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•'

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
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22
17
16
15
14

L
14
21
20
23
23

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Pet.

Gil

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6

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8
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2t
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19 16 . 543 1 112
20 17 .Soli 1 112
17 11 .472
4
13 23 .361
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Los Angeles
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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(T......... «&lt;I. 7:115 p.m.
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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19 18 .514
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11 26 .297
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Baltimore
T - Boy

_,.._

CNcago-Soxe, r..... a

IOiivloeo 2·3), 7:05p.m.
San fronciooo (llomookloz 2·5) .. (Oen'rs r ,_,.J, 7;05 p.m.

w

.............at-

Mio-7, 1&lt;MWMCiy3

(Moys ..2). 8:05p.m.

at-

DolnJit (MIIdd 3-2) at B IIi 1101e ( D-3). 7:05 p.m.
(~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.

~

--

a.wland
Oe1rnit

Chicago
KansasCity

Seallle
Anaheim
Oakland
Texas

p•

T-BAVDEVl.RAYS P1 ... _
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....,., .......

ARlZONA OfAMQNOBAClCS.. Pllced
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r 'M 1111. ,.. r t ,.. ert Sibil
toornT"'*"'ofthOPCL
.
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on· 11e 15dllycfs HMIIt.

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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 •
38-llellio"""' fle1!HIIylilt ~ .... c ~ ., ....

WLPciGI
25 10 .714
2A 11 ....
1
17 18 .486
8
14 2t .400
11
13 24 .351
13

...,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

COIORA00~38

-~lnd--15-&lt;l!ly lilt - - 'C

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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The .Daily Sentinel

'Ill I iSEf, IIIey 11, 2G01

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More rain on Wednesday
BY lHE ASSOCI.t.TED PRESS
A warm fumt stalled along
the Ohio-Indiana border will
continue to produce showers
and thunderstorms, some with
heavy downpours and hail,
tonight and Wednesday.
Highs on Wednesday will
be mostly in the 70s following
overnight lows in the 50s, the
National Weather Service said.
Sunset tonight · will be at
8:40, and sunrise on Wednesday is at 6:16 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Showers likely
with · a chance of thunder·storms. Low 55 to 60. West
wind 5 to 10 mph becoming
south late this evening.
Chance of rain 60 peteent.
Wednesday... Showers likely
with a chance of thunder-

storms. High 73 to 79. Light
south wind. Chance of rain 60
peteent.
Wednesday night ...Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstorms. Low near 60.
Extended forec81t:
Thursday.. . A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. High 70 to 75.
· Friday... Pardy cloudy. Low
in the mid 50s and· high in the ·
lower 80s.
Saturday.. . Pardy
cloudy
with a chance of showers. Low
in the lower 60s and high in
the upper 70s.
Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Low
51 to 56 and high in the mid
70s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Low
51 to 56 and high 78 to 83.

Shooter aets 63 years in prison
CLEVELAND (AP} -A man was sentenced to 63 years in
prison for fatally shooting tw~ men as they left a nightclub in
the city's downtown entertainment district.
Kenneth Hughes, 22, avoided a possible death penalty sentence by pleading guilty Monday during the start of his trial.
Hughes killed Rayshawn Lindsey, 24, and Horace Roberson, 22, on Nov. 3 when he fired into a crowd at the Flats
after he fought with Roberson:s friend, Marquese Bryant.
Prosecutors said Hughes pointed .the gun at Bryant's chest
and pulled the trigger but the gun did not go off. He then
fired into the crowd .
Malena Roberson, 23, told a three-judge panel that sentenced Hughes that no sentence will bring back her brother.

Mom liven time behind b1rs

to d~th , his lawyers say.
Later Monday, lawyers amd U.S, District Judge Kathleen M . O'~ey to
delay Scott's execution for a second
time. She declined.
Timothy Sweeney, one of Scott's
attorneys, said he planned to appeal the
decision Tuesday with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
Joe Case, spokesman' for Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery, was
not surprised 'by the rulings Monday.
"It's becoming evident that the legal
ground on which they're making their
arguments is very quickly crumbling
away no\v," he said.
Scott's •ttorneys had argued in a
motion to O ' Malley that Ohio has

woman shot dead in her home, the H oc king l.ounty Sheriff's
office said Monday.
. '
·
Wretha Poling was found about 2 p.m. Sunday. She was
beaten before she died, and robbery appea rs to be &lt;he mo&lt;ive
in her death, the sheriff's office said.
The Franklin C ounty coroner in C olumbus planned to do
an autopsy.
.
Laurelville is about 40 miles southeast of Columbus.

Developer enters guilty plea
CLEVELAND (AP) - A prominent Youngstown. businessman pleaded guilty to conspiracy Monday in the public corruption case against U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr.
.
John J. Cafaro, 49, entered the plea to a single count before
U.S. District Judge Solomon Oliver.
The judge set sentencing for Aug. 9, but said he would lik~­
ly postpone it at the request of prosecutors to ensure that
Ca&amp;ro testifies at Traficant's trial, scheduled for Feb. 4-.
Cafaro, who has homes in Liberty Township near
Youngstown and Chevy Chase, Md., faces a maximum of five
years iri prison.

Man sentenced

Woman found shot dead
LAU~LVILLE (AP) -

'

Relatives found an 85-year- old

nine other groups including
the 0 hio School Boards Association 'and teachers, unions in
Akron, Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus and Toledo.
Current charter school law
- enacted in 1997 - also
violates the Ohio Constitution
because charter schools aren't
part of a state system of common schools, the lawsuit said.
Charter. S!'hools •"were supposed to be smaU, aittnuomous
public schools offering some
uoique instructional program,"
said To m Mooney, OFT presi.
dent. " In Ohio, that idea has
been hijacked by . entrepreneurs whose goal is simply to
make a profit and by people
who are ideologically comnutted to privatization for the
sake of privatization."

Janles Echltrrd B·ash

GALLIPOUS - Chades L. ':Johnny" Ecker, 66, Gallipolis, died
SYRACUSE- Jaines Edward Bush, 62, of Syracuse, passed
Sunday, May 13, 2001 at his residence.
away on Monday, May 14, 2001 at his residence.
He 'W3S born Sept. 26, 1934 in Ann Arbor, Mich., son of the late
He was born on December 8, 1938 in Mason,West Virginia,
H.B. and Florence Bott Ecker. He 'W3S a ver=n of the U.S. Army, son of Lecta Mae Criner Bush, and the late William Moodisand a member of the Fint Presbyterian Chuteh.
paugh Bush.
He was bead fuotbal1 coach at Galld Academy High School, and
He was employed for more than 21 years as an insurance

was a haseball coach at lhe University of Rio Grande.
Surviving are his sister,jean (Kyle) Sessions of Bloomington, ru.;

two ni~ces and a nephew; and ~ great nieces.

·
Services will be I p.m. Sal:llnby in Fint Presbyterian Chun:h,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Raafat Zaki officiating. Burial will be in
. the &amp;mi1y plot at Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
The body will lie in state at the church an hour prior to the serMemorial contributions may be made to the First Presbyterian
Chnn:h Memorial Fund, 51 .Stati: St, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Groundbreaklng for center set

HOLZER CLINIC
Hearing Aid Center

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·RecaptUre Life's Most
Important Sounds
-

Cllllles....._wa{Edrzr

On Friday, the Ohio Supreme C ourt
ruled 6- 1 to uphold a C uyahoga County Common Pleas judge's decision that
Scott is competent to face execution .

. Taft book revises ima1e

Chef to open own restaurant

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v;ce.

He hopes " The Collected Works ofWilliam Huward Taft"
will convince historians and scholars that Taft is as impo rtant
to early 20th century America as two othe r presidents - .
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson .
· ·
" He came between the darling of destiny and the tragic
figure," said Burton, a history professor emeri~us a&lt; St.
Joseph's University in Philadelphia and a Taft bwg rapher.
"Taft has not lieen well understood. He's been under appreciated.

schools

••

do,.. she ' wrote.

' Judges re)ed convicfs appeal

over charter

CINCINNATI (AP) - Authorities · on Monday identified
, the badly burned body of a child as that of a 9-year-old boy
whose family had reported him missing three days earh:r.
·'Later, they arrested the boy's n1other and charged her With
rnurde~
·
Hamilton County coroner's officials said they ,used dental
records to identify the remains as those of Diarro Lavon
Hayes, of suburban Silverton. His family said he had fatled to
show up at the home of a neighborhood friend he had gone
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to visit on Friday night.
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A child's body, bur.ned beyond recognmon , was found Saturday mornipgoin Daniel Drake Park, abo\11 two miles from
the boy's home. Following an autopsy Sunday, the coroner
· listed the cause of death as asphyxiation.
)~ ··After the identity was made Monday, police obtained a
warrant and searched the mother 's home , then placed her
~)Jnder arrest.

.

slaying

Groups_
sue state

,

failed to provide sufficient procedures.
to protect a defendant's right to avoid
execution based on mental incompeu:nce.
O'Malley said that while defense
attorneys " eloquendy discuss the sad
realities of mental illness" in their
motion her court could nor "apply
. a
constitutional standard which .is contnry to, or at least substantially extends,
existing Supreme Court precedent."
" This is something this C ourt ca nnot

CINCINNATI (AP) ·-·
Construction starts later ·this
month on a $34. 1 million project that is to pmvide a 11ew
home for the Contemporary Arrs Center in spring 2003.
Officials said Monday they plan a May 24 ground-breaking
ceremony at the downtown site, which recendy was cleared
by the demolition of old retail buildings. The 85,000•squarefoot arts center will be named for Cincinnati philanthropists
Lois and Richard Rosenthal, who donated $5 million to the
project. ·
London-based architect Zaha Hadid designed the arts center. It will be the first American building she designed. Hadid
i~
is known for her designs of the Cardiff.Bay Opera House in
LANCASTER (AP} - · A man who admitted stabbing and Wales and the Vitn Fire House in Wei! 'a m Rhein, Germany.
The Contemporary Arts Center has been ~ouse.d since
beating his girlfriend to death last August was sentenced
1971 in a second-floor space over a downtown Cincinnati
Monday to 18 yean to life in prison.
•
storefront.
William Cooper, 23, of Columbus, pleaded guilty last
I
Wednesday in Fairfield County Common Pleas Court to
murder and .kidnapping in the death of Angela Greathouse,
21.
CINCINNATI (AP) - .. Federal judges on Monday rejectCooper stabbed Greathouse more than 20 times and· bludgeo~ed her with a dumbbell in her apartment in Reynolds.- ed the appeal of an Ohio prisoner who was caught and conburg on Aug. 11. Greathouse was a Capital University nurs- victed in a Cleveland gas station robbery and killing that haping studentfroin Xenia.
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·
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pened 23 years earlier.
After the slaying, Cooper took a Greyh&lt;&gt;!'fld bus t'? AUanta,
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of App~als ~phdd ,a ,.\9wer
then called 911 from a pay phone and said he was wanteifor court's ruling against Cllarles Wilson, who was .seeking·a ne,,f
murder in Ohio.
·
trial.
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' Wilson, 52, was convicted of murder and arined robbery in
the Dec. 17, 1972 robbery and shooting death of gas station
owner Willie Binford. Wilson was sentenced in. 199~ to 15
COLUMBUS (AP) -A biographer is trying to change the years to life in prison for the murder conviction and sewn to
image of William Howard Taft, the portly president often 25 years on each of the thre~ robbery convictions, all to be
remembered for being too heavy to pull himself out of a served consecutively. He is eligible for parole jn 2005 .
·
bathtub.
Wilson challenged a witness ideqtifica.tion that wa! used to
David H. Burton is putting together eight volumes ofTaft's convict him 23 yeatl ·after the holdup. But judges Ronald
writings, speeches and Supreme Court opinions - the first Gihuan, Paul Borman ahd R. Guy Cole Jr. rejected that
time all of the Ohio Republican's writing~ haw been com- · appeal, saying the lUte h~d irttroduce!i sufficient evidence to
piled in one source.
iupport the jury's guilty vtrdict.
·

· TI\.OY (AP} - A woman convicted of child endangering
Cor Ieavins her 4-year~old 1on in the care of the 111an later
c:onvicttd of killin(l him ha1 been 1enrenced to two yean in
prbon.
Pro1ecutot1nid Suun Enpand, 29, of Piqua, knew that her
boyfriend, Elijah Manie, wa1 a threat to her 1on, John James
''J.J." Sandi1on, but allowed Manic: to watch him while she
wa1 at work.
The boy died Sept. I, 1999, when fire engulfed the house
where he livec:l With his mother and Massie. Massie admitted
tO· Imothering the child into unconsciousness and, thinking
he wu c:lead, setting a fire to cover the abuse.
·
· ·
He pleaded no contest to murder and arson and is serving
COLUMBUS. (AP)
15 yean to life in prison.
Ohio's charter school system
violates both the Ohio Constitution and State law, a coalition
of education groups and
. CINCINNATI (AP} -The Maisonette, the longest-run- teachers: unions charged
· ning Mobile five-star restaurant in the nation, is losing its · Monthy in a lawsuit.
executive chef.
State officials have allowed
Jea~-Robert de Cave! will leave in October to open his for-profit companies to conown establishment, Jean-Robert at Pigall's, at the downtown trol and operate charter
site of another former five-star restaurant, a Maisonette schools and allowed at least
spokesman said Monday.
·
· three private schools to be ille"1 want to give back to Cincinnati all the support people gaily converted to charter
have given me at the Maisonette," said de Cave!, who plans a schools, according to the law75-1eat fine-dining restaurant at the old Pigall's restaurant, suit filed by the Ohio Federa·s erving contemporary French cuisine.
tion ofTeachers.
"This is just something I have to do," he said.
The union was joined by

Patent charged with murder

LOCAL BRIEFS
m uslj: progra19 Q[ the
Club to meet agolden
Dldies at the' M eigs

.......,• ..., 15, 2001

C OLUMBUS (AP) - For the. second time: in a month, Jay D. Scott has
taken the 145· mile uip from death row
at the Mansfield Correctional Institution to the death house at the Southern
Ohio C orrectional Facility, not knowing if he would be executed the next
day.
Scott, who was scheduled to be put to
d eath Tuesday nigl}t for the 1983 murder of a Clevela,;if delicatessen owner,
arrived at the Lucasville prison Monday
afternoon .
About the time he arrived, the U.S.
Supr~me Court &lt;tnnounced it would
refuse to hear his plea that he is incompetent to face execution. Scott, 48, is a
sc hizophrenic who is too ill to be put

The Dally $entinel • Page A 3

a

Scott's case enters another appeal .
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Pomeroy, llhtdllpott. Ohio

1

LuiNISd10enleb
POMEROY - LutreU Schoenleb of Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, died Tu~y, May 15, 2001 at Holze.r Medical Cent&lt;.,-.
Arrangements will be announced by. Ewing' Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

Harold.Stafder

agent with American General Life and Accident Insurance
Company.
He was in the Anny Reserves.
Surviving are his wife, Don E. Bush of Syracuse; a son, James
E. Bush II of Athens; a daughter, Angie Barrett of Belpre; his
mother, Lecta Bush of Gallipolis; three sisters, Linda Kimper,
Karen McCoy and Patricia Watson, aU of Gallipolis; two brothers, Raben Bush and Roger Bush, both of Gallipolis; stepchildren, James M . Yonkers II of Mason, West Virginia, Kineta L.
Burns of Florida, and Philip .S . Mattion of South Carolina;
grandchildren, Bruce M . Yonkers, Eric S. Marrion, Michael
Barrett, Amanda D.Yonkers, Dillon Bush, Be,Yamin H .Yonken,
Catherine M. Yonkers, Dalton Bush, Corey Barrett, Trent Barrett and Gaven Marrion; and several st.:pbrothers and sisters.
He was preceded in death by his father, William Moodispaugh Bush.
.
.
Services \viii be 2 p.m. on Thursday, May 'I 7, 2001 at FtshcrAcree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating. will be Larry
Drummond. Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday, May 16, 200 I from 6-8 p.m .

HOCKINGPORT - Harold Snyder, 72, Hockingport, died
Monday, May 14, 2001 at the Veterans Adnlinistration Medical
Center, Clarksburg, W.Va.
ArrangemeniS will be announced by White Funeral Home,
·
Coolville.

Se n ior-Center•• T ht&gt;rsday,
5:30p.-m. There is no admission price.

ROC KSPRINGS
Rochprings Be tter Health
Club will meet on Thursday
at I p.m . at the home of
Phyllis Skinner.

Dance slated

Plan derby

APP LE GROVE A
round and square J ance will
be held Friday at the R ed
Barn in Appl e Grove o n
Ohio 338.
Music will be by t he
J-lappy H ollow Boys, 8 to I 1
p.m. The re w ill be ' ca ke
walks, door prizes, li ne
dancin g and clogging.

LONG BOTTOM
Forked Run Sportsmen 's
C lub will hold its kids' fishing derby on Saturday from
9 a.m. until noon at the club
pond .

Picnic planned

CHESHIRE - In observance of Nation~! Stroke
Aware ness Month, a picnic
will be held at the Cheshire
PO MERO Y
M eigs
She lter House, May 22 , Co unty Arth ritis Sup pn rt
12:30 to 2 p.m. Also invited Gro up w ill meet f riday. I 0
will be the Stroke Survivo rs' . to I L\0 a.m. at the M eigs
Support Group and the
Co unty Senio r Cit i ze n ~
Amputee Support ·Group.
Ce nter.
For transportation, Meigs
l aurie Cn."mcans, a di acountians ca n contact th e
Senior C itizens Center, 992- betes edu cato r from H o lze r
, Medica!'. Gen ter, .wil l", speak
21 6 1.• .
,...;•. ' '
~
&lt;~t •• - · ' ~ .... ,
· abo ut di ab e tes scre c m ngs
and foot care, .Anyo ne w ith
arthritis o r a family member
POMEROY Junior with arthritis id nvited . N ew
and Rita Whit" will present participants are invited.

Meet Friday

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Procuring authentic looking steps for the front of the
cabin w.1s also discussed by
' tDifl
.. l,.- P
council members~·
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{"' ... , ~ ... .} .•'
In other matters, cou.ncil:
purchase of a new light.
• met with Meigs County
After listening to Birch- Health Department's Margie
REEDSVILLE -· Wells "Bill"VanDyke, 82, of Reedsville, died field's request, council decid- Skidmore to discuss various
Friday, May 11,2001 a: his residence.
ed to have the issue thor- programs being offered to the
.
He was born Dec. 2, 1918 in Athens, son of the late Guy and oughly resean:hed.
community;
RockWell - 431.
ConnieVanDyke. He was a veteran of the; U.S. Army during World
AEP-48~
Gannett - 67~
Jade 4-H representatives
• approved the mayor's Arch Coal-- 35~
General Electric - 49l. Rocky Boots - 41.
War U, and was a retired coal miner and retired grave digger.
GKNLY -11 ~
RD Shell-58.
Vickey Russell and Janet report and announced that a · Akzo-41~
He is survived by two sisters, Agnes Wulner of Reedsville, and
H11rley
Davidson
SearS'- 38 ~
AmTech/SBC
42\
Bolin infoJined ·council that car and truck are ready to be
Ashland Inc. - 42
46~
Shoney's -~
Eliu~eth Moore of Kentucky; and rwo nieces and a nephew.
several 4-H members are bid on;
· Kmart-10~
Waf.Mart- 541.
AT&amp;T-21'1.
Graveside services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday inSandrock
Kroger- 24
Wendy's - 24\
working on the village's
. • discussed meeting with Bank One - 36l.
Cemetery in Srewart. Friends may call at White Funeral Home,
Worthington - 111.
Bob Evans -1n .
Lands End - 34
flower
beds.
RusseU
and
Eva
Lunder
from
the
goverDaily stOI:i&lt;' ~~pOrts are
Ltd.
-16%
BorgWamer
421.
Coolville, from 6-8 toniught.
the ·4 · p.m. &lt;:lOsing
Bolin ajso inquired about · nor's office to as~e's possibili- Champion - 21. ·
Oak Hill Financial 14~
quole.s of llle previous
plans to hook up water in the ties of obtaining a new water Charming Shops - 6
OVB-25l• . '
day's transaqons. pro·
City Holding - 8
Harder Cabin, which, they tank.
.
BBT
-351,
vided· by Smith Part·
DuPont
461.
w;ith adolts using profane lanPeoples - 18),
ners at Advest·lnc. of
say, woqld make it easier to
Attending were Mayor Federal Mogul - 3
guage will also be addressed, and
Premier - 6,.
Gallipolis. ,
USB-21
Richan:l Fetty, Councilmen
water the flowers.
that those using bad language in
' ·,
Following
discussion, Tammy Searles, Judy Denney,
the park will be banned
hmPapA1
..
. ~ouncil approved the pur- Martin Andrew, Ralph Bales,
li~r, Amber Nicole' C:llun:h,
The tennis coum are now
chase of 200 feet of water Office Manager Amanda
Joshua M . Clark;"C inda Kay
Thomas said the ann~ JuJ}ri • idcl&amp;d, Iall\ia.~ said. and sign
Ramage, Patrolman Steve
4-H
members
and
hose
for
Clifford, Sarah Nicole Clif· celebration is an attraction that ·will be posred advising players
Williams and Maintenance
to
look
into
hoolqng
agreed
ford, Phillip John C ooke,
flom~A1
brings visilon into Middleport where the key can be picked up.
'·
·~
Supervisor
David
Davis.
water
up
in
the
cabin.
James·'
~ley :·erowp•$ nauna
.,. "
• n ..,
-...,.
from throughout the area, and is The tennis coum have been
. ''
of Pomeroy. She has been 'Mari~ Elhott, Jarrod C. M .
important to maintain.
locked becawe of prol:!lems
·active in athletics and student Farley, Timothy J Grimm,
"It brings people into the with bikers and skateboarders
tiona! S5 for mailing. After government during her high Matthew Allen Grubb, Krisarea, and it 'Mluld be a shame to on the courn.
July 5, the price will increase school career. In addition to ten Diana Hoffman, Tiffany
• .
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. •1
lose it;'Thomas said, "especially
Tennis I~ns and swimming
to $59.50.
serving as juni~~ ~nd 'sopho- Lynn Hollon, Jamie N teole
with the Ohio Bicentennial · ICS!Ons are planned for later in
Parker reported on the more class president, she was H upp. Joshua F. lhl c;
f1omPapAl
coming up (in 2003}:' .
the summer, lannarelli said.
reorganization of the museKevin Michael Keat o n,
Council approved a motion
lannarelli distributed a list of their creativity and displaying · um's library, the status offam- also freshman class treasurer.
She has been a member of Dustin Paul Kehler, Joshu a
by Councilman Bob Robinson, proposed .increases in building their products on Sunday ily stories and businesses
student council as well as a Lee Kchl , Stacey .M ari e
that the village's finance com- pennit fC!C'S fur council's consid- afternoon.
· ·
R.obe rt . J.osc•ph
going into the new history mernber. of the National Kimes,
Myron and June Duffield of
mittee meet to detemline if, and erntion,as subnlitted by building
Lawrence,Jenny
Lim1ca Lo ng,
book, interest iii securing a Honor Society, serving as secfrom where, a contribution can ' inspector Carter French.
Middleport wiD be there with
Thomas J. McDonald. Joseph
historical marker for Dr. retary during her senior year.
be made toward the fireworks.
Councilman
Stephen their colorful circus calliope
Huntington, and. on a new
Active in sports, she has W. Marcinko, N at han G.
The comnlittee will meet on Houchins noted that 450 tons entertaining all afternoon, and·
Paul
comnlittee being formed . by played volleyball, pasketball Marcinko, . N athan
Thursday at 6 p.m.
of garbage were collected by the inside an art show wiU be ,
the Meigs · County commis- and softq,a_~ fo~,(Ol,I ':;Y~ ars, and . M;trcinko. C:h'i.d Eri&lt;;.)')lclson,
In other business, council village d\]ring last month's staged. Annie Chapman :is il)
sioners to pursue money for has received awards in all three " Al'ri'atfda • l eigh " Ndft't. nip,
hired Fona Snlith as the pool spring clean-up week. Costs for charge of arranging the disMichell ~ Lynn O'Nail, Nicole
the B,uffington Island battle- sports. ·
and park manager at General the annual event are still being play of works completed by
She received the Meigs Lynn Parker, Marsha N. Pt•rfield.
Hartinger Park, · and lani}.".'7!Ji calculated. . .•
. • local artists.
She also announced that County Academic Excellence sons, Stephanie Lynn Pullins,
discussed a number of problems
Council also: ·
Souvenirs of the I 25th
Gail
Putnun,
the Buffington · 'l sl;nd Re- Award and •Ohio University Mathew
which have arisen at the park so
• Held a second reading on an anniver~ary ·of the historical
, Andrew Steven R,ced , Trave rs
enactment ~ill ·be · held July Alumni Association's Out&amp;r this se~n.. .
.
, •o~nance providing for a ~JIS- , soc~ety , wj,U b~ a:--a•labl~ for
Page · Robideaux, ~ a·nh e w
standing · Junior · award last
lannarelli satdthe ~strooms at ' fer •of ~~ ; ttiim the ~n~ral ~ sale; and ""fresliments wtll be 20, 21, and 22:
, Walter , .Sit,n pso q , &lt;:; hr.i stina
.
Ashley an.no.u ncecl ihe Sc;ms year.
the park were vandalized some
fu,;'d to' fiie' equipment, recre- served thro'u~out .the a~terDanielle Smith, . Pani ~ lle
attends
Mount
HerShe
of UDion Veterans' marking of
tune over. the weekend, and that . .
d
.
th fu ds·
noon.
M~rie Spencer, R,(\bert Joseph
- · will be closed to al:lon an v:m~s o er . n. ,
D .
h
.
mon United Brethren in
the --·~~. . y
A
~
nons
unng t e meen~g con- the grave of Congressional
Tay)or, . Jason ·Lee Warner,
Christ. Church, and plans to
the public and portable toilets ' ' : · I·PP"\V.C:. · approprla
ducted
.
J)y
Margaret
Parker,
of
Honor
recipient
Medal.
, William · Ed~ard W~ite II,
1
will be installed unless ptOblems adjustlhents;. '
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•
president, ii .was noted that William Barringer at II a.m. study allied health at either . .B.t;adley Jay Willford. a11d Benbe resolved
"App!OV"d payment ofbills 10 orders for the new history on Saturday. He noted that Marietta College or ·Kenyon . jamin Ray Wolfe.
,,
canMiddleport Youth League, the amount ofS 25 •692·88 · with book are still beinguken. The descendants wiU be coming College.
Members of the graduating
Iannarelli said, is responsible for 7 4 entries;
,
cost is $49.50 with an addi- from seven states.
. the facilities while baseball· sea• App~ the mayors _d!Port
class are:
son is under way. Council mCil!- of fees and-fihes collected m the
Jason.Ar.iX, Juli .Jilenee BaiI,
ber Kathy Scott, w h o - as , amount of$6.~55.90;
. .•
ley, Amber Marie Baker,
chairman of the recreation." , ; {1-p~rovedllie Mt: reading,~f ·
Christopher A. Barringer,
committee, suggested that the · :u;t.;.ordinance establishing a viiChristopher Michael Bissell,
league be made financially liable !age,investment policy;
·
Justin S. Brewer, Joseph Alan
Thl Community Calendar le
for any damage that takes place
··• "wroved the hiring ofWay- TUESDAY
Brown,
Brandon
Ryan
publlehed 11 a free Mrvlce to
Rock ofAges memorials.
during the league's games.
land M~ey. as a parr-n~s . RACINE -Racine Board .of
Browning,
Bridget
DanieUe
Public Affairs, 10:30 a.m. ·
non11roflt groupe wlahlng to
The most permiment
lannarelli said that problems police disp,atcher.
'· ' municipal building.
ennounce mHtlnge and apa- . Browning, Erin Summer
.
.
thing
you'll ever buy. '·
clal evente. The -calendar fa
Bumgarn~r.
Elizabeth J.
. '
'
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POMEROY - Meigs County
not deelgn,d to promota
Buntin,g, Kristen Lee ChevaIf 10• fed, u "' do, that qu~ity
·Heath Departmenl, childhood
aalea or fund·ralaara of any
and workmanship •rt viral in -a
immunization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m. type. Items are printed only
'fuhily memorial. yo~J're nOr alone.
Shot reeords lo be presented,
As 1n Authorited Rock of
aa apace permlta and cannot
. children lo be accompanied by . be guaranteed to be printed 1
Aps Memorialist, we're prou~ lo
•
(USPS 211-ftO)
enl/guard'1an
offer Amcria'• finetl memoria!J.
specific number of deya.
Ohio
P-•v co.
par
.
They Iff bf~d bt the nronges1 .,.
Published 0\lery afternoon, Mondo~
.
.•
•·.,. • ·ptrpetull wamnty,tVIilabW. ;.ttw,,.
·
, • . ,l~roilgh :, Frt~y..,;1~1 coun $t.. ; , · THURSDAY ,
""' Ill. Whlr Coutab( 'mort' iffip&amp;rlnt •
Correction PoliCy ,, • · Pomernr. .. Ohlor • SecoM-cluo · ROCKSPfiiNGS - Rock·
whm -,au're choosing.a .mc:mori~l~ .
Our main concem In all stories Is =~~~=:;. Preoa lllJd
springs Better Heahh Club, 1
. ,•' '
to be accurate. If you know of an lheCI!Io•No-perAoiiOCI. atlon. , ,
p.m., home of Phyllis Skinner.

Rutland

To perform

gt

v.-e&amp; vanDyke

LOCAL STOCKS
.

Fund

Eastem

a

,._~'

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Heritage

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L'O 'C AL ·.E VENTS

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The Daily Sentinel

Hearing Screenings. during May a~
·
·Holzer Clinic

Rea. cler Services
.

error In a story, can the newsroom
a1 (740) 992·21 56.

Appointmen·ts available on Wednesday only!

News Departmem. .

is Better.S~h ·ac ,
"ngMonth

Cou~. ·
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~rft.ttir: ~tn&lt;V·addren corrac· o~.

IIOftl to The Dilly Sentinel, 111
Sl.. PotllJroy, Ohio 46789.

,.

Holzer Clinic
· A~

Kimberly Jenkin•, MS, CFY/A
Loretta Lauder, MA, CCC/A

t"'

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Ill~ ·

FRIDAY
POMEROY _ Meigs County
Cancer lniliative Members, 1:30
to 3 p.m. al Veterans· Memr;nial
Hospna 1con ference room.

The main number is 992·2156. •·: .s'ilbecrlptlcin rat•• . ' I
By comor or motor rouhl
Depar1menl etdlltUons are:
onewook
12
one
.......,
se.1o
Qenerolllllln8ger
Ext 12 ·
One,..,
$104
Ex1 13 Olllly
50 conll
SATURDAY
·
Subocribors nQI desiring lo pay 11\e
POMEROY -The Meigs
ci.mer may remit In advance dlreclto
or
Counly Retired Teachers, noon,
Ext 14 Th' Dally Senlli&gt;el. CrodKwlll bo given
.. &lt;&gt;arrlor eac)h wHk. No oubscriptlon by 1 . Star Mill Park, Racine, potluck
Other services
mall ponnltted In areoo whero 110me
picnic. Beverages and table·
Ext 3 camoiloiMC~ Is available.
ware will be provided. Music by
Adverttelng
The Uplifters from Carmei·Sut·
'M811 subsatDIIon ·
Ext.' 4
Clrculallon
ton Church. All refired teachers
lnoldl Mote• c;l;,;t'y
13 weekS
$27.30
and families inviled.
Ext 5 28 WHk'
Clooelflod Ado
$53.82
52 weeks
.
St 05.56
LONG BOTTOM - Forked Run
To eend e-mell
Rolla outoldl Mllgo County
Sportsmen's
Club kids' fishing
newsOmydallysentinel.com
13 WHkl
$29.25
derby,
9
-a.m.
until noon, club
f' "'
$58.88·~.,
On
Web
"' 1:8WHMI ...
pond.
www.mydailysentinel .com
52 WHI!I o, .. , ,
,$109J i ·

•

May

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lie~ E* Muljtrj.CIMIIn llat Jtm Lt9l•
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1'1.11

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�PageAl

The .Daily Sentinel

'Ill I iSEf, IIIey 11, 2G01

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More rain on Wednesday
BY lHE ASSOCI.t.TED PRESS
A warm fumt stalled along
the Ohio-Indiana border will
continue to produce showers
and thunderstorms, some with
heavy downpours and hail,
tonight and Wednesday.
Highs on Wednesday will
be mostly in the 70s following
overnight lows in the 50s, the
National Weather Service said.
Sunset tonight · will be at
8:40, and sunrise on Wednesday is at 6:16 a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight... Showers likely
with · a chance of thunder·storms. Low 55 to 60. West
wind 5 to 10 mph becoming
south late this evening.
Chance of rain 60 peteent.
Wednesday... Showers likely
with a chance of thunder-

storms. High 73 to 79. Light
south wind. Chance of rain 60
peteent.
Wednesday night ...Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstorms. Low near 60.
Extended forec81t:
Thursday.. . A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. High 70 to 75.
· Friday... Pardy cloudy. Low
in the mid 50s and· high in the ·
lower 80s.
Saturday.. . Pardy
cloudy
with a chance of showers. Low
in the lower 60s and high in
the upper 70s.
Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Low
51 to 56 and high in the mid
70s.
Monday... Mostly clear. Low
51 to 56 and high 78 to 83.

Shooter aets 63 years in prison
CLEVELAND (AP} -A man was sentenced to 63 years in
prison for fatally shooting tw~ men as they left a nightclub in
the city's downtown entertainment district.
Kenneth Hughes, 22, avoided a possible death penalty sentence by pleading guilty Monday during the start of his trial.
Hughes killed Rayshawn Lindsey, 24, and Horace Roberson, 22, on Nov. 3 when he fired into a crowd at the Flats
after he fought with Roberson:s friend, Marquese Bryant.
Prosecutors said Hughes pointed .the gun at Bryant's chest
and pulled the trigger but the gun did not go off. He then
fired into the crowd .
Malena Roberson, 23, told a three-judge panel that sentenced Hughes that no sentence will bring back her brother.

Mom liven time behind b1rs

to d~th , his lawyers say.
Later Monday, lawyers amd U.S, District Judge Kathleen M . O'~ey to
delay Scott's execution for a second
time. She declined.
Timothy Sweeney, one of Scott's
attorneys, said he planned to appeal the
decision Tuesday with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.
Joe Case, spokesman' for Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery, was
not surprised 'by the rulings Monday.
"It's becoming evident that the legal
ground on which they're making their
arguments is very quickly crumbling
away no\v," he said.
Scott's •ttorneys had argued in a
motion to O ' Malley that Ohio has

woman shot dead in her home, the H oc king l.ounty Sheriff's
office said Monday.
. '
·
Wretha Poling was found about 2 p.m. Sunday. She was
beaten before she died, and robbery appea rs to be &lt;he mo&lt;ive
in her death, the sheriff's office said.
The Franklin C ounty coroner in C olumbus planned to do
an autopsy.
.
Laurelville is about 40 miles southeast of Columbus.

Developer enters guilty plea
CLEVELAND (AP) - A prominent Youngstown. businessman pleaded guilty to conspiracy Monday in the public corruption case against U.S. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr.
.
John J. Cafaro, 49, entered the plea to a single count before
U.S. District Judge Solomon Oliver.
The judge set sentencing for Aug. 9, but said he would lik~­
ly postpone it at the request of prosecutors to ensure that
Ca&amp;ro testifies at Traficant's trial, scheduled for Feb. 4-.
Cafaro, who has homes in Liberty Township near
Youngstown and Chevy Chase, Md., faces a maximum of five
years iri prison.

Man sentenced

Woman found shot dead
LAU~LVILLE (AP) -

'

Relatives found an 85-year- old

nine other groups including
the 0 hio School Boards Association 'and teachers, unions in
Akron, Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus and Toledo.
Current charter school law
- enacted in 1997 - also
violates the Ohio Constitution
because charter schools aren't
part of a state system of common schools, the lawsuit said.
Charter. S!'hools •"were supposed to be smaU, aittnuomous
public schools offering some
uoique instructional program,"
said To m Mooney, OFT presi.
dent. " In Ohio, that idea has
been hijacked by . entrepreneurs whose goal is simply to
make a profit and by people
who are ideologically comnutted to privatization for the
sake of privatization."

Janles Echltrrd B·ash

GALLIPOUS - Chades L. ':Johnny" Ecker, 66, Gallipolis, died
SYRACUSE- Jaines Edward Bush, 62, of Syracuse, passed
Sunday, May 13, 2001 at his residence.
away on Monday, May 14, 2001 at his residence.
He 'W3S born Sept. 26, 1934 in Ann Arbor, Mich., son of the late
He was born on December 8, 1938 in Mason,West Virginia,
H.B. and Florence Bott Ecker. He 'W3S a ver=n of the U.S. Army, son of Lecta Mae Criner Bush, and the late William Moodisand a member of the Fint Presbyterian Chuteh.
paugh Bush.
He was bead fuotbal1 coach at Galld Academy High School, and
He was employed for more than 21 years as an insurance

was a haseball coach at lhe University of Rio Grande.
Surviving are his sister,jean (Kyle) Sessions of Bloomington, ru.;

two ni~ces and a nephew; and ~ great nieces.

·
Services will be I p.m. Sal:llnby in Fint Presbyterian Chun:h,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Raafat Zaki officiating. Burial will be in
. the &amp;mi1y plot at Mound Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel. Gallipolis, from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
The body will lie in state at the church an hour prior to the serMemorial contributions may be made to the First Presbyterian
Chnn:h Memorial Fund, 51 .Stati: St, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Groundbreaklng for center set

HOLZER CLINIC
Hearing Aid Center

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·RecaptUre Life's Most
Important Sounds
-

Cllllles....._wa{Edrzr

On Friday, the Ohio Supreme C ourt
ruled 6- 1 to uphold a C uyahoga County Common Pleas judge's decision that
Scott is competent to face execution .

. Taft book revises ima1e

Chef to open own restaurant

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v;ce.

He hopes " The Collected Works ofWilliam Huward Taft"
will convince historians and scholars that Taft is as impo rtant
to early 20th century America as two othe r presidents - .
Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson .
· ·
" He came between the darling of destiny and the tragic
figure," said Burton, a history professor emeri~us a&lt; St.
Joseph's University in Philadelphia and a Taft bwg rapher.
"Taft has not lieen well understood. He's been under appreciated.

schools

••

do,.. she ' wrote.

' Judges re)ed convicfs appeal

over charter

CINCINNATI (AP) - Authorities · on Monday identified
, the badly burned body of a child as that of a 9-year-old boy
whose family had reported him missing three days earh:r.
·'Later, they arrested the boy's n1other and charged her With
rnurde~
·
Hamilton County coroner's officials said they ,used dental
records to identify the remains as those of Diarro Lavon
Hayes, of suburban Silverton. His family said he had fatled to
show up at the home of a neighborhood friend he had gone
•
to visit on Friday night.
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A child's body, bur.ned beyond recognmon , was found Saturday mornipgoin Daniel Drake Park, abo\11 two miles from
the boy's home. Following an autopsy Sunday, the coroner
· listed the cause of death as asphyxiation.
)~ ··After the identity was made Monday, police obtained a
warrant and searched the mother 's home , then placed her
~)Jnder arrest.

.

slaying

Groups_
sue state

,

failed to provide sufficient procedures.
to protect a defendant's right to avoid
execution based on mental incompeu:nce.
O'Malley said that while defense
attorneys " eloquendy discuss the sad
realities of mental illness" in their
motion her court could nor "apply
. a
constitutional standard which .is contnry to, or at least substantially extends,
existing Supreme Court precedent."
" This is something this C ourt ca nnot

CINCINNATI (AP) ·-·
Construction starts later ·this
month on a $34. 1 million project that is to pmvide a 11ew
home for the Contemporary Arrs Center in spring 2003.
Officials said Monday they plan a May 24 ground-breaking
ceremony at the downtown site, which recendy was cleared
by the demolition of old retail buildings. The 85,000•squarefoot arts center will be named for Cincinnati philanthropists
Lois and Richard Rosenthal, who donated $5 million to the
project. ·
London-based architect Zaha Hadid designed the arts center. It will be the first American building she designed. Hadid
i~
is known for her designs of the Cardiff.Bay Opera House in
LANCASTER (AP} - · A man who admitted stabbing and Wales and the Vitn Fire House in Wei! 'a m Rhein, Germany.
The Contemporary Arts Center has been ~ouse.d since
beating his girlfriend to death last August was sentenced
1971 in a second-floor space over a downtown Cincinnati
Monday to 18 yean to life in prison.
•
storefront.
William Cooper, 23, of Columbus, pleaded guilty last
I
Wednesday in Fairfield County Common Pleas Court to
murder and .kidnapping in the death of Angela Greathouse,
21.
CINCINNATI (AP) - .. Federal judges on Monday rejectCooper stabbed Greathouse more than 20 times and· bludgeo~ed her with a dumbbell in her apartment in Reynolds.- ed the appeal of an Ohio prisoner who was caught and conburg on Aug. 11. Greathouse was a Capital University nurs- victed in a Cleveland gas station robbery and killing that haping studentfroin Xenia.
·
·
·
pened 23 years earlier.
After the slaying, Cooper took a Greyh&lt;&gt;!'fld bus t'? AUanta,
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of App~als ~phdd ,a ,.\9wer
then called 911 from a pay phone and said he was wanteifor court's ruling against Cllarles Wilson, who was .seeking·a ne,,f
murder in Ohio.
·
trial.
..
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' Wilson, 52, was convicted of murder and arined robbery in
the Dec. 17, 1972 robbery and shooting death of gas station
owner Willie Binford. Wilson was sentenced in. 199~ to 15
COLUMBUS (AP) -A biographer is trying to change the years to life in prison for the murder conviction and sewn to
image of William Howard Taft, the portly president often 25 years on each of the thre~ robbery convictions, all to be
remembered for being too heavy to pull himself out of a served consecutively. He is eligible for parole jn 2005 .
·
bathtub.
Wilson challenged a witness ideqtifica.tion that wa! used to
David H. Burton is putting together eight volumes ofTaft's convict him 23 yeatl ·after the holdup. But judges Ronald
writings, speeches and Supreme Court opinions - the first Gihuan, Paul Borman ahd R. Guy Cole Jr. rejected that
time all of the Ohio Republican's writing~ haw been com- · appeal, saying the lUte h~d irttroduce!i sufficient evidence to
piled in one source.
iupport the jury's guilty vtrdict.
·

· TI\.OY (AP} - A woman convicted of child endangering
Cor Ieavins her 4-year~old 1on in the care of the 111an later
c:onvicttd of killin(l him ha1 been 1enrenced to two yean in
prbon.
Pro1ecutot1nid Suun Enpand, 29, of Piqua, knew that her
boyfriend, Elijah Manie, wa1 a threat to her 1on, John James
''J.J." Sandi1on, but allowed Manic: to watch him while she
wa1 at work.
The boy died Sept. I, 1999, when fire engulfed the house
where he livec:l With his mother and Massie. Massie admitted
tO· Imothering the child into unconsciousness and, thinking
he wu c:lead, setting a fire to cover the abuse.
·
· ·
He pleaded no contest to murder and arson and is serving
COLUMBUS. (AP)
15 yean to life in prison.
Ohio's charter school system
violates both the Ohio Constitution and State law, a coalition
of education groups and
. CINCINNATI (AP} -The Maisonette, the longest-run- teachers: unions charged
· ning Mobile five-star restaurant in the nation, is losing its · Monthy in a lawsuit.
executive chef.
State officials have allowed
Jea~-Robert de Cave! will leave in October to open his for-profit companies to conown establishment, Jean-Robert at Pigall's, at the downtown trol and operate charter
site of another former five-star restaurant, a Maisonette schools and allowed at least
spokesman said Monday.
·
· three private schools to be ille"1 want to give back to Cincinnati all the support people gaily converted to charter
have given me at the Maisonette," said de Cave!, who plans a schools, according to the law75-1eat fine-dining restaurant at the old Pigall's restaurant, suit filed by the Ohio Federa·s erving contemporary French cuisine.
tion ofTeachers.
"This is just something I have to do," he said.
The union was joined by

Patent charged with murder

LOCAL BRIEFS
m uslj: progra19 Q[ the
Club to meet agolden
Dldies at the' M eigs

.......,• ..., 15, 2001

C OLUMBUS (AP) - For the. second time: in a month, Jay D. Scott has
taken the 145· mile uip from death row
at the Mansfield Correctional Institution to the death house at the Southern
Ohio C orrectional Facility, not knowing if he would be executed the next
day.
Scott, who was scheduled to be put to
d eath Tuesday nigl}t for the 1983 murder of a Clevela,;if delicatessen owner,
arrived at the Lucasville prison Monday
afternoon .
About the time he arrived, the U.S.
Supr~me Court &lt;tnnounced it would
refuse to hear his plea that he is incompetent to face execution. Scott, 48, is a
sc hizophrenic who is too ill to be put

The Dally $entinel • Page A 3

a

Scott's case enters another appeal .
I - - · I54Y/7ti1 •

Pomeroy, llhtdllpott. Ohio

1

LuiNISd10enleb
POMEROY - LutreU Schoenleb of Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, died Tu~y, May 15, 2001 at Holze.r Medical Cent&lt;.,-.
Arrangements will be announced by. Ewing' Funeral Home,
Pomeroy.

Harold.Stafder

agent with American General Life and Accident Insurance
Company.
He was in the Anny Reserves.
Surviving are his wife, Don E. Bush of Syracuse; a son, James
E. Bush II of Athens; a daughter, Angie Barrett of Belpre; his
mother, Lecta Bush of Gallipolis; three sisters, Linda Kimper,
Karen McCoy and Patricia Watson, aU of Gallipolis; two brothers, Raben Bush and Roger Bush, both of Gallipolis; stepchildren, James M . Yonkers II of Mason, West Virginia, Kineta L.
Burns of Florida, and Philip .S . Mattion of South Carolina;
grandchildren, Bruce M . Yonkers, Eric S. Marrion, Michael
Barrett, Amanda D.Yonkers, Dillon Bush, Be,Yamin H .Yonken,
Catherine M. Yonkers, Dalton Bush, Corey Barrett, Trent Barrett and Gaven Marrion; and several st.:pbrothers and sisters.
He was preceded in death by his father, William Moodispaugh Bush.
.
.
Services \viii be 2 p.m. on Thursday, May 'I 7, 2001 at FtshcrAcree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating. will be Larry
Drummond. Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday, May 16, 200 I from 6-8 p.m .

HOCKINGPORT - Harold Snyder, 72, Hockingport, died
Monday, May 14, 2001 at the Veterans Adnlinistration Medical
Center, Clarksburg, W.Va.
ArrangemeniS will be announced by White Funeral Home,
·
Coolville.

Se n ior-Center•• T ht&gt;rsday,
5:30p.-m. There is no admission price.

ROC KSPRINGS
Rochprings Be tter Health
Club will meet on Thursday
at I p.m . at the home of
Phyllis Skinner.

Dance slated

Plan derby

APP LE GROVE A
round and square J ance will
be held Friday at the R ed
Barn in Appl e Grove o n
Ohio 338.
Music will be by t he
J-lappy H ollow Boys, 8 to I 1
p.m. The re w ill be ' ca ke
walks, door prizes, li ne
dancin g and clogging.

LONG BOTTOM
Forked Run Sportsmen 's
C lub will hold its kids' fishing derby on Saturday from
9 a.m. until noon at the club
pond .

Picnic planned

CHESHIRE - In observance of Nation~! Stroke
Aware ness Month, a picnic
will be held at the Cheshire
PO MERO Y
M eigs
She lter House, May 22 , Co unty Arth ritis Sup pn rt
12:30 to 2 p.m. Also invited Gro up w ill meet f riday. I 0
will be the Stroke Survivo rs' . to I L\0 a.m. at the M eigs
Support Group and the
Co unty Senio r Cit i ze n ~
Amputee Support ·Group.
Ce nter.
For transportation, Meigs
l aurie Cn."mcans, a di acountians ca n contact th e
Senior C itizens Center, 992- betes edu cato r from H o lze r
, Medica!'. Gen ter, .wil l", speak
21 6 1.• .
,...;•. ' '
~
&lt;~t •• - · ' ~ .... ,
· abo ut di ab e tes scre c m ngs
and foot care, .Anyo ne w ith
arthritis o r a family member
POMEROY Junior with arthritis id nvited . N ew
and Rita Whit" will present participants are invited.

Meet Friday

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Procuring authentic looking steps for the front of the
cabin w.1s also discussed by
' tDifl
.. l,.- P
council members~·
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Al
. . . ~.-........;a.,
{"' ... , ~ ... .} .•'
In other matters, cou.ncil:
purchase of a new light.
• met with Meigs County
After listening to Birch- Health Department's Margie
REEDSVILLE -· Wells "Bill"VanDyke, 82, of Reedsville, died field's request, council decid- Skidmore to discuss various
Friday, May 11,2001 a: his residence.
ed to have the issue thor- programs being offered to the
.
He was born Dec. 2, 1918 in Athens, son of the late Guy and oughly resean:hed.
community;
RockWell - 431.
ConnieVanDyke. He was a veteran of the; U.S. Army during World
AEP-48~
Gannett - 67~
Jade 4-H representatives
• approved the mayor's Arch Coal-- 35~
General Electric - 49l. Rocky Boots - 41.
War U, and was a retired coal miner and retired grave digger.
GKNLY -11 ~
RD Shell-58.
Vickey Russell and Janet report and announced that a · Akzo-41~
He is survived by two sisters, Agnes Wulner of Reedsville, and
H11rley
Davidson
SearS'- 38 ~
AmTech/SBC
42\
Bolin infoJined ·council that car and truck are ready to be
Ashland Inc. - 42
46~
Shoney's -~
Eliu~eth Moore of Kentucky; and rwo nieces and a nephew.
several 4-H members are bid on;
· Kmart-10~
Waf.Mart- 541.
AT&amp;T-21'1.
Graveside services will be 10 a.m. Wednesday inSandrock
Kroger- 24
Wendy's - 24\
working on the village's
. • discussed meeting with Bank One - 36l.
Cemetery in Srewart. Friends may call at White Funeral Home,
Worthington - 111.
Bob Evans -1n .
Lands End - 34
flower
beds.
RusseU
and
Eva
Lunder
from
the
goverDaily stOI:i&lt;' ~~pOrts are
Ltd.
-16%
BorgWamer
421.
Coolville, from 6-8 toniught.
the ·4 · p.m. &lt;:lOsing
Bolin ajso inquired about · nor's office to as~e's possibili- Champion - 21. ·
Oak Hill Financial 14~
quole.s of llle previous
plans to hook up water in the ties of obtaining a new water Charming Shops - 6
OVB-25l• . '
day's transaqons. pro·
City Holding - 8
Harder Cabin, which, they tank.
.
BBT
-351,
vided· by Smith Part·
DuPont
461.
w;ith adolts using profane lanPeoples - 18),
ners at Advest·lnc. of
say, woqld make it easier to
Attending were Mayor Federal Mogul - 3
guage will also be addressed, and
Premier - 6,.
Gallipolis. ,
USB-21
Richan:l Fetty, Councilmen
water the flowers.
that those using bad language in
' ·,
Following
discussion, Tammy Searles, Judy Denney,
the park will be banned
hmPapA1
..
. ~ouncil approved the pur- Martin Andrew, Ralph Bales,
li~r, Amber Nicole' C:llun:h,
The tennis coum are now
chase of 200 feet of water Office Manager Amanda
Joshua M . Clark;"C inda Kay
Thomas said the ann~ JuJ}ri • idcl&amp;d, Iall\ia.~ said. and sign
Ramage, Patrolman Steve
4-H
members
and
hose
for
Clifford, Sarah Nicole Clif· celebration is an attraction that ·will be posred advising players
Williams and Maintenance
to
look
into
hoolqng
agreed
ford, Phillip John C ooke,
flom~A1
brings visilon into Middleport where the key can be picked up.
'·
·~
Supervisor
David
Davis.
water
up
in
the
cabin.
James·'
~ley :·erowp•$ nauna
.,. "
• n ..,
-...,.
from throughout the area, and is The tennis coum have been
. ''
of Pomeroy. She has been 'Mari~ Elhott, Jarrod C. M .
important to maintain.
locked becawe of prol:!lems
·active in athletics and student Farley, Timothy J Grimm,
"It brings people into the with bikers and skateboarders
tiona! S5 for mailing. After government during her high Matthew Allen Grubb, Krisarea, and it 'Mluld be a shame to on the courn.
July 5, the price will increase school career. In addition to ten Diana Hoffman, Tiffany
• .
'
. •1
lose it;'Thomas said, "especially
Tennis I~ns and swimming
to $59.50.
serving as juni~~ ~nd 'sopho- Lynn Hollon, Jamie N teole
with the Ohio Bicentennial · ICS!Ons are planned for later in
Parker reported on the more class president, she was H upp. Joshua F. lhl c;
f1omPapAl
coming up (in 2003}:' .
the summer, lannarelli said.
reorganization of the museKevin Michael Keat o n,
Council approved a motion
lannarelli distributed a list of their creativity and displaying · um's library, the status offam- also freshman class treasurer.
She has been a member of Dustin Paul Kehler, Joshu a
by Councilman Bob Robinson, proposed .increases in building their products on Sunday ily stories and businesses
student council as well as a Lee Kchl , Stacey .M ari e
that the village's finance com- pennit fC!C'S fur council's consid- afternoon.
· ·
R.obe rt . J.osc•ph
going into the new history mernber. of the National Kimes,
Myron and June Duffield of
mittee meet to detemline if, and erntion,as subnlitted by building
Lawrence,Jenny
Lim1ca Lo ng,
book, interest iii securing a Honor Society, serving as secfrom where, a contribution can ' inspector Carter French.
Middleport wiD be there with
Thomas J. McDonald. Joseph
historical marker for Dr. retary during her senior year.
be made toward the fireworks.
Councilman
Stephen their colorful circus calliope
Huntington, and. on a new
Active in sports, she has W. Marcinko, N at han G.
The comnlittee will meet on Houchins noted that 450 tons entertaining all afternoon, and·
Paul
comnlittee being formed . by played volleyball, pasketball Marcinko, . N athan
Thursday at 6 p.m.
of garbage were collected by the inside an art show wiU be ,
the Meigs · County commis- and softq,a_~ fo~,(Ol,I ':;Y~ ars, and . M;trcinko. C:h'i.d Eri&lt;;.)')lclson,
In other business, council village d\]ring last month's staged. Annie Chapman :is il)
sioners to pursue money for has received awards in all three " Al'ri'atfda • l eigh " Ndft't. nip,
hired Fona Snlith as the pool spring clean-up week. Costs for charge of arranging the disMichell ~ Lynn O'Nail, Nicole
the B,uffington Island battle- sports. ·
and park manager at General the annual event are still being play of works completed by
She received the Meigs Lynn Parker, Marsha N. Pt•rfield.
Hartinger Park, · and lani}.".'7!Ji calculated. . .•
. • local artists.
She also announced that County Academic Excellence sons, Stephanie Lynn Pullins,
discussed a number of problems
Council also: ·
Souvenirs of the I 25th
Gail
Putnun,
the Buffington · 'l sl;nd Re- Award and •Ohio University Mathew
which have arisen at the park so
• Held a second reading on an anniver~ary ·of the historical
, Andrew Steven R,ced , Trave rs
enactment ~ill ·be · held July Alumni Association's Out&amp;r this se~n.. .
.
, •o~nance providing for a ~JIS- , soc~ety , wj,U b~ a:--a•labl~ for
Page · Robideaux, ~ a·nh e w
standing · Junior · award last
lannarelli satdthe ~strooms at ' fer •of ~~ ; ttiim the ~n~ral ~ sale; and ""fresliments wtll be 20, 21, and 22:
, Walter , .Sit,n pso q , &lt;:; hr.i stina
.
Ashley an.no.u ncecl ihe Sc;ms year.
the park were vandalized some
fu,;'d to' fiie' equipment, recre- served thro'u~out .the a~terDanielle Smith, . Pani ~ lle
attends
Mount
HerShe
of UDion Veterans' marking of
tune over. the weekend, and that . .
d
.
th fu ds·
noon.
M~rie Spencer, R,(\bert Joseph
- · will be closed to al:lon an v:m~s o er . n. ,
D .
h
.
mon United Brethren in
the --·~~. . y
A
~
nons
unng t e meen~g con- the grave of Congressional
Tay)or, . Jason ·Lee Warner,
Christ. Church, and plans to
the public and portable toilets ' ' : · I·PP"\V.C:. · approprla
ducted
.
J)y
Margaret
Parker,
of
Honor
recipient
Medal.
, William · Ed~ard W~ite II,
1
will be installed unless ptOblems adjustlhents;. '
' •
•
president, ii .was noted that William Barringer at II a.m. study allied health at either . .B.t;adley Jay Willford. a11d Benbe resolved
"App!OV"d payment ofbills 10 orders for the new history on Saturday. He noted that Marietta College or ·Kenyon . jamin Ray Wolfe.
,,
canMiddleport Youth League, the amount ofS 25 •692·88 · with book are still beinguken. The descendants wiU be coming College.
Members of the graduating
Iannarelli said, is responsible for 7 4 entries;
,
cost is $49.50 with an addi- from seven states.
. the facilities while baseball· sea• App~ the mayors _d!Port
class are:
son is under way. Council mCil!- of fees and-fihes collected m the
Jason.Ar.iX, Juli .Jilenee BaiI,
ber Kathy Scott, w h o - as , amount of$6.~55.90;
. .•
ley, Amber Marie Baker,
chairman of the recreation." , ; {1-p~rovedllie Mt: reading,~f ·
Christopher A. Barringer,
committee, suggested that the · :u;t.;.ordinance establishing a viiChristopher Michael Bissell,
league be made financially liable !age,investment policy;
·
Justin S. Brewer, Joseph Alan
Thl Community Calendar le
for any damage that takes place
··• "wroved the hiring ofWay- TUESDAY
Brown,
Brandon
Ryan
publlehed 11 a free Mrvlce to
Rock ofAges memorials.
during the league's games.
land M~ey. as a parr-n~s . RACINE -Racine Board .of
Browning,
Bridget
DanieUe
Public Affairs, 10:30 a.m. ·
non11roflt groupe wlahlng to
The most permiment
lannarelli said that problems police disp,atcher.
'· ' municipal building.
ennounce mHtlnge and apa- . Browning, Erin Summer
.
.
thing
you'll ever buy. '·
clal evente. The -calendar fa
Bumgarn~r.
Elizabeth J.
. '
'
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POMEROY - Meigs County
not deelgn,d to promota
Buntin,g, Kristen Lee ChevaIf 10• fed, u "' do, that qu~ity
·Heath Departmenl, childhood
aalea or fund·ralaara of any
and workmanship •rt viral in -a
immunization clinic, 1 to 7 p.m. type. Items are printed only
'fuhily memorial. yo~J're nOr alone.
Shot reeords lo be presented,
As 1n Authorited Rock of
aa apace permlta and cannot
. children lo be accompanied by . be guaranteed to be printed 1
Aps Memorialist, we're prou~ lo
•
(USPS 211-ftO)
enl/guard'1an
offer Amcria'• finetl memoria!J.
specific number of deya.
Ohio
P-•v co.
par
.
They Iff bf~d bt the nronges1 .,.
Published 0\lery afternoon, Mondo~
.
.•
•·.,. • ·ptrpetull wamnty,tVIilabW. ;.ttw,,.
·
, • . ,l~roilgh :, Frt~y..,;1~1 coun $t.. ; , · THURSDAY ,
""' Ill. Whlr Coutab( 'mort' iffip&amp;rlnt •
Correction PoliCy ,, • · Pomernr. .. Ohlor • SecoM-cluo · ROCKSPfiiNGS - Rock·
whm -,au're choosing.a .mc:mori~l~ .
Our main concem In all stories Is =~~~=:;. Preoa lllJd
springs Better Heahh Club, 1
. ,•' '
to be accurate. If you know of an lheCI!Io•No-perAoiiOCI. atlon. , ,
p.m., home of Phyllis Skinner.

Rutland

To perform

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v.-e&amp; vanDyke

LOCAL STOCKS
.

Fund

Eastem

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Heritage

.

L'O 'C AL ·.E VENTS

\

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The Daily Sentinel

Hearing Screenings. during May a~
·
·Holzer Clinic

Rea. cler Services
.

error In a story, can the newsroom
a1 (740) 992·21 56.

Appointmen·ts available on Wednesday only!

News Departmem. .

is Better.S~h ·ac ,
"ngMonth

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-·

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~rft.ttir: ~tn&lt;V·addren corrac· o~.

IIOftl to The Dilly Sentinel, 111
Sl.. PotllJroy, Ohio 46789.

,.

Holzer Clinic
· A~

Kimberly Jenkin•, MS, CFY/A
Loretta Lauder, MA, CCC/A

t"'

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FRIDAY
POMEROY _ Meigs County
Cancer lniliative Members, 1:30
to 3 p.m. al Veterans· Memr;nial
Hospna 1con ference room.

The main number is 992·2156. •·: .s'ilbecrlptlcin rat•• . ' I
By comor or motor rouhl
Depar1menl etdlltUons are:
onewook
12
one
.......,
se.1o
Qenerolllllln8ger
Ext 12 ·
One,..,
$104
Ex1 13 Olllly
50 conll
SATURDAY
·
Subocribors nQI desiring lo pay 11\e
POMEROY -The Meigs
ci.mer may remit In advance dlreclto
or
Counly Retired Teachers, noon,
Ext 14 Th' Dally Senlli&gt;el. CrodKwlll bo given
.. &lt;&gt;arrlor eac)h wHk. No oubscriptlon by 1 . Star Mill Park, Racine, potluck
Other services
mall ponnltted In areoo whero 110me
picnic. Beverages and table·
Ext 3 camoiloiMC~ Is available.
ware will be provided. Music by
Adverttelng
The Uplifters from Carmei·Sut·
'M811 subsatDIIon ·
Ext.' 4
Clrculallon
ton Church. All refired teachers
lnoldl Mote• c;l;,;t'y
13 weekS
$27.30
and families inviled.
Ext 5 28 WHk'
Clooelflod Ado
$53.82
52 weeks
.
St 05.56
LONG BOTTOM - Forked Run
To eend e-mell
Rolla outoldl Mllgo County
Sportsmen's
Club kids' fishing
newsOmydallysentinel.com
13 WHkl
$29.25
derby,
9
-a.m.
until noon, club
f' "'
$58.88·~.,
On
Web
"' 1:8WHMI ...
pond.
www.mydailysentinel .com
52 WHI!I o, .. , ,
,$109J i ·

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1he Daily Sentinel

Jill

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Ponwioy, Ohio
740 112·21M • Fax: 112-2117

Ohio Valley Publl.t11ng Co.
Cl•1tJ w. Go\-.v

R. SIIUII Lule
., Nlglng Edllar

Pull!.....

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CMstine tla Illicit

Ccwa•olar

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NATIONAL VIEW

Offer more than jail time
to our own drng abuse;:s

•

• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on fighting the drug
war. There ve two ways to combat drug abuse in the Uuited
States: The,federal government can make .a show of talking and
acting rough; or it can actually try to accomplish somethingby bmncirig efforts to crack down on drug supplien with better treatment for the people who actually buy drugs. ·
John Walters, touted by Bush adruinisaation officials as the
nation's new drug czar, will have to choose between the two
approaches if he is confirmed for the post. Bn.t to judge from
some of his past comments, he seems to favor t~e. W~l}g one:
an emphasis on law enforcement alone. ...
·
Granted, it is important to try to stem · the flow of naocotics
into the United States and catch drug traffickers within the
nation's borders. The imprisonment of so many drug critninals
during the 1990s, many e;Kperts say, is part of th': re~on why
crime dropped so precipitously during the St?cpnd half. of the
decade.
· Moreover, reducing the availability of drugs :md dri~g up
their prices tnight well force some drug users onto the wagon
sooner rather than later.
But it is hard to belieVe that the threat of criminal sanctions
- or knowledge of the health risks - will, prompt heroin,
cocaine and other hard-drug users to Jack their habits. And as
long as there are tnillions of Americans who cannot fight \heir
addictions, there will be a lucrative drug trade. Jf drugs can find
their way into nation's prisons - · and by all accounts they do
- they can certainly penetrate thousands of miles of coastlines
and porous international borders.
One has to question why, as a nation, we are so eager to crack
down on drug producers in other countries but so reluctant to
offer much besides jail time to the Americans who are actually using drugs.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today iJ Tuesday, ~~y JS. the I 35th ~ay of_20\l~. T!l~re a.re
230 days left in tqe year. ·•
.
• ' ·
Today's Highlight fn Hi~tory:
On. May 15, 1911, th~ ~upreme. Court ordered the dissolution ·of~tandard Oil:Cp., ~uling it was in viola~iottofthe·'sqer- ·•

A..c;. .

- •

., •

On thiJ date:·
' • •
In 1602, Cape Cod wa.l ''discovere~.

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KILPATRICK'S VIEW

U'hen ·advocacy breaks down ·irito inducement
Robert Bemhoft md Robert Raymond are "intelligent men." The 7th U.S.
Circuit Court so certified them last September. Why. !hen, did they disseminate
"false or misleading speech intended to
incite imminent unlawful activity"?
Good question. The answer is that the
two gendemen believe passionately that
the fetieral income tax, despite the terms
of the 16th Amendment, violates other
provisioltS of the C onstitution. In 1995
they created and sold a three-volume program for avoiding the tax, and now they're
in the U.S. Supreme Court defending
their First Amendment right to proclaim
thrir views..
The high court is itot likely to grant
their petition for review, but the case
invites a fresh look at old doctrines of
prior restraint. This is the story.
R:ayrilond ··and Bernhoft are active
members of the U.S. Taxpayers Party.
Bernhoti is a lawyer with a general practice in Milwaukee. Raymond is a roofing
contractor with an avid interest in politics.
He ran almost invisibly for the Senate
against Russell Feingold in 1998 and
again ;tgainst Herb Kohl in 2000. The two
nonconformists struck up a political
friendship that led them to launch a brieflived business known as Morningstar
Consultants.
They promoted a program they called
the "Pe-Ta,xing of America." Under the.
hea,ding of"Just Say No:• the consultants
a&lt;fvertised (1) that federal income md
Social Security taxes are voluntary, (2) that
the federal government has no authority
to compel anyone to file a tax return, and
(3) that by following· the program's directions their customers· would no longer be
required to pay federal taxes.
Mornin~tar earned $34,578 by selling
the program to 55 suckers in several different States. At least 12 of their customers
followed the promoters' cockamatnie

"Moreover," . said Judge Flaum, "the
appellants· have expressed no remorie
concerning their participation in the
unlawful activities at issue.... They continue to be active members of the U.S. Tax-.
payers Party and continue to forcefully
advocate their belie&amp; regarding the alleged
dubious legality of the federal tax system."
Constitutionally speaking, we are looking here at a very fine line. It is the wobbly line that separates advocacy from
COLUMNIST
incitement. The question 3f&lt;!5e memorably in the case of Charles Schenck, a
advice. They asked their employers to stop Socialist pamphleteer who utged young ·
withholding federal tax payments. Tw.;nty men in 1917 to resist the draft. A unani- ·
gullible innocents relied upon Morn- mous Supreme Court upheld his convic- :
ingstar and filed false ot fraudulent lion. Said Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes,
income tax returns. The rRS says this cost "The most stringent protection of free'
the government nearly $700,000 in actu- speech would not protect a man in falsely
al revenues, plw the expense of791 ,man- shouting fire in a theater and causing .
hours responding to relev.mt claims. .
panic:· Schenck's pamphlets created a .
. In March 1997 the government won a "dear and present danger" of bringing
permanent injunction in U.S. District · about a substantive evil that Congress had
Court against Raymond and Bernhoft. power to preVent.
The injunction spe!=ifically prohibits RayIn 1969 the court laid down a tougher.
mond and Bernhoft fiom inciting others test. Clarence Brandenburg had been con-.
(1) to understate their federal tax liabili- victed under an Ohio law punishing
ties, (2) to avoid the filing of federal "criminal syndicalism:• [n the course of a
returns,.md (3) to avoid paying taxes by televised Ku Klux Klan rally he had advorelying upon the "false and frivolous" cated racial strife. A unimimous court
clailllS promoted by Mornin~tar. The reversed. His inflammatory speech tUd
defendants are further enjoined from stopped short of advocacy ' intended to
"advertising, marketing or selling" any incite imminent lawless action.
The pending 7th Circuit case is a civil, · '
documents advising taxpayers that wages
and salaries are not taxable income.
not a crimin,al, proceeding. The Morn- ·
Last September, speaking through Chief in~tar promoters have not been charged
. th c· · · with any crime, but Bernhoft especially
th e 7
.
. ·
1u dge JoeI M . F1aum
· '
: trcutt
. • will
want to watch htS forceful advocacy.
affirmed .the lower court. The De-Tax:ng
1 h ted "fiI'C7,"
,,
• "'
\::.In the record he f:"
a.~se y s ou
Am
of
enca p,rnm pron:'oted an '~bu- md some of his customers were caught
stve tax shelter under Secnon 6700 of the when they ran for deceptive eicits. 1am no
Internal Revenue Code. The promoten' friend to prior restraint of speech, but I
statemerits amounted to "clearly false rep- would let this injunction stand.
resentations!' The argument that wage
(James j Kilpatrick is a columnist for Uni· '·
earners ~re not subject to federal taxes is a
versa/
Press Syndicate.) ·
"tired argument" that is patendy frivolous.
I

James

Kilpatrick

'
•
by English · ~Vi&amp;ator
Bartlrolo'mew Gosnold; •
• _.
In 1886, poet Emily Dickinson-died in Amherst, Mass. ·
I~ , 1918, U.S. airmail . began servic~ ~.etween Washingron,
Phtladelphia
and New
York.
I•
'
,
•
I.,,.... ,
In 1930, Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on
dutr'aboard a United Airlines flight betwe~n 'san 'Franci"o and
,
Cheyenne, Wyo,
In 1940, nyl~!i stockings went on general sale for the first
I •
time ,in the United ~tates.
·
·
In 1942, gasoline rationing went into effect in 17 states, lim-:
iring sales to three gallons a week for non"t!Ssential vehicles.
In 1963, U.S. astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
BY .loAN RYAN
dredging up the past and imposing conse- unwinnable war. So much ef what our sol" Faith Seven" on the final mission of the · Project Mercury
They are two PC9ple who buried pieces quences? Their cases beg the question: diers did there was both right md wrong,
space program.
.
· of their .young lives and moved on to What should be the purpose of punish- and no one has yet to define a clear line
In 1969, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas resigned amid a
beeome productive, admirable people. One ment? Is it to rehabilitate, to deter further between the two.
controversy over his past legal fees.
was a ,governor then senatpr, the other a crime or to make criminals pay a price? If
The story told today is as confusing as it
In 1970, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs :ind James Eari "Green, two
chef, mother and church volunteer. But it is to rehabilitate, both have done the job must have been that night in Vietnam. As
black stu~ents, at Jacks,o n State University in Mississippi, were
th:rir new lives must have been something well on their own. [fit is to deter further Kerry and his men· arrived at a 'group of ' .
out of an Edgar Allan Poe story. No matter crimes, both are clear on that front, too.
four or five hooches, they reportedly were ..
killed when police opened fire during student protests.
In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer and
how deep they buried their pasts, a heartSoliah clearly is no longer the t:adical, fired upon. Kerrey's team fired back. They
left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel; Md., for . the
beat thrummed faintly in their ean, as if misguided young woman that . police were horrified to discover that the dead
Democratic presidential nomination. '
·
from a faraway g::ave.At my moment, ihey describe. Friends say it's a waste of taxpayer . were all women and children.
Trn yem ago: President Hush took Britain's Queen Elizabeth
knew, the old ghosts could 'rise.
money to conduct a trial that is expected to
Should he be proseruted so, like the Los '
11 to a baseball game between the Baltimore Orioles md the
And of course, they did.
last eight months, md it is especially a waste Angeles police officers, the families of those , .
Oakland Athl.etics (the queen left after ~o innin~) • French
Kathleen Soliah went on trial yesterday to put a good woman behind bars, taking a Vietnamese women and children can hold
President Francois Mitterrand appointed Edith Cresson
to
be
in
Los Angeles on
•
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"'"- ~r th
b charges
· that, as a mem-. · mother way from three daughters.
someone
accountable? I can't imagme' · •
Fra.nce's first female pretnier.
·
.
.
Uc:r u1
e Sym ionese liberation Army.
But what about a paying a price for one's
Five yean ago: Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole
she planted nail-studded pipe bombs under actions? lfSoliah is given a get- out-of-jail- how. Who is qualified to give an accurat~; ·
announced he was leaving the Senate after 27 yeats to chaltwo police ,cars in 1976. Fot most of her 23 free pass, we send tile message that all will account of that night and who is qualifieq .
.· . - .
years as a fugitive, she has been living .as be fotgiven if you can successfully elude to judge the actions of soldiers who feared
lenge President. Clin.ton full-time. . ·
One year ago: By a. 5-4 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court threw
Sara Jane . Olson, wife of an emergency your captors for a suflicient number of for their lives and, when in free-fire zon~. : ..
out a key provision of the I 994 Violence Agaiim Women Act, ' ' room doctor and mothe'r of three tlaugh. years.
were ordered to attack any "targets of, . ,
!
This~ not justice. Justice is facing up to opportunity;' including people and vii- ·
safing that rape victims could not sue their attackers, in·federal ' ' ters in St. PaUl, Minnespta.
court. United Press International was sold to the parent com.: ,·.
Last Week, Bob Kerrey. former governor your actions, no mlltter how many years lage:;?
_
. , .
p~y ofThe Washington Times.
~ ,
, , and two-term senator, 'admitted that as ,a have passed,Justiceis allowing ajuty to sift _ L1ke haunong memones,JttSnce can be~
Today's Birthdays: Actress Constance Cummings is 91. Singer
25-year-old lieutenant in Vietnm1 he was through the evidence. Justice is making ghost, as ephemeral and difficult to define
Eddy Arnold is 85. Actor Joseph Wiseman is lB. Playwright
responsible for killing women and children sure the pblic'e officers who were almost as fog-shrouded night in the Mekong
Anthony Sh~er (','Sleuth") is 75. Playwright Sir Peter Shaffer
during a raid in 1969.
blown to bits are given a public accounting Delta. But it can also be a heartbeat, a con(" Amadeus") is 75. Playwright Paul Zindel is 65.Actress-singer
Both Soliah and Kerrey have lived exem- of the conspiracy to cake their lives.
crete living ,thing. thrumming louder until ·· ·
Anna Maria Alberghetti is 65 , Counterculture· icon Wavy. Gravy
plary lives in the several decades since the
In the civilian life in which Soliah oper- soll).OOne hears.
is 65. Former Secretary of State Mad~leine Albright. is 64.
violent incidents dm have landed them in ated, the rules were dear. In the Vietnam
Ooatl Ryan is a coluttmistfor tlic San FranSin,g er Trini Lopez is 64. Singer Lenny Welch is 63. Actress·the news this iWeek. Both' were young at War, they were anything l:!.ut. ,
ciw Chrm1icle. Send comme11ts to l1er in Care ,j
sing~r Lainie Kazan is 61. Actor"director Paul Rudd '(''Knots
the time. Neither is a threat to society1 now. _ Kerrey and other yo\ffig men found this newspaper or semi l1er e-mail at foan· .;.
Landing"} is 61. Country singer K.T: Oslin is 59.
'rhe question is: What good is served by themselves in a morally ambiguous, ryan@sjgate.com.)
'
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RY.AN'S VIEW

Echoes of the 1960s that will nev~r go away

a

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Page AS
'I If

Joins lnfaeision

~nt mums, RducL.g
your IIICOme Ulae5 or maxiGALLIPOLIS Misty mizing your invesrment
~ h2s j oined lnfoCision income. you should plan ro
Maru~t Corp. as ~ pm- attend Ibis info~ c1au.H
gnm supavisor in the open- Bownun-Moore Wd.
nons department ~t its Gal- . For information, or to
~polis C2ll Center.
~ a sea. conbct Debbie
As program supervisor. Bartek at !he Senior Resource
Sa)..e specializes in running Center, 446-7000. or Dale
tdephone marketing programs Whitt of the Oflice of Conand works with .an assigned tinuing Education ~t Rio
team of communicators. Her Grandr, 245-7325.
lt'sponsibilities also include
re•ching esublished performance goals for the company's
ctient programs.
·
GALLIPOLiS Tyler
Sayre earned her bachrlor's Stnilh of Gdlipolis is a new
degree from M.alon&lt;' College junior member of !he Ameriin Canton. She most recendy can Angus Auociation, based
,ervcd as an intern ~t Bel-Air in St. Joseph, Mo.
Emert.ainment in Burbank
• The association's junior
Calif
members are eligible to register cattle in the organization
and take part .in assorutionsponsored shO\~s. as well as
national and regional events.

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GALLIPOLIS
Anty
llownun - Moore, , Edward
Jones investment represenuri,·e in Gallipolis, will host a
financ ial workshop for th~
1ndi\lidu.al investor staning
June 5 at the GaUia County
Senior Resource Center, 1167
Jac kson Pike.
The workshop will be from
3-5 p.m . and will continue
every Tuesday through June.
Evening classes will be held on
the same dates in Room 204
of Anniversary Hall at the
University
of
Rio
Grande / Rio Grande Community College from 7-8:30
. p.m.The textbook can be purchased for $8.
The workshop will assist
individuals in setting financial
and investment goals, offering
an in-depth look at the many
different types of investments
available to and suitable for
investors who are workirig or
retited.
·:whether you are interested
in maximizing your long-term

NEWYORK (AP) -Anxtety owr intcrcsr rates made
for a quiet Monday on Wall
Street, with investors reluctant
ttl 111ake any big moves on the.
eve of an important federal
Reserve nleeting. 131~1e chips
rose moderately, while tech·
nology stocks drifted lower.
givh~g the Nasdaq composite
its fourth straight decline.
Analysts said the market's
tentativeness resulted from
doubts about how big a rate
cut the Fed will make - if it
makes one at all - on Tuesday.
''It's really been a non-event
day," said Stephen Carl, head
of equity trading at The
William
Capital
Group.
"Everybody's just on the sidelines waiting to see what the
Fed does. The volume is so
low that it's hard to tell what,
if anything, else is going on."
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed up 56.02 at
10,877.33 on gains that mostly came late in the session.
Broader
indexes
were
mixed. The Nasdaq slipped
25.51 to 2,081.92, giving it a
116.85-point I or 5.3 percent
le&gt;ss over the past four sessions.
But the Standard &amp; Poor's 500
.index ro se 3.25 to 1,248.92.
Trading activity was muted
thr9ughout the session, with
the New York Stock Exchange
and Nasdaq Stock Market
experiencing their slowest day
of t'h e year.
NYSE volume wa's 858.27
million shares, compared with
906.25 million Friday. the pre·
vious low this year. The Nasdaq recorded . 1.30 billion
share s trading hands. compared with its previous 2001
low of 1.43 billion recorded
Friday.
Although most analysts still
c'XP.ect t he Fed to make its
fifth interest rate cut of2001 at
its Tuesday meeting , there are
doubts about whether the

-.-.

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rd.mDiiN'8
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A. ~ ID Dolwd Alon - .

u.~.rm-.-. a-.

.......... Jordan. ~ lo
Tracy L -

Donlk D. dood. CCIUnbia.

W&lt;e S. MdJaniol, Klllhy S.

~-L "' Chades a
w. Owislm
-. ·
Slow C. Russel to Belly Calved.

Wood,- ·

-. ~.

Johl Ktisley. Usa ~. lo H.F.

McfOIIar1cl, · 5alem.
Jcl1n Hysell, Balllala ttrool. '-Gmoe
Gone Olaney, Saleh
A. B Dabaja. Vid&amp;y El Dabaja, 1o
A. 8 Dabaja. Vodly 8 Dabaja,
__Saleh, Soan_

a-.

- . , . Greer. ""'-"""· lo Edilh
Greer. Cokonbia.
01illles ..... Doma ..... lo S1alo

c:l Cho, Meigs Counly Cou11 . 'hn-

Sulton. .
.....-.Sulton.
""'· dood.

01illles lhle, Doma ...... .. -"' Olio, Meigs caur.y CommissicJn.
Raymond Fubee, Gnoao F..-~

It's a-cozy, hoiJle-Jike environment combined with custom service that makes Hometown Candles
a unique experience for the candle buyer. Sherrie Might, pictured here, and her husband Bernard
have opened the shop on Ohio 7 in Meigs County, just across from the Skate-A-Way, 'and off~
homemade candles 1n more than 70 scents, and in m_any presentations. Jelly jar candles "(ainbow" candles with three scents .in one candle, votilles, gift baskets, aromatherapy
and
other candles perfect for the home or as gifts, along with handmade etafts by Peg Brickles and .
~anet Venoy, among others, fine the walls and shelves of the comfortable little shop. Judy Coblentz
1s the store manager, and also designs many of the candles in the shop. The store is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m., and by appointment. (Brian J. Reed photo)

produds

Producers Inc. market report . Hf $68-$72.
from Gallipolis for sales conFed Cattle (second
ducted on Wednesday.
Wednesday of each
Feeder Cattle-Higher
month)
275-415# St. $95-$108 Hf.
Steers- Choice, $76-$81;
$85-$96, 425-525# St. $90- heifers, $75-$78.
$104 Hf. $82-$95 550-625# · Select - Steers, $72-$75;
St. $87-$99 Hf. $80-$88 650- heifers, $69-$71.
725# St. $81-$93 Hf. $75Holsteins Steers, $68United $82; 750-850# St. $78-$82 $70.10; heifers, $60-$64.

,,
•

1.000

MOO

LOw

10.100.13
llooordlltthl 11,722.81

10.171.71

· Jon. t•.aooo

~IMUAIW

MA"CH

A~AIL

W.Y

1.0110

May 14.2001

1.100

11 ndtldll
...... 100

,,.00
•1,:100

1,241.82

~ct. """'
+0.21

1.200

""""'

Hllh

LOw

1.100

1.241._02
,._,. hlth: 1,527.48
1.24t.ll

1,000

MIICI1 IM, IOOO

May 14,2001

•.ooo

N11d1q

3.!500

-Ill-·

3.000

2·.081 .92

2.100

Pct . . . . -ptOIOiol:

·1.21
High

LOw

2.105.38

2.062.41

.Roc:ord high: 5.048.62
Mo..n :o. 2000

2.000

FEBRUAAY .

reduction will be as big as
expected.
The central bank has been
lowering rates to stimulate the
sluggish · economy, but -some
recent data have indicated
business may not be as weak as
previously thought, If the
economy shows signs of
strength - as some betterthan~expected retail and consumer sentiment reports suggested last week - many fear

-.dy Gloo, ID

~Riley. .....

PctCIWtl--

•

It Lie.

... -.SQpio.
.
Ewlyn Srualt aad Ia JemllrL.ym
Sn 7
' Till, died. Slllm.

Markets roundup

•0.&amp;2

~

wayne Lie ~. Md'Mde. D a.t.ra AM Wlmlli..

Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/Fleshed $45$53; Medium/Lean $38~$44;
Thin/Light $35-$38; Bulls
$49-$61.75 .
Back To The Farm:
Cow /Calf Pairs $540-$990;
Bred Cows $370-$785; Baby
Calves $95-$275; Goats $21$71.
.

Blue chips higher, techs fall ,as market awaits Fed meeting
SunTrnst falls
$4.81 on word
q{Wachovia bid

11. 2111

--__.._.._..,... __
TN L Lie lo

Uvestock report
GALLIPOLIS -

, • ..,

POMEROY Mrigs
County Recorder Judy
King ~ned !he following real estate tr.IJWC!ions
as processed in her office:

Make enbies
GALLIPOLIS Three
Gallia County residents will
exhibit Angus catde at the
2001
Atlantic
National
Regional · Preview Junior
Show at the Maryland Sute
Fairgrounds in Timonium,
Md., on May 26.
They are Morhan Woodward, Kimberly Evans and
Jenny Davis, all of Gallipolis
and all junior members of the
American Angus Association,
based in St. Joseph, Mo. They
will be among I 43 young
Angus breeders from 18 sutes
who have entered a ooul of
332 head at the show.
The show is one of five
nationally sanctioned junior
Angus shows sponsored by the
American Angus Association
and the National Junior Angus
Association in 2001.

I

Land deals·
recorded

Financial
wotbhops

Balance

ll1l1q .AIItif!ltJ(

Business

The Daily Sentinel

MARCH

APRIL

MAV

1,100

the Fed will be less Inclined to
cut aggressively.
The problem for the market:
In the absence of strong earn.:
ings, investors have become
increasingly dependent on the
fed's cuts for catalysts to rally
stocks. Stocks spent most of
last week in a li,arrow trading
range in anticipation of the
fed's next move.
"Not having the 100 percent certainty that the fed will

$5,000 reward offered for the
arrest &amp; conviction of the
person or persons
responsible for the shooting
&amp; death of Michael Sigler.
Contact the Sigler f~mily

. 742-2279
I

lower interest rates as ntuch as
. many want is what's causing
this," said Steven Goldman,
market strategist at Weeden &amp;
Co. "But overall, the market
remains on good footing."
The latest Fed report·
released Monday showed further evidence that the economy slO\ved during the spripg.
Industrial production fell in
April by a bigger-thanexpected 0.3 percent, the sev~
enth straight monthly decline,
according to the report.
Technology stocks were
especially weak, reflecting the
gradual selli11Jsince April's big
advance. Cisco Systenu 'feU 48
cents to $18.57, while Intel
dropped 53 cents to $27.4'.
· Non-technology issues fared
better, including banker J.P.
Morgan, up $1.20 at $47.64.
Also Monday, SunTrust
Banks feU $4.81 to $60 on
news it madr a $14.7 billion
bid for Wachovia, a move that
could derail First Union's
planned Sl 2. 5 billion purchase
of the North Carolina bank.
Wachovia rose $3.85 to
$64.75, while first Union was
up 56 cents at $30.58.
Advancing issues led decline'rs 8 to 7 on the NYSE. Consolidated volume on the
NYSE came to 1.02 billion,
compared with 1. 08 billion

friday. ·
The Russell 2000 index
slipped 0.72 to 486.64.
Overseas, Japan's Nikke i
stock average slid 1.2 percent.
Getmany's DAX index fell 1.2
percent, Briuin's FT-SE I 00 ·
.lost 3.5 percent, and France's
CAC-40 fell 1.4 percent.

lo Slate of Olio, - · LaiJaim.
Aichard l.tchael Gtess. Palricia

Gteu. lo Mark Palric:l&lt; Gnlss. - ·
Village ot-..,.t
Billy D. l!uA:ham. deooased. 1o
Cindy ~. - · Vilage of
f&gt;omOfoy.
Cindy Lanbell"' SUe lirlde. - ·
Vllaged Pai161f11.
~ lAimaoler to Ronald E.
- · J,, Jeame It Haclcer. dood,
CaUrtie.
ScoUA. Lilla, Jahn T.,Lilla, C1vis1i
A. Uolo, tons Renlals. 1nc.• ·
Village ollotitopurt
ScoU A. Lilla, Jahn T. Lisle Christi
A. ~ to ns Renlals, 1nc:. - ·
Vtlage of Synocusa.
Holen F. Baerto DonnaJ. G.-r.
Meliaa K. Gruesar. doad, ViSage of

Synocusa.
Bryan Keilh While, Har1ey Haning.
Margarol•Haning. Ia Har1ey Haning
and Morgarel Haning. , . , . , . , . .

otee-.

·

Robeft R. Oonch, '*I lied, to
~ G. Clonch. afficllvil, Sallsbo.ry.
Eura Largent to Anthony w. Deem.
David L
Vilaga o1 Syra·

arse.

Deem,-·

Phillip R. Blackford. SU""' L
Blaoklord to catumb,. Southem
PO'Mif, easement. ScipiQ.
John A. Hantlel, Marian C. Hambel, Thomas L. Asher. loretta J.
Asher, to Columbus Southem Power.
easement. Sdpio.
Winifred Martis, Timothy Lenlgar,
to Cdumbus Southem Power, easement. Sdpio.
Chad .l . Roberts . Randall S .
Rooerts. Judy D. Rol&gt;erts. to Randall
S. Roberts, Judy D. Roberts. deed.
Letart.
Edna L Neigler, deceased, to
Ralph F._Naigler. affidavit, Sutton.
Clara Jarvis, deceased, to wavne ·
JaNie. affidavit, Village of Middleport.
Wl)fno JaNis to Heraton JaNis.
Roy JIMo . dttC. ViiO.ga of Middle·

port.
Thoa&lt;to&lt;o P. Soubor, Cerol J.

S.ubor, to Thoodore P. Slublr. Clrol
J. Seublr, dud, Bodford.

Wonderful opportunltlll ere avellableln Tom
Peden Country. We are expending our fecllltlll
end netd more talea people. No experience It
requlrtd, ·only 1 wllllngn•• to l11rn, work •• •
team, and hJvt atrong Initiative.
ExCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
GREAT BENEFITS (INCLUDING DEMO PFIOOFIAM)
WOFIK AT THE 11 :lEALERSHIP

Call To §cbodult An lmorvltw;
Tom Peden Cou~try

1-800-822-0417. (304) 344·5947
475 South Church llreet • Ripley, wv

The Meigs County Department of Jobs &amp; Family Services
Is seeking proposals to provide a summer youth program to
eligible youth age 14-18 consistent with federal, state and local
guidelines for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TAN F)
program~ Youth who reside In Meigs County and whose family
Income does not exceed 200o/o of the federal poverty Index are
eligible for participation. Program costs must not exceed
S100,000 for the period beginning June 1, 2001. It Is expected that
the program wlll .enroll 60 youth and provide employment at
$6.15 per hour. Actual enrollment of youth Is expected to begin no
later than June 15, 2001. Administrative costs may not exceed
1So/o of the total contract award.
There will be a proposers conference for aU Interested parties on
May 21, 2001 at 10:00a.m. at the Meigs County Department of Job
and Family Services, 175 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio, 3rd Aoor
Conference Room. At this conference the proposed format will be
described. Any organization falling to aHend will be Ineligible to
submit a proposal •

�PageM ...

1he Daily Sentinel

Jill

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Ponwioy, Ohio
740 112·21M • Fax: 112-2117

Ohio Valley Publl.t11ng Co.
Cl•1tJ w. Go\-.v

R. SIIUII Lule
., Nlglng Edllar

Pull!.....

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CMstine tla Illicit

Ccwa•olar

Ga•lllllnlg«

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NATIONAL VIEW

Offer more than jail time
to our own drng abuse;:s

•

• The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, on fighting the drug
war. There ve two ways to combat drug abuse in the Uuited
States: The,federal government can make .a show of talking and
acting rough; or it can actually try to accomplish somethingby bmncirig efforts to crack down on drug supplien with better treatment for the people who actually buy drugs. ·
John Walters, touted by Bush adruinisaation officials as the
nation's new drug czar, will have to choose between the two
approaches if he is confirmed for the post. Bn.t to judge from
some of his past comments, he seems to favor t~e. W~l}g one:
an emphasis on law enforcement alone. ...
·
Granted, it is important to try to stem · the flow of naocotics
into the United States and catch drug traffickers within the
nation's borders. The imprisonment of so many drug critninals
during the 1990s, many e;Kperts say, is part of th': re~on why
crime dropped so precipitously during the St?cpnd half. of the
decade.
· Moreover, reducing the availability of drugs :md dri~g up
their prices tnight well force some drug users onto the wagon
sooner rather than later.
But it is hard to belieVe that the threat of criminal sanctions
- or knowledge of the health risks - will, prompt heroin,
cocaine and other hard-drug users to Jack their habits. And as
long as there are tnillions of Americans who cannot fight \heir
addictions, there will be a lucrative drug trade. Jf drugs can find
their way into nation's prisons - · and by all accounts they do
- they can certainly penetrate thousands of miles of coastlines
and porous international borders.
One has to question why, as a nation, we are so eager to crack
down on drug producers in other countries but so reluctant to
offer much besides jail time to the Americans who are actually using drugs.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today iJ Tuesday, ~~y JS. the I 35th ~ay of_20\l~. T!l~re a.re
230 days left in tqe year. ·•
.
• ' ·
Today's Highlight fn Hi~tory:
On. May 15, 1911, th~ ~upreme. Court ordered the dissolution ·of~tandard Oil:Cp., ~uling it was in viola~iottofthe·'sqer- ·•

A..c;. .

- •

., •

On thiJ date:·
' • •
In 1602, Cape Cod wa.l ''discovere~.

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'"t

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KILPATRICK'S VIEW

U'hen ·advocacy breaks down ·irito inducement
Robert Bemhoft md Robert Raymond are "intelligent men." The 7th U.S.
Circuit Court so certified them last September. Why. !hen, did they disseminate
"false or misleading speech intended to
incite imminent unlawful activity"?
Good question. The answer is that the
two gendemen believe passionately that
the fetieral income tax, despite the terms
of the 16th Amendment, violates other
provisioltS of the C onstitution. In 1995
they created and sold a three-volume program for avoiding the tax, and now they're
in the U.S. Supreme Court defending
their First Amendment right to proclaim
thrir views..
The high court is itot likely to grant
their petition for review, but the case
invites a fresh look at old doctrines of
prior restraint. This is the story.
R:ayrilond ··and Bernhoft are active
members of the U.S. Taxpayers Party.
Bernhoti is a lawyer with a general practice in Milwaukee. Raymond is a roofing
contractor with an avid interest in politics.
He ran almost invisibly for the Senate
against Russell Feingold in 1998 and
again ;tgainst Herb Kohl in 2000. The two
nonconformists struck up a political
friendship that led them to launch a brieflived business known as Morningstar
Consultants.
They promoted a program they called
the "Pe-Ta,xing of America." Under the.
hea,ding of"Just Say No:• the consultants
a&lt;fvertised (1) that federal income md
Social Security taxes are voluntary, (2) that
the federal government has no authority
to compel anyone to file a tax return, and
(3) that by following· the program's directions their customers· would no longer be
required to pay federal taxes.
Mornin~tar earned $34,578 by selling
the program to 55 suckers in several different States. At least 12 of their customers
followed the promoters' cockamatnie

"Moreover," . said Judge Flaum, "the
appellants· have expressed no remorie
concerning their participation in the
unlawful activities at issue.... They continue to be active members of the U.S. Tax-.
payers Party and continue to forcefully
advocate their belie&amp; regarding the alleged
dubious legality of the federal tax system."
Constitutionally speaking, we are looking here at a very fine line. It is the wobbly line that separates advocacy from
COLUMNIST
incitement. The question 3f&lt;!5e memorably in the case of Charles Schenck, a
advice. They asked their employers to stop Socialist pamphleteer who utged young ·
withholding federal tax payments. Tw.;nty men in 1917 to resist the draft. A unani- ·
gullible innocents relied upon Morn- mous Supreme Court upheld his convic- :
ingstar and filed false ot fraudulent lion. Said Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes,
income tax returns. The rRS says this cost "The most stringent protection of free'
the government nearly $700,000 in actu- speech would not protect a man in falsely
al revenues, plw the expense of791 ,man- shouting fire in a theater and causing .
hours responding to relev.mt claims. .
panic:· Schenck's pamphlets created a .
. In March 1997 the government won a "dear and present danger" of bringing
permanent injunction in U.S. District · about a substantive evil that Congress had
Court against Raymond and Bernhoft. power to preVent.
The injunction spe!=ifically prohibits RayIn 1969 the court laid down a tougher.
mond and Bernhoft fiom inciting others test. Clarence Brandenburg had been con-.
(1) to understate their federal tax liabili- victed under an Ohio law punishing
ties, (2) to avoid the filing of federal "criminal syndicalism:• [n the course of a
returns,.md (3) to avoid paying taxes by televised Ku Klux Klan rally he had advorelying upon the "false and frivolous" cated racial strife. A unimimous court
clailllS promoted by Mornin~tar. The reversed. His inflammatory speech tUd
defendants are further enjoined from stopped short of advocacy ' intended to
"advertising, marketing or selling" any incite imminent lawless action.
The pending 7th Circuit case is a civil, · '
documents advising taxpayers that wages
and salaries are not taxable income.
not a crimin,al, proceeding. The Morn- ·
Last September, speaking through Chief in~tar promoters have not been charged
. th c· · · with any crime, but Bernhoft especially
th e 7
.
. ·
1u dge JoeI M . F1aum
· '
: trcutt
. • will
want to watch htS forceful advocacy.
affirmed .the lower court. The De-Tax:ng
1 h ted "fiI'C7,"
,,
• "'
\::.In the record he f:"
a.~se y s ou
Am
of
enca p,rnm pron:'oted an '~bu- md some of his customers were caught
stve tax shelter under Secnon 6700 of the when they ran for deceptive eicits. 1am no
Internal Revenue Code. The promoten' friend to prior restraint of speech, but I
statemerits amounted to "clearly false rep- would let this injunction stand.
resentations!' The argument that wage
(James j Kilpatrick is a columnist for Uni· '·
earners ~re not subject to federal taxes is a
versa/
Press Syndicate.) ·
"tired argument" that is patendy frivolous.
I

James

Kilpatrick

'
•
by English · ~Vi&amp;ator
Bartlrolo'mew Gosnold; •
• _.
In 1886, poet Emily Dickinson-died in Amherst, Mass. ·
I~ , 1918, U.S. airmail . began servic~ ~.etween Washingron,
Phtladelphia
and New
York.
I•
'
,
•
I.,,.... ,
In 1930, Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went on
dutr'aboard a United Airlines flight betwe~n 'san 'Franci"o and
,
Cheyenne, Wyo,
In 1940, nyl~!i stockings went on general sale for the first
I •
time ,in the United ~tates.
·
·
In 1942, gasoline rationing went into effect in 17 states, lim-:
iring sales to three gallons a week for non"t!Ssential vehicles.
In 1963, U.S. astronaut L. Gordon Cooper blasted off aboard
BY .loAN RYAN
dredging up the past and imposing conse- unwinnable war. So much ef what our sol" Faith Seven" on the final mission of the · Project Mercury
They are two PC9ple who buried pieces quences? Their cases beg the question: diers did there was both right md wrong,
space program.
.
· of their .young lives and moved on to What should be the purpose of punish- and no one has yet to define a clear line
In 1969, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas resigned amid a
beeome productive, admirable people. One ment? Is it to rehabilitate, to deter further between the two.
controversy over his past legal fees.
was a ,governor then senatpr, the other a crime or to make criminals pay a price? If
The story told today is as confusing as it
In 1970, Phillip Lafayette Gibbs :ind James Eari "Green, two
chef, mother and church volunteer. But it is to rehabilitate, both have done the job must have been that night in Vietnam. As
black stu~ents, at Jacks,o n State University in Mississippi, were
th:rir new lives must have been something well on their own. [fit is to deter further Kerry and his men· arrived at a 'group of ' .
out of an Edgar Allan Poe story. No matter crimes, both are clear on that front, too.
four or five hooches, they reportedly were ..
killed when police opened fire during student protests.
In 1972, George C. Wallace was shot by Arthur Bremer and
how deep they buried their pasts, a heartSoliah clearly is no longer the t:adical, fired upon. Kerrey's team fired back. They
left paralyzed while campaigning in Laurel; Md., for . the
beat thrummed faintly in their ean, as if misguided young woman that . police were horrified to discover that the dead
Democratic presidential nomination. '
·
from a faraway g::ave.At my moment, ihey describe. Friends say it's a waste of taxpayer . were all women and children.
Trn yem ago: President Hush took Britain's Queen Elizabeth
knew, the old ghosts could 'rise.
money to conduct a trial that is expected to
Should he be proseruted so, like the Los '
11 to a baseball game between the Baltimore Orioles md the
And of course, they did.
last eight months, md it is especially a waste Angeles police officers, the families of those , .
Oakland Athl.etics (the queen left after ~o innin~) • French
Kathleen Soliah went on trial yesterday to put a good woman behind bars, taking a Vietnamese women and children can hold
President Francois Mitterrand appointed Edith Cresson
to
be
in
Los Angeles on
•
'
"'"- ~r th
b charges
· that, as a mem-. · mother way from three daughters.
someone
accountable? I can't imagme' · •
Fra.nce's first female pretnier.
·
.
.
Uc:r u1
e Sym ionese liberation Army.
But what about a paying a price for one's
Five yean ago: Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole
she planted nail-studded pipe bombs under actions? lfSoliah is given a get- out-of-jail- how. Who is qualified to give an accurat~; ·
announced he was leaving the Senate after 27 yeats to chaltwo police ,cars in 1976. Fot most of her 23 free pass, we send tile message that all will account of that night and who is qualifieq .
.· . - .
years as a fugitive, she has been living .as be fotgiven if you can successfully elude to judge the actions of soldiers who feared
lenge President. Clin.ton full-time. . ·
One year ago: By a. 5-4 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court threw
Sara Jane . Olson, wife of an emergency your captors for a suflicient number of for their lives and, when in free-fire zon~. : ..
out a key provision of the I 994 Violence Agaiim Women Act, ' ' room doctor and mothe'r of three tlaugh. years.
were ordered to attack any "targets of, . ,
!
This~ not justice. Justice is facing up to opportunity;' including people and vii- ·
safing that rape victims could not sue their attackers, in·federal ' ' ters in St. PaUl, Minnespta.
court. United Press International was sold to the parent com.: ,·.
Last Week, Bob Kerrey. former governor your actions, no mlltter how many years lage:;?
_
. , .
p~y ofThe Washington Times.
~ ,
, , and two-term senator, 'admitted that as ,a have passed,Justiceis allowing ajuty to sift _ L1ke haunong memones,JttSnce can be~
Today's Birthdays: Actress Constance Cummings is 91. Singer
25-year-old lieutenant in Vietnm1 he was through the evidence. Justice is making ghost, as ephemeral and difficult to define
Eddy Arnold is 85. Actor Joseph Wiseman is lB. Playwright
responsible for killing women and children sure the pblic'e officers who were almost as fog-shrouded night in the Mekong
Anthony Sh~er (','Sleuth") is 75. Playwright Sir Peter Shaffer
during a raid in 1969.
blown to bits are given a public accounting Delta. But it can also be a heartbeat, a con(" Amadeus") is 75. Playwright Paul Zindel is 65.Actress-singer
Both Soliah and Kerrey have lived exem- of the conspiracy to cake their lives.
crete living ,thing. thrumming louder until ·· ·
Anna Maria Alberghetti is 65 , Counterculture· icon Wavy. Gravy
plary lives in the several decades since the
In the civilian life in which Soliah oper- soll).OOne hears.
is 65. Former Secretary of State Mad~leine Albright. is 64.
violent incidents dm have landed them in ated, the rules were dear. In the Vietnam
Ooatl Ryan is a coluttmistfor tlic San FranSin,g er Trini Lopez is 64. Singer Lenny Welch is 63. Actress·the news this iWeek. Both' were young at War, they were anything l:!.ut. ,
ciw Chrm1icle. Send comme11ts to l1er in Care ,j
sing~r Lainie Kazan is 61. Actor"director Paul Rudd '(''Knots
the time. Neither is a threat to society1 now. _ Kerrey and other yo\ffig men found this newspaper or semi l1er e-mail at foan· .;.
Landing"} is 61. Country singer K.T: Oslin is 59.
'rhe question is: What good is served by themselves in a morally ambiguous, ryan@sjgate.com.)
'
~

RY.AN'S VIEW

Echoes of the 1960s that will nev~r go away

a

.

I

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Page AS
'I If

Joins lnfaeision

~nt mums, RducL.g
your IIICOme Ulae5 or maxiGALLIPOLIS Misty mizing your invesrment
~ h2s j oined lnfoCision income. you should plan ro
Maru~t Corp. as ~ pm- attend Ibis info~ c1au.H
gnm supavisor in the open- Bownun-Moore Wd.
nons department ~t its Gal- . For information, or to
~polis C2ll Center.
~ a sea. conbct Debbie
As program supervisor. Bartek at !he Senior Resource
Sa)..e specializes in running Center, 446-7000. or Dale
tdephone marketing programs Whitt of the Oflice of Conand works with .an assigned tinuing Education ~t Rio
team of communicators. Her Grandr, 245-7325.
lt'sponsibilities also include
re•ching esublished performance goals for the company's
ctient programs.
·
GALLIPOLiS Tyler
Sayre earned her bachrlor's Stnilh of Gdlipolis is a new
degree from M.alon&lt;' College junior member of !he Ameriin Canton. She most recendy can Angus Auociation, based
,ervcd as an intern ~t Bel-Air in St. Joseph, Mo.
Emert.ainment in Burbank
• The association's junior
Calif
members are eligible to register cattle in the organization
and take part .in assorutionsponsored shO\~s. as well as
national and regional events.

I

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GALLIPOLIS
Anty
llownun - Moore, , Edward
Jones investment represenuri,·e in Gallipolis, will host a
financ ial workshop for th~
1ndi\lidu.al investor staning
June 5 at the GaUia County
Senior Resource Center, 1167
Jac kson Pike.
The workshop will be from
3-5 p.m . and will continue
every Tuesday through June.
Evening classes will be held on
the same dates in Room 204
of Anniversary Hall at the
University
of
Rio
Grande / Rio Grande Community College from 7-8:30
. p.m.The textbook can be purchased for $8.
The workshop will assist
individuals in setting financial
and investment goals, offering
an in-depth look at the many
different types of investments
available to and suitable for
investors who are workirig or
retited.
·:whether you are interested
in maximizing your long-term

NEWYORK (AP) -Anxtety owr intcrcsr rates made
for a quiet Monday on Wall
Street, with investors reluctant
ttl 111ake any big moves on the.
eve of an important federal
Reserve nleeting. 131~1e chips
rose moderately, while tech·
nology stocks drifted lower.
givh~g the Nasdaq composite
its fourth straight decline.
Analysts said the market's
tentativeness resulted from
doubts about how big a rate
cut the Fed will make - if it
makes one at all - on Tuesday.
''It's really been a non-event
day," said Stephen Carl, head
of equity trading at The
William
Capital
Group.
"Everybody's just on the sidelines waiting to see what the
Fed does. The volume is so
low that it's hard to tell what,
if anything, else is going on."
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed up 56.02 at
10,877.33 on gains that mostly came late in the session.
Broader
indexes
were
mixed. The Nasdaq slipped
25.51 to 2,081.92, giving it a
116.85-point I or 5.3 percent
le&gt;ss over the past four sessions.
But the Standard &amp; Poor's 500
.index ro se 3.25 to 1,248.92.
Trading activity was muted
thr9ughout the session, with
the New York Stock Exchange
and Nasdaq Stock Market
experiencing their slowest day
of t'h e year.
NYSE volume wa's 858.27
million shares, compared with
906.25 million Friday. the pre·
vious low this year. The Nasdaq recorded . 1.30 billion
share s trading hands. compared with its previous 2001
low of 1.43 billion recorded
Friday.
Although most analysts still
c'XP.ect t he Fed to make its
fifth interest rate cut of2001 at
its Tuesday meeting , there are
doubts about whether the

-.-.

Edmon~ T. ~

rd.mDiiN'8
--a
HT17 5 t
• "'-v""
A. ~ ID Dolwd Alon - .

u.~.rm-.-. a-.

.......... Jordan. ~ lo
Tracy L -

Donlk D. dood. CCIUnbia.

W&lt;e S. MdJaniol, Klllhy S.

~-L "' Chades a
w. Owislm
-. ·
Slow C. Russel to Belly Calved.

Wood,- ·

-. ~.

Johl Ktisley. Usa ~. lo H.F.

McfOIIar1cl, · 5alem.
Jcl1n Hysell, Balllala ttrool. '-Gmoe
Gone Olaney, Saleh
A. B Dabaja. Vid&amp;y El Dabaja, 1o
A. 8 Dabaja. Vodly 8 Dabaja,
__Saleh, Soan_

a-.

- . , . Greer. ""'-"""· lo Edilh
Greer. Cokonbia.
01illles ..... Doma ..... lo S1alo

c:l Cho, Meigs Counly Cou11 . 'hn-

Sulton. .
.....-.Sulton.
""'· dood.

01illles lhle, Doma ...... .. -"' Olio, Meigs caur.y CommissicJn.
Raymond Fubee, Gnoao F..-~

It's a-cozy, hoiJle-Jike environment combined with custom service that makes Hometown Candles
a unique experience for the candle buyer. Sherrie Might, pictured here, and her husband Bernard
have opened the shop on Ohio 7 in Meigs County, just across from the Skate-A-Way, 'and off~
homemade candles 1n more than 70 scents, and in m_any presentations. Jelly jar candles "(ainbow" candles with three scents .in one candle, votilles, gift baskets, aromatherapy
and
other candles perfect for the home or as gifts, along with handmade etafts by Peg Brickles and .
~anet Venoy, among others, fine the walls and shelves of the comfortable little shop. Judy Coblentz
1s the store manager, and also designs many of the candles in the shop. The store is open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m., and by appointment. (Brian J. Reed photo)

produds

Producers Inc. market report . Hf $68-$72.
from Gallipolis for sales conFed Cattle (second
ducted on Wednesday.
Wednesday of each
Feeder Cattle-Higher
month)
275-415# St. $95-$108 Hf.
Steers- Choice, $76-$81;
$85-$96, 425-525# St. $90- heifers, $75-$78.
$104 Hf. $82-$95 550-625# · Select - Steers, $72-$75;
St. $87-$99 Hf. $80-$88 650- heifers, $69-$71.
725# St. $81-$93 Hf. $75Holsteins Steers, $68United $82; 750-850# St. $78-$82 $70.10; heifers, $60-$64.

,,
•

1.000

MOO

LOw

10.100.13
llooordlltthl 11,722.81

10.171.71

· Jon. t•.aooo

~IMUAIW

MA"CH

A~AIL

W.Y

1.0110

May 14.2001

1.100

11 ndtldll
...... 100

,,.00
•1,:100

1,241.82

~ct. """'
+0.21

1.200

""""'

Hllh

LOw

1.100

1.241._02
,._,. hlth: 1,527.48
1.24t.ll

1,000

MIICI1 IM, IOOO

May 14,2001

•.ooo

N11d1q

3.!500

-Ill-·

3.000

2·.081 .92

2.100

Pct . . . . -ptOIOiol:

·1.21
High

LOw

2.105.38

2.062.41

.Roc:ord high: 5.048.62
Mo..n :o. 2000

2.000

FEBRUAAY .

reduction will be as big as
expected.
The central bank has been
lowering rates to stimulate the
sluggish · economy, but -some
recent data have indicated
business may not be as weak as
previously thought, If the
economy shows signs of
strength - as some betterthan~expected retail and consumer sentiment reports suggested last week - many fear

-.dy Gloo, ID

~Riley. .....

PctCIWtl--

•

It Lie.

... -.SQpio.
.
Ewlyn Srualt aad Ia JemllrL.ym
Sn 7
' Till, died. Slllm.

Markets roundup

•0.&amp;2

~

wayne Lie ~. Md'Mde. D a.t.ra AM Wlmlli..

Cows-Higher
Well Muscled/Fleshed $45$53; Medium/Lean $38~$44;
Thin/Light $35-$38; Bulls
$49-$61.75 .
Back To The Farm:
Cow /Calf Pairs $540-$990;
Bred Cows $370-$785; Baby
Calves $95-$275; Goats $21$71.
.

Blue chips higher, techs fall ,as market awaits Fed meeting
SunTrnst falls
$4.81 on word
q{Wachovia bid

11. 2111

--__.._.._..,... __
TN L Lie lo

Uvestock report
GALLIPOLIS -

, • ..,

POMEROY Mrigs
County Recorder Judy
King ~ned !he following real estate tr.IJWC!ions
as processed in her office:

Make enbies
GALLIPOLIS Three
Gallia County residents will
exhibit Angus catde at the
2001
Atlantic
National
Regional · Preview Junior
Show at the Maryland Sute
Fairgrounds in Timonium,
Md., on May 26.
They are Morhan Woodward, Kimberly Evans and
Jenny Davis, all of Gallipolis
and all junior members of the
American Angus Association,
based in St. Joseph, Mo. They
will be among I 43 young
Angus breeders from 18 sutes
who have entered a ooul of
332 head at the show.
The show is one of five
nationally sanctioned junior
Angus shows sponsored by the
American Angus Association
and the National Junior Angus
Association in 2001.

I

Land deals·
recorded

Financial
wotbhops

Balance

ll1l1q .AIItif!ltJ(

Business

The Daily Sentinel

MARCH

APRIL

MAV

1,100

the Fed will be less Inclined to
cut aggressively.
The problem for the market:
In the absence of strong earn.:
ings, investors have become
increasingly dependent on the
fed's cuts for catalysts to rally
stocks. Stocks spent most of
last week in a li,arrow trading
range in anticipation of the
fed's next move.
"Not having the 100 percent certainty that the fed will

$5,000 reward offered for the
arrest &amp; conviction of the
person or persons
responsible for the shooting
&amp; death of Michael Sigler.
Contact the Sigler f~mily

. 742-2279
I

lower interest rates as ntuch as
. many want is what's causing
this," said Steven Goldman,
market strategist at Weeden &amp;
Co. "But overall, the market
remains on good footing."
The latest Fed report·
released Monday showed further evidence that the economy slO\ved during the spripg.
Industrial production fell in
April by a bigger-thanexpected 0.3 percent, the sev~
enth straight monthly decline,
according to the report.
Technology stocks were
especially weak, reflecting the
gradual selli11Jsince April's big
advance. Cisco Systenu 'feU 48
cents to $18.57, while Intel
dropped 53 cents to $27.4'.
· Non-technology issues fared
better, including banker J.P.
Morgan, up $1.20 at $47.64.
Also Monday, SunTrust
Banks feU $4.81 to $60 on
news it madr a $14.7 billion
bid for Wachovia, a move that
could derail First Union's
planned Sl 2. 5 billion purchase
of the North Carolina bank.
Wachovia rose $3.85 to
$64.75, while first Union was
up 56 cents at $30.58.
Advancing issues led decline'rs 8 to 7 on the NYSE. Consolidated volume on the
NYSE came to 1.02 billion,
compared with 1. 08 billion

friday. ·
The Russell 2000 index
slipped 0.72 to 486.64.
Overseas, Japan's Nikke i
stock average slid 1.2 percent.
Getmany's DAX index fell 1.2
percent, Briuin's FT-SE I 00 ·
.lost 3.5 percent, and France's
CAC-40 fell 1.4 percent.

lo Slate of Olio, - · LaiJaim.
Aichard l.tchael Gtess. Palricia

Gteu. lo Mark Palric:l&lt; Gnlss. - ·
Village ot-..,.t
Billy D. l!uA:ham. deooased. 1o
Cindy ~. - · Vilage of
f&gt;omOfoy.
Cindy Lanbell"' SUe lirlde. - ·
Vllaged Pai161f11.
~ lAimaoler to Ronald E.
- · J,, Jeame It Haclcer. dood,
CaUrtie.
ScoUA. Lilla, Jahn T.,Lilla, C1vis1i
A. Uolo, tons Renlals. 1nc.• ·
Village ollotitopurt
ScoU A. Lilla, Jahn T. Lisle Christi
A. ~ to ns Renlals, 1nc:. - ·
Vtlage of Synocusa.
Holen F. Baerto DonnaJ. G.-r.
Meliaa K. Gruesar. doad, ViSage of

Synocusa.
Bryan Keilh While, Har1ey Haning.
Margarol•Haning. Ia Har1ey Haning
and Morgarel Haning. , . , . , . , . .

otee-.

·

Robeft R. Oonch, '*I lied, to
~ G. Clonch. afficllvil, Sallsbo.ry.
Eura Largent to Anthony w. Deem.
David L
Vilaga o1 Syra·

arse.

Deem,-·

Phillip R. Blackford. SU""' L
Blaoklord to catumb,. Southem
PO'Mif, easement. ScipiQ.
John A. Hantlel, Marian C. Hambel, Thomas L. Asher. loretta J.
Asher, to Columbus Southem Power.
easement. Sdpio.
Winifred Martis, Timothy Lenlgar,
to Cdumbus Southem Power, easement. Sdpio.
Chad .l . Roberts . Randall S .
Rooerts. Judy D. Rol&gt;erts. to Randall
S. Roberts, Judy D. Roberts. deed.
Letart.
Edna L Neigler, deceased, to
Ralph F._Naigler. affidavit, Sutton.
Clara Jarvis, deceased, to wavne ·
JaNie. affidavit, Village of Middleport.
Wl)fno JaNis to Heraton JaNis.
Roy JIMo . dttC. ViiO.ga of Middle·

port.
Thoa&lt;to&lt;o P. Soubor, Cerol J.

S.ubor, to Thoodore P. Slublr. Clrol
J. Seublr, dud, Bodford.

Wonderful opportunltlll ere avellableln Tom
Peden Country. We are expending our fecllltlll
end netd more talea people. No experience It
requlrtd, ·only 1 wllllngn•• to l11rn, work •• •
team, and hJvt atrong Initiative.
ExCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN
GREAT BENEFITS (INCLUDING DEMO PFIOOFIAM)
WOFIK AT THE 11 :lEALERSHIP

Call To §cbodult An lmorvltw;
Tom Peden Cou~try

1-800-822-0417. (304) 344·5947
475 South Church llreet • Ripley, wv

The Meigs County Department of Jobs &amp; Family Services
Is seeking proposals to provide a summer youth program to
eligible youth age 14-18 consistent with federal, state and local
guidelines for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TAN F)
program~ Youth who reside In Meigs County and whose family
Income does not exceed 200o/o of the federal poverty Index are
eligible for participation. Program costs must not exceed
S100,000 for the period beginning June 1, 2001. It Is expected that
the program wlll .enroll 60 youth and provide employment at
$6.15 per hour. Actual enrollment of youth Is expected to begin no
later than June 15, 2001. Administrative costs may not exceed
1So/o of the total contract award.
There will be a proposers conference for aU Interested parties on
May 21, 2001 at 10:00a.m. at the Meigs County Department of Job
and Family Services, 175 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio, 3rd Aoor
Conference Room. At this conference the proposed format will be
described. Any organization falling to aHend will be Ineligible to
submit a proposal •

�'

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The Daily Sentinel
~ sn• .U ltiwan

•

en¥h••

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Stares shoUld expand
il5 miliwy preselllte oo die Pacific island of Guam and consider
uJring Japan for permission to use irs southernmmt R yukyu
isl•nds as a staging base in defense ofTaiw.m, a Pentagon-sponsored J1Udy says.
·
The srudy by the Rand think Wtk says U.S. miliary strategy
in Asia, which for decades has focused on Japan and North
Kota. should be shifted south to better prep~ for poten!W
conflict cmr Taiwan.
·
The srudy says the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam should be
developed into a major hub 6om which the US. Air Force and
Navy could project power into the South China Sea and elsewhere in Southeast Asia.
The lead author of the R.Jnd study is l.alnuy Klulilzad, who
headed the Bwh administration 's ttansition team at the Pentagon before joining the White House staff on Monday as a senior
director at the National Security Council. Rand is a research
organization that studies a \vide range of public policy issues; the
Asia security study was done by a Rand division financed by the
Air Force.

FBI pt
WASHINGTON (AP) - FDI field offices were told in
December dut some _O klahoma City bombing records could lie
discarded, but those instructions were retracted a month later
after archivists discovered that some offices had failed to turn
over all their evidence to lawyers for Timothy McVeigh, a government official said.
·
The. initial guidance \vent out in ·December, the official said
Monday, four days after it was revealed the FBI withheld thousands of pages of evidence from lawyen for the convicted
bomber.
The revelation was the latest t\vist to the FBI's mishandling of
investigative materials in the Oklahoma City bombing case.The
· FBI failed to turn over to McVeigh'sla\vyers some 3,135 pages
of investigative materials, including interview ~ports, and ph}"ical evidence such ;as photographs, tapes and letters.
In another development, the FBI's Baltimore bureau .late last
week turned up seven more documents that should have ·been
forwarded, a governmenr official, speaking on condition . of
anonymity, said Monday night. ·

Page

f

21!.1

Senate focuseS on who benefits from tax bi
.......,• ..., 1!1,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republians
say a proposed ~ compromise on I2Ji:
cuts doesn't slash income taxes deq&gt;ly or
quickly l'llOUgiL Dcmocnts say too gte&gt;t a
sb:tte of the benefits goes to the wealthy.
The Senate Fimnc.c Committtt
planned Tuesday to begin sealing dut
debate by sorting duuugh dozens of
amendments to !"' ll-)'1'2l, $1.35 trillion
ux relief package dnfted by Sens. Clurles
Gcwley, R -low:o, and Max Baucus, DMonL · ·
The bill would cut income taxes across
the board, creating a new I 0 percent rare
for a portion of every taxpayer's income,
retro.lctive to Jan. 1. Among other things,
the measure would gradually &lt;l'peal the
estate taX, ease the marriage penalty paid
by millions of two-income couples, double

Di4nwrul RDurulup, .1-\Jge 86
ER. on 1M go!f anme, J¥ B6

-·

Mmy conservativ&lt;s also oppo1e a parr#
the $500 child cmlit and expmd wcf3\o'Oird comribution limits for lRAs and the bill, suggested by moderate GOP !q.
Olympu snowr of Maine, to permit ~
401(k)s.
The IIW3SIJre could reach the Senate income ..wthn 10 claim a portion of
floor ;as early ;as this -.,It. Republican child =&lt;lit even if they don't pay ~
_
•
leaden hope to quickly iron out differ- income tlXI5.
Lott said he is "\Wiried about it
eoas with the House and ~ the bill 10
the president's desk befo"' Memorial Day. turned into a redistribution M v=lth. q(2
GOP conservari""l, including Majority wd&amp;re program, when it's supposed to·~
Leader Trent Lott, want the top 39.6 per- helping people dut are paying too highjll
:
cent income ux rate dropped to 33 per- ~"

be!.nl

cent, as sought by President Bush, insread
of settling for the 36 percent in the bill.
They also say the gradual pluse-in ofmost
of the rate curs over sev~:n yean is roo siO\v.
" I think that nobody should pay over a
third of their income for federal r:axcs,"
Lott, R-Miss., told, reporters Monday. "I
·hope dut will be the "'"'ntual result."

lishing rumors about the murder inwstigation.
"The media may be unknowingly tainting witnesses or damaging the ability of police to gather firsthand information that is
critical ro the investigation," police Cmdr. Garrett Zimmon told
reporten Monday evening.
,
Earlier in the day, police declined to comment on a report on
ABC Ncws"'Good Morning America'' that the murder weapon
was found in a trash bin near the murder site. The report cited
an unidentified source.
The Los Angeles Times reported in Tuesday's editions that a
truck driver asked by police to haul evidence away May 5 - the
day after Blake's wife, Bonny tee Bakley. was killed- was told
by officers they found .a gun in a trash bin.

jailed men fw eed

Police ask for cap on mmon

Democrats, on the other hmd, S"f thr
package remains neady a5 tilted row.ud the
wealthy as Bush's original l0-J'I'2I, St.6
trillion ax cuL A series of amendmena
they plan ro offer would attempt to c~
that distribution, many by scrapping ~
plan to repeal estate taxes and using t"l=
money in other wa}".
,...

1

cleared in the ·1987 slaying of a _livery cab driver, in part thai]~
n_

;

~·

w~=

"About time!Mspectaton cried out as faison, 35, and Shepai4,
3K, \Vere ordered released by Judge Robert Kreindler, the saq~,e

man who presided &lt;Wer their triaL

-

POlice chase kills 5-year•ld ....
BULLARD, Texas (AP) - A state police cruiser pursuin'-•
vehicle over an apparent traffic violation collided with a pickop
truck, killing a 5-year-old girl who was thrown tiom the trui;t
The ·girl's mother and two state troopers were i'njured in fiW
collision, authorities said. The accident occurred Monday abO
I 00 miles southeast of Dallas. ·
Cherokee County Sheriff James Campbell said the crugl,
identified as Donna Morales of the Flint are~. apparendy was t~.
resttained in the vehicle. The girl's mother, Misty Morales, W3S
hospitalized in critical condition Monday, and the injured t:rodp,ers were in fait condition.
'•
The two men who were being chased were eventually
ed. The driver, Junior Earl Jameson Jr., 29, was being held oii. ~
charge of ev.ading arrest causing death. His passenger, 17-~
old Gereden Julio Roman, was being held on a criminal llll6&gt;chief charge unrelated to the chase#

='-

~

Marijuana
patients fear
returning to
streets
.

'

Page II

I

....... , • ...,15.UOI

'I'uffillw's

HrGHLIGI-ITS .
Minnesota

coadi liled
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Two yean after an academic
fraud sandal tarnished MinneSota's men's basketball program, its women's coach w:u
fired for a pattern of rulebreaking
that
included
improper benefits to playen.
The university's investiga.tion found that Cheryl Littlejohn gave money to a player,
bought clothing for others
and interfered with an earlier
inquiry by telling players to
lie.

Colorado takes command of West finals
DENVER (AP) -As an East Coast and fourth lines, Colorado coach Bob
grinder surrounded by All-Stars, Hartley kept his analysis simple after
Shjon Podein's primary duties include watching his team take a 2-0 lead in
chasing down ·pucks, blocking shots the best-of-seven series.
and clogging up play in the comers.
The Avalanche, who cruised
On Monday night, he added a duuugh the regular season as the
game-winning goal to the checklist.
NHL's top team, are fezting of late.
Podein scored a critical third-period . Since an 183-minute scoring drought ,
goal. and Colorado got steady perfor- in the conference semifinals against
tJUDces tiom its ~~~known skaters Los Angeles, they have sco.red 13 goals
as the Avalanche took cot~trol of the in three games.'
Ray Bourque had his first goal of
Western Conference 6tWs with a 4-2
victory over the St. Louis Blues.
the playoffi, and fellow defenseman
Though happy with the play of Adam Foote scored his second MooPodein and his hard-cheeking third day night. Both came on long shots,

leaving St. Louis goalie Roman Turek
frustrated yet unimpressed.
"They scored three goals but they
were pretty lucky goal&lt;;' said Turek.
who made only 16 saves. "We had_two
nice goals, but they scored three lucky
goals and they won."
Podein's goal with 6:39 remaining
was reminiscent of injured teammate
Peter Forsbetg as he swept in on a 3on-2, made a q~ick move and beat
Turek down low. It proved to be the
diff'erence because AI Macinnis scored
on a slap shot 2:31 later to cut Colorado's lead to 3-2.

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WASHINGTON (AP) Fonner baseball player Steve
Garvey will pursue collection
of a $3 million labor settlement through an arbitrator
after the Supreme Court
overturned the settlement.
The court ruled 8-1 that a
lower court usurped the role
of an outside arbittator by
awarding Garvey the money.
The ruling favored the
baseball players' union, which
argued that giving G3\'Vey the
money would upset a careful
system fot handing out labor
settlements based on an arbitrator's finding$.
Garvey. a 10-time All-Scar
first baseman for Los Angeles
and San Diego, was trying to
collect a share of a $280 million settlement baseball owners agreed to pay in 1990 after
..urhitratlm ·ruled tqey had
· worked together · to hold
down the salaries of free ·
agents.

•

1n

West··

gave the Asttos ' struggling offense a rare clutch hit.
Roy Oswalt, part of the U.S .. Olympic team's rotation
that won the ·gold medal last year in Sydney, got his.
first major league win by pitching 2 2-3 innii:Jb" in
relief.
C loser Dilly Wagner got his third save in three days,
another indication he's recovered from major elbow
surgery last year.
"It's been a long time since I've been able to go
(three in a row) and be successful;: he said.
The Reds have been successful at only one thing
this season: scoring in every game.
Ruben Rivera had an RBI single and a homer,
extending the Reds' streak to 200 consecutive games
with at least one run .The third-longest such streak in
.big-league history is more of a curiosity than a
barometer of success: Cincinnati has gone 102-97
with one tie since last year's season opener.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - David Robinson probably won't invite Shaquille O'Neal
over for dinner. Gregg Popovich isn't likely
to take Phil Jackson on a tour of the Alamo.
After nearly a year of verbal warfare, the
San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers ·
will get the chance to settle their diff'erences
in the Western Conference finals.
The 1999 NBA champion Spurs earned
the right to play the defending champs for a
spot in this year's NBA Finals by beating the
Dallas Mavericks 105-87 Monday night,
ending a second-round series in five games.
· The showdown, which starts Saturday in
San Antonio, will be the first conference
finals pitting the two previous NBA champions since 1985. It's only the fifth such
matchup in league history.
This one comes with some baggage.
O'Neal called the Spun a WNBA team last
summer and Jackson has said San Antonio's
title deserves an asterisk because it came in
the lockout-shortened season.
"It's a good series to hype up, isn't it?" said
Robinson, the target of some harsh words in
O'Neal's recent book. "They've been playing
great 1:-asketball, their best of the year, and
o ur level of basketball has been extremely
high. This is exciting. No question this is a
big series."
The Spurs are on a nice roll. Six of their
seven playoff' wins have been by at least 13
points; their average margin over Dallas was
15,5.
San Antonio also has won all five home
games and has home-court advantage against
the Lakers. The Alamodome crowd already
was looking forward to the next round .by
chanting "Beat LA!" in the final minutes
against the Mavericks.
"This is the series everybody wanted," said
Tim Du,ncan, who led the Spurs with 32
points and 20 rebounds. "I don't know if we
wanted it."
The Lakers are on an even better roD, having won 15 in a row. They just became the
· fifth team to sweep the first two roundS since
the current playoff format was adopted ·in
1984.
"They are obviously the hottest team in
the league," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich ·
said. "They are a rea~y good defensive club,
a heck of an offensive club and play

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Pluse He Spun, B4

Ueberlhal out
for season
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Phillies All-Star catcher Mike
Lieberthal will miss the rest of
the season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his
right knee. Lieberthal, who
hurt his knee when he was
picked off' first bas~ Saturday'
night, also tore the medial
colla~eral liganient ;md lateral
meruscus.

Rulz·Holyflled ·
card set
NEW YORK (AP) Evander Holyfield and WBA
heavyweight champion John
Ruiz will fight in China in
August, with WBC and IBF
champion Hasim Rahman on
the under'card. The bouts.,
announced by Don King, are
the first part of his plan to
unify the heavyweight titles
and leave out Mike JYson and
Lennox Lewis - unless they
win in court.
The Holyfield-Ruiz bout,
their third in a year, and Rahman's fight against Brian
Nielsen of Denmark are · ,
scheduled for Aug. 5 in Beijing (Aug. 4 in the United
States). If Rahman beats
Nielsen, King wants him to
take on the winner of the
Holyfield-Ruiz fight.
.
But the WBC champion's
mandatory defense is due in
November, and Tyson is the
No. 1 contender.

Returns' tops
box office

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WESTON, Fla. (AP)
Dan Marino, the NFL's most
prolifi..,asser, failed to get
beyond!!he first stage of qualifying for the U.S. Open.
Marino shot a 6-over par 78
at Weston Hills Country Club
· and missed advancing to the
next round of qualifying by
nine strokes.
.-.e--.., --"..~· 1---- - - - - - - - · --~-----

The Blues maintajned the pressure,
but saw their chances diminish when
Pierre Turgeon rook a slashing penalty with I :38 to play. Foote elbowed
Turgeon seconds earlier.
"I tried to hold back," said Turgeon,
whose nose was badly bloodied after
the game. "I turned around and he hit
me cold. They called it the other way."
St. lquis made one final rush after
pulling Turek in the final minute, but
Chris Drury iced the victory when he
scored into an empty net with 7.3
seconds remaining, giving him an
NHL-leading eight goals.

Lakers,
Spurs to

Garvey fights

Ingels Elecbonlcl

1"he Mummy
LOS· ANGELES (AP) "The Mummy Returns"
earned $33.7 million to top
the weekend )Jox office for a
second . week, raising i.ts total
to nearly S118 million in 10
days.
The medieval fantasy "A
Knight's Tale," the only other
movie that opened . in wide
release, came in second place
with $16.5 million . .
The top 20 movies at North
American theaters Friday
through Sunday, followed by
distribution studio, gross,
nuinber of theater locations,
average receipts per location,
total gross and number of
weeks in release, as compiled
Monday · by Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.:
1. "The Mummy Returns,"
Universal, $33 .7 million,
3,410 locations, $9,895 aver1 age, S 118 million, two weeks.

The Daily Sentinel

•

NEW YORK (AP)- Anthony Faison began writing letters
pleading for help, soon after his 1988 murder conviction. He
wrote and wrote until the number ofletters reached 60,000.
He only received one response - tiom Michael R.Jce, a private investigator who started looking into the case after being
LOS ANGELES (AP) - As reports surfaced that .a gun W.s moved by one of Faison's !etten in January 1999.
On Monday, the years of letter writing finally paid off when
found )':lrds away from where the wife of actor Robert Blake
was shot to death, police asked journalists to refrain 6om pub- Faison and his · convicted accomplice, Charles Shep~rd. were

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Yvonne Westbrook recalls
whim getting relief from the
symptoms of multiple sclerosis meant venturing int9
seedy parks to buy bags of
marijuana from drug dealers.
So she worries that the U.S.
Supreme Court's unanimous
ruling Monday could mean a
return of those daY'. "Now .
they've opened us up ro the
street and all the perils
involved," she said.
The. high court said there is
no exception in federal antidrug laws for patients to use
marijuana to ease their pain
from cancer, AIDS or other
illnesses.
Westbrook is fearful the rulfng could mean the end for
the . dozens · of distribution
clubs that sprang up after California passed Proposition
215, the state law allowing
people to grow and possess
medical marijuana.

Inside:

TWO DOWN- Houston Astro.s' Craig Biggio Is tagged out by Cincinnati Reds' third baseman Aaron Boone
to complete a double play in the first Inning In Cincinnati. (AP)

Astros become·latest team
to
down slumping Reds
I

CINCINNATI (AP) -When the Houston Astros
fell behind and a steady rain started to fall, manager
.
Larry Dierker began to fret.
"The thing I was afr · f Was that it would come
down harder and the
e would be stopped before
back," [)ierker said. .
we'd have a chance to
No worries.
e visi ·ng team at Cinergy Field
· needs to pull out a win.
almost alway
The heavy rain stayed jmt to the north and the
Astros got their comeback Monday night. Moises
Alou's bases-loaded double in the seventh inning rallied the Astros to a 6~4 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds, the NL's most acconunodating home· team.
In the only other National Leagi!C game, the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Pittsburgh. Pirates 11-8.
It was a soggy night of breakthroughs for the
Astros, who took three of four in the series and have
won eight of their last 11 ga~es.
Alou's three-run double off' C hris Reitsma (2- 3).
'
.

Reds running themselves out of wins
CINCINNATI (AP) '- One of the
main criticisms of the Cincinnati
Reds last seas~n was that they didn't
run enough - didn't steal enough
bases,- didn't take the extra base on
hits.
.
They're off and ·running this season
- running themselves right out of
rallies.
Heading into their game Monday
against Houston, the Reds were second in the National League with 38
.steals in 36 games. They also were
establishing an identity :ts a team that
doesn't know when to stay put.

I ,

"The thing that impresses me with line between being aggressive and
the Reds is that they're very aggressive · being silly.
with their running," Astros manager
"Well, we're not exactly hittin g the
Larry Dierker said. "So far in this ball over the· wall," manager Bob
series, it's · hurt them more than it's Boone said, defending the base run-.
helped them."
ning. "We've got to play aggressively,
In the first three games of the series, but we've got to be selective in our
the Reds got two runners thrown out aggresstveness."
at home, twu at third and one at secToo often, they've picked the wrong
ond as they tried to advance on a hit times to run.
or tag up on a fly out. They also had a
During a 4-3 loss on Sunday night,
run ner picked off third and two Donnie Sadler had a caree~- high four
caught stealing.
hits but got thrown out on the bases
The blunders resulted in a pair of twice. H e was nailed at third as he
one-run losses that showed the fine tagged on a fly ball to left field in the

'.

sixth inning, and was caught stealing
in the seventh.
The mistake in the sixth was especially costly. He would have later
scored on Sean Casey's hit, helping
the Reds pull into a 4-all tie.
"I saw Oeft fielder Richard Hidalgo)
t'urn his back, and I went back to the
bag to tag and figured, 'What are the
odds on him making a great throw?"'
1
Sadler said.
The odds are that if he hadn't run,
the Reds would have 'tied the game.
Boone ~oesn't want ~o put · a

PluleiHReds,B4

.

.••

., - - - -- ----&lt;c-·_;

�'

••

The Daily Sentinel
~ sn• .U ltiwan

•

en¥h••

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United Stares shoUld expand
il5 miliwy preselllte oo die Pacific island of Guam and consider
uJring Japan for permission to use irs southernmmt R yukyu
isl•nds as a staging base in defense ofTaiw.m, a Pentagon-sponsored J1Udy says.
·
The srudy by the Rand think Wtk says U.S. miliary strategy
in Asia, which for decades has focused on Japan and North
Kota. should be shifted south to better prep~ for poten!W
conflict cmr Taiwan.
·
The srudy says the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam should be
developed into a major hub 6om which the US. Air Force and
Navy could project power into the South China Sea and elsewhere in Southeast Asia.
The lead author of the R.Jnd study is l.alnuy Klulilzad, who
headed the Bwh administration 's ttansition team at the Pentagon before joining the White House staff on Monday as a senior
director at the National Security Council. Rand is a research
organization that studies a \vide range of public policy issues; the
Asia security study was done by a Rand division financed by the
Air Force.

FBI pt
WASHINGTON (AP) - FDI field offices were told in
December dut some _O klahoma City bombing records could lie
discarded, but those instructions were retracted a month later
after archivists discovered that some offices had failed to turn
over all their evidence to lawyers for Timothy McVeigh, a government official said.
·
The. initial guidance \vent out in ·December, the official said
Monday, four days after it was revealed the FBI withheld thousands of pages of evidence from lawyen for the convicted
bomber.
The revelation was the latest t\vist to the FBI's mishandling of
investigative materials in the Oklahoma City bombing case.The
· FBI failed to turn over to McVeigh'sla\vyers some 3,135 pages
of investigative materials, including interview ~ports, and ph}"ical evidence such ;as photographs, tapes and letters.
In another development, the FBI's Baltimore bureau .late last
week turned up seven more documents that should have ·been
forwarded, a governmenr official, speaking on condition . of
anonymity, said Monday night. ·

Page

f

21!.1

Senate focuseS on who benefits from tax bi
.......,• ..., 1!1,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republians
say a proposed ~ compromise on I2Ji:
cuts doesn't slash income taxes deq&gt;ly or
quickly l'llOUgiL Dcmocnts say too gte&gt;t a
sb:tte of the benefits goes to the wealthy.
The Senate Fimnc.c Committtt
planned Tuesday to begin sealing dut
debate by sorting duuugh dozens of
amendments to !"' ll-)'1'2l, $1.35 trillion
ux relief package dnfted by Sens. Clurles
Gcwley, R -low:o, and Max Baucus, DMonL · ·
The bill would cut income taxes across
the board, creating a new I 0 percent rare
for a portion of every taxpayer's income,
retro.lctive to Jan. 1. Among other things,
the measure would gradually &lt;l'peal the
estate taX, ease the marriage penalty paid
by millions of two-income couples, double

Di4nwrul RDurulup, .1-\Jge 86
ER. on 1M go!f anme, J¥ B6

-·

Mmy conservativ&lt;s also oppo1e a parr#
the $500 child cmlit and expmd wcf3\o'Oird comribution limits for lRAs and the bill, suggested by moderate GOP !q.
Olympu snowr of Maine, to permit ~
401(k)s.
The IIW3SIJre could reach the Senate income ..wthn 10 claim a portion of
floor ;as early ;as this -.,It. Republican child =&lt;lit even if they don't pay ~
_
•
leaden hope to quickly iron out differ- income tlXI5.
Lott said he is "\Wiried about it
eoas with the House and ~ the bill 10
the president's desk befo"' Memorial Day. turned into a redistribution M v=lth. q(2
GOP conservari""l, including Majority wd&amp;re program, when it's supposed to·~
Leader Trent Lott, want the top 39.6 per- helping people dut are paying too highjll
:
cent income ux rate dropped to 33 per- ~"

be!.nl

cent, as sought by President Bush, insread
of settling for the 36 percent in the bill.
They also say the gradual pluse-in ofmost
of the rate curs over sev~:n yean is roo siO\v.
" I think that nobody should pay over a
third of their income for federal r:axcs,"
Lott, R-Miss., told, reporters Monday. "I
·hope dut will be the "'"'ntual result."

lishing rumors about the murder inwstigation.
"The media may be unknowingly tainting witnesses or damaging the ability of police to gather firsthand information that is
critical ro the investigation," police Cmdr. Garrett Zimmon told
reporten Monday evening.
,
Earlier in the day, police declined to comment on a report on
ABC Ncws"'Good Morning America'' that the murder weapon
was found in a trash bin near the murder site. The report cited
an unidentified source.
The Los Angeles Times reported in Tuesday's editions that a
truck driver asked by police to haul evidence away May 5 - the
day after Blake's wife, Bonny tee Bakley. was killed- was told
by officers they found .a gun in a trash bin.

jailed men fw eed

Police ask for cap on mmon

Democrats, on the other hmd, S"f thr
package remains neady a5 tilted row.ud the
wealthy as Bush's original l0-J'I'2I, St.6
trillion ax cuL A series of amendmena
they plan ro offer would attempt to c~
that distribution, many by scrapping ~
plan to repeal estate taxes and using t"l=
money in other wa}".
,...

1

cleared in the ·1987 slaying of a _livery cab driver, in part thai]~
n_

;

~·

w~=

"About time!Mspectaton cried out as faison, 35, and Shepai4,
3K, \Vere ordered released by Judge Robert Kreindler, the saq~,e

man who presided &lt;Wer their triaL

-

POlice chase kills 5-year•ld ....
BULLARD, Texas (AP) - A state police cruiser pursuin'-•
vehicle over an apparent traffic violation collided with a pickop
truck, killing a 5-year-old girl who was thrown tiom the trui;t
The ·girl's mother and two state troopers were i'njured in fiW
collision, authorities said. The accident occurred Monday abO
I 00 miles southeast of Dallas. ·
Cherokee County Sheriff James Campbell said the crugl,
identified as Donna Morales of the Flint are~. apparendy was t~.
resttained in the vehicle. The girl's mother, Misty Morales, W3S
hospitalized in critical condition Monday, and the injured t:rodp,ers were in fait condition.
'•
The two men who were being chased were eventually
ed. The driver, Junior Earl Jameson Jr., 29, was being held oii. ~
charge of ev.ading arrest causing death. His passenger, 17-~
old Gereden Julio Roman, was being held on a criminal llll6&gt;chief charge unrelated to the chase#

='-

~

Marijuana
patients fear
returning to
streets
.

'

Page II

I

....... , • ...,15.UOI

'I'uffillw's

HrGHLIGI-ITS .
Minnesota

coadi liled
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
Two yean after an academic
fraud sandal tarnished MinneSota's men's basketball program, its women's coach w:u
fired for a pattern of rulebreaking
that
included
improper benefits to playen.
The university's investiga.tion found that Cheryl Littlejohn gave money to a player,
bought clothing for others
and interfered with an earlier
inquiry by telling players to
lie.

Colorado takes command of West finals
DENVER (AP) -As an East Coast and fourth lines, Colorado coach Bob
grinder surrounded by All-Stars, Hartley kept his analysis simple after
Shjon Podein's primary duties include watching his team take a 2-0 lead in
chasing down ·pucks, blocking shots the best-of-seven series.
and clogging up play in the comers.
The Avalanche, who cruised
On Monday night, he added a duuugh the regular season as the
game-winning goal to the checklist.
NHL's top team, are fezting of late.
Podein scored a critical third-period . Since an 183-minute scoring drought ,
goal. and Colorado got steady perfor- in the conference semifinals against
tJUDces tiom its ~~~known skaters Los Angeles, they have sco.red 13 goals
as the Avalanche took cot~trol of the in three games.'
Ray Bourque had his first goal of
Western Conference 6tWs with a 4-2
victory over the St. Louis Blues.
the playoffi, and fellow defenseman
Though happy with the play of Adam Foote scored his second MooPodein and his hard-cheeking third day night. Both came on long shots,

leaving St. Louis goalie Roman Turek
frustrated yet unimpressed.
"They scored three goals but they
were pretty lucky goal&lt;;' said Turek.
who made only 16 saves. "We had_two
nice goals, but they scored three lucky
goals and they won."
Podein's goal with 6:39 remaining
was reminiscent of injured teammate
Peter Forsbetg as he swept in on a 3on-2, made a q~ick move and beat
Turek down low. It proved to be the
diff'erence because AI Macinnis scored
on a slap shot 2:31 later to cut Colorado's lead to 3-2.

your minutes and save!
••badiiCIItCthe ATaT Shared Advao'

••·Plan. With at least two users at only $29,99 each,
'

106 N..Seconq Ave.

.

'

Middleport ·

'

140-992-2825

nwllnl .

WASHINGTON (AP) Fonner baseball player Steve
Garvey will pursue collection
of a $3 million labor settlement through an arbitrator
after the Supreme Court
overturned the settlement.
The court ruled 8-1 that a
lower court usurped the role
of an outside arbittator by
awarding Garvey the money.
The ruling favored the
baseball players' union, which
argued that giving G3\'Vey the
money would upset a careful
system fot handing out labor
settlements based on an arbitrator's finding$.
Garvey. a 10-time All-Scar
first baseman for Los Angeles
and San Diego, was trying to
collect a share of a $280 million settlement baseball owners agreed to pay in 1990 after
..urhitratlm ·ruled tqey had
· worked together · to hold
down the salaries of free ·
agents.

•

1n

West··

gave the Asttos ' struggling offense a rare clutch hit.
Roy Oswalt, part of the U.S .. Olympic team's rotation
that won the ·gold medal last year in Sydney, got his.
first major league win by pitching 2 2-3 innii:Jb" in
relief.
C loser Dilly Wagner got his third save in three days,
another indication he's recovered from major elbow
surgery last year.
"It's been a long time since I've been able to go
(three in a row) and be successful;: he said.
The Reds have been successful at only one thing
this season: scoring in every game.
Ruben Rivera had an RBI single and a homer,
extending the Reds' streak to 200 consecutive games
with at least one run .The third-longest such streak in
.big-league history is more of a curiosity than a
barometer of success: Cincinnati has gone 102-97
with one tie since last year's season opener.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) - David Robinson probably won't invite Shaquille O'Neal
over for dinner. Gregg Popovich isn't likely
to take Phil Jackson on a tour of the Alamo.
After nearly a year of verbal warfare, the
San Antonio Spurs and Los Angeles Lakers ·
will get the chance to settle their diff'erences
in the Western Conference finals.
The 1999 NBA champion Spurs earned
the right to play the defending champs for a
spot in this year's NBA Finals by beating the
Dallas Mavericks 105-87 Monday night,
ending a second-round series in five games.
· The showdown, which starts Saturday in
San Antonio, will be the first conference
finals pitting the two previous NBA champions since 1985. It's only the fifth such
matchup in league history.
This one comes with some baggage.
O'Neal called the Spun a WNBA team last
summer and Jackson has said San Antonio's
title deserves an asterisk because it came in
the lockout-shortened season.
"It's a good series to hype up, isn't it?" said
Robinson, the target of some harsh words in
O'Neal's recent book. "They've been playing
great 1:-asketball, their best of the year, and
o ur level of basketball has been extremely
high. This is exciting. No question this is a
big series."
The Spurs are on a nice roll. Six of their
seven playoff' wins have been by at least 13
points; their average margin over Dallas was
15,5.
San Antonio also has won all five home
games and has home-court advantage against
the Lakers. The Alamodome crowd already
was looking forward to the next round .by
chanting "Beat LA!" in the final minutes
against the Mavericks.
"This is the series everybody wanted," said
Tim Du,ncan, who led the Spurs with 32
points and 20 rebounds. "I don't know if we
wanted it."
The Lakers are on an even better roD, having won 15 in a row. They just became the
· fifth team to sweep the first two roundS since
the current playoff format was adopted ·in
1984.
"They are obviously the hottest team in
the league," Spurs coach Gregg Popovich ·
said. "They are a rea~y good defensive club,
a heck of an offensive club and play

.

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Storet and Klorka

Please see Slide, Bl

Pluse He Spun, B4

Ueberlhal out
for season
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Phillies All-Star catcher Mike
Lieberthal will miss the rest of
the season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his
right knee. Lieberthal, who
hurt his knee when he was
picked off' first bas~ Saturday'
night, also tore the medial
colla~eral liganient ;md lateral
meruscus.

Rulz·Holyflled ·
card set
NEW YORK (AP) Evander Holyfield and WBA
heavyweight champion John
Ruiz will fight in China in
August, with WBC and IBF
champion Hasim Rahman on
the under'card. The bouts.,
announced by Don King, are
the first part of his plan to
unify the heavyweight titles
and leave out Mike JYson and
Lennox Lewis - unless they
win in court.
The Holyfield-Ruiz bout,
their third in a year, and Rahman's fight against Brian
Nielsen of Denmark are · ,
scheduled for Aug. 5 in Beijing (Aug. 4 in the United
States). If Rahman beats
Nielsen, King wants him to
take on the winner of the
Holyfield-Ruiz fight.
.
But the WBC champion's
mandatory defense is due in
November, and Tyson is the
No. 1 contender.

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WESTON, Fla. (AP)
Dan Marino, the NFL's most
prolifi..,asser, failed to get
beyond!!he first stage of qualifying for the U.S. Open.
Marino shot a 6-over par 78
at Weston Hills Country Club
· and missed advancing to the
next round of qualifying by
nine strokes.
.-.e--.., --"..~· 1---- - - - - - - - · --~-----

The Blues maintajned the pressure,
but saw their chances diminish when
Pierre Turgeon rook a slashing penalty with I :38 to play. Foote elbowed
Turgeon seconds earlier.
"I tried to hold back," said Turgeon,
whose nose was badly bloodied after
the game. "I turned around and he hit
me cold. They called it the other way."
St. lquis made one final rush after
pulling Turek in the final minute, but
Chris Drury iced the victory when he
scored into an empty net with 7.3
seconds remaining, giving him an
NHL-leading eight goals.

Lakers,
Spurs to

Garvey fights

Ingels Elecbonlcl

1"he Mummy
LOS· ANGELES (AP) "The Mummy Returns"
earned $33.7 million to top
the weekend )Jox office for a
second . week, raising i.ts total
to nearly S118 million in 10
days.
The medieval fantasy "A
Knight's Tale," the only other
movie that opened . in wide
release, came in second place
with $16.5 million . .
The top 20 movies at North
American theaters Friday
through Sunday, followed by
distribution studio, gross,
nuinber of theater locations,
average receipts per location,
total gross and number of
weeks in release, as compiled
Monday · by Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.:
1. "The Mummy Returns,"
Universal, $33 .7 million,
3,410 locations, $9,895 aver1 age, S 118 million, two weeks.

The Daily Sentinel

•

NEW YORK (AP)- Anthony Faison began writing letters
pleading for help, soon after his 1988 murder conviction. He
wrote and wrote until the number ofletters reached 60,000.
He only received one response - tiom Michael R.Jce, a private investigator who started looking into the case after being
LOS ANGELES (AP) - As reports surfaced that .a gun W.s moved by one of Faison's !etten in January 1999.
On Monday, the years of letter writing finally paid off when
found )':lrds away from where the wife of actor Robert Blake
was shot to death, police asked journalists to refrain 6om pub- Faison and his · convicted accomplice, Charles Shep~rd. were

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Yvonne Westbrook recalls
whim getting relief from the
symptoms of multiple sclerosis meant venturing int9
seedy parks to buy bags of
marijuana from drug dealers.
So she worries that the U.S.
Supreme Court's unanimous
ruling Monday could mean a
return of those daY'. "Now .
they've opened us up ro the
street and all the perils
involved," she said.
The. high court said there is
no exception in federal antidrug laws for patients to use
marijuana to ease their pain
from cancer, AIDS or other
illnesses.
Westbrook is fearful the rulfng could mean the end for
the . dozens · of distribution
clubs that sprang up after California passed Proposition
215, the state law allowing
people to grow and possess
medical marijuana.

Inside:

TWO DOWN- Houston Astro.s' Craig Biggio Is tagged out by Cincinnati Reds' third baseman Aaron Boone
to complete a double play in the first Inning In Cincinnati. (AP)

Astros become·latest team
to
down slumping Reds
I

CINCINNATI (AP) -When the Houston Astros
fell behind and a steady rain started to fall, manager
.
Larry Dierker began to fret.
"The thing I was afr · f Was that it would come
down harder and the
e would be stopped before
back," [)ierker said. .
we'd have a chance to
No worries.
e visi ·ng team at Cinergy Field
· needs to pull out a win.
almost alway
The heavy rain stayed jmt to the north and the
Astros got their comeback Monday night. Moises
Alou's bases-loaded double in the seventh inning rallied the Astros to a 6~4 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds, the NL's most acconunodating home· team.
In the only other National Leagi!C game, the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Pittsburgh. Pirates 11-8.
It was a soggy night of breakthroughs for the
Astros, who took three of four in the series and have
won eight of their last 11 ga~es.
Alou's three-run double off' C hris Reitsma (2- 3).
'
.

Reds running themselves out of wins
CINCINNATI (AP) '- One of the
main criticisms of the Cincinnati
Reds last seas~n was that they didn't
run enough - didn't steal enough
bases,- didn't take the extra base on
hits.
.
They're off and ·running this season
- running themselves right out of
rallies.
Heading into their game Monday
against Houston, the Reds were second in the National League with 38
.steals in 36 games. They also were
establishing an identity :ts a team that
doesn't know when to stay put.

I ,

"The thing that impresses me with line between being aggressive and
the Reds is that they're very aggressive · being silly.
with their running," Astros manager
"Well, we're not exactly hittin g the
Larry Dierker said. "So far in this ball over the· wall," manager Bob
series, it's · hurt them more than it's Boone said, defending the base run-.
helped them."
ning. "We've got to play aggressively,
In the first three games of the series, but we've got to be selective in our
the Reds got two runners thrown out aggresstveness."
at home, twu at third and one at secToo often, they've picked the wrong
ond as they tried to advance on a hit times to run.
or tag up on a fly out. They also had a
During a 4-3 loss on Sunday night,
run ner picked off third and two Donnie Sadler had a caree~- high four
caught stealing.
hits but got thrown out on the bases
The blunders resulted in a pair of twice. H e was nailed at third as he
one-run losses that showed the fine tagged on a fly ball to left field in the

'.

sixth inning, and was caught stealing
in the seventh.
The mistake in the sixth was especially costly. He would have later
scored on Sean Casey's hit, helping
the Reds pull into a 4-all tie.
"I saw Oeft fielder Richard Hidalgo)
t'urn his back, and I went back to the
bag to tag and figured, 'What are the
odds on him making a great throw?"'
1
Sadler said.
The odds are that if he hadn't run,
the Reds would have 'tied the game.
Boone ~oesn't want ~o put · a

PluleiHReds,B4

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1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901
Ga!ha· Molgo Communlly Action
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tiona For Tho Politlon Of Educa·
110ft Spoidallot
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the aervlcn of a dentlat to Hrvt
undermsurect and unlnaured pa·
Uenta Our otflce has d.-ntal
equlpmonl and sttH, Alary equa"
!ng sao 000 per year plut btnellfl
and paid holldayt PltaH conlacl
lhl Oral Heattn &lt;:oordinator at
740-992-o8211

LPN positions available- pari
time/ cal-In tor aM sholla Batt rale
$11 00/hr Groat Experience Pay
$ 25 Shift Differential For Even·
lngs S 50 For Midnights Attendance bonus avallabte lola of ax
traal Ptease call Scenic H11ls at
(7401•4&amp;-7150 tor
mort In·
tormatlon

Needed Experienced Crew lor
Setting and Fmishing Sectional
HoUSII'IQ 8end Prkang InformatiOn
and experience to Soutnern
Homes PO Box 829 Jackson ,
OH4SMO

Chellllre
This Ia A Temporary (S,. Month)
Position With An E•pected Start
Da1t Of Early June Tht Potalb!tl·
ty Of Continuation On A Perma~
nent Baa!o Does falsi
Appllcalions Must S~bmll All Of
The Following A Reaume, A
Comple1td GMCAA Appl!calioo,
And A Copy 01 Thtlr Teaching

Certificate Or License Appliea·
tions May Be Obtained Aftd Submlltod AI The Following Loca·
liont App!lcaliona May A!oo 81
Obtelntd By Calling (740)387·
73•2 Eat 27 Or (7•0)992·8829
Ext 27
Gallla· Meigs Community Action
Agency, 8010 N Sta1t Rou10
Chlllhlro OH 45820
Ohio Department 01 Job &amp; Family
Services 455 Buckeye Hills
Road Tnurman. OH -45685
Applications Must Be Received
by 4pm, Monday, May 21 2001
Gallltt- Melgo Commuofty
Acfk&gt;n Agor\Cy
Equo! Opporrunlly Employer

OWn a PC 7 Pul II IO Work! For a
tree booklol call 800 429 !5653 or
v~!t ut onine
www gelpcwork com

1

Position available· auto body and
e;~~~'~r Eaper!ence a muat Hilt's
Care 29670 Bashan Ad
Ohio 45771 740·949·
2217

taut Wrlta Immediately WINDFALLS 3010 WilSHIRE BlVD
WS ANGElES, CALtFOtl
NtAtl0010

BlACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Comprohen~lve, of·

iOglt - t •
tng I!·
nco Homo
1880 SliMly
Free cotolog·

---

800·82e 11228, PO BOX 701441
Dalln TX 75370 or http II

180 Wanted To Do
BIB Coollructlon- FloOIII)g, Sk:l!ng
And COntrOIO, tntoriOI &amp; Extlrtor

l'alnlilla. All -

Of Homo "-'
palrs1'F'or A Free Eatlmate Call
(304)e75-7731AHtr! OOpm
Sallyllltlflll In

CALLIGRAPHY BY lARRY 8
Park SlrHt. Wopokontta. Ohio
•5185 (419) 739·2300 Gradua·
Uoo, Woddlng, oH typea lnvotattona Addrtollodl Calligraphy
LttiOflt Taught by Appointment
~

a

CASH lOANS, S2000· S5000
Coooolldofk&gt;n to 1200,000 Bid/
No Crodll. Crodll Carda, Mort•
gogot for lntormotton· 1·800·
334-7812, . . 3122
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
0 A.C Ftorn 12.8CJO.S125 0001 II%

AveriQI rato. Ono·llour IPPfOYIII
F.C C 8 loll·frae 1-188-eDS.

my oome. tnlllnt to

preschool pref•rrad, 1tate cerll-

llotl. coll740-882· 1877

Chltcleare In My Home, C!Ote To
AOOIIVI!I School, Uok Paymontt
Accepted , Call Llta (304)675·

CREDIT PIIOBLEMS? CALl THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
SAO CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS AAA

IIATtNO f-881Ht1-0902.

Oa\ltd's General Contractora,
Plumbing, Electric, Painting
Decks, Mlac
Work
C1fl
(740)256-9373 Or Cot! Phone 1•

Sawmill, don't
to lht mil jutt catt
lawn

Mowing Service. FrH
~ (740)258 113113

Eo-.

Repairing Lawn Mowers And
Small Engina Pick up And
Delivery Available For Quality
Col (740)0-16-7604

fLawn Mowlna. Weed Eating,
Deck

Cleaning,
Raflnlshlng,
Removal Of Unwanted ltama
From But!dlngs Cat! (740)446-

7804

Massage Tnerap1s1 Aeceptlng
Clients Come To Your Home And
Practice Swedish Mauage
1304)674-1439 (740)446·1916
Mowing And Weedtollng And
Olher Outdoor Work
FREE
Estimates (7•0)258-8893 Or
(740)2-3 Leaw Meltegt

TUIINED DowN ON
SOCIAL SECUIIITY liSt?
No Fee UIIIOII We Win!
1-888-562·3:146
WAYOUTOFDaTt

flecluol ...." ,.,......
Pay ont bl!tlmonth. EASY to

--"'11

got--ChrttttooCoo-.g, (800) Mt·
9757, Ext.CC3
(Non-Proll)

Immediately

Opening Cnsls Counseling Legal
Advocate Court ..l!ccompanimeot
For Victim s Of Family Abuse.
And Educational Presentation
For School Clv1c And Rellgloua
Groups Aequlrementa 'ReQuired
Listening Writing Speaking
Skills Ablll!y To Work Wl!n Other
Community Agenc11s M S Oiplo·
ma Required But Prefer College
Degrea ln Social Work Counsel·
lng Or Criminal Juatlct Attldtntl
01 Muon County Are Encour·
agtd TO Apply So!ory $21 ,500
Wilh Hooun !nturonco/ Ponolon
Pion Send Ruumt 10 Brtnchot,
Inc , Care 01 Logo! Advocato,
P0 Bo• 403, Hunt1ng1on WI'

25708 EOE

'

410 Hou1e11 for Rent
2 Bettooom Homo, GallipoliS Area.
$400/mo P!ua ctoposll And Aeter·
, . . NO PETS (7401"1-1519

BUY Foreclosed Homu From
St 0,0001 Repo s &amp; Bankruptcy'o
For lltllngt HIOQ-31 9-3323 Eat

1709

1976 14X70, 2·3 Bedroom, LOIS
Of Improvements, InCludes Stove,
Refrigerator, Porch Shed Fence,

condo For Rent North Myrtle
Beach. Sleeps 6 . 2nd Row.
(740)116 86~7

$7200 OBO (304)875 3008 Any
time (740)395-4277

Pilot Program Renters Needed,

I'Bl*-

..................
*'' ·

---..or-..
...,, or..,..
,...,. . p.....

-on - · Cltfur, rwtiOfori,
ontlott 10
h) I I ar dlatmlnldon •

lhll n1 ,.PIP« w1 not
lu-tgly occepl
............. for . . . .
-ltln&gt;iotationoiN

llw

OUr- tnlto!tby

kolormodDIItll-lngo

.tYirttaldln lhll fiiW r;aper

n - o n on OlfUII
-"""~'-

3 bedroom mobltt home for rent,
no Plfl, 740-992·5858

Rool (30-1)576-4016

Two bedroom mobile nome In
Mtddllporl all electric S300 plus
dtpod. 740-882·3194

440

•T
(140~'"~'-o~11~3~--~~~

lAY
PEPS!ICOKE/FRITO
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$ALl CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
lENT PROFITS lo800o731-7233
EXT 21 03
Blorl Your lut!noot Todoy .
Pr!mt Shopping Con lor Spoco
AVII!IDit AI Allordlbll IIIII.
Sonng Volley PIIU, Col! 740-441•
OIOf

WO~K ,~OM HOMI( lor"
UOO·I7,000/!1'onth PTI", ~ul!
Trolnlng, Pill lntormatlon. call
Now( 1-118.. 11-5410 '"
WWWIIlalnurllrtomtoom

+ Pltlo- Gas Furnace/ AJC,

~ BA, I balh, otdar frame home on
929 of an acre delached garage
5 mites lorm city $55,000, county
water. {740)448-0527
Choahlrt Dlstrtsa Salt, Mull
St!! Only S1 9.900 Greal House
On A Prtvoto Wooded Hll!a !de
Not A Mobllo Homo Thll Is A
Vinyl l!dtd Houu Wlln A Full
Batomonl. Loll 01 Eatru Prlcl&lt;!
120.000 Bilow Approltal To So!!
Fatt lrokora Pro11ctod. 151 Oa·
yer Aotd, Chllhilo Townohlp No
Lind Controcfl ly Owntr.
(118)11ot-ICIG
Country Home, 1 111 Story, 3
lodroo!l'. 1 lolh, Qn 81K Acrot.
17'11 Ccmp(otod W!Ht ~!roploco
And lplrat 1111r Coat On Ploit·
ont'~!dgo lid IIO,OQO (304)171•
ltU
•

New &amp; Utect Fumllul't
Now 2 Pltca llvl!tgroorn Solita,
S399 Buy Sol, Trade
New Lazy Boy Sofa And Love
Seel tAec!lnort On Both EMs)
Price $1 700 Catt Aher • 30pm
(740)0-16-7585
Queen Mat1ress Sal With Brasa
Headboard New In Pla111c
$189 00 Cal (304)360-0233

Antiques

530

•

AMAZING Little or No Credll
Needed, Special Government Fi·
nanclng, (304)755 5885

Beautiful

Ooublewlde On 5
Wooded Acres Hurry! Wont
last! (740)446-3093

Brand New 2001 Doublewlde 3
Bedroom, 2 Bath Custom· Pick
Your Colors Only $245/mo 0
Oakwood · Ga!hpohs (740)4463093

2 Bedroom Garage Apartment
Located 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis
S300/ Month, $300 Deposll, Plus
Utilities References Required
(740)44&amp;-3117
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
ION EBTATIS, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383 Welk 10
thop &amp; mov!ls Call 740·446·
2568 Equal Houaing Opponunllj!
Christy • Family Living, 33140
New Lima Ad , tiUIIaorl, Ohio. 740742·7403 Aportmenl, home and
tralltr rentals Commercial atore·

fronts

avallab~

for lease Vacan -

cltonow

Furnlohed 2 I 3 Room Apart·
menls. Clean, No Pets, No Smolc·
ing , Reference• &amp; Deposit At·
qulred
UUiilies Furnished
(740)046-1519

Factory Goof 32K80 StO ooo Dos·
count only $1000 00 Down De·
livery, and setup paid by Factory
t ·800-891 -8777

Graclouo living 1 and 2 bedroorn
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Ajveralde ApartmentS in Middle
pori From $278 $348 Calf 7 40·
992· 5064 Equal Housong Oppot·
lunllkll

Final Days Nallonwlde Inventory
Reducllon! (304)738-3409

For sale by ownerSPECIAL DEAL· MUST SEE
Trailer anc lol bOth 3 bfldtoom
new applances furnace and In
aide redone, l111 sldtng with
IICid-On room cash pnce $12,000
firm P&lt;lmeroy can 740·742·7403
leave message

Honeysuckle Hilts Apartments
localld On Colonial Drive Behlnc
Highway Patrol Post On Jockaon
Pike 1 Becrroom Now Available
Rant Stans $2401 Month low and
Moderate Income Equal Housing
Opportunoly, (740)446-3344 TOO

Limited Or No Credit? Govern
ment Bank Finance Only At Oak
wood In Barbouraville, WV 304·

Now Taking Applications - 3!5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sowago. Trash $3501Mo . 740·

1·800-750-0750

~
Tara Townhouse Apar tment&amp;
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA f 112 Bath Fully Car·
peltd Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Polio, S!erl $385/Mo No Poll
Lease Plus Security Deposit Ae·
qu!rtd Days 740 446·3481 ,
Evon!ngs 740 3&amp;7 0502 740·
..6.0101
;9

TWin AIVtrTowers now accepting
app!icallonslor I BR
HUD aubald~ed apt fur ofderly
and dlllblod EOH (304)6758879

Must soli 1995 Shull 16a80 3
bedroom 2 path E~~:cellenJ cond1
lion Can Chery! 740.395 4367

Two bedroom apartment stove.

refrigerator, Middleport, one bed·
room 1p1rtment, Pomeroy, stove.

New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 per mon ca ll now 1 800
691-6777

re~lgorotor 740·7•2-7403

460 Spac1 tor Rent

New t6 ft wide $499 per mon
only $270 per man call now 1
800·891-8777

Family typo tor omall camping
trailer nookup and one dock lilt,
can 740-9112-- anytime

New 2001 Fleetwood o nly
$146 •8 per month Call Nikki
140 395·4367

480

New 2001 Fleetwood , 3 br 2
bath, 111 up ln The Country Mo
bile Home Park rtldy to mo~,~e In
SitS down $189 96 per month
740•182-1187
•

lloau!!tu! 1800 Sq Feel, RettOrld
2nd Floor Apartment In Htatorlc

Olttrlet Ideal For Prolesslonal
Couplo AU Modern Amen!11tl 3
-omt, Spacious LIVIng f·t/2
Blthl, Roar Dock HVAC: .8001
mo Ptuo Utllltloo Security And
t&lt;1v DepotM No Ptll Attorenctl
~tqulrtd (740 )408-•425 Or
(740)448-3138 •

Now dOUb!l Wide 3 Dr I Dt
1111 00 down only •295 Ptr
mon call now 1-100·8tt·5777

~rlvott Proparty Artd Now Cou ·
bltwldo, flnt Poymont (304)738·
1111

)

'

Fori.Nae

CAIHLOANSI
'BedCioditOK
' MootOudly

•Fut SeN.101

s
s
I
f
I
f

,.

D

s

.u~

•

.1,..4,:1.,

· ,. ...._ ........ ~

• '

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1' .{
,. f

~

f

\ 1

•

8 N Ford Tractor With Grader
Blade &amp; Bush Hog Boat ATrat!er,
Ford 2000 Tractor For Sale,
$4200 Call (740)256--8883

630

Electric Hosp!la! Bed. Mallress &amp;
Sldo Rat!l, loO~S &amp; WOrt&lt;! GOOd,
$150 (304)773-5145
•

Livestock

t 4 Foot Stock Trailer. 15 Year
Old
Thorough bred
Mara.
(740)358-9364

FlOORING Pre-finished Qak Stt!l
In
MUST SELL! 2 25/sq h
Cellular f 1-1177-834-7330

17' Horse Saddle .
(740)001-9513

For sa le New~ factory "sealed
An"e of Green Gables and Road
I~ Avonlea mt&gt;vi8s To order or

2 appondoa yea11ing geldings. Pal·
ammo S2500 bay. hkes to jump,
Stsdo. 740·843-5176

for Information caD IOU !ret 1-866744-8245 (P~UP .~'

3 AOHA Horses $1 soo Eacn,
One 2001 Co!! $700. One APHA
3 Year Old Stud 80 Day&amp; Train·
ong, $2800 (740)245...CJ370

eo-

lha!Jtrltert'll'jmllnlepotlalb~.com

FREE $40 Oli' GAil!:ERI&amp;Sl Lom·
Ited to !Irs! 100 calls Tell Frklnds
aocl Famly! 800-426·03117

$250.

FREE OST'OMY PMbUCTSf

Manufacturer otters a two week
supply of colostomy or urostomy
brand name pr01tlucts wltn one
ample phone cillll No obligations

SERV(CES
Are You Looking For Engines Or
Transmlaslons? Give Me A Call
Al740-..&amp;-o519

Can 800·755-7880
GET SEXY FOR SUMMEA! Lose
3·5 lbs woek!y Guaranttl&lt;l Control cravl!'lgl, feet great! Burn fat
quickly Only $19 951 COOS
phonechecka, credit cards. 1
6D0-258.Q989

Budget PrJced Tranemlsslons
All Types Access To Over
10 000 Tra nsmissions transfer
Cases 740·245·5671 Cell 339·

4

~765

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs
Problem'7 N~ Tu,ned? Cal! The
Plano Dr 740.~525
,

790

Independent f'iorba!llt DIOirlbutor
Call For ~ PrOduct Or Opportunity
(7401"1-1982

1968 Avlon, 26', New Air
Conditioner Awning &amp; Upnotstery
Good Cond!lton (740)...6-3038

720

Hay &amp; Bnghl Wire Tle Slraw, Yea•

Delivery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm
'Rot~nd

(304)675 5724

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants· Order Now To
Guarantee Earl)' Spt"ing Planttngs
Increase Allotments Mean E1ttra
Plants Thank Vou For Your Business Call Danny Dewhurst
leave Message (304)695 3740
Or (304)895-3789

lenoir dining labte wUh 8 A~al rs
72·80' $130 7.().892-8587

MOBILE HOME OWNEAS

Huae ln\ltnlory, Discount Prices
fi!n VInyl Skirting, Doors Wind
ows Anchors Water Healers
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Fur·
~aces
Heal Pumps Bennetts
Mobllt Home Supply 740· 4•6·
9416 www orvb.comlbennan

a

710 Autos lor Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE !M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS! HONDA S
CHEVY'S JEEPS lOW AS $291
MO 24 MOS 019 9% FOR
~!STINGS, CALli 800 451 0050
ext C 9812

NEW AND USED STEEL Sloe!
Be1m1 Plpe Ribar For concrete
Angle Channel , Flat Bar Steel
Grating For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways New !55 Gallon Drums
Wllh l!d &amp; Ring. $7 00 Each l&amp;L
Screp Mets!s (740)0-16-7300

1971 El Camino 55 Clone LOis 01
New Parts Cali Alter 6 30pm
(740)...6--6978

PETCARERX COM Sava up to
50% on ALl pol mlftloa!ions and
supplies, Including Hearlgard In
ttrceptor Frontline morall FREE
'SHII! lNG Order online www Pot·
CareR com t ·8D0-844·1427

1988 Old&amp; Cut!aos C!Ora Good
Condition, Good Tlrea $1.(00
(740)245-'5572

1992 Beretta V6

TroUlng Motor 1 $50; Remington
870 20 Gouge W!lh 2 Barrels
Scope &amp; Sling 5400 Now Picnic
Toblos $99 Each Alvin Hers
borger 4789 Potrlot Road, !n
Cadmus

StEEl BUilDINGS Now . Mu11
StU 30a•Oa12 wu $10,200 now
$8,880 40a80a12 waa $1t ,•oo
no)Y ••o 971 50a100a1S was
•27 ,580 now S111,900 eo
att
was $58 780 now $42 990 t ·8D0406·512e

.:zoo

STOP SWIMMING !N CHLO
AINE ! EltctronJc coppertallver
Ionizer Non·ctt.mlcat purlller cuts
ChlOrine 95% Five modall for
I!Oolltpa l!arllng $188 oo Col! I·
800·678·7439 www llloguardsya·
iemtt

com

'

Automatic,

TruckB

for Sale

1999 Cadge Oakota Sport Club
Cab 4114 V6 Excellent Condition
All Power 22 000 MileS Call Alter

1997 lnnsbrook Laser Travel
Trader $7500 (304)675 2793

oeo

1993 Shadow 88 ooo Milts 5
speed 4 Cylinder. $800 OBO

(740)256-1233
1999 M1tsubtsn1 Echpse RS red
crul&amp;e power locks power
windows CO warranty remains

arc

740.8926780
2000 BMW 323cl 22 500 Milos

Sport! Premlom Package, Leather
Power Seats
S~o~nroor
Warra nty $32 ooo (740)245552 3

CD

$3295 199• Cava!!tr $2895,
1993 Cavallar Four Door $2395
1995 S· 10 $4295 1995 S- 10
$4.95 1998 Silverado 4 a4
Ea!tndtd Cob $13 900 COOK
MOTORS (7.0)446...CJI03

78 Oldo Do!la 88 Runs Good
Chrom e Whee ts New Palnt Job
$500 OBO (740)..8-8135

1994 Thunderbird 1 Owner Low
miles. garage l&lt;ept E•cellenl
Cond!llon . Loodod.
$6.800
(304)675-7505

9t Camero teal color new tire•
run1 excellettt good shape CO
p!aylr air, power wlndowl $3 !00
!lrm 740.446-9271

1995 Mustang 8 Cylinder 3 8 5
Speed, laatr Rad 78.000 Miles.
$7300 Firm Call After 5pm
1304)882·2030

94 Ford Exptorer 95 Pontiac
Grend Prix 96 Pontiac Grand Am

1997 O!ds Achlava SL 63K
Miles $6500 1994 Ford Tampo
GL. 128K Milts $2500 1989
Ford Tempo Gl 98K Mil a&amp;
$1700 OBO (740)448-2e24

97 Monda C11JlC LX 4 .:lr sliver.
keyless entry. pawer Etlllrytnlng 5
sp , sunroof good gas mileage,
rota!! $10 300 ao~lng $9 300 740·
742 3114

90 CavAlier. Runs Good, Good
Mileage $1 ooo
(7.0)441-1 083

au

oeo

(304)773-6057 Or (304)773-5225

Extras $10 200 (3041675-5366

200 1 Hornet 2711 Travel Tra1ter
~oa ded
like
1740)367- 7614

GelS It! (740)14t...CJ682

94 Dutchman

96 tlodge Ram 1500 4WD 318
PW POL CR 70 000 Miles
Topper Sharp, (304)675·5040

Air
Room
1740)...1-9531

Brand

810

I

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
o

Uncondlllonal lllaUme guarantee
L:ocal reference s lurn1 shed Es
labhshtd l975 Cal! 24 !;Irs (740)
"146 0810 I BOO 287 0576 Aog· ,
ers Wal&amp;r.prooflng
"

1996 Prowler 26 Foot Travel
Trailer With !stand Bed 4nd At

92 Ford F 150 6 Cylinder Looks
Good Runs Great First $4600

1993 Cavalier 4 Cylinder Auto
AIC Pl CO 134 000 Miltl Ask·
ong $3500
(304)576·2092

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1978 F ISO 4•4 8 Cy!lncer Short
F!al Bad 1998 fold 1·150 4a2 6
Cylinder (740)245-5693

spm (740)446-4316

TRANSPORTATION

•
t '

l
8

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

1600. (304)675-~77

or 2

c

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

1 Bedroom Apanmont AI Utl!illta
toc!udld, $2751 month (304)875-

tocludtd, $400/mo llmll
Peoplo (740)3t57...CJ81 I

SenUIIf!l

124 Alto Cub Cadet tractor w!lh
plow, mower &amp; cultlvalor, 10
..... 740-992-7..9

PitaSI Cal! tor Usllngl.
1·1100-45 Hl050 ElL C9817

2 Bedroom Furnishad UUhties

Dally

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

lion com

89117

Dog,

The

1

1 Bedroom Furnlohed Aptrtmenl

,

---

Organic purple asparaaus call or
lease order at VIrgil's Berry
Patch east of Syracuse an SR

Police lrnpour)do &amp; Aepool
Tpyola&amp;. Cllevy's, Jeeps!

In Poin1 Pleasant Very Nice &amp;
Cltan. No Poll, (304)675-1 386

1

570

Old

HOMEGROWN STAAWSERR!ES
McKean Farm 556 Centenary
Road, Gallipolis OH Phone
(740)0-16-9442

1st Time Home Buyers Program
Special Financing Ava•lable
2 Doublewlde Foreclosurers
easy Terms, Very Small Fee &amp;
Move-In Oakwood· Gallipolis
(7401"6-3093

Tncolored
14
Month
Female Beagle Rabbit
(304)5711-2779

580

31550

~

i

1 llle4

AKC Pekinese PuppteS 2 Males.
t Female 7wk Old. (1 )5 Monlh
ClttiToyl'oodo (7~~

ala!led, f2 295, $ t ,ooo Back,
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Call For Quotes On Olhar Sizes
It You Don' t Col! Ut We
I!GI1 Lotti MObile Homea Our
Specla!lly 1 740· 446·8308 1·800·

O&lt;imp~lar! ;~WE ~~~,\!:fCUilEtL
COMPUTEMSI Ev•n ~lH Ieos
t~an perttcl credltt 1·,00·477·
9018 Co&lt;le AC:ZO www omcsolu

-

;'I

AKC Lab Puppltl. 6 Weeks Old
First ShOt&amp; &amp; Wormed Yellow,
$275 lltack $250 (740)256-tllifl

t-oner, 2 Ton Coli, 1 Line Set In·

40 gallon natural gas hOt water
tank $60 Coleman trailer tur
nace. bottled gas 15,000 BTU's
$100 call 740·742·2373 at1er
4pm

~

",n

lllilllless

PIANO SAlE
Many To cnoose From. U95
And Up Huntington Plano Inc
(304)525-5382

1884 No"ls 14•10 2 Bedroom 2
Bath, Maytag Appliances Heat
Pump, Deck, $1•.soo (740)2459875

(304)755-~

..,..
......

-:..,'""" .... _, __
I,.

llldllles.

1m com cdunJYerse amason etc

No Cl'tldll OK! HUO. VA.
FHA: Col tor LiStings
1-81J0.501·1ID Eat 9818

AUTOS F - 1800.00

........

NOBODY'S FATHER CD by 1&lt;1·
vtn Jones Marv cliapln Carpenter &amp; Ace Smllh guest On tax-

SO DOWN HOliES

'

Reds can score. bu~ .t.!.. can't wm ~~:7
- •
a5 at The
Ieast not at horne Cmcmnan
has yet to
Clllledllillsl win consecutive games at Cm_~~:rgy f1eld' thts
nll.eiiiiii.J seaso11, gomg 6-13 there for the NL's worst
..
home record.
The Reds have lost 10 of 12 overall.
)IWeQ.
matching thor season low at thtee games
u11der .500 (17-20).
"Our last seven to 10 games have been tlut
! ill
way;• manager Bob Boone wd. "We're JUSt
conung out on the wrong end of the suck.
We're nght there."
There are a lot of factors m the Reds' fadmteibiiR,'I ures. The starters haven't gotten a wm stnce
lrMl
Aprd 28, the offense has an NL-low ,29

56G - Petit for Sale

1539 RUM Moore, owner

540 MIICellaneoua
Merchandlae

•

Block brlck,r&amp;.JW&amp;r p!pes, wtnd
ow&amp; lmte~. etc Claude Winlers.
RIO Grande, OH Call 740·2·5-\
5121

610 Farm Equipment

Lot model clearance one 2000
sectional save S9 625 lor 2000
model &amp;lngtes 5 pre owned sm
gles must go by May 31, no rea
sonable ollar refused these
homes won't last long so stop in
an(t cfleck us out we re dealing
Coles Mobile Homes Athens
Ohio Open M W 9 7 Thurs Frl
9-8 Sal 10.5

(304)675·8022

Streel Furnl1tn
(31M)875-1022
515 Main Street Plllnt Pleasant

can

Clnlury Flblrgltat Cargo Cover·
Flit S~OIIbtd GM Pickup
(740)0-16-2350
'

Homes US M East Atl'lens Oh

a

,.;;~~~:~:~~

:S. STEEL BUt..-5
2AII28 Wll f7 .990 ... $3 A75
30a45 was StO,tiSq, sal f5 800
50at 15 was $31) 900.... $12.500
~ Grag (800)392-7808

I and 2 bedroom apanmontt, tur·
nlaned and unfurnlsned security
deposit required no pels. 7-401192 2218

Lol model clearance saYe up !O
$8,625 with any home check us
out were deaung Cole's Mob1le

....._.,_ ~···" &amp; 112,
Floors
1 Dining

Apartments
for Rent

Building
Suppllea

Carpel. 202 Clark
Portor, OH Freo Eat~
90

281.QQ98

tor Rent

736 3409

MEDICAl BilliNG Un!lmlled In·
come potential No ell;perience
necessary Free lnrormauon
CD-ROM !nve&amp;lmenl lrom $2495
Financing available (800) 322·
1139 EXT 050
1
www business stanup com

550

· Ctll (304)3ttll-«!33

Sl,OOO aACK 2 Ton- Air Condl·

420 Mobile Homes

1981 Naohaua Mob ile Home

97 Oakwood, 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath
Heat Pump Asking Payoff Prlct
Loan Is Assumable (740)256-

Allrtll--!0111
lhll t)l
..-ct 10
..Folr Hf!Utlrto Act

-

1124 Easl Main oo SR 124 E Pomeroy. 740.882·2526 or 740-892·

1-888-926-3026

1988 14a70 3 Bedroom shong!es
Root, Vloyl Sodlng Remode led
Very Clean $12,900 Make Oiler
t2x12 Storage Building For Sale

RON EVAIIS ENTEIIPIISES
.-....Of*&gt;.
t.8QQ-537-9521

Buy or sell Riverine Ant1ques

RENTALS

Ooty $195 oo Per

PAY O'f ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS lor 5% ol balance! II you
..,. tooo lhtn 95% ot crt&lt;lll t!ml~
there wll be no out-ot.packtl exCalll-316 • • •

Workplace Dlverslly

VICtim Advocata

looking To Buy A New Home?
0011'1 Hava l.and7 We Doltt Huny
Dnly fOLofl Le1t. 304-736-7295

Monrh18 99% Fixed Interest Rate
With Air And
Underpinning

1982 14Jt70 Faarmont Townhouse,
2 bedroom, I largo bath woth heal
pump &amp; ale $7 soo. 740· 591·
4003 or 740-992-{)939

tunity Employer Encouraging

(740)245-5334, Eatonslon 201
EOE Dead!one May 23nl

Sites For Rent On Ka·
nawha RIVer, 8 mllu from Point
Pleaunt. electriC only (304)675
1722, (30ol)e75-4t... Alter S9m

$5.000 l740)00· 14x70 Southern Dream free Oellv•ry tree Setup only $999!5 1

NEED AN EARlY PAYDAY?? Up
10 $500 lnttanlly by phont! t.
877 EARLYPAY liCI 750005 1at
ACNANCE FREE!

•ordllatmlllltlon 1

1997 Wells Cargo Conceoolon
Trailer Enlered In several Local
Feotlva!B Cal! (7•0)288-3870,
Asking Price S15,000

Camp

12x50 Mobllo Home, Now Kitch·
en, Naw Bathroom New Floors,
1818 Covorld Porch. Ctnlral Aor.

14170, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, D1n1ng
Room Heal Pump Front Porch wl

of~--- Rlflegll

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends lhat you do bual·
neu with people you know, and
NOT to send mooer through the
mall unlit you have invealigated
lhe otlenng

13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
VIew Sileo $50 000 t 8 Acres
W1th Large lake, Uob1le Home
WHh Add On S79 500 Galloa
County On Blacktop Road,
(740)38&amp;-al78

Bedroom. 2 Bath
Slng!owldo. Jutl $099 Down
(740)0-16-3093

!ntarttt Rale, 1·886-926·3028

!NOTICEI

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

1980 Skyline 2 bedroom. all elec·
trk: central !lr on a rented lot In
M-pon $4900.740.992 3194

Mowers, and Farm Tractors,
Certllled
Mechanic
Call
(740)0otHlt99 9·5Pm

Bualn•••
OpportunltV

sq
tr , building
ale CO!Mrld
partung, cet,..
Otflce
In Monerovitle
600
lng len S3DOo'11IO 614-875-1661

••t Only.. 3

Free Money Nowl It's Truel No
repayment Quaranta~ For per·
aonal needs education busl·
.... t 80().724-8047 (24 hr)

King Manrett Sot. Ptuoh p. T,
frl PackiQI. Uot St 899, Sol

-flpm

tor Sale

WHI Repair Automobiles Lawn

210

Lot for aale with 2 eommercial
bultcllngt, bolh - . . one buittf.
lng houses U S Postal ServiCe
wi1h 1 year lease. 7&lt;10·7•2·3»4

320 Mobile Homes

28)1;80 3 Or 4 Bedroom Only
$345 00 Per Month 8 99% F111ed

FIN AI, CIAI

. . - Rt1lngt "'StOcl&lt;

Buildings

Two car garage/apartment 1n
Middleport two bedroom&amp; full
bath. LR kitchen w1th electr.c
range , central air 7.(0-985-3650
or740-992 2795

16 Wide

W attrllftt Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 P.r 100. t• 200 PSI
$37 00 Par tOO, ~H Brafl COm·

340 Bullneuand

Routa 1 South Newer, Larger
Home Very Nice Consider
T,_..,,l740)046-9968

Will haul trash or junk 1way
$40 oo a load 304-875·8950

Will work for $4 an hour, paint
porches will mow grass &amp; weed
aat clean out outbuildings, pick
up junk tor tree. 740-88M314

-

304·736-7295

304-833-8265
F,.otance Engtl1h Riding llltlfuctor $15/ Hour. Call Agnes 0
(740)00t...CJI84

Stantey Home Product~ And
Fuller Brush Available To Order
Productt Or tloqueot Catalogt
Pleate can (304)875·8903 Any

888·928·3426

be submitted to RoCksprings Ae·

cation Aequ1red CONTACT
Buckeye Hills Career Center

ITAY HOMI. Mokll ... '~II
lnlormat!on 1·118•117•1211 or
WW'If I rotdiiUOCIII COlli

SIS NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash tor remaining payments on

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES'
•o OR lOW DOWN' TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES' OK
CREDtTt FOR liSTING' CALl I
800-501 tm ext 9813

of dOIIIfl, to twlp m1n1m1ZI their

habilitation Center. 36759 Rock·
springs Road. Pomeroy Ohio
45769 or call and contact Kerry
Snepnerd, RN Director ol Nursing
at 7-40 992 8606 Equet Oppor-

Information call 1· 888·674·91 50
txt 3234

Htlp won!l&lt;! caring lor 11\t o!ctorly
01r11 Group Home, now paying
minimum wage, naw 1hlft1 ?am ·
3pm, 7om-5prn, 3pm-1tpm tlpm·
7om, cal! 740·8112·5023

--.-....~com

Schooll
lnatructlon

150

s..-

(plumbmg heatang erectnc1ty.
doors. walls, ce11tng s. bathroom
and kitchen floors ki1chefl cab•·
nets an bathroom f1xtures. lront
porch. 2 coats ex1enor pa1nt~ Un
dar $30.000 (740)698 6783
(740)5111-1 384
Eacotltnt lOcation On Route 160
Between Galhpohs And Holzer
Hospital 3 Bedrooms Salh living
Room. Family Room, Kitchen Wllh
Appliances, FuU Size Basement.
2•h24 Fintsned Garage, 8x 10
wood Srorage Bulldmg CIA &amp;
Gas Heal Excellent Neighbor·
hood Too Much To MenUOn
Ready To _.. IntO C.M For Ap""""'"""' (740)046-9548

RN and LPN tor 100 bod sklltod
nuralng facility Excellenl starl
rates, benefits anct sign on bOnus
Opportunity to work wllh exceptional team Applications should

Vacancy VocatiOnal Supervisor
Ohla Department 01 EducatiOn
Supervisor/ Admin istrator Ctrtlfl

GAOWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work from homel Mall-or
dtr/E·Commerce $522+/Weok PT
$1000·$4000/ wk FT 800 · 821·
8538 www dr11m2b~H com

ton "" t

--1831

Pr-'1' Sold! Mon-t AMue

Pootot Joba .48 323 00 yr Now
hiring- No experience paid train-~
lng· groat bonet!ls call 7 days
800·429·3860 ext J·~5
POSTAl JOBS Up lo $18 35/
hour Hiring lor 2001 Paid !rain·
lng Full Bentllts No o•pertenco
required C8J! tou tree 7am-7pm t .
888·726 9083 X17~

Government Jobt $11 00
$33 00 per hour potential Patd
Training/Full Benefits For more

Government Postal Jobs
Up To St 8 35/Hr
Hlnng tor 2001
BenelliS/Pension
I 888-728 9083 Eat 2000
7am 7pmCST

....... ctotalls 24 h&lt;

U&amp;JI Selllementsl Immediate
Ouotoolll 'Nollocly beats our proc:·
ea • N1t1ona1 Contracl Buyers
(BOO) •90-0731 tat 101 www oa·

FIM-Tlmt.llene-

tott. RetaWEaperlo,.,. Prtft&lt;rl&lt;l
Apply At Llftstyle Furnllurt, No
Pholle Colli. Apply_ •• 858 Third Avonuo. Golllpollt,
Olio.

trom- - ...... and report

•ea.

ROUTE DELIVERY DRIVER
For Locat Attta
Full &amp; Pan

54HU3

They lhoughl t woo cni:-J 10 quK
my job! I now ooro $tOOK ptuo

S FREE CASH NOW$ from

-and COOk·

sawmHts. •dU•rs and akkldere
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Orive, BuffalO NY t•225
FREE lnlor01atoon 1-800·5711363 EXT. 20IW

~Aitnew

~

bolltles WHt loctudo Schodullng
OUties fur Nlnirtg Slltl we 0ttor
Competi1tve Wages Beneflll

11864

wwo CuhNowArxlfortlllll&lt;com

excellent Income Easy cla1ms
proelltlng Full-tra•nlng Home~

ltocltlont Art Typtng Sklllo.
Knowledge 01 MocrotoH WOfflt
6 0 And E•cel Oetired Tra111
Are Strong Organizadonal And

Communocation Skilfo

-$3---~ ......
bermato 2000 largot c.ap101110
mote opttans Manufacturer of

home. appraised 127 500, call
74CH02·7403io;M mesoaga.

4:3tlpn. 32 Haus A - OUtf.

..... Some -

sitions For
Mot•vated ln&lt;h·
vtduals, Expenence Not Necessary- But Will Tra•n
Flexible
Hours And Some Weekend&amp;
Aeqtftd COll.icenso Not . .
qu1red
Call Mr Cline 1..aoo.

·--·-good

s.cro.. ry PooKion
Art l·tlllllft To

Hours

Cai1-800-490-JM50 2A ...

In recruiting voluntHrl
over 1he phone for
major non-prolll hlllllh
organlzalloi'W. ll'lpolltlona Involve
NO IIUNDRAIIINQI

Mlfti&lt;lt
Av-

-

=='-'-!.~.,..:,·

310 Homes tor Sale

Help w.ntld

110

- - 10 cora

$635~-E
asy!No--

Corporation

P'TIFT

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn

--

Management

S500-

!too Or Qllttno ' Mail Orde&lt;

15000/mo. PT/FT. t ·800· 784·
85511 --t.com

-9105Agaln

40

s $ 50 tor
mldn•gnts ·•Anenctance bOnus
available many e11ras Please
call Sari: Hittt; AI (740)0-167150

posmons come

- ··lito . .

Top

Commtn1on Anywhere for
!'hOne lntoMew. Cal Ryan HIOO·

-eolial fur

Help W'lnllld

... ..

Heat,_.,.

STOP tiENTtNGtt OWN FOR

lESSIIO or
Ott~
~ llltingo Col •- 5 0 H m
Exllltl21

110

Slide
.,...

T o - H i E - - - Gil
F . . _ O I -. 1 2 -

homen and the pine
NL-Iow&gt;,094.
•
•
•
Re! bOU, kept the_ ~· ~Qf.
SO'"$ sn· the severitli, Wht'll ' ~ '8
and dl~n gave up a-~i• df- d~$ 2rotln~ * ·
$harpJl' hit smgle byJed',~B'¥~11 '
• •
Scott Winchester was ready tri the1&gt;utlj'len~
but Boone declded. to- stick 'r'th · Remnia,
who had thrown 106 pttches. Whtle puchmg
coach Don Gullett VISited the mound for a
chat, Alou plotted his mategy on-deck
"They'd been throwmg me } 1of. of lirst- '
puch breaking balls that I'd• been takmg, ~nd
I had that 111 the back
of my mmd,''•Alb ,.4
u
fl,t
Sat d
•
If•
l
1Dh l
He pulled Rettsma's first-pttch curve
down the third base line, and all dim: .ruiiners kept the1r footmg on the Clampened
infield to score for a 6-4 lead
.. , , . ~" . ,

New

Campa~ Expando

Condll10mng

r \

'

~·

G&amp;c

General Home Ma !ntenanoe Pa1nUng v1ny1 SIOtng
carpenlry doors Wind ows oath s
mobile home repa1r and more For
free estimate call Chet 740 992
6;J23
ltvlngston s Sasemer'i f Wat er
Proofing all ba sem en \ re pa rs
do ne free esl!mete! !tte llme
guarante e 14yrs on JOb e)(pen
enoa (304)895·3987
Roofing &amp; Small Repa1rs 14
Ye ars E~tpe rl e n ce Fuu Guar·
anteed And
Insured Free
Eslimates (740)245-934 1

840 Electrical and
• Refrl~tati,on' , .w.~

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDa

Residential

or commercia l w1n11Q.-

~

new ser'IIICe or repatrs Masl9r Etr.,~.
can1ad ~lec\rtc la~ RtH~nl%Y.••
Ele ctrical WV000306 304 675-

1994 Altro Convers1on Van 1
Owner, Excellent Condition,
$4500 1304)562 2787

1786

95 Gee Tractler 4x4 !5 Speed
AIC AM IFM Cassette, Ask~ng
$3950 OBO (304)576-2201

740

Motorcycles

1997 Honda 300EX e-xcellent
Condilion Lots Of Extras Asking
$2600 (740 )4 4 1-0182 Aller
530pm

1898 Honda 750 Shedow Ciaaooc
8 000 Miles Excellent Condhlon
$4500 (740)387-7750
2000 Harley Sportster 883 Hug·

ger with 1200 conversion loaded
with extras new condition $8700
740·949 2181

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1977 Thunderbird
165
HP,
Inboard/ OutboarD Motor $2500
(740)406- 9021

t 992 Playtime 24 Pontoon w/48
hp Evlnrude molar w11h all acces·
sories e~tceiiMt condl llan 7-40·
742 1007 after 5pm
Jet Sk! 1999 Kawasaki I I DO ZXI
L.lke New low Hours Alum1num
'lltiUer $5800 (304 )576-2890

110

Help Wanted

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT&gt;
We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Manac;~er. We are currently
seeklnQ to fill over 109 positions. No
exp. necessary. Earn up to $15/hr.
Very flexible schedullnQ. Both f/t and
p/t avail. Medlcai/Dentai/Pd
vacatlon/Mc}mt. opps. avail for f/t.
Call today; start tomorrow•••
1-888-974-JOBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU!
COG Management, LI..C

I.

�·.
....2•TMDIIIylenllnll

Ohio

lingto -

--.--

s-r,.r
C-1
7 55 •

.........

FlnoiiClng Avllalllo,
7tlt

u.r-

Help Wenled

Help WIMid

110

·-IIWOIIIt" ""ttZ laM/
~- Cottogo- '01 HS
Gr-tet. Enuy Lovol Svc/
sales Condrhons Apply Openmgs Throughout Trr-State Area
1304)552.001•

-~
A S35 000 per year Career! Notional TransportatiOn Serv•ces

needs dnver tra•nHI NOW• 15
U, CDL· OOUiiftglmello inclucf.

eel- no upfronl ss- tractor tnuler
"""*V .....71t-IM6

Earn E1tr1 Income ParHi..,.
Caterln"' Flexible SCheduling.
we'M TnoNI, No E-rltnce Nee·
Hllry Oay &amp; Even1ng Elo•eftiS

110

_,. c-"' - ·•

t53
bod locilily, lo..,.
c eptJng IPPhC:AilOPI tor AN's,
lPN'o, and STNA S Varyong full
and pan .... p o - . . -

Appticauon Accepted AI Sludenl
Center Annex Bu1khng At Vm·
..,.ity Of Rio Grande. (7.00)2A5-

Applicants mut:l be energet.c.
..._
and motillilld ......
playerS Full bme

5660EOE

E - - Ad

Pro WanU!d

-f
r
-lllat .. - · -·u
pacbgo
2Pand1oPihitts
sura net, 401 K, pakt vacatiOn, 7
pa•d holidaya/ year Fte••ble
spendtng accoum, eredit uniOn.
IM!fy other and holiday
oH and more Hou&lt;1y wage com-

... 5-llllOO

FlOOr Superv110r AN Posn.ans

an how
~~~~u.25snHI

ngo. Bate ~te ol $14
--pan

mensurate w•th experience
Please ean 740· 797-4581 M- F
8A-4 30P 10 act\edultl a profes
--...EOE

-~pay

at-

Addrn .... wanted - . t e f y t
No expertence n«esnry WOfll:
Ctii-Hl3117

w..-

Addr......
tinmoctlatalyt
No Eaperltoc:e N......ry Worlc
Atttome Ctll (et-U7-11397

A,. you a Citing. 1eem- o r --.g fur lhe porfect jail
wifll ur•t pay? Then we're look·
ing tor you at 5cenic HilS Nlnlft!l
Center State Tesred Nurs•na
Atctes and Certlf11d Nurs1ng
Aides poslt1ons ava1lable one

FREE SEARCH!

....SINGI.£s.com

pat1·time

Gentleman Sttk1ng Whitt Fe·
male Over 50 YtiJI For W1111:1
And Frtoodohtp Reply To 553
2nd Avonue. Golllpollt. Ohio
~1 , ...,.,.._403

SBCM COIItga Grlduate,
5 '1 t, ttiOib, otok WF
componlonohlp Wrllo B
1202tol5 (E·1 · 3l CCI,

Ct

7
• ••

ITAIIT

HIVI

tun

Qi 45801

31yrt,
or IF
Scott·

eo. 5800,

DATING TONIGNTI
meo11na ottalblt t!RDitl

~~·• Tou-frtt 1·800·

at8735

Why lllrllt? Stort mottlng Ohio
11,...1 tonight t ·800·7M·2f23

at lat.

30 AnriOWICIII!Iflta

2Pm

IO 1Upm Two
fur &amp;am 10

In/ titf.lft .,.,..-.

cal~

2Pftl

.... tOpm tO 68m se.ao .. hour
for atale tllttd nura1ng 111i1·
tanll, S5 80 on hour tor &lt;*lif*l
nuralng 1111111nts •perfect ••·

---1

_ , . , . booUI every 3 ·
•eonus available for working

caring, and c:omH eo. you oro porltct
fur our _ , Overbrook ~ It
looking lor lull time 1 port time
Are you

wt~rm,

STNAI.

LPNI lnd tiNt 10 , . quality car• for our realdente.
lOin the Overbrook FamNy.
For ..,. !ntormotlon, ~ contoct Krlotlo Moddon 01 740-8112·
M72 or olop by 333 Pogo ltree1
10 lll OUI on lft1t&gt;ICitlOn. E.O.E

come

Fundralur, Sing, Yard saM·
t2 00·5.00 Auction ! 30, Mty
lith, Stlvorovlllo Church. Por·

ASUMaLY AT HOIIIII Croht,
Toya, Jewelry Wood, SeWing,
~ Grtal Pay! CALL 1·100~ Eatf 201 (2"""1

...... ONo,

Attlntion- Worfl From Home. Oft.

7---

-lb '100 Tlvlll ~
8 - Stmoon, Athtno

740-5e2·1842
Quality clolntng and househOld
ltams S1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday
tiJO.fOO

GIVUWIIV

3·. 7 Wook Old Mallard Ducks,
Mutt Take Alt. Pe~tct For Small
(740)3tlt-92t7

Giveaway To Good Home only
Mlllld Brood Pupploo, very Cull
(7..0)2415 &amp;082laa¥1Mtttaue
Klftlftl· Calico, SIK Wttkl Old
And
Litter
Trained
Call
(740~73&amp;

r

80 La.t and Found
LOST· Sliver Poodle With fled
CO!Ior On Alllmond Rldgo, JollOI'
..... (304)875-7.50

70

Yard Sale
GalllpoHs
&amp; VIcinity

- - 112 Solar Drive, 15-tfl.
'7, 11m L.ala ICidl Clothes

cw
Pomatoy,

lllddlaport
"VIcinity
3 ltlnity garage 1111, May t 81h
and 11th lrom 1-4, outside Po·
.....,. on 33 1hl lour lanes
ftldl to ldultt, older

c- ~ - · otot

-HI
Big ,.a -

181h

of

mile ott Lina Ad on

lid, tlutflnd. 141h lhru

IIACO yard tele ot Rae! .. 1 Stir
Mill Park on May 171h Sam to
4pm &amp; May 18th 9am to 2pm
Clothing, thoet. d!ohot. pans
glottwora. linens. 1oya, ruga.
knk:k-knacka, Iota or mise Items
All proceede to to •cholarahlp

lund Thonka tor • - ' Catt Ann
Zlrklt If 740-IM9·2031
Hln t1 740-909-2656

80

or Ka!11ryn

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctlontlr complete
auction
service
Licenatd
f86,0hlo &amp; Wt51 VIrginia , 30•·
773-578! Or 304-773-5..7

80

•

Wanted to Buy

Abtolult Top Dollar U S Sltvor
Gold Colno Proo HIO, Dlamooclo
Gold tltogt
U S Currency••
M TS, Colo SI)Op t5t Second
, _ . ,, Ga!llpoMt, 740-008-2802
wontod To Buy U11d Mobllt
Homo, Colt 7~175 Or 304·
675-llifl5

[MPlOYMENf
S EHVIC!c &lt;;

110

Help Wanted

Sl200 WEEKlY POSSIBlE Pro·
Ctlling 400 lnqulrv Envelopes at
Home Eaay Work Call 1-800756-2027 11539 (24HII)

IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS!
Join

lnfoCislon

a. &amp;

Sartendtr Waolld. Somy'e
Gt1!, (740)367o0850 AHer 5pm

Be ""' Own Boss!
EamupiO
S500-$800Mo10

Nr ~
S y - f i - 1 .,._, Watraoty

Up to $7/hour +

bonu• potential
Full·tlme with

I Cotmplate blneflta
package

IYC:Jur new career

with one of the
area's leading
companies.

1-81J0.511Hl7~

PC roqulrtd Calf Pllystctao &amp;
Heotthctre O....loprnenle tal Into
1-800-m-5833 Ext. 2010

Clle Mlnagtmtnt Potitio,._. An
oUipltilnt alc:Onol aftd otner drug
counseling agency locatei1 In
GaUil County, Ia seeking a caae
Manager to work wllh a~ults
and ado~scenta
providing
acreenlnga, evaluations, Intakes
referrals, aeneral case management service• and etc Must
have knowledge 1n the held of
chemical ctopeodency Sachtiort

&lt;1ogroo orw11 "' oapenenco eeoc
a pluo Ser1d ,.....,. by Moy 11.

2001 to FACTS.
4! Olivo
StrNt. Gan!po!lo, Ohio 454131 or
Fox (740)446-alto EOE loWIH

COL-A Drivers Experienced/In·
experienced W11t Coast Avail·
ab!e"Grool Pay•MIIeo· Bonomo•
Transponatloo'lo&lt;lglng tnctudl&lt;l
COl Training Available Call I·

800-3ol8-1380

QIAl
Local.tackiOn COuoly, wv
~ Ia Now Coottuctlng lnlel'llews For Fu1~111re Eapon
encldCNA-1
S$$Slgn-Up Bonut$SI
Wogtl Compt-.y Btnelfto Awlllablt IItke Tho Rl¢1

Choice- Cal For 'lbur Confidontlal
!-TOday 'lbu'U Be Gild
'lbu Dld!lt
30o.273-5893
0&lt; Stop In I

See Ua

0

11 t 3 Wuhlngton St.
R.............,,wv
Denial Hyg!onlot. Pan limo And/
Or Fuii·Ume Dental Hygiene position Available Submit Reaume
Or Call Ora Smith &amp; Jorgensen
885 JackiOfl Pike Galtlpolla Ohio
4!1831 (7.00)0-16-2191
Dornino't
Now
Taking
Apptlcalloftl For Gal!tpollo &amp;
f'llrntroy Locallons Only

Domino's Of Point Pleasanl &amp;
Eleanor, WV Now Hiring Assla·
tant Managers &amp; Drivers Please
Apply In Person AI Either Loca
110ft
DRIVERS· Cannon ExprtS$
Owner OP/Leasa Program Your
truck or ours 83c+fml Company
drivers starting up to 34C Pay
ralu every 6 mo Bonut·Aider
Program Pald vac Ins avail
www cannonexpr&amp;BII com 1-800·
845-9390
Drlvtro Paid 2 week COl lralnlng
No experience needed $34,000/
yr plus lull benefits P A M
Tranaport Onver&amp; based In midwell 1·877·230·1002 Sunday
9am·5pm Mon-Frl Bam-5pm
EARN $25 000 $50 000/yr Ml&lt;ll·

cal ln1urance Billing Needad lm·
modlototyl Homo Compuler Nted·
ed FREE ln10rnet, 1· 800·291·

&lt;1883 Dtpt tt09

·--ea... . .

Packago 401K. Bonus Dayl.
1urance.
Crodot Union You May Apply In
Person At SceniC HIHI Nurs1ng
311 Buctorklgl - . Bid- . Olio. (BeNnd 1111 Spring
ley C"""""l Monday Through Frf.
day ... 30 Catt (740)446-7150

cantor.

v..

ForMoro--

tor_,.

ong rtlqi.Qcl., (300)675-1715

Toma COirmlsslon Based Pay Po-

Saioo.......,_

.--a

80CIAL-IRI

IIAIIKITIHG

Overbrook Confll' lt now tcctpl·
!ng fur ... potltlon ol ()1.
rec10r of SOCIII SltYiclt/Admlo
alon and Marketing Candidate
mutl POIHII lll&lt;lflll Vlrbl! ond
written communication tkllll
Medicaid, Medtcore end MDS
knowledge and marlletlng skllll
(both lnt~tnaf aocl oxternt!) LSW
with experience In Long Tarm
Cart preferred but not requlr1d
Qualified Candktalas plene eon-

tact Charta Brown. Administrator
at 333 Pogo Slreel, Middleport
Ohio 45760, 740-992-&amp;&amp;72

1-866-475-7223
ext. 1901
Ga!ha· Molgo Communlly Action
Agency 11 Accepting Appllca·
tiona For Tho Politlon Of Educa·
110ft Spoidallot
Ouallflcallona Applicants Must
Possess AI Least A Four· Year
College Degree In Educa11oo Or
A tltfa1td Subjecl And Have A
Valid Ohio Teaching Certificate
Or Llcentt Applicants Must
Po11t11 A Orive(s ~ lcenae, Be
Willing To Travel (Retmt&gt;urtect) tn
Tht Gallla· Meigs Service Area
On A Dally Baals And Travel
Cut~* Tho Area

When Ntedod

DUIIel The Educa11on Specialist
Will Aulll Agency Cu11omor1 In
Utilizing SerVICal Available
Through The local Worklorce
Dtvolopmtnl Syttom This Wilt
Include PrOVIding And/ Or Ar·
ranging For Tho Following Sorv·
ices Assessment Testing Remediation, Tutoring Academic
Enrk:hment And Rtlated 8erv1c·
•• Tht Educational Spoctotlst
Will Alao A&amp;JIIl Orher Staff In
Providtng General Workforce De
velopment Services The Educatlonol Spoclallll WI!! Work Prl·
marlly With Youth (Agu 14·21)

But Will Also B• Involved With
Servlceo To Adult And Dlolocal
td Worker Cullomoro Position
W!l! So Baaed At Ga!l!poha Or

HamewarUrs Needed S835
Weekly Proce11lng Mall Eaoyt
No EICI*ittl""'
Neodld Calf
1-1100·852·8726 Ext 2070 2&lt;1Hrs
Immediate Opening For Residential Aid To Work In Mono Shelter
In Melgl County The Position 11
Approx 35 Hours A Week, Hours
From 8pm to 8am Appllcanl Must
Have High School Diploma Or
GED Valid Driver's llcentt. Be
Responsible And Able To Deal
W1th Crisis S•tuat10ns Interested

Parsons May Respond To Per
sonnel. P:O Box .. 54, Gallipolis,
OH45631

Legal Secretary Posluon Experl
ance Prefarred Salary And Bene
tlls. Competitive Send Resumes
To JR10 c/o Pojnt Pleasant
Register 200 Main Street Point
Pleasant, WV 2!1550
local Company Needmg Day &amp;
N1ghl Time Dnvers Requif'ements
PunctuatiOn Polite, Clean Well
Groomed Anytime {740)441-

9390
Local publoc health agency needs
the aervlcn of a dentlat to Hrvt
undermsurect and unlnaured pa·
Uenta Our otflce has d.-ntal
equlpmonl and sttH, Alary equa"
!ng sao 000 per year plut btnellfl
and paid holldayt PltaH conlacl
lhl Oral Heattn &lt;:oordinator at
740-992-o8211

LPN positions available- pari
time/ cal-In tor aM sholla Batt rale
$11 00/hr Groat Experience Pay
$ 25 Shift Differential For Even·
lngs S 50 For Midnights Attendance bonus avallabte lola of ax
traal Ptease call Scenic H11ls at
(7401•4&amp;-7150 tor
mort In·
tormatlon

Needed Experienced Crew lor
Setting and Fmishing Sectional
HoUSII'IQ 8end Prkang InformatiOn
and experience to Soutnern
Homes PO Box 829 Jackson ,
OH4SMO

Chellllre
This Ia A Temporary (S,. Month)
Position With An E•pected Start
Da1t Of Early June Tht Potalb!tl·
ty Of Continuation On A Perma~
nent Baa!o Does falsi
Appllcalions Must S~bmll All Of
The Following A Reaume, A
Comple1td GMCAA Appl!calioo,
And A Copy 01 Thtlr Teaching

Certificate Or License Appliea·
tions May Be Obtained Aftd Submlltod AI The Following Loca·
liont App!lcaliona May A!oo 81
Obtelntd By Calling (740)387·
73•2 Eat 27 Or (7•0)992·8829
Ext 27
Gallla· Meigs Community Action
Agency, 8010 N Sta1t Rou10
Chlllhlro OH 45820
Ohio Department 01 Job &amp; Family
Services 455 Buckeye Hills
Road Tnurman. OH -45685
Applications Must Be Received
by 4pm, Monday, May 21 2001
Gallltt- Melgo Commuofty
Acfk&gt;n Agor\Cy
Equo! Opporrunlly Employer

OWn a PC 7 Pul II IO Work! For a
tree booklol call 800 429 !5653 or
v~!t ut onine
www gelpcwork com

1

Position available· auto body and
e;~~~'~r Eaper!ence a muat Hilt's
Care 29670 Bashan Ad
Ohio 45771 740·949·
2217

taut Wrlta Immediately WINDFALLS 3010 WilSHIRE BlVD
WS ANGElES, CALtFOtl
NtAtl0010

BlACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Comprohen~lve, of·

iOglt - t •
tng I!·
nco Homo
1880 SliMly
Free cotolog·

---

800·82e 11228, PO BOX 701441
Dalln TX 75370 or http II

180 Wanted To Do
BIB Coollructlon- FloOIII)g, Sk:l!ng
And COntrOIO, tntoriOI &amp; Extlrtor

l'alnlilla. All -

Of Homo "-'
palrs1'F'or A Free Eatlmate Call
(304)e75-7731AHtr! OOpm
Sallyllltlflll In

CALLIGRAPHY BY lARRY 8
Park SlrHt. Wopokontta. Ohio
•5185 (419) 739·2300 Gradua·
Uoo, Woddlng, oH typea lnvotattona Addrtollodl Calligraphy
LttiOflt Taught by Appointment
~

a

CASH lOANS, S2000· S5000
Coooolldofk&gt;n to 1200,000 Bid/
No Crodll. Crodll Carda, Mort•
gogot for lntormotton· 1·800·
334-7812, . . 3122
CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
0 A.C Ftorn 12.8CJO.S125 0001 II%

AveriQI rato. Ono·llour IPPfOYIII
F.C C 8 loll·frae 1-188-eDS.

my oome. tnlllnt to

preschool pref•rrad, 1tate cerll-

llotl. coll740-882· 1877

Chltcleare In My Home, C!Ote To
AOOIIVI!I School, Uok Paymontt
Accepted , Call Llta (304)675·

CREDIT PIIOBLEMS? CALl THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
SAO CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS AAA

IIATtNO f-881Ht1-0902.

Oa\ltd's General Contractora,
Plumbing, Electric, Painting
Decks, Mlac
Work
C1fl
(740)256-9373 Or Cot! Phone 1•

Sawmill, don't
to lht mil jutt catt
lawn

Mowing Service. FrH
~ (740)258 113113

Eo-.

Repairing Lawn Mowers And
Small Engina Pick up And
Delivery Available For Quality
Col (740)0-16-7604

fLawn Mowlna. Weed Eating,
Deck

Cleaning,
Raflnlshlng,
Removal Of Unwanted ltama
From But!dlngs Cat! (740)446-

7804

Massage Tnerap1s1 Aeceptlng
Clients Come To Your Home And
Practice Swedish Mauage
1304)674-1439 (740)446·1916
Mowing And Weedtollng And
Olher Outdoor Work
FREE
Estimates (7•0)258-8893 Or
(740)2-3 Leaw Meltegt

TUIINED DowN ON
SOCIAL SECUIIITY liSt?
No Fee UIIIOII We Win!
1-888-562·3:146
WAYOUTOFDaTt

flecluol ...." ,.,......
Pay ont bl!tlmonth. EASY to

--"'11

got--ChrttttooCoo-.g, (800) Mt·
9757, Ext.CC3
(Non-Proll)

Immediately

Opening Cnsls Counseling Legal
Advocate Court ..l!ccompanimeot
For Victim s Of Family Abuse.
And Educational Presentation
For School Clv1c And Rellgloua
Groups Aequlrementa 'ReQuired
Listening Writing Speaking
Skills Ablll!y To Work Wl!n Other
Community Agenc11s M S Oiplo·
ma Required But Prefer College
Degrea ln Social Work Counsel·
lng Or Criminal Juatlct Attldtntl
01 Muon County Are Encour·
agtd TO Apply So!ory $21 ,500
Wilh Hooun !nturonco/ Ponolon
Pion Send Ruumt 10 Brtnchot,
Inc , Care 01 Logo! Advocato,
P0 Bo• 403, Hunt1ng1on WI'

25708 EOE

'

410 Hou1e11 for Rent
2 Bettooom Homo, GallipoliS Area.
$400/mo P!ua ctoposll And Aeter·
, . . NO PETS (7401"1-1519

BUY Foreclosed Homu From
St 0,0001 Repo s &amp; Bankruptcy'o
For lltllngt HIOQ-31 9-3323 Eat

1709

1976 14X70, 2·3 Bedroom, LOIS
Of Improvements, InCludes Stove,
Refrigerator, Porch Shed Fence,

condo For Rent North Myrtle
Beach. Sleeps 6 . 2nd Row.
(740)116 86~7

$7200 OBO (304)875 3008 Any
time (740)395-4277

Pilot Program Renters Needed,

I'Bl*-

..................
*'' ·

---..or-..
...,, or..,..
,...,. . p.....

-on - · Cltfur, rwtiOfori,
ontlott 10
h) I I ar dlatmlnldon •

lhll n1 ,.PIP« w1 not
lu-tgly occepl
............. for . . . .
-ltln&gt;iotationoiN

llw

OUr- tnlto!tby

kolormodDIItll-lngo

.tYirttaldln lhll fiiW r;aper

n - o n on OlfUII
-"""~'-

3 bedroom mobltt home for rent,
no Plfl, 740-992·5858

Rool (30-1)576-4016

Two bedroom mobile nome In
Mtddllporl all electric S300 plus
dtpod. 740-882·3194

440

•T
(140~'"~'-o~11~3~--~~~

lAY
PEPS!ICOKE/FRITO
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$ALl CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
lENT PROFITS lo800o731-7233
EXT 21 03
Blorl Your lut!noot Todoy .
Pr!mt Shopping Con lor Spoco
AVII!IDit AI Allordlbll IIIII.
Sonng Volley PIIU, Col! 740-441•
OIOf

WO~K ,~OM HOMI( lor"
UOO·I7,000/!1'onth PTI", ~ul!
Trolnlng, Pill lntormatlon. call
Now( 1-118.. 11-5410 '"
WWWIIlalnurllrtomtoom

+ Pltlo- Gas Furnace/ AJC,

~ BA, I balh, otdar frame home on
929 of an acre delached garage
5 mites lorm city $55,000, county
water. {740)448-0527
Choahlrt Dlstrtsa Salt, Mull
St!! Only S1 9.900 Greal House
On A Prtvoto Wooded Hll!a !de
Not A Mobllo Homo Thll Is A
Vinyl l!dtd Houu Wlln A Full
Batomonl. Loll 01 Eatru Prlcl&lt;!
120.000 Bilow Approltal To So!!
Fatt lrokora Pro11ctod. 151 Oa·
yer Aotd, Chllhilo Townohlp No
Lind Controcfl ly Owntr.
(118)11ot-ICIG
Country Home, 1 111 Story, 3
lodroo!l'. 1 lolh, Qn 81K Acrot.
17'11 Ccmp(otod W!Ht ~!roploco
And lplrat 1111r Coat On Ploit·
ont'~!dgo lid IIO,OQO (304)171•
ltU
•

New &amp; Utect Fumllul't
Now 2 Pltca llvl!tgroorn Solita,
S399 Buy Sol, Trade
New Lazy Boy Sofa And Love
Seel tAec!lnort On Both EMs)
Price $1 700 Catt Aher • 30pm
(740)0-16-7585
Queen Mat1ress Sal With Brasa
Headboard New In Pla111c
$189 00 Cal (304)360-0233

Antiques

530

•

AMAZING Little or No Credll
Needed, Special Government Fi·
nanclng, (304)755 5885

Beautiful

Ooublewlde On 5
Wooded Acres Hurry! Wont
last! (740)446-3093

Brand New 2001 Doublewlde 3
Bedroom, 2 Bath Custom· Pick
Your Colors Only $245/mo 0
Oakwood · Ga!hpohs (740)4463093

2 Bedroom Garage Apartment
Located 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis
S300/ Month, $300 Deposll, Plus
Utilities References Required
(740)44&amp;-3117
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
ION EBTATIS, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383 Welk 10
thop &amp; mov!ls Call 740·446·
2568 Equal Houaing Opponunllj!
Christy • Family Living, 33140
New Lima Ad , tiUIIaorl, Ohio. 740742·7403 Aportmenl, home and
tralltr rentals Commercial atore·

fronts

avallab~

for lease Vacan -

cltonow

Furnlohed 2 I 3 Room Apart·
menls. Clean, No Pets, No Smolc·
ing , Reference• &amp; Deposit At·
qulred
UUiilies Furnished
(740)046-1519

Factory Goof 32K80 StO ooo Dos·
count only $1000 00 Down De·
livery, and setup paid by Factory
t ·800-891 -8777

Graclouo living 1 and 2 bedroorn
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Ajveralde ApartmentS in Middle
pori From $278 $348 Calf 7 40·
992· 5064 Equal Housong Oppot·
lunllkll

Final Days Nallonwlde Inventory
Reducllon! (304)738-3409

For sale by ownerSPECIAL DEAL· MUST SEE
Trailer anc lol bOth 3 bfldtoom
new applances furnace and In
aide redone, l111 sldtng with
IICid-On room cash pnce $12,000
firm P&lt;lmeroy can 740·742·7403
leave message

Honeysuckle Hilts Apartments
localld On Colonial Drive Behlnc
Highway Patrol Post On Jockaon
Pike 1 Becrroom Now Available
Rant Stans $2401 Month low and
Moderate Income Equal Housing
Opportunoly, (740)446-3344 TOO

Limited Or No Credit? Govern
ment Bank Finance Only At Oak
wood In Barbouraville, WV 304·

Now Taking Applications - 3!5
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sowago. Trash $3501Mo . 740·

1·800-750-0750

~
Tara Townhouse Apar tment&amp;
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA f 112 Bath Fully Car·
peltd Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Polio, S!erl $385/Mo No Poll
Lease Plus Security Deposit Ae·
qu!rtd Days 740 446·3481 ,
Evon!ngs 740 3&amp;7 0502 740·
..6.0101
;9

TWin AIVtrTowers now accepting
app!icallonslor I BR
HUD aubald~ed apt fur ofderly
and dlllblod EOH (304)6758879

Must soli 1995 Shull 16a80 3
bedroom 2 path E~~:cellenJ cond1
lion Can Chery! 740.395 4367

Two bedroom apartment stove.

refrigerator, Middleport, one bed·
room 1p1rtment, Pomeroy, stove.

New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 per mon ca ll now 1 800
691-6777

re~lgorotor 740·7•2-7403

460 Spac1 tor Rent

New t6 ft wide $499 per mon
only $270 per man call now 1
800·891-8777

Family typo tor omall camping
trailer nookup and one dock lilt,
can 740-9112-- anytime

New 2001 Fleetwood o nly
$146 •8 per month Call Nikki
140 395·4367

480

New 2001 Fleetwood , 3 br 2
bath, 111 up ln The Country Mo
bile Home Park rtldy to mo~,~e In
SitS down $189 96 per month
740•182-1187
•

lloau!!tu! 1800 Sq Feel, RettOrld
2nd Floor Apartment In Htatorlc

Olttrlet Ideal For Prolesslonal
Couplo AU Modern Amen!11tl 3
-omt, Spacious LIVIng f·t/2
Blthl, Roar Dock HVAC: .8001
mo Ptuo Utllltloo Security And
t&lt;1v DepotM No Ptll Attorenctl
~tqulrtd (740 )408-•425 Or
(740)448-3138 •

Now dOUb!l Wide 3 Dr I Dt
1111 00 down only •295 Ptr
mon call now 1-100·8tt·5777

~rlvott Proparty Artd Now Cou ·
bltwldo, flnt Poymont (304)738·
1111

)

'

Fori.Nae

CAIHLOANSI
'BedCioditOK
' MootOudly

•Fut SeN.101

s
s
I
f
I
f

,.

D

s

.u~

•

.1,..4,:1.,

· ,. ...._ ........ ~

• '

\

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1' .{
,. f

~

f

\ 1

•

8 N Ford Tractor With Grader
Blade &amp; Bush Hog Boat ATrat!er,
Ford 2000 Tractor For Sale,
$4200 Call (740)256--8883

630

Electric Hosp!la! Bed. Mallress &amp;
Sldo Rat!l, loO~S &amp; WOrt&lt;! GOOd,
$150 (304)773-5145
•

Livestock

t 4 Foot Stock Trailer. 15 Year
Old
Thorough bred
Mara.
(740)358-9364

FlOORING Pre-finished Qak Stt!l
In
MUST SELL! 2 25/sq h
Cellular f 1-1177-834-7330

17' Horse Saddle .
(740)001-9513

For sa le New~ factory "sealed
An"e of Green Gables and Road
I~ Avonlea mt&gt;vi8s To order or

2 appondoa yea11ing geldings. Pal·
ammo S2500 bay. hkes to jump,
Stsdo. 740·843-5176

for Information caD IOU !ret 1-866744-8245 (P~UP .~'

3 AOHA Horses $1 soo Eacn,
One 2001 Co!! $700. One APHA
3 Year Old Stud 80 Day&amp; Train·
ong, $2800 (740)245...CJ370

eo-

lha!Jtrltert'll'jmllnlepotlalb~.com

FREE $40 Oli' GAil!:ERI&amp;Sl Lom·
Ited to !Irs! 100 calls Tell Frklnds
aocl Famly! 800-426·03117

$250.

FREE OST'OMY PMbUCTSf

Manufacturer otters a two week
supply of colostomy or urostomy
brand name pr01tlucts wltn one
ample phone cillll No obligations

SERV(CES
Are You Looking For Engines Or
Transmlaslons? Give Me A Call
Al740-..&amp;-o519

Can 800·755-7880
GET SEXY FOR SUMMEA! Lose
3·5 lbs woek!y Guaranttl&lt;l Control cravl!'lgl, feet great! Burn fat
quickly Only $19 951 COOS
phonechecka, credit cards. 1
6D0-258.Q989

Budget PrJced Tranemlsslons
All Types Access To Over
10 000 Tra nsmissions transfer
Cases 740·245·5671 Cell 339·

4

~765

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs
Problem'7 N~ Tu,ned? Cal! The
Plano Dr 740.~525
,

790

Independent f'iorba!llt DIOirlbutor
Call For ~ PrOduct Or Opportunity
(7401"1-1982

1968 Avlon, 26', New Air
Conditioner Awning &amp; Upnotstery
Good Cond!lton (740)...6-3038

720

Hay &amp; Bnghl Wire Tle Slraw, Yea•

Delivery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm
'Rot~nd

(304)675 5724

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants· Order Now To
Guarantee Earl)' Spt"ing Planttngs
Increase Allotments Mean E1ttra
Plants Thank Vou For Your Business Call Danny Dewhurst
leave Message (304)695 3740
Or (304)895-3789

lenoir dining labte wUh 8 A~al rs
72·80' $130 7.().892-8587

MOBILE HOME OWNEAS

Huae ln\ltnlory, Discount Prices
fi!n VInyl Skirting, Doors Wind
ows Anchors Water Healers
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts. Fur·
~aces
Heal Pumps Bennetts
Mobllt Home Supply 740· 4•6·
9416 www orvb.comlbennan

a

710 Autos lor Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE !M
POUNDS &amp; REPOS! HONDA S
CHEVY'S JEEPS lOW AS $291
MO 24 MOS 019 9% FOR
~!STINGS, CALli 800 451 0050
ext C 9812

NEW AND USED STEEL Sloe!
Be1m1 Plpe Ribar For concrete
Angle Channel , Flat Bar Steel
Grating For Drains Driveways &amp;
Walkways New !55 Gallon Drums
Wllh l!d &amp; Ring. $7 00 Each l&amp;L
Screp Mets!s (740)0-16-7300

1971 El Camino 55 Clone LOis 01
New Parts Cali Alter 6 30pm
(740)...6--6978

PETCARERX COM Sava up to
50% on ALl pol mlftloa!ions and
supplies, Including Hearlgard In
ttrceptor Frontline morall FREE
'SHII! lNG Order online www Pot·
CareR com t ·8D0-844·1427

1988 Old&amp; Cut!aos C!Ora Good
Condition, Good Tlrea $1.(00
(740)245-'5572

1992 Beretta V6

TroUlng Motor 1 $50; Remington
870 20 Gouge W!lh 2 Barrels
Scope &amp; Sling 5400 Now Picnic
Toblos $99 Each Alvin Hers
borger 4789 Potrlot Road, !n
Cadmus

StEEl BUilDINGS Now . Mu11
StU 30a•Oa12 wu $10,200 now
$8,880 40a80a12 waa $1t ,•oo
no)Y ••o 971 50a100a1S was
•27 ,580 now S111,900 eo
att
was $58 780 now $42 990 t ·8D0406·512e

.:zoo

STOP SWIMMING !N CHLO
AINE ! EltctronJc coppertallver
Ionizer Non·ctt.mlcat purlller cuts
ChlOrine 95% Five modall for
I!Oolltpa l!arllng $188 oo Col! I·
800·678·7439 www llloguardsya·
iemtt

com

'

Automatic,

TruckB

for Sale

1999 Cadge Oakota Sport Club
Cab 4114 V6 Excellent Condition
All Power 22 000 MileS Call Alter

1997 lnnsbrook Laser Travel
Trader $7500 (304)675 2793

oeo

1993 Shadow 88 ooo Milts 5
speed 4 Cylinder. $800 OBO

(740)256-1233
1999 M1tsubtsn1 Echpse RS red
crul&amp;e power locks power
windows CO warranty remains

arc

740.8926780
2000 BMW 323cl 22 500 Milos

Sport! Premlom Package, Leather
Power Seats
S~o~nroor
Warra nty $32 ooo (740)245552 3

CD

$3295 199• Cava!!tr $2895,
1993 Cavallar Four Door $2395
1995 S· 10 $4295 1995 S- 10
$4.95 1998 Silverado 4 a4
Ea!tndtd Cob $13 900 COOK
MOTORS (7.0)446...CJI03

78 Oldo Do!la 88 Runs Good
Chrom e Whee ts New Palnt Job
$500 OBO (740)..8-8135

1994 Thunderbird 1 Owner Low
miles. garage l&lt;ept E•cellenl
Cond!llon . Loodod.
$6.800
(304)675-7505

9t Camero teal color new tire•
run1 excellettt good shape CO
p!aylr air, power wlndowl $3 !00
!lrm 740.446-9271

1995 Mustang 8 Cylinder 3 8 5
Speed, laatr Rad 78.000 Miles.
$7300 Firm Call After 5pm
1304)882·2030

94 Ford Exptorer 95 Pontiac
Grend Prix 96 Pontiac Grand Am

1997 O!ds Achlava SL 63K
Miles $6500 1994 Ford Tampo
GL. 128K Milts $2500 1989
Ford Tempo Gl 98K Mil a&amp;
$1700 OBO (740)448-2e24

97 Monda C11JlC LX 4 .:lr sliver.
keyless entry. pawer Etlllrytnlng 5
sp , sunroof good gas mileage,
rota!! $10 300 ao~lng $9 300 740·
742 3114

90 CavAlier. Runs Good, Good
Mileage $1 ooo
(7.0)441-1 083

au

oeo

(304)773-6057 Or (304)773-5225

Extras $10 200 (3041675-5366

200 1 Hornet 2711 Travel Tra1ter
~oa ded
like
1740)367- 7614

GelS It! (740)14t...CJ682

94 Dutchman

96 tlodge Ram 1500 4WD 318
PW POL CR 70 000 Miles
Topper Sharp, (304)675·5040

Air
Room
1740)...1-9531

Brand

810

I

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
o

Uncondlllonal lllaUme guarantee
L:ocal reference s lurn1 shed Es
labhshtd l975 Cal! 24 !;Irs (740)
"146 0810 I BOO 287 0576 Aog· ,
ers Wal&amp;r.prooflng
"

1996 Prowler 26 Foot Travel
Trailer With !stand Bed 4nd At

92 Ford F 150 6 Cylinder Looks
Good Runs Great First $4600

1993 Cavalier 4 Cylinder Auto
AIC Pl CO 134 000 Miltl Ask·
ong $3500
(304)576·2092

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1978 F ISO 4•4 8 Cy!lncer Short
F!al Bad 1998 fold 1·150 4a2 6
Cylinder (740)245-5693

spm (740)446-4316

TRANSPORTATION

•
t '

l
8

Fruita &amp;
Vegetables

1600. (304)675-~77

or 2

c

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

1 Bedroom Apanmont AI Utl!illta
toc!udld, $2751 month (304)875-

tocludtd, $400/mo llmll
Peoplo (740)3t57...CJ81 I

SenUIIf!l

124 Alto Cub Cadet tractor w!lh
plow, mower &amp; cultlvalor, 10
..... 740-992-7..9

PitaSI Cal! tor Usllngl.
1·1100-45 Hl050 ElL C9817

2 Bedroom Furnishad UUhties

Dally

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

lion com

89117

Dog,

The

1

1 Bedroom Furnlohed Aptrtmenl

,

---

Organic purple asparaaus call or
lease order at VIrgil's Berry
Patch east of Syracuse an SR

Police lrnpour)do &amp; Aepool
Tpyola&amp;. Cllevy's, Jeeps!

In Poin1 Pleasant Very Nice &amp;
Cltan. No Poll, (304)675-1 386

1

570

Old

HOMEGROWN STAAWSERR!ES
McKean Farm 556 Centenary
Road, Gallipolis OH Phone
(740)0-16-9442

1st Time Home Buyers Program
Special Financing Ava•lable
2 Doublewlde Foreclosurers
easy Terms, Very Small Fee &amp;
Move-In Oakwood· Gallipolis
(7401"6-3093

Tncolored
14
Month
Female Beagle Rabbit
(304)5711-2779

580

31550

~

i

1 llle4

AKC Pekinese PuppteS 2 Males.
t Female 7wk Old. (1 )5 Monlh
ClttiToyl'oodo (7~~

ala!led, f2 295, $ t ,ooo Back,
$1295 Net Price Free Estimates
Call For Quotes On Olhar Sizes
It You Don' t Col! Ut We
I!GI1 Lotti MObile Homea Our
Specla!lly 1 740· 446·8308 1·800·

O&lt;imp~lar! ;~WE ~~~,\!:fCUilEtL
COMPUTEMSI Ev•n ~lH Ieos
t~an perttcl credltt 1·,00·477·
9018 Co&lt;le AC:ZO www omcsolu

-

;'I

AKC Lab Puppltl. 6 Weeks Old
First ShOt&amp; &amp; Wormed Yellow,
$275 lltack $250 (740)256-tllifl

t-oner, 2 Ton Coli, 1 Line Set In·

40 gallon natural gas hOt water
tank $60 Coleman trailer tur
nace. bottled gas 15,000 BTU's
$100 call 740·742·2373 at1er
4pm

~

",n

lllilllless

PIANO SAlE
Many To cnoose From. U95
And Up Huntington Plano Inc
(304)525-5382

1884 No"ls 14•10 2 Bedroom 2
Bath, Maytag Appliances Heat
Pump, Deck, $1•.soo (740)2459875

(304)755-~

..,..
......

-:..,'""" .... _, __
I,.

llldllles.

1m com cdunJYerse amason etc

No Cl'tldll OK! HUO. VA.
FHA: Col tor LiStings
1-81J0.501·1ID Eat 9818

AUTOS F - 1800.00

........

NOBODY'S FATHER CD by 1&lt;1·
vtn Jones Marv cliapln Carpenter &amp; Ace Smllh guest On tax-

SO DOWN HOliES

'

Reds can score. bu~ .t.!.. can't wm ~~:7
- •
a5 at The
Ieast not at horne Cmcmnan
has yet to
Clllledllillsl win consecutive games at Cm_~~:rgy f1eld' thts
nll.eiiiiii.J seaso11, gomg 6-13 there for the NL's worst
..
home record.
The Reds have lost 10 of 12 overall.
)IWeQ.
matching thor season low at thtee games
u11der .500 (17-20).
"Our last seven to 10 games have been tlut
! ill
way;• manager Bob Boone wd. "We're JUSt
conung out on the wrong end of the suck.
We're nght there."
There are a lot of factors m the Reds' fadmteibiiR,'I ures. The starters haven't gotten a wm stnce
lrMl
Aprd 28, the offense has an NL-low ,29

56G - Petit for Sale

1539 RUM Moore, owner

540 MIICellaneoua
Merchandlae

•

Block brlck,r&amp;.JW&amp;r p!pes, wtnd
ow&amp; lmte~. etc Claude Winlers.
RIO Grande, OH Call 740·2·5-\
5121

610 Farm Equipment

Lot model clearance one 2000
sectional save S9 625 lor 2000
model &amp;lngtes 5 pre owned sm
gles must go by May 31, no rea
sonable ollar refused these
homes won't last long so stop in
an(t cfleck us out we re dealing
Coles Mobile Homes Athens
Ohio Open M W 9 7 Thurs Frl
9-8 Sal 10.5

(304)675·8022

Streel Furnl1tn
(31M)875-1022
515 Main Street Plllnt Pleasant

can

Clnlury Flblrgltat Cargo Cover·
Flit S~OIIbtd GM Pickup
(740)0-16-2350
'

Homes US M East Atl'lens Oh

a

,.;;~~~:~:~~

:S. STEEL BUt..-5
2AII28 Wll f7 .990 ... $3 A75
30a45 was StO,tiSq, sal f5 800
50at 15 was $31) 900.... $12.500
~ Grag (800)392-7808

I and 2 bedroom apanmontt, tur·
nlaned and unfurnlsned security
deposit required no pels. 7-401192 2218

Lol model clearance saYe up !O
$8,625 with any home check us
out were deaung Cole's Mob1le

....._.,_ ~···" &amp; 112,
Floors
1 Dining

Apartments
for Rent

Building
Suppllea

Carpel. 202 Clark
Portor, OH Freo Eat~
90

281.QQ98

tor Rent

736 3409

MEDICAl BilliNG Un!lmlled In·
come potential No ell;perience
necessary Free lnrormauon
CD-ROM !nve&amp;lmenl lrom $2495
Financing available (800) 322·
1139 EXT 050
1
www business stanup com

550

· Ctll (304)3ttll-«!33

Sl,OOO aACK 2 Ton- Air Condl·

420 Mobile Homes

1981 Naohaua Mob ile Home

97 Oakwood, 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath
Heat Pump Asking Payoff Prlct
Loan Is Assumable (740)256-

Allrtll--!0111
lhll t)l
..-ct 10
..Folr Hf!Utlrto Act

-

1124 Easl Main oo SR 124 E Pomeroy. 740.882·2526 or 740-892·

1-888-926-3026

1988 14a70 3 Bedroom shong!es
Root, Vloyl Sodlng Remode led
Very Clean $12,900 Make Oiler
t2x12 Storage Building For Sale

RON EVAIIS ENTEIIPIISES
.-....Of*&gt;.
t.8QQ-537-9521

Buy or sell Riverine Ant1ques

RENTALS

Ooty $195 oo Per

PAY O'f ALL MAJOR CREDIT
CARDS lor 5% ol balance! II you
..,. tooo lhtn 95% ot crt&lt;lll t!ml~
there wll be no out-ot.packtl exCalll-316 • • •

Workplace Dlverslly

VICtim Advocata

looking To Buy A New Home?
0011'1 Hava l.and7 We Doltt Huny
Dnly fOLofl Le1t. 304-736-7295

Monrh18 99% Fixed Interest Rate
With Air And
Underpinning

1982 14Jt70 Faarmont Townhouse,
2 bedroom, I largo bath woth heal
pump &amp; ale $7 soo. 740· 591·
4003 or 740-992-{)939

tunity Employer Encouraging

(740)245-5334, Eatonslon 201
EOE Dead!one May 23nl

Sites For Rent On Ka·
nawha RIVer, 8 mllu from Point
Pleaunt. electriC only (304)675
1722, (30ol)e75-4t... Alter S9m

$5.000 l740)00· 14x70 Southern Dream free Oellv•ry tree Setup only $999!5 1

NEED AN EARlY PAYDAY?? Up
10 $500 lnttanlly by phont! t.
877 EARLYPAY liCI 750005 1at
ACNANCE FREE!

•ordllatmlllltlon 1

1997 Wells Cargo Conceoolon
Trailer Enlered In several Local
Feotlva!B Cal! (7•0)288-3870,
Asking Price S15,000

Camp

12x50 Mobllo Home, Now Kitch·
en, Naw Bathroom New Floors,
1818 Covorld Porch. Ctnlral Aor.

14170, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, D1n1ng
Room Heal Pump Front Porch wl

of~--- Rlflegll

OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends lhat you do bual·
neu with people you know, and
NOT to send mooer through the
mall unlit you have invealigated
lhe otlenng

13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
VIew Sileo $50 000 t 8 Acres
W1th Large lake, Uob1le Home
WHh Add On S79 500 Galloa
County On Blacktop Road,
(740)38&amp;-al78

Bedroom. 2 Bath
Slng!owldo. Jutl $099 Down
(740)0-16-3093

!ntarttt Rale, 1·886-926·3028

!NOTICEI

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

1980 Skyline 2 bedroom. all elec·
trk: central !lr on a rented lot In
M-pon $4900.740.992 3194

Mowers, and Farm Tractors,
Certllled
Mechanic
Call
(740)0otHlt99 9·5Pm

Bualn•••
OpportunltV

sq
tr , building
ale CO!Mrld
partung, cet,..
Otflce
In Monerovitle
600
lng len S3DOo'11IO 614-875-1661

••t Only.. 3

Free Money Nowl It's Truel No
repayment Quaranta~ For per·
aonal needs education busl·
.... t 80().724-8047 (24 hr)

King Manrett Sot. Ptuoh p. T,
frl PackiQI. Uot St 899, Sol

-flpm

tor Sale

WHI Repair Automobiles Lawn

210

Lot for aale with 2 eommercial
bultcllngt, bolh - . . one buittf.
lng houses U S Postal ServiCe
wi1h 1 year lease. 7&lt;10·7•2·3»4

320 Mobile Homes

28)1;80 3 Or 4 Bedroom Only
$345 00 Per Month 8 99% F111ed

FIN AI, CIAI

. . - Rt1lngt "'StOcl&lt;

Buildings

Two car garage/apartment 1n
Middleport two bedroom&amp; full
bath. LR kitchen w1th electr.c
range , central air 7.(0-985-3650
or740-992 2795

16 Wide

W attrllftt Special 314 200 PSI
$21 95 P.r 100. t• 200 PSI
$37 00 Par tOO, ~H Brafl COm·

340 Bullneuand

Routa 1 South Newer, Larger
Home Very Nice Consider
T,_..,,l740)046-9968

Will haul trash or junk 1way
$40 oo a load 304-875·8950

Will work for $4 an hour, paint
porches will mow grass &amp; weed
aat clean out outbuildings, pick
up junk tor tree. 740-88M314

-

304·736-7295

304-833-8265
F,.otance Engtl1h Riding llltlfuctor $15/ Hour. Call Agnes 0
(740)00t...CJI84

Stantey Home Product~ And
Fuller Brush Available To Order
Productt Or tloqueot Catalogt
Pleate can (304)875·8903 Any

888·928·3426

be submitted to RoCksprings Ae·

cation Aequ1red CONTACT
Buckeye Hills Career Center

ITAY HOMI. Mokll ... '~II
lnlormat!on 1·118•117•1211 or
WW'If I rotdiiUOCIII COlli

SIS NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash tor remaining payments on

FORECLOSED GOV'T HOMES'
•o OR lOW DOWN' TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES' OK
CREDtTt FOR liSTING' CALl I
800-501 tm ext 9813

of dOIIIfl, to twlp m1n1m1ZI their

habilitation Center. 36759 Rock·
springs Road. Pomeroy Ohio
45769 or call and contact Kerry
Snepnerd, RN Director ol Nursing
at 7-40 992 8606 Equet Oppor-

Information call 1· 888·674·91 50
txt 3234

Htlp won!l&lt;! caring lor 11\t o!ctorly
01r11 Group Home, now paying
minimum wage, naw 1hlft1 ?am ·
3pm, 7om-5prn, 3pm-1tpm tlpm·
7om, cal! 740·8112·5023

--.-....~com

Schooll
lnatructlon

150

s..-

(plumbmg heatang erectnc1ty.
doors. walls, ce11tng s. bathroom
and kitchen floors ki1chefl cab•·
nets an bathroom f1xtures. lront
porch. 2 coats ex1enor pa1nt~ Un
dar $30.000 (740)698 6783
(740)5111-1 384
Eacotltnt lOcation On Route 160
Between Galhpohs And Holzer
Hospital 3 Bedrooms Salh living
Room. Family Room, Kitchen Wllh
Appliances, FuU Size Basement.
2•h24 Fintsned Garage, 8x 10
wood Srorage Bulldmg CIA &amp;
Gas Heal Excellent Neighbor·
hood Too Much To MenUOn
Ready To _.. IntO C.M For Ap""""'"""' (740)046-9548

RN and LPN tor 100 bod sklltod
nuralng facility Excellenl starl
rates, benefits anct sign on bOnus
Opportunity to work wllh exceptional team Applications should

Vacancy VocatiOnal Supervisor
Ohla Department 01 EducatiOn
Supervisor/ Admin istrator Ctrtlfl

GAOWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work from homel Mall-or
dtr/E·Commerce $522+/Weok PT
$1000·$4000/ wk FT 800 · 821·
8538 www dr11m2b~H com

ton "" t

--1831

Pr-'1' Sold! Mon-t AMue

Pootot Joba .48 323 00 yr Now
hiring- No experience paid train-~
lng· groat bonet!ls call 7 days
800·429·3860 ext J·~5
POSTAl JOBS Up lo $18 35/
hour Hiring lor 2001 Paid !rain·
lng Full Bentllts No o•pertenco
required C8J! tou tree 7am-7pm t .
888·726 9083 X17~

Government Jobt $11 00
$33 00 per hour potential Patd
Training/Full Benefits For more

Government Postal Jobs
Up To St 8 35/Hr
Hlnng tor 2001
BenelliS/Pension
I 888-728 9083 Eat 2000
7am 7pmCST

....... ctotalls 24 h&lt;

U&amp;JI Selllementsl Immediate
Ouotoolll 'Nollocly beats our proc:·
ea • N1t1ona1 Contracl Buyers
(BOO) •90-0731 tat 101 www oa·

FIM-Tlmt.llene-

tott. RetaWEaperlo,.,. Prtft&lt;rl&lt;l
Apply At Llftstyle Furnllurt, No
Pholle Colli. Apply_ •• 858 Third Avonuo. Golllpollt,
Olio.

trom- - ...... and report

•ea.

ROUTE DELIVERY DRIVER
For Locat Attta
Full &amp; Pan

54HU3

They lhoughl t woo cni:-J 10 quK
my job! I now ooro $tOOK ptuo

S FREE CASH NOW$ from

-and COOk·

sawmHts. •dU•rs and akkldere
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Orive, BuffalO NY t•225
FREE lnlor01atoon 1-800·5711363 EXT. 20IW

~Aitnew

~

bolltles WHt loctudo Schodullng
OUties fur Nlnirtg Slltl we 0ttor
Competi1tve Wages Beneflll

11864

wwo CuhNowArxlfortlllll&lt;com

excellent Income Easy cla1ms
proelltlng Full-tra•nlng Home~

ltocltlont Art Typtng Sklllo.
Knowledge 01 MocrotoH WOfflt
6 0 And E•cel Oetired Tra111
Are Strong Organizadonal And

Communocation Skilfo

-$3---~ ......
bermato 2000 largot c.ap101110
mote opttans Manufacturer of

home. appraised 127 500, call
74CH02·7403io;M mesoaga.

4:3tlpn. 32 Haus A - OUtf.

..... Some -

sitions For
Mot•vated ln&lt;h·
vtduals, Expenence Not Necessary- But Will Tra•n
Flexible
Hours And Some Weekend&amp;
Aeqtftd COll.icenso Not . .
qu1red
Call Mr Cline 1..aoo.

·--·-good

s.cro.. ry PooKion
Art l·tlllllft To

Hours

Cai1-800-490-JM50 2A ...

In recruiting voluntHrl
over 1he phone for
major non-prolll hlllllh
organlzalloi'W. ll'lpolltlona Involve
NO IIUNDRAIIINQI

Mlfti&lt;lt
Av-

-

=='-'-!.~.,..:,·

310 Homes tor Sale

Help w.ntld

110

- - 10 cora

$635~-E
asy!No--

Corporation

P'TIFT

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn

--

Management

S500-

!too Or Qllttno ' Mail Orde&lt;

15000/mo. PT/FT. t ·800· 784·
85511 --t.com

-9105Agaln

40

s $ 50 tor
mldn•gnts ·•Anenctance bOnus
available many e11ras Please
call Sari: Hittt; AI (740)0-167150

posmons come

- ··lito . .

Top

Commtn1on Anywhere for
!'hOne lntoMew. Cal Ryan HIOO·

-eolial fur

Help W'lnllld

... ..

Heat,_.,.

STOP tiENTtNGtt OWN FOR

lESSIIO or
Ott~
~ llltingo Col •- 5 0 H m
Exllltl21

110

Slide
.,...

T o - H i E - - - Gil
F . . _ O I -. 1 2 -

homen and the pine
NL-Iow&gt;,094.
•
•
•
Re! bOU, kept the_ ~· ~Qf.
SO'"$ sn· the severitli, Wht'll ' ~ '8
and dl~n gave up a-~i• df- d~$ 2rotln~ * ·
$harpJl' hit smgle byJed',~B'¥~11 '
• •
Scott Winchester was ready tri the1&gt;utlj'len~
but Boone declded. to- stick 'r'th · Remnia,
who had thrown 106 pttches. Whtle puchmg
coach Don Gullett VISited the mound for a
chat, Alou plotted his mategy on-deck
"They'd been throwmg me } 1of. of lirst- '
puch breaking balls that I'd• been takmg, ~nd
I had that 111 the back
of my mmd,''•Alb ,.4
u
fl,t
Sat d
•
If•
l
1Dh l
He pulled Rettsma's first-pttch curve
down the third base line, and all dim: .ruiiners kept the1r footmg on the Clampened
infield to score for a 6-4 lead
.. , , . ~" . ,

New

Campa~ Expando

Condll10mng

r \

'

~·

G&amp;c

General Home Ma !ntenanoe Pa1nUng v1ny1 SIOtng
carpenlry doors Wind ows oath s
mobile home repa1r and more For
free estimate call Chet 740 992
6;J23
ltvlngston s Sasemer'i f Wat er
Proofing all ba sem en \ re pa rs
do ne free esl!mete! !tte llme
guarante e 14yrs on JOb e)(pen
enoa (304)895·3987
Roofing &amp; Small Repa1rs 14
Ye ars E~tpe rl e n ce Fuu Guar·
anteed And
Insured Free
Eslimates (740)245-934 1

840 Electrical and
• Refrl~tati,on' , .w.~

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDa

Residential

or commercia l w1n11Q.-

~

new ser'IIICe or repatrs Masl9r Etr.,~.
can1ad ~lec\rtc la~ RtH~nl%Y.••
Ele ctrical WV000306 304 675-

1994 Altro Convers1on Van 1
Owner, Excellent Condition,
$4500 1304)562 2787

1786

95 Gee Tractler 4x4 !5 Speed
AIC AM IFM Cassette, Ask~ng
$3950 OBO (304)576-2201

740

Motorcycles

1997 Honda 300EX e-xcellent
Condilion Lots Of Extras Asking
$2600 (740 )4 4 1-0182 Aller
530pm

1898 Honda 750 Shedow Ciaaooc
8 000 Miles Excellent Condhlon
$4500 (740)387-7750
2000 Harley Sportster 883 Hug·

ger with 1200 conversion loaded
with extras new condition $8700
740·949 2181

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1977 Thunderbird
165
HP,
Inboard/ OutboarD Motor $2500
(740)406- 9021

t 992 Playtime 24 Pontoon w/48
hp Evlnrude molar w11h all acces·
sories e~tceiiMt condl llan 7-40·
742 1007 after 5pm
Jet Sk! 1999 Kawasaki I I DO ZXI
L.lke New low Hours Alum1num
'lltiUer $5800 (304 )576-2890

110

Help Wanted

LOCAL COMPANY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT&gt;
We would like to announce that our
Pomeroy facility now has a new Call
Center Manac;~er. We are currently
seeklnQ to fill over 109 positions. No
exp. necessary. Earn up to $15/hr.
Very flexible schedullnQ. Both f/t and
p/t avail. Medlcai/Dentai/Pd
vacatlon/Mc}mt. opps. avail for f/t.
Call today; start tomorrow•••
1-888-974-JOBS
WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING YOU!
COG Management, LI..C

I.

�~

.

-- .

_:.._

___ .
Tueeday, May 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

NKA Cro11word Punle

UNDA'S

PAINTING

n• Dffll

A&amp;D Alit .....llfwy- Pill, ....

~~~I

Mon-Frl8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

Alllr 6,.

(740) 742-8888

t.lwd p.111.

740-985-4180

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

CORTUml&amp;

R\Aiand, Ohio
Truck scats, ear seats, headliners,lnlcl&lt; taJps.
convertible &amp;. vinyl lOpS, Four wheeler scats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

'

"T..t.e .tlw pcoiA ""'
ofpoU.filo6- L«oo ilfor -,-•
Interior
FREE ES1'IMATES

Complete Home

• •u
••
,,,

Repair .
Remodeling
New AdditiOnS
Garages

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

t OJ I

Wl/0282120

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

Bo&lt; 189
M1rJdleport Oh10 IS760

c.IIQHcll

--

• No Carry Ouls

• Mounting, Bal. EXtra
other Splcllll

"'l.. .... ~

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

•Complete

Remodeling

11111R12
151180R13
1M-IOR13 _
175-IOR13
1u.eoA13 .

Avlllllbll
While Suppllel .....

(:'Oflll I11AIIIl See

....... .

IIPIYIII

- Deoll8

·-Ripllll
F ree Estlnl&lt;ltcs

740 992-1101
or 992 2753

HowardL..
Wrltesel

All Makei'I'r8ctor
"
'
Equlpmealhrtl ,

Roofing ·Home

Factery Autllortlod

Gutters- Down

llllntenance-

cue-ml'1lrll

spout

Demn

,,.. Eltl/llllel

111110 St. 1ft. 7 Soulll

949-1405
591-5011

Coolville, OH if5n3

•

, ...n ..aa

_. · _ Pablk: Nodal Ia Nn&gt;1pa1~

Yoilr JUPt to KHw, Delivered RJptto Yoar

CARPENTER
SERVICE·

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE OF

COnMMinoy Dlltrlet.

Ludlng Creek
conHrvlney Dlltrlc;t

(I)

'We SetvicaAH Makes"
Warner Healing &amp; Cooling, Inc.
l),nder new ownership ~ ill now '

,

I
I

u-NCI • IIIIUI'Id
,.,._ • Jenltrol • TM"""I Zane • Lennox

a Sherrie Fink, OWner

&gt;

l

I

Toll Free1-88&amp;-913-6595
Long 11o11orn Pt. l'teUIInt

BOOKS
II
II ill.

Il

Strvlng cuetomera11 years
1Gene

\

:I

1111111&amp;

-----~~~~~~-~--.

'

'.

RIIMY

The CRAFTY. ~~~.
BLIND SPOT

(Factory Outlet)
All •erli&lt;ol blind&amp; are
made lo order at oar
IO&lt;alion
UPTO 70%0Ff
• Verlieolo • WoOd

Gene Baker, Auto·Valve,
&amp; all our loyal
custotncrs &amp; friends.
Outdoor Power

• Minis • Ete

144 TWnl Awt. Galp1ls

"446-4995

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hilan~ Rd.
Plmieroy;-Ohio .

TERRY'S ENGINE
' AIR ,
AHD.
COMPREsSORS

740·992·5232 .

Complete MobUe

Repair

' Pd1mo.

..,.•.

~

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRAOA TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME ·HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT~
,I I
'

gav"

BUILDIU .INC,
New Honm • VInyl
Sldlna • Now GafiiOS

~,:::!~«.::~

AddlllonS"RO&lt;Iftna

~·; OUALIT¥f..

(NO SUNDAY CALLS) .

)

1-800-291-5600 • Pomerov. OH

~. 110111 UliM~·-·-·~"

..•.

0

''

?•
'

.

'

·STORAGE

,' '' '

WINDOW. . SYSTEMs·...

.

''

~

1-,

St. Rt~ 7

T~INK

MAVSE I CAN
RETURN '(OUR QUESTIONS SETTER
FROM TWE 8A5ELINE ..

•••
•'&gt;
•

..

•

•

--:!::====1

~

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1'!"'.;;;,;;_.,.=:.,;;...._.;:;:~:;;:;;~;.:.:.,;..._

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Advertise
this 8J)a1C:8I
for,f25 per
month

URNPIKE

LIMCO~~· .

Mercury
SPECIAL flNANCB DEPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? Credll Problems?

•

~

•
.
.

Every Spring Tune-Up
.get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or ~1m

or a REAL DEAL on 1 new lawn tractor,
lawn mov.r or weed trimmer.
&lt;

Ili'!:CCrer;:iJ;;
I
GRAVELY.TRACTOR
Sales &amp; Service,
204' Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

"We Can Help'll
Call Us first Or We Both Lose!

Ask
For Mike Hindle
' .
179 or 446-9800
·'

.AWIL

,. Cellular·

•

'•'

~~eff Wa!"er .Ins.

,i

'. 992-'5479.

:
I.

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41

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nut

:-&amp;.uri
47 "ud ai

41 Pa II IT II

£:·;~

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31=-.uo
37........ .. ~
tinton'•

31AFLpwbw

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull C.mpqa

fer·-·

Collbltly Ci!Nr cryptogi- art t:NIIed from quolatlont by flmOUI

pocllllo, put ll1d - l Each -in

tho""""' .....

Tottay'l clue: T equals W

'G PI

WOYDGV

BOYVSM

NW

ous

PYVKOtMV

NW 0 8 I

GPS

'K L

ZAUQYSV

NW

SEBSVV

G P 8 A.U

BNDSQGS
·T AZSV. ' PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II rou've never hoard me opeak
Spenllh, jull fOllow
. me untl mies a ehort putt.• - (Golfer)
Cl!l Chi ROdriquez

.

.........

~.,

••, :

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0Rtarronge tatters of lhe
four ocrolllblld -d• •be.
low.to form four llmple warda .

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1
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l---,ll'!3.....,- ..--.,...-l.
14. .
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L-.J.......L.-1-.L....J

won Wllh the ·ace aiid
N o· G I J
..
~.· .
I have learned that ona who
led another spade. .
gives too much flatlecy should be
East's . ruff with the
heart nine effected an
watched carefully. Even wolves
uppercut, promoting
E M0 R 0 S
'look--- - --- -.
West's 10 as the set- •
A
7
V Complete tho chuckle qvoted
ling trick.
. . .
.
_ .
by lilting in ""' milling wards
West ,could also L.....L.-lL.......L.....J-..L.....J YO&lt;J develop from stop No. 3 t.low.
' have defeated the
lift. PRINT NUMBERED
:game with an unlikely
~ LETTERS IN sawiRES

I

: opening
club. get
lead.
Declarer cannot
his
I0 tricks established
· without losing three
diamond tricks, or suffering what actually
happened , or going
under to a club ruff by
West.

I I 1 I" I

~~~~~~!]][[]I:[IJJ

·~

SCRAM-LOS ANSWERS

W/101/y - Yollrs - Whoop - Behalf - POWER
. "Reform," the teacher lectured, "corrects abuse while
revolution transfers the POWER "

Wednesday, May
16.2001 .
. Whether you seck it
nersh1p
have
an ola·;r::t~~f.~:
that
or not, there's u good
doesn 't support the
chance you're likely IQolher. anylhing you
be in the limelight in
auempt to do 1oday
the year ahead, bolh
could prove lo be
socially aod career
counter product ive .
wise. Always present a
CANCER (June 21good image when out
July 22) -· Basing a
in public.
judgment call onemoTAURUS (April
tions or feelings today,
20-May 20) ·- Just
especially
where your
. because a tactic
work
or
caree
r is conworked well for a
cemed,
is
a
no-no.
Any
friend of yours doesn'l
departure
from
prncti·
mean it will be as
calily and realism will
effective for you. it
invite problems, ·
will first have to be
LEO (July 23-Aug.
modified to fil 'your
personality and needs.
22) -- Lady Luck may
be nowhere to be
Taurus, treat yourself
found today should
to a birthday gift. Send
for your Amo-Giaph
you need her help to
predictions for the
pull off something that
year ahead by mailing
you got yourself
$2 and SASE 10 Aslminvolved in. All specuGruph. c/o thb newslative involvements
paper, P.O. BliK•17S8,
should be avoided.
Murray Hill Station,
VIROO (Aua. 23New York, NY IOIS6.
Sept. 22) •• Usually
Be ;ure to stnte your
you're pretty careful In
•tlcklna
to your auns
Zodluc Mli"·
.
about
somethina
OEM INI &lt;Muy 21you'Ne 1tudled and .
Julle lOJ .. Should
euch P""Y I~ u llllrt• . understand. Today, a

••

J::..

IIIII
Door
colwnn

30 :::::-

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

•

I·

I

&gt;

992-1717
'
·-;

DO '(OIJ MIND IF I
TRV SITTING WM

&amp;ACK WERE, M/J/.AM?

lOx 10$40
10x20$60

~·.'

COMI!ERCW. and IISIDOOIAl
FREE ESTIMATES . • .

740-992•7599

.• lHARTWEL_L

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS ' .
fACTORY DIRECT
PAICINQ· ~ - ' - '

Advertise In
this space . · Bring In your repair work
. f $25 ; we'll tet you going for
or
spring
per month • .

BISSELL ·

Toll Free

BLOCKS OUT .Sll .
· OF DAMAG Nq
' '

P/8

1

Repaln
1~866•299-4445

Indian

44 C11M 01

-~=-......

·

J§

.1

on Lawo

111len, WaiTIDty

KENSINGTON

a

group

42 Flnltllll
M •1•
43 l'llinl

24 DIM

211

41 llllllwy

II

.

Tractors, Mowers,

Hill'• Self

"

&gt;

.

SYRACUSE SMALL
ENGINE DOCTORS
1358 cOllage Rd.
' 740-192.0122
.Masltr Ctrllfitd Technklans
Over 23 yra axp.
AM work guarantlld
Service a peril
. 8Vlllla~• .
Speciallha'lif(J io tyle

'

TJIE BORN LOSER
p-l.!.r:; (,() FOR. (&gt;.. WI&gt;LK, GL~~
.

- ·"""'

of their first 20 shots and led by at least
· II for the final three quarters.
"You could tell from the moment
everyone walked in this morning that
every~ne was extremely focused," said
Antonio . Daniels, who set his playoff
high with 19 points and nine assi ~ t s.
Dallas, which had won four straight
elimination games this postseason, didn't
havo the energy - or accuracy - tp
come back.
Except for Dirk Nowit zki, who
scored a career-high J2 points and had
I R·rebounds, the Mawricks resumed the
inept shooting that cost them the first
three games of the series. Dallas \Vas 0for- 1i on }-pointcni.

••
•

Rtclll

dt

.~,

~~jTi

I

.•

AIClnt, Ohio
Winchester, who lp~ !'!'Covered from a
•45771
•.•• pulled_r.tusc)e .in hi! left ,.side,
the
{
'740-949-2217
,
bullpe11 ~ fre1h piFch~r.The, b.ullpen.had to
'
Slzea
'II' I! 10'
fram'Pap 11
go 8' 2-3 inningS S4nd?-Y nig~t after Jim
to 10' X 30'
Brower got rocked.
'
'
a damper on \Us
runners"
aggressiveness.
Houra
..:.:_i.h_qp~ I pn get mxself in a spot where
Players gnnilbled last season that manag7:00AM
• 8:00 P~
I'm ·here perp~anendy.7Wjpchester said.
er Jack McKeon ·didn't let them run
Maybe -not this week. Boone and manenough; McKeOn didn't want to risk run7
ager Jim Bowden arc le~ning toward callning with . Ken Griffey Jr. and Dante
ing up right-havder Brian Reith from
Bichel\C in the lineup.
·
Double-A to start ori Wednesday, which
"I think we could have run well last
would jeopardize Winchester's spot on
year, but it wasn't our game plan," short- .the roster.
s~op B~rry, L~rkin said. "We weren't real
A doubleheader over the weekend got
aggressive . . ·
tlie rotation "off schedule. Bo~~e considBiahette is gone; G~iffey is disabled by a ered starting Fl;,b Be)! ort thrie days' rest
torlj hamstring and Boone is determined Wednesday or giving Dennys Reyes a
to steal more bases with a lineup that's start out of the bullpen.
more suited for it this season,
After meeting with Bowden, Boone
"This team supposedly couldn't run, said the club probably will call up Reith,
and I think I've proved that wrong," 23, who has made oQly 13 starts at DonBoone said.
ble-A in his career. Reith, obtained as part . - - - - - - - - .
. They've done well at stealing bases, get- of the trade that sent Denny Neagle to
ting caught only 11 times in 49 tries. It's h
· k
ke 1
··
h ,
d
ki
t e New Yor Yan es ast season. is 4-1
h
d
t e ecwons t ey ve ma e on ta ng with a 2_15 ERA for Chattanooga.
COIITIACTORS, INC.
~ bas::s t~t are the problem.
.
The Reds already have one pitcher in
Racine, Ohio ill771
Theyre livmg up to their scounng • the rotatil)n who' .made the jump from
740-985-3948 ·•
reportl,' ·Dierker, said.. "Their scouting Double-A this season - Chris Reitsma. CONCRm/BI.OCI/BRICI(
report 1s that ~eyre gomg to run, run and Reith would give the Reds three young • Foocen, Walll; Slepo •
run. It's the kind of thing where 1f you
•
Flat Work,
·· live by the sword, you die by the sword." ·~:c;n't know if he's ready;· Boone said. RePtacomeall, • Walka
Another Double-A pitcher?
•· If he does good, maybe he stays awhile.
end Drl""• 'Slondl
The Reds optioned infielder D.'l'. It's kind of a quick look into the future ~::.r::.!'!:'~.
Cromer back to Triple-A Louisllille on and it seems to make sense, even' though
WV.I03171l
Monday and activated reliever Scott Win- sometimes 1 question whether anything .__;;..;.;;.;;;,;;;;;;;.._.
· chester off the disabled list.
'
makes· sense."

r'

~::~P~Iu~m:~~ng~==~~~~~~~~.

• Gnvel Saad •
1bpsoil• Fill Dirt
0 Muldl
Bulidozer Services

992-3410

28l7o 811hlln Road

J

740-992-5065 :

992·6215

I

unselfishly. It's going to b~ a heck of a
challenge for us."
·
Charlotte travels to Milwaukee for
Game 5 of the Eastern Conference
semifinal Tuesday night. T he series is
tied 2-2.
·
After blowing a chance for a sweep
Saturday in Dallas, San Antonio wasted
no time taking charge on Monday
·
night.
' Duncan and Robinson threw down
early dunks and a 3-pointer by Danny
Ferry put the Sp[.-rs up by double digits
. within eigh t minutes. The Spurs lm 15

';

:~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CIMaUIId ....

fromPapBl

~~

MowlntJ"
TrlmmiiiQ .

Free Estimates ,

••
.............

Spurs

1

•Nft~

until 4:00 p.m. on
lily 2~, :10111 11 thl
· PubliC Notice
Dlalrlcta olllol
loc8llclll34481 Com
•NOTICE OF , ,
Hollow liNd, Rulllnd.
AVAILABILITY FOR
for tha following: · PUBUC INSPECTION
1811 ~ord F3110 Dump
The
Carleton
At. 1 Pi~ Express
.Truck, 1111 Chevy Collegl Bo1rd · of
Dellve~ng lunch .starling
C11100 Pickup Truck,' Trullftl hila 111111 Ill
May 21st&amp;! 11:00am.
"
1nd 1188 Chevy S14 1nnu11 r1turn of 1
New
Items Meatball ~bs, Dell
4WD Truck.
print• found1tlon,
Thl Items may be Form 110-PF, with till
Meals, RoHiserrie Chicken with
- n lithe Dlllrlctl lntern11 Revenue
side salads 992·9200
office Mondl(ly-frlday S1rvlce for c1land1r
S:OG-4:00, until thl yur
2000. . l·n
blci, opening, .,MI... ICCOrdl!nCe wi,)h
22nc1, 1:1111 p.m. TIM lnleiNII !Ieven.. Coda
llama will be aold aa Section 8104(b), lhle ·
11 without 1ny · fqrm Ia avlllabla for
exP,:aAICI 0.. Implied public ln1p1ctlon al
. wa11'11nty,
LCC,D tha homa of lloblrl
IIIIMII lhl right IO • Wingllt, Pralldenl 1nd
accert or raJICI 1ny Princlpel . M1n1gar,
Ofll bid._ Tarme or 1387 Collage Road,
..... cuh·or Clrllflad Syraoun, Ohio, . . . . . . . . J.
check.
· c!,urlng the 11Q-day
By. Board of period beginning M1y
Laac!lng ·creak 111,20110.
(5) 15

•

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE

..: .

• E - l l PlUmbing
• Roollni I Clultora
• lllnyt 8lclng 1 Pointing
•hllollndPon:hllldll

w111 11e ..-tv~ng bldl I :311::;;..._ _ _ _..,....

Re.ds

740-992-1871

..

R•;:adallng

1, 1, 15, 2001

'

.

'Wt ....... Yllvolnt Producll'. All Olllln ~~

·A-Adclllanal

Prealdant, Charla•
ll8n'llt, Jr.

SALE

&amp;
Excavating

I nHUIIIIIU

~- Sttrlllu e-.

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

FREE ESTIIATES

Humor often fealures an unexpected
conclusion, as in this
=-::u · stanza by T.S. Eliot:
And the wind shall
say "Here were decent
godless people;
Their only monument the asphalt road
And a thousand lost
golf balls." .
When defending,
unless you can see the
contract sinking for
sure, you should be
happy to let partner
steer you down the
road, asphalt or otherwise, As unusual as
that is, maybe he
knows what he · is
doing!
This deal occurred
I' II
during the 1975 European Championships,
in the open mate h
between Belgium and
j!"
Greece . How did EastWest defeat four
hearts?
· North bid aggressively, calling his hand
a limit raise with three
~W:£DTO
hearts . However, he
e£ f\QO\(f()OO
did thai because he
::.0~~­
liked the secondary
eoHIOW IT~
club fit. If South had
..lUDC£~!
rebid two diamonds,
North would have settled for two hearts.
West, George Roussos, led the diamond
.
.,
'
queen;, East, He"'ules
"
Matrangas, overtook
'"""=:=--=c::=-=-:=--.,
· =~==:-::-=-=....-. · with. his king and
NORti'-L PEOI"LE ?
B I /M PRETTY 5URE IT
returned the spade
WW.T"s. THAT SUPPOSED tlOESH'l" INVOL-VE MRS .
J'ack. Thinking his
10 11E"N? llOES. ANY- · GODF~Y l!oEING
· 801&gt;'1' REALI..y KNOIJ . . ATTM.I&lt;Ell SY / - - - - l ·partner had switched
W~T NOILf"'AL IS~
! ne.SII-EATINC. THEY'E to a singleton, West
LEEC.HES .
SLUGS,
won with the ace and
...._....C....,,--1 ACTUALLY.
REALL'&lt; played back a spade.
~~~~ !
When East didn't
ruff, declarer probably
felt happy, but he was
in for disappointment.
, When he played a
_ __.. trump to his jack, West

.....

mUIICIIIy
22 Sprlnl8
23 ...... up

EMI
,._
.....

Keep on

Stop &amp; Complra

Advertise
In thiS space
for $25 per
month.

21

()pooioJI- • "

-·.

"""""""'""

•

11 ...... lot

BY Plm.LJP ALDER

Local843-5264

,PJ

,_

..... ...,.
t . . . . l't'

•NtwHomts
• Gll'lgll

104112-2220

..

Y.t ...... .

CONSTIUCTION · •

Rocky R Hupp Agent

•

• It I 7
• AQ.I I

...ROiERT IISSELl •

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

WANTED

.. •• t.

914JI 7

~----., ,

Olllnlln,oM...._

• AKUU

••

flEE f.STI.RitS
wv 304 112..:1874 •
OH 740-7412-2257 ••

1-888-521-4)916
•

,.

6A714J

'-Your
'Birthday·
slroog-willed per:1on .
may
nevertheless
innuence you otherwise.
LIBRA (Sept. 230cl. 23) .-· No one is
goi ng to be supportive
of your efforts today if
you pick apart their
parlicipmion instead of
prai sing it. Criticism
could cost you your

allies.
SCORPIO (Oct
24-Nnv. 22) -· If you
can ' t .~vc n manage

your own re.'wurces
today, how ·can you

lake on handling lhe
~

uff:tir~
Uon' 1

nr

another?

offer

any

advice, even when

asked.
· ·
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Pec. 21) ..
Leulng your emotions
rule your rcoctions und
behavior loday will
elll\er prevent you
frontbclna ableto·follow your own aaenda
or muke mattera worse
when you do.
CAPRICORN

(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -

You can operate effectively today when
being forced to deal
with a person you dislike if you don't tum
the event into a grudge
malch. It will all be up
to you .
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 19) --It would
be quile foolish to le(
your ego get in the
way tOday should your
friends want to do
something you can't
presenrly afford. It's
not a di sgrace to say
no.
PISCES (Fo h. 20.
March 20) ·-Allowing
frustration to get in
your wuy todny when

altcmpting a diflicult
objective will suarnnlee fa ilure. Remnin
cool. calm und col·
lecled. and you will
succeed.
ARIES (Murch 21·
April 19) .. A similar
•lluntlon you d~alt
with quite succe"sful·
ly In the pa"t may urle
11Jaln today.
•'

�~

.

-- .

_:.._

___ .
Tueeday, May 15, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

NKA Cro11word Punle

UNDA'S

PAINTING

n• Dffll

A&amp;D Alit .....llfwy- Pill, ....

~~~I

Mon-Frl8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

Alllr 6,.

(740) 742-8888

t.lwd p.111.

740-985-4180

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

CORTUml&amp;

R\Aiand, Ohio
Truck scats, ear seats, headliners,lnlcl&lt; taJps.
convertible &amp;. vinyl lOpS, Four wheeler scats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

'

"T..t.e .tlw pcoiA ""'
ofpoU.filo6- L«oo ilfor -,-•
Interior
FREE ES1'IMATES

Complete Home

• •u
••
,,,

Repair .
Remodeling
New AdditiOnS
Garages

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

t OJ I

Wl/0282120

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

Bo&lt; 189
M1rJdleport Oh10 IS760

c.IIQHcll

--

• No Carry Ouls

• Mounting, Bal. EXtra
other Splcllll

"'l.. .... ~

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

•Complete

Remodeling

11111R12
151180R13
1M-IOR13 _
175-IOR13
1u.eoA13 .

Avlllllbll
While Suppllel .....

(:'Oflll I11AIIIl See

....... .

IIPIYIII

- Deoll8

·-Ripllll
F ree Estlnl&lt;ltcs

740 992-1101
or 992 2753

HowardL..
Wrltesel

All Makei'I'r8ctor
"
'
Equlpmealhrtl ,

Roofing ·Home

Factery Autllortlod

Gutters- Down

llllntenance-

cue-ml'1lrll

spout

Demn

,,.. Eltl/llllel

111110 St. 1ft. 7 Soulll

949-1405
591-5011

Coolville, OH if5n3

•

, ...n ..aa

_. · _ Pablk: Nodal Ia Nn&gt;1pa1~

Yoilr JUPt to KHw, Delivered RJptto Yoar

CARPENTER
SERVICE·

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE OF

COnMMinoy Dlltrlet.

Ludlng Creek
conHrvlney Dlltrlc;t

(I)

'We SetvicaAH Makes"
Warner Healing &amp; Cooling, Inc.
l),nder new ownership ~ ill now '

,

I
I

u-NCI • IIIIUI'Id
,.,._ • Jenltrol • TM"""I Zane • Lennox

a Sherrie Fink, OWner

&gt;

l

I

Toll Free1-88&amp;-913-6595
Long 11o11orn Pt. l'teUIInt

BOOKS
II
II ill.

Il

Strvlng cuetomera11 years
1Gene

\

:I

1111111&amp;

-----~~~~~~-~--.

'

'.

RIIMY

The CRAFTY. ~~~.
BLIND SPOT

(Factory Outlet)
All •erli&lt;ol blind&amp; are
made lo order at oar
IO&lt;alion
UPTO 70%0Ff
• Verlieolo • WoOd

Gene Baker, Auto·Valve,
&amp; all our loyal
custotncrs &amp; friends.
Outdoor Power

• Minis • Ete

144 TWnl Awt. Galp1ls

"446-4995

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hilan~ Rd.
Plmieroy;-Ohio .

TERRY'S ENGINE
' AIR ,
AHD.
COMPREsSORS

740·992·5232 .

Complete MobUe

Repair

' Pd1mo.

..,.•.

~

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRAOA TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME ·HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT~
,I I
'

gav"

BUILDIU .INC,
New Honm • VInyl
Sldlna • Now GafiiOS

~,:::!~«.::~

AddlllonS"RO&lt;Iftna

~·; OUALIT¥f..

(NO SUNDAY CALLS) .

)

1-800-291-5600 • Pomerov. OH

~. 110111 UliM~·-·-·~"

..•.

0

''

?•
'

.

'

·STORAGE

,' '' '

WINDOW. . SYSTEMs·...

.

''

~

1-,

St. Rt~ 7

T~INK

MAVSE I CAN
RETURN '(OUR QUESTIONS SETTER
FROM TWE 8A5ELINE ..

•••
•'&gt;
•

..

•

•

--:!::====1

~

..

·'

1'!"'.;;;,;;_.,.=:.,;;...._.;:;:~:;;:;;~;.:.:.,;..._

•'

!~..!~~----.!:!....!;.!;f~~7,~j[__j

Advertise
this 8J)a1C:8I
for,f25 per
month

URNPIKE

LIMCO~~· .

Mercury
SPECIAL flNANCB DEPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? Credll Problems?

•

~

•
.
.

Every Spring Tune-Up
.get a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or ~1m

or a REAL DEAL on 1 new lawn tractor,
lawn mov.r or weed trimmer.
&lt;

Ili'!:CCrer;:iJ;;
I
GRAVELY.TRACTOR
Sales &amp; Service,
204' Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

"We Can Help'll
Call Us first Or We Both Lose!

Ask
For Mike Hindle
' .
179 or 446-9800
·'

.AWIL

,. Cellular·

•

'•'

~~eff Wa!"er .Ins.

,i

'. 992-'5479.

:
I.

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41

=..
nut

:-&amp;.uri
47 "ud ai

41 Pa II IT II

£:·;~

52

31=-.uo
37........ .. ~
tinton'•

31AFLpwbw

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull C.mpqa

fer·-·

Collbltly Ci!Nr cryptogi- art t:NIIed from quolatlont by flmOUI

pocllllo, put ll1d - l Each -in

tho""""' .....

Tottay'l clue: T equals W

'G PI

WOYDGV

BOYVSM

NW

ous

PYVKOtMV

NW 0 8 I

GPS

'K L

ZAUQYSV

NW

SEBSVV

G P 8 A.U

BNDSQGS
·T AZSV. ' PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "II rou've never hoard me opeak
Spenllh, jull fOllow
. me untl mies a ehort putt.• - (Golfer)
Cl!l Chi ROdriquez

.

.........

~.,

••, :

•.•

l

0Rtarronge tatters of lhe
four ocrolllblld -d• •be.
low.to form four llmple warda .

II I I . l I
1
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1
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l---,ll'!3.....,- ..--.,...-l.
14. .
. . 1
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L-.J.......L.-1-.L....J

won Wllh the ·ace aiid
N o· G I J
..
~.· .
I have learned that ona who
led another spade. .
gives too much flatlecy should be
East's . ruff with the
heart nine effected an
watched carefully. Even wolves
uppercut, promoting
E M0 R 0 S
'look--- - --- -.
West's 10 as the set- •
A
7
V Complete tho chuckle qvoted
ling trick.
. . .
.
_ .
by lilting in ""' milling wards
West ,could also L.....L.-lL.......L.....J-..L.....J YO&lt;J develop from stop No. 3 t.low.
' have defeated the
lift. PRINT NUMBERED
:game with an unlikely
~ LETTERS IN sawiRES

I

: opening
club. get
lead.
Declarer cannot
his
I0 tricks established
· without losing three
diamond tricks, or suffering what actually
happened , or going
under to a club ruff by
West.

I I 1 I" I

~~~~~~!]][[]I:[IJJ

·~

SCRAM-LOS ANSWERS

W/101/y - Yollrs - Whoop - Behalf - POWER
. "Reform," the teacher lectured, "corrects abuse while
revolution transfers the POWER "

Wednesday, May
16.2001 .
. Whether you seck it
nersh1p
have
an ola·;r::t~~f.~:
that
or not, there's u good
doesn 't support the
chance you're likely IQolher. anylhing you
be in the limelight in
auempt to do 1oday
the year ahead, bolh
could prove lo be
socially aod career
counter product ive .
wise. Always present a
CANCER (June 21good image when out
July 22) -· Basing a
in public.
judgment call onemoTAURUS (April
tions or feelings today,
20-May 20) ·- Just
especially
where your
. because a tactic
work
or
caree
r is conworked well for a
cemed,
is
a
no-no.
Any
friend of yours doesn'l
departure
from
prncti·
mean it will be as
calily and realism will
effective for you. it
invite problems, ·
will first have to be
LEO (July 23-Aug.
modified to fil 'your
personality and needs.
22) -- Lady Luck may
be nowhere to be
Taurus, treat yourself
found today should
to a birthday gift. Send
for your Amo-Giaph
you need her help to
predictions for the
pull off something that
year ahead by mailing
you got yourself
$2 and SASE 10 Aslminvolved in. All specuGruph. c/o thb newslative involvements
paper, P.O. BliK•17S8,
should be avoided.
Murray Hill Station,
VIROO (Aua. 23New York, NY IOIS6.
Sept. 22) •• Usually
Be ;ure to stnte your
you're pretty careful In
•tlcklna
to your auns
Zodluc Mli"·
.
about
somethina
OEM INI &lt;Muy 21you'Ne 1tudled and .
Julle lOJ .. Should
euch P""Y I~ u llllrt• . understand. Today, a

••

J::..

IIIII
Door
colwnn

30 :::::-

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

•

I·

I

&gt;

992-1717
'
·-;

DO '(OIJ MIND IF I
TRV SITTING WM

&amp;ACK WERE, M/J/.AM?

lOx 10$40
10x20$60

~·.'

COMI!ERCW. and IISIDOOIAl
FREE ESTIMATES . • .

740-992•7599

.• lHARTWEL_L

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS ' .
fACTORY DIRECT
PAICINQ· ~ - ' - '

Advertise In
this space . · Bring In your repair work
. f $25 ; we'll tet you going for
or
spring
per month • .

BISSELL ·

Toll Free

BLOCKS OUT .Sll .
· OF DAMAG Nq
' '

P/8

1

Repaln
1~866•299-4445

Indian

44 C11M 01

-~=-......

·

J§

.1

on Lawo

111len, WaiTIDty

KENSINGTON

a

group

42 Flnltllll
M •1•
43 l'llinl

24 DIM

211

41 llllllwy

II

.

Tractors, Mowers,

Hill'• Self

"

&gt;

.

SYRACUSE SMALL
ENGINE DOCTORS
1358 cOllage Rd.
' 740-192.0122
.Masltr Ctrllfitd Technklans
Over 23 yra axp.
AM work guarantlld
Service a peril
. 8Vlllla~• .
Speciallha'lif(J io tyle

'

TJIE BORN LOSER
p-l.!.r:; (,() FOR. (&gt;.. WI&gt;LK, GL~~
.

- ·"""'

of their first 20 shots and led by at least
· II for the final three quarters.
"You could tell from the moment
everyone walked in this morning that
every~ne was extremely focused," said
Antonio . Daniels, who set his playoff
high with 19 points and nine assi ~ t s.
Dallas, which had won four straight
elimination games this postseason, didn't
havo the energy - or accuracy - tp
come back.
Except for Dirk Nowit zki, who
scored a career-high J2 points and had
I R·rebounds, the Mawricks resumed the
inept shooting that cost them the first
three games of the series. Dallas \Vas 0for- 1i on }-pointcni.

••
•

Rtclll

dt

.~,

~~jTi

I

.•

AIClnt, Ohio
Winchester, who lp~ !'!'Covered from a
•45771
•.•• pulled_r.tusc)e .in hi! left ,.side,
the
{
'740-949-2217
,
bullpe11 ~ fre1h piFch~r.The, b.ullpen.had to
'
Slzea
'II' I! 10'
fram'Pap 11
go 8' 2-3 inningS S4nd?-Y nig~t after Jim
to 10' X 30'
Brower got rocked.
'
'
a damper on \Us
runners"
aggressiveness.
Houra
..:.:_i.h_qp~ I pn get mxself in a spot where
Players gnnilbled last season that manag7:00AM
• 8:00 P~
I'm ·here perp~anendy.7Wjpchester said.
er Jack McKeon ·didn't let them run
Maybe -not this week. Boone and manenough; McKeOn didn't want to risk run7
ager Jim Bowden arc le~ning toward callning with . Ken Griffey Jr. and Dante
ing up right-havder Brian Reith from
Bichel\C in the lineup.
·
Double-A to start ori Wednesday, which
"I think we could have run well last
would jeopardize Winchester's spot on
year, but it wasn't our game plan," short- .the roster.
s~op B~rry, L~rkin said. "We weren't real
A doubleheader over the weekend got
aggressive . . ·
tlie rotation "off schedule. Bo~~e considBiahette is gone; G~iffey is disabled by a ered starting Fl;,b Be)! ort thrie days' rest
torlj hamstring and Boone is determined Wednesday or giving Dennys Reyes a
to steal more bases with a lineup that's start out of the bullpen.
more suited for it this season,
After meeting with Bowden, Boone
"This team supposedly couldn't run, said the club probably will call up Reith,
and I think I've proved that wrong," 23, who has made oQly 13 starts at DonBoone said.
ble-A in his career. Reith, obtained as part . - - - - - - - - .
. They've done well at stealing bases, get- of the trade that sent Denny Neagle to
ting caught only 11 times in 49 tries. It's h
· k
ke 1
··
h ,
d
ki
t e New Yor Yan es ast season. is 4-1
h
d
t e ecwons t ey ve ma e on ta ng with a 2_15 ERA for Chattanooga.
COIITIACTORS, INC.
~ bas::s t~t are the problem.
.
The Reds already have one pitcher in
Racine, Ohio ill771
Theyre livmg up to their scounng • the rotatil)n who' .made the jump from
740-985-3948 ·•
reportl,' ·Dierker, said.. "Their scouting Double-A this season - Chris Reitsma. CONCRm/BI.OCI/BRICI(
report 1s that ~eyre gomg to run, run and Reith would give the Reds three young • Foocen, Walll; Slepo •
run. It's the kind of thing where 1f you
•
Flat Work,
·· live by the sword, you die by the sword." ·~:c;n't know if he's ready;· Boone said. RePtacomeall, • Walka
Another Double-A pitcher?
•· If he does good, maybe he stays awhile.
end Drl""• 'Slondl
The Reds optioned infielder D.'l'. It's kind of a quick look into the future ~::.r::.!'!:'~.
Cromer back to Triple-A Louisllille on and it seems to make sense, even' though
WV.I03171l
Monday and activated reliever Scott Win- sometimes 1 question whether anything .__;;..;.;;.;;;,;;;;;;;.._.
· chester off the disabled list.
'
makes· sense."

r'

~::~P~Iu~m:~~ng~==~~~~~~~~.

• Gnvel Saad •
1bpsoil• Fill Dirt
0 Muldl
Bulidozer Services

992-3410

28l7o 811hlln Road

J

740-992-5065 :

992·6215

I

unselfishly. It's going to b~ a heck of a
challenge for us."
·
Charlotte travels to Milwaukee for
Game 5 of the Eastern Conference
semifinal Tuesday night. T he series is
tied 2-2.
·
After blowing a chance for a sweep
Saturday in Dallas, San Antonio wasted
no time taking charge on Monday
·
night.
' Duncan and Robinson threw down
early dunks and a 3-pointer by Danny
Ferry put the Sp[.-rs up by double digits
. within eigh t minutes. The Spurs lm 15

';

:~

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CIMaUIId ....

fromPapBl

~~

MowlntJ"
TrlmmiiiQ .

Free Estimates ,

••
.............

Spurs

1

•Nft~

until 4:00 p.m. on
lily 2~, :10111 11 thl
· PubliC Notice
Dlalrlcta olllol
loc8llclll34481 Com
•NOTICE OF , ,
Hollow liNd, Rulllnd.
AVAILABILITY FOR
for tha following: · PUBUC INSPECTION
1811 ~ord F3110 Dump
The
Carleton
At. 1 Pi~ Express
.Truck, 1111 Chevy Collegl Bo1rd · of
Dellve~ng lunch .starling
C11100 Pickup Truck,' Trullftl hila 111111 Ill
May 21st&amp;! 11:00am.
"
1nd 1188 Chevy S14 1nnu11 r1turn of 1
New
Items Meatball ~bs, Dell
4WD Truck.
print• found1tlon,
Thl Items may be Form 110-PF, with till
Meals, RoHiserrie Chicken with
- n lithe Dlllrlctl lntern11 Revenue
side salads 992·9200
office Mondl(ly-frlday S1rvlce for c1land1r
S:OG-4:00, until thl yur
2000. . l·n
blci, opening, .,MI... ICCOrdl!nCe wi,)h
22nc1, 1:1111 p.m. TIM lnleiNII !Ieven.. Coda
llama will be aold aa Section 8104(b), lhle ·
11 without 1ny · fqrm Ia avlllabla for
exP,:aAICI 0.. Implied public ln1p1ctlon al
. wa11'11nty,
LCC,D tha homa of lloblrl
IIIIMII lhl right IO • Wingllt, Pralldenl 1nd
accert or raJICI 1ny Princlpel . M1n1gar,
Ofll bid._ Tarme or 1387 Collage Road,
..... cuh·or Clrllflad Syraoun, Ohio, . . . . . . . . J.
check.
· c!,urlng the 11Q-day
By. Board of period beginning M1y
Laac!lng ·creak 111,20110.
(5) 15

•

R&amp;H LAWN
SERVICE

..: .

• E - l l PlUmbing
• Roollni I Clultora
• lllnyt 8lclng 1 Pointing
•hllollndPon:hllldll

w111 11e ..-tv~ng bldl I :311::;;..._ _ _ _..,....

Re.ds

740-992-1871

..

R•;:adallng

1, 1, 15, 2001

'

.

'Wt ....... Yllvolnt Producll'. All Olllln ~~

·A-Adclllanal

Prealdant, Charla•
ll8n'llt, Jr.

SALE

&amp;
Excavating

I nHUIIIIIU

~- Sttrlllu e-.

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

FREE ESTIIATES

Humor often fealures an unexpected
conclusion, as in this
=-::u · stanza by T.S. Eliot:
And the wind shall
say "Here were decent
godless people;
Their only monument the asphalt road
And a thousand lost
golf balls." .
When defending,
unless you can see the
contract sinking for
sure, you should be
happy to let partner
steer you down the
road, asphalt or otherwise, As unusual as
that is, maybe he
knows what he · is
doing!
This deal occurred
I' II
during the 1975 European Championships,
in the open mate h
between Belgium and
j!"
Greece . How did EastWest defeat four
hearts?
· North bid aggressively, calling his hand
a limit raise with three
~W:£DTO
hearts . However, he
e£ f\QO\(f()OO
did thai because he
::.0~~­
liked the secondary
eoHIOW IT~
club fit. If South had
..lUDC£~!
rebid two diamonds,
North would have settled for two hearts.
West, George Roussos, led the diamond
.
.,
'
queen;, East, He"'ules
"
Matrangas, overtook
'"""=:=--=c::=-=-:=--.,
· =~==:-::-=-=....-. · with. his king and
NORti'-L PEOI"LE ?
B I /M PRETTY 5URE IT
returned the spade
WW.T"s. THAT SUPPOSED tlOESH'l" INVOL-VE MRS .
J'ack. Thinking his
10 11E"N? llOES. ANY- · GODF~Y l!oEING
· 801&gt;'1' REALI..y KNOIJ . . ATTM.I&lt;Ell SY / - - - - l ·partner had switched
W~T NOILf"'AL IS~
! ne.SII-EATINC. THEY'E to a singleton, West
LEEC.HES .
SLUGS,
won with the ace and
...._....C....,,--1 ACTUALLY.
REALL'&lt; played back a spade.
~~~~ !
When East didn't
ruff, declarer probably
felt happy, but he was
in for disappointment.
, When he played a
_ __.. trump to his jack, West

.....

mUIICIIIy
22 Sprlnl8
23 ...... up

EMI
,._
.....

Keep on

Stop &amp; Complra

Advertise
In thiS space
for $25 per
month.

21

()pooioJI- • "

-·.

"""""""'""

•

11 ...... lot

BY Plm.LJP ALDER

Local843-5264

,PJ

,_

..... ...,.
t . . . . l't'

•NtwHomts
• Gll'lgll

104112-2220

..

Y.t ...... .

CONSTIUCTION · •

Rocky R Hupp Agent

•

• It I 7
• AQ.I I

...ROiERT IISSELl •

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

WANTED

.. •• t.

914JI 7

~----., ,

Olllnlln,oM...._

• AKUU

••

flEE f.STI.RitS
wv 304 112..:1874 •
OH 740-7412-2257 ••

1-888-521-4)916
•

,.

6A714J

'-Your
'Birthday·
slroog-willed per:1on .
may
nevertheless
innuence you otherwise.
LIBRA (Sept. 230cl. 23) .-· No one is
goi ng to be supportive
of your efforts today if
you pick apart their
parlicipmion instead of
prai sing it. Criticism
could cost you your

allies.
SCORPIO (Oct
24-Nnv. 22) -· If you
can ' t .~vc n manage

your own re.'wurces
today, how ·can you

lake on handling lhe
~

uff:tir~
Uon' 1

nr

another?

offer

any

advice, even when

asked.
· ·
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Pec. 21) ..
Leulng your emotions
rule your rcoctions und
behavior loday will
elll\er prevent you
frontbclna ableto·follow your own aaenda
or muke mattera worse
when you do.
CAPRICORN

(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -

You can operate effectively today when
being forced to deal
with a person you dislike if you don't tum
the event into a grudge
malch. It will all be up
to you .
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 19) --It would
be quile foolish to le(
your ego get in the
way tOday should your
friends want to do
something you can't
presenrly afford. It's
not a di sgrace to say
no.
PISCES (Fo h. 20.
March 20) ·-Allowing
frustration to get in
your wuy todny when

altcmpting a diflicult
objective will suarnnlee fa ilure. Remnin
cool. calm und col·
lecled. and you will
succeed.
ARIES (Murch 21·
April 19) .. A similar
•lluntlon you d~alt
with quite succe"sful·
ly In the pa"t may urle
11Jaln today.
•'

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS: Still going

. J, Ropls 1
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Joe Mays became the Minnesota
Twins' third fi..e-game winner, :illowing six hits in ~en
innings to lead the AL Centr.al leader over the Kansas City
Royals 3-1 Monday night.
Mays (5-2), who struck out four and walked two,joined Br:ad
Radke (6-1) and Eric Milton (5-2) to give the Twins three of
the ~n AL pitchen with five wins.
LaTroy Hawkins got the save.
Doug Mientkiewicz homered for Minnesota.
Dan Reichert (3-4) gave up two runs, five hits and five walks
in seven innings.
Minnesota took a 2-0 lead in fourth on ftnt baseman Mike
Sweeney's throwing error on Chad Allen's groundrr with the
hues loaded. The Twins had filled the bases on Matt Lawton's
walk, and singles by Corey Koskie and oO:,ug Mientkiewicz.
Sweeney drove in a run in the fifth with his second double
of the game and his AL-leading 21st of the season.
Mientkiewicz homered offJason Grimsley in the eighth.

Brewe1s 11, Pirates 8

·

Raul Casanova drove in four runs with a homer and single
and Tylet Houston had three RBis as Milwaukee improved to
10..() in day games at Miller Park.
Jamey Wright (4-4) gave up five runs and seven hits in five
innings, and Cu rtis Leskanic pitched the ninth for his fifth save.
Do~ Wengert (0-t) gave up eight runs and nine hits in 6 2-3
mrungs.

ttM'c • LMIUe

-

Mo!OIOII

-

Yollc

Sl l.o&lt;.Q
Chlcogo
Houllon
Cincinnati
Pin...,fl11

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oa
22 •• .611
17 21 •.U7
6
1620 .- 6
15 23 .395
8
•• 23 .378 8112
Contnl
WLPcloil
21 I5 .583
21
16 .568
112
20 16 .558
1
21
17 .553
1
17 20 .459 4 1/2
t3 24 .ast a 112

....

WLPct08
22 16 .579
San Fiantllco 21 16 .568
112
Arizona
19 18 .514 2 112
Colorado
19 18 .514 2112
San Diego
18 •• .486 3112
l.oo~

s.-r·•ci-o

Milwaukee 4, Pittsbu~ 1
51. Louis 13, CtO:ago CubS 4
Mon1reat 14, COlorado tO
San Francisco 8, N.Y. Mets 3
LOS Angekls 3, Atlanta 1
AriLOf\6 6, Philadelphia 1
FlOrida 10, San Diego 4

•NI.7:G15PA

Colorado,..,._,

WMnrrrt V"•GM..
Colorado(Chaoon 1· 1) at Atlanta (Giavlne
4-2), 1:05 p.m.
LO. Angelo• (~ 2·21 at-....1
(R1111mes 2..1. 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Kite 5-2) at Pilllbu'ltl (Sdmldt
HI), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (5dlitti~ S.t) II Cincinnati (Reith
~~: 7 :05p.m.

San Francioco (Rueter 4-3) at Florida
( C t - 1·3), 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 3-4) at Pllila&lt;ietptu
(Chon H). 7:05 p.m.
San Diego (Eaton 4·2) at N.Y. Mets
(Rusch 2·21, 7;10 p.m.
Houston (Reynolds J.21 at Chicago CubS

Monder'• Ga'""
Boston
New York
Toronto
Baltimore

(Yazquez 3-4), 7:05p.m.

2e

(Dempstar ~). 7:05p.m.
Ulwout&lt;ee (l-.utl HI) ol Ptilodllphla
(T-.... «!), 7:05p.m. .
San Diego (Jones I ..) at N.Y. Melt (Rood
4·2), 7:10p.m.
S.O) a t - (Bur·
1o1tt 2..1. 7:35p.m.
Oakland
Houston (lima 1·1) at~ COOs
(Tipllrli S.t), 8:05p.m.
·
ra...

Euat
W
L
22 15
22 18
19 18
18 22

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.A86

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112
.400 11 112

14).l:tlp.IL

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15

(Punlu 2-2) · - - (Sclloti
-2·2),
10:05 p.m.
•
N.Y. Y a - ~ 4-3) II a.tond :
(lito 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
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11

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.579
.514
.421

GB
112
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prompts
SHS
graduates
59
Sunday
=
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area evacuation

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AED SOX AI
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1ham from the tS&lt;IIy- till
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KANSAS CITY ROYAI.S-Oiltlonld
Tony Cogan to WleNta ol the T Loague. Rec:allod INF Willorl ~
from Ornahl of the PCL
&lt;

0C

T~a-

Detroit (~ :J.2)
0.3). 7:05 p.m.

(Ponson

(Castillo 3-21 at Minnesota (Red·

man 2·3), 8:05 p.m.

(Oivfl 2-3~ 1:06 p.m.
T~ Bay (Wilson 1..1at Kansas City
(Meadows 1-4), 8:05 p.m.
Toronto (Michalak 3·21at Anaheim
.(V-s 2·2), 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees'(Ctemens4.0) at Oakland
(Hudson 3·3), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 1·31&amp;1 Seat·
tie (Sele 5.0). 10:05 p.m.

NEW YORK YANKEE5-0ptioned

=~·~ Colurrbus

of:;...

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CtNCtNNAn REDSMIIIIF D.Ji

Cromer to Loufa~ f1l ttw ~ r ' .
11 League. R·=n"lild RtF SCott Wfrt.
1ton1 LGulo- Md actio •1
him 1ton1 tho 1 5 . . . . , - 1101. • 4

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~

~-

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

Texas. 12; TBatlsta, Toronto, 11; 1i · • ,
Oakland, 10: JGonzalez, Cleveland,
:
APalmelro, Texas, 10.
.: .
BATIING-Aurilia, San FranciSco, .393;
llATTINQ-:Mianlkiewicz, MlnntiOia,
EOmonds, St. Louis, .380; Pujol&amp;, St. COlorado, 13: Flo,o. Florida. 13; Bumill, .410; MAamlrez. Bolton, .408; JGonza· STOlEN llASES-Knoblauch, New Yilta.
Louis, .370; Hollandswonh, Colorado, Milwaukee; 12; SScisa. Chk:ago, 12; lez, Cleveland, .365; Suzuki, seattte, 13; Soriano, New York. 12; .5uzukl,!
•
.368; PWilson, Florida, .357; Polanco, St. LWatker, Colorado, 12.
.360;
AAtomar, Cleveland,
.353; tie, 11; Cedeno, Detroit, 10; Rivas,
Louis, .349; LWalker. Colorado, .349.
STOLEN BASEs-t.C8stltlo, Florida, 11 ; JaGiarrlli, Clakland, .339; Olenld, Seattle, nesola, 8: Lawton, Mlmalota, 8; H
son, Detroit, 8; GWiliam&amp;, T~ lily,,;
RUN5-He11on, Colorado, 39; Flojd,
PWilson. Florida, 10; OJackson. San .333.
Florida , 36; LGonzalez, Arizona, 35; Diego, 10: Rollins, Philadelphia, 9; Pierre, RUNs-JGonUIIez, Cleveland,. 35; Suzu· DeShields, Baftimora, 8.
TWalker, Colorado, 33; LWalker, COl· Co[orado, 8; Glan\OIIe, Philadelphia, 8; kl, Seattle, 34; ARodrtguez, Texas, 32;
orado, 31 ; sumltz, Milwaukee, 30; Bag- EYoung, Chicago, 8; 1-te(ldet&amp;On, san MJSweeney, Kansas City, 31 ; CDetQado, PITCHING (5 ~)-Seta. ·
well, Houston, 30; SSosa, Chicago, 30.
Diego, 8.
Toronto, 31 ; Mondesl, Toronto, 30; Stew· S.O, 1.000, 2.72; PMartlnoz.llollon,:sll,
1.000, 1.74; Radke, MIM81018, 8·1, llili,
RBI-Hehon, Colorado, 44; Pujols, St.
an. Toronto, 29; cameron, Seattle, 29.
Louis, 42; LWalker, ColoraOo, 36; LGon· PITCHING (5 Oeclslons)-Hampton, Cok RBI-MAamlrez, Bolton, 46; JGonzaliz, · 2.80; Moyer, Seattle, 6·1, .857, MB;
zalez, Arizona, 36; Floyd, Florida, 34; oradO, 5-0, 1.000, 2.34; RUOrUz. San Cleveland, 40; ARodliguel, Texas, 35; Sabalhla, ClevelanO, 4·1 , .800; 3..:
Bonds, San Francisco, 33; Casey, Clncln· FranciscO, 6-1 , .857, 2.n ; WMIIIer, Hous- BBoone, Sean!$, 34; RPalmelro, Texas, DOiver, Texas, 4-1, .. BOO,_ 8.=.8;
,
nati, 32; CJohnson, Flor!Oa, 32; Bumltl, ton, 5·1 , .833, 3.02; Tapanl, Chicago, 5·1 , 32; Fulmer, Toronto, 31 ; EMardnez, Seat- Minnesota, 5·2, .714, 2.30, M11too,
•
Milwaukee, 32: SSosa, Chicago, 32.
.833, 3.97; $dlllllng, A~zona, 5·1 , .833, tle, 30; Burks, Cleveland, 30.
nesota, S.2, .714, 2.46; Burba,
• ,
S.2, .714, 5.60.
• ..
HtTS-Au~Na, San Franolsoo, 53; PWil·
3.34; KBrown, Loa Angeles, 5·1 , .833, HITS-Suzuki, Seattle, 82; MRamlrez,
son, Aor1da, 51 ; Pujots, St. Louis, 50; 1.09; Protcopac, Loa Angeles, 4·1, .800, Boston, 58; Stewan, Toronto, 50; JGonza· STAIKEOUT5-¥t.larilnez,.Boston, ~.II.
LGonzalez, Arizona, 48; Vldro, Montreal, 3.93.
lez, Cleveland, 50; MlentldoWicz, Min· lito, Oatdand, 52; Colon, Ctevetard, v:
47; He~on. Colorado, 46; Vlna, St Louis, STRIKEOUTS-ROJol'onson, AriZona,
nesota, 48; Knoblauch, Naw Yortc, 46; Pett11te, New · Yortc, 48; Muaalna, 45; LWalker, Coloraclo, 45.
104; Wood, Chicago, 72; Sc:llllll~. An· RAtornar, Cleveland, 47.
York, 46; Cflnley, Cleveland, 47;
DOUBLES-Hollandsworth, Coloraclo,
zona, 68; WMitter, Houston, 55; Parte, Los DOUBLES-MJSweenay, Kansaa City,
Boscon, 48.
..,.
15; Kent, San Francisco, 15; Lowell, Flon' Angeles, 51; Madclux, Atlanta, 50: Asia· 21; Greer, T..... 15; EChavez, oakland, SAVE5-Sasakl, Seattle, 17; Hal&gt;1clne,~
da, 14; Navin, San Diego, 14; PWUson, clo, Cotoraclo, 49; KBrown, Los A~etes , 14; JGonzatez. C-tand. 14; EMartlntl, Minnesota. 12; MRivera, Yol1&lt;.: f! :
Florida, 12; Alfonzo, Newvonc, 12; Hehon, 49.
Seattle, 13; Soriano. New Yort&lt;, 12; Koch, Toronto. 8; T8Joneo. Detroli.JJ;
Colorado, 11; Stevens, Montreal, 11 .
SAVES-Shaw, Los ArGetes. 13; Mesa,
JaGiaml&gt;l, Ooktand, 12.
Foulke. cntcago. 7; ParciYal. Anaheim;~.
TRIPlE5-0Cabrera, Montreal, 4;
. PhllaOelphla, 10; Rocker, Atlanta, 9: TRIPLEs-cGuzman. Minnesota, 7;
.
.riO
NPerez, ColoraOo, 4; Vina, St. Louis, 4; Graves, Clnolnnad, 9; BWagner, Houston, SUzuki, Sllllttla, 5; JEncamacton, Detroit;
Cotangeto, San Diego, 3; Ocl&gt;oa, Clnclr&gt; 11; Faosero, Chlcego, 9; Non, San Frar&gt; 4; 18 are lied wtlh 2.
nat!, 3; Aurllla, San Francisco, 3; 17 are cisco, 8.
HOME RUN$-COelgado, Toronto, 14;
"'.
tledwlth2.
MRamlroz, SOIIon, 13: ARodrlguez,
NATIONAL LEAGUE

HOME AUNs-LGonzalez, Arizona, 17;
Bonds, San Francisco, t 5: Drew, St.
Louis. 14; Pujol&amp;, St. Louis, 13; Hetton,

AIERICAN LEAGUE

.. J

i'lrl!'l'·

DEAD MEAT - The Pittsburgh Pirates' Aramis Ramirez (16)is
tagged out at home by Milwaukee Brewers' catcher Raul
Casanova Monday. (AP)

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Send
us
your
local
sports
~
Doctors take on golf course
at
the
Daily
Sentinel
safety, injury treabnent·
SPORTS MEDICINE

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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) An
Nationwide, there are 16 ,743 golf courses,
elderly woman drowns when her electric cart including 1,228 in Florida and 986 in Caliveers oft a steep slope, flipping into a Florida fornia . Michigan is a close third with 951.
pond.
Statistics on injuries at golf courses are hard
In Louisiana, two ·golfers are critically to come by, though . Maureen McGaffin, a
injured when lightning strikes the tree where spokeswoman for UPMC-Presbyterian, said
they have taken shelter. Both die within days. her facility treated 56 golfers for non-life
The stories aren'r new to Dr. Paul Paris.The threatenin g injuries last year.
pittsburgh physician has .known about the . Golf courses ar~ the ftfth-mo;t 'likely place
dangers of the golf course since he was a to have a heart attack, M cGaffin said. The
teen-ager, when a high school buddy was other four are airports, jails, shopping malls
struck and killed by an errant ball.
and stadiums.
"It's always been seen as a safe and benign
That's why ' many doctors believe portable
defibrillators should be standard equipn1ent at
activity;' Paris said Monday.
, But dozens of dangers lurk. on the golf golf courses, where medical help can, be far
course. Beyond the lightning bolts, water traps away.
and hard-flying balls are the threats of asthma
When a person goes inro card.iac arrest,
attacks, diabetic shock, head injuries, heat help is critical in the first five minutes.
"After that, survival gets· very low," Paris
stroke and allergi10 reactions to insect bites .
Yet most golf courses are unprepared.
said.
"I have asked to see first aid kits, and there
I ncteas ingly, police, fireftghters; airplane
three Band-Aids and two Tylenol," personnel and airport staff are carrying defibwill
said Paris, chairman of the emergency medi- · rillators.
'c ine department at the University of PittsWhen the Fol&lt; Chapel Golf Club in suburburgh School of Medicine.
ban Pittsburgh bought one last summer, they
Paris is bri nging 100 doctors from around used it to save a life within three weeks, Paris
the country together this week in an attempt said.
· . to change that. The three-day golf medicine
The Links for Life campaign, sponsored by
conference, believed to be the first of its kind Golf Digest, the American. Heart Association
in the United States, begins Thursday at Lake- and Medtronic Foundation, is aimed at gelview Golf Resort and Spa in Morganrown.
ting more of the machines on the greens.
The symposium has two equally important
"But there is a . real morass in getting
goals .. One is to make golf course operators· changes made," Paris said.
more aware of the need for basic medical
" There is 'a whole structure at golf courses
equipment; The other is to get people with professionals, administrators, insurance
people, boards of administrators - and every
injuries and illnesses back on the greens.
"The idea is that it's important for physi- change has implications. Something like a
cians to treat not only injury and illness, but defibrillator· is a major deal."
also to tteat the quality of life," Paris said.
Organizers of the golf medicine ·s ymposium
, Allowing people with lung disease to get say other must-haves for a golf course include
back outside, for example, can do won~e rs for epinephrine injectors for allergic reactions; a
their health by first improving their outlook. cervical collar and backboard for head, neck
"Golf is one of the things that enriches and spine injuries; insulin; an asthma inhaler;
many people's lives and we should help them sterile ·water, saline solution or alcohol; and
do it," Paris said.
airway· equipment . such as . oxyge n and air
The agenda is a golfer's dream : Every day valve masks.
·
has a six-hour slot for golfing. The remaining
After the co nferen ce, the doctors plan to
hours are filled with medical seminars on top- produce a publica tion that golf cou rse operaics from •the need for portable defibrillators to tors ca n use to begin their own emergency .
helping people go!f with arthritis. back dis- medicine programs.
ease q r some other disability.
That will mcl ude detailed advice on hanOr. Ed Palank, a c.1rdiologist from Naples, dling the threat of lightning st rikes, Paris said.
Fla., and Dr. Bill Mallon, an orthop edi c sur• Thirty ,p ercent of all people stru ck by lightgeon from Durham · N .C., are tho key note ning are killed , wh ile the other 70 percent are
speakers.
severely injured.
The N ational G1'lf Foundatioll estimates
The I' GA Tour uses IWlther stations, met~there are 26 .4 million go lfers m the United urologists and lighti ng- prediction devices at
States, about 6.1 millio n of whom play ,at least eac h of its 120 tourn ame nts, an~ many doc25 rounds a year. Five percent of doctors are tors would like to see- more courses install
also· avid golfers, and th e number .of womeb them so ai r horn s can clear the gree ns quickgolfers has grown to 4.6 milli on in th.e past ly.
decade.

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Evans, Hubbard
receive top honors
BY TDIIY M. LIAcM
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

• RACINE -Joru,than Evans, Southern
High School's valedictorian, and Chad
Hubbard, salutatorian, will address 57
memben of their graduating class during
combined baccalaureate and commencement exercises on Sunday.
.
Gr:aduation will take place at 8 p.m.
inside 'Charla W. Hayman Gymnasium.
'Evans is the son of Joseph and Cannel

Evans of !Ucine. He
selections, and three
ius been involved in
vanity letters and spevarious athletic procial mention aU-district
grams and a number of
in baslcetb:ill.
extracurricular activi-)
He. is a member of
ties while · attending
the National Honor
Southern High Sc.hool.
Society, Pep Club and
Evans has earned
Vanity S Club, and has
fotir vanity letters in
volumeered his coachfootball, including two
ing and refereeing skills
JoNIII- E¥8111 years as captain, two
for the Southern Biddy
salutatorian · League
valedictorian lint-team :ill-Tri-V:illey
basketbaU
Conference
(TVC) teams.
selections, three first-team all- district
Evans received the :ill-academic TVC
selections, three special mention all-state

Phsn . . SHS,AJ

Band seniors bid farewell to MHS
BY CJwn DIE HOEFUCH
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Monday
night was an evening of
reflection and recognition,
with both tears and laughter,
for memben of the Meigs
High School band.
. Mote than 200 students,
parents' and teachers gathered
in the caf~ria to pay special
tribute to the senior class
.. memben.
After hearing
glowing
report&amp; about their perfor.mance from Toney Dingess,
director, the seniors respond- ·
.ed with compliments for
Dingess and his assistant, ·
David Deem, the Meigs Band
Bog,sters, , l!Dd · svpporters,

•.tilc1WUia~thtiir,pare•:lts.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
We will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not forgotten. They
similar to the sample below:

' ,

~~-:rhefMws 'an. ~nge of
.gifts of appreciation.
Penona) ,stories about the
impact-~;N,~. on ·their lives
were shart!d, ~d appteciation
.for the discipline and strength
they gained through participation wai related.
. '1'114~1Y WINNIRI - Presented trophies In recognition of their band worl&lt; were; from left,
"Band ·has meant more to Sandi Gilkey, Chaslty Fowler and Bol;l Johnson, 110 percent trophies; and Sarah Houser, Abby
.
j,
.
Harris and Derek Johnson, outstanding musicians. ·
PhirueeMHS.AJ
...

'

will

May God's aqels
. guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Alwa,a Ia our heart~,
John and Mona Atldrewa and

family .

. Hishand.
4. Thank you for the wondctful days we shored liJSelher. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
· .
S. The days we shared were sweet.llongtoscc you again in God's
heavenly glory.
.
·
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
·

I'J(:OQNIZb - Amy Frecl&lt;er, flag captain, Andrae Krawsczyn
and Ashley Hennahi, field commanders, left to right, were ·recognized and presented trophies at the Meigs band banquet
' Monday nllht

7. Thouah out of sight, you'll rorever be in my .heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the light of pca&lt;:c shine on your face for eternity.
10. May Gocfs a...Js auidc you and protcc;l you lhroughoullime.
11 . You were allpt In our life that bums forever in our hearts.

•..,..

12. May God's grac:es shine ovct you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from moming to niaht and from
year to year.
14. We send this message with al.Ving ki55 for eternal rest and happiness,
IS. May the IAlrd blcos you wilh His graces and warm, loving heart. ·

:ll's dlaM- 1:1

TO REMEMBER YOUR WVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • U21F PICTURt INCLUDED
The QaUy Sentinel
With Fondett Memorlea
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

. .---------·-·'11

Please publiSh my tribule in lhe special Memory Page on Friday, May 25. •

.

Namemd«:ea~OO-------------~------------~----~----------------:
Relationship tome: __________________________
Dale of birth

------------.:-__:z:._____

Date of passinll--..-.---~

Print your name ner·C----------------.;_---------~

tl

I C i t y · - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - ' - Stale' -- - - ~·P---.--'.il

I'
I

Make Check Payable to TilE DAILY SENTINEL

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L--------------------------------~-

81,3.6
A2

........................... ~._. ..........--~·

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.. .

a small section of Ohio 7
Tuesday.
Bob Byer, Meigs County
Management
Emergency
director, said that around t :30
p.m., a DuPont railroad car
carrying methyl methacrylate
monom, which is listed as a
Class 3, tlamnuble liquid, was
· observed leaking a clear, odorless Ouid by a Dayton truck
driver who was stopped at the
Hobson railroad crossing just
outside of Middleport.
The truck driver contacted
authorities, who inunediately
dispatched emergency crews
to the scene.
Several individuals were
evacuated from their homes
uate

Byer added that a Norfolk
Southern Hazmat team manager was notified of the situation, who said that methyl
methacrylate monom '.'should
have an odor:·
Once . DuPonr Haznut
teams arrived on the scene, the
liquid was analyzed and determined 10 be water.
FoUowing the analysis, individuals were :illowed 10 rerum
10 their homn and businesses.
The entire ev:ICIIation lasted
around two hours, added
Byer.
The rail car originated in
Texas and was traveling 10
BeUe,W.Va.

C 2001 Ohio Vatlay Publilhlnl Co.

.assurance
t

BY TONY M. l.uoH

ing characteristics for building foundations, is being
conducted by .the WesterviDe-based company.
· Under the approved contract, M&amp;E is to provide
design engineering services,
including ·an analysis of the
best alternative for the proj ect, analysis of the · existing
well pump characteristics
and modifications, coordination with utility companies,
filing plans for EPA permits,
preparing a cost estimate,
work speCifications, bidding
documents, contract documents, and assist wilh holding public hearings as neces-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - A meeting with the Ohio Water
Development
Authority
(OWDA) wiU determine if
' funding is available to contlnue design work on
Pomeroy's new water treatment plant.
. Village Administrator John
Anderson said rhat today's
routine
meeting
with
OWDA officials in Columbus is to ensure that fut)ding
for the plant's- planning
process wiU continue.
In Febru~ry, Pomeroy
Council approved a contract
with M&amp;E Companies to sary.
.
.
.
assist the village with profes- , M&amp;E will als~ provtde the
sional design and engineer- servtce of applymg for vaning services ' for the new. ous gran! and loa* funding
treatment plant, which . sources as well · as provtdmg
would eventuaUy be . con- an mspector to ovenee constructed near the well field in structlon and ensure conformtty with plans and spectfiSyracuse.
cations.
A sub-surface soil investiM&amp;E's fee for performing
gation to assist in determin the engineering work is
ing the location of the plant,
PIHH ... Funcllnc. AJ
as weU as obtaining soil bear-

representative m Congress.
As a membe~ o.f the
Hou~e.
Commerce
Committee, he helped
'a uthor the C hildhood
Health Insurance Program and the Patients'
Bill of Rights. H e also
serves on the Energy
and Power Subcom-

land~ D-~ucasville, will be the keynote

speaker'at the Meigs County Democratic
Party's annual spring dinner on Saturday.
The dinner will be at the Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center, with a
the dinner
social hour at 5 p.m., prior
at 6 p.m.
,
Strickland is serving his fourth twoyear · term as the Sixth Ohio District's

ta

mittee.
A native of Scioto County, he has also
. worked as a minister. a psychologist and a
college professor at Shawnee State University.
"Meigs County voters have always
been supportive of Congressman Strickland," Maiso n said, "and he has never lost
an election here. He has a wide base of

· PIHH ... Democrlltt. AJ

A Work Injury Management Sertice
of Holzer Medical Center.
For more .information,

Discover
the J-/Ql2ter Difference.
•,

call446·5733.,
toll ••• 1·866-308·2t66

·,

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. ,. . " .... ~ ... ,. · - ........ .-·-"'"''""",.._..,. ... .. ,.~ ...... ,. .•. ~_,..,, ..)·~·.......,,.. • "*'"* - ... --~

ing railroad tanker car forced
emet:gency penonnd 10 evac-

Strickla.nd to·address Meigs Democrats

"'
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SENTINB. NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - A leak-

Holzer.Vlork

Number of selected verse ___..__

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..;.;;_"""T_ _ _ _ _ Phone num,ber._ _ _ _.___

Wtather

.

POMEROY - . U.S. Rep. Ted Strick-

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Edjtorjals
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W.VA.
Obityarjes
Dlly J: 8-&amp;-5 .,., 4: 6-9-5-2

Sports

TOP AWARDI-- Toney Dingess, Meigs band dlr,ctor, canter,
presented tile Arion Trophy, the top musician's award, to Julie
'
Kennedy, and the director's awPrd to Adam Shank at Monday
night's annual recognition banquet.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Lotteries

¥

DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 5t00 p.m.

.

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Low: lOP
Details, A2 .

~~1.8i:RI~IW~IilliLI__.__...1181.61!~. :~: &amp;3-1; Pick 4: 5-2-6-3

Fill out the form below and drop off to

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Sentinel

BY TDIIY M. l.acH

and businesses while the scene
was secured by memben of
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparunent,
Middleport
police and fire Departments,
and Rudand EMS.
"Individuals were evacuated
as a precautionary measure:'
said Byer. " In a situation like
this, you can't talce any
chani:n. Safety is top priority."

plant funding

wl&amp;h, select ont of the fellowlna FREE •enes below to
lacC:otDJI.IIy your tribute.
I. We hold you in our lhooghts and m&lt;motics forever.
2. May God cndle you in His arms, now add forever.
J, Forever iniiiiCd, never fOtgottcn. May God hold you in !he palm of

DAvid C.~
.lilly 10, 1881·Mar 5, 1880

·Substancefound
to be water

Pome-:ov seeks

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be

.

www . mydatly~entinel com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'•'' "'"''·May lf&gt; 1001 ·Vol 51, No 211

:TRANSAC110NI • t.·

SAVIAI I

Seattle 7, ToroniO 5

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Chicago WhifB Sox 6, Te- 3
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(Otlvanoo 2-3), 7:05 P.lll.
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(Tavarez 3·2), 8:05 p.m.

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Reds tank another one,

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