<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7382" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7382?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T17:11:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17791">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7146b547765b754b6828357c8b7dd324.pdf</src>
      <authentication>679eda0b954632b1ab29cb9c4efa7e76</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24090">
                  <text>Page

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

Ventura rips
15th ·homer,
Kent belts seven
RBI on big night

,.

"

OIIL.Mguo

~

L

15
12

10
15
14
. 15
15

~

- -~
Alllnll

11
11

11

-York

Chic:lgo
Clndnnati

MitJolukee

Houlton
StLOuiS

Piftlllurgh

w

L

15
15
14
12
12

10
10
11
13
13
15

·-

A!lzona
Colo&lt;ldo
San Francioco
~n Diogo

11
12
12
12
15

Gil

.600

.440
.423
.423

""'

.600
.600
.56Q
.48()

.480

.375
9
.... Oivlolon
w L Pet
15
14
13
13
11

N .Y. Melo7, . . _ , $
San Diogo 10, Chlcogo C. 3

lllvloloft

w

.5n

.538

.520
.520

4
4
4112
4112

G8
1

3
3
5 112

G8
1
1112
11/2

r-,..-

Milwoukoo (Rigdon 2.0) at
(MadduX 2·2). 7:05 p.m.

Atlanla

ArlzoNI (-.on 0.2) 11 (Aimu .Jr. o-4), 7:05 p.m.
St. Loull (tolofril3-2) II flol1da (Penny
1.0). 7:05p.m.
San Frandl&lt;o (Ortiz 3-1) at~
(RitcNe 1).3), 7:05p.m.
Loo Angotoo (8fOM&gt; 3-1) at Ctncinnad
(Hamlsch 1·2), 7:05p.m•
~ (Bohanon o-3) at PNiadel·
phla (Person 2·2), 7:05p.m.
Houstcn (Uma 1-1) at N.Y. Mats (A!Jiller 2·2), 7:10p.m.
San Diogo (JaNio 1-2) at ChiCago
Cubl (~ 2·1), 8:05p.m.
"Tbutacloy'a San Diogo (Jooaa 1).3) at Ch~ilo
Cubs (Wood 1-1 ), 2:20p.m.
~ (Astacio 3· 1) aiPhlladelphil
(Telemoco 2.0), 3:05 p.m.

cOolon
T"""""
--

Ban· ,....,.

T-

--

Bay

17
17
15

13
8

8 . .854
8 .854
12 .556
14 .481
18 .298

2112

4 112
8 112

centniDI¥tolon
W
L Pot
GB
18
7 .720
15
8 .825 2 1/2
10 16 .385 . 8 112

--

lllu!&gt;e 1·31 ot
7:05p.m.

at-

ToroniO (LDolza 4-1)
der 2·2), 10:05 p.m.

8

15
15
18

,423

9

.423

9
12

;308

-v-·-·

~··-•t-

r.gers 6,
Rangers 3

Angels 6,
White Sox4

rewers 5,
Braves 3

Bulk Garden
Seed ready

·Blue Jays 5,
Athletics 4

for spring .
planting ·

PICKEN

rl"
4,
cardinals 3
Ma

.,
'

Orioles 3,
Devil Rays1

Royalty candidates

.
&amp;tv
!

HARDWARE

.

· ,.

•

• BY TONY M. I.McH
SENTINEL NEWs ST4FF

RAdiNE - ·

A project
geared toward creating a
ne\v boat ramp in Racine
is still considered "top priority" by the Ohio Department
of
Natural
Resources.
Jim Marshall, ODNR
Division ofWildlife district
manager for southeast
Ohio, said the ~ew ramp is
among the department's
top 10 · projects to be
undertaken sometime in
the near future.
• "The .state is currently
.. ~uating specific budget
~e5' for various ODNR
projects ·throughout Ohio,''
5aid Marshall. "The Racine
slJmp is still top priority,
*d would gready complil{tent the boat ramp in BelJ:tre and the newly conSft'ucted launch near Ga!ijpolis Locks and Dam in ·
~allia Count}'."
:- The 21-acre tract of
&amp;nd, located near Star Mill
Pari&gt; in: ' the Yellowbush
·~reek area, includes 1,475
.S.i11l'~'rl!..lle, Jhat

+

11..

;

MASON,
W.VA.

oj M.J!oU.

Phillies 7,
Rockies 1

DR. BOWERS
TO RETIRE
ON JUNE 30, 2001

G. Wilson Bowers, MD will retire on June 30, 200L If you
are a patient of Dr. Bowers please call our Pediatric
Department at (740) 446-5371 to select a new Pediatric
Physicians.
,
Please choose one of the following
Pediatric Physicians:

Middleport
Oty Hospital

-nurses with
· salute!
Place of Employment --;----------.....,..Your Name ________________
~

I.H. Kim, MD
K.K. Lee, MD

HOLZER
CLINIC
...
90 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OH . 45631
(740) 446-5371

Joseph Y. Li, MD
Leigh Ann Meeks, MD
Richard J. Mendieta, MD
Monique M. Sherrill, MD
.Jon M. Sullivaq, MD

Plan would force EPA to act on permits

"

.E£"~~~en-"!Sp(APtl

~:_ohi?

Unde r the a mendm~ttt~'

. . issue permits. for factones .
other proje~ts. that can pol)ute,_an EPA offici~ s:udWednesday.
. bU"ector · Chnstopher Jones
plan,rted to ask the &amp;;nate to remove
the Iimlts from the House budget
bill, said , Patricia Madigan, .an EPA
deputy director.
Republicans slipped the plan into
the $45 billion, two-year budget
plan early Wednesday as the House
Finance Corrunittee completed its
work on the bill. The full House
approved the bill early Thursday.

·submission to determine
whether to grant or detty
the permit.

h-.

RAMP liTE - A new boat
launching facility In Racine
Is still top priority for ODNR
offlclcls, who say the project could possibly get
under way sometime In the
l'lear future, The proposed ·
boat ramp, eathnated to
cost around $1 million,
would be constructed •on
21 acres near Star Mill
Park In Yellowbush Creek.
(Tony M. Leach photo)

~usinesses

The Stnate must also pass the budget and Gov. Bob Tali must sign it
by July 1.
Unde~ the amendment, the EPA
weuld have 90 days from an application's submission to determine
whether to grant or deny the per.mit. Cun'ently, the agency has 180
daYs to decide, Madigan said.

and commumttes
should not have to wait that.long to
lip~ Qut ~~ f,JOf&lt;!.~d with a ·
proJect, sallt Rep.Jun Trakas, a suburban Cleyeland Republican. ,
"Sometimes it t'akes six months, a
year, two-to-three years for a ,business to end up having its application
approved. Many businesses are getting frustrated by this," Trakas said.
He cited as an example the runway project at Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport. The EPA this
nionth granted a waiver that allows
Cleveland to proceed with plans td
build the 9,0()().foot runway, which
aims to allow expanded flights at the
··
·
city-owned airport.

Bv ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POM ER.OY - A Pomeroy woman is in fair
cond1 ti on following a three-vehicle accident on
East Main Street on Wednesday.
Pom ~roy Police Chief Mark Proffitt said that ·
Charles Whittington Jr. , 43, Pomeroy. was traveling along East Main at 6:30 p.m. when he
went left \llf center and struck a truck driven by
Leonard Koenig for Bob's Market.
·, • KoeniJll.ost' control of his ,vehicle went,left of
cenfer•ai1i!"collidbd liread-on witlra V:di dri\ltn
by Gloria VanReeth, 44, Pomeroy. The panel
truck continued over an embankment .and
came to rest 10 feet from the Ohio River.
VanRceth, who was extricated from her vehicle with the Jaws of Life, was flown by medical
helicopter to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va ., where she is currently listed as in fair
condition .
Whittington was charged with driving under
th e influenc e, left of center and aggravated
vehi cular assault .
He is being held in the Middleport jail awaitmg an appearan ce in Meigs County Court

Please see Accident. .U

..,..,..

Sentinel

party lines with majoricy Republicans committee met for 263 hours and heard ' ina! budget proposal of Republican Gov. second year prevailing. sent the budget bill to the Sen- testimony from 868 wimesses, both Bob 11Ift disproportionately affected
ate, where' the education portion is likely reconls for a single bill, Chairman John vices to the elderly and the poor.

Hip:IOI
Low: lOs
Details, A2

~ca~!~eo~d~a~r------~gA5~ OH~
.~~r.Clllla,..sswifi..eMd.. _s_ ___,84oc...·6,.. _Pick :s: 7+6; Pick 4: 9-5-7-1
,loC:v.omu.wics,....__~---'_,Bu..Z · Slfii'LiiiiD: 16-21-27;35-47-49
~~~tt~owri~al~s________cA4~ ~1-49949

~o~b~ku~anf..
le~s________,A3~ ~~
~spo~rts~_ _ ___..B.LJ-.2.,.,s
.. Dilly 3 = &amp;-s-a 0e11r 4: o: 1-11-4

_____.£A2,.

.~~Wuei!iawth"-le01r

c 2001 Ohio VIIJ.y Publilhinr co.

Sl'l'·

and restored funding for
the ·OI1io Women's Policy and Research
Commi&gt;~ion, among other things.

Titling of vehicles headed to Internet under bill
COLUMBUS (AP) -The titling of
vehicles and watercraft could ,be done
through the Internet, under legislation
the Senate approved W~dnesday.
The bill, passed 33-1 in the Senate, is
meant to streamline !he process of buying, selling and trading vehicles, said
Ron . Amstutz, a Republican from
Wooster who sponsored th~ measure.
Ohioans will be 'able to title. their
vehicles in any county instead of, as law

currently requires, with the clerks 'of
court in the county where they re sid~
or where they purchase the vehicl e:
"Technology makes it possible for us
to do a much better job providing customer service," Sen. Bill Harris, a
Republican from Ashland; said in urging
support for the bill.
Several lawmakers who voted for the
biU said they agreed 1 ith its overaU
concept, but were con/ rned that cross-

county ti tling would hur't revenue
counties get trom issuin_g titles through
their clerks of co urt.
"This bill is a real plus for customers,
but it does dislo ca te the revenue stream
from ~he services counties now provide,
and I hope we will continue to look at
that · issu e in the future ,'' said Sen .
Priscilla Mead, a Republican from
Columbus.

Address-----------,..------.-PhoneH _____________________~Ads Must Be Prepaid

.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The House on to remain intact. Republicans in both Carey said.
"This budget allocates too much of the
Thwsday apptu~~ed a $45 billion, two-year chambers agreed to most of the education
"This budget has received more debate, . pain to those lea~t able to accept it," said.
spendiflg plan that includes $1.4 billion in . proposals befOre they went into the plan. more ideas and more scrutiny than any Dale Miller, a Cleveland Democrat.
nei.v spending on primary 31)d secondary
The vote followed the second straight budget in modern history;• said Carey, a
ln all, the Republicans stopped six
education, a priority with the state facing day of marathon discussions. Thursday's Wellston Republican. "We had hearing; Democratic amendinents that would have
a court-imposed deadline to change its floor vote came at 2:51 a.m. The House and lots of them, and we li~tened."
changed the school funding formula, kept
school funding formula by June 15.
Finance Committee voted to rerommend
Democrats were united in their opposi- the 6 percent coUege ruition cap for both
The 59-40 vote, which fell strictly along the bill after 6 a.m. Wednesday. Overall, the tiori. They said the cuts made in the mig- years - the bill would remove it iii the

Lotteries

Name of Nurse_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Pradeep Kandula, MD

King and queen candidate$· for the Meigs High School' prom set Saturday, 7 p.m. to midnight, are from left,
front, Cara Ash, Ashley Thomas and Derek Miller; and back, Bethany McMillin, Robert Johnson, Andrea
Krawsczyn, Ashley Hannahs, Zach Bolin and Rachel Taylor. Candidates not there for the picture were Jan
Story, Drena Todd and Adam Bullington. The theme is "You're My Everything," with decorations ln dark blue.
purple and silver.

Woman
injured in ·
Main Sbaeet
accident·

House sends Senate S45 billion budget

.

janette Doe, R.N.

AUTO ACCIDENT- A Bob's Market panel truck,
driven by Leonard Koenig, lies 10 feet from the
Ohio River following a thre&amp;Vehicle accident that
occurred on East Main Street In Pomeroy
Wednesday evening. (Dave Harris photo)

owoses arop~_Jon:e.Jhe
' ,h.'oilir
~~illi~~~~·:~~··~-v·~·~-·
ec..on '"'&gt;~ncys ... ;,.;;.w
. th£. EPA U!OUld
ave• 90...
~ detennine ~ IJO&lt;fays ._J.,.
· !" lfJIP t..."!tton 'S

Indians 13,
Royals 1

l O,
CUbs ·3

www m ydailysentinel .com

4), 3:05 p.m.
~
Toronto (Michalak 3·1) II Oaldond
(HudSon 2&gt;3), 3:35p.m.
:
N.Y. Yankees (UIIy 1.0) 11 S a (McEimy 1-1), 7:05p.m.
..
Dostoo (CUiillo 3-1) at Saame (Morer
4.0) , 10:05 p.m .

Expos3

B

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

No. 202

..

,.:,

Mariners 0

s I,

at O.ldonl &lt;!f.!·

D·backs a,

Red Soxl,

, 0 lent~ • May J. lOO I • Vol

""11"

.••

Yankees 4,
1Wins o

Hometown NewSpaper

"JJI.

CltYelond (Burl&gt;tl 3· 1)
(Reichert 3· 1), 2:05p.m.
Oelroil (MIIcld 1·2) at TOICU (-.g-1.

11
11

Melpeounty's

, _ (Moya3-1), 8:05p.m.
•
DeiJOII (Holl2-2) II TOXII (C..
8:05p.m.
~
CleYellnd (Sibllhll 2·1) II
City (SuDII&lt;J 2·1), 8:05p.m.
•
lloslon (Nomo 3-1)
(Sol(._
0), 10:05 p.m.
•

WLPc1GB
20
8 .769

18

.375
.333

•

•

N.V. Y - ~-odoZ 1).2) ot llf&gt;-

CNoogo While Sox (Garlond 4).())! 11
Anllhoim (Walhl&gt;um o-3), 10:05 p.m. • .

8

oakland

Bay

uo

'',!

8 112
9 112

9 . 15

Seo!Ue
Anaheim
Texas

r-

~0-&lt;1),

Thursday·

..
...

T....,.._ n ··1fo

T"""*' 5. Ooldlnd 4, 10 irr*1gl

WL~GII

.......... .

Daal didn't allow a hit until
Robin Ventura and Jeff Kent Neifi Perez led off the seventh
.423
Mmcloy"o Oomoo
Arizona (Johnson 3-3) at Montreal
had impressive performances with a double. Daal allowed
Kansas Ci1y 6, Toronto 3
Mooday'oGemo
(Thurman 2·3). 7:05 p.m.
Baltlmore 5, Tampa Say 3
at the plate Tuesday on a night four hits in eight innings.
N.Y. Mets'B, Houlton 2
.
San Francisco (Estes 2· 1) at Pitts·
Minnesota 2, N.Y. Yankees 1
J:
when · impressive was the
burgh (Anderson 2·1 ), 7:05p.m.
Denny Neagle (2"1) gave up
• Tulodey'aa...o
ChiCago Wl'ile Sox (Baldwin i).tloal
AriZor)a 8, Montreat 3
Los Angeles (Prokopec 2.0) at fin&lt;:in·
Anaheim (On!z 3·2), 10:05 p.m.
Ba"lmore 3. Tampa Say 1
norm.
six runs and six hits in 6 2- 3
...
Philadelphia 7. COlorado 1
nail (Reitsma 2·1 ), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 4, Minnesota Q
Ventura hit hi' 15th caree r mmngs.
San Francisco 11 , Pittsburgh 6
St. Louts (Hermanson 1-1) at Florida
Cleveland 13, Kansas City 2
grand slam, breaking a tie with
Cincinnat17, Los Angeles 6
(Dempster 2· 3), 7:05p.m.
Detroit 6, Texas 3. 10 Innings
Mitwaukee 5. Atlanta 3
Milwaukee (Sheela 1·2) at Atlanta
Boston 2, SeaUip 0
Ken Griffey Jr. for the most
Florida 4, St. Louis 3
(Bur1&lt;en t -3), 7:35p.m.
Anaheim 6, Chicago White Sox 4
among active players, as the
1:
New York Mets beat the
Housto n Astros 7-5 Tuesday
combined on a four-hitter. "
night.
Jay Bell hit a two-run hoiner seven runs, five hits and four scoring double in the eighth.
walks
in
two-plus
innings.
Orioles starter Jason Johti"You have to be patient and in the first and Matt Williams
son (2-2) allowed three I:Qts
wait until they have to throw added a three-run shot one
and an unearned run in 5 ~3
strikes," said Ventura, ninth inning later as Arizo_na built an
overall on the career slams list. 8-0 lead.
innings. Both his wins this s Deivi Cruz hit a three-run son have come against his 6
Jay Powell intentionally
Before 4,340, the smallest
Mike
Mussina
pitched
his
homer
in the lOth inning as mer team. Ry.m Kohlme r
walked Mike Piazza to pitch Expos' crowd at Olympic Stato Ventura, who fouled off dium since Oct. 3, !990, Curt.
The only place where Pedro first shutout for New York to Detroit overcame a pair of . pitched a perfect ninth for
three straight pitches, working Schilling (4 _0) gave up a . Martinez seems to struggle is win for the 17th time in 19 home runs by Alex Rodriguez sixth save at Baltimore. ·
career decisions against Min- to win at Texas.
the count to 3-2 before con- three-run homer to Vladimir in the bullpen.
.
necting on his eighth pitch. Guerrero in the fourth, allowAfter cutting his pregame nesota.
Cruz's two-out homer off
Mussina (2- 3) pitched a Jeff Zimmerman (1-2) folVentura is 49•for-139 (.353) ing eight hits in seven innings. throwing session short, Marwith the bases loaded.
Britt Reames (2-2) gave up tinez allowed three hits in three-hitter for his first win in lowed Bobby · Higginson's
"N?bodr. wanted to pitch eight runs and seven hilS in 1 eight innings and struck out five starts and 16th career one-out double · and Tony
to P1azza, Astros manager 1-3 innings.
12 to lead the Boston Red Sox shutout. Mussina struck out a Clark's walk.
Larry Dierker said. "Venrura's .
to a 2-0 win at Seattle on season-high 10 and walked
none.
a slow runner and I wanted to
Tuesday night.
get a groundball. We tried to
"It's probably the WOI'5t time
David Justice homered
prevent the tying run and
I had this year," Martinez said against Eric Milton (3-2) in
ended up giving up. the winof his warmup. "I just wanted the sixth inning, and Bernie
ning run."
R au I C asanova, ..,
Troy Glaus went 3-for-4
LYIer H ous- to start the game and see what Williams hit an RBI single in
Mike ·Piazza also homered
was going to happen, because I the second at the Metrodome. with a home;r and three RBis
ton and Jeromy Bur~itz
for the Mets, who improved to
didn't feel comfortable at all. I
and Pat Rapp (1-3) earned his
homered for. visiting Milwau11-15 with their second kce, w h ic h h as 42 in 25 games. was a ·little bit upset. with
first victory in six starts with
straight victory over the Astros
Jimmy Haynes (3 -Z) allowed myself, and I needed a little
. host Anaheim.
after losing five of the final six three runs and five hits in _6 1_ kick in my behind by myself."
Anaheim built a 4-0 lead
games on a nine-game trip.
Martinez (3-0) walked four,
after three innings against
3 innings, and Curtis Leskanic
Tom Martin (1-0) allowed got three outs for his third improving to 8-0 with a 0 .89
Alex Gonzalez homered on David Wells (2-3), who
one run in 2 2-3 innings, and save.
ERA in eight appearances the first pitch of the 1Oth allowed four runs and six hits
Armando Benitez pitched the
Kevin Millwood (l-3) gave against Seattle. He. reached inning against Jason Isring- in seven innings. The defendninth for his fourth save. Nel- up four runs and seven hits in double digits in strikeouts for hansen (0-1) as Toronto ing AL Central champion
son Cruz (0-1) was the loser. six innings.
the fourth tiJUe this season· and I'Xtended Oakland:s home los- . W~ite Sox lost for the 12th
In Pittsburgh, Kent tied a
the 73rd time in his career.
ing streak to eight games.
time in 16 games.
career high with seven RBis
'Everything
was
just
Tony Batista, Brad Fullmer
. on a three-run homer and two
IRS
wrong," he said. "My breaking .and Raul Mondesi also hit
ball wouldn't break, my fastball solo homers for the Blue Jays,
doubles, leading San Francisco
wouldn't go, my body was who won for the fifth time in
over the Pirates 11-6.
Kent, who hadn't ho111ered
tight, I dido 't feel the ball seven games.
.
Mike Lowell hit a two- run right."
in 57 at-bats since Apri112, hit
1-304-773·1583
Paul Qu2ntrill (4-0) got the
Jerry Hairston hit a two-run
a drive into the left-center ~omedr, andhAndybBenkies (l- 2)
After .a 20-4 start, the ·last out of the ninth. Billy
homer off Bryan Rekar (0-4)
r
··orce 1n t e t1e- rea ng run . M ·
h
1
· h
.
fi1eld seats d unng
a .our-run
.h
c,c. h . .
lk
anne"! ave ost two stmg t Koch pitched the 1Oth for his and three Baltimore pitchers
Wit a at -mmng wa
to r
h fi
.
h'
.d . .
.
R
amon Ch I
J0 h
h .
wr t e mt nme t IS season. eighth save.
t hu mmng agamsr
1
M artmez
·
(0 - 2) . H e add ed a Florid.&gt;
ares
nson '
e pmg Th ey were bl an k'e d 10r
"
th e
0
3
three-run . double an inning
overcome a
- ' first time since last Aug. 15
deficit.
against De_troit's Steve Sparks.
later against Terry Mu-lholland,
and an RBI double in the sevVladimir
Nunez
(2- 2) . Seatde,scorel.ess in its last 15
enth.
pitched two scoreless innings, innings, had been 16_0 ih
• n•
k
and Antonio Alfonseca got his
'we too extra batting fourth save.
games started by right-handed
Marty Cordova hit a 455practice to get used to the
opposing
pitchers.
The foot homer, one of five Cleve~'~~adreS
Mariners' only hits were ·sin- land home runs at Kansas City.
field, and I was disappointed in
it not being a hitter's ballpark,"
r•
gles by Jchiro Suzuki in the
Juan
Gon~alez,
Eddie
Kent said.
third, John Olerud in the Taubensee and Cordova each
Kirk Rueter (3-2) allowed
fourth and Mark McLemore homered and drove in· three'
four runs and five hits in seven
in the eighth.
d Iii
MAY 6-12
Ben Dav,is hit a· grand ·slam
runs, an E ·s Burks and Rusinnings. Martinez, who has an
"He had · some nasty stuff sell Branyan also connected.
c
·
8 .62 ERA, gave up · .our
runs and Phil Nevin added a three- to day,' • said Mi k e Cameron,
Gonzalez, who hit a two-run
~
· _? 2- 3 mnmgs.
· ·
run shot to back Brian Toll-. w h o struc k out three times. drive off Blake Stein in a sixan d t h ree hi ts m
berg (2-2) at Wrigley Field. "
h
h l'
He as a .97 mp .astball and run seventh, has 29 RBis in 24
Mark Kotsay went 3-for-5 in
86
h h
· H'
fi
an
mp c angeup.
e games. ,
.
.
1
h1s -return rom the disabled h
· h
d
'
list.
t rew some great pile es an
Chuck Finl\,y (2-2) won for
he was able to shut us down." the first time in five starts,
Cubs reliever Mike Fyhrie
R J d A ·
· h d
&lt;
o an o rroJo p1tc e a imp~vin'g to 16- 11 aga_inst
b ro ke · h is Je,t arm in the
..l'
l'
•v
Omar Daal (3-0) took a nopenect ninth inning 10r his Kansas City
· "
h
hitter into the seventh at fourth inning when he was hit c•ourth save m
,our c ances.
Chad Durbin (0-1) allowed
M
R. ·
h'
RBI
Philadelphia · and sparked a by the barrel of Santiago
anny anurez It an
seven runs and fiv.e hits 1'n "our
"
five-run inning with an RBI Perez's bat.
sin g1e in the sixth 1off John • innings.
Jason Bere (3-1) allowed Halama (2-2), then had a runsingle.

•

~PORIS: Eagles win sectional;_Raiders stun Meigs, a1

W.cln11day, ll!y 2, 20CII

AROUND TH.E DIAMOND

Los Angeles
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

.

l

Holz~r

Medical Center

Neu~logy

Services.

EEG and EMG testing offered to record electrical
activity of the brain and nervous system.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

�Ohio

Dilly Sentinel
Olllo.WIIIIIIr

•

n"

IIIYAilYj •

...,.•

. . . . ~~~·;;t ~
Showefs

l ·SIDims

Rain

Flufrfl

Snow

Ia!

Chance for rain.returning
PRESS
Stormy we"'ther could
return to the tri-county
areaon Friday as a high pressure center slips off to the east.
Clouds will move in from
Michigan and there will ile a
chance of showers and thunderstorms on Friday ·afternoon
and evening, the National
Weather Service said.
Temperatures will continue
to be warm, with highs of7585.
'•
Sunset tonight will be at
8:28, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:28a.m.
Weather forecast:
. Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Low in the mid 50s. Near
calm wind.
Friday... Pardy cloudy and
BY THE ASSOCIATED

continued warm. High in the
mid and upper 80s. Light and
variable wind.
Friday night... A chance of
showers after midnight. Low
·
near 60.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Not as warm
with a chance of showers during the day, dry at night. High
in the mid 70s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Morning low near 50. High in
the upper 70s. ,
Monday... Pa£tly cloudy.
Morning low in the mid 50s.
High in the upper 70s.
Tuesday and Wednesday... A
chance of showers or thunderstorms. Morning lows in the
mid and upper 50s. High iri
the. mid and upper 70s.

Senator
seeiiS
.
. , statewide vote

BUTLER (AP) -A 5-foot-taD tombstone feD on a third-grade
student during a field trip to a cemetery Wednesday, killing him, a
coroner's official said.
James Wies of Buder was pronounced dead at the scene at 2:15
p.m., about an hour afi:er the tombstone feU, a coroner's investigator
said
.
CAT scan results indicated the cause of the 9-year-old's death was
a· skull fracture, said Richland County coroner's investig;1tor Paul
Jones:
Jones said the boy jumped atop the tombstone and grabbed it
when it toppled backwml.

Chllldaleader looks for good
CINCINNATI ·(AP) -The city can emerge tiom its racial tensions and build a better future through reconciliation, the head ofthe
nation 'slargest Presbyterian denomination said Wednesday.
The Rev. Syngman Rhee, moderator of the Presbyterian Churi:h
(U.S.A.), said his denomination has worked with other ecumenical
leaders for Y"ars to bring about better relations berween the United
States and his native Nonli Korea. '
People divided by racism must realize that it can be dealt with if
both sides stop blaming the other for past wrongdoing, said Rhee, a
Presbyterian minister since 1960.
"Continued blame would not be helpful because people can say,
'Don't blame me. I wasn't part of that;" he said.

v-·- ..
~L

kills eld lj couple

Colll't WDII'l dismiss suit
COLUMBUS (AP) -An appeals coun has refused to dismiis a
suit filed by a child-suppott advocacy group demanding millionS of
dollars tiom the state in back suppon payments.
Attorney General Betty Montgomery had argued that the Association for Children for Enfon:ement ofSuppon had no standing .to
6le the lawsuit.
H"""""'r, Magistrate Patricia Davidson of the 1Oth Ohio Disn:ict
Court ofAppeals ruled Tuesday that ACES showed that it was entided to ask the State to pay back the money and established that the
state had a legal duty to repay parents.
A telephone message seeking comment was left at the attorney
general's office Wedn~ ·

Oleckpoil;t validity upheld
COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio Supreme Court on Wednesday
unanimously upheld the constirutionaliry of a checkpoint that Dayton police use to find unlicensed drivers, saying it !lid not violate
protections against unreasonable search and seizure.
,
Magus Orr and Andre Smith, who \vere cited for driving without
being properly licensed after being stopped at the checkpoint in June
1998, chaDenged its constitutionality. saying it was a "suspicion-!~
.
"
seiZUre.
The court, in a 7..() ruling, said that each drivers-license checkpoi,nt must ,be evaluated on a case-by-case basis to d.etermine its
intrusion on privacy. the state's interest in maintaiping the che4. point, and' how much the checkpoint advances that interest.
j
Justice Francis E. Sweeney wrote that under the criteria, Dayto~'s
checkpoint" did not gready intrude upon travelers' sense of privacy;'
especiaDy given the: state's "critical interest in .protecting its citizeju
from drtvers who etther are not qualilied to drive or have been f¢'bidden to drive because of a record of driving offenses:'

Funding
coalition
demands
answers

AKRON (AP) -A man who claimed his girlfriend's baby fell
(Pict~:~re)
down the basement stairs has been charged with killing him.
Elliott Cherry, 2~, was to be arraigned Thursday in Akron Municipal court on charges of aggravated murder, felonious assault and
on our
felony child endangering.
Cherry is accused ,of causing the death of 13-month-old Elijah ' COLUMBUS (AP) -The
~·Mother's Day"
Kimbrough on Tuesday. .
coalition of school district! that
Chert}'. who was watching the baby for his girlfriend, called 911 sued the state over how it gives
about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday and told police that Elijah had fallen down money. to schools asked the
the basement stairs.
Ohio Supreme Court on
1ic3
To
be
publ.
l
shed
Wednpsday to order state offiFriday, May 11th
cials to answer questions about
the issue.
GREENVILLE (AP) -A man has pleaded innocent to a charge
h
of murder il). the death of his 1-year-old daughter.
.
'F e Ohio attorney general's ·
office, one of the departments
Robert L. Nason, 20, of An:anum, entered &lt;the plea ar his arraign- the coalition is questioning,
..
ment Wednesday in Darke County Common Pleas Court. Police' described the move as a publicwere awaiting final autopsy reports before releasing the cause of
~cue~
ity stunt.
death for IUidyn Nason.
The Ohio Coalition for
Preliminary repom indicated the girl died Monday tiom trauma
to the head, Arcanum Police ChiefRoger Shellabarger said.
Equity and Adequacy ofSchool
Nason's bond was set at $100,000. He remained in the Darke Funding asked the coun to
County jail Wednesday night.
·
· enforce subpoenas it said it has
·served on employees of the
Ohlo Department of Education and the Legislative Budget
~~. ·
EAST CLEVElAND (AP) -An Ohio woman who once faked Office. Those offices are
her way into Yale University is now accused of trying to fake her involved in drafting legislation
that would add $1.4 billion in
death by plotting to kill a woman with a similar build.
Police said Tonica Jenkins, 25, wanted to fake her death to avoid a new spending for schools over
federal drug trial Jenkins and her cousin, Kyle Martin, grabbed a the l!wO-}"'ar period beginning
woman off the street, drugged her and even had dental records made July 1.
"We keep hearing that there
Deadlihe For Thi&amp; Special Mother$ Day Tribute Is Monday, May 7,12 no~•n ·! l
up to make it look like the woman was Jenkins, police said.
Fill out the form below and drop off the payment to ,
"At first, it was kind of hard to believe," police Chief Patricia Lane is a $1.4· billion plan, but some.
state
officials
seem
to
be
afraid
said of the alleged murder plot. "Then the facts started meshing
·
The Dally Sentinel "Mother's Day"
to show the details of it or how
together."
111 .Court St. Pomeroy, OH 45769
Police have charged Jenkins and Martin, 31, of Springfield, with they arrived at it;' said William
P! _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .._ _ _ _
attempted murder. Jenkins is being held \vithout bond in Tampa, Phillis, rhe coalition's executive
Aa. where she and her mother were found guilry of drug charges director.
I CIRCLE ONE A. 1X3GREETING...S10.00 B. 1X5
The
coalition
of
more
than
Friday in a federal court.
(PLEASE PRINT or TYP.E)
500 districts sued the state in
MOTHERS NAME: '
.
1991, saying 'the state did not
provide a· thorough and effi:YOUR NAME(S):
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE (AP) - A man originaDy cient educado'n to each Ohio
child~
as
mandated
by
the
Ohio
charged with nine counts in connection With the slaying of a pizza
delivery driver is now charged \vith only two counts of obstruction Constin1tion.
A Perry County judge ruled
ofjustice.
YOUR ADDRESS: _ __...,;_~-----;---..,.----...-...~
111
the coalition's favor and the
Judge Victor Pontious of Fayette Counry ,Common Pleas Court
ruled Wednesday that there was nor enough evidence to try Ke~n Supreme Court agreed, ruling
CITY, S T A T E : - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - _ _ _ ; , _ . . . ; _
Terry Jr. on three counts of complicity in aggravated murder, one twice rhar the funding formula
PHONE: ·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..:._ ___;o,;._
co.unt of complicity in aggravated robbery, one CO\Jnr of complicity relies roo heavily on local prop- .
erty
t.1xes.
That
reliance
creates
in kidnapping and one count of complicity in rape.
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: TttE
SENTINEL
. .
The judge also· ruled that one· of the three original col!nts of disparities among Ohio's 612
obstruction of justice against Terry in connection with Precious school districts, the court said.

GreetIno
Examples.

Page

enters innocent plea

'

~"'~"·
~

.

th lea7'-"'~~
~·lea

.ttNJe,-~"'"'"'

WOman am=ed of faking

I
I

Counts against snsped dropped

:-:~_..:._-------:----~-.....::--

1

I
I
I
IL

'

'

n

DAIL~

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

------~
.· .,.

The Deily 8111llnel • Pege A 3 .

•

LOCAL STOCKS
usa-2n

NZP-48

M:ll Coli- 33

AmTectiSBC &gt;42'1.
AINind InC. - 401.

&lt;IMIII-115},
o.n-1 Ellctltc:- 48
GIOI.V-11
Hilley IMi ... •t - &gt;48

llobE\o801-1D

Klogar- 25
IJnls End- 30~

Akzo-4tl.

"-roldWilght
- GUYSVILLE- Harold Wright, 66, Guysville, died Monday,
! May 1, 2001 at his residence.
... He was born on July 6,1934,son of the bte Garten McKinley and Lula Nichols Wright. He wa.s a farmer.
. Surviving are a brother and sister-in-law, Lee and Sue Wright
of Columbus; a sister, Mari., Wilson of Sandridge, WVa.; and
" several nieces and nephews.
,
·
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Harry Wright;
and a sister, Nellie Beaver:
:- ~ · Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday in White Funetal Home,
·l Coolville, with the Rev. Dave Cogar officiating. Burial will be
- at the family farm in Guysville. Friends may caD at the funeral
home from 6-8 p.m. Friday.

·Ramp

the river and general deterioration of the ramp itself has
many fishermen anticipating
the construction of the proposed new boat launch.
"The Ohio River is a popular destination for many ;esidents and .non-residents and
will most dcfinitdy see
increased usage in future
years," said Marshall.

flam Page AI

tzens.

Tcw;lhtGne , . . . youth

~...
COLUMBUS (AP) - A state lawmaker wants Ohio voters to
decide whether video slot machines should be aDowed at the state's . NEWCOMERSTOWN (AP) -An elderly husba!)d and wife
from Zephyr Hills, Fla., were killed Wednesday wherl 1'tl\eir minivan
seVen horse racing tracks.
Sen. Louis Blessing, R-Cincinnati, said Wednesday he will inao- went thiQugh. a stop sign and srruck a coal truck, state rroopers said.
duce a joint resolution next week seeking to put on the Nov. 6 bal- · Donald FerreU, 85, and his 79-year-old wife, Mildred, were killed
lot a constitutional amendment to authorized the gambling in the accident at the southbound Interstate 77 l':!~P at U.S. 36
machin~s.
.
Blessing said the state is losing much-needed revenues as Ohioans
flock to neighboring Inrlillna, Michigan and :West Virginia; w!lere
· they can gamble le~y.
"I look at the Argosy Casino in Indiana and two-thirds of the
liceJ;!Se plates are tiom Ohio," Blessing said, referring ro the riverboat
casino about 20 minutes west of Cincinnati in Lawrenceburg, Ind.

Man dlarpd in baby's deall1

Several black activists who addressed the
council on Wednes&lt;by said Shirey and
police leadership wete to blame for prob- .
lems contributing to the street violenc~.
The activists held up signs urging that
Roach, who has not been charged \vith
anything, be sent to prison.
"You can't make these police resp«t 11$." •
said Kabaka Oba of a Cincinnati black
activists' group calling itself the Special
Forces. "But prison will make the police
respect us. Prison for the police is a deteCrent for the police."
• Also Wednesday, the council voted S-4
to commit the city to mediation to try to
resolve a lawsuit accusing Cincinnati ·
police of targeting and harassing blade cit-

Canter's slaying be dropped.
about 40 miles south of Canton.
The two were returning lium a family member's funeral in the
Canter, 31, was killed June 29, 2000, afi:er maKing a delivery. Her
body was found hours later ijt a parlcing lot.
Ravenna area, said State Highway Parrol Lt. Eric Escola.
·
\
The truck driwr, Beryl Patton, 58, ofAmsterdam, Ohio, was neared at the scene fur minor injuries:

'

Pomeroy, lllddllport, Ohio

1h.....,. M.y J. 2001

ClNCINNATI (Al') - The dty man- dominantly black Cincinnati neighborager resigned Wednesday befme the City hood damaged by the rioting. said he had
Council could vote on whether to fire lost faith in Shirey's leadership.
hi,m in the aftermath of rioting over the · Tm.dl ~ that Cincinnati's lack of
police shonring ofan unarmed black nnn. attention fur }'leafS to economic developThe council voted 54 to accept ciry ment in poor ncighborboods is the undermanager John Shirey's resignation, effective lying cause of the riots.
Dec. 1 when a new council takes office.
Councilnun Phil Heimlich, who had
Shirey, whll was being paid $1-l'l,OOO called for Shirey's firing months ago for
annuaDy to run Cincinnati's day-to-day aDeged administrative shortconrting,;, said
operatiOns, Will have served eight years. He the riots were not Shirey's fault.
will receive a $70,000 severance payment.
Three nights of rioting and looting in
Shirey, 51 , said he resigned to avoid a several blade neighborhoods foUowed the
council fight.
April 7 fatal shooting of a black man,TimCouncilman Jim Tarbell had pushed for . othy Thomas, 19, by white police officer
a vote on firing Shi"')) but withdrew. the Stephen Roach.
proposal when the council Voted to accept
Roach .is on paid leave. A :Hamilton
the manager's resignation.
County grand jury is to sran hearing eviTarbeU, who owns a restaurant in a pre- dence in the shooting Thursday.

-

Sum, PI CloLq Cloudy

PageAJ

Cincinnati to mediate racial profiling lawsuit

FtHJ;,IIIJC

Ir

.1'11ursday, ..., 3, 2001

don 't own boats.
In 1999, ODNR procured
10 ac~ of land for the ramp
project from Racine businessman Jim Diddle, who, following the purchase, donated I I
adjoining acres to the agency..
.. The Ra[:ine area is a hot
Funds for die land purchase bed for both fishing and water
came from division revenue craft enthusiasts," said Mar, obtained through th.e sale of shall. "A new public access
.: fishing and hunting licenses,
ramp would greatly benefit
' The planned facility would the community, counry and
. replace the existing boat ramp state."
_located at the Old Ferry
Marshall said the new ramp,
' Landing. Park, which remains once finished, would most
, populai.. with local'spomn1en likely resemble the launching
• who enjoy fishing the pro- facility constructed near
. ' ~uctive tail waters of the Forked Run State Park and
'"Racine Locks and Dam.
the Belleville Locks and Dam,
However, limited parking and probably cost in the
"space, a restricted approach to neighborhood of $1 million.

ATIT-22\\
811* One- 38'1.

Boot&lt;\l'ernll - 44\

Shops-,.,.
8.,.

Ollrf1tiOn - 3

0*"*'0

Oty Haclng -

DuPont-45Y.

.

Fedenll~-3

Km.t-10\

w.-1n

Olk Hil F'IIIIWICial- 14~
OVB-25

IIIT-38
,...,....

"'••iet

18

n

Rocl&lt;wlll- ~.,.
Roclcy Boola - 4~

RDShll-sn

S..-38ll.

ShanoY's-1

WeJ Mart-53
Wenct(s- 25\

Wooltil\lbt

12

Dtily sb:k raports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quoll8 of the pr.wx..
day's ••aa:toe. provided bt' Smltt Pamara
at MillS! Inc.

Land transfers reported
POMEROY
Meigs
Co unty R ecorder JudY Ki ng
reponed the following transfers
in real estate as recorded
recently in her office:
Shennan D. Whne to Dwayne
Wltite, Kathleen White, deed, Rutland
Twp.
Patrick Wayne Mullen, Penny
Elaine Mullen, to Jeffrey 0 . Pecl&lt;ham,
Usa Rickert, deed, Village ot Middleport.
Donna Rose. Donna R. Rose, to
Robin J. Kinney, Sandra A. Kinney,
deed, Lebanon.

James Edward White, Krista Mar·
lene White, to Gloria J. VanReeth.
deed, Chester.
Beulah M. Crabtree, deceased, lo
Kenneth E. Crabtree, Donald W. Crabtree, Cindy J. Ctabtree, certili&lt;:ate of
transter, Columbia.
•
l..ar!y M. Well, Judy A. Well, to State
ot Ohio, deed, Bedtord.
'
James R. Qlivey, Connie J. Quivey,
to State ot Ohio, deed, Bedtord.
Robert E. Lee, Donna L. Lee, to
State of Ohio, deed, Bedford.
Robert..E. Lee, Donna L. Lee, to
State of Ohio, deed; Bedford.
HoUie V. Hayes. Unda S. Hayes, to
State of Ohio, deed, Bedford.
Dwight c:.A.ms to State of Ohio,

LOCAL BRIEFS
Dinner to·be
held

do when an adult, child or
infant is choking; the warning signs of bean attack,
stroke, cardiac arrest and
choking in adults; techniques
to prevent Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome; and ways
.to prevent injuries and choking in infants and children.
Registration through the ·
hospital's community relations department is required
no later than May 14, at a
cost of $10, which will be '
waived for anyone unable to
pay, and which covers all
supplies and cost of ce rtification for each participant.
Students will receive a textbook. Information is available b~ calling 592-9300.

LONG BOTTOM _;_ A
ham-and- turkey dinnet will '
be served Satunlay at Long
Bottom Community Building starting at 5 p.m.

Banquet set
RUTLAND - The Rutland Alumni Association will
have its annual reunion May
26 at 6 p.m. at Rudand
Civic Center. Reservations
may be made by sending $15
per meal to Rutland Alumni
Association, P.O. Box 125,
· Rutland,
Ohio. 45775.
Tammy Taylor and Bev
Atkins wili perform at the

Tuppe&lt;$ Plains-Chester water DistriCt.
right of way, Sutton.
United Methodist Church to
TPCWD, right otway, Sutton.
RusseH Keller. Rodney Keller, Jen·
niter Keller, to TPCWO, right ot way,
Chester.
Horace W . Karr, Dorothy M. Karr, to
TPCWD, right otway, Chester.
·
Horace W. Karr, Dorothy M. Karo, to
reumon .
TPCWD, right otway, Sutton.
Horace W. Karr, Dorothy M. Karr, to
TPCWD, right ot wey. Chester.
Karr Construction Co. to TPCWO,
rigrt otway, Chester.
Paula K. Dillon to TPCWD, right of
Meigs County Pomona
way, Chesler.
Grange
will meet in regular
Thomas W. Karr, Diana S. Karr, to
session Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
TPCWD, right otway, Sutton.
Patricia Manzey, Rlcltard Manzey, Racine Grange Hall with
to William Dix, Stacy Karin Hall, agree- Racine Grange as host.
ment, Scipio.
should bring
Gene Jetlars, V. Y\lcme Jeffers, to Members
Stacy Kam Hall, WiiiM Dix, ease· entries in the baking contest
ment. Scipio.
John C. Hart to Dennis S. Whillatch, for judging.

Issued license
POMEROY - A marriage license has ban iss uod
in Meigs County Probate
Court to Thomas Eugene
Lambert, 4·7 , and Nt ch ole
Annette Wilbur, 20, borh of
Dexter.

·Grange to meet

EMS log calls
POMEROY -- Units of
the Mei~ Emergency Service answered 1 I caDs for ·
assistance on Wednesday.
Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:56 a.m., Yellowbush
Road, Keith Musser, refused
treatment;
4:00 a.m., State Route 7,
motor vehicle accident,
Sharon Johnson, St. Joseph's
Hospital;
10:26 a.m., East Main,
Freda Hawk, Holzer Medical
Center;
I :03 p.m., Sixth Street,
Rose Peterman, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
3:49 p.m., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Amy Acree,
PVH;
4:58 p.m., State Route 7,
motor vehicle accid~nt,
Stacy Price, Kim Meadows,
Mark Soce, treate4;
7:34 p.m ., McNichols
Road, Chad Wolfe, HMC.
POMERO\'
.,
6:37 p.m ., East Main
Street, motor vehicle accident, Gloria VanReese, St.
Mary's Hospital, leonard
Koenig, refused treatment.
RACINE
9:26 · p.m., East l etart,
Margaret Gloeckner, Jackson
General Hospital.
RUTLAND
10:33 a.m., Overbrook'
Nursing . Center, Barbara
Hayes,HMC;
8:18 p.m., State Route
143, Ashley Wervey, PVH.

deed, Columbia.

Paul 0 . Ervin, Wilma E. ENin,
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy R. ENin, to
State ot Ohio, eight ot way, Sutton.
Paul 0 . Ervin, William E. ENin,
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy R. ENin, to
State of Ohio, deed, Sutton.
.
.LONG BOTTOM
Paul W. Thaxton, Cathy A. Thalctoo,
Eastern High School Class of
to State of Ohio, deed, Sutton.
deed, Bedford.
Paul W. Thaxton, Cathy A. Thalctoo, 1960 will hold its 41st
Dwight CUiums to State of Ohio, to State of Ohio, deed, Suttoln.
deed, Bedford.
Paul W. Thaxton, Cathy A. Thalctoo, reunion May 26 at noon at
Long Bottom Communiry
Joseph Sisson, deceased, to Myrtle to State of Ohio, deed, Sutton.
Sisson, aft!&lt;lavlt, Village of Pomeroy.
James Ralph Tucker to State of · Building. Those attending
Myrtle Sisson to CarolYn K. Teaford, Ohio, deed, Sutton.
should bring a covered dish.
George R. Teafonl, dead, Vllage of
James Ralph Turner to State of
All classmates, friends and
Pomeroy.
Ohio, deed, Suaon.
sheriff's department and
Charles A. McKown lD Ellsabetlt
Paut W. Thaxton, Cathy A Thaxton, former teachers are welaflldavlt, l.alart.
to State of Ohio, right of way, Sutton.
·emergency crews for their McKown,
Frank Herald Jr. to Edward W.
Paul w. Thaxton, Cathy A. Thaxton, come. Information is avail'
able by calling Marlene Put· rapid assistance during the Stinea, Jade C. Stines, dead, Orange. · to State of Ohio, right of way, Slltton.
Leonard
Stioctcey,
Oebotal1
Shock·
·
Ricky
Lee
Deeter,
deceased,
10
f1om Page AI
man at 667-3895 or 378incident;' said Proffitt.
ey lD Columbus Southam Power, right Argyle Deeter, affideVit, L.ebanon.
'
Argyle Deeter' to Argyle Deeter, 6149.
"Their ability to work as a of way, Bedford. ·
today.
William S. Brown Trust, David S. Thomas L. Dee1er, deed, Lebanon.
team really showed their pro- Brown, Peter H. Brown, 10 Kristina E.
Bruner Land Co., Inc. to Warren F.
l- • Koenig was treated at the
Glslason, deed, Autlanc:l. •
VanMeter, Cha~otte F. VanMeter,
fessionalism
in
a
time
of
cri'· •scene and released a short
Bnnir land Co., Inc., to Delbert H. deed, Orange. ·
.
. Iater.
I
sis," he added.
S1oams, Marguerite Steams. deed,
George 0 . Hensley, deceased,
GALLIPOLIS -- New
' · tlme
Orange.
extinguiSh
1ne
eetate,
affidavit.
The
crash
is
still
under
Life
Church of God in Gal"I wish to commend the
Wayne A. Hanzel Jr., lD Wayne A.
Anthony Land Co., Inc. to National
lipolis will hold revival ser' ·local fire departments, the investigation.
Hanzel Jr., Cheryl A. Hanzel, deed, Nominee Group Inc., deed, Salem.
Scipio.
Ron~d D. Loaoar, Rebecca c. · vices May 9-12 at 7 p.m.
Lee Miner, deceased, to F.,. Loscar, Judy L. Monls, James Morris, with Pastor John Elswi~k as
'···~--------------------------------------~~ n1eArthur
Miller, affidavit· of transfer, Rulfand Judy L. Baibear, deed, OliVe.
music
Twp.
· _, · triJ'!Jt
'
~ ... OfeyE.~" SandrWIK.'He~ , evangelist. · Special
. F..... ,._. to ~ Eua-t .,.,loRonllldD.IIIIIt)Wt,dHd,Sci- each even.i ng is planned. PasMIIIer, Terrie Lee Houser, deed, Aut· plo.
.
land Twp.
11m Parsons, Kim PntlnS, to Oley tor Rick Towe invites the
Sandra A. Nelson, James W. Nel- E. · Herdman, Sandra Kay Herdman, public.
son, to AleJlti!l M. Russell, Sandra A. deed, Scipio.
·
Nelson, easement, Chester.
Clarence S. Shipley, Beth A Ship·
Phyllis L. .Howerton 10, Robert E. ley, to Rlch8rd A Hagerty, Dorothy
NoiWOOd, deed, Salisbury.
Hagerty, deed, Salem.
Dora 0 . Pierce, deceased, to Elmo
Ronald Kim Browning, Judith Elaine
S. Pierce. Rodney E. Pibrce, certlr&gt; Browning, to Roger L. Jefers, Janel M.
cate, Olive.·
Jeffers, deed, Salisbury.
ATHENS O'.aleness
Elmo S. Pierce, Jeanette L. Pierce.
Rober:! F. Moore, Esther M. Moore,
Memorial Hospital in Athens
Rodney E. Pierce .Jr., to Rodney M. to Slats Of Ohio, deed; Bedford.
Pierce, deed, Olive.
Diana F. Carey, William D. Carey, lo will offer a course in carThomas W..Karr. Diana S. Karr, to Stale of Ohio, deed, Bedford.
diopulmonary resuscitation
May 16 from 6:30 until 9:30
p.m.
Participants will learn
CPR techniques for adults,
children and infants; what to

Class plans ._ ,
reunion

.. Accident
-

j .,

Revival set

Course
available

GOP ready to push 2002
budget through Congress

.

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

~Judge . dismisses $1 o
~!billion PG&amp;E suit ·
·'

''
~: SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- utility

:1\ federal judge !)as dismissed a
: lawsuit filed against the Califor·~a Public Utilities Commission
1
the state's largest utility,
~ ~~ch sought $10 billion from
•'~ prepayers.
~' PG&amp;E had asked the, U.S.
~District Coun in Los Angeles to
~:o\rerrule PUC decisions that the

?,by

.

~;.;

was not entided to the
money, which the utility. spent
buying' electricity on the
increasingly expensive wholesale market.
·In dismissing the lawsuit
Wednesday,Judge Ronald S.W.
Lew·said "PG&amp;E's claims are not
yet ripe f'or review;' meaning the
case wasn 'r ready for trial.

~·.~----------~-----------.
;.
••.
[•

The Paily Sentinel

~

::'• Reader·Services
~

Correction Polley
Our main concern In aR stories Is
• to be accurate. If you know of an
~ · error In a story, call the newsroom
•. at (740) 992·2156.
.
~
~

~~

N-s Departments
· The main number Is 992-2156.
~ · Department 81&lt;tanflons are:
~·
~ : General manager
Ext. 12

..,' .. Nawa

•• •• ar
••

Ext.
Ext.

~

~·

13
14

Other services

&amp;rft~ traditional

tions to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Coun.

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Subscription rates

diamond' h~art or
diamond cross p~ndants
a£wa15 Q aood dto!C£.

By canter or motor route
OnowHk
$2
Ono month
$8.70
Ono yoor
$104
Dolly
50 cents
· Subscribers no~ desiring to pa~ the
carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit wtll be giV&amp;Jl
carder each week. No subscription by
mail perm~lad In areas where home
carrier service Is available.

~~ ~:£oldo Molgo Co nty m:~g

To send •mall
newsOmydallv.sentinel.com •
On the Web
www.mydallysantinel.com

Weeks
$105.56
· Role&amp; -ldo Molgo County
1J Weeks ·
S29.25
26 Weeks
$56.68
52 Weol&lt;o
$109.72

t l;· -

'

Poatm•t•n Send address correc-

~

·
~
~ :
1;
~ :

Subscribe today.
992-2156

. Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·cl,ass
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Mombor: The Associated Press and.
the Ohio Newspaper AssocJallon.

Ext. 4
Ext 5

~

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS .

Our &amp;£autlfur
sd£ctlon of p~arrs
rana£ from S3900
to our f1n£st
strand's at s147500•
A.,(( moth£rs [o"£
p£ar[s!

(USPS 213-HO)

Ext. 3

" •

restraint .
At the White House on
Wednesday, Bush touted the
deal as containing "the
largest tax cut in a generation and reasonable levels of
spending." He also said it
repres ented the fruit of
bipartisan cooperati.on.

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
Publlshod every afternoon, Monday
through Fnelay, 111 Cou~ St.,

~

. Advartlalng
~; · ct 1 11
: CI::I::Adl

WASHINGTON (AP) Republicans are poised to
shove
a 2002
budget
through Congress with most
of the big tax cut President
Bush proposed and more
spending for prescription
drugs and other programs
that he wants.
GOP leaders planned to
muscle · a
compromise
House-Senate fiscal blueprint through both chambers on Thursday. Congres ~
sional passage and a triumph
for 'Bush's budget goals
seemed assured, they said,
thanks to concessions Bush
made to Senate moderates to
temper the tax reductions
and his calls for spending

I

Mill subscrlr!on

f

1/4 Ct. TOW

HEART

CROSS

PENDANT

PENDANT

1/4 Ct. OltrftoMITW

(Cftlln NMinll.)

YOUR CHOICE... "99'"

ktp.Witia&amp;S !lbt.IJe:wtfiJ

52

t _ _ _ _...;____..J~

16 Diamond

LOCATIONS~,:;:,~·~!r~~:_~4&lt;~IIG

CORNER
SECOND AND GRAPE,
TWO
91 MIU STREET.

All AGES All TIMES $ 4 .00

..

~H

vro

�•'

.

Opinion

PageA4

1hlllld.,• ..., s.. 2101

~- _The_oail_·y_Se_ntin_ei_ _ _..=.By. the.Bend

Lonely teen can't see life without her ex-boyfriend

The Daily Sentinel
'" =••
a. • Fu: 1112-2157
711
Rlat•

DEAR ABBY: I am a 19-yearold · girl who has been with my
boyfrieqd for two years. He recendy
broke up with me, and I'm devastated. He told me he did it because I
deserve better, and he believes
there's someone else out there who
will make me happier. Those were
his exact words.
.
Abby, he was everything to me my best friend, my lover. Fr;om the
bottom of my heart, I. know he was
meant for me. He's the only man I
can picture myself with.
I am really depressed. He doesn't
even call anymore. How do I move
on when I don't want to be without
him? Please give me some advice.ALONE AND IN LOVE
DEAR ALONE: When a man
(or \VOman) ends a relationship with
the excuse that someone "deserves
better," be grateful for the candor.

Pomeroy, Ottlo

'

Oldo VIII-., Publlahlng Co.

a••P •?ZIIws
w.a •••.,
ca '*'* "a
a.r

•
•

a

'

. . . '1

•

llllch

Page~s
'!hursUY•..., J, 2001

R.lhawn._...,
Managing' Editor
.,.... Klly' Hill

Controller

OUR VIEW

morrung.
Your sister needs to establish a
In order to get some exetcise, my weekly routine whereby someone
sister walks in the moriling. She can be there to tend her children
le•ves her kids alone in the h(Qe, while she de-stresses.
and takes a baby monitor with her.
DEAR ABBY: I strongly disShe insists that she stays within sight agree with your advice to "Lonely
of her house.
Husband in Oklahoma.''You advised
. for his ' step'
I' don't want to tell my sister how him to get a· puppy
to parent, but I feel this is a safety daughter so she would sleep in her
ADVICE
issue. She won't listen to her own bed instead of her mother's
younger sister, but says she'lllisten to bed.
He pr she is probably right.
you. Please, Abby, give her your
Abby, a puppy is a lifelong comIt's time to move on. Stop playing opinion. - CONCERNED SIS- . mitment that should never be
uyour" song, put meinentos out of TER IN CAUFORNIA
entered into as a solution for a famsight and refuse to be a victim. Take
DEAR SISTER: I don't blame ily problem. Please don't recoma class, join a gym, spend time with you for being concerned. Leaving mend that a puppy be used as a kind
your friends. Do not allow yourself children 7, 5 and 6 months old alone of animated teddy bear. A puppy is a
the time to brood. Trust me, it is n~gligence. If an emergency were . live animal that requires attention
works!
\. _
to occur while she was away from and care, and "the girl is too young to
DEAR ABBY: My sister has the house, none of the children take responsibility for that animal's
three children, ages 7, 5 and 6 would be capable of dealing with it. emotional and physical welfare for
months. Her husband works nights The possibilities poisoning, the entire life of the dog.
and doesn't return home until choking, a fall - are frightening.
When a child sleeps with a parent

Dear
Abby .

to .the detriment of the paront's marriage, it is a red flag that the family
dynamics are askew. Sometimes parents who are divorced or in a bad
relationship use their children as a
surrogate mate.
Other times, children in a oneparent home feel powerful and
secure sleeping with the parent and
are loathe to surrender the power to
a new husband they may perceive as
an inauder.
I recommend "Lonely Husband"
and his wife get into a program of
marriage counseling, and perh.aps ·
family . counseling that includes the
stepdaughter.- SIDNEY LONG,
NEWPORT, R.I.
DEAR · SIDNEY: You are
absolutely right. Mea culpa. (You 're
the eat's meow!)
(Dear Abby is writteu l&gt;y Pauli,,.
Phillips ""'' tfa,glrt~Veanne Pl"ll'l'·'·)

..

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

LOCAL EV'E NTS

CONSOI!s stran4 of hope
may keep mines operating
Although e~pected for some time, closing of Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s mining complex by the end ofJune is still a shock.
··
ing thought.
Yet we hold out hope that !lOme if not all of the nearly 700
jobs SOCCO provides will be pr;eserved when CONSOL
Energy . takes control of the mines from American Electric
Power.
.
The possibility exists that CONSOL will recall some of the
laid-off employees. That might be a tenuous strand to hang on
to, but it's all we ha~~e at this point.
That's why it's up to us and our leaders in the seYeral counties that depended on SOCCO's payroll contributing to the
local economy to convince CONSOL that continuing operations at Meigs Mines is not only productive, but vital to the
area's survival.
We can deduce tiom the sale of the mines that CONSOL
doesn't plan to let them remain idle. Some kind of plan must
be in the works. A company doesn't acquire someone 's else
property unless it has some purpose. With the resurgence of
coal as an energy soutce, the new owner's plan may not be .
apparent, but should be so in the near future.
Time will tell us what CONSOL has in mind. In the interim, a number of SOCCO employees have taken advantage of
refresher classes offered · through the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College and Hocking College. If they opt not to return to the mines if the opportunity
arises under CONSOL, many will be ready . to try a new
endeavor.
But we can't just write off the mines as a viable job source in
•
• our area. If there is any productivity left in the mines, keep
them open. That's why we and our leaden have to develop a
relationship with CONSOL, welcoming them to the area as
·enthusiastically as AEP was when the mines first opened three
· : decades ago.
.
.
Meigs County Economic De11elopment Director Perry Varnadoe said the possibility of a recall under CONSOL is "very
promising in the short term." We need to ensure the future of
. the mines and our own economic oudook extends beyond the
"short term."
·
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
'

IV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

,
•

.•
•

;
•

Today isThunday, May 3, the 123rd day of2001. There are
242 days lefi in the year.
Today'~ Highlight in History:
Ori May 3, 1802, Washington D.C. was incorporated as a
city.
On this date:
In 1916, Irish nationalist Padraic Pearse and two others
were executed by the British for their roles in the Easter Rising.
·
In 1921, Wctt Virgiilia imposed the first state sales tax.
In 1937, Margaret MitcheU won a Pulitzer. Prii:e for her
novel, "Gone With the Wbid."
In 1944, U.S. wartime rationing of most grades of meats
ended.
In 1945, Indian fotces captured Rangoon, Burma, from the · ·
Japanese.
ln 1948, the Supreme Court ruled that covenants prohibiting the sale of real estate to blacks or members of other
racial groups were lesaJ!y unenfotceable.
In 1971, anti-war ptoc~tel1 began four days of demonstrations in Washington aimed at shutting down the natio.n's capital.
•
In 1978, Sun Day fell o.n a Thursday as thousands of people extolling the virtues of solar energy held events across the
country.
.
. •
·
In 1979, Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher was
chosen to become Britain's fint female prime miilister as the
Tories ousted the incumbent ~bor government in parlia·
mentary elections.
In 1986, in NASA's first post- Challenger launch, an
unmann~d Delta rocket lost p~r ill ~ts main e~gine shortly ~fter hftoff, forcing safety officers to destroy, tt by remote
control.
·'
Ten years ago: The government reported the nation's civilian unemployment rate fell in April to 6.6 perce~r .. Exxon .
Corp. and the state of Alaska withdrew from a $1 btllion setdement of the Exxon Valdez oil spill (another serdeme~t w~s
reached later). Author Jerzy Kosinski was -found dead m hts
New York City apartment; he was 57.
.1
Five years ago: An ~rnational conference in Geneva
ended 30 ~onth~ of anhi?jls negotiations over ·.W:hether to
ban land mmes wtth a weak' compromise treaty gt~mg coun. tries rune years to switch to detectable, self-destructtve
. devices.

_

THURSDAY
PAGEVILLE - Revival ser. vices, Pageville Free W~l Saplist Church, Thursday through
Saturday. Calvin Minnis,
speaker.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush deserves a star for first 100 days in l!ffice
In 100 days, President · Bush has, as .
promised, changed the tone in Washington. It's businesslike now, not boisterous.
We're doing policy, not soap opera. And
the public seems to like it.
Instead of Bill Clinton's bifurcated ·
poll ratings - high job approval, iow
personal favorability - Bush's are in
sync. More than 60 petcent of the public both approves of his performance and
likes him personally.
COLUMNIST
This is pretry remarkable, given that
he lost the popular vote last November,
he became president after a bitter tially what he wants from Congress.
· In the Post poll, voters support Bush's
recount fight, and the economy is soft.
In addition, Democrats have questioned tax plan by 54 to 39 percent - even
his legitimacy, his intelligence, his com- though 53 percent said it will benefit
mand of his own adminis~tion - and upper-incoine people most, and only 15
his policies, of course.
percent believe it will benefit low- and
Some Democrats have even ques- middle-income taxpayers, as Bush
. .
tioned.his honesty, charging that he mas- · asserts.
queraded as "compassionate" to hide his
Items to come on Bush's agenda bedrock conservatism and engaged in but facing more difficulty ~ are a prophony bipartisan outreach to mask a ducdo'n-boosting energy plan, a freeRepublican-based legislative strategy.
trade push, a patients' rights bill and
One former top Clinton aide even Medicare reform. All of these items, if
suggested to me that Bush's "lies" were accomplished, will put Republicans in
worse than Clinton's because Bush's are good shape to retain control of Congress
about f&gt;Ublic policy, whereas · Clinron's in the 2002 elections (another top Bush
were just "personal" - neglecting the priority) .
fact that he was under oath when he
Bush has made just one significant
misstep: allowing himself to be tagged as
uttered some of them.
Nevertheless, the latest Washington an enemy of the environment arid a pal
Post-ABC News poll found that nearly ofpoUuters, an image he's now fighting
40 percent of Democrats approve of mightily to correct. ·
Bush's performa.nce, along with 94 perSignificandy, the Post poll - con~ent of Republicans and 62 percent of ducted last wee~, just as Bush's environmdependents.
.
mental counterattack began -: showed.
. Bush may be the Qenefipary of low that he has not suffered seriously even
· expectations. In the new Pox News- on that score..
Approl!al of his environmental poJi,
Opinion _Dynamics survey, 21 percent of
voters satd Bush has performed better cies was weaker than in other areas (47
than they expe~ted. In the Post poU, 39 petce'nt vs. 60 petcent on education), but
percent gave this assessment. .
di · __ ,
n1 · 41 per e 1 ·
•.
.gh h
di d ""'
sapprov"' was o y
c n.
""h' anyonerd
. mt t ave pre ctfe 1i=m
By 54 to 43 percent, ·voters said it's
Bus s reco
as governor o exas,
.
. ·
th ugh he has laid down a dear set of ll}Ore tmporrant to protect the envtronpr~oriti~s and has pushed hard for them. 'l).ent than to pro~uce m_o_re energy, b~t
Education tax cuts and faith-based Bush could look ltke a VlSlonary on thts
social progra:n, are first in line. Bush has ~core if California-style blackouts occur
plumped tirelessly for them across .the In the East.
,.
.
One of the most mteresnng of all the
country, and he is likely to get substan-

Morton

Kon&lt;hacke

recent polls was conducted early this
month by Stan Greenberg, once Clinton's and AI Gore's pollster. Essentially, it
showed that few of the Democrats'
attack lines against Bush are.working.
Although Democrats try to portray
Bush as the champion of the rich, voters
queried
by
Greenberg-Quinlan
Research said by 53 to 43 margin that
he "cares about" people like them.
By 64 to 32 percent, they said Bush is
"moderate, not extreme," though a plurality, 46 to 43 petcent, believe that he
does "listen to right-wing conservatives
.too much."
Contrary to assertions by Clinton's
hand-picked Democratic National
Committee chairman, Terry McAuliffe,
that Republicans "stole" the presidency,
Greenberg found that, by 58 to 37 percent, voters discount the statement that
Bush was "not really elected president."
Sixty-eight. percent of voters · ·said
Bush is "a strong leader"; however, 53
percent said he is "too dependent on his
advisers.'' By 55 to 42 petcent, voters
disagreed with the Democratic line that
Bush "seems in over his head."
Fifty~eight petcent said he "has good
ideas" for meeting ·the country's problems, and a plurality disagreed with
Gore's charge ~hat Bush's proposals are
"risky.'' Still, by 64 .to 32 petcent, voters
said he is "more for big business than the
average penon."
Testing Bush's tax plan, GreenbergQuinlan found that 60 petcent favored it
before a series of arguments for and
against it were presented~ including a
withering (and correct) charge that "A
single mother making ·$25,000 gets
nothing."
After listeiling to the arguments, voters still supported Bush's tax plan by 55
to 42 percent.
One hundred days into his administration, that kind of result is e'nough to
make Democrats weep and give Bush a
reason tl:&gt; smile.

a

.. SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Council, 7 p.m., village
hall, regular meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern
Local Schools, parent-teacher
conferences, from 3 to 6 p.m.
· · at both elementary and high
schools. Parents to call
'' · schools at 985-3304 (elemen- ·
., tary) or 985-3329 (high school)
to schedule appointments.

•&gt;
1,.

We want your photos! .

.

•,

,..

''·

:•

..

,,. '

The Sentinel welcomes your phototraphs. Here are a few
guidelines for submissions: ,
.
• Color photocraphs are accepted, provided they are In focus
1 and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted: however,
please Include a print along with the negative.
.• Black-and-photographs are accepted, provided they are In
·focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; how. ever, please Include a print along with the negatllle.
.
• Standard-size slides are accellled. provided they are In focus
and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wal·
let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
• Polari~type photos are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on newsprint.
·
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the Images are
seved as hlgtHesolutlon, hlgh&lt;juallty JPEG flies.

cho~est~r~l'
' ..
.

Question: Is flaxseed oil
good to take CYery day; and if
so, are there any side effects?
Snould I be concerned about
. omega-6 fats in my diet, too?
Answer: Nutrition and its
relationship to health is a conJohn C. Wolf,
fusing area for everyone Allociate Ptofeuor
physicians, dietitians and other
of Family Medicine
folks. Therefore, I'm not surprised that you ha~~e questions. the story is actually a bit more omega-3 tatty acids in the diet
flaxseed oil has been advertised complicated. The process of but the ratio of these fatty acids
as the nexr great triumph of manufacturing vegetable oils to another fatty acid (omega-6)
health care. &amp; I'm sure you can change their desirable · that is the key to the possible
know, but my · other readers properties. Even cooking at health benefits.
may not, flaxseed Gil is high in high temperatures can do this.
Omega-3 fatty acids are
one of the omega-3 fatty acids.
Another factor that must be found in salmon, tuna, sardines,
Its presence is the basis for the considered in determining tlie walnuts and flaxseed. The
health claims made by the pro- health effects ofwrious oils and omega-6 fatty acids are found
fats involves the question you in cold pressed corn, olive, safponents of flaxseed oil.
Reseatch about the effects of raised about omega-3 fatty · flower and sunflower oils. So,
nutrition on human health is acids. These fatty acids ha~~e those who believe the prelimihard to do because we humans · been linked to lower total cho- nary research that doesn't have
are trUe omnivores. We can sur- ·(estero( and higher amounts of the statistical power to convince
viVe fairly well by eating almost good
HDL
cholesterol. skeptics,' advocate the conany plant or animal source of flaxseed oil has one . of the sumption of foods or supplefood. Conseguendy,_it ~~ a three omega-3. (atty a'ilds, and men,ts . containing pmega-3
carefully aesigned study with a thus -may !'aile so~e , heal~ fatty adds to "balance" with the
large number of. participants to benefit. Bur •. to ~d.d JUSt a btt easily available foods that are
show with certainty the impact more confu!lon,tt IS apparendy rich in omega-6 fatty acids.
of excess or absence of any type not the mere presence of
If you do not enjoy or can't
offood.
I'm su.re you recall that a high
level of HDL (so-called "good
cholesterol") and a low level of
LDL ("bad cholesterol) have
been as!IOciated with a reduced
risk of heart disease. A diet high
. in animal fall tends to raise total
cholesterol . primarily
by
increasing the amount of bad
. LDL in your blood. That's why
it's reconunended that we
restrict our fat consumption ~ Every mother 11 unlq~e but all
no more than 30 percent of our
mothel'l have one thing In
total daily calories.
Further, its been shown that common: no matter how busy
vegetable oils generally have less they get, they're always there
detrimental effect on our cho- for you. This Mother's Day,
lesterol than animal. fats. But, show mom how special she 11 •

_fimilp

~dicinc

'
afford · cold-water fish as the
SO\liCC of your omega-3 fatty
acids, then, cqnsi~er , adding
some flaxseed or ·flaxseed oil
three times each week.The fla x
plant is an old fri~nd of
humans. We have used the
fiber.; from the stalks of the
plant to make linen for more
than 3,000 years. The seeds are
a food source. Un(ortunately,
flaxseed or its oil isn't very ·
palatable. Walnut oil is somewhat better, but I still don't like
it in my salad dressing. You .
should try them younelf
because you may feel differently about their tastes.
Remember that this omega3 fatty acid information is. currendy only preliminary. While
we await the results of better
research, I'll eat fish.

Family Medicine is a wteldy colunan. To submit quesfions, write to
john C.U&amp;if, D. 0, Ohio Univer. sity College '!f·0stMJH1thk· Medi·
dne, GrM!IfflOr Haii,Athent, Ohio
45701. Past co/um11s are available
onli11e at wwwjllradio."I'JIIfill.

MOM~S

THE WORD

ON MAY 13!

fill her

:•

with love, laughter,·

FARMERS BANK

(Morton Kondr~cke Is exe~J~{ive editor of
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

because rhey believe that the companies
they spend on will dp better in the future
than they're doing now. Right now, they
are eager to spend.
.
The average American investor still
expects double-digit fu~ annual gains,
accqrding to a study by Stephen Johnson
of Northwest Survey &amp; Data Services, as
referenced by The Wall Street Journal.
InOated expectations, of- course, are
what Federal Reserve · chief Alan
Greenspan had in mind when he referred
to irrational exuberance. In the long term,
stocks might average I 1, percent, bu.t they
can experience violent downturns in the
meantime. Eleven petcent can dlsgwse
much interim pain.
The consumer-investor, however,
knows at least a bit abqut pain, having
seen inutual funds and 401 (k)s decimated
along with glorious plans for the future.
But, it seems, they are ready to bet on better times.
Is this the same person who, the consumer surveys suggest, will postpone buying a refrigerator because the future is roo
uncertain?
.
. Oohn Crmn!ff is a business analyst for The
Associated Press.) .
· ·
·

POMEROY- Pomeroy Alumni Association, Monday, 7 p.m.
at the home of Yvonne Young.
Final planning session for
alumni banquet.

•"*

EEDMO
A FARMERS BANK "Home Advantage" Equity
Line will make your dreams grow! If you own
your own home, you can borrow against the equity ·
that's already built
right into your house!
·'

How do you read the.mind of the consumer?
stubbom consumer.
NEW YORK - There is something
But consumers held out, perhaps as
to be explained about the popular mea- long as they could under the dire circumsurements of consumer confidence. A lot, stances being expressed by so-called
perhaps, but a beginning Would be to experts. Car sales and home sales·
explain why people won't buy a refriger- remained near ' record highs, and confiator but Will buy a stock.
dence even began to rise.
The latest consumer attitudes survey
Now, apparently it" has fallen again,
from the University of-Michigan indicates even as other indicators suggest the worst
two-thirds of consumers believed the might already have occurred, leading to
economy was in recession in April- one the reasonable .suggestion that conswners
of the worst levels since 1992, when it might be reacting to events rather than
really was.
forecasting them.
Buying attitudes were said to have
If things really are as bad as I've been
declined for homes, appliances, cars, furni- · reading, the consumer can be imagined
ture and home electronics - and other thinking, then I had better get in agreestudies back this up. But ~ne is relative, ment with the crowd.
This, however, does no1 seem to apply
as in declines from extreme, unsustainable
highs.
.
·· to investors,. whose groWing numbers in
Almost simultaneously with the con- this day and age include a large segment of
sumer confidence report came the sur- ordinary "consumers, the same consumers
prising news that the economy grew ·at a who are now said to be worried about the
.
2 percent annual rate during the first future.
If so, the worries hardly show up in the
quarter, twice as fast as had been anticitrading ~tatistics. After one of the worst
pated.
Rem~ber, this was a three,month crashes .:Ver, an!l certainly the worst in
period during which the word recession terms ~f the.number of investors directly
was used by officials and commentators involved, optimism remains. ·
almost every day - enough times you
Investors .don't make _plans to spend
might say ~o brainwash even the most · thei~ money .o n what is past. They spend

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m.,
fire station.

'LETART- Letart Township
' · SATURDAY
trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
- RACINE- Special meeting,
office building.
·
·,' Pomeroy-Racine Lodge 164, ·
F&amp;AM. Work in fellowcraft
RACINE - Racine Chapter
degree: breakfast at 8 a.m.
· 134, Order of the Eastern Star,
arinuallnspectlon of officers.
SUNDAY
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The Community Calender 11
• Poplar Ridge .Freewill Baptist
publl1hld 11 1 free aarvlce
Church, baptismal &amp;e!Vice,
to non-profit group• wl1hlng
Krodel Park, 2 p.m. Sunday. All to 111nounce mHtlng• and
churches welcome.
lpeclll tYIIItl.
'
'The calendar 11 not de•lgned
R'ACINE '- Racine Chapter
to promote 11111 or lund·
1,1 134, OES, ·priiC)Ice for·inapac- ralaara of any type. ltemt
tlon. Ofllcera urged to attend.
Jlrlntecl only •!I apa.,. per- .
mlta and cannot be guaran·
· ' MONDAY
tlld to be prlntld 1 apeclllc
number of daya.
'' SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse

BUSINESS MIRROR -

BY JoHN CUNNIFI'

Water Board, Monday, 7 p.m.
water board office. Consumer
Confidence report should be
delivered to the residents
before that time: new rates
included iri report. Anyone with
questions, attend the meeting
. for an,wers.

Flaxseed oil may reduce (bad

7.75°/oAPR*
With A Fixed
.
.

."
,,."

New/Used Boat!

5YearRate!
Limited
tlme effer.

'.

Pomeroy
.,

(740) 992-2136
·

GaiUfN!Ut

(740) 446-2265
; ·'

•·'

. I

'.

,, .
...' '

Tupperi Plains

(740) 667-3161

(F, :B) Farmers Bank .
~ . We're Your Bank for fifeMA

• Rate is fixed for the linl S yean and subject 10
cluonae onn11111lr aft..- the Slh year. APR's for
Home Equily hne!l·will not exceed 18%. Min.
Credit line is $5,000. There i• a $99 closing
cost. Consult I tax •dvisor reaardins deductibility of interest. APR based on loan amount of
SSO,OOO. Anm181 mcmbenhlp of $SO on anniver·
sary. Member FDIC, Equol Opportunity Lender.

t\l
t A,,''''"' run~· r'l'ufl~ P' 1U"
'(\I~ I. 1 . 1\n .1.. .1\1:1 U I)
1

.

.

1·800·200-4005 Of (740) 667-7388

42123 Stale Route 7
Thppers Plains, OH 45783
· ~ours: Monday • Thursday 9·5
Friday 9·6; Saturday 9-4

�Thursday,: May 3, 2001

PomerOy, llkklleport, Ohio
r

ws About Senior Citizens
In Meigs County
•

Evening Dinners

The Senior Nutrition Program meal is served at 12:00 dally.
0

• '1111' •;, Nlllrition Program

support the ~xisting lunch and
0 '
will be served on home delivered meal program.
- llh' ud Thursday with
1. . 1111114:45 to 5:30p.m . A
8 UllfM donation for the
meal Is $4.00. The
"liJa meal Is intended to
3
tilde a 1111tritlonal meal at a
able COS I. Dollars Crumb Topped Chicken
rated will be used 10 Macaroni and Cheese
Steamed Broccoli
Croissant
Peach/Pear Dream Pie

-••

a ..a

.MAY 2001

THURSDAY

••'oa

•
...

TUESDAY

10

8
Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad with
Homemade Dressing
Garlic Bread
Lemon lush

.., Ham 'n Noodles
Clllfcmla Blend Vegetables
PlckieaBeets
Fllky Biscuit
Earthquake Cake

0

22

29
Roast Beef, Mashed

White 01' Brown Bread

ComBiead
Raisin Vanilla Pudding

Cinnamon Applesauoe
1.
Oven Baked Fish
Lyonnaise Potatoes .
Seasoned Peas
White or Brown Bread
Man. Oranges and Ba

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Italian Vegetables
Ga~ic Bread
Applesauce
0

31

Potatoes and Gravy
Sandwich Plate

BBO Spare Ribs
Hot Baked Potato
Crisp Salad

Sweet Senior Slaw

Buttered Roll

Bananas &amp; Vanilla Pudding

Rocky Road Pudding

'•

on Graham Cracker Crust

THURSDAY, MAY 10 ITAUAN NIGHT
TUESDAY, MAY 15- Blood Pressure 4:15
THURSDAY, MAY 17- Rita-and Junior wlll'play at 5:30
THURSDAY, MAY31- Senior Fitness Day ·

a-sa

Orange

Chicken Patty

Fruit Cocktal

Beef Vegetable Soup
PeanutButterSandwKh
Cracker
White or Brown ·aread
Tropical Mixed Fruit

White or Brown Blead

Banana

'

21
Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
White or Brown Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad

CLOSED

Cindy Wood from Jackson,
Ohio will talk on the importance
of having your quilts appraised
for insurance purposes and as a
family heirloom. She will speak
at 10:30 a.m. on June 21 .
Ms. Wood will do private
appraisals of your quilt for
insurance purposes for $20.00
per quilt. You will receive a
certified document. Please call
Patty Pickens at 992-2161 to

Scalloped Chicken
Pickled Beets
Orange Juice
White or Brown Bread
Rocky Road Pudding

Bak.iKI Pork Chop
Augratin Potatoes
Peas with Mushrooms
White or B"""n Bread
Purple Plums

1-Jun

31
Johnnie Marzetti
Perfection Salad
Apple Juice
White or jlrown Bread
Bishop's Cake

.Ham Loaf
Creamed Potatoes
Spinach
White or Brown Bread
Purple Grapes

Activity Schedule

schedule a time.
At 1:00 p.m. there will be a
workshop on embroidery. Pam
Shultz will work with beginners
to learn the basics of
embroidery.
The Pomeroy Library will
have a display on quilts and area
residents are encouraged to
bring in their favorite quilt for
display. Please call Patty to
make arrangements
for space.
.
.

The Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center is ope.n Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly
scheduled activities held
throughout the week include
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo,
cards and games.
Dance team practice is held
each Monday at 1:00 p.m. Cost
is $1.00 per session attended.
The Knitting Circle meets·· on

Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.
until noon.
Older ·a dults are invited to
attend the activities scheduled.
Join us for lunch and select what
you want from the a Ia carte
menu or you can enjoy the
regular meal. A Ia carte items are
individually priced . The
suggested donation for the noor.
meal is $1.50.

Have you always wanted to finished size is 54" x 60".
The Arthritis Supporr Group McGrew Will speak on
' make quilt? Well, now is your
'llbc cost of Ibis class is $40.00 meets on tbe · third Friday 'of fibromyalgia at the May
chani:e to do so. Pam Shultz will which includ«&gt;s everything each month from 10:00 a.m. meeting.
teach you how to create a needed to complete the project. until 11 :30 a.m. Meetings are
The topic for the June meeting
project that can be used as a It will take two classes to scheduled for May 18 &amp; June 15 will be "Pulmonary &amp; Cardiac
The following trips have been Concert at Capital Music Hall, a twin size quilt or as a throw. The complete and the dates are Jurie
scheduled for 2001.
· dinner cruise . on the Gateway design is an appliqu6 flower and 6 &amp; 13 at 1:15 p.m. Call Patty in the conference room at the Rehab" and will be presented by
Darren Hayes.
Meigs Sepior Center.
Tllanday, June 7- Trip to Clipper, and view the Oglebay
a paper quilt garden. The Pickens to register for the class.
The
Arthritis
Support
Group
is
Zanesville for a tour of the Winter Festival of Lights, this
made possible through funds
National Road- Zane Grey trip is with Park Tours, 15
from
the Ohio Department of
Museum, a buffet luncheon and people are needed for a pickup
Come in for a manicure and
Health
and
Ohio
University.
tour of the historical Schultz in Meigs County . cost $95 .00.
Do you· have questions )lbQut
get your. nails ready for spFing.
Ms. Schaad will ·.be at the
.
The Caring and Sharing Pam Napper is a nail technician
Mansion and .grounds, guided
A three day trip, October 21; investments? If so, you can have Center on May 8 &amp; iune 12
Support Group meets the. fourth at ~dded Touch in Middleport
tour of the historical Putnam 22, ·aad 23 is scheduled to .a private consultation with from 10:00 a.m.- '11:00 a.m.
Thursday of each month at the
Mansion, and shopping at Niagara Falls at a very good Elizabeth Schaad Investment
Appointments are necessary ¥eigs County Senior Center at and will be lit the center on May
Zuesvillc Pottery and China, price, $225 .00. The Fall Foliage Representative ~ith Edward for this service. ·Call Patty
5 from 9:00 . a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
White Pillars Christmas House trip through Ohio, Pennsylvania Jones and find· the answers to Pickens at 992-2161 to make 1:00 p.m. the meeting dates a~e No appointment is necessary.
May 24 &amp; June 28. S~rah
•ad Colonial Cottage- cost is and New York to Niagara Falls, your questions.
your appointment now.
$4~.00 (there are 12 seats includes two nights stay at . a
availlblc for this trip).
hotel within·walking distance of
Wedaelday, July 18 • trip to the falls, 2 breakfasts and 2
A representative from the
Mark your calendar for May
LaComedia Dinner Theater and dinners , 4 hour tour of the
Athen~ Social Security Office is
Scott . McKnight from t~e May 8 &amp; 29 and June 12 &amp; 26. 24 and june 28 if you celebrate a
tbc atagc production of The' Niagara Falls area, and visit to
at the Meigs Multipurpose
VMH
Behavioral Health Unit Ail games begin at 11:00 a.m. birthday during either one of
Wizard of Oz" with a delicious the ,casino. A $50.00 deposit is
Senior
Center to assist persons
will be here on the following. and prizes will be given to the these months. The 5th &amp; 6th
buffct 'dlnner, this trip ·is with required to reserve aspace.
Social.
Security problems
with
grade choir from Eastern
winners.
Park Tours, 15 people are
Other overnight trips with dates to play games.
and to provide information. The
Come and have fun with us on
Elementary will sing for .the
nec.dcd 'f or a . pickup ·in Meigs Park Tours that are available are:
dates are May 9 &amp; 23 and June
May 2&lt;1 pariy. Scot.! McKnight
County- cost is $75.00.
May 111-20 - to Little ·
13 &amp; 27 from 10:00 a.rn. - 11:00
will sing' for your entertainment a.m.
, Saturday, Aupst 11- trip to Nashville, Indiana~ cost $330.00
at the Home 28 party.
Beckley, W.Va. with dinner at per person
Hal Kneen, OSU Extension on how to care for your annuals
Ryan's Steak · House and "The
Au1JUst17·19 - to Lancaster, Office, will be at the Center on and perennials. Come and join
Sound of Music" at the outdoor Penn. for touring and "Noah" - May 17 to give you infO&lt;mation us at 11:00 p.m.
Theater ~est Vrrginia,. this trip cost $330.00 per person ·
The weekly evening dinners
On May 22 at 11 :00 a.m. will continue on Tuesday &amp;
is with Park Tours, 15 people are
August 24-Ui- to Refro
'Larry Pitts, State. Fire Marshall, Thursday with serving from
needed for a pickup in Meigs Valley, Kentucky for a weekend
The National ·Multiple Post #128 at299 Mill Street in will speak at the Center 4:45p.m. -5:30p.m.
of country music- cost $260.00
County- cost is $50.00.
· Wednesday, September 26- per person.
Sclerosis Society is announcing Middleport. The first ~eeting is concerning "Fire Safety for
Come join . us for great
trip to Ripley, a historical Ohio
October 4-7 • to Pigeon a self-help group for Meigs · scheduled for Thursday, May 3 Seniors &amp; Fire Hazards." Betsy company and good fo11d. The
River town' in Brown County, Forge, Tenn. and Dollywood County -for persons who have at 7:00 P.M. Call Ella Roush at Nicodemus witil the Accident suggested donation' for the
Ohio, visit .the John Rankin Fall Festival· cost $390.00 per MS. The meetings will be held 992-5758 for more jnformation. and Injury Prevention Program evening dinner is $4.00. This is
arranged this program.
at the •American Legion Annex
House,
an
Und.erground person,
a great bargain!
Nov. 30-Dec.2- Frankenmuth
Railroad Station, view historical
homes and sites, visit the Christmas Wonderland, MichUiysses S. Grant home in cost $255.00 per person.
Learn how to type a simple and registration is required. Call
1 Georgetown, lunch included •
For further information on any ·letter. The cost for the class is Tammy Queen at 992-2161 to
c:ost $50.00.
·
of the I rips or to make $2.00 and it is offered on each of register.
,
Sunday, NoYember 18· trip to reservations, contact Alice these dates- May 11, 14, -or 25
Computer lati is offered .on
Wheeling for a Staller Brothers Wamsley, 992-2161.
from 10:00 a.m .• 11 :30 a.m. May 8, 10, 15, 17 and 24. Come
Registration is required.
in and learn ·some basic·
·we Care For You Like Family•
Learn how . to create an computer skills. Tammy Queen
Home Oxygen
address list on the computer. will be available to answer your
• Hospital Beds • Power Wheel Chair
~ortable Oxygen • Wheel Chairs
• Scoo!er
There is still time to register 8:00 p.m. June 7, 14, 2K, July~ The class will be held on June·5, questions.
15,
26
or
29.
The
cost
is
$3.00
Nebulizers
• Patient Ufts
for the ballroom dance classes. &amp; 12. The cost is $50.00 for the
• Bedside Commodes
CPAP/BIPAP
• Lift Chairs
• Bath/Safety Items
Gerald · Pow~ll will teach 5-week class and is limited to 10
beginning ballroOfll dancing couples. Call Patty Pickens at
classes at the Center on the 992-2161 to sign up. Leather
Nancy Stevens, from Holzer Bring your medications if you
Medical Center, is the facilitator hav~ questions . The June .
following dates from 7:00 p.m. - shoes are required for the class.
?
for the Diabetes Support Group. meeting will be held on June 21.
\
In
TheMay 17meeting will feature Both meetings begin at 10:30
.
Craig Kimble, Pharmacist, to . a.m.
Arc you interested in making a c~st for the class .IS
$20.00. ~~ discuss diabetic medications .
beautiful sweatshirt jacket with wall take 3 days to complete thts · "':"-=iri:ii:t'~u;'i::'i~;'jj:J-p-ii';:::;~Ui:i;--,
LocaUy Operated By: Mary Ann Bowman, Lewis Bowman
~n ~mbroldered garden pattern? project and the dates are May 9, U
~F
Dan Bowman, Keith Blanken• hip
If so, call Patty Pickens for more May 16 &amp; May 23 at 1:15 p.m.
J'IL..U
'-'
iJiforrnation or to register. You on each date.
24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVIC E
FN&amp; Delivery and Training • We Bill All Insurance
Call Patty at 992-2161 to
supply the sweatshirt an\! Pam
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
SUPPU£5
and
BRACES
·
Shultz; 'the Instructor, supplies register.
• Soles cl Rentals • Some Day Service • 24 Hour
the rest of the materials. The
·
Emergency Service · •
HOME OXYGEN and

a

Senior Center Trips

Nails by Pam

Investment questions? '

Fun and games with Scott

Birthday parties Social Security

· Caring for your parents

Evening dinners

Fire safety

'

Multiple sclerosis self help group

Computer cla·sses

Ballroom Dance Class

D'Iabetes suppo rt group

'
b 'd
lnterested em r01 ering,

0

1\.JC"l

. WEHONOR

Inc.

SALIS &amp; RENTALS
r

212 EAST MAliN ST.

flllllliVIIY

446·2206

0

POMEROY, OH

992-3785

'

RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
14101eclrNtl ...
GalH,.Ut, Ollie 45611
416 • .,......

*•

'

I

70 Pine St.
740 ~ 446-7283

1· 800 -458 -6844
Oh

Jlick-, Ollie 41640

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

..

Quigley, said the memo was a . mistake.
In the interim, Quigley and other officialS had struggled to explain the move,
which also appeared to catch the White
House by surprise.
Quigley told reporters rhat the
Rumsfeld aide who wrote the memo
had '' misinterpreted the secretary's
intentions" by declaring a suspension of
military-to-military relations.
"His actual intention is for aU elements of the military-to-military pro- '
gram to be reviewed and approved on a
case by case basis by the Department of
Defense," Quigley said several hours
after the memo was leaked to reporters.
Quigley declined to say who wrote
the memo. He said Rumsfeld had not
seen it before it was sent to the military

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush plans to order federal agencies nationwide to cut their consumption of energy,
particularly in power-strappe~ regions such as the West Coast.
Bush is sending his energy secretary to California to underscore his concern about the issue.
Bush will issue the presidential directive on Thursday. He was
going to ask heads of executive departments and agencies to
identifY areas where such savings might be achieved, an administration official said Wednesday. Federal buildings throughout
DALLAS (AI') - Police officers broke into a loft apartment
the nation were likely targets of the energy-conservation and found two young sisters who had been shot to death, police
efforts.
·
said.
"This will be a nationwide directive at aU federal facilities,"
Authorities detained two people for questioning after discovthe official said, on condition of anonymity.
. ering the. bodies of Liberty Battaglia, 6, and Faith Battaglia, 9,
on Wednesday in their father's apartment, said police Sgt. Filiberto X . Carrillo .
Police dido 't say who was taken into custody, but one suspect
was
the driver of a pickup that matthed the description of the
VALLEJO, Calif. (AI') - An 8-year-old kidnapping victim's
testimony and detailed· descriptions helped to catch and then vehicle owned by John David Battaglia, the victims' father.
Mary Jean Pearle, the girls' mother, was on the phone with
convict a child molester who had kept her chained inside his
from her home when she heard five shots fired about
Battaglia
car for nearly two days.
A Solano County jury on Wednesday found Curtis Dean 7:30 p.m.,po'lice said. The shots followed an argument between
Battaglia and Pearl~, police said.
·
Anderson, 40, guilty of kidnapping and sex-related charges.
Anderson had grabbed the third grader last August as she was
on her way home from schooL He chained her to the passenger seat of his car, forced her to drink alcohol and. sexually
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A shooting suspect hijacked a pubassaulted ·her.
lic
bus and held a gun to the driver's head during a police chase
The girl's ordeal ended after 44 hours when she found
Anderson's keys, unlocked herself and was rescued by a passing that ended when the bus slammed into a minivan at an intersection, killing the van's driver and injuring seven people.
truck driver.

.8-year-old kidnap case ends

One dies in bus hijacking

.Support groups

· Make a cozy flannel quilt

Bush·tells agendes to ainserve

WASHINGTON (AP) -The .fentagon further complicated an already
tense relationship with China by first
stating that Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld had suspended all contacts
with the Chinese military and then
retracting the statement, which it called
a misunderstanding.
On Monday an official memorandum
from Rumsfeld's office to senior military and civilian officials in the Pentagon said he had direcred "the suspension
of aU Department of Defense programs,
contacts and activities with the People's
Republic of China until further notice."
Hours after the memo leaked on
Wednesday and was reported worldwide
by U.S. news organizations, a· spokesman
for Rumsfeld. Rear Adm . Craig

Police find bodies of l children

25

2.
Ham Slice
Parsley Potatoes .
Cabbage and Carrots
Wh~e or Bwwn Bread
Pineapple - Cake

30

Let's tal~ quilts

Ham Salad
· Potato Soup
Carrot Penny Salad
White or Brown Bread
Green Grapes

· Beef and Noodles
Broccoli Salad
White or Brown Bread
Peach Slioes

23

22
Crisp Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Lima Beans

11

17

11

Sliced Roast Beef
Mashed Potalqes &amp; Gravy
Buttered Green Beans
White Of Brown Bread
Blushing Pears

Hash Brown Polaloes
Creamed Tomatoes
White or Brown Bread

21

Chicken Pot Pie
Meatloaf
a-sy Mashed Potatoes GanJen Collage c - Salad
While or Brown Bread
Buttered Wax Beans
· Mand.Oranges/Gelatin
White or Brown Bread
Peanutbutter Cookie
Apricot Ha(ves

Veal Parmesan
Speghetti with Sauce
Pea &amp;
Salad
White Of Brown Bread

15

11

10

I

TOIN!to VonalgAIIIe
Fruit Juice

24

Alaskan Pollock Fish
and Shrimp
. Seasoned Potato Wedges.
ColeSlaw
Biscuit
Apple Cherry Crisp

Creamed Baked Chicken
Peas and Carrots
Pineapple and Cottage
Cheese Salad
Flaky Croissant
Red Velvet Cake

SoutrBeans and Ham

21

Meatloaf
Cheesy Mashed Potatoes
Steamed Mixed Vegel;lbles
Buttered Roll
Strawberry Shortcake

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Orange Glazed Carrots
Buttered Roll
Bishop's Cake

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Parsley Polaloes
Suocolash

.

17

15

'1

7

•

Chicken Salad
8roc:alli Soup
Sliced Tomatoes &amp;
Lettuce
White cir Brown Blead
Peaches

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) - An Ohio doctor ~ued in
~the first-ever winter airplane boding at the South Pole prq&gt;ared ·
. .. Thursday for surgery to have his gillbladder rem~.
; : Dr. Ronald S. Shemenski of Oak Harbor, Ohio, has been
:. undergoing tests since arriving · Sunday. at Swedish Medical
Center in suburban Denver, where the surgery was to be performed.
· ·
"I thought for the first time in my life I'd know where 1 was
going to be for the next six to eight months;' Shemenski said
Wedn~day in recalling his time at the South Pole. "I never
· thought I'd end up in Denver."
.
The impending surgery dido 't diminish Shemenski's eothusiasm about another trip to the South Pole. He wants to return
in October wi~h the next crew, but would first have to pass a
physic.al ~xamination.

Pentagon will review contracts with China

~

.
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

Rescued doctor awaits surgery

•'"'

.,

service secretaries, the office of the Joint
ChiefS of Staff and se nior civilian officials in the Pentagon.
'
Several officials told reporters that the
order took effect Monday, the day it was
distributed inside the Pentagon. Later,
Quigley said that a corrected version
would be sent to make clear that mili tary-to-military ties were 'n ot suspended.
Monday's memo was quite detailed. It
said Rumsfeld had directed that defen se
attaches abroad be permitted to attend
social funcrions, as part of their usual
activities, in which C hin ese officials nlJy
be present. But there were to be no
Pentagon contacts with C hin ese diplomatic representatives . in Washingt on. 1t
said.

Officers shot at the suspect Wednesday but missed as lw r.111
from the bus, which had pushed the minivan into a p&gt;rk,·,i
United Parcel Service truck and then crashed.into a do\\'nwwn
parking lot filled with cars.
The suspect, whose name \Vas ·not released, was arrested :1~ ilL'
tried to get into a stopped car .and was booke,d for invttsti gauon
ofthurder.
The bus driver, .five passengers and ·t he UPS driver were
injured. The minivan driver, who died at the scene, was .1
woman in her 30s, police said.

Delta pilots prepare to vote
ATLANTA (AP) - Delta Air Lines pilots will soon begin
voting on a new contract now that their union's leadership has
endorsed a tentative agreement that could end the threat of a
strike at the nation's third-largest carrier.
The decision late Wednesday by . Delta's master e.xecutive
council, a division of the Air Line Pilots Association, sends the
contract to Delta's 9,800 pilots.
"I believe this contract recognizes the important part our
pilots play in the operations of our corporation and the uniqu e
skills, experience and expertise we bring to the cockpit," said
Charles Giambusso, chairnian of ALPA's Delta unit.

Search is on
.for new FBI
director
WASHlNGTON (AP)
l'li~ Bush administration Is
cuting wide net for potential
candidates to replace FBI
· Di~ctor Louis Free h. About a
dozen people, including a
GOP legal strategist for the
Bush camp during the florida
recount and a former drug
enforcement offiCial, are considered potential candidates.
The administration will
probably add more names in
· the coming days, said Mindy
Tucker, spokeswoman for
Attorney
General
John
Ashcroft.
"We are looking for someone who has credibility in the
law enforcement community,
someone who has strong managerial skills and someone . of
high integrity;' Tucker said.
.
President Bush's advisers and
the White House counsel's
office will do the initial interviews with candidates, after
which Ashcroft will meet with
the prospects.
·White House aides and
Ashcroft will then make a recommendation to President
Bush,Tucker said. ·
Freeh announced Tuesday
that' he would retire next
month.
Two senior administration
officials, speaking on condition
of anonymity, said special care
is being taken t~ make sure
minorities are considered for
the job. The most prominent
· candidate .in that category is
Ronald Noble, a fonner Trea. sury department official under
the first Bush . administration
who .is now the secretary-general oflnterpol, an int~rnation­
al crin1e-fighting group based

a

irl Frarice.
Noble, who is black, was, a
high ranking enforcemenr offi. cial at the Treasury Department, where he . oversa1v the
$ecret Service, the U.S. Customs Service, the Bureau· of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
artd other agencies. He led a
·Study of the ATF's raid on the
Brandl Davidian compound
near Waco, Texas.
' Black agents have accused ·
the FBI of discrimiJJaling in
proif10tions.This week a federal judge approved a settlement
between the butl'au and black
agents who complained of
racial ,discriminatiml.

'

Ingels Electronics

your minutes

save!

lnlroduciiC tile ATat .._... AdvlntiiP.,._, With at least two users at only $29.99 each,
you get to share 500 anYtime in-plan minutes, 1,000 weekend minutes, and free unlimited
Mobile-To-Mobile calling within your user group. Great for families and small businesses!
1

106 N. Second Ave.

Middleport
740-992·2825

AT&amp;T Wlreleas
Stores and Kiosks

'$9999 Ericsson
R289LX

_s50oo AT&amp;T
service rebate •

_·ssooo

That's a $50 mail-in service rebate when you sign up for select
Ericsson rebate• AT&amp;T Wi~eless calling plans at $29.99 monthly and above, and
a $50 mail-in rebate with the purchase of an EricssQn R289LX
digital multi-network phone.
· ,

Free Phonal

0 2001 AT&amp;T W1 r~l ess. AT&amp;T Wireless Calling Plans require credit approval , S25 activatioolee, annual contra ct, a cai\Ce_Uation fee of 5150 p~r line and
a Di3ital multi-network phone. Digital PCS features oot aYailllble in aU um. AT&amp;T Shan:d Advanua:c : Customm will be cflarged OOr when movi.ng

actnowl(
Offers end soon.

ou~ide the Homt. CaUin8 A~a. $50

Mall-In Scrvi.ct Rebate: One ~batt~~ activation on a qualifying AT&amp;T Wirtlw Calling plan or S29.99 a month

b, more. Appliel only to Rnttwo usen at 529.99. Phone must remain on AT&amp;T service for at lra&gt;t I30 days and phone mu:ot hl; attl\lf on AT&amp;T servi«
at tht ti~ r~bau i1 processed. C~rtain ~ striCtiO ns apply. Void where prohibited. Vahd 412610 1· 7f110t . Erinwn SSO
pyrcha~

~-In

Rebate: One rebatt per

of a new Eriaaon R280LX or R2B9LX Digital mu lti-network phone and wireless ~rvice awvanon w1th AT&amp;T. To be elig1ble, phone must remain

on AT&amp;IT ,servke for

'

a tl ~ast 30

days and phone must ~ active on AT&amp;T servke at tlu time rebate is processed. Vahd 4126/0l - 7fl/Ol .

'

.

~
AT•T

) authorized
dPaiPr

�'11 U IIIII

Thursday, May 3, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

continues to be sluggish in the spring
W.WINCICJN (AP) -1M u.s. age points, in an effort to rejuvenate
ec-w 4 C f =d Ill be drnggish in ccononlic growth. Many economists
die 'I $ +a I down by lat;lduster believe another rate cut wiD come at the
allll .a...t wtak IMMdvtnring, the Mly meering.
F I ~ P lie llid We kwwby. Offer- On Wall Street, blue-chips stocks feU
ia&amp; llap. b a ........... down the road, on some mild profit-taking. The Dow
aDa ID fiauies pa ~their first gain Jones industrial a\&gt;erage dosed down
blbc,ar.
21.66 points at 10,876.68.
In ill ..._ !lllph.ot of economic
.,. fi -, a....d che country. me Fed
llpOIW •a slow pace of econOI)UC
mity in Maa:b and early ApriL"
1hc ~ based on infom1ation
•lpf[d by che mi's 12 regional b&gt;nks,
wil be used by Fed policy- makers &gt;t
lbcir IICXl meedilg on May 15 to set

The Fed survey "paints a picture of •
very flat economy," said Mark Z.ndi.
chief economist at Economy.com. " I
think it gives policy-nta~rs a green
light to continue to ease."
In the survey, the Fed said retail sales
were weak in M&gt;rch &gt;nd while thc·y
strengthened in April, most Fed districts
expecte-d "only small g:tins &gt;t b,'5,., in the

inl a a rates.
Seeking to SI:IVe off recession. the conung n1omhs.
Consmne r spending :.ccounts fOr
~ bank Ius slashed interest rate'S
fOur times this year, tor&gt;ling 2 percent- two-thirds of aU c(uno mic activity and
.

has been a main force propping up the
struggling economy. Some economists
woriy that consumer spending may
\\'eaken in cooling months h2sed on
expectations that the nations unemployment rate, now at 4.3 percent, will
continue to rise.
In the Boston, Kansas City. Philadelphia and St. Louis districts, "big-ticket
items - such as jewelry, appliances and
electronics - have been &gt;low movers,"
the survey said.
Apparel sales and SC350nal merchandise \vere \\'eak in both the Chicago and
New York districts, but \\'ere brisk in the
Cleveland and Philadelphia districts.
Manufacturing, which Ius been harde-st hit by the slowdown. has seen activity continue to weaken, the Fed noted.
''The high-tech and tdecunununica-

lions industries are experiencing a pronounced slowdown," the survey said
Despite sharply higher energy costs,
the Fed said consumer prices were
brgely steady. W..ge pressures also abated. Amlysts said the Fed has room to
continue lowering rares because inflation is not a current risk to the econoniy.

In another report, the Commerce
Department said factory orders
increased by 1.8 percent in March. Factory orders feU by 4.3 percent in JalJUary and 0.1 percent in February
AU the strength in March factory
orders came from a whopping 2~ ..8 percent increase in ordm for transporution
equipment, which includes everything
from cars and airplanes to ships and military tanks.

Because the transportation category
includes such coStly items for which
demand can swing widely from month
to month, econornisls alien look. at
another figure, which c:xclu&lt;b transporution orders, to gau'ge the hWt:h of
the manufacruring·secror.
Excluding traruport:ltion equipment,
'overall hctory otders feU 1.2 peocent in
March, the fourth straight monthly
decline.
Nation:al Associ:uion of Manufacrurers economist Gonion Richards said the
slowdown isn't over but called the
March rise in factory orders a \velcome
sign. "We ntay still see a couple of weak
months in April and May;' he said "But
we should see a return to stronger
growth sometime this sunm1er."

·'

Napster proclaims cornpany is
healthy, despite falling numbers
SAN FRANC ISCO (AP) the l.ttest Webnoizc study is the they shued 37 on .average, 3
Napster is by no means hig h number of 1nusic con- decline of more than 80 perdead, but the latest liSag&lt; num- sumers who remain loyal to cent, according to Bailey.
And sin ce last week, many
bers show the revolutionary file · sha rin g," Barry sa id
song- swapping service is a Wednesday. "Close to R million more songs have been blocked.
vastly reduced version of its · people are usmg Napster each Napster now sc::-reens for a
day with an average of over I wide range of variations in
former bad-boy self.
An analysis by the Internet million using the service at any . artist and song names that ha d
research firm Webnoize found given time."
allowed copyright music to
A million users would be a reappear in its index.
that Napster usc has plunged
"That, in turn ,has unfortu41 percent since the online success for many Internet
company added song-screen- companies, but it represents a nately caused sub1tantial addiing technology to comply sharp decline in activity for . tional 'ovcrblockin g,' the uninNapster, which has hobbled tentional removal of otherwise
with a federal court order.
Users downloaded 1.59 bil- itself in response to the music authorized works, for which
we apologize to our users and
lion songs in April, a sharp industry's copyright suit.
declin e from 2.8 billion in
Napster, a dorm room artists," .Napster told its fans.
T hel Reco rding Industry
February, according to Matt experiment that revolutionBailey, an analyst with Cam- ized the m,usic business,' is now Association of America, which
.bridge, Mass.-based Webnoize. struggling to retain its vast user sued Redwood City-based
H~nk Barry, Napster's chief base as it employs tough new Napster
for
copyright
executive, said the Webnoize screening technology to inhibc infringement, said the report
numbers illustrate users' loyalty it the trading of copyright does not prove the company is
despite the ·screening, and songs.
fulfilling its part of the j udge's
In Match, users shared 220 order to remo\'e ·copyrighted
don't reflect a dying company.
"The most striking fact in song files on average. By April, works from it&lt; site.

1J.ruRsnw's

up the pace on the president's
education package with
agreements on school testing
and help for students in fail ing schools.
. Educ.~tion
debate
has
stalled for weeks in the Senate as lawmakers discussed
details .of how student test
scores should be weighed.
GOP and Democratic senators were expe.c ted to
announce an agreement on
testing Thursday.
Meanwhile, the House and
Senate were intensifying
work on their own versions
of a major education funding
bill, which has provisions
designed to improve stndent
performance while giving
more freedom to schools to
spend federal funds. ·
The two bills are similar at
their co re. Each would

... '

requi re that students be tested
a nnually on reading and outh
from the third grade until the
eighth. School districts would
be granted greater flexibility
in their use of federal funds, a
provision designed to give
local officials the ability to
direct resources to their
gre&gt;test needs higher
teacher salaries, for example,
or improved classroom technology.
The committee vote to
remove the voucher provision was 27-20, with live
Republicans siding with. aU
the panel's Democrats.'
As it stands, low-income
· students in failing .s chools
would stiU be allowed to
transfer to another p'u blic
school and use federal funds
for tutoring.

......

,

' '" "

,.

1

7-6.

Meigs 6

Bob's Has the Plants You Need!

TIMEX Watches
.30°/oOFF
SUNGLASSES • Complete Stock
1/2 PRICE '
JEWELRY • Complete Stock

1/2 PRICE
$5 99

s4· 14

Now

• Aeeratuin • Dahlias

• Petunias
• Geraniums • Salvia
• Lobelia
• Zinnias
• Marieolds

• ferns • IVY Geraniums
Zonal Geraniums • Wave Petunias
• HJ'brid New Guinea ImPatiens
• AND
ORE!

Hardy Bloom

Cassette
Country 8l. Ul(lltes
Kea.

from A to Z••~

• AlYssum
• Beeonias
• Celosia

Buy a Greeting Card and get
a 55¢ candy bar for only 14¢!!

AZALEAS
....,...,...n .... IIWJat
z...,.... ..... '1.18
I IIIII PM

NNIALS

Dlvlllon IV .

Wlldnuday, May 2
Crooksville 15, Trimble 0
Eastern 14, Waterford 3

Portsmouth E. at Symmes
Valley, 5:00

Dlvlalon II
Friday, May 4
Gallia Academy at Warren,
5:00
Vinton County at Meigs, .
5:00

11119 •

Service

·•••etFI..
.........
.........
•••*12.18

r

•1111 'IOIEI

2400 Eastern M¥1111. 1
(Across from KMiartl~l
.Gallipolis, Qhlo 45631
446-1711

,,

•

COWSION AT HOME -

Kayte Davis of Meigs upends River
Valley's Geri McFann to score a run Wednes(jay. (Dave Harris)

PbaM-D-11.81 .

Dlvlalon IV

Thul'ldlly, Mey 3
Eastern

at Southern, 5:00

: Waterford at Trimble, 5:00

• ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
-,
Indians pitcher Jaret
Wright gave up two runs and
four hits in eight innings
Wednesday for the Interna!ional League's Buffalo Bisons
· i'n the first start of his minor
~~

BY ANDREW CARTER

and Tammy Bissell was 2for-4 and scored twice.
EAST MEIGS - POwer Amanda Yeager went ! -forpitching and timely hitting 3. Tiffany Hensley scored a
propelled Eastern to a 14-3 run on a walk. ·
victory over Waterford, givCourtesy, runners Kayla
ing the Eagles their first sec- Gibbs, Sara Mansfield and
tiona! softball championship Nikki Phillips each scored a
since 1999 and the eighth in run for Eastern.
school history.
Kristin Hill had two of
Juli Bailey held the Wild- Waterford's three hits, finish- .
cats to just three hits, struck ing the day 2-for-3 with two
out eight batters and walked RBI. Crystal . Bauerbach
six to secure Eastern's 17th went 1-for-3 ,arid scored a
straight win.
run for the Wildcats. Maggie
"I'm really excited;' Bailey Wainwright and Jennifer
said of her team's win. "I Baltzer each scored a run .
wasn't feeling so great
Eastern (17-l) cranked up
tonight. You could tell, the offense early, scoring
because J wasn't throwing twice in the first imung.
very hard. But I knew I had Wiggins and Powell ripped
a great defense to back me back-to-back singles with
up. They did great."
Wiggins scoring on an error
Defe~ . ~· ·. thf!, _oqly an4 ~
· ilfPU~·
' great thing :In ~ce' on a ;acrlfite fly bY Lod~ck "
Wednesday. The' Eagles to·put the Eagles on iop, 2-0.
'pounde&lt;! out 14 hits, in dudWaterford pulled back one
'ing fOur that went for extra . run in the second. Bauerbases.
·
bach tripled and scored on
Sandy PoWell had the big an RBI single by Hill to cut
bat in hand for the Eagles, the deficit to 2- t.
going · 3-for-4 with four
However, Eastern came
RBI. She also scored · two right back with two more
runs.
runs in the home half of the
Bailey helped herself at the second. Bailey reached on an
plate, going 3-for-4 with an error and was replaced on
RBI.
the basepaths by courtesy
Kass Lodwick crushed her r~nner Kayla Gibbs. ·Bissell
second home run of the sea- followed with a one-out sinson and finished 1-for-2 gle and Gibbs and Bissell .
with two RBI and scored scored on Chevalier's single
to center, which . gave the
twice.
Kristen Chevalier drove in Eagles a 4· 1 lead.
Bailey allowed just two
two runs while going 1- for· 5. Chevalier also scored a baserunners over the next
three innings, shutting down
run.
Carrie Wiggins went 3CHAMPIONSHIP EAGLES- Eastern pitcher Juli Bailey struck out eight batters and third basefor-3 and scored three runs
0VP SPORTS EDITOR

l'leiMIHD-IV.BI

, SEATTLE (AP) - Jeremi'ah Pharms, recently drafted by
:the Cleveland Browns, has
been arrested and jailed in his
.hometown of Sacramento,
Calif., in a year-old shooting
~nd armed robbery. ,
' Phatms, 22, was being held ·
' Tuesday night in the Sacramento CoUI1ty Jail, police
said. H~ has been charged
·with robbery. King County
:l'rosecutor N arm Mal eng
iaid.
: Pharms is suspected of
'being the triggerman . in a
March 14, 2000, armed rob_}lery near the Washington
'~ampus during which the vic..
tim•J suffered serious injuries.
w

'I ·'

.

I

•

man Sandy Powell (inset) had four RBI as the Eagles beat Waterford , 14-3. (Andrew Carter)

Brown tames Redlegs as Dodgers win, 7-3
CINCINNATI (AP) Kevin
Brown may not know what to .do
when he hits a home run, but he
Rnows exactly what to do with hitters
like Deion Sanders.
Humorlessly and methodically, he
gets them out.
Brown hit his first career homer one of four 'off Pete Harnisch - and
kept Sanders off the bases Wednesday
night, leading · the Los , Angeles
Dodgers to a 7-3 victory 'over the
Cincinnati Reds.·
.·
Brown (4-1) won his founh consecutive· start and ran the bases much
more than Sanders, who couldn't pro1

HOURS
Mon - Fri Sam - 9pm
Sat. Sam ~ 6pm
Sun. lOam- 4pm

Ward and McFann stole second and third
respectively to set up a pair of runs .
Ward scored on a sacrifice fly to left field by
A,manda Lawson as Lindsey Bolin made an
impressive catch. Mcfann then scored on a
sacrifice grounder by Jamie Nickels.
The game was almost put away in the seventh as the Marauders had two outs with a
runner on.
That's when Bolin cDfl nected on a hit to
Baird that went through her legs for an error,
allowing Kara Messer to score and crack open
the flood gates.
·
McFann then walked the next three batters
to score Bolin.
Kayte Davis swred on a wild pitch and

Eastem stomps

Prep Baseball

IICII,I II•:
•FIX liM
•lhiiMIIIII

Comnuttce members acc us-

Kenneth McCullou9h, R. Ph.
Charles Rlffte, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2995
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Earlier in the season, the Raiders traveled
to Meigs to beat the Marauders in regular
season play.
On Wednesday, River Valley had to do it the
hard way as -Christen Baird and Geri McFann
made up for a difficult top of the seventh.
The Raiders took a 4-2 lead in the sixth
inning as Cynthia Ward and M cFann each
singled.

Wlldn II day, May 9 .
· River Valley at Warren,
5:00

• Wright, ·recovering from
Augt!St . shoulder surgery,
~ed none, struck out seven
and got the win as Buffalo
beat Rochester 4-2.
"I think it
positive," said
Wright, who started two .
World Series games and won
-one for Cleveland as a rookie
in 1997.
"My shoulder felt pretty
good. My fastball was working best. I kept it d9wn for the
·most part. I threw a few
I've been
.change-n ps ,working on that in Aorida.
My curve ball was where I
needed it to be to pitch a
game .today."
• He worked out in Florida
:for the last three months, most
'recently pitching in extended
spring training.
Wright's fastball reached 96
mph during Wednesday's out·fng. Although his speed
'dipped into the 8os later in
tlte igl.me, he was clocked at
94 mph ori one pitch· in his
linal inning. Sixty-eight of his
102 pitches were strikes.
·• He gave up three doubles
that led to Rochester's tnns ih
.
.the seco~d inning.
:·. "I just left a couple of balls
put over the plate, and they
hit them,".Wright said. "One
of my biggest problems is get·ting too excited the first couple of innings. After that, my
fastball command got beti:er
:and my curve got better."

··Each daY. Plants fresh from the areenhouse
are shiPPed to our retail stores. so You aet the
freshest and healthiest Plants in the area!.. ·

20 oz. Bottle only 694

CHESHIRE - Not on our field!
That was the mentality of the Ri\'er Valley
softball team in irs sectional g;une against
Meig$ Wednesday.
The Raiders rallied ·in the bottom of the
seventh to defeat the fifth-ranked Mara~ders,

Dlvi8lon I
Weclnuday, May 2
. Warren 16, Gallia Academy

was

COLD POP

BY lkrrcH COOPER .
OVP SI'ORTS STAFF

~!!

Hi Val Cigarettes
5
1.35 /Pack 513.45 I Carton

'lt.ursct.y. Mlly s. 2111

Raider rally stuns Marauders

HIGHLIGHTS

River Valley 7,

-

Page 81

5:00

Residents'·
fears remain
despite panel
meetings

tomed to going about their
work· in obscurity got a fir5 thand view of the tensions surrounding the ponds with their
opening sessions on Monday.
The agenda originally called
for the committee to visit sever&gt;! waste ponds in soutlieri1
West Virginia on M onday and
Tuesday. But the visiti were
canceled by the min e operators because they \ycre overwhelmed by the, "subst;uitial
public interest."

__.:-...

Thul'ldlly, May 3 ·
S. Galli&amp; at South Webster,

,

CHARLESTON (AP) Three days of meetings by an
engineering panel have ·drllle
little to &gt;llay the concerns of
coalfield residents who live
downstream of mining waste
ponds.
Congress asked th e Nation&gt;! Academies of Science to
review the engineering standards for coal waste impound. ments following last October's
spill of 250 million gallons of
coal sludge from a 72-acre
pond in Martin County; Ky.
" People here are very mistrustful of this whole thing;'
Elaine Purkey of H artS, the
wife of a laid-off coal miner,
said Wednesday.
"They think, this is . a scam
or a smo kescreen, that this
committee will take all this
inform ation back, turn it in ,
and it isn't going to make a bit
of difference."
'
No one was injured in the
Martin Cou nty spill, which
occurred when the floor of
the pond collapsed into an old
underground mine below.
C lea nup costs were estimated
at $16.5 million, and a number
of residents are suing for millions more.
T he sludge, lace d with
arsenic and heavy metals such
as mercury, flowed into nearby
st reams and co ntaminated
drinking water supplies along
some 60 miles of the Tug fork
and B•g Sandy River between
Wc~t Virgin ia and Kentucky.

.

-·

·quickly

Congress movi
on education
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's education
package is g:tining momentum , but without a voucher
plan that would let lowincome students in poorly
performing schools usc federa! funds for private school
tuition.
The House Education
Committee voted Wednesday
to strip private school vouchers from Bush's educatio n
legislation in a setback for
conservatives that, nonetheless, likely will boost the bill's
chances for wider support.
"I think that winning the
voucher vote is a very, vecy
important .step toward a positive, bipartisan bill;' said Rep.
David Wu_, D-Ore.
Even as the .voucher plan
was going down 'tp defeat,
Congressional leaders picked

.Maddux quiets Brewm, Pa~ B2
Twins double up Y.:tnkees, ~ge B2

vide a sequel to his sensational bigleague return .
A day after he went 3-for-3 with a
homer, Sanders went 0-for-4 and
failed to get the baD out of the infield
against Brown, who allowed five hits
m seven mnmgs. ·
"I just go at him like anybody else
- try to get him out," Brown said
matter- of-factly:
Harnisch (1-3)' had a lot of trouble
getting outs, adding to the Reds' concern over their No. 1 starter.
Marquis Grissom homered twice
and Eric Karros added a two-run shot
as the Dodgers hit one long drive after

anoth er off Harnisc h, who gave up
four homers in a game for th e fi rst
rime since 1996.
Harnisch has . been bothered by
soreness in his forear m near the
elbow, and his pitches have been coming in ilat. The .results show in· his
ERA. now 6,53 and climbing with
nearly every ou'ting.
"He's not throwing the same as he
did iii spring training," manager Bob
Boone said. "He's got a (tender) spot
in his elbow, but we've looked at it
and it's nothing serious. He'll jl!st
keep going 'o ut there until he gives us
a go?d one. Then we won't worry

about it ,anymore."
Gary Sheffield added his eighth
hom er off rclic\'cr Scott Sullivan,
marking the thi rd time this season that
the Dodgers have hit five homers in a
game.
.:
The Dodgers won for the sixth time
in seven games and set the tone on the
game's first pitch, when Gr issom
hom ered to right-center. Two outs
. later, Shawn Green ' doubled to the
b&gt;se of the \Vall&gt;nd Karros hit his fifth
hom er.
In the second,. l:lrown hit a high,

Please see Reels, 8S

'

King of CART gives Winston Cup Series.aspin
.\

CART championships and
As a smiling Chip . Ganassi last year's Indianapolis 500.
strolled down pit lane, crew"People seem to know him
men stopped working on here :already," said Mike Hull,
their cars to watch or nod to general manager for Ganassi's
NASCAR's famous newcom- CART team. "They know
er.
who he is and what he does."
They all wanted
to
Heading into Saturday
acknowledge the car owner night's Winston· C up race in
who's beginning to turn Richmond, Va., Ganassi's lead
around a struggling _Winston · stock car driver, ,Sterling MarCup team after wmrung. a · lin, is fifth in th e standihgs and
record fo11r consecutive has six' top- 10 finishes in the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

{'; I

first 10 races of the new .buy out . an established
r~g•me .
team in NASCAR's top cliviMarlin, a two-tim e Daytona sian , took more than 80 pcr500 winner, had become a cent from Sabates . T hen
virtual forgotten man the last Ganass i brought in Andy
few seasons driving for Felix Graves to work with Tony
Sabates. A self- made million- Glover as team managers, and
aire in the electronics distrib-. · switched from C hevrolet to
ution business, Sabates found Dodge.
it hard to translate that success
" It's hard to believe with all
to his racing operation.
the changes it all seemed to
Ganassi, looking for an just come together," Marlin
opportu~ity to bu)j into- or said. "Chip h Js corne in a~~

put the right people in place.
"1 really feel like we have a
team that gives me the chance
every weekend to drive into
victory lane."
·
Hull, who a month ago
spent a NASCAR weekend
with his boss in Texas, isn't
surprised by Ganassi's quick
adj\lstment from open-wh eel
,ra~ing to stock cars.

Please see NASCAR. 81 .

- -· .., ...

�Baseball
Kane Davis pitched 2 2-3
innings of scorelesS "tdid; and
Jose Jimenez got Doug
Glanville to line out with the
bases loaded in
ninth for
his seventh save.
Robert Person (2-3) gave up
three runs and seven bits in 6
2-3 innings.

me

Glllnts 7, Pirates 6

A

aetift:d his last

~ out six in a

row

point.

M ., 'I p his 1OOth complere pme and 32nd shutout.

'l;ler Houston struck out
nriJIIial for the final out on a
fw'..U low and away. Maddux
P''mpN his fist, took the ball
fiom catcller Paul Bako and
duew it high into the stands ·
011 his way to the dugout.
Paul. Rigdon (2- 1) allowed
fiw bits in 7 2-3 innings, but
gave up a second-inning
homer to B.J. ~urhoff, hitting
JUSt .178 coming in.

a,

Armando Rios bit a goahead, three- run homer in the
sixth offJose Silva (1-2), overcoming a 5-3 deficit and sending · host Pittsburgh to its
fourth straight loss.
Barry Bonds hit his 12th
homer of the se~n and the
506th of his career, and Russ
Ortiz (4-1) remained undefeat~d agai~st the P.irates
desptte allowmg five r~ns, SIX
htts and stx walks m six
mrungs.
R:obb Nen pitched the
nimh for his seventh save.

lllddleport, Ohio

AROUND THE DIAMOND
_

_...
------

...

~Ao!Jt-

Eeol tJivtolon
w · L Pel.
15
13
12
11

1
15
15

Chicago

Houston
St. Louis

16
15
14
13
13

Pittsl&gt;urgll

. 9

Los Angelos

....
.464

"

12
13
13
16

16
14
14
14
11

11
12
12·
13
16

,...,..

san Diogo

3
3112
4
4112

san Diogo ~Jones o-3)
~~1·1 ,2:20 p .m.

.

at Chicago
.

~(-3-1)01~

.615
.577

1

.538
.500
.500
.360

2
3
3
6112

(Tolooo..., 2.0), 3:05 p.m.
Atizono (Johnson 3-3) a1
(Thurman 2·3). 7:05 p .m.
san Frandlco (Estes 2·1) at Pitts·
burg~! (Andef&gt;on 2·1). 7:05p.m.
lOS Angeles (Prokopec 2.0) at Clndnnati (Raltsmo 2·1), 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (Hetmanson H) al Florida
(DeqJotOf 2-3), 7:05 p.m.

G8

Milwaukee {Sheets 1-2, a1 Atlanta
(Burllett 1·3). 7:35 p.m.

w... DMoJon
w . L Pel

ColOradO
SanFnmclsc;o

Arizona

10

Touyo-

.577

IS '.423
11 16 .407
cenlnllllwtoloft
w L Pel

Cincinnati
Milwaukee

G8

e. san

.593
.538
.538

_
.519
.407

Arizona 8, Montreal 3
Florida 4. St. Louis 3
Cinc:innati 7. L.oo Angeles 6
San Francisco 11, PittSburgh 6
Philadelpl1ia 7. Colorado I
N.Y. Mels 7. Houston 5

Milwaukee 5, AUanta 3
.
San Diego 10, Clilcago Cults 3

Wedne.clar'• O.mea .
Atlanta 1, Milwaukee 0
Montreal 4, Arizona 3
Los Angeles 7, Cincinnati 3

G8

1112
1112
2

5

-al ·

Frlday'oGo,_

lOS Angeles (Pall&lt; 3-2) at Chicago
COO. (Tapani3·1), 3:20p.m.

--· - YEMIIIIw L
17 10 .630
17 10 .630
TO&lt;Oillo
15 13 .536
NeWY0111
13 15 .&lt;164
r....,. Bay
9 19 .321

Color-

(Harn!&gt;tOfl 3-0) at Pittsburgh

(Arroyo 2·2). 7:05 p .m.

san Diogo (Eaton 3-21 at Cincinnati
(Dessens 2·1). 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Wright 3·2) at fknida
(Clement 1· 11, 7;05 p.m.

San Francisco ~Hernandez 1..t) at
Philadelphia (Chen 1·1}, 7:05p.m.
Arizona (Reynoso 1-4) at N.V. Mots
(Reed 3· 1). 7:1o p.m.
St. louis (I&lt;He 4·2) ar AHanta (Giavine
4·1 ). 7:35p.m.

. Colorado 6 , Phiadelphia 2

19
16
10
10
8

Detroit

KanAasCily
Chicago

2112
4112
8112

GB

7

.731

9

2112
..00 8112
.370 9 1/2
.320 10 112

15

17
17

.640

Wootliivlolon

w

21
12
11

Seattle
Anahelm

Texas
ClaJdand

9

Houston (Miner 4· t) at Montreal
(POiers 2·2), 7:05 p.m.

G8

-~
w L Pel

Mini!IJSOta
Cleveland

L

Pel

6
15
16
18

.778

.

Touya-

An-'-

san FtOIICioc:o 1, -..g~~e
Sl. l.auls • • 2. 11 '"'*'Ill
~c.~~s
Diogo 3
Hoos10n 6, N.'V. !1, 10 ifft1gs

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who m·ake
this page possible.

GB

.4«

9

.1,07

10
12

.333

TuHdoy'o-

Bahimore 3. Ta~ Bay 1
N.Y. Yankees 4, Mlv1esota 0
Detroit 6, Texas 3, 10 iooings
Cleveland 13. Kansas Cily 2
Boston 2. Seanle o
Toronto 5, Oakland 4. 10 innings
Ananelm 6, Chicago Wlii1e Sox •

Ciolo&gt;Oiond ( - 3-1) at (Reiell8tl3-1), 2:05p.m.
~ ~ 1-2) .. , .... ~-.g
4). 3:05p.m. .
.
ToroniO (Uicltolal&lt; 3-1) at Oa~ta&amp;i
(HudSon 2-3). 3;35 p.m.

Balirnoiol
Boslon (CUIIIo 3-1). s.-

N.Y.

~ loll) al

(McElroY 1·1 l. 7:05 p .m.

«1). 10:05 p.m.
Chicago -

SOX ~~

Anaheim (OrtiZ 3-2), 10:05 p.m.

Frtday"o-

• I

Bal!i&lt;
,..,., !Hentgen 1-31. 7:05p.m.
~I
Clo..-d (Colon 3-2) at T- ~
' N.Y. Y . . - ( C - 3-0) at

( L - 3-2), 7:15pm.
,. 1
Minnesota (Rodman 1·3) at kansla
City (Mea- 0.3), 8:05 p.m . •
Chicago Whila SOx (Buehrle 1-3)
Texas (Oavts 2·2). 8.05 p.m.
Toroolo (Parris 1-2) at Seattle
0-()), 10:05 p .m.
•
'

I

•1
(fllllooti

I

w__,., _

Tampa Bay 1, Ballmore ~

Minnesota 4. N.Y. Yankees 2
Detroit B. Texas 4
Cleveland B, Kansas City 4
Oakland 6 , Toronto 0
Seattle 5, Boston 1
Anaheim 12, Chicago White Sox 5

AliT--

1997

4 p .m . • Sunday • ESPN

_

Ranprs

-AnniS

Don Tate motors

Whlie

' . (8)

s.

....... MIIIIIr,1,3!18

t.
-.

D·- ........
-·-""
-·-k
Jell-

fl·

110. (I)

··-at~--­

Crow's
Family .
Restaurimt

FR OM LAI I WEEK
the 250 laps. •For me to

-TCHICUP

FONTANA. Calif. - Ruity
Vlallace won for the ·54th
time of his career Sunday In
the NAPA 500 at California

~'! ;.~-!.,.

,;:;_·

J': ! ·•

· ·""'" WitH""''' n,.n&lt;!
Dale Earnharctt cUed earlier
this year In the Daytona

228Maln St.
Pom..-oy, Ohio
Drlv•Thru WindOw

992-5432
.liNt;
1'

-

See us for Your St!hlPower Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

Qaltllll c-111111 c - .
C-teilcyhllolm........
Conalotencr .. &amp;altlnc alii
- t o IMiklll"' lila ec~&amp;•

11o1111r H-011 Poat·T..dop Iii- .

500, Wol...,. lmmodlatoly,
and wlttl maniC lntenlltY,
·made sure he had ~n
EamharcJt tribute ttaa; ready
so that he could honor
Earnhardt when he won
Rockln&amp;ham .
That was Feb. ~6. and
WallaCe did not pt to unfurl
his Earnhardt flq to ttie
adorlntl masses or fena
.because he finished
seventh tn that race. He, In
fact, did not win until
Sunday, but It did not lesserl
W811ace 'slntenslty when
crewman Billy Wilburn
brouaht It to him for a

victory tap around the twomile track.

As It turned out, the ·
Wallace victory carried with
it a ntce touch of Irony.
Earnhardt. would nave turned
50 Sunday.

•lt's a spec;lal feeling:
said wallace, who led 95 of

have won on (Earnhardt's}
birthday wos very special.
That was for Dele and
Teresa and the whole
Earnhardt family. I hope they
, )In~ l .dljlll IQI tllem.
· ~~"lo!IOme
~d

Patti, my wife. We ,went

on a lot or vacations
totether, ned a lot of fun .

we went do'M'I to the
Bahemas .elot, and I knew
him off the 11!1Cetrack and
not only em the track .~

IUICIIIIWID IIAno!IAL
FONTANA. Calif. - Define
competition on the basis of
how nard It Is to win , and
the Winston Cup Sellas Is
the best In the land. Denne
It on the basis of the
number of cars capable of
wlnnlne, and the Busch
Series has no equal.
Hank Parker Jr. provided
testimony to the latter
theory wllh his upset vlctOJy
In the Auto Club 300 on
Saturday at California
Speedway.
The Chevrolet driver
entered the race without so
much as a top..10 finish in
the first nine races of the
year.

FEU DOf IHE WEEK

M.-1&lt; M.tln vs.

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

-Burton

Two dfivers hevln&amp; difficult seasons &amp;Ot tocether and
made things even worse . The Incident happened on the
224th of 250 laps. "I a,ot In the bac:k of Ward 8nd
couldn't get off ~ l m . I don't even know how much
contact we made, but It wes one of thote deals where It
was slick out there . He started a,oln&amp; around and I
couldn't get off him."
·

IIAICAII T111a -'1 Dutt111 llvn hlo
•niOn: •There Is no bad·wlll here, just frustration.

Burton Ia 19th In the pointe and Martin Ia 23rd, and
after 10 races. that's e toiJih pill for both to swallOW.•

Rusty Wallace

__

.

,

Winston Cup Series

Oc~Okla.

Willie
neJ~, It

X

Beedle. He l'lls won tne
Winston •. the Bud Shootout
and·the lnaucural Suttdta
demonstration ntCe In
Jepon In 1196.

llantabaw: St. Loula
Air. 44
Wllo: 1/"itl
•
•••=iilwl"!21). . 1

Rloey.ato, KJ.

II '"fMii/llt ll'llllt&gt;IIII,.OIIItr

WIOtf6 .wovr/,_M 111M, Jwcollld
be §IUJ"'"dtd or l'fllli§IIM ~~~~~

Kfllle (16), Slophen (13)

~~ly.

c..... ltltiJdll: 53&amp;

•••••••••••
Fan Tips

aunts, 3! potea, 54 wtna.
178 top-llvo ftnlolte&amp;, 283

101&gt;101, jull- S26.S

e,

• Jimmy Sponcor will hold
his fourth annual el'llt'IIY &amp;olf

Mlci&gt;ICanl. win (April 6 ,

____..,- ..
'N~InN~AR

Winston Cup ntcln&amp;. ·e 50().

mllor ollrtlnf 19th lo not
-., btck. It real~ Isn't. lt'a

klnd,of on OK IIOflln&amp;
. poo~lon. we had o .,..., pM
spot. The ptts here at
California aro oo bl&amp; and
IPICIOul, and lt't lilY 10
make a ptt atop. lt'a a n.lca,
aete racetrack. 1wea
plcklnr; cara off one at 1
limo. and It's a 101111 IIICt."

__,..__

...,
a

__ ..... _,fll..

Jo!WI~TNI-

....

'a.acra••
_.,,

t1to (eAIIT!_vetl,.

neUo,... .. T••?•i'm
nota CART {Jrlver. I don't
know onythln&amp;oboullt I

know the CART cars are to
doa&amp;one fast, and Teltas
(Motor S~llsellttle
bit rouch. lt'a not real rou-..
but lt'a ollllle bit. and for
those guys to run DYer 240

miles an hour, you've got to
have some brave Individuals
to dothet. And I think the

?qf?

---

aut• prpbllbtyran outend

the brains 1tlrted klckln&amp;
In, t:HtcauMtohltthe well at

-----

over 240.1hll'u ba&lt;!Ciooi.·
.... ,.. illlnlr .

lila eMf "Ho made aome

aollant ollorll. but you

can't let your 1uard down .
If I would hM &amp;Qn&amp; Into
the. corner and acrev..d up
a little bit, he would have
probably

aot me :

••••••••••••
V'JIIRHotWho'aNot

•1101: Jeff Gordon has
posted six top.flva

finiShes this year.

1. Who was the first to drive car No. 43 after
R(cha rCI Petty's reUrement?
·2. What driver raced out' of Dawsonville. Ga .• at age
11, as · wnd BIW Dawson?
3. What was the highest number of races ever won tly
Oate Earnhtmn In a single seetso~ ?

• NOI: In the last seven
races , Michael Weltrlp
has flnlsned no better
than 22nd.

. L86"!: Ul 'll ' E
~ }!:JO I:J ,&lt;~;wo.;~ · ~:

:·Jr 1.4:1&amp;(1uaueo A:neM 'l
SUMINV

••••••••••

:)1 tn~!:if'1 Nernecti8k, Petree looking for sponsorship next season

--froM

1tood 011i1J'

t•t at

bush es and find sponsorshi p fo r learned cmd po"fbly rc:sroup 1o
1M
thi's team. I feel rtally positi\lc that Ol}lanize another re51ro conrimK: ro
1
~
... ·
somr:one is aoi ng·lu realize whal a build on the theory of abiyger. less
,.._,l-od
· . ~,..! ~:.::
"Cost redutlion inl!ialivn" haVe 11rons orJanization rhio; it ~nd aerodynamic gr~Xnhou~...
...,_--· ~ • ,..
......._ ·o·• lh
1p ., · oh 1 n
come on board."
. Among th ee".pcrime111~ conduct·
-ol, m. •• •t ,• .....,
.,.... n cr .... ~~~ eeu n 10 e 0 a·
....,
ed were width and ht'igh"dJ."' ' '
.....
-~
e:..pected decision of Oakwood
,..
lndl. . . . . . . llitpltlld
Homes to Jh·c up ita prim1 ry ~pon•
nrc:nts to the rear spoiler and from
.Winet~ a..-~
sonhip of JM Ncmechek at Andy
DON ' T BET THE: RANCH : fenders. a m11re ~ reTcl)" ansh:d
~' exoettt ,_ • ~ f Petree Racin&amp; ntxt yrar.
.
Win~ton Cup Series dirL~tor Gary windshield and a wi er "gr·eenII
. .. , . .
_ l•puln ~
. •
Officialconfirmationcomesatler Nelson !Klondcd fai rly pessimistic housc" tpa sseng::' area.
Ncmechek'steammate,[)obbyHam· aft er «onductin¥ exploratory resrs
_..
A.J,'~wontheiiNt
ilton,gave thetwo-cnrteamlts finrr with Stc~lio 11 Mnrtin !i [k)dge in o
~ •
OlltalriO racn,...
victory Aprll2l inTaiiEJdewt, Ala.
Monday SC!Is ion ~rl'alludc:ga Super·
TAI.LADEGA LEFTOVERS:
leitn)' ~*"''-tile
"They h~ve been yrtMtl o us and lfX"CdWI!y.
The29~ars thar finishtdthc:Tal lllde·
lilt two.' Ail~~
true support~rs in every sense of
1Jnshin11 hopt&gt;:~. of further rul~:s ¥II ~00 on the lead lop established an
lliere . . . . . . . Winston
the word.'" Petree said. "I ftel bad for chan11n to enhance the quaht y and all·timc record for the highest nom·
Cup NICM tiii!IN• The
them becausr I )l(llevc thc:y would ~~~~!)' afmciniJ at so-ulled "re~tric · bcri n acompl ered~OO·milcrace.The
have loved 10 ha"c renurino:d a port tor-pl at~ tmcks," Nt'lson said : "The · ~ious r«onL 26, WliS established
1
~ -L.. - of ~celt
of this and withom theprob lems in resu lts wt rtceivt"d · were · not m0crober2000 arrhe same track in
"""'
·their industry right nmv. most likely promising.' While rhe lt'SI di d nol the Winston ."iOO. Thc non-Tall adeijtr
~ ....,. ......t.
would h:n·e.
pro,·fdt' us with any immediate r~:~:ord is 22. ~c r in June 1990 at
~Now wc\·egot to lt'ally bc:at the anS
"'-"t'T1. we willstilltttKiy what Yo'C' Pocono

lr Monte Ditton
NASCAR Thls.week

111

The mosl cars ever lo fin ish on
the h:ad lap in any Winsron Cup
race was 33, scr 111 Warki ns Glen,
N.Y., on Aua. l.l. 2000: The record
for a shortened 5110·m•le race was
J2. "' Arl''''u Mo1or S--lwat oo
,...~~
Nov. 8. 19911. whm only 2.2 1 o 325
l ap~ wtrt completed.

X

BRIGHT LIGHTS., BIG CITV:
Southern CalifQrnia i:s a welcon1t'
chllnKe of pace for Kannapoli s,
N.C., native Ollie Earnhardt Jr.
"The We·~r Coast trip!i arr alwayJ
dint~rent," Eamhurd t said. "I h;m: a
lot of friends in rh'c Los Angeles
~rca. so il 'l!. a chl!nce for me to eatch
up with rhem and check out a lot of
different th ings. For a boy from

North Cllrolina, LA. i~ li ke a breath
of fresh air."

toumamMt at Edtewood In
the Pines Golf Course In
Drums, Pa., on June 14.
The event will benefit
Camp VIctory, a facility for
chronically 111 children, end
trle EOS Therapeutic Ridln&amp;
Center, where handicapped
children enjoy tneraPV by
. rldln&amp;Mrsea.
Other benaflclarlel are the
D.A.R.E. proiJ'am tOr kids,

Children's Library 1nd other
Pfa&amp;r•ms that benefit chttdr!Bn in the local cc:nmunlty.
Other Wlnaton Cup
drtvers , asMIIal televlelon
and redlo celeblltlea, wUI
take part. Spencer hopes to
raise $100,000 this year.
"Wlnnlne a Winston Cup
race or fin ishing In ttle top
five Is pretty !peclal,"
Spencer said, ~ but It does
not compare with the feelln&amp;
you get when ~ou see those
kids rli::tlng horses and
know ln&amp; that 1hls kind of
theraP'f rna~ help them walk
someday, or the chronically Ill
kids enjoyln&amp; a camping tri p."
For Information on
sPonsorship packagas
and donations, plea::le
call Diana Mike at {570)
759-1490, or e·mau
dmike@sunllnk .net.

X CREW Of 111WEII
• In tho Auto etoll

300, c,.w chi., Billy
N.cewlcz carne IIIJI
with • atr..
tt••t

eo

••owed drh'tr H•nk

P•rktr Jr. to complete
ttie race witt; ont leN
pll etop thin 1111 tile

oth•r drlveta ••cept

on•. Aa • retutt,

P1rktr ·won fer tM
ftratllma on N.UCAR'I

premier aualllar~
8uach Gr1nd
N•tlonal, CfQnlnl the
ftnlah line In ne•r •••re
Rrlni

end Hre•mlnc In Joy
ID his t1am over the

rHto.

Pl,ace Your Business's Ad .here
Call The Daily Sentinel for details
·o ave ·Harris or Debbie Call
'

'

,_ elM ltaMo 10
~rc~

"'"'.
.......... oro-of
.'(

.'

I.

Aa v~

roce11

Dcar,NASCAR This Week,
Tony Stew1n w1s find
S I 0,000 and is on prob•tion
until Aua. 29 for his retlliation
•&amp;•inst Jeff Gordon bump inl
him from founh place in the
final ·lap of lhe food City SOO.
What does probation mean in
NASCAR?
Dorio W-ood

c:httm)llonshlp In 1989
willie drlvlnll Ponlllic:
owned by Rll!fi1C)nd

-~~-

II'IOr!'

qvailabl~ titan '-Wr bejoN.'
rltoftb 10 tile ll t twod: stalfons.
o" Fox and NBC. D&lt;l11 'I forg'-1
thai ESPN and TNN orr citblf'
cht,.ntfll.

tho-

R-~nau

f«l, l•Jalr-

M

dould br point"/ out

'"at tltr fans wllo do• 'I

Cup .- Ia of
In
1984 and won hla lone

COr: No. 2 Millar Ute :
Ford Tauruo. owned by

SJIIffXIIIIi:e with

cllblr ltave ''""'Y

raw.

11!98. at 8rlo1nl)

wt'

your pmbl~ms,

W.ll.ce was the Winston

miHion In ooml""
, _ , Stoll (Morell 1
1880, at AlhmiOJ, polo
(June 26. 1987. Ill

What has NASCAR done to

.loll-•

Tne-Auto-

500, at Collfomla
Spnttw&amp;J In Fontana, w..
tho 541h victory of Rusty
WllllocO'I IVIniiOn Cup
career. Wellece Ia now tied
wl1h the lalo l.oe Petty IlK
sevtnth ptace on the ellttmo lltl of NASCAR
winners, one win ahead of
Jeff Gordon, who ftnlohod

'

Dear NASCAR Thit Week,
Lime trials. No " RPM 2Nite."
..~ .. pne. Only one rKC
on Sunda)'a. What about the
fans thai don•1have ll:lblc?
Vlrpall

NASCM Thll - k

.econd In Sundoy'o

Your
'~Urn
a.n.sr-o.r .....

us? No Busch rKe ~· No

AROUND IHI GARAGE

17

TODA~I

..._

4. (4) .........,_ - . .. . . . ..... ' · (3) ltertlnc M - Dodp boy w11o could

6. (10) Tony • 7. (I) · - (71 Rielly Rudel
, I. (I) I!Min Harvlak

••••••••••••

PROfiLE ·

.,

ln•bltof•.._

....,.: Gateway International Raceway, Madl50f1. 111.
(1.25-mlle trac:kl,160 laps/
200 miles

s_... .

JMrCook,600

M~t~e

3. (I) Auaty-

QuiiiiFJhtC record: Jason
Keller. Chevrolet, 124.907

mph. May 14. 1999
Race record: Manny
Wollace. Ford. 104.928 mph. - : 4 p.m .• Sul\day
Sept. 8 , 1995
o.tendlnl . . ,, : Jack
lntemalionoiRacewir;(.75mite
......._:Green won from
lr.ICIIJ,-400_300 . .1es
MJICH IRAND llATIOIW. the pole last year.... The
Quell,._. NOOI'CI: Stacy
- : 7:30p.m.• Saturday
track rec01d holder, Keller,
Compton. Dodl•. 133.093
D•"IIIIIIC cUMpltn: Dale
WMt: Hardee's 250
and last year's winner.
Earnhardt Jr.
mph.Auc. 19.1999
Wltere: FtidiiiQIKI (VB. I ln1er· Green. ere teammates .
R - -:Jack Spraaurt,
Qultllrln1l-: Jeff
national Raceway (.75-mlle
ChO¥JOiel. 113.728 mph.
Gordon. Chevrolet. 126.499 track), 250 laps/186 mlle5
CIIAmMAIITIIIICK
Moy 7, 2000
mph, May 13. 1999
Wilen: 7:30 p.n1., Friday
Note~M: Dodge Rams 118\o'e
lt.C. ._ord: Dale Jarrett,
Wllal: Rom Tougn 200 by
D•tenlllll&amp; cUrnJ' n: Jeff
won all tour races this·season.
Ford, 109.047 mph, Sept. 6 , Green
Pepsi

Mclauthlil , 1 ,327 Randw' Tohme, sgg
Rldlr ·Aucld,1,201
...,,...,1,240
Jldl; ........ 575
lklti0¥Himllt0n.1.230 TOOGB«&lt;nt,1.215
Ted~. 669
S.. hdl, 1.227
Jimmie .loi'I'IIIM, 1.UID ....,. Kvllfil, 563
Toll' Stewwt.1,207
blp Alines.1.133
11ie1t c...ton:l. 543
DIIII~Jt.. 1.1S1a.dUD:Ie,1,103
CCJWQID, 485

1, (1)
2. (2)

1995

IMIM pafflclp!Jtlng
IDI'Ihll'lft'lpfiPeFI

Scott RiCCI. 875
Joe Auttnw1, 848
RICfVHendrlelt, 810

• NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton r'anks the
top 10 drivers heading Into this weekend's race. Last
week's rankin&amp; Is In parentheses.
·

From

. 1885
Transport

Biflle, U!M

TOP TEN

EXT4Dr

900

.. Rult)'WIIIK.e, l.IU2

&amp;

JHCKROUSH

ligen

MIWI ...... 1.451
JfffOfltn, 1.·410

a. SterllnJ Martin. urn

longtime Area
Salesman

of
Pt. Pleasant,
West Ulrglnla has
Joined the staff
at

I. OW .Mrw1tt. 1,4U
.1. Jeff Gonion, 1,375
t. JoiWrt Benlotl, 1,330

..
J'.

-

2001 POINT\ ITAN()ING\

_ .GftiC-

I

Blue Jays o

Mets

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

I

• er•..,.-r.-.•-Taicto200

C harlotte, made his seaso.;
including a homer, and five Seattl~'s lchiro Suzuki went 0- hitS in 6 1-3 innings.
. Cubs Padres 3
:
Ray Lankford hir a two-run RBis as Tampa Bay defeated for-2 against Hideo Nomo (3Jon Garland (0-1), recalled debut.
•
·I
homer
in
the
11th
inning
off
Baltimore to avoid a three- 2) but helped his team break a Wednesday from Triple-A
Sammy Sosa hit his 200th
I
'
·
I
1- 1 tie in the fifth by getting
home run at Wrigley Field - · Antonio Alfonseca (1-2) at game sweep.
I
Miami.
Gerald
Williams
had
two
hit
in
the
back
with
a
pitch.
a solo shot in the fourth Steve Kline (1-1) gave up hits and scored three runs for
and Gary Matthews Jr., Bill
I
Mueller and Eric Young all hit two hits ·in 1 1-3 innings, and the visiting Devil Rays, who
6,
Dave
Veres
pitched
a
scoreless
•
had
lost
three
straight
and
five
I
two-run homers.
11th
for
his
second
save.
of
six.
Tampa
Bay.
the
lowestMiguel Tejada homered
Jon Lieber (3-1 )' allowed
Florida's
.Cliff
Floyd
tied
it
scoring
team
in
the
majors,
twice and drove · in. four runs
three runs and five hits in
with a ninth-inning homer off tied a season high with 15 hits. to lead Oakland over Toronto.
eight innings.
Mar.k Mulder (3-2) pitched
Kevi n Jarvis (1-3) lasted Matt Morris, who struck out a· Ryan Rupe (2-3) allowed
one run and four hits in five a three-bitter for his first comfive-plus innings, giving up career-high I 1.
innings. Tanyon Sturtze fol- plete game in 33 career starts
five runs and five hits - three
'IWins 4, Yankees 1 lowed with four innings of and stopped an eight-game
of th em homers.
scoreless relief for his first home losing streak.
career save. ·
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Frank Menechino also
Astros 6.
5
Jose Mercedes (0-5) took · homered for the A's, who still
Chuck Knoblauch adjusted
lite loss.
have the. worst home record in
At New York, Lance Berk- well to tracking down fly balls
under
the
Metrodoine
roof.
It
the majors at 2-91
man and Moises Alou hit
was
the
flying
objects
from
the
8,
4
.Esteban
Loaiza · (4-2)
back-to-hack homers in the
stands
he
had
trouble
with.
allowed six run$ ~nd nine hits
1Oth .off Armando Benitez (2Knoblauch.,
who
played"
left·
Juan
Encarnacion
and
Dean
in five innings.
1) for a 6-4 lead.
field
for
the
first
time
in
his
·
Palmer
each
bit
two-run
donUntil the Astros bit five solo
homers off the Mets' bullpen, former home stadium during bles as Detroit scored the first
12.
the biggest excitement came New York's series at Minneso- seven runs at Texas.
Sox 5
Tigers starter Chris Holt (3when Houston's Jose Lima hit ta, was pelted wi~ golf balls,
New York's Jay Payton with a hot dogs and plasac beer bot- 2), a Dallas native who grew
Adam K~nnedy homered
pitch in the sixth inning, caus- des by fans, Umptres had to up 'a Rangt!rs fan, pitched sixing both benches to clear:and pull the Yankees off the field plus innings to win in his first and ~rove m . four runs, and
stlie tWO pbji\!rs to .be ej&amp;ted. for 12 minutes in !he sixth appearance against his 'home- · Beng1e f1,P!'~.~ had three
·
•'
· RB!s .as .An~h~ll!l used a seaBilly Wagner (1 - 1) got out inning of their 4~2 loss to the town team . .~
Twins
on
Wednesday
night.
Darren
Oliver
(
-l)
pitched
s~~~h1glt 16-hlt attack to beat
4
of a bases-loaded, no-outs jam
Knoblauch , who played sec-. just 2 1-3 .innings, the shortest vtstnng Chtcago.
in the 1Oth. After Robin VenJarrod Washburn
(1-3)
tura's sacrifice fly, Wagner ond base for the Twins from outing by a· Texas starter this
1991-97 and was moved to season.
allowed four runs and seven
struck out pinch-hitter Todd
Pratt and Joe McEwing to end the outfield this season after
throwing problems last year,
it.
Indians 8, Royals 4
didn't speak to reporters after
game.
Marty Cordova hit a threeExpos 4. D·backs 3 theThe
first delay came with run homer for the second
two outs in the sixth and the straight night, backing rookie
Tony Ari1tas Jr. (1-4) hit a
Twins leading 4-1 afte·r Doug C.C. Sabathia (3- 1) as Clevetwo- run si ngle · off Brian
Mientkiewicz's two-run single land won at Kansas City.
Ander~on (0-3) in a' three-rup
chased Orlando Hernandez
Juan Gonzalez drove in two
fourth and allowed one hit" in
(0-3).
runs,
giving him 31 RBis in ·
six shutout innings at MontreDuring the delay, Minnesota 25 games, as the Indians
al.
manager Tom Kelly even · stretched their winning streak
Arizona's Luis Gonzalez hlt
2000
strolled out to left field, plead- to four.
,
his II)ajor league-leading 14th
ing with fans to stop. ·.
tadlllae
Roberto Alomar was 4-forhome run off Guillermo Mota
Joe Mays (4-1 ), who gave up 5 for the Indians.
DeVIlle
in the seventh.
four hits in six innings and
Mac Suzuki (2-2) took the
Graeme . Lloyd got the final
struck out four, beat the Yan- loss.
out for his first save since May
kees for the first time in four
26, 1999.
was:
starts.
M's
Red
Sox
1
Torii Hunter ' homered in
the fifth and was hit by a pitch
Aaron Sele became the
2801
with the bases loaded in the
majors'
second
five-game
winTodd Hollandsworth home- sixth against Hernandez as the
red and had two RB!s, and Twins took two of three f~m ner, and Edgar Martinez drove
Brooks Kieschnick hit a two- the Yankees despite geuing in Seattle's first three runs.
Sele ·allowed one run on
run single for his first hit in only 15 hits in the series.
seven
hits and a walk in seven
the major leagues since Sept.
innings, matching· Minnesota's,
28, 1997.
Devil
Rays
7,
O's
1
Brad
Radke at 5 ~0.
Brian Bohanon (1-3) gave
In a duel between two of
up two runs and six hits in six
Ben Grieve had four hits, Japan's top players, ·visiting
innings at Veterans Stadium.

Rockies 6, Philles 2

•

- -• ....,...... 2IO _ _WI=NI~T!!ON=e:UP::;__
....,....: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
won tor tl'le first time in thl's
7:30p.m. • friday · FX
.
Wltlll: Pontiac Elltitement
race a year ago .••• Tony
• Wlwtw eu,. ......._ bultaeeeut 400· 400
Stewart also won for the first
7:30p.m. • Saturday • FX
WileN: Rk:t,1oucJ (Ve.)
time at this track .
•

cards 4. Martins 1

. lfs

~}:;·

iJ. :J-:)_r: :Jl.1

Boston (Ohka 2·1JIIQakland (Heredia

,_.), 10:05 p.m.
'
Detroit (Perisho D-2) at Anaheim'
(sa-&gt;ewels 2-2), 10:05 p.m.

992-2155

Racine
Mower
Clinic
Open Mon-Frl 9-5:30
Sat.9-1

(740) 949-2804
Comer of VIne &amp; 8th

�'Thurlcllly,llay 3, 2001

ao
Jluw

CMDIT I'AOIIlEIIIS1 CN..L THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT 8ANKRU~TCV
lAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
AArtiG t.-.a11-G902.
NEEO AN EfoRI.Y Pt.YOAY7? Up
to S500 lnogntty Oy phonot I
877 EAAlYfiAY liCI 150005 111

70

YwdSIIe

Den"'t Hygoarv•t Pa t time ArwJJ
Or Fud time Denial Hyg,... po5itJOn Avalable Subm t Resume
Or Call Drs Sm th &amp; J01gansen
995 Jocbon PM Gallipolis Oho
456:11 (7401446-2191

GaiHpolla
'VIcinity

Big

ra d

acrou

sale ns de and out

I om Portland Park SA
12&lt;1 Conning joro &amp; old farm ma
~atoto
May5-m

ffldoy &amp; Sow aay loloy 4 5 235

S505/WK wo k ng wotll tht gov
ernmenl lrOm """'" Part-timellul1 mo 1 888 745 3772
All
(2&lt;1 '")

Frld-r 133 Buuarnut Avenue
Oak stand ceda cheat dinette
sat Jawn turn lure gun roekar

$529 WEEKLY malt ng ltttt a
t om hOme Full 01 pan tiln8 No
'""".....,. , _ r y Eaoyt At'lf
nours1 Call uS o gut 1 &amp;17
520-807124 hcu"t611XNdiliQ

.....

7173

aM ,.. IIUftuto

Muot 81 11
..................51131

•

k•.oUIICIIntnts

.... . . , _ N. UMa ces Buu

tr ......

foftdo White &amp; l&lt;lly
1 Monlll
. . 00 Up (Now Cuotomoro)
. . ...lfta W.lcomo (304)575
. . . _ . C111rona 0.V Fridoy
~

,_,.. lcMdol Rw

a

-

740-!!1111 1M2
OuiUty clOthing ond hOuHhald
llama It DO bog sale IVOry
TllurMiy Mondor 111 u Soturda)'

40

Gaillpotlo - . Fridly 114 Salur
- !11!1 111m til ? 3201 Georgta
C - flcl Mona Women &amp; Klda

ISO Gallon Fuo 01 Tank l UMd
tOO BoHon Mo10 01 1740)311-

Ctollttl. 111\11&amp; Mtae

Garage Salt Wed Thurt I 4

1100
Adult Go den Ret iev1r Mia
iiPIJid Female EXC1RIIt1 WI1Cft
Dog Noods A Loving Country
Haml(7~)4olt

1268

E..nlng

flol

Frenchtown Apto

727 4th Avo

Gaf!'ll ~. Mar¥ Ntoo rte-

blac~

, •• three

orange oaek

150 00

aha

laga and one

ag

black wtth

orange doll tan under neck
(740)441-0518

70

--

MovlnS..
hit May 3a4 from I

fJDm

¥".....

ml1emlty clothll

Pl.- Up at Tribune Of· ~~- .. ~ biDy dotlltl furniture exerc111 equ pment

Mtutng Cat AowarG

1331' 1308 81111 Roull881

Mer ..a Friday a SaiUrdly eom-

!llm Mabtlont Drive Gallpolla

Ctolllilg Fo.wnllull Etc

Mer 4111 l

5111 Chi drena Ck&gt;lhll
tntont ta 2T And t.ota or Gnodito
End 01 Shoootrlng R dgo Noar
AICCCII I floed

Yard8ale
Qalllpolla

a VIcinity

May 4th Routt 1 South Noar
8ct&gt;ool Uttlt ~ Ck&gt;lhll
Mile

C1ar

1 Mtto blloW Dom Lott of hbJ
Cloella Homl tnttrtot M1J 3 4

1308 Jockoon Plkt Moy 4th &amp;
!Ill 111m-? Loti ot Mile C Birblll Etc Hot Tub/ Spa
$2100 080 A C $800 080

BollWcfkClflll
2 Fomlly Yard So 1 Stturday
May
5th 11 t Oak
Golltpolla
(Spring

S.-)

Moving Sale Fr day Sa u doy
lam ? Everything Mull Go 64
Clalllo
e11y. Ohlo

s- c.....

Mull Fomlly Glragt Sa a [Ran
Dr Shine) 16 Whitt Avenue Ga~
lpo 1 (011 Ga~lt d Avenue Fot
ow Slana) Fr day Moy 4th lam
5pm Saturdoy May 5th Bam
2pm Oual ty Ch ld en s C otll ng
And Toyo Mono &amp; Womana
C othlng Mloe Houuho d llama
Eltltrll nmtnt Center Dinette Set
Callao And End Tablu Much

Moral

224 111 A.. nua In Atl F lday
Mlr 4th l-4pm &amp; Saturday lolly
5th 1 1pm lOll or baby lltmo
blby lnd chlldron elothos both
bayt lnd g r 1 toyo womon

--·

clothea d nn ng oom table &amp;

3 l.,ly YtrG lilt Frida~ Batur
dly 1413nl-

vanco Ad aiQno w be posted
Mer 5th, II-? 740-8112-!133

Pmjocto 7 - 15278

Spring Nmmag4 1111- May 4 &amp; 5
Heath Un ted Mothodlat Church
Third Stroot Mtddlopo 1 9 00
300
Thuroday Frldor SoturdiJ 1 5
milia post Southern High SCI1ool
R1clne Wetch for algni Name
brand ctottttng biDy tttmo kill at
740-fl4i:3127
Two m1111 north of Cheater Fr
dlr Satu day lim ? TV Home
tnterk»r c othll turnltu 1 kn ck
knaekl

,:a•

'larG or
143 Po

Mull family Gorogo/ Bake Sale
Fr day a Satu day lolly 4&amp;5
lam ? Aouto 110 3 112 M u
11om Hotl«&lt; On The Right
Satu day Moy 5 4409 Bu av 1
P kt lam t1 2pm longabo gar
Home Inter or tlate g uawa 11
Iota of mtoc

sate 4 m loa out
May4-5 10to4

-

'lard 1111- May 4t11 &amp; !Ill SR 124
Ractno BaOy ltomo dog kennel
•rove reel ners c othea and
Yard 1111 May 5th New lima
Ad Rutland Houoohotd Items
mise Chevy Beretta some an

4 Fam ly Ga11g4 8111 Frldt~ I
3pm 1 114 Milo Out Georg••
Crtlk 011 Routt 7 Large Stu
Clothing lompo 8odoproado

wwwliltlomlbtz.com
A e You Look ng For A New
Stort For Oobt Conooltdotk&gt;n
ca t t 811~ 3318 Ton Frao
24H11 Voyager 8u1 ntll Allo-

Cillll
ASSEMBLY liT HOMEU Crafto
Toys Jew11ry Wood Sawing
TYP ng Groat Payt CAll 1 800
795-0380 Exit 201 (2Atn)

ATTENTION
Wort&lt; trom homo

---com
MaDonlOttn-

SI00-11000 por mo PTIFT

Anentlon Work From Home On
tne Dr Otttlno Mal Ordo• S!500$5DOOJmo PT FT 1 800 784

a

15158 wwwpepoya com

ATTENTION MOTHERS AND
OTHERS Up to $500-$2500 PI t
t mo Full training 1 800 879
4608 www qu ckcasnnow com

IW&gt;IQin

Benefits
Incentives
Career Potential
Paid Training
lnfoCiston ts looking for
quahty people to contact
customers and donors by

220 t Oak St eel F day 4th &amp;
Saturooy 5th 9-:Jpm
5 Family YarG 5ale May 3 &amp; 4 a? first house On Left Off Of Route
33 On Sandhill Road Home n
terlo Gotl C uba VCR Ctotheo
Fo m Infant To Adult Fu n tu 1
Rid ng Mower
Much More

And

B g Yard Sate Muon Bah nd
Fire Station May 3 5 9am till
5pm GraaiBargelni
Leta t WV Near Old School
May 3 &amp;4 9 ? Sno Cone Ma
chine Nacho Mach ne 1974
Dodge Campe Some Ant ques
TV VCR Exerc I I Equ pment
Comtorto 1 A S ze C othlng
Clllll Homo tmeriO

expenenccd tramers
thoroughly mstruct new
Call Center
Representaltves durmg
a pa1d 30-day

comprehensive trammg
program

2515

Point
Too s
Mise

DON1

to ovoryontl Clothoo
tor•
hOUIIhold gOOdl C aftl and
much much mort
113 5/6
101m 5pm
1111 Chath,m

A4 30 &amp; 5 1 5/4 U Mlttl Out
Route 211 Mowo a T mmero
Fans Peper Back Booko Many
Other ttemo

FuH time And Part Umo AN Posl
llone Ava lab a At Seen c H s
Nurs ng Cenla We Offer FleJC ole
Schedu ng Greal Btntl t Pack
IQ4 Con1&gt;eUIMI Wogoa, Shift OW
ferent a Wage Expe ience And
Ahandanca Bonuses Ca TOday
Fo More lnformallon About Th s
Grea1 Opponun ty Ask Fo
Ahondo Ho ste n At (740)446
7150
Government Joba S 1 00
S33 00 pe hour potent a Pad
li 1 n ng Fu Benalltl FOf more
nfo mat on ca 1 1 888 674 9150
Ill! 3231
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HElPt Work I om h"""'t MHO
do E Commo ce $522 /week PT
S1000 $4000 wk FT 800 92
8538 d oam2bl 11 com
Help won ad caring lor the oldarly
Darst Group Home now pay ng
m nlmum wage new sh f1s 7am
3pm 7am-5pm 3pm-11pm t pm
7am cat 740-9!12 5023.

open ng tor dlt ary manager rn s
person must have a h gh schoo
d p oma o equivalent oood com
munlcatlon skIs arid two years o
dlelary expe enca n a haa th
ca e setting You may apply n
person o fo more nlormat on
catt (740)44&amp; 5001 and aok or
Martie or Eu a
HoiZII Senlo Care Cante
380 Co onla o lwt
B-• Ohk&gt; 4563
HomoworklrtNIIdld
Se35 wllk~ proc:eaolng ma I
Easyt No IICPI'IeOCI noedtd
Call HIOtl-490 9450 24 hrs
HOMEWOAKEAS NEEDED
S600 -~ p ace.. ng ma
Easyt No o~Cpenenea needed
Ca t 100 755 2027 •539 124

""''

lmmadloto Oponlnea For
LPNS I ANS
Ful &amp;
Part Tlmo Poalllons. Good
Comt&gt;Ol!ll1ton I -~~ cot
(7411144- Or llop In AI
HHirttlll.,...menr
Nut~lng S.rvkll

762 2nd ........
Gllllpol 1 Ohio 45131

FT from home Fullli a n ng F ee
Booklet

920 924 8400

www AchieveD earns com

Needed Expe lanced Crew fa
Sett ng and F n sh ng Sect ona
Hous ng Sand P lc ng no rna on
and expe ence to Southa n
Homes PO Bo)l 629 JaOlcson
OH45640

Call for an mtervtew

OR STOP BY

I VlniOn Avonua Gall p01 1 May
2-5111 111m-? n1ca ck&gt;lhll tet n
tr blkta mowora VCA 1 TV 1
C 8 a air cond lone o mtoc

lloma

hm lpm Frtdly 213 Co men
Drtvt Tara E1 1111 Quo ty
Womtno Chll&lt;lron Ck&gt;th ng Lon
Qlbtrgt lot IC

~dutt &amp; Ch ldreno Name s and
C othfl Tor• a lo a More
Saturday 51h I 4pm 324 3 d
A..nut (provloualy htld At Dat y
Outen)

4 lamily ~ lilt MIJ 2 3&amp; 4 II
40844 laura Clll Rold Ao n or

-

111111111?

ttl 8 Th rd Middleport Frldoy
Saturday Moy 4 5 hm !pm 81•
family 0~1 tdult c othlng toyo
bualnet blktl booko much
~

ChMP prtoll

God,_

lillmo~l aaJt Rutland Church

of

My4t11111fno4pm

laohtn &amp;llurGay only May ! h
lldop aado atw ng mach nt
CDWOoy 110011 liverwtlll bOOkl
lu I 1111 loothlr lklk C o hll an
1quoo ntll' Ar nt rid ng mowol
I kl new Troy-bin chlll9er ltwn 'Ill
cuum ots Of hOUMhold 1m1
MeOintt llld . .
Gatage
oala
Wtdnuday
Thuraday Fr~ay. SR 7 On11 or
Storage Unit !O:OOam 2 OOpm

II

Or Stop By:
242 Th1rd Ave.
Galhpohs, OH
Roof&amp; with carpentry expe enca
needed 740 37B 6349
Soles Person
Fu Time Sane
f ts Re a Experience Prafe red
Apply At lleotylo Fu nltu 1 No
Phono Cals Apply tn Poraon
856 Th d Avenue Galllpo a
Oho
Scenic H Ito Is Now H ng
STNA a And Ca t llad Nura ng
Ass stan • For A I Shilts We Are
A P og ISS VB Fac ty Who Ap
p ac ate&amp; Ou Staff You Have
G eat Oppo tun t es At Seen c
H s Please Ca Rhonda Holste n
At {740)446 7 50 Todayt 0
Stop By And Ft Ou An Appl ea l
1Qn

::::.::_-=-=~===:---

SOCIAl WORKER/
ADM SS DNS I MAAKETINO
Overb ook Cen11 s now accept
ng esumes to he pos lion ot Dt
ec o o Soc al Se v cesJAdm 1
son and Ma ke ng Cand date
must possess st ong verba and
wr tten commurt cation sk s
Mad ea d Medica e and MDS
know edge and ma ketlng ski s
(bo h nterna and •• erna) LSW
w th expo ones In •ong To m
Care p ale ed but not requ ed
Qual fed Cand dates ptease con
lac Cha a Brown Adm n s1 ator
at 333 Page St eo M d~ apo t
OhiO 45760 740 992-6o072
URGENTLY NEEDED p asma
donors earn $45 o $60 to 2 or 3
hou a week y Ca Se a Tee 740
592 6851

6265

TUIWEO OOWII ON

w.

1 888 582 3345

~19Sl'

HEAL ESTATE

lawn Mow ng W - Eatlntl
oack Ctean ng
Atllnlahlng
Removal Of Unwanted Uems
From Bu tdlngs Ca t (740)UII
7804

·-~187

Foclory Goof 32liiO SID 000 Dilcoum only S1000 oo Down 01tlvory lnd oet"' paid Oy Foetoty
1-«JJ-691-em
Final Days Natlohwldo tnvonto.y
(304)736-3409

SPECW. DEAI..-IIUIT SEE

-and
-room.

Troillrlndtolboth 3bado001o&lt;
apptlancaa,
111sido-..
f. til siding with
CUll priOt $12.000
cal 740-742-7403

firm.~

age

310 tloiMs for Sale

llnCI Homo PoekaQ4S AN Crld I
(740)445-2570

$0 DOWN HOM ESt GOY T a
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OA NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT FOR ltSTINGSI CAll

L mlted Or No Cred I? Govern
mont Sank ~ Only At O.k
wOOd In Barboursv 1e WV 304
738-3408

1-8Q0.338.0020 ... 9811
38A.1btth - - - ..

Odd jobs woadtating oullldo
patnong mowing Qllll wilt out bu d ng1 clean up yerda
740-9!12 9314

929otlft .... - -

5form cily $55 000 county
-(740~

lol model clearance save up to
$1 825 with any home ehack us
out we a dealing Co a s Mobile
Hornoa US 50 East.-. Oh
New 14 It w do $499 down only
$199 par mon cal now t 800
181-8777

Wades Cons uctlon General
lawn Malnttnaneo landocaptng
[740)701H1458

Now 18 It w de $499 por mon
only $270 per mon ca I now 1
800-89Him

w hau t ash or junk aw1y
$40 00 a toad 304-6711-1950

Ntw 2001 F ootwood 3 br 2
bath 111 up n The Counoy Mollill Home Parto. , _ , to In
$8115 down $1119 9B por month
740-992-2187

Mllll--.cltn
11111 o• ~· II atm!ICIID
1111,_ Ftlt~I'IA

FINANCIAL

210

.,......

ati·--·-~PI-••

Bualnaaa

1Ft 'I

Opportunity

-

S1 000

WEEKLY! Work at IIOmt
p ocesslng au1omotlve pam
ph etsl No upar encol Wu~ty
paychecks Evoryth ng auppllodl
1 800-551 3175

-or-ID

IOidW~i· ..... i

.. -

•

r.ntltl

-ntltglon.

l1llllonal

origin. or any

makt any .at PilflriiiCO
11m1t111on or dlleflni.UO.• •

-·lorilll•

O l r - nltllaby

••bnawdthlllldl • •
DalliNd ln . . ;aw 1-.+

tlloollorng

.... *than., . .
-"'""Y-

4 badroom houu Pomeroy good
homo appralaed $27 500 call
740-742 7403- 1111111101
ATTENTION INTERNAT O!~Al
COMPANY NEEDS HElP

8 Room lWo Slllry Haull I Bath
n Bldwal Two lots (740)245

w/cuatomer+III'V ct management
$50000.$150000 PT

9323
843 2nd AVIru
2 Slory.
3 Bedroom 2 Bath $59 ooo
(740)441 3014

$2000up FT
cart 800-98+3312
EARN $500 $900 PI Wllk In
you ba nrobt &amp; s ppero low tn
ves manr 1 100 272 0193 awe
somes n ngs com

FORECLOSEO GOV T HOMES!
$0 OR lOW DOWNI TAX
AEPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT FOR liSTING CAU t
eotHot tm lilt 68t3

Es n $90 000 YEARlY ropaklng
NOT eplac ng Long cracks n
W ndah 1 dB F II v dto 1 BOO
828 B523 US/Canadl www gtau

mechlnbt com

, (i!iteic.hi~j

co lago Dogroa
Bache or 1 Maater a
Docto are by Cor ospondonca
BaNd Upon P or Eduea on E•
po oenee and Study Cou ae Free
Cata og Cambr dge State Un
VBrslly (8CQ) 1164 8318 24 HRS

EARN your Colege Deo ee
OU CKLYI Bachelors Masters
Doc orate by cor espondence
Based Upon P tor Educat on E•
perlenc. and Study Course Free
Catalog Camb ldgo Sta e Un
110rs1ty (800) 1164 83!6

MED OAl B LUNG Un m ted n
come potent a No expe enea
necessary F ae 1!1fOrmat on &amp;
CD ROM lrMIII manl trom 12495
F nanc ng ava abte tBOOI 322

e

New double wldt 3 b 2 ba
$998 00 down onty 1295 por
man eaH now t-aoo-elt-tm

,.....,. wll not
-ICWICCIPI

-~~ln-attllo

J

2 Bedroom I Bath 0" Kriner
Road 1750 Down Eaoy Term
Cltt OIVtd 11-IOQ.;m.etiiO
New Conal ueled Hou11 Up To 3
Bedroom• 2 Ful Baths 2 Half
Baths 2 Fu Kitchens t lara'
Enough To Eat In Forma Din ng
Room G tat Room llrQ4 Maatt
Su 11 Wth Wh ! poo Tub Largo
Co amlc Shower 3 Car Gorago
P ua 30x40 Out Bu ldlng On 7
P ua Wooded Acru In Green
Townsh p P us Much Much
More Save 8% Before L st ng
W th Rae Eatato Broker P cod
$340 000 (7'40)246-9033

0 de home for sale n Dexter
liking 142 000 740-742 2218

WORK FROM HOME
$500 $1 500 Mo Pa
S 200 seooo mo Fu T me
PA D VACATIONS
BOO 490 30 9

me

WORK FROM HOME
$500 $ t 500 pe mo PIT
$2000 saooo pa mo FIT

320

WOW Now F totwood Doubla
Wldo 2ldO 4 BR Only 31990 II
Fllltwood Homo• ol Proetorvlto
Tolflll 1-888-565.0187

330

Fanna tor

Sale

Form HOull 8oauttlu ly Aomo
dlltd 2883 Square Flit 7 Acr
•• Pond t1111round Poo StvOral
Barna GIIIQ4 Fru t Traoo Close
1b Hotzar $215 000 (740)44&amp;-

4230

350

Lota

&amp; Acreage

13 Acree With Baautllut lake
Vlow Slles $50 000 I Acres
w th Large lake Mob to Homo
With Add On $79 500 Ga a
County On Blacktop Road
(740)381-5171
4 and 5 Aero Wooded But d ng
Lots In G111n Townah p M nutoa
From HoapHal On Pavad Roode
The Woods Oak Ridge Drive
Pr cod tn Tho 30 s (740)441
7071 Or {7..0)245 8033
camp
S Ill For Rant On Ka
nawha R ve 8 m es from Point
Ploaoant olectle on y (304)67e
1722 (304)675-4144Affor5pm

'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
'

11 0

Cass A OTA Snge 0 ve Lae
Model Kenwo hs W h Reele a

wes Coast Ca Ia
Help Wanted

ttiATTENT ON
lnta natlona Company Expand ng
Work From Home o Off ce
$500 00 $8 000 00/mo PTIFT
Ma 0 de !In a net
Paid Train OWVacatlons
CaD 1 800-21 t 8 60

UIATTENTIONI
tntornattona Company E•pand ng
Work From Homo 01 Of ee
$500 Q0.$8 000 ()()(mo. PTIFT
Mo OrGo nto not
Paid Til In ng/VICittona
Colt 800-226 0317
WW'/1 ColhOnThoTtbt o com

Can B

OTR Team S a ght Tuck late
Mode F e ght na 8 W th S eep
ars Mus Have A B aka En
do semen s 800 M e Flad ua
Home Da ve es Bolh P0111 ons
At Least 25 Yaa s Old At leaot 2
Yea s Expe ance Good MVR
Week y Pay Heath nau ance
Ava atHe Wo k We W h The
Pub c Fo Mo a no mat on
Ca
800 437 8764 Hou a
8 30am 5pm
Cllrical
A+L Tr1neter one o he na on a
a goat lam y owned •Tl moto
It ghl ca a s a eccep ng ap
p cot ons
a Fu 1timo ana Shift
14 OOpm 2 30tmt Pre Clerk
Must typ' 211-30 wpm w h oe
cu acy The IUCCIII U c:an
d da e w I bt diiPindlblt wal o
gan zed computer ttrltt and
POUISI bas C math tkllll WI
o a nco ont pay w th btnttlll
hat ncludes a 40 (K) rot tmtn
pan and I •• vacat on lodg ng a
ou amp oyea 110 t n Fl Myt 1
Beacn Fl and our 1111f)loyaoo Inn
n P goon Fo ge TN Mt you
tsume
o Route t Bo• 448 1
Gs pol a Fo ry WV 25515
Phone (304)875 1809 o llx your
Resume to 1304)875 4882 M/FN/
0 EOE www ca e • com
lfflw rl le om

Pa t me housekeepe aund y
staU needed or 1 oo bed sk ed
n.u s ng rae ty lnte es ed app c
ants shou d app y to Aoeksp ngs
Rehab Ita on Can e 36759
Flocksp ngs Road Poma oy
Oh o 45769 attn M ko G lmo e
Superv so Equa Oppo 1un y
Emp oye Encou ag ng Wo k
pace o ....lly

No expe ence needed
Tra n ng p av ded
BOO 394-4930
www9 1de com
If you have 10 10 75 pounds to
ose we pay you S$$ 9BI 237
938

140

Bualneas
Training

Schools
ln1tructlon

Poatol Jobs 148 323 oo yr Now
hlr ng No tJCpt enca Plld t a n
ng Q eat benet t1 ca 7 days
800-4211-3880 ..l J 38!
POSTAl JOSS to 118 35/hr
W lDL FE JOBS to ~~ 60 n n
cludtl Sent 1 No Expe ence
Ntctuary Fo Appl cat on and
E•am no cal t 100 992 705~

li208 M F 8 30-5 OO!&gt;m

BlACKSTONE
PARAlEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy Ap
p OVId Afro dab I COmR than
s ve ega a n ng s nee 1890
FREE Cato o~ 800 826 9221
w Ita ~0 Box 70 449 Da as TX
75370 NA o http www b ackl o
neawcom
GED

Ge you HS equ va enev d p oma
easy home 1 udy cou u
1 lll0-569-2163e•t 310

w lh ou

180

Wanted To

$$$ CREOIT CARD PROBlEMS?
FREE D•b Canso ldat on Cut
Payment&amp; Aeduce nterest Non
P ott eoo 288 6331 E" t5

Do

IS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
eash o reman ng payments on
P oporty Sold r.to gagaa Annu
t as Set tmen 1f mmedlate
Quo ••
Nobody baats ou p c
es Nat ona Cont act Buye s
(BOO) 490 073 1&gt;1 101 www na
k&gt;nateont actbuyera com
CASH lOANS $2000 $5000
Conoo dat on o $200 ooo Bad/
No C edit C od Carda Mo t
gagu Fo nlo mat on
100
935-78 2 ext 3812
CONSOL OATE YOU A WAY
OUT OF DEBT Roduco month y
paymen1a Pay one b month
EASY to ge 1 a od Finane al
F aedom Chr 1 an Coun11 ng
100 141 9757
ext
CC3
www dlbtceo o g non prolt)
DM&gt;rot$150
Bank uptcy S 95
Adoptkln $225
No do t yooru 1-kR
CAll 800 303- t 70
FREE nlormat~n
Bank uptcy nil In TN/K Y
Money Nowl t a T uo No
opaymont Gua a" aod Fo per
sona neado education buol
nasa t 800 724 6047 (24 hro )

1 7--6301
1-100()lr
-Spoeiellty
l.oalt
291-00111

CIH-

-ing References
Clean No -&amp; Depos
No Smok
t Re
qu red
Ut Illes Fu n ahed
(740)418-1519
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmonto at Vittaga lolanor 'and
River- Apartmonll In Middle
port F om $2711-$348 Co 740
992 5014 Equal Hauling Oppor
lunitlll
Modern 1 Bedroom Apa tment
No Poll $230/ Month tneludel
Watt Stoo Deposit (740)4483517
Now Taking Appt eallono 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Inc udea Water:
Apartments
Sewage Trash $350/Mo 740
446 0008
River Sana Ptace Now Aceljlting
Apptlcatlonl Ia t 81droom Hud
SubSided Apartment for E dar y
and Dtub od EOH (304)182
3121 Dr (304)882 3274
Tara Townhoult Apa tmtnts
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1/2 8at11 Fully Clir
pottd Adult Pool I BIOV Poo
Patio Starr $385/Mo No Pets
loau Ptue Socurtty Dtpolll Aa
qulrld Dayo 740 448 348 t
Evtnlngo 740 387 0502 740
445.()101

1W n~rTOMII now accepting
apptlcationllor I BA
HUD . - i1pl. tor otdt&lt;ty
and EOH (304)67116879
Two 2 bedroom apartmanta for
rant In Syracu11 $325 PI montl1
plua S200 lllpollt. 74o-37tl-611t

RENTALS

410

HOUIII for Rent

1 Bldooom Hou11 tn Town $2751
mo $200 Oepos 1 Aafe ence Re
qulred Abso utely No Pets
(740)446-7795 From 9 4pm Ask
FoGog

Two bedroom apa tmtnt atove
rotrtgo ator Mtdd tport one bad
room apa tment Pomeror: stove
relrlgtlltor 740-742 7403

480 Space for

Rent

Mobllt home ot tor ont n Mid
dlopon $125 por month 740-9923184
Moblla Homo lot W Taka
121 41 t8 a wdll $125/mo
SIOO dop Noed Aolo one11
(140)445-0175

490

ForLnae

Baautllut 1800 Sq Flit Aoatorld
2nd Floor Apartment In H atorlc
Otst ct tdoa Fo P ol11alonat
Couple A Modar~ !1!11!•,11 •• ~
lledrooma SpocloualJiifittl 1 111!
8otha Roar Dock HVAC $8
mo Ptua Utilities Socu ty And
Key Deposit No Pats Rol,ranell
Required (7401446 4425 0
(740)44&amp;-3935

MERCHANDISE

510

Houaahold

Goods
2 Retr ge ator $125 Each &amp;
Up lghl F HZII $100 A I In Ull
(740)256-5535

Compute 1 WE FINANCE DELl
COMPUTERS Evon w t~ 1111
than portoct crldltl I 100 477
90t8 Codl ACt&amp; www omeoo u-

tlon.com

CIIIDIT CARD EQUIPMENT

www"""' .....-,.

nect

-

S3 895 -

Super lum-

bermatl 2000 Ia ge capac t es
mort opt on&amp; Manufactu ar ol
sawm lis edge ' and sk dde a
NORWOOD INDUSTR ES 252
Sonwill Drove Bullak&gt; NY 14225
FREE Informal on 1 800 576

1383 EXt 2QO.U

STEEl BUilD NG 4 only 21
25x30 30•40 451190 must movot
So ng lor ba anco owldl 1 tJOO.
4115705x37
STEEl BUilDING New Mull
1111 40x80x12 was $17 500 now
$10 971 501100&gt;16 .... $27 850
now 119 990 80•135x18 was
$79 850 now $44 990 00•751120
waa St 29 850 now $84 990 1
tl00-405o5128
Un mlted Nationwide Long D s
ttncol Only
00 por moltlh 1
BOIJ.562-D091""' 1031

see

UMd Whallcho r Good Con
dillon $175 00 (740)448-2205 or
(740)441 8515 Alk Rw Virginia.

Well aupply you with Merchant
Account 1nd Equ pment Low
coat 11111 Solos dlpoo tid Into
your ehaektng account Col CorG
SoMionlt-888-321 7241
EZPETAX COM SIVI up o 50%
on All pet mad cottons ana suppilei Including HHrtgard tnte
ceptor Frontline moralll FREE
SHIPPING Ordt online _ , Ez
patAx com t-eoo-844-1427

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacklon Ohio, 1 BOIJ.537 952B

prllllon Fltttnge n Stocll

We Need Your D rt Aocka And
Bouldtra Dump F eo Call
(740)4-41-DS28

5SO

Building
Supplln

FREE CASH $10 OOD or more
pou tM In 58 days or le11 NIY
er report Now programat Fill n
!ormation
1 800 306 8147
www vlllonq2000 com

Free government I p vate mon
ey Ntvtr repay AI wo thwh t
requ"ta cons dortd Mull ba
given out to avo d taxes Fund ng
to ldueatlon housing buotnoaa
travel debts a 11 and mo •
www granta dot com com 1 800
2;12.()363 1111. 4009

560

1976 14,70 2 3 Bad oom loa
Ro go ato Porch Shed Fence
$7200 080 (304)875 3008 Any

Hmt
1682 14•70 Fa man Townhou11
2 bed oom 1 arge ba h wllh heat
pump &amp; a c $7 500 740 591
4043 0 740 992 0938

v

Longeberger Baskets Large Peg
W T Fa Baoket 99 Falht 1 Day
Basket 2000 Sma Purst Smat
Eaaot 1 Candy Co n Votive
Seve al L ntrs Ca 1 For Pr cas
1304)882-2531

B and Now Dum Sa $1000 Or
Best Olio Incudes Stgo And
D um Calli [740)416--7637

Fa r ShOW Plgl Contact Ha 0 d
Taylo tn E - nga AI (740)2459047
HORSESHOEING
Cort l td
Farner Fred Queen (740)256-

Hay&amp; Grain
Hay &amp; Bright W o Til Straw Round Del wery &amp; Volume Dis
count Ava able Her tage Farm
1~)675-5724

85 Chevy Asa o Van

1750

(740~4!HII12

9 Chevy S 10 B IZil 4•4 V 8
auto ale S3850 740-949-2732.

740

Motorcycles

1992 Yamaha Seca
Runs &amp; looks G ea
[7~)319--2480

aooec
$1800

1999 Honda Fo eman s.tso 4x4
360 M es Ha db' Used Hardly
Used $4800 [7401256- 329

82 Honda God w ng Back
Graat Shape 38 000 Mites S2500
(304 )882-3338

650 Seed a. Fertilizer
Tobacco Pfanls 0 der Now To

Guarantao Early Spr ne Pitmtncreast AI otments Mean Extre
Plants nank ~u

Fo Your Buetr
ness Call Oann~ Dewhur't
Leave Massage (3041895 3740
Or (304)895-3789

TRANSPOfHATION

710

Autoa for

Sale

10 DOWN CARS POLICE tM
POUNDS &amp; AEPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEP S lOW AS $291
MO 24 MO S
9 9% FOR
L STINGS CALl 1 81XH51 0050
tllt c 6812

e

1984 Z 28 Automat c Ti ans
m Ilion New T 81 T t Wheel
Air Brakes Pa nt Has A arm
Syllom Runo Good $3000
(304)862 397
9B7 otas 98 Regency t7t 764
m lea needs eng ne bes oler
740-992-0768
1968 Honda ! IPIId 40 MPG
$750 (740)245-5812

Clean 1983 Yamaha V ago Mo
torcyde-o 500 cc Low M es Sha

OfWen Run&amp; Grea 2 He matS 2
W ndshie ds Included Red W ne
color
Must
Se
S1300
(740)448-4542

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
t985 Proc aft 17 1 2 Foot Bass
Bolt Witll 1988 JOhn&amp;On 150HP
Good
Condition
$3 800
(7401256-1329
11195 11 Foot Afnke Ca Fo
More Deto to (~04)675 129B o
(304)675-5770
1997 SeaOco OTI 3 Seal Jot S~
and Tratla EJCcel ent Cond t on
Roady lor Summer (304)882 37110
20 Pontoon Boat 40HP Mereu y
MoiO &amp; Trailer $7000 (740)446-

3054

780

AutoPal'tl

&amp;

Acceeaorlea

989 Cadi ac Fleetwood 4
Doo
loathe Seats loaded
Excellent Condil on
Ask ng
$3000 OBO 1740)448 293
(Days) [740)446 tt 51 [Eva n

1 ton GMC cob &amp; ehoaalo no
11 and tr~~namlsslon or motor
bad
cob
Good
tta
(304)875 3000 [304)875 8783
leave number

Budget Priced Trenemleelone
All Types ACCIII To Ovo
o ooo T ansm ss ons Traneler
Casas 740 245 5677 Col 338
3765

t 997 Subaru OU back Spon pow
ee ng AW Pl A C T
Whee 27 mpg $9500 304)675
41t8leovo Message

94

Cob a Popup Campa

By

F ags aff Exce en cond t on A
Fu nace T nted W ndows Ask ng
$3000 (304)675 67 3

SERVICES

NOSOOV S FATHER CO by Kt
v n Jones Ma y chap n ca pen
te &amp; Ace Sm h gues On lax

Home

1m com cdun ve se amason etc

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
Uncond ona er me gua an ee
Loca efe ences u n shed Es
tab shed t975 ca 24 H s {740
446 OB70 t BOO 2B7 0576 Aog
ers Wa a proof ng

FARM SUPP LIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

810

Farm Equipment

NEW AND USED STEEL S eat
Baamo Pipe Reba For Conore e
Ang e Channa Fat Bar S eel
Grating For Drains Driveways &amp;
wa kwaya l&amp;l Sc ap Meta 1
(740)416--7300
NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT
ERS Almo11 everyone approved
wth SO down low monthly pay
'lntntall BOIJ.8 7 3478 e•t 330

CARS $29 MONTH POl CE M
POUNDS &amp; AEPOS HONDA S
CHEVY 24 MO S 019 9
FOR
STINGS CALL t 800 941
8777 EXT C 9Bt4

420

14x70 tota e &amp;ctrlc wo bed
ooms $300 month pus $150 do
poSit no pots 740 742 2714

Apartment•
for Rent

New And used Furn lUre Store
Be ow Ho day Inn Kanauga We
Sa G ave Monuments
And
Vases 1740 446-47B2

Attent C)n Atten on! S an ey
Home P oducts And Fu e B uah
Aval able To Ordo P oducts 0
Request Cata ogs P Base Ca
(304)675 81103 Anylrno

4 H And FFA C ub P gs Hamp
Yo k &amp; Ouroc C oss 740 388
11033

On

1 and 2 bedroom apa tments fu
nlshed and unlu nlshed aecu ty
deposit requ ad no pas 740
992 2218

110 Help Wanted

EYECHRE/mEDICftlHSSISTHDT

v

STOP RENT NG t OWN FOR
LESSI SO or ow downl OK crldtt
Fo at ng ca t 800 sot 1777
txt 1821
2 BR n Pain Pil111nt Rolaronc11 &amp; Depoall Rtctu rod (740)+48

2200
4 room Oownato a Water paid
No Pall II Ctdor St 1740)3811100
8 Room ond Both Centra A
wash Room Pan y n Kanauga
$4001 mo p uo dapot t (740)'148
4734 or(740J3877ot~

44 Magnum Auge B oekhowk
S
n Box $325 00 357 Augo
h Hollie &amp; She s $325 00
7401245-5812

I

w

I

1_;,-----=~:::--t

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CLASS!!c:ifE!)Si

Electrical and
RefrigeraUon

Mobile Homea
for Rent

Nice
C ean
3
Bed oom
Mob le Home Near Me cerv I e
(740)256-6574

L v ngs on s Basemenl Wa t
P oo ng a basement epa ra
dona f ea es ma es t fetlmt
gua an ee 4y &amp; on job exper
ence (30.&lt;t 895 3867

840

P ano story &amp; Clark $600 You
Mus P ck up Ca
Bonn a
(304)895 3723

Two bed oom house n Pomeroy
$75 ciopoa t $260 pe montn
trash plct&lt;up paid 74()-985-4256

S ock Model C oaranco all 2000
modlta mull go Now hOme poy
menlo ao ow 11 S !0 32 PI
month and on $760 00 down
Oal140 3811-4317

3332

ego (740)245~411!5 Atlltlipn

a S

"1'mbe

Abondonod Doublew do Muot
Se [740)4-46-3083

Tho Home Show Borbou avilla
Open Houat May 4 ! 16th At
2001 Modola Must gal F 10
Marohal Seuon Foo ba Ttcketa
And $600 Cl It Cart I co o With
Pu chou Ot Now Homo Stop By
today or can Fo P ' opp oval
!81B Routt SO East t 888 738

Fa
.,..._m

AKC Rag a e ed Ma e Chinese
Pug Puppy G aat Bloodline
Show Ouo ty Shots Wo mod
S37! Will Aecapt Payment• 0
Deposit (740)388-9325

Old RC &amp; Noh top load pop cool
e good eond ton $600 otho
o d tams (304)675 3000 o
13041875-8793 -

440

97 Oakwood 3 BR 2 Bath On y
uk ng payoff prlca p eaae ca
(740)2156-6997liiVI Malllg4

And

112 Aott And
Wooka Otd
(740)446--t519

JET
AERATION MOIORS
RIIPI rid Now &amp; Aobu H In Stock
Co Ron E\1801 1 800-537 952B

v

$195 oo Per

Of Improvements nc udet Stove

Moat Goats.

Great

Peta for Sale

Man h 8 99% Fb.ad In areal Rate
Undo pnnng

CLUII OOATI Born "This Year
Pro;ed$ Purl -

ngs)

Huge lnvan ory Discount P cas
On V nyt Skirting Ooo s W nd
ows Ancho s VJ'ater Hea a s
Plumb ng &amp; Electr ca Pa 11 Fur
naeea &amp; Heat Pumps Benne ta
Mob Ia Home Supp
HO 446
941 e www orvb com/bennett

68B92~3428

Wth A
And
1 888 928 3428

•*

1330
Stat onory Extrclsa Slka $35
Wh te Kllellen Tabla w th Blue
Flo a Podded Bench &amp; Chairs
$35 Double Barreled Shotgun
H'VQins Model Sears &amp; ROIIbuelc
St 10 Rem ngton Speedmaste
Rilllo Witll Scope $50 Baaman a
P ec alon Air Gun By We hrach
$3!5 Spr ngf elds A ms S ngle
Ba e ed Shotgun A Col ector's
Dllam, $40 (7~)416--11165

Waterline Spec at 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
137 00 Per 100 All 8r111 Com

MOilLE HOME OWNERS

t ·h70 Sou hern Dream free Oa
ve y I ea Salup only $9995 1

v

810, Bod Ctr SUI H gh Choir
That You Can Make Into Table &amp;
Chair (304)6711-2801

Tappan H Ellie ancr 110% Gao
Furnaces. Oil Furnaces 12 SHr
Heat Pump &amp; A r Cond t onlng
Syslems F~ee a Yea War anty
Blnnons Hoa ng &amp; Cooling 1
100-172-5967

Clllt ..... Soturdoy loiiJ CIIJIIe Four Cll&gt;lollll C!oe1ro ga
511. 1:1lllpla. ~ , _ ag4 kept Excotilnt'cond liOn
bfod l -~~ Cl VII A I $3100 (304)e95-3828
cOMignmoOIS .,.tcomo hau ng 1995 F 150 Eatandad Cob 4WO
Cattll occeplld ato t
...
(740)!592
long bed 65.000 m11e1.
ate
ing at
many oxt•as Stt 500 740 llt2
- 4pm on Friday
2322 or (7.JOIIIII-353I
1640

-

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!
Manufacturer o lara a two week
supp y or co ostomy or u ostomy
brand name p oducls with one
atmplo piiOnt cat No obtigl kina
ca 1800-755-7880

OOOD USED APPliANCES
Washes d ye s ef ga ato 8
anges Skaggs App ances 76
ne Street Call 740 446 7398
t 188-8 B.012B

new y ramode ed

On

ASTHMA AllERGY NEEDED
10 II PEOPLE Who D~1111
tmmldiata Altltl To Try Evaluate
A NEW Compact Slate Of Tho
Art HolM Or But neu Air
Purficatlon Syotom No Coot Or
Obtigatton FrH 3 Day li at 1o1o
(304)675-3378

IIUtOENYW.i.o.OWNEIIB

W ton Coke Pans Mootty Fo

Four Gas Hot Water Heaters 30
40 Ga on In Good Cond ton
(740)446-9523

~ook

w de

Appro• matoly 25 longabtl gar
Baskets and WroUGht Iron Pro
ducto From 94 to l'reaenl Call
For Details And Prtees Serious
inqutoH Only (304)882 2531

.17311 v.na • 4-WDa
1:UO::::.._::;;u~a•~•:::a-::-:c::lt-:-:-ATHI!JII LIVEITOCK SAliS 1181 Cillo•- 010"'"' Ail Tit.

MYRTLE BEACH S C '2 3 8R s
on oil ocean $650 $1200 per
week Book now BarelootVaca
ttonaOAOL COM

99 mob e home lor sa e must
t 4•70 th ee bed ooms two
llalhs 74()-949 3004 alit 5pm

16

1974 Dodga Camper Sno Cone
Mael'llne
Nacho
Mach ne
(304)1tl5o35t9

540 lllscellaneous
_ _ _l.;.l..:l.:.ld:.;.:•::.n;,:d:;_IM:,:.__

Chldron (740)446-0527

Sale

www goldcoastcc com

Gat polio CafMr Co togo
ICa oe s Close To Home)
Ca Today 740 446 4367
BOO 2 4-0452
Rag 190 05 2746

tor

I fREE CASH NOW$ I om
weal hy ram t ts un Old ng m lions
of dol ars to he p minim ze lhe
axes Wr te mmad ately WINO
FALlS 3010 W LSHIRE BlVD
•ee lOS ANGE.ES CAliFOR
N A90010

Furn shed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apt t

-.._Rd. -

looking To Buy A New Home?
oon 1 Have Land? we oo Hurry
Only 10 lott loll304-738-729S

gsa heat
(304)675 3000 or
(304)675 6193 eave number
may be sun at K&amp;K Park

Services

$1 lACK 2 Ton A r Condt
2 Ton Colt 1 Uno Sol. 1ft.
lttltod $2 295 $ t ooo BoCk
$12t5 Not Price Fill E catl For Ouolll On Olttar 5 ZIL
II You Don 1 Catt Uo We

S ngle Perent Program Spec 11
F nanclng Ava able (304)755
7191

se

1&lt;4ll:64

Prole11lonal

Christy s family lrv ng, 33140
OhiD. 740742 7403 Apartment end
rrail.lr rentals Comtnlfdal sw.
konts -loble tor loou -

Mobile Homn
for

Mleullaneous

••• chandlle

er5pm(740~4-2&amp;60

&amp;

230

540

3 Bad oom House $300 Po
Mon h $300 Dopoelt Eu aka AI

139

WORK FROM HOME
Eo n
$500 $7000 mon h PT FT Fu I
Tanng Free no mat on CaU
Now 1 800.290-!19 4
www atta nu d earns com

eUOGET PIIICEI AT ~ACil­
ION IITATII 52 WootDriVI trom 3217 10 8313 10
ohop &amp; mov •• Colt 740 448
251111 Equal~ Oppol1unily

--on-no

or 1111

AnliqUII
11M
&amp;II !24 E Fo2SII
113t7
__
_
_ or 741).t112

Ntw 2001 Modota • 2000 -

Como Satl Hurry &amp; Saat Pr co
lncrtall
Ookwood Galllpol 1
(740)118 3083

TN1 neuu

tNOTICEI
OH 0 VALlEY PUBLISH NG CO
recommends thl you do bua
non with pooplo you know and
NOT to send money lh ough lha
mall until you have nvt~trgatld

St1rt A Travel Agency Aece ve
Tra n ng Bus ness support You
own T ave Wtbs e and T ave
D scounts Pe ks Ea n big SSS
Nom nat Sta up Cost -886 699
090 o www Ea nBuck&amp;F om

www getpcwofk com

lli'&lt;olcld . _ , Sotr ~ Floot
wood 0.... Wide 5000 Equity
Ills Iorio tid TOU FIIEE

IelMa

Need Your Lawn Mowed This
Summer? Call J&amp;K Mowing
Sa wce AI Anr Time At
t740)446 2318 Or (740)387
0212

www soor ch com o 1 800 688
5919

800 429 5653 or

nano:rg..(304)75$-5885

Rw-by-

SOCIAl. SECURITY MS?
No Fit Untea Wlnl

Goo gea Partible S.wmtlt don~
haul .,... logiiO 1111 mil jual call

T easu ad Pho os
Captu ed Fa You Wedd ng n
A Compute zed Aud a II sua
Sl des how P esenta on Deta s
(740 256-9341

tove-

dltrboyl

Call for an mtervtew
1-888-237-5342
ext 2201

-

caro

Call (7&lt;1012Se9373 Or C.t PIIOne t 304-1133-

Spoc:alGcMrMIInl fl.

-

W~DDiNGS

Middleport

lim-?? 4111 &amp; 5t11 OR or775 On
Pttriot ROad Clothll &amp; Mile

msurance

Ooekl
pan. t.awn

AIIAZING liHte or No Crtcllt IIAUTIPUL AI'AIITIIINTI AT

Home com

lam !pm Frl&lt;lay May 4 h Sa u
dey May 6th 504 A dgo Ave n
R o Grande 2 Blocks rrom
Sptado a Pizza on Cherry Ridge
Baby and todd tr Ctothll Now
bOrn- 24 montlll

2 yord uleo May 5th all day
May eth 1111 12 00 Baohan Ad
from flrt dopa tmon From
124 lakt I rot tell paot Southorn
High end go! 112 m Ita So a &amp;
war.rbtd Pll 1111 otza
6liiVII Homo Into k&gt;r tod

We offer
Compelltlve wages,
full health benefits,
one week patd
vacation every stx
months, seven patd
hohdays, 401K, free
hfe msurance pohcy
and dtsablltty

Own a P:C? Put II to Wo k Fo a

I ee booklt ea
vtsU us onHnt

'lllrG Ball M! et:1 5/4 45 aurnon
AdKonauga

2 rami y VII owcuah Rd P ckon
81 Racine Oh o boy c othos
newborn and up baby bad &amp;
dllollng table friday &amp; SatUrGay
Mer 4th &amp;5111

recogmzes a JOb
well done and
understands the
importance of
rewanhng the
people who dnve
our success

--Ali-Re.

Oaw d s General CDnlriCIOII
Plumbing Electric Panting

Own a PC? $25-$75 pt/11
12 week n home train ng oou se

And Old Toyo May 4&amp;5 h 9 !pm
34 Smitltlrl A111nuo

a Vlcrnlty

POSTAl JOBS Up to $18 35/
hour H r ng for 2001 Paid Ira n
ng Fu btnerrts 1 888 726-9083
11101

NEED MOINEY UU? Too many
blll1? Debt consol datiOn Min
$2 ooo oo &amp; Up """' cal Hili&amp;·
195 8477 Goocllbad crld~ apply

EXT 050 www bus ness star
tupcom

Toola HDUNI'IOid lltmt Cto 1'111

Pomeroy,

POSTAl JOBS 10 $18 35/hr H•
ng ro 2001 pa d t a n ng Full
benolill No _ . . . . . requQd
cal tal lrol 7lfllo7prn CST Hl88726-908311705

Galhpohs, OH

Thuradoy 5/3 4 DarJ&lt; F lday 5
4 8 dlk Saudoy S/5 14 Ro
u o 7 3 M •• South Ot Euraka
Baby Bod Chang ng Tablo S tol
1 loto Of sao, ttomo Booutlu
Boby tams Boaut lut Baby
Ctothtl N eo Mono And Wom
tna C otlltl Fu n tu 1 Gott Bag
Toya ana Much More Somothlng
lor IVIryano Clraa P lceo

MNNCEFAEEt

Help wam.c~

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2301
242 Third Ave.

litiS OUT I Wt have IOmtth ng

Eom "' To $350 In One day tnv
111 Your F ends To You Home
For A Profe&amp;IIOOBI P ctu e Pa ty
We Provide cto h ng And Jewelry
catt 1-IOCH2&amp;-8363

INTERNATIONAl
COMPANY
NEEDS HELP with Ma 0 darE
Commaroa $500 $7000 mo PT

• $7 00 per hour
•401K
• Health benefils
• Patd Vacatton
• Seven Hohdays
• Fnday and
Saturday off

110

InfoCision
EARN $25 OD0-$50 OOOJyr Med
ca Insurance Btll1ng Needed lm
-tolyt Homo Computer Needed FREE nlernet 1 800 29
46831lopt t 10i

Holle Sonlo Ca e Conte has on

computenzed d1aler
system Teams of

PI Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity

Mite

4 Family 'lard Sail

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put It to wo k $25nl S75nlr FTI
PT FREE nlo 888 803 0538

phone through a

May 3 4 &amp; ~·n &amp;am 3pm
Mount Vernon Avenue
Peasant E ectr c Range
Mens &amp; Womano C otll ng
Pun1es

3 Mllll OUt 211 Frld.IY l Satu
day Baby C oth11 blby Btd
co,...t Furnllu 1 Cralla Namo
brand Clotlllng lOll or EldrU.

$987 85 WEEKlY Proc11slng
HUDIFHA Mortgag4 Aolundl No
Exper1ence Required For FREE
tnlo mat on Call 1 800-501 1432
""' 1300 www prli(eCIIIIundo

Wllrlln 180Qoet15o0212

liqUI8

5

101 lluhl
Morton
Rood
Jaekaon Plkt On Hill
8th nd Foodltnd ThuradiJ MIJ
3rG- ThuradiJ :lrG-5111. 8-lpm

Iota m tc clean Co Rd 18
t&lt;ingtbury to Pagev lie Ad to

SIIUrGIJ May 5111 1 4 m ItS Hy
oott Run Ad
house buldo
church Mu II lam y vtrioua 1 ze
cloth ng housthotd tow pr cos
Proc11d1 benet r Youth Cllll

May 2 3 &amp;4 tom ? Furniture
Water led women• &amp; Mons
Ctolhta C - Mioc Conranary

Water T111tment P ant Sunday

now bunk- with draw
er. fu nftwa items 1 orm doors

-

Largo 'larG Sate Fridly May 4th

EquiJl:m••t n Morel

Found lAdy WIIO 1 8 - N wU
011 n g 111 11 Bot Per- n11r

May 4 thrH lam ly 400 Rutland
StrHI M ddtopo t AI condition
er t&gt;oys ctolhoo toys houllhatd
Iota at mile I:CIOIII&gt;1

Sol

4&amp;5 lam-? 2183 Star.
lloula 141 Crib 1bcldto11 Ctotllll.
Aelrlglralor
Caah Aog ott
Aetoldtng And Muuto oadtng

Loat and Found

race ca bed toys 2 ocker e
dlnlnlandt10uaol1oldmtae.

11512nd-

Mer

80

hoUII on"'IR ch kiron s clothing
siZII o 10 7 (gtrts &amp; t&gt;oys) wom•n 1 &amp; men 1 clothing 2 play
pens stroller tw ng potty chair

Friday MIJ 4111 &amp; SaturGay 5th
From lim ?7 II lroad &amp;kHt
VllageatCtr• ...

Won.,.,

----WEEKLYtt
Money Helping .,..,..

GaiiQI 1111- Frldoy May 4th- SA
241 top of Chaster h 11 th rd

--And

.-:oo

'"''- ITUCh more

e"

"""' Delaill (2&lt;1 tn)
HIOO...,IH82li Ext 5700

c. .

" ' - May 4111. 1 .... Charry
Ridge 8aOy Clothoo Mano
mile 1:00am-4:00pm

Giveaway

doll. c•

Friday Mer 4th a Saturday May
5th 218 Kitty Drtvo Ott or 1
GoorQ4I
Hoo llhotd homa.
Chrlttmao Trtl Boya &amp; G 11
Toclcller Ctothta &amp; Shooa Toya

garage -

.... 1b 'lbul'llril1 ~

luggage ant que butter bucket

- ectr cal
jowtry
Iampo
1
&amp; plumbing
ilema
nena houHWarea and much

·---·

. . ;aollel asoo

. . . . ,-Pori-

Fr day Moy 4th &amp; s.turday Mor
!til lltm-ll!lm- 32 Vinton Slrtet
Rotn Cancolo Mona &amp; lodloo
good quality ClOthing lhOII

~Wanted

110

The Dally Sentinel • . , . 8 5

Pomefoy,lllddleport, Ohio

meigs County eyecare practice Is seeking a
dependable lntlluldual for doctor's assistant.
Experience osslstlna In health care practice or
degree In medical or ophthalmic assisting Is
preferred. This posHion will be full time for 3
months followed by permanent port-time
bollS with potential for future full time
position. Send complete resume by may 11 to.
The Dally Sentinel
P.O. BoH 729•04
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�PHILLIP
ALDI!R

UNDA'S
PAINTING

A&amp;D Alto Up~alst.-y· Plls, lie.

"Take the paiA our
ofpaintin6- Let ""'
do it for you"
Interior

Truck seats, w sears, headliners, IlliCit WpS.
oo~vertiblc It vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,

Rulland. Ohio

Mon-Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yrs eXf*lence
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()918

Iefort 6p.m.
1.-Messap
Alter6pm

740-985-4180

-=.......
=-1
I

I I

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month

Blddl 191'klnls.

ftan91n911asU!s
Mon-Sat9-5

IRIBWD'S GIIBIHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh

7.992-5778 .

WANTED .
Old ,. 1111, ellll'lllllo

-

Complete Home
"Repair
Remodeling
New Additions
Gatages

rQolorcycle seals, boat rovers, C81JlC'Is, etc.

FREE ESTIMATES

Now

TIJIDffll
COIITUCfl•

-... ..,,
•• ,

• t I Ill

fllU fSTIIIITfS

6 .&amp;&amp;1411

WV 304 I U-llt74

91l 'CII

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

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

Rocky R Hupp Agent

.,....-.~~

. tlllles, ' .......

OH740-742~

.•,

. c.ll Clluclc

30. 112·2220

till'

IJU

SHERIFF TAIT"S

SOME PLACE
LOOKIN; FER ME-- WHAR HE'D
WHAR CAN I
NEVER LDo1tc.l

..,

Plllft

Advertise In
this space
for$25
per month•

Howardl.
Wrltesel

11011CE Ia h•r•by 42 aeconda Eaat a
thran
that on dlatanca of 2711.73
AU Makes Tractor II
• a ••· M ly s, foot to a !II" Iron pin
Roofing • Home
..,, at 10:00 a.m., a aat:
.Equlpmeat PuU
.MaintenanceHI• will b•
Thane• South 44
F•ctory Authorlztd
held at 211 W"' dag'"a 41 mlnutea
HaatPumpl
Gutters- Down
teoond
Street, 18 aeconda Ealt
Cue-IHI'artl
0
•
G111veiStmd
soma Plumbing
Air Conditioning
, Ohio, The Pilling thru a 5/1"
Spout
'lbploll • 1!111 Otrt
Dealen
Bank and Iron pin 11t at a
We Service AD Makes"
FrH EllimltN
• Mulch
company dlallnce, of 138.85
1000 St Rt. 7 Soutll
Warner Heating &amp; Cooling, Inc.
'
eel partclng lot· feet and going to a
Bulldozer
Senlces
949-1405
Under new ownership nIs now
Coolv/1,._ OH if6m
(b . . lde Powell's total dlatence of
8uper Valu), to a all 184.75 feet to the
591-5011
for CMh thaiDflowlng principal point of
cotlaterll:
beginning
Ucenlld ·, lnoul'ld .
11182
14x48 CONTAINING 1.00
Trana • Janltrof • Thermal Zone • IAnnox
RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
CLAYTON SABRE
acra, mono or 1-.
YOUNG'S
Serving customers 11 years
MOBILE HOME
PARCEL NUMIIER:
Help Wanted
G - A Shtrrfe Fink, OWner
42420881 E
14-001117.000.
Toll
Free 1-86&amp;-913-8595
'Wt
flllln
Yllvallnll'laducll"
•
AA
0111111
Sb:k
Tho Farmera Bank
PROPERTY
Apply in person
and
Savings ADDRUS: 33177 SL
Ripley
1-4 pm Mon- Fri.
Company, Pomeroy, R1. 7, Pomeroy, OH
372-1940
Aemgd1lng ·
Ohio, r"'•rv.. the 457111.
Vine &amp; Third St. Racine
right to bid at thle
Said pramla11
•--~
. . _ . Plullllllng
ull, and to withdrew iocated at 33877
whom
it
may
concem:
Floyd
•RoollngiGutllrl
the ebove collaterel &amp;tete Route 1,
• Vlny18klng • Painting
prior to uta. Further, Pomeroy, Ohio 45718.
Rosses wedding anniversary is
• Pallo and Porcll Docila
. The Ferm111 Bank
Said pramlaea
on May 8 and it will be 48 yrs.
Free Estimates
end
Saving• appralaad
at
We would appreciate It if you
Company r..arvaa $15,000.00
and
V. C. YOUNG Ill
the right to raJIIOI any .. nnot ba aold for
992-6215
would get him a gift.
or all bide aubmttt.d. laaa than twD-thlrda
Tha
a b o v • of th8t amount.
deacrlbad collateral
TERMS OF SALE:
will ba aold "aa Ia- $5,000.00 down,
where Ia", with no ramalndar upon
p bile Notl
p bll N
upraaaad or Implied l8ndar of dMcl.
u c. otlc:e
1__u_...;..,;__c:e__
BLIND SPOT
eUWI'IInty gtwn.
Shariff o.f Matga
REAL ESTATE
ordara and relief II BUILDIRS INC.
High&amp;
F0 r
f U rt hI r ,._ _ OH
APRRAI$ED AT:
the Court may find
. (factory Outlet)
New Homa • VlaJI
lnfOmlltfOn, prior to . ~ ..,,
All vertleol hlinde ...,
Mil date oontact
$15,000.00. The raat proper In the ume.
Sldl81 • New G~~n~~t~
Self-Storage
Sheila Buchanan at 04-11, 211, 2001
111111 cannot ba aold
You are requlr•d to
......
I
IIUide to onler 1t our
05-3, 2001
for laee than two- anawer the Complaint
'\- . , '!to•
Wf...,.'oJttoOm
loea'lon
11112-2138.
~.;;:.;;,;;.;.;__ _ _ I thlrda ttoio appralood withIn · tw•nty·elght
33795 Hiland Rd.
UPTO 70%0FF
Addition• • Rooftq
Public Notice
value.
(21) daya aft•r the laat
(I) 2, 3, 4, 2001
_ __;,.,;_:..;,.,;;.;;.:...;,.-1 TERMS OF SALE:
publication of thla coiiM!tCLILIIIIIIMIOOW.
• Vertlcolo • Wood
Pomeroy, Ohio
3tc
IN THE COMMON
10% down day of Notice, which will bt
• Minio • Ete
FREI:
ESTIMATES
PLEAS COURT OF
aal•, balance on pubflahad onca each
Public Notice
1441Wnl An. W,alt
MEIGS COUNTY,
delivery of de•d. · waak for thraa (3)
740-992·5232 Complete Mobile
OHIO
Sold aubfect to .auccaaalva waakl.
'446-4995
SHI!Rif'I"S SALE OF
PO 1 tM.
Repair on Lawn
MCond half 2000 and Tha laat pubflcotlon (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
RI!AL I!STATE
CASE NO.
accrued 2001 real will ba made on the
1Trltc:totrs, Mowen,
OOCV1156
lltaiii8Xea.
day of Moy 10,2001,1
CASI! NO, C»CV-131
..----:--~--------. nuen, W1rnnty
and the twanty-olght '
NOTICE
OF
SALE
Douglaa
W.
Llttl•,
(28)
daya
lot
aniWII
·
KENSINGTON
Repairs
The Stale of Ohio, .
ftir
Plolntlff
will
commence
on
that
:
Attorney
1111011 County.
By vlrtua of an
data. In the caae of .
Ord11 of Sale laauecl
211, 2001
your fellura to anallil11 : 211870 Ballhln Ra.t
llniiDIII~
KEEPS THE
fr..
out
of
·the
Common
10,
2001
or otharwlae raapond :
ot 0111o, Pllilnilff Ple11 Court of Malga 1..;,;...,;,......;-..___ ••
RICine, Ohio
SUMMERliiiE HEAT
raquallad by the ·
OUT AND WINTER .
45771
County, Ohio, In the
Public Notice
Ohio Rul.. of Civil :
llME HEAT IN
c111 of tha Homa 1---..:._..;,;;;,;;.;._ Procedure, Judgment
7~9-2217
BLOCKS OUTIU%
NaUonol
Bank,
PROBATECOURTOF
by
de1ault
will
be
·
Todd Dill aka Todd A.
OF DAMAGING
Slztl 5' X 10'
· Plaintiff, vo. Cerolyn MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO rendered agelnet you
Oil, at. al.,
ULTRAVIOLET
RAY&amp;
8. Curtla fkl Carolyn
ESTATE OF
and for the . refl•t ·
Defs.,.nta ·
to 10' .x 30'
FACTORY DIRECT
S. Wabb, et at.,
EARL FILSON
demendad lei th•
Houn
Dalendanto, upon a LOCKElT, DECEASED Com pIa Int.
Your
PRICING
ln~ofan
Judgement
ther•ln
CASE
NO.
30877
inawer
·
ahould
be
7:00AM·
8:00PM
Order of lall In till
I
..,_. alllhcl eoaon. randel'ld, being C111 CHARLES H. KNIGHT,. directed to the M•lga
I w111 ·otrer for ule at No. CJO..CV-1541 In aald ADMINISTRATOR OF County Court ol
Court, till Shariff of
THE ESTATE OF
Common
Plua,
public ..uon, at "" Mlfga County, Ohio,
EARL ALSON
Probate Dlvlalon,
Colirthouaa
In
will offer for •••• at LOCKElT, DECEASED Court and Second
fton• ort.Ohio, In the the
front door ol the
PLAINTIFF,
Stra•t, Pomeroy, Ohio
- - - -·County,
Courthouae
In
VS
45769.
on tha 3111 day of
Pom•rov,
M•lga
MARGARET
CHARLES H. KNIGHT,
..... 2001, at 10:00 . County,
Ohio,
on
the
LOCKm,
ET
AL
Admlnlotrator of the
1-BOQ-291·5600 • Pomerov, OH
a.m., lha following
. . . . tall U1'IW'U "'IIIHQ • IIU£VIHQ" • 'ftVI02347T
28th
doy
of
May,
DEFENDANTS
Eatate of
daacrlbacf ,..1 aatata
2001,
at
10:30
a.m.,
NOTICE
BY
EARL
FILSON
to wit:
the lollowlng lartda
PUBUCATION
LOCKETT, Deceaaad
Iaing • part or • and
tanamanta,
To:
Margaret
ChrlalopharE.
13.5 •era mora or localad ·at 45841 Lockett, her unknown
1'1i1oglla,
(0055290)
leaa, tract tranaftrrad Pomeroy
Advertise
Pika,
htlra,
dtvlaaaa
and
Attomoyfor
Plaintiff
to Rita LiiWII aa
Raclna,
OH
45771.
A
l•gataaa,
addraaa
Judith
R.
Slaoon
recorded In Deed
In this apace ~
legal unknown, and George
ClerlcofCourto
'
Book 271, It Plgl complata
daacrlptlon
·
of
the
Lock•tt,
hit
unknown
(4)
211,
(5)
3,
10
803, Malga County
for
$25
per
R-ar•a Office, real aatata Ia aa h•lra, devla•.. and
t•gateaa, addreaa
month r
Melfa County, Ohio, followto:
Public Notice
Th• following real unknown.
alao baing a pert of
lactlon 3, Townlfl~ aatata In Cheater ·To the above named
NOTICE Ia hereby
th•lr
Z·North, Ranga-13- Townahlp, Melga peraona,
County,
Ohio
and
In
unknown
halre
at
law,
given that
on CONTRAOOIS, IlK.
WIIt, Sallabury
S.turday, May 5,
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS
Townahlp, Malgl Sactlon No. 30, Town next of kin, devla-, 2001 ; at 10:00 a.m., 1
AlCina, OhiO 45771
3,
Rangel
12
and
ltgataaa
and
aaolgna
County, State of Ohio
public aall will be
74().985-3948
and mora particularly daacrlbad •• followa: believed to ba haiti
at 211 West
-Beginning
In
the
deceaaed
helra
of
~bad 11 lollowa:
Str . . t, CONCREIF/BLOCIC/BRICK
FILSON s.conil
Beginning at a center of County EARL
JtkHnrd1hStOfJA 1Jont~
Pomeroy, Ohio, Th• .• Footers, Waiii,Stepo •
Road
laadlng
from
LOCKETT,
daceaead,
point In the Clnllrflna
Flat Work,
placea ol Fanner'a Bank and
of &amp;lata Route 17 Chaatar to Rock
Savlnga Company Reptocemerito,; Wolkl
1-304-675-7824
1-100-l!G-!1077
Springe
at
a
point
ruldance
ara
Whloh bora South 47
extended parking lot
Residential Commercial • New Comtruclion
whara
eald
canter
unknown,
pleaae
take
dlflrHa 00 mlnutea
·
.
that on the (b. alde Pow•ll ' t · and Drl..o • Steacll
s.tr:a Senice l.,.llallon
00 aaaonda Welt 1 llna lnlaraeole the
Super
Valu),
to
toll
Crete
Free
Eollmot
..
day of April,
dlatenoa of 088.83 1!11t lin• of &amp;action
Spedalildni In Sheet Mdal Ductwork
CHARLES H. for eaah the following Senlng'Ohlo aac1 w.v,
tnt from ' the No, 301 thence South
collateral:
WVI03l7U
"Tnne" Sli"" a Set-rice For
Northllll aorn•r of 1n lwl; thine a w..t
1h•
1 909
H 0 N D A L.-~.::::~~...J
Gallla, Muon, lnd ~tip COIOIIIM
of the
.SP!liCIAL FINANCE .~EP~IRTMENr
Uld 13.5 eara, mor• 110 faat; . thence J
LicenRd and Insured
WV 005176
North 80 feat to th• Eatata ol EARL FOURTRAX 300 4x4
arillelrlat:
Bankruplcy?.Credit Problems?
•
' " ' - along uld canter of Hid road ; FILSON ,.LOCKETT, 478TE1504XA0171!89
The
Farmer•
Bank
Advertise
. 'We Can Help'll
.
centerline
the thlnca Northllalarly dtcaaaad flied hla and
Savlnga
containing
one-half·
"
Complaint
lor
follawlng
two
Call Us Firat Or We Both Lose!
an acra, mora or 1111. Determination ·Of Company, Pomeroy, In this space Bring In gour re~lr work
B•lng a part of the
In the Probate Ohio, raaarvea the
get
gou
going
for
1.
Bouth 48
for
per
M•lga right to bid at thll
dag,..a 21 mlnutae raal 111111 conveyed
spring
ule, and to withdraw
by
B.K.
Smith
by
Clle
21 ·-onde W11t 1
tha abova collat•ral
·
m
onth
.
1
79 or
dlatanoa ol 11t,17 dead r•cordad In
.'1~~ prior to aale. Further, L-...;.----..1
Every Spring Tune-Up
fwltoapolnt:
Dead Book 124, Pill'
h
191 Tha Farmera Benk
z.
Bauth sa en of tha Malga
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
and .
Savlnga 1""~....- - - County
Deed
ol
October
1998,
degraae 27 mlnutet
poeaaltad . ol certain Campany raaarvll
Ntw tqulpment arriving dally
33 HOOnda Wall 1 Rtca•da.
·
,
Rel~ronce . Daad: paraonal property and lha right to refecl any
dlltanae ol 111.87
Set Manning, W1yne or Jim
Volumo 37, Pall' au, that a number of hllra or all blda aubmlttecl.
.... to • point:
.
.
or
I
RIAL
DEAL on a new lawn lfiCtOr,
The
.
abov•
ftiiMd th•raln 11
Tllenoa lea~ Mtlga County Offlolal daacrlbed
collateral
•
New
Homn
RacOraa.
·
1111 only htlra atlaw of
IIWn mover or wHd trimmer.
IIICI Olillerllna
A\Idltoe'e Parcaf tht d-lld anti 11eel will ba IOid "II II•
44 . dllllll 41
to ahara In the where It", with no • Gar1gn
mlnlllll 11 HCOnda Na • 03-01•~
,:·h • -~o:! v 8 dlllrlbutlon of hla •xpraaa•d or Implied , Cbmplete
Wftt Pilling thru a
warranty given.
p1n ... at • d-btd root •••••• .......
For
turth•r
RemQdellng
Tht prayer ol the
....._of 24.30 .... Ia aotd "aa Ia"
1nd going 1 total without warrentlae or · patHion 11 thot the lnformatlon, .prlor to
Stop &amp; Compare
Sales &amp; Service
oourt cletlrmlna who ••I• date contact
dlltanoa of 141 .17 -..anta. .
PROPERTY
aN
tilt
htlra
II
law
of
Shalla
Buchanan
at
FREE
ESTIMATES
flat to a Ill" 1101) pin
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy
ADD REB&amp; : 45841 uld cltOedanl andtled 002-2138.
lit:
'
•
Plko
by'-" In thla alate to
740.992-1671
I
.
Thlnoa No"h .41 Pom•roy
Racine,
OH
45771
.
'
Inherit
from 'II• aoteta, (5) z, 3, 4, 2001
dlfii'MI 18 mlnutea
~
and tor aulh other 3tc

_....lc

.

,....,....

HIDE?

992-3470 WIIIEI-II.IEITIII&amp; CIIUII .

"".

HI6HwAY

~~riee&amp;.

CARPENTER
-SERVICE

'TU/lN

n
.. : .

r

. .' ..

THE BORN ~..v.,

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

ThE CRAFTY,

u

Llf~

.,,••

BISSELL

NO

OF

.
r:--------·-Add-· 1!'!~•• tol.uJ~~

1-------.

I'IUI...n I-JOOL.tl '\'YJO

DOZ£.1-1"''

~~ett1U19
Dry

TERRY'S
AND AIR .
COMPRESSORS

' '

~~~~~~~~~

k

740·992-7599

Hill'• Self
Storatt

MIR-:..~~H~~y

1•166-299-4445

with
second-round
controls in both round-

PEANUTS
'

St. Rt. 7 '
lOx 10$40
10x20$60

I f.IA~E TO WltiTE A REPORT
OH WI-N WE1RE f.IERE ..

$25

we'll

Ask For Mike Hindle

ROBERT BISSELL
(ONSTRUafON

·.AWI&amp;L
Ce·llular

w Iron

.992·2975

'

•\1' •

•

.

Jeff Warner
Ins.
.
992-5479

600D .. TI-lAT WAS EASIER
T~AN 1 THOU61-lT ..

Today's clue: S equals F

'R

MCIGK

FJTU

R

PRHVUDI

HC

ZC

C W U D J

JH
FJ T U

M C H -K U D S 1. G G B

J H K

GCTUK

FJTU

OUUH

J

0 RV

UJD . '

T CR E U

EJDG

DURHUD
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Fair play -with others Is
blaming them lor anything lhatls wrong wun us.' -

not
Eric Ho"er

p~marlly

'

___

TIIAT IAILT s~
PUZZLII ..;;;.....;;;;,
\!li

WOlD

..........,

.....

tAilS

0

Rearronge
le~~&lt;~n of th•
lour
~trombt.d words .,._
low 10 form four allftple wards. ·

r....,,..s""TH.,.E_C__,E,_W.,.._.I

I'
-

12
-

I I I
-

-

I
-

1

L_. ....
I_IL.....JIL-..;.·L'....J
·

v

·j

gene rate a trump trick .

An overweight woman stepped
:down from the scale and
annQunced, 'I would rather be
saved from these consequences
than my ____ -.'
. ..·

I zI I I' I I I

Complete ~~.. chuckl• quGIIOd
by filling In tt.. mlulnll - •
yau dOYolap frano stop No. :1 bolo..

8

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

To stop panner from ii~~TiHE~S~E~S~Q~U~A;R~ES~;:;:;~;;:=~~;:~=;:::!:~
. going wrong, We s t -;
should continue with a
u~~R~B~N~~~~E LETTERS ·
low diamond . East has
.'
the vital s pa de nine ,
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
whic h
effects
an ·
. Abrupt: Flush - Noisy- Treble - RUBfJISH
'
uppercut. However,
As a kid, I was taught to keep mys e lf busy. The reason "
when West continued
being , a vacant mind and a vacant lot has a habit of
with the diam ond ace, . Clilllecling RUBBISH .
Eas t sa ved hi s side by
ru ffin g anyway.

I I I I .I . I

8

..

p/8

_.,...,

people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.

ed suits. (Don't use .,
0 A 1 L 1::;:
·Blackwood with two
4
top losers in an unbid _
I
I
I
suit unless you are I00
percent sure panner
E wE H E
has a control there.&gt;
So, the only chance to
defeat the slam is to

'992-1717

r----...;.-- L--------------...1

by Luis Cimpo1
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous

·E

HARTWELL.
STORAGE

OUALITY .
'WINDOW .
'SYSTEMS

popular
agreement
in
the
tournament
world.
It follow s that if you
lead a ce from aceking, panner knows
the queen isn't in your

CEL'EBRITV CIPHER

player, hi s use of . ,
NF I K
Blackwood marks him ~......-..........- ......-1

0

II~::~~!J~,t~:;,~;

...

hand.
If South is a reliable

eo.

1.------.1

••

BY PHILLIP ALDER
Thunderclaps and
howls
The fierce storm
sure to begin:
I trumped partner's
ace
-- Dennis Lynch,
Crystal Lake, Ill.
In many quaners,
it is thoug ht that
trumping panner 's ace
is the worst thing one
can do at the bridge
table. However, occasionally it will be the
right de fense ·- as ·in
this d eal.
West's · three-diamond weak jump
overcall promised a
good six-card suit and
6-10 high-card points .
A ga inst this weapon ,
when responder has a
fit w ith partne r, he
sh ould bid one trick
m o re than normal. So,
three spades indicates
a s in g le rai se, four
spades shows a limit
raise, and a four-diamond cue-bid promi ses a, g ame -forc ing
raise. All the se guara ntee
only
three
trump s, but you try to
have four.
West led the diamond queen . What
should West have done
next? .
Leading the queen
from a suit headed by
ihe ace-king-queen is a

Medicare Supplement; Ufe Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
·
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home~

DIPIIIII

...

Not wrong

Local 843-5214

Public Nodt:eiiD Ntwlp8Jien.
Your JUpt to Kaow, Dtllveretl RJpt to Yaur Door.

• &amp;.Q' ••

. . . . . . . N.rtl ...
••
••
t•
....

Box 10;!
Middleport Oil1o 45760

.

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

••

WV0282120

'Your
'Birthday

I

Friday, May 4, 200 I
Bridges will replace obstacles and 9pposition you may
have been experiencing in the
past with new easier roads to
travel . You'll reach your
desired destinations in the year
ahead.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Conditions are trending
in . your favor today for
advancement in your worlc or
career. The opportunities to do
so will be both obvious and
subtle, so cover all your bases.
Oct a jump on life by under·
standina the influences that'll
aovem you in the year ahead.
Send for your Astro-Oraph predictions by mailing $2 to .
Aslro·Or'aph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
Hill Station, New York, NY
10156. Be sure to state your
Zodiac sign .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Arrangements formed today
for mutual pleasurable pur- .
suits with your friends could
tum out to be quite lucky for
r you. Gather together a few of
your closer personal pnl$.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
,. If there is a domestic situation th"~. needs resolving , this is

a good day to ca ll a private
round table meeting with all
those involved. People, in general. a~e more coopera1ive
today.
.
LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22) -Persons who have provided
you with sound suggestions in
1he past can do so again 1oday.
Don 't hesitate to speak to them
about one of your newest ideas.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
· - Don't desianate to the rear
ranka today situations that
could enhance your material
security. This Is an especially
good area where nice things
could happen for you at this
,
time.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Today offers a new ball pme
with new rules that favor you,
so don't be fearful about, once
again, taking on an endeavor.
with which you weren't ouc·
cessful previously.
SCORPIO (Oct. '24-Nov.
22) -- Think money today,
because conditions, in general,
favor you in this an:.a . It could
be one of those days when a
great deal can be gotten from
little.
SAOITrARIUS (Nov: 23-

Dec. 21) :. Play things loose
today, because lady Luck has
plan s for you that could fulfill
some of your hopes and expectations. There 's plenty of justification for going with the
flow.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-lan.
19) -- Focus and fortitude are
your lucky keys to success
today. Once you ' ve established
a specific game plan, don't let
anyone or anything obliterate
your targets.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Whether you know it or
not, you are currently more
popular with your peers than
usual, and good things can
happen today to· people, like
you , who know how to be nite .
to everybody.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
•• If you simply stick. to method• and procedures that have
proven to be successful for '
you, all your affairs today will
tum out as you hope and en vi·

,.I·

'

!ion.
ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- Politely request the support
or cooperation you need from
others for an important endeav·
or you're laking on and you' II
easily get it. Tact and diploma·
cy is your lucky ticket today. ·

,1

�'
•l•'fiiiDIII!rll P II

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Southern rallies to win sectional crown, Bl

Thursday, May 3, 2001

•

-~

•

JNV.

•

II

dw Wildc111 witla four
lit¥ a.•ll IIICI hok'' 1 them
'I
She a«iaed me !ide in
Older Ia me lhild. faced four
I

baaeii Ia lbe fooada and four
1D0R wilboat incident in the
&amp;ala.
Meanwhile, Eastern contin-

ued ill onslaught, adding a
rwa in die third when Lodwick hammered a home run
to left field to push the Eagle
lead to 5-1.
E.tnn exploded for five
fWII in the fourth thanks 10
four hits and three errors. Bissell doubled to lead off the
~g and scored on a two' - error that pur Chevalier
011 base. Wiggins singled and
she and Chevali&lt;r scored .on
Powell's triple to right.
walked and
Lodwick
moved to third o n Jllother
error that allowed Powell to
score. Bailey rounded out the

outburst with an RBI sing!~
chat scored Lodwick and gave
Eastern a 10-1 cushion.
Hensley and Wiggins each
drew a walk with on~ out in
the fifth as Eastern added to
its run total. PoweU drove
both in with a single to run
the Eastern lead to 12-1.
Baltzer walked and scored
on an RBI single by Hill in
the Waterford sixth to trim
the deficit to 12-2.
Eastern scored its final two
runs in the sixth after a double by Bailey and a single by
Yeager put courtesy runners
Sara Mansfield and PhiUips in
scoring position. Mansfield
scored on an error and HensIcy drove in Phillips with a
sacrifice to up the Eastern
lead to 14-2.
W.1terfnrd's final run ca me
in the SCVt"nth when Wain-

wright reached o n a, fielder's
c hui n: and scored on :m

error. Bailey struck o ut Jeconda Smith .mel got a ground
ball from Baucrboch which
she handled herself for the
care about what I'm doing.
''I'm not here for the food
or the fireworks . I'm here
for the racing."
Certain of that is Jimmy
Vasser, who won the first of
Ganassi's CART championships in 1996 .but left after
last season.
"There· ~re people who
like Chip," Vasser said.
. "There are people who
don 't like him. But everybody agrees the man is a

NASCAR .
hom Page 81
"Chip finds what we need
when we need it," Hull said.
"There's not many owners
around willing to do it for
you and not spend their
time micromanaging or
standing over your shoulder.
"He lets everybody do the
job they were hired for."
That doesn't mean Ganassi is al~vays smiling and
happy. He can be tough and
acerbic, particularly when
things aren't going well.
Ganassi, who started as a
race driver and was the
fastest rookie at the 1982
Indianapolis 500, remains
highly competitive and confident.
"Everybody's got their
own style and I guess I have
a way of doing things that
sometimes makes people
mad," h\' said. "Most of the
people I work with, though,
seem to appreciate that I

,,..,.Bt

firtal out.
"I think they can go as far
as they want to;· Eastern head
coach Pam Douthitt said of
her baUclub. "They're capable
of doing it, as long· as they
play good defense and good
offense."
Smith went the distance for .
Waterford. She recorded six
strikeouts and three walks.
Eastern, ranked No. 10 in
the latest Division IV state
poll, will play in the district
tournament at Waverly next
Thursday. ·
Notes: Eastern also won
sectional championships in
1986, '89, '90, '92, '95, '96 and
'99. The Eagles won district
tides in 1985, '86 and '92.

Shann6n Price was hit by a
McFann pitch to score the
go-ahead run.
Nikki Butcher was walked
with \)ases stiU loaded and
two outs to score Abby Harris
to give Meigs a 6-4 lead.
, McFann struck out Messer
to end the inning.
McFann on the day had I 0
strikeouts and only gave up
three hits and a pair of earned
runs. but walked nine.
Meigs starting pitcher Katie
Jeffers also threw a complete
game, giving up nine hits, six

Eastern 'von a regional chanl-

earned runs and four walks,

pionship in 1985, advancing
to the state Final Four.
Eastern's TVC Hocking
Division titk this year was the
third in school history, but the
first since 1996. The Eagles
also won the TVC Hocking

while striking out three.
As the Marauder bench celebrated taking the lead, the
gan1c \vas f.1r from over as the
Raiders had one more shot.
After Tarra Minnis grounded out to Kaytt' Davis at third
base, Amy Hood was hit by a
Jeffers pitch.
Baird then made up for her
error by connecting on a sin-

c rown in 1995.

D-11

•

gle, placing runners on first didn't take long for Meigs to
and second.
tie the contest as Bolin sinHood and Baird picked up gled in Price and, with b~
the dlmble steal to put the loaded, Messer scored as
game-tying run a.isecond.
-- Ka~ Davis was walked.
With two ours, Ward hit a
Meigs had a cham:e toxore
shot to left field, scorin~ in ·the second as Davis wu
Hood, but Baird couldn't get · walked and Harris doubled,
around Davis at third to put but Davis was gunned down
runners on first and third.
at the plate on a relay by
. . Ward then made a key steal, Nickels at left to Lawson at
third to Minnis behind the
her fifth of the game.
McFann theri made up for plate.
· her tough Inning with a baseHarris got to third on the
hit to leftfiel&lt;! as Baird scored, play, but Jaynee Davis struck!
but Bolin couldn't field it, out to end the threat.
·
aUowing Ward to score for the
River Valley will travel tO•
winning run.
Warren for the sectional
Ward was 3-for-3, while championship on May 9.
McFann went 2-for-4 for the
The Raiders, who were
Raiders (11-11) , who broke swept by the Warriors this
the school r~cord for most season, feU to Warren 12-5 on•
Monday.
·
wins in a season.
For Meigs (13-8), Kayte
In that game, Watkins had a.
· Davis was walked three times, double and triple; Baird had a
pair of hits and McFann·
while Harris· had a double.
River VaUey took the first tripled in a losi\)g effort.
The Raiders play host to:
lead of the game in ·the second inning when a sac point Pleasant today in a:
grLiunder by Beth Bryant makeup game that was origiscored Ward and Minnis dou- nally scheduled for Wednesday, but had to be moved back,
bled in Lawson .
In the top of the third, it because of sectionals.

ar

·Malp C.Unty's
so cent\ · May

Pomeroy

grant
. BY TONY M.

Reds

from Page 11
arching drive that bounced
otT the top of the left-field
wall and continued over for
hi~ · first career homer in 374
at-bats.
Brown was as stunned as
anyone on the Dodgers
bench .

the left-field wall.
It was only the third time in
his career that Harnisch gave
up four homers in a game.
The last time was for the
Mets on July 23, 1996, at
Coors Field.
Sanders didn't hit anything
hard. He fouled out, grounded out and was thrown out as
he tried to bunt for a single
against Brown. He also flew
out wea)&lt;ly against reliever

grant money :will go a
long way toward developing the park on Lasiey
Street.
.
"The village.ha,s haq the
park in its possession for
years, and this money will
now, allow for greater utilizati,o n of such a cen.trallly

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS

Gl

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Equal Housing
Opportunity

·

POMEROY . A
$21,431
NatureWorks
grant has been awarded to
Pomeroy by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources for new playground equipment at
Sugar Run Park.
The grant is among a
total of more than $7 million in state and federal
funds awarded to Ohio
communities for local
parks and recreation
improvements.
These
include nearly S5 million
from the NatureWorks·
grants program as well as
more than S2 niillion in
grants from the federal
Land and Water ConServation . fund, . which · is
administered in Ohio ·by
the ODNR.
.
jackie Welker, Pomeroy
·councilman and president
of the Village Parks and
Recreation .Committee·,
said Thursday the awarded

Mike Fetters.
Brown, who entered with
an NL-leading 1.03 ERA,.
. gave up five hits and three:
runs in seven innings, pushing
his ERA to 1.62.
Dmitri Young doubled' ·
home a run and hit a solo
homer off Brown.

"This whole thing has
been a big learning curve;"
he said." A lot of times it's a
blurred line where developracer."
ment of your team ends and
"I thought it was 3 foul r-------;;:~=:;:=:;::==:------,
Although rookie Jaso n the development of Dodge popup," he said. "I was going
back to home plate. I didn 't ·
440 Apartments
·Leffier hasn't fared ·nearly as . takes over."
.
. ..
for Rent ·
see tt.
well as Marlin and is 39th in
He didn't do any celebratWhile still very involved
the standings, Ganassi's team
ing
once he circled the bases,
. has been the most successful in his CART team as 'well as
of the ftve that chose to go running two cars in the either.
. "I don't have the personaliwith Dodge in its return to IRL's Indy 500 again on
ty
to get carried away with
Winston Cup after a 16- May 27, Ganassi is thorAccepting Applications
oughly enjoying his new it," he said. "Forgive me if I'm
year-absence.
still
pretty
serious
after
some1 bedroom apartments
Ganassi hasn't been afraid challenge.
thing like that." .
Elderly (62 or older) or Disabled
to gamble on changes with
"We're pleasantly surBrown, a .121 career hitter,
or Handicappe,d
his open-wheel team, either. prised with the way things also reached on third baseman
His decision to combine the have gone so far," he said. "If Aaron Boone's error in the
Eligibility Based on Income
then-new Honda engines somebody told me we'd fourtlf and came a'round on
Handicapped Accessibility
with Reynard chassis and have Sterling in the top five Grissom's fifth homer, a drive
Please Call (740)992-3055
Firestone
ttres
helped in the points after 10 races that cleared the concrete base
TDD# (800) 855-2880
Ganassi win th e CART ... well ... it's been great."
9f the new ballpark beyond

h4clt

SENTINEL NEWS S'f4Pf'

-~~~~~~~~~!~:;.,~

,.,

......... ,.,..A3

w ww.myda ily\en tinel.c om

Cou
seeking
COPS
funding

park wins

titles.
He hasn't done so well
another
since
making
change last year, going with
Toyota power plants and
Lola chassis. Still, Ganassi
went with Dodge tn
NASCAR, knowing it
might not be so easy to get
established.

Mi d dleport • Pom e roy, Ohio

&lt;1 100 1 ·Vol . 51. No . 203

School £?fficers would provide
DARE, mentoring services
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMl:.ROY - During their regular meeting
Thursday, Meigs County commissioners approved a
grant application to fund the placement of a police
·
officer in each Meigs County school.
PREIENTED TROPIIY- Zack Moore, a fourth-grader at Eastem Elementary School, was the first of 53
·T he board approved a 'resolution authorizing
students r8C!IIIvllli trophies at the Meigs County Academic Ex~llen~ Banquet Thursday night Howard
Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell to seek funds
Caldwell of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center Governing Board, presented the trophies.
through th~ U.S. Department of Justice and'. its •
COPS in Schools program, to hire an officer, for
each of the county's three local schonl districtS.
Deputy Scott Trussell, who submitted the proposal to the board, said officers would perform the
duties of a Drug Abuse Resistance Education offi"
cer,
and provide mentoring and leadership services
BY CHARLINE HOIFLICH
Tire students were
Meigs and James Lawrence of
to th~ students,
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
db .h
Southern Local.
. POMEROY _The acc;:om· presente 1' t e
"We think that having an ofT1cer in the schools
Also honored were the top
would reduce fights, bomb threats and some of the
plishments of 53 ,top scholars in superintendents of their
· in the schools;· he said. "And more
three seniors, one from each
other ·problems
· Meigs Co11nty schools were respective schools, Deryl
importantly, it will ·help students see that law
celebrated Thursday night at f.*:ll oifEnstwr, Willinm school district, selected on the
basis
of
academic
achievement
enforcement
officers are people they can trust and
h 17 h
a1 M · C
t e t . annu
elgs ounty
Buckley oifMeias and and leadership skills. They were
. open up to."
f!.cademiC Excellence Banquet
"'
Josh· Kehl of Eastern, Jonathan
Sheriff Trussell said that the in-school officers
~ ~~ehtw ,th~ Meigs High School
James IAwrt'!ce of
Evans of Southern a,nd Je~y
. would work d~tt't!y,,~ih an ·officer now on staff
:i¥e~~i'f. ;" "~; .; .:, ·~,, .~
· _..._.._
. ...~ou~4ern
Lo~:pl.
.
Shank of Meigs. .
'·
•,
add:~~:cy problems.
~ . . Eac.h ofthe '.stude. ntf. re.pre
,., · •
'
.
11 Ui.d ihar-:pl
· · cllilii ilie
· FromitlftthfCe.)~•h'KeiJl'was ", : !'liP
lildibj pae ., .. ~f
~-r ., . ·.
selected'
ti as ', the . outstan~ing
Gallia
.'
Ac
demy
High
School
in
.GalJiPoJH'· bas.
~p,e.rnvt scho ts,•\vaS pre&amp;ent- · , ,The stUde~ts' weie. ~resente.d
resulted in a 45 percent reduction in delinquency
ed .a trophy by Howard Cald- bY the supermtendents of then• senior in·Meigs County. Onable
the
banquet
because
cases
and other offenses by students.
to
attend
weU of the Atheqs-Meigs Edu- respective schools, Deryl Well

Schools celebrate

.·.

satiortal $ervice' Center Gov- of Eastern, William Buckley of

Please He COPS, AI

PleiH M1 BaiM!IIIII. AI

PRAYER
~ OBSERVANCE
l

if
. ' -lllll he steps of the Meigs County Court-

4100 Utility Tractor

Starting at: $9,995 .

SST16 Lawn Tractor

You deserve one. Your lawn

•16·hp, V-Twin engine
• Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 42-inch mower deck
• Zero-tum radius,with power steering

deserves one. What are you ' ·

• 20-hp, diesel engine
• Standard 4WD
• Standard mid and rear PT(ls

time to pamper yourself,

As shown: $15,959

thanks to huge savings on

house became a place for prayer on
Thursday, as Meigs County celebrated
the National Day of Prayer. Local pastors, elected officials and members of
the general p1,1blic joined in prayer for the country. ·
the community and their leaders, and celebrated
with music from Martie Short, Carleton School and
Mid-Valley Christian School srudentS, and James .
Soulsby. The midday service was the culmination of
a weeklong observance, which has included a Bible
reading and prayer marathon, a prayer bre,akfast for
local officials, and · a concert of prayer at the Ash
Street Church, held Thursday night.The Rev. Father
Walter Heinz, pictured here, was one of several who
olfered prayers at the service. (Brian]. Reed photos)

waiting for? This is a great

ONLY $4,299·

'lid.,..

afull line of John Deere

Sentinel

LT155 Lawn Tractor

equipment. You know you've

•15-hp engine
'Two-pedal automatic
transmission
• 38-inch mower deck

earned it. So cut out of work
early and run to your John
Deere dealer's store today.

• 30-c c engine
• 180-mph air velocity
• Weighs 10.7 pounds

ONLY $2,399

(Because the savings end

SAVE $100

July 4, 2001.)

2hdl••-12 ......

BH30 Handheld Blower

~c~oumlliC:Sw.,-----.!OlB""s ·• • 111s: 1+15-24-32

ONLY $169''·

Editorials
A4 o~bllitu~•~nn··~----~~A3J.l w.~

www.JohnDeere com
oTHINc;

RUN'·;

LIKI

A

Lotteries

~c~a!~ewnd~aLr~----~gA5&amp; ~
C!.!llalllp~jfiedsllml.._____.._. .liB~2-4~ Pldl :s: s:o.o; Pldl4: 6-{}-4-0

BI. 6

Dlllr :s: 3-l-6 .,., 4: 8+9-1

W.useillalilthwelilr_--'---LlA2.._

o 2001 Ohio VOlley Publishlns co.

Sports

N

HIJh:701 .
Low: !101
Details, A2

Remaining workers at Windsor laid off
WEST LIBERTI, W. Va. (AP) - All
remaining wotkets at Windsor Coal Co.
will be laid off, American ·Electric Power
has confumed -jtist days after a proposed
sale' of the coal company was announced.
'Brooke County conunissionets received
a letter from Windsor Coal General Manager D. G. Zatezalo on Thursday concerniJlg the layoffi. In the letter, AEP con6rmed
that Windsor Coal will close on June JO

and the 61 remaining workets will lose
their jobs.
Windsor had once employed 225 people.
Columbus-based AEP earlier annoljilced
plans to close Windsor Coal in March, but
the company confirmed in February it
would retain 67 of its 225 employees to
keep the mine in working order until a
buyer could be found.
The number of workers had changed

slighdy since then.
On Monday, AEP officials reached a proposed agreement with CONSOL Energy
Inc. of Pittsburgh, in which CONSOL
would purchase stock of AEP affiliate
mines Southern Ohio Coal Co. in
Wilkesville, Ohio; Central Ohio Coal Co.
in Cumberland, Ohio; and Windsor Coal,
AEP spokeswoman Vikki Michalski had
said.

DFFRI

Heritage Week.

~

CARMICHAEL'S.FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

EAST END. CYCLE SALES INC.

Jackson Pike • 2 mile.West of Holzer 'Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45614
740-446-2412

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304-529-3309.

"Offer! tnd

···---

Ju~

-

4,1001.

luoo.h;oh&lt; "'"' end 'dellvt'Y

" '~oli&lt;lod,

I

Celebrote Nallonal Hospital Week and Holzer Heritage

Week with u~. and tour the new Holzer Education &amp;
Cc,nference Center locuted on the ground Roor of the
Cha~ E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center. Public inviled.

Tuesday,' May 8 from 1:30 - 4:00 pm.

.

,.

Mon"'"""'' '""'"'d l;st pd" and"""''· Modelo, ,.;,.. and savi1gs may YI'Y par deoll&lt;.
.

.,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="452">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9894">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24092">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24091">
              <text>May 3, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
