1 e
ionship team bul in my opinion; nex.t year, tomt thina• sctm lo iO
fc 1 vel"y dlffi~ult 10 win a titfe," wrona that didn't ao wroni the
Olaver taid.
, rear before. I don'C tltlnk the 18
,.It appears 10 be even more llifll, .{Labonte) hid any DNFs latt ~·
(;Uit to defend I cidc. That't what I 'Thit )IC'{
havea't been qwte
made that 24 team (Gordon~ to IM'I fl'lrl~nate.

(740) 949-2804
Corner of VIne &amp; 6th ·

1 a.m. to 1 p.m. on lalla·
fJega rece weekends, and
from 8:l0 a.m. to 5 p .m .

th.~)'

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ahlef . . .t known for
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Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
oaVe ·Harris ot Debbie Call ·

'

·

The Motors~rts tiall of
Fame Is o~n each day from

'1J~'

.992-2155

Sat. 9-1

Offenhauaer.

Ken Schrader $8YB rules at Talladega suit him·J~ · flrut •
Rookie Juon Lemfr hu a new
creWChief'; MattCbambm.
Chaml)en replaced Kevin Cram
II Chi Oanull Racl earll~ thit
wtek pctwnbm wwtl~ II Roush

Open Mon-Fi'l9-5:30

each dar the rest of the year.

AROUND THE GARAGE

·
. , ~Th~k
11
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•

Racine
Mower
.
Clinic ,

~Jon Jimmy Bryan, motorcycle
superstar Mike Hallwood and
engine builder Fred

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.....

• NASCAR Thlo WHk- -Dutton rank1 llle
top 10 -.hoadlrw Into 11111 •altond'l ..... Lall
-'1 ...,klrw 111n pare,._.

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COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

•.

r-,!•~=:::::::=::==~

I

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The Daily Sentinel

Henderson
now walking

side-by-side

f' '1 IIIII

---......

with the Babe

EMtDiu'
W
L
14

1

W

.on.
Millwood got hu first victory since last Sept. 22 delpite
leaving with a sore left hip in
the s"enth inning a. the
Adanta Bra\res beat the Houston Asttos 11-3 Wednesday
night.
"It's that .ciatic nerve down
in his back," Braves manager
Bobby Cox said. "He's been
barding that for a while." ·
Millwood (1-2) allowed
three runs and six hits in 6 13 innings. He was 10-13 last
year after going 18-7 ln 1999:
"It bothered me in my last
start, but it got better between
starts," Millwood said. "I didn't
feel it before the game, but
after the game started, it started coming back every inning
and was getting worse and

wone."
At San ()iego, Henderson
set the major league wallts
reconl at 2,063, W21king on a
3-1 pitch &amp;om Jose Mm leading olf the ninth of the Padres'
5-3 Joss to Philadelphia. He
took sole pOSleSsion of the
record he shared for a day with
Babe Ruth.
"The reconl is outstanding:•
Hendenon said. "It's great to
be in a class with Babe · Ruth
and all that good stuff, but I'm
the type of penon that wants
· .~ ·

to win."

In Adanta 's victory at Houston, Chipper Jones hit a threerun homer.
Scott Elarton (3-2) dropped
to 0-4 against the Braves,
allowing four runs and seven
hits in six inningS.

Phlllies 5,
Padres 3
Travis Lee hit a two-run
homer for the second time in
three games for the Phillies,
who won their sixth straight.
San Diego has lost nine of 10.
. Omar Daal, who led the
majors with 19 los~ last year,
improved to 2-0, allowing two
runs and nine hits in seven
innings. Mesa pitched the
ninth for his sixth save.
Brian Tollberg (1.-2) gave up
four runs and six hits in seven
innings.

Rockies 6,
Cubs5
todd Helton homered
twice and drove in five runs at
Coon Field, and Jelf Cirillo
hit a ninth-inning sacrifice fly
olf Courtney Duncan.
Todd Hundley tied the score
at. 5 in the ninth with a solo
homer olf jose Jimene% (1-0),
who blew his second save in
seven chances.

D-backs 10,

Marll~ 7 ...

Curt Schilling (3-0) struck
qut 12 to rai.e his seas\)n total
to 50 and take over the .major
league lead from teammate
Randy Johnson, who has 48.
Schilling (3-0) allowed
seven r.uns and 13 hits · in
· seven-plus innings as Ari%ona
completed a series sweep
before 23,097 - the smallest
crowd in Ba!lk One BaUpark
history. Bret Prinz pitched the
ninth for1his first career save.
Marlins rookie jason Grill(
(2-2) was pounded for nine
r~n~ and 10 hits in four-plus
.mmngs.

Clrcllnals 5,
Expos 2

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12
11

SAN DIEGO (AP) While Rickey Henderson was
walking into history, Kevin
Millwood was looking for a
more mundane accomplishment: his first win of the .ea-

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RBls for the thinl straight
1\
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game, hitting a tbree-run
-.k.M&amp;, N.Y. Mola4
homer olf Britt Reames (2-1)
• Sl. Laulo 7 , - 2
~ 14. CNcogo Cubo 1
for a 4-2 lead in the fourth at
Arimna9, An118
St.Louu.
PI__,.,. 12, San Olego 7
Pilllllurgll 5. Lao Anga. 1
Jim Edmonds was 3-for-3
Clncmlli 9, San FIMCio&lt;:o 5
\vith an RBI single in the tint.
"--nla11, Houlton3
Andy Benes (1-1) allowed two
Miwauk.M 7, N.Y. Moll 2
runs and four hits in five
Sl Loui15. MonlrNI 2
~ S, Chicago Cuba 5
inning5.
Gene Stechschulte got
Michael Barrett to pop up
with the basel loaded for the the second with a leadolf
final out in the seventh and home run.
"No, this u not what I envifinuhed with one-hit ~elieffor
sioned,"
Manuel said after the
his first career save.
three-hour,
48-minute
marathon. "But I did mention
that no matter how long it
i:akel, i~'' important to win this
one.

...........

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

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Anaheim 3, Cleveland 1

1oV 1·2). 7:05 p.m.

'•
(lqef 3-0) .. N.V. Yenl&lt;efo
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0:
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Taxas C(lliver «&lt;J at Cloveland (~I
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I
Bay .IR&lt;IPO 1.·2) at OeOroit (Miici
lei 0.2). 7:05 p.m.
1
Kansas City (St.,. 1·2) at ,1losttH1
(CUtillo 2·1). 7:05p.m.
!
oaJdand (Mulde&lt; 2~1) at N.Y. Yankeet
{Hemandez 0-2). 7:05p.m.
:
aanmore (Me~s 0.3) at Mlmesot4
(lolayt2·1). e:os p.m.
i
Seattle (Sele 3-0) at Chicago Wlill
Sox (Bald!Mn o-o), 8 :05p.m.
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a.-.:1

SAVEHasaki,~ Seattle, 11!
Chicago Cubs, ·~llowed 'One ~;Mesa. P~iladlllphla, 6: JJimenez.
run and four hit:S rbefo~e leav- · Colorado, 5; Roc:ker, ' Atlaftta, 5; Koch, Toront'!• 6;. ~!wkJna. Minf
nesoia. 6; ~!meier, Bakimore~ 4f
'' '
ing after .five imrlngs with a BWagner, Houlton, 5.
Faull&lt;&amp;,
C~go, 4: •YIJJ), 1'\'P,,
blistered finger.
Bay, 4; lsrinQhaus~,· Oakland, 41
· C.C. Sabathl~ (2-1), the
AL Llllcien
Crabtree, Texas;,
'l'~onesj
Indians' heralded 20-year-old
Detroit, 4; RMHemanoe • KansaT
rookie, gave up five hits, four
BATTING-MRamirez. Boston, City, 4,
I'
walks and three runs in five .415; Stewart. Toronto. .393;
innings.
JaOiambi, Oakland, .391 ; JGonza·
lez, Cleveland, · .an: K9nerko,
Tranuctlon•l. · .
Mark Grud%ielanek tripled
. ., i'{
Chicago, .388;· Olarud, Seattle.
and .cored on a wild pitch by
.380; Suzuki, seante, .355; Mien,
American Laaa'Ui ,
Jose Manzanillo (Q-1) in the
TAMPA BAY DEVIL -RAYS_.
tklewlcz, Minnesota, .355; JoCna,
ninth, and Shiwn Green hit a
· hi
L-Toronto, .355.
OpHoned RHP Travis Phelps · a~
tliree-run homer.
.R uss Jo hnson t a t'u""• ., RUN5-Stewan, Toronto, '21; RHP Dan Wheeler to Durham
Terry Adams (1-1) sttuck , Carlos Guillen drove ·in nin slnuble offJelf Suppan (t- Lawton, Minnesota, 19; ARo· tl)e ln,amational League. Called u
out three in two hidelS illllinp three .runs with a pair of two~ 3) a'nd. Paul WiOOn '\von for driguez, Texas, 19; CDalgado, f\HP Brian Rose and LHP Jeff Wa~
out hits olfAndy Pettitte (3-2) · just the . second · time since Toronto, 18; CEverett, Boston, I B; lace-from Durham. Transferred
at Dodger Stadium.
...
visiting Seatde won its sixth 1996 as T;uilpa Bay held on at Koskie, MinniiiOia, 17; ·O'Neill, LHP WliMri Atval'ez frOm the 15: t4
Making his 300th major
home.
'" '
· New York. 17; GltlarraQII, 'Texas, the 6Q:d~y dis~d Hst i
·
league appearance - and tint straight.
The
Mariners,
despite
the
WiliOn
(1
_:2)
continued.'his'
17.
·
·
. )Uilonel Laallu•
•
against the team he made his
ofiSeason
loss
of
Alex
comeb~k
from
shoulder
and
RBI-MRami,.z,
Boston,
23;
ARIZONA
·OIAMOND,flt.CK~
.
tint 262 big-league starts with
Rodriguez,
have
won
10
ofll
arm
problema
by
allowing
Fullmer,
Toronto,
21;
CDalg•do,
Placed
RHP
Matt
Mantei.
S
"
1he
15j
- Pittsburgh's Ramon Marday disabled list. Punlhased
tinez allowed five runs · and and lead the majon with a 17- three runs on four hits in five Toronto, 20; JGonzalaz, Cleveland,
4 teconl.
in ·ng5 befcne'·a· crowd of just · 20; ' RPalmelro, Texas, 20; ARQn contract of RHP Erik ,Sabel f~
four hits in five inninjp.
Tucson of ·lht •PC4 l'iansterr
·t::.
Sellqll.
. N orm Chariron (1-0) got 11ru156,
,. ,, E·•·b
- an .."• an ;;,.t
r
~"" . ·driguez.Texaa, ~.!l:.oterud.
•
&gt;
19
RHP Bobby Win from the 15: to t
the win and Kazuhiro Sasakf fo}l"!h) rie. '
'
·
HITS MRamlrez, Boston, 34; 60-day di~ li". . I,
: I
pitched the ninth for his major
'·· .. , ··
"''
. Suzuki;Sellttls, 33; Siewert, Toron- j ATLANTA BRAVI:~urcha$e&lt;l
Jeague-leading 11th save.
NL I Mdwa
· io, 33; Knoblauch, New . Vol!(, 30; lli&lt;l ~.of BJif' t.latt ~hll~si
.
'JGonzalaz, Cleveland, 29; Brosius, from Richmorid of the tntJma!ion
BATIING-HoHandllwo"",
,
Col,
.
New York, 28; IRodriguez, Texas, League. f!tcafl~ill J.,JiP.1 DamJa
_
~. '· orado, ..388; Aurilla, San Francisco, 28,
Richie Sexson hit a two-run "" .
, ,
, ,. ,, c ·; ,.,.0 , ~ 0 ~ from .f.!icl)\l)!!n~,.PPtio"e
triple in a four-run seventh at ·
.386; Plljols, St. LouiS, .375t•LWalk• · DOUBLEs-Greer, Texa;, 10; R,HP Marif llll .Je$"t5'··•~phmohd
Milwaukee,
and
Jimmy .
er, Colorado, .375; JBeD.',ArlzOf1a, · Konerko, Chicago, '·a; Siewarl, · Oeiiglllted RHP -Chris l!eelbac
Haynes (2-2) allowed two
'
ToriiHunter hit a three-run .365; Larkin, Cincinnati, .384; Darr, Toronto, 8; JGonzalez, Cleveland, . for assignment.
runs, eight hits and four walks
San Diego, .353, ·.
,;,
8; 9 are tied wi1h 7.
CHICAG9. 9UI;IS-Activated 1~
double in the 1Oth-inning as
in six inning5.
RUNs-Helton;· Col0f8do, 23;
TRIPLE8-CGuzman, Minneso- Apr! Coom'\r f~om the ·15.:!1ay ~Is
David Weathers allowe!i one surprising Minnesota rallied at LGonzalez, Arizona, 23; LWalker, ta, 5; AKennecly, Anaheim, 2; ablad list Optioned OF Aooseve
Colorado; 20; TWaQier, Colorado, CNlee, Chicago, 2: JEncamacion, Brown lo'lo\va i&gt;fthe PCL'
~
hit in three inning5 for his Fenway Park.
The Twins tied the game in· 19; Fioyd, Flori&lt;ta, 1.9; Bumltz. Mil, Detrolt, /1 2; Durham, Chicago, 2:
LOS ANGELES DODGER$
third save.
Steve Trachsel (0-4) gave up the ninth on doubles by waukee, 19; Beri&lt;man, Houston, CEvaratt, Boston, 2; · Easley, Signed RHP luis Arriojas, Art
'Detroit, 2; RSanchez. Kansas City, Juan Barreras, ' RKp Yunhy BrrtoJ
three runs and eight hits in Jacque Jones and AJ. Pierzyn- 1B; Bagwell, Houston, 18.
RBI-LWalker, Colorado, 25; 2.
RHP Djurving Cleola, AHP Rodolf~
ski against Rod Beck (0-1).
five inning5.
HOME
RUN5-CDelgado, Gonzalez, RHP Leigh Neuage
. Minnesota· leads the AL Cen- Pujols, S!, Louis, 22; H~l).on. Col·
tral at 15-4 after posting the orado, 22; !,Gonzalez, Anzona, 22; r9ronto, 1Q; Quinn, Kansas City, 8; RHP Alvis Ojeda, RHP Arol Soto
worst record in the league last CJones, Atlanta, 21; LStev;ens, O'Neill, New York, 8; Daubllch, LHP Javier Arturo Lopez, LH
Montreal, 21; Casey, Cincinnati, Boston, 7; JGOr)zalez, Cleveland, Jorge Luge, ; LHP Jesus TrevinOl
year.
20.
7; 6 are tied wi1h 6.
INF Luis Casiillo, INF Christia~
Bob Wells (2-0) got out of a
HITS-Vidro, Montreal, 28;
STOLEN BASES-Knoblauch, Herrera, INF 'Fausto lopez, IN~
jam in the bottom of the ninth Pujols, St. ·Louis, 27; Aurllla.. San New York, 8; Cedeno, Detroit, 6; Euctides Sumoza, OF Ivan Castro
CHICAGO (AP) - Jerry
with a runner at third. La Troy Francisco, 27; LWalker, Colorado, GWIIiams, Tampa Bay, 6; Durham. OF Franklin Gutierrez OF Jesu~1
Manuel's pregame chat got
Hawkins pitched the 1Oth for 27;. PWilson. Florida, 26; Mueller, Chicago, 5; Curtis, Texas, .5; 7 are Perez and c Rafael Camarero t~
·through to the struggling
Chicago, 28; Hollandsworth, Col· tied with 4.
,
minor league contracts:
•
Chicago White Sox after 11 his sixth save.
orado, 26.
PITCHING (3 Decisions)MONTREAL EXPOS-Activate~ ·
inning5.
DOUBLES-Lowell, Florida, 10; WRoberts, Baltimore, 3:0, HXlO, RHP Anthony Telford frqm the 151
A few houn after Manuel
Nevin, San Oiego, tO; Hoi· 1.25; FGarcia, SaaHie, 3-0, 1.000, day disabled .list Senr'RHP Mik~
called a rare team meeting to .
landsworth, Colorado, 9; CJOhn· 4.06; Ml\:halak, Toronto, 3.0, 1.000, Johnson outright to Ottawa 01 the
address Chicago's poor start,
son, Florida, B; LSievans, Mantra· 1.62; Millon, Minnesota, 3-0, 1.000, International League.Jlp~oned 0
Paul Konerko hit a solo homer
al, 8; PWilson, Florida, 7; Abreu, 3, 12; Radke, Minnesota. 4,0, Peter Bergeron .to Ottawa
Cal Rjpken hit his first Philadelphia, 7; Affonzo, New York, 1.000, 2.52; DOIIver, Texas, 4·0, Recalled OF Andy •Tracy fro
in the 11th to give the White
'
,.
Sox a 2-1 victory over Oak- home run of the year, con- 7; MIWIIIIams. Arizona, 7; Larkin, 1.000, 5.24; Sale, Seanle, 3·0, Ottawa,
necting
olf
Steve
Sparks
(1-2),
Cinc!nnati, 7.
1.000. 2.25; Quantrill, Toronto, 3:0,
NEW YORK METSz.:rPiace
land on Wednesday night.
Baltimore.
to
lead
visiting
TRIPLE~rera, Montreal, 1.000, .00; Moyer, Seattle, 3·0, LHP 1'1 ~eiter on the 1~~ay dis!
"His meeting was about
Ripken,
rested
Tuesday
by
3;
Colangelo, San Diego, 2; Cora, 1.000, 4.09.
a1Jied list. retroactive to ~rll 21
capitalizing on situations, and I
Los
Angeles,
2;
ABoone,
Cincin·
STRIKEOUTS-PMartlnez,
Recalled LHP Tom Martin 110m Nor
manager
Mike
Hargrove
for
think he got his point across:·
natl,
2;
OJackson,
San
Diego,
2:
Boston,
54;
Zilo,
Oakland,
37;
folk
of. the lntemationalilaague!
said David Wells, who allowed the second time in three
LCasdllo,
Florida,
2;
Ochoa,
Clncln·
CCarpentar,
Toronto,
32;.
Colon,
Purchased
tilfl contract of RH~
only one run and five hits in games, went 1-for-4 .and is natl, 2; Vlna. St.
2; Lankf~, Cleveland, 30; Aloptz, Tampa Bay, Brett Hinchliffe from ;,Norfoll
batting just .161. Ripken, 40,
nine inning5.
St.
Louis,
2.
?.8; Hudson, Oaklanq, 26; Loaiza, Optioned OF Jorge Toea to Nolfol
"Going in, I thought we increased his career RBis rota!
HOME RUNS-LGonzalez, Ari· Toronto, 26; Clemens, New York,
, ··
,
, ·
; ..
were going to get our butts to 1,636, tying Ernie Banks zona, 11; LWalker, Colorado, 11; 26.
place.
for
19th
Bonds,
San
FranCiaco,
9;
He~on,
·
1
chewed out, but he went the
Willis
Roberts
(3-0),
makColorado,
B;
RSandera,
Arizona,
8;
I
opposite way and it paid off."
Mter winning the AL Cen- ing his second career start, Pujols. SL Louis, 7; Truby, Hous,
ton, 7; CJohnson, FlOrida, 7; Bur,
I
tral last year, the White Sox gave up one run in seven
hitz,
Mllwaukee,
:7.;
Sheffield,
Los
I
have struggled. They came inning5 as Baltimore won its Angeles, 7,
into Wednesday's game on a thinl straight
STOLEN BASES-4-Castlllo, .
four-game losing streak and
Florida, 6; EYoung, Chic8go, 7;
had lost eight of 10 PWIIson, Floridi,
6; SPerez, San
'I
•;
Diego,
5;
OJIICICIOn,
San Diego, 5;
prompting the meeting.
Glanville, PhDaile)phla, 5; Roffins, ·
"If we go out tomorrow and
Philadelphia, 4\ VGuerrero, Mon~
win again, this could turn into
treat,
.4: Ochoa, ,Cincinnati, 4;
Brad FuUmer hit a three-run
~momentum builder:· Manuel
uesday and W81:1n,e~;day
Floyd,
Florida, 4.
said. "And hopefully (or a long homer off Kenny Rogers (12 man team partnersPITCHING (3 Decislons~rp,
2)' and added a go-ahead
time."
ChlcaQti, 3.q'!'L1.ooo;·s.eo; •Himp·
Kon~rko homered with one infield single in the eighth ton, Colorado[. 3:0, . 1.000, 2·.97;
Women's ~.·League
inning
to
lead
host
Toronto.·
out in the 11th off former Sox
Schilling, Arlzone, 3-0, 1.000, 3.29;
' Mondays
Paul Quantrill (3-0) got one OFamandaz, Cincinnati, 4:1, .800,
reliever Chad Bradford (0-1),
setting off fireworks and high out for the win, and Billy 5.27; WMIIIet; Houston, 3'1 •. ~5o, ,
Koch worked a hidess ninth 2.35; R\IOrtieSan FnlnCisco, 3:1;
fives among the White Sox,·
1
·:
Thursday ;··.
•
his
sixth
save
m
seven
for
.750.
2.70;
Alfa¢io,'
Colorido,
:J;1,
"We're not too happy," KoriTwosomes
.750, 1.93; Tapanl, Chicago, 3,1,
erko said. "It's kind of like chances.
.750; 4:81; RRa.ed, !&gt;lew Yo(k, 3,1,
when a hitter's in a slump.
.750, 1.119; Glavl~. Atlanta, 3:1 ,'.
When you're 0-for-20 and
'750, 3.98.
'
Friday .
you get a hit, you're still kind
STRIKEOUTS-8chllllng, Ari,
of mad. It's like, 'Geez, it's
Lugu•• Beginning End ofAI:)I'II
zona, 50; RDJohneon. Arlzone, 48;
about time."'
Cour.. 11 •v•ll•bl• for Tournam1nt1
WMIIItr, liouf\C)n,·
Oagne,,L.oe
Ismael Valdes got his fint Angelee, 32; Wood, Chlltllo, 112;
Keith Foulke (1~2) gave up
and Outlnga
·
only two walks in two score- win since July, ,al)d Benji Gil Vazquai,, Montrea,l. 30j , ~t.Oio,
hit an RBI triple as Anaheim Colorado, 28.
less innings.
won
at Cleveland.
Jose Valentin hit a s.olo
8AVE8-Faeeero, Chicago, 8;
Valdes (1-2), whose last win Gravea, . ,einclnneu, 8; Nen, San
homer in the fitst for Chicago,
but Terrence Long tied it in came July 23, 2000, with the Francllco;--8; Shew, Loe Angel11,

Dodprs6,
Pirates 5

I

II

.l1llf1
10 . ·.Ale
524
·11
14 .333
..

W
15
11

Todo(o-

••l•1

.fltl1

7
7

7
I

2~t:35p.m.

1'-..gn , _ o-2) .. Lao Angoloo
, _ 2-1). 10:10 p.m.
Flllla/IGIMel
Flollda (Penny lo(J) II . _ , (Uml
1·1). 8:05 p.m.
Mol*61i (Tlumln 1-.3, at 111 ii!L.tM
(~ (1.0). e:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mill (~ 2•1) at St. lA*
, _ 2·2~ e:IOp.m. .
2-11 • Colonldo
, _ 3-1), 8:05p.m.

14
14
11

08

_The Dally Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

'

...,__ .

\AIIIII Gll*l·=:J!iii!~~~== June 22, 1997
N 1 55 • Callfonila
3:30p.m. • lillllnllr • Foo&lt;
NAPI\ Auto Porto

CD fiJ

• c·•·I:
CD ... as
cc·- CD.._

• WI 11
2 p,m: • Sllndly • Fox
• Cooft , . - . - . , . . . . . . .

CD

......

RWSOx4

White Sox 2,
Athletics .1·

Orioles 6,
'dprs4

'iula,

I

Blue Jays 8,
Ranprs 5

and 3

·2 p.m.. Sundnr

-

·

n.k 2 , ,........:
--~
Mllto Sl&lt;tnMf, c - .

\lA~OIN(.\

--Jell-.

...
::J ·ca c
oC

~~

·=

Jason KeUer are other prtme

KenHth

contenders •... This will be
lhe fifth Busch Series race
al California.

1'rMk 2 ''1 tiWrttoeN:
Jell Groen, C......,ltt,
178.258 """'· April 27,

--Dole

tle&amp;fMI on 111e front ltroi&amp;hl 2000
de&amp;ree• on the beck
ltroi&amp;hl.
Earnhardt Jr., CheYrolel,
173.581 """'· Oct. 29,

--- · Auto Club 300
Clllfornlo Speed-

-=

way, ron11no, CoiW. (2&lt;nllt

2000

tract&lt;), 150 IIPI/300 mllol
Incumbent Green and Kevin
3:30 p.m.. Sotunlty Hor&gt;lck, Gle&amp; lllflle -

I'IWHI

~

Hamilton

liJP I fN

CIW'riiiAIITIIUCK
-

Popll

Ram TOU&amp;h 200 Ill'

-..:Goteoay

1999
lnlernaUonal Raceway,
_...: A neroe battle tor Mldioon,lll . {1 .25-mllt
the Hf'lea chlmplontnlp 11
trock),100 lallo/200 milts
lhapilll up be-n
-:Moy6

1811.1!81 mph, Apotl 28,

&gt;- · CD

o••-nc rt" plan: Jack

Spra&amp;oie

••••••••••••

·YouP'Ibrn

·~· ' ~·
,.

&amp;.~~~nr..o.

l. (1) -

~

'Ia ;; I :!Ill r~ 1111111

81T a trp
2. (2) Jellhfll' .,....,.. .. , nl
I, (4) · · - - _ _ _ ......

---

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(I) ...,N..IIton . . otwtot.ryofhta-

---~~~--

7. (I)
lllllttr. -·
~
1.
(:i) -

Clll'..,ler _ _

•• (7) - -

-

tellllolt Ito llhll12111

. I, (I) 11111tJ Wll- Loet hta rtMe Ill till tlntft

' .10. (-) TtNit'lte•••

. _ .. _ . . ,
wtlllltllewJ U r

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Futurlng
' MJituCkj"'
FrledChlcun
228MIIn 8t,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-ThN Window

992·543~

f~OM

lA\l WffK
' •1 ..erntd aorne ltuff in

111e 1811 (~r 2000) ,...
TALlADEGA, Alt. - it
clooan't tokO r IOCitot
... _.. or a ma&amp;Jclan to
win a •Uf*lplllldwat l'liCI,
It takes 1 rKW, pure and

, 1lmp18. Bob!;¥ Hemilton
dltln~.....,. to 'aee 111e olr.'

Htjulthldto ft(ld away to

11!1 watcnlna Dalt Eoonnontt,' Hlmllton llld,
reterrlrw to llle ltpntlory
Cltlver who won 10 tlmea
hera before bllnt killed In I

~nl 500 Cl'llft In ,0):
l'ebruary, '111111-Mo'ln

tne ..... con....,boltnt' a(ld

Wilted UJ1Iff ,.,. ..... 15
the front, and 1111 tlmiq Wll · laPI
_.
• - r~
10 10
lmpoccnblt . .
To Homii!On, • ......,, no- - ...,_..
nonunse rtct driver from
Mount Julltl, Tenn .. wlnntnc
TAlt.Ail£GA, Alt. - Mlt!o
""'Tott.,....,IIOO ""' •
Mclaulhlln.auo-,.
matte.r of simple arithmetic.
bottom of.1811edep
Early In the race, Hamltton . SuperaPiedwll) '1 benkt,.
fttUred out that he coUld ·
flultlellly, end the re1ult ,
work nta ~to t!1efront of
. we a 1 tterdtlt contested
tilt lltld In IIIPfOXImotely 15 Yictory OYt&lt; Jimmy Spanc:or
tept. When 15 tapa were left In the Subway 300. ·
dn Sunday, ne put hit plan In

McLIUJhlln, drtvlnaa

motion -literally. Tne reiUtt . Pontiac owned bV Joe Gibbs, i
was the fourth victory of hi I
trected al'leet metal to res lit r
---------,
r

carHr and the first for car

J..,wnor Andy l'otroo.

Speneer'a dotleCI pursuit ln.
,
'

ine ftnll ·lapa,

fHIO Of IHf WHK

See us for Your StihiPower Tools &amp;
Accassorles

race weekend
waa also the occasion of the
annual Induction ceremonies
for the International Motor·
sports Hall of Fame end
Museum, housed on the
grounds of lhe 2 .686-mlle
track.
·
This year's induction was
held A.pri119, and the ne~
members of the hall of fame
were the NASCAR star Nell

I • Talladeaa

Ridenour
Supply

1\ aala:llla'IWvla

St. At. 24B
Chester 985-3308

s.. lh what year did 081e Earnhardt win his
first Winston Cup championship?
2. What WinSton Cup driver was named Rookie of the
Year In the 1980 Indianapolis 500?
J.. How meny national Late MOdef SP.ort1man ~namplons
went on to win the I nOw~ Winston Cup championship?

•1101: Stacy Comptoo

·~est

aterted ftrst but flnlshec:l
111i at Taltadlaa.

pue "t96t u1n1mur P&amp;N :auo ·c
:puowl!OU:I wu "" :cast "l

IIIMINY

••••••••••

Bonnett, open,wheel cham-

Vekran drivu Kiln Schrader -

~~::=~~~w:::::

... ofthl ,..___ SOO.
.-,--

_,.,.,.up

both!~

bd ' with Kurt Butch in
en~ Truek and Winaton Cup

.......
In (Jvuroflhe ~lc ntltt In ltrin.
plabiiiTalildep.
...
''
X
"lltiUIIIctbnewMI'Orulallel:· ~
.
ter thlft wtlat *e "'4" Schridlr
nMUCIIANCIIJohnAndrcni
.. __, . . "'" allanlaoto chltkl up the eme,...ence of new
..I• •"'-··
1011
u.
.._,
...·•
be In a W, pi1' but at kat dlit way ~~ Man like Sieve Park and
can
Everyone wart co Til· - ~In H~iclll buthlttt u uiUII
;:.... 1.,1' fall, kept cheir ....,.., in the w-.iton Cup Seriu
1
face
1
~tdn atd 11111 put aD 1 srnti'ICI. dM:~· ( w:;ec::: 11 ~h·~

*'

really IIYnk M Ala hlppm
and I look forwtrd to Mrilnt

H

:=tn.

..a~•

kl OMI

k." : "bal: .. A:Z:r

k•P

~rill ;n

ld "II will

on~·.;;utina .'n:-,h~'l what

CHAMIIRI RI8URFACI8t ~ kAstAR exehltlJ. Thll itn't

like Formula One where you 1\avc a
pretty Jood Jd~a what driv.er with
what car make 15 going 10 wm week
in ~nd wnk oul. In NA.SCAR, any
driver and an)' make can win on any
aiven Sunda)'."

X

WHATSETSGORDONAPARI':

Slrona wbe~ chcy were w.nnm11
championsh1pt. They thdn'c lei up
after IIIey won one.
"The)' were prepared IO doh
again. I'm, noc saylnJ the!e other
jtlyl 1ren I, but there! so mu.ch
prenure on the whole tum thai 1t'J

hard 1o repeat.
"The

Leagu,e.··

Senior.Scramble

Anlels ·3,
Indians 1

· Every

..a;

Pine Hilla Golf Course

88 .&lt;Dale JarrcnJ wt;~ their

• --·
first title in '99 and then fJnla,hed
ChipOanaul_,;myteammliOqer r
bl
Tony Olover comp limenetd Jetr toun u 1_year.

Gordon and Hendnck Mo1orspo~
''Dobby LaboPIC ,woo Ihe clu.m·
he be
1 d lh current w1n piOJJship.lll!ll year and look where
w n ana Y.zt; e. .
· they are now. II looks like one year
aton CUp clwnpmnsh1p raec .
ri .. b k
d h
"l"ve.nevcr been 1 part ofa Cham· )'OU aet.all the 1,,1 rea •· an 1 e
ionship team bul in my opinion; nex.t year, tomt thina• sctm lo iO
fc 1 vel"y dlffi~ult 10 win a titfe," wrona that didn't ao wroni the
Olaver taid.
, rear before. I don'C tltlnk the 18
,.It appears 10 be even more llifll, .{Labonte) hid any DNFs latt ~·
(;Uit to defend I cidc. That't what I 'Thit )IC'{
havea't been qwte
made that 24 team (Gordon~ to IM'I fl'lrl~nate.

(740) 949-2804
Corner of VIne &amp; 6th ·

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from 8:l0 a.m. to 5 p .m .

th.~)'

=-==-No

wotllti5 1111......., to
billa.'• wlnniiC,..,..
for more - . . five
reJir8, MMIIoiiiiJ

Mllnltton'l: TIIIIIIP
100 vtator, . .

,..,.. .. ftrat •
OWMf', , . . ' "

• teMI

WM 1

hl&amp;blr MceltfUI crew

ahlef . . .t known for
~
le
0I
,_ wo111

'.IIIMhlrdt d Harry
e.t. 1ut Na tlrat

vtator:r.:• •...._

arew chlaf

,
WM

at ,.,.

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wMn ltbll ,.,.....
won. Mlmllttn'- vlctorr
WU .-a tM llrat fw
GNW

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oaVe ·Harris ot Debbie Call ·

'

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The Motors~rts tiall of
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'1J~'

.992-2155

Sat. 9-1

Offenhauaer.

Ken Schrader $8YB rules at Talladega suit him·J~ · flrut •
Rookie Juon Lemfr hu a new
creWChief'; MattCbambm.
Chaml)en replaced Kevin Cram
II Chi Oanull Racl earll~ thit
wtek pctwnbm wwtl~ II Roush

Open Mon-Fi'l9-5:30

each dar the rest of the year.

AROUND THE GARAGE

·
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NA A
•

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Clinic ,

~Jon Jimmy Bryan, motorcycle
superstar Mike Hallwood and
engine builder Fred

I

..,l~ed

.....

• NASCAR Thlo WHk- -Dutton rank1 llle
top 10 -.hoadlrw Into 11111 •altond'l ..... Lall
-'1 ...,klrw 111n pare,._.

'ftl
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-ACIIIaYaO&lt;oama.com

LletnHd Prtcllotl Nuraes (LPN)
FG' Full And l'ar1 Omt Woill In A
114 llacl lntarmldloto Care Stale
Facility An Extensive Benefit
Package Ia Available For Full
11m1 Empioyeeo Sllory 11 c.....

.,__eo..

_,.Willi
11C1 Stnctra Railmirt. DON AI Ll·
kin Hoopllal. lakin WV at
(304)875-0110. EJd 124 MOnctay
"'"' Frlclty lam-4pm Lakin Hos
pltallo tn EECIM E...,..,...

Managtmtnt ()pj&gt;ortunlty Cottar
Opportunity Willi Mljor Company
Compltlt Trelnlng P•ogram
Excellent Btnallll Call 1 511
201-5021 For Conlldantlol In

-

Madicat Billing Aallatant nat&lt;led
lmmldlotttyt FTIPT w~ Ttoln Ex
ctlltnt Income PC required 1
Ill • t8 9'773 exl. 222.
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Work on your computer Guar
antoad tmptoymano T•alnlnglcer
!ltlcatk!n (lrH) lorton Pull Inc

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AIIEM-LY AT HOIIIII Craflo

Ntld 10 Ladlta To Sol! Avon
Earn 40% Cll (740)441 3358

m.oatO Edt 201 (24hil)
ATT1H1'10111

Needed Experienced Crew for
Setting and Flnlahlng St&lt;:tlonaJ
Houalng Stnd Pnclng ..... , ......
and experience to Southern

Toys Jewelry Wood Sawing
TY1Jina Groat Payl CALL I 800-

Woill lrorn homo.

Mtllonltr1500-18000 Pit monlll PTIFT
wtllrtil 1.-.o:l42
www gentrllet:ttlthl1honw com

ATTENTION MOTHERS AND
OTHERS Up to S50Q.52500 part
time Fullrralnlng 1 800·8711·
4808 www Quickcasnnow com/

Lora Ot Stulll Friday Stturday a
Sunday Till 8pm 1153 Grahtm

1522+/WIIk PT SIOOO S4 000/
wtek FT Full Training Free
laoktet www createdttamlltl com

Homu PO Box 821 Jackaon
OH-

-~~-POll
I'OINT
PLEASANT OFFICE
EAIIII UPlO 110.00 AN H0U11
(--ltltry)

--ln-..

Mtnend--ToDo
Tllltphont Optrl1o&lt; Woill FG'

NATIONAL IWliO

STATION PIIOMOTIONS

ATIENTION OWN A COMPUT
ER1 Mall ordtr/E Comrntrct

-""'~

'Oo\Y AltO IYININO SHIFT
.WAILAIL!

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
AprV 26111 &amp; 271ft rain

or INna •

,. comforter Chrlltmtl trH tncyclopedlll tcanntr drtptties

lllggscrHI EUit&lt;n
Garage Ilia April 27 28 1 5
corner of Fltth 1 Vine Raclnt

Futnllure clollllng ekl
lnaldt yard 1111 April 21th lttm
to 4pm Bttldt Autltnd Depart
mtnt Store LOll Of glaaaware &amp;
creft lttma No ctotnea let

WOOd 740-7422790

ATTINTION

WORK

wwwSirlva~oom

..
'lbur Own - · .
-·8AoMI
Earn Up to 1500-IIOOI)'MO
PTIFT
www C•"'~'H:MAnd""'- corr"l
CAREER OPPORTUNITY( Earn
exctlltnt Income Eloy Claims
prOCIIIIng Full lrllnlng Home
PC required Call Phyalolan &amp;
Heallhcere Development• toll•

,_ t-«JJ. rn 5838 an ao10

Claaa All CDL Drlvtrl GOOCI
Ply ltntfl!l 401 K Vtcauon '"'

aurtnce Home

(740)211-140

Pt. PlaaMnt
VIcinity

2114 Birch Avanuo 4127/01
~ loll Ot Good 81Ufll
Cheap Glrago Stlt 112 Milt A..
utt 17 Off Junction Rou11 2
Thuro Stt Somellllng For Evary
ont

Lora• 2 Family Gorago Sill
A - fl7 FollOW Slgno
Wanted Vtnctora

For Wttl

VIrginia GIANT 'Ripley a On
Salt Balltvt II Or Not' Solo On
512..r 5126 Group&amp; eualntllet
Individuals Crafltrt And Food
Vtndors Rtnt tOxtO CourthOUH
Lawn Space F.. SIO ($5 00 E""'

For Elect•lclly) Call Rlploy Main
Street (30•)372 1037 And lie
'it&gt;IK $j)ot Now

l!~tntnga

Call

COME DRIVE 'LATIED POll
USI Compeny I Ownor/OPirator
OTA drlvo•o for rtDionll l dedi
calad runa Ctll f00•581·1057
Ia! 140 Bruos for Nortlltrn 01t1o
~IICI run Clll IOD 100-831·
"m5CIUMCOLroqullld

Jill--

04yotrt .,.Hable In Rtolnt area

740-8421 ..
Domino • Now Taking Appllca·
Ilona For Galllpoill &amp; Pomtroy
.._Only
EARN S25 000 UO 000/yr Modi
cal lnouranco BIHin11 NHdld lm
mldlall~l HOmo COmputt1 NHd
od FIIEE lnltlntl 1 100 2111
4113 Dap11101
EASY WOIIKI Groat payl Earn
SSOO Piua • Wtt- Autmbll ng
Produc1l 11 Home NO Exptr~nce
Ntotnary Ctll Toll Fr01 1 800
28739«x138

728-11083 ~~~

POSTAL JOBS II&gt; 111 35/llr
WILDLIFE JOBS Ill UUQIIII lncludn hnellll No

Nectsaary FDr Application lnd

Eaem Info call -tt2-7054

&gt;r20111U' 1:3Q.&amp;:OGIIn

303 Mlln
Point -.a

- . , , Apolt 24111
Wt*IJJdly,Apr1121th
Tllundoy, AjlriiZIII

,,..,, """'l11ll

:l:llllpm Unll i:OOpm ONLY
AP f'or Mt. Willa

OWN A COMPUTER? Put to
workl Ja5-17!!/llr PT/FT Frtt on
llna oatoiOQ 11 , _ wnogrtaHn-

-COlli ot cal I -«JJ.J70.11184

Own a P.C 1 Put n 10 Woikl For a
~ bOokltl call 100-429 5853 or
villi u1 onlnl
WMW getpcwOt k com

Port Tlmt CNA/ LPN lor In Home
Cart ftmalt Patient Stna At
turnt Ill CLA 511 C/0 Golllpolla
Dally Trlbuno 125 Third Avt
OaMipONI Olllo4.a1
'•rt tlmt LPN flolltlon Avalltble

At lcanlc Hilla Nurolng Ctntor

'it&gt;• C.. 011 Flalllblt SChldutng
Clreal -~~· Compotlllvt Wag

to Shill Dlfftrontltl Willi ExPtrl-

ence And Attendance eonuusr

Don 1 Pau Up A Grut Oppor
tunl!y To ltgln Or Continuo You
Exciting Nurolng Caroorl Call
Rhonda HOIIIIIn AI (740)4467150 Toellyl
PGT 11 hlnng llalbad drlvtra Min
8 montho OTR Exparltnct GOOd
MVR No ICCidtntl EICCIIItnt
Pay ond Btnlflll WE "AVIi
fiiiiOHT 1 1101).TEAIII'OT
Polloi Jobo 141 323 00 yr Now
hiring No er:perlence paid train
lng· great btneflta call 7 Clayl

..,.

frH computer Proc111 medal
110111 hOme F r H -

PAN licanald ~---.

alolln! and PAN - h - ·
pill nHdocl loi lOCI bad llkllltd

oiiiiOliiTE 001.0 WEll
•No fi'IOMy down• Work 3-,.hrll
wk. Earrr I50KfYr owning plo1fng
INTERNET bullntll FrH lntoH

PRN~......_PIIN

Ainlrlg-~­
.,.. rahabllltotion dlpa,.,..nt

both Inpatient and oYipatlent

ltrviCII provided lnle,.lttd
. . - - ~ .. lloc:ll
sprtngo llthabHHallon Ctnttr.
3fl7et AoclttiM1ntllllaed. ~'~~mfr.
flY OhiO 457... Allllon lltMII.
MPt llahaD hrvlcea Otractor,
740-1111- Equal Opfortuntty
Employar Encouraging Work
plaaa~

liN and LPN for 100 bad oklllfd
ouratog ftcltlly Excellent wnlty lor cntllfnOing end tng txptrltnct Sign-on DOnut
groat lltr1 ri!U -Ifni neou·
tetory compllanct hlltory lnttr·

lltld ell rthj*l ShOuld ~ ..,
llockaprln~llohtbllltatiOn

c. ..

,., 317511
PI&gt;
mtiVY.Oilio487..
lng AN Oliaclor af Ntnlng. 740992-eaos EqUII OoooltunHy Employer Encouraging WorkpiiCI

---Time-

EAIIN 1500 1900 ptr wttk In
&amp; alljlptra Low ln••tmem t-100-272.0183 awa-

_...,com

858 Third Avenue Gallipolis
Ohio.

EARN your Colloot Doorn
QUICIILVI 8achtiO(I Maottfo
Doctorate by correspondence
hHd Upon Prior EdUCIIfOn Ex

.,.,._ end Study CourH FrH

Catetot CamDrldgt Stilt Unl·
~ (100) 1114-1311:14 HAS
Eacellent Opportunity Vending
.... No Nllng 50K plul yr " '
hr weell:ly Minimum lnv11tment

.__. 1 IIOI).i!M-5171241V1

Income PoltnUal 1-871-415-5337

www rnedictlttans net 1 888 745

11284

Sctntc Hills 11 Now Hiring M&amp;M/MAIIS Established 10ul11
STNA 1 And CtrUflad Nurolng available Mln1mum lnvestmenl
Aloillanlt fclf All Sllllla Wo Ara M800 Annual pDIInlial earnmgs
A P"''trau... Faelllty Who Ap- over hOK Toll Free 1 8&amp;6 787
preciate a 01.1r Staff You H1v1 111a24hil
Grtat Oppor1unltl" AI Scenic
H..l Ctl- MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlltd InAt (740)4411-7150 Todeyl or cornt po!ln!lat No IXPtrlence
~By
And Fit OUt An Aptlllea·~ · ~ntcf;t~u~a~Grylnvaatmenllrom
_,
S2495&amp;
1 Free Information
available (100) 322
URGENTLY NEEDED plaama 1139
donors, ..., 148 to 110 b 2 or 3 EXT 050 www buolneoo 11ar
houia
Cal 6tia ...._ 100. tup.com

-ar

582-1851

llart A Trawl A...cr Aecalve

Waddloga

T•taaurod Photoa
Clpturtd For Your 'JJ'ttlllh. In
A Compu!trlzad Audio/ Visual

Training BUIIMSI Support Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks Earn Big $$$

Sltdelhiow Preuntatlon Detail&amp;

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(740)258-9347

WORK FROM HOME
SS00.$1 500 Mo. ..., nm.
$1.:ZOO.S8 000 Mo. F.-t nm.
PAID VACATIONS
1-800-499-30111

Sto~up Cos~

1 618 81190901 or www EarnBucksFrom
Home com

Start Your Business Today
Prima Shoppmg Center Space
Available At Affordable ~ate

Spring Valley Plaza CaN 740-446-

0101

140

Buai!IHI
Training

OrMie: • C... C..,..
(Caron Cloet To H..-1\1)
Call Today! 7 -

1.1()0.214-0452
Reof90.05.12748.

School•
lnltnlctlon

150

I l l - '1111'.,...,..,.

...

...... , . . -

.........

WORK FROM HOIIEI Earn
1500 17 000/monlh PT/FT Full
Tramlng Free Information Call
1-«ll-290-8114

--230

rallglon

orfoln. 01 1111'- to

proto.....

... -~·

_,
~wlllclllo
tawo.._
.. of"'"
_,
lnfannad thalli~

NOT replacing Long cracko In

fila Rtll" Exptrltnoe Praf1111d
-

01 181111 wltit . . - I ilfDII

Wlndfil\leldl Fret vldta 1·100·
• ·m u~ nw(IIUI-

MtdiCII Tran1c:rlptlon AlliS
blnct with Job Placement upon
IUcctllful Completion ExctNent

Phone Calla All!lir In

Uio F - Fllr Hauling N1.

Elm 190 000 YEARLY ropelrtng

~

Apply AI Llltalylt Furniture No

"""'-~"'
, . - · Ujacl to

1~1

GLOBAL MEDICAL TAAN
SCRIPTION Train 11 Homo for

.. . . -.... aqua~

-"'"""-

310

Home• for

Sale

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES I
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
AEPO'S &amp; SANKIIUPTCIESI OK
CREDm FOil LISTING! CALL 1
aoo-501 1m e111. 9813
Handyman Special In Excellent
Na.ghborhood Large Yard Good
Condition Won t Last 159 900
Malia Otto&lt; (304)675-18 16

HOMES FROM S 199 30/Mo I
3BR Repos/ Foreclosures fee
4% down Fo r Listings/Payment
DelaYs 1-IIOil-719-3001 al185
Middleport gray stone 3 4 bed
rooms large walk In Iorge
eat In k1tcnen 2 bathrooms large

J.R trmal DR i)ine paneiO&lt;I dOrtl
bedroom full unftnishtd base
ment steam heat s1tuated on 3
village kits one car garage new
sidewalks new root lar~e front
porch deck small outbUilding
qutet street lined basketball
cou111 parking area win consider
all reasonable otters 740 992
7396
Must see 1993 28x:7Q double
wide newer carpet gas rumace /
hot water tank large front porch
needa moved appraised at

169 000 selling for 135 ooo 740
992 5722
Newly Constructed Single Story
1600 Square Foot Home ,o
Minutes From Hospital Btdwell/
Porttr Area LOCI!Id On A lloeuhful Private 1 112 Acre Lot 3
Bedroom 2 112 Baths Btg Kitctten w!Custom Oak Cabmets From
Smi1h s Cabmets Oft LR w/Gas
Log F•eplece Front Porch &amp; 2 11
2 Car Garage Oual1ty Construe
t1on All The Way $135 000 Call

(740)446-4514 from 8 5 ME Or
1740~48

After 5pm

Two car ga rage/apartment In
Middleport two bedrooms full
bath LR kltcl'len w11n electric
range central alf 740-985 3650

Profelllonal
Servlc:ee

$ FREE CASH NOWS from

«7~2795

BLACKSTONE PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo SludJ Ap
proved Affordable comprehen
slve legal training tinct 1880
FREE CatalOG 100 128·9228
wrne ~0 Box 701449 0111aa TX
75370 N~ or nttpJ/Www _ ,..

unloading of dollar&amp; to Relp m1nlm1ze the.ttxes Wnte lmmedl81ely WINO-

320 Mobtle Homo
for Sale

FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA 90010

99 mob1le home for sale must
seH 14x7() three bedrooms two
ballls 7-9-3004 after 5pm

ntlawCOIII

Payments RtdUC8 lnterell Non-

-.y families

US CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS?
FREE Debt Consolidation Cut
P•ofll 800 268 6331 Ell 15

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bachelors Master•
Doctorate by correspondence

wwwp.tcC'II'&lt;e com

based upon prior eduCation and

cash ror rema1nlng payments on

ShOrt IIUdy

For FREE lnformaMn booklet phone CAM
BRIDGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
1101).9&amp;4-8318

180

COUIII

WantadTo

Do

Bebylllling In my ljomt Clllldren
2 10 M F eam 5 30pm can
(740)388-8193
Ctro Of Elderly/ Houooliaap•ng
H 00 Per Hour Aak For Bonnie
(304)195-3723
David • General Cootrectora
Plumbing

EleCifiC

Pamtlng

DOcka Mise Woill All H- Rt
polrs Lawn Cart Call (740)2589373 Or Cell Phone 1 304 133
8285

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logo to 1ht mill juat caw

304-875-195?.

Lawn

Mowing Strvlce Free
Eatimaltl CtH (740)2Y 1313

Lawn Mower And Small Englnt

(740)44&amp;-7604
Apply In

A SPECIAL OFFER Oual1ly for

count Start Today! HI 575
IQE(4183) EX1:703

ery Within 10 Mlltl 21 Vaara
E-•perlenee
Call Mlkt AI

PliO II

HOIII
Mall Ofdlr/E-cotiWUIIW buiNM
St SOO.S7.:ZOO month PTIFT
"'" lntormallon 1 800 1121 0874

1982 141(70 litiQI
FllrmoniZbiC!rOOm
__ _

-No---c.. ... hi 7.,...7pm CST 1 -

Repair F111 Pick up And Otllv•

(800) 755-4108

Pomlt'Oy,

J

---

Mothers &amp; others put your com
puttr to work earn 'S500 $5000
PT/FT tree Information 1 7410
342-GISO

)I~

l

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP!
WOrlt flom-·
dtriE-commtroe
1122.PT
S1000·S40001wk FT 8011-121·

1-11»1144-5595

Frldty 27th Saturday 21th 2
MIIU Olf Route 7 Bladen llotd
Nice Clolhos

Sdiool-

ao..m~~~ent Jolla S11 oo
133 oct par hour potantltl Paid
Training/Full ltnefltl For mora
Information calli Ill 874-ttSO
alii. 3234

II 000 WIEKLYI lltlllnt 400 3Cllll 7-Sprn

Dayton OH45401

{740)2!56-9302

•

~=::·

Wrllt MM lltad P 0 Boa 888

Giveaway

Adorable puppies I weeks old
Shepard mia Weaned fiflt ahota
and wormed
Pie.. e call

Calm

MIIOn11fA•r.

c/o Galllpollo Da•ly Tnbuna 825

Reward for anyone returning a
Jonsered 20S.tt chalnsaw alofen
from 43430 Pomeroy Pike r•o

40

- 000
-...
Oib
1500 00-te
OOimo.
PTIFT

Way

121&amp; 1299 Per Ulnute Serv U

For Any Debts Other

ttiATTEIITlON!ft
~- . . . . e.._ Eli~* .. "

POSTAL JOBS 10 11..-.r Hir·
lng to• 2001 paid ,....... Full

for ....

E-- ____
...-lOy-- -1- -----·
...
your_--wlllnol
..........
In_In,._
.............

AVON! Ali-Tolluy or Sell

!'11

320 Mobile H.-

Bullnell
Opportunity

210

110

Wades Con11ruct1on General
Llwn Maintenance Land&amp;caplng

(740)709-8488
Will Cora For Bedflll Eldtrly
Ftmalt In My Homo Dodrill I
(740)388-8113
Will Powtrwllh HOUNI Tr•llerl

And IIV I ConiiCI Ron AI
(740)441-0151 or 331 otso If
No Anlwtr LNYe • · •
Will Repa ir Automobllll La•n
Mowen

US NEED CASh
P~

{800) 490-0731 ... 101 www ..

~-

CASH LOANS UOOO $5000
Consolldallon to S200 000 Bact/
No Crad1t Credit Carda Mort
gag•• For Information , 800·
335-1612 Ill 3822

lullneaa

11 000 WEEKLY! Work at hornt
proce11lng automotive Plln·
phltlll No IXPirltnCII Wl.-ly
paychtckol Evtrythlng IUPPIIfdl
1 800-551 3175
INOliCII
OHIO VAL.EY PUBLISHING CO
recomm•nda lhat you do bull
ntu with people you Mnow, end
NOT to send monty throuah the
mall until you have lnlflslfgattcl
the offe•lng

A+ M&amp;M MAIISINESTLE Eotabllsht&lt;l Vandtng Routt Wlfl Nil Ill'
5/7/01 Under $9K minimum In·
vestment requlred E:xetltant ll'rof
II Pottn!lal Finance AYIIIIDII/
Good Crtdll Toll FrH """(HI)
211&gt;2111"'"

888 928-3426
16 Wide Only $195 00 Per
Month 8 99'- Fixed Interest Rate
With

Aw

And

Underpinning

1-888-92&amp;-3426
1981 14170 Admiration Trailer

For Stle Has Island In Middle Of
KUchar! WUh Slove Bull! In Con
tral Air &amp; Most Appliances Go
Must See! Very Low Price Call
Anytime Anti Ask For Tammy
(740)388-8914
1st Time Home Buyers Program
Special Financing Ava1labte

(304)755-5566

CONSOliDATE BILLS/LOANS
OAC From S250Q.$125000I 9%
average rate One hour approval
CaM F.C C S tolllrte 1 888 805-

3379

CREDIT PROBLEMS? C~LL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING. I 888-811.o902

Dlvorot $150
ltnkruprcy St95
AIIDPI!O&lt;l S22S
Not tfo.h.youratlf km
CALL f-8(1().303-1170
FREE lnlormtlonl

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom Only
S345 00 Per Month 8 99% Fixed

lnlllfe6111ale I 888-928 3426

"'" (304)5711-2642
97 Oak..ood 3 BR 2 Bath Only
asking payoff price please call

(740)2-997 Leave Messa{IO
Abandoned Doublewide Must
Stll (740)446-3093
AMAZING "'llle or No CreOII
nanclng (304}755-5885

ltnkruptcy rvaln TNIKY

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to S500 lnolanlly by phontl 1·
877 EAIILYPAY Lfet 750005, 111
ADIIANCE FREEl

NO FetiiStMCe Chlillltt
In NHd otFintncliiAstllttnct?
Plta11 Call Uo Toll Fr01 1 111
813-181124hr

Dtvorced "Must s.u• Large Fleet

wood Double W1do 5000 Equity
has boon forlelted TOLL FREE
I 888-585-0167

Factory Gool 32x60 $1 o 000 Ola
count only 11000 oo Down De
livery and sttup paid by Factory

1 fl00.69t a1n

Final Days Nationwide Inventory

RldUC11onl {304)731-3409

TUIINEO DOWN ON
IOCIAL UCUIIITV lllf?
NO FH
We Wlnl
, _Unlfll
_ 33411

Land Home Packaaaa All Craalt

Ht AI I 'dATE

Limited Or No Crtdtl? Qovern
mtnt Bank Flnanct Only At Oak
wood In Barboursville wv 304
7313409

Homee for

S.le

z

1m 3 -.om 81111 t4r?O
Mollllo Home On Aantad LOI on
Sandhill lid Doaa Not MOYid Ntw Carpet NtYir
Smoked In 818 larn •utldlng
Gota Both Pordln w.tt Malnlllnld lnolda and OUt. (304)8757388 Monday F1iday 8 30 to
5 00 (304)175 8844 Altt• 5 00

RilkS (740~2570

Lot model claaranco save up 10

$8 825 with any nome el'leck us

IO DOWN HO,..ESI GOV T &amp; out wort dtsllng Colo 1 Mobile
BANK FOAECLOSUI'IESI LOW HO- US 50 Eo11 Alhlnl Oh
011 NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CIIEDITI FOR LISTINGS! CALL Ntw 14 II wlao $499 ~own only
1-«l0-33H020a111.9811
$199 Ptr Mon Clll now I 800
891 8777
2 Story Bilek Approllmtltly :MOO
Square Feat 1 112 Acru Full Now 16 II wldo 1499 per mon
lasemenl IHutHul Vltw 01 Rlv only 1270 per mon call now 1
ir. Waa US 500 Atductd To 1101). 69 1-8777
IIG 500 By Appointment Only New 2001 Flattwood 3 br 2
(740)2Serel72
bath 111 up tn Tho Country Mo
2-1 ltdroam Hou" ,,. Stlt In bile Homo Park &lt;tidy tc movs In
Bidwell lncludOI 2 LOll 1895 down $1911111 por monlh
(740)441-0420
740-~ 2187
Approxlmaltly 5 Acrta With 2 Now :ZOOt Modols 0 :ZOOO Prieta
Bedroom Home Located AI 1027 Como Seen Hurry &amp; Bear Prtca
Gtoo Ad Patriot OH 130 000 Increase 0 Oakwood a,mpolls
Pliono !740!448 01115
I:!::-740..:.:...)446-309:'-:-:=3-:-:-::r--:-New doubla widl 3/ br 2 ba

April only Sl2 000 080 Ntw $988 00 down only '295 •o r
Hawen three bedroom• one and
"
""
112 bath• large hlmity room wllh man call now 1 80CHi91 8777
flrtplac, two car attached ga Nlee lraHtr a Jot ror sale uptown
rage 30• 882 1075 days 740
Middleport greal 1ocat1on 14~~:70
M-90011avtnlrtgt
740-992 2881

GOOD UIED APPLIANCII
W""'" dryers refrl.geralors

Orivt '""" U.7 10 1313 lo
11!011
&amp; _ , . , CaH 740 441
2511 EQual Houalng ~

Vine Slrttl Cau 7&lt;044&amp; 7391
1 -.t111'0128

-.oep

Chriaty'a F•mlly living , 331""
-Lima
lid ONo. 1407&lt;2 7403 Apartment homo end
trailllr rentals Cornmerelal store·
fronts available for teen 'VIean

--

Fot rant one bedroom rurnilhed
_,...lin M~ cafl740-

Sewage Trash 1350/Mo 740
«f..OOff

T1r1 Townhouse Apartmenta.
V•r'l Spacloue 2 Bedroom• 2

Stock Modal C~lr- all 2000
modtla muol go Naw hOme paymtnll aa low aa 1110 32 per
month end only 1750 00 down
Ctll7.0.315-4387

WOW Ntw Fltttwood DouDia
Wldt 28X60 4 811 Onlir 39.190 111
FIHiwOOCI Of ~roctONIIII
To! FrH 1 888-~1117

Upalllra Apartment 3 Room•

Farma for

S.le

FARM FOR SALE!! Wo Htvt
Moved And Are Selling Our
Farm 3 Bednlom Home Hu High
Collings Ook Tilm And A Ltrga
Kitchen Buildings Include A
Large Barn And Garoeo Ercel

Mobile Homo Lor Will Takt
121 14 1 11'1 Wldta $125/mo
StOO/dtp Natd Rtftrtncea
(740)448.0175

menl

Only

Call

Evenings

(740)380-0259

350

Lot•

a Acreage

BO Acres

Developed land In
Mason County Natural Spr1ng
Clly Water A Creel~ AI Tht Sol·

tom Asking $50 000 Already
Timbered (304)697 51127
Sites For Rent On Ka
nawha River 8 miles from Point
Pleasent electriC OJ1Iy (304)6751722 (304)675-4144 After 5pm

Camp

loakmg To Buy A New Homa1
Don 1 Have Land? We Do Ill Huny
On~ 10 LOIS Left 304-736-7295

RENTALS

Floor Modal TV 150 Couch
160 Enlt•llloment Cenlor 150
Kirchen Table I Chalra It 00
W-/ Dryer S250 5 HP Tllltr
S125 Puoh Lawn Mower 1100
(740)311-0850 (740)317-7272

Galllpollo Deposit Required Six
Monlhl Ltlll Ullllllll Not In
CIUdtCI EJCtpt Warar Call Debblt
or Judy AI (740)448-7323 (LI
brlry) To Stt Up An Appotnlmlnl

Opllon I Houst Barn Bulldlngo
With 88 Acres For S129 900
Opt/on Z Includes Everything
And A Toral Of tao Acroa Prlcod
At $189 900 Shown By Af)f&gt;Oinl

pa!AJt.com 1-11»844-1427

3 Room Upalllra Apt • One Bid

480

In Opt1on 1 plus Paatura Pond

EZPETRX COM Stvt up to 110%
on ALL Ptl mldlcallono and plloa Including Htarteord lntor
ctplor Fronlllnt m6rtlll FIIEE
SHIPPING Order onlnt www Et

room At &amp;51 Second Avenue

490

Spece for Rent

Houaes for Rent

Almond Whirlpool a GE waah
ora $80 Each While May!ag
Waah01 S65 3 Drya11 $60

(740)441-4120

Appllancts
Reconditioned
Waahers Dryers Ranges Refrl
gratora Up To 90 Days Guar
antoedl We Sell New Maylag Ap

2 Bedroom House Plus Oeposll

74Q.448.1195

2 Bedroom House For Renl In
B dwell
Includes 2 Lots

~eferences

pllancts French Clty Maytag
No Pets

PMne

(740)446-0615 (740)44&amp;-9249

DCM Tlmewlndow3 Front and
Tlmepteee Rear Home Thaater

2 BR Log House AIC No Pets

Speakera Coli $1900 SaciHice
for $800 Unbelievable Sound
(740)446-4860 after Sprn

Ava1!abta June 1st 1350/mo De
pos1t Reference (7,.Q)446-7732
between 4pm and l1pm

3 Bedroom Water &amp; Trash Patd
Stove Refrigerator CIA $425

Plus OepoSII No Psis (740)31188371
For rent or sate large 4 bedroom
2 bath 2 ear garage $600/mo

$500 dtpoSII 740 446 6383 304
127 3318
Golden Glrla Opportunity
Christian Woman 44 Would L1ke
To Share Large House On Rae
coon Creek Wllh 2 Other Mature
Chrl&amp;lian Females Private Bed
rooms 2 Bath large Kitchen
Ommg
large llvlngroom
Screened Deck Covered Patlol
Shelter By Water $225/mo Plus
113 Utilities If You Love Natura
Have Steady Monthly Income
&amp; GOOd Rolarenoss -Call
Linda Sanders
Work 1
601l-669-6119 Ext 3214 Monday Fildey
P1lot Program Renlers Needed

3047387295

420

Mobile Home•
for Rent

12x60 2 Bedroom All Electric

For Sale Reconditioned wash·
ers dryers and rtlrlgaratora
Thompsons Appliance 3407

Jackson Avenue {304)675 7388
Main Slreel FumHura
{304)875-1422
515 Main Street Point Pleasant
Now &amp; Uaed Fumfture
New 2 Piece Livlngroom Suites
$399 Buy StU Ttadt
Used

Window
Unit
Air
Conditioner&amp; 90 Day Guarantee

(740)888-7531 (740)88&amp;-®47

Whirlpool Washor While $95
Whlrlpool Dryer While $95
Electric Range 30" Avocado
$150 Small Chesl Freezer $150
Refrigerator Frost Free $150
Aefrtgerator Frost Free Almond

$195 Skagga Appliances 78
VIne Slrtsl (740)448-7398

530

Antlquee

Anllque Canopy Bed Co'flplele &amp;
In Good Condition $350 &amp;
Antique Solid Walnut Bed $100
OBO
{M4)695 3364
Or
(304)695-3441
Buy or nil Riverine Antique•

Acron New Haven Grade
School $300/ mo (304)682 2219
(304)8822119

11:14 Easl Main on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2528 or 740 992
1539 Ruoo Moore owner

2 bedroom mobile home or 800
sq II oltice space Rlverpaill Ml·
nersvllle $300/mo each reduced
rent for handy person who can
mow the gran in the park 614

1540

876-1881

440

Apartment•
for Rent

1 anct 2 bidroom apa~mtn!l turnlohed and unlurnlohtd oacu~ljl
deposi• required

812 2218

no pttl 740

1 Bedroom Apartment AtfriQira
tor Rang• A/C Included, 1111
PIUI Daposll &amp; Rtftrtnet HUD
Approvad. {140)441-1511
Furnlahad 2 a 3 Room Apart•
menll Clfln No Pail No ~·
lng lltftrtn~at a Dtpoall lla•
qulrtd Ulllllltl Furnlahad
(740)446-1511
Grtcloua living 1 anct 2 bedroom
aplrlmenll at VIIIIGI Meno1 and
Riverlldt ~p1rtmtnt1 In Middle

port From S278 $341 Call 740·
112 5084 Equal Houotno Oppo'
tunltlfl
I Bedroom In Country SloYO ~~
lr.lgaralor Watar/ Tralh No Pall
Sl!78 Plua OtPOIII (740))118371
1 bedroom SIOO por month 2
bedroom 1280 plua dtPOIII a
u!lllllta 3rd Street Aactno Oh
740.247-42112
2 Btdroom Furnltl'ltd Ulllltlta

lncludod $400/mo Llmll 01 2
Ptopll (740)387..()(11 1
2 B~ Aplrtment In Centenar~
Appllano11 Furnlthtd Utllltlet
Paid Sxoopl !ltotriO C~an S2151

mo Call(740)atll-1131

4 room Oownetllrt Water palll-

No Palo G1 Cldtr 81 (740)3811100

Apertmant for flttnt In Downtown
Gaillpollo Pie'"• Call (740)1167174

Mtnufacturtr oilers 1 two weak
supply of colostomy or uroalomy
brand namt prod~o~cta wltl'l one
llmf&gt;lt phone call No obllgauona

CIIB00-7155-7880

Gateway Ptrlormance Pant 3
Delk Top Compultr Printer,
Scanner &amp; VIdeo Carntfll Priced

To Still (304)875-2817

Mlacellanaoua
Mllrchandlae

SO DOWN HOMES
No Crtdll OK! HUD VA.
FHA Call for llo!lngt
1 801&gt;5011717 Ext 8818
St,OOO BACK 2 Ton Air Condl
tloner 2 Ton Coil 1 Lint Set In
atalltd $2 295 St 000 Back
S1295 Nat Prlct Frn EaHmales
Call Fot Quo1tl Oh Other Slzeo
II You Oqn 1 Call Ut We
Both Loaol MobWe HG'nta Our
Speciality I 740 441 8308 I 600
291 .()098
18 HP Yordman f!ldloa Lawn
Mower LOOkl Gqod Auno Good
S850 (740)388-1:121i
1995 A! Aulomallc Frick Stwmlll
Compurorlztd HMC Dtborkar I
Mort&gt;ork Chip Pack wlll Stparatt
CtMafllr 7 OOpm (740)441--8783
ASTHMA ALLIIIGY NUDIO,
10•16 PIOPLI Who Oulrt
lmmldlalt Atilt! To TrJ EYIIUIII
A NEW Compact Stall Of Tho
Art Home Or Bu11na11 Air
Pu~f!callon Syolam No Cost Or
ODIIgl!lon Fret 3 Day Trial Mal
IIOU {304)575 3379
.t.TTINTION Prom Droll 'Moil
Lto" Color AublrQina (Light
BrF\OktY Lsvindar) l'ald $145
Worn Onct Slzl 111/20 Sill For
1100 Shoat olzt II t/2 Soma
Color S20 (140}418-7553
Allenll9n Anonllonll Stanley
Homo Producll And fuller !ruoh
Avallabil To Order Product• Or

Raquatl Calalogo PltaiO Call
(304)875 8903 Aoytimt
AUTOS PAOli 1100 00
Police tmf)OUIId• a Aepoot
TOI'Qilll Ch8Yyo. Jetpal
Plflu Call lor •1111ngt
1 800-451.0500 Ext C9B17
Baby ltd Cor Stat HIGh Chair
Thai Vou can Makl Into Table &amp;
Chair (304)675 2801

P~

2 Malta. Shott &amp;

AKC Black Ltb Ftmtlt 8
Months Champion Btoodllnu
LOYII Chlk!rtn 1125 (7.00)2588114
AKC Aaglaterad Uele CfllneH
Pug Puppr Shota. Wormed
Toklng Dapotill To Hold 1425 00
Aocapt , _ , . . (740)388--t325

PtkiPOO Tiny Milt 7 Wttkl
thOII and worMtd 11 SO
{140)Z51-t814

570

Muelcal

IMtrulllll'ltl
Drums Tama Rock Start wlllld·
)tan cymbala too 111uch to 1111
,, ooo oao 740-9!129013
NOBODY S FATHEfl CO by Kt·
vlo Jon11 MlrJ chtpln Carptn·
tor &amp; Ace Smith gUilt On !IX•
IOICOI!Iedllni\IIIH-.IIC

FAH h.1 (,(Jf'l'llf )
&amp; l !VI ',((!( 1\

810

GET SEXY FOR SUMMER! LOll
3·5 IDI -kly Ouarlnltld Only
S11951 COOS Crtdll Cardo
PhoiiiCI1eckl 1-800-:!Sfl 0989
QMC Fiberglass Bed Cover 88

98 Full Size Short Wheal Ball
S200 Twin Bouprlnga $25
LOVIIIII $200 {740)388-8267
afllr300pm
Grubbs Plano- Tuning &amp; Repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The
Plano Dr 740-4&lt;16-4525

Farm Equipment

1987 John Duro 110 Ltwn
Trtctor Willi ~ &amp; Front Bladt
Excollant Condition 11000
(304)885-3314 Or (304~3441

(740)441-1982

Heavy Duty eolnch Finishing
Mower Pull Behind ,. Wheeler
14HP Electric Mower Electric

JET

740-992-6581

Llvntock

18 year old Quarter nor11 with
bridle and aaddle
1500

(740)441-11513

LIKE TO GAMBLE?
Cesara online gaming easlno and
sportsbOOI&lt;
www ceasaraonlinegamlng com
Stfo oSecura oReI I -

FAIR PIGS FOil SALE BO"N
IN GA~LIA COUNTY (740)f410988 OR (740)44e-4311
4 H And FFA Club Pigs Hemp
York &amp; Ouroc Croas ~140)3889033

Huge lnvenlorv Discount Prk:as
On VInyl Skirting Ooora Wind
ows Anchors Wat•r Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts Fur·
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

CLUB GOATS Boor Meal Goats
Born Th1s Year Great Fair

Mobile Home Supply 740 446
94, 6 www orvb.comlbennett

Feeder fair Pigs 30 70 Pounds

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams Pipe Rebar For Concrete
Angle Channel Flat Bar Stool

Goats 1/2 Sotr Doll a Bucko
8 12 Weeks Old $125 Each
(740)258-1724

Gratmg For Dra1ns Orlvey,ays &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metals
(74Q}44&amp;-r300

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS Almost everyone approved
witt! so downl Low monthly pay
menlo! HIOI&gt;817·3478 ell 330
Nice

Used

Furniture

C811

Anytime (740)446-1004 Or
(740)44H275
Gas Powered
$1200 (740)446-li579

OTIS Forktltt

due to flootlmg In
Mldweat factory has (2) arch style
steel bldgs for Immediate sale
(1} 40x60 (still crated) call Jess
0801l-581 5843

Repo Bldgs

AESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI Efficiency 90o/. Gal
Furnaces Oil Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Frea 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

neH
Rough tut Lumber and Mulch
Bulk loads Call atter 7 OOpm

(740)446-6783
Royal Oak Membership wllh
Coast to Coast and children s

nghls $1000 937 38&amp;-2110

Projects Pwe Bred And Percent

aga (740)245-04815 Anor &amp;pm
$50 (304)576-2579

Hoppes &amp; Lucas Sale 12 Frldly
April 27 7 30pm Sharp FayeHe
County Falrgroundo YESI YESI
YES I There WJII Bt 40 Heed Big
Enough For Gallla County Fair
Including Litter Matti To The
S1 ooo Gulli And $500 Guilt
Check Our Updated Weboltl
wwwwchocom
Horses tor Sala 1 Morgan 4

Miniatures

(740)~783

HORSESHOEING
Certified
Farrier Frad Queen (740)2581330
I
Polled Hereford Bulls 18 Months

Old
Good
Sloodllnoa
(740)44&amp;-2684 Ewnlngo

640

Hay

r. Grein

Someone with machinery to har
vast hay on shares SQuare Balli
ol Hay For Self (740)379-2839

Hay &amp; Brlghl Wlra Tit St1aw Ylar
Round Delivery a Volume Dis
counl Available Heritage Farm
(304)675-5724

FREE lnformallon 1 800 578

TRAN S P Of1T Al !GrJ
DIS~BILITY

CONSULTATION Benelll Team

836-4052
Steel Bu ildings New Muat Sell

40xeoat2 was $17 500 now
StO 1171 50xt00x18 was $31 500
now S19 990 70x150x16 waa
159990 now $42 990 80x200x 16
was 194 500 now 559 990 1 800

408 8128 1 800 406 5126

11le
Dilly
Sentinel
Jloi.IRIJIIfl

Stanley \ViftHe, starter and
p1eked up rhe WID
Meags.
Knapp got the saw The two
combmed to gave up I 0 hits,
strake out stx, walk seven and
hat a batter
Stew:art had a double and
sangle to lead Metgs Knapp,
Davas and Snuth each added a
paar of smgles Bullmgton
added hts grand slam and

Jor

Dodson, Stanley, DettWIUer
each added smgles
Snuth went the route and
was ugged with the loss He
gave up 14 htts, stuck out SIX,
w:llked mne and hat a batter
Snuth had three smgles to
lead Belpre Wolfe added two
and Polmg a double
Metgs (8-9, TVC 6-7) will
travel to Vtnton County today
for a make-up game before
r:eturmng home on Fnday to
play the Vtkmgs

Public: Notices ID Newspapen.
Your Right to Know, DeUvered Right to Your Door.

PROIIATICOURTOF Dltormlnotlon

AutOI for Sale
OWN
CARS I POLICE IM
$0 D
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEE~ S •ow A8 1211/
MO 24 MO S 01119% FOil
LISTINGS CALL 1 800·451 0050
oll C 9812

710

89 Lincoln Continental exctlllnl

condlllon 112 000 mlloa 12000
fltm 741&gt;742 2814

ol Proclduro, luclgment

s.

Wobb,

et 11.,

111101 COUNTY, OHIO Hlll'll" In tho Prob8tl by detoull will be Delendenta, upon •
UTATI OF
IARL I'ILION
LOCKaTr,DICIAIID
CAIEN0.30877
CHAJIL.Ia H. KNIGHT,
ADIIIMI8TRA'I'OR OF
THE EITATI 01'

of llotge t'llndered ogolnllt you =•m•nt therein
COUnty, Ohio, Cttl and tor tho relief
rod, being cNo 30877elleglngthlll demanded In tho No OD-CV·1H In ttld

Court

the docatted dltd
lnteltlttt of the 11th
city of Ootober 1111,
ttiHd of cortaln
I!AM.PILION
peroonol PI'OPartyancl
LOCKETT,DICI!A81!D thlllanumblrolhell'll
PLAINTII'I',
w.. Mmecllhtflln at
vs
tho only hllrti111W 01
11ARQAR1T
tho d-Ad entitled
LOCKaTr, IT AL
to ahara In the
DI!FI!NDANT8
dletrtbutlon of hit

NOT1CI tJY
PUBUCATION
To:
Morgortt
Loclcttl, "-r unknown
htlrt, deviHtl and
lagoten, - adelrooe
u'*-, IIIII Gao...
Lockltt, hie lll'lknotllf"
htll'll, devtee.. and
ltpfttt, tddrou
wtlurown.
10 tho tboltt nomad
Jltrtona,
their
unknown holre it low,
111111 or kin, dllvl-,
........ oncl ottlgna
btllend
to
ba
dtoltttd htlra of
EAIIL
I' 1L 8 oN
LOCKI!TT, decaoatd,
whota plaoat of
r 0 al d 1 nco
o r1
unknown, pltoH lltkl
notlol thot on the
11th, day of April,
2001, CHAIILEI H.
KNIGHT,
t he
Admlnlatrltor of the
Ellatt of EARL
fiLION LOCKETT,
daOIIItd flied hll
•complaint
for

9~

The prayer of the
petition Ia thlt the
court dltermlna who
.,. tho hoiNitlow of
llld dtUdtnt MIHIIod
by lliw In liU .,.._ to
lnhlltt lrCim hll etll1a,
end fOr ouoh other
ordtl'll tnd 1'111111 11
tho Court moy find
proper In lito HIM.
You aro required to
• - lito ComPlaint
within twanty·alghl
(211 doye lifter lito loll
publlctllon of thlt
Notlco, which wiH be
publlahld once each
wttk tor three (31
IUCCIIIIVI Wllkt.
Tho Ia at publlclltlon
will bt mode on the
city 01 , :10111, and tho
twenty•lght 1211 dayo
for a newer will
commence on that
dote In tho c••• of
your ltrtluN to anewor
or OlhtrwiH raapond
11 roquotted by tho
Ohio Aulee of Civil

Autoi tor S.le

Buick Rogal Custom Loadt&lt;l

New Slrutl Brekea Very Clean

Excellonl ConditiOn $5000 OBO
(740)44HI5:M
CAR$ 129/MONTHI POLICE IM
POUN~S &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY 24 MO S 01911% FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1 800 941
8117 EKT C 9814
CAliS FROM $500 • Pollco lm
poundo &amp;lax lllzuru Hondel
Cl\fvyl Fordo &amp; mort For 1111·
inga Call Now I 1 BOO 71G 3001
tll1 ACtO
Hondo a From $5001 Pollca
lmpoundl Cau Now For List
1 1101&gt;31..3323 Ext A411

720

Complaint.
Your
anawer ehould be
directed to tho llalga
County Court of
Common
Pleu,
Probete Olvlelon,
Court and Second
8trMt, Pomeroy, Ohio

4170.

CHARLES H. KNIGHT,
AdmlnllltrltorOIIIto
Eatltl 01
EAIILFILSON

ee111a.

93 Ford Tempo Auto And Power
Ev11ythlng S2700 OBO Call
(740)446-4479

•eave Message (304)895 3740
01 (304)895 3789

Servlcea Inc Toll free 1 888

.....

650 Seed r. Fertlllzar

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Orivt Buffalo NY 1422!5

SOCIA• SECURITY

...
..... Pick

WID

but Meags answered that
With a paar m the top of the
seventh to uke a 13-7 lead
Darrick Knapp reached on a
error and DaVIs 11ngled Skip
Dodson smgled, a walk and a
hit batter plat~d the runs
Belpre scored a pan m the
bottom of the seventh and
had runners on second and

71 0

Tobacco Plants Ordtr Now To
Guarantee Early Spring Plantlrtgl
lnerease Allotments Mean Extra
Plants Thank You For Your BUll
ness Call Danny Dewhursl

Claim Denied? We Specialize In
Appeals and Hearing• FREE

~~~~~~~­

fnlmPIIp81

Tobacco Plugs For Sale TNIO &amp;
NC3 Locally G1own (740)2455193

Sawmill $3 895 New Super Lum
bermale 2000 larger capacities
more options Manufacturer of
sawmills edgers and skldders

1383 EX1:200 U

'="
..

Meigs

day.

Start Kohler Engine (740)2588574

830
Large dining table 88" without
leaf 80' with leal six chalra 1125

.......

thard But Knapp patching m
r:ebef ofSunley struck out the
last batter to g~ve Me•gs the

Hubbard and a lingle by
DaDy HiD
I'.Wl~r banged out leW'n
hits led by Demus Kdler Wltb
two singles', Matt Surner two
smgles, Nelson a double,
Daugherty a single, and Gl.us
a single.
Crouch was the wmrung
pttcher wtth Hill prung the
save SHS pttching fanned
rune and walked S1X Sprner
and Nelson fanned stx and
wallced SIX
Southern IS tdle today and
goes to Federal Hocking l'n-

Culll· Gator Harrow 12ft $900
JD Whetl Dllk 10111800 NH
479 Hayblne 911 13500 Kallon
Silage Wagon wf Avco Nl Gear
$\:ZOO (304)571-9009
Dual Axle trailer Good Condition
(740)448-2684 Evtnlngs

AERATION MOTORS
Aef)lurtd New &amp; Robultt In S Cali Ron Evana 1 1101).537 9528

J

.

ana

3 Point Hitch Disc 6 ft Erooltnt
COndition (304)675-3m

lndtpandtnt Hort&gt;allle Distributor

Call For PrOduct Or Opportunll)i

MOBilE "OME OWNERS

Etch {740}44&amp;-BilU

410

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Forleaae

Beautilul1800 Sq Feel Realonid
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
District Ideal Por Proftulonll
Couple All Modern Amenllles 3
Btctrooms Spacious Uvlng 1·112
Baths Rear Deck HVAC 1800/
mo Plus Utilities Security And
Kay Deposit No Pets Relerencea
Aequlrad (740)448-4425 or
(740)446-3938

_ , T....

.._.. S250 (140)446-0485

160 Old SinGtr Sowing MtcCaatl S25 Etch Air Condltionor
17ll (304)815-4352

Fumilhed Utilillll Paid S280 Par
Month Pluo Otpotl! (740).481340

Ifni Loctlionl

AKC

,. Famal11

the

g
1

&lt;!af

one out :and two rvnnen
on
Crouch showed much po15e
much like sophomore counterpart Allen, who
has
enjoyed a successful seuon
Crouch got two ground outs
to get out of the mrung
Crouch then got the first
two out an the seventh, but
walked Stoltz and B
Humphrey. He ran the count
to 3-0 on Skillman when

3388

$20 Bookcaae $15 Plpevlst

~trtBR

HUD IIAIIIdlaclep~ tr eldtrly
lhd- EOH (304)1751171

Peta tor Sale

WHkl 4-112 Monlhl (7.00)44&amp;-

Desk $150 Couch 150 GIUI
Cofloe Table $25 End Teblu

1'Nin RIYtt'I'OWtrl now tcctOifng

Subdlvlalon Canctltd Now
Modtla Dlracl From FectorJ
Onir 2 Lift catl (140)141 3083

330

lion &lt;Om

- · CA 1 112 llalll Fully Cor
paled Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start S3151Mo No Ptll
liiH PIUI Stcurlty Deppllt A•
qulrtd Oaya 740•441•3481
Evanlngo 740·317·05D2 740
448-0101

wo-

2~1tTgyPoodiH
·3 Yttro 2 Malt Toy Poodles
II

Qll• of p~ttence

plug on
Brice Hill
came on m relief and wallced
SlcillnUn (In one p.uch, but
saved the
JNMn bard-hitbng Randy Nelwn" came to
the pla[F
1-iill got the ground bill and
third b:uenun RusseU Krtder
snagged 1t about 12 feet off
the bag, and barely beat
Humphrey running to third
for the force and the SHS VICtory
Southern
hatters
were
Brandon Pu:rce a double and
smgle, bunt Singles by Hill

5121

,560

V.

iRii ' J!.ll~d

C..u~fi,

-Rio Granda
lie
OHClaUde
Call 710 tq,

Compult&lt;l WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even wllh ltsa
ltlan perfect credit! 1 lOCI •11
9011 Codt AC 17 www omcsolu

Now Taking Appncallona- 35

Pr1vate Propertr And New Oou•
bltwldt Ona PaymanL (304)73f7295

=

- brld&lt;._...__

Compoattr &amp; Club Cadtl wiU'\
plow mowtt &amp; eulttvator Virgil I
lltiry Parch. 740-992 7449

W11t 2 Bedroom Townhoute
Apartmen1t lnctudtl Water

and-

Slnglt Parant Proorom Spacltl
Financing Available, (30•l1S5
11111

ranges Skaggs Appliancll 71

~5231

At.. ltnd Place Now Acctptlng
Appllcotlono lor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subaldod Apartment tor Elderly
and Dloabltd EOH (304)882·
3121 Or (304)1U-3274

87 2 Bedroom Oakwood Very
Nice On Rented Lot In lesage

Needed Special Government Fl

and Farm Trac1ora

Opportunity

'

Annu~

es • N1t1ona1 Contract Buyers

310

- - - ... J 315

Sold! Mongegeol

heal Settlaments! Immediate
&lt;luoltslll "Nol&gt;ody beaia our pric-

Lowell Rt!tl In Town Ctrtltltd
Mechanic Call (740)«H)1H
11-llpm

210

WE pay

1

14x.7Q SO!Jthern Dream lree De
ltvery free Setup only $9995 1

pump I ale $1-SOO. 740 5111
4043 or 740 ttr1 0901

IIMTI'UL APAIITIIINTI AT
,11~18 AT JACII·
8011 EITATiil. 52 Wtotwood

...

\XI"rckliQ!! •

Truckl for Sale

1962 Chivy 4 door Utility IIUCk
'92 Muotang GT 5 ap11a 5 0 V (74o)448-8713
1 loaded mony 0111r11 80if ml~l t•:.:.;;:.;.;:.~-::--:-:-7:-::-:­
S8500 740.1112 4017
1g113 S 10 Exttndtd Cab Load
.:.::.:.:..:.-:--:--:--::-1od LOW Mllll FlbtrglaU Topper
'95 C.volltr 4 cyllndat automallc And VIsor Eactlltnl Condlllon
,.,.. uoor S2800 740-742 2387
(740)317-7512
1988 4·Door Buick Skyhtwk, 19115- Oodgl Ram 011111
11000 080 {304)675 2127 (740)441--8713
Arlyllmt
19111 Ford F 150 XLT Loaata
1989 Mazda 323 Exeatlent Ceo· 8G 000 Mllu Aaklng U 4115
dillon (740)418-7125
\3!14)713-87:"
Unllmltad Nationwide Long Ols
1994 Chovy Camero Vol I bOOr tit• Dtkolt Sport Truck 4WD
lanctl Only 169 oo par month 1
81K T Topa, Full LO&amp;dtd V·l !500 mllu rebulll IIIIa
1101).5e2.Q097 ext 1031
Excatltnl Conditio~ S1,090 113 000 (740)37HQol7
{304)875-2881
Used Whetlchalr Good Con
88 Ford Pickup No Rust
dillon $175 oo (740)441-2205 or
1995 Berl111 $3695 1HI Luhll (740)3'19-2188
(740)44&amp;-9585 Aok For VIrginia
ns $4895 19118 Silverado Ex·
tended Cab 4x• The Boat 12 Cnovy Sllvarado, Short It~
Uald "Tickle Me Elmo• Excollonl $13 900 11G5 8·10 1•215 toadld seeoo Daya (740)24&amp;Condition Make Ollerl (740)£46- 1998 Ranger 13715 11181 And 5080
Evtnlngl (740)812-7512
2205 or (740)446-9585 Ask For lWO 1993 CSVIIilrl COO~
VIrginia
uoto"8(740)448-0to3
12 Ford F·150 Exrtndod Cob
1 11 ooo Mlltl Good Condition
Wate•llnt Special 314 200 PSI
1999 Ford Erptdltlon Loadaa S7100 (740)311 19111 Ewnlnga
$21 95 Ptr 100 1' 200 PSI
Eactlltnl Condition (740)441l37 00 Ptr 100 All Bross Com
8713
G4 Ford XLT PU 4x4 P~mt Sill
prtlllon Flnlngo In Stock
Tow Packaal Ntw T~•• BaHt,Y
liON EVANS EN1EAPRISES 18 Olds Cull au Cltrra , Good Shocko 78.000 Mllu 110 280
Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9~6
Condition (304)875 3248 or (304)875 4721 or(304)875-4248
(304)675-8283
We Need Your Dirt Rocks .-nd
98 F 1110 Bilek &amp;pon Look 5 Cy
Boulders Dump Free Call
ee Crown VIctoria Good Cor~ IInder 5 Speed Sh1rp Truck
{740)441-Q626
Gillon Runs Good Coli (740)379- Peyoll SIO 400 (740)446-35-45
2198
730 V1n1 4·WDI
91 Plymouth Ro llanl 12000 11
CLEAN HOUSE
Grand Am S1900 Both Have
H1gh Milts 92 Geo Metro 5 92 Ch•y conver11on can v a
WITH THE
Burgundy
Low
MIIOigt
Speed $700 Firm (304)897
(740)4~4 Call Afttrllpm
5927
CI.ASSIFIIEDSi

STEEL BUILDINGS New Pre en
glnttred w/plans 30x!0•1 0 was
$12 500 now S8 990 50x80a14
waa 127 450 now $18 990
eoxt50x14 was 152 750 now
S34 990 80K200xt8 waa $81450
- 159 990 1 IIOI)o248 9840
STEH BUILDINGS Uraonlll
Muat Movoll 25a30 3Qa40
451180 Liquidation Pricing on In
llock Slztl 1 800.462 7930 X 48

r.
1-----------

730

Vans

LOCKE1T, Dtclltaad
Chrlltophor E
Ttnotll!t, (005112801

' AltllmW farfllllnlllr

Court, tho SheriH of
llelp County, Ohio,
will oHer tor aale at
the front door of tha
Courthoull
In
Pomeroy,
llalgt
County, Ohio, on the
21th day at May,
2001, et 10 3D 1m,
the following ltnda
and
tenements,
located et 45841
Pomeroy
Pika,
Racine, OH 45771 A
complete
legel
deacrlptlon of the
reel eofeta lt1 ••

Clerk of Courtll
The following reel
(4) at, (S) 3, 10
otto to In Choeter
Townehlp, Melge
Public Notloe
c-ty, Ohio end In
Sactlon No 30, Town
IN Tlfl! COMMON
3, Ilona• 12 etld
PLEAS COI,IRT OF
deecrl- utolloMEIGS COUNTY,
Beginning In the
OHIO
canter of County
Roed latdlng from
CASE NO
Cheater to Rack
1158
Springe at • point
where ae!d center
NOTICE OF SALE
line lnteretcle the
Eaal line of Section
By virtue of an No 30, thence South
Order of Sola laeued 173 fHI, thenca Weal
out of tho Common 15D feet, thence
PIHI Court of llelge North 5G fell to the
County, Ohio, In the center of aald road,
0111 of tho Home thence Northoaater!y
Nttlonol
B111k, contelnlng one·half
Plaintiff, ve Cerolyn en aero, more or leta
8 Curtis flee Cerolyn
Being • part of the

r. 4·WDI

740

brakes $8000 080 (3Q4)875
4383

1989 Chevy Allro Va~ Wo•k
van Stanctara 12500 6 Cyllnaer
(140)446-1837 Or (740)4483437
1989 Suburu Wagon All Time
4x4 Auna Good (304)875 4458

1992 Plymourh Voyaget •oaded
Exclllent Condition $2800 Firm
(740)245-.1941 After 111m
1995 Ford Ranaer XLT 4a4 lo/C
CD Playa• Standard Shill Excel

Motorcycles

1979 Harley Davidson lowr~der
nice
2300 M1les $9000

{304)882 2099
1995 Harley Davidson FLHTCU
Wllh Extras $15 000 Film Call
(740)441-1018
Clean 1983 Yamaha VIrago Mo
torcycle 500 cc Low Miles Shatl
Driven Runs Great! 2 Helmets 2
Windsh ields Included Must Sell!

$1300 (740)446-4542

r.

750

Nooor- (304)875 7974
1995 Ford Wlndsrar GL Van
Teal Slut 39 000 mllea Loaded
EKCtllent ConditiOn Garage Ktpt
v 1 Front Wheal Drlvt 11500
(740)992-8150

good
7664

lent Condition 79 000 MMe11 Price

Truck

4x4

2000 Chevy Tracker 4WD Rod
Auto A/C 4 Door 4 Cyl Fo•
PayoH or Takeover Paymenls
(740)448-4479
2000 Ford F 150 4K4 4 0001
SuPtr Cab 8 4 V8 PDL PW Till
Flemott Starter

10 000 Mll11 Exotlltnt Conaffion
(740)448-8217 Cays Bafort 2pm
Ort.teveMu&amp;e Toyota Pick up 4x4 G11a1
Condlllon Now Tlroo CD Player
$3200 080 (740)311-lle83

II PlymoUih Voyogtr g1111 con
dillon U ooo 080 740 11112
0514

740

Motorcycle•

125 Yahama Bruzt S1 500
(740)448-1783
1991 )ionda Foreman 84!0 o4x4

380 Mllao Hardly U01d Hardly
UHd S4800 (740)258-1329
2000 400EX Totally Deckad OUI
Few Houra Powder Coat Frame
Hoostr A Arms Works Shoeka
Sterlng Stem Bare Lonstar .&amp;.xle
Anti ftde Bead Locka Durable

Hubo Etc
(740)367..0883

Asking $6800

99 XR70 Honda E•eellent Sh,gpe

$800 (740}446-3545

VI lUI

TEAMS OF SALE.
10% down day of
balance on
delivery of deed
Sold eubject to
e110ond half 2000 end
eceruod 2001 real
ellllltllxtl

••1•,

Doug!.. w Lltlla,
Attorney lor Pftlntlff
(4)28, 2001
(5) 3, 10, 2001

Classifieds ~
~992-21561

\Wj

790

r.

Campers
Motor Homes

t995 Allegro 31 Foot Class A
Motorhome Low Miles Loaded

(740)44&amp;-1352
35 It Coachman Gooseneck
Camper Excellent Gondlllon

$7500 (740)448-6763
Palamlno Pop up Camper Sleeps
6 Furnace Refrigerator Air Con

Gllloner Asking $2900 (740)3888029

Boats
Motora
for Sale

18 Foot Deep Y Aluminum Boat
4 Trailer 1998 15 HP Motor With
About 20 Hours On It Electric

CD

Auditor'• Parcel
No 03-0130!1 000
The
above
dncrt- reel aattta
It told "11 II"
wllhout wanentlae or
cov-nll
PIIOPERTY
ADOAESS
45841
Pomeroy
Pike,
lllclne,OHoj8771
IlEAL !!STAT!
APIIIIAISED All
$15,000 00 The rul
e11111 ctnnot bl 101&lt;1
for Ieee than two·
thlrde the tppreleed

ao cv

1981 Jeep CJ7 304 4 apoed all

Crulsl

Racorda

' Jlidllli II. 1 ' - lollowll:

rlberglass new palnl tires &amp;

1998 Jeep
(304)8112 3173

r01t conveyed
by B. K. Smith by
deed recordtd In
Dead Book 124, Page
113 o1 the llalge
County Dead
llacorda.
llalaronce Deed·
Volume 37, Peg• 5113,
llllga County Offlcltl

Moloi Goss With II (304)875
2245

SERVICES

8t0

Home
Improvements

Mercrulur
$3500 740 992

18 Rinker 140 hp

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond itional lifetime guarantee
1985 Procraft 17 112 FOOl BaSI Local references rurnianed EJ
Boot Wllh 1988 Johnaon 150HP lai&gt;IShed 1975 Coli 24 Hrt 17•0)
Good
Condition
$3 800 448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Rog
ers Watarproollng
(740)258-1321
~ond!Uon

1995 19 Foal Onker Call For
Molt Dttalla (304)675 1298 or All types of masonry brick block
&amp; stone Free e1t1malea 304
(304)575 5770
773 9550
1997 Four Wlnaa Horizon RS 19
CIC General Home Main
Fool (304)895 3929
tenenca Painting vinyl &amp;ld!ng
carpentf'y doOrs window• baths
780 Auto Parts
mot)lle nome repair and mort For
Acceasorlas
free 1111mate call Cnet 740 9i2
• 38l14 50 Rl5
Radial 6323
Groundhog Mounted On 15x1 0
Dodson Bulld8ra
Alumlmun Wheels !00 Mlln On
Tlrtl $850 (740)643 2771 Your complate home remodeling
repair &amp; maintenance contractor
(740)534 2589

r.

Painting

vinyl aid ing decks

4·285/H R18 Gooayoa• A/S on
1991 Dodge Ram 1500 •lumlnum
Stoci Wheels $400 (740)6432771 {740)534-2589

blthl klt eh tna tlectrlcal plumb
lng many otl'ttr service• to sun
your nttdl No JOb to big or small

ludgtt Prlctd Tfanamlnlans
All Typts Accua To Over
10 000 Transmlaslon• Tra,sfer
Costa 740 245 5677 Cell 339
3785

1384

Pick up Toppe r Fiberglass &amp;
Truck Tool Chasl
$650

(304)875-4721 or {304)675-4249

7110

30 years e11ptrlenct Free tltl

matu 740 698 6783 740 591
livingston s Basement Water
Proofing all b11ement repalrt
done free estlml~el lifetime
guaranlte 1.Cyrs on job expert

enca 130• )895-3887

840

a

Campara
Motor Homes

,988 Mlllllrd 2t motor home low
mileage very good eond lion

$9 000 740 992 5983 evenings

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commtr~lel wiring
new service or repairs Ma111r Ll
ce nsed eleculclan Ridenour

EleclriCa WV000308 304 875
1716

\

�1M Dlllly s.nlnel• ..... B 5

•

110

....

Help Wlntlld

ATTIIITION.

WOIIII

FIIOII

---

llt8-.£--

__
,_
_4
IIJGH7
.21110.PTifT

....., Spaara. ~14211

..,._., Praltr M y - 3-5
Olyal Wttk 1·3pm Call
(740):MH412
Experienced True- Mechanic
.OOtK - n t
tll Otntll 1 Vlaton lnaurance
-liOn Ply hHd On EJPOrl11101 Clil (740)211-1113

,_,., ..... ,__

Eye doctofa olllco- baalc bual
n111 nUll roqulract ltellnlcal

t

able to . , . •eh •l!h _pHpl•

. 11"t!
II'. t(

f

Tht DIIIIJ
.....
nat , o
loxolo
7:1t-03
Pomeror

,

ONo-

MWIJIHH E l.ll ' J I

005

Futt-tlma And l'lln·.... AN Poal-

Help Wlneld

110

tiOno AvalltDII AI SceniC Hllll
NUISint Clnll&lt; We Oflor Flallllllo
-Nng. GrHI ltntnt Pack
•
~.,.., 8Ntt IJII.
'-ttndll WIOI E--.ce Anct
Altandance lonuatol Ctll Toctey
F..- tntorN!lon Allout Thla
Graar Opportunity! Ask For
Rhonda HOII!tln At (740)44117150

Plrlonell

hautltul Glrlall
Excldngll
Puolanatoll Toll&lt; To om u..tt
1 to0-3211-1130 Ell 7338 S3"
Per Mlnu!l Mutt 81 1I Yaara

s.n-u (11816'5 a•:M
FIIEE SEAACHI
. . . SINGlE9.com

LIFE FOCUS CAIIEEII IIELA
TIONSHIPS FHII"' LOot? s.nd
LSASE to lndlvk!ull Dynamics
P 0 Fox 7587 North Port Fl
34217
Mot New Peopl• The Fun
To~ay !l

1 900 329 1150 Eat

(819)645-&amp;A:M
STAAT DATING TONIGHl'l
Haw tun "'""ng tllglblt 11110111
In your area Call For More lnlof'~
mellon 1 800 ROMANCE tal
9735

Sllrt doting tonlglil1 Ploy lho ONo
Dating Game Coli tDll liM 1.1()0.
romance ext 1&amp;21

TALK TO OIALS I.IVII
JUST CALL

1-9110-3211-8130 Elll. 7173
S3 99 Par Minute Must Bt II
- . . Se&lt;v-u (819)645-&amp;A:M

30 Announcementl
I Loon G Gqy As Ot 23 01 Apnl
:ZOOI Am No Longer lltsponslblf

Than

Myself

H..- To '100 TMft 5hoppe
9 West Stnnson A!lhens
7.0.592 1&amp;12
Ouahty clottuno anCI houathOICI
item• S1 oo bag 1111 every

Thurlday Monday lhfll Stturdoy
9CXHI:OO

992-9017

St:ZOO WEEKLY POSIIIBLE PiOCitllng Inquiry Envelopes at
Home Ea1yl No Erperience 1
101).755-2027 X5311 (24 Ho&lt;n)

Brittany Span.et Mix 6 WHic Old

Puppies Free To Good Home

(740)367-()624

Free Pupp1es lab M1x GenHI &amp;
~10

(74())2-1

Grande

Area

brochureal SltllfiCUon Gu1r
eniHdl Pollago I SWIM PIOvidadl Rulh lalf Add11111d
Stampod e-lope! GICO DEPT

5 Box 1'38 ANTIOCH, TN
37011 1o131 Stlrt lmT

7

')l

1917 U WEEKLYI Procullng
HUDIFHA Mor10IIe Allunda No
ExPt&lt;ltOC. lloquirld For FREE
InformatiOn Calli 100-501-1132
IlL 1300
' ''ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put H to worltt S2!!/llr S76/hr FT/
PT FREE Into 100-871-1045 till
Ill,

www llhOrniDiZ.com

""WOM FROM HOME•"

UCICH1500 por mo Ptr
12000-18000 por mo Ftr
NoawleliuNidld
'lllln;ngp!VIIIdod
1-«)0.~!1:10

Accounting Cltrltl StuoniJ Em
l)loyment May Novtmbtr Evtry
Ytar &amp;end Reaume to CLA 521
Third Avenue
4!131

QalllpoUt OH

An Ohio ON Compeny naldl
marurt per10n now in Gallipolis
area Regardlttl of txperltnca

Aro you loo4dng lor Uio opponunt
ljl to join I
Item tnd become part ot a lilt ~ -

""'ni""

cart Industry? SCeniC ~HI Nuralng Ctntor 11 offtrlng Nurea' Aida
Tralntng claaaea monthly 11 Is •

75 hour courae lasltng for 11
days Monda~ through friday

130to430 ThloloafrHCGUIII
end I graat ot&gt;POrtUnll)'t Tht ntJ1
cion will t&gt;tgln May 7111 Stop Dy

today ror an application or con·

Pallets Gallipolis Daily Tnbune

tact Sttl)htnlt Kemper lnstruc

OffiCI LocatiO AI 825 Third Ave-

!Of II (740)418-7150

nut Gallipolis Pick Up At Tha
Rear 0t The Bulk!lng Fnt eonro.
Fnl Serve No Phone Cab

60

Loat and Found

LOST Fam11y Crib Mlltlktnly
Donated To Outrttch Ctnttr
0 March , II If You HIVe
Info Please Cali (740)«1 6312
Rewtrcut
LOST Lad1ea Rolex Watch re
ward tf Found VERY Sentimental

Call (740)446-1711 Or (30.)
67H919

70

Yard

Sale

Galllpolle
VIcinity

r.

Art You Loo-lng Far A New
Sill~ For Dabl ConsotldariOn
Co" 1 188-440.3341 Tol Free
24Hro Vovagor Bualntn AI..,.

Hilt&gt;
"'" PIYintl
~
Dtrat- GroupCllrlttg
Hometrnow

.,pm.

minimum-·- llhlttl 7am11pm.
7tm.arll740-112·~

Hom• Hoallft Aeoncy Suklng
AN a LPN o, CNA'a For Gallla
Courtdaa. CtH l.turll Lila
(740)C41-1171

Hounkeeper To Clean Weak.,.
Rtlorlt- ~- (740)441-

1018 Allar 4:30pol

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wllll MaU Otder/E
Commarca 1500 S7ooo mo PT/
FT f""" homt Full lttllnlng Free
Bookltl
920 924 8400

-ACIIIaYaO&lt;oama.com

LletnHd Prtcllotl Nuraes (LPN)
FG' Full And l'ar1 Omt Woill In A
114 llacl lntarmldloto Care Stale
Facility An Extensive Benefit
Package Ia Available For Full
11m1 Empioyeeo Sllory 11 c.....

.,__eo..

_,.Willi
11C1 Stnctra Railmirt. DON AI Ll·
kin Hoopllal. lakin WV at
(304)875-0110. EJd 124 MOnctay
"'"' Frlclty lam-4pm Lakin Hos
pltallo tn EECIM E...,..,...

Managtmtnt ()pj&gt;ortunlty Cottar
Opportunity Willi Mljor Company
Compltlt Trelnlng P•ogram
Excellent Btnallll Call 1 511
201-5021 For Conlldantlol In

-

Madicat Billing Aallatant nat&lt;led
lmmldlotttyt FTIPT w~ Ttoln Ex
ctlltnt Income PC required 1
Ill • t8 9'773 exl. 222.
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Work on your computer Guar
antoad tmptoymano T•alnlnglcer
!ltlcatk!n (lrH) lorton Pull Inc

-

AIIEM-LY AT HOIIIII Craflo

Ntld 10 Ladlta To Sol! Avon
Earn 40% Cll (740)441 3358

m.oatO Edt 201 (24hil)
ATT1H1'10111

Needed Experienced Crew for
Setting and Flnlahlng St&lt;:tlonaJ
Houalng Stnd Pnclng ..... , ......
and experience to Southern

Toys Jewelry Wood Sawing
TY1Jina Groat Payl CALL I 800-

Woill lrorn homo.

Mtllonltr1500-18000 Pit monlll PTIFT
wtllrtil 1.-.o:l42
www gentrllet:ttlthl1honw com

ATTENTION MOTHERS AND
OTHERS Up to S50Q.52500 part
time Fullrralnlng 1 800·8711·
4808 www Quickcasnnow com/

Lora Ot Stulll Friday Stturday a
Sunday Till 8pm 1153 Grahtm

1522+/WIIk PT SIOOO S4 000/
wtek FT Full Training Free
laoktet www createdttamlltl com

Homu PO Box 821 Jackaon
OH-

-~~-POll
I'OINT
PLEASANT OFFICE
EAIIII UPlO 110.00 AN H0U11
(--ltltry)

--ln-..

Mtnend--ToDo
Tllltphont Optrl1o&lt; Woill FG'

NATIONAL IWliO

STATION PIIOMOTIONS

ATIENTION OWN A COMPUT
ER1 Mall ordtr/E Comrntrct

-""'~

'Oo\Y AltO IYININO SHIFT
.WAILAIL!

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
AprV 26111 &amp; 271ft rain

or INna •

,. comforter Chrlltmtl trH tncyclopedlll tcanntr drtptties

lllggscrHI EUit&lt;n
Garage Ilia April 27 28 1 5
corner of Fltth 1 Vine Raclnt

Futnllure clollllng ekl
lnaldt yard 1111 April 21th lttm
to 4pm Bttldt Autltnd Depart
mtnt Store LOll Of glaaaware &amp;
creft lttma No ctotnea let

WOOd 740-7422790

ATTINTION

WORK

wwwSirlva~oom

..
'lbur Own - · .
-·8AoMI
Earn Up to 1500-IIOOI)'MO
PTIFT
www C•"'~'H:MAnd""'- corr"l
CAREER OPPORTUNITY( Earn
exctlltnt Income Eloy Claims
prOCIIIIng Full lrllnlng Home
PC required Call Phyalolan &amp;
Heallhcere Development• toll•

,_ t-«JJ. rn 5838 an ao10

Claaa All CDL Drlvtrl GOOCI
Ply ltntfl!l 401 K Vtcauon '"'

aurtnce Home

(740)211-140

Pt. PlaaMnt
VIcinity

2114 Birch Avanuo 4127/01
~ loll Ot Good 81Ufll
Cheap Glrago Stlt 112 Milt A..
utt 17 Off Junction Rou11 2
Thuro Stt Somellllng For Evary
ont

Lora• 2 Family Gorago Sill
A - fl7 FollOW Slgno
Wanted Vtnctora

For Wttl

VIrginia GIANT 'Ripley a On
Salt Balltvt II Or Not' Solo On
512..r 5126 Group&amp; eualntllet
Individuals Crafltrt And Food
Vtndors Rtnt tOxtO CourthOUH
Lawn Space F.. SIO ($5 00 E""'

For Elect•lclly) Call Rlploy Main
Street (30•)372 1037 And lie
'it&gt;IK $j)ot Now

l!~tntnga

Call

COME DRIVE 'LATIED POll
USI Compeny I Ownor/OPirator
OTA drlvo•o for rtDionll l dedi
calad runa Ctll f00•581·1057
Ia! 140 Bruos for Nortlltrn 01t1o
~IICI run Clll IOD 100-831·
"m5CIUMCOLroqullld

Jill--

04yotrt .,.Hable In Rtolnt area

740-8421 ..
Domino • Now Taking Appllca·
Ilona For Galllpoill &amp; Pomtroy
.._Only
EARN S25 000 UO 000/yr Modi
cal lnouranco BIHin11 NHdld lm
mldlall~l HOmo COmputt1 NHd
od FIIEE lnltlntl 1 100 2111
4113 Dap11101
EASY WOIIKI Groat payl Earn
SSOO Piua • Wtt- Autmbll ng
Produc1l 11 Home NO Exptr~nce
Ntotnary Ctll Toll Fr01 1 800
28739«x138

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POSTAL JOBS II&gt; 111 35/llr
WILDLIFE JOBS Ill UUQIIII lncludn hnellll No

Nectsaary FDr Application lnd

Eaem Info call -tt2-7054

&gt;r20111U' 1:3Q.&amp;:OGIIn

303 Mlln
Point -.a

- . , , Apolt 24111
Wt*IJJdly,Apr1121th
Tllundoy, AjlriiZIII

,,..,, """'l11ll

:l:llllpm Unll i:OOpm ONLY
AP f'or Mt. Willa

OWN A COMPUTER? Put to
workl Ja5-17!!/llr PT/FT Frtt on
llna oatoiOQ 11 , _ wnogrtaHn-

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Own a P.C 1 Put n 10 Woikl For a
~ bOokltl call 100-429 5853 or
villi u1 onlnl
WMW getpcwOt k com

Port Tlmt CNA/ LPN lor In Home
Cart ftmalt Patient Stna At
turnt Ill CLA 511 C/0 Golllpolla
Dally Trlbuno 125 Third Avt
OaMipONI Olllo4.a1
'•rt tlmt LPN flolltlon Avalltble

At lcanlc Hilla Nurolng Ctntor

'it&gt;• C.. 011 Flalllblt SChldutng
Clreal -~~· Compotlllvt Wag

to Shill Dlfftrontltl Willi ExPtrl-

ence And Attendance eonuusr

Don 1 Pau Up A Grut Oppor
tunl!y To ltgln Or Continuo You
Exciting Nurolng Caroorl Call
Rhonda HOIIIIIn AI (740)4467150 Toellyl
PGT 11 hlnng llalbad drlvtra Min
8 montho OTR Exparltnct GOOd
MVR No ICCidtntl EICCIIItnt
Pay ond Btnlflll WE "AVIi
fiiiiOHT 1 1101).TEAIII'OT
Polloi Jobo 141 323 00 yr Now
hiring No er:perlence paid train
lng· great btneflta call 7 Clayl

..,.

frH computer Proc111 medal
110111 hOme F r H -

PAN licanald ~---.

alolln! and PAN - h - ·
pill nHdocl loi lOCI bad llkllltd

oiiiiOliiTE 001.0 WEll
•No fi'IOMy down• Work 3-,.hrll
wk. Earrr I50KfYr owning plo1fng
INTERNET bullntll FrH lntoH

PRN~......_PIIN

Ainlrlg-~­
.,.. rahabllltotion dlpa,.,..nt

both Inpatient and oYipatlent

ltrviCII provided lnle,.lttd
. . - - ~ .. lloc:ll
sprtngo llthabHHallon Ctnttr.
3fl7et AoclttiM1ntllllaed. ~'~~mfr.
flY OhiO 457... Allllon lltMII.
MPt llahaD hrvlcea Otractor,
740-1111- Equal Opfortuntty
Employar Encouraging Work
plaaa~

liN and LPN for 100 bad oklllfd
ouratog ftcltlly Excellent wnlty lor cntllfnOing end tng txptrltnct Sign-on DOnut
groat lltr1 ri!U -Ifni neou·
tetory compllanct hlltory lnttr·

lltld ell rthj*l ShOuld ~ ..,
llockaprln~llohtbllltatiOn

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PI&gt;
mtiVY.Oilio487..
lng AN Oliaclor af Ntnlng. 740992-eaos EqUII OoooltunHy Employer Encouraging WorkpiiCI

---Time-

EAIIN 1500 1900 ptr wttk In
&amp; alljlptra Low ln••tmem t-100-272.0183 awa-

_...,com

858 Third Avenue Gallipolis
Ohio.

EARN your Colloot Doorn
QUICIILVI 8achtiO(I Maottfo
Doctorate by correspondence
hHd Upon Prior EdUCIIfOn Ex

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Catetot CamDrldgt Stilt Unl·
~ (100) 1114-1311:14 HAS
Eacellent Opportunity Vending
.... No Nllng 50K plul yr " '
hr weell:ly Minimum lnv11tment

.__. 1 IIOI).i!M-5171241V1

Income PoltnUal 1-871-415-5337

www rnedictlttans net 1 888 745

11284

Sctntc Hills 11 Now Hiring M&amp;M/MAIIS Established 10ul11
STNA 1 And CtrUflad Nurolng available Mln1mum lnvestmenl
Aloillanlt fclf All Sllllla Wo Ara M800 Annual pDIInlial earnmgs
A P"''trau... Faelllty Who Ap- over hOK Toll Free 1 8&amp;6 787
preciate a 01.1r Staff You H1v1 111a24hil
Grtat Oppor1unltl" AI Scenic
H..l Ctl- MEDICAL BILLING Unllmlltd InAt (740)4411-7150 Todeyl or cornt po!ln!lat No IXPtrlence
~By
And Fit OUt An Aptlllea·~ · ~ntcf;t~u~a~Grylnvaatmenllrom
_,
S2495&amp;
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available (100) 322
URGENTLY NEEDED plaama 1139
donors, ..., 148 to 110 b 2 or 3 EXT 050 www buolneoo 11ar
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-ar

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Clpturtd For Your 'JJ'ttlllh. In
A Compu!trlzad Audio/ Visual

Training BUIIMSI Support Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks Earn Big $$$

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-

(740)258-9347

WORK FROM HOME
SS00.$1 500 Mo. ..., nm.
$1.:ZOO.S8 000 Mo. F.-t nm.
PAID VACATIONS
1-800-499-30111

Sto~up Cos~

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Home com

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Prima Shoppmg Center Space
Available At Affordable ~ate

Spring Valley Plaza CaN 740-446-

0101

140

Buai!IHI
Training

OrMie: • C... C..,..
(Caron Cloet To H..-1\1)
Call Today! 7 -

1.1()0.214-0452
Reof90.05.12748.

School•
lnltnlctlon

150

I l l - '1111'.,...,..,.

...

...... , . . -

.........

WORK FROM HOIIEI Earn
1500 17 000/monlh PT/FT Full
Tramlng Free Information Call
1-«ll-290-8114

--230

rallglon

orfoln. 01 1111'- to

proto.....

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~wlllclllo
tawo.._
.. of"'"
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NOT replacing Long cracko In

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-

01 181111 wltit . . - I ilfDII

Wlndfil\leldl Fret vldta 1·100·
• ·m u~ nw(IIUI-

MtdiCII Tran1c:rlptlon AlliS
blnct with Job Placement upon
IUcctllful Completion ExctNent

Phone Calla All!lir In

Uio F - Fllr Hauling N1.

Elm 190 000 YEARLY ropelrtng

~

Apply AI Llltalylt Furniture No

"""'-~"'
, . - · Ujacl to

1~1

GLOBAL MEDICAL TAAN
SCRIPTION Train 11 Homo for

.. . . -.... aqua~

-"'"""-

310

Home• for

Sale

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES I
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
AEPO'S &amp; SANKIIUPTCIESI OK
CREDm FOil LISTING! CALL 1
aoo-501 1m e111. 9813
Handyman Special In Excellent
Na.ghborhood Large Yard Good
Condition Won t Last 159 900
Malia Otto&lt; (304)675-18 16

HOMES FROM S 199 30/Mo I
3BR Repos/ Foreclosures fee
4% down Fo r Listings/Payment
DelaYs 1-IIOil-719-3001 al185
Middleport gray stone 3 4 bed
rooms large walk In Iorge
eat In k1tcnen 2 bathrooms large

J.R trmal DR i)ine paneiO&lt;I dOrtl
bedroom full unftnishtd base
ment steam heat s1tuated on 3
village kits one car garage new
sidewalks new root lar~e front
porch deck small outbUilding
qutet street lined basketball
cou111 parking area win consider
all reasonable otters 740 992
7396
Must see 1993 28x:7Q double
wide newer carpet gas rumace /
hot water tank large front porch
needa moved appraised at

169 000 selling for 135 ooo 740
992 5722
Newly Constructed Single Story
1600 Square Foot Home ,o
Minutes From Hospital Btdwell/
Porttr Area LOCI!Id On A lloeuhful Private 1 112 Acre Lot 3
Bedroom 2 112 Baths Btg Kitctten w!Custom Oak Cabmets From
Smi1h s Cabmets Oft LR w/Gas
Log F•eplece Front Porch &amp; 2 11
2 Car Garage Oual1ty Construe
t1on All The Way $135 000 Call

(740)446-4514 from 8 5 ME Or
1740~48

After 5pm

Two car ga rage/apartment In
Middleport two bedrooms full
bath LR kltcl'len w11n electric
range central alf 740-985 3650

Profelllonal
Servlc:ee

$ FREE CASH NOWS from

«7~2795

BLACKSTONE PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo SludJ Ap
proved Affordable comprehen
slve legal training tinct 1880
FREE CatalOG 100 128·9228
wrne ~0 Box 701449 0111aa TX
75370 N~ or nttpJ/Www _ ,..

unloading of dollar&amp; to Relp m1nlm1ze the.ttxes Wnte lmmedl81ely WINO-

320 Mobtle Homo
for Sale

FALLS 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA 90010

99 mob1le home for sale must
seH 14x7() three bedrooms two
ballls 7-9-3004 after 5pm

ntlawCOIII

Payments RtdUC8 lnterell Non-

-.y families

US CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS?
FREE Debt Consolidation Cut
P•ofll 800 268 6331 Ell 15

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bachelors Master•
Doctorate by correspondence

wwwp.tcC'II'&lt;e com

based upon prior eduCation and

cash ror rema1nlng payments on

ShOrt IIUdy

For FREE lnformaMn booklet phone CAM
BRIDGE STATE UNIVERSITY I
1101).9&amp;4-8318

180

COUIII

WantadTo

Do

Bebylllling In my ljomt Clllldren
2 10 M F eam 5 30pm can
(740)388-8193
Ctro Of Elderly/ Houooliaap•ng
H 00 Per Hour Aak For Bonnie
(304)195-3723
David • General Cootrectora
Plumbing

EleCifiC

Pamtlng

DOcka Mise Woill All H- Rt
polrs Lawn Cart Call (740)2589373 Or Cell Phone 1 304 133
8285

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logo to 1ht mill juat caw

304-875-195?.

Lawn

Mowing Strvlce Free
Eatimaltl CtH (740)2Y 1313

Lawn Mower And Small Englnt

(740)44&amp;-7604
Apply In

A SPECIAL OFFER Oual1ly for

count Start Today! HI 575
IQE(4183) EX1:703

ery Within 10 Mlltl 21 Vaara
E-•perlenee
Call Mlkt AI

PliO II

HOIII
Mall Ofdlr/E-cotiWUIIW buiNM
St SOO.S7.:ZOO month PTIFT
"'" lntormallon 1 800 1121 0874

1982 141(70 litiQI
FllrmoniZbiC!rOOm
__ _

-No---c.. ... hi 7.,...7pm CST 1 -

Repair F111 Pick up And Otllv•

(800) 755-4108

Pomlt'Oy,

J

---

Mothers &amp; others put your com
puttr to work earn 'S500 $5000
PT/FT tree Information 1 7410
342-GISO

)I~

l

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP!
WOrlt flom-·
dtriE-commtroe
1122.PT
S1000·S40001wk FT 8011-121·

1-11»1144-5595

Frldty 27th Saturday 21th 2
MIIU Olf Route 7 Bladen llotd
Nice Clolhos

Sdiool-

ao..m~~~ent Jolla S11 oo
133 oct par hour potantltl Paid
Training/Full ltnefltl For mora
Information calli Ill 874-ttSO
alii. 3234

II 000 WIEKLYI lltlllnt 400 3Cllll 7-Sprn

Dayton OH45401

{740)2!56-9302

•

~=::·

Wrllt MM lltad P 0 Boa 888

Giveaway

Adorable puppies I weeks old
Shepard mia Weaned fiflt ahota
and wormed
Pie.. e call

Calm

MIIOn11fA•r.

c/o Galllpollo Da•ly Tnbuna 825

Reward for anyone returning a
Jonsered 20S.tt chalnsaw alofen
from 43430 Pomeroy Pike r•o

40

- 000
-...
Oib
1500 00-te
OOimo.
PTIFT

Way

121&amp; 1299 Per Ulnute Serv U

For Any Debts Other

ttiATTEIITlON!ft
~- . . . . e.._ Eli~* .. "

POSTAL JOBS 10 11..-.r Hir·
lng to• 2001 paid ,....... Full

for ....

E-- ____
...-lOy-- -1- -----·
...
your_--wlllnol
..........
In_In,._
.............

AVON! Ali-Tolluy or Sell

!'11

320 Mobile H.-

Bullnell
Opportunity

210

110

Wades Con11ruct1on General
Llwn Maintenance Land&amp;caplng

(740)709-8488
Will Cora For Bedflll Eldtrly
Ftmalt In My Homo Dodrill I
(740)388-8113
Will Powtrwllh HOUNI Tr•llerl

And IIV I ConiiCI Ron AI
(740)441-0151 or 331 otso If
No Anlwtr LNYe • · •
Will Repa ir Automobllll La•n
Mowen

US NEED CASh
P~

{800) 490-0731 ... 101 www ..

~-

CASH LOANS UOOO $5000
Consolldallon to S200 000 Bact/
No Crad1t Credit Carda Mort
gag•• For Information , 800·
335-1612 Ill 3822

lullneaa

11 000 WEEKLY! Work at hornt
proce11lng automotive Plln·
phltlll No IXPirltnCII Wl.-ly
paychtckol Evtrythlng IUPPIIfdl
1 800-551 3175
INOliCII
OHIO VAL.EY PUBLISHING CO
recomm•nda lhat you do bull
ntu with people you Mnow, end
NOT to send monty throuah the
mall until you have lnlflslfgattcl
the offe•lng

A+ M&amp;M MAIISINESTLE Eotabllsht&lt;l Vandtng Routt Wlfl Nil Ill'
5/7/01 Under $9K minimum In·
vestment requlred E:xetltant ll'rof
II Pottn!lal Finance AYIIIIDII/
Good Crtdll Toll FrH """(HI)
211&gt;2111"'"

888 928-3426
16 Wide Only $195 00 Per
Month 8 99'- Fixed Interest Rate
With

Aw

And

Underpinning

1-888-92&amp;-3426
1981 14170 Admiration Trailer

For Stle Has Island In Middle Of
KUchar! WUh Slove Bull! In Con
tral Air &amp; Most Appliances Go
Must See! Very Low Price Call
Anytime Anti Ask For Tammy
(740)388-8914
1st Time Home Buyers Program
Special Financing Ava1labte

(304)755-5566

CONSOliDATE BILLS/LOANS
OAC From S250Q.$125000I 9%
average rate One hour approval
CaM F.C C S tolllrte 1 888 805-

3379

CREDIT PROBLEMS? C~LL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING. I 888-811.o902

Dlvorot $150
ltnkruprcy St95
AIIDPI!O&lt;l S22S
Not tfo.h.youratlf km
CALL f-8(1().303-1170
FREE lnlormtlonl

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom Only
S345 00 Per Month 8 99% Fixed

lnlllfe6111ale I 888-928 3426

"'" (304)5711-2642
97 Oak..ood 3 BR 2 Bath Only
asking payoff price please call

(740)2-997 Leave Messa{IO
Abandoned Doublewide Must
Stll (740)446-3093
AMAZING "'llle or No CreOII
nanclng (304}755-5885

ltnkruptcy rvaln TNIKY

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to S500 lnolanlly by phontl 1·
877 EAIILYPAY Lfet 750005, 111
ADIIANCE FREEl

NO FetiiStMCe Chlillltt
In NHd otFintncliiAstllttnct?
Plta11 Call Uo Toll Fr01 1 111
813-181124hr

Dtvorced "Must s.u• Large Fleet

wood Double W1do 5000 Equity
has boon forlelted TOLL FREE
I 888-585-0167

Factory Gool 32x60 $1 o 000 Ola
count only 11000 oo Down De
livery and sttup paid by Factory

1 fl00.69t a1n

Final Days Nationwide Inventory

RldUC11onl {304)731-3409

TUIINEO DOWN ON
IOCIAL UCUIIITV lllf?
NO FH
We Wlnl
, _Unlfll
_ 33411

Land Home Packaaaa All Craalt

Ht AI I 'dATE

Limited Or No Crtdtl? Qovern
mtnt Bank Flnanct Only At Oak
wood In Barboursville wv 304
7313409

Homee for

S.le

z

1m 3 -.om 81111 t4r?O
Mollllo Home On Aantad LOI on
Sandhill lid Doaa Not MOYid Ntw Carpet NtYir
Smoked In 818 larn •utldlng
Gota Both Pordln w.tt Malnlllnld lnolda and OUt. (304)8757388 Monday F1iday 8 30 to
5 00 (304)175 8844 Altt• 5 00

RilkS (740~2570

Lot model claaranco save up 10

$8 825 with any nome el'leck us

IO DOWN HO,..ESI GOV T &amp; out wort dtsllng Colo 1 Mobile
BANK FOAECLOSUI'IESI LOW HO- US 50 Eo11 Alhlnl Oh
011 NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CIIEDITI FOR LISTINGS! CALL Ntw 14 II wlao $499 ~own only
1-«l0-33H020a111.9811
$199 Ptr Mon Clll now I 800
891 8777
2 Story Bilek Approllmtltly :MOO
Square Feat 1 112 Acru Full Now 16 II wldo 1499 per mon
lasemenl IHutHul Vltw 01 Rlv only 1270 per mon call now 1
ir. Waa US 500 Atductd To 1101). 69 1-8777
IIG 500 By Appointment Only New 2001 Flattwood 3 br 2
(740)2Serel72
bath 111 up tn Tho Country Mo
2-1 ltdroam Hou" ,,. Stlt In bile Homo Park &lt;tidy tc movs In
Bidwell lncludOI 2 LOll 1895 down $1911111 por monlh
(740)441-0420
740-~ 2187
Approxlmaltly 5 Acrta With 2 Now :ZOOt Modols 0 :ZOOO Prieta
Bedroom Home Located AI 1027 Como Seen Hurry &amp; Bear Prtca
Gtoo Ad Patriot OH 130 000 Increase 0 Oakwood a,mpolls
Pliono !740!448 01115
I:!::-740..:.:...)446-309:'-:-:=3-:-:-::r--:-New doubla widl 3/ br 2 ba

April only Sl2 000 080 Ntw $988 00 down only '295 •o r
Hawen three bedroom• one and
"
""
112 bath• large hlmity room wllh man call now 1 80CHi91 8777
flrtplac, two car attached ga Nlee lraHtr a Jot ror sale uptown
rage 30• 882 1075 days 740
Middleport greal 1ocat1on 14~~:70
M-90011avtnlrtgt
740-992 2881

GOOD UIED APPLIANCII
W""'" dryers refrl.geralors

Orivt '""" U.7 10 1313 lo
11!011
&amp; _ , . , CaH 740 441
2511 EQual Houalng ~

Vine Slrttl Cau 7&lt;044&amp; 7391
1 -.t111'0128

-.oep

Chriaty'a F•mlly living , 331""
-Lima
lid ONo. 1407&lt;2 7403 Apartment homo end
trailllr rentals Cornmerelal store·
fronts available for teen 'VIean

--

Fot rant one bedroom rurnilhed
_,...lin M~ cafl740-

Sewage Trash 1350/Mo 740
«f..OOff

T1r1 Townhouse Apartmenta.
V•r'l Spacloue 2 Bedroom• 2

Stock Modal C~lr- all 2000
modtla muol go Naw hOme paymtnll aa low aa 1110 32 per
month end only 1750 00 down
Ctll7.0.315-4387

WOW Ntw Fltttwood DouDia
Wldt 28X60 4 811 Onlir 39.190 111
FIHiwOOCI Of ~roctONIIII
To! FrH 1 888-~1117

Upalllra Apartment 3 Room•

Farma for

S.le

FARM FOR SALE!! Wo Htvt
Moved And Are Selling Our
Farm 3 Bednlom Home Hu High
Collings Ook Tilm And A Ltrga
Kitchen Buildings Include A
Large Barn And Garoeo Ercel

Mobile Homo Lor Will Takt
121 14 1 11'1 Wldta $125/mo
StOO/dtp Natd Rtftrtncea
(740)448.0175

menl

Only

Call

Evenings

(740)380-0259

350

Lot•

a Acreage

BO Acres

Developed land In
Mason County Natural Spr1ng
Clly Water A Creel~ AI Tht Sol·

tom Asking $50 000 Already
Timbered (304)697 51127
Sites For Rent On Ka
nawha River 8 miles from Point
Pleasent electriC OJ1Iy (304)6751722 (304)675-4144 After 5pm

Camp

loakmg To Buy A New Homa1
Don 1 Have Land? We Do Ill Huny
On~ 10 LOIS Left 304-736-7295

RENTALS

Floor Modal TV 150 Couch
160 Enlt•llloment Cenlor 150
Kirchen Table I Chalra It 00
W-/ Dryer S250 5 HP Tllltr
S125 Puoh Lawn Mower 1100
(740)311-0850 (740)317-7272

Galllpollo Deposit Required Six
Monlhl Ltlll Ullllllll Not In
CIUdtCI EJCtpt Warar Call Debblt
or Judy AI (740)448-7323 (LI
brlry) To Stt Up An Appotnlmlnl

Opllon I Houst Barn Bulldlngo
With 88 Acres For S129 900
Opt/on Z Includes Everything
And A Toral Of tao Acroa Prlcod
At $189 900 Shown By Af)f&gt;Oinl

pa!AJt.com 1-11»844-1427

3 Room Upalllra Apt • One Bid

480

In Opt1on 1 plus Paatura Pond

EZPETRX COM Stvt up to 110%
on ALL Ptl mldlcallono and plloa Including Htarteord lntor
ctplor Fronlllnt m6rtlll FIIEE
SHIPPING Order onlnt www Et

room At &amp;51 Second Avenue

490

Spece for Rent

Houaes for Rent

Almond Whirlpool a GE waah
ora $80 Each While May!ag
Waah01 S65 3 Drya11 $60

(740)441-4120

Appllancts
Reconditioned
Waahers Dryers Ranges Refrl
gratora Up To 90 Days Guar
antoedl We Sell New Maylag Ap

2 Bedroom House Plus Oeposll

74Q.448.1195

2 Bedroom House For Renl In
B dwell
Includes 2 Lots

~eferences

pllancts French Clty Maytag
No Pets

PMne

(740)446-0615 (740)44&amp;-9249

DCM Tlmewlndow3 Front and
Tlmepteee Rear Home Thaater

2 BR Log House AIC No Pets

Speakera Coli $1900 SaciHice
for $800 Unbelievable Sound
(740)446-4860 after Sprn

Ava1!abta June 1st 1350/mo De
pos1t Reference (7,.Q)446-7732
between 4pm and l1pm

3 Bedroom Water &amp; Trash Patd
Stove Refrigerator CIA $425

Plus OepoSII No Psis (740)31188371
For rent or sate large 4 bedroom
2 bath 2 ear garage $600/mo

$500 dtpoSII 740 446 6383 304
127 3318
Golden Glrla Opportunity
Christian Woman 44 Would L1ke
To Share Large House On Rae
coon Creek Wllh 2 Other Mature
Chrl&amp;lian Females Private Bed
rooms 2 Bath large Kitchen
Ommg
large llvlngroom
Screened Deck Covered Patlol
Shelter By Water $225/mo Plus
113 Utilities If You Love Natura
Have Steady Monthly Income
&amp; GOOd Rolarenoss -Call
Linda Sanders
Work 1
601l-669-6119 Ext 3214 Monday Fildey
P1lot Program Renlers Needed

3047387295

420

Mobile Home•
for Rent

12x60 2 Bedroom All Electric

For Sale Reconditioned wash·
ers dryers and rtlrlgaratora
Thompsons Appliance 3407

Jackson Avenue {304)675 7388
Main Slreel FumHura
{304)875-1422
515 Main Street Point Pleasant
Now &amp; Uaed Fumfture
New 2 Piece Livlngroom Suites
$399 Buy StU Ttadt
Used

Window
Unit
Air
Conditioner&amp; 90 Day Guarantee

(740)888-7531 (740)88&amp;-®47

Whirlpool Washor While $95
Whlrlpool Dryer While $95
Electric Range 30" Avocado
$150 Small Chesl Freezer $150
Refrigerator Frost Free $150
Aefrtgerator Frost Free Almond

$195 Skagga Appliances 78
VIne Slrtsl (740)448-7398

530

Antlquee

Anllque Canopy Bed Co'flplele &amp;
In Good Condition $350 &amp;
Antique Solid Walnut Bed $100
OBO
{M4)695 3364
Or
(304)695-3441
Buy or nil Riverine Antique•

Acron New Haven Grade
School $300/ mo (304)682 2219
(304)8822119

11:14 Easl Main on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2528 or 740 992
1539 Ruoo Moore owner

2 bedroom mobile home or 800
sq II oltice space Rlverpaill Ml·
nersvllle $300/mo each reduced
rent for handy person who can
mow the gran in the park 614

1540

876-1881

440

Apartment•
for Rent

1 anct 2 bidroom apa~mtn!l turnlohed and unlurnlohtd oacu~ljl
deposi• required

812 2218

no pttl 740

1 Bedroom Apartment AtfriQira
tor Rang• A/C Included, 1111
PIUI Daposll &amp; Rtftrtnet HUD
Approvad. {140)441-1511
Furnlahad 2 a 3 Room Apart•
menll Clfln No Pail No ~·
lng lltftrtn~at a Dtpoall lla•
qulrtd Ulllllltl Furnlahad
(740)446-1511
Grtcloua living 1 anct 2 bedroom
aplrlmenll at VIIIIGI Meno1 and
Riverlldt ~p1rtmtnt1 In Middle

port From S278 $341 Call 740·
112 5084 Equal Houotno Oppo'
tunltlfl
I Bedroom In Country SloYO ~~
lr.lgaralor Watar/ Tralh No Pall
Sl!78 Plua OtPOIII (740))118371
1 bedroom SIOO por month 2
bedroom 1280 plua dtPOIII a
u!lllllta 3rd Street Aactno Oh
740.247-42112
2 Btdroom Furnltl'ltd Ulllltlta

lncludod $400/mo Llmll 01 2
Ptopll (740)387..()(11 1
2 B~ Aplrtment In Centenar~
Appllano11 Furnlthtd Utllltlet
Paid Sxoopl !ltotriO C~an S2151

mo Call(740)atll-1131

4 room Oownetllrt Water palll-

No Palo G1 Cldtr 81 (740)3811100

Apertmant for flttnt In Downtown
Gaillpollo Pie'"• Call (740)1167174

Mtnufacturtr oilers 1 two weak
supply of colostomy or uroalomy
brand namt prod~o~cta wltl'l one
llmf&gt;lt phone call No obllgauona

CIIB00-7155-7880

Gateway Ptrlormance Pant 3
Delk Top Compultr Printer,
Scanner &amp; VIdeo Carntfll Priced

To Still (304)875-2817

Mlacellanaoua
Mllrchandlae

SO DOWN HOMES
No Crtdll OK! HUD VA.
FHA Call for llo!lngt
1 801&gt;5011717 Ext 8818
St,OOO BACK 2 Ton Air Condl
tloner 2 Ton Coil 1 Lint Set In
atalltd $2 295 St 000 Back
S1295 Nat Prlct Frn EaHmales
Call Fot Quo1tl Oh Other Slzeo
II You Oqn 1 Call Ut We
Both Loaol MobWe HG'nta Our
Speciality I 740 441 8308 I 600
291 .()098
18 HP Yordman f!ldloa Lawn
Mower LOOkl Gqod Auno Good
S850 (740)388-1:121i
1995 A! Aulomallc Frick Stwmlll
Compurorlztd HMC Dtborkar I
Mort&gt;ork Chip Pack wlll Stparatt
CtMafllr 7 OOpm (740)441--8783
ASTHMA ALLIIIGY NUDIO,
10•16 PIOPLI Who Oulrt
lmmldlalt Atilt! To TrJ EYIIUIII
A NEW Compact Stall Of Tho
Art Home Or Bu11na11 Air
Pu~f!callon Syolam No Cost Or
ODIIgl!lon Fret 3 Day Trial Mal
IIOU {304)575 3379
.t.TTINTION Prom Droll 'Moil
Lto" Color AublrQina (Light
BrF\OktY Lsvindar) l'ald $145
Worn Onct Slzl 111/20 Sill For
1100 Shoat olzt II t/2 Soma
Color S20 (140}418-7553
Allenll9n Anonllonll Stanley
Homo Producll And fuller !ruoh
Avallabil To Order Product• Or

Raquatl Calalogo PltaiO Call
(304)875 8903 Aoytimt
AUTOS PAOli 1100 00
Police tmf)OUIId• a Aepoot
TOI'Qilll Ch8Yyo. Jetpal
Plflu Call lor •1111ngt
1 800-451.0500 Ext C9B17
Baby ltd Cor Stat HIGh Chair
Thai Vou can Makl Into Table &amp;
Chair (304)675 2801

P~

2 Malta. Shott &amp;

AKC Black Ltb Ftmtlt 8
Months Champion Btoodllnu
LOYII Chlk!rtn 1125 (7.00)2588114
AKC Aaglaterad Uele CfllneH
Pug Puppr Shota. Wormed
Toklng Dapotill To Hold 1425 00
Aocapt , _ , . . (740)388--t325

PtkiPOO Tiny Milt 7 Wttkl
thOII and worMtd 11 SO
{140)Z51-t814

570

Muelcal

IMtrulllll'ltl
Drums Tama Rock Start wlllld·
)tan cymbala too 111uch to 1111
,, ooo oao 740-9!129013
NOBODY S FATHEfl CO by Kt·
vlo Jon11 MlrJ chtpln Carptn·
tor &amp; Ace Smith gUilt On !IX•
IOICOI!Iedllni\IIIH-.IIC

FAH h.1 (,(Jf'l'llf )
&amp; l !VI ',((!( 1\

810

GET SEXY FOR SUMMER! LOll
3·5 IDI -kly Ouarlnltld Only
S11951 COOS Crtdll Cardo
PhoiiiCI1eckl 1-800-:!Sfl 0989
QMC Fiberglass Bed Cover 88

98 Full Size Short Wheal Ball
S200 Twin Bouprlnga $25
LOVIIIII $200 {740)388-8267
afllr300pm
Grubbs Plano- Tuning &amp; Repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The
Plano Dr 740-4&lt;16-4525

Farm Equipment

1987 John Duro 110 Ltwn
Trtctor Willi ~ &amp; Front Bladt
Excollant Condition 11000
(304)885-3314 Or (304~3441

(740)441-1982

Heavy Duty eolnch Finishing
Mower Pull Behind ,. Wheeler
14HP Electric Mower Electric

JET

740-992-6581

Llvntock

18 year old Quarter nor11 with
bridle and aaddle
1500

(740)441-11513

LIKE TO GAMBLE?
Cesara online gaming easlno and
sportsbOOI&lt;
www ceasaraonlinegamlng com
Stfo oSecura oReI I -

FAIR PIGS FOil SALE BO"N
IN GA~LIA COUNTY (740)f410988 OR (740)44e-4311
4 H And FFA Club Pigs Hemp
York &amp; Ouroc Croas ~140)3889033

Huge lnvenlorv Discount Prk:as
On VInyl Skirting Ooora Wind
ows Anchors Wat•r Heaters
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts Fur·
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

CLUB GOATS Boor Meal Goats
Born Th1s Year Great Fair

Mobile Home Supply 740 446
94, 6 www orvb.comlbennett

Feeder fair Pigs 30 70 Pounds

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams Pipe Rebar For Concrete
Angle Channel Flat Bar Stool

Goats 1/2 Sotr Doll a Bucko
8 12 Weeks Old $125 Each
(740)258-1724

Gratmg For Dra1ns Orlvey,ays &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Metals
(74Q}44&amp;-r300

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS Almost everyone approved
witt! so downl Low monthly pay
menlo! HIOI&gt;817·3478 ell 330
Nice

Used

Furniture

C811

Anytime (740)446-1004 Or
(740)44H275
Gas Powered
$1200 (740)446-li579

OTIS Forktltt

due to flootlmg In
Mldweat factory has (2) arch style
steel bldgs for Immediate sale
(1} 40x60 (still crated) call Jess
0801l-581 5843

Repo Bldgs

AESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Tappan HI Efficiency 90o/. Gal
Furnaces Oil Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Frea 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 5967 www orvb com/ben

neH
Rough tut Lumber and Mulch
Bulk loads Call atter 7 OOpm

(740)446-6783
Royal Oak Membership wllh
Coast to Coast and children s

nghls $1000 937 38&amp;-2110

Projects Pwe Bred And Percent

aga (740)245-04815 Anor &amp;pm
$50 (304)576-2579

Hoppes &amp; Lucas Sale 12 Frldly
April 27 7 30pm Sharp FayeHe
County Falrgroundo YESI YESI
YES I There WJII Bt 40 Heed Big
Enough For Gallla County Fair
Including Litter Matti To The
S1 ooo Gulli And $500 Guilt
Check Our Updated Weboltl
wwwwchocom
Horses tor Sala 1 Morgan 4

Miniatures

(740)~783

HORSESHOEING
Certified
Farrier Frad Queen (740)2581330
I
Polled Hereford Bulls 18 Months

Old
Good
Sloodllnoa
(740)44&amp;-2684 Ewnlngo

640

Hay

r. Grein

Someone with machinery to har
vast hay on shares SQuare Balli
ol Hay For Self (740)379-2839

Hay &amp; Brlghl Wlra Tit St1aw Ylar
Round Delivery a Volume Dis
counl Available Heritage Farm
(304)675-5724

FREE lnformallon 1 800 578

TRAN S P Of1T Al !GrJ
DIS~BILITY

CONSULTATION Benelll Team

836-4052
Steel Bu ildings New Muat Sell

40xeoat2 was $17 500 now
StO 1171 50xt00x18 was $31 500
now S19 990 70x150x16 waa
159990 now $42 990 80x200x 16
was 194 500 now 559 990 1 800

408 8128 1 800 406 5126

11le
Dilly
Sentinel
Jloi.IRIJIIfl

Stanley \ViftHe, starter and
p1eked up rhe WID
Meags.
Knapp got the saw The two
combmed to gave up I 0 hits,
strake out stx, walk seven and
hat a batter
Stew:art had a double and
sangle to lead Metgs Knapp,
Davas and Snuth each added a
paar of smgles Bullmgton
added hts grand slam and

Jor

Dodson, Stanley, DettWIUer
each added smgles
Snuth went the route and
was ugged with the loss He
gave up 14 htts, stuck out SIX,
w:llked mne and hat a batter
Snuth had three smgles to
lead Belpre Wolfe added two
and Polmg a double
Metgs (8-9, TVC 6-7) will
travel to Vtnton County today
for a make-up game before
r:eturmng home on Fnday to
play the Vtkmgs

Public: Notices ID Newspapen.
Your Right to Know, DeUvered Right to Your Door.

PROIIATICOURTOF Dltormlnotlon

AutOI for Sale
OWN
CARS I POLICE IM
$0 D
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEE~ S •ow A8 1211/
MO 24 MO S 01119% FOil
LISTINGS CALL 1 800·451 0050
oll C 9812

710

89 Lincoln Continental exctlllnl

condlllon 112 000 mlloa 12000
fltm 741&gt;742 2814

ol Proclduro, luclgment

s.

Wobb,

et 11.,

111101 COUNTY, OHIO Hlll'll" In tho Prob8tl by detoull will be Delendenta, upon •
UTATI OF
IARL I'ILION
LOCKaTr,DICIAIID
CAIEN0.30877
CHAJIL.Ia H. KNIGHT,
ADIIIMI8TRA'I'OR OF
THE EITATI 01'

of llotge t'llndered ogolnllt you =•m•nt therein
COUnty, Ohio, Cttl and tor tho relief
rod, being cNo 30877elleglngthlll demanded In tho No OD-CV·1H In ttld

Court

the docatted dltd
lnteltlttt of the 11th
city of Ootober 1111,
ttiHd of cortaln
I!AM.PILION
peroonol PI'OPartyancl
LOCKETT,DICI!A81!D thlllanumblrolhell'll
PLAINTII'I',
w.. Mmecllhtflln at
vs
tho only hllrti111W 01
11ARQAR1T
tho d-Ad entitled
LOCKaTr, IT AL
to ahara In the
DI!FI!NDANT8
dletrtbutlon of hit

NOT1CI tJY
PUBUCATION
To:
Morgortt
Loclcttl, "-r unknown
htlrt, deviHtl and
lagoten, - adelrooe
u'*-, IIIII Gao...
Lockltt, hie lll'lknotllf"
htll'll, devtee.. and
ltpfttt, tddrou
wtlurown.
10 tho tboltt nomad
Jltrtona,
their
unknown holre it low,
111111 or kin, dllvl-,
........ oncl ottlgna
btllend
to
ba
dtoltttd htlra of
EAIIL
I' 1L 8 oN
LOCKI!TT, decaoatd,
whota plaoat of
r 0 al d 1 nco
o r1
unknown, pltoH lltkl
notlol thot on the
11th, day of April,
2001, CHAIILEI H.
KNIGHT,
t he
Admlnlatrltor of the
Ellatt of EARL
fiLION LOCKETT,
daOIIItd flied hll
•complaint
for

9~

The prayer of the
petition Ia thlt the
court dltermlna who
.,. tho hoiNitlow of
llld dtUdtnt MIHIIod
by lliw In liU .,.._ to
lnhlltt lrCim hll etll1a,
end fOr ouoh other
ordtl'll tnd 1'111111 11
tho Court moy find
proper In lito HIM.
You aro required to
• - lito ComPlaint
within twanty·alghl
(211 doye lifter lito loll
publlctllon of thlt
Notlco, which wiH be
publlahld once each
wttk tor three (31
IUCCIIIIVI Wllkt.
Tho Ia at publlclltlon
will bt mode on the
city 01 , :10111, and tho
twenty•lght 1211 dayo
for a newer will
commence on that
dote In tho c••• of
your ltrtluN to anewor
or OlhtrwiH raapond
11 roquotted by tho
Ohio Aulee of Civil

Autoi tor S.le

Buick Rogal Custom Loadt&lt;l

New Slrutl Brekea Very Clean

Excellonl ConditiOn $5000 OBO
(740)44HI5:M
CAR$ 129/MONTHI POLICE IM
POUN~S &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY 24 MO S 01911% FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1 800 941
8117 EKT C 9814
CAliS FROM $500 • Pollco lm
poundo &amp;lax lllzuru Hondel
Cl\fvyl Fordo &amp; mort For 1111·
inga Call Now I 1 BOO 71G 3001
tll1 ACtO
Hondo a From $5001 Pollca
lmpoundl Cau Now For List
1 1101&gt;31..3323 Ext A411

720

Complaint.
Your
anawer ehould be
directed to tho llalga
County Court of
Common
Pleu,
Probete Olvlelon,
Court and Second
8trMt, Pomeroy, Ohio

4170.

CHARLES H. KNIGHT,
AdmlnllltrltorOIIIto
Eatltl 01
EAIILFILSON

ee111a.

93 Ford Tempo Auto And Power
Ev11ythlng S2700 OBO Call
(740)446-4479

•eave Message (304)895 3740
01 (304)895 3789

Servlcea Inc Toll free 1 888

.....

650 Seed r. Fertlllzar

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Orivt Buffalo NY 1422!5

SOCIA• SECURITY

...
..... Pick

WID

but Meags answered that
With a paar m the top of the
seventh to uke a 13-7 lead
Darrick Knapp reached on a
error and DaVIs 11ngled Skip
Dodson smgled, a walk and a
hit batter plat~d the runs
Belpre scored a pan m the
bottom of the seventh and
had runners on second and

71 0

Tobacco Plants Ordtr Now To
Guarantee Early Spring Plantlrtgl
lnerease Allotments Mean Extra
Plants Thank You For Your BUll
ness Call Danny Dewhursl

Claim Denied? We Specialize In
Appeals and Hearing• FREE

~~~~~~~­

fnlmPIIp81

Tobacco Plugs For Sale TNIO &amp;
NC3 Locally G1own (740)2455193

Sawmill $3 895 New Super Lum
bermale 2000 larger capacities
more options Manufacturer of
sawmills edgers and skldders

1383 EX1:200 U

'="
..

Meigs

day.

Start Kohler Engine (740)2588574

830
Large dining table 88" without
leaf 80' with leal six chalra 1125

.......

thard But Knapp patching m
r:ebef ofSunley struck out the
last batter to g~ve Me•gs the

Hubbard and a lingle by
DaDy HiD
I'.Wl~r banged out leW'n
hits led by Demus Kdler Wltb
two singles', Matt Surner two
smgles, Nelson a double,
Daugherty a single, and Gl.us
a single.
Crouch was the wmrung
pttcher wtth Hill prung the
save SHS pttching fanned
rune and walked S1X Sprner
and Nelson fanned stx and
wallced SIX
Southern IS tdle today and
goes to Federal Hocking l'n-

Culll· Gator Harrow 12ft $900
JD Whetl Dllk 10111800 NH
479 Hayblne 911 13500 Kallon
Silage Wagon wf Avco Nl Gear
$\:ZOO (304)571-9009
Dual Axle trailer Good Condition
(740)448-2684 Evtnlngs

AERATION MOTORS
Aef)lurtd New &amp; Robultt In S Cali Ron Evana 1 1101).537 9528

J

.

ana

3 Point Hitch Disc 6 ft Erooltnt
COndition (304)675-3m

lndtpandtnt Hort&gt;allle Distributor

Call For PrOduct Or Opportunll)i

MOBilE "OME OWNERS

Etch {740}44&amp;-BilU

410

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Forleaae

Beautilul1800 Sq Feel Realonid
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
District Ideal Por Proftulonll
Couple All Modern Amenllles 3
Btctrooms Spacious Uvlng 1·112
Baths Rear Deck HVAC 1800/
mo Plus Utilities Security And
Kay Deposit No Pets Relerencea
Aequlrad (740)448-4425 or
(740)446-3938

_ , T....

.._.. S250 (140)446-0485

160 Old SinGtr Sowing MtcCaatl S25 Etch Air Condltionor
17ll (304)815-4352

Fumilhed Utilillll Paid S280 Par
Month Pluo Otpotl! (740).481340

Ifni Loctlionl

AKC

,. Famal11

the

g
1

&lt;!af

one out :and two rvnnen
on
Crouch showed much po15e
much like sophomore counterpart Allen, who
has
enjoyed a successful seuon
Crouch got two ground outs
to get out of the mrung
Crouch then got the first
two out an the seventh, but
walked Stoltz and B
Humphrey. He ran the count
to 3-0 on Skillman when

3388

$20 Bookcaae $15 Plpevlst

~trtBR

HUD IIAIIIdlaclep~ tr eldtrly
lhd- EOH (304)1751171

Peta tor Sale

WHkl 4-112 Monlhl (7.00)44&amp;-

Desk $150 Couch 150 GIUI
Cofloe Table $25 End Teblu

1'Nin RIYtt'I'OWtrl now tcctOifng

Subdlvlalon Canctltd Now
Modtla Dlracl From FectorJ
Onir 2 Lift catl (140)141 3083

330

lion &lt;Om

- · CA 1 112 llalll Fully Cor
paled Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pallo Start S3151Mo No Ptll
liiH PIUI Stcurlty Deppllt A•
qulrtd Oaya 740•441•3481
Evanlngo 740·317·05D2 740
448-0101

wo-

2~1tTgyPoodiH
·3 Yttro 2 Malt Toy Poodles
II

Qll• of p~ttence

plug on
Brice Hill
came on m relief and wallced
SlcillnUn (In one p.uch, but
saved the
JNMn bard-hitbng Randy Nelwn" came to
the pla[F
1-iill got the ground bill and
third b:uenun RusseU Krtder
snagged 1t about 12 feet off
the bag, and barely beat
Humphrey running to third
for the force and the SHS VICtory
Southern
hatters
were
Brandon Pu:rce a double and
smgle, bunt Singles by Hill

5121

,560

V.

iRii ' J!.ll~d

C..u~fi,

-Rio Granda
lie
OHClaUde
Call 710 tq,

Compult&lt;l WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even wllh ltsa
ltlan perfect credit! 1 lOCI •11
9011 Codt AC 17 www omcsolu

Now Taking Appncallona- 35

Pr1vate Propertr And New Oou•
bltwldt Ona PaymanL (304)73f7295

=

- brld&lt;._...__

Compoattr &amp; Club Cadtl wiU'\
plow mowtt &amp; eulttvator Virgil I
lltiry Parch. 740-992 7449

W11t 2 Bedroom Townhoute
Apartmen1t lnctudtl Water

and-

Slnglt Parant Proorom Spacltl
Financing Available, (30•l1S5
11111

ranges Skaggs Appliancll 71

~5231

At.. ltnd Place Now Acctptlng
Appllcotlono lor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subaldod Apartment tor Elderly
and Dloabltd EOH (304)882·
3121 Or (304)1U-3274

87 2 Bedroom Oakwood Very
Nice On Rented Lot In lesage

Needed Special Government Fl

and Farm Trac1ora

Opportunity

'

Annu~

es • N1t1ona1 Contract Buyers

310

- - - ... J 315

Sold! Mongegeol

heal Settlaments! Immediate
&lt;luoltslll "Nol&gt;ody beaia our pric-

Lowell Rt!tl In Town Ctrtltltd
Mechanic Call (740)«H)1H
11-llpm

210

WE pay

1

14x.7Q SO!Jthern Dream lree De
ltvery free Setup only $9995 1

pump I ale $1-SOO. 740 5111
4043 or 740 ttr1 0901

IIMTI'UL APAIITIIINTI AT
,11~18 AT JACII·
8011 EITATiil. 52 Wtotwood

...

\XI"rckliQ!! •

Truckl for Sale

1962 Chivy 4 door Utility IIUCk
'92 Muotang GT 5 ap11a 5 0 V (74o)448-8713
1 loaded mony 0111r11 80if ml~l t•:.:.;;:.;.;:.~-::--:-:-7:-::-:­
S8500 740.1112 4017
1g113 S 10 Exttndtd Cab Load
.:.::.:.:..:.-:--:--:--::-1od LOW Mllll FlbtrglaU Topper
'95 C.volltr 4 cyllndat automallc And VIsor Eactlltnl Condlllon
,.,.. uoor S2800 740-742 2387
(740)317-7512
1988 4·Door Buick Skyhtwk, 19115- Oodgl Ram 011111
11000 080 {304)675 2127 (740)441--8713
Arlyllmt
19111 Ford F 150 XLT Loaata
1989 Mazda 323 Exeatlent Ceo· 8G 000 Mllu Aaklng U 4115
dillon (740)418-7125
\3!14)713-87:"
Unllmltad Nationwide Long Ols
1994 Chovy Camero Vol I bOOr tit• Dtkolt Sport Truck 4WD
lanctl Only 169 oo par month 1
81K T Topa, Full LO&amp;dtd V·l !500 mllu rebulll IIIIa
1101).5e2.Q097 ext 1031
Excatltnl Conditio~ S1,090 113 000 (740)37HQol7
{304)875-2881
Used Whetlchalr Good Con
88 Ford Pickup No Rust
dillon $175 oo (740)441-2205 or
1995 Berl111 $3695 1HI Luhll (740)3'19-2188
(740)44&amp;-9585 Aok For VIrginia
ns $4895 19118 Silverado Ex·
tended Cab 4x• The Boat 12 Cnovy Sllvarado, Short It~
Uald "Tickle Me Elmo• Excollonl $13 900 11G5 8·10 1•215 toadld seeoo Daya (740)24&amp;Condition Make Ollerl (740)£46- 1998 Ranger 13715 11181 And 5080
Evtnlngl (740)812-7512
2205 or (740)446-9585 Ask For lWO 1993 CSVIIilrl COO~
VIrginia
uoto"8(740)448-0to3
12 Ford F·150 Exrtndod Cob
1 11 ooo Mlltl Good Condition
Wate•llnt Special 314 200 PSI
1999 Ford Erptdltlon Loadaa S7100 (740)311 19111 Ewnlnga
$21 95 Ptr 100 1' 200 PSI
Eactlltnl Condition (740)441l37 00 Ptr 100 All Bross Com
8713
G4 Ford XLT PU 4x4 P~mt Sill
prtlllon Flnlngo In Stock
Tow Packaal Ntw T~•• BaHt,Y
liON EVANS EN1EAPRISES 18 Olds Cull au Cltrra , Good Shocko 78.000 Mllu 110 280
Jackson Ohio 1 800 537 9~6
Condition (304)875 3248 or (304)875 4721 or(304)875-4248
(304)675-8283
We Need Your Dirt Rocks .-nd
98 F 1110 Bilek &amp;pon Look 5 Cy
Boulders Dump Free Call
ee Crown VIctoria Good Cor~ IInder 5 Speed Sh1rp Truck
{740)441-Q626
Gillon Runs Good Coli (740)379- Peyoll SIO 400 (740)446-35-45
2198
730 V1n1 4·WDI
91 Plymouth Ro llanl 12000 11
CLEAN HOUSE
Grand Am S1900 Both Have
H1gh Milts 92 Geo Metro 5 92 Ch•y conver11on can v a
WITH THE
Burgundy
Low
MIIOigt
Speed $700 Firm (304)897
(740)4~4 Call Afttrllpm
5927
CI.ASSIFIIEDSi

STEEL BUILDINGS New Pre en
glnttred w/plans 30x!0•1 0 was
$12 500 now S8 990 50x80a14
waa 127 450 now $18 990
eoxt50x14 was 152 750 now
S34 990 80K200xt8 waa $81450
- 159 990 1 IIOI)o248 9840
STEH BUILDINGS Uraonlll
Muat Movoll 25a30 3Qa40
451180 Liquidation Pricing on In
llock Slztl 1 800.462 7930 X 48

r.
1-----------

730

Vans

LOCKE1T, Dtclltaad
Chrlltophor E
Ttnotll!t, (005112801

' AltllmW farfllllnlllr

Court, tho SheriH of
llelp County, Ohio,
will oHer tor aale at
the front door of tha
Courthoull
In
Pomeroy,
llalgt
County, Ohio, on the
21th day at May,
2001, et 10 3D 1m,
the following ltnda
and
tenements,
located et 45841
Pomeroy
Pika,
Racine, OH 45771 A
complete
legel
deacrlptlon of the
reel eofeta lt1 ••

Clerk of Courtll
The following reel
(4) at, (S) 3, 10
otto to In Choeter
Townehlp, Melge
Public Notloe
c-ty, Ohio end In
Sactlon No 30, Town
IN Tlfl! COMMON
3, Ilona• 12 etld
PLEAS COI,IRT OF
deecrl- utolloMEIGS COUNTY,
Beginning In the
OHIO
canter of County
Roed latdlng from
CASE NO
Cheater to Rack
1158
Springe at • point
where ae!d center
NOTICE OF SALE
line lnteretcle the
Eaal line of Section
By virtue of an No 30, thence South
Order of Sola laeued 173 fHI, thenca Weal
out of tho Common 15D feet, thence
PIHI Court of llelge North 5G fell to the
County, Ohio, In the center of aald road,
0111 of tho Home thence Northoaater!y
Nttlonol
B111k, contelnlng one·half
Plaintiff, ve Cerolyn en aero, more or leta
8 Curtis flee Cerolyn
Being • part of the

r. 4·WDI

740

brakes $8000 080 (3Q4)875
4383

1989 Chevy Allro Va~ Wo•k
van Stanctara 12500 6 Cyllnaer
(140)446-1837 Or (740)4483437
1989 Suburu Wagon All Time
4x4 Auna Good (304)875 4458

1992 Plymourh Voyaget •oaded
Exclllent Condition $2800 Firm
(740)245-.1941 After 111m
1995 Ford Ranaer XLT 4a4 lo/C
CD Playa• Standard Shill Excel

Motorcycles

1979 Harley Davidson lowr~der
nice
2300 M1les $9000

{304)882 2099
1995 Harley Davidson FLHTCU
Wllh Extras $15 000 Film Call
(740)441-1018
Clean 1983 Yamaha VIrago Mo
torcycle 500 cc Low Miles Shatl
Driven Runs Great! 2 Helmets 2
Windsh ields Included Must Sell!

$1300 (740)446-4542

r.

750

Nooor- (304)875 7974
1995 Ford Wlndsrar GL Van
Teal Slut 39 000 mllea Loaded
EKCtllent ConditiOn Garage Ktpt
v 1 Front Wheal Drlvt 11500
(740)992-8150

good
7664

lent Condition 79 000 MMe11 Price

Truck

4x4

2000 Chevy Tracker 4WD Rod
Auto A/C 4 Door 4 Cyl Fo•
PayoH or Takeover Paymenls
(740)448-4479
2000 Ford F 150 4K4 4 0001
SuPtr Cab 8 4 V8 PDL PW Till
Flemott Starter

10 000 Mll11 Exotlltnt Conaffion
(740)448-8217 Cays Bafort 2pm
Ort.teveMu&amp;e Toyota Pick up 4x4 G11a1
Condlllon Now Tlroo CD Player
$3200 080 (740)311-lle83

II PlymoUih Voyogtr g1111 con
dillon U ooo 080 740 11112
0514

740

Motorcycle•

125 Yahama Bruzt S1 500
(740)448-1783
1991 )ionda Foreman 84!0 o4x4

380 Mllao Hardly U01d Hardly
UHd S4800 (740)258-1329
2000 400EX Totally Deckad OUI
Few Houra Powder Coat Frame
Hoostr A Arms Works Shoeka
Sterlng Stem Bare Lonstar .&amp;.xle
Anti ftde Bead Locka Durable

Hubo Etc
(740)367..0883

Asking $6800

99 XR70 Honda E•eellent Sh,gpe

$800 (740}446-3545

VI lUI

TEAMS OF SALE.
10% down day of
balance on
delivery of deed
Sold eubject to
e110ond half 2000 end
eceruod 2001 real
ellllltllxtl

••1•,

Doug!.. w Lltlla,
Attorney lor Pftlntlff
(4)28, 2001
(5) 3, 10, 2001

Classifieds ~
~992-21561

\Wj

790

r.

Campers
Motor Homes

t995 Allegro 31 Foot Class A
Motorhome Low Miles Loaded

(740)44&amp;-1352
35 It Coachman Gooseneck
Camper Excellent Gondlllon

$7500 (740)448-6763
Palamlno Pop up Camper Sleeps
6 Furnace Refrigerator Air Con

Gllloner Asking $2900 (740)3888029

Boats
Motora
for Sale

18 Foot Deep Y Aluminum Boat
4 Trailer 1998 15 HP Motor With
About 20 Hours On It Electric

CD

Auditor'• Parcel
No 03-0130!1 000
The
above
dncrt- reel aattta
It told "11 II"
wllhout wanentlae or
cov-nll
PIIOPERTY
ADOAESS
45841
Pomeroy
Pike,
lllclne,OHoj8771
IlEAL !!STAT!
APIIIIAISED All
$15,000 00 The rul
e11111 ctnnot bl 101&lt;1
for Ieee than two·
thlrde the tppreleed

ao cv

1981 Jeep CJ7 304 4 apoed all

Crulsl

Racorda

' Jlidllli II. 1 ' - lollowll:

rlberglass new palnl tires &amp;

1998 Jeep
(304)8112 3173

r01t conveyed
by B. K. Smith by
deed recordtd In
Dead Book 124, Page
113 o1 the llalge
County Dead
llacorda.
llalaronce Deed·
Volume 37, Peg• 5113,
llllga County Offlcltl

Moloi Goss With II (304)875
2245

SERVICES

8t0

Home
Improvements

Mercrulur
$3500 740 992

18 Rinker 140 hp

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond itional lifetime guarantee
1985 Procraft 17 112 FOOl BaSI Local references rurnianed EJ
Boot Wllh 1988 Johnaon 150HP lai&gt;IShed 1975 Coli 24 Hrt 17•0)
Good
Condition
$3 800 448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Rog
ers Watarproollng
(740)258-1321
~ond!Uon

1995 19 Foal Onker Call For
Molt Dttalla (304)675 1298 or All types of masonry brick block
&amp; stone Free e1t1malea 304
(304)575 5770
773 9550
1997 Four Wlnaa Horizon RS 19
CIC General Home Main
Fool (304)895 3929
tenenca Painting vinyl &amp;ld!ng
carpentf'y doOrs window• baths
780 Auto Parts
mot)lle nome repair and mort For
Acceasorlas
free 1111mate call Cnet 740 9i2
• 38l14 50 Rl5
Radial 6323
Groundhog Mounted On 15x1 0
Dodson Bulld8ra
Alumlmun Wheels !00 Mlln On
Tlrtl $850 (740)643 2771 Your complate home remodeling
repair &amp; maintenance contractor
(740)534 2589

r.

Painting

vinyl aid ing decks

4·285/H R18 Gooayoa• A/S on
1991 Dodge Ram 1500 •lumlnum
Stoci Wheels $400 (740)6432771 {740)534-2589

blthl klt eh tna tlectrlcal plumb
lng many otl'ttr service• to sun
your nttdl No JOb to big or small

ludgtt Prlctd Tfanamlnlans
All Typts Accua To Over
10 000 Transmlaslon• Tra,sfer
Costa 740 245 5677 Cell 339
3785

1384

Pick up Toppe r Fiberglass &amp;
Truck Tool Chasl
$650

(304)875-4721 or {304)675-4249

7110

30 years e11ptrlenct Free tltl

matu 740 698 6783 740 591
livingston s Basement Water
Proofing all b11ement repalrt
done free estlml~el lifetime
guaranlte 1.Cyrs on job expert

enca 130• )895-3887

840

a

Campara
Motor Homes

,988 Mlllllrd 2t motor home low
mileage very good eond lion

$9 000 740 992 5983 evenings

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commtr~lel wiring
new service or repairs Ma111r Ll
ce nsed eleculclan Ridenour

EleclriCa WV000308 304 875
1716

\

�(

•
The o.lly SantJnal • Page 8.I

Palneroy, lllddlaport, Ohlo

•

~ ALLEYOOP
•

I'

PHDLIP

UNDA'S
"Talc. til. poia ""'
ofpain~- L.rchJ it for you"

•

'-,....

Tire . Ba~

Alttr6pm

flEE EST\&amp;11 tS

Pomeroy

740-985-4110

• 4l

YN0282120

~II I

• • 'Ill

·ROBOTMAN

.

WVIIM 112:1171

· PIIIIIDIG
..... Ill

A&amp;D Alto Upllolsttry- Plls, lie.
Rud8J1d, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tsrps,
convertible &amp; vinyl lop$, Fow wheeler scats,
motorqcle scats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()916

WANTED

• I I II

--

1111di
20 DP' lid
- 21 Atnollme
23 Olllclal

PI :'rw.

• I

!' .........

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

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANa CO.

••

,_

4•

g:
lion

33 CoWboy
lllck

34C:.. ..

Local843-5284

Advertise in
this space
for $100
per month.

m

Publk: Nollca ill NewiJIIIpen.
Yow JUPt to Kaow, Delivered Rlpt to Yoar Door.

HAVE TO WATCH
MY PINNIIS
THESE DAYS

Howardl.
Wrltesel
. Makes Tnctor

Roofing ·Home
MaintenanceGutters-Down
Spout

Equipment Parts
Factory Aul"-rbod
llealen
lotiO St. , 1 South
C«&lt;lvvfM, OH 461:13

·, ti 117

FfH&amp;tlmM

949-1405
591-5011

a••

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·--·

•--~
El-ll'tumblntl
• llaollng I Guu.r.
• Vln,lllclntl • Polnllng
• Plllo end Porch Dedul

Llcenlld • ln8lnd
Trane • J8nltrol • 'Tllenlwl

ilaf!Jte~&amp;.

:ron.··...._.

Serving cult0mers11 years
0.. " ~~harM Fink, Owner

Toll Frae.1 aee 813-8515

'Wt leabn Vatlollnt Praducb" •AI 0111 In Slock

----------Tills
Month's Special

Pt. Plellltllt

Lang lloltom

992·6215

TO GUT PfOPLf
OVT Of lllll#'lf.

fr"'~ ~ ~o ,._, ·

-.Ottio
Tuesdays 6:00 to 7:00pm
May 1 to July 3

BISSELL

The CRAFTY,

Meigs Senior Cllizen's Building

BUILDERS INC.

Call992·2161 to register
$2.00 per class

BLIND SPOT

New Homes • Vla1l

. (Factory Outlal}
AD vertical bllnde are

Hill'• Sell
. Stortge

.,

..

..

TERRY'S ENGIII'
AND AIR
COMPRESSORS

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pd1mo.

74o-949·2217

HARTWELL
STORAGE

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

·st. Rt. 1
lOx 10$40
10x20$60

OUALITY
WINDOW .
SYSTEMS

992-1717

1·8G0-291·5600 • Pomerov. OH

Rlafghiii!Oiiot'lal""-o~~ld

-

~~=

!=~dbK

Chal1otii-

10 ...... 1or
. INIInd
11

FAlliN HOME EIIIMATll • •IUJtQ t1 •IJEVIHo• •~

-d•.

I
I
I .. I

Toll Free

, OF DAMAGING

3 Flair

If opponents
40 llulllm
Have bid three of'
12 Gl QDW
a
the suits
11 Roman...
Of course you lead
lllldlclty 21 lila nymph
trump
-- Eva L. Duncan,
Knoxville, Tenn.
Once in a while, a
trump lead will be
best. If you have a
few minutes to spare,
write down the ones
you can think of.
The most common
situation is when
declarer is planning
either to crossruff or to
ruff losers in the dummy, yet this is easier
said than done. Other
instances occur when
the opponents have
sacrificed, especially
over your game contract; or after your
CELEBRITY CIPHER
partner has passed
by l.ula Campoa
your low-level takeCtlobll1y
Cipllor cryptoaiamo "'" CONiodlrom quolallono by lunaue
out double. convertpooplo, pool ond p.-ont. Eld\ tottor In the dphor ollndll04' another.
Today's clue: M equals v
ing it into a penalty
double. In these two
KE I P T
• RW U
YUSTRPDAI
cases, a trump is a
must Don 'tlook at the
AOR
SYU
UMDBUI
rest of your hand, just
pick a trump. And if
RWUN
svu
HUUZPAXI,
CER
you don't have a
DH
KUKOVPUI
PKSXUI,
trump, sneak one from
RWU
the other deck on the
OSEZ
HUUZPAXI.'
table!
Then there is the
WPAVUKPRW
situation in today's
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'You can run an oHice without a boss,
deal! · Nbt only · have
bUt you can1 !"" ., ome. without - . n -•- Jane Fon!la
they bid three suits,
but also West is strong
in declarer's side suit.
lAM I
If West leads the
superficially attractive
Roarraneo lonort of !he
four
Kramblod ward• bo- ·
diamond
queen;
low ·to form lour tlmplo
declarer will win in the
dummy and play a
KNI CES
club. If West now J-.1--r-1-....12""1.--II'T!""Ir-f
switches to a spade, L=~·=-~~-:;::~-=~--J,,
declarer wins and los- ..
U N R 0 .M
es another club.
Declarer gets two club l-4~-~,-~ s-..1--1
ruffs in the dummy .L.....1-J.. ....J.I--..1.. ....J.
and can reach I0 tricks
, via four spades, two
R,...,..0--11;!•
7
hearts, two diamonds
Elderly gent to friend : ''I've
and those two ruffs.
. . . .
discovered that lile·insurance and
However, if West ,......,.,._,.,....,.....,.....,..-:'---. fun have a lot in common. The
Jeadsatrumpattrick
M U T SIR
olderyougetthe·- - -it---- -. "
one, and keeps leading 8 I 1 1 19 1
G Complete
tho chucklo q~
by fillinv In tho missing wwds
trumps .every time he
·you dovolop from li•P No. 3 below.
wins a club trick,
declarer gets only one
club ruff in the dummy
and finishes one down.
He wi II lose one heart
and three club tricks.
SCRAMJ.ETS ANSWERS

0

Repair on Lawn
Tractors, Mowers,
1illers, Warnnty
Repairs

1·866-299·4445

BLOCKS' OUT 11.5%

Sizes 5' x 10'

:rl:.
ca·aun

....

74().992·5232 . Complete Mobile

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMI!RTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TillE HEAT IN

45771

LTHII'tK f\E.

U~ll\

Self-Storage

KENSINGTON

29870 llahan Road
Rlldne, Ohio

A.C.TIJN.L'(,

High&amp; Dry

location

UPTO 70%0FF
• Verticals • Wood
• Minto • Ete

I"

;,~'{\)~,~\
~ L\IAS &amp;.EN Gill~

~ .;;~

made 10 order at our

AvL Ge11pe1s
740·9!J2·7599 . 144 Tktl
'446-4995
.
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

to 10' X 30'
Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

• TtflrfATENfP

•t7'1

Free Estimates

Public Notice

' .1· NWfJ Ul'll&gt;f~6TOOI&gt;
. . Ttff VALUf OF ......_ ·
. WILI-POvlf~
'UNTIL l.

01 Cll••• ,., to !s IIlLI .... ' Lilli

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sldlet•NewGa,....
•Repbocemnt
Wladowt • Room
Additions • Roollaa
CIJIIIIIIOAI. aod IEliDOOW.
FREE ESTIMATES

AN' 1\o\Y NICKIU, MY DIMES,
AN' MY QUARTERS

FRANK. &amp; EARNEST

992-3470

"'

YOUNG'S .

A«naMIIng

• Gnvel S.ad •
Thpooll • Fill Dirt
•Muldl
Bulldozer Servka

,.._

nwtl..• OOWN
1 ....lcllnl'

C.
..........

~ BARNEY

""'"""'""'

c-urParta

.

• lpkkMi

BY PHILLIP ALDER

Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Maj9r Medical • Nursing Home.,!.

•

35 Docila
• llorllllllly
10-

Best lead

Medicare Supplement; Life lnsur~ce;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,

·:::--

.Lib.........
.... :rwltll•
.....,.

Box t8'l
Midd leport OhiO ·EJ!liO

.,.......
4

lnalrumlnt

AI ...

.,.....lillllll:!?

Rocky R Hupp A&lt;Jt'fll

!Ill

t.ana -·

.. f ••

•••J I I

0117411-742 M7

Advertise
IIIUI II
IL
.. ' , ...
In thlt apace · llallflll
Man • Sat 11-5
for$25 par HUIWII'S GIBIIOUSl
Syr~CUW, Oh
month

..

17"AI*t

•&amp;.J IU

• A.&amp; I I I
9 Q II

Y'

PtkleltCUSTOII SCIEII

-

arour
' sa

140hu·;ha57 llallllllliall
15T....,,at
11Wp
-time ••.
I
18-.....,:.;:

...•••• -...

Garages

hlort6p.m.

...

11~- . .

....

Complete Home
Repair
Remodeling
New Additions

Interior
FREE EITIMATES

East State Street Phone (740)S93-667
Athens, Ohio
·

1LMII
7Aiw•-.

DIDfl•
C81Tftm116

PAINTING

rr:_..,.

ACROII :

ALDI!R

.PEANUTS
I-I ERE! WEAR IT

AROUND 'fOOR NECK!

I SUPPOSE

r SllOUI.D

GET SOME SLACKS AND
SIIOES TO 60 WITH IT..

r--F...;.O
..L
...... I ,.
I l'l

I

I

I I I I lttl I I I I I

Advertise
In this space' ..
for $25 per '
month

· . Confer . Delve . Juicy · Plenty· PERFECT

1 once dated a fellow who was a perfectionist
slopped seeing him because I realized that the work of
: the world couldn't wait to be done by PERFECT people.

'Your . - . ___,....,............._~AG
'BirthdaJ' · c.21)··
B.
r·

ELITJt MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

12 .,..
1·304-475-7824
1-800-250·!10'17
Raiclmtlal Conuntrd.tl New Conolnldlon
Salel Stnlc:e• lnstaUatlon · ·
Sptdall... l!t Sheet Mebll Ductwork
·
"Tnme" Sales " Stnlc:e For
· Gallla, Muon, od Melp CouniiM '
Ll-.ed and
WV 005176

'"""nd

Bring In your repair wark
we'll get yau going far
spring
Every SJrlng Tune-Up
gat a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trln~m•tr.

Salea &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

.

DEPARTMBNr

Bankruptcy? Credit Problmls?
"We Can llelp"IJ .
Can f'lnt Or We 8oth l.oleJ

u.

Ask For Mike Hindle
I ~800-272-5179 or

...Cellular
"'"
· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Friday, April27, 2001
There's a strong chance you
could develop·a partnership in
the year ahead for the purpose
of achieving a mutual goal.
Gains from lhis union, both
intellectually and materially,
are likely.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- It's .unlike you not to ·
keep orderly and methodical
records of your resources, yet
today this is exactly what you
misht do for the purpose of
kidding yourself over your
wastefulness. Get a jump on
· life by understanding the lnflu.
ences that'll sovem you in the ·
. year ahead. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions by
mailing $2 to Astra-Graph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 17S8,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY IOIS6. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sisn.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
•• Someone might be spoiling
for a fight today, but will only
be able tq draw you into one if
you allow yourself to be goaded into aconfrontation. Hold
·your longue •• well •• your
temper.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Ju~t becau~e othe~R might not
he a.~ productive as you ore
today i·~ no rtason to let down

on your duties as well. Don '1
match laziness wilh indolence.

It's your work that'll suffer.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) ••
This could be just one o(those
~ays when no matter what you
''" or how hard you try there
are wme people you won't be
able to please. Don't waste
· your energy attempting lo do

so:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·.. Without realizing it today,
you could mindlessly slip into
a mode that might cause you to
conduct yourself in a manner
others find unbecoming or
. · abrasive. Watch your behavior.
' ' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
• Even if you know for a fact
you are correct about some·
thin&amp;, don't attempt to force
your knowledge onto anybody
who simr,ty doesn't want to
hel!l' it. It 11 only fruslrlte both
of you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Should you 1et involved
In Joint endc.lvor todoy with
someone who turns out to be
unwillinJIO pull his or her own
welaht physlcllly or financial·
ly, Jet out quickly; before
you're had. ·

a

self can be·a very helpful 'quality to spur yoil onto to·•uccess.
unless there's too much empha·
sis placed on number one. Harmony dn be destroyed today
when working with another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· Beller make an effort
. today to be amicable and pleas'
ant at all times. If you ·choose
lo walk around with a chip on
your shoulder you won't have
any trouble finding someone to

knock it orr.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· It doe&lt;n 't make any
sen~ e to try to push 'yourself
into a clique today whose
members make you feel inad·
equate. Keep the company of
those who have a aenuine
appreciation for you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
.. Jfthe world docsn'llrcat Y.ou
kindly today, don't strike aut at
those who will take it from you
because they love you. Get
. anary at the culprits, not your
supporters.
.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19)
- Don 'I fall prey today to a
childish retort or blamlna other people or outaldc facton for
Ollstakes you make yourself.

I

' .

�(

•
The o.lly SantJnal • Page 8.I

Palneroy, lllddlaport, Ohlo

•

~ ALLEYOOP
•

I'

PHDLIP

UNDA'S
"Talc. til. poia ""'
ofpain~- L.rchJ it for you"

•

'-,....

Tire . Ba~

Alttr6pm

flEE EST\&amp;11 tS

Pomeroy

740-985-4110

• 4l

YN0282120

~II I

• • 'Ill

·ROBOTMAN

.

WVIIM 112:1171

· PIIIIIDIG
..... Ill

A&amp;D Alto Upllolsttry- Plls, lie.
Rud8J1d, Ohio
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May 1 to July 3

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The CRAFTY,

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BUILDERS INC.

Call992·2161 to register
$2.00 per class

BLIND SPOT

New Homes • Vla1l

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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, OF DAMAGING

3 Flair

If opponents
40 llulllm
Have bid three of'
12 Gl QDW
a
the suits
11 Roman...
Of course you lead
lllldlclty 21 lila nymph
trump
-- Eva L. Duncan,
Knoxville, Tenn.
Once in a while, a
trump lead will be
best. If you have a
few minutes to spare,
write down the ones
you can think of.
The most common
situation is when
declarer is planning
either to crossruff or to
ruff losers in the dummy, yet this is easier
said than done. Other
instances occur when
the opponents have
sacrificed, especially
over your game contract; or after your
CELEBRITY CIPHER
partner has passed
by l.ula Campoa
your low-level takeCtlobll1y
Cipllor cryptoaiamo "'" CONiodlrom quolallono by lunaue
out double. convertpooplo, pool ond p.-ont. Eld\ tottor In the dphor ollndll04' another.
Today's clue: M equals v
ing it into a penalty
double. In these two
KE I P T
• RW U
YUSTRPDAI
cases, a trump is a
must Don 'tlook at the
AOR
SYU
UMDBUI
rest of your hand, just
pick a trump. And if
RWUN
svu
HUUZPAXI,
CER
you don't have a
DH
KUKOVPUI
PKSXUI,
trump, sneak one from
RWU
the other deck on the
OSEZ
HUUZPAXI.'
table!
Then there is the
WPAVUKPRW
situation in today's
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'You can run an oHice without a boss,
deal! · Nbt only · have
bUt you can1 !"" ., ome. without - . n -•- Jane Fon!la
they bid three suits,
but also West is strong
in declarer's side suit.
lAM I
If West leads the
superficially attractive
Roarraneo lonort of !he
four
Kramblod ward• bo- ·
diamond
queen;
low ·to form lour tlmplo
declarer will win in the
dummy and play a
KNI CES
club. If West now J-.1--r-1-....12""1.--II'T!""Ir-f
switches to a spade, L=~·=-~~-:;::~-=~--J,,
declarer wins and los- ..
U N R 0 .M
es another club.
Declarer gets two club l-4~-~,-~ s-..1--1
ruffs in the dummy .L.....1-J.. ....J.I--..1.. ....J.
and can reach I0 tricks
, via four spades, two
R,...,..0--11;!•
7
hearts, two diamonds
Elderly gent to friend : ''I've
and those two ruffs.
. . . .
discovered that lile·insurance and
However, if West ,......,.,._,.,....,.....,.....,..-:'---. fun have a lot in common. The
Jeadsatrumpattrick
M U T SIR
olderyougetthe·- - -it---- -. "
one, and keeps leading 8 I 1 1 19 1
G Complete
tho chucklo q~
by fillinv In tho missing wwds
trumps .every time he
·you dovolop from li•P No. 3 below.
wins a club trick,
declarer gets only one
club ruff in the dummy
and finishes one down.
He wi II lose one heart
and three club tricks.
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Friday, April27, 2001
There's a strong chance you
could develop·a partnership in
the year ahead for the purpose
of achieving a mutual goal.
Gains from lhis union, both
intellectually and materially,
are likely.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- It's .unlike you not to ·
keep orderly and methodical
records of your resources, yet
today this is exactly what you
misht do for the purpose of
kidding yourself over your
wastefulness. Get a jump on
· life by understanding the lnflu.
ences that'll sovem you in the ·
. year ahead. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions by
mailing $2 to Astra-Graph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 17S8,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY IOIS6. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sisn.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
•• Someone might be spoiling
for a fight today, but will only
be able tq draw you into one if
you allow yourself to be goaded into aconfrontation. Hold
·your longue •• well •• your
temper.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. Ju~t becau~e othe~R might not
he a.~ productive as you ore
today i·~ no rtason to let down

on your duties as well. Don '1
match laziness wilh indolence.

It's your work that'll suffer.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) ••
This could be just one o(those
~ays when no matter what you
''" or how hard you try there
are wme people you won't be
able to please. Don't waste
· your energy attempting lo do

so:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·.. Without realizing it today,
you could mindlessly slip into
a mode that might cause you to
conduct yourself in a manner
others find unbecoming or
. · abrasive. Watch your behavior.
' ' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
• Even if you know for a fact
you are correct about some·
thin&amp;, don't attempt to force
your knowledge onto anybody
who simr,ty doesn't want to
hel!l' it. It 11 only fruslrlte both
of you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Should you 1et involved
In Joint endc.lvor todoy with
someone who turns out to be
unwillinJIO pull his or her own
welaht physlcllly or financial·
ly, Jet out quickly; before
you're had. ·

a

self can be·a very helpful 'quality to spur yoil onto to·•uccess.
unless there's too much empha·
sis placed on number one. Harmony dn be destroyed today
when working with another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) ·· Beller make an effort
. today to be amicable and pleas'
ant at all times. If you ·choose
lo walk around with a chip on
your shoulder you won't have
any trouble finding someone to

knock it orr.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) ·· It doe&lt;n 't make any
sen~ e to try to push 'yourself
into a clique today whose
members make you feel inad·
equate. Keep the company of
those who have a aenuine
appreciation for you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20)
.. Jfthe world docsn'llrcat Y.ou
kindly today, don't strike aut at
those who will take it from you
because they love you. Get
. anary at the culprits, not your
supporters.
.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19)
- Don 'I fall prey today to a
childish retort or blamlna other people or outaldc facton for
Ollstakes you make yourself.

I

' .

�•
•

•

P&amp;. . B I • The Dlilly SeniiiMI

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio -

Fired•up
leads
·Bucks past Magic
MILWAUKEE (AP) -IUy Laken attempt to take a 2-0
hllen Ius the Milw:aukee lead when they pl;ly host to
Bucks on the verge of win- Portland.
· ·
ning their first playoff series
On Wednesday night, Sam
since the 1980s.
Cassell•dded 26 points for the
hllen, fired up by a flagrant Bucks, who won consecutive
foul on Andrew DeClercq,· playoff games fot the first time
had a penonal playoff-best 27 since 1989. when they bear
points to go with l!l rebounds Atlanta two straight en route
and seven assistS in Milwau- · to a 3-2· series win, the last
kee's 103-96 victory over time Milwaukee won a firstOrlando' en Wednesday night. round series.
Allen also slowed down 21The Magic scm the Bucks
year-old Magic star Tracy to the line 33 umos. Allen was
McGrady in the fourth quar- 11-of-13 from rho foul line.
ter as rhe Bucks rook a 2-0 and Cassell made all nine of
lead in their best-of-five series his free throws as the Bucks
that resumes in · Orlando on outscored Orlando 25-9 on
Saturday night.
free throws.
McGrady sc,ared a career
The Bucks' " Big Throe" - ·
playoff-high 35 points, but had Allen , Cassdl md Glenn
just five in the fourth quarter Robinson - combined for 67
as the Magic lost to Milwau- points, 19 more than they had
kee for the 11th straight time. in Game I on Sunday night.
Toronto looks to even its
Kings 116, Suns 90
series at one game apiece
Pej~ Stojakovic scored 22
Thursday night with a victory points and Jason Williams
at New York. The Los Angeles added 18 as host Sacramento

Reds

•

l'hlndey, Apr1121, 2001 :

Alexander girls edge Meigs ~

- a ~alute to·the tri-county regi~n

Friday

•

lhDAVEII-.s
OVP CORR~SPONDENT

ALBANY - Alexander on
the strength of a nine run secevened
its senes with ond inning, jumped out to a
9- 1 lead and held off Meigs to
Phoenix.
The Kings charged to a 22~ post a 10-9 win over the
Marauders in TVC softball
point lead if) the first half and
action
Tuesday.
never let up on. the way to the
Meigs took a 1-0 ·Jead in the
franchise's biggest playoff victop
of the second inning on a
tory since April 7, 1951, when
fielder's choice, and singles off
the Rochester Royals won the
the bats of Jaynee Davis and
first game of the NBA Finals.
IUra
Musser.
. Sacramento made a pair of
But the lead didn't last long
8-0 runs during a 25-8 surge
as
the Lady Spartans sent 13
and rook a 22-point lead with
3 112 minutes left in the first batters to the plate in the bothalf The Kings led 95-63 after tom of the inning. Consecuthree quarters, stretched the tive singles by Canterbury,
lead to 34 points and cruised Whitlacth, Carr and Hamill
began the inning.
through the fourth period.
After a Marauder error,
Chris Webber finished with
singled
and
16 points, nine rebounds and Williams
Llewellyn
doubled.
Kauffman,
five assists for Sacramento,
which shot 57 percent in the Whitlatch and Carr followed
with ·singles before the
first three quarters. Bobby
Marauders
could retire the
Jackson added 16 points, and
seven Kings scored in double side. Whitlatch and Carr each
figures .
Tony Delk scored 14 points
for the Suns, who had SIX
players in double figures.

Fernandez, a former Giant, put the ball on fell in."
allowed four runs and· eight
The Giants took a 2~0 lead
hits over five innings, with in the first inning on Barry
two
walks and two strikeouts. Bonds' two-run double.
fromPapBI
Danny Graves pitched · the
Young slipped, · but still
managed to catch ~onds' secninth for his sixth save.
22-23.
Aurilia also finishecl'4-for-5 · ond-inning . pop-up to left
The Giants also failed to fill
with a long reach while sittheir bayside ballpark for the with an RBI.
"Larkin
had
a
pretty
good
ting
on the grass.
second consecutive game
The victory extended
after a string of 90 str:aight night. Aurilia had a pretty
sellouts. The . team drew good night, too." Reds man- Cincinnati's NL-record streak
40,763, which was 296 short ager Bob Boone said. "I guess of not being shut out to 183.
it was shortstop night."
Notes: Aurilia matched his
of capacity.
Ken
Griffey
Jr.,
still
rehabcareer
high with four hits ....
San
Francisco
almost
caught up in the fourth . Sha- bing his injured left ham- The Giants were 336 fans
won Dunston narrowed it to string, pinch hit for Fernan- short of a sellout Tuesday....
6-3 with an RBI double off dez in the sixth inning with Giants 3B Russ Davis began
Osvaldo Fernandez (4,1), and one out and LaRue on third. serving a two-game suspenAfter he was intentionally sion Wednesday for a spring
Rich Aurilia's single scored
Dunston to . pull the Giants walked by Rueter, Griffey training scuffie with Chicago
within two.
was replaced by pinch-runner Cubs' pitcher Julian Tavarez.
Eric Davis' RBI groundout Donnie Sadler. Griffey waved The suspension was reduced
in the seventh brought the to the crowd as he walked from three games to two....
Giants within one run. But back to the dugout.
LaRue's triple in the ·sixth was
Ochoa added an RBI single
Rueter allowed six runs and the first of his career. ... The
for the Reds in the ninth.
rt hits through 5 1-3 innin~. last time the Giants gave up
"It was a game of good for- He walked two and struck seven hits in an inning was on
tune for them and bad for- out two.
April 22, 1999, against Col1
' It was a: weird ~nning,' ; orado. ... Rueter was 7-'0
tune for us," Gian~ manager
Dusty Baker said. "They Rueter said of the third. "It's against the Reds before
found every hole and we just one of those things. It Wednesday night's loss.
couldn't. find any holes."
seems that everything they

INSIDE lODAY: PRIDE 2001

had two singles in the inning.
Meigs scored a pair of runs
,in the top of the third inning,
and looked to have a big
inning in the works. Mindy .
Chancey and Lindsay Bolin
both singled and Stephan,ie
Wigal tripled putting her on
third with no outs. But
Lkwellyn bounced back to
retire the next three Marauder
batten and leave Wigal stranded a third base.
The Spartaps scored a run in
the top of the fourth inning
for a 10-3 lead. Whitlatch
reached on a Meigs error. She
later scored on Josie Carr single.
Meigs came back in the top
of the sixth inning with a pair
of runs . Chancey singled and
stole second and came into
score on a single off the bat of
Lindsay Bolin. Bolin stole a
base and scored on a Spartan
·error.
The Marauders added four

mol'&lt; runs in the top of the;,
sixth inning. With · two out!-.
Shannon Price ..,ached on a.
fielden choice, Chancey fol-~.
lowed with a walk and Boli~
singled Wigal reached .on ~
error and Abby Harns fol-~
lowed with a single. A Spartart(
error pulled the Mar:auders to;
within 10-9, but tlut w:as a S,:
close at it would get.
Morgan Llewellyn picked:
up the win for Akxander giv~·
il)g up nine hits walking ~
and striking out. two. Jos•c;
Carr \Vas perfect in four at ba~
with four singles, Williams;,
added three singles.
•
Jeffers · was the starter an1
loser for Meigs.Jeffers gave up.
15 hits, struck out two, walkecf.
four and hit a pair.
;
Bolin was perfect at th&lt;;;
plate with four singlest
Chancey added two singles'
Wigal a triple, Harris, Jayne~
Davis and Musser each adde'f
a single.
~

OVP CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY - Division leadingA!exander jumped out to a
7-0 lead after two innings, and ·
held off Meigs to post an 8-4
win over the Marauders in a
TvC contest Tuesday.
The Spartans jumped out to
a 4-0 lead off oflosing pitcher
Josh Napper after the first
inning. Justin Brooks singled
and moved up on a Meigs
error.
After a fielder's choice put a
runner on, Jason Warren hit a
three run bomb to give the
Spartans a 3-0 lead. After a pair
of walks, Adam Ross singled
in a run to make it a 4-0 contest.
In the second inning with
one out Steve Llewellyn hit a

b

/

•

Spartans topple Marauders
BY DAVE HARRIS

•

•

#

••

*•
•

'
'•
solo home run. Marauder double. Meigs (7-9 TVC 5-7}
coach Oan Thomas thel} went · added a solo run in the bot~
to the 'bull pen and brought tom of the inning on a sol.;
Matt Lewis into pit~h. Brooks home run by Stanley to makl
was hit by a pitch and one ·out it an '8-4 contest and close out
later Warren walked.
the scoring.
•
Both runners advanced on
Ross picked up the win for
passed balls and scored on a the Spartans (11-7, TVC 10~
single off the bat of L. C. 2) . Ross gave up six hits:
Grigsby.
struck out nine and walked
Meigs scored three '·runs in three. Llewellyn led the Spar~
the third inning to pull to tans with a double and home;
within four runs. Matt Stewart ·run, Warren added a home;
led off the inning with a solo run.
'"·
home run.
Napper picked up the loss
John Stanley followed with for Meigs, with help from
a single and Adam Bullington Lewis. The two scattered seven
went deep to cut the Maraud- hits, walked five, and hit onci
er deficit to 7-3.
batter. Stewart led Meigs witli
The Spartans made it a 8-3 a pair of singles and a home
contest in the sixth inning, run, Stanley added a single and
Issac Wooten singled and came home run and Bullington ~
into score when Llewellyn home run.

Keep up with your favorite teams every day in the
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Subscribe today • 992•2156

~

'

Melp CoUntfs
so tt·nt' ·April

11 20 U I •

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

liol '&gt;I Nn IYH

Historical
site gets .
·. rare trees

Hcnnetown News,.per
wwwmyd.JIIY"'"''"''' ,om

PrOm candidates

County
inks pad
911

lh

CNARUNE HOEFLICH
SENJJNEL NEWS ST-FF

CHESTER 'IWo
Dawn Redwoods, grown
from seeds collected from
trees in the National
Arboretum in Washington, were planted at the
site of the Chester courthouse
.Wednesday
'•
~venmg.
· : The event brought .
fogether trees thought to
)&gt;e extinct for thousands
pf years and a courthouse
l&gt;uilt in 1823 which has
the distinction of being
the oldest one standing in
Ohio.
Frank
Porter
of
Riverview Herbs secured
;md planted the trees for
the Meigs County Associ':ltion of Garden Clubs.
One tree was purchased
· with . a grant from the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, while the second tree was donated by
Porter. The trees were .
planted on the hillside in
front of the courthouse.
Porter said the Metrasequoia Glyptostroboides
(Dawn Redwood) was
only known from fossil
records in Japan until the
late
1940s when ·
botanist, 'while on a
'

consultant
lh BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

·These six Eastern High School seniors are candidates for prom king and queen: Amber Baker, Shauna
Elliott and Kristen Chevalier, queen candidates, and Jason Warner, Joe Brown and Matt Simpson, king can"
dldates. The prom Will be Saturday evening at tl:le high school. (Brian J. Reed photo)

'b•·•

.

lagers who were carrying .,
br:lnchet ·&amp;f t11e tree to he
used as firewood.
When queried as to the
location of the trees, they
pointed to the side of a
mountain, and the next
day led the botanist to a
~mall grove of Dawn
' Redwoods.
Porter
,aid
that
seedlings and seeds were
collected and taken to the
National Arboretum and
. it was from those original
seedlings, now 70 foot
specimens, that seeds were
. taken for the two Dawn
Redwoods planted at the
Chester courthouse.
Attending the planting
were repre~entatives of all
Meigs County garden
clubs, Rutland, Rutland
Friendly
Gardeners,
.Chester, Wildwood, Shade
.Valley, Winding Trail, and
Middleport; Master Gardeners Club, the ChesterShade Historical Associa·tion and the Chester Fire
'Department.

POMEROY- Meigs County c0 rrunissionen
took a major step in the process of initiating 91 1
emergency service when they met in regular session on Thursday. signing a contract With a consultant who Will complete a feasibility study fur
the county.
The conmussione~ have appointed an ad-hoc
committee of township and village representatives, and that committee also attepde&lt;j the meeting with William E. Stanton of Coshocton, a 13year veteran of the 911 business, who will complete the $5,000 study.
Stanton has worked with a nt1mber of ~ther
small counties in conjunction with the Governor's Office of Appalachia, which will fund the
·study. The office will also make matching funds
available for the purchase of equipment and other
infrastructure needed to implement the service in
the few rural counties which do not haY., the service in place.
.
Middlepon and Racine myors Sandy lannarelli and Scott Hill, Amanda Ramage, Dean McKnight, EMA Director Bob Byer, EMS Adrninis- ·
trator Gene Lyons, Todd Smith, and SheriffRalph
Trussell serve on the committee.
·
Byer, who will head up the.ad-hoc group, said
· the oper•ting costs of the system could be a concern for .the county once the equipment wonld
be in place.
"! have a lot of questions and concerns, mainly
• abou,t how ~ would pay for thjs," Byer said.
·•.,..w
.me~ biit'p lis....._ ~
maintaining
it
With
out' population bate is ari
.. , .

.,

ISSUe.

OMEROY ·
a bridge. Tables around the ·
Those attending room were decorated with
the
first-ever candle centerpieces, and
prom at
the punch and cookies were
Senior· Citizens served.
Center Tuesday literally Powell coacl1es seniors on
danced the day away. ·
"cutting the rug." Since
"Never have .I been to a proms and pictures go
·30 · th
together, Frances Reed was
prom at 10. m e morn- . . d b S
M K . h f
ing," quipped Gerald Powell, JViome YM. cott . cl Hmg :t 0,
etetans emona osplta1s
fl ·
"
h
w h o emceed th e program
and . taught new steps to , Inner Re ecoons ror a p oto
under the archway; (Charlene
h had b eeno ff the H
manywo
ilih h
)
da~ce floor for years.
oe c P otos
The
popular
dance
instructor
successfully
encouraged seniors with or
without partners to participate in the activities held in
the community room, deco·rated with royal blue and
white streamers and a backdrop of clear' mini lights.
Seniors in their Sunday
best entered the prom area' ·
through an archway and over .

Some counties pay for the·operation of the service through a 50-cent monthly surcharge on the
telephone bill, Stanton said, approved by referendum. Commissioner Mick Davenport said a bill is
pending in the Ohio legislature alloWing the
commi.«ione~ to levy the surcharge without a
resolution.
"We have to know the cost before we can have
any serious discussion of how it.will be funded;'
Commissioner Jim Sheets said.
Stanton's study will not address operating costs,
he said, but will look at what equipment is
required, staffing, ~elephone infrastructure and the
status of the county's house numbering system.
Purchase of any equipment and networking
telephone expenses would be subject to a 50 percent match from the Governor's Office of
Appalachia.
Stanton expects to have his study completed by
the end ofJune.
In other business, the commissioners:
• Approved bid&lt; for bituminous materials for
May from Asphalt Materials Inc., Marietta,' and
Middleport Terminal Inc., Gallipolis;
• Met with Mike Swisher, director of the Meigs
County. Department ofJob and Family Services,
in executive session, for discussion of personnel;
• Paid bills in the amount of$261,885.34.
Present, in addition to .Sheets ·and Davenport,
were Commissioner Jeff Thornton and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

~

Todly's

H!p:IOI

· ~

Sentinel· v
2S..:IIIWI1-11 .....

Low: 40s
Details, A2
'•

Rum·ors of _bridge closing inaccurate·

Lotteries

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - "The Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) is not
'84-6 Pldi3:~2-6;Pidl4:6-4-9-8
closing the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge."
87 Ill d .. 5: 29-J0-31-33-37
That was the message from ODOT
M
District 10 ; Deputy Director George
A3 W.VA ·
Collins· on rumors of pending closure of
Sports
81-3.8 Dlllvl:.l.().4De1Jv 4:8-S·?-8
the structure for repairs.
Weather ·
A2 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co. '
"These rumors seem to be spreading
....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, . like wildfire," said Collins. "However,

Calendar
Classifieds
Comjcs
EsJjtorjals
Objtuarjes

A5 OHIO

that's all they are - rumors. No one at
ODOT knows .how they got started."
ODOT recently completed a thtee-day
bridge repair project that required closing
the bridge for three days. Those repairs
were successful and the bridge was later
reop ened.
. The need for the repairs was discove red
during an in-depth inspection of the
structure, and although the repairs were
'

.

not critical, ODOT pursued the repairs
immediately in order t&lt;r• save money by
taking advantage of sqffolding whi~h
had been installed on the bridge . by the
i nsp'ection team.
Collins said field work for the in-depth
inspection has been completed and that a
final written rcpori is expected within a
month.
·

PleiiH see Rumors. Al

Me,igs family Fun Festival
Look for the Holzer Medic~l Center Community Health and '
Wellness Trailer at the Festival. Non-fasting cholesterol
and glucose screenings will be provided at no cost.
r

Satunlay, April 28
10am·2pm
· laale11i High .Sch.OI
For more informalion

'

call (740)446·5679

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

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