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and it works," said Williams.
''In our chiropractic cue · ·
we do orthodics (foot levelers), vitamins, and herbs;· he
f1mP1p:D1
ftom Pip Dl
a9&lt;Jed. " Our adjusting techniques include diversified,
the problem."
If you have minor chilThe mochine has a class II activator, SOT (sacral occipi- dren , name a guardian in
FDA license and she and Dr. tal technique), and the your will. Be very specific
Andrew Williams have had Thompson Drop Technique." about how you want your
extensive training and certifi"We do • lot of work with assets distributed, even if
cation on how to use it s~fdy the West Virginia and Ohio · you've told your friends and
and effectively in their prac- Workers Camp and a lot of relatives wh&gt;t you want, the
tice.
auto injuries, Williams said.
will documents your wishes
NAET is a synthesis of varThe premise behind all of so there are no disputes.
ious medical disciplines such the treatments is to balance
Durable power of attoras allopathy, acupuncture, chi" the body naturally and with- ney, health care power of
ropuctic, kinesiology :ind out chemicals.
attorney and a living will. A
nutrition.
Nambudripad's
There are two Complete · living will is also known as
Testing Techniques utili~es Care Chiropractic locations, a health care proxy. Both
Muscle Response Testing one with Thomas E. Roell, durable and health care
· (MRl) .which indicate the D.C. . and R.ahul H.R. Singh,
kinetic imbalances in the D.C., at
963
General
body ca use&lt;;! by allergens.
Hartinger Parkway in MidThe NAET treatment stim- dleport, 992-216R, aJld one
ulates pressure points along with Williams and Bitner at
the spine from the neck ro the I OA Airport Road (behind
ftom
D1
sacrum while the pati~:nt is Burger King) in Gallipolis,
holding an allergen . After the 44(&gt;- 0 100.
97, and accept modest yields
treatment, a ·strong MRT ,
Complete Care's hours arc in good blue mold years, and .
indicates that tht· allergy has Monday, Wednesdays and Fri- high,•r than average yields in
been r~moved .
days !I a.nL - noori and 1- 5 bad blue mold years. For
" It's an innovative, natural p.m.. . and Tue~days and Thurs- more information . on blue
solution for allergies and days. 8 a.m .-noon and 1-6 mold control, please call the
allergy-related conditions- p.m.
OSU Extension Office at
446-7007.
Ag news
appea ring near homes haw
Last week's alfa lf.1 weevil
been identified as the imma- readers, picking up where it
ture form of the box elder left off, here's the res t of the
from PageDl
bug. Soapy water sprayed onto alfalf.1 weevil article:
these immature insects will
Producers who cut early a~c
·months.
quickly suffocate them and encouraged to follow up on
Don't panic if your hollies reduce the multitude of calls two issues pertaining to chis
are losing last year's leaves as thi s fall as to how to rid the corrective action . First, fields
they normally shedjust before homeowner of their mature that are cut early should be
the new leaves emerge. For form - the box elder bug.
thoroughly scouted for addimore information on hollies,
tional weevil damage within
ask for USDA bulletin 130,
There.has been some inter- seven to I 0 days of the cut"Growing Hollies" from the
est by both farmers and the ting.
extension office, 992-6696.
Remembe r that cutting
pl)blic in forming a Farmers
early does not eliminate the
lmects are the talk of the Market in the county. Several weevil. Furthermore, the
community. When are the surrounding co unties have weevil has not completed its
Eastern tent caterpillars fin- accive markets once or twice a life cycle and thus can ca use
ishing th eir .f:irvae, eating week.
Many times the markets damage to the new growth.
stage? They are abo ut done
Secondly, when alfalfa is cut
and now and are &lt;;reating develop_around homeowners prematurelyt a certain an1oun t
white to creamy white who have occasionally · too of stres~ is placed on the roots.
cocoons (dormant stage that m.uch produce in their ·garTherefore, at some point
occurs just before they dens and would like to earn during the growing s~aso n, it
emerge as adult moths to lay some seed money for next is important to allow one cuteggs for next year's crop) year's crops. If anyone is inter- ting .of the crop, preferably
found on any building, equip- ested, please contact my office the third, to grow beyond
ment or stack of wood that at 992-6696 so we may blooming, which \vlll .. allow
they can find.
arrange a date, time and place necessary regeneration of the
Want co reduce their num- to di scuss details and interest. root rese rves.
bers next year' C lean up and
(Hal Kneen is Meigs Co11111y s
Produce rs, who would
destroy these cocoons.
£\·(efiSitlll- aJ!ellf for il)!ricuJtllrC rather apply gene ral use of
Calls concerning hundreds aud uawrnl resources, Ol1io SMte insecticides, should first con-.
of little bright red insects Unii'Crsity)
sidcr that these che mi cals

Smith

Care

Bymes
Pap

Kneen

po,\rers of attorney and a
living will make things easier for your family •nd. doctors if you become terminally ill or disabled and cannot speak for yourself.
Unlike a regubr power of
attorney, the duuble p&lt;&gt;wer
of attorney remains in effect
in the event of a disability,
giving the person the
authority to conduct your
affairs for you. The health
care power of attorney gives
the
named
person(s)
authority to make medical
decisions on your behalf,
and a living will &lt;&gt;r health
can! proxy tells your family
and your doctors what your

wishes •re.

Exrcusiou

a~mr

for

agriwlture and natural resources,
0 /rlo Srare Ullillersiry.)

If you don't plan your
A simple way to m•ke estate, ·the stare will. And
things as easy as possible for raxarion issues · notwitqyour heirs, is to establish a standing, taking the time to
legocy file. This is usually a put these basic instrumenu
metal file box (or strong in place will save your fambox) in which you store all ily, friends •nd benefibories
important documents or time, worry, and money.
· copies of such docu!Dents.
More and more financial
h's a good idea to include a advisors, in concert with
letter of instruction listing your attorney and tax advithe name, address and sors, can help you with
phone number of your estate . planning issues. Talk
attorne}: •nd any other · to someone · about estate
advisors and aily other planning soon .
information
you deem
(Bryct Smith is an . inwslessential. Be sure to inforni mtnt txtcutia't with Smith .
your executor or children Partnrrs at Advrst Inc. , in its
where this file is located.
Gallipolis affiu.)

...

1999 Toyota Ta.c oma

.4o.t4t 1

1999810 Extended Cab
V6, AUTOMATIC, f&gt;.JC
WAS $14,900 .

1t~ $-12', 990

.1998 Jimmy

2

Door SLE ·

$I 4,,900

2000

Cadillac DeVille

NORTHSTAR V8, LEATHER, CO. PLAYER

IJ,.e, $29. 9oo '

. GARAGE KEPT, LOCAL ONE OWNER,
ONLY 83,000 LOW MILES ·
SHOWROOM CONDITION

1'u,

1!:etJ4-o.~Ut-4k

Speak
Out
~s the most valuable

I on~ have learned
frorri your molher? .
Edle

R01e,

clean
house.
.She taught me that my
home should always look
presentable, even if it's
just for myself."

65 and Over

wwv. .mydally\t' ntan.-1 wrn

Valedictodan, salutatorian·· named
D..Ctt••"Eu--.
UT
""'""
I1VI:I"1.ftift
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - The valedictorian
and salutatorian of the Meigs High
School Class of2001 were announced
today by Dennis Eichinger, principal.
Jefli-ey Adam Shank., son ofJeff and
Wanda Shonk., is valedictorian, and
Chdstopher A. Dodson, son of RusseU an&lt;;! Kay Dodson of Pomeroy, is
salutatorian.
The top achievers from the class of
136 graduating seniors will speak at
the commencement program at 8

p.m. Friday in Larry
Active in the comR .' Morrison Gymmunity, he has been
nasium at Meigs
a vacation Bible
High School.
school leader and is
Shank groda former member of
uates with a 3. 962
rhe Boy Scouts of
grade point average,
America.
a straight A average.
He
lS
He is a· member of
enrolled at Ohio
the National Honor
University
in
Jeffrey Adem Society,
French Cblllstopher A. Athens and will
Shank
Dodson
·c lub,
M eigs
Salutatorian
begin studies in the
Valedictorian
Marching
Band,
field of engineering
and FeUowship of Christian Students. in September. His ·goal is to earn a

your Breathing Medication;

IIBCIWIVIAN'S HOMECARE
446·7283
1-800-458-6844

Tammy

. Melt,

Mldcll•
port: "She
told me to
appreciate
my chit·
dren, that
they were
my
strength in
life, and she was right."

16th Annu·al
Mercervllle/Hannan Trace Alumni
May 26th
Hannan Trace Elementary School
Doors open 4:00 pm.
Dinner 6:30 pm, $15.00 ea.
RSVP Call Secy-Treaa,
Katie Mullins
740-446--7379

Don't Get Bugged
EXTERMITAL TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTROL

- 740-446-2801
Darrell Haney, Owner
local SENTRICON Installer
FREE Estimates

Hanging Baskets $6.50
Geraniums 50~
PLANTS R US
N"ar Clay Schopl
St. Rt 7 South.
M-S 10:00-6:00
Sun 12-6:00

Chandler,

Pomeroy:
"J./ly moth-

Gallia Baptist Church

M~y 14-18 7

pm

•

6 mi. east of oak hill, St. Rt. 233 24 miles west of GaUIPQIIs,
State RoLite 233 behind Old
G.allia School
.
w~h Evangelist Dave Frazee
Pastor Cline Rawlins
·
- Special Singing NlghUy:
Mon- Headed Home
Tqes· Church Family
Wed &amp; Thurs. Andrew Toops
Frl- The Miller Family '

CHANNEL :
MARKER
CONDOS

·::

·'

Richard
••

. Auto Insurance
Monthly Payments
Problems with your driVing
record; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency
446-1960

For Sale
Wheelchair
good condition $175 .
446-2205 or 446-9585
and 4 6 Lug 15" Rims
with tires $1 00
. 446-2804

er has
taught me.
todayto ~
treat olh•
·ers the
way 1would like to IJe treated,
and .to respect my ~lders:"

'

Middleport: "She
taught me
to respect
other peoIngs."

Jenny

Dllcher,

a..tart

Fatle; ~Aiways

wear
clean
under-

wear.•

,.•

Plain &amp; Fancy Bulk FoOd
4 miles west from GaiiiPQIIs on
· State Rt. 141

...

'· ~
ARTHRITIS EDUCATION FORUM
Pleasant Val loy Outpatlenl Rolill!!l/llalklll I
Cenlef May 17111· 5 pm
Two Spaakors Dr. Robea1 Tayongeo, MD
Internal Madlclne, Mason, W\1
Topic- "I Would Uko To Talk wllh You
about Arthrttla'
(Bring your quosllons • Lefslalkl)
and Mo. Ruth Lewis- Arthrttla Foundation
LeadoriVohinteer, Huntington, W\1
Topic- "Positive ~ifeatylo and Elfecllvo
Management of Arthrllla and Related
Conditions" (Including many of her own
peraonal e•pariences In dealing Wllh
arthrlllo) Sponaorad by tho ArthrUia
Foundation and Searle/Pharmacil .

nurse will care for
an elderly -person 2 days a
week. Excellent ere. .
References
446·2732

Pleasant Gun
Club would like to thank
Haffelts Mill Outlet for
their donation of vinyl
flooring to our club:
The Gun vtUIO·I

Five Star Driving
School
Come learn to drive with us
$189.00
339·0321 or 446-3608·
Monitered by Ohio Dept 0f
Public Safety

·~

..

_.,.~

Sentinel
· 2 lrdl•••- 12 ,.._

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital .
observes
National Nurses Week
.
both with fnur years service at the
hospital .
OMEROY - National
Before making the presentaNurses ..Week
was tions Dailey reflected' on those
observed Friday at Veter- moments in nursing which
ans Memorial Hospital "remain forever in our memowith a reception and recognition ries." She described nurses as
of nurses for their &lt;;ledication to being dedicated to healing "helping people get well and go
the caregiving professiort.
Paula Eichinger, director of home," and of the lasting impresHome Health Care, emceed . the sions of those times when consolprogram, which was highlighted ing patients, being compassionate,
by the naming of outstanding and staying to the end, was all that
nurses.
could be done.
Selected for honors by their coAll of the nominees for outworket:S and then ·presented standing nurses were recogoize&lt;;l
plaques by Rhonda Dailey, VMH and presented c.erti6cates. Assistadministrator, were Sharon Vick- ing with the 11resentations was
ers, ·nursing assistant; • with 10 Carol Jean Adams, R .N., who also
· years service at VMH, Jackie . gave a gift to Dailey in appreciaFrost,licensed practical riurse, an&lt;;! tion for her &lt;;ledication to the
Lisa Gillagher, registered nurse, hospital. Adams said the names of
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

P

ples'

serve.s victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577

Mldge1 League Cheerleading
Clinic for all area
4th &amp; 5th grade girls
Tuesday, 5/15/01,
Wed.nesday, 5/16/01 ,
Thursday, 5/17/01
5 :00 to 6:30 pm each day
Location: Haskins Park

Rhonda Dailey, ' veterans Memof.i.al Hospital admlnlwator, preseoted plaques to
Sh.liii"Qn,Yickeii; nursing_assistant; Jackie Frost, llcei'l§ed practical nurse, "an'd Lisa Gallagher, registered
nu~ •.flit· Frtqay's ol;l$!1ryilnoe of National Nurses Week. (Charllme Hoeflich photo I

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

belong-

Opening May 11th
at 10:00 am
AUNT CLARA'S
KITCHEN

OutstANDING_--

·8Y

Serenity House

Drive thru employee
wanted. Apply in person
at Crow's Steak House,
. Pomeroy

re-evaluate his position,"

.

DeW.....

Hlp: 801
I.Ciw: 101
Details, A2

Lotteries

~C~al~en~d~a~r______~AS~ ·OH~
~C111
1a~sswifiJSediYisL-----..Iil!B~2-4::::t Pick s: 5--9-9; Pick 4: 7--&amp;-4--3
~C!lJomw
· wics~

_____.B~S . ,_.., Lollll: 2-28-32-33--36-49

~Ed~bMoarwia~b~----~&amp;4~ . ~~19944

wO~bbwu~awri~a~·--~~~A3~ W.~
111sp~oa.rts~-----B"-1...,.3""-"!4.~6 o.liJ J: 4-6-l Dally 4: l..fi.0.6

:v:Woeaautl bl :eLr____.._A2Q6.

c 2001 ohio Vollrf PubNihina eo.

the outstanding nurses would b e
included on a large plaque in the
hospital lobby.
The event took the form of a
tea party with Maureen Burns of
The Herbal Sage Tea Co., Rut7
land, speaking on herbs and their
tole in stress reduction .
Her emphasis was o n rea, the
differem kinds available, and their
role in smoothing the edges of
those who work. under stress. She
noted the importance of taking
good care of yourself and listed
several · kinds of teas whi ch are
effective in relieving stress, men tioning also essential oils and
aroma therapy as ways of combating the pressures of everyday life.
A decorated cake and other
refreshments were served follow ing the program.

.

...

Human services advocates complain about budget:
COLUMBUS (AP) Some social
service advocates say state lawmakers are
using money designed to help the poor
to solve other budget problems.
'"They are using it to solve their
school-funding problem," said Ed Lazere;
a senior analyst with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonprofit
Washington think tank.
Republican .leaders want to use $260
million in federal welfare money to pay

for several programs that had been covered by state funds, a move that would
shrink the amount, of state dolla.rs for
programs to help th e poor.
· Legislators are trying to come up with
other. soutces of money to put an additional $1.4 billion imo primary and s~c­
ondary education in hopes of resolving a
decade-old school-funding lawsuit. ·
" We think it 's a really, bad trend
because of how it can hurt poor families

and because it really threatens the
integrity of the fe&lt;;leral block- grant program," ,1\ristina Wilfore, a spokeswoman
for the nonpartisan Center for Policy
Alternatives, told The Columbus Dispatch for a story Sunday.
State Sen. Eric Fingerhut, a Cleveland
Democrat and a member of the Senate
Finance Committee, predicted that Congress will cut the state's allocation once it

......... Budpt.AJ

Tobacco-Use Prevention
The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition of Gallia and
Jackson counties is here to help.

BLACKBURN'S TREE SERVICE
Top, Trim, Removal Bucket
Ser\tlce, Stump grinding
740·446·2422
Eric Blackburn Owner
Fully Insured Right Away Cl!'fll'lng

Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information,
,.

I

.!

, I

completely
reasonable for
him toreevaluate his
position,"
Nigh told
"Fox News
Sunday."
"The facts of
the case are
now certainly
at issue."

Nigh told "Fox News Sun~
day." '"The facts of the case
are now certainly at issue."
Mf.Veigh "has indicated
now that he is at least willing
to·take a fresh look. at things,
hear our analysis of the facts
contained within the documents and our legal analysis
of his options," Nigh said on
CBS' "Face the Nation."
The FBI's lapse has
prompted members of Congress to urge hearings into
ho\v it hoppened, and one
Democrat wants President Bush to appoint a
blue-ribbon commission to review the FBI.
Defense attorney Nathan Chambers questioned whether the FBI has disclosed all evidence. "Are we going to learn next week that
there are yet more documents?" Chombers said
on ABC's "This Week."
·
"There are a lot of questions thot a lot of people have for the FBI, and as we move forward in
these next few days, that question will be one
that is answered," said Mindy Tucker, spokes- ·
woman for Attorney General John Ashcroft.
· A former prosecutor in the case said she
believe&lt;;! the foul-up was unintentional and that
.the documents should not affect the outcome of
the case.
"He has confessed to the crime. The evidence
during the trial was absolutely overwhelming,"
Beth Wilkinson said on ABC. "I believe it is very
unlikely that there will be any informotion that ,
would be usefi_tl to Mr. McVeigh."

Call (740) 446·5940
••

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

WASHINGTON (AP) As Timothy
Me Veigh re-evaluates whether he wants to be
executed, lawmakers are considering hearing,-;
into the FBI's failure to disclose evidence in the
Oklahoma City bombing case.
When McVeigh originally decided not to pursue further appeals, he had no ide~ the FBI hod
withheld evidence, attorney
Robert Nigh said Sunday:
"In light of
"lu light of that, it's comthat, it's
pletely reasonable for him to

B111ndon

COME TO THE OLD
FASHIONED TENT MEETING!
Tony the Puppet will be
appearing nightly!
'
SPQnsored by

moster's degree in a specialized area.
Dodson . is enrolled in the Ohio
University's Russ College of Engineering and Technology in mechanical engineering. His goal after graduate ·work is to become. "all aerospace
engineer for NASA and then apply
for an astronaut position at the Johnson Space Center.
He has received the Ohio University Presidential Scholarship (fulltuition), Ohio Academic Scholarship,
and the Holzer Science Aw.ard.

his
to
be .executed

Alb1.rter·t:!1, Atrovent, paid by
Insurance. Fr~ Delivery

Come help celebrate
Bertie Roushs .rellremem from
Community Nursery School
Friday, May 18th
6 to 8 pm ·
.at the Presbyterian Church

1985 Lincoln town Car

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 (ents • May 14, 2001 • Vol. 51. No . 209

keep a

4X4, POWER SEAT, CD PLAYER

~.t,

Melp County's

Middleport: "My
molher
taught me
how to

North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6 , fully furnished, 2nd
row, ocean view, W~~Sher/dryer.
Openings from May thru Sept.
446-2206 Mon thru Fri.
I;venings &amp; weekends

EXTENDED CHASSIS, AUTOMATIC, f&gt;.JC .
SUNROOF, TRD OFF-ROAD PKG, VB

at

BULLETIN BOARD

...

Monday

•

A&lt;;t DOW

A legacy file

would have an undesirable
residual control of the beneficial wasps. General use insecticides, such as Sevin 80S and
Lorsban 4E, are labeled for
control of alfalfa weevil.
Pesticide applicators are
advised to read and follow the
labels of any products used. To
have your field sampled for
weevil . levels ·tO determine
economic threshold, or for
more information on alfalfa
weevil, please call the OSU
Extension Office at 4467007.
ljemrifer L. Byrarcs is Gallia
Coumy~

SPORTS: ·Reds get knocked down by Houston, B1

Sunday, lilly 13. 2001

Pomet"OY • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

'

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The Daily Sentinel

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COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - About
2,000 Comair ~mployees, including
1,500 at the company's ·h eadquarters,
are out of work as ·a strike by pilots
enters its eighth week and the airline
se~ks (o cut expenses.
Pay and benefits for those employees
ended at midnight Sund•y, a day after
the pilots' union overwhelming rejected a setdement recommended by the
National Mediation Board.
A union spokeman said there was no
movement in the dispute Sunday.
"Today was pretty much a day off for
everybody," said Max Roberts, a
spokesman for th e Comair chapter of
the Air Line Pilots Association .

"We made the decision two weeks
ago that Mother's Day was going to be
a stand-down day for everybody,"
Roberts said. " The strike center was
dosed, and we encouraged all . our
pilots to spend time with their families."
Roberts acknowledged the irony '?f
layoffi occurring on a family holiday.
"Obviously, it's an unfortunate
thing," R9berts said. "However, the
whole situation could have. been avoided very easily. A.fter three years of
negotiations and 48 days of a strike,
there 's been ample opportunity for this
to be resolved."
A company spokeswo man did not

Since Ohio .upped th e tuition payment from 60 percent to a
full ride at stat" schools two years ago, th e· Army Guard has
grown from '9,200 to m ore than 9,1Hl0, moving doser to its
authorized strength of 10,000, the Akron Beacon Journal
reported. Th" Air Guard, at 5,000, is at authorized strength.
The Ohio Guard has become ont· of the best r"cruiting stories in the country, said Capt. Neal O'Brien, head of public
'
·
affairs for the Ohio Guard.
"The increases hav&lt; been dramatic," he said.
work week, the National
Recruits have to commit six years to the Guard, be trained in
Weather Service said.
Sunset Monday night wjll a Guard skill, then spend one weekend a month and two weeks
be at 8:39 p.m. and sunrise on every year on duty. They also may be called up to active duty
Tuesday at 6:17 a.m.
Forecast
Today: Partly dourly. High
CINCINNATI (AP) - A Hamilton County commissioner
71,low 51.
Tuesday: Showers. High 66, says the city's public schools agreed to.accept $5 million as their
annual tax payment.from new stadiums for the Cincinnati Reds
low 51.
.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. and Bengals.
.
However,
school
officials
.
disagree,
saying
that
figure
is
flexiHigh 69,low 47.
Thursday: Partly cloudy. ble and could be as much as $4 million higher.
Commis.s ioner Todd Fortune wants the schools to accept the
High 80,low 55.
lower amount.
.
.
School officials say language in a 1996 agreement drafted to
obtain the schools' support of a sales tax levy far the stadiums
spells out how the amo1,1nt they receive is to be determined.

Rain returns on Tuesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms
will return to the tri-county
region Tuesday as a warm front
becomes nearly stationary
across the area. Highs will be
mostiy in the 70s.
Some rain was possible
Monday night, when lows
were expected to be in the
50s.
Partly sunny skies and mild
temperatures were expected
afterThesday for the rest of the

County, schools spar over ·taxes

Senator recalls his OSU days
'

COLUMBUS (AP) - Long before he. became a politician,
U.S. Sen. Thomas Carper was a dishwasher at an Ohio State
University sorority.
·
"I was the pots-and-pans man at the. Delta Gamma sorority
house," the Delaware Democrat said with a laugh.
Each day, he donned a white jacket, then walked down the
street from his frati:rnity house to a "beautiful home full of
lovely women who aUowed us to serve their food, wash their
dishes and pots and pans - and fed us very well;' Carper told
The Columbus Dispatch for a Sunday story.
Now, more than three decades after he completed college,
: 'Carper, 54, is the only current U.S. senator with an undergraduate degree from Ohio State.

FcHmer lawmaker dead·at age 70
TOLEDO (AP) - Robert E. Brown, a former director of
the Ohio Department of Mental Retardation and Develop- .
· w ho h ad serve d m
· t h e Oh'10 H ouse. h as d'1e d
. b'l'
mentaI D 15a
11!1es
at age 70.
.
Brown died Saturday ·from complications of a bone marrow
·r 1i d
.
d 110rd er di agnosc d .10 years ago, sal'd h'11 WILe,
o y.
. A Republican. Brown was .appointed by then-Governor
Ce Ieste, a Democrat, to t~ ke over th e d epartment o f mentaI
retardation in 1985. He served until 1991 ,
He was a former president of the Perrysburg board of educa. H ouse
·
· su b urb an 111
tlon m
o edo. H e won e1cc t'1on to th e Oh 10
of Representatives in 1978, succeeding former Speaker of the
House Charles Kurfess, who ran unsuccessfully for governor.

. Enrollna~nt up at Ohio Guard
AKRON (AP) - Enrollment in the Ohio Army National
Guard is on the rise as more people are attracted to increased
tuition payments for state colleges.

Insects heading for central Ohio
COLUMBUS (AP) :-- The state Agriculture· Department
says gypsy moths are on their way to central Ohio and will
arrive there sometime this summer.
Department spokeswoman Deborah Abbott· said the insects
soon could strip the leaves off trees in some Franklin and Licking County neighborhoods and woodlands.
A sneak preview of what might happen occurred in the Little Turtle ·area of northeast Franklin County last June. The blueand-red spotted caterpillars stripped the leaves from several
.
large oaks in a matter of days.
The state responded to a request from residents of the area by
spraying 741 acres with a biological agent.
'

tiw sc ulptures of Dayton-based inventions like ihe cash register, the ice cube tray and the Wright Flyer Ill..
·RiverScape is ·many years in the making, said David Holmes,
chGirman of the downtown-based R eynolds and Reynolds Co.,.
and the lead business backer of the riverfront development. ·
" I said I'll take RiverScape, but on on&lt;; basis - if we start
this , we finish it," he said. "We are going to drive this to completion."

Festival to draw thousands
COLUMBUS (AP) - Recent disturbances in the Ohio
State University area have increased concern among students
and police about what will happen at the university's AfricanAmerican Heritage FestivaJ this week.
·
The festival, which began as ~ smaU block party 23 years ago,
starts Monday and continues through Sunday. It's expected to
attract as many as 40,000 people and bring an estimated S7 million in revenue to the city.
"We are the second biggest ·event in the city next to Red,
White &amp; Boom (the city's annuallndependel)ce Day fireworks
display);' said Rebecca Parker, chairwoman of the event's programming committee. '
.
The weekend always has been a busy one for police because
of the size of the crowds, many of whom take part in a parade
of cars that can stretch for miles down High ·Street on either
end of campus.

hydrauliC preSSUre
c ·

s

Airport codes upset nelpbors

RlverScape proJect to optn

DAYTON (AP) - A University of · reasonable amount of accuracy ihe probDayron professor envisions a day when ability of a strike."
Ismail, also an engineer at Praxis Softstorms crossing the country would be
tracked to predict the likelihood of light~' ware in suburban Kettering, has developed a computer program that would
ning hitiing an area.
"Lightning strikes are very difficult to link sensors monitoring those armospherpredict:' said Amin Ismail, associate pro- ~c changes.
He has partnered with Thor Guard Inc.
fessor of engineering technology. "But
certain energy levels in the atmosphere of Fort Lauderdale, Fla ., which makes the
can be measured so we can predict with a lightning sensors.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
random drive- by shooting of
an Ohio State Universi ty stu~
dent in an off-campus neighborhood has residents concerned about the area's safety.
Ryan Morbitzer, a 20-yearold sophoinore English
major from Grove City, who
.: ,. friends say he:\ no enemies,
,· . was walking on 11th Avenue
at 2:39 a.m. Friday when he
•' was shot 1 in · the chest. He
died in surgery three hours
later at the OSU Medical
Center.

,,

Adult Balance &amp;
Fall Prevention Clinic

EventuaUy, airports, utility conip.anies
and others would be able to determine
where lightning is probable over large
areas and warn people in harm's way, he
said.
Thor Guard spokesman Bob Duggan
says .sensors .can predict when lightning ·
will strike by measuring the energy
buildup in the atmosphere's electtostatit
field .

The Melos County Department of .Jobs &amp; FamilY. Services Is
seeklnQ proposals to provide a summer youth program to eliQible
youth aoe 14-18 consistent with federal, state and local
ouldellnes for the Temporary Assistance for ~eedy Families (TAN F)
prOQram. Youth who. reside In Melos County and whose family .
Income does not exceed 20% of the federal poverty Index are
eiiQibte for participation. ProQram costs must not excee'd
$1 00,000 for the period beQinnlnQ June 1, 2001. It Is expected that
the proQram will enroll 60 youth and provide employment at
$6.1 5 per hour. Actual enrollment of youth Is expected to beQin no
later than June 15, 2001. Administrative costs may not exceed
15% of the total contract award.
There will be a pro posen conference for all Interested part!es on
May 21, 2001 at I 0:00a.m. qt the Melos County Department of Job
and Family Services, 175 Race_Street, Middleport, Ohio, 3rd Roor
Conference Room. At this conference the proposed format will be
described. Any orQanlzatlon falllno to aHend will ~· lneiiQible to
submit a proposal.
·

........ 21' 2111·11111 .

"

'

•

Deaths

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-48~

byna~c~Voll .

t

RUTI~D - ~ymo'!d Voll, 85, Rutland, died on Sunday,
May 13,2001 at the V.A. Medical Center in Chillicothe.
He was born on June 7, 1915 in Ravenna, son of the late
Sebastian and Mary Kessler Voll. He was a professional gardener f?r How..rd Johnson's, and was a veteran of the U.S. Army
dunng World War II and a member·of the Disabled American
Veterans.
I
Surviving are his brother, PaulVoll of Middleport, two nieces
and a neph~w.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by three brothers: John, William and Lewis Voll; and three sisters: Mary Voll,
Jahannah Marcus and Hariett Keppler.
.
Graveside services will be conducted on Wednesday at 1 p.m.
.
at Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Budget
from Page AI
s"es . how Ohio is spending
the S728 million a year it is
getting.
'
" What I find ironic is that
in the five years that the program has been in place, the
state hasn't figured out how to
spend the money... . When we
finally do dip into the money,
it's for plugging the budget
gap," he said. "We're treating it
as if it's our own rainy-day
.fund."
Still, some give Phio credit
for being innovative.
States are trying to get
more creative, said Dana
Reiche~t. a policy analyst
with the National Conference of State Legislatures. It is
a combination of being aware
of what is in the budget and
flexible on · how money is
· spent on poor people, she
said.
Plunging welfare rolls have

resulted in huge cas h reserves
in many states.
Ohio had a balance of more
than $800 million as of
March, the second highest
amount in the nation , according to federal record~ . State
officials say the reserve has
since dropped to $721 million, with mu ch of the money
committed for various programs later in the year.
State programs that would
be funded with federal welfare dollars in the new budget
include: Head Start, food
banks, alcohol and drug treatment, fatherhood programs,
Appalachian work force
development and adult protective services.
State Republican leaders
say that without the money,
additional budget cuts wquld
have been unavoidable. They
are . hoping that an improved
economy will help them
replace the federal dollars
with state money in the next
two-year budget cycle.

Astronaut depicted on Ohio
quarter isn't an Ohioan
1

Glmell-00~

GllnHII

AT&amp;T-21t.

48\
Kmelt-1ol.

AmTectVSSC- 42'1.
Alhlll1d Inc. - 41'1.'

Bank One- 38\
Bob Evans -18

~ ri2 ~
Charming Shops- st.

Ha~ey

Davidson

WII.Mart- 54
Wendy's - 25Y.

Worthlnglon - 11"'
Daily stock roporte are

Ltd. -16'1. '

Dale Hill Financial -

the 4 p.m. closing
quotH ol the previous
day's traneactlons, p..,.
vicled by Smith Part,
nors at ...._ Inc. of
GaWpoUs.

14'ro

Federal Mogul- 3

PeopleS- 18~

BBT-35'·

Premier- 6\

LOCAL EVENTS
MONDAY

ty Retired Teachers, Saturday,

CHESHIRE- Disabled Amen·
can Veterans on State Route 7
below ·Middleport; dinner 6:30
p.m.; meeting, 7 p,m.

noon, Star MiU Park, Ra&lt;;ine.
potluck picnic. Beverages and
tableware will be provided.
Music by the Uplifters from
Cannei,Sutton Church. All
retired teachers and families
irwited.

· TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, Tuesday, 10:30
a .m. municipal building.

The Community Clllender Is
publlehed ea a free aarvlce to
POMEROY- Meigs Cour~ty
non-profit groupa wlllhlng to
Heath Department, childhood
announce meetlnge and speimmunization clinic, Tuesday, 1 cial avanta, The calendar Ia
to 7 p.m. Shot records to be pre: not claslgnlld to promote sales
sented, children to be accompa· or fund-ralaern of any type.
Items are printed only as
nied by parenVguardian.
'space permits and cannot be
SATURDAY
guarilnteed to be printed a
POMEROY- The Meigs Coun- specific number of days,

Museum .auctioninl
first
.· ·of Mickey
.Mouse to pay debts
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP)
-The International Museum
of Cartoon Art says it is reluctantly auctioning its prize
exhibit purportedly the
first drawings of Mickey
Mouse - to hc;lp pay debts.
The museum will offer the
drawings and hundreds of
other items for sale to defray
nearly $2 million in debt, most
owed to a bank which holds
the museum's mortgage.
The 36-panel storyboard
from the 1928 Walt Disney
cartoon "Plane Crazy" was the
first drawing ever made of
· Mickey Mouse, according to
Mort Walker, founder of the
museum that displays vintage
cartoons, comic strips, films
and animation art.
The storyboard is valued at
between $3.2 million and $l7
million.
"This is the one we're all
counting on," said Walker,
who also created the Beetle
Bailey comic strip.
The sale will include anima-

Anesls made

992-3371.

I''!E probed

Shoney'e _,_

Kroger- 24~
LaMs End - 3&lt;1).

OVB -25),

·

RDShal-59
Seetl-38

GKNLY-1n

~:;:-1&amp;- 8~

. USB- 21

Rockwell -43~
Rocky Boola - .. ~

EIICWtc - 49

Arch ca.!- 33~
Akzo-41\

LOCAL BRIEFS

tion cells fioqt the 1937 Disney movie "Snow White and
·the Seven Dwarfs," including
one showing dwarfs Doc and
Dopey which is expected to
fetch $20,000 to $24,000.
Other items range from
original comic ·strips from the
1930s to editorial car)oons
from the New York( baily
News and animation cells or
comic strips of such characters
as Bugs Bunny, Charlie
Brown, Beetle Bailey, Dennis
the Menace and Prince
Valiant.
In all, more than 600 items,
·some donated and some coming from the museum's collection of 200,000' drawings, will
be put on the block Saturday
at The New. York Historical
Society.
"This is probably the
biggest cartoon auction in history," Walker said. "It probably
won't be duplicated, because
nobody can duplicate the
drawings of Mickey Mouse."

TOLEDO (AP) -The first
The mint !las a rule that no
man on the moon and the first living person can appear on its
American to orbit Earth are coins, but . Kilbourne said use
both from Ohio, but the astro- of the Aldrin image was
naut depicted on Gov. Bob acceptable because "it's a
Taft's choice for the state's generic rendering of an astrocommemorative quarter isn't naut. It's an image of a spacefrom the state.
suit, not an image of a human
He 's Col. Edwin Aldrin Jr., a · being."
New Jersey native, who folTom Noe, chainnan of the
lowed Ohioan Neil Arm- committee in charge of
strong to the lunar surface in choosing . among
several
1969. Armstrong took the designs for the quarter, said it
photograph on whith the had no problem with the
depiction proposed for the mint's depiction of the astracoin is based.
naut.
The U.S. Mint plans to issue · "We meant it to be a generthe state's commemorative ic astronaut," he said. "We
quarter next April. Taft on Fri- wanted it to be ·as generic as
NEW YORK (AP) He began his career as a magaday officiaUy submitted Ohio's possible.
Jacques Lowe, a photographer zine photographer in 1951 and
"Birthplace of Aviation"
"If it (the mint) wants to best known for his pictures of a year later won Life magazine's
design as his choice for the . change the .astronaut to give it the Kennedy family, died Satur- young photographers contest.
coin to Treasury Secretary a different look, that's OK as day in Manhattan. He was 71.
Lowe worked as a.free-lance
Paul O'Neill, who will make long as it doesn't change the
The cause of death was can- photographer most of his ·
look · of the coin. We don 't cer, a Lowe family spokesman career. His pictures appeared
the final decision.
The design superimposes an have a problem either way. It's said.
regularly in popular publicaastronaut and a Wright Flyer, still not too late to change the
Lowe took some of the most tions, including Life, Look,
·
the first plane designed by astronaut,"
famous pictures of the United Time, Newsweek, Fortune and
Mint officWs, invoking the States' most famous political Ladies Home Journal.
Dayton's Wright brothers,
"no living person': rule, had
over ·an outline of the state.
In 1956, he was assigned to
family.
U.S. Mint spokesman Matt said ·earlier this year that the
Among them were photos of · photograph
Robert
F.
Kilbourne told The Blade, in a1 state
committee's
initial
John E Kennedy, who suffered Kennedy, then a young Washstory published Sunday, that images of an ·astronaut for the from a back ailment, leaning
the !llint's· design for the coin quarter design bore too much against his White House desk in ingron lawyer. Kennedy liked
was based on the Armstrong resemblance to Armstrong, a November 1961 and one of LoW&lt;!'spicturesandframedone
· on· as a present for his father•
· Kenne d y posmg
photograph of Aldrin, taken Wapakoneta native. So the Jacqueline
near the'Apollo 11 lunar mod- mint sent the committee its a deck tha.i r in a yellow-and- Joseph P. Kenne~y. The elder
ule on July 20, 1969.
own recommendations.
white checkered dress in Hyan- Kennedy was so Impressed he
nis Port, Mass. , in the summer asked Lowe to photograph
of 1960.
John F. Kennedy and his new
Lowe was born in Cologne, wife,Jacqueline.
Germany, in 1930 and moved
to the United States in 1949,

·Jacques Lowe dead at 71

POMEROY - Five individual! were arrested over the
ATHENS - The Athens
weekend by the Meigs CounCounty She~iff's Department
ty Sheriff's Depamnent.
Sheriff ~lph E . Trussell is investigating a break-in at
reported Marion and Tim Bob's IGA on United Lane in
Snider were arrested and Athens.
Sheriff Vern Castle said a
charged with domestic violence over the weekend after maintenance man for the
an altercation with each other supermarket repqrted the
store was entered through a
at their home in Racine.
Both subjects are currently rear door and that the suspects
· incarcerated pending their disabled the alarm system by
cutting the phone lines.
court appearance.
An undisclosed amount of
In other matters, Donald R.
Nickels was arrested Saturday cash was taken from the Bank
on charges of receiving stolen One ATM and the store safe.
The Ohio Bureau of Crimproperty. Nickels is being held
in the Meib'S County Jail inal Identification and Investiawaiting his co urt appearance. gation is assisting with the
Tony Hutton was arrested investigation.
over the weekend and
charged with speedi ng,ldt of
center 311d driving under the
influence . Hutton is c~trrently
in the Meigs County Jail until
POMEROY A boil
his co urt appea ran ce.
Bobby J. Gayheart was advisory has been issued for
arrested on Saturday on a lincoln Hill residents by John
bench warran t for failure to Anderson, village administrapay old fines. He is currendy tor: Repair was completed
in jail awaiting his court hear- early thi s morning o n a line
break on the hill. When the
mg.
\vater is safe to drink, th"
advisory will be lifted and an
announcetnent wiU be made,
said Anderson.

Boil advisory
issued

Complaints
investigated

POMEROY Several
complaints are being investigated by the Meigs Councy
Sheriff's Department.
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell
said
Tangie
Shoulders,
Pomeroy, reported her residence was entered sometime
between Thursday night and
Friday morning while she
slept.
Shoulder said a large sum of
money was taken and damage
was done to a vehicle parked
outside the home.
In other matters, James
Birchfield, Rutland, reported
the theft of a money bag containing an undisclosed sum of
money, which was taken from
the Rutland Department
Store.
Leonard Huffman, Shade,
informed deputies several
unknown subjects were rid~
ing four-wheelers on his
property, which resulted in 20
pine trees being destroyed.
Trussell said anyone with
information about these or
other investigations can call

Meigs

from PapAl
In high school Dodson has
been active in cross-country,
track and field, National
Honor Society, and the Science Club. His enrichment
programs have included Buckeye Boys State, Regional
Scholars, Governor Scholars,
and Special Olympics.
Named honorarlans of the
class on the basis of their
scholastic achievement were
Cara lynn Ash, Whitney Ashley, Derrick Lee Bolin, Andrew
Edward . Davis, Tiffany Day,
Aaron Lee Krautter, Andrea
Celine Krawsczyn, Carrie
Leann Lightfoot, Beatrice Anni
Morgan, Christopher Pickens,
Shannon Nicole Price, Cassandra Suzanne Thorn, and

EMS logs calls
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six caUs for assistance over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 11 :59 a.m., Condor Street, Mildred Castle,
treated;
3:10p.m., Veterans Memor"
ial Hospital, Sybil Barr,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
8:17 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
Renee Hess, refused . treatment;

Sunday, 7:08 p.m., Flatwoods Road, Charles Cook,
refused treatment.
POMEROY
.
Sunday, 9:08 p.m., Stat~
Route 33, assisted by Central
Dispatch, Samuel Gibbs,
Holzer Medical Center.

TUPPERS PLAINS ·
Sunday, 10:14 a.m., Rice
Run, Donald Bennett, Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

Stephanie J\nne Wjgal.
The 33rd annual baccalaureate and conunencement pro-·
gram ,;,ill open with the procession and the National
Anthem to .music provided by
. the Meigs Band directed by
Toney Dingess. Debbie Ann
Searls will give the invocation,
Andrea Celine Krawsczyn,
class president, will extend the
welcome, and Bethany Ann
McMillin, treasu.rer, will make .
introductions.
The class will be presented
by Dennis R. Eichinger, principal, to John Hood, president
of the Board of Education,
who will present the diplomas.
Ashley Lynn Thomas, class secretary, will caU the roll, and
Shannon Nicole Price, vice
president will give the symbol
of graduation.
•
The benediction will be
given by Abby Jo Harris.

The Daily Sentinel

• Education about balance loss

elips for home fall prevention
• Exercises to Improve balance
• Newest research Information

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

Newa Departmehta

The main number Is· 992,2156 .

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Gener•l man1ger .

• Reasons for falls

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or

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OSU strugles to recruit minorities

Company helping create national lightning network

·Shooting of
student raises
concerns

return a phone call seeking comment.
In two days of telephone voting, ·
Comair pilots. rejected a proposal that
would have ended their walkout,
which began March 26. The vote was
1,042 to 99, t.h e union said.
' The company had said the pilots'
decision was critical for the future of
Comair, the nation's second-largest
regional airline behind American
Eagle. It has had no comment other
than a terse statement released after the
vote was announced Saturday night . .
"This is a disappointing day," said
Randy Radema cher, president · of
Comair.

. COLUMBUS (AP) - During the latter part of the 1990s
State University spent hundreds of thousands of dollars· hiring
minority faculty and staff members, but didn't improve its percentage of minority workers.
Although its minority faculty held steady at 11 percent, the
university was one of two Big Tel) schools that lost upper-level
minority employees from 1995 to 1999.
Hiring minority deans and vice presidents has been especially challenging, said Ed Ray, the univ&lt;rsity's provost, who is second in command to President William Kirwan . .
" If you don't have a lot of breadth and depth among senior
faculty, then when you 're looking for people to take (more)
senior roles, you don't have many to ·look to," he told The
I0Se5
CLEVELAND (AP) _ A
1E
1 1· t Columbus Dispatch.
os
h d I'
·
b r
1,ontmenta
d'
d xpress
· htpaned th
y rau 1.' pr:ssu~e JUst . e~or'e an mg un ay mg, , an
e
pilot landed It Without tncld&lt;nt. .
None of the 19 pam•ngers on fl1ght 3812 from Greensboro,
MOUNT VERNON (AP) - Knox Co1.mty ufficiali have
NC
Cl 1 d · · 1
'd E · R
k
6
. . .to eve. an w.as . um, sal
nca oy. spo eswoman or proposed creation of an 18,000-ae~..: safety zone aro~md the
Contmental A1rhnes 111 Hnuston.
Sh
·d h • 'd
Cl 1 d H ki 1
· · 1A ' county airport. But some resident~ say county commissionen
e sa1 t e ~nc1 ent at ew an
op 11.' nternauona. lr· are more concerned about controlling land use in the area than
p~rt happened about 8;45 p.m .' a~d she dtd not know ,If the about ~afety.
.
.
pilot. declared a11 emergency. She did not have any other mforThe proposal was introduced in March and brought inunedimatlon.
ate c~iticis~l from landowners surrounding the airport. It's been
modified 11nce then, but was attacked by several ofthe 200 people who attended a hearing on the matter last week.
"I got upset about it, very upset," said Jim Duffey, 64, wh!J has
DAYTO N (AP) - A phase of the city's development plan is lived on 22 acres near ti)e ~ast end of the airport's single' run-·
scheduled to open Saturday, giving officials hope that more way for about two dec;ades.
· .
people will visit downtown ..
. "This is like ·socialism when they take and start controlling
The $21.1 million RiverScape park will feature a fountain our property. We wouldn't have been ·able -19 build our house
with water from the Great Miami and Mad rivers and interac- ht;re." ·
-

Plane

Monclliy, llay14, 2001

Moll«bby• . . , 14, 1001

Comair layoffs take' 9ffect

Ohio weather

I Moo

'

earner serviCe Is available.

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The Daily &amp; •mrel

Mor.diJ. M1J 14. 2001

The Daily Sentinel
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74CHI2-2151· Fax: lt2-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Cl&amp;111 w. Gover
Publlaher

rtbman can't close her eyes to Peeping Tom next door

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...

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'

, MEETING

'

R. Shawn LAwll
MMeglng Editor

·.

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Conlioller

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NATIONAL VIEWS

'·

Circus

..

Denial of webaLSting
execution a responsible move
• Journal and Courier, Lafayette, Ind., on Mcl4?igh and the
Internet: Is it another ruling chipping away at the heralded First
Amendment or a decision setting responsible parameters
around an event that, while historic, has the making&gt; of a global circus?
.
U.S. District Judge John Tinder has rightly denied an Internet company's request to Webcast the execution of Oklahoma
City bomber Timothy McVeigh, ruling the First Amendment
clid not entitle Entertainment network Inc. to broadcast the
execution on the Internet.
To a business that makes a living off the First Amendment,
it might be simpler to say the judge erred in his decision.
But any journalist or scholar or news source lcnows that the
coverage of a major news event comes with ·a responsibility, a
contract - · if you will - that demonstrates the right of the
public to know what happened while exercising a sense of
decency in covering it.
Newspapers have a right to show readers those images. But
the media also has a responsibility to do the right thing for
their communities and their country by reporting the news,
not sensationalizing it.
• St. Peter~burg (Fla;) Times, on animal cruelty: Federal law
requires slaughterhouses to render cattle and pigs insensible to
pain befOre they are slaughtered. Yet on a daily basis, still-conscious cattle and pigs are carved, gutted and skimied by workers told not to pause for the suffering of animals that are still
alive 'Yhen they meet the saws and knives.
In a seven-month investigation of the govermnent meat
inspection program, Washington Post reporter Joby Warrick .
found that slaughterhouses often fail to stun animals effectively. In one Texas plant, inspectors found nine live cattle dangling
from a chain that feeds the production line. It is illegal, but the
U.S. Department of AgricultUre has grown lax in enforcing the

law.
The speed of modern slaughterhouses, which can process
400 cattle per hour, contributes to the problem. A halt in production can cost the company thousands of dollars per minute.
Halting production is, therefore, the govermnent's biggest
threat for violators, but it is seldom used. The USDA's Food
Safety and Inspection Service went to an industry self-inspection system in recent years and stopped tracking violations;
according to the Post . . .
·
.
A moral society does not avert its eyes from the suffering of
animals. President Bush and Congress should address the disturbing violations uncovered by the Post. The Department of
Agriculture should no longer be allowed to ignore inhumane
treatment of animals in the nation's slaughterhouses.

TODAY IN HISTORY

,.

what to do. Last week I caught my
next-door neighbor "peeping" into
the bedroom window of a very pretry neighbor across the street. When I
confronted him, be begged me not
to tell his wife, giving all kinds of
psychological reasons for his behavIor, includihg his upbringing.
Let me add that when my husband
and I moved into our home seven
years ago, we had a "peeping Tom" at
our bedroom window: This neighbor
now admits it was he, and that he
also liked co listen to our bedroom
activities! Now he claims that being
caught has completely changed him.
He has promised it will never hap p~n again . Somehow I don't buy it.
This man and his wife are a young
couple who have aniwunced they ·
plan to ."make a baby'" in the fall. I
wor~y about the child they want to

Should I tell her what I know? My
husband says I should stay out of it,
but this has been bothering me to
the point d1at I feel like installing
security cameras on all sides of our
home.
·
How should I handle rhis, 1\bby? I
need your advice quick. - WOR-

Dear

Abby

DEAR ABBY: This is in response
to the letter from "Gardener in West
Palm Beach, Fla." He's the man who
stemmed the constant flow of criticism from a pesky neighbor by
telling her it made him uncomfortable that she constantly watched him
get "all sweaty" while working in his
y=l 'vith his shirt off- then gave
her a ~nk. I had to laugh because it
reminded me of a·similar experience
my husband and I had.
We lived in an apartment over a
business. Our "pesrs" \vere an older
couple who lived in a duplex across
the street. They literally took turns
watching us through their binoculars! It got· to the point where we
couldn't open our front curtain•.
One hot day we opened our curtains aiJd front 'vindow to let some
air i"n, and sure enough, there they
were. My husband gave me a sly

RIED NEIGHBOR

ADVICE

DEAR WORRIED . NEIGH-

bring into the world, and the consequences of having this guy as a
father.
It's difficult to act normal in front
of his wife. We were becoming
friends and entertained them as dinncr . guests a few times. We helped
each . other with yard work and
household improvements. Now I
feel
extremely
uncomfortable
around them. I think his wife has
noticed the strained f&lt;.&gt;eling.

BOR: Your neighbor across the
street ·should immediately be told
what you witnessed so she can take
steps to protect her privacy. Your
local police should be informed so
they can keep an eye on the man who clearly has a problem that
requires professional help. However,
I sec no reason to tell his wife at this
time. That information should come
from her husband or the authorities .
Read on for a more lighthearted
"neighbor story":

grin. Then he turned around,
dropped his shorts and mooned
them! I watched them gnb the
binoculars they dropped and run in
the house. Needless to say, they
never watched us again. - STilL
LAUGHING IN OHIO

DEAR STill LAUGHING:
'
They were
· fasr learners. Being
moonstruck once was enough.
CONFIDENTIAL TO "LONG
TIME AGO" IN ILLINOIS: TeD
your husband about the molestation
that happened when you were a litde girl. It wasn't your fault. Then
make an appointment with a therapist.-In order .to get on with yourlife
and stop the flashbacks, you must
bring all of this out in the open.
PleJse write again and let me know
bow you are doing.
Dear Abby is wrirrcu l&gt;y Pauliuc
Plrillip&lt; aud dmoxluer jeauur Plrillips. .

.
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...:

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Facts remain elusive on ·television talk shows

' .' /

,.

"When I use a word, it means just what I
Although we now have more access to
choose it to mean - neither more or what is alleged to be information, actual
facts are getting harder to 6nd. That is
less."
· ' ·:
particularly true ofthe increasing number ·
"The question," Alice answered, "is ··~:
of bombastic, Punch-and-Judy-style talk
whether you can make word' mean so · "
shows.
many different thing&gt;."
...,.,
1\vo egregious examples of George
"The question;· said Humpty Dump- :-::."·
Orwell's warning that "the slovenliness of
ty, "is w hich is to be master - that's all." : • ~·
our language makes it easier for us to
AI Hunt and Bob Novak should take a , ,.;
have foolish thoughts" took place on
look at "Alice in Wonderland."
. ,
CNN's "Capital Gang" on April 21. But
COLUMNIST
I was surprised that Mr. Novak, who is •";'
that television program and network
not indifferent to attacks o n religious as ·'"""
hardly have a patent on what Orwell
well as civic fteedoms, made no mention -~·· "'
described as "newspeak."
contempt for civil liberties. Both parties of the recent State Department report on ;. ~:
During a discussion of whether the joined Clinton's radicallimitations .on the the significantly worsening conditions for ....:
FBI was blameworthy in the killing of76 oldest right of the English-speaking peo- those in China who are continually pun- :.· ~·
Branch Davidians - 27 of whom were pies, habeas corpus. There was bipartisan ished - often brutally - for trying to ·. ·•
· "waco,
'
""'
~ the use o f secret evi d ence in exercise freedom of conscience.
'"''
c h 1'ldren m
• exas, R o b ert support •or
Novak cited a recent investigative report deportation proceedings and an increase . In January, Catholic sources in Hong ::::~.
by the Caro· Institute in Washington, D.C. in the FBI's aggressive use of )"ire tapping. Kong reported that two nuns were forced , ..,,.
The report persuasively reveals unacIn ,"Tl)e Rule of Law in the Wake of . to renounce their faith in Eastern China ·.. ·
knowledged facts about Janet Reno's and Clinton," American Civil Liberties Union amid ren"ewed': crackdowns against the .-~,;­
the FBI's cover- up of their recklessness.
president Nadine Strossen documents · underground Catholic community there . .. ··,
Panelist AI Hunt is the ·resident liberal what she accurately calls C linton's
"Two nuns and a laywoman were : .. ~
of The Wall Street Journal, where the · "brazen disregard" for civil liberties. In taken November 4 to a government · "
invaluable Dorothy Rabinowitz at long the Clinton years, however, the medi a office in Feng&gt;han town, where they were ·· '"··
last received this year's Pulitzer Prize for largely ignored that part of his record to denied food for two days and not allowed .. ::~
commentary. On "Capital . Gang," Hunt focus on Clinton's adventurous sexual to sleep. On Nov. 7, under verbal sexual _.:,.
· scornmg
·
harassment, the nuns were forced to .sign ·~·
sh ot fro m the Iup,
the · ato pracuces.
..
I don't agree with all of the Cato lnsti- a prepared document saying they ._,.•.
Institute as "some kind of wacky institute
·
"th
d
·
· ll y ots
·
renounced their faith:'
· ·"'.
th at w·ill come out wt a paper in or er tute 's po1·tcy cone 1ustons,
especoa
to placate some wacky contributors."
Alice-in-Wonderland notion that free
I hope that both Robert Novak and ., ~
The libertarian Cato Institute has trade with China will eventually end that the Cato Institute will send those ,former. ;_
done more than any other Washington S·-'
..... inist regime 's pervasive imprisonment nuns their assurances ihat free trade will ;,:._
think tank to illuminate the manifold and torture of those of its people who one day allow them to practice their faith .,.
abuses of the Constitution during the ·advocate demqcracy.
·
· agam. ·
··
Clinton regime. The Institute published
In this regard, on the same "Capital · What might help consumers who tune ·.~ ·
" h
R b
N
k
·th
in. to tbis torrent of television talk is a reg- :,.;
Tim Lynch's "Dereliction of Duty: The G ang s ow, o ert
ova , WI out
Constitutional Record ofPresident.Clin- pausing for a second, said: "There's no . ular critical review of the programs . .....:
CNN does have "Informed Sources" on ·
ton" (Cato Institute policy analysis, 1997) · question tbat the individual fteedoms in
,
Sunday,, but much of that review of the ·:.
and "The Rule of Law in the Wake of C h ina over the last 12 years have
,
press is more talk and not enough in sis- _.;
Clinton" (Caro Institute, 2000)·, edited by increased dramatically. An d t h ats why
Roger Pilon. Both of these works have there's an anti-Americanism: A lot of tent separation of newspeak from the · · :
'Wh .
missing facts.
~i·
gone much deeper than the mainstream peop Ie (in C hina) are saying
at IS all
. .,
or the alternative press - and certainly this yelling about human rights?' ;rhey
(Nat Hento.lf is a natiorwlly renowned~ Of
more than broadcast or cable · television have never had it so good."
authority on the First Amendment and the "
•
'···,
- into Clinton's arid the Republican's
As Humpcy Dumpty said to Alice: Bill if Rights.)

Nat
Hentoff

c

·

h ,, '

--,--,-----------------------,--------------------------~'---'-~--,--------..,----.. ;p

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, May 14, the 134th day of 2001. There are
231 days left in the year.
• Today's Highlight in Histoty:
On May I 4, I 948, the independent state of Israel was proclaimed in Tel Aviv.
On this date:
In 1643, Louis XIV became King of France at age 4 upon
the death of his father, Louis XIII.
In f804, the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the
Louisiana Territory left St. Louis.
In 1904, the first Olympic games to be held in the Uni\ed
States opened in St. Louis.
.
.
In 1942, the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps "was established.
'
In 1955, f!:presentatives from eight Communist bloc countries, including the Soviet Union, signed the Warsaw Pact in
Poland.
In 1973, the United Siates. launched Skylab 1, its first
manned space station.
In I 975, U.S. forces raided the Cambodian island of Koh
Tang :)lld recaptured the American merchant ship Mayaguez.
All 40 crew members were released safely by Cambodia, but
some 40 U.S. serVicemen were killed in the military operation.
In 1980, President Carter inaugurated the Department of
Health and Human Services . .
In I 995, Myrlie Evers-Williams was sworn in to head the
NAACP.
In 1998, singer-actor Frank Sinatra died at a Los Angeles
hospiral at age 82. .
Ten years ago: President Bush announced his selection of
Robert M. Gates to head the Central Intelligence Agency.
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II arrived in Washington to begin a
two-week visit to the United States. ,forty-two people were
.
killed in a train collision in western Japan.
Five years ago: A jury in Pontiac, Mich. , acquitted Dr. Jack
Kevorkian of assisted-suicide charges, his third legal victory in
two years.
1
•

DEAR ABBY: I don't know

BUSINESS MIRROR

,,ll j

Americans have a choice on comfortable-·retirement

~:::
"

BY JoHN tu.I!WF
the traditional essentials. The alternative is example, that American 'investors believe a ,::.
NEW YORK - If Americans appear to slop saving rather ·than lower living . stock ri=ket that can scalp their portfolios.. :.
to be not fuUy sold on the idea of saving standards.
one year can repleni~h it the next. The' .~
for their retirement, the explanation
Worse, they sense that tax~ might very idea of easy fortunes has not been elimi~ ~ '·'
might lie in two. very broad and different well take an ever bigger bite in future nated.
·
.
,
· -~ .
possibilities:
.
years despite loudly sought tax cuts.
The decline in savings for retirement ,;,
I . They feel they c;m't maintain a mod:.
The possibility of taxes taldng an even comes at a time when publicity about the ,,~·
ern lifestyle and afford ro save.
. larger budget share is raised by the Tax need to do the very opposite _ that is ...- ·~.
2. Deep down,
feel that some out- Foundation, whose documented but con- raise ·saving&gt;. rates _ is so loud that feV.: ' .--:
side-force will take care of the matter and troverst'al 11ax Freedom Day has b 11
' ,.
•
'Yorker-taxpayers have failed to hear it. . : ..
provide the wherewithal when the time pushed pack to May 3 this · ye . t
'-~ But savings declines are what's been ·:"
9
comes.
April 18 in 1 92.
.
fo'u nd by the independent researchel'S - '~
Whichever the reason, fewer workers . It means,the Foundation ys, that tax"'l
. ,
.
the Employee Benefit Research Institute ~,
than a year
ago are savtng 10r retirement, payers must work until the . simply to
· ·
Education·"·
acco rdi·ng to a report .by two research . meet federal, state and local tax bills. And, and the American Savin&lt;&gt;&lt;
&lt;&gt;"
organizations. Moreover, they say, confi- it adds, another week will be added to the Council - and it presents serious issues- · ·
dence in a future comfortable retirement grind by 2011, the result of the tax code's of public policy.
.
·;:.':
is down.
. built-in tendency to absorb a larger frac- .
Obviously, there's evidence of a funda- ,:
Supporting the first possibility is the ·tion of the nation's income.
mental Contradiction: that you can have . il
concern that whatever small amount
While 'those angry at the tendency the benefits, but avoid the risk and the.'"
workers save..could be wiped out by illness have a tendency of their own to blame an P3111 ·
or other forces beyond their control, such avaricious government, much of the tax
. Relying on government rather than· ~­
as rising prescription and utility bills.
growth has, in effect, been sought or oneself to pay for retirement means high_.. ,;:
It is a fatalistic attitude, but understand- acquiesced to by voters approving more er taxes and maybe lower living standards"··
able when you consider the overwhelm- government services.
now. Depending on the stock market:~·
ing anxiety that grips some families when
That bring. up the second possibility means assuming the risks and perhaps f.1c- .
.,
they match their incomes against the - that some people harbor the notion ihg a mjserable retirem ent.
demands, such as for tuitions and mort· that government will bail them out. H ow,
It's a painful choice for tl10se who face ·:
gage payments.
they ask, can it not do so? And, if not the it, but it"is a choice - ad alternative rather:''
And perhaps taxes, too. Americans in govermnent, then possibly the stock mar- than a dictate.
·ti
· : ~.
recent years have b&lt;;en paying more in ket.
(Jolm Comn!ff is a busi11ess a11aly!t for Tite• ·:
· taxes th~n for· food, t}oi;hing and shelter,
More than one survey has shown, for Assodated Press.)
· ·1

tliey

··J

.Jii

•·

Judge Story processes
County Court cases

•After Hours'

Volunteers honored

POMEROY
· Meigs under the influence, $24 and
County Court Judge Steven costs, speed, $100 11nd eoslf;, 10
L. Story recently processed a days jail suspended to lhree con·
current w~h OUI, one year probenumber of cases.
.
lion, fleeing; Cassandra Will.
Fined were: '
Pomeroy, $30 and costs speed;
Jason L Smith, Middleport, $75 Jarry W. Smith, Huntington,
and costs. possession; James M. W.Va, $20 and costs, sealbelt;
Sable, Syracuse. $100 and costs, Walter T. Bat.mgt~rler, Albany, $30
10 days jail suspended on each and costs, speed; Pamela D.
count, one year probation, reslilu- Campbell, Balpre, $30 and costs,
lion, two counts ·contributing; seatbett; Michael B. BUck, .Park·
James P. Wells, Long Bottom, ersburg, W.Va., $30 and costs.
$850 and costs, 10 days jail sus- speed; Frank E. GiQbs, Rawson,
pended to three, $500 suspended $20 and costs, faiklre to control,
upon completion o1 RTP School, Paul G. Zeispan, Mason, W.Va.,
To celebrate National \Ulunteer Week, O'Bleness Memorial Hosp~
one year probation, $500 lorfei· $30 and costs, speed, $30 and
tal in Athens honored itS volunteers at the hospital's annual \UIture, reckless operation; Sara costs, seatbelt; Frank M. Colwell,
The Chester-Shade Historical Association hosted a recent unteer Recognition Program at the Ohio University Inn. These vo~
Henoy, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. $25 Pomeroy, $1,240andcosts,overMeigs County Chamber of Commerce "Business After unteers achieved service-hour milestones during the past six
and costs, three days jail sus- load, $20 and costs, unsafe vehiHours"
event at the Chester Courthouse. Guests were given months. Seated, from left,'.are Doris Gevas, 1,000 hours; Shirley
pended, one year probation, resti- cle; Joe A. Hunt, Sisterville, W.Va.,
a guided tour of the courthouse, and. saw a display case, Venen, 1,000 hours; Evelyn Houck, 2,000 hours; and Beth Hoch,
IUiion, passing bad che«Jks; Laura $30 and costs, speed; Gregooy L
filled.
with artifacts, seen here with Pat Holter of the Asso- · 100 hours. Standing, from left, Glenna Gamwell, 1,000 hours;
Buckley, Proctorville, $100 and Pollard, Portland, $20 and costs.
costs. $100 su~eil. window vehicles traveling in . opposite
ciation, right, and members of the Chamber. Members of Betty Poston, 1,000 hours; Margaret Duff, 100 hours, and Anne
tint; Amanda F. Neece, Middle- directions; Timolhy J. Clemens,
the Association provided historical reenactments, and Marie Chonko, 500 hours. Not pictured are Amy Collins, 1,500
port, $100 and costs, 10 days jail Athens, $20 and costs, speed;
heard details about the renovation effort. Refreshments hours; Margaret Soltow, 1,000 hours; Julie Fawcett, 1QO hours;
suspended to one, $200 for1eiture, Joshua T. Horr, Portsmouth, $30
were
served. (Contributed photo)
and Sue Metcalf, 100 hours. (Contributed photo)
probation until 21 years of age, and costs, speed, $20 and costs,
underage consumption, $100 and ·failure to display sticker; Alice Y.
costs, 10 days jail suspended and Levingston, RuUand, $20 and
concurrent, drug paraphernalia, costs, marked lanes.
$75 and costs, possession; Aaron
Carla S. Chapell, Long Bottom,
. Crump, New Haven, W.VIJ.,, $100 $20 and costs, stop sign; William
During iu£1ntry training,
and costs, 10 days jail suspended R. Dobbins. Parkersburg, W.Va.,
to one, $200 for1eiture, probation $30 lll)d costs, speed; Laura Fox,
Day developed basic combat.
until 21 years of age, underage Reedsville, $30 and costs; seat
skills and battlefield operaconsumption, $100 and costs, 10 belt; Devin L. Newell, Letart,
tions and tactics, as well as
days jail suspended and concur· WNa.. $50 and costs, speed;
BIDWELL
Marine
experiencing
·
various
rent, drug paraphemaia, $30 and Derek McGlaughlin, Pomeroy,
R.:eserve
Pfc.
Howard
weapons
and
weJpons
Corps
coats, seat batt; James Whitting· $100 and coeta, no operators
ton, Middleport, $100 and collll, llcenae, $30 and co111, 11at beft;
L. CaldweU recently graduat- defenses made available to
recklen operation, $25 and co111, Mike P. Laudermllt, Pomeroy,
ed from the Marine ~orps infantry crewman.
lett of center: Richard Ward, Mid- $100 and coati, 30 days jail lUI·
Bmc Combat . Engmeer
Day is a 2000 graduate of
dlaport, $20 and coati, expired paneled, 80 hou_ra community aer·
Coune at Mnrm~ Corps . Meigs High School and the
tag~: Scott Colwell, Pomeroy, $30 vice. two years probalfon, con·
Base, ~amp Lejeune, N.C.
son of Eric and Joy Day of
and coet1, Malbtlt.
trlbutlng, $100 and cOlla, 30 cllya
Clll~otte A. Crank, Pomaroy, jill IUiptndld, two years proba·
Dunng the five-week Pomero~
$32 and co1t1, 1peecl; Wafter J. Uon, reetHution, receiving llolen
coune, Caldwell re~eived
·
Haggy 11. Rutland. S25 and coet1, property: Timothy John1on,
instruction in the fundamen·
window tint: fMh Frank, Racine, Pomeroy, $100 and co111, 30 ·
tals of engineering support
$~ •nd COlli, aplldi Danltllt dayt jail IUtptndtd IO IIVIIfl, 80
Siders, Gllllpolle, $30 and cOlla, hours community "rvlce, two . for combat units, including
the procedures for building
sealbtlt, $35 and costa, child years probation, contributing;
re1tralnt; Jeremiah Bentley, $100 and costa, two ysara probe· · and repairing bridges, roads
Pomeroy, $24 and coalS, 1peed; tlon, criminal treapan. $100 and
SHADE - Navy Petty
and field 'fortifications . ·
Ronnie Johnson, Racine, $30 and costs, 30 days jail suspended to
Caldwell also received Officer Third Class Denver
colll, seatbelt, $20 and costs, seven, two years probation,
on demolition con·- P. Midkiff recendy reported
training
lallure to control $25 and costs underage consumption; Paul K.
cepts,land mine warfare and to duty at Naval Hospital,
unsafe vehicle: Jared Bobb• ' F'lora, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
Racine $100 and COSIS under:, 30 days jail suspended to seven,
camouflage techniques .• He Jacksonville, Fla.
Clarice and Harold Swisher recently rece ived an Excellence in
. age consumption, $30 a~d costs, t_wo years probation, criminal tras_- ' :will accompany Marine
Midkiff is a 1996 graduate Service Award at the O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's annual ·
seatbillt, $20 and costs, failure to pass, $100 and costs, 30 days jatl
Infantry forces to build of Alexander Higli School in Volunteer Recognition Program. The award is presented to vol·
control, $75 and costs, reckleiiS suspend~ to seven. 80 hours
roads , set up camps and forti- Albany and is t~e son of unteers who go above and beyond theif regular duties. The
operallon; Paul Flora, . Pomeroy, community servlc~. two years profy
living areas.
Mickey and Gerald Midkiff Swishers are seven-year volunteers who work at the hospital's
costs only, five days jail suspend• bation, contrlb~t\ng, $100 and
Caldwell is the son of of Shade.
information desks. (Contributed photo)
ed, two years probation, contribut- costs, 30 days taol suspended to
ing; Troy Yankuns, Pomeroy, seven, _1wo year~ probation,
Charles H. and Ruby F. - !':!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!~~
costs only, restitution, 90 days jail underage consumption.
Caldwell of Bidwell and a
Chad Wlsej fv1iddleport, costs
suspended to time served, two
1995 graduate of River Valyears probation, criminal damag· .only, 60 days aol sus~ded, two
ing; Shawn Dailey, Racine, $15 years P.robatoon, restraon~ng order,
ley High Schoo1.
and costs, speed; Ryan J. Nelson, sexualomposltion; Flossie M. Doll,
Portland, $250 and costs, 30 days Long. Bottom, $20 a11d. costs, falljail suspended to three, $200 .for· ure lo control; Kenneth M. CurfeHure, one year probation, no re_nce, Middleport, costs, 60 days
POMEROY Army
aperators license, $30 and costs, Jail suspend~. two years probaMiddleport, OH
525 North Second Ave.
National
Guard
Pfc:
seatbett, costs only, -lailure to con- !ion, r~straonon~ order•. . sexual
trol; Jason Klein, Pomeroy, $75 1mpos111on; Oavrd P. T1emeyer,
Robert M . Day has graduand costs, three days jail SliS- Pome~o_y, $950 and costs, 30
ated from qasic infantry
pended,. two years probation, no days Jail suspended to 10, . one
training at Fort Benning,
operlltors license, costS only, ficti· year license su~p_enslon, two
Columbus, _Ga.
tlous tags; Terry Day, Rutland, years probat1bn, driVIng under lhe
Day received training in
$250 and costs, 10 days jail sus- onflue~ce, $100 and costs. 30
pended ·to three, jail and $250 days Jail suspended to .1 0 concurand . ceremonies, ·
drill
suspended upon completion of renl, two yea~ probatoon, dnvong
weapons, map reading, tac- ·
This will be o.u r twenty-second conference in our twenty
RTP School, one year probation, · under suspensoon, $25 and costs:
tics. military courtesy, m.ili-.
$200 lor1eiture, reckless opera· failure to display vahd t~gs,
four years here at Victo~ Baptist Church.
tary justice, physical fllness.
lion $200 and costs, 1"0 days jail Charles 0. Johnson , R.acone,
We have two guest Speakers this year.
first aid, and Army history
susPended to three ·concurrent, $850 and costs, 10 days Jail sus·
one year probation, no operators pended ~o lhree, SIX month Wce~se
and traditions. ·
Dr. James Ellis from Bessmer City, North Carolina. Dr.
license costs only, failure lo con· suspensoon, one year probation,
Ellis is with Fundamental Baptist Home Missions Board.
trot·. Bryan Stewart, Coolville, $500 suspende~_u~on complet10~
$200 and costs, fine and 30 days of RTP School ~1th1n 90 days, dn·
Evangelist Woody Hoskins, who .i s also a ventriloquist,
jail suspended, IWo years proba· vong under the onfluence, $25 and
lion restraining order domrotic costs, left of center! $30 a~d
Travels with his helper "Sunny Day" will be speaking in
'
'
costs, _seatbelt: Sabnna Moms,
101
each service.
·
v ~yr;::~· Rockhold, Reedsville: Racine, $100 and costs, 30 days
$200 and costs, 30 d'ays jail sus- suspe~ded ,to three, two yea":. MILLWOOD SPORTS
Pastor James E. Keesee would like to invite the public to
paneled to three, two years proba- probat1on, theft, Andrew Robin
BAR&amp;GRILL
tion no operators ~cense, $200 son, Caldwe_ll •. $1,o0o and costs,
the services. Nursery will be provided.
and' costs 30 days jail suspended srx months 1a11. suspended '? _30
(304) 273-9004
to three c~ncurrent, two years pro· days, two years probatoon, dnv1ng
Karaoke Contest
bation, falsification, $200 and under suspensron, $75 and costs,
st 30 days jail suspended to open container, $25 and costs, 10
Tueadaya 8-11 pm
~~re!' concurrent, twG years pro· days i.ail s~spended, two years
$25 weekly winner
b t" 0 1 aving the scene· Shan· probatron , omproper transport of
EVANGELIST WOODY
Entered In $1200
n~~ ~. ~arran, Hartford,· W.Va., firearms; Matt Eblin, .R~Iand, $50
HOSKINS AND "SUNNY DAY"
Studio Recording
$850 and costs, 10 days jail sus- and costs, 30 days JWI suspendpended 10 three, six month license ed, one year probabon, assault,
Competition
suspension, one year probation, $60 and costs, 30 days Jaol susRt. 2 south of Ravenswood •
jah and $500 suspended upon pended, on!' year probation, crim·
In Mlllwood
completion of RTP School, driving lnal damaging.

MILITARY NOTES
Howard L
caldwell

Receives award

Denver P.

.Midkiff

MISSIONS CONFERENCE

Robert M. Day

AT

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
May 16-20 7 pm each evening
Sunday lOam -11 am

PROUD TO BE PART
OF YOUR LIFE.

.

.

I

�..

•

Page~&amp;

Nation •

'The Oilly Sentinel '

The Daily Sentinel

14.2011

Diamond roundup, .Pdge B6

President renews call for reducing gun violenc~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans are closely watching
the nation's rapid population growth and are nor convinced it
is a good trend, a poll suggests.
Some older citizens and whites who are not Hispanic were
more uncomfortable with the nation's rapid growth and
changing demographics that have been reported by the census,
according to the poll by the Pew Research Center for the People &amp; the Press.
. The poll showed that half the population thinks the nation's
rapid population growth is a bad thing, but that did not suggest those negative feelings were related to the nation's increase
in minorities.
Nationally, the Hispanic population grew 58 percent in the
last decade, from 22.4 million in 1990 to 35.3 million.in 2000.
Hispanics drew virtually even with non-Hispanic blacks as the
country's largest minoriry group. .

Page Bl

•

WASHINGTON (AP) - President ·
Bush, stepping back into the gun-control debate, is renewing his pledge to.
help communities and states combat
gun violence.
Bush was visiting Philadelphia on
Monday to highlight his efforts to catch
gun offenders. Bush has advocated "vigorously" enforcing laws involving gun
crimes and. said it should .be a prioriry
to keep juveniles from obtaining guns.
Underscoring the contentiousness of
the issue, a gun-control advocacy group
was airing ads urging him to support
mandatory background checks for custamers at gun shows.
" Felons in 32 states can get guns at
gun shows with no questions asked. and
resell them on our streets," the radio

SunTrust Banks bid for Wachovia
NEW YORK (AP) - .SunTrust Banks Inc. is making an
·unsolicited $14.7 billion bid for Wachovia Corp., a move that
could derail First Union Corp.'s planned S12.5 billion purchase
of the North Carolina bank.
. The board of Sun Trust approved rht• offer, which would crt&gt;-.
ate a bank with nearly S180 bil~on in assets, the eighth-largest
bank holding company in the United States, the Atlanta-b;ised
bank said in a statement M onday.
·
The new bank would haw branches in seven states throughout the Southeast and serw more than 7.5 million retail customers.
The bidding war for Winston-Salem, N.C.-based Wachovia
comes after it agreed bst month to be_purchased by Charlotte,
N .C.-based First Union in a deal that would create the nation 's
fourth-largest banking company.

Activists: We won't go away'

•

spot says. "That's why we need a
national Jaw requiring background
checks at all gun shows."
.
The 60-second ad was being run in
Philadelphia Monday by Americans for
Gun Safery of Rosslyn. Va., founded by
Andrew McKelvey, the creator of the
Monster.COJ!l online job referral service.
The group's mission statement says it
"supports die rights of_individuals who
own firearms and seeks stronger new
Jaws and tougher enforcement of current laws to help keep g~ns our of the
hands of criminals and kids; and to
make guns safer in the home.' '
Sen. Jack Reed , D-R. I., has proposed
requiring a three-day waiting period on
gun show purchases, and Sens. John

•••••, • ..., 1... 2.1

McCain, R-Ariz., and Joseph Lie~r­
· man, D-Conn ., plan .ro introduce similar1egislation.
Bush said during the presidend,al
campaign that he supported cl~sing 8_!'n
show loopholes.
·
~
With Monday's trip to Philadelp!Ua,
the president was returning to an ~e
that was a thorny one for him during
last year's campaign. Democratic rivatAI
Gore appealed to urban and suburG'an
voters by painting Bush as pro-glin.
Bush, then the governor of Te#'as,
appealed to· his rural base by defen~ing
firearm owners' rights.
:-..
Bush's · proposed 2002 bud~~t
includes $49.8 million for states .,-~o
establish programs for increasing arr!'ts
and prosecution of gun offenders. ..: ·

MoNn\Y's

scramble
wlnne1s named
· MASON, WVa. -Twenryseven foursomes of golfen
played in the annual Meigs
Football Golf Scramble held
last weekend at the Rivenide
Golf Course in Mason. The
108 golfers enjoyed near perfect conditions for the tournament.
The foursome of Jay Har,ris, Jeremy HartSon, Jim
Pullins and Allen Plant blistered the course for 18 tinder
par to win . the tournament.
Three teams finished at 12
under and a chip off was held
to determine theit placements.
The team of Gene Weaver,
Dan Perry, Bob Blessing and
Tom Reynolds took home
second place due to the chip
off. With Jim Ridenour,John
Ridenour, Melanie Ridenour
and Gerald Holland coming
in third place. Todd Lisle,
Oono Lent, 1)' Roush and
Gary Stufllebean finished in
fourth place.
· Individual awards went to
Huey Eason for longest drive,
Marshall Wooten won the
closest to the pin and G~
S111fllebean for the longest
put.
. Mike Chancey was pleased
with the tournament, "I
would like to thank all the
businesses and · individuals
who supported the tournament. These people mean a
lot for the Marauder football
program."

··if

Jacques Lowe dead at 71

CINCINNATI (AP) -When a white police officer was
charged with misdemeanors in the fatal shooting of an
unarmed black man, some in the ciry feared a repeat of the
NEW YORK (AP) - Jacques lowe, a photographer best
known for his pictures of the Kennedy family, died Saturday in
rioting that followed the death.
It didn't happen, although the results of black activists' anger Manhattan. He was 71.
remain· evident: a march into Ciry Hall, chanting among a
The cause of death was cancer, a Lowe family spokesman
business-day restaurant crowd, a canceled weekend music fes- said.
rival.
.
.
Lowe took some of the most famous pictures of the United
Blacks who say they fear police and feel excluded from eco- States' most famous political family.
Among .them were photos of John F. Kennedy, who suffered
nomic prosperiry say they will continue civil disobedience to
from a back ailment, IJ;'aning agairtst his White House desk in
keep their concerns in the public conscience.
"We won't go· away. We won't go home," the Rev. Damon. ,November 1961 and one of J acqueline Kennedy -posing on a
Lynch III told City Council members after he and about 40 deck chair .in a yellow-and-white checkered dress in Hyanais
activists marched last week into the counciJ's· chamber for an · Port, Mass., in the summer of 1960.
impromptu meeting.

despite a decade of efforts to diversify the auto industry, a sr.Qj:ly
.,,

;

~~ -

Atlto executives said l.o wer-lcvd female executives are il}_ a
.
~
pipeline to advauce in canting years.
Bur while more women are climbing the corporate lad4er,
many are still hitti01g a glass ceiling, despite ambitious meni(Yf-'
iitg programs, costly management development efforts :;;.~11 .
zealous recruiting, according to Catalyst, a New York-b~d
group that tracks women in business .
;i,
Catalyst said that U.S. automakers and pam suppliers r:i-k
near the bottom in the percentage of women who are coqj!irate office'rs - generally the most powerful executive pj#j.
,.\oW
tions.
..,

..,
... .
.
· cancer drugs show little help ••
~

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Much-anticipated new drili!S
intended to stop cancer by cutting off its blood supply sha'N
only slight benefit in early testing on terminally ill patie~. ·
although experts say the medicines still may prove useful. :
Whatever their eventual role , however, new data releasc!i.
Sunday suggest the drug. will not be the kind of across-th~board cancer cure that SOI1le had predicted..
•.
None of the drug. prompted the kind of dramatic tum.~!
shrinkage or disappearance that doctors look for even in th~
first stages of human testing, which ·are largely intended to se~
if medicines are safe. Although the dnl&amp;' had little effect ovtl~
all, there were hints they might someti.mes slow or even stop '
some tumor growth, at least temporarily.
'
Reports on three of the drug., all discovered in the lab ofpr.
DETROIT (AP) -Women hold just 13 of the 11 6 highestJudah
Folkman, were presented at a meeting in San FranciS£&lt;?
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) - The International Museum of ..r:mkingjobs at General Motors, Ford and C hrysler combined,
of the American Sociery for Clinical Oncology.
Cartoon Art says it is reluctantly auctioning its prize exhibit-

Women still lag in top spots

Museum audioning.the Mouse

' , . .,.

....

.N.C. a leader as cotton p~\I~On rises
GASTON, N .C. (AP) - In
the !50 years the Grant family has been farming cotton,
its members have often
watched the price fluctu.ate.
But the latest downturn was
protracted, .making the current boom all the more welcome.
With prices down for corn
and soybeans, and fewer acres
planted in tobacco, more
' than 1 millio~ acres of cotton
will be . pl~nted this year in
North Carolina. •
·

That's 13 percent more
than last year and the most
since 1937, when the lifesapping boll weevil pushed
production into a decline
that . bottomed our at about
45 ,000 acres in the '70s.
Cotton prices are low down from an average .77
cents a pound in 1995 to less
than 50 cents a. pound now
- but the crop is still a better option for many farmers,
said economist Kent Lanc.Jos
of the National Cotton

members would benefit fiom
energy
development
and
construction.
power-plant
Among those meeting withVice
President Dick Cheney was
Teamsters president James
Hoffa.
If this summer's high fuel
prices turn into soaring home
heating cosiS next winter, Bush's
focus on long-tenn solutions
could become a political problem not orily for the White
House, but also for congressional Repub~s facing reelection

Visitors to Oklahoma City bombing
memorial upset, outraged over delay
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)
- Tom Kight thought of his
8-year-old
granddaughter
Sunday as he strolled near a
rippling pool where Timothy
McVeigh once parked a truck
bomb.
The little girl ~a n't spend
Mother's Day wiJh her mom,
one nf the 168 people who
die~ in the Oklahoma C ity
bombing. Kigh t placed a
flower on a bronze chair representing Frankie Merrell at
the Oklahoma C ity National
Memorial.
"I don't believe
in saying
I
goodbye," he said.
Holidays are always hard for

those who lost loved ones in
the April 19, 1995, blast. This
one, though, seems worse
because it comes t\Vo days
after victims' families learned
McVeigh will not be executed
~n Wednesday as scheduled.
Attorney General John
Ashcroft 0;11 Friday postponed
bomber's execution until
the
I
Ju ile II after learning that the
FBI had withheld thousands
of documents from M cVeigh's
defense team.
Kight won't speak about
McVeigh as he stands near his
stepdaughter's memorial chair,
especially 'not {)n Mother's
bay. He visits the memorial

..

about twice a week and sometimes bring. his granddaughter.
"This is Frankie's ground,"

he said. "It's

Vt!ry

,,

,

Melp .sPring
banquet set

Houston ftosh
declares for

$695
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8XIl

.UniverSCll Rundle ~~
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Set

Brown, Black,
Mlat Grttn, WhHe

$1295

~~~~gles $2.664
$

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36

HOUSTON
(AP)
· Houston freslunatl Alton Ford
has applied for the NBA draft.
The deadline for declaring for .
early entry . was Sunday. The .
6-foot-9, 280-pound forward
averaged 11 points and six
rebounds last season as the
Cougars went 9-20. He did
ncit hire an agent, leaving
open the possibility he could
return to coll~ge.

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'lhompson wins
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•noVing, very

spiritual. l' jn not going to tell
yo u [ don't shed a tear a two."
Even those whn did not lose
loved · ones in the explosion
are moved as they walk the
grounds.
.
Vincen t CialJO and Carlos
Herrera, truck drivers traveling through Oklahoim City,
kneeled at the memorial to
cry Sunday. ·
"I can't believe God allows .
us to do something like this to
each other," .Ciano said.

·'"

ROCK SPRINGS -The
annual Spring Sports Banquet
for Meij!;s High School Athletes will be held ~ Thesday,
May 15 in the high school
cafeteria at 6:30.
' Everyon~ attending should ·
bring two covered dishes.
Meat 'will be provided.

'

in 2002, say some political analysts.
On Sunday. California Gov.
Gray Davis accused the White
House of ignoring "the greed of
... Texas energy companies" by
refusing to call for temporary
price caps on soaring electriciry
cosiS in California and elsewhere across the West.
Davis, a Democrat, said ori
ABC's "This Week" that the
administration "was dropping
the ball" by refusing to address
the West's power crisis.

"
\

thru
MilY 26th

Council in Memphis, Tenn .
" There's a greater certainty
you can produce a decent if
not outstanding c rop th an
you ca n with corn or soybeans," Lanclos said . "Cotton
is Jess risky." ·
North Ca rolina's co ttonproducing peak was in 1926,
when far mers plamed 1.8
million acres. By con1parison,
Texas is now the country's
largest producer with about 6
million acres.

-

.

Prices EffectiVE:

Bush energy plan offers no .short-term.fixes
WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush, preparing a plan
to address the 'country's energy
needs, sees no shan-term fixes
for consumers facing big electric
bills and $2-a-gallon gasoline.
Instead,, Bush views longterm energy development as the
answer, and he is certain to face
a battle in Congress over his
plan, which is to be released later
chU week.
The administr.ition hoped to
garner support Monday fiom
labor leaders whose union

'

1

4• FLEX PIPE
Solid &amp; Perf

$2395

IRVING, Texas (AP) - Robert
Damron finally made a putt that Scott
Verplank couldn't answer, and won
for the first time.
Damron also got a good break and
made a bold move Sunday in the final
round of the Byron Nelson Classic
before he finally beatVerplank with an
18-foot birdie putt on the fourth
playoff hole, the par-3 17th.
Afte~ Tiger Woods, Nick Price and
David Duval were out of contention,
and Verplank birdied three of the last
four holes in regul~tion, Damron won
his first PGA Tour event in a playoff
distinctly different from those at the

Melp Foollml1

~~

purportedly the first drawin1,rs of Mi ckey Mnuse - tn help pay .
debts.
·
The museum will offer. the dr.winbrs and hundreds of.other
items for sale to defray nearly S2million i1'1 debt, ntost. owl!d to
a bank which holds the museum's mortgage.
The 36-pand storyboa rd from the 1928 Walt Disney cartoon
"Plane C razy" was the first drawing ever made of Mickey
Mouse, according to Mort Walker, founder of the museum that
displays vintage cartoons, comic strips. films and animation art.
The storyboard is valu ed at between S3.2 million and $3.7
million.
"This is th~ one we're all counting o n," said Walker, who also
created the Beetle Bailey comic strip.

Damron wins first PGA event

HIGHLIGHTS

AUGUSTA, Mo. (AP) Leonard Thompson beat
Argentina's Vicente Fernandez 2-up to vrin the. Senior
PGA Tour's Enterprise RentA-Car Match Play Championship.
Thompson, a playoff loser
to Fernandez last year in a
match play event in Pperto
Rico, earned $300,000 for his
third senior victory.
Fernandez sent the match
to the 18th hole with a birdie
on the par-S 17th, but hit his
second shot on the final -hole
into the water. He then conceded the hole, and the
match, to Thompson.
·In the semifinals, Thompson
beat Hale Irwin 4 and 3, and.
Fernandez defeated Bob
Gilder 6 and 5. Irwin beat
Gilder in 19 holes in the consolation match. In the Super
Seniors competition for play- .
ers 60 and over, Jim Albus
beat )im Dent 1-up.

Nelson the. previous two yeai-s.
No one made a mistake on the
extra holes.
"I didn't have an option. Scott hit
them in fiont of me. So I think it
made it easier," said Damron, a newly
married 28-year-old who won
$810,000. " It gave me no choice.
Either I step up and I hi't a good shot
or it's over."
Verplank, trYing to become the first
Dallas-born player to win the Nelson,
never had a birdie putt longer than 18
feet in the pla)'l&gt;ff. T hree of those were
just a turn away from f~ng:
Damron and Verplank closed with

66s to finish at 263, three strokes
ahead of the talented trio of champions who had been in contention for
most of the day. Brian Watts and Justin
Leonard, another hometown favorite,
finished at 267.
On the final hole, Damron took a
risk, and it paid off.
After hirting it close with a 6-jron
on the 17th in regulation and the first
rime around in the playoff, Damron
decided to change to a 7-iron and
take dead aim at a pin tucked behind
the water.
"The worst thing that was going to
happen is we 'lose," he reasoned. "I

DISCUSSION TIME

didn't want to do it by backing
down."
Damron, who changed putters last
week for the first time in his 132 PGA
startS, curled his putt into the center
of the cup. Verplank couldn't extend
the playoff when his 15-foot birdie
was well off the mark.
" I kept hitting good shots and he
kept matching me," Verplank said.
"For a guy who hadn't won, he hit the
ball prerry good in the playoff."
The real break for Damron came on
the 14th, when he found a gap in the

Cincyslide
continues, 4-3

C INC INNATI (AP)
Before they moved to hitterfriendly Enron Field, the
Houston Astros were known
· for playing - and winning a lor of low-scoring games in
their
climate-controUed
dome.
They're starting to get back
their knack for pulling out the
close ones.
The Astros' offense went
back into its sheD after a fourrun first inning highlighted by
C hri s Truby's bases-loaded
double, but Kent Bottenfield
and the bullpen made it hold
up for a 4-3 victory Sunday
night over the Cincinnati
Reds.
Even though their offense is
in a deep slump, the Astros
have managed to squeeze out
wins. They've played five
straight one-run games, wi!lning three of them.
"O ne of the things the
(Atlanta) Braves have done so
well over · the years is pitch
well enough to win their fair
share of games when they're
nor hitting, and then go on a
streak when they get the hitting;• manager Larry Dierker
said. "What we're going to
have to do is win the lowscormg games.
Low-scoring, high cscoring
it doesn't matter to the
Reds. Whenever they play at
home, they seem to lose.
They've heard a lot more
WHAT?Reds' Sean Casey, right,' gets an explanation from home plate umpire boos than cheers at C inergy
Tim McClelland after being called out on a third strike against the Houston Astros In the first Field, where they're 6-12 Inning In Cincinnati. (AP )
·

.

'

.

the worst home record in the
National League. They've lost
seven of their last. eight at
home.
Every game, it's something
else. On Sunday, it was a
career-worst start by Jim
Brower.
The Reds' long reliever
filled in for disabled Pete Harnisch and lasted only 24 pitches. Brower (2-1) faced seven
batters and retired only one of
them, bringing a cascade of
catcalls from the 19,096 fans
who had barely settled into
their seats.
" I was just trying to get settl ed, but it all happened so
quickly," Brower said. "I
couldn't take a step back."
Truby's bases-loaded double
made it 4- 0 and ended Brower5' OU\ing, the shortest of his
17 major league stariS. Truby
had been in a 1-for-22 slump·
and hadn't driven in a run
since April 28.
" I've just been trying to
relax and stay smooth," he
said. "I've kind of been reaching for everything."
The Asrros didn't have to
reach far for Brower's pitches.
"He got the ball over the
middle of the plate," manager
Bob Boone. said. "Those guys
are going to hit that.'' .
Once Brower left -the game,
the Astros couldn't hit anyone
else and couldn't score despite
a lot of help fiom the Reds'

Plua ... Reda,l4

'

'

Tribe stung by
·Devil Rays, 7-0
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tanyon Sturtze showed that
· good starting pitchers can provide relief, too - especially for managers.
.
"I never got that queasy feeling I pad in previous
games," Tampa Bay manager .Hal McRae said Sunday
after Sturtze shut out Cleveland for seven innings in a 70 victory.
Steve Cox had a career-high five RBls as the Devil
Rays finally defeated the lndiins.
"That was a brilliant performance," McRae said.
"St\lftze normalized their offense. They looked like regu lar guys for a change."
The Indians batted .344 (62-for- 180) and outscored
Tampa Bay 45- 19 in winning th e first five meeting. this
year. In iiS first 11 games in M ay, Cleveland hit .324 with
91 runs.
"A lot of people are happy with this one," Sturtze said
after limiting the AL's top-hitting team to five singles.
"Cleveland has an unbelievable lineup and we sure didn't
want to lose six straight to them ."
SACRAMENTO,
Calif. over the Sacramento Kings,
Sturtze (1-2) struck out five and walked two in his sec· (AP) - On Saturday night, sweeping th e best-of~seven
ond start since being moved fiom the bullpen.
Kobe Bryant was by his ailing senes.
Greg Vaughn had fo11r hits · for the Devil Rays, who
wife's side in Los Angeles. A
Bryant's 84 points in the
won for the third time in their last 13 games.
at Arco Lakers' two victories in Sacrafew hours later, he
"We got what Wl!'ve seen the opposition getting,"
Arena,
inspiring
the
lakers mento helped back words of
McRae saiq. "Good starting pitching, two-out rallies,
with his words before lead1ng leadership that drew praise
timely hitting. We've got to do it for a week .now to get
them to yet another victory
from coach Phil Jackso n - as
59me momentum."
Bryant set career playoff did Bryant's abiliry to·produce
Rusry Meacham and Esteban Van each pitched one
bests with 48 .points and 16 two phenomenal perforinning to complete the shutout.
rebounds Sunday as the Lake,rs mances while his wife was ill.
The Indians lost for the· second time in their last 14
advanced to · their second
"It's been an emotional few
games, but got to see herll!ded rookie Danys Baez.
straight Western Conference days for him, but he was fanfinals with a 119-113 victory tastic on the co urt," Jackson
PIHHIHTrl~l

MOVIN'ONLos Angeles lakers' Kobe ·
Bryant, left, celebrates with
teammate
Shaqullle O'Neal
after the Lakers
defeated the
Sacramento
Kings 119-113
to advance to
the Western
Conference
finals. (AP)

Lakers drop Kings. 119-113
was

'

said. "He has a lot of poise f&lt;lr
a young man his age."
Bryant, who married Vanessa Laine last month after an ·
engagement that began during
last season's playoffS, found out
hours before tipoff of Friday's
Game 3 that she had been
taken to an emergency room
with a severe pain in her left
side.
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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

llcJnUy,lley 14, 2001

' IIIey 14, 2001

Slnglo Partnl Progrom SptclM

Finane nQ "••liable (1104)755
7191

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Personals

FREE SEARCHI
-.SINGLES.oom
Gent em an Seek ng While Fe

male Over 50 Yea 1 For Walks
And F ltndoh p Rep y To ~~3
2nd Avtnut Gl I polio OhiO
4!1831 Aplr1mlnl 403

SBCM ColloOt GrodUIII 31Yrl
~ II
180 b lltk WF or BF
compen onahlp Write B Scott
12021~ (E 1 3) CCI Bo• ~~0
Chllicolht 011 4!60
START Do\TING TONIGHT!
Have fun meet ng eligible 1 ngles
In your area Toll fret 1 800
ROMANCE tx1 9rn
Why WI t? Stlrt mttl ng Oh 0
alnglts 1on ghl 1 800 766 2823
111162

Fund alae S nq Ya d sale
12 00 5 00 Aucl on 5 30 May
19th St versv I e Chu ch Po
lland Ohio 740-843-5652

New To You Thr ft 8 ' 9 West St mson Atnens
740-592 1842

Qua ty c othlng and hOusehold
tema $1
bag sale every

oo

Thu &amp;day Monday th u Satu day
9 OQ-800

40

Giveaway

3 1 Wook Old Malle d Ducks
Must Take A Perfect Fo Sma
Pond (740)38&amp;-9217
G veaway To Good Home on v
M ltd B Hd Pupp oa Very Cij o
(740)2&lt;15-9082 Leava Mtssago
K ttena Calico s MWetka o d
And llltr Tra ned
Ca
(740)2-735

Yard Sale

70

Galli poll a
&amp; Vicinity
Ya d sae 62 SOla Drlvt 15 16
17 118m LOIS Of Kids Clothes

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Btg yar&lt;t salt ol1 Now lima Rd on
Whitos H I Rd AUIIand 141h lh u
181h
RACO yard salt a Raetne s Slar
M Park on Ma~ 17 h 9am to
4pm &amp; May 18th 9am to 2pm
Cloth ng shoes d shes pans
glaaaware linens toys rugs
kn ck knacks Iota of m ac Items
All procHdS IO IO IChOII Bh p
fund Thinks for support Cal Ann
Z rklo II 740 949 2031 0 Kathryn
Hart 11740-849-2656

80

Auction
and Flea Market

110

•ao

$2- WEEKLY I llolllot
brochures Sat sfact on Guar
. , _ Posggo &amp; Supplies provided! Rush Self Add ened
Slemptd Envolopol GICO DEPT
5 BOX 1438 ANTIOCH TN
370111438Start~

IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS!
JOin

lnfoCislon
Management
Corporation
tn

005

HelpWanted

M'W Ell;

run lly 4 30 p.m. lllillr*y
..,

110

recruiting volunteers

over lhe phone for
major non profit health
orgamzaliOns These
positions till/Dive
NO FUNDRAISINGI

Up to $7/hour +

bonus potential
Full-time with
Complete Hnefltl

package

Call now to ttlrt
your new career
with one of the
area's leading
companies.

1866 475-7223
ext 1901
Are you a car ng eam onented
parson ook ng to lila pallacl Joll
w th great pay? Then were look
ng for you a SceniC HIs Nu s ng
Cen ar State Tasted Nu s ng
A des and Ce 1 f ad Nu s ng
A des poa t on&amp; ava table one
part t me :2pm to 10pm Two call
n/1 1- n poSitiOn&amp; fo Gam to 2pm
anlt 10pm to 6am S6 80 an hour
for state tested nurs ng ass s
tanta $5 eo an hour to cer f ad
nura ng ass slants Pe teet at
tendance bonus 8YMY 3 months
Bonus ava abe fo wo king
Oltra Shifts

A e you wa m ca ng and com
passiOnate? t so you a e perfect
tor our team Overbrook Cen er s
lookng fo lu tma &amp; pat tme
STNAs LPNs and ANa to provide
qua ty ca e fo our es dents
Come jo n the Ove brook Fam y
Fo mo e ntormation please con
,.cl Krlstlo Madden a1 740 992
8472 o &amp;lop by 33~ Paga Sleel
to I out an app oca ton E 0 E
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII C ails
Toys Jewel y Wood Sew ng
Typ ng G tat Pay CAll BOO
195-0380 EXIt 201 (24h s)
Anent on Work F om Home On
ne 0 Offl no I Ma Onltr $500$5000 mo PT FT
800 784
8556 www pcpays com
ATTENT ON MOTHERS AND
OTHERS Up 10 $500-$2 500 pan
t me Ful tra n ng 1 800 879
4808 www qu ckcashnow com
jambagan
ATTENTION
WORK FROM
HOME $25 $75 hr PT FT Main
orde (800) 937 2281
www ourdreamquest net

Ntvtr9., ~ Agan
Eamup o
~$BOOOIMO

PTIFT
800-S1Cl-0705
www CaabNowAndfo ever com

DlPLOYMHH
So RVIU ',

$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE Po
cell ng 400 lnqul y Envelopes al
Homo Eaoy Wo k Call 1 800
755 2027 x539 (24Hrl)
$98185 WEEKLY! P ocosolng
HUD FHA Mo lgago Rotunda No
Expor once Requ rod For FREE
tntormat on Coli 1 800 ~0 8832
111 1300 www pro aclrolund oom
ACC~SS

TO A COMPUTER?
Pul I o wo k $25 hr S75 h FTI
PT FREE nto 888 9377 28
www d akehockeyOea h nk net
ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
PT FT 125 o $75 Pt nour Co
1 BOO 895-0219 or wwwworktrom
homne247 com
ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put I 10 Workl $25/h $75/hr FT
PT FREE nlo 888 803 0732

www llhomlb z com

rete als gene a case manage
ment serv ces and etc Must
have knowledge In the r eld of
chemiCil dependency Baehe"'ts
&lt;togreo andl 0&lt; oltlfi'10'IC8 eeoc
a phiS Sencl resume by May 18
2001 to FACTS
45 0 ve
Slreet Ga pols Oh o 45631 o
Fa• (7401446--8014 EOE MlfiH

Pad 2 COL traontng
No expe ence needed $34 000
y plus ful bene s PAM
1i anspor 0 ve s based n mid
west 1 877 230 6002 Sunlta~
9om-5pm IAon Fri llam-Spm

Help Watllld

...-ale Ollonlng ""'

Re-n-

tia Aid To Work In Men I Shther
In Meigs COunty Tne PositiOn Is

Appro• il5 ttoura " Hours
From 6pm 10 8am Appllcanl Muol
Have H gh Schoo 0 ploma Or
GED Va d 0 va s L cense Be
Respons ble And Abe To Deal
Wit h C &amp;~s S tuat.ons lnle esled
Pe sons May Respo nd To Pe

sonne PO Boll 45&lt;4 Gal po s
OH45631

Orival$:

EARN $25 000 I~ 000/y Mod
ca Insurance B II RQ Needed lm
mediately! Homo COmpu or Ned FREE Internal 1 800 291
4683 Dept 1109
Earn Ext a Income Pa t I me
Cafe ng Flex b e Sehedu ng
We T a n No Eltpe ence Nee
essary oa~ &amp; Even ng Events
Appl ca on Accepted At Studan
Cente Annex Bu ld ng At Un
verslly 01 R o Granda (740)245~EOE

Earn up To S3~ In ana day lilY
te You F lends To Your Home
fo A P OftiSiOOI Picture Party
Wo P ovldt CIOih no And Jowe ry
Cal 1 800-426 8363
E1pa tonctd Ad Pro Wanled Top
Comm u on Anywhere Fo
Phone In orvle¥t Cal Ryan 1-800475-8000
F.loor Superv ao AN Position•
avatablt pa I lime/ days or tvtn
no• Bt• ala of S14 oo an hou
w lh •-linea pay 1 25 1h n
d Ita entiat tor evon ngs $ 50 lOr
m dn ghta Attendance bonus
ava able many ext 11 Ptea11
can Scantc H a AI (740)446-

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent ncome Easy c a ms
p oceuing Ful tra n ng Home
PC required Cat Ptlys c a" &amp;
Hee tttcare Dave opments to t--f ee
f 8011-772 5933 Ell 2070
CDL A Or vers Expe enced In
exper anced West Coas Ava 1
able 0 ea Pay M ea Beneflla
Tranapo ta on Lodg ng nc uded
COL Tra n ng Ava able Ca 1
600 348-1380

local Jackson County: WV
Company I&amp; Now Conduc ng n
lervltwa Fo Fu ~~ me E•pe
onctd CNA Pos tions
$$$$ gn-Up Bonus$$$
Wagoo Coff¥&gt;01 vt Many Sene
I o Ava tabla Make Tht R ghl
Cho~• Co Fo You Conf danlla
Today 'lbtl Bt Glad
You Ddt
304 273-5893
o Stop n &amp; See Us

,..,.taw

110

Help Wlllted

RN and LPN lor 100 IJtCI lk lltd
nurs na facil ty Eree tent start

...... -and ............

Opportun ty to wo k • th excep
tional team Applications should
be oubmilted to RocMpringl R•
hab litatiOn Center 36759 Rock
sp ngs Road Pomeror Otto
4~769 or can and contact Kl r
~ RN D&lt;octar ol NUf1ing
a1 140 992 6606 Equa Oppoo
tun ly Employer Encourag ng
WOr&gt;plaoo OiiiOI1ily

l censed Practica Nu ses (LPN}
Fo Full And Pa It me Woril: In A
14 Bed Long Te m Ca e State
Fac y Extens ve Benet t Pack
age Includes State Ctv Serv ce
Ae ement Can Earn Up To 15
Oa~s Vacat on , 8 Days S ck
Leave And 13 Days Pa d Holl
dava Per Yea Fo FuU-t me Em
p!Qyees Sa ary 9 Commensura e
W th Expe enoe Contact Sandra
Re mue DON At Lak n Hospita
lak n WV al (304)675-oatlO E11
124 Monday th u Friday Sam
4pm lak n Hosp a s an EEO

M EJ11)1oyer
Loca Company Need ng Day I
Ntghl nmo Ortvtra RO&lt;lul&lt;amtnts
Pune1uar on Po te C ean We
G oomed Anyt me (740)441

ROUTE DELIVERY DRIVER
Fo loca Area
Full &amp; Part
limo ~ Bastd Pay Pos t ons For
Mo vated
lnd
v dua s £xpe MnlCe Not Naces
sa y But W llli a n Flex ble
Hou s And Some Weekends
RaqUi&lt;td COL ~~~ Nol Rtqu ed
Call Mr C ne 1 IOGs.ts-4423

WORK FROM HOME
U"""l- Corr1JuiOr1
1350-$850/wk.
-~.com

Bualnna
Training

140

Oall-.,ole CarMr Collegt
(Ca oors CioN To Homo)
Cell TOday17-7
1-800-214-04~

Reg t90-0S.12748

150

School•
Instruction

9390
local public health ag.ncy nHds
the 11rv cea or a dent at to H ve
unite lneured and uninsured Pll
lltnlo Our o111ct hos dtnto
fCIUipmtnl and otofl Nlary tQUI~
no $80,000 po year p ua btntflts
and pa d holidays Pllaot conlaCI
the Oral Heallh coord naror 11
740-992-

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Camp thtntlvt 11
lordlblo - . Study logo! 1n1 n
lng olnco 1UO Frat co.. tog I
800 121 8228 PO BOX 7014411
Dllllt TX 75370 or hllp II

---

180 WanllMITo Do
B&amp;B ConalrUC1fon- Roofing Skftng
And Concralo ln,.rlor I Ex,.rtor

PaintingFor"''A- Free Ea01 mate
Fitpairs
Ca
(304)875-7738 Aller 5:00pm
Babyalll ng In my homo nfant lo
p etchoo prefe ed alate cartl
foacl Clll740-9!121877
Secre a y Position

Qua t cat ons Applicants Must
Possess
least A Four Yea
n Educat on Or

And Have A
Ce t flcata
Must
l cense Be
W Hng To -.;ave (Re mburoed) In
The Gall a Me gs Se v ce A ea
On A Dail~ Bas s And Travel
OUtside Tht AIM W h l n Out as The Educal on Spec a &amp;t
W I Aso o Ager)cy Cu&amp;lomera In
Utliz ng Services Ava table
Th ough The Loca Wo kfo ce
Dave opmen Sys em Th s W
nc ude P ov ding And Or A
ang ng Fo The Fo ow ng Se v
ces Assessment Test ng Re
mad at on Tu or ng Academ c
En chmen And Related Servk:
as The Educat onal Spec al sl
W I A so Ass sl Otho Slall In
Provld ng General Wo kfo ce De
ve opmen Sa v ces The Educa
t ona Spec al st W Wo k P
ma y Wlh Youlh (Ages 14 211
But W A so Be lnvo ved W lh
Se v ces To Adu 1 And D s ocat

Ava abe HousAeSOOamTo
4 30t:~m 32 Hou a A Week Qua
f cal ons A e Typ ng Sk IS
Know edge or M crosolt Works
6 o And Excel Des red Tra ta
A e Strong 0 gan zat or'lal And
Communlcat on Skil s Responal
b t es W Include Schedut ng
Duties for Nur&amp; ng StaH We Offer
Compatt ve Wages Benefits
Package Include&amp; hea th Ca e In
su ance 401 K Bonus Days
C ed Un on Vou May App yIn
Pe son AI Seen c H s Nu s ng
Cane 311 Buckrldge Road 9 d
wei Oh o (Behind the Spr ng va
aey C nama) Monday Through F
day 8 4 30 Ca (740)446 7150
For Mo e nforma 10n

Needed Elllper enced c,ew fo
Se 1ng and F n sh ng Sect ona
HousJno Send P telrig Info matlon
and eKper ence to Southe n
Homes PO Bo• 629 Jackson
OH45840

ed Worke Customers Pos ton

w

Be Based AI Ga pot s Or
CheSI1ira
This Is A Temporary (S 1 Monlh) Pos on ava tab e In ve y faet
Pos t on W th An Expected Sta 1 paced off~• able o handle mull
Date Of Ea y June The Possib
pta la6l&lt;s a1 one mo type at ~asl
y 0 Cont nua on On A Pe ma
35 wpm cus ome serv ce a
nent Bass Does Exist
must Send esume C/o The Da I)'
Sen! no P 0 BoK729 05 Pome
Appl cot ons Mus1 Submll All 01 oy Ohio 45769
Tho Follow ng A Resume A
Completed GMCAA Appllcal on
And A Copy 01 The Teach ng
Cert f cate 0 License App ca
ton a May Be Obta ned And Sub
m ned At The Follow ng Loca
1ons App ca ons May A S() Be
Obla ned By Cat ng (740)387
7342 E1l 27 Oo (740)992 6829
Ell 27

Oh o Oopartment Of Job I Fam ~
Sarv ces 455 Buckeye H s
Road Thurman OH 45685

_,._

Appllcat ons Must Be Race vtd
by 4pm Monday May 21 2001

Cloollla-llalgo Community
Equa Opportunily Employo

Ohio

Bllt 3234

Governmen Posta Jobs
UpTo$1835/H
H ring tor 2001
BtntiiS/Pinson
-888-726'9083 Ext 2000
7am 7pmCST
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Wo k f om hamel Ma o
de E Comma ce $522+ week PT
$ 000 $4000 wk FT 800 921
8538 www d aam2b ee com

Davids Genera Contractors
Plumb ng Efectr c Pa nting

Decks
Mise
Wo k
Call
(740)258-9373 0 Colt Phona 1
304-833-6265

SOCIAL WORKER/
ADM SSIONS &amp; MARKETING
Ove b oak Cen e s now accept
ng esumes for he pos 100 of D
ecto of Soc a Se v cas Adm s
s on and Ma kat ng Cand dare
mu&amp; possess st ong ve ba and
w tlen commun ca on sk Is
Med cad Med ca e a nit MOS
knowtedge anlt ma kat ng sk s
(both nte nat and exte nal) LSW
w h elCpe ence n Long Te m
Ca e p efe ed bu not equ ed
Qua I ed Cand aa es pUJase con
ac Cha a B own Admn 9 ato
at 333 Page S ee M dd epa t
Ohio 45760 740 992 6472
STAY HOM&amp; Moko I$$ FREE
nfo ma on t 888 717 827 o
WWW 1 Oad25UCC8SS com

URGENTLY ~~EDED p asma
donas ean$45 o$60f0f2o 3
hou s week y Ca Sea Tee 740
592 6651

Repa ng Lawn Mowers And
Sma
Eng ne P ck up And
Deliva v Ava lab t Fo Quality
Serv~e Cat (740)4411'-7604

BuaiMU
Oppottunlty

They lllough11 wu crazy 10 qun
my jObt 1 now ••rn S100K plus
Frtt audio .... , _ ,
reveals details 24 h loll f ee 1
---.1931

WORK FROII HOIIEI Ea n
5500 57 OOO/mon1h PT/FT Fu I
Training Free laformat on Cal
I 212-812-5490

--oom
230 Profeaalonal

services
S FREE CASH NOW$ lrom
-llhV lamilitl unlolclino mnoons
ot cto ars to help mtn miza the r
taxes wrne mmed a ety WINO
FALLS 3010 WILSH RE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
NIA90010

S$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash for emaln ng payfTIIInts on
Prope ty Sold Matgageol Annu•
Ileal Settlements! Immediate
Ouolaalll Nobody btats our pnc
es Nat onal Contract Buyers
(800) 490-0731 ell 101 www na

Mowing And Weedea lng And
Otha Ouldoo Work FREE
Estlmalos (740)258-8893 Or
(740)256-81163 LOIVI Massago

3 Bedroom HouH Bath &amp; 112
Hardwood Aooral Din ng
Room + PatiO- Gas Fwnaoel AJC
(304)675-11022

Count y Home 1 1 2 S o y 3
Bedroom 1 Batn On Six Acres
87% Completed Wilh Firep ace
And Sp ral Sial Cas&amp; On Pleas
•n1 Ridgt Rd $~ 000 (304)576
3156
Excdltnl Location On Route 160
Between Galllpol s And Holze~
Holpilal 3 Be&lt;trooms Balh Living
Room Family Room Kildlan With
App ances Full S ze Basement
24x24 F n shed Garage ax 1 0
Wood Slo aQo Bu ld ng C A &amp;
Gas Heat Excellent Ne gttbor
hood Too Much To Menllon
Ready To lolovo lnlo CaU For Appointmont (140)"46-9508

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES!
to OR LOW OOWNI T"X
REPO S &amp; BANKRI!I'TC ESt OK
CREDIT FOR LISTING CAll 1
aoo-~1 1m ell 9813.
2 Bedroom 1 Bath Ofr K ne
Road $750 Down Easy Term

Cal David 01-8Q0.333-6910

A Counl y Crafllman Sl tpp ng
Ref nlsh ng Can ng Repa ra &amp;
UQhclllory Como Sot OUr Show
Room 1II% 011 Slrlpptng. Slalnlng
Rein oiling Chon (304)743-1100

Aouta 7 Sou h Newe Larger
Home Ve y Nice Consider
Tl1lda-ln (740)448-9988

CALLIClRAPHY BY LARRY 8
Park S raa1 W•pakontta Ohio
46888 (418) 730-2340 Cl aduo
tlon Wadding I on typos tnvlla
Ilona Addroutdl Calligraphy
Ltuono Taught by Appotnlmtnl
Dnfl&lt;

bath LR kllchen w th 1 eetric
ange centra air 740 985 3650
or 740-9112 2m

Co\SH LOo\NS 12000 $5000
Contolldltlon 10 $200 000 Bod/
No Credll Cre~ll Cords Mort
ooatt For tntormo1 on 1 800
335-7812, flll3822
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
O.A C From 12 500-$125 00019%
Average ,... One hour approval
Call FCC S lo frto 1 888 605
3378
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 1-8811-811-0902

DIYorca S1~

Blnlcrupley $1~
AclopUon $225
NOt do-H-yDUIItl-lcl1t

CAll 1-8Q0.303-1170
FREEinbmallonl
Btnkruptey IVa n TNIKY

Two car garage/apa tmtnl In
Middleport two bed ooma ful

320 Mobil* Homa•
for Sale

12150 Mob to Homo Now Klich
en New Bathroom New Floors
18x8 Covered Porch Cent a Air
$5 000 (740)441 9389
t•ll70 Scuttle n D earn tree De

very t oe Solup only $9995 1
888 928 3426
16 Wide 0" 1 $195 00 Per
Month 8 99% F xed lnteres Rate
W th A r And Unde p nnlng
1 888 928-3426
1970 12x60 mob a home 2 badoom $1 800 small deep eeze
siOrm doors m c owave 74Q-992

6833
1976 14x70 2 3 Bed oom lots
Of mp ovements me udes S ova
Refrige ato Porch Shed Fence
$7200 OBO 1304)875 3008 Any
ma (740)385-4277

PAY 0 , ALL MAJOR CREDIT
Co\llbs to ~% ol bolance II you
owe 1811 than 95% of c ad t mit
lhtre wNI be Ill' oul-ol packet ••
por!M Cll11-800-341 1188 t

1982 14x7o Fa mont Townhouse
2 bedroom large balh wllh htal
pump &amp; a c $7 500 740 591
4043 or 740-992 0938

Atduoe ........,. ..,......
Pay ont blllmonlh EASY 1o
QOIIIIrlld Ftnanclat-m
Chrtltlln eour-.g (800) 841
97~7

Ell CC3--0ill

(Ncn-Prolll)

1987 Clayton Mobile Home
14165 (740)245--5788
1994 Noo s 14ll70 2 Bedroom 2
Bath May.lag Appl ances t-leat

Pump Deck t14
9875

~0

(N0)245-

210

Bualnna
Opport14nlty

HNII--.aiOOin
tNI MDII~ Ia aubfed lo
Houolngla
ol1188wNci1-KIItQtl

1111-F*

-on ,_ -11&gt;
to_..

IOyfJII"'M . .

1at Time Home Buye s Prog am
Spec a F nanclng Ava labia
(304)755-~~

2 Doublewlde Fo ec:losu e s
eaay Te ms Very Sma Fee &amp;
Move n Oakwood Gall pol s
(740)446-3093

-~~~knowingly accapl

-1orreal811ate
which lo In vlololloo of lila
laW
htrolry

o..--...

CASH NNOW I
Tilt lnlt nils HOTIEST p Oducl
goes • at NO compeullon
NOBel ng
Prot s $1 000 $3 000/wk
1 888-804 6837

hibmtd .,.. .. ctnllllnQI
lltJertilld jn thll MWipoapet'
.,.. l\lalla~ on an equal

-"'""Yboato
REAl ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
SO DOWN HOMESI GOY T &amp;

Ea n $90 000 YEARLY epaltng
NOT ep ac ng Long c acka in
W ndsh elds F ee v deo 800
826 8~23 US Canada www g ass

BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDITI FOR LISTINGS CAll
1 80G-338-D020 ... 981 1

mechanx com

2 Sto y House On 2nd Avenue
New y Remodeled ns de Pr ced
Reasonable (740)446-3064

EARN you college deg ee
QUICKLY Bache o &amp; Mas era
Doe o ate by co espondence
baaed upon p o educat on and
sho 1 s u(ly "Cou se Fo Fee n
ro ma on bookie phone Cam
b dge S ofll Un ve s y 1 800
964 83 6 24 HAS

0

3 Bedroom Home 2 Bah Large
Ga age Rou o 588 1740)2455489 (740)288-«12

3 BA

bath older tramo homo on
929 or an acre detaened garage
5 mlloa o m c 1y $55 000 coun y
Wllar (740)448-0527

1113 Waoh no•on S
RllYOnswcod WV

PEPS COKEIFRITO
LAY
SNACK AND SOCA VENDINCl
ROUTE BE YOUA OWN lOSS
UALL Co\SH IUS NESSU IN
OAEAS! VOUA INCOME NOW
BMA'" NVIITMINT IXCn
LINT ~AOml 1 100 731 7153

Ill I

Yo~r l~1ln111

T041Y
lhopp ng Oen11r 1]1101
AVII Ull AI A!lordiD I Alii
~rlmt

IID~ng V•IIY "'" 0111~

4 btd oom hoult Pomo r11 good
homo oppro ud 127 ~oo co
740 7427403 lllYO mouogo

(140)~

Mob le home lot for r.nl n Mid
dleparl, 1125 por moolh 740-9112
3194

340 Bualneaa and
Buildings
w lh 2 commerc al
bUildingl bolh lusod one buildIng houses U S Poalal Serv ct
w lh 7 year tease 740 742 3304
lot for aale

-epm

Cilia 1&gt;\lildlng on Mlntrovllo 600

n lie covered park ng ca t
lng,., $300/mo 614-816-1881

IQ

350L01a&amp;Acreage

13 o\croo Wllh Boaulllut Ltkt
VIew S 101 $50 000 18 Acru
Wllh La go lake Mob to Home
Wllh Add On $79 500 Ga a
County On Blacktop Road
(740)318-8878
IIIUNER LAHil

7-11412

Otlllt Co Kerr Rood. 8 o\cros
121 000 Or ~ Acres Wllh Pond
125.000 Rio Grandt 8 Acrat
$19,0000r13-AcratAI
Doldond $26 900 ChtSh"' 6
Acrea. $11.500 Or 20 o\crol
$19.000 Clajl Townahlp
31
Acres. Bam + Stream $32 000
"iycoon LalUo AIM UBI Ona
1 4 - 113900
Mtlgo Co. T-11 Ptam
SR881 Nice High ~ Acr.. On
Shadt 112 000 or 31
Acres. $26 900 carr Road 8
Acres $12 000 Or 5 o\cros w th
Horae Barno 125 500 Da""'"
Nice Woodtd 5 Acral $13,500
Rulland 9 Acrat $8 500

Juol a tow of lht pome!S
ava lablo Col now lor maps and
Olhtr HUIIJSI Owner F nancing
Wilh Sllghl Properly Markup
Cemp
S los Fo Renl On Ka
nawhaRve 8mesfomPont
Pleasant a eclr c on y ~304)67!1
1722 1304)675-4144 After 5pm

onty 10 lolslefl. 304-736-7295

410 Houeee for Rent
1 Btdroom Hou$8 In Town 12751
mo $200 Doposl Roloranca Re
qui ed Abaotule y No Petst
(740)446 7795 From 9 4pm All&lt;
For Greg
2 Bedroom Homo Ga pots Area
$400 mo P us daposll And Role
encas NO PETS 1740)441 15 9
able June

1st In Pont Peasant (304)675

8833Aha Spm
BUV Fo eclosed Homes From
$10 000 Repo s ~ Bank uplcy s
For lsllngs 1 BOO 319 3323 E1t
709
condo For Rant North Myrt e

Sleeps 8

Beach

2nd Row

(740~7

Pllol P oaram Renlers Needed
304-738-1295

2 Bedroom 1 M Ia From Town
Ideal Fo 1 2 Paople Water &amp;
Trash Fu n stled No Pets Rent
$265 Dapoall $1~0 (740)446
0761

Forsaot&gt;yowne
SPECio\L DEo\L MUST SEE
Tra er and lol bO h 3 bed oom
new appl ances u nace anct nsida adono f11 sdlngwlh
add on room calh potca $12 000
trm Pomeroy cal740-742 7403
tave massage

490

ForLeaae

Btaulilul1600 Sq. Rtiloltd
2nd F oar Apartment In H stor c
District deal For Prorentona
Coup 1 All Modern Amen t es 3
Bedrooms Spacious Living 1 112
Balhs Roar Dock HVo\C. 1800.'
mo Plus Utilities S1curity And
Key Dtpolil No Poll Rala-1
Rtqu rod (140)441 442~ Or
(740)448 311311

I,IU1CHANDISE

Household
Goode

510

128 Ya ds 01 Mtdlum Taupo
Caopol I Pld No Ch ldren Only
Down
For 1Yr $8~0 00
(740)24Hm
App aneta
Reconcs toned
Waehef'l Drytrl Rangea Relr
gra1ora Up To 90 Days Cluar
anlltd Wt Sill New Mll)'UlO Appl anceo French C ly MayloG
740-448-1195
For Sa e Flecondll aned wash
era d yers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appl ance 3407
Jacklon o\venuo. (304)875-7388
Four Gal HOI Waler Healoro 3040 Ga lon In Good Condlllon
(740)448 ~
GOOD USED

APPLIANCES
refrlgeratq s
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78
v ne Sl 111 Call 74Q-448 7398
1 988-818-01211

wast~e

s

dr~ers

K ng MallrOIB Stl Plush P T
New In Package l Sl $1899 Sell
$599 Cal (304)36(H)233
Mo tohan Carpel 202 C ark
Chape Rd Porter OH Fru Eati
mallS Etly F nancong or 90 days
same as cash Visa Maste card
Acceplld (740)446 7444 or
877 830 9162
(304)875-1422
515 Ma n Slrael Po n1 Pleasant

On 5

f nal Days Na onw de lnveniOt"y
Rtduct on 304)736-3409

460 Spaco for Rent

-....
__ --.....
..
.......

Hugo '--Y Dlleouni Prieto
On Vinyl Sllo-Ung Doors W nd

ow Ancho • Water Heaters

Plumlling &amp; E-lcol P - Fow
ntcto &amp; Htal Pumpo Btnntlli
Mobile Homo SutJIIIy 740 4~
9418_..........,_

IIEW AIID USED STEEL Slot
Popo- fof C&lt;&gt;nctOII
Angle Channe Flat Ba Site
Grallng For Ora ns Drivew!IYI &amp;
Wolkwoyo. Now 55 Gallon Drumo
Willi LJd &amp; Rtng S7 00 Each l&amp;l
Scrap- (1401446-7300
PETCo\RERX COM Save up lo
50% on ALL pet medteaHons and
suw Its tnclud ng Htanga d In
te ~tor Fronllirte more FREE
SHIPPING Ordor online www Pel
CtrtRX oom 1 800-844-1427
AESIIENTIAL HOllE OWNERS

Tappan H Elf clency 90% Gas
Furnaces Oil Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condit on ng
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
BenntUI Heat ng &amp; Cool n11 1
800-872 5967 www orviJ com/ben

-

Sawmi S3 895 Now Super lumbe male 2000 araec capac lies
more options Manulactu a of
sawm lis edge s and sk dda s

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive Buffalo NY 1422~
FREE lnlormat on 1 800 578
1383 EXT 2011-U
Stan tY Home Products And
Fuller Brush AYIIIbfe To 0 dtr
Producli Or Roqutll Cata ogo
Pltlot Co (304).875 8903 "ny
lint
STeEL BU LDINGS Now Must
Sell 30x40x12 wu $10 200 now
$8980 40•80•12 was $18 400
now 110 871 50x100x18 w11
~90 now S18 800 60x200&lt;1f
wu
760 now ~2 990 1 800-

w

ua

406-~128;

STOP SWIMMING IN CHLO
RINEI Electronic copper/a ver
JOn Hr Non-chemica purtne cu s
chlorine 95'1. Five mode 1 for
pool/spa a arting S199 00 Cal 1
800 878 7439 www I tegua days
tamacom
To ng
870 20
Scope I
Tab 11
bt ger
Cadmus

Mota $50 Remington
Gauge With 2 Bar e 1
S ng $400 Now P~n c
S99 Each A v n He s
4789 Pat lot Road n

Waterl ne Spec a 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100 A B ass Com
press on Fittings In Stock
RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackoon Ohio 1-800-537 9528

550

Building
Supplies

3- STEEL BU LDINGS
241&lt;28 was $7990 oat S3 475
3Qx45 was $10 880 sa $5 800
501115was$30900 sa $12600
Can Del vart Greg (600)392-7806

3 bed oom molllle home fo
no pets 740-9112-58~

440

Apartments
for Rent

used
W ndow
Un t Air
Cond 1 onere 90 Day Guarantee

(740)886-7531 (740)868-0047

530

Antiques

Buy or se A ver ne Antique&amp;
1 24 Etsl Man on SA 124 E Po
me oy 740 992 2526 0&lt; 74Q-992
1539 Russ Moore owner

540 Mlscellaneoue
Merchandise
$0 DOWN HOMES
No Crodn OKI HUO VA
FHA. Cot tor Usllngs
1-1100-~11m Ell 9818
$1 000 BACK 2 Ton A 1 Cond
tone 2 Ton Coli 1 line Set In
alallod $2 295 $1 ooo Back
$1295 Not P leo F oo Eal mateo
Call For Quotes On Other S Zit
If Vou Don t Ca
Us We
Bolh Lose Mobllt Homto OUr
Spac ally 740 446 8308 800
291 0098
15x30 Above Ground Poo 4
Years 0 d G ool Shape Wllh
Accosoolftl (740)446-3697
AUTOS FROM $600.00
PoNCe mpounda I RtpoSI
Toyolee Ch,.Ys Jeeps
Ptaasa Cat tor lsi ngs
1 800-451 0050 E11 C9817

560

1 Btd oom Aportmonl All Ulll loa
lncludtd $275 monlh (304)675
3854

2 Bedroom Furnlatted Ut t 11
Included $400imo l m 1 01 2
Peope (740)367-0611

2 Bed oom Garage Apartment

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

•IBJ

111117 nil
snlces,
lfll estlle,

trMI

.....

Laken
fnnPa&amp;eB1

llltiiii!S.
undisclosed malady After a
1111
relaxmg day Bryant returned
to Sacr.nnento and fimshed
Wsll;ess his two-game vortuoso per
formance
lliillla,
It wasn t a d1stracnon at
all
Bryant sa1d
It puts
IIHSI!IIls.
thmgs m pcn;pecnve a htde
IIIIas . . bit more You understand that
thts ts JUSt a game The love
IIIUdl
that I have at home wtth my
wtfe means so much to me
l'ldl7511
It 5 mtportant that she stays m
good health It was a scary s1t
"" tMII. uatton
In other NBA playoff
games
Philadelph1a beat
Seallllel Toronto 84 79 and Charlott~
beat Milwaukee 85 78
San Antomo can advance
l
w1th a vtctory at home ag:nnst
Dallas on Monday
Bryant scored I 5 pomts m
the fourth quarter as the Lak
ers who won theu 15th
I
straight smce April 1 weath
ered a strong effort from the
f
Kings and advanced to face
I
the wmner of the San Anto
f
mo Dallas senes
hot at the nght
D orneWeandgotwent
through the
first round and the second
round and the next round ts

---.,.

.._
The

Dally

c

8

s
s

640

Tollacco P ants 0 de Now To
Gua an H Eo ty Spr no P an nga
Increase AI orments Mean Ex a
P ants Thank You Fo Your Bus
nan Call Danny Dewhurst
Leave Message (304)89~ 3140
0 (304)895-3189

Btagle pups 6 Wuks 0 d Shots
&amp; Wormed Tr co or (304)675

TRANSPORTATION

8838

570

710 Autoa for Sale

Musical
Instruments

NOBODY S FATHER CD by Ko
v n Jones Mary chap n Ca pen
te &amp; Ace Sm th guest On 111
m com cduntverse amason etc

SO DOWN CARS POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MO 24 MO S 019 9'l'o FOR
LISTINClS CALL 1 800 451 00~
ext c-98 2

Plo\NO So\LE
1988 0 ds Cutlass Clo a ClOOd
Many To Choose F om $495 Cond I on Good T es $1400
And Up Hunt ngton P ana Inc (740)245-5572
{304)~5--5382

580

1989 Cadi lac Sedan Dev e
(304)875-7887

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

~omos

US W EaSI Athens Oh

Lo mode clea ance one 2000
sec ana save $9 825 ro 2000
mode snges 5paownadsn
g es must go by May 3 no ea
aonable offe efused heae
homea won as ong so s op n
and check us out we e dea ng
Co e 1 Mob e Homes A hens
Oho Open MW 97 ThusFr

s-6 sat o-s:

Chrtily 1 Fomlly L v ng, 33UO
Now l ma Ad Rulland Ohio 740742 7403 Apa lmtnt home and
1r1 ler en a 1 Comme clal atore
Irani&amp; ava abtt for 11111 Vacan
ciea now
Fu nlohtd 2 &amp; 3 Room Aps 1
man 1 11n NO PolO No Smok
tng Rtft tnctt I Dtpooll Ro
qu rod
Ut Ill to Furnlohtd
(7401448-1 518

c

no

G ac ous v
1 end 2 bedroom
apartment• at V age Manor and
A ve tide Apa tm1nt1 In M ddle
po• F om 1278 1348 Coli 740
1182 ~4 Equal Houatng Oppor
lun tlt1

The Laken won even With
out a strong contnbutton
from 0 Neal who fouled out
With 3 09 left after getttng 25
pomts and 10 rebounds
Bryant earned Los Angeles to
vtctory m Game 4 oflast sea
sons NBA Fmals m Indiana
after 0 Neal fouled out and
he did It agam m Sacramemo
Bryant earned the Lakers
offenswe load woth ease and
flaar blowmg on h1s hot
shootmg hand durmg one
parucularly mtpresstve sec
ond h.tlf stretch of JUmpers
and dnves He had 28 pomts
after halfnme
The Lakers got 20 pomts
from Derek Ftsher but they
conlmued to rely on the1r
superstar duo for the bulk of
theor offense Whole 0 Neal
was lmnted by a steady stream
of defenders and double
teams Bryant dormnated hos
matchup wllh Sacramento
defenstve
stopper Doug
Chnstle
Rookie Hedo Turkoglu
scored 22 pomts as the Kings
best season m two decades
eqded With a standing ovation

Allen Iverson nailed a 3
pomter wtth 2 21 remaimng
to break the last ne and vmt
mg Philadelphaa came up
wuh enough of a balanced
attack to beat Toronto
The 7 6ers evened the best
of. seven senes at two g:ontes
apiece and regamed home
court advanl:lge headmg mto
Game 5 Wednesday mght
Game 6 wtll be back m
Toronto on Fnclay
Aaron McKie the NBA s
stxth man of the year moved
mto Philadelphia s startong
~neup and had 18 pomts five
asmts and five rebounds He
also spent almost the entire
game defendingVmce Carter
helpmg hold him to 25 pomts
on 8 for 27 shootmg
Hornets 85, Bucks 78
Jamal Mashburn scored 31
pomts seven m a I 34 span to
gtve Charlotte an 82 72 lead
With 4 20 to pia~ as the Hornets evened the best of. seven
senes 2 2
Mashburn was I I for 26
from the floor and 9 for 9
from the hne

Motorcycles

740
992 Pont ac Granlt AM 4 d
ma oon wflan nt 139 000 mi es
nght side damago $1 .200
993 Pontiac Grand AM SE 4 d
b ue w g ay nt 25 79 actua
mites $3 500
1995 Pon ac G and AM SE V 8
4 dr green w/tan nl 74 002
mies mlno frt da~Mgo 12 300
995 lfonltac G and AM SE 4 dr
wh It wlda k g ay nt 82 758
..... 12600
995 Ford Taurus SHO 100 ooo
m es g een w gray n 5 apd
aunmot CD 13 500 080
995 Ford Taurus GL b ue
59 225 m as I rea quarter dam
age (pa ts a so avai same colo )
600
1994 Fo d Tau us Gl 06 705
m es g een w gray nl a bags
OK ght ea damage S 200
(parts also ava I same colo )
1992 Fo d Tauous l 83 45
m IS blue wlb ua nl ve y n ce
nt t ntecs w ndows f 1 bumpe
damage $800
1995 Ford Con1ou SE 4 do Y-6
blue wlgray k'll auto g "' eatne
n survoof 70 916 m les left side
damage S3 200
A.l (740) 992 1~06

CARS $29 MONTH POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REP OS HONDA S
C1-1EVY 24 MO S 0 19 9% FOR
l ST NGSI CALL 1 800 941
am EXT C9814
Dodge Stea h ES PW Pl CD
A arm $4495 OBO V 6 DOHC
24 Vave (740)245-5797

s

2000 Ha ev Spor ste 883 Hug

ge with t200 convers on lOaded
w th ex ras new cond kln $8700
740 949 2191

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
16 Foot A um num Ba~s Boa 40
HP Me cu y Mo o Ti'o ng Motor
&amp; A I E• as $2500 (740)379
2706

1977 Thunderb d 165 HP
lnboa d Ou boa d Mo o S2500
(740)446-9021
992 Playtime 24 Pontoon w 48
hp Ev n ude motor w th a acces
$0 es exce en cond ton 740

s

999 Dodge Dakola Spo C ub
Cab 41l4 V6 ExceMent Cond ion
A Powe 22 000 M aes Ca Alter
5pm (740)446-43 6

742 1007 afle SJ)m

82 F 100 Good Wo k T uck 3
Speed Runs Good $500
(3041675 8832
92 Fo d F i~ 6 Cyl nde Looks
Good Runs G eat Firs $4600

Ge sl

740)441-0682

96 Oodgo Oakole V 6 5 Speed
Ask ng $4850 7401256 738 0
(740)256-6200

A.ulomaUc
$3295
994
Cava
e
$2895
HOMEGROWN STRAWBERRIES
McKean Fa m 5!56 OentAna y 1993 Cavata Fou Doo 12385
1995 s 0 54295 1995 s 10
Road Ga po Is OH Phone $4495
1996 S tvooado 414
1740)446-9442
E• endld Cab I 3 900 COOK
MOTORS (740l&gt;144H1103
0 ganlc pu p~e asparagus cal o
1993 Cava e 4 Cylinder Auto
ease o de at v gil s Be ~
AIC Pl CD 134 000 Millo Aak
Patch lilt of Sy acuse on SR
ng $3600 080 (304)576 2092
124 Also Cub Cadellractor wllh
plow mowe &amp; cui vato
0
1993 Shadow 88 000 M oa, 5
horae 740-9927449
spood 4 Cyttndtr $800 OBO
(740 258-1233
I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

76ers 84, Raptors 79

Budget Priced Tranaml11 on•
A Types Access To Ove
10 000 T ansm ss ons Tans e
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce

339

3765

790

Campers &amp;
MotorHomas

...

Av on ie
New A.
Cond one Awn ng &amp; Upho s e y
Good Cond lion (740)446-3438

1994 Thunderbird 1 Ownt low
'miles ga age Kept Excellent
loaded
$6 800
Condll on
(304)875 7~
1995 Muslang 8 Cyl nda 3 8 5
Spatd la~o Rod 78 000 MHos
$7300 F m Call Alter ~pm
(304)882 2030

Cham 318 14 long G ada 80
$15 00 Each 8 ndo o 3 a A so
112 112 50 Each {7401245
9318
Compute 1 WE FINANCE DEll
COMPUTERS Evon w lh ess
lhon portae! c od II 1 800 477
9018 COde AC20 www omcao u
ttoncom
Etectr c Hosplta Bed Mattress &amp;
S de Ra s Looks &amp; Worto;s Good
11~ (304)773 51~

13001 Mon h S300 Dapoall Plu1
UtI ttl Rete tncea Required
(740)448-3111
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES ~2 WUIWOOd
D 110 I om $297 10 $383 Wa k 10
ahop &amp; movtts Call 740 448
2~ Equa Housing Opportunlly

nghtn~

from thetr grateful fans Pep
StoJa~c silenced by Rick
Fox the rest of the senes had
26 pomts and Vlade Dtvac
added 18 pomts and I 0
rebounds

1992 Be et a V6

Card of Thanks

Fo d 2000 Tracto Fo
$4200 Ca 740)258--86e3

Sale

wentto n
Meta- County Sherllla
O.pariment far ihe

au-nful mining
pareon M•rch for
630

Livestock

RuihC RoM
Sincerely Kenna5h G RoM

Located 2nd Avenue Galllpols

Lo model clea ance save up o
$8 525 w th any home check us
ou wee dea ng Coes Mob e

gomg to be very chaUengmg
for us Shaquille 0 Neal S3ld
It looks like we II play San
Antoruo and they re probably
the best team m the league

Hay &amp; Grain

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Pets for S.le

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fu
niahed anlt unlurn shed securiW
dapoal equ ed no pets 74(1

9112 2218

Reels

Hoy &amp; B lghl W o Tie S aw Yaao
Round De ver~ &amp; Volume DJs
count Ava table He age Farm
{304)675-5724

New &amp; Ustd Fuon lure
New 2 Pece Lvng oom Sutel
$398 Buy Stl T.a~een Manresa Sel W tn Bran
Headboard New In Ptast c
$189 oo ca (304)360--0233

Cinonnaa walud a se:uon-high 10 batters
but none of diem scored
The ~ loaded the bases wtthout sconng
m the fifth and seventh mmngs and stranded
mne runners m sconng pouaon ownll. They
fd
relax and stay smooth he $31d I ve kind of couldn t do anything after the1r b1ggest first
mrung of the season
•
been reachmg for everything
We cant expect them to score e1ght runs a
....
The Amos didn t have to reach far for
n'r Sin Browers pttches
mght wd Bottenfield (2-2) We have as
lll.e
~He got the ball over the rmddle of the mu ch offensive talent as anybody m the
IIi Ill 11, plate manager Bob Boone wd Those guys league but the.., s got to be good pitchmg
too We re seemg some of that
jeaeli" are gomg to hit that."
Bottenfield making his second sl:lrt smce a
1•1 ll7ij
Once Bro\WOr left the game the Astros
two
week snnt m the bullpen gave up three
..-,
couldn t h1t anyone else and couldn t score
p nlrtl
despite a lot of help from the Reds bullpen runs - two earned - m 5 2 3 mmngs

s

Main Street Furniture

RENTALS

2 llodroom lralta wnh 01pando n
Tuppe s Plains $275 monlh plus
ullllln &amp; dtposil, 740 887 3487

Facto y Gool 32•80 $10 000 D s
count only $1000 00 Down Do
I ve y and setup pa d by Factory
1 800-891-8777

,...,.......... 740-7~ 7~

1 Aero Lo1 On Cora Mill Road
(140)24H788 Evtningl onty

AIIAZING lll e D No C edll
Nuded Spec a Government Fi
nanc ng (304)755 5885

B and New 2001 Daub flw de 3
Bed com 2 Ba h Cua om P ck
You Colo s On y $245 mo 0
Oakwood Gall polls (740)446
3093

Tllin - - - OWijJiing
""'atiCiiS b' 1 BR.
HUO 11-lld opL b _ ,
W - EOH (304)1758819

Two bedroom apartment stove
rotngera10r ~ one bod
room apartment Pomeroy ttoVIf

6997

Won 1

Ta a Townhouse ApartiHnt&amp;
Very Spac oua 2 Bedroom• 2
Floorl. CA. 1 112 111111. ,.., car
pttocl AduM Pool I a.by Pool
Pat o Stan $365/Mo No Pela
lttM PIUI Stcur11y Dtpollil 111qu~red
Days 740 «I 3411
e... ngo 740 387 0~02 uo
446-0101

Opdon I Bam 8uildingt
With 86 Acres For S 129 900
Opl""' :t Includes Evorylh no
In Opl on 1 plus Pas1ure Pond
And A Tolll 01 120 Aaws Prlcod
AI $189 900 Shown By Appoinl
ment Only Call Even nga

420 Mobile Homea
for Rant

colo( rtlgion

Thlt nto papat wiN not

ACT NOW OWN A COMPUT
EA? Put llo wok Tollreo 877
320.2345 www KashDo com

97 Qakwooct 3 Bedroom 2 Balh
Hoal Pump Aak ng Poyol P ce
loan to Assumab e (740)256

Mmllallon ordilerlm-n

tiXIamjlol-.aor nallonal
origin Ill ony.
moiUIII"'f lucll fill"'&amp; ICe

FARM FOR SALEI We Have
Moved And Are Setung Our
Farm. 3 Bedfoom Homo Hao High
Ctilings Qak Tnm And A Largo
k Iehan Bu ld ngs Include A
Large Barn And Garage Exeattoni Location Near R i o -

a Bedroom Home Alo'a

28180 3 0 4 Bedroom Only
$345 00 Per Monlh 8 99o/o F Ked
lniOFOSI AaiO I 888 928 3426

FINANCIAl

330 FlinU for Salo

Don I Have land? We DoIll Hu ry
1981 Nashaua Mob e Home
t4x70 2 Bedroom 1 Bath 0 n ng
Room Heat Pump F on Ptlrch w
Root (304)578-40 6

WAY OUT 07' DUTI

Elll9121

look ng To Buy A New Home?

NEED o\N EAR~ PAYDo\Y?? Up
10 s~oo nolanlly by phonal 1
877 EARLYPA¥ l cf 750005 1&amp;1
AO'Io\NCE FREEl

TUIIHED DOWN DN

Massage Therapist Accepting
Cllen s Come To Vou Home And
Pract ce Swad sh Massage
(304)614 1439 (740)446-1916

310 Homes for Sale

ttonalcX&gt;nlrac1 oom

IOCIAL SECUIIITY /Sa?
NO Faa Unlatl We Wlnl
Hl88 682 3345

IX'!' 2103

A Ul QOO ptr ~llr Clrtlr No
llonal Trtntpor!ll on lmlott
nud! ~river lrt nttt NOW! 1t
-lr 00~ hOVII!!IIIII'U I nolva

210

Free Mane~ Nowt Its Truel No
repayment Gu•ranteect For pe
sonal needs edueat on bus
naso 1-800 724-6047(24hr)

Sale&amp; Person
Fu I T me Bane
f &amp; Fiala I Expe ence P efe ed
Apply A l es ye Furn u e No
Phont Ca 18 App y In Pe son
856 Ttl d Avenue Ga po s

Governmtn1 Jobe $11 00
$33 oo pe hour potent a Pa d
T ain ng Fu Bener 11 Fo mo e
nformat on ca 1 888 874 9t50

Ch tdcart In My Homo Ctoao To
RoosiMIU School L nk Payments
Aecepled Call lisa (304)67~
6884

!NOTICEI
OH 0 VALLeY PUBLISHING CO
ecommands that you do but
ness w th people you know pnd
NOT to send monl)' th ough lhe
ma I unt you have nvest gated
heottertng

Ga • Mo ga Communlly Acllon
Agency 8010 N Stale Route
Cheshl o OH 45620
Be Your ONn Boas

67~~~

Case Managemen1 Position An
OUipiMn! alcohol and doug
eounse ng agency located n
Ga Ia County ts seeking a case
Manage to wo k w th adu s
and adolescen s p ov d ng
sc un ngs evaluahons •ntakes

110

71~

R ck Ptaraon Auct O!" Company
full lime auctronet compete
auct on
strv ce Licensed
t880ho &amp; WaiiVrgna 304
773-5715 Or 304-773-M47

Wanted To Buy Ustd Mobllo
Homo Co 740 448 017~ Or 304

HelpW.m.d

STOP RENTINGII OWN FOR
LESSI $0 or Looo Down Ok C...
fof llsdngo Call HIIJCI-501 1m

Tokloo ~ 35
Wast 2 Bedroom Townl\ouea
Apar-11 lnctlldeo Wllet
Sewago Truh $350/Mo 740
448-0001

_.

$250

FREE

~0

OF GROCERIES l m

ted to I tt 100 ca • Te Fr tndl

and Famt~t800-4211-4397

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS
Manufactu tr ottera 1 two week
IUPPI~ or colostomy o uroatomy
brand name product• w th ont
otmp 1 phone ooll No ob galiono
Col 100 75s-7860
GET SEXV FOR SUMMEAI Loot
3-5 ba wttk~ Quaronlttd Con
trot crev nga lttl grea Burn '-'
qu ok y On y •19 8~ COOS
phontohtcl&lt;l credit cards 1
800-~0988

Qrubb 1 Ptono Tun ng &amp; Ropako
Probltmo? Nttd Tuntd? Col Tht
P eno D 74D-4411-4525

0101

eel no YQironl ... 1r1otor 1r111r

!rlllln no 1•NI711 lllf

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rtpt lid Now l Rtbu I n Slock
Cot Aon e.... 1 BOO 53711528

3 AOHA Horoos $1~00 Each
One 200 CoM $700 Dna APHA
3Yoa OdSud 80Deya,;sn
no s2soo (740)245-0370
4 H And FFA C ub Ptgo Hamp
Yo k &amp; Du oc C oss (740)388
9033

Tha fllmlly of Cacll
Ro~C~barry wlghllll to
fh4nk e1111ryona for tha
fiOWIIHl food Cllrd•
thought1 ~nd pr~yar1
during the 1011 of our
lo1111d one. !:poclal thanlclt
to Dr Douglu Uuntar
and Joe Rou•h and
Rouch a ~unatal Uome.
Alco apaclal thanlclt to
tho ladl111 of tho
!:onchlna Cit·clo for all
thalr halp ~ftor lha
eatvlcaa Out du!JGII
~ppttclatlon to all thoaa
who ehared their tlrna and
rnomotlac with ue thy
God bla11 you aach ~nd
avaryona
Dotolhy Rocabotty
chlld111n and
g,.ndohlld111n

93 Shadow \1 6 5 Speed Cus
om Whee s $2000 95 Neon

80K 5 Speed $3000 88 KOSO
$350 (740)446-2247

740

97 Honda Cvc LX 41t slve
key ess en y powe everyth ng 5
sp sunroof good gas mi eage

1982 Honda Go dw ng Aspen
cade ch orne and ghts 33 000
m es good cond on $2600
740 742 3800 afte 5pm

e a $10 300 ask no $9 300 740
742-3 4

97 Me cury Sabta Wagon 58 ooo
M es Exce lent Cond on $9 900
{740)258- 425

Motorcycles

1997 Honda 300EX Exce en
Cond ton Lo s Of EK as Ask ng
12600 (740)44 0 82 A e
5 30pm
1998 Honda 750 Shadow C ass c
8 000 M es Exce en Cond on

$4500 (7401367 nso

110 Help Wanted

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Manaoer We are currently
seeklno to fill over 100 positions. No
exp. necessary. Eam up to $15/hr
Very ftexlbleschedullno Both f/t and
p/t avail. MedlcaVDentai/Pd
vacatlon/Momt opps avail for f/t.
Call today, start tomorrow
1-888-974-JOBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU•
COG Management LLC

94 Dutchman Campe Expando
Room
A
Cond on ng
740)441-953

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

810

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond 1ona tel me gua an ee
Loca ete ences turn shed Es
ab Shed 975 Ca 24 H S 740
446 0870
800 287 0.576 Rag
ers Wa e p oaf ng
Gene a Home Man
enence Pant ng v ny s d ng
ca pentry doo s w ndows baths

C&amp;C

mob e nome repa and mo 1 For
fee es ma e ca Che 1•0 992
6323
L v ngs on 1 Buement
P ooflng a buemen
!tone f ee t9 mates
gua a rttee 14y s on Job
oneo (304)895 3887

Wa e
epa a
fet me
expe

Roof ng &amp; Sma Flapa a 14
Yea s Expe ence Fu Guar
anteed And
lnsu ed F ea
E1llma ot (140)245--934

Electrical and
Refrigeration

840

I

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

I

CLASS F EIDSI

�• ••

.

...

.. . ....

""' ... "

.

.

Monday, U.y 14, 2001

Monday, May 14, 2001 •

Pomeroy, Mkklleport, Ohio

i

The Dally s.rtinel • hge ~

ALLEYOOP

REA Croaaword Puzzle
PHII.IJP

ALDI!R

UNDA'S
PAINTING
of~- Let

...
®iJfo•you"

lnteriol'
FREE ESTliiATES

Aft.-6,.

740..985-4180

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

R H11pp A&lt;J&lt;'rll
Buv 1 PI)

,...

.COIJU!lnAndStt
·connie Or

AU Makes 'l'rldor &amp;

740 -992 -1101
or 992 -2753

EqolpmeathrU
Factory A11tllorbed

. CaR-IHhrU
Deafen
1000 St. Rt. 7 ~
Coolvtl,., OH &lt;f6123

•. ....

,. .,

Public: NaCica Ia Nn•apaJiJCn.
Your IUpt to Katnr, Dellnml Rlpt to Your.

. YOUNG'S

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Sea lad btda lor
painting lhl-rtor ol
the Court Houae
ahould ba aubmlltad
to the Commlnloners'
Office no later than
10:00 a.m., May 24,
than will ba opened
and I'NCI aloud during
tha
regular

eom..-.-•

IIIMIIng. P-gtvea
breakdown of quote

•• foltowa:

1. Wood Surfacea:
011·- paint
2. 8rlok: CINnad or
acrapad· M..onry
Palm
3.
Wlndowl:

•New Homes
•Garage~

•Com"'...
, .....v

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Public Notice '

Caulked •• needed
and painted
.
4. Dome: Gold top
5. Soulfata, fiCII
ondAlao, pi- Include
1 copy of your
lnaurance bond with
btd, the number or
yaara your work Ia
guaranteed, and the
grade of your ·
matarlola .
Any
quaallona can ba
dlractad to lht Mtlga
County
Commlaalonera, Court
Houae, 100 Eaat
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
or cell 740-892-2118.

• Rom~ Addlllona &amp;

Romodellng

• NewCll-

• E-lcoll a Plumbing

• Roofing &amp; Outtora
• VInyl Siding &amp; l'lllntlng
• Polio ond Porch llocka

Free Estimates

V. C, YOUNG Ill
992-6215

- ·"""

Adverti~e

your
message

SYRACUSE SMALL
ENGINE DOCTORS
• 1358 College Rd.
740·992-0122
Master Certified Tedlnkians
Over 23 yraup.
All wortc gu1rantttd
Service &amp; parts
available.
Special tha nks to Lyle

$8.00.column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

.
Reds

while tagging up on a fly out and was
thrown out trying to steaL Dmitri
Young also was thrown , out trying to
from Pap 81
stretch a hit into a double.
- All of the mistakes prevented the
bullpen. Cincinnati · walked a sea- Reds from overcon1ing Brower's poor
son-high 10 batters,.but none of them start.
" It was a bad time for a bad game,"
scored.
The Astms loaded the bases without · Brower said.
·
scoring in the fifth and seventh
Notes: Astros pitching coac h Bun
innings, and stranded nine runners in Hooton missed the game because his
scoring position overalL They couldn 't sister-in-law died. He will rejoin the
do anything after their biggest first team Tu.esday.. .. Julio lugo led off the
inning of the season.
game with a homer, the Astros' first
"'We can't expect them to score eight leadoff homer of the season. .. . The
runs a night," said Bottenfield (2-2). Reds have scored in 199 consecutive
"We have as much offensive talent as games, an Nl record and the third- ·
anybody in the league, but there's got . longest streak all-time . ... CF Ken Grifto be good pitching, too. We're seeing · fey took batting practice before the
game, but is still a long way from
some of that."
Bottenfield, making his second start returning from a torn hamstring. .. .
since a two-week stint in the bullpen, larkin was out of. the lineup because
gave up three runs - two earned he felt tenderness in his groin while
in 5 2-3 innings. Mike Jackson pitched running out a grounder Saturday
out of a threat in the eighth, and Billy night. He came in at shortstop as part
Wagner struck out Barry Larkin with a of a double switch in the seventh . ...
.runner on second base to end it and OF Deion Sanders, hitting .219, was
get his eighth save in nine chances.
out of the lineup for a second c·onsecDonnie Sadler had a career-high utive game since his misplay in center
four hits for the Reds and scored field set up a loss.
twice, but got thrown out at third

Gem: Duker. Auro Valve,
&amp; all our loyal
customers&amp;. friends.
Ould09r Pow~r

Howardl.
Wrltesel
R9oflng • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

Spout
Fret Eltlllllln

949-1405

~

...

.

~

IID•I!III • umm• Gnvel Sand •
Thpsclu • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bul..ozer Servl...

591~11

,.

'•

"We Service All Makes"

Warner Heating &amp; Cooling, Inc.
Under new ownership It Is now

---------

'WIIelbn VaiWIIIII Products" • All Ollaln SJock

~

I

EMPL.OYMENT
:APPL.IG.ATION$

•&lt;

..
•

I

lhls Month's Special 1
011 a.111111P to lllbJ 1111te1' I 1.11111

. .,,.s

F.RANK &amp; EARNEST

I
I
II .

Ucen8ed • l118urecl
Tnone • Jenltrol • Thennel Zone • Lennox
Serving customers 11 years
G.ne &amp; Sherrie Fink, OWner
Toll Free 1-886-913-6595
.
.

I

"

'

I

FW. TMI! IUCIWO: Oolllln" • e- AIWYia • SIKMUZIII H""'

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blinch are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF

• Verticals • Wood
• Minio •·Etc
144 TWrd AYI. Mpols

'446-4995

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storngc

740·992-5232
Pdlmo.

KENSINGTON

Raelnt, Ohio.

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE ·
SUMMERTIME HEAT

45771

OUT AND WINTER

29870 llahiR ROlli

I~ R.EC£0\t'IG&gt;!

~?&lt;~

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy,_Ohio

TERRY'S ENGINE
AND AIR
COMPRESSORS
IT HA!'PENS TO
VE!t'l' SPECIFIC.

Complete Mobile
Repair on Lawn
Tractors, Mowers,
Tillers, Warranty
Repairs
1·866~299-4445
Toll Free

TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT tU%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PAICIIO

740-949·2217

t&gt;ESTIN.A.TION!

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

~~~d~1u~hfi~~s~t~~~

PEANUTS
'

''·
'

\f'OU LOOK KIND OF
SITTIN6 TI;IERE

'

16UE55 MAVBE I AM ..

Tf.IEREt5 NOTHING MORE
LONELV THAN SITTIN6 ON

A 8EHQl ALL 8'( VOI1R5ELF ·

•·

. WITHOUT A DOU611NUT..

,,'

• :,:a.a:.:. L ~ ~IF

,sr.......,
-•

Uald chclr

• Garden
....

2t .....
lllflnlhll 42 -01111011
22 Mill I
111CM 111111
23

I Author
Flll;tlt.

=

411alll

a.

b1W1
24 Tl~loland

43 T 44 "'(. .
--?"
44 Do 1t11nt1
47 ~of

n.:~ ~
'

of 25 =Ella ol 4l
27 1nc11n1t1on so Civil w.9 w..., or
a Gold
_..
2t Clothaa
S2 Rid
a
11
llnlar
IRICk
...
31 c-tgn
53 "MILydlvl"
Ida

.

=:r-

by·-.

'*""'-for..-.

1-"""TI-..1""·._,..13r-rl~~

:::·

wise, surely he would L-=~-~-==~-:::~have switched to that'r
p H 0 W 0 ff:,~
suit. Still, continuing
"Reform,• the teacher lectured,
4 ••
with his plan, after
I I I 1
"corrects· abuse while revolution
winning with dum- L-..._L--..1.-.L.-1.
. .J t
f
h
.---------..;rans erst e ••••• "
my's heart ace, declarFL E 8 A H
er played a spade to 1-.....,..;;.,.:...;;....;.:,.:..:.._-1
his ace, then ran the 1
S
0 Complele
one chudlo quoied
.
. . . . • 1
by lllling In the ..... -rdo
d tamond
six . to East's
you de•elap from llop No, 3 below.
10_ · Rigal ruffed the
heart exit, crossed to
PR~~s~urJ~!~~sLETTERs IN
I'
-dummy's spade king, :;~a·~~~~~~~;:=:;~=;:::;=~
ruffed a diamond,
u~~R~~B~N~~~~E LETTERS } I I I I I
bringing down the ,.
- · · • • ·
SCRAM-LETS ANSWIIS
king, led a c lub to
dummy's ace, and disCooler- Ripen - Haven - Tropic · POLICE CAR
carded his last club on
"Why are you driving so slow?" I quizzed my teenage
the established diason . "I was told to drive as though I was be ing followed
mond· jack -- mission
by a POLICE CAR "
accomplished.

I I I I 1

992-1717
.,.'

I'

8

I' I" .Is I

6

Advertise
In this 8PilC81
for$25 per
month

P/B

Nelson.

.llwllh

..-a

40

_W-rl-..--11

- • ._..,.... _ . -··~77

ago for his fourth consecutive major,
CONTRACTORS; IlK.
ELITE MECH.\NICAL CONTR.\CTORS
birdied seven of his first 13 holes .to
Racine, Ohio um
briefly pull into a share of the lead.
740-985·3948
Pap B1
After starting the day six strokes ·
COHCREif/BLOCIVBRICK
behind Verplank and Damron, the co• Footen, Walls. S1ep1 •
The real break for Damron came on · leaders after 54 holes, Woods got
Plot Work, , .
1·304-675-7814
......Z$0-9077
the 14t~, when he found a gap in the rolling from Nos. 6 to 12. He ~ad three
Repla~mentl, • Walkl
·
KSldeatial
CommercW
New Construction
trees just wide enough to clear the straight birdies, made a delicate chip to
ond Drl•n • Stencil
S....
Stnlee
llllllllalion
'
Cnte Fret EaUmota
water hazard and land in the bunker, save par and then had three more
Spedalblna In Shott Metal Ductwork
Servtna Ohio ond W.V.
setting up a routine par save instead of birdies.
"Tnno• s.Jei A Stnlce For
WV.031712
With a chance to take the outright
chipping out of the trees and likely
Gallla, Ma..; Ud Melp Coundeo
making a bogey.
. lead on the 13th, his 10-footer broke
Ll~ and Tlllllnd
WV 105176
Verplank thep chipped in from 20 just below the hole. He bogeyed the
feet on the 15th to tie Damron at 15 next hole.
Advertise In
Bring In your repair work
under, and they matched birdies on the
"What really hurt was the putt I
this
space·
16th - Verplank with a. I S-footer, missed on 13 to keep the run · going,"
we'll get you going for
•
for
$25
Damron by blasting out of a btmker to said Woods, who went on to a ,closittg
spring
about 2 feet.
63.:'I'm wry pleased that I was able to
per month.
. Every Spring Tuna~Up
After Oamron hit a 6-iron to 10 feei . hang .in there and not really have my
on the 17th,Verplank .1 nswered \vith a best stuff."
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
10-footer on the 72nd hole to force
Flgurirg that Wbods (27 I'GA T&lt;mr ' . - - - - - - - - ,
New equipment srr/VIMJ dslly
. the playoff at the TPC at las Colinas. · ~vins) was quickly running out of
BISSELL
Set Manning, Wayn• or Jim
Damron peeked at the leaderboard h oles, Damron never looked back at
BUILDIR81NC.
or a RIAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
only onct' during the final round, on the scoreboard. H e uewr really ku cw
Now Homes • Vlayl
lawn mover or waed trtmn11ir.
his fourth hole whe n he no ticed that Price (16 wins) and Duv:Y (12) were
Sldllql' New Garoan
. L4wn and .
f1111\ll'lt
Woods was making a charge.
alsp lu rking right behind most of the ·
• Replacement
rt 'stdcJin•.
· Woods, playing for the first time time.
Windows • Room
since winning the Masters fo ur \Wcks
AdditionS" Roollna
GRAVELY TRACTOR
COMI!IRCIAI aad IISIDI1fliAI
Sales &amp; Service
.
FREE ESTIMAT~S
204 Condor St.
.. .Pomeroy

5 ~

M AI I II

20 At IIIII

1 12 1 1 1

'HARTWELL
STORAGE

OUALITY
WINDOW
.
SYSTEMS
1.:S00.291·5600 • Pon'lerov. OH

4 Jn1ot

·'*"""·

THE BORN LOSER
{,.oo ealE.V£ '&lt;OOR.f-\NIQINE:""'

L.:---------:..1
The CRAFTY,

32 U...

~)

11 Uncle
" "Grrn"
llnlah

At the bridge table,
experts will do almost
anything to avoid a
fmesse. Here is a typical example, played
by journalist Barry
Rigal back in 1987
before he moved to
New York City.
North's
rebid
. announced a strong
no-trump. (A one-no.
trump opening would
have shown 12-14
points.) East's overcall would cause
raised eyebrows on
this side of the
Atlantic, but the bold
CELEBRITY CIPHER
or bizarre British (your
by LUll Campo•
choice of adjective)
~Cipher Clyplogrwnl ... llamquollttiot•
pulllld - " " EICII-In . .
think it is normal .
Today's clu.: S equell J
At the other table,
' EI
DXN'JP. · MPJPA
ZPAAK
declarer won trick one
with dummy's heart
BP
L Y PAW
LYAMELZ,
SNLH
king, drew two rounds
of trumps ending in
IXFFXC
BP
NIIHEF
E
BELL
hand, and took the
A
LZXAH
club finesse . In about
YNHH. ' 12 seconds, he won 12
(UXFIPA)
OZE
OZE
tricks.
West led the ·bean
AXKAEUNPO
six, the start of a MUD
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Druga are the ruination of civilizatiOn·
(middle-up-down)
the WOtll thtng that haa happened to modem man: - Joan
sequence. Rigal, placColllna
·
ing East with the club
king for his overcall,
WOlD
lAIII
tried to avoid that
finesse. At trick two,
he called for the dia- 0 Roorrango leHort of the
four ocromblecl warda be·
mond three: eight, low oo form four ttlmplo wordo.
queen, ace. Now came
.
the . heart seven to lh-..,L_H...,Y.-.0,...
dummy 's ace.
· I
At this point, I think 1--:::;;~~~::::::!~·
Riga! should have con- ,r- 0 R U S y

0

l

OOWN

ocean."

•'

Air

992-3470 WMBFIIIIEDIII &amp;

iatd.e SNtee ~

Hill'• Self
Stmge

Slzta 5' X 10'
. to1D'x30'
Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

I,..,..,. Plumbing

~ tllr .

House of Representatives January 22, 1812,
Henry Clay said, "If
you wish to avoid foreign collision, you had
better abandon the

TH' VARMINT
BEAT ME
TO IT !! .

740-992·1671

~

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

,_

In a speech in the

Remodeling
;~
Stop &amp; Compere ·"
•
FREE~TES • ·

n

21 C!llor
On dd t·naf t Canter af 1
llalll!lll
lhllld
271Jpelit •' 2 ftappt•
Ill ......
un- 3 -llllald

....

BY Pluu.IP ALDER

-4••

Advertise In
In this space this apace
for$25 per ·
for$25
month.
month .

.,__.,

d

23 111m
Toaftlc 11g11t

Finesse?

~

Adv~rtlse

1111'

54 W I 1r
18 llnllllound

ln2Down
18 W.bla /
20 S~~oHwpW
1111.l.ludlr 12 flO«

-........ ,.
...

.....

t7flllart,....

''*
.................
......
• •

F I Ill
51 CGMruotlon

tUd

•u

IOIEIT IISSEU
CONSTIUCTIOfl

Local843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mongage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home..!,.

Fr ee Esttm,Jtc s

.-..

.... I f l

. • Q.

7411-142·2257
._OH
____
_.:A•

rJI

155R12
155-80R13
185-80A13
175-aiR13
185-80R13

•t I

a AII I I I I

·,, lr

M•ddlcpo&lt;t Ol11u 4'&gt;ib0

IMPERIAL TIRE

6

lllchc\lclt
_..

14 l..eltll
toundl
15 .,_.
tl Andanl

Q J If I t
+11: 11 1

• .

?' ...,...

Rocky

CIIICIIuck

• CiiJ"

•• '4 .1 s11

FREE fSillllllfS ··
wv 304 Bll-2t74 •

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

Old ralllu, allllallo

.-.

• A l i i "I

WV0282120

1 888 521-G916

WANTED

•u

• A II: I
• I J 4I

~

Remodeling
New Additions
Garages

Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888

t-Mos f1

Advertll8
In this space · laiGIIMJBarll'lb
Mon - SalB-5
for $25 per IHUll~ GIHIIIOIISE
month
Syracuse, 011

Complete Home Repair
-

Mon-Frt 8:30 • 5:00

...... p.lll.

Csslw
IV I ell-·
CUSTOM SCIIEII
PIMII&amp;
...... «&lt;Il
1.........735

COIITIUICTI•

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headline~ truck tarps,
convenible &amp;. vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats, .
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"Take 1M poU. out

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Ask For Mike Hindle

r. our'"''".,.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Tuesday, May 15, 2001
loday on people you lhink will
Several small developmeniS
aulmnatically do lhing.s for you
could conlribule lo your malesimply fur lhe usking. Even nn
. rial well being in lhe year
old fri end mighl di sappoi nt
ahead. If managed properly,
you at this time.
these can eventually become
VIRGO (Aug. 21-Scpt. 22)
quite significant
•• Those observing yo·u loday
TAURUS (April 20-May
will make judgmenls about
20) -- Everything has its price;
you based on lhe lype of comeven in dealings wilh friend s.
pany you kee p. Be discrim iYou_could learn a hind lesson
nating about those you choose
to be around.
today concerning th is when
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23).
asking for something free . or
. even when you're giving away
• It may take sustained effon
something.
' today to. perform your tasks
GEMINI (May 2I·June 20)
and ·goals in a responsible man.. Be prepared not to be too
ner. Wilhout it, not much of
disappointed should you fail at
sianificance is likely to be exeyour first attempt at aomethin1
cuted or completed,
you're try lnJ to do toda)'.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
You'l' team from It, and you'r
22) ··Think twice bcfooe vol·
second effort should do the
unteerinJ to handle the
. trick.
resources of olhera today .
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
There mlaht be more trouble In
•• Shoot for ~el!her reachln1
attemplinJ to do ao th1111 you
above your beat abilities nor
can comfortably menage. .
below them. Unnecessary disSAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23appointments can he avoided
Dec . 21) •• Becauae you may
today if you' re real istic about
not treat serious matten with
what you can accompll•h.
the t:espect they deserve today,
I,.EO (lui~ 23-Aug . 2~ ) -chances are you'!1' aoin&amp; to be
Try not to bank too heavily · bolh a slow staner end an lnef-

'(

Warner ·In
992-5479

••

-{.

...•'
..

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~ .

'

'

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d

. fective fin isher.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Even though your intentions w.ill be in doing what you
believe is best to salisfy the
will of lhe majority, it isn't
likely your thinking, methods
or results will mee1 with their
approval.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -- This is one oflhose days
when money and friendships
do not mi•. be it a proposa.l you
submit or one they suggest. It
won 't mailer if everyone's
intentions are unselfish; it still
won'1work.
PISCES &lt;Feb. 20·Mnrch 20)
·· You cnnno1 attempt to uher
the pPCc of yoor.us!oclateKto
fit yours today, nor can they do
so with you. The tlmln1 'l•n't
apt lo he In sync, no matt.r
how you try.
ARIES IMnrch 21-April19)
-- It might be nil too easy todtly
for you 1o blun out secrets
before you even realize: what
you're doing. Be ••tremely
dlligcnl aboul what you ••Y to
whom.
,,

.

I

�•

•'

complete perfect

homestand
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Rookie Albert Pujols, J.D. D~ and the rest of the St. Louis
Cardinals could do no wrong at Busch Stadium.
The Cardinils completed a perfect seven-game homesund,
roughing up wild Kerry Wood and the Chicago Cubs in • 134 romp Sund.y.
·
St. Louis won four games ag.oirut Pittsburgh 2nd three from
the Cubs, outscoring its opponents by a combined 57-17.
The Cardinals posted their first undefeated homestand against
two or more opponents 'since Sept. 5-11, 1988, when they also
went 7-0.
·
"To come in here and win the whole homestand, I still find
that hard to believe," manager Tony La RusS&gt; S&gt;id. ''You just can
. never figure this game."
The Cardinals, who moved ohead of Chicago for first place
in the NL Central, now head to Pittsburgh to start a seasonhigh, 12-game road trip. ·
Pujols hit his 13th homer. The 21-year-old third baseman is
batting .370 with a team-leading 42 RBis.
Drew hit his 14th homer, only four shy of his entire total last
season.
"I'm glad he 's doing well and I'm glad I'm doing well," Pujols
said. "It's no competition or anything, he 's trying to do his job
and I'm trying to do my job. I hope he hits one every day."
Jim Edmonds and Larry Sutton also homered for St. Louis. ·
Fernando Vina hit a bases-loaded triple offWood, who walked
seven in four innings.
The Cubs dropped their founh s~raight game and also lost
third baseman Bill Mueller for.two months.
Mueller broke his left kneecap when he ran into a wall try-.
ing to catch a foul popup. He was batting .317.
. "khuns this team more than getting swept here," manager
Don Baylor Said. "Eight weeks is a long time to be without his
quiet leadership."

-• .

AROUND THE DIAMOND
....,....., I
Eool
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22
17
16
15
14

L
14
21
20
23
23

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6

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2t
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19 16 . 543 1 112
20 17 .Soli 1 112
17 11 .472
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13 23 .361
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22 16 .579
San F1111lCism 21 16 .568
112
Ariz&lt;na
19 18 .514 2 112
CoOOodo
19 18 .514 2 112
san Diego
18 19 .486 3 112

-,·. -

Miwaukao 4. Pittsburgh 1
St. Louis 13, CNc:ago Cubs 4

Montraa1t4, Colorado 10
San Frandsco6, N.Y. Mets 3
Los Angeles 3, Adania 1
Mzona 6, Philadet&gt;hia 1
f1oriOa to. san o;ego 4
ttou.ton 4, Cincfmati 3

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

Pillllllufllh (Weflgort 0.0) at Miwaukee

IWright H), 1:05 p.m.
Houoton (-5-1) ot Clne-

IRollomo 2-2), 7:05 p.m.
T-y'oGomeo

Los Angeles (Parte .C-3) at Montreal
(Vazquez 3-4), 7:05 p.m.

~ (EIIII J-1) • Qedsw...,
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San Diego (Joowl1-4)atN.Y. -~Fieod
..2). 7:10p.m.
CoOOodo ~HIIolm""*"'*"'" 5-ll) aiAIIanto (8urkat12-4). 7:35p.m.
- ( U n a 1·1) at CNc:ago CWo
(Taponi 5-1). 8:05p.m.

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11 26 .297
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Baltimore
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San fronciooo (llomookloz 2·5) .. (Oen'rs r ,_,.J, 7;05 p.m.

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at-

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(~3-2)
(flellmon 2·3). 8:115 p.m.
Clcu ...ld(' trHa4-1).tTu.
( - 2-3), I:Ot p.m.
T-Boy (Lopez 3-3) at Kansas Cly
(tls'tows 1~J. B:OS p.m.
l"""*&gt; ~ 3-21 at ilnal)oiOn
(Valdes 2·2). 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Y-(~4-0)atOOidand
( - 3-3), 10115 p.m.
Chicago So• I - 1·3) •• Seal·

""(Sole 5-0). 10:05 p.m.

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a.wland
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Chicago
KansasCity

Seallle
Anaheim
Oakland
Texas

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AHP AftNndo fta!tt:w .m ._ 15-*t'
r 'M 1111. ,.. r t ,.. ert Sibil
toornT"'*"'ofthOPCL
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CLEVELAND INDIAN5-4lecal1ed RHP
Danys Baez from Boflato ol the lnlema·

9

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Sunday'oGomn
Seattle 7. Toronto 5
llostoo 5, Oakland 4, 11 inning$

Anaheim t4. De1roi12

11
13
15

Riggs from Por1land al . . PCL

tionallf011JU8.
1ioflal League. Optioned RHP Tm Drew 10
Buffalo.
KANSAS CITY ROrALs-FiOO Brent
Strom, pitCIIing

ooach. Named 1U1pen

Jensen from Fr~. Tran&amp;famtd ,.._.
John Johnstone 110m lhe, 15-&lt;l!ly Iii ~

60-&lt;lay disabled list

coach Tom Gamboa ln!erim pitching
coach, and roving catching instructor
Brian P~ t..,_.oy ...,._ coacll.

Dewhurst added that
goal nets and marker flags
have also been obtained.
Dewhurst, along with
Janet and Joe Bolin, Kimberly Wilford, Maureen
Burns, Marie Bircl:tfield,
Chris Hutton, John McK- .
inney and Emily Bing,
submitted their requests to
b.e on the Civic Center
Committee.
Joanne and Bruce May
reported to council that
they are still working on
the flagpole at the Civic
Center and that it should
be ready for Memorial
Day festivities . .An Ohio
. State tlag for the pole still
needs to. be acquired, they
added.
Resident Jim Birchfield
met with council to discuss
the possibility of installing
a permanent traffic light at
the corner of Salem and
North Main streets. Birchfield said he is willing to
donate $500 toward the

Red Sox 5, AthleticS 4, 11 inninp ~
.t·

.~

.the

Manny Ramirez tied the game with a two-run homer in
eighth, and Jason Varitek hit the game-winning home ruO.·~
Pinch-hitter Charles Johnson lined his first career grand slam
the 1lth offJeffTam (0~ 1) as Boston rallied ac Fenway Park.- .
and Aorida took advantage of pitcher Kevin Jarvis' injury to
Oakland loaded the bases in the 1Oth, but Derek Lowe (2'~'5.)
win at San Diego.
ALMOST - Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Randy Johnson
Damon on a 3-2
pitch to end the inning-:Jarvis had a 4-1 lead with two outs in the seventh when he wipes his brow while pitching against the Philadelphia Phillies struck out Johnny
.
.
was hit in the leg by Preston Wilson's groundball single. Jarvis in the eighth inning Sunday who recorded 20 strikeouts in his
·'
left after one more batter, and Johnson connected later in the last game, fanned 12 Phillles falling one short of t}iing a major.•.
league record for strikeouts in consecutive games. (AP )
mnmg.
' .l ~
The Padres, victims of A.]. Burnett's no-hitter Saturday night,
Ichiro Suzuki extended .his hitting streak to I 9 games - ~nd
did not get a hit until Ryan Klesko singled leading off the
also was hit by two pitches - as Seattle won its fifth straight:
·
fourth.
as Montreal outscored Colorado at Coors Field.
The Mariners ·swept the three-game series at SkyDome :and·
Bradk"Y homered, doubled twice and singled in the Expos' lead the majors with a 28-9 record.They sent Toronto to its ~~a':
highest-scoring game of the season. Orlando Cabrera .con- son-high sixth loss in a row.
, •·
tributed a bases-loaded triple.
Jamie Moyer (6- 1) gave up five ru!"s on eight hits in ·six
Todd
Helton
had
four
hits,
including
a
homer,
and
dro.
w
in
llllllllgs.
.Rich Aurilia homered, doubled and drove in three runs as San
four ru1is for the Rockies.
Francisco won its season-high fourth in a row.
,.
· Aurilia, leading the NL with a .393 average, and the Giants
'
completed a three-game sweep at Pacific Bell ·Park. New York
lost its sixth in a row.
Luis Rivas hit a two-run homer and Jacque Jones had a pair
Giants reliever Chad Zerbe, forced to make ah unexpected
Ben Sheets won his fourth straight start, pitching seven of RBI singles to back Eric Milton (5-2).
start at the last moment, gave up two unearned runs and two impressive innings as Milwaukee beat Pittsburgh at Miller Park.
Tile host Twins scored four times in the second off M~c
hits in five innings to earn his first major league victory.
Sheets, last year's U.S. Olympic hero, gave up one run and Suzuki (2-3) on RBI singles by Jones, Torii Hunter and Del)jJ.y
. Zerbe was standing near the dugout, talking with his wife in four hits. He is 4-0 with 1.37 ERA in four outings since a fast Hocking and a run-scoring groundout by A.J. Pierzynski. ~,.
.
the stands, when he was told seven minutes before gametime trip to the minot'S.
that scheduled starter Shawn Estes couldn't get loose. After the
game, Estes was put on the 15-day disabled list with tendinitis
•
in his left shoulder.
M agglio Ordonez hit a three-run homer C?ffRick Helling :(J~
6) ·a nd James Baldwin (2-2) pitched six solid innings as ChiC,a:..
go beat Visiting Texas.
.
,
~:
Herbert Perry and Carlos Lee also homered for the Wh1ce
.
·Orioles come up big again1t Rivera
:_-·,
Luke Prokopec and two relievers combined on a three-hitter
Scoring five runs in a game is an accomplishment for the hit- Sox, who have won six of eight.
to lift Los Angeles over Atlanta at Dodger Stadium.
ling-challenged Baltimore Orioles.
··:r,,
Prokopec pitched through the seventh. Mike Fetters and Jeff.
Doing it in one inning against Mariano Rivera - one of the
1
Shaw each worked a scoreless inning.
game's best closers - was downright shocking.
'
•
The Dodgers scored three times in the first against Greg
Rivera gave· up a career-high earned five runs in a relief
Darin Erstad and Adam Kennedy had three hits apiece as v~~
Maddux. Eric Karras hit a two-run single and Adrian Bdtre appearance, with Jeff Conine's . three~run · homer capping an
iting Anaheim had its biggest offensive game of the season to
had a sacrifice fly.
11th-inning burst that lifted Baltimore to a 10-5 win at Yankee snap Detroit's five- game winning streak.
."i.'·
Maddux dropped to 3-4, mostly because the Braves have not Stadium on Sund.y.
·
The Angels, who entered the game 12th in tlie AL in scorillg· .
backed him. In four of his last five starts, Atlanta has scored · "Countless times you see him come in and nobody ever gets
at 4.2 runs per game, set a season high In runs and match.ed
exactly one run per game.
·
the bat on the ball," Conine said.
their best total of the year with 16 hits.
·
. ::!
Especially the Orioles, who are 13th in the league in runs and
Jarrod Washburn (2-4) struck out a career-high nine batteri
las~ in homers.
in six-plus innings.
· .
.
;"
.
~~~
Baltimore blew a 5-3 lead in the ninth when Paul O'Neill hit
••'
Milton Bradley set career highs with four hits and five RBis a two-run homer. But the Orioles .rallied in the 11th when
shortstop Derek Jeter misplaye·d a potential inning-ending dou- ,

.

Mariners 7, Blue Jays 5

Giants 6, Mets 3

. Twins 7, Royals 3

Brewen 4, Pirates 1
a

Dodgers 3, Braves 1

......... lhdlllnd. AJ

.

White Sox 6; Rangers 3

Angels 14, Tigeu s 2

I.

from Page II
·Baez, who defected from the Cuban nation. al team in 1999, pitched one scoreless inning
and walked t\Vo in his major league debut after
being. recalled ,from
. Triple-A Buffalo in the
mormng.
Cox continued to pound Indians pitching.
He went 3- for-5 and has a ca reer A 19 (13for-.&gt; I) average with four homers and nine
RBis against Cleveland.
"I just see the ball 'vdl at this park," Cox
said . "Most hitters fed that wav here."
Cox hit a two-run hl)mcr t~ .right-center in
the fifth inning to make it 7-0,
"Cox was awesome," Sturtze said. "His big
day settled us all down, made it a lot easier."
The Devil Rays str.ung together two-out

,,

.

Food drive

Midd

lau
fireworkS
fund drive

Donna Jenkins' flfth.grade class at Rutland Elementary loaded r:nore than 750 cans of collected non-per·
ishable Items Monday. morning for the third annual Right-to-Read food drive, sponsored by Title I. The
food is being donated to the Meigs Cooperative Parish for distribution to low-Income families during the
organization's summertime food giveaway in June. The school's kindergarten class, which collected 233
food items, won a pizza party for collecting the most items. The food drive was planned by Linda
McManus, Title I teacher. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Societf braces f~r Heritage Week

-..

-·

'IIJ ,..

211d1DIII- 12 .....

Calendar
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials

Federal Consumer Protection has confirmed the accuracy of the fuel saving described in this advertisement.{:

Device May Increase Gas Mileage by 22o/t&gt;
BOSTON - National Fuelsaver engine is pollution, this 2Z% of
Corp: of Boston hlis developed a each gallon would normally
low cost automotive accessory burn . when it reaches the
called the Platinum Gas Saver platinum of the catalytic
which is guaranteed to increase · converter.
gas mileage by 22% while
Unfortunately, the converter's
meeting all emission standards.
platinum burns this fuel in the
With a simple connection to a tailpipe, where the heat ahd
vacuum lin~. the Gas Saver adds energy produced from burning
microscopic quantities of this fuel cannot be harnessed to
platinum to the air-fuel mixture drive your vehicle.
.
entering the engine.
Bu( when the gas Saver adds
Platinum lias th~ unique platinum to the air-fuel mixture,
ability to make non-burning fuel · 22% fewer gallons are required
burn, With platinum in the flame to drive the same distance.
zone, ·you increase the
After studying this process for
percentage of fuel burning in the five years, the government
engine from 68% of'each gallon concluded: "Independent testing.
to 90% of each gallon, a 22% . shows greater fu~l savings with
increase.
the Gas Saver than the 22%
' Since unbumt fuel leaving an
\,

Objtuarjes

.~

claimed by the developer."
'-\
In addition to this govemmentl:
study, the Gas Saver 'hllJi
received patents for cleaning o~,
carbon and ta(sing octane,.:;
making premium . fuel•
unnecessary for most vehicles . .:
Joel Robinson; the developer~
commented: "Almost a half
million Gas Savers have be.~
sold. To our surprise, as rna~ ,
people buy the gas sav~
because it extends ensine lif~
by cleaning out ·the abrasiv&lt;'
carbon deposits) as buy .it tO&gt;
increase gas mileaae or to tal~
octane."
~;
For further information call: :;
1·800-LESS·GAS
.~
l.S00-537·7417
:.

...
.•

Hltli: 701

a..w:

Ill
. Details, A,2

Sentinel

Expos 14, Rockies 1o·

Tribe

As a graduating senior, Kehl participated in the "Best of the Class"
program ofWSAZ NewsChannel
3 during ceremonies in. Huntington, W.Va., and was the Franklin B.
Walter scholastic award winner in
Columbus.
He is a member of the Little
Hocking Church of Christ.
Kehl plans to a!lend Ohio University this fall. and pursue a com-

He is a two-year member of the
National Honor Sociery, .which he
has served·as vice president. He has
played basketball for four year.; and
participated in ttack for a year.
He has participated in Regional
Scholars and was named the Ohio
University Alumni Association's
outstanding junior.
.Ioiii KeN
Kehl received the all-acade•nic
valedictorian Tri-Valley Conference award for
two spons, and Meigs County's Award for Academic
Excellence for five years.

.

AMERICAN
LEAGUE

singles by Ben Grieve, Vaughn and Cox to take
a 1-0 lead in the first inning off Dave Burba
(S-2).
· The same trio again delivered t\vo-out hits
to make it 3-0 in the third. Grieve singled to
right and went to third on Vaughn's double
down the third- base line. Both sco red on
Cox's bloop single to center.
Three mort• two-out hits in the lc&gt; urth 111adc
it 5-0. Felix Martinez hit a two-out double
and scored on R andy Winn's double off the
left-field " ;all Gerald Williams fi&gt;llowed with
an RBI ·si ngle .
·
'
"We &lt;"ouldn't get that third om." l11diam
manager .Charlie M :ul\lcl said. " Burba usually
·pitches out of trouble. Th;ll's why it is hard to
tell when to take him out. He stands i11 and
battles."
Burba gave up fiw runs and nine hits in J 23 innings. He had WO!l five straight since a 76 loss in Chicago on April 1 1.
'

Graduation begins at 2 p.m. in the high school
gytnna5ium.
Kehl is the son of Gary and Rita Kehl ofTuppers
Plains. He has been an active 'athlete a~ Eastern, and
bas been involved in a number of other extracurric-

ular activities.

goals.

_,

Maltins 1o, Padres 4

&amp;y:

RUTLAND - Various
. community projects were
discussed during Rutland
Village Council's regular
meeting.
Jay Dewhurs.t, member
of the Parks and Recreation
Committee,
i11formed council that
conduit is beirlg run in the
park for new lights . and
that Tony's Portable Welding is making new soccer

·' l

Eastern High School's

baccalaun:ate and commencement exercises on Sun-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

ble-play grounder, aUowing the go-ahead run . to score. M~
){jnkade added an RBI single before Conine's homer.
' j
Rivera (I -3) had never been roughed up like this in 339 p~­
vious relief appearances. He had last given up four earned r!:'')S
ag.oinst Atlanta on July 16, 1999.
' !
" It's not going to be the last time," said Rivera, who ~SI\'t
worried about the shaky performance.
!
Baltimore built a 5-3 lead on Chris Richard's tying three-ru)l
homer in the fourth and Greg Myers' go-ahead two-run sh4t
off Orlando Hernandez in the eighih.
;
But Ryan Kohlmeier blew a save for the second time in n1n~
chances when Chuck Knoblauch walked with one out in ~
ninth and O 'Neill homered deep into the right-center fielli
· bleachers with two outs, his first home run since April 24. . ~
BJ. Ryan (2-0) entered in the lOth and struck out the side,
and finished o·f f the Yankees in the 1lth. New York had bee~
15-0 against teams with su"-".500 records.
•:
Mter the game, the Yankees were shaken when they learn~
Bernie ·WiJliams' father, 73-year-old Bernabe.Williams Sr., haa
a hean attack and was in grave con~tion. New York's ce!l!'f
· fielder planned to return to Puerto Rico rather than accl&gt;mpa:ny the team to the West Coast.
,: :
"It puts a lot of things in perspective," .said O'Neill, whoplayed the final game of the World Series in 1999 just ho11rs
after his father died.
.
·
..;

Randy Johnson struck out 12 in eight innings to lead Arizona
over Philadelphia.
Johnson, coming off his 20-strikeout performance against
Cincinnati, threw 146 pitches. The record for strikeouts in consecutive games in 33, set by Kerry Wood in 1998.
Mark Grace hit a grand slam for the Diamondbacks and Reggie Sanders hit a two-run homer.. Later, Sande·rs was hit by a
pitch from Raben Person, who was ejected after the benches
and bullpens emptied.
.
The surprising Phillies,leading the NL East by six games, left
Bank One Ballpark to begin a season-long, 12-game homestand.
.
·
·

TUPPERS PLAINS -

valedictorian, Josh Kehl, and salutatorian,Juli Bailey,
will address their 51 classmates during combined

8T TOllY M. LEAcH
•

Diamondbacks 6, Phillies 1

BY IRwl J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

project
update

.

Sunday

Kehl, Bailey are top honorees

gets

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTs-Pioced u,'
Shawn Estes on lhe 15-&lt;l!ly d's8blo!llilt.
Purchased lhe conl1a&lt;l ol RHP fiYan

www my1i ..nlywntn wl&lt;um

Eastem

Council

NEWYOAK ~C .IMa!l

Johnny Ellll!da and RHP N""""
BOSTON RED SOX-Oplianad RHP
Figueroa from ~...,
PaiiiOO Cra- and RHP Torno Ohlul to thO llllerTialional
PaWIUCII8! o1 the lntemalional League.
. SAN DIEGO PADRES-f'll&lt;ecl28
•
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Oplioned RHP
Qamion Jadclon oo N t!Hiay Gaoy Glonr 1o · Cha- of the lnlerna· lilt Purt:hasod llie oon1racl oftNF-.,

28

RUTLAND

lOS ANGELES DOOGERS I •
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so cenb • May IS, 2001 ·Vol. &gt;1 , No. 1.10

COIORA00~38

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BASEIALI. T1IANSACTlONS
~

-

Tuesday

Ma•d.,. lilly 14. 2M1

Cardinals beat Cubs,

•

: Cincinnati losing slide

Page B6

The Daily Sentinel

• •

Sports
Weather

Lotteries

A5 OHIO

.Lalla:

82-4 Pick 5: 6-5-7; Pick 4: 5-6-2·7
BS
3-7-12·24-37

M

W.VA.
81,3-4.6 Dilly 5: &amp;8-7 Dlllr 4: 3-9-~

A3
A2

c 200t Ohio Vlltlo)' Pubtishlna Co.

Census: Big incr~ase ~n unmarried couples
WASHINGTON (AP) - Americans,
collectively, are growing older. And
they're expanding their ideas of what it
means to "settle down."
There was a 71 percent increase in
the number of unmatried partners living together between 1990 and 2000,
the latest census finds. It dwarfed the
growth in married-couple households,
up 7 percent the past decade.
Data released by the Census Bureau

Tuesday also .showed larger increases in
other alternative arrangements: a 25
percent increase in the number of
women living with their own child but
without a husband; and a 21 percent
growth in the number of people living
alone.
Later . this year the Census Bureau
will reveal more details, such as how
many unmarried couples were in samesex relationships, or how many people

living alone were elderly widows.
Still, the figures should place new
pressure on lawmakers to deal with the
issues of changing family structures, ·
said Thomas Coleman, execUtive director of the American Association of Sin- ·
gle People. Those issues include
expanding employee benefits for
domestic partners and recognizing
same-sex partnerships.

I Tberapy Services
at

RVQilabrle Holzer Medical Center and Veterans Memorial
Hospitol. Outpa~ent services include orthopedic, hand
injury, neurological and pediatric therapy.

8om-5pm
·Monday through Friday

Discover the Holzer Difference.

C740) 446·5121 for an appol111ment
•

-

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----- ..
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